Azerbaijan Eyes Armenia, NKR, Russia And Iran As Enemies

AZERBAIJAN EYES ARMENIA, NKR, RUSSIA AND IRAN AS ENEMIES

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.09.2007 14:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Vafa Guluzade, once a renowned "hawk" in Baku,
was plucked and a bit broiled by Heydar Aliyev. Now he is playing up
to Aliyev junior.

However, it’s not his personal ambitions. Guluzade sounds "fresh ideas"
if they are meant to please Ilham Aliyev and fit Azerbaijan’s foreign
policy, which aims at integration with U.S. and NATO and confrontation
with Russia," political scientist Levon Melik Shahnazaryan said in
an interview with PanARMENIAN.Net.

"In this respect, Guluzade’s statement clearly reflects the aspirations
of Azerbaijan, which eyes Armenia, NKR, Russia and Iran as enemies. I
should mention that Azerbaijan is immoderately trying to satisfy its
new patrons," he said.

"This statement is a propagandistic canard. I repeat, Guluzade sounds
Azerbaijan’s foreign ambitions. This republic estranges itself from
Russia to please the U.S. Do you remember the headlines of Saturday
edition of pro-governmental Zerkalo (Mirror) Baku-based newspaper? The
headlines read, "Russia levies war on Azerbaijan and Georgia",
"Putin’s provocation fails", "New imperial spurt ahead"…

All this is meant to demonstrate adherence to Washington. However, Baku
dislikes confessing that the majority of population lives at expense
of transfers made by Azeri gastarbeiters in Russia," he continued.

"Azerbaijan’s original understanding of geopolitical dualism leads
to such collisions," Melik-Shahnazaryan said.

The other day Azeri political scientist Vafa Guluzade said "Azerbaijan
had better deploy a couple of divisions in Nakhichevan and aim them
at Yerevan and Russian bases in Armenia."

Armenian Forces Kill Azerbaijani Soldier Near Karabakh: Official

ARMENIAN FORCES KILL AZERBAIJANI SOLDIER NEAR KARABAKH: OFFICIAL

Agence France Presse — English
September 14, 2007 Friday 10:21 AM GMT

Armenian forces have killed an Azerbaijani soldier near the disputed
region of Nagorny Karabakh, the Azerbaijani defence ministry said
Friday.

Sergeant Mushvig Pashayev, 31, was killed when Armenian forces opened
fire on Azerbaijani positions on Thursday, violating a ceasefire,
defence ministry spokesman Ilgar Verdiyev said.

Azerbaijan said last week that three Armenian and two Azerbaijani
soldiers had been killed in fighting near the region, but Armenian
separatist officials denied the claim.

Armenian forces seized control of Nagorny Karabakh from Azerbaijan
in the early 1990s, in a war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives
and forced about a million people on both sides to flee their homes.

The two sides signed a ceasefire in 1994 but the two countries have
cut direct economic and transport links and failed to negotiate a
settlement on the region’s status.

Armenian and Azerbaijani forces are spread across a ceasefire line in
and around Nagorny Karabakh, often facing each other at close range,
and shootings are common.

Political Worries Stall Bushehr Project

Moscow News, Russia
21/09/2007 |

Political Worries Stall Bushehr Project

Last weekend Russia and Iran yet again exchanged accusations over the
Iranian nuclear power plant in Bushehr.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki said on Saturday that fuel
for the plant, being built by Russia’s Atomstroyexport in south Iran,
was "ready, with the security seal of the International Atomic Energy
Agency [IAEA]."

A Russian delegate in the agency quoted by the RIA-Novosti news agency
immediately dismissed the report and said that though the fuel is
ready, the containers did not have the IAEA seal on them and thus
still cannot be shipped to the power plant.

The Moscow News talked to one of the Russian specialists working on
the project and asked what was really going on at the station from a
technical point of view.What we learned presents the situation from a
different angle.

Work in Bushehr started in 1975; initially the nuclear power plant was
built by the German (back then – West German) Siemens concern.But
immediately after the Islamic revolution of 1979, the Germans
terminated construction and withdrew from Iran, leaving the unfinished
work and taking all documents with them. Some time later the
unfinished construction suffered several air strikes from Iraq and was
in a rather sorry state when in 1995 Russia signed a contract to
complete the project.

