And heaven knows I’m miserable now

The Herald (Glasgow)
February 19, 2005

And heaven knows I’m miserable now

HANNAH McGILL

IT’S bone-chillingly cold, with sleet pounding cheerlessly out of a
slate-grey sky – so it must be Berlin in February.

It’s hard to believe fewer deals aren’t struck at Berlin than Cannes
simply because of the negative psychological effects of the weather.
One imagines moguls pondering: “Shall I make this promising young
film-maker a star and a millionaire overnight, or drag myself back to
my hotel over slush-covered pavements and go to bed with some heiss
schokolade and a grumpy disposition?”

Still, it’s more than just the weather that gets a poor press this
year. Regis Wargnier’s festival opener Man to Man gets as good a
response as any film featuring Joseph Fiennes can reasonably expect
these days – it’s universally panned. There’s more interest in David
Mackenzie’s third feature, Asylum, a doomy, enigmatic love story
based on the novel by Patrick McGrath. Natasha Richardson is a
psychiatrist’s wife who moves on to the premises of a mental
hospital, falling into a passionate and inevitably destructive love
affair with an inmate. Ian McKellen is excellent as a creepy doctor
whose interest in his patients seems to extend beyond the
professional: “My particular interest is sexual pathology and the
associated problems.”

The same might be said of Mackenzie, director of The Last Great
Wilderness and Young Adam, and screenwriter Patrick Marber, who
penned Closer. At the press conference, however, Mackenzie claims his
desire to work with Marber was, in fact, triggered by the discovery
they shared a passion for Joy Division.

“We’re all miserable people and we hate ourselves, ” the director
cheerfully notes of cast and crew.

It must be catching. Faces proceed to fall – along with the
temperature and snow – over the next few days as a distinctly
uninspiring selection of competition films reveals itself. Andre
Techine’s Changing Times features the iconic pairing of Catherine
Deneuve and Gerard Depardieu and is diverting enough, but the
strongest impression it leaves is that Deneuve needs to lay off the
collagen.

Broadly, the competition films are notable for their solemnity, their
conventionality of form and their lack of obvious commercial
prospects. There’s acclaim for Julia Jentsch’s performance in the
German Second World War drama Sophie Scholl: The Final Days, the
story of an anti-Nazi activist; but the film itself is talky and
staid.

The Holocaust is examined in harrowing Schindler’s List-style detail
in the two-and-a-half hour Hungarian epic Fateless. Two films – Terry
George’s Oscar-nominated Hotel Rwanda and Raoul Peck’s Some Time In
April – deal with the Rwandan genocide. Hany AbuAssad’s Paradise Now
follows the fate of two Palestinian suicide bombers. Robert
Guedeguian’s The Last Mitterand is an oppressively respectful
portrait of the late French president.

Mike Mills’s charming Sundance prize-winner Thumbsucker provides a
rare moment of good cheer, but Wes Anderson’s The Life Aquatic with
Steve Zissou leaves disappointment and indifference in its wake.
Christian Petzold’s Ghosts is a highlight of a small-scale kind –
subtle, enigmatic, beautifully performed – but I stomp out of
Taiwanese director Tsai Mingliang’s The Wayward Cloud after as many
yucky, flip, misogynistic minutes as I can stand (about 45) .

As is often the case, there’s better material to be found in the less
prestigious sections. Ravishingly shot by the living legend that is
Christopher Doyle, Fruit Chan’s daring horror Dumplings is a
remarkable conjunction of stunningly elegant imagery and
extraordinarily sick content. At certain points, I feel in genuine
danger of vomiting.

Tickets, a three-parter with sections by directors Ermanno Olmi,
Abbas Kiarostami and Ken Loach, is patchy but entertaining.

Kiarastami’s section is brilliant and the Loach part, which stars
some young actors from his Greenock-set Sweet Sixteen as Celtic fans
on an eventful train ride to Rome, has copious foul-mouthed Weegie
charm. In Love + Hate, British director Dominic Savage revisits the
Romeo and Juliet territory that Loach covered in Ae Fond Kiss; it’s
straightforward stuff, but brilliantly performed by an unknown cast.
I’m hugely taken with the lively, forceful underworld drama Gamblers,
from French/Armenian director Frederic Balekdjian, and with Malgosia
Szumowska’s ravishing and original Stranger, from Poland. Beyond the
confines of the screening rooms, I get cheered up by a dinner with
Brazilian directorWalter Salles.

