BAKU: Status-Quo In Nagorno Karabakh Conflict Must Not Continue-Germ

STATUS-QUO IN NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT MUST NOT CONTINUE-GERMAN FM
by Aynur Mehtiyeva

SIA INFORMATION AGENCY
March 16 2012
Azerbaijan

The status-quo in Nagorno Karabakh conflict must not continue, said
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle at the press conference
in Yerevan.

According to him, the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh conflict will
bring dividends to entire region, including Armenia. He emphasized
the importance of finding a compromise solution within the OSCE
Minsk Group: “I took advantage of my visit to Baku as an opportunity
to discuss the Karabakh issue in detail. I would like once again
emphasize that the German government supports finding a balance
between the principles of territorial integrity and the right to
self-determination”.

The minister noted that Germany supported the normalization of
Armenia-Turkey relations: “It will meet the interests of both Armenia
and Turkey”.

Op-Ed: In Armenian Nation, Men Must Take On Gender Equality

OP-ED: IN ARMENIAN NATION, MEN MUST TAKE ON GENDER EQUALITY

ianyan magazine

March 15 2012

The Armenian Nation is a complex and curious one. Where once regarded
as disjointed, the nation should be characterized as Homeland and
Diaspora in constant communion with one another. Armenia is what we’ve
come to call this transnational minority. Despite any divisions set
by borders, the nation is preserved.

In this nation, the stories of the unknown and unimportant are often
torn from the roots and lose meaning as they pass through the filters
of ideology and dogma.

The filters we use to construct our cultural, historical, and national
narrative often mask the great individual moments of many and pose them
as a creation of the few. The narrative of a people is a reflection
of the internal power-structure of that tribe.

The few that we attribute with the maintenance of our relative
importance are almost always, with little deviation, men. Men have
constructed a narrative that determines the norms and values of this
nation- they have established an order, a way of doing things.The
pillars of Armenia, those bastions of our current condition, are all
men. The story has been penned by men. The great heroes of yesteryear,
martyrs of the past century, thinkers and tinkers of a budding Zartonk
or Awakening- those deemed worth remembering- are rarely, if ever,
presented as women.

The omission of half the population from history is at the core of
the current distortions of contemporary society; distortions that
are acted out in the lives of all Armenians.

Though the biasses of history might reflect the inequality of the
past it is more so an expression of the present, where both men and
women act in accordance with what’s traditionally expected of them.

Just like women, men are prisoners of their own complex. This power
imbalance has created an unequal system where women have been regulated
as cogs in a machine.

Politicians and their elections, reformations and revolutions,
sometimes war, and anything else that moves a people through the epochs
are all thresholds of history. As this nation passes through the next,
grievances should be redressed. This not a task set to any single
person, it requires dialogue between both genders. Only by consensus
could the modes of oppression be properly identified. By consensus,
where both men and women can come together, identify and address the
imbalance of power and then work to reform it. Men should step-up,
step-back, and allow for the dialogue to flow.

The history of Armenia and the resuscitated Zartonk becomes
meaningless, almost vain, if not coupled with the cause for gender
equality. Men must take on this cause.

Though class is established on material foundations, according
to differences in capital and relationships towards the means of
production, it is characterized by the gender inequalities which run,
like veins, through all its ranks. Because women are the underclass
in the current power-structure they are the revolutionary class,
and the conditions are ripe for revolution.

Each revolution is entitled to relevant language.

There is nothing inherent in language that allows for the maintenance
of any patriarchal structure or any other form of authority. It is
the way that language is utilized that upholds the existing forms of
authority and domination. In this, language is a tool of oppression.

Only a few brave fools have called it into question and dared to
redefine it.

The people’s history of Armenia has yet to be presented in its full
scope. Though written, one realizes that it remains incomplete. To
make up for this, our words need new meaning.

Words are interesting. How we choose to use them changes everything.

The word ‘feminist,’ is as significant to the future of Armenia as the
idea of Zartonk. How it would be defined in Armenian is a difficult
subject to consider. What it means to be a Feminist, and what Feminism
looks like, will be articulated over the period of many years.

