Cinema Et Rencontre Avec Bernard Coulie : ‘Le Genocide Armenien’ (Jo

CINEMA ET RENCONTRE AVEC BERNARD COULIE : ‘LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN’ (JOURDAN, 2004)

Quefaire.be (Communique de presse)
28 mars 2012
Belgique

Dans le cadre de la Quinzaine ‘La paix ca commence tout de suite
!’, projection du film ‘Le genocide armenien’ de Laurence Jourdan,
suivi d’une evocation de l’Armenie par le professeur Bernard Coulie
(organisation : Les Voies de la Liberte).

Les documentaires historiques sur le xxe siècle (” Les Oubliees de
la piste Ho Chi Minh ” ou ” L’Europe des Fronts Populaires “) et plus
specialement sur les massacres (” Le viol. Un crime de guerre en Bosnie
“) sont devenus le champ de specialite de Laurence Jourdan, ce qui
lui a valu de nombreuses recompenses nationales et internationales. La
construction de ce film est chronologique. Les supports sont multiples
et le documentaire repose sur des temoignages filmes, sur la lecture de
temoignages (surtout diplomatiques), sur des photographies d’epoques,
sur quelques rares films et sur des animations cartographiques.

‘Cinema et rencontre avec Bernard Coulie : ‘Le genocide armenien’
(Jourdan, 2004)’

Cinescope Adresse: Place Raymond Lemaire, 1348 Louvain-La-Neuve
Telephone: 010/45.20.61 – Pas de reservation Public: a partir de 14
ans Internet:

Mardi : de 20:00 a 23:00 Le 24 avril

http://www.atoutage.be/lapaix

ISTANBUL: Prosecutor Appeals Dink Ruling, Says Murder Work Of Ergene

PROSECUTOR APPEALS DINK RULING, SAYS MURDER WORK OF ERGENEKON

Today’s Zaman
March 30 2012
Turkey

An İstanbul prosecutor investigating the 2007 murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink has appealed a January court
verdict that ruled out involvement of an organized criminal network in
the killing, saying the murder was undoubtedly the work of Ergenekon.

Specially Authorized İstanbul Public Prosecutor Hikmet Usta filed
his appeal at the Supreme Court of Appeals on Thursday. Similar to his
final opinion submitted to the İstanbul court hearing the Dink case
in September of last year, the prosecutor insisted that the murder
was committed by Ergenekon’s cell in the Black Sea province of Trabzon.

Ergenekon — a clandestine gang with members nested within the state
hierarchy who are currently on trial for attempting to overthrow
the government by force — is accused of being behind many atrocious
crimes and plots that sought to create chaos in Turkey with the intent
of triggering a military takeover.

Members of the Friends of Hrant Dink group have welcomed the appeal
as a positive development but took it with a pinch of skepticism. The
Friends of Dink group has been fighting for justice for the slain
journalist over the past years, keeping the trial in the public
spotlight and finding new evidence that the several prosecutors who
changed during the course of the trial often neglected.

Garo Paylan from Friends of Hrant Dink said the prosecutor had had the
opportunity to make this case earlier, but chosen not to do so. “Good
morning is all I can say. These prosecutors have all the authority,
and we have seen in some other cases how they use this authority. In
some cases, they can take solid steps within 10 days.” The Dink trial
ended five years after its start with a highly unsatisfactory ruling
for the journalist’s family and lawyers.

“This prosecutor didn’t push to investigate very solid evidence
presented by the Dink family lawyers,” he said; this had happened in
spite of a number of European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) rulings
that said the murder investigation was carried out inadequately.

Paylan expressed his belief that some political pressure, including
a report filed by the State Audit Council (DDK), an investigative
body under the president’s office, which pointed out many gaps in
the investigation, was the real reason behind the prosecutor’s appeal.

He added: “The sloppiness of the investigation was documented during
the court process, by the ECtHR rulings, and this positive step comes
at a time when there is no way to hide anything anymore. This is a
positive step, but it comes out of an obligation.”