The idealistic, egalitarian, peasant-hugging ethos of The Motorcycle
Diaries is all very well, but Salles is a living, breathing reminder
that some people are just more equal than others. At 48, the man
looks like a Levi’s model, has a young wife, Maria, so beautiful you
want to genuf lect, and talks about cinema with the knowledge of a
scholar and the passion of a fan.

Elsewhere, a chat with Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, the directors
of the documentary Inside Deep Throat, proves similarly illuminating.
They reveal that their original plan was to make a Linda Lovelace
biopic, starring Mariah Carey. “We think she has one good performance
in her, ” they claim.

Now, that’s the sort of thinking outside the – ahem – box that this
rather staid and chilly festival could have used more of . . .

Tbilisi: CIS faces inevitable transformation

CIS faces inevitable transformation

The Messenger, Georgia
Feb 18 2005

The successful velvet revolution in Ukraine has paved the way for
great changes in former Soviet countries, as it was further proof
that Russia is losing its dominating influence in the Commonwealth
of Independent States.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, uniting former Soviet
republics in the CIS was an effort on the part of Moscow to retain
its imperialist grasp on these countries. Many in Russia hoped that
this union would allow Moscow to establish a sphere of influence and
eventually lead to the reintegration of the other republics.

Although Russia was not able to realize these plans completely, over
time the other states have formed two groups. On one side countries
firmly within Moscow’s orbit, like Belarus and Armenia and on the other
side – countries that try to distance themselves from Russia and seek
closer ties with the West. Among these countries is Georgia, which
despite being a member of the CIS, faces constant pressure from Russia.

Nowadays when discussing the CIS, the probability of further velvet
revolutions inevitably comes up. In particular, Kyrgyzstan will hold
parliamentary elections on March 6 and Moldova on February 27. Some
have already labeled anticipated demonstrations in Kyrgyzstan
the “Tulip Revolution,” as March 13, when the second round of the
parliamentary elections is planned, is the peak of the blooming period
of the mountain tulips.

Russia is anxiously observing the possibility of the Kirghiz velvet
revolution. As the Russian newspaper Argumeniti i Fakti states,
if the Tulip Revolution is actually enacted, similar revolutions
may take place in neighboring Central Asian republics. There is
no doubt among Russian analysts that these revolutions are of an
“anti-Russian” nature, but there is serious difference of opinion
as to how to resist them. Moscow did everything in its power to halt
the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, but to no avail. At the same time,
the conditions in Kyrgyzstan are completely different in comparison
to those in Georgia and the Ukraine.

The success of the Ukrainian Orange Revolution was greeted with
enthusiasm in Moldova. President of Moldova Vladimir Voronin was the
only president of the CIS countries who attended the inauguration
of Viktor Yushchenko. Many in Moldova believe that the revolution in
neighboring Ukraine will isolate the separatist regime in Transdnestria
and lead to the restoration of Moldovan territorial integrity.

But Konstantine Zatulin, a member of the Russian Duma and also the
chairman of the institution of the CIS countries, was quoted by the
Russian newspaper Argumenti i Facti as saying that the situation
there is very complicated as Ukrainian nationalist forces also have
territorial claims on Transdnestria. This statement can easily be
interpreted as another effort on the part of Moscow to start an ethnic
conflict in post-Soviet space.

The Ukrainian revolution was the heaviest blow for neo-imperial minded
Russians. This event marks the end of Russian hopes for reintegrating
CIS countries and the beginning of an era where Ukraine will provide
serious opposition to Moscow within the commonwealth.

The position of Georgia towards the CIS is of special importance. For
years after the fall of the Soviet Union, Georgia refused to join the
commonwealth, but after defeat in Abkhazia then-President Shevardnadze
agreed to involve Georgia in the alliance. At that time, many believed
that CIS membership would lead to Russia letting up on pressure to
Georgia and return Abkhazia and Ossetia. Unfortunately, this turned
out to be a laughable misconception.

Due to Russia’s repeated efforts to violate the sovereignty of Georgia,
many consider it necessary to pull out of the CIS. Parliament even
adopted a relevant proclamation, but the Shevardnadze administration
resisted, saying that though CIS membership brings no good to the
country, it does no harm either and that it was necessary for Georgia
to use the CIS to express its own position. Nevertheless, Georgia’s
protests against the Kremlin at various CIS summits have yielded no
results over the years.

