Baku: Political Scientist Alexander Iskandaryan: "The Resolution Of

POLITICAL SCIENTIST ALEXANDER ISKANDARYAN: "THE RESOLUTION OF NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT LIES IN THE POLITICAL DIMENSION"

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
June 11 2008

Nagorno Karabakh conflict is a political one and its resolution lies
in the political dimension but not the dimension of law, said head
of the Caucasus Mass media Institute, political scientist Alexander
Iskandaryan.

"Legal realities do not play a role… The conflict is a political
one and while working on it political realities should be taken into
account", said Iskandaryan during the Yerevan-Baku-Moscow TV bridge.

According to Iskandaryan, the conflict primordially emerged not within
the international law. It started in the times of the Soviet Union
in Nagorno Karabakh.

"This was a conflict of population, not political subjects, as there
were not such political subjects as Republic of Armenia, Republic of
Azerbaijan and "Nagorno Karabakh Republic". Yet much has changed since
that time and the conflict has become a part of international law",
announced the political scientist.

/Novosti-Armenia/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/45599.html

BAKU: Panahov: Participation Of Azerbaijani Citizens Of Armenian Ori

MAZAHIR PANAHOV: "PARTICIPATION OF AZERBAIJANI CITIZENS OF ARMENIAN ORIGIN IN THESE ELECTIONS IS DOUBTFUL"

Azeri Press Agency
June 10 2008
Azerbaijan

Baku. Elnur Mammadli -APA. The Central Election Commission of
Azerbaijan is working on the appropriate instructions and preparing
the work schedule for the upcoming presidential elections, said
Mazahir Panahov, Chairman of the Commission, APA reports.

He said the preparation of the work schedule according to the new
Electoral Code was about to be completed. He said the elections should
be announced 75 days before the voting. Therefore CEC will gather 77
days before and announce the elections. Panahov said participation
of Azerbaijani citizens of Armenian origin in these elections was
doubtful as it was during the previous elections. "CEC is making all
possible efforts, but Armenian government should create conditions
for that. We appealed international organizations on this issue,
but there are no real results yet".

Ra President Attended 12th International Economic Forum

RA PRESIDENT ATTENDED 12TH INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.06.2008 18:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan attended the
12th International Economic Forum in Saint Petersburg on June 7,
the RA leader’s press office reported.

The forum participants discussed the issues referring to international
economy, modern challenges, rise in prices for fuel and food,
efficiency of state institutions as well as prospects of economic
cooperation in the CIS.

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BAKU: Araz Azimov: "Armenia Cannot Change Map Of South Caucasus"

ARAZ AZIMOV: "ARMENIA CANNOT CHANGE MAP OF SOUTH CAUCASUS"

Azeri Press Agency
June 9 2008
Azerbaijan

Baku. Tamara Grigoryeva-APA. St. Petersburg meeting was of great
importance for familiarization of positions of the Presidents and
determination of closed issues", Araz Azimov, Azerbaijani Deputy
Foreign Minister told journalists, APA reports.

He noted that the meeting was politically important.

"Azerbaijan will make efforts for the solution to the conflict", he
said. Azimov advised opposite side not to prolong current situation
with the help of meetings and ensure political interests.

"We will not take off our hand from them. We will continue to provide
information about crimes committed by Armenians till the liberation of
our occupied territories. Azerbaijan has enough opportunities and the
President’s position is decisive. Armenia has limited opportunities
and no country supports its position", he said.

The Deputy Minister announced that Armenia could not change the map
of South Caucasus.

"There are three countries in the region-Azerbaijan, Armenia,
Georgia. We want the restoration of normal neighborly relations
between three countries. There is only one problem, which impedes it –
occupation of Azerbaijani lands by Armenia. Armenian new authorities
should pass a decision on lifting of problem", he said. Asked which
point Azerbaijan will conduct negotiations, the diplomat stated that
Azerbaijan had conducted negotiations from the same point and it was
ready to continue it from same point.