He said now whether the murder investigation will deepen and possibly
extend to public officials and security force officers who appear to
be involved remains to be seen.

“We have generally lost our sense of excitement. The prosecutor
is now saying what we have said for the past five years inside the
courtroom and on the streets. More than 80 petitions we filed have
been rejected. There was no effective investigation at any stage of
this trial. None of the suspects, who were convicted or released,
are individuals who might help truly illuminating the case,” said
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hayko Bagdat.

He said it was going to depend on the Supreme Court of Appeals’
ultimate decision if a new and efficient investigation can be
conducted. “All I know is this: Whomever we petitioned during the
course of the trial, he felt closer to the murderer.”

The prosecutor said in the appeal that the Dink murder is a “flawless”
Ergenekon plot, and that the court failed to make an accurate
assessment of the incident in this regard. He said the court should
have waited for a decision from another court currently hearing the
Ergenekon case.

Usta also dismissed a reasoned decision of the court that said there
was insufficient evidence to prove wider involvement in the murder,
although the court had said the murder appears to be the work of a
criminal network. He added that the court should have instead asked
the prosecution to broaden their investigation in this regard.

Editor-in-chief of bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos and Turkey’s
best known Armenian voice abroad, Dink was shot in broad daylight on a
busy İstanbul street as he left his office on Jan. 19, 2007. In what
many said was a shocking and frustrating ruling in the five-year-long
trial in the Dink case, the İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court in
January cleared all suspects of charges of membership in a terrorist
organization, angering lawyers and many others who say the trial
failed to shed light on alleged connections between the suspects and
state officials.

The court convicted Yasin Hayal, a major suspect in the killing, of
instigating a murder and sentenced him to life in prison, while another
suspected instigator, Erhan Tuncel, was acquitted by the court. A
juvenile court had already sentenced Dink’s assassin, Ogun Samast, to
22 years, 10 months last July. He was 17 when the killing took place.

Usta ruled out that Dink murder suspects Alper Esirgemez, İrfan
Ozkan, Osman Alpay, Erbil Susaman, Numan Å~^iÅ~_man, Å~^enol Akduman
and Veysel Toprak were members of a criminal organization, but argued
that they hid Hayal in their home after the bombing of a McDonalds in
Trabzon, medically treated him and financed his escape to İstanbul. He
added in his 30-page long appeal that they didn’t report his crime
to police, directly or indirectly helping the organization, and hence
should be treated as members of the criminal organization.

In the appeal, suspects YaÅ~_ar Cihan and Halis Egemen are also
accused of helping the organization and the prosecutor is asking they
be convicted and sentenced for these charges.

In 2010, the ECtHR ordered Turkish authorities to pay 100,000 euros
($132,600) to Dink’s family in compensation, saying authorities had
failed to protect Dink even though they knew ultranationalists were
plotting to kill him. Seven security officials have already been
convicted for failing to relay information about the plot that could
have prevented the murder.

In a statement ahead of the recent January verdict, Amnesty
International said authorities had still not investigated the
full circumstances behind Dink’s murder. Dink had been repeatedly
prosecuted for insulting “Turkishness” under the infamous Article 301
of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), which was later amended to placate
EU criticism that Turkey was violating freedom of expression.

The prosecutor said in the appeal that suspects Tuncel and Hayal are
the leader and manager of the organization and that Hayal had even
threatened Turkish Nobel Literature laureate Orhan Pamuk after his
arrest. The appeal detailed in great length suspicious behaviors by
the suspects, who the prosecutor said point to them being members of
a criminal organization.

The petition also argued that all assassinations attempts and similar
plans stopped in 2008, when the Ergenekon investigation started.

Finally, Usta requested the court restart the case if there is other
evidence related to the Dink murder, but added that it is unclear
what kind of evidence the court is looking for as it’s not possible
to restart the case based on the same charges.

20th Anniversary Of OSCE Minsk Group

20TH ANNIVERSARY OF OSCE MINSK GROUP

Vestnik Kavkaza
March 30 2012
Russia

20 years have passed since the establishment of the OSCE Minsk Group.

