"Elections Have Passed Under Not Free And Unfair Conditions In Elec

"ELECTIONS HAVE PASSED UNDER NOT FREE AND UNFAIR CONDITIONS IN ELECTORAL CONSTITUENCY 15," RAFFI HOVHANNISIAN DECLARES

Noyan Tapan
Aug 27 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 27, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA NA MP Elections By The
Majoritarian system have passed under not free and unfair conditions
with various infringements and abuse of power levers in Electoral
Constituency 15. This statement was made by Raffi Hovhannisian, the
leader of the "Zharangutiun" (Heritage) party and a candidate, who
took part in the elections, at the press conference, which was held
on August 27. Seeing no need to go into details, he only mentions that
"everything happened in front of the eyes of electors."

"I hope that the governing body of the republic together with all
its levels will in future perform its obligations in a more decent
and legal way, worthy of the respect of people," is mentioned in the
statement of Raffi Hovhannisian.

It should also be mentioned that according to the preliminary results
of the NA MP by-elections held by a majoritarian system in Electoral
Constituency 15 of the Aragatsotn region on August 26, 16 121 electors
have voted for businessman Khachik Manukian, a member of the Republican
Party of Armenia.

The votes among the other five candidates have been distributed in
the following way: non-partisan Mnatsakan Mnatsakanian, the Mayor of
Talin, has received 10 067 votes, Gurgen Shahinian, a member of the
ARF Dashnaktsutiun, 7 248 votes, Raffi Hovhannissian, the President
and Founder of the Zharangutiun (Heritage) party and an MP by the NA
proportional system, 1 220 votes, non-partisan Emin Karapetian and
Vahagn Petrosian, correspondingly, 518 and 96 votes.

The Musical Institute – A Cultural Center

AZG Armenian Daily #153, 25/08/2007

Culture

THE MUSICAL INSTITUTE – A CULTURAL CENTER

Yerevan Komitas State Conservatory’s Gyumri branch will have the
recurrent staff of the students this year in the Departments of String
Instruments, Wind Instruments, Vocal Art and Military Conducting. The
best graduates of "Improrythm" college are also among the new
students; some of them are participants of the international festival
sponsored by Vladimir Spivakov International Charity Foundation.

Yerevan Komitas State Conservatory’s branch of Gyumri has become a
kind of cultural center in Gyumri. It holds musical festivals,
concerts, cultural meetings, etc.

Armenian-Russian cultural dialogue-forum titled "Dialogue of two
cultures" will take place in September of this year in Gyumri.

"Art and time: a glance from Gyumri" scientific-cultural magazine
started to be published in 2006. Yerevan Komitas State Conservatory’s
Gyumri branch and "Improrythm" Co. Ltd. are the founders of the
above-mentioned magazine.

By Gegham Mkrtchian

Arlington pulls out of No Place for Hate

The Arlington Advocate: Arlington pulls out of No Place for Hate

By Shauna Staveley/Staff Writer
GateHouse News Service
Wed Aug 22, 2007, 01:38 PM EDT

Arlington, Mass. –

The Arlington No Place for Hate Program Steering Committee decided
Monday night in an emergency meeting that they would suspend their
involvement wit= h the committee.

This decision was in lieu of recent controversy involving the program
sponsor, the Anti-Defamation League, and their supposed inability on
the National level to acknowledge the 1915-1917 murder of 1.5 Million
Armenians by the Ottoman Empire a genocide, committee officials said.

"Everyone in the committee felt clearly as the Watertown (program
ending), and following stories (about the controversy) were happening
that we had to do something about this," said Cindy Friedman,
chairwoman of the Arlington No Place for Hate Committee. "We didn’t
want to wait and not respond."

Friedman said the committee analyzed and discussed a diverse array of
information, including a written letter from the Armenian community
and Arlington activists, as well as gathered information on the ADL.

Another influential occurrence was a reported divide in perspective
between the Regional and National ADL leaders. According to the Boston
Globe in an article on Aug. 19, two New England board members resigned
after New Englan= d Regional Director Andrew Tarsy was fired over his
push to acknowledge the Armenian genocide.

"At the very least, the ADL can acknowledge the New England Regional
chapte= r and their stance – to call the genocide a genocide,"
Friedman said. "And = I think they should reinstate Andrew Tarsy. They
should reinstate whom they fired, call it a genocide and support the
position of the New England chapter. That’s what they could do."

