Two-Day Conference Of Dentists Kicked Off In Yerevan

TWO-DAY CONFERENCE OF DENTISTS KICKED OFF IN YEREVAN
Lilit Muradyan

“Radiolur”
24.05.2012 15:28

A two-day conference of dentists kicked off at the Yerevan State
Medical University today to mark the 50th anniversary of the Faculty
of Dentistry.

Leading specialists from more than ten countries have arrived in
Yerevan to participate in the discussions and share their experience
with Armenian counterparts.

Minister of Healthcare Harutyun Kushkyan said one of the urgent issues
of the sphere is to raise the quality and accessibility of services.

“Although we are not far behind Europe, we still have much to do.

Taking into consideration that dentistry has become a “fashionable”
profession, we’ll work together with the Dentistry Association to clear
the field of low-quality services,” Minister Kushkyan told reporters.

Richard Giragosian Considers Armenian President’s Refusal To Attend

RICHARD GIRAGOSIAN CONSIDERS ARMENIAN PRESIDENT’S REFUSAL TO ATTEND NATO SUMMIT TO BE A MISTAKE

ARMINFO
Thursday, May 24, 17:52

Armenian Richard Giragosian, Director of the Regional Studies Center
(RSC), an independent think tank in Yerevan, told ArmInfo that
Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan’s refusal to attend the NATO Summit
in Chicago was a mistake.

To recall, it was Serzh Sargsyan’s second refusal to attend the NATO
Summit held in Chicago on May 20- 21. The president explained his
decision by the ineligibility of mentioning the topic of the Nagorno-
Karabakh problem in the final declaration.

“The Armenian president should have more able to defend Armenia’s
position in the Summit, and the language of the resolution that
was adopted was not that bad, it was balanced between territorial
integrity and self determination”, the expert said.

When asked whether the Armenian President’s refusal will have any
impact on the relations of the sides, Giragosian said: “Armenia
continues to deepen its ties with NATO, this was a mistake, but there
should not be any implications”.

Speaking about NATO-Russia opposition over the issue of anti-missile
defense and about the possible role of the countries of the region,
the expert said: “On the one hand the NATO expansion in this region is
over, even Georgia no time soon will join NATO, in terms of missile
defense systems, even that is a marginal issue, because neither
Armenia nor Azerbaijan plays any serious role in missile defense”.

Nato Supports Territorial Integrity Because Of Georgia – Armenian Ex

NATO SUPPORTS TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY BECAUSE OF GEORGIA – ARMENIAN EXPERT

news.am
May 25, 2012 | 14:18

YEREVAN.- NATO mentioned about territorial integrity of Azerbaijan
because of Georgia’s case, Armenian expert believes.

Ruben Safrastyan, head of Institute of Oriental Studies, commented
on the NATO Summit declaration supporting sovereignty and territorial
integrity of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Moldova.

“By including such wordings in a declaration, NATO wants to show
Georgia there is an opportunity to join the alliance, although Georgia
is engaged in territorial conflicts as well,” he told journalists
on Friday.

Nevertheless, the expert considers the document is a mistake as
Azerbaijan will perceive it as a pardoner for new provocations in
the line of contact with Karabakh.

“NATO will not directly act as a mediator, as the bloc clearly
supports the talks held within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group,”
Safrastyan added.

He considers Armenian leader’s decision not to attend the summit
was right.

“Presence of president during signing of such document is not in
Armenia’s interests,” he said.

Festival "My Armenia" To Start In Zvartnots Temple

FESTIVAL “MY ARMENIA” TO START IN ZVARTNOTS TEMPLE

ARMENPRESS
24 May, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 24, ARMENPRESS: In the framework of pan Armenian
festival “My Armenia” which is held in support of Ministry of
Diaspora of Armenia, more than 50 events will be implemented. They
will be open-air concerts in Yerevan and regions, master classes for
choreographies and moderators, flesh-mobs, round tables, excursions,
meetings with political, cultural, social figures. Armenpress was
informed from the ministry the solemn ceremony of opening would be
held in Zvartnots temple in June 29.

