New Premier Introduced To Armenian Government

NEW PREMIER INTRODUCED TO ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT

Interfax News Agency
April 10 2008
Russia

President Serzh Sargsyan introduced newly appointed Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan to the national government on Thursday.The appointment
was made on April 9, and the Armenian parliament accepted Sargsyan’s
resignation from the position of the Central Bank chairman earlier
in the day.

The government will fulfill ambitious plans under the guidance of
the new premier, the president said. The new premier said he favored
teamwork.

The president thanked the government for the joint work. He also
signed an ordinance, which dismissed the incumbent government, on
April 9. Incumbent ministers will perform their duties until a new
government is formed.

Sargsyan was inaugurated for president on April 9.

In line with the Armenian constitution, the new government will be
formed within 20 days of the appointment of the new premier.

Tigran Sargsyan was born in Kirovakan (currently Vanadzor) on January
29, 1960. He is married, with two children. He is not a party member.

Sargsyan is a reserve officer. He graduated from the Voznesensky
Finance and Economics Institute in Leningrad in 1983 and did post-
graduate studies at the International Law Institute in Washington
and the World Bank’s Economic Development Institute.

Sargsyan was the chairman of the Association of Armenian Banks in
1995-1998 and chaired the Central Bank in March 1998 – April 2008.

Judgement To Be Pronounced On April 14

JUDGEMENT TO BE PRONOUNCED ON APRIL 14

A1+
11 April, 2008

The Appellate Court is due to pronounce a judgement on GALA TV Company
at 2:00, April 14. Today the Court held a hearing on the case.

The chief executive of the TV Company, Karine Harutiunian, informed
A1+ that the proceedings had been held without "major" incidents.

"The representative of the City Hall didn’t want the proceedings to
be shot. Nevertheless, the Court permitted shooting as his arguments
were groundless," she said.

Karine Harutiunian says the Court was loyal and well-disposed. Even
her fellow colleagues noticed it.

To note, the Company challenges the verdict of First Instance Court
of Gyumri under which the disputed television tower belongs to the
plaintiff – the City Hall of Gyumri.

Survivors Remember Armenian Genocide

SURVIVORS REMEMBER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
By Jessica Lyons

Queens Courier
/04/09/news/local/news36.txt
April 10 2008
NY

As the 93rd anniversary of the Armenian genocide approaches, the few
remaining survivors continue to tell their stories in order to make
sure that the world knows what happened and does not soon forget
about it.

The anniversary is commemorated on April 24, which marks the date
that the Armenian Genocide began in 1915. From 1915 to 1923, 1.5
million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire were killed by Young Turks.

An additional 500,000 were exiled.

Survivor Onorik Eminian, now 95 and living at the NY Home for the
Armenian Aged in Flushing, was just a little girl playing ball
outside when the Turks invaded her home in Izmir. Two Turks entered
her family’s home, pulling her hair and slapping her as they asked
where her father was. They took Eminian’s father away with them,
but the Turks returned to her house.

"They killed my father and they brought his jacket and pants (back),
all (covered with) blood," Eminian said.

Eminian saw her mother and grandmother shot and killed and her baby
brother thrown and killed. She was also hit with a rifle butt that
she still has scars from.

Eventually, the Red Cross took Eminian in and placed her in an
orphanage. She later went to Greece and moved to the United States
in 1930.

Born in Palu on December 22, 1909, Perouz Kalousdian was six years
old when the war started. One of the first things she said happened
was all of the men were taken away and never seen again.

"After that, they took everything away from us," said Kalousdian,
also a resident of the home in Flushing. "I’ll never, never forget."

Charlotte Kechejian, a 95-year-old survivor who was born in Nikhda,
remembers walking through the desert with her mother, feeling tired,
thirsty and hungry. Her mother kept promising her that it would only
be a little while longer and that in the end she would have comfort
and happiness.

"Thank God I had my mother," said Kechejian, who came to the United
States with her mother when she was 10 and is now living at the NY
Home for the Armenian Aged. "If I didn’t have my mother, how would
I have had courage (at) eight years old?"

Survivor Arsalos Dadir’s father was also killed. Being that her
family was wealthy, Dadir, now 94, and her mother, grandmother and
great-grandmother were able to find safety with a wealthy Turkish
family that they were on good terms with. The family eventually
moved to Constantinople, where Dadir married and raised two children,
moving to the United States later in life. She now also lives at the
home in Flushing.