On the occasion of the anniversary, VK decided to ask Armenian and
Azerbaijani experts to share their opinions on the body’s role in
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict resolution.

Member of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences, Ruben Safrasyan,
told VK that he appreciates the role the OSCE Minsk Group played in
the peace talks. “Despite the fact that no agreement has been reached
so far, progress is evident,” the expert believes.

At the same time member of the Western University of Baku, Fikret
Sadykhov, seems sceptical about the results of the Minsk Group’s
efforts. “All the attempts to resolve the conflict undertaken by the
Minsk Group have failed. It is the ultimate fiasco,” Sadykhov says.

Imagery And Atrocity: The Role Of News And Photos In War

IMAGERY AND ATROCITY: THE ROLE OF NEWS AND PHOTOS IN WAR

The Atlantic

March 30 2012

Technology is changing the 150-year-old relationship between a war
and the images it produces

Last week, I was fortunate to attend a workshop at the U.S. Holocaust
Memorial Museum, “Power of Witness: The Use of Technology in Preventing
Mass Atrocities.” Among the topics discussed were the current and
potential use of journalists, victims’ reporting, satellites, aircraft,
and drones (presented by myself) to reveal to the outside world what
is happening on the ground. It was remarkable to hear from a wide
range of dedicated people who utilize innovative technologies and
collaborative arrangements to document prospective war crimes for
dissemination to the media, people in the target country, foreign
leaders, criminal tribunals, the global public, and others.

Of course, harnessing the power of witness is not a new endeavor. As
Martha Finnemore notes in her book, The Purpose of Intervention:
Changing Beliefs About the Use of Force, the domestic debate
surrounding intervention for humanitarian purposes is highly
contested. Finnemore describes the influence of the media to “arouse
public opinion and influence policy…by increasing exposure and
creating familiarity where little existed previously.”

Over the past 150 years, intervention proponents have increasingly
relied on vivid and graphic imagery from the target country to rally
support to their cause–including U.S. policymakers, for better or for
worse. In 1995, U.S. ambassador to the UN Madeline Albright fought to
declassify three CIA satellite photographs of Srebrenica in order to
show them to a closed session of the UN Security Council. Of course,
such imagery is subject to interpretation and exploitation by internal
opposition groups, exiles, or foreign governments to justify military
interventions. On February 5, 2003, Secretary of State Colin Powell
briefed the UN Security Council on “Iraq: Failure to Disarm,” which
included photographs (remember the “mobile biological warfare agent
production plants?”) and audio clips that purportedly confirmed the
existence of Iraq’s WMD program, which did not exist.

Consider this brief survey of how powerful imagery emerged from foreign
conflicts or major wars, and the impact it had on the homefront,
policymakers, or the international community.

Crimean War (1853-1856)

The Crimean War is considered to be the first media war, in which
the telegraph and camera enabled news and images from battles to
be transmitted to the homefront in hours instead of weeks. For the
first time, the British public saw photographs of the front line that
brought far-off battlefields to life.

Armenian massacres (1915-1916)

The Ottoman Turks deported hundreds of thousands–some argue more
than a million–of Armenians to the desert of Syria. Western news
organizations captured the unfolding events, as many Armenians died
en route from starvation or were killed by Ottoman forces. Today, most
scholars and historians consider this a clear act of genocide, although
the Turkish government strongly rejects the claim and resists the
use of the word by any government to describe the Armenian mass deaths.

New York Times, December 15, 1915

Times of London, 1915

World War II (1939-1945)

World War II was a watershed in the global understanding of atrocities
and genocide (a term coined in 1943 by Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin,
which combined the Greek prefix genos, meaning family or race, and
the Latin suffix cide, meaning killing), largely due to the horrific
images that emerged from concentration camps in Europe after the
arrival of Allied soldiers. The construction of a new global human
rights regime was a direct response to the Nazis’ Final Solution, in
the hopes that signatories to the 1948 Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide would ensure that the five
specific acts that comprise genocide wouldn’t happen again:

(a) Killing members of the group; (b) Causing serious bodily or
mental harm to members of the group; (c) Deliberately inflicting on
the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical
destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures intended to
prevent births within the group; (e) Forcibly transferring children
of the group to another group.

