Prize-winning film makers to receive Jonathan Daniels Award

The Union Leader, NH
March 16 2014

Prize-winning film makers to receive Jonathan Daniels Award

KEENE — The legacy of lawyer Raphael Lemkin, who became a human rights
advocate and introduced the word “genocide” to describe mass slaughter
as a crime against humanity in 1944, is featured in filmmaker and
director Edet Belzberg’s celebrated film, “Watchers of the Sky.”

The film, which earned an Academy Award nomination and Sundance Award,
will be shown on Saturday, April 12, at the Colonial Theatre in Keene
during the second annual Monadnock International Film Festival
(MONIFF).

After the screening, Belzberg and producer Amelia Green-Dove will be
presented with the Jonathan Daniels Award, named in honor of the
murdered Episcopal seminarian whose advocacy in the 1960s helped
galvanize the civil rights movement.

The award is presented annually to a socially conscious filmmaker who
“echoes Daniels’ courage, purpose and spirit by using film in a
powerful, transformative way,” MONIFF said in revealing its choice for
award recipient.

Using present-day and archival footage combined with animation, the
film blends Lemkin’s struggle with the first-hand experiences of four
21st-century activists who honor Lemkin’s legacy: Luis Moreno-Ocampo,
chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court; Samantha Power,
author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning book “A Problem from Hell:
America and the Age of Genocide,” and U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations (who also narrates Lemkin’s story in the film); Rwandan
Emmanuel Uwurukundo, who oversees refugee camps on the border of Chad
and Western Sudan for the United Nations, and Ben Ferencz, a former
prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials who knew Lemkin.

They carry on Lemkin’s legacy through their firsthand experiences with
20th- and 21st-century mass killings of minority groups in Armenia,
World War II, Bosnia, Rwanda, and the Darfur region of Sudan, MONIFF
officials said.

This spring’s MONIFF will include feature narrative films, three
feature documentaries, a short film program and several panels. The
faculty and staff of the Keene State College Cohen Center for
Holocaust and Genocide Studies will collaborate with MONIFF on special
programming for students and community members during the festival.

Tickets are $12 per screening, $75 for a film pass and $125 for a VIP
pass. Visit or call 352-2033 for more information.

Though plans are still shaping up, events are slated to take place on
the Keene State College campus, at the Peterborough Players in
Peterborough and in a Jaffrey beneath an entertainment tent, festival
officials said.

http://www.unionleader.com/article/20140227/NEWHAMPSHIRE01/140229338/0/FRONTPAGE
www.moniff.org

Putting pictures together

The Hindu
March 16 2014

Putting pictures together

Out of the blue there arrived the other day a catalogue that brought
back memories of Mala Mukerjee who many years ago took photographs for
my Madras Musings and for assignments I had worked on. Many others in
Madras will remember her as the charming wife of a banking head in the
city, hostessing very propah dinners by night and roaming the city by
day handling her saree as she leaped about trying to get the best
angles for a picture she wanted to capture just right. There are still
others, particularly cricket buffs, who might remember her picture of
that very last moment that made a Test at Chepauk an exciting tie in
1986.

Only the second tie in Test cricket, it was memorable for Dean Jones’
epic 210 scored while fighting fatigue and dehydration, the
Shastri-Maninder Singh partnership that failed to earn a win but
achieved a tie — and Mala Mukerjee’s picture of that final moment, the
only picture of it taken by any photographer, Indian or international,
amateur or professional. She was to later tell me, “I was so excited
by what was happening on the field that I didn’t realise I was
clicking and clicking and it was only when I got home and developed
the rolls that I realised what I had got. And it was only after I saw
the match pictures in the various papers the next day that I realised
that I had got that once-in-a-lifetime shot.” That picture, my
favourite of those she ‘shot’ for me — of how the MRTS was ruining the
Buckingham Canal — and one of her pictures from the catalogue, showing
how completely different her work is today, are the three contrasting
pictures I present readers today.