Men can no longer afford to stand separate from this process. The
movement won’t reach its full potential otherwise.â~@¨To paraphrase a
wise man: the liberation of men is directly tied to the liberation of
women.â~@¨The phrase, “I am a Man, I am an Armenian, I am a Feminist,”
will one day echo through the streets of Yerevan.â~@¨The Women’s
Movement within the physical borders of Armenia has begun to take
on recognizable form- not solely as a result of specific campaigns
but because of a myriad of conditions that have led to a new wave of
activism in the country.

Now, there is real hope that an already existent road may widen and
allow for the inclusion of voices hitherto unheard.

-Saro

Saro lives and works in Los Angeles, California. He is an artist,
a writer, a musician.

http://www.ianyanmag.com/2012/03/15/op-ed-in-armenian-nation-men-must-take-on-gender-equality/

Armenia: Extended Winter Good For Growers

ARMENIA: EXTENDED WINTER GOOD FOR GROWERS

Fresh Plaza

March 16 2012
Netherlands

The extension of winter this year, into the first weeks of spring, has
delayed the onset of the agricultural vegetation by 20 days, compared
to last year.

However, tis is being seen as a good thing Agrarian Peasant Union of
Armenia Chairman, Hrach Berberyan, stated during a press conference on
Wednesday.

“Since the winter is prolonging, we will not have frostbite (frost
damage) in April. We can evade the apricot frostbite,” Berberyan said.

According to him, this year apricots will be harvested at the end of
June, instead of the usual time of mid-June. Vegetables will be
gathered in around 20 days later than usual, seeing the potato harvest
taking place in June this year and not May.

He noted that the only problems he could foresee as a result of the
cold temperatures were in relation to spring sowing.

http://www.freshplaza.com/news_detail.asp?id=94147#SlideFrame_1

The Ashton-Juppe Gate – Why Is France Out Of Line?

THE ASHTON-JUPPE GATE – WHY IS FRANCE OUT OF LINE?

Foreign Policy Blogs Network
March 15, 2012 Thursday 12:25 PM EST

These last several weeks Alain Juppe, French Foreign Minister, has
been outspoken against the incompetence of the EU High Representative
Catherine Ashton and the European External Action Service (EEAS). The
latest attack was a letter sent by Juppe to Ashton on March 9th,
wherein the French minister lectured Ashton on the shortfalls of the
EEAS. According to Juppe’s representatives, the letter was part of a
natural exercise of constructive criticism fostering debate between
the EEAS and the French ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Despite the fact that Ashton has not emerged as the most polish
diplomat, it is still quite inappropriate to see France attacking her
this way. Back in 2009 Nicolas Sarkozy, President of France, made a
choice to assure the DG Internal Market of the European Commission to
Michel Barnier instead of seeking for the head of the EEAS. France is
far from being a model of EU guardianship when it comes to foreign
policy, as recently illustrated with the Arab Spring and the NATO
mission in Libya. In both cases, France tried to maximize its interests
at the expense of the EEAS and ultimately the Union.

Francois Guillot/AFP/Getty Images

Following the appointments of Ms. Ashton, Mr. Van Rompuy, and Mr.
Barnier, Nicolas Sarkozy declared that securing DG Internal Market
was a victory for France. Sarkozy was quoted by Le Monde claiming
that “the agreement on the role of Michel Barnier was sealed between
Barroso and I [Sarkozy] three days ago. It’s exceptional for France.

And the second victory is that our friends, the Romanians, have
agriculture.” Such statement was particularly inappropriate for
two reasons: first, in theory, a Commissioner is accountable to the
Union and not to his/her country; second, the statement was directly
addressed to the British. No statements were made about the importance
of the EEAS.

In recent years, Mr. Juppe has emerged as an vocal politician
considering his criticisms on several key decisions made by the ruling
party of

President Sarkozy. For example, he was critical of the bill
criminalizing the denial of the Armenian genocide considering the
consequence it could have on the relations with Turkey; second, he
took note of the election of Vladimir Putin last Sunday, and never
congratulated Putin; last, he now criticizes openly Ashton in his
letter of March 9th.

