Azerbaidjan-Armenie: Possible Rencontre Aliev-Sarkissain En Juin

AZERBAIDJAN-ARMENIE: POSSIBLE RENCONTRE ALIEV-SARKISSAIN EN JUIN

RIA Novosti
12 Mai 2008
Russie

BAKOU, 12 mai – RIA Novosti. Une eventuelle rencontre des presidents
azerbaidjanais et armenien, Ilkham Aliev et Serge Sarkissian, pourrait
avoir lieu en juin prochain, a annonce lundi aux journalistes le chef
de la diplomatie azerbaidjanaise Elmar Mamedyarov.

"Nous avons decide de poursuivre les negociations. Une rencontre
pourrait probablement avoir lieu en juin prochain au niveau des
presidents", a ajoute le ministre.

Elmar Mamedyarov et son homologue armenien Edvard Nalbandian se sont
rencontres le 6 mai au siège du Conseil de l’Europe a Strasbourg. Les
deux ministres ont notamment discute de l’eventuelle rencontre
Aliev-Sarkissian

Les co-presidents du groupe de Minsk de l’OSCE sur le Haut Karabakh
le Francais Bernard Fossier, l’Americain Matthew Bryza et le Russe
Iouri Merzliakov, ainsi que le representant personnel du president
en exercice de l’OSCE l’ambassadeur Andrzej Kasprzyk, ont participe
a cette rencontre.

"Un nouveau president a ete elu en Armenie. La rencontre avec les
nouvelles autorites (d’Armenie) montrera si elles sont pour la paix
ou non", a ajoute M. Mamedyarov.

Il a reitere la position de Bakou selon laquelle la question (du
règlement du conflit azerbaidjano-armenien sur le Haut-Karabakh)
doit etre resolue dans le cadre de l’integrite territoriale de
l’Azerbaidjan.

Le conflit azerbaidjano-armenien au sujet du Haut-Karabakh avait debute
en 1988 après que la region, peuplee majoritairement d’Armeniens,
eut proclame son independance face a Bakou.

En septembre 1991, la Declaration sur la proclamation de la Republique
du Haut-Karabakh avait ete adoptee. A la charnière des annees 1991
et 1992, des operations d’envergure ont eclate a l’issue desquelles
l’Azerbaidjan a perdu le contrôle du Haut-Karabakh et de sept autres
regions limitrophes. Les hostilites ont cesse dans la zone du conflit
le 12 mai 1994 a l’issue de la signature a Bichkek d’un cessez-le-feu
toujours en vigueur. Depuis 1992, des negociations sur le règlement
du conflit du Haut-Karabakh se poursuivent dans le cadre du Groupe
de Minsk de l’OSCE.

L’Azerbaidjan insiste sur la preservation de son integrite
territoriale, alors que l’Armenie defend les interets de la republique
autoproclamee du Haut-Karabakh qui n’est pas partie aux negociations.

–Boundary_(ID_P2TN/OcrxmhvZ84o/HeP nw)–

Peaceful Resident Wounded

PEACEFUL RESIDENT WOUNDED

A1+
[04:49 pm] 12 May, 2008

At about 11.00 today morning Azerbaijan’s armed forces bombarded the
military positions of the Armenian Armed Forces near Baghanis village
in Tavoush Marz.

Resident of Baghanis, shepherd Lorik M. Avagian, 1957, was wounded
as a result of the offensive, the press service of the RoA Defense
Ministry reports. Avagian was taken out of the danger zone at 12.40.

Lorik Avagian was taken to an Idzevan hospital where he underwent an
operation. Doctors say his state is of average seriousness.

Note, Lorik’s wife, Narik, died of an Azeri bullet in 1992.

Supporting cast dominates Verdi’s ‘Macbeth’ at Met

Supporting cast dominates Verdi’s ‘Macbeth’ at Met
By MIKE SILVERMAN

NEW YORK (AP) – Lay on Macduff – and Banquo, too.
10 May 08

It was these two supporting characters who stood out Friday night as
the Metropolitan Opera assembled an entirely new cast for the season’s
last three performances of Verdi’s "Macbeth."

