NKR Defense Ministry: NKR Defense Army Fully Controls Over Situation

NKR DEFENSE MINISTRY: NKR DEFENSE ARMY FULLY CONTROLS OVER SITUATION IN CONTACT-LINE

arminfo
2008-03-10 12:55:00

ArmInfo. NKR Defense Army fully controls over the situation in the
contact-line of NKR and Azerbaijani Armed Forces, Press Secretary of
NKR Defense Ministry, Lt. Colonel Senor Asratyan told ArmInfo.

He said the situation is calm at present. The Azerbaijani party
regularly violates the ceasefire regime. ‘They use small arms mainly’,
S. Asratyan said. As regards the information by the Azerbaijan party
that allegedly the Armenian and Karabakh parties keep violating the
ceasefire which results in casualties also among the population,
S. Asratyan said the Azerbaijani leadership concealed the casualties
after the attempt to seize one of the post of NKR Armed Forces and now
tries to lay them on ‘new violations of the ceasefire’. S. Asratyan
also added that negotiations for crisis monitoring by OSCE are
underway. The monitoring planned for the last weekend was failed
because of the Azerbaijani party. Armenian Defense Ministry told
ArmInfo, the situation in the contact-line of Armenian and Azerbaijai
Armed Forces is stable. ‘The situation is normal’, Armenian DM Press
Secretary Seyran Shakhsouvaryan said.

Azerbaijani side once more violated the ceasefire regime

Azerbaijani side once more violated the ceasefire regime

07-03-2008 13:02:52 – KarabakhOpen

On the night of 6-7 March, the Azeri armed units once more violated the
ceasefire regime on Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan’s Armed Forces
contact-line in the direction of Hadrut. According to the NKR Defense
Ministry’s on-line data, NKR Defense Army’s positions were heavily
fired on using different kinds of weapon – submachine guns and sniper
rifles. Being adherent to the ceasefire regime, the NKR Defense Army
subunits did not open a return fire.

‘Gun safety’ has given countries license to kill

The Jackson Citizen Patriot – MLive.com, MI
March 7 2008

‘Gun safety’ has given countries license to kill

Posted by Jackson Citizen Patriot March 07, 2008 09:48AM
Categories: Voice of the People

LEONI TOWNSHIP – In regard to Robert Henderson’s Feb. 27 letter,
here’s a little history on taking guns from the people because of gun
safety. The Soviet Union established "gun safety" in 1929. From 1929
to 1953, 20 million political dissidents, unable to defend
themselves, were rounded up and exterminated.

Turkey established "gun safety" in 1911. From 1915 to 1927, 1.5
million Armenians, unable to defend themselves, were rounded up and
exterminated.

Germany established "gun safety" in 1938. From 1939 to 1945, 13
million Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals and mentally ill people unable to
defend themselves were rounded up and exterminated. Similar campaigns
have taken place in China, Guatemala, Uganda and Cambodia.

The U.S Congress expanded "gun safety" in 1968 in direct violation of
the Second Amendment to the Constitution. In 1992, 86 members of a
religious cult including women and children residing outside Waco,
Texas, died after a standoff with the federal government. Authorities
said they possessed firearms made illegal by the unconstitutional
1968 Federal Gun Control Act.

Congress is considering passage of additional unconstitutional "gun
safety" laws. So, be careful what you wish for and be even more
careful who you vote for this fall.

– Martin S. Smith

Lifting of sanctions on Abkhazia to boost rail traffic to Armenia

RIA Novosti, Russia
March 6, 2008

Lifting of sanctions on Abkhazia to boost rail traffic to Armenia –
RZD

MOSCOW, March 6 (RIA Novosti) – Russia’s decision to lift transport
and other sanctions on Georgia’s breakaway republic of Abkhazia will
significantly increase passenger and freight traffic via Georgia to
Armenia, Russia’s rail monopoly Russian Railways (RZD) said on
Thursday.

