Biogaphies Of Candidates On Walls Of Election Precincts

BIOGRAPHIES OF CANDIDATES ON WALLS OF ELECTION PRECINCTS

Panorama.am
20:03 14/02/2008

Central Electoral Committee deputy chairman, Harutiun Shahbazyan,
presented the works for the organization and the conduct of February
19 presidential elections during a meeting with reporters today.

"A sample ballot paper will be posted at the precincts during the
elections which will mention how it is filled in. Information posters
will also be posted on the presidential candidates with data from
the biographies. Each candidate is provided equal size of space. As
much information is provide as was submitted by the candidates,"
Shahbazyan said.

"Mobile boxes will be provided to those precincts where there are
hospitals," the speaker mentioned.

On February 15-16 Water Supply Of Nork-Marash, Nor Nork Communities,

ON FEBRUARY 15-16 WATER SUPPLY OF NORK-MARASH, NOR NORK COMMUNITIES, MUSHAVAN VILLAGE AND VARDASHEN TO BE STOPPED

Noyan Tapan
Feb 14, 2008

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The water supply of the Nork-Marash
community, 1-21 blocks of houses of the Nor Nork Second district,
the adjacent territory of the Vazgen Sargsian Military Institute,
Sari Tagh, the blocks of houses of Vardashen and the Mushavan village
will be stopped since nine o’clock on February 15 up to nine o’clock
on February 16 in connection with construction work. This information
was provided to Noyan Tapan by the "Yerevan Jur" company.

Tehran: Armenia backs Iran nuclear right

PRESS TV, Iran
Feb 14 2008

Armenia backs Iran nuclear right
Thu, 14 Feb 2008 22:32:23

Iran is entitled to acquire nuclear technology for civilian purposes,
Speaker of the Armenian National Assembly, Tigran Torosian says.

All countries are entitled to use nuclear energy within the framework
of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said Torosian in a
meeting with Iran’s Ambassador to Armenia, Ali Saqayian.

The two sides also slammed Western powers’ approach to nuclear
programs of other countries, a statement by Iran’s Embassy in Armenia
said.

The Iranian Ambassador, for his part, invited the Armenian official
to visit Tehran.

Saqayian expressed hope that meetings and talks between Iranian and
Armenian senior officials will boost the two nations’ ties.

A Patriarch In Dire Straits

A PATRIARCH IN DIRE STRAITS
by John Couretas

Acton Institute
Feb 13 2008
MI

With the release of a new book, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
I — best known as the Orthodox Church’s Green Patriarch for his
environmental activism — offers a concise summary of the Eastern
Christian tradition and views on a wide range of social issues.

The publication of Bartholomew’s "Encountering the Mystery" next
month arrives at a time of deep crisis for the patriarchate, a crisis
that has registered little interest among Europe’s secularized
political classes or, for that matter, Christians outside the
Orthodox Church. The Ecumenical Patriarchate, located in Istanbul
on the historic East-West crossroads of the Bosporus Straits, has
been suffering a slow asphyxiation for decades. And it is not at
all certain that this ancient see of the Church, the living witness
of a Byzantine Christianity that has proclaimed the Gospel since the
establishment of Constantinople in the fourth century — indeed since
the time of the Apostles — will survive.

Bartholomew, a Turkish citizen, presides over a flock of Orthodox
Christians that has shrunk to 3,000-4,000 members, one of the smallest
religious minorities in a land of 72 million people that is 99 percent
Muslim. The other constitutionally recognized minorities include
some 65,000 Armenian Orthodox Christians and 23,000 Jews. But there
are significant minorities of non-Muslim believers, including Syriac
Orthodox, Baha’is, Protestants, and Roman Catholics.

Who will follow?

By law, Bartholomew must choose a successor who is a Turkish
citizen and thus subject to a constitution that enshrines the modern,
secularist principles formulated by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the national
hero who established the modern state of Turkey after the collapse of
the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century. But the patriarchate
has long been viewed with suspicion by Turkish nationalists who see
it as a "foreign" institution that often sided with Greece in the
centuries-old, warring rivalry with Turkey.