It has the aim to support Armenian culture, national identity keeping
and development. The festival will be an exclusive celebration of
Armenian culture in homeland, which will be continuous and will be
held once in two years. From June 29 till July 10 are planned “Days
of Dancing”, from August 9-14 “Chorus Art days” and etc.

Official website of the festival has been made.

www.im-hayastan.com

Sergey Khachatryan Performs In New York

SERGEY KHACHATRYAN PERFORMS IN NEW YORK

ARMRADIO.AM
25.05.2012 13:50

“In New York, where audiences are treated to regular performances by
star musicians, there is excellent music-making in abundance. Yet for
all the virtuoso playing – however enjoyable it may be – it is still
rare to hear an artist communicate with the level of searing intensity
that Sergey Khachatryan achieved in his sublime interpretation of
Bach’s Partita for Solo Violin No. 2 at Alice Tully Hall on Wednesday
evening,” the New Your Times writes.

“This was certainly a deeply spiritual performance, personal and
soaringly expressive. As soon as Mr. Khachatryan began the opening
Allemande, you could sense how intently the audience began listening,
as he achieved the all-too-uncommon feat of seducing a rustling,
coughing crowd into silence,” the paper writes.

Sergey Khachatryan was born in Armenia in 1985 into a gifted musical
family; both parents and his older sister being pianists. After
winning numerous competitions including the Louis Spohr competition,
in December 2000 Sergey won the VIII International Jean Sibelius
competition, and in 2005 he claimed the first prize at the prestigious
Queen Elizabeth Competition in Brussels.

Sergey Khachatryan appears in recitals throughout the world, including
London’s Wigmore Hall; Carnegie Hall in New York; the Palais des
Beaux-Arts in Brussels; the Alte Oper Frankfurt, and cities such as
Madrid, Tokyo, Seoul, Paris, San Francisco, Hamburg and Dublin.

Eurovision Does Little To Help Human Rights In Azerbaijan

EUROVISION DOES LITTLE TO HELP HUMAN RIGHTS IN AZERBAIJAN

guardian.co.uk

Friday 25 May 2012 10.00 BST

This year’s host city, Baku, has had a makeover but journalists and
activists say that under the surface, life is as grim as ever

Elnur Majidli, a shy 22-year-old Azeri, lowered his voice when he
talked about the time he spent in prison.

He mainly read books to pass the time – 102 in all. “I discovered
George Orwell,” he said. “The novel 1984 is the situation we have
in Azerbaijan today. [President Ilham] Aliyev is like Big Brother –
he sees everything, knows everything.”

Majidli was released from prison last week after serving half of
a two-year sentence on charges of hooliganism that rights groups
say were politically motivated. Amnesty International named him a
prisoner of conscience, jailed for his participation in opposition
protests against Azerbaijan’s all-powerful president. “They wanted
to lessen the pressure a bit because of Eurovision,” Majidli said of
his unexpected release. “They wanted to show they’re humane.”

Azerbaijan’s hosting of the Eurovision song contest has thrust the
oil-rich country into the international spotlight.

The very nature of Eurovision, a kitschy pop spectacle in which
competitors representing about 40 countries (of which 26 reach the
final) perform a song live on television, is in stark contrast to
the grim reality of life in Azerbaijan.

The government has poured millions into the capital, Baku, turning it
into a sort of European capital on the Caspian, with grand, illuminated
buildings, a tree-lined boardwalk, and even a fleet of London-style
cabs to ferry visitors around. Yet beneath its marbled exterior,
and just outside the city limits, a different vision emerges – one
where journalists are routinely threatened, human rights activists
pressured and protesters and bloggers who dare to challenge Aliyev
put behind bars.

According to Amnesty, 16 political prisoners remain behind bars in
Azerbaijan. Reporters Without Borders ranks the country near the
bottom of its press freedom index, noting the continuing imprisonment
of five journalists and one blogger, and the unsolved murder last
year of a prominent journalist, Rafig Tagi.

The vast wealth that flowed into the country as oil prices soared and
then peaked in 2008 failed to trickle down to most of the population,
with the average salary standing at 351 manat (£285) a month, according
to government statistics. Independent observers say it is much lower,
at just 130 manat a month, on average, for doctors and other state
workers.