Russia lifts trade, economic, financial sanctions on Abkhazia

MOSCOW, March 6 (RIA Novosti) – Russia has lifted trade, economic,
financial and transport sanctions on Georgia’s breakaway republic of
Abkhazia, and urged other CIS countries to follow suit, the Foreign
Ministry said on Thursday.

The ministry said that "due to a change of circumstances, the Russian
Federation no longer considered itself bound" by a resolution on the
Abkhazia-Georgia conflict, which was adopted by the CIS Heads of
State Council on January 19, 1996.

It said sanctions were imposed amid a confrontation between Georgia
and Abkhazia that continued after the 1992-93 war and were designed
to compel Abkhazia to adopt a more flexible position, primarily on
the return of refugees and other displaced persons.

"Today the situation has changed drastically. The majority of ethnic
Georgian refugees have returned to Abkhazia’s Galsky district," the
ministry said.

Abkhazia, an unrecognized republic with a population around 200,000,
has plans to reiterate its calls for recognition of its de facto
independence by Russia and major international organizations later
this week.

Russia’s lower house of parliament the State Duma is to discuss the
issue of Georgia’s breakaway republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
on March 13.

Shortly after Kosovo declared independence on February 17, Abkhazia
and South Ossetia, both involved in bloody conflicts after
proclaiming independence from Georgia in 1991, said the recognition
of Kosovo should now be taken into account when considering their
claims for sovereignty.

Russia has repeatedly said the recognition of Kosovo will set a
precedent for other breakaway regions, including in the former Soviet
Union.

The Russian parliament said in a statement in late February that
Kosovo’s independence gives Russia the right to forge new
relationships with self-proclaimed states.

The decision to lift transport sanctions on Abkhazia will
significantly increase passenger and freight traffic via Georgia to
Armenia, Russia’s rail monopoly Russian Railways said.

ANTELIAS: MECC new Exec. Committee concludes sessions in Antelias

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

"THE CHURCHES OF THE MIDDLE EAST MUST ACT TOGETHER"
SAID HIS HOLINESS ARAM I

"More than at any time at this point in history, the Christians of the
Middle East must act together. This is the call of our Lord and the
imperative of new times", stated His Holiness Aram I.

Meeting in Antelias, Lebanon, the Executive Committee of the Middle East
Council of Churches is seeking the best ways and means to serve the growing
needs and expectations of the churches. As one of the presidents of the
MECC, His Holiness Aram I underlined the vital importance of the Council as
the only regional framework for common reflection and action and he said
that "in order to give more quality and visibility to our togetherness and
make our voice heard, we must restructure the Council and articulate our
priorities clearly".

Catholicos Aram I said that the Council exists to challenge the churches to
work together: "Unity for the churches of this region is not a theological
matter; it is an existential issue. We cannot afford living in isolation. We
must be together in the real sense of the world".

In a recent lecture delivered at a conference on Christian-Muslim dialogue,
Aram I has considered inter-faith dialogue an important dimension of the
Christian presence and witness in the Middle East: "For centuries,
Christians and Muslims have lived together in this region. They have shared
common values and traditions. In spite of existing differences in many
respects, they must build together broader communities undergirded by moral
values, common objectives and vision".

##
View the photos here:
tos/Photos205.htm#2
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

War Over The Mountains: Casualties In Nagorno-Karabakh Again

WAR OVER THE MOUNTAINS: CASUALTIES IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH AGAIN
by Ivan Sukhov

What the Papers Say
March 5, 2008 Wednesday
Russia

Fighting reported on the border of Nagorno-Karabakh; There has been
fighting between the army of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic
and the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan. Nagorno-Karabakh, populated by
ethnic Armenians, has been striving for independence from Azerbaijan
for the past 20 years.

It was reported yesterday morning that there has been fighting
between the army of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic and
the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan on the border in the district of
Mardakert. Nagorno-Karabakh, populated by ethnic Armenians, has been
striving for independence from Azerbaijan for the past 20 years. De
facto, it won its independence in the war of 1992-94 – also taking
over several adjacent districts of Azerbaijan. The future status
of Nagorno-Karabakh and the return of these districts have been the
subject of negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia for many years;
the negotiations are coordinated by the OSCE Minsk Group.