In 1971, the Turkish government shut down Halki, the partriarchal
seminary on Heybeliada Island in the Sea of Marmara. And it has
progressively confiscated Orthodox Church properties, including the
expropriation of the Bûyûkada Orphanage for Boys on the Prince’s
Islands (and properties belonging to an Armenian Orthodox hospital
foundation). These expropriations happen as religious minorities report
problems associated with opening, maintaining, and operating houses of
worship. Many services are held in secret. Indeed, Turkey is a place
where proselytizing for Christian and even Muslim minority sects can
still get a person hauled into court on charges of "publicly insulting
Turkishness." This law has also been used against journalists and
writers, including novelist Orhan Pamuk for mentioning the Armenian
genocide and Turkey’s treatment of the Kurds.

In a 2005 report on the Halki Seminary controversy, the Turkish think
tank TESEV examined what it called the "the illogical legal grounds"
behind the closing and how it violates the terms of the 1923 peace
treaty of Lausanne signed by Turkey and Europe’s great powers. TESEV
concluded that "the contemporary level of civil society and global
democratic principles established by the state, are in further
contradiction with the goal to become an EU member." And, because
of its inability to train Turkish candidates for the priesthood,
TESEV warned: "It is highly probable that the Patriarchate will not
be able to find Patriarch candidates within 30-40 years and thus,
will naturally fade away."

The patriarch’s solution to Turkey’s problems — and that of
religious minorities — is to move the country to a more Western
model of tolerance and religious freedom by bringing it into the
European Union. "It is my conviction that the accession of Turkey
to the European Union would benefit all of its citizens, including
the minority communities of the country," Bartholomew writes in
his new book. "For Turkey would be required to make significant,
indeed substantial modifications to its legislation, adhering to the
principles of other European nations."

The EU Card

Unfortunately, recent history is not so favorable to this view. It is
a doubtful proposition that the EU mandarins in Brussels, who resisted
any effort to mention the Christian roots of European civilization
in a failed draft constitution, would come rushing to the aid of the
Patriarchate and other religious minorities.

Tellingly, Turkish authorities still refuse to acknowledge the
Armenian Genocide, which claimed 1.5 million lives at the hands of
the Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I. Armenian Orthodox
Patriarch Mesrob II, also facing a shortage of clergy, is pleading
with the Turkish government for permission to open a seminary.

In its 2007 report on religious freedom in Turkey, the U.S. State
Department reported a number of religiously motivated killings,
stabbings and beatings of Christians and their religious leaders,
along with attacks on church properties. In April, three members of a
Protestant church in Malatya were tortured and killed in a Christian
publishing office. In February 2006, Roman Catholic priest Andrea
Santoro was gunned down in his church along the Black Sea coast.

Witnesses said the killer screamed "Allahu Akbar," Arabic for "God is
great," before firing two bullets into Santoro’s back as he kneeled
to pray. Death threats made to American Christians are widely noted.

Indeed, Turkish society itself is deeply conflicted about its
secularizing principles and a resurgence of Islamist sentiment. In the
past week, major cities have seen street demonstrations triggered by
a proposal to lift the ban on Muslim women wearing the traditional
headscarf at universities. Writing in Hurriyet, the Turkish daily,
commentator Bekir Coskun asked if lifting the ban on the headscarf
was a step toward the Arab culture of the middle ages. "Would someone
please explain to me what kind of ‘nationalism’ this is, turning the
most beautiful culture in the world, a culture that exists in some
of the best geography in the world, towards Arabistan?" Coskun asked.

Unfortunately, the gravity of the situation facing the Ecumenical
Patriarchate and other religious minorities in Turkey hasn’t much
moved the passions of America’s opinion shapers.

In a Jan. 25 review of Bartholomew’s "Encountering the Mystery"
in the Wall Street Journal, Charlotte Allen dismisses the book as
a collection of "bromides" and "platitudes" designed to appeal to
secular progressives (except, presumably, for the parts on monasticism,
prayer and theology). She mocks the Patriarch’s writings as simply
"yadda yadda yadda." Allen also describes Bartholomew as a sort of
"pope," an abysmally misapplied term for him, as anyone familiar with
Eastern Orthodox tradition understands. But, helpfully, she announces
that Orthodoxy "is not dead yet." You can almost hear the collective
sigh of relief from 300 million Orthodox Christians all over the world.