Armenian genocide expert Dr. Dennis R. Papazian estimates that there
are roughly 200 to 300 survivors still living in the United States.

On Sunday, April 27, the Armenian genocide will be commemorated with an
event in Times Square at 2 p.m. There will be free bus transportation
to and from. In Queens, there will be a bus at Baruyr’s at 40th Street
and Queens Boulevard.

http://www.queenscourier.com/articles/2008

Armenian President Sworn In After Months Of Unrest Over Election

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SWORN IN AFTER MONTHS OF UNREST OVER ELECTION

Earthtimes
April 9 2008
UK

Moscow/Yerevan – Armenia’s President Serzh Sarkisian was sworn into
office Wednesday after months of violent protests in the capital since
his February 19 election in a contested vote. The inauguration included
a military parade in the capital Yerevan’s Liberty Square, scene of
major demonstrations led by opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian
after elections in the small Caucasus of 3.2 million.

"You had the right not to vote for me," Sarkisian told those present
for Wednesday’s event. "But I’m your president."

He said that as president he would "do my utmost to reach a mutual
understanding in society and rid it of polarization and vulgar strife."

The opposition has been carrying out daily protests against the
election results, but has taken care to limit demonstrations to less
than 100 and launch them from activities such as chess in order to
bypass government restrictions after a state of emergency was declared
in the capital.

Outgoing President Robert Kocharian imposed emergency rule that banned
mass gatherings and censored the media after a night of violent clashes
between police and opposition protestors left eight dead on March 1.

The US and British embassies in Yerevan Wednesday warned citizens of
possible violence in the capital.

"We wish to remind American citizens that even demonstrations intended
to be peaceful can turn confrontational and possibly escalate into
violence," The US embassy said in a statement.

During the inauguration ceremony, about 100 opposition members gathered
to erect a monument to those who died in the overnight protests,
Interfax news agency reported.

Supporters of opposition leader and first president Ter-Petrosian
held banners reading "Fight till the End" and "Levon President",
while others stood silently with candles and pictures of the dead
and those currently held in detention.

Armenian authorities have confirmed that over 60 opposition activists
are being held on charges of orchestrating unrest.

Western powers fear instability in the strategic region could disrupt
gas pipeline routes from the Caspian and further undermine a fragile
security situation with Armenia’s neighbours Georgia, Azerbaijan
and Turkey.

Sarkisian is expected to keep to the line set by his political mentor
incumbent Kocharian during his decade at the helm – specifically
strong ties with Russia.

ANC-WR Welcomes New Chairman Vicken Sonentz-Papazian

Armenian National Committee – Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918
Fax: 818.246.7353
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
April 7, 2008
Contact: Ani Garabedian

ANC-WR Welcomes New Chairman Vicken Sonentz-Papazian

Los Angeles, CA – The Armenian National Committee – Western Region
(ANC-WR) this week welcomed long time activist Vicken Sonentz-Papazian
as its new chairman. Originally from Watertown, Massachusetts,
Papazian has been involved with the Armenian National Committee of
America (ANCA) since 1985.

"I look forward to building on the impressive successes of the
ANC-WR," stated Papazian. "This is a great opportunity to work with
the board of directors and community leaders," he added.

In addition to working at the ANCA office in Washington D.C. from
1985-1987, Papazian also served as the ANCA Executive Director from
1991-1993. He joined ANC-WR as the executive director from 1995-2000
shortly after.

Papazian, who has been a licensed attorney since 1991, is admitted to
practice law in California and the District of Columbia. He has been
instrumental in promoting Armenian issues on Capitol Hill, within the
United Nations and on the state, county and local levels.

The Armenian National Committee – Western Region is the largest and
most influential Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in
the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of
offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States
and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANC-WR advances
the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of
issues.

www.anca.org

Book Review: ‘Draining The Sea: A Novel’ By Micheline Aharonian Marc

BOOK REVIEW: ‘DRAINING THE SEA: A NOVEL’ BY MICHELINE AHARONIAN MARCOM
By Jane Ciabattari

Los Angeles Times
April 4 2008
CA

An evocation of the Guatemalan genocide of the 1980s and its echoes
of the Armenian genocide in the early years of the 20th century.

IT’s unsurprising that Micheline Aharonian Marcom, whose first two
novels, "Three Apples Fell From Heaven" and "The Daydreaming Boy,"
explore the massacre of Armenians nearly a century ago, has turned
her attention to Guatemala.