According to the Armenian Defense Ministry, troop movements on the
Azeri side of the border were detected in the early hours of March 4
– and the opposing forces opened fire on Nagorno-Karabakh positions
around 5 a.m. According to Azerbaijan’s version of events, the
Nagorno-Karabakh forces opened fire first. The gunfire gradually
intensified, and a Nagorno-Karabakh soldier was wounded. The
Nagorno-Karabakh troops were even forced to abandon one of their
positions, but then regained it by counter-attacking. As at 8 p.m.

yesterday, Azerbaijan reported four soldiers dead. By that time the
Armenian Defense Ministry announced that the battle was over; Azeri
agencies reported that fighting was still under way. At any rate, both
sides have reported the ceasefire violation to the OSCE Minsk Group;
and the Armenian and Azeri chiefs of General Staff have discussed
the details of the incidents, according to procedures in the event
of ceasefire violations – which are not infrequent, unfortunately.

But the current escalation has taken place under exceptional
circumstances. Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian has already
accused Azerbaijan of attempting to "take advantage of Armenia’s
domestic political situation in the military and diplomatic sense."

As we reported earlier, the Armenian opposition has categorically
refused to recognize the presidential election results. The official
decision is that Prime Minister Serge Sarkisian won the election. As
a result of unrest in Yerevan, which escalated on March 1 from a
round-the-clock demonstration to bloody clashes with police, a state
of emergency has been declared for 20 days in the Armenian capital.

Serzh Sarkisian Continues To Receive Foreign Leaders’ Congratulation

SERZH SARKISIAN CONTINUES TO RECEIVE FOREIGN LEADERS’ CONGRATULATIONS

ARMENPRESS
March 4, 2008

YEREVAN, MARCH 4, ARMENPRESS: The government press office said
president-elect, prime minister Serzh Sarkisian continues to receive
foreign leaders’ congratulations upon his election as president
of Armenia.

It said a message of congratulations came from president of Argentina,
Mrs. Kristina Fernandez de Kuchner, who has reconfirmed the desire of
her government to further develop and deepen friendly and partnership
ties between the two countries.

The press office said congratulatory messages arrived also from
president of Vietnam Nguen Min Tchiet, president of Hungary Laslo
Szoiom, European Court of Human Rights chairman Paul Costa, and a
famous Russian Armenian actor Armen Jigarkhanian.

RA Parliament Deprived 4 Deputies Of Immunity

RA PARLIAMENT DEPRIVED 4 DEPUTIES OF IMMUNITY

DeFacto Agency
March 5 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 05.03.08. DE FACTO. March 4, in the course of an extraordinary
sitting, RA Parliament deprived Myasnik Malkhasian, Sasoun Mikaelian,
Hakob Hakobian and Khachatur Soukiasian of deputy immunity.

Thus, the RA Parliament granted a petition of the RA prosecutor general
on giving permission for the detainment of four deputies of Armenia’s
National Assembly to call them to account as defendants.

According to the prosecutor general, evidences received in the course
of the investigation are enough to call the above-mentioned deputies
as defendants on criminal case in compliance with article 225 part
3 (mass disorders accompanied by a murder) and article 300 part 1
(usurpation of state power) of the RA Penal Code.

To note, the above-mentioned deputies are Levon Ter Petrossian’s
supporters.

Statement of Heritage’s Parliamentary Group – 03/04/2008

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

4 March 2008

Statement of Heritage’s Parliamentary Group

The Heritage party’s parliamentary group harshly condemns the improper
and impermissible use of excessive force against the peaceful
demonstrators, both in the early morning of March 1 at Liberty Square
and throughout the evening of the same day and early hours of March 2
in downtown Yerevan. In actual fact, these actions have begotten
numerous casualties and given cause for even more violations.
Furthermore, in direct breach of Armenia’s commitments to the Council
of Europe and the provisions of the European Convention on Human
Rights–including the terms stipulated in Section 15–the incumbent
president declared on March 1 a state of emergency in Yerevan.