"This point covers liberation of occupied territories of Azerbaijan and
peaceful solution of the conflict within the framework of Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity", he said. Azimov stressed that Azerbaijan was
ready for compromise.

Armenian rhapsody: One of the world’s top violists, Kim Kashkashian

Detroit Free Press, MI
June 8 2008

Armenian rhapsody

One of the world’s top violists, Detroit-born Kim Kashkashian brings
passion, intensity and fierce ethnic pride to her life and her music

BY MARK STRYKER ¢ FREE PRESS MUSIC WRITER ¢ June
8, 2008

CLEVELAND — Kim Kashkashian, one of the world’s great violists, is a
little bleary-eyed as she climbs into the minivan this Sunday
morning. She performed Bela Bartok’s exhausting Viola Concerto the
night before with the Cleveland Orchestra, and she barely slept once
her head hit the pillow.

"All the other worries I put aside seemed to come out," she tells a
friend. "On the other hand, I now have my daughter’s graduation all
planned."

The Detroit-born Kashkashian, 55, who performs at the upcoming Great
Lakes Chamber Music Festival, is one of just a few violists with a
thriving solo career. But even within a small circle, she stands out
for her maverick sensibility, storyteller expression and the breadth
of her activities as a performer, recording artist, teacher and
champion of contemporary music.

"Kim is absolutely at the pinnacle," says Detroit Symphony Orchestra
violist Caroline Coade. "She’s a role model. We all want to build
awareness for this incredible instrument. She’s out there
commissioning new works, making unrivaled recordings, soloing with
orchestras, playing chamber music and teaching."

Kashkashian is 5-foot-6, but her long neck and lean, lithesome frame
create the illusion that she’s taller. She has a soft face, high cheek
bones, plaintive eyes, short brown hair, an ultra-bright smile and a
generous laugh. She could easily pass for 40.

>From the outside, Kashkashian’s journey to the top of her profession
seems paved with inevitability. Her pedigree includes the Peabody
Conservatory, rubbing shoulders with giants like Rudolf Serkin and
Felix Galimir at Vermont’s prestigious Marlboro Festival and
competition prizes. She launched her solo career working with the
perspicacious Latvian violin virtuoso Gidon Kremer in the early ’80s.

During her landmark 20-year tenure with the artsy boutique European
label ECM, she has recorded everything from Bach and Brahms to lots of
new music by modernists like Luciano Berio and György
Kurtág. Since 2000 she has taught at Boston’s New England
Conservatory, relocating after 13 years in Germany, where she built
her career on the viola-friendly European scene. Her peak was about 60
concerts a year.

But a program-book biography obscures a complex road map of
bushwhacking, grinding sweat and struggle. A perfectionist and prone
to self-doubt, Kashkashian has battled not only the recalcitrant viola
but darker angels. She has willed herself into greatness.

"I’m not by nature a sunny person," she says while waiting for a
flight at the airport. "Some of us fight through a dark cloud every
morning, but I’ve learned that if I can’t fight through it, at least
there’s something on the other side of it. I’ve trained myself to be
happy."

Extraordinary touch and nuance

The viola is the Rodney Dangerfield of the orchestra, its players the
butt of endless jokes such as: How can you tell that a violist is
playing out of tune? The bow is moving. Kashkashian’s favorite is the
most macabre: How do you make a violist sit up straight? Stab him in
the back.

Larger and more unwieldy than the violin, the viola is the alto voice
of the string section. Solo repertoire is limited but growing thanks
to players like Kashkashian and her Russian contemporary Yuri Bashmet,
heirs to William Primrose, the most important violist of the 20th
Century.

Kashkashian’s magic starts with the dark-complexioned purity of her
tone and absolute technical mastery. But the loftiest realm of
technique isn’t speed; it’s nuance. Kashkashian draws an extraordinary
range of color from the viola, shading each note with its own
considered hue, animating each phrase with dramatic intent, balancing
gutsy rhythm and intensity with untethered flow. Nothing sounds
fussy. Her playing blooms with shrewd intuition and delirious song.

"When you hear Kim, you wish to experience in your daily emotional
diary the feelings that emanate from every one of her performances,"
says her longtime pianist, Robert Levin.