Mikheil Saakashvili has so far been “alone” at CIS summits, but
the appearance of Viktor Yushchenko should create quite a different
atmosphere there and possible revolutions in Kyrgyzstan and Moldova
could also radically change the balance of power in the commonwealth
as well.

Time is money =?UNKNOWN?Q?=28or?= why the world is queueing up to bu

Time is money (or why the world is queueing up to buy a £36,000 watch)

They adorn the wrists of pop stars and presidents, a footballer risked his
life for one and Silvio Berlusconi gives them away as gifts. Rose George reveals
what makes Franck Muller timepieces tick

Independent/UK
19 February 2005

It happened, as the best dramas do, in a men’s toilet. Precisely,
near the urinals of Funky Buddah, a Mayfair nightclub frequented by
celebrities and footballers, and where, in the early hours of 30 June
last year, minder Godfrey Kessie threatened Dwight Yorke and asked
for his watch. Not just any watch. A Conquistador King, as seen on
David Beckham’s wrist, complete with diamond-encrusted face, triaxial
tourbillon and carefully crafted complications and movements. And a
£36,000 price tag.

Yorke gave Kessie the watch, he told Southwark Crown Court in London
this week, then something got the better of him. Despite Kessie’s
greater bulk and height, and going against all personal safety rules,
he tackled the minder, despite being concerned for his life. He got
the watch back. Kessie, 25, from Wood Green in north London, is in
custody awaiting sentence after pleading guilty to robbery.

The question is, why did Yorke bother? The price tag is a couple of
kicks around the pitch, in footballer-salary terms. The Conquistador
had diamonds, but Yorke probably has a dozen more that do, too. He
risked his life because he was not just saving a watch. He was saving
a Franck Muller.

“Please don’t call it a watch,” says a Franck Muller watchmaker in
Switzerland, when I ask him about the watches he makes. “Please call
it a work of art.” These works of art, then, made by the Swiss watch
firm Franck Muller, wrap the wrists of David and Victoria Beckham. Sir
Elton John collects them; the entire Arsenal squad wears them. Colleen
McLoughlin bought a £15,000 one for Wayne Rooney, perhaps to make up
for the engagement ring flung at the squirrels. The Italian Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi, in a non-patriotic moment, gave one
worth £9,800 to President George Bush. And in an unusual display
of international unity, even the Russian President Vladimir Putin
has been spotted with a Franck Muller on his wrist. Politicians and
paparazzi fodder alike are prey to the exploding Art Deco numerals,
the mixed-up numbers of the Crazy Hours, the colours and stitching,
the sapphire-blue glass and diamonds.

That is just the bling. But beyond the glitter lies the story of
a revolution. The rise of Franck Muller, in the slow and slowly
maturing world of Swiss watch-making, has been spectacular. Most of
the venerable watchmaker houses – Patek Philippe, Jaeger-Le Coultre,
Zenith – have existed for decades, or centuries. Muller started his
company only 13 years ago, with five employees. He produced 12 watches
in his first year. Today, Franck Muller’s Watchland, an estate based
around a chateau and two additional buildings, is housed in the sweet
Swiss village of Genthod.

The setting is serene enough – Lake Geneva to one side, Mont Blanc
to the other – but it hides a busy business, including a team of 60
watchmakers, 12 jewellers and a fair amount of diamonds. Franck Muller
employs 550 people worldwide. The company produced 47,000 watches last
year, and 20 new models. Next month, to celebrate the 10th anniversary
of Muller’s famed Casablanca watch, the London celebrity jeweller
Theo Fennell will launch his latest Franck Muller collaboration,
the limited-edition, pale-green Nile. The most expensive Niles –
white gold with white diamond-set case, automatic movements – will
sell for £24,950, and the top numbers of the limited editions have
already been reserved by celebrities, even before the previews.

Fashion-driven covetousness aside, that is still not bad going for a
company that does not spend much on publicity or marketing (there are
no glossy pages in the right magazines; there is not even a dedicated
website). It is not bad, either, for a watch-maker who did not intend
to be one. Franck Muller – he’s a real man (unlike Patek Philippe),
with heavy eyebrows and plentiful hair – was born in 1958 and grew
up in Geneva. He did not know what he wanted to be, until, hanging
out at a local flea market, a watch expert noticed his interest in
timepieces. He suggested Franck went to Geneva’s watchmaking school,
L’École d’horlogerie, because there were not enough people to repair
antique watches, and it could be a good career. Franck took his
advice and found he was good at it. He had the manual dexterity
required to work with tiny, interlocking mechanisms. He had the
patience. By 1990 or so, he had backing, in the shape of Armenian
investors and his Armenian-Turkish-Swiss partner, Vartan Sirmakes.
Unlike most watchmakers working with the venerable Swiss houses,
conservative by nature and design, he also had flair.

