Baku: President Of Azerbaijan: "Baku Will Continue The Policy Of Iso

PRESIDENT OF AZERBAIJAN: "BAKU WILL CONTINUE THE POLICY OF ISOLATING ARMENIA"

Today.Az
olitics/48204.html
13 October 2008 [18:23]
Azerbaijan

Baku will continue the policy of isolating Armenia, until the latter
stops occupation of Azerbaijani lands, said President of Azerbaijan
Ilham Aliyev at an expanded session of the government by results of the
socioeconomic development of the country within nine months of 2008.

"Until our lands are under occupation, we will continue the policy
of total attack against Armenia both in the diplomatic sphere and
in the political, economic, transport, military and other spheres",
said Aliyev.

"Any cooperation with Armenia and their participation in any regional
project is impossible until the Karabakh conflict is settled. We will
spare no efforts for the further isolation of Armenians for them to
realize what their future depends on", said the head of the state.

According to Aliyev, Azerbaijan is fortifying its army for the soonest
resolution of the Karabakh conflict and $4.5 bln has been invested
into the defense sector of the country through the past five years.

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

Armenia, Ireland Interested In The Development Of Bilateral Ties

ARMENIA, IRELAND INTERESTED IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF BILATERAL TIES

armradio.am
10.10.2008 17:14

On October 10 Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Gegham Gharibjanyan
received the Ambassador of Ireland to Armenia Geoffrey Keating (seat
in Sofia).

Greeting the guest, the Deputy Foreign Minister noted that
Armenia is interested in the development of the Armenian-Irish
relations. In particular, he attached importance to the activation
of the political dialogue between the two countries, the shaping
of the contractual-legal field and deepening of cultural ties. In
this context the Deputy Foreign Minister underlined that Armenia and
Ireland have many historical and cultural similarities, which can
become a good basis for the development of bilateral relations.

At the request of the guest, Gegham Gharibjanyan turned to the
recent events in the region, the developments in the negotiation
process on the resolution of the Artsakh issue ad the perspectives
of normalization of the Armenian-Turkish relations.

AGMA Gifted Exceptional Collection Of Genocide Documentation

AGMA GIFTED EXCEPTIONAL COLLECTION OF GENOCIDE DOCUMENTATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.10.2008 17:04 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Two donors, who presently wish to remain anonymous,
have gifted the Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA) with an
exceptional collection of books and other printed material focused on
the Armenian Genocide and its documentation, AGMA told PanARMENIAN.Net.

The collection of several thousand rare and out-of-print books and
other documents is slated for transfer to the AGMA in time for the
opening of the museum in 2010. AGMA will include a complete facility
to support ongoing research at the museum.

The remarkable collection contains many valuable items including maps,
photographs, and other historical evidence reflecting acquisitions,
research, and exploration across numerous archives.

In making their gift to AGMA, the two donors stated: "Indeed, the
very raison d’etre of this collection is that everyone needs to know
that there is a massive amount of documentation on what happened
to the Armenians. At the same time, there is also ample testimony
that they were able to overcome the attempt to annihilate them and
to recover from such unprecedented adversity. And, all this with a
great deal of help from the U.S.A. What better place to show this
than in Washington, DC?"

The donors hope that the gift will serve as an incentive for others
to contribute relevant works as well. Collection development is
a major objective of the AGMA library. Accepting the donation,
AGMA Trustee and Building and Operations Committee Chairman Van
Krikorian, said: "We are thrilled to receive this astounding gift of
an entire library of specialized publications concentrating on the
Armenian Genocide. The donors’ monumental achievement in creating
this collection and tremendous generosity in choosing the AGMA as
the home for the collection represent a true match made in heaven."

Krikorian went on to say: "This collection of works ranging in their
coverage from the mid-1800s to the present has personal meaning
for a variety of reasons. First, this specialized Armenian Genocide
collection is destined to constitute the foundation of the museum
library. Second, the donation of this entire pre-existing collection,
along with our own Assembly and ANI materials, and in light of the
help we are getting from the Near East Foundation and the Armenian
Genocide Museum in Yerevan, and others, immediately puts AGMA out
front in Washington for running the type of research center that we
plan and need to support the museum, its exhibits and activities. Our
donors have established a standard of sharing with this extraordinary
donation in the same community-minded spirit of Anoush Mathevosian,
Hirair Hovnanian, and the Kechejian family, which we hope others
will emulate."