People concerned about religious freedom, and those groups established
to promote religious tolerance and freedom, should raise the public’s
awareness about what is happening to the Ecumenical Patriarchate and
other religious minorities in Turkey. A growing movement to establish
civil society think tanks in Turkey should be encouraged as one of an
important means of building up that country’s ability to work out its
own conflicts — on its own terms — about religious freedom. With
that, perhaps, respect for the rights of religious minorities will
soon become a defining element of "Turkishness."

–Boundary_(ID_nWjJGYgMB mapZfmdTmve2Q)–

Union Of Armenians Of Russia Endorsed Serge Sargsyan

UNION OF ARMENIANS OF RUSSIA ENDORSED SERGE SARGSYAN

Lragir
Feb 13 2008
Armenia

The Union of Armenians of Russia endorses the presidential candidate,
Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan, stated the president of the UAR Ara
Abrahamyan.

"The Union of Armenians of Russia thinks Serge Sargsyan is the most
acceptable presidential candidate. We know Serge Sargsyan and we
have been collaborating for 10 years and we would wish to see him
president of Armenia," Ara Abrahamyan says.

According to him, Serge Sargsyan has considerable potential and his
approaches toward political and economic issues match with the stance
of the Union of Armenians of Russia. According to him, the UAR daily
receives messages from about 300 thousand citizens of Armenia living
in Russia who want to know whom their Union will endorse.

Ara Abrahamyan confessed that his organization may support only the
candidate whose political program includes cooperation between Armenia
and Russia as a priority.

Extending Through Armenia, Nabucco Can Involve Republic In Regional

EXTENDING THROUGH ARMENIA, NABUCCO CAN INVOLVE REPUBLIC IN REGIONAL PROJECTS

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.02.2008 17:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "The European Union would prefer to be in transit
dependence on Armenia rather than on Turkey, which has already
opposed joining of Gaz de France to Nabucco, motivating its decision
by France’s stance on the Armenian Genocide and Sarkozy’s position
on Turkey’s full membership in the EU," Habet Madoyan, expert of Mitq
analytical center, said in an interview with PanARMENIAN.Net.

"As result, Gaz de France will be an associated member. Thus,
wishing to avoid energy dependence on Russia, the EU risks to fall
into dependence on Turkey, which runs the Blue Fuel. Any alternative
gas pipeline through Armenia will involve the republic in regional
projects. Nabucco construction is supposed to kick off in 2009 and
something can be changed still," he said.

HayPost Delivered Notifications To All Voters

HAYPOST DELIVERED NOTIFICATIONS TO ALL VOTERS

armradio.am
12.02.2008 18:11

"HayPost" concluded the delivery of election notifications all over
the territory of the Republic of Armenia, Director General of "HayPost"
CJSC Hans Boon stated today.

Speaking during the meeting with the employees of "HayPost," Hans Boon
informed that all the electors of the country received notifications
on the date of the elections and on the local polling station where
they are going to vote.

Azerbaijan Splashes Oil Wealth On Prestige Building

AZERBAIJAN SPLASHES OIL WEALTH ON PRESTIGE BUILDING
By Lada Yevgrashina

Reuters
Feb 11 2008
UK

BAKU, Feb 11 (Reuters) – Azerbaijan’s ruling elite has grown rich
from oil and now it is to acquire the ultimate status symbol: a
monument to the president’s father designed by one of the world’s
most sought-after architects.

The Azeri government has commissioned Zaha Hadid, an Iraqi-born Briton
best known for designing a cutting-edge new plant for carmaker BMW
(BMWG.DE: Quote, Profile, Research) in Leipzig, to build a cultural
centre in honour of Heydar Aliyev, the man who founded the ruling
dynasty.

The undulating glass and aluminium structure will rise up alongside
oil-blackened Soviet-era factories in the capital of a country
that just a few years ago was in economic chaos and reeling from a
territorial war with its neighbour Armenia.

It will also deepen the posthumous cult of personality around the
former KGB officer who ran Azerbaijan for three decades before his
death in 2003. His son Ilham Aliyev, a reformed playboy, took over
the presidency.

"This centre will be an example of respect for the legacy of Heydar
Aliyev and become a symbol of Azerbaijan’s modern capital," Ilham
Aliyev said at a ground-breaking ceremony for the cultural centre.

OIL WEALTH

Azerbaijan is following the example of other ex-Soviet states that
have brought in big-name architects to translate their new-found oil
wealth into steel and concrete.