Vietnam War (1960-1975)

The Vietnam War was the first fully televised war, in which the
American public received regular updates on the conflict through
photographs and videos. (For just one example, see the real-time CBS
News video that captured an Army platoon under fire from mortars and
sniper.) Photojournalism played a large role in shaping public opinion
on the war, particularly through its more graphic images. Now-infamous
images, such as the photograph by Eddie Adams of a general shooting an
unidentified man in the head, defied the U.S. government’s portrayal
of the war effort fueled the Vietnam protest movement in the United
States.

This photo ran on front page of the New York Times under the headline
“Street Clashes Go On in Vietnam, Foe Still Holds Parts of Cities;
Johnson Pledges ‘Never to Yield.'”

Cambodian genocide (1975-1979)

The Khmer Rouge regime led by Pol Pot carried out a widespread
and systematic genocide, killing approximately 1.7 million people,
or roughly 20 percent of the population. In its policy of internal
“purification,” the regime deported the urban population to the
countryside where brutal labor conditions, disease, and starvation
killed hundreds of thousands. The government also targeted and executed
political groups and suspected opponents or rivals.

The killing ended when the Vietnamese army invaded Cambodia in January
1979; the first images of the atrocities committed were taken by
Vietnamese soldiers.

Images of victims from the Tuol Sleng Prison, also known as the “S-21”
interrogation and extermination center. In total, there are over five
thousand photographs of prisoners at the facility; the vast majority
of victims are unknown.

The exhumation of the Choeung Ek killing fields in 1980 offered some
of the first concrete evidence of the atrocities committed by the
Khmer Rouge regime (Yale Archives/Ben Kiernan).

Bosnian War (1992-1995)

In August 1992, a number of Western newspapers, including Newsweek
and Time Magazine, called for intervention by publishing images as
proof of a “new Holocaust” occurring in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Over
the course of the conflict, an estimated 200,000 Muslims were killed
by Bosnian Serb forces.

Rwandan genocide (April-June 1994)

Over three months, Rwanda witnessed an ethnic cleansing campaign that
killed an estimated 800,000 people, largely carried out by the Hutu
majority against the Tutsi minority (although moderate Hutus were
targeted as well). The international community reeled at the speed
and scale of the genocide, which defied all conventional norms of
conflict prevention and early warning.

Horrific images emerged from Rwanda over the course of the genocide
as the world stood paralyzed.

Kyrgyzstan (June 2010)

On June 10, 2010, violence erupted in Osh, Kyrgyzstan, between ethnic
Kyrgyz and Uzbek communities. Over the next four days, it is estimated
that between 500 and 2,000 people were killed as well as over 400,000
displaced. Satellite images (as seen below) tracked and mapped the
conflict as it escalated. In particular, such images captured “SOS”
signs written on roadways and buildings.

Map of “SOS” signs throughout Osh (© 2010 Digital Globe).

For most of recent history, news and images of conflicts and atrocities
reaching the outside world were dependent on reporters, photographers,
and a small number of activists on the ground. However, technology
and social media such as camera phones, blogs, YouTube, Facebook,
and Twitter have permanently and dramatically altered the way the
world communicates and receives news.

During the so-called “Green Revolution” in Iran in 2009, the brutal
suppression of non-violent protesters by the regime was extensively
documented by ordinary people organizing demonstrations and sending
updates, photos, and videos on Twitter. An excellent report by the
RAND Corporation describes the power of social media as a particularly
effective tool to “generate political opposition, shape political
discourse, and facilitate action in the face of a powerful regime”
in Iran and beyond.