One piece of information was an advertisement by the ADL titled "An
Open Letter to the New England Community." That advertisement is
scheduled to ru= n all week in various newspapers according to the ADL
website, and states the following:

"ADL has acknowledged and never denied the massacres of hundreds of
thousands of Armenians – and by some accounts more than one
million – at th= e hands of the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1918=85we
cannot let a disagreement on = how to proceed on one issue undermine
all our joint good work."

Many Arlington residents, both Armenian and non-Armenian, activist and
non-activist, have increased their criticism after this advertisement
was published. The issue has especially affected Armenians, however,
who have relatives that directly experienced the horrors of 1915-1918.

Lucine Zadoiam-Kouchakdjian is a four-year Armenian resident of
Arlington whose grandparent’s perished and parent’s escaped the
genocide. She said he= r grandparent’s took refuge in an Armenian
church in Bitlis (Turkey), and upo= n the church being filled with
refugees; it was burnt to the ground. "It is a known fact," she said.
Her parents both took refuge in Romania, where they first met.

"My father’s side, he was a young man and went to Syria, and from
there he tried to gather orphans to have orphanages. There was
reluctance to talk about the subject, as would many people who go
through tragedy, to their children. They would say bits and pieces,
but wouldn’t have (the) heart to pour out their grief," she said.

Zadoiam-Kouchakdjian’s story is far from unique, and that is precisely
why this controversy is so hurtful to the Armenian people.

"There are all these stories," she said. "Everyone outside of Armenia,
or Western Armenia (now Eastern Turkey): why are they outside of
lands? Becaus= e of the genocide. What business (do they have in being
outside of their homeland)? Because of Survivors that took refuge in
Middle Eastern countrie= s or in Europe or the United States. Every
Armenian would have story. That is why it’s ridiculous to support the
denial of Turkey (about the genocide)."

Berge Ayvazian, an Armenian resident for 28 years that has raised
three children in the area, is a member of the Armenian Assembly Board
of Trustees. He said the Assembly is the is the "largest U.S. based
advocacy organization regarding Armenian issues located in
Washington. We have been backing legislation and working with congress
to get it passed."

Ayvazian said "in practice he was normally supportive" of the No Place
for Hate Program in Arlington, but his view changed due to recent
articles he has read on the controversy.

"I just think it’s extremely hypocritical to promote a program against
hate bigotry and divisiveness and deny a genocide that was widely
recognized," Ayvazian said.

One piece of legislation the Assembly is working to pass in Congress
is House Resolution 106, introduced on Jan. 30, 2007, which in the
legislative documents states that the resolution is:

"Calling upon the President to ensure that the foreign policy of the
United States reflects appropriate understanding and sensitivity
concerning issues related to human rights, ethnic cleansing, and
genocide documented in the United States record relating to the
Armenian Genocide, and for other purposes."

The ADL responds

What is interesting about the resolution, in relation to the ADL, is
their most recent press release titled "ADL Statement on the Armenian
Genocide," released Tuesday afternoon.

In the release, National Director Abraham H. Foxman said "on
reflection, we have come to share the view of Henry Morgenthau, Sr.,
that the consequences of those actions (on 1915-1918) were indeed
tantamount to genocide. If the word genocide had existed then, they
would have called it genocide."

Bob Wolfson, the ADL Associate National Director for Regional
Operations, said in a phone interview that he hoped that this would
start the healing process of the Armenian Community.

"The Watertown action was based on the notion that we were denying the
genocide, which we never did," Wolfson said. "The use of that term was
problematic for very complicated political reasons, so we decided to
change our policy and use the term. And I believe and hope the
Armenian community will applaud it and I hope the good work with the
program in places like Arlington will continue."

The problem for residents, however, is the bottom paragraph of the
"ADL Statement on the Armenian Genocide," where Foxman stated the
following abou= t congressional resolutions such as 106:

"We continue to firmly believe that a congressional resolution on such
matters is a counterproductive diversion and will not foster
reconciliation between Turks and Armenians and may put at risk the
Turkish Jewish communit= y and the important multilateral relationship
between Turkey, Israel, and the United States."

