Austrian FM visits Austrian library of Yerevan Brusov State Universi

Austrian FM visits Austrian library of Yerevan Brusov State University
of Languages and Social Sciences

13:01, 8 September, 2014

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS: Foreign Minister of Austria
Sebastian Kurz who is in Yerevan on an official visit attended the
Austrian library of the Yerevan State Linguistic University. The
minister and the delegation led by him walked around in the
university, familiarized themselves with the library’s activity, met
with the students.

Rector of the university Gayane Gasparyan attached high importance to
the event. “Our university has always enjoyed Austria’s attention to
our German-speaking students. We implement a wide range of educational
and cultural programs in collaboration with Austria. As a result of
those very programs, our university has founded its Austrian library,
the opening of which was attended by the first lady of Austria,”
Gayane Gasparyan said, Armenpress reports.

The university rector expressed gratitude to the Austrian FM for the
visit. Sebastian Kurz in his turn thanked for the invitation. “We are
very happy for our cooperation with Armenia. The visit of our
delegation proves that. As I was informed, 500 students at the
university study German. They can continue their education in
Austria,” said Kurz. He also listened to the speeches of the
German-learning students and communicated with them.

Diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Republic
of Austria were established on 24 January 1992. On 11 October 2011
Arman Kirakossian was appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Armenia to Austria.

On 28 August 2012 Alois Kraut, Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Austria to Armenia (with residence
in Vienna), presented his credentials to the President of the Republic
of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan. In June 2011 Aram Marutyan was appointed
Honorary Consul of the Republic of Austria in Armenia.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/775352/austrian-fm-visits-austrian-library-of-yerevan-brusov-state-university-of-languages-and-social-sciences.html

GARD La députée Françoise Dumas en voyage officiel en Arménie

REVUE DE PRESSE
GARD La députée Françoise Dumas en voyage officiel en Arménie

Françoise Dumas s’envolera aujourd’hui vers l’Arménie. Elle y sera
jusqu’à dimanche, aux côtés d’une délégation de députés socialistes, à
l’invitation du Fra Dachnaktsoutioun et du Comité de défense de la
Cause Arménienne.

Une visite qui aura pour but de commémorer le centenaire de la mort de
Jean Jaurès, qui fut impliqué dans la cause arménienne.

la suite…

lundi 8 septembre 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

https://www.objectifgard.com/2014/09/04/gard-la-deputee-francoise-dumas-en-voyage-officiel-en-armenie/

Bakou satisfait de la position de l’OTAN sur le Karabagh

Relations internationales
Bakou satisfait de la position de l’OTAN sur le Karabagh

Le gouvernement azerbaïdjanais a félicité l’OTAN pour la réaffirmation
de son soutien à l’intégrité territoriale de l’Azerbaïdjan dans le
conflit du Haut-Karabagh lors de son dernier sommet tenu au Pays de
Galles.

“Les alliés restent dans la même ligne concernant leur soutien à
l’intégrité territoriale, l’indépendance et la souveraineté de
l’Arménie, l’Azerbaïdjan, la Géorgie et la République de Moldovie”,
ont affirmé le président américain Barack Obama et les dirigeants des
27 autres Etats membres de l’OTAN dans une déclaration commune adoptée
vendredi.

“Dans ce contexte, nous allons continuer à soutenir les efforts en vue
d’un règlement pacifique des conflits dans le Caucase du Sud, ainsi
que dans la République de Moldovie, sur la base de ces principes et
des normes du droit international, la Charte des Nations Unies ”
ajoutait la déclaration.

L’OTAN avait adopté des termes pratiquement identiques lors de ses
précédents sommets. Serge Sarkissian a évité de prendre part à ces
rassemblements pour protester contre la non-utilisation de l’OTAN du
principe de l’autodétermination des peuples défendue par l’Arménie
dans le conflit du Karabagh. Une combinaison de l’autodétermination et
de l’intégrité territoriale a été au coeur des propositions de paix du
Karabagh faites par les États-Unis, la France et la Russie au cours de
la dernière décennie.