As Banquo, Macbeth’s comrade in arms who falls early victim to his
murderous rampage, the German bass Rene Pape dominated the early
scenes. His beautiful tone, seamless throughout his range but
especially impressive in its upper reaches, always commands attention,
as does his deep commitment to character. From his first entrance, he
makes Banquo’s wariness of the witches’ prophesies – and of Macbeth –
apparent, and his one aria, "Come dal ciel precipita" grimly
foreshadows his murder at the hand of Macbeth’s hired thugs.

In the second half of the evening, the nobleman Macduff, who until this
point has mostly been an observer, mourns the slaying of his wife and
children in a lyrical aria, "Ah, la paterna mano." This solo provided a
golden opportunity for Joseph Calleja, a young tenor from Malta, to
impress the audience with his large, warm and well-focused voice.
Calleja, whose previous Met appearances have been as the Duke in
Verdi’s "Rigoletto," drew the evening’s biggest applause and made one
eager to hear him in more roles.

The leading roles of Macbeth and his Lady, meanwhile, were in the hands
of singers who discharged their duties honorably without making a
particularly vivid impression.

Hasmik Papian, an Armenian soprano, has potent high notes in her favor
(though her final D flat in the sleep-walking scene sounded forced) and
the technique to toss off her drinking song with elan. But she is weak
in the lower, chest register where so much of Lady Macbeth’s early
music lies.

As her husband, Spanish baritone Carlos Alvarez is something of a
puzzle. His basic sound is attractive, if a size too small for an ideal
Verdi singer. But he never quite grabs hold of the role or the audience.

With such an imbalance in the casting, the focus of much of the evening
fell on the superb work by the chorus, the grimly effective – and
sometimes darkly amusing – production by Adrian Noble and the
sympathetic conducting of James Levine in the pit.

On the Net:
The Metropolitan Opera:

http://www.metopera.org

CBA Puts Into Circulation new 10 000-Dram Banknote

CBA PUTS INTO CIRCULATION NEW 10 000-DRAM BANKNOTE

YEREVAN, MAY 9, NOYAN TAPAN. The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) put into
circulation a new banknote of the nominal value of 10 000 drams (2008
issue). NT was informed by the CBA press service that new 10 000-dram
banknotes are legal means of payment in the territory of the Republic
of Armenia and shall be accepted without reserve at their nominal value
against all monetary liabilities, without a time limit. Banknotes of
the same nominal value which were issued in 2003 and 2006 remain in
circulation without any restriction and change in the conditions of
their use.

Armenia and Lichtenstein establish diplomatic relations

Armenia and Lichtenstein establish diplomatic relations

armradio.am
08.05.2008 14:52

On May 7 RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and the Foreign Minister
of Lichtenstein Rita Kieber-Beck signed a Protocol on establishment of
diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and Lichtenstein.
The signing ceremony was followed by a meeting, during which the
Ministers expressed willingness to develop the interstate ties and
launch cooperation on the international level, in the fields of
economy, culture and science.

The same day Minister Nalbandian met with the Minister for European
Affairs of the Netherlands Frans Timmermans. The interlocutors
discussed a number of issues of bilateral, regional and international
importance. The parties noted that despite the existing ties, the
relations between the two countries need additional impetus and it will
be useful to intensify the communication and reciprocal visits in the
future.

RA Foreign Minister presented to his Dutch counterpart the priorities
of the Armenian Government formed as a result of the presidential
elections, among which he specially noted the deepening of cooperation
with European structures, and intensification of foreign economic
relations. In this context the two Ministers discussed the
opportunities of attracting Dutch investments into a number of spheres
of the Armenian economy, especially agriculture, communication and
transport.