Despite the criticism, Juppe called for the EEAS to become a stronger
international actor as well as increase the coherence and efficiency
of the external actions of the EU. He also made several propositions:
first, the EEAS must be more proactive in advancing the questions of
human rights in countries like Syria and Iran; second, reinforcing
the EU capacities in sharing refueling airplanes as proven by the
shortfalls during the Libyan mission; third, the EEAS needs to
improve its competencies on core international questions such as
non-proliferation, fight against terrorism, coherence in international
fora.

Erkki Tuomioja, head of the Finish diplomacy, declared that Ashton
has been trying her best but remains dependent on the willingness of
the EU Member States, and especially the Big Three – Britain, France,
and Germany. Such statement is not surprising coming from a smaller EU
Member State as they have progressively become second-class citizens
on foreign policy questions. This gap between the Big Three and the
rest of the Union is increasingly hurting the unity of the Union on
key international questions.

The claim that the EEAS has turned out as a disappointment is quite
valid considering its large budget and staff. The EU could have
been much more active in the Arab Spring – Tunisia and Egypt – and
failed to do so. Libya was really the opportunity to redeem the EEAS
and launched a CSDP mission. Ashton failed to assure a role to the
EU. Now with Syria, one could expect nothing coming from the EEAS
beside words. Despite the recent failures of the EEAS, for Juppe to
lecture Ashton on her missteps, mistakes, and the EEAS shortcomings is
an absolute aberration. France should take a clear look at its latest
foreign policy decisions and see how many times since 2009 and before
it has tried to empower the EEAS instead of France’s interests.

Nicolas Sarkozy has proven to be a strategic world leader positioning
France as a world power at the expense of the EU, as proven by the
Georgia and Libyan crises among others. Ultimately, EU Member States
get what they choose for. Maybe it should be time to substitute the
traditional question of, how much has the EEAS done for France?,
by another one, how much has France done for the EEAS?

Hetq: Diaspora Ministry’s Much Heralded "Virtual Museum" Is A "Virtu

DIASPORA MINISTRY’S MUCH HERALDED “VIRTUAL MUSEUM” IS A “VIRTUAL EMBARRASSMENT”
Hrant Gadarigian

12:24, March 15, 2012

I read somewhere that the 2012 budget for the RA Ministry of the
Diaspora is 712 million AMD. That’s around $1.9 million, give or
take. God knows what they do with the money…

I can tell you one thing for sure – they didn’t spend a dime on
the newly released Virtual Museum of the Armenian Diaspora! The
website is an embarrassment and should have never been launched in
its present state.

I skipped through the English version – atrocious is the first
adjective that popped into my disbelieving head. Grammatical mistakes,
incorrect place names, poor syntax….where does one begin?

Who conducted the research? Who edited the text? The best one can
say is that, in places, the Virtual Museum resembles an adequate copy
and past job.

As to factual inaccuracies, well, the list is endless. Here’s a section
on the Armenian community in the United States. Read and weep…

* The Armenians who left for the U.S. settled in almost all states
and there were nearly 20,000 Armenians living in the U.S. in 1900.

* Among active dioceses are the U.S. Eastern (Prelacy is the St.

Varian Church in New York, Prelate, Archbishop Khazhak Parsamian) *
The first Holy Savior Armenian Apostolic Church in the U.S. was built
in 1891 in Ustr and currently, there are nearly 90 churches…

I read that Diaspora Minister Hranush Hakobyan noted the following
to the press when the Virtual Museum was launched recently:

…creating such a museum requires serious professional work, and
the Ministry of Diaspora did its utmost for the website to contain
accurate information. More information will be added to the website
in the course of time…

If we are to believe her words, then the Minister needs a serious
wake-up call.

The Virtual Museum resembles a hastily concocted high school homework
project rather than something emanating from a government ministry.