Her photo-art is what she now showcases in her Mala Mukerjee Gallery
(MMG) in Kolkata — where she also hosts exhibitions of the work of
other photographers. MMG is a founder member of the China
International Photography Museum and Gallery Alliance (IPMGA) founded
in what is called “the first photography town in China”, Lishui, in
November 2011. At the first International Congress and Photographic
Art Exhibition held there that year, Mala volunteered to hold the
second one in Kolkata to help reclaim its position in “the forefront
of photography in India.” It’s the catalogue of that event that found
its way to my table. It’s an impressive publication, but what bowled
me over was the work of the “New Mala” — a photographer turned artist.

******

Always something new to learn

There is always something new to learn — even every day, as far as
Madras is concerned, I always tell people who ask me how I keep this
column going. And that learning comes from readers who keep sending me
material, or leads to material about people, places and potpourri
about Madras.

What made me think of this recently was two events: a visit by two
Frenchwomen of Armenian heritage researching the Armenian presence in
India and the release a couple of days later of the book Contemporary
Facets of the Anglo-Indian Community written by Dr. Geoffrey K.
Francis. Both produced nuggets of information that I had had no clue
about, even though I had done much work on both the Armenians and the
Anglo-Indians.

Chantal Satenig Batwagan-Toufanian, one of my visitors, told me she
was especially interested in a book titled The Trap of Grandeur (aka
as The Trap of Glory or The Trap of Vanity) and wondered whether, as
it had first been published in Madras, I knew anything about it. And I
let the side down by saying I’d never even heard of it. Whereupon I
did hear about it — in an accent I struggled to decipher.

The author, I learnt, was Hakob Shahamirian (known better in Madras as
Jacob Shawmier) who printed and published it in Armenian in Madras.
The title page carries the following imprint: “In 1773 in the main
Indian city of Madras in the print house of Hakob Shahamirian.” But
what was most interesting about this book is that, besides narrating
the history of the Armenian people, it suggested to them what is
considered “the first republican constitution in the world.” Jacob
Shawmier, the son of Shawmier Sultan (of Julfa in Persia, before he
settled in Madras) had set up a printing press in Madras in 1772, the
first Armenian press in the country.

The second bit of learning came from Dr. Francis’s collection of
articles, speeches, and appeals. Those who know Anglo-Indian history
are undoubtedly aware that John Ricketts, who worked with the
nationalist poet Henry Derozio, took with him to London in December
1829 a petition seeking better living conditions for the East Indians
(as Anglo-Indians were known before 1911). What I didn’t know was that
with it went a petition from the East Indians of Madras, who were
themselves planning to establish an association of their own.
Interestingly, a public subscription was raised in Madras to support
Ricketts’ journey to London with both petitions — and the first to
subscribe to it was Governor Stephen Lushington!

The next bit of learning followed on this. On his return journey from
London, Ricketts disembarked in Madras in late 1830 and spent a few
weeks here. While here, Governor Lushington gave him an audience and
invited him to a State Ball and Dinner. The East Indians, whose
association had not got off the ground at the time, gave him a public
dinner and a reception ball and supper and congratulated him on what
he had achieved in London. In fact, he hadn’t achieved much by way of
initiating action, but he did deliver the petitions to Parliament,
Government and the Crown, and the Charter of 1833, during the
preparation of which the East Indian petitions must have been
considered, restored all the rights the East Indians had lost from
time to time over the previous 50 years.

It was, however, to be some time, before the East Indians formed an
association in Madras. The association was formed in October 1879 and
registered as The Eurasian and Anglo-Indian Association of Southern
Indian in 1882. It later became The Anglo-Indian Association of
Southern India in 1908. The founding President of the Association was
David White and presiding over it today is Geoffrey K. Francis, a
leading educationist and correspondent of three Anglo-Indian Schools.
He was Principal of A.M. Jain College and, after retirement, is
Principal of the College’s second shift. He was also the MLA
representing the Anglo-Indians in the Tamil Nadu Assembly from 1985 to
1988.