The first music Kashkashian heard was her Armenian-born father singing
opera and Armenian folk songs around the house. Though he died when
she was 9, his resonant baritone was seared into her DNA. She speaks
of his voice longingly — "it’s as familiar to me as the color of the
sky" — and every time she picks up the viola, she’s playing a duet
with his spirit.

"I’m a melody person," she says. "Other people might be harmony
people, rhythm people or structure people. Of course, the elements are
intertwined and can’t live without each other. But melody for me is
the guiding engine."

Her taste for contemporary music was formed as a teen intoxicated by
the visceral sonorities and pleasures of new music on record. By now,
she has had dozens of works written for her and forged illuminating
partnerships with many important composers.

Once when preparing a piece by Kurtág, a Hungarian who writes
intensely distilled and eloquent miniatures, Kashkashian traveled to
Budapest to play for him. She thought she was prepared. Five hours
later they were still only two lines into the piece.

"I had a complete midlife crisis," she says. "The things he asked for,
things I wasn’t able to do until later, generated a whole new level of
playing for me. I didn’t know there were so many layers to the onion."

The composers are grateful for her advocacy. Kashkashian gave the
premiere of a new concerto by Tigran Mansurian two weeks ago in
Boston. Speaking through a translator, the Armenian composer compared
her to Petrarch’s muse and noted that she always remains at the
service of the composer instead of the other way around.

Teacher and student reunited

Kashkashian’s final business in Cleveland on this morning is teaching
a master class at a workshop named for her own legendary teacher,
Karen Tuttle, who despite declining health at age 88 has made it here
for the weekend. Her students treat her with the affection and
reverence reserved for matriarchs. Kashkashian likes to call her Tut,
snuggle up to her and kiss her cheek.

"I had a lesson with her two days ago," she says as the van heads to
class. "It’s amazing how much you forget."

The class is at the Cleveland Institute of Music in a recital hall
flooded by natural light. Anna Hoopes, 17, plays the first movement of
William Walton’s 1929 Viola Concerto. Kashkashian, wearing a loose red
shirt and black skirt, dives into the marrow of interpretation.

"Are you nervous?" Kashkashian asks.

"Yes."

Both burst into laughter. "The problem is the evidence is showing in
your vibrato," Kashkashian says. "It’s a really fast, electric
vibrato. Can you consciously slow it down? You were just trying to
control yourself — I know. Believe me, I know. But you can learn to
control it."

Long hours in the practice room

Critics and musicians often call Kashkashian a natural musician, but
she argues it’s a mirage. In her own mind she has always played
catch-up. She took up the violin at 9, late in the game compared to
her peers. She studied with Ara Zerounian, a Detroit teacher with a
Midas touch, who also trained the world-class violinists Ida and Ani
Kavafian from Detroit.

Kashkashian switched to viola at the Interlochen Arts Academy at age
12, attracted by the alto range. The viola’s size fit, too, since she
was already her full height. But the Kavafians were the whiz kids on
the scene, leaving Kashkashian in their wake. She felt similarly
behind the talent at Marlboro in her 20s and Kremer’s circle in her
early 30s.

"Even today, I would say that I can produce a reasonable facsimile of
a natural player, but I’m not one," she says. "The only thing that’s
natural and the thing that drove me all along was the need to produce
certain sonorities. That’s why I say I’m a melody player."

Her friends say no one put in longer hours in the woodshed. This is a
woman who is known to practice in airport restrooms. "It looks to me
now that she does things with such ease, but I remember the incredible
struggle she used to have to get to this point," says cellist Marcy
Rosen, who has known Kashkashian since Marlboro.

"I’m grateful now that it’s been hard work for me," says
Kashkashian. "There’s an element to music making, which I’m going to
call resistance, and without that resistance factor, I don’t think the
whole picture of the music or experience of the performance can reach
the audience. The performer has to fight for something."

‘An Armenian baby?’