According to our source, who wished to remain anonymous, this task was
exceptionally difficult.Russian and German nuclear equipment did not
match and Germans did not provide the documents for what they had left
behind. The war damage to the buildings had to be assessed and
repaired and there were no proper testing facilities in Iran. The
major reason why Russian State Corporation Atomstroyexport agreed to
do the job was the desperate need of cash – in 1995 the nuclear
industry was recovering from a collapse caused by the sorry situation
of the state financial system and lack of internal order after the
Chernobyl disaster.

Our source said that Iranian claims that the plant was 95 percent
ready are basically correct, but it still needs tests which are
complicated, time-consuming and expensive. Iranians are pressing for
the fuel delivery and delaying payments, making testing even harder.
What is more important, the source said, is that the Bushehr NPP
suffers from a severe lack of qualified personnel. When work on the
project started, Russian contractors realized that they were short of
trained people to work at the site, especially engineers and
assemblers. After the crisis of the Russian nuclear industry in the
early 90s many Russian organizations in the sphere collapsed and the
specialists that remained were old and unwilling to leave there secure
places. Also, climate conditions in Bushehr are severe and many
elderly people declined the offer for health reasons.

Atomstroyexport then hired many men from other countries of the former
Soviet Union, in particular Ukraine and Armenia, but they are not as
good as Russian specialists and running the station still requires
better trained staff, the Russian specialist said.

AT POLITICAL LOGGERHEADS

The nuclear fuel dispute is in reality a reflection of a more general
discussion – whether there will be a Russianbuilt nuclear power plant
in Iran at all. The most important part of the nuclear fuel assemblies
is not the enriched uranium itself, but the containers in which it is
kept, transported and loaded into the reactor. These containers are
Russian know-how and the Russian reactor will only work with them.

At the same time, when the fuel is delivered to the station, the cycle
starts and the reactor must start working in six months after the
delivery – otherwise the expensive batch of fuel will become useless
waste. Therefore, when Russia finally delivers the fuel it will be a
sure sign that the reactor will start six months later. Until then –
the project remains suspended.

According to our source, the reasons of such situation were purely
political. Atomstroyexport is interested in completing the project as
soon as possible. For Russians it is the only way to receive the
delayed payments and, more importantly, to start working on several
new reactors – the Iranian program is very extensive and they have the
money for it. But the Russian authorities are under pressure from the
international community, as many countries share the U.S. and Israel’s
fears that the working reactor in Bushehr would speed up the Iranian
project to build its own nuclear weapons.

Our source did not deny that Iran is now working on such a
project. But he added that all works were secret and were not
connected with the Bushehr reactor."We do not ask them about the bomb
project and they obviously tell us nothing about it," the specialist
said. At the same time, he added that the reactor in Bushehr can not
be used for military purposes "even in theory."The fuel for it is only
about 3.5 percent enriched and the level of enrichment for
weapons-grade uranium must be over 90 percent. The used fuel is
returned to Russia under IAEA control and if Iranians violate this
agreement they simply would not receive new batches of fuel that they
cannot produce themselves. "They may be claiming such intentions, but
it is pure demagogy," our source said.

On the other hand, if the nuclear energy program in Iran starts
working it will give a major boost to the economy of the
fundamentalist country and this is not what Iran’s neighbors and the
Western powers want. The program can also lead to the situation when
20 working reactors will be spread over the country’s territory. A
major military operation in such condition becomes complicated as the
fallout from destroyed reactors will cover the neighboring countries
and the invading force will have to take the blame for it.

The Russian expert told us that even these fears were possibly
exaggerated. Iran is now facing international sanctions and has no
materials or testing facilities for building these 20 blocks. New
power plants can only be built by foreign firms and so far only
Russians agree to do it and only under IAEA control.

In recent statements Russian nuclear officials gave the earliest date
for the start-up of the Bushehr reactor as fall 2008. Under the
contract, Russia will run it for two years after the start, providing
the operators and training Iranian specialists for the work. The first
used fuel will be removed about six months after the start of the
reactor and for safety reasons it will remain on the premises for two
years – the used fuel cannot be used or even moved before that.

But with time Iran receives more warnings over its nuclear
projects. As Russia and Iran were exchanging accusations, France
threatened Iran with sanctions and warned of a possible war. French
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said in a radio interview that war
could break out if Iran obtains nuclear weapons and said European
leaders were considering their own economic sanctions against the
Islamic country.

Iranians reacted sharply, calling the statement hard and illogical and
French Prime Minister Francois Fillon attempted to play down
Kouchner’s words on Monday. Fillon said that his country would do
anything to avoid war, but did not mention sanctions.