******

When the postman knocked…

*You’ve forgotten two others from Ceylon (Miscellany, March 10), who
did much in India in religious and Tamil studies; in fact, you had
written about one of them, S. Sivapathasundaram, writes R. Rajendran,
chiding me. The other person he refers to is Yazhpaanam Kadhirvel
Pillai, a Saiva Siddhantha pandit who had much to do in getting labour
leader Thiru Vi.Ka. more interested in philosophy than in the labour
movement after he passed the labour crown on to C.S. Anthonypillai.
Sivapathasundaram’s contribution, as I have related in the past
(Miscellany, November 12, 2012), was as much in broadcasting as in
writing travelogues and partnering Chitti in writing the definitive
histories of the Tamil Novel and of the Tamil Short Story.

*How can refugees, who have not been given citizenship or permanent
residency of the host countries they have sought refuge in, be
considered part of a diaspora (Miscellany, March 10), wonders S.
Geetha, who says she is a student of international relations. That, I
rather think, is a valid point, but I wonder what the editors of the
National University of Singapore’s encyclopaedia on the Sri Lankan
diaspora have to say to that.

*That picture you used to illustrate a crowded George Town street
(Miscellany, March 10) is of the area’s main thoroughfare, N.S.C. Bose
Road, and hardly shows how bad the congestion in the area’s
cross-streets is, regrets L. Ramadoss. Can’t you give us a picture
that shows it really like it is, he asks. Will today’s picture of
Armenian Street do, reader Ramadoss?

http://www.thehindu.com/features/metroplus/society/putting-pictures-together/article5788342.ece?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication

A Nantes, Lena, toute jeune Française et heureuse de l’être

REVUE DE PRESSE
A Nantes, Lena, toute jeune Française et heureuse de l’être

Lena, 25 ans, est désormais Française. Ses parents ingénieurs,
Arméniens d’origine, ont fui la Russie et sont arrivés en France en
2003. à Saint-Nazaire. Elle est
aujourd’hui en cinquième année de faculté de médecine à Nantes. Plus
tard, quand elle sera > dans son métier, la Française
aspire à effectuer

Aram MP3 représentera l’Arménie à l’Eurovision 2014 avec la chanson

L’ARMENIE A L’EUROVISION 2014
Aram MP3 représentera l’Arménie à l’Eurovision 2014 avec la chanson >

Nous savions depuis le mois de décembre qu’Aram MP3 représenterait
l’Arménie à l’Eurovision 2014 en mai prochain au Danemark. Mais nous
connaissons désormais sa chanson. Il s’agit de > une
chanson dont les paroles sont écrites par Gaguik Baboyan et
l’arrangement musical est l’oeuvre de Lilit Navassartian. Le régisseur
du CD est Krikor Gasparian. Le comité arménien chargé du concours de
l’Eurovision a reçu plus de 75 propositions de chansons avant de
porter le choix sur >. 37 pays participeront à
l’Eurovision 2014 dont le mot d’ordre sera >
(rejoignez-nous) dont la finale se déroulera le 10 juin au Danemark.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 16 mars 2014,
Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

Ambassador: Iran may offer Armenia new conditions on gas supplies

Ambassador: Iran may offer Armenia new conditions on gas supplies

March 15, 2014 | 19:22

YEREVAN. – The Iranian side is doing everything to arrange the visit
of president Hassan Rouhani to Armenia, Ambassador Mohammad Reisi told
Armenian News-NEWS.amcorrespondent.

Ambassador said president Rouhani’s priority is relations with the
neighboring states and he plans to visit the countries, in particular
Armenia, that is of special priority for Iran.

“I hope the visit will take place this year,” he said.