Today, news reports on the protracted conflict in Syria rely heavily on
reports from citizens on the ground via Skype, videos taken on phones
uploaded to YouTube, and updates posted on Facebook. According to
one estimate, 80 percent of the videos of the Syrian conflict that
have been broadcasted by mainstream news organizations were shot
by amateur videographers. In addition, unmanned U.S. intelligence
drones have flown over Syria, collecting information and monitoring
the Syrian military’s movements. Due to technology and social media,
there is unequivocal evidence of atrocities committed, but still
amost no on-the-ground access for UN or human rights investigators
to better verify the accounts.

In 2009, former British prime minister Gordon Brown reflected on the
emerging power of social media: “You cannot have Rwanda again because
information would come out far more quickly about what is actually
going on and the public opinion would grow to the point where action
would need to be taken.” While we hope that will be the case, it is
the responsibility of the international community to use the power of
technology to better inform and shape its decision-making process in
order to take actions commensurate with the political will, available
resources, and potential to make a real impact.

This article originally appeared at CFR.org, an Atlantic partner site.

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/03/imagery-and-atrocity-the-role-of-news-and-photos-in-war/255275/

Baku Expects Russia To Ensure Progress In Settling Nagorno-Karabakh

BAKU EXPECTS RUSSIA TO ENSURE PROGRESS IN SETTLING NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT

Interfax
March 29 2012
Russia

Baku pins great hopes on Russia in resolving the conflict over
Nagorno-Karabakh, Azeri presidential secretariat spokesman Ali
Hasanov said.

“We expect a lot from Russia in settling the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict. There is no other country in the world that would wield
more influence in settling this conflict,” Hasanov told journalists
in the run-up to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s planned
visit to Baku on April 3-4.

Russia’s role in settling the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict can be
explained by its unprecedented influence on Armenia, he said.

Hasanov said he hopes Russian President-elect Vladimir Putin will
continue outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev’s active peacemaking
steps toward settling the conflict. “We believe these efforts will
be continued this year as well, and we will witness very serious
progress,” he said.

Azerbaijan and Russia will discuss cooperation priorities for the
coming years during Lavrov’s visit to Baku, Hasanov said. “This visit
should be viewed as an important step in determining issues of mutual
interest,” he said.

Official Slams Azerbaijan, Turkey Over "Anti-Armenian Propaganda"

OFFICIAL SLAMS AZERBAIJAN, TURKEY OVER “ANTI-ARMENIAN PROPAGANDA”

Public Television of Armenia
March 28 2012

[translated from Armenian]

An Armenian official has slammed Azerbaijan and Turkey for what he
described as “cheap anti-Armenian propaganda” voiced from the platform
of the Seoul Nuclear Security Summit.

“The impression is that they [Azerbaijan and Turkey] understand that
no-one is listening to them and everything that is being said is,
first of all, said for internal consumption, for internal audience,
or for each other,” Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan
said in an interview with the Armenian Public TV on 28 March.

Kocharyan said that Turkey had been repeatedly told not to interfere
in the settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagornyy
Karabakh if it wanted to see some progress in the issue.

“Turkey’s interference in this process, its attempts to make the
normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations dependent on progress in
the settlement of the Karabakh conflict only wrecks this process and
makes Baku’s stance on it even harsher,” Kocharyan said.

The deputy minister criticized Azerbaijan for becoming the bearer of
“anti- Armenian and misanthrope ideology” of the Ottoman Empire in
the Karabakh issue, which also reflected on its struggle against the
recognition of the killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in
1915 as genocide.

“Thus, if Turkey wants to see progress in this [Karabakh] issue and
cooperation in the region, it must, at least, give up its policy
of denying the Armenian genocide, and it would be even better if
it recognized [the genocide]. It would be a serious signal for
Azerbaijan,” Kocharyan said.

The official also considered as inadmissible Azerbaijan and Turkey’s
policy on “discrediting” the activity of the co-chairmen of the OSCE
Minsk Group, which mediates a peaceful solution to the Karabakh
conflict. Kocharyan said that the reason for the failure of the
Karabakh talks was Azerbaijan’s stance over the issue rather than the
“ineffective” activity of the Minsk Group, as Azerbaijan was trying
to describe it.