Fiercely proud of her heritage, Kashkashian made her first trip to
Armenia in 1990 to perform in the capital Yerevan. One day a friend in
the orchestra office asked, "How come you don’t have children?"
Kashkashian playfully looked heavenward as if to say, "He’s not
helping." Two days later, the friend arranged what Kashkashian assumed
was a routine excursion to a children’s hospital.

It was a set-up. The head doctor was secretly giving her the
once-over, and something in her soul spoke to him. He walked her to
the other side of the hospital, explaining that conditions in Armenia,
suffering from a devastating 1988 earthquake, were so bad, he sold his
car and bought a horse because there was no gasoline.

They entered a room with two babies in bed. "Can you imagine one of
these being yours?" he asked. Her jaw dropped: "An Armenian baby? Of
course!" Six months of paperwork later, Kashkashian had a child.

She picked the 5-month-old girl, whose smile reminded her of her
aunt. She named her Areni. Beyond all the obvious ways a child changes
a parent’s life, Areni, now 18, had one truly unexpected consequence.

"She taught me to be happy," says Kashkashian, a single mother. "She’s
an extraordinary and unique example of a happy Armenian. I’ve never
known any Armenian who has the natural sunny nature that my daughter
has, and, boy, have I learned a lot."

Kashkashian on CD

Kim Kashkashian’s discography is so expansive and so diverse that
knowing where to start can be tricky. Try one of these highlights from
each of the following categories:

– What’s new: "Asturiana" (ECM), a soulful CD of Spanish and
Argentine songs with pianist Robert Levin.

– Contemporary (all on ECM): Tigran Mansurian’s "Monodia," Luciano
Berio’s "Voci," Kurtág’s "Homage á R. Sch," Giya
Kancheli, "Vom Winde" and Schnittke, Viola Concerto.

– 20th-Century modern: Bartok, Viola Concerto (ECM), Hindemith, Viola
Sonatas (ECM), Britten/Penderecki/Hindemith, various (ECM),
Shostakovich, String Quartet No. 15 with Gidon Kremer, Daniel
Phillips, Yo-Yo Ma (Sony)

– Older repertoire: Mozart, Divertimento in E-flat, K. 563, with
Kremer and Ma (Sony); Mozart, Duos for Violin and Viola, with Kremer
(download at Deutsche Grammophon Web site); Brahms, Sonatas for Viola
and Piano (ECM).

– Wild card: "Elegies." Viola and piano music by Britten, Vaughan
Williams, Glazunov, Elliott Carter and more (ECM).

?AID=/20080608/ENT04/806080524

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article

European Commission transfers Euro 5 million assistance to Armenia

AZG Armenian Daily #108, 07/06/2008

EC-Armenia

EUROPEAN COMMISSION TRANSFERS 5 MILLION ASSISTANCE TO
ARMENIA

The European Commission has disbursed the first
installment of a 16 million package to fight
unemployment, especially among the young workforce,
through reforms of the Vocational Education and
Training (VET) sector. The funds are part of the
European Commission’s 2007 Annual Action Programme for
Armenia, endowed with a total of 21 million
assistance funds. This first transfer was made on 5
June 2008. Two further installments are foreseen until
2010. Mr. Hugues Mingarelli, Deputy Director-General
of the European Commission’s Directorate-General for
External Relations, responsible for European
Neighborhood Policy and for relations with Eastern
Europe, Southern Caucasus and Central Asia, the Middle
East and Southern Mediterranean, gave a press
conference together with Mr. Tigran Davtyan, Minister
of Finance of the Republic of Armenia, Armenian Public
Radio reported.In the framework of the European
Neighborhood Policy (ENP), Armenia and the European
Commission have agreed to focus assistance of the
European Union to Armenia allocated in 2007 on further
reforms of the Vocational Education and Training (VET)
sector, building on extensive experience and lessons
learned from previous TACIS and other EU funded
projects. EU assistance to VET reforms in Armenia for
2008 will be delivered through large scale Budget
Support of 15 mln EUR, completed by a 1 mln EUR
project of technical assistance, i.e. 16 mln EUR in
total. The disbursement of the 15 mln EUR will be done
in three installments of 5 mln EUR each. The
conditionalities were mostly linked to the preparation
of the "Strategy on Restoring Strength in Education"
(to be implemented in 2010-2015) and to the
rehabilitation of selected VET centers. The programme
as a whole aims at improving the VET institutions as
well as the cooperation between employment and
education sectors, and at enhancing the business
climate for boosting job-creation.In the period
1992-2006 the European Commission has provided more
than 400 million euro in grants to Armenia through a
wide range of instruments, the most important ones
being TACIS, ECHO, Food Security Programme (FSP),
European Initiative for Democracy and Human Rights
(EIDHR) and Macro-Financial Assistance (MFA).More
particularly, since 1999, the EU has spent over 25 mln
EUR to development of the Education sector in Armenia,
through support to VET reforms and TEMPUS programme.