She is among a growing number of contemporary novelists writing about
the inhumane landscape of genocide. The title of her new novel evokes
the military’s savage "scorched earth" policy toward Guatemala’s Maya
population during the most gruesome years of that country’s 36-year
internal conflict. About 200,000 Guatemalans, mostly Maya, were killed,
most with incredible cruelty by paramilitary "death squads."

"The guerrilla is the fish. The people are the sea," noted Gen.

Efrain Ríos Montt, who led the 1982 coup that precipitated some of
the worst atrocities. "If you cannot catch the fish, you have to drain
the sea." (The phrase is rooted in a pronouncement of Mao Tse-tung’s:
"The guerrilla must move amongst the people as a fish swims in the
sea.") Ríos Montt was simply building upon decades-old policy; in
1970, one of his predecessors, President Carlos Arana Osorio, made a
similarly chilling comment: "If it is necessary to turn the country
into a cemetery in order to pacify it, I will not hesitate to do so."

ADVERTISEMENT

Marcom’s incantatory voice shows promise in the opening pages of
"Draining the Sea." Her unnamed narrator is a lonely American man,
half-Armenian, who collects garbage, which often includes canine
corpses, in Los Angeles. "He drives along the streets of this city,
to the sea and up the tarmac hills, along the remote spoors of the
Santa Monica Mountains, which are today the 405 Freeway, and here he
is a driver and the world is seen and separated by glass, plastics,
metal, and it is speed he seeks, and a girl also. . . . " He fantasizes
obsessively about an Ixil girl he calls Marta, brought to him in 1983,
in the basement of the Polytechnic School, in Guatemala City, where it
seems he was complicit in the interrogation and torture of suspects:
"I am aroused when I see you and when I see you I burn you with my
cigarettes and I cut off your hands before I kill you, tomorrow,
because I have been officially trained and educated in these things,
because it is my job."

As the novel progresses, he addresses Marta with endearments,
speculates about her after assignations with prostitutes, compares
her to his Armenian mother, descended from survivors of the Armenian
genocide. He begs Marta’s forgiveness, implores her sympathy, pities
himself: "Love me back, come back to me, make your way back from
the dead corners of your republic and the interstices of historical
rendering where you have been: buried: please return; I am sorry,
I swear it, sorrow’s sorrow is my fleshy foolish history. . . "
This soon strains the limits of a reader’s empathy.

Marcom’s fractured narrative — mixing shards of the narrator’s
memories (rape, torture, dismemberment) with images of other atrocities
and the narrator’s familiar comforts (ice cream, reality TV, his "green
and padded armchair") — becomes increasingly incoherent. By my third
reading, I wished for a search engine that could unwind the narrative
knots and tease out their strands so I could make sense of them.

An accompanying timeline signals the author’s overarching intent. She
begins with 10,000 BC. ("Seafaring culture in modern-day southern
California") and moves forward, through the centuries, to the 1915-17
massacre of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire and on to the Guatemalan
slaughter. She includes maps and photographs (of the Polytechnic,
where torture and interrogations took place; the cemetery in Acul,
site of a massacre of Maya villagers; the narrator’s ancestral village
of Kharphert).

Emphasizing the facts behind her fiction, Marcom samples "collected
phrases" from key documents, including "Guatemala: Never Again!,"
the April 1998 report of the Human Rights Office of the Guatemalan
Archdiocese, which broke the silence with heart-rending testimony
from survivors and witnesses, and "Guatemala: Memory of Silence"
(1999), the 3,600-page report of the U.N. Commission for Historical
Clarification, which confirmed the genocide. In an afterword, she
notes, "As stipulated by the peace accords, the CEH [Commission
for Historical Clarification] was not allowed to name individuals
responsible for human rights crimes in its report. This book is,
in many ways, an interrogation into untold or denied histories —
it is, however, a work of fiction."

Despite her worthy intent, Marcom’s ambition here overshoots her
execution. Perhaps she needed more time to distill her material. It
is not an easy matter to push against the boundaries of language to
express unimaginable horror. More likely, her design is flawed.

Yoking the Guatemalan genocide with the Armenian one — and with
the extermination of Southern California’s indigenes, the building
of the Los Angeles aqueduct, the transformation of the Los Angeles
River into a concrete "river freeway" and the alienating effects of
modern life — is a tall order.

And there are no glimpses of courage amid the depravity, no recognition
that human rights workers, survivors, witnesses, investigators
(including judges) and at least one brave bishop risked their lives
to extricate the truth from a labyrinth of lies, cover-ups, terror
and intimidation.