“The main reason, culprit of the preservation of the status quo
[in Karabakh issue] is Azerbaijan with its destructive policy,”
Kocharyan said.

Armenian Genocide Recognition Advocate Balakian Speaks April 13

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RECOGNITION ADVOCATE BALAKIAN SPEAKS APRIL 13

US Fed News
March 28, 2012 Wednesday 6:11 PM EST

FRESNO, Calif., March 28 — California State University Fresno issued
the following press release:

Peter Balakian, an award-winning author and leading voice for Armenian
Genocide recognition, will speak 2-3:30 p.m. Friday, April 13, at
Fresno State’s University Student Union, Room 312-314. The free,
public event is sponsored by the Fresno State Armenian Studies
Program. Balakian is the 2012 Alice and Clifford Spendlove Prize in
Social Justice, Diplomacy and Tolerance awarded by the University of
California, Merced. For more information call 559.278.2669.

Armenia May Receive $56 Mln From IMF In May

ARMENIA MAY RECEIVE $56 MLN FROM IMF IN MAY

Interfax
March 28 2012
Russia

Armenia may receive another, fifth tranche totaling $56 million (36.2
million SDR) from the International Monetary Fund in late May as part
of an EFF/ECF program, IMF Mission in Armenia Head Mark Horton said
at a press conference in Yerevan Tuesday.

Around $30 million of the tranche will be allocated to the Central
Bank of Armenia to replenish foreign currency reserves and the rest
will go to the Finance Ministry for budget requirements, he said.

The IMF Mission completed a fourth review within the framework of
the EFF/ECF (Extended Fund Facility – Extended Credit Facility) and
monitored the Armenian economy during a visit to Yerevan in March
14-27. The IMF Executive Board will in May consider the results of
the monitoring and decide on the allocation of another tranche to
Armenia. With this tranche the total amount of payments will be 181
million SDR, or $279 million.

Overall macroeconomic indicators continue to improve in Armenia,
Horton said.

GDP climbed 4.4% in 2011, largely due to the development of industry
and the services sector. Inflation slowed and was under 4% year-on-year
in February. The situation with tax and the budget improved. The
current account deficit remains relatively high and the vulnerability
of the Armenian economy is also high.

The 3-year IMF EFF/ECF program for Armenia, totaling 266.8 million SDR,
or around 290% of Armenia’s quota in the IMF was approved by the IMF
Executive Board on June 28 2010. At the time the IMF allocated the
first tranche of 36.2 million SDR.

Greg Krikorian Enters 43rd Assembly Race

GREG KRIKORIAN ENTERS 43RD ASSEMBLY RACE

asbarez
Friday, March 30th, 2012

GLENDALE-Longtime Glendale Unified School District Board member Greg
Krikorian has entered the race for the 43rd State Assembly district
in the upcoming elections.

Krikorian has served as a Glendale Unified School District school
board member for 11 years. When he first served as president of
the school board, Krikorian mapped out his vision of the district’s
future. Back then he spoke of bringing back the Glendale Educational
Foundation and looking into alternative energy sources, like solar
power. Working on these programs and seeing them to fruition is a
work ethic he plans to bring to the state assembly, if elected. In
addition to his experience in the field of education, Krikorian is
also founder of Krikorian Marketing Group (KMG) and vice president of
business development for “Business Life” and “Senior Living” magazines.

“[GUSD] is one of the few districts that has [remained] financially
stable,” he said. Krikorian attributes this to the school board’s being
fiscally conservative. He added this is the right time for him to run.

“I want to be a voice for our community,” he said. He has already won
the endorsement of Los Angeles County Supervisor Michael Antonovich.

“I understand the [challenges] of a small business,” he said.

An active member of the community, he has served on the board of
directors of the Glendale Chamber of Commerce and the Burbank Economic
Development Task Force. Working in the community through his business
and the school board, Krikorian said, gives him a specific perspective
that would benefit those living in California.

“The key [point] is our state is on an unsustainable path,” he said.