Bolsheviks And Neo-Bolsheviks

BOLSHEVIKS AND NEO-BOLSHEVIKS
GAGIK MKRTCHYAN

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on June 07, 2008
Armenia

Twin Brothers

The historical Bolsheviks, under Lenin’s leadership and today’s
Neo-Bolsheviks, under Ter-Petrosyan’s leadership are twin brothers.
Let’s start from the fact that both the first and the second ones have
started their struggle with futile promises of establishing justice.

The idea of justice – this is what you can read on all the flags, with
which the revolutionaries usually go to occupy the palaces, estates or
even the Heaven.

This word embraces the music of the revolution. This word nourished
Volodya Ulyanov, from Simbirsk, and Ernest Guevara with nickname `Che’.
But these people usually end in concentration camps and all the before
mentioned ends in grimace.

But it can’t have any other finish. Justice is a cruel and bloody
thing. A very wise man has once said that, had God been very just,
instead of merciful, he would have already annihilated humanity from
this world for their sins.

Yes, injustice really grows in Armenia nowadays. Maybe more than ever.
It is not fair that some get too much salary some little. It is not
fair that life in Yerevan is better than in the provinces. The
distribution of wealth is also not fair. It is not fair that the `new
Armenians’ build country houses but teachers get very little salary,
and so on and so forth.

But the situation will be worse in this country if we set off hatred
against injustice, or if we envy and do evil. In that case only blind
fury will work. Let’s remember the speeches delivered by Levon
Ter-Petrosyan and his supporters during the past 8 months. What do they
comprise except hatred? Don’t you think that this was the reason of
March 1?

By the way, one very noteworthy quotation: `It is necessary to
eliminate the representatives of the government in power, be armed with
anything (guns, knives, cudgels, things to make fire), throw stones on
the troops, pour boiled water on them, make bombs¦.’ The same thing
Lenin wrote in the leaflets in October 1905.

Don’t you find similarities between the Bolsheviks and Armenian
Neo-Bolsheviks?

There is one thing that unites the historical Bolsheviks and
Neo-Bolsheviks, they don’t think about anything but annihilating the
`enemy’. They are concentrated on that idea, independent of their own
condition.

Beginning from the end of May 1921, Lenin’s health deteriorated. After
1922, apoplectic strokes were very frequent. His intellectual abilities
were going down and down. He was obliged to learn reading and writing.
On May 30, for 5 hours he couldn’t multiply 7 by 12.

But what did he use to think of, even during this critical period. Yes,
again the same thing: to catch and expel the philosophers and
scientists, which by the way happened in 1922.

The health condition of Armenian Neo-Bolsheviks was also deteriorating
beginning from September 2007. Each public event was like an apoplectic
stroke. It seemed after March 1-2 these people would start learning
primitive things¦

But instead of starting to learn the political alphabet, they announce
that they are going to continue their struggle after June 20.

What is the difference between the Bolsheviks and Neo-Bolsheviks?

On March 6, 1923 Lenin got a very strong apoplectic stroke, due to
which he was unable to perceive the words. But most probably he already
had the problem of listening to his opponents, or to perceive any idea
contradicting his own.