As to prospects for bilateral energy cooperation, Ambassador noted
that the regular meeting of Armenian-Iranian inter-governmental energy
committee is to take place to disucss the issues. Asked whether Iran
can offer Armenia new conditions on gas supplies, the diplomat said:
“It is possible. Everything depends on talks. The issue may be raised
during the meeting of Armenia-Iran joint inter-governmental commission
to be held in Tehran this May”.

Asked whether the sale of Vorotan Hydro Cascade to U.S. will affect
Iran-Armenia energy cooperation, Mohammad Reisi said Iran’s partner is
Armenian government and the Iranian side has no relation to who
purchased the Vorotan cascade.

On January 29, Energy and Natural Resources Minister of Armenia, Armen
Movsisyan, and ContourGlobal’s Executive Vice President and CEO for
Eastern Europe & CIS, Garry Levesley, signed an agreement on the sale
of the Vorotan Hydro Cascade–which is a series of three hydroelectric
power plants–to the US company.

Under the terms of the agreement, ContourGlobal Hydro Cascade, a
direct and wholly owned subsidiary of ContourGlobal, will supply power
to the Armenian grid under a long-term power purchase agreement. It
will also invest US$ 70 million over the next six years in a
refurbishment program to modernize the plants and improve their
operational performance, safety, reliability, and efficiency.

http://news.am/eng/news/199166.html

Threatened US and EU visa bans would hit 13 Russian political and bu

Threatened US and EU visa bans would hit 13 Russian political and
business leaders -German newspaper

YEREVAN, March 14. / ARKA /. Threatened US and EU visa bans over the
Crimea crisis would hit at least 13 Russian political and business
leaders, including the defense minister, secret service chief and head
of Gazprom, German newspaper Bild said today.

According to Bild, the list of people to be targeted with visa bans
includes at least 13 names, among them Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu
and Federal Security Service (FSB) chief Alexander Bortnikov, chief of
Putin’s administration Sergei Ivanov, vice prime minister Dmitry
Rogozin and secretary of the National Security Council Nikolay
Patrushev.

The ban may also hit presidential aides Sergey Glazyev and Vladislav
Surkov and head of parliament committee on foreign affairs Alexei
Pushkov.

Gazprom chief executive Alexei Miller and oil giant Rosneft’s chief
Igor Sechin would also face bans on travel to the European Union and
United States, BIld said.. -0-

– See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/threatened_us_and_eu_visa_bans_would_hit_13_russian_political_and_business_leaders_german_newspaper/#sthash.4RzIUtlz.dpuf

Belarusian Tractors to be Delivered to Artsakh Soon

BELARUSIAN TRACTORS TO BE DELIVERED TO ARTSAKH SOON

Saturday, 15 March 2014 12:34

Director of the NKR Fund for Rural and Agricultural
Relief Ashot Bakhshiyan paid a working visit to Yerevan on March 3-7.

The visit was, in particular, aimed at meeting with Director of the
Fund “The National Centre for Development of Small and Medium Business
of Armenia” Varazdat Karapetian.

At the Office of the Center, an agreement was signed on purchasing
tractors of Belarusian production, according to which 40 tractors will
be delivered to Artsakh soon to give them to farmers on leasing or by
direct sale. Tractor trailers will also be delivered to the second
Armenian Republic. Last year, Artsakh received 20 tractors of the
kind. The Fund “The National Centre for Development of Small and
Medium Business of Armenia” provides Artsakh with tractors at cost.

According to Director of the NKR Fund for Rural and Agricultural
Relief Ashot Bakhshiyan, an arrangement on organizing the production
of dried fruits in Artsakh, as well as introducing new technologies
and modern equipment at the fruits processing factories was achieved
during the meeting.