Kazakhstan, home to the world’s biggest new oil discovery in more
than 30 years, hired Britain’s Lord Norman Foster to design a huge
glass pyramid in its capital Astana, a city built almost from scratch
in the empty steppes.

Foster is also behind a tapering skyscraper in the Russian capital that
its builders say will be the tallest building in Europe. The tower
will be the centrepiece of a development that symbolises Russia’s
oil-driven economic boom.

The Baku cultural centre will be the most distinctive building to go
up in the Caspian Sea city in a generation.

Slated for completion by the end of 2009, it will house a concert
hall seating 1,284 people, a library, a museum and underground parking
for 1,350 cars, the developers say.

Although they refuse to reveal how much it will cost, the project,
to be paid for by the government, is likely to run into tens of
millions of dollars.

It will be a major outlay for country where, according to the World
Bank, the average monthly income is about $250 and 29 percent of the
population live in poverty.

But the state’s coffers, now recovered from the chaos of the 1990s,
are bulging with revenues from the oil that Azerbaijan, in conjunction
with a BP-led (BP.L: Quote, Profile, Research) consortium, exports
along a pipeline to the Mediterranean Sea.

Hadid is hailed as one of the world’s most important contemporary
architects. In 2004 she was awarded the Pritzker Prize, the
architecture world’s equivalent of the Nobel prize, the first woman
to receive the award.

Among her recent high-profile commissions is a $146 million aquatics
centre for the 2012 Olympic Games in London. (Writing by Christian
Lowe; Editing by Catherine Evans)

Portrait in Light and Shadow

Portrait in Light and Shadow: The Life of Yousuf Karsh
by Maria Tippett
Reviewed by Lynne Truss

The Sunday Times
February 10, 2008

In December 1941 (so the story goes), Winston Churchill delivered a
landmark speech to the Canadian parliament, and afterwards discovered ‘
to his annoyance ‘ that he was to have his picture taken in an
adjoining chamber by a small, delicate Armenian man whose excessively
good manners turned out to mask a steely resolve. That man would later
be known to the world as `Karsh of Ottawa’ and this year is his
centenary. Anyway, Churchill immediately lit a cigar and ignored the
ashtray Karsh politely offered. At which point, under severe pressure
of time, Karsh simply removed Churchill’s cigar from his lips and took
the iconic portrait that resulted, in which a look of sheer, murderous
outrage is combined with a babyish sulk.

That picture made Karsh’s name. By miraculous good fortune (and,
really, what were the chances?), Churchill’s glowering
you-thieving-little-bastard expression looked exactly like `We shall
never surrender.’ No wonder Karsh loved this self-glorifying story so
much that he retold it for the rest of his life. The picture became
celebrated universally as The Roaring Lion, and the amazing thing is:
even when viewers knew the cigar story, they still succumbed to its
power.

Turn to the life of virtually any male 20th-century notable, and you
will probably find that he was successfully `Karshed’ at some point or
another. For anyone with an eye to posterity ‘ politicians, film stars,
world leaders, royals ‘ Karshing was virtually a career requirement.
And why? Well, one of the main reasons was that nobody ever looked at a
Karsh and said, `I wonder if anyone famous took that.’ Any flattering
and meticulously printed monochrome studio picture of a Top Person
characterised by extreme and artful contrast, a studied pose,
theatrical highlights, pinpoint detail, visible hands and optional
silvery cigarette smoke can be rightly assumed to be his. And if
Karsh’s was an old-fashioned and restricted approach to photography, by
the way, he certainly made a virtue of that fact ‘ just as he turned so
many other drawbacks into advantages, as Maria Tippett’s biography
reveals. Take the Ottawa thing alone. Imagine what appalling luck it
was for an ambitious, immigrant, lion-hunting photographer to find
himself based in the administrative capital of Canada. Lesser men would
have given up at once and sold pencils. Yet, by branding himself Karsh
of Ottawa, our hero cleverly conferred worldwide cachet on an
unglamorous city (thus earning its gratitude) and made himself sound
much more interesting and exotic at the same time.