S’adressant au sommet jeudi, Sarkissian a mis en garde les dirigeants
de l’OTAN contre l’inclusion de formulations pro-azerbaïdjanaises dans
leur déclaration, soufflées par la Turquie. Il les a exhortés à
adopter à la place “la langue du Groupe de Minsk de l’OSCE”,
co-présidé par les Etats-Unis, la Russie et la France.

L’appel de Sarkissian est clairement tombé dans l’oreille d’un sourd.
L’Arménie n’a pas encore réagi à la déclaration de l’OTAN.

L’Azerbaïdjan, en revanche, n’a pas tardé à se féliciter de ce
document. Le chef de la politique étrangère du président Ilham Aliev,
Novruz Mammadov, a déclaré vendredi soir que “la position de l’OTAN
n’a pas changé.” “Étant donné que l’OTAN est aujourd’hui l’organisme
politico-militaire numéro 1, son soutien est très important”.

lundi 8 septembre 2014,
Claire (c)armenews.com

Letters: Michael Kustow’s thinking was bold, his ambition high

Letters: Michael Kustow’s thinking was bold, his ambition high

Jeremy Isaacs, Tony Gordon, Bernard Regan and Mike Westbrook
theguardian.com, Sunday 7 September 2014 16.17 BST

Highbrow argument: Michael Kustow in 1968, as director of the ICA.
Photograph: Chris Morris/Rex

Jeremy Isaacs writes: Channel 4 was charged, by Act of Parliament, with
providing a “distinctive” service; as its commissioning editor for the
arts, Michael Kustow did much to make that promise good. His thinking was
bold, his ambition high. Peter Brook’s Hindu saga, The Mahabharata; Peter
Hall’s masked Oresteia; Pina Bausch’s Bluebeard’s Castle and Tony
Harrison’s V, directed by Richard Eyre, tumbled on to the screen one after
the other. BBC2 commissioned an opera from Harrison Birtwistle, Yan Tan
Tethera, but declined to broadcast it. Kustow snapped it up for Channel 4;
the television version we made was simulcast with the BBC’s Radio 3. He
brought together the artist Tom Phillips and the film-maker Peter Greenaway
to attempt A TV Dante: eight episodes of The Inferno resulted. Kustow
behaved as a patron of the arts in a grand manner.

Himself an unreconstructed egghead, Kustow also offered highbrow argument.
The programme Voices began with Al Alvarez chairing a debate, with George
Steiner, Mary McCarthy and Joseph Brodsky, on the effect on artists of
dictatorship. Six series of Voices were screened at 11pm. And there were
programmes such as Psychoanalysis Today (Michael Ignatieff) and Philosophy
Today (John Searle). Thoughtful viewers in those days owed much to Michael
Kustow. He deserves to be remembered for it.

Tony Gordon writes: In the 1970s, Michael Kustow generously answered an
optimistic plea from Colin Jellicoe and myself (who both owned small
galleries) to visit us in Manchester to discuss a possible exhibition of
northern based artists at the National Theatre. He was the NT exhibitions
director at the time.

Where to go for lunch? He suggested Armenian, as part of his family had
originated from Armenia and he loved the food. At the time, Colin and I
were both struggling financially and couldn’t really afford the restaurant,
but luckily Arto der Haroutunian, the restaurant owner, happened to be one
of our artists. Michael proved great company, very entertaining and most
gracious.

In due course, the exhibition was organised and filled the foyers of the
NT. Looking back, it was not the greatest of exhibitions and was rightly
slated by Time Out. However, the knock-on effect was my contemporary
jewellery exhibition Dazzle which stayed for 32 years at the NT, until it
moved along the South Bank last year to the Oxo building.

Bernard Regan writes: In the last 10 years Michael Kustow and I worked
together on a number of projects. One was Another Israel, a meeting at the
NUT headquarters in Euston Road, London, which gave a platform to speakers
from Israel opposed to the policies of the Israeli government. Michael
organised the filming of the event, which was packed. He was supportive of
all those who wanted to open the debate within the Jewish community about
what was happening to the Palestinian people and of those within Israel who
sought to question their government’s actions.

Michael visited Israel and the West Bank and took a close interest in
theFreedom theatre in Jenin. I think he made a political journey, too –
always questioning and challenging, but engaged and never negative. He
brought his wide interest in the arts to bear on how he thought about the
issues and how he sought to engage people in a dialogue and discussion
about them.