“People don’t remember now,” says celebrity jeweller Theo Fennell,
who introduced Sir Elton and other big clients to Franck Muller. “But
14 years ago, the watch world was really boring. There were no big
watches, apart from divers’ watches. Everything was soulless and
really plain, a rehash of what had gone before. Franck Muller watches
were elegant, with a retro look. I immediately loved them. They
were different.”

They were also a salvation. By the 1980s, the Swiss mechanical watch
industry was in serious trouble. Cheap, easy to produce and more
accurate than the most complicated of mechanical mechanisms, the quartz
watch was destroying the Swiss mechanical watch industry. Watch houses
were reducing production. Muller began making watches at exactly the
right time. The climate began to change when in 1989, a Patek Philippe
Calibre 89, containing 1,728 parts and 33 functions, was sold at
auction for $3.7m (£1.9m). Vintage and unmodern was back, along with
as many complications as possible. A complication, in watch terms, is
one of three categories of mechanisms that add to the basic mechanism.

It can be additional hands with a timing function (second hands that
jump back, for example), or minute repeaters, or the astonishing
intricacy of a perpetual calendar, a device that fully rotates only
once every four years, and can calculate months with 28, 30 or 31
days, entirely mechanically. A “grand complication” encompasses all
three categories. Franck Muller, starting small in Geneva, found he
could do grand, and more.

In 1986, he produced his first watch. It had a tourbillon, a mechanism
patented in 1801 that was designed, via complicated balances and
springs, to correct inaccuracy caused by gravity. So tricky was the
tourbillon, only a few hundred had been made since the original patent,
but Muller mastered it. To the tourbillon, he added “jumping hours”,
where the hand jumps to the next hour after 60 seconds, and separate
dials for hour and minute hands. He pioneered his signature “exploding
numbers”, oversized, Art Deco numerals that are now copied worldwide.

They were not new; there had been other watch designs with similar
numerals, and other watch cases that were curved, like his. But the
combination became the Franck Muller signature, as did “Master of
Complications”, which he began to engrave on every watch case. This
was high self-praise indeed. It is a measure of his talent that in
the esoteric and fanatic world of watch-lovers, hardly anyone disputes
that he deserves it.

A watchmaker in Muller’s own Watchland certainly does not disagree. He
does not want to be named, he says, for reasons that are not clear,
but he is a watchmaker with 35 years’ experience, including nine
years at Franck Muller, and he does not show signs of wanting to
work anywhere else. He talks about how one tourbillon design requires
576 pieces in its movements. He points to the Master Banker, a watch
with several time zones, and says only the Franck Muller has hour and
minute hands on all the dials. “We make all our movements in-house,”
he says proudly, because for a watchmaker, this is important.

Most watchmakers buy the movements – the wheels and balances, the
mechanics that make the watch work – from outside firms, and modify
them in-house. Muller claims not to. As proof of how good he is,
Franck Muller Technowatch SPA has won 40 patents in 13 years.

But behind the complications of the watch, there was also proper
marketing talent. What sets Franck Muller apart, his anonymous
watchmaker says, “is that we are so dynamic. I’ve worked in watch
houses where it takes months for a decision to be made, because there’s
such a hierarchy. Here, we can get a prototype produced in a year,
from initial decision to the production.”

Nadine Broden, Muller’s marketing manager, says; “If customers or
agents make a suggestion about a trend or desire in the market, we
can respond much more quickly than other companies. We don’t waste
a long time on market research.”

They know, for instance, that south Asians love the pastel colours
of the Crazy Hours, and Arabs prefer diamonds. High-end business men
and bankers like the complications and the chronographs.

Everyone likes the prices. Not because they are cheap, but because
they’re not. Rich men – of which there were many, in those boom
days, and of which there are still enough – have a limited choice
of accessories. As portable status symbols, a watch worth several
hundred thousand dollars, encrusted or just complicated, became
unbeatable. Muller seized the zeitgeist and controlled it perfectly.

Muller is a young man, for a watchmaker, and his team, on average,
are in their thirties. This explains the risk-taking dynamism –
the exclusive Swiss watchmaker is not above making a £70,000 watch
in Crystal Palace colours for Palace owner Simon Jordan – and also
the odd tendency to cheesiness. Last year’s Color Dreams, all pastel
colours and crazy numbers, Nadine Broden says, “was designed to inject
some joie de vivre into the gloom of the post 9/11, war-in-Iraq world”.