By Kirill Bessonov

Free Speech Roundup: Turkey, Russia, Pakistan, India

FREE SPEECH ROUNDUP: TURKEY, RUSSIA, PAKISTAN, INDIA
by Sami Ben Gharbia

Global Voices Online, MA –
Wednesday, September 19th, 2007 @ 16:22 UTC

(1) YouTube blocked in Turkey again. (2) Russian LiveJournal user
faces prison over fictional story.

(3) Blogspot.com blocked again in Pakistan. (4) Mumbai police planning
to install keystroke loggers in cyber cafes.

Turkey Blocks YouTube. Again.

For the second time in a year, a Turkish court ordered, on Tuesday
September 18, to block access to YouTube.com over videos deemed
insulting to the country’s leaders.

The decision followed a complaint by a resident in the eastern city of
Sivas that the site hosted videos containing insults against Turkey’s
founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, President Abdullah Gul, Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the army.

It’s a tumultuous time for YouTube in Turkey. A wave of controversy
over an ultra nationalist video praising the assassination of Turkish
Armenian journalist Hrant Dink posted on the video-sharing site has
made its way into the pages of country’s most popular newspapers-and
to the courts. According to Turkish Daily News, Dink’s lawyers said
the video "incites people to commit hate crimes by abusing race and
religion and by praising a murderer." They lawyers are preparing to
file a complaint.

In March of this year, the country’s largest telecommunications
services provider, Turk Telekom, blocked access to YouTube for two
days, following a court decision deeming that videos appearing on the
site were insulting to the father of modern Turkey, Kemal Ataturk,
and to the Turkish people.

On August 17, 2007, the Turkish Fatih Second Civil Court of First
Instance blocked access to the entire wordpress.com domain after
lawyers for Turkish Islamic-creationist, Adnan Oktar, aka Harun Yahya
alleged that a blog hosted on wordpress.com contained material that
libeled their client.

Russian LiveJournal blogger could face three-year sentence

The 23-year old Russian blogger, Dmitry Shirinkin, who posted a
fictional story on his blog inspired by the Virginia Tech shooting,
could face up to three years in prison (read the whole story on
Global Voices).

Dmitry Shirinkin was running a LiveJournal blog under the name
"tetraox" and wrote about buying a gun and killing number of people
in one of the city’s colleges. He is being accused of "falsely warning
of a terror threat."

"The Prosecutor’s Office analysed Dmitry’s blog and concluded he had a
desire to shoot dead a dozen people," Russia Today reported. However,
Shirinkin’s defense is requesting a language analyst to give his expert
opinion on the controversial text. The trial has been adjourned to
September 20th.

In an interview with Russia Today (see the video above), Shirinkin
said "I didn’t expect that a short writing piece could provoke such
reaction from the security services. They interrogated me asking
where my gun was, but I’d never had one."

According to Russia Today, even before the trial Dmitry was already a
popular figure, as he had been awarded the title of the best blogger
in the region.

Russian bloggers are rightly concerned that Shirinkin’s case might
set a bad precedent for the country’s Internet users.

Another Russian Livejournal blogger is facing a two-year prison
sentence or a fine of 100,000 rubles (US$4,000) for "inciting hate"
against police.

According to the Komi regional prosecutor, the allegedly offensive
message-which has been deleted from the site-by the 21-year old
Savva Terentyev contains "a direct call aimed at inciting hatred or
hostility, as well as harming the dignity of … a particular social
group: policemen."

Pakistan: blogspot.com blocked again

Don’t Block The Blog reported that access to the popular blogging
platform blogspot.com, which is owned by Google Inc, has been blocked
again in Pakistan:

For about four months (since May, 2007) Google fortunately had changed
the IP address of its Blogspot servers. The new IP addresses were
not demarcated as prohibited by the censorship filters located at
the Pakistan Internet Exchange. Today, for some odd reason, Google
has suddenly reverted back to its original IP address, which has been
on the block list since March of 2006. This move has resulted in the
blocking of all internet traffic to the blogspot.com domain. Millions
of blog readers in Pakistan now are unable to read or and interact
with any of these websites.

The "Don’t Block The Blog" (DBTB) campaign was launched in response
to the blanket ban on the Blogspot.com blogging platform instituted
by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) on March 3, 2006.

Read our earlier interview with Omer Alvie, the co-founder of (DBTB),
about the blanket ban and the Pakistani campaign to support online
freedom of speech.