Mike Westbrook writes: One of Mike Kustow’s projects was an English version
of Roger Planchon’s surrealist opera about Al Capone, Mama Chicago. The
original music and the songs had got lost, so Mike wrote new lyrics and
asked me to write the music. The piece had been commissioned by the
Crucible theatre, Sheffield. I duly wrote the score, and my group the Brass
Band was booked to play for the show, on-stage. At the last minute the
theatre’s director got cold feet about the possible impact of this
avant-garde production on the provincial audience and pulled the plug.

The Mama Chicago songs stayed on the shelf until Kate Westbrook and I had
the idea of using them as the basis for a jazz cabaret, a form of
music-theatre, incorporating improvisation, that we had been developing
with the band. The show was first staged at Charles Marowitz’s Open Space
theatre, a disused post office by Warren Street tube. We invited Michael to
the premiere, having told him nothing of our plans. To our great relief, he
loved the show, and did not seem to mind a bit that we had reworked some of
his lyrics as stand-alone songs rather than parts of an operatic scenario.

At the Edinburgh festival in 1978, Mama Chicago won the Fringe award. Over
the succeeding years, Kate, Phil Minton and I, with a succession of bands,
gave frequent London performances, and toured the jazz cabaret throughout
France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland and Scandinavia, and once to Australia.
It was filmed for BBC TV, broadcast on radio, and recorded as a double
album. In fact, Mama Chicago was one of our most successful projects.

It pleased Michael that the piece he had sparked off reached such a wide
audience. His text for Song of the Rain, featured in the show by Phil
Minton, is a work of genius – poignant, witty, and soulful. One of the last
times we met was at the Theatre Museum in Covent Garden for the launch of
his Peter Brook biography. At Mike’s request, Kate sang Song of the Rain.
He described that lyric as “God given”. He has left us a great theatre song
to remember him by.

http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2014/sep/07/letters-michael-kustow-obituary

No expectation from NATO

No expectation from NATO

14:34 | September 6,2014 | Politics

“NATO will gradually change its emphasis and will come forward with
its obvious Azerbaijani position,”- says politician Yervand Bozoyan.

There is no ward about the right of people’s self-determination in
NATO Summit declaration. Only the principle of territorial integrity
is stressed.

“There is no serious expectation for Armenia from that union,”- summed
up Yervand Bozoyan.

http://en.a1plus.am/1195588.html

Sen. Kirk Presses for More Scrutiny of Obama’s Pick of Turkey Envoy

Sen. Kirk Presses for More Scrutiny of Obama’s Pick of Turkey Envoy

Saturday, September 6th, 2014

by Ara Khachatourian

Republican senator from Illinois, Mark Kirk

Seeks Clarity on U.S. Policy on Armenian Genocide and Efforts to
Secure Turkey’s Return of Stolen Christian Church Properties

WASHINGTON-With the Senate scheduled to resume session on September 8,
Illinois Senator Mark Kirk (R-IL) has submitted five pointed questions
to U.S. Ambassador to Turkey nominee John Bass in order to bring
much-needed clarity to U.S. policy on both the Armenian Genocide and
the growing movement to secure Turkey’s return of stolen Christian
churches and religious properties, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America.

The complete text of Senator Kirk’s five questions is provided below.

“We want to thank Senator Kirk for shining much-needed sunlight on
Ambassador-designate Bass’s nomination and, more broadly, for
requiring that the Administration provide clear responses to simple,
straightforward questions about the Armenian Genocide and the return
of stolen Christian church properties by Turkey,” said ANCA Executive
Director Aram Hamparian. “We look forward to sharing the responses to
Senator Kirk’s questions as soon as they are made publicly available.”

In July, the ANCA welcomed the U.S. Senate’s decision to recess for
August without confirming Ambassador-designate Bass as a meaningful
opportunity for both Senators and American civil society to review
both his positions as well as the broader issues rapidly reshaping the
U.S.-Turkey relationship.

In his formal testimony, Ambassador Designate Bass used inaccurate and
offensive euphemisms, such as “shared history,” to avoid properly
characterizing the Armenian Genocide, and praised Turkish Prime
Minister Erdogan’s cynical repacking of genocide denial in his April
23rd “condolence” open letter to Armenians.