During the special session of the National Assembly, which lasted from
the late night of the same day to the early hours of March 2, Heritage
MPs argued that the aforesaid declaration would escalate the tensions
between the authorities and the opposition, and would serve only to
agitate the national problem. The blockade placed against political
parties, social associations, and the media, in particular, have
drastically curtailed political and civil rights and freedoms. The
members of Heritage’s parliamentary group also emphasize the necessity
to take political steps toward resolving the situation, to end the
bloodshed and violations, to investigate the crimes, and to bring the
perpetrators to justice.

But during today’s special session the attorney general’s formal
petition to take away the parliamentary immunity of our four
colleagues and to launch a criminal investigation against them shows
that we do not comprehend the gravity of this situation. This new
measure taken by the authorities will no doubt destabilize the
situation even further.

We believe that the preliminary investigation launched against those
men is nothing but political vengeance and, among many dignitaries,
the Council of Europe’s secretary general Terry Davis has made an
appeal to the authorities to refrain from such reprisals. In the past
two days, we have attempted to ascertain the whereabouts of, and to
converse with, our four associates and many other detainees. Our
attempts have been consistently hampered.

We declare that the preliminary investigation is biased, unfair, and
unlawful. This is also demonstrated by the fact that the legal
defenders of many of the accused were not allowed to see their
clients. We are also deeply concerned with the physical and mental
condition of those who have been arrested, especially since a number
of them were subjected to various types of abuse. In our view, the
revocation of the parliamentary immunity of our four coworkers and the
carrying out of political vengeance against them constitute an open
defiance to the honor and integrity of this country, its people, and
the international community.

We call upon all our colleagues in the National Assembly to refrain
>From deepening the divide between the frustrated Armenian people and
the authorities, and to say no to this petition, which will bring
about unforeseeable catastrophic consequences. It is impermissible for
us, the legislative branch of the Armenian government, to exempt our
country and ourselves from international law and our own commitments
to it. The wild passion, which has possessed certain bodies of power,
to claim itself the victor in this situation at all costs is likewise
impermissible. We encourage Armenia’s attorney general to consider the
perilous nature of his petition and to withdraw it immediately. If
approved, this petition will have a boomerang effect and none of the
parliament members sitting here today will be able to defend himself
>From this boomerang’s return hit. The civic patience will have funally
run out.

Dear colleagues, at this crucial moment for our nation, we ask you
with all our heart, mind, and conscience to not play a part in the
irreversible deepening of our people’s final abyss.

Yerevan
March 4, 2008

Founded in 2002, Heritage has regional divisions throughout the land.
Its central office is located at 31 Moscovian Street, Yerevan 0002,
Armenia, with telephone contact at (374-10) 536.913, fax at (374-10)
532.697, email at [email protected] or [email protected], and website
at

www.heritage.am
www.heritage.am

Critics’ Forum Article – 03/01/2008

Critics’ Forum
Theater
Finding the Universal in Ibsen’s A Doll House
By Lori Yeghiayan

Question: What does a play, written in Norwegian in 1879 about a
woman’s journey toward personhood and freedom from repressive social,
gender and class norms, have to do with the Armenian community?

Answer: The play, A Doll House, by 19th century Norwegian playwright
Henrik Ibsen, was recently produced by Glendale’s Luna Playhouse – one
of Los Angeles’ only theatres founded and operated by Armenian
artists – and directed by Luna Playhouse Artistic Director, Aramazd
Stepanian.

The majority of Luna’s audience, according to Stepanian, is
Armenian.

So, why produce an Ibsen play?

"Because it’s one of the greatest plays ever written. It’s just a
great play. What situations! What characters! What deep
psychological insight!"

That was director Stepanian’s enthusiastic response when I asked him
that question on a recent Saturday afternoon visit to Luna. We sat in
the theatre – momentarily empty while the cast and crew of the upcoming
My Heart’s in the Highlands, by William Saroyan, were on break from
rehearsal – and chatted about Stepanian’s production and the play’s
relevance to a contemporary audience.