The library donors are scientists with advanced degrees, one with
Armenian roots and the other with no such roots but with a fervent
interest in human rights, peace, and social justice. The gift is being
made in memory of the parents of one of the scientists. They were from
the same small mountain village in the Kharpert region of Armenia. One
was a Genocide survivor; the other was a "gamavor" or volunteer from
America who served in the Armenian Legion or Legion d’Orient.

This special collection will significantly expand the holdings of
the Armenian National Institute (ANI), which has been serving as
the research facility of the AGMA. ANI is already the beneficiary
of the oral history project conducted by the Armenian Assembly of
America in the 1980s, which also sponsored in the 1990s, the first
comprehensive collection of 37,000 pages of U.S. documents from the
National Archives issued on microfiche with a 476-page guide to the
documents, both published by Chadwyck-Healey, Inc. Over the years, ANI
has also acquired important archival holdings from around the world.

Le Clezio — Who’S He?

LE CLEZIO — WHO’S HE?
By David L. Ulin, [email protected]

Los Angeles Times
October 10, 2008
CA

This year’s Nobel laureate for literature is little-known in the
States. Perhaps this is evidence of our bias. Or maybe it’s a product
of the Swedish Academy’s willful dismissal of U.S. writers.

If the selection of French writer Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio as
the 2008 Nobel literature laureate has anything to tell us, it’s that
Horace Engdahl means what he says.

Last week, Engdahl, the Swedish Academy’s permanent secretary, called
American literary culture "too isolated, too insular. They don’t
translate enough and don’t really participate in the big dialogue of
literature" — comments widely seen in the United States as evidence
of the insularity of the Nobel itself and proof that American writers
would be shut out again.

The last American to win the prize was Toni Morrison in 1993;
since then, recipients have included Poland’s Wislawa Szymborska,
Italy’s Dario Fo, Chinese-born Gao Xingjian and Austria’s Elfriede
Jelinek. That such authors are not household names has led to charges
that the Nobel committee is willfully obscure, or worse, motivated
by political considerations.

Certainly, the last three winners — Britain’s Harold Pinter,
whose acceptance speech excoriated the Bush administration’s Iraq
policy; Orhan Pamuk, who faced criminal prosecution (later dropped)
in his native Turkey for speaking out about the Armenian genocide;
and British citizen Doris Lessing, an early and committed feminist
who campaigned against apartheid and for nuclear disarmament — are
political as well as literary figures, although there’s no question
about the quality and engagement of their work.

It’s hard to say where Le Clezio fits into all this; I’ve never read
his books. In fact, until Thursday morning, I’d never heard of him
— and I’m not alone. Harold Augenbraum, executive director of the
National Book Foundation, which administers the National Book Awards,
said the same thing, as did David Kipen, literature director of the
National Endowment for the Arts.

On the one hand, that might seem to support Engdahl’s claims
of American isolationism and insularity, but I’d suggest this
unfamiliarity cuts both ways. How do we make the case for Le Clezio
as representative of the best that literature has to offer when so
many are unacquainted with his work?

I don’t mean to equate popularity with quality; some of the best-known
Nobel winners (Pearl S. Buck, Rudyard Kipling) are not the most
exemplary on the page.

And, to be fair, Le Clezio does seem intriguing; an "irregular"
resident of Albuquerque — he has taught, on and off, at the University
of New Mexico — he is fascinated by the notion of borders, both
real and metaphorical, and has written nonfiction about the American
Southwest and Mexico.

But if this makes him very much a writer of the moment, reflective,
as Augenbraum suggests, "of important themes in immigrant literature
that may really resonate with American readers," his selection brings
us back to an elusive question: What is the purpose of the Nobel Prize?

The same could be asked of all awards, which have a veneer of authority
when, in fact, they’re as subjective as their judges. Just look at
Engdahl, whose statement that "Europe still is the center of the
literary world" reveals a cultural blindness as pervasive as anything
he accuses American writers of.

"I’d be more inclined to take Engdahl at his word," Kipen writes in
an e-mail, "if his championing of European literature didn’t also
ignore all the great writing coming from the rest of the planet just
now. Africa, India and China, to name just three not inconsiderable
land masses, are producing wonderful stuff."