Nelson AVANESIAN

http://artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1396:-belarusian-tractors-to-be-delivered-to-artsakh-soon&catid=6:economy&Itemid=18

En Turquie,la rue se réveille contre Erdogan l'<< assassin >>

REVUE DE PRESSE
En Turquie,la rue se réveille contre Erdogan l’>

Gaz lacrymogènes, canons à eau, bombes de gaz irritants : les forces
de police d’Istanbul sont intervenues brutalement hier contre
plusieurs dizaines de milliers de manifestants qui participaient aux
funérailles de Berkin Elvan. Le garçon de 15 ans, mort mardi matin
après 269 jours de coma, avait été gravement blessé pendant les
manifestations du printemps pour la défense du parc Gezi, près de la
place Taksim au coeur d’Istanbul. Les manifestations d’hier ont été
les plus massives depuis juin à Istanbul mais aussi à Ankara, Izmir et
dans de nombreuses autres villes du pays. Plus de 200 000 personnes
auraient marché derrière le cercueil. La rue se réveille à moins de
trois semaines d’élections municipales cruciales qui sont un test
politique majeur pour le Premier ministre islamo- conservateur Recep
Tayyip Erdogan et son parti, l’AKP. Ils sont affaiblis par des
scandales financiers et des écoutes téléphoniques accablantes mises en
ligne sur Internet par la confrérie islamiste de Fetullah Gülen,
prêcheur réfugié aux Etats-Unis qui fut longtemps l’allié du Premier
ministre. Aux slogans du printemps comme > se mêlaient des >,
devenu le cri de ralliement des protestataires depuis la révélation,
en décembre, des affaires de corruption impliquant le Premier
ministre. Et aussi beaucoup de >. >, lançait
devant les caméras la mère de Berkin Elvan. L’adolescent est devenu un
symbole. Dès le matin et par dizaines de milliers, jeunes et vieux,
femmes et hommes ont convergé vers Okmeydani, quartier du centre
d’Istanbul et le cemevi, le lieu de culte alévi, secte progressiste
issue du chiisme dont se réclame près du quart de la population turque
et la famille de la victime. L’alévisme n’a jamais été reconnu et ses
fidèles sont victimes de discriminations. Les alévis ont été en
première ligne de la contestation au printemps dernier. GRÈVE.
L’ensemble des magasins d’Okmeydani étaient fermés. Le Disk
(Confédération des syndicats des travailleurs révolutionnaires) et le
Kesk (Confédération des syndicats des travailleurs du secteur public)
avaient décrété un jour de grève pour encourager leurs membres à
participer aux manifestations. Entouré de drapeaux rouges et
d’oeillets, le cercueil a été transporté jusqu’au cimetière de
Ferikoy, à quelque six kilomètres, en près de cinq heures. Des
funérailles encore plus imposantes et suivies que celles, en janvier
2007, du journaliste turc d’origine arménienne Hrant Dink, assassiné
par un jeune chômeur ultranationaliste manipulé. >, avoue un manifestant. Pour la première fois, les
élèves et étudiants de plusieurs lycées et universités privés ont
participé en masse à un tel cortège, scandant >.Habillés en noir,
nombre de manifestants brandissaient un pain en hommage à Berkin,
touché à la tête le 16 juin par une cartouche de gaz lacrymogène alors
qu’il allait chercher du pain à 200mètres de chez lui.Une information
contre X a été ouverte par le parquet,mais seulement cinq mois après
l’incident. Et, jusqu’à aujourd’hui, aucun suspect ne s’est retrouvé
devant le juge. Le gouvernement turc est accusé par l’opposition, les
organisations de défense des droits de l’homme et par la Commission
européenne d’avoir eu recours au printemps > face aux manifestants. BLOC.Cette remobilisation
de l’opposition de gauche risque pourtant de ne pas se traduire dans
les urnes le 30mars.Malgré les scandales de corruption, les sondages,
y compris les plus sérieux comme ceux de l’institut Konda, donnent
tous entre 40 et 47%à l’AKP, qui reste de loin la première force
politique du pays.Un fléchissement par rapport aux dernières
législatives de juin 2011, où il avait remporté 49,8% des voix, mais
un progrès par rapport aux précédentes municipales (38,5%). L’extrême
polarisation du débat politique expliquerait la popularité persistante
du parti au pouvoir depuis 2002, dont les partisans font bloc face à
ce qu’ils considèrent comme un gigantesque complot de l’étranger. Les
soutiens de l’opposition veulent quand même y croire. >, assure Hakan Aygun,
directeur de la chaîne Halk TV, proche du CHP, la principale force de
la gauche. Mais la vraie question, c’est l’après.