He said that he recognizes the struggle school districts have faced,
as money promised from the state does not come through, yet programs
must be maintained. He has also seen how communities ban together to
help and support one another.

“We have to rally around Mr. Krikorian, he has given us every
opportunity to succeed in our schools and now it’s time we help him!”

said Argishd Parsekhian former Crescenta Valley High School Student.

The new 43rd Assembly district serves Burbank, Glendale, La Crescenta,
Montrose, La Canada, Atwater Village, Los Feliz, East Hollywood,
Little Armenia and Griffith Park. The primary is this June 6th and
the General Election is November 5th 2012.

Krikorian is a second-generation Armenian-American, whose grandparents
escaped from the Kharpet region of Armenia during the Armenian
Genocide1915. They came to America as orphans, fleeing the murders
of their families to begin a new life.

Krikorian was the first ever Armenian-American elected to the Glendale
Board of Education in 2001. During his tenure, the board of education
has been able to maintain an effective budget and also is continuing
to reduce class sizes for grades k-3. Throughout Greg’s tenure, the
board has been able to maintain financial stability while raising
the bar for student achievement. We can all be very proud to say that
despite these hard economic times, we have protected teacher’s jobs.

We are one of the few districts in the state that has not had to lay
off any teachers despite budget cuts.

In addition, the Glendale Unified School District boasts numerous
programs that serve their diverse population by launching dual-language
programs at many of their elementary schools. One of which is
“Armenian” and this offers our families a unique opportunity to
enroll their children in Armenian dual language programs at Jefferson
Elementary & R D White Elementary Schools k-6th grades.

Also, the GUSD offers Armenian Language classes at Hoover & Glendale
High Schools, and has hosted various workshops for professional
development for it’s teaching staff on teaching Genocide. Another
highlight in Krikorian’s tenure is the closing of the Glendale public
schools on January 6th for Armenian Christmas. Also, Krikorian played
a key role in developing Armenian clubs at four of their high schools
and traditionally host a Genocide Assembly at GHS Auditorium. (This
year’s assembly is on April 19th at GHS)

Krikorian is involved in many organizations throughout the community
for past 20 years, and continues to coach and referee for AYSO soccer,
is on the board of directors of Verdugo Hills Boy Scouts Council,
Homenetmen and Salvation Army, and is a member of the Kiwanis Club
of Glendale.

The three issues on which he will focus are education funding for
colleges and public schools, reducing government and creating jobs.

“We [must deal] with the impacts of unfunded mandates to both
businesses and education,” he said.

He believes his background on the school board makes him well equipped
him to address the state’s financial woes.

Schiff Meets With Pilibos, Ferrahian 8th Graders

SCHIFF MEETS WITH PILIBOS, FERRAHIAN 8TH GRADERS

asbarez
Friday, March 30th, 2012

Rep. Schiff with Pilibos and Ferrahian 8th graders on the steps of
the Capitol

WASHINGTON-Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) met with more than 80 eighth
grade students from the Holy Martyrs Ferrahian Middle School and
Rose and Alex Pilibos Armenian Middle School who were visiting the
nation’s capital.

During their half-hour meeting with Congressman Schiff on the steps
of the Capitol, the students had an opportunity to ask Schiff about
his positions on various issues that affect the community. Many of
students of both schools live in the 29th Congressional District,
represented by Schiff.

“It was wonderful to meet with such a great group of young and engaged
students,” said Schiff. “It’s an honor to work and advance issues
important to the Armenian community. And the students I met with
this week asked me some great questions about the Armenian Genocide
resolution and other measures I’m pursuing for the community. It was
a privilege to speak with them, and I hope they all had a memorable
visit to our nation’s Capitol.”

During the meeting, students asked Schiff about his role as the
lead sponsor of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, about Genocide
insurance claims, taxes, and even the Congressman’s travel to and
from the district. After the meeting, Schiff’s office also arranged
for the students to have a tour of the Capitol and view proceedings
from the Senate and House Galleries while Congress was in session.