Augenbraum takes a more nuanced position: "I think the uproar is
unfortunate because it diminishes the award. Without the Nobel
committee, would we be reading [Hungary’s] Imre Kertesz or Elfriede
Jelinek? Kudos to them for introducing these writers to us."

He’s got a point; awards juries pluck books and authors from obscurity
all the time. That’s part of the idea: to bring deserving writers to
new readers. To say: You ought to pay attention to this.

The Nobel, though — or so the argument goes — is different;
it carries a weight, an authority, that most awards don’t have. In
Slate last week, critic Adam Kirsch wrote: "Unless and until [Philip]
Roth gets the Nobel Prize, there’s no reason for Americans to pay
attention to any insults from the Swedes."

By such a standard, the choice of Le Clezio can’t help but be read
through a political filter, as payback for our insensitivity. But if
that’s true, then so is the opposite: that the expectation by readers
and critics in the U.S. that the award must go to an American is more
than a little arrogant, our own form of cultural hegemony.

I agree with Kirsch about Roth’s significance, but that doesn’t mean
the Swedish Academy owes him anything. There are plenty of significant
authors (Nigeria’s Chinua Achebe, for instance, or Mexico’s Carlos
Fuentes) who have never received the award, for reasons that have
nothing to do with national identity.

In fact, the two most prominent American Nobel candidates this year
— Roth and Joyce Carol Oates — both seem unlikely laureates; Roth
because he has actively lobbied for the award (which the committee
is known to resist) and Oates because, to be frank, she’s just not
good enough.

There’s more to the Nobel Prize, in other words, than filling out a
resume, which is exactly as it ought to be.

Of course, the danger of giving this kind of prize to a writer few
have heard of is that, like the uproar that preceded it, this too can
diminish the award. It’s what we might call the Sarah Palin effect:
Does the out-of-nowhere candidate open up the playing field or simply
reveal the process as inherently flawed?

This is not the first time such an issue has come up in regard to
the Nobel. In 2005, Knut Ahnlund, a prize juror, resigned in protest
over Jelinek’s selection the year before, calling her work "whining,
unenjoyable public pornography" that "has not only done irreparable
damage to all progressive forces, it has also confused the general
view of literature as an art."

Strong stuff, but at least it stirred up a reaction. The real question
about Le Clezio’s Nobel Prize is whether anyone will care.

Hilda Tchoboian And Peter Semneby Discuss EU’s Caucasus Policy

HILDA TCHOBOIAN AND PETER SEMNEBY DISCUSS EU’S CAUCASUS POLICY

Noyan Tapan

Oc t 9, 2008

BRUSSELS, OCTOBER 9, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. Peter Semneby,
the EU special envoy to the South Caucasus, and Hilda Tchoboian,
the Chairperson of the European Armenian Federation, held a meeting
on 24 September in the framework of the regular consultations that
take place between the Euro-Armenian NGO and EU institutions.

The main focus of their talks was the recent geopolitical unrest in the
South Caucasus, the renewed interest in improvement of Turkey-Armenia
relations, and the challenges faced by Georgia’s ethnic Armenian
population.

The interlocutors reiterated their common interest in eventually
seeing the normalization of regional cooperation in South Caucasus,
particularly in the wake of the Georgian crisis. The President of
the European Armenian Federation, however, informed Mr. Semneby of
her organization’s scepticism about Turkey’s proposed "Caucasian
Platform for Stability and Cooperation," noting that, until now,
Turkey has primarily been a destabilizing factor in the region, as
evidenced by its blockade of Armenia and its pro-Azerbaijani bias in
the Karabagh conflict.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=118032

"Exracted Products Purchased Under Shadow"

"EXTRACTED PRODUCTS PURCHASED UNDER SHADOW"

Panorama.am
20:25 08/10/2008

By the order of the President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan the supervision
service has conducted an investigation in the exploited minings located
in the administrative territory of Yerevan and nearby, reported the
press service of the President’s Administration.

According to the source, the results of the study have been discussed
during a consultation at the President. The Prime Minister, the Head
of Staff, the Ministers of Energy and Natural Resources, Economy,
Environmental Protection, the Mayor of Yerevan, the Chairman of Real
Estate Cadastre, the heads of State Revenues Committee were also
present at the meeting.