"Draining the Sea" is a noble effort but so flawed as to be
largely unreadable. A redeeming factor: It spurred me to reread
"The Art of Political Murder," Francisco Goldman’s 2007 account of
the Guatemalan military’s murder of Bishop Juan Gerardi, two days
after he released "Guatemala: Never Again!," and Victor Perera’s
"Unfinished Conquest"(1995), an eloquent history of the decimation
of four Maya villages in paroxysms of state-sponsored terrorism. I
recommend them both.

Jane Ciabattari, author of the story collection "Stealing the Fire,"
is president of the National Book Critics Circle.

–Boundary_(ID_SY5ZffZqzZrlPd5D8Dx1Rg)–

Zharangutiun Has Never Discussed Issue Of Renouncing Mandates, Laris

ZHARANGUTIUN HAS NEVER DISCUSSED ISSUE OF RENOUNCING MANDATES, LARISA ALAVERDIAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan
April 4, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 4, NOYAN TAPAN. Today society is in the condition of
expectation, as the opposition does not undertake active actions. Under
the circumstance, as Larisa Alaverdian, a member of the RA National
Assembly Zharangutiun (Heritage) faction, stated at the April 4 press
conference, the arrests carried out at present are strange, as they
cause more questions than answers. "Doing so the authorities either
try to show that they are strong or they are not afraid of further
aggravations," L. Alaverdian said.

Speaking about the proposal made by the Council of Europe Committee
of Ministers Monitoring Ago Group to the RA authorities, the deputy
said that they proposed nothing new: it had been spoken about at the
NA sittings, but the authorities and media have never responded to
it. While the latters give a more active response to only proposals
of international institutions.

Touching upon the issue of Zharangutiun’s renouncing its mandates,
L. Alaverdian said that this issue has been never discussed in the
faction mentioning that it is only discussed by media. According to
the deputy, it would be more logical if that issue were raised on
the part of illegally elected deputies. And Zharangutiun, according
to her, as the only parliamentary opposition should be the "apply of
the authorities eye."

Bryza Hopes For An End To Karabakh Process

BRYZA HOPES FOR AN END TO KARABAKH PROCESS

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.04.2008 16:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ OSCE Mink Group U.S. Co-chair, Ambassador Matthew
Bryza thinks that the Karabakh talks will be continued.

"We have known Serzh Sargsyan for a long time and think that he is
the person with whom we can continue talks for resolution of the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict," he said. "The leaders of Armenia and
Azerbaijan will have the possibility to meet after inauguration of
the RA President. And we are awaiting this meeting."

"Despite some tension, Azerbaijan agrees to continuation of talks
within the OSCE MG format. I am hopeful that the process will come
to an end soon," the intermediary said, the RA government’s press
office reports.

ArmRosgasprom: Armenian Gas Network Has 529231 Subscribers Now

ARMROSGASPROM: ARMENIAN GAS NETWORK HAS 529231 SUBSCRIBERS NOW

ARKA
April 2, 2008

YEREVAN, April 2. /ARKA/. ArmRosgasprom’s press office told ARKA News
Agency on Wednesday that the gas network has 529231 subscribers now.

The number of gas consumers grew by 2872 in March alone. The 200
000th subscriber joined Yerevan’s network on March 31.

The number of ArmRosgasprom’s potential subscribers grew 10.1% and
actual consumers 17.6% in 2007.

ArmRosgasprom enjoys monopoly on Russian natural gas importation to
Armenia and distribution it at the country’s market. The company is
established in 1997.

Its capital totals $580 million.

The company shareholders are Gasprom (57.59%), Armenian Energy Ministry
34.7% and Itera (7.71%).

Armenia’s Former President Presented His Own Interpretation Of March

ARMENIA’S FORMER PRESIDENT PRESENTED HIS OWN INTERPRETATION OF MARCH 1 EVENTS TO AGO GROUP

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.03.2008 15:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ AGO group delegates met with Armenia’s leadership
and opposition, Swedish Ambassador to the CoE, head of AGO group Per
Sjogren told a news conference in Yerevan.

"We had a meeting with Armenia’s former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan
on March 30. By Mr Ter-Petrosyan’s request we attended his
residence. He presented his interpretation of the March 1 events,
when the police dispersed the opposition rally. We held this meeting to
have a clear picture of what had happened," he said. "Mr Ter-Petrosyan
agreed to our proposals and described them as the best scenario to
improve the situation," the Swedish diplomat said.