While Majidli was released, more than a dozen men arrested alongside
him in April 2011 for participating in an anti-Aliyev protest remain
imprisoned and 11 have gone on hunger strike. Majidli was kicked out
of university after his arrest, but vows to continue to challenge
the Aliyev regime. “I’ll continue my activities until Azerbaijan has
democracy, human rights and respect for its people,” he says.

Aliyev has ruled Azerbaijan since 2003, inheriting the mantle from
his father, Heydar Aliyev, who died months after giving up power.

The elder Aliyev has since become the subject of a state-sponsored
personality cult, lending his name to museums and streets. The
airport is named after him, as is an enormous new cultural centre
designed by Iraqi-British architect Zaha Hadid. Posters bearing his
image compete with adverts for Burberry and Chanel on Baku’s spotless
boulevards. There are at least three statues of the late leader in
Baku, and dozens around the country.

His son and daughter-in-law, along with their two daughters, have
been accused by journalists and activists of ruling the country’s
politics and economy like a personal fiefdom. A US diplomatic cable
written in early 2010 and leaked by WikiLeaks compared the running of
Azerbaijan to “the feudalism found in Europe during the middle ages”.

The government has gone on the offensive to deny accusations of
dictatorship and corruption. “Azerbaijan is not an authoritarian
state – we want to prove this to the whole world,” said Ali Hasanov,
an aide to the president. “Is Ilham Aliyev to be blamed because he
is the son of Heydar Aliyev, but got the majority of votes? Is this
not democracy?”

With all television channels and most newspapers under the control of
the state or members of the president’s family, activists argue that
it is not a democracy, comparing it to an absolute monarchy instead.

“If we had one normal television channel, there would be an Arab spring
in a minute,” said Idrak Abbasov, a leading journalist for Zerkalo,
one of the country’s few independent newspapers. Abbasov lay wrapped
in a blanket, his torso in a back brace – the result of a beating
he received last month while covering the continuing demolition of
homes to make way for apartment blocks and villas for the elite.

Other journalists have been blackmailed, with at least three
clandestinely videotaped engaging in sexual acts. Two of the tapes
were broadcast on a television channel owned by the president’s
cousin. A third, of Khadija Ismayilova, a journalist for Radio Free
Europe who has spent years investigating the first family’s wealth,
was leaked online.

“It’s not going to stop me,” Ismayilova said. “Those who are stealing
people’s money are the ones who should be ashamed.”

Hasanov, the Aliyev aide, blamed the video of Ismayilova and beating
of Abbasov on “foreign special services”, a commonly used euphemism
for Armenia, Azerbaijan’s neighbour, with whom it fought a brutal war
over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh after the breakup of
the Soviet Union. Hasanov likes to remind visitors that Azerbaijan’s
army remains on full war footing.

Anti-Armenian propaganda and sentiment continues to run high. During
the 2009 Eurovision, several Azeris who voted for the Armenian
contestant were called in for questioning for posing a “potential
security threat” and being “unpatriotic”. Armenia is boycotting
the contest this year. “Sport and cultural events should not be
politicised,” Hasanov said.

Baku city centre has been transformed into a Eurovision playground,
with posters advertising the contest adorning every bus, pay phone
and several of the city’s new skyscrapers. “Eurovision gives us a
chance to show our city, state and people at their best,” Hasanov said.

Yet just outside the city centre, far from the oil wealth poured
into Baku, lies a land where roads are rarely paved. In the suburb
of Balakhani, just 15 miles away, dilapidated houses painted bright
pink and blue stand in stark contrast with their corrugated roofs and
grim surroundings. Children play in the shadows of oil pumps and black
pools filled with rubbish. The sour smell of oil hangs in the air.

“Of course it’s dangerous, but what can we do?” said Afag, a
43-year-old mother of three. “They give us water when they want
and have promised to build a rubbish fill. Why haven’t they? Ask
the government.”