Portrait in Light and Shadow is a somewhat optimistic title for this
biography. It implies there will be ups and downs and a bit of probing
into dark corners. In fact, it appears that even any light-and-shade
account of Karsh’s long life (he died in 2002, aged 93) was made pretty
well impossible by the way he took ownership of his story, and
presented it in the best possible light. Every conversation with a
famous sitter was typed up afterwards by his first wife Solange; each
encounter (with Sibelius, or Elizabeth Taylor, or Khrushchev) was
reduced to a polished, anodyne caption. One starts to feel sorry for a
biographer faced with such an airbrushed life. Was Karsh a terrible
social climber? Why did he tell his first wife that he couldn’t love
her `in the way [she] should be loved’? Why didn’t he make plans for
his parents (in Syria) to follow him to Canada once he was rich and
successful? Isn’t it frustrating to be told so frequently that Karsh
was amusing company without a single instance to support the claim? I
am reminded of a television make-up lady I had once who seemed to be
doing a really good job on me. `What are you using? It’s terrific!’ I
said. `Just concealer,’ she replied, baffled. If Tippett barely quotes
from Karsh’s autobiographical writings, one starts to suspect that the
reason is pure despair. After all, a) his first wife probably wrote
them on his behalf in any case, and b) they are specifically designed
to reveal sod all.

So this book is mainly an easy and readable account of Karsh’s
ever-burgeoning celebrity, based on an immense talent and appetite for
monumentalising. In common with his heroine, the 19th-century
photographer Julia Margaret Cameron, Karsh believed in a spirit of
greatness that could be fixed for eternity on a piece of photographic
paper if you just managed to get the lighting right. He arrived for
sittings both well briefed on his subject’s life and equipped with
polite, prepared conversational questions, such as `What do you think
of the link between smoking and lung cancer?’ He would have previously
set up banks of lights. He devised new, ingenious ways of getting the
hands into shot. And after the picture was taken, an unspecified amount
of work (usually by others) went into retouching the image until it was
flawless.

I would have liked much more about technical matters. Only once is an
exposure time mentioned (a tenth of a second for Churchill), and the
knowledge that Karsh’s camera of choice had a white case, instead of
the usual black, leaves me a little unsatisfied. Tippett mentions the
huge amount of equipment that had to be shipped to Europe, but she
doesn’t open the containers to peek inside. I would have liked to know
how many shots were generally taken at each sitting, and whether
sitters were involved in selecting images. I would have liked more on
the general context of 20th-century photography. But most of all, I
would have liked much better reproductions of the pictures themselves,
which are nicely placed in the run of the text (which is good), but
reproduced in quite murky half-tone (which is shocking).

Incidentally, few of Karsh’s smoking portraits are in the book ‘ in
fact, I think there’s only Humphrey Bogart. There is a great Karsh
photograph of Tennessee Williams so wreathed in smoke that you can’t
help thinking his hair is on fire; Peter Lorre, Laurence Olivier and
André Malraux are all similarly depicted with gaspers, and there are
many self-portraits of Karsh with fag in hand. None of these makes an
appearance, and one has to ask: is this a case of yet more historical
airbrushing?

HOCUS FOCUS

The final version of Karsh’s famous Churchill portrait was markedly
different from the original. Not only was it heavily cropped, but a lot
of work was done to make the sitter less tired, his hands smoother, and
areas of white more luminous. When a critic crowed that Karsh had
raised photography to the level of painting, she was closer to the
truth than she realised.

PORTRAIT IN LIGHT AND SHADOW: The Life of Yousuf Karsh by Maria Tippett
Yale £25 pp426

Available at the Sunday Times Books First price of £22.50 (including
p&p) on 0870 165 8585

President: `immoral’, efforts to manipulate names of Armenian heroes

President described as `immoral’ the efforts to manipulate by the names
of Armenian heroes in the process of the pre-election struggle

February 8, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. President Robert Kocharian stated in Yerevan today
that `all the participants and the chief organizer of the terrorist act
in the parliament in 1999 are convicted, and I consider the efforts to
manipulate by the names of Armenian heroes in the pre-election struggle
immoral’.

Mediamax reports that the President said this, commenting on the
statements of ANM, according to which, coming into power, they `will
unveil the real culprits of the terrorist act of October 27 of 1999′.

Commenting on the statements of Levon Ter-Petrosian on the disclosure
of economic crimes, made in the time of the present power, Robert
Kocharian stated that the Ex-President has `absolutely no knowledge in
the issues of economy’.

`When I was a Prime Minister, Ter-Petrosian was not at all involved in
economic issues, and now he surprises me by his statements’, Robert
Kocharian stated