But if it is just the flashiness that sells, the Muller delight
will not last. “There are other watches that are as complicated,”
says a London watch expert, who prefers to remain anonymous. “There
are better, more interesting ones for the same price. He’s a very
good watchmaker, and he was very clever to realise there was room for
more excitement in the industry. But if you ask me, Franck Muller is
a busted flush.”

The company has certainly had problems, with Muller and partner Vartan
Sirmakes feuding, and resolving the dispute only late last year. The
dispute was bitter – with Muller saying publicly that Sirmakes had
been employing illegal Armenians – and last year the company was
nearly split up. But for now, things in the serene surroundings of
the castle in Genthod are back to normal.

Theo Fennell, for one, is not worried. “I really don’t think it’s
just a fad. There are enough models that each can be a limited
edition. You’re not likely to see the same watch on someone else’s
wrist, unless you bought it for them. Franck Muller watches are
beautifully made and produced.” If they’re on showbiz wrists, he says:
“It’s not because they’re a gimmick. It’s because they can afford to
buy the best.”

–Boundary_(ID_bMRYUO4DX2uufZZ1UT4V3g)–

World Congress Of Azerbaijanis Appeal Demands OSCE Leadership”To Put

WORLD CONGRESS OF AZERBAIJANIS APPEAL DEMANDS OSCE
LEADERSHIP “TO PUT AN END TO THE USELESS ACTIVITY OF OSCE MINSK GROUP
CO-CHAIRMEN”

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 16. ARMINFO. Azerbaijanis of the world have appealed
to OSCE demanding that the “useless” activity of OSCE MG co-chairmen
on settlement of Karabakh conflict be stopped. The appeal of the World
Congress of Azerbaijani (WCA) demands that the mediators either solve
the problem or leave the process.

The authors of the appeal urge the OSCE leadership to take specific
steps on Karabakh. <This organization still does not recognize
Armenia as an aggressor despite the fact that OSCE MG has undertaken
the mission to solve the conflict. In such situation, the doubts in
objectiveness of the structure’s mediation only strengthen,> the WCA
says. The document also makes definite notification on the activity
of OSCE in the South Caucasus and urges it for just settlement of
Karabakh conflict for protection of stability in Europe.

BAKU: World Bank approves 11m-dollar loan for Azeri refugees

World Bank approves 11m-dollar loan for Azeri refugees

Bilik Dunyasi news agency
17 Feb 05

Baku, 17 February: The Board of Directors of the World Bank [WB]
has approved the project “Assistance to economic development of
internally displaced persons [IDPs]”.

The 11.5m-dollar project envisages improving living conditions, as
well as the social situation of people who became IDPs in the wake
of Armenia’s occupation of Azerbaijani lands and accelerating their
integration into society.

A total of 200 micro credits each totalling around 50,000 dollars will
be allocated to IDPs within the framework of the project in order to
better their socio-economic situation.

The credits will be allocated to Azerbaijan for a period of 35 years,
including the first 10 years on favourable terms.

Azerbaijan has received loans worth about 620m dollars for 25 projects
since it became a member of the WB in 1992.

Foreign minister to pay visit to Armenia

Foreign minister to pay visit to Armenia

RosBusinessConsulting Database
February 16, 2005 Wednesday

Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov will pay a two-day visit to
Armenia to discuss bilateral cooperation. The two parties will focus
on trade and economic cooperation, official representative of the
Russian foreign ministry Alexander Yakovenko has reported. Russian
and Armenian leaders are to hold talks regarding the implementation
of bilateral agreements achieved in May 2004, which help to solve
certain Armenian problems in the transportation and the fuel sector,
and contribute to the enhancement of bilateral relations between
Russian and Armenian regions.

Dr. Vahakn Dadrian, World’s Leading Scholar Of Armenian Genocide,To

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (E.)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Chris Zakian
Tel: (212) 686-0710; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

January 25, 2005
____________________

DR. VAHAKN DADRIAN, WORLD’S LEADING SCHOLAR OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, TO
RECEIVE “LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD” IN GALA BANQUET AT DIOCESAN CENTER
ON APR. 2

The Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America is proud to
announce that it will bestow a special Lifetime Achievement Award on Dr.
Vahakn N. Dadrian, the eminent scholar of the Armenian Genocide, during
a gala banquet on Saturday, April 2, 2005.