ANCEM: High School Students Lead Efforts to Pass Genocide Resolution

Armenian National Committee
47 Nichols Avenue
Watertown MA 02472
617-926-1918
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
May 7, 2008

High School Students Lead Efforts to Pass Genocide Resolution
Urge Massachusetts Congressional Delegation to Champion H.Res.106

Lexington, MA– Two high school seniors are leading efforts to
activate their classmates and high school students across eastern
Massachusetts in support of H.Res.106, the Armenian Genocide
Resolution, reported the Armenian National Committee.

Nairi Khachatourian and Sosse Beugekian, both seniors at Lexington
High School, began circulating a petition calling on the Massachusetts
Congressional Delegation to lead efforts to ensure passage of the
Armenian Genocide Resolution.

`What an amazing way for students to become involved,’ stated
Sharistan Melkonian of the Armenian National Committee. `Nairi and
Sosse are role models to a generation of activists and are proving
that one person (or two) can make a difference. We hope their action
will encourage other individuals to also be creative and to make a
difference.’

Nairi and Sosse began circulating the petition in their own high
school but then reached out to friends in other communities. The
petition now has signers from Lexington, Watertown, Natick,
Lincoln-Sudbury, Waltham, Belmont, Newton, and Arlington.

H.Res. 106, the Armenian Genocide Resolution, calls on the President
to ensure that the foreign policy of the United States reflects
appropriate understanding and sensitivity concerning issues related to
human rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide documented in the United
States record relating to the Armenian Genocide. 213 Members of
Congress, including every one of the Congressmen from Massachusetts
has cosponsored H.Res.106.

Asked why they were targeting the Massachusetts delegation, all of
whom have already cosponsored the resolution, Khachatourian said, `We
appreciate that the Congressmen from Massachusetts have all
cosponsored H.Res.106, but cosponsoring the Resolution is not
enough. We need their leadership now more than ever to get the
resolution passed.’

"High school students are more interested than ever in making a
difference," said Beugekian. "We are a powerful and energetic voice
and we know what we want. And, we want to do everything possible to
ensure that this resolution passes this year."

Khachatourian and Beugekian, both 18 years old, will graduate on May
23. Khachatourian will attend Boston University in the fall and
Beugekian will attend Suffolk University.

The petition calls on Members of the Massachusetts Congressional
Delegation to urge their Colleagues to vote yes on the Resolution.

The petition reads:

We the undersigned, students in the Greater Boston area, strongly
believe that H.Res.106, the Armenian Genocide Resolution, should pass
when it is sent to the House floor. It is very important to show the
world that `genocide’, `ethnic cleansing’, and `racial discrimination’
will not be overlooked and that we are committed to ending and
preventing genocide. As students who are becoming adults and going
into `the real world’ we are beginning to realize the important role
that the United States’ can play on important issues. And, as
soon-to-be voters we are more and more interested in these matters. We
thank you for your cosponsorship of H.Res.106 and ask you to urge your
Colleagues to take a stand and support this Resolution. How can we
expect to end and prevent genocide in the future if we refuse to
properly acknowledge a genocide of the past?

Nairi and Sosse launched their petition on April 24 at the Greater
Boston Community Armenian Genocide Commemoration and intend to
circulate the petition through May 22.

####

FRESNO: Born 100 years ago, Pulitzer winner William Saroyan…

The Fresno Bee (California)
May 7, 2008 Wednesday

Born 100 years ago, Pulitzer winner William Saroyan was a pop-culture
icon in his heyday

by By Donald Munro, McClatchy Newspapers

FRESNO, Calif. _ After his acclaimed first book of short stories was
published in 1934, William Saroyan sent a letter to Random House
asking: "Do you think it would help any if I was photographed swinging
on a trapeze?"

Saroyan knew how fame worked. At the peak of his renown, from 1939
through the early years of World War II, he cozied up to America as a
celebrity who was equal parts literary giant and pop-culture
icon. This self-proclaimed "world’s best author," who came to
prominence with his short story "The Daring Young Man on the Flying
Trapeze," was a big deal in a way authors in our contemporary
image-oriented society _ a culture tilted toward movies and television
_ can pretty much only dream about.