Upon reading this statement, Ayvazian, member of the Armenian Board of
Assembly, said "Certainly they don’t support the resolution
(106). They think it’s counterproductive. It appears they value
reconciliation as a higher objective than recognition (of the
genocide). It’s hard for me to se= e how you’d achieve reconciliation
until you receive recognition."

"It’s unfortunate that a valuable program such as No Place For Hate
has bee= n put at risk by the ADL’s unwillingness to step forward and
recognize that it’s not tantamount to genocide, but it is genocide –
and it’s important that recognition come before reconciliation," he
said. "None of us want to put the Jewish/Turkish community at
risk. But if they’re at risk, that puts into perspective even more the
importance of recognition." Other complaints against the ADL

Elaine Hagopian, a retired professor from Arlington who studied the
Middle East for more than 45 years, earning two Fulbright grants for
research, sai= d the problem with Anti-Defamation League’s association
with a program like N= o Place For Hate runs much deeper than the
Armenian Genocide issue. She said the problem was merely a "trigger to
expose the ADL for its’ duplicity."

She discussed an incident in 1993, where a the District Attorney of
San Francisco had 700 pages of documents in which he claimed the ADL
was spying= , and had files compiled over 30 years on over 10,000
individuals and 950 groups of "all political stripes, including Arab
and Palestinian groups, an= d anti-apartheid activists before South
Africa became independent."

The DA dropped the accusations a few months later, but a class-action
lawsuit was filed, and according to published reports, the
Anti-Defamation League settled out of court in 1999.

Hagopian also said the Middle East Studies Association once condemned
the ADL because they "inhibited academic freedom."

Knowing of these incidents, and others in which Hagopian said the ADL
tried to "suppress dissent," Hagopian and other Arlington residents
tried to prevent the No Place For Hate Program from being created
months ago, but th= e attempt failed.

"The issue of having these programs (such as No Place For Hate) is it
gives the Anti-Defamation League credibility," she said. "It keeps in
the public mind that they are somehow a civil and human rights group,
when really they are doing other things in the background – one of
those being an advocate for Israel, which makes it impossible to be a
human rights group. It opens opportunity to see the other faces."

"No one would argue that the ADL has no right to advocate for Israel,"
she said. "On the other hand, they cannot say that they are promoting
diversity and respect for others and so forth when they target people
and groups that they see as critics of Israel – or people who, like
Arabs who represent a different point of view=85. So if you exclude
certain groups from being covered by the ADL because of an Israeli
agenda, then ADL really needs to choose whether it is really a human
rights group equal to all, or an advocate to Israel."

However, Heather Steckel, a Social Worker at Peabody High School, said
her experience with the ADL during a workshop was overwhelmingly
positive.

"Through grant money they came in to do teacher work shops and did
really well=85they’ve been fabulous," Steckel said. "I’ve had nothing
but good experiences with them and their workers."

Steckel said they asked her the following spring if she would like to
use a $20,000 donation they received from an anonymous
donor. According to Steckel, the ADL is going to use all of the money
on training kids, faculty= , and technical support for two years.

"So the fact that they came to me, because I did a workshop I think
was wonderful," she said. "I don’t agree with their policy, absolutely
not, but as an organization they’ve done very well by us. So much so
that I thought about going to work with them before this happened."

Arlington No Place For Hate Program Steering Committee Chairwoman
Friedman said that the program has brought great things to Arlington
that have nothing to do with the ADL or its’ sponsorship.

"The idea that a community stands up, from the board of selectmen down
says we are committed to making this a welcoming place to live, and we
are committed to activities that encourage that, its an incredibly
positive thing," Friedman said. "We had organized the start of
capturing oral histories of people in Arlington, how they got here,
why they stay, and wer= e starting to have dialogue between people how
we’re different and how we’re the same. All of that is incredibly
positive."

"We were just starting to do all of that stuff," she said. "We had our
proclamation and were organizing the Town Day. It was great and
brought together all the different groups, who all have some piece in
making Arlington a safe and welcoming place. So, we are saddened by
this. We think there are great things about the program, but we just
cannot continue under these circumstances."

Source: 4

http://www.townonline.com/arlington/news/x66348006

Azeri President Rekindles War Rhetoric

AZERI PRESIDENT REKINDLES WAR RHETORIC

ARMENPRESS
Aug 23, 2007

BAKU, AUGUST 23, ARMENPRESS: Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev has
rekindled his war rhetoric today telling a crowd in a remote Hajigabuli
region that Azerbaijani army is getting stronger day after day and
is ready to liberate Armenian-controlled areas.