Mumbai police to monitor cyber-cafes

In support of its war against terrorism, police in Mumbai, India,
are planning to install keystroke loggers in the city’s cyber
cafes. According to Vijay Mukhi, President of the Foundation for
Information Security and Technology:

The police needs to install programs that will capture every key
stroke at regular interval screen shots, which will be sent back to
a server that will log all the data. The police can then keep track
of all communication between terrorists no matter, which part of the
world they operate from.This is the only way to patrol the net and
this is how the police informer is going to look in the e-age.

This new monitoring software, CARMS (Cyber Access Remote Monitoring
System), that Mumbai’s police are requiring the city’s 500 Internet
cafes to install, "will capture every keystroke by users and turn
that information over to the government – nearly in realtime by the
sound of it," said the Indian journalist Amit Varma.

The Soprano Had Some Inventive Moments After The Crispy Duck

THE SOPRANO HAD SOME INVENTIVE MOMENTS AFTER THE CRISPY DUCK

The Citizen.com, GE
Tue, 09/18/2007

Not that I expect anyone to believe this, but our daughter Mary, the
German pianist, will be 50 years old in November. How can this be,
when I’m only 55 and Dave 60?

Last Mother’s Day she congratulated me on 49 1/2years of motherhood. I
don’t know whether she remembers, but about the time she finished
college, she said she felt like I had wasted my life, doing nothing
but raising children.

Well, I’ve had a pile of small careers, including church music and
emergency medicine, and now in my dotage, a column that occasionally
is well received. I can’t imagine doing anything I’d enjoy more, nor
in which I could make a small contribution to my community without
breaking a sweat.

But most of all, I am fiercely proud of those two girls I raised. They
alone would justify my life, as far as I’m concerned. They both
enrich the world where they find themselves, and honor their parents
in the doing.

Anyhow, here are a few notes from Mary earlier this year when
she was settling into her new job in Mannheim in south-central
Germany, requiring many trips between there and her home base of
Gelsenkirchen. She’d had a streak of bad luck, losing her glasses on
the train.:

April ’07: Beautiful weather. Bought a year’s pass for the big park in
Mannheim, since it costs four Euros a visit, and Sunday walked along
the Neckar [River] (finally) ’til I reached the requisite Fernseh
[fern=far, seh=seeing: television] tower-with-restaurant, past a boat
house (with restaurant) full of those long, Olympic-style row boats,
and into the park. Still some daffodils, and tulips in full bloom.

May: It’s cloudy for the first time in weeks. Has been unusually
sunny and dry and I’ve had to put cream on my face. I think the
farmers will be happy soon.

Wearing my new glasses…called lost and found a few times, but
[the old ones]never turned up. It was also Carneval [Mardi Gras,
with lots of wild celebrating.]

Now I left a little suitcase, the part of a set that you slide on top
the trolley, also probably on the train. Was going to Gelsenkirchen,
right after rehearsal, and had some dirty wash with me…mostly socks
and underwear. They also have not been turned in… maybe I should
check on E-Bay.

Also, unfortunately, my black American jeans plus belt. All those
years traveling to Dortmund, no problem.

June: [She had told us about an upcoming concert for which the evening
turned sharply cold.]

Played the Respighi outdoors on an electric piano (clavinova). Don’t
know if I was heard at all, since the speakers were not strong. A
little Italian girl played the Rachmaninoff Paganini variations on a
real grand. They had huts for us to change in, and she warmed up on
a table with a metronome going.

The new Armenian soprano star from Gelsenkirchen sang some Boheme
and Butterfly. Now I’m in a packed early train, trying not to have
the feeling I should give up my seat to a little Japanese boy, whose
father set him on a suitcase next to me when they lost their seats.

Rainer has some back problems, he thinks maybe from falling asleep
in his chair. Otherwise OK. His orchestra has made two new recordings
with their new music director, who hasn’t even officially started.

Did I mention that my friend Jeff (in Dortmund) was singing Nacht in
Venedig (Night in Venice, Strauss) in an outdoor theater in Venice,
near San Marco? It was supposed to run for the next three years,
and folded after five nights. Everyone left as quickly as they could,
since not even the hotel was paid after the first week.

Schwetzingen is very charming. All the buildings up to the castle
look like they belong to the castle (maybe did). The castle itself
is only high at the entrance.

The theater is small (2,300 seats), three tiers, and more rococo and
less wooden than the one at Ludwigsburg.