Saroyan’s literary fame has not endured in the way his partisans might
have hoped. (He is admired but not widely taught, and most of his
titles are hard to find in chain bookstores, even in his hometown of
Fresno.) And his pop-culture fame, while perhaps more lasting than the
vapid notoriety bestowed by such gossip outlets as TMZ and People
magazine, lacked staying power.

Keep in mind just how well-known this former unruly school kid was at
his peak. His publisher at the time, Bennett Cerf, dubbed him "the
wonder boy from Fresno."

Even when he eloquently (and very publicly) showed disdain for the
trappings of fame _ refusing to accept the Pulitzer Prize and the
$1,000 that went with it for his play "The Time of Your Life" in 1940,
for example _ Saroyan gained more notoriety than if he’d simply taken
the money.

Saroyan liked to be recognized for his literary merits as the author
of such acclaimed works as "The Human Comedy" and "My Name Is Aram."
But he also realized, living at a time when the names of serious
writers floated in conversations alongside those of movie stars and
socialites, that people gravitated to the whole William Saroyan
package. All of it added up: the dark and exotic good looks, the
fierce temperament, the loud voice, the stormy marriages and divorces,
the expensive tastes, the precarious finances. And especially the
muscular ego.

"Modesty," he wrote, "almost invariably accompanies mediocrity and is
usually an inside-out variety of immodesty."

When publishers wanted to tinker with his precious words, his first
inclination was to change publishers.

Saroyan wasn’t content just to have three plays open on Broadway in a
period of 13 months, as he did in 1939. He wanted to run the theater,
too. He named it after himself, naturally. The Saroyan Theatre might
not have been the financial success that he’d hoped. But for a time,
he was known as the playwright who had wrested control from the "money
guys" and taken charge of his own destiny.

Saroyan’s desire for control extended to Hollywood, and there,
perhaps, he met his match. When he sold the script for "A Human
Comedy" to MGM for $60,000, he assumed he’d direct the movie as
well. The studio chief, Louis B. Mayer, who had an even greater
reputation for obstinateness, didn’t agree.

Yet for all the ways that Saroyan burned bridges by alienating
publishers, theater investors and movie moguls, his celebrated cocky
attitude helped define an image that endeared him to the public.

A 1940 article in Life magazine _ one of the great arbiters of popular
culture at the time _ painted a glowing portrait of a headstrong,
confident writer taking Broadway by storm. The article repeated the
oft-told anecdote about the publisher Cerf. In 1934, while a guest at
San Francisco’s Palace Hotel, Cerf was informed that "a young man who
says he is the world’s greatest author is in the lobby." Replied Cerf:
"Tell Mr. Saroyan to come right up."

At the peak of his success, with "My Name Is Aram" a best-selling Book
of the Month Club selection and "The Time of Your Life" running
successfully on Broadway, Saroyan moved into a suite in the
prestigious Hampshire House Hotel overlooking Central Park, and for a
time, writes Saroyan scholar Brian Darwent, lived "the life of a
millionaire."

Yet for much of his life, he struggled with debt and a nasty gambling
habit _ which only added to his larger-than-life personality.

Key to Saroyan’s image is his humble beginnings in Fresno. He was the
first son in his family of Armenian immigrants born on American
soil. A writer with an outsized personal voice, he produced many works
drawing on his own experiences growing up in the Armenian section of
Fresno. It is in these glimpses of his hometown _ of the old Armenian
Presbyterian Church, the Postal Telegraph office, the family house _
that readers came to feel that they knew not only the characters in
his stories but Saroyan himself.

Nothing captures that autobiographical flavor better than Saroyan’s
Homer Macauley, the schoolboy hero of "The Human Comedy" who made $15
a week working 4 p.m.-midnight delivering telegrams. In "Follow," you
see a slightly surlier _ and more ethnic _ interpretation of this
archetypal character in Aram Diranian, the unfulfilled telegraph
clerk.