"We are taking every possible measure to raise the efficiency of our
armed forces," he was quoted by Azerbaijani news agencies as saying.

He boasted of growing military spending which he said have equaled
Armenia’s total budget. "It is impossible to imagine that a country
may attack Azerbaijan today," he said.

Team Of Yerevan Leads By Number Of Gold Medals Won At 4th Pan-Armeni

TEAM OF YEREVAN LEADS BY NUMBER OF GOLD MEDALS WON AT 4th PAN-ARMENIAN GAMES

Noyan Tapan
Aug 23, 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 23, NOYAN TAPAN. As of August 23, sportsmen from
18 cities have won medals at the 4th Pan-Armenian Games. The team
of Yerevan is in first place by the number of gold medal won – 21,
as well as 12 silver and 11 bronze medals. The team of Vanadzor is
in second place – 4 gold, 5 silver and 2 bronze medals, and the team
of Glendale is in third place – 2 gold medals.

Medals have also been won by sportsmen of: Artashat – 1 gold, 2 silver
and 1 bronze, Kapan – 1 gold and 2 silver, Akhaltskha – 1 gold and 3
bronze, Tehran – 1 gold and 4 bronze, Gyumri – 1 gold and 2 bronze,
Tbilisi – 1 gold, Moscow – 1 gold, Spahan – 6 silver and 2 bronze,
Stepanakert – 2 silver and 3 bronze, Kiev and Sofia (each won 2
silver and 1 bronze medals), Khaskovo (Bulgaria) – 1 silver, Ijevan –
2 bronze, Plovdiv – 1 bronze, and Abovian – 1 bronze.

From Baden-Baden To Stepanakert

FROM BADEN-BADEN TO STEPANAKERT

Lragir.am
22-08-2007 12:27:39

Rumors came that after spending the holiday in the German city
of Baden-Baden with Serge Sargsyan hard days are awaiting the NKR
president elect Bako Sahakyan connected with the new government. The
point is that in the pre-election period Bako Sahakyan "hinted"
at several people for the appointment of prime minister. Currently,
the co-leader of the Azat Hayrenik Party, Member of Parliament Arayik
Harutiunyan, the Moscow-based businessman Levon Hairapetyan and the
former NKR vice prime minister Yuri Ghazaryan are mentioned. Meanwhile,
Prime Minister Anushavan Danielyan is not likely to give up easily. The
prime minister is said to demand a high-ranking position in Armenia
in return for the post of prime minister.

In Stepanakert they say Anushavan Danielyan may be appointed minister
of transport of Armenia. For some "well-known reasons" Anushavan
Danielyan cannot return to Crimea. For their part, the official
circles of Stepanakert and Yerevan are not "fond" of him but they
cannot ignore his demand. He was prime minister of Karabakh for many
years and is well-aware of the activities of the Karabakh officials.

The problem of appointment of a prime minister is not the only
complication.

Bako Sahakyan made similar pledges regarding the appointment of some
other core posts. After the voting he had stated that political culture
supposes appointing the representatives of forces which endorsed
him. Meanwhile, the representatives are many whereas the posts are few.

For its part, the new staff of the NKR government needs the approval
of official Yerevan because the bulk of the NKR budget comprises the
interstate loan of Armenia. Arkady Ghukasyan and Anushavan Danielyan
had tried at one time to conduct an independent economic policy
especially in tax administration, but Armenia made them review this
policy through economic methods. Hence, considering the "peculiarity"
of the election of Bako Sahakyan, the new government of NKR will not
be independent.

The acting president Arkady Ghukasyan should not be forgotten
either. He and Bako Sahakyan were said to have controversies over
the new government, namely some appointments.

The Plank: Genocide, Realpolitik, and The ADL

08.20.07

*GENOCIDE, REALPOLITIK, AND THE ADL:*

Anyone who read my *recent
story< 723&s=crowley072307>
* about the explosive Washington politics of the Armenian genocide will be
interested in this dramatic flare-up in Massachusetts: The Anti Defamation
League *has fired< /2007/08/18/adl_local_leader_fired_on_armenian_iss ue/>
* its New England regional direction for insisting that the group recognize
as genocide the circa-1915 slaughter of perhaps a million Armenians by the
Ottoman Turks. (Two regional board members, including a Boston City
Councilor and the former chairman of Polaroid, have subsequently
*resigned< ws/local/massachusetts/articles/2007/08/19/two_mem bers_of_regional_anti_defamation_league_resign_in_ protest/>
*.)