They finally announced in Mannheim what’s coming next year. New:
yet another Traviata, Rossini’s Silk Ladder, Donizetti Anna Bolena
concertant, Puccini Trittico (which I’ve never done), Jenufa, a world
premiere and another Mannheim court opera. Repeats: Don Giovanni,
Rigoletto, Lohengrin, Parsifal, Butterfly, Lucia, Forza del Destino,
etc.

Our intendantin [director, fem.] is back with her premature American
baby, but is not allowed to work until the end of the month.

June 30: [I expressed surprise that Frau Intendantin had timed her
pregnancy to overlap the beginning of a new season. Such things don?t
worry German employers as they do American.]

Nobody knew that Intendantin Gerber was pregnant, and we all saw her
at the Strauss premiere at the end of March. She is working again now.

Played Italian arias at a four-course meal in Heidelberg yesterday,
and for another big meal for theater sponsors tonight in the Mannheim
castle.

Unlike the singers, who mostly didn’t eat until they were through
singing, I kept up with all the courses, just making sure I didn’t
drink too much. Good thing, because the star soprano had some inventive
moments, and the lighting was dim by the time we were on, after the
crispy duck.

Sunday free; Monday the piano dress rehearsal of Lucio Silla in
Schwetzingen. Supposedly they changed the premiere date from July 7th
to the 10th because of all the weddings that are taking place there
on 7-7-07 [considered a lucky date.]

We brought out a second run of Cosi recently. A lot of work for
just three performances, but that’s typical here. Cosi is not a hit
like Figaro or Flute, but there is some beautiful music, and such a
bittersweet ending

Who Is Hiding Behind Offers To Clear Javakhk From Armenians?

WHO IS HIDING BEHIND OFFERS TO CLEAR JAVAKHK FROM ARMENIANS?

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.09.2007 15:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Day.az web site has posted a statement allegedly
made by the Union of Compatriots of Georgia (UCG), who are "launching
a war against Armenian occupants of Samtskhe Javakheti." The statement
signed by UCG chairman Gogi Chipashvili says, in part, "From this
day, September 18, the UCG consisting of 2500 Georgian patriots
and their volunteer armed groups are starting a war against Armenian
separatists. We are not going to tolerate the occupation of Armenians,
who have seized the lands of our ancestors. Any time we are ready
to take up arms against mercenary Armenians. We call on the Georgian
government, especially on President Mikhael Saakashvili to be cautious
and not encourage Armenian separatism, because the head of the state
will be responsible for collisions and bloodshed. We do not expect
any assistance from government in this guerrilla war. We do call on
the sons of Georgia to join us in the name of glory of our country."

It’s curious that Day.az has embellished the publication with comments
calling on the readers "to feel the menace of a new war in the South
Caucasus being provoked by Georgian Armenians for this once."

Meanwhile, representative of the Georgian Diocese of the Armenian
Apostolic Church, Levon Isakhanian said that the statement is "absurd
from beginning to end."

"The Georgian security service would immediately prevent such
actions. To be honest, the story is just ridiculous. What can 2500
people do against 100-thousand population of Javakhk? But the most
interesting fact is that the statement was circulated by an Azeri
portal while Georgia is absolutely unaware," Isakhanian stressed.

For his part, senior exert of the Caucasus Media Institute, historian
and political scientist Sergei Minasyan told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter, "The statement by the Union of Compatriots of Georgia is
a figment. It just can’t be."

A similar comment was received from Javakhk News Agency editor
Armen Grigoryan. "No one in Javakhk heard either of the UCG or its
intentions. By the way, text of the statement imitates the style of
articles published by Azeri press," he noted.

Karabakh Authorities To Return Azeri Prisoner To Motherland

KARABAKH AUTHORITIES TO RETURN AZERI PRISONER TO MOTHERLAND

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.09.2007 16:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The government of Nagorno Karabakh as a goodwill
gesture will convey Azeri citizen Ashraf Jafarov, captured in June
when crossing the Karabakh border, to the Azeri side. As reported
by the NKR state commission on war prisoners and missing, the NKR
leadership is hopeful that Baku will release two Armenians kept in
Azeri custody for long time.

Ashraf Jafarov, 22, native of Garachuhur settlement of Suranhali
region of Azerbaijan, was captured by NKR soldiers on 30 June 2007.