Homer is youth itself, a ubiquitous folk character and something of a
priest flitting from one American town to the next, "a modern American
Mercury," writes Saroyan scholar Alfred Kazin, "riding his bike as
Mercury ran on the winds, with a blue cap for an astral helmet and a
telegraph blank waving the great tidings in his hand."

Yet this wind-riding boy grew up, slowed down, grew old.

Saroyan lived far beyond his relatively few years of intense favor in
the public spotlight. Critical tastes are hard to explain and even
harder to predict: Who can say why Saroyan doesn’t have the name
recognition today of, say, his contemporary John Steinbeck? There is
no arbitration board of literary reputation, no rules of fairness as
to why some authors go out of print and others have entire shelves at
Borders.

But Saroyan himself seemed to recognize the vagaries of fame.

The 1940 Life magazine article _ which was not a cover story, showing
that even then there were limits on his celebrity _ noted that since
becoming successful, Saroyan returned to Fresno on occasion.

There, the article went on to say, "he is amused by the fact that the
Armenian boys and girls he went to school with have no idea of his
fame. When they ask him what he’s doing there, Saroyan replies that he
is out of a job and `looking for work.’"

What he did with words was work, of course, and he knew it. The most
glorious kind of work: one in which you leave a mark. Although the
headlines and the space on bookstore shelves might diminish, the words
will always remain.

CEC rep to observe the parliamentary elections in Georgia

RA CEC representative to observe the parliamentary elections in Georgia

armradio.am
05.05.2008 16:40

Atom Mkhitaryan, leading specialist of the Foreign Relations Department
of the Central Electoral Commission of Armenia has been included in the
short-term mission of the OSCE Office of Democratic Institutions and
Human Rights to observe the parliamentary elections in Georgia due on
May 21.

Press Secretary of the Central electoral commission Tatevik Ohanyan
told Armenpress that the CEC has received no invitation form other
international organizations or Georgia to observe the elections.

The OSCE/ODIHR Observation Mission will be headed by Boris Frlec who
led the delegation carrying out observation of the parliamentary
election in Armenia on May 12, 2007. OSCE/ODIHR will delegate 54
observers and 31 commentators to Georgia.

BAKU: Azerbaijani and Armenian FMs to have first meeting tomorrow

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 5 2008

Azerbaijani and Armenian Foreign Ministers to have first meeting
tomorrow

[ 05 May 2008 11:22 ]

Baku. Lachin Sultanova-APA. Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov will
pay a business visit to Strasbourg tomorrow.

APA reports that the aim of the visit is to participate in the 118th
plenary meeting of the Council of Europe Committee of Ministers on May
7. Foreign ministers and secretaries of states of over 30 countries
will attend the meeting. The meeting will focus on the situation in
the south-east of Europe, Council of Europe’s recommendations on the
stability and security in Europe.

Slovakia will hand over the chairmanship of the Committee of Ministers
to Switzerland for six months.

On May 6 Elmar Mammadyarov will have first meeting with his Armenian
counterpart Edvard Nalbandyan. The ministers will exchange views on
the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict. OSCE Minsk Group
co-chairs mediating in the settlement of the conflict will also attend
the meeting.

FM stressed importance of confidence building b/w NK conflict sides

PanARMENIAN.Net

RA FM stressed importance of confidence building between Karabakh
conflict sides
06.05.2008 12:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ There is a dire necessity to build
confidence between parties to the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, Armenia’s Foreign Minister said.

`It’s also important to emphasize that the conflict
can be resolved via peaceful talks only,’ Edward
Nalbandian said after a meeting with his French
counterpart Bernard Kouchner.

`Tomorrow I am meeting Elmar Mammadyarov, the Foreign
Minister of Azerbaijan, and I am hopeful that
constructive dialog will be continued,’ the Minister
said, RA MFA press office reported.