Minister Hakobyan also said that 6 million AMD ($16,000) was spent
of the project.

The least they could have done was to hire a semi-decent
translator/editor and a fact-checker.

Then again, there’s nothing “virtual” about the Virtual Museum. I mean,
you can’t walk around in it.

I guess the million dollar question to be asked is – What was the
ministry thinking in the first place?

Who came up with this idea and why?

Minister Hakobyan, during her press conference for the much ballyhooed
museum, stated:

… The project is an attempt to integrate the Armenian Diaspora’s
values with community and national values.

Could someone please translate this into English for me?

Someone has to be held accountable for this travesty. Such haphazard
and unprofessional work cannot be tolerated.

The ministry seems incapable, or unwilling, to take itself seriously
and this project merely underlines the point.

They should have used the $16,000 to compile a reading list of
materials for those interested in learning about the “diaspora”;
its origins, history, present situation, et al.

This is a line from Minister Hakobyan’s introduction when you enter
the Virtual Museum:

Fortune disposed us, Armenians, to lose our Homeland and become
refugees, to spread all over the world, to find a shelter in different
corners of the world.

FORTUNE???

Please, go back to the drawing board and try again.

http://hetq.am/eng/opinion/11870/

Former Armenian Police Official Accepts Charges Against Him

FORMER ARMENIAN POLICE OFFICIAL ACCEPTS CHARGES AGAINST HIM

news.am
March 15, 2012 | 17:21

YEREVAN. – Former Chief of the Police Force Criminal Investigation
Department, Police Major General Hovhannes Tamamyan, pleaded guilty
for the charges that were laid against him.

The court hearing of Tamamyan and two other defendants-Armen Poghosyan
and Vahan Khanzadyan-finally got underway, on Thursday, at capital
Yerevan’s Kentron and Nork Marash General Jurisdiction Court. The
defendants are charged with abuse of power, which has caused serious
consequences.

At the start of the hearing, Poghosyan and Khanzadyan accepted the
charges that were made against them and asked the Court for a speedy
trial. Hovhannes Tamamyan’s attorney, on the other hand, asked for a
ten-minute recess to consult with his client, and subsequently Tamamyan
likewise accepted the charges against him and asked for a speedy trial.

Next, the prosecutor asked for two working days to prepare the
accusation report. So, the presiding judge complied with the
prosecution’s request and adjourned the Court until March 20.

To note, Hovhannes Tamamyan is under custody since March 24, 2011.

Armenia At A Cross Roads

ARMENIA AT A CROSS ROADS

The Messenger
March 15 2012
Georgia

Armenian political party New Times will not participate in the
forthcoming parliamentary elections, according to party chair, Aram
Karapetyan, because the party does not believe that it is possible
to change Armenia through elections.

Karapetyan says there is only one way to change anything in the
country, and that is through street protests.

In contrast, Republican Party MP Manvel Badeyan believes that it is
unacceptable to lead the country into revolution. He said “responsible”
Armenians should not follow in the footsteps of their Arab peers.

ARF Discusses Its Proportional List

ARF DISCUSSES ITS PROPORTIONAL LIST

ARMENPRESS
MARCH 15, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MARCH 15, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Revolutionary Federation
is launching today discussion of proportional list and majority
system candidates, member of the ARF Supreme Body Spartak Seyranyan
told Armenpress. He said after clarifications the list and names of
candidates will be known to the public. The ARF member said there is
no clear timeframe for discussions, they may last for hours or days.

No party has yet officially publicized the proportional list but non
official discussions over them continue. The RPA though has officially
publicized the names of candidates in majority system.