Microsoft IT-Academies To Be Establsihed At Armenia’s Universities

MICROSOFT IT-ACADEMIES TO BE ESTABLSIHED AT ARMENIA’S UNIVERSITIES

ARKA
September 18 2007

Microsoft IT-Academies will soon be established in Armenian
Universities, Director of the Microsoft office in Armenia Grigor
Barseghyan told ARKA.

"The establishment of IT-Academies implies certification
Microsoft-conducted trainings as one of the components of the IT
curriculum, affording a further opportunity for taking qualifying
examinations for Microsoft certificate specialist, which open up
ample opportunities for students after graduation," Barseghyan said.

According to him, IT-Academies will afford an opportunity for MSDN
Subscription (a program of regular distribution of new software).

"The most up-to-date products and software platforms will be available
in Armenia for organize the highest-level education," Barseghyan said.

According to him, IT-Academies will be established at four universities
at the initial stage: Yerevan State University, Yerevan State Teachers’
Training Institute, Vanadzor University and Russian-Armenian (Slavonic)
University (RAU). Relevant agreements have been signed.

Barseghyan pointed out that a special program, Microsoft Dynamics
Academic Aliens (MDAA), not envisaged by the agreement, has been
included for RAU.

"The MDAA program envisages global solutions and software platforms
for big businesses, which will allow them to exercise complete control
over their production process, accountancy, storehouse management,
personnel potential analysis and financial flows," Barseghyan said.

He reported that, under an agreement with the RA Government, Microsoft
elaborated a version of "Information Science" for schools, which has
been submitted to the RA Ministry of Education and Science.

"Under the program, we are ready to retrain all Armenian teachers of
information science," Barseghyan said. He added that the project is
related with the Microsoft program of higher education.

In his earlier interview to ARKA, Director of the Business Development
and Policy Center, Microsoft Corporation, Paul Muckleston reported
that the annual number of Microsoft-certified graduates of Armenia’s
higher schools will have reached 1,000 by 2010.

The RA Government and the Microsoft Corporation signed a cooperation
agreement in Edinburgh, Scotland, on January 30, 2007. Under the
agreement, Microsoft is to implement a number of investment, education
and innovation projects in Armenia.

Robert Kocharian And Mikhael Saakashvili Discussed Armenian-Georgian

ROBERT KOCHARIAN AND MIKHAEL SAAKASHVILI DISCUSSED ARMENIAN-GEORGIAN RELATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.09.2007 12:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Robert Kocharian was in Ajaria
September 15-16, the leader’s press office reported. In Batumi, Robert
Kocharian and Georgian President Mikhael Saakashvili discussed the
agenda of the Armenian-Georgian relations.

The Presidents also visited Kobuleti, where Mikhael Saakashvili
presented tourism development prospects.

Iran’s Pavarotti to perform concerts in London

Tehran Times, Iran
Monday, September 17, 2007

Iran’s Pavarotti to perform concerts in London

TEHRAN — Iranian traditional music vocalist Shahram
Nazeri, who has been dubbed `Iran’s Pavarotti’ by the
Christian Science Monitor, will be performing in
London from October 14 to 16.

Mohsen Nafar, Sina Jahanabadi, Soheil Aminzadeh,
Hassan Rezaiinia, and Navid Ofoqeh will accompany him
in the performances.

——–`Water Bride’ wins Kyrgyz filmfest

TEHRAN — `Water Bride’, a documentary featuring the
rituals held in a region near the Iranian city of
Semnan, won the best documentary award at the 1st
Issyk-Kul International Film Festival in Kyrgyzstan.

Another Iranian documentary `Suffering and Toranj’
received an honorable mention at the event, which was
held from September 3 to 9.

—–`All Good Days’ heads to Australian film gala

TEHRAN — Iranian short film `All Good Days’ will be
competing at the 10th Auburn Intentional Film and
Video Festival for Children and Young Adults, which is
to begin today.

Directed by Mehdi Jafari, the film tells the story of
a 7-year-old schoolgirl and an apple tree.

The festival, which is sponsored by Cinewest, a
company organizing arts and cultural activities, will
run until September 21.

——Armenia selects Iranian story for schoolbook

The Armenian Ministry of Education and Science has
chosen the Iranian story `The Little Star’ as one the
topics to be included in the literature textbook of
primary school fifth grade students.

Written by Mohammadreza Yusefi, the story has been
translated by Georg Asaturian.

The story will be read along with works by Gotthold
Ephraim Lessing, Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin, and
Hans Christian Andersen.