A resolution pending in Congress would make it official U.S. policy to
recognize that the Armenians were genocide victims. But the ADL, along with
other leading Jewish-American groups, apparently considers friendly
relations between Israel and Turkey–whose government takes genocide claims
as a massive provocation–more important than the underlying historical
question. As the ADL is explaining via an *open
letter< asp>
* in Boston newspapers:

We believe that legislative efforts outside of Turkey are counterproductive
to the goal of having Turkey itself come to grips with its past. We take no
position on what action Congress should take on House Resolution 106. The
Jewish community in Turkey has clearly expressed to us and other major
American Jewish organizations its concerns about the impact of Congressional
action on them, and we cannot ignore those concerns. We are also keenly
aware that Turkey is a key strategic ally and friend of the United States
and a staunch friend of Israel, and that in the struggle between Islamic
extremists and moderate Islam, Turkey is the most critical country in the
world.

Meanwhile, the House resolution mentioned above now has 226 co-sponsors
(see the list *here< 110:HE00106:@@@P>
*)–eight more than a majority. The only question now is whether House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who had ardently supported the Armenian cause in the
past, wants to press ahead with a vote–one that the Bush administration
opposes and which is sure to infuriate the Turks, possibly even with *
consequences < =2128>* for the
war in Iraq.

*Update*: I’d missed Alan Wolfe’s posting over at our Open University blog
yesterday calling the ADL "tone deaf." Check it out
*here< y?pid=135807>
*.

–*Michael Crowley*

Source: *
*

http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i070
http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles
http://www.boston.com/ne
http://www.adl.org/ad_new_england.
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d
http://www.armeniadiaspora.com/ADC/news.asp?id
http://www.tnr.com/blog/openuniversit
http://www.tnr.com/blog/the_plank?pid=135885

Finally Arriving

FINALLY ARRIVING

Hayots Ashkharh Daily Newspaper
21 Aug 2007
Armenia

The mission of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
(PACE) will visit the region under the leadership of the British
Parliamentarian Edward O’Hara for monitoring the situation of the
cultural monuments in South Caucasus.

As informed by Christopher Grayson, Head of the PACE Committee on
Cultural, Scientific and Educational Affairs, the mission will start
its visit on August 29, first arriving in Azerbaijan and then in
Armenia. As mentioned by K. Grayson, the routes and the time-limits
of the visit to Armenia are not yet clarified.

It had previously been mentioned that the mission would also visit
Nagorno Karabakh, Nakhijevan and Tbilisi. K. Grayson said the details
need further clarification.

Boxing: Arthur Abraham Crushes Gevor in Eleven

BoxingScene.com, AR
Aug 18 2007

Arthur Abraham Crushes Gevor in Eleven

By Per Ake Persson

Berlin, Germany – IBF middleweight champ Arthur Abraham retained the
title with a brutal eleventh round knockout over a very brave
challenger in Khoren Gevor. The end came at 2.41. Gevor, who had
fought with a beyond belief heart and determination was all of a
sudden hurt by a left hook and staggered backwards, Abraham followed
up,
missed with a big right hook but the short, powerful left hook that
came behind it took out Gevor. The challenger went down on his knees
and fell over as American referee Pete Podgorski dispensed with the
count.

Gevor got up relatively quickly but looked badly dazed for minutes.

After ten it was scored 98-91, 97-93 and 97-95, all for Abraham.

Gevor was off to a good start outworking the champion. However,
Abraham had much superior power and once he found the range he would
nail Gevor almost at will fighting in spurts with long spells off as
he often tends to do. Khoren, a southpaw, showed a good chin but most
of all an enourmous will and kept coming back no matter what.

On the undercard welter Michel Trabant and Giammario Grassellini
fought to a technical draw after Trabant was badly after an
accidental clash of heads.

Cuban cruiserweight Yoan Pablo Hernandez knocked out Brazilian Daniel
Bispo in the first to win the vacant WBA Fedelatin title.

Super middleweight Mads Larsen clearly beat Australian Nader Hamdan
after eight rounds. Hamdan was floored in the third.