In addition to Senator Kirk, Senate Foreign Relations Committee
Chairman Robert Menendez (D-NJ) and Senators Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and
Ed Markey (D-MA) had questioned Ambassador Bass on U.S. policy on the
Armenian Genocide, Turkey’s ongoing blockade of Armenia and efforts to
secure the return of confiscated Christian holy sites from Turkey.

Sen. Mark Kirk: Questions for the Record to
The Honorable John Bass, U.S. Ambassador-Designate to the Republic of Turkey

During your testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on
July 15, 2014, you stated: “The U.S. government acknowledges as
historical fact and mourns that 1.5 million Armenians were massacred
or marched to their death in the final days of the Ottoman Empire.”

a) Can you clarify and expand on your statement to clearly indicate
the party or parties responsible for perpetrating the murder of 1.5
million Armenians?

b) Would you agree with the European Union and 11 of our NATO allies,
all of which have officially designated these atrocities as the
Armenian Genocide?

c) As Ambassador, would you support the rights of the heirs of those
killed during the Armenian Genocide to seek compensation from the
Republic of Turkey?

During your testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on
July 15, 2014, you stated: “If confirmed, I will encourage the Turkish
government to follow through on the return of religious minority
properties and to take additional steps to promote religious freedom,
such as allowing more religious communities to own property, register
their places of worship, and train clergy.”

a) Could you expand and clarify on what specific actions you plan to
undertake? Will you raise this issue at the highest levels of the
Turkish government?

b) Are you satisfied with the actions the State Department and our
Embassy in Ankara has taken to date to convince Turkey to restore
Christian religious property to its rightful owners?

http://asbarez.com/126706/sen-kirk-presses-for-more-scrutiny-of-obamas-pick-of-turkey-envoy/

Aziz Tamoyan: Armenia is safest country for Yazidis

Aziz Tamoyan: Armenia is safest country for Yazidis

Saturday,September 06

The plight of Iraqi Yazidis has worsened in the past week, and they
are in a difficult situation now, Aziz Tamoyan, the head of National
Union of Yazidis NGO, told reporters today.

Tamoyan stressed the inadmissibility of genocide in the 21st century.
In his words, some of the Yazidi people are being exterminated in
Turkey, others – in Syria, and although the Syrian government helps
Yezidis, its help is insignificant.

“Syria has its own problems. We ask the United States to continue
actively providing relief to Yazidis as the Islamists’ goal is not
limited to Yazidis’ extermination. Their real goal is to create an
Islamic state. We speak about human rights, but today we don’t see
this institute functioning. Why is everyone silent when an entire
nation is dying of hunger? This Islamic wave will sweep the whole
world,” A. Tamoyan said.

According to him, about 2,300 Yazidi women are being held captive and
they need to be rescued. “300 Yazidi women and girls were sold in a
market in Syria. It is unacceptable that women are sold as sex slaves
in the 21st century,” Aziz Tamoyan said resentfully.

Many of Iraqi Yazidis want to move to Armenia as it is the safest
country for them, the union chairman noted.

Making an appeal to other countries, Tamoyan said that if they want to
help Yazidis, they should send money to the Yazidi people, rather than
to the Iraqi government.

“The money should be sent to Lalish, Yazidis’ cultural center and
their place of pilgrimage in Northern Iraq. Relief donations for the
Yazidi people can be transferred to an account opened in Armenia,”
Aziz Tamoyan said.

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2014/09/06/aziz-tamoyan/

Why I Haven’t Talked So Far

Why I Haven’t Talked So Far

Lragir.am
Law – 06 September 2014, 09:38

“Why haven’t I talked so far,” Vardan Petrosyan said making his first
testimony in court.

The reasons are several. “First, Detective Hakobyan tried to force
testimonies out of me in the absence of my advocate,” Vardan Petrosyan
said. Besides, the actor reminded that during the pre-trial
investigation the investigative body refused to provide the existing
documents relating to the case. “It was my action of protest,” he
said.

The third reason, according to Vardan Petrosyan, was his fear that his
testimony could contradict the testimonies of the victim whereas the
aggrieved party was already rather aggressive.