PM, Russian Transport Minister hail the dynamic development of dialo

Armenian PM, Russian Transport Minister hail the dynamic development of dialogue

14:47 15.03.2014

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan received Russian Transport Minister
Maxim Sokolov. The two co-chair the Armenian-Russian Intergovernmental
Commission on Economic Cooperation.

“The volume of direct Russian investments in Armenia makes 40% of the
foreign investments in the republic,” the Russian Minister said,
adding that another 50 mln will be invested in 1,820 joint ventures.

“I’m glad that our dialogue is developing dynamically, especially
ahead of Armenia’s joining the Customs Union and the Eurasian Economic
Union. This is important for Armenia, Russia and all other member
states,” he said.

The parties hailed the process of implementation of the measures
envisaged by the “roadmap” of Armenia’s accession to the Customs
Union.

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/03/15/armenian-pm-russian-transport-minister-hail-the-dynamic-development-of-dialogue/

Transport Troubles: Unhappiness over lack of conclusion by commissio

Transport Troubles: Unhappiness over lack of conclusion by commission

SOCIETY | 14.03.14 | 17:25

Photolure

Gohar Abrahamyan
ArmeniaNow reporter

Public transport passengers in the Armenian capital are unhappy with
the work of the transport commission created several months ago and
believe no efforts are spared to eliminate the passenger
transportation companies and to monopolize the field.

In July, Yerevan Mayor Taron Margaryan suspended the application of
his decision to raise the transport fares (from 100 drams to 150 [36
cents] and from 50 to 100 [24 cents]) after a weeklong civil protest
in the Armenian capital. He also stated that a commission of experts
and concerned citizens would be formed to develop all the mechanisms
that would allow completing the decision on “Reconsideration of the
passenger transportation fares in Yerevan city”. The civil activists,
not satisfied with this solution, continued the standoff and demanded
dismissal of several high-ranking officials.

Economic entities have made their own calculations, after which they
stated that the bus fare had to be raised to 150-250 drams (36-60
cents), while NGO representatives claim their calculations show even
with 80-dram fare (19) it would be possible to work with profit.

Member organizations of the Passenger Transporters of Armenia say they
have been working at a loss during the recent years, because the bus
fare rate has not changed since 1996, but the taxes have grown, the
fuel and technical assistance prices have gone up.

“We absolutely do not want to leave this burden on our citizens,
instead the tax burden could be eased, the fuel sold to us at cost.
People have made expenses, purchased new busses, but today these
companies are in a dire situation, one of them facing bankruptcy. Most
probably, the goal is to eliminate all these companies and hand the
entire field to one operator,” Hrant Yeghiazaryan, heading the union,
told the press on Friday.

According to passenger route operators, the commission has achieved
nothing essential in all these months and they have turned to the
country leader to understand what is happening.

They claim also that five companies have shut down, seven are on the
verge of liquidation, 23 are not functioning, which affects the still
running companies because of the work overload.

Thursday the parliament discussed a draft law on changes and additions
to the law On Automobile Transport, providing for handing the
exploitation of public transport to the community administration, new
operator concept has been introduced, which is an organization to run
regular local city passenger transportation routes using automobiles
of general public use, with 100 percent community participation.

“If there is only one operator, we will have many jobless people, a
new wave of migration, and a higher than 200-dram bus fare, because
the field will be monopolized and you won’t be able to do anything
about it. Monopoly always dictates the rules, it has never done any
good to people,” says the Union’s vice-president Harutyun Araqelyan,
passenger route operator, who has worked for 35 years in the sphere.

http://armenianow.com/society/52709/public_transport_costs_in_armenia_taron_margaryan