The President said that such checkings should be conducted often,
in order to struggle against shadow, corruption. Hovhannes Hovsepyan,
the head of the Supervision Service announced that according to the
results of the study the extracts have been kept and their revenues
hided under shadow.

The President of Armenia encouraged all the responsible bodies to
take appropriate measures to meet the challenge.

Lennmarker To Discuss Karabakh Process During A Visit To Russia, Tur

LENNMARKER TO DISCUSS KARABAKH PROCESS DURING A VISIT TO RUSSIA, TURKEY

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.10.2008 15:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly’s rapporteur on
South Ossetia and Nagorno Karabakh, Mr. Goran Lennmarker is arriving
in Moscow today to discuss the conflicts in Nagorno Karabakh and
South Ossetia.

A new guideline should be found for resolution of conflicts in Nagorno
Karabakh and South Ossetia, the OSCE PA rapporteur said.

He also informed that he will pay a visit to Turley to hold talks
on the Karabakh process. "I am particularly interested in Turkey’s
mediation between Azerbaijan and Armenia as well as in its Caucasus
Platform," Mr Lennmarker said, the Azeri Press Agency reports.

Yerevan State Medical University got an access to OVID SP

Yerevan State Medical University
Contact: Astghik Markosyan
Tel: +37410 547263
Email: [email protected]

YSMU got an access to OVID SP

We are happy to announce that from September 2008 YSMU has an access to
OVID.

The administration and the community of YSMU express their gratitude to
Armenian Fund USA, which made this remarkably important for the academic
institution system, available for our students and professors.

Founded in 1988, Ovid is used across the globe by librarians, researchers,
clinicians and students from leading colleges and universities; medical
schools; academic research libraries, hospitals, pharmaceutical,
biotechnology companies and clinical practice. OVID help make research
smarter, faster, and more effective by providing powerful information search
and discovery platforms (OvidSP and SilverPlatter) to access premier
electronic content, including a growing list of 1,200 journals, over 500
books, and more than 200 databases, with innovative technology tools and
specialized services to browse, search, retrieve, and analyze critical
information.

`Access to OVID for our university is an incredible chance to support our
researchers and individual work of our students ` said Prof. Magda
Melkonyan, Vice-rector for Research at YSMU.

`It is essential for YSMU to have access to such a system, we are deeply
thankful to Armenian Fund for such incredible opportunity’ said Dr. Gevorg
Yaghjyan, Vice-rector for postgraduate education and CME at the Yerevan
State Medical University.

Access to OVID system is a huge step for YSMU to integrate more in the
international research and healthcare community. It is a priceless tool for
our researchers and students to support their work and to make it easier and
more successful.

108 Georgians And 9 Ossetians Receive Right To Live In Armenia

108 GEORGIANS AND 9 OSSETIANS RECEIVE RIGHT TO LIVE IN ARMENIA

Panorama.am
16:41 01/10/2008

In the aftermath of Georgian-Ossetian conflict 108 Georgians and
9 Ossetians have applied to the Republic of Armenia to get a right
to be defended by our country and to live here. Currently they are
under the defense of Armenia and they’ll receive a right to live in
the country, said Gagik Eganyan, the head of migration department of
the Ministry of Urban Development in a press conference today.

"We though the number of people who want to live in Armenia would
be higher but, fortunately, the military activities were stopped and
many of them stayed in their countries," said Mr. Eganyan.

According to him in those days many wanted to be transferred under
the defense of Armenia but after the military activities were stopped
they returned to their countries.

Vartan Oskanian: Strengthening Of Armenian Statehood Main Goal Of Ci

VARTAN OSKANIAN: STRENGTHENING OF ARMENIAN STATEHOOD MAIN GOAL OF CIVILITAS FOUNDATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.10.2008 15:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The main task of Civilitas Foundation is to
strengthen Armenian statehood.

"The Foundation will analyze the developments in the Armenian foreign
policy and consider democracy issues," ex-Foreign Minister of Armenia,
promoter of the Foundation Vartan Oskanian told a news conference
today.

"We will deal with regional problems and hold conferences and
round-table discussions on urgent issues. Publication of weekly and
monthly newsletter is also envisaged," he said.

"Civilitas will sponsor agriculture programs and provide scholarship
for Armenian students abroad," Mr Oskanian added.