His Eminence Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, the Diocesan Primate, will
preside over the event and present the award to Dr. Dadrian, who is
considered to be the world’s leading authority on the Genocide.

Through decades of study, and in a number of major publications, Dr.
Dadrian has not only documented the atrocities of the Genocide itself,
but has also shed critical light on the mechanics of organized
extermination employed by the Turkish government of the period, and has
detailed the sociological and legal consequences of state-sponsored
genocide.

A blue-ribbon program of speakers will be on hand to honor Dr. Dadrian
on this occasion.

Dr. Vartan Gregorian, president of the Carnegie Corporation, will be one
of two main speakers.

Professor Stephen Feinstein, the distinguished Holocaust specialist at
the University of Minnesota, will also deliver an address.

Professor Peter Balakian, author of the Genocide memoir, “Black Dog of
Fate,” and the best-selling historical account, “Burning Tigris,” will
be master of ceremonies.

In addition, the banquet guests will view a multi-media presentation on
Dr. Dadrian’s life and work, by the Zoryan Institute.

The Lifetime Achievement Award banquet honoring Dr. Vahakn Dadrian will
take place on Saturday, April 2, 2005, in the Haik and Alice Kavookjian
Auditorium of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (630 Second
Avenue, New York City). A reception starting at 6:30 p.m. will precede
the dinner and program at 7:30 p.m. The donation for this event is $125
per person, and tables of ten can be reserved for $1,250. Proceeds will
be used to establish a special fund in Dr. Dadrian’s honor.

More information on the award banquet will be forthcoming; but
reservations can be made by calling the Diocese of the Armenian Church
of America (Eastern), at (212) 686-0710.

–1/25/05

PHOTO CAPTION: Dr. Vahakn N. Dadrian will be honored by the Eastern
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America, which will bestow a special
Lifetime Achievement Award on the eminent scholar of the Armenian
Genocide at a gala banquet on Saturday, April 2, 2005.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org

Armenia receives “no dividends” from peacekeepers’ dispatch to Iraq

Armenia receives “no dividends” from peacekeepers’ dispatch to Iraq

Arminfo
8 Feb 05

Yerevan, 8 February: The US position on the Karabakh issue which
has recently been voiced by several high-ranking officials of this
country shows that Armenia has received no dividends from dispatching
peacekeepers to Iraq, opposition MP Stepan Zakaryan told the Armenian
parliament today.

He said that all the discussions in parliament and behind closed
doors about the certain dividends received by Armenia after it decided
to dispatch the peacekeeping contingent to Iraq and about the USA’s
position on Karabakh turned out to be untrue.

To prove his point, Zakaryan quoted the recent remarks by US Assistant
Secretary of State Elizabeth Jones, the US State Department and the
US embassy in Armenia on the Karabakh problem.

Apart from this, the MP recalled Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan’s
earlier statement that not all leading countries of the world put
the issue of solving the Karabakh conflict in the same frame as the
issue of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

In this connection, the MP said that deputies are becoming less
trustful of Oskanyan’s statements, since the recent remarks by
representatives of various “key” countries has proved the opposite.

The Armenian Culture Is Purposefully Destroyed In Georgia

THE ARMENIAN CULTURE IS PURPOSEFULLY DESTROYED IN GEORGIA

A1+
14-02-2005

Because of the state indifference the Javaxq cultural centers are in
danger, says the agency «A-Info».

If at the end of the 19th century the famous Armenian theatres of
Axalqalaq and Axaltsxa were still operating, during the Soviet reign
they were closed turning into self-operating groups. After the collapse
of the Soviet Union these groups too ceased to exist.

For a long time no Armenian plays have been staged in Javaxq. Groups
from abroad do not come here either. This year the Armenian National
Dramatic Theater intends to go to Axalqalaq but the financial problem
has not yet been solved.

The museums are also in very sad condition. There are 4 museums
in Axalqalaq and Ninotsminda, two of which â~@~S the Axalqalaq
provinciological museum and the house museum of Vahan Teryan in Gandza,
are popular in the cultural society. If the house museum of Vahan
Teryan has recently been reconstructed, the building of the Axalqalaq
provinciological museum is in danger of being deconstructed. Besides,
because of the indifference of the authorities, unique exhibits are
disappearing from museums.

The same happens with the libraries. The doors are closed, but the
books become less.

–Boundary_(ID_oVpv6PT83uJezPg9EkPdnA)–