Commenting on the day of the accident, Vardan Petrosyan said that on
that day he had an appointment with the TV show They Were Not
Expecting Us and in the morning he was waiting for their team in his
house in Saralanj village.

The director of the show Suren Shahverdyan asked him to shoot another
show by the same group called “They Were Not Expecting Us Hungry”.

Vardan Petrosyan said he was reluctant to be hosted by this show
because he hates “eating and drinking faces on the screen” but the
authors of the show persuaded him. And since there was not enough food
at home, he asked his sister arriving from Yerevan to bring some food.

Vardan Petrosyan commented on the opinion that there was a party in
his house on that day. “There was no party, there was a shooting and
if there are people who go round restaurants, eat and drink and cannot
imagine how one can lay the table and put no vodka.”

As to vodka on the table, Vardan Petrosyan reiterated the container
with liquid on the table was vodka. And in the video he says “pour
some water”.

Coming back to the crash in the evening on his way back to Yerevan,
Vardan Petrosyan said he reached Yeghvard, he was driving slow, a
while later the crash happened.

“I learned to drive in France, I was wearing a seatbelt all the time,
I noticed the Niva car which a little left from me, the Niva suddenly
turned to the road, I tried to maneuver, there was a crash and I lost
conscious. I came round when I was taken out of the car,” Vardan
Petrosyan said.

He also said that he was in severe pain and felt very bad and from the
caring actions of the rescue service he concluded that his state was
bad, close to death.

“I thought I was dying,” Vardan Petrosyan said, adding that he started
joking to encourage himself and especially the guys who were helping
him.

“I didn’t know how the crash happened, that children had died. I was
even happy that on the verge of death I pulled myself together to
encourage the rescuers. I didn’t know that a tragedy happened,” he
said, adding, “When I learned about it later, the shock was
unbelievable.”

In conclusion, Vardan Petrosyan said: “When people who shoot and kill
each other are let free on a single member of parliament’s signature,
and for me not one but tens of members of parliament, social
activists, artists both in Armenia and France sign but I am still in
prison, I conclude that my case was tried as a premeditated murder and
was used to discredit me, put psychological pressure on me, kill me.”

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/right/view/32941#sthash.iRwd1OTT.dpuf

Statistics reveals drop in residential buildings’ number

Haykakan Zhamanak: Statistics reveals drop in residential buildings’ number

09:45 * 06.09.14

The latest findings by Armenia’s National Statistical Service reveal a
decline in the number of registered residential buildings as of 2013,
according to the paper.

The report suggests that multi-apartment blocks decreased by 45 in
number compared to the previous year. The statistics further reveals a
drop in the number of apartments (435,427 instead of the 436,631 in
2012).

In the meantime, more private houses are said to have been registered
last year. Their number increased from 423,624 in 2012 to 426,592 in
2013, says the paper.

Armenian News – Tert.am

ARF: Armenian soldiers forced Aliyev to sit down to negotiating tabl

ARF: Armenian soldiers forced Aliyev to sit down to negotiating table

17:10, 05.09.2014

YEREVAN. – The meetings of Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents are
better than hostilities, and we always give positive assessments of
such meetings, ARF Dashnaktsutyun parliamentary group head Armen
Rustamyan said.

However, one should not expect much, yet Azerbaijan has positioned
itself as “not negotiating party” on the principled issues.

“How can one negotiate with a party that does not realize what
concessions it should make? Azerbaijani side presents only unilateral
concessions for the Armenian side. As long as Azerbaijan does not
realize that they must respect the right of Karabakh people to
self-determination, the process will be delayed,” Rustamyan told
reporters.

Asked ether there is a fault of the OSCE Minsk Group, Rustamyan noted
that it is impossible to equally blame the Armenian and Azerbaijani
side in relation to the violence at the contact line, when you know
exactly who is the initiator. He thinks it is time for international
community to say who is who.

Commenting on the trilateral meetings with the presidents, the MP
noted that the dynamics of meetings was forced by the Armenian side.

“In fact, it was a three-day war, the outcome of which forced
Azerbaijan to sit down at the negotiating table, just as it happened
in 1994. First of all our soldiers forced Aliyev to sit at negotiating
table,” he added.

Armenia News – NEWS.am