A major work by one of the most influential playwrights of modern
Western theatre, Ibsen’s A Doll House (commonly translated as A
Doll’s House) is an early example of "realism" – a genre characterized
by an invisible "fourth wall" that remains unbroken by the actors.
It is as if in the midst of the characters’ lives the fourth wall of
their living room were removed, allowing the audience to peer in on
the action as it unfolds.

The play opens on the living room of the Helmer home and on the lives
of Torvald and Nora Helmer, a young married couple with three small
children and several servants. Theirs is a seemingly happy home.
Husband Torvald is a bank manager, wealthy and respected; wife Nora
is beautiful and devoted, cheerful in her domestic duties. Into this
stasis arrive Nora’s less-privileged childhood friend Kristine Linde
in search of a job and Nils Kroggstad, an employee of Torvald’s at
the bank – a man desperate to regain his lost status in the community.
Also a key figure: the Helmers’ friend and frequent visitor, Dr.
Rank, who is in love with Nora and who, despite his money and high
status in the community, is terminally ill – rotting from the inside
out from an inherited disease.

All of the characters are victims of what Ibsen sees as the diseased
and destructive forces of oppressive societal standards of marriage,
gender and social class that deny them the freedom to develop into
full human beings. The dramatic action of the play exposes the weak
foundations of Nora and Torvald’s marriage and propels Nora out the
door in search of knowledge and her authentic self.

Though the final action of A Doll House – in which the main character
Nora leaves her husband after eight years of marriage calling herself
a "doll-wife" and their home a "play-room" – may have lost its power to
shock, the play still has a lot to say to a contemporary audience.
The psychological truth of the characters has made it a classic,
relevant to almost any modern community – whether the view out that
community’s windows is the Norwegian Fjords or Glendale’s Verdugo
Mountains.

The Luna Playhouse production was directed with precision and depth
by Stepanian and was confidently acted by a uniformly solid cast.
Stepanian chose to set the play in northern Europe in the late 1950s,
and Maro Parian’s detailed set and costumes served the production
well, especially in establishing the time period. Henrik
Mansourian’s lighting design also added to the realistic setting,
with some nice lyrical moments, such as the rapid fade to moonlight
during the love scene between Nora and Dr. Rank, as the sun sets on
his life and their life-affirming relationship.

The theatre had originally planned to stage an Armenian-language
version of the play to run in repertory with the English version but
was not able to for various logistical reasons It would have been
interesting to see that interpretation and how Stepanian might have
utilized culturally-specific archetypes that have particular
resonance for an Armenian audience.

Luna Playhouse’s artistic mission is not, however, limited by genre,
language or culture. "We don’t look at our audience as just an
Armenian audience," said Stepanian. "Yes, we do Saroyan, but we also
do [contemporary British playwright, Harold] Pinter and others."

"Why?" I asked.

"We do it primarily because the artists involved are interested in
it."

I applaud the Luna Playhouse leadership for presenting great plays
>From many cultures and for offering its audience theatre that speaks
to universal experience – whether the playwright is from Norway,
England, Armenia or the U.S. Great drama exists to explore all
aspects of the human experience: love, death, war, identity, family,
class, gender, repression, freedom – most cultures and communities have
experience with such issues, and each of them has a lot to teach and
learn from the others.

I asked Stepanian what he thought A Doll House was ultimately about.
He answered by referring to an exchange between Nora and her husband
in the final scene of the play: "I think it’s about her [Nora’s]
line, `I must learn about the world.’ The important realization for
her is `I have to figure out what the world is about.’ "

He added, "She sees her own problem and she wants to change – which is
a universal problem for everyone."

All Rights Reserved: Critics’ Forum, 2008. Exclusive to the Armenian
Reporter.

Lori Yeghiayan holds a Master of Fine Arts degree in Theater from the
University of California, San Diego and has worked as a professional
actress in television, radio, film and theatre.

You can reach her or any of the other contributors to Critics’ Forum
at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
in this series are available online at To sign
up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
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