Cruiserweight Alexander Frenkel scored a bad knockout over American
Shane Schwarz in the first and it took a long time for Schwarz to get
up on his feet.

;id=9970

http://www.boxingscene.com/?m=show&amp

Ararat Zurabian: Serge Sargsian Won’t Dare To Run For President

ARARAT ZURABIAN: SERGE SARGSIAN WON’T DARE TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT
By Marieta Khachatrian

AZG Armenian Daily #148
18/08/2007

The leader of the board of the All-Armenian Movement Ararat Zurabyan
stated August 17 at the Pastark club if Levon Ter-Petrosyan is
nominated, Serge Sargsyan will not dare to look Levon Ter-Petrosyan
in the eye and speak up. "However, I also think Serge Sargsyan will
not be nominated because I do not think he may dare to be nominated,"
Ararat Zurabyan says.

He said who participated in the meeting of the opposition leaders
at the Metelitsa Cafe.He added that the club the common candidate of
the opposition is not an end in itself. The purpose of it should be
to offer the society a real alternative. Ararat Zurabyan underlines
the importance of the opposition leaders and says the public and
political circles and the reporters have already talked for more
than 40 hours about this meeting which lasted for 40 minutes. As to
his expectations, Ararat Zurabyan says he has great expectations
from the meetings of leaders of the political opposition. "Every
political process is important, and the meeting of some political
figures, the persons representing the parties, must have certain
importance but similar meetings take place every day. Every day I
meet with the leaders of one or two parties, or political figures,
and I never announce about it in the media or on television because
it is a very natural process," Ararat Zurabyan says.

The notion of public demand is highly conventional, he said, answering
the question of reporters whether the All-Armenian Movement has
measured public demand for the nomination. "When Karen Demirchyan
was named president in 1998, public demand was not mentioned.

Nobody could forecast the developments and the situation," says the
leader of the board of the All-Armenian Movement. Ararat Zurabyan
thinks a similar situation will occur if Levon Ter-Petrosyan
is nominated. Meanwhile, Ararat Zurabyan is all but sure that
Ter-Petrosyan will be nominated. "There is public demand. No candidate
is mentioned definitely by the society but there is public demand for
a change of government, to have another political figure at the wheel
of the government. I think the public demand that exists, and we all
are aware and we all know, the Armenian society does not like this
government and does not think this is the team that should rule Armenia
over the upcoming 5-10 years. And I think, as to Levon Ter-Petrosyan,
this process is underway," Ararat Zurabyan says. He stated that
the All-Armenian Movement will nominate Levon Ter-Petrosyan. As to
Ter-Petrosyan’s personal attitude, it will become known when the time
of registration of candidate comes, says the leader of the board of
the All-Armenian Movement. "As to Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s likelihood
to participate in the political process, I am deeply convinced he
is," Ararat Zurabyan says. He underlines that most political figures
have stated likelihood to run in the election but only the rumors
about Ter-Petrosyan’s nomination aroused a fuss. "And considering
his importance, Levon Ter-Petrosyan must break the silence in the
political sphere, which is happening," Ararat Zurabyan says. As
to Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s visits and meetings in the regions, Ararat
Zurabyan says those are related to the party’s affairs. "The activists
of the regional organizations of the All-Armenian Movement had a few
meetings with Ter-Petrosyan. In the regions of Aragatsotn, Shirak,
Lori, and the meetings will continue. I think it means something,"
Ararat Zurabyan says. According to him, nobody will believe him if
he says Ter-Petrosyan’s meetings had a purpose other than what the
reporters suggest. "It is obvious that with the presidential election
coming up, the members of the team meet, discuss the moods, try to
evaluate the possibilities.

And it is natural," Ararat Zurabyan says. According to Ararat Zurabyan,
during the meetings nobody said that Ter-Petrosyan will not be
nominated. Meanwhile, many spoke for the nomination, Ararat Zurabyan
says. "A number of meetings are expected. The representatives of the
All-Armenian Movement will participate, as well as I think the format
will be enlarged, in a very short period. There is a tendency, and
there will be a number of other meetings," says Ararat Zurabyan. He
says, however, the meetings are not part of an election campaign,
meanwhile, in the period of nomination and the election campaign
Ter-Petrosyan will have broader meetings and rallies. "And so on,
and so forth," Ararat Zurabyan says.