And now just tell me how many times have our Neo-Bolsheviks, under
Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s leadership refused the proposal of dialogue made
by the authorities. Have they ever manifested any desire to understand
their opponents?

Historical Bolsheviks and present-day Neo-Bolsheviks are twin brothers.
How could ever Ticia and Leonardo, Goya and Michelangelo, Shakespeare
and Dostoevsky describe this terrible connection?’

BAKU: Presidents in Russia to seek resolution to Karabakh conflict

Azeri Press Agency
June 6 2008

Azeri, Armenian heads meeting in Russia to seek resolution to Karabakh
conflict

6 June: Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev left for Russia’s St
Petersburg to take part in an informal summit of the CIS [the
Commonwealth of Independent States] heads of states on 5 June.

The Azerbaijani president was welcomed by the vice-governor of St
Petersburg, Aleksandr Vakhmistrov, and other officials at an airport,
the presidential press service told APA.

Ilham Aliyev, who is to attend the International Economic Forum, will
hold bilateral meetings with Russian President Dmitriy Medvedev and
some other heads of the CIS member countries.

Moreover, Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev will hold a meeting with
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan today. The sides will have
discussions on a resolution of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict at the
meeting.

Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian Receives India’s Ambassador Of Armen

PRIME MINISTER TIGRAN SARKISIAN RECEIVES INDIA’S AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA RINA PANDEI

ARMENPRESS
June 4, 2008

YEREVAN, JUNE 4, ARMENPRESS: Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian received
today India’s ambassador to Armenia, Ms. Rina Pandei.

The government press office told Armenpress that both sides stated
that Indian-Armenian relations and friendly ties are centuries-old,
based on good traditions. They also stressed that these relations
should be strengthened today through seeking new areas of cooperation.

In this context they emphasized the need of continued high level
reciprocal visits. Tigran Sarkisian assessed highly the two counters’
interaction in international organizations, particularly, within the
frameworks of the UN and thanked the government of India for it.

>From the perspective of boosting and expansion of bilateral ties the
two sides stressed the work of the Indian-Armenian intergovernmental
commission, which will have its next session in Yerevan later this
year.

Tigran Sarkisian noted that it is a good occasion for both sides to
give a new push to their interaction. He suggested that the Indian
side presents the list of questions which it would like to be on
the meeting’s agenda as well as to specify the Indian cochairman’s
candidate.

Among cooperation priorities they singled out information technology,
health, tourism, jewelry and diamond cutting, education, science and
culture. The sides also referred to the importance of establishing in
Yerevan of the Indian Information Technology Center. The ambassador
said such centers are planned to be set up also in Armenian
regions. She said the government of Armenia offers for Armenian
specialists short-term training courses in India’s universities.

She also noted with satisfaction that Armenians are interested greatly
in Indian culture and added that two long-term training courses on
Indian culture will be organized for Armenians specialists.

The prime minister and the ambassador also spoke about organization of
an Indian-Armenian business conference in New Delhi, which, according
to the ambassador, is very likely to take place in autumn.

During the conversation they also emphasized stepping up cooperation
between Yerevan and New Delhi.

It was noted that to this end Yerevan mayor will pay a visit to
New Delhi.

NKR: High Horatagh Has A School

NKR: HIGH HORATAGH HAS A SCHOOL

Panorama.am
16:42 04/06/2008

On 30 May opening ceremony of a new school supported by "Toronto"
committee of "Armenia" all Armenian foundation took place in High
Horatagh, NKR. According to the foundation the school is named after
baroness Caroline Koks who is called "Angel of Artsakh".

Baroness is the apologist of Karabakh independence in the UK and in
the world. She visited Karabakh more than 60 times. Hence Baroness
was the honorable guest of the event.

The Prime Minister of NKR Arayik Harutyunyan, NKR Minister of
Education Vladimir Khachatryan, NKR Minster of Urban Development
Alexander Mamunc, other high ranking officials and representatives
of international organizations were present at the event.

Once there were 530 inhabitants in the village after the war time
it was deserted. "But when they found out that a school is built
they returned back to their homes," said the director of the school
Naira Arustamyan.