Eric Bogosian Discusses Career, Tehlirian Project

ERIC BOGOSIAN DISCUSSES CAREER, TEHLIRIAN PROJECT

ARMENPRESS
MARCH 15, 2012
YEREVAN

NEW YORK, MARCH 15, ARMENPRESS: Eric Bogosian, the star of “Law &
Order-Criminal Intent” and the now cult-classic “Talk Radio,” spoke to
an audience of about 100 people on February 2 at the Cornell Club in
New York about his artistic career, his Armenian background, and his
research project on Soghomon Tehlirian, the assassin of Talaat Pasha,
the mastermind of the Armenian Genocide, reports Armenpress citing
Asbarez.The event, “Searching for Tehlirian,” was organized by the
New York Chapter of the Hamazkayin Armenian Education and Cultural
Society, and was the inaugural lecture of the Hamazkayin Arts &
Letters Series. Bogosian started by talking about growing up in
Watertown, Mass. “My grandfather used to say that the whole world is
Armenian because we all are descended from Noah,” he said to general
laughter. Bogosian’s initial intent was to fictionalize Tehlirian’s
assassination of Talaat in Berlin on March 15, 1921.

As he delved deeper into the topic, in the process amassing a library
of more than 1,000 volumes on Armenian history and related issues,
Bogosian discovered new angles to the genocide plan and the plot to
kill the masterminds of the genocide-plans that remain relatively
unknown. He saw the Armenian drama in a geopolitical context that
involved Germany, Great Britain, and the race to control Caspian and
Middle East oil, including Calouste Gulbenkian’s role.

These and other new findings nudged Bogosian towards turning his
project into a non-fiction book, which will likely come out later this
year or in early 2013 as he continues his research and field studies.

Dr. Aslanian’s Book Signing Event

THE ARARAT-ESKIJIAN MUSEUM
THE ARMENIAN SOCIETY OF LOS ANGELES
THE ARMENIAN EDUCATIONAL FOUNDATION
THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR ARMENIAN STUDIES AND RESEARCH

present

FROM THE INDIAN OCEAN TO THE MEDITERRANEAN:
THE GLOBAL TRADE NETWORKS OF ARMENIAN MERCHANTS FROM NEW JULFA

A Lecture by
Dr. Sebouh Aslanian
Richard Hovannisian Term Chair of Modern Armenian History,
Established by the Armenian Educational Foundation,
University of California, Los Angeles

**Sunday, March 18, 2012 – 4:00 p.m.**
at The Armenian Society of Los Angeles, Main Hall

Drawing on a rich trove of documents, including correspondence not seen
for 300 years, Dr. Sebouh Aslanian’s groundbreaking study From
the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean (University of California Press)
explores the emergence and growth of a remarkable global trade network
operated by Armenian silk mer-chants from a small outpost in the Persian
Empire. Based in New Julfa, Isfahan, in what is now Iran, these
merchants operated a network of commercial settlements that stretched
from London and Amsterdam to Manila and Acapulco.

Aslanian brings to light the trans-imperial cosmopolitan world of the
New Julfans, the effects of long distance trade on the organization of
community life, the ethos of trust and cooperation that existed among
merchants, and the importance of information networks and communication
in the operation of early mod-ern mercantile communities.

Sebouh David Aslanian is the Richard Hovannisian Term Chair of Modern
Armenian History, estab-lished by the Armenian Educational Foundation,
at the department of history at UCLA. He has taught at the department of
history at CSU-Long Beach as an Assistant Professor in the fall of 2010
after serving a year at Cornell University as a Mellon Foundation
Postdoctoral fellow in world history. He received his Ph.D. (with
distinction) from Columbia University in 2007.

From the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean was selected by the
Committee of the `California World Histo-ry Library’ as the first book
to appear in their new series, `Author’s Imprint,’ that celebrates and
recogniz-es `exceptional scholarship by first-time authors.’ It
received the 2011 Houshang Pourshariati Book Award in Iranian Studies
and the PEN literary award for outstanding first book of the year from
UC Press.

117 S. Louise Street, Glendale, CA 91205

Free admission and open to the public. Your donations are appreciated.

>From the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean will be on sale and available
for signing by the author.

For more information about this free event contact the Ararat-Eskijian
Museum at 818-838-4862 or

[email protected]; the Armenian Educational Foundation
at 818-242-4154;

the Armenian Society of Los Angeles at 818-241-1073; or NAASR at
617-489-1610 or [email protected].