“There has been a huge flow of oil money and a presidential decision
was taken to turn Azerbaijan into Dubai,” said Arif Yunus, a human
rights activist at the Institute for Peace and Democracy. “It’s like
an Arab monarchy.” He accuses the west of ignoring the country’s
problems because of the vast riches to be made there. “The situation
in Azerbaijan is worse than in Belarus but the west closes its eyes
to us and even takes part in it sometimes.”

With the Eurovision finals nearly upon them, activists find themselves
anxious of the government’s reaction once the spotlight on the
country fades.

“I fear there will be a strong crackdown and serious human rights
violations,” said Abbasov, the journalist.

“We were all expecting the situation would get better because of
Eurovision,” said Ali Novruzov, a prominent blogger. “It didn’t –
it’s nearly Eurovision and we’re in the same situation.”

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/25/eurovision-azerbaijan-human-righ

Armenia’s President Was In Bad Mood – Newspaper

ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT WAS IN BAD MOOD – NEWSPAPER

news.am
May 25, 2012 | 06:16

YEREVAN. – During the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) Executive Body
session on Thursday, President and RPA leader Serzh Sargsyan spoke
long about the domestic political situation and the consolidation
meetings with the Prosperous Armenia Party, Yerkir daily writes.

“According to the Republicans in attendance to the session, Serzh
Sargsyan was irritated and very angry. He repeated several times that
now they are left all alone, and he blamed the fellow Party members
for talking a lot but doing nothing.

‘In fact, the people’s discontentment of us is justified; they have
a right to complain,’ Sargsyan said.

Incidentally, unlike the Executive Body’s previous session, this time
Serzh Sargsyan did not at all speak with news reporters, and he left
the RPA building as quickly as he entered it,” Yerkir writes.

Eurovision: PR Pitfall And Chance For Azerbaijan

EUROVISION: PR PITFALL AND CHANCE FOR AZERBAIJAN

Agence France Presse
May 23, 2012 Wednesday 2:07 AM GMT

Eurovision song contest hopefuls pranced and posed their way through
rehearsals at Baku’s Crystal Hall this week, while on nearby streets
Azerbaijani police were seizing protesters.

Raw video images of the break-up of an illegal opposition rally
vied for viewers online with slick official footage of competitors
like Russian grannies Buranovskiye Babushki and Irish twins Jedward,
perfecting their onstage moves ahead of the glitzy pop event.

The Azerbaijani authorities had hoped that hosting Eurovision would
boost the energy-rich ex-Soviet state’s image, but it has attracted
publicity over allegations of human rights abuses which threaten a
potential PR disaster.

“This is part of a broader diplomatic charm offensive to put Azerbaijan
on the map, but if you get a lot of attention, you are also much more
open to criticism,” said Lawrence Sheets, Caucasus project director
at the International Crisis Group think-tank.

International media have given unprecedented coverage in recent weeks
to Azerbaijani campaigners who allege that President Ilham Aliyev
heads an authoritarian regime which is trying to crush dissent and
silence free speech.

“The Azerbaijani authorities’ fake positive PR campaign has not
worked,” said Rasul Jafarov of Sing For Democracy, a local group
founded to use Eurovision to highlight alleged abuses.

But furious officials have increasingly been striking back against
negative reports, accusing foreign journalists and organisations
like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch of conducting a
“slanderous campaign” against them.

“The provocative anti-Azerbaijani reports have been deliberately
invented,” Ali Hasanov, a senior official of the presidential
administration, said this week.

“Political pluralism and human rights are fully ensured in Azerbaijan,”
he insisted.

An editorial published by Baku news agency Trend suggested the country
should actually be praised as a secular Muslim state and a strategic
Western ally in the “fight against terrorism”, whose huge Caspian
Sea oil and gas reserves can help ensure energy security for Europe.

“Azerbaijan is a country about which unfortunately very few people
speak truthfully in the West,” the editorial complained.

After political turmoil and war with neighbour Armenia in the 1990s,
Azerbaijan’s energy-fuelled economy has boomed since Aliyev came to
power in 2003, succeeding his father Heydar, an ex-KGB officer and
communist-era boss.

Aliyev was re-elected by a landslide in 2008 and a referendum victory
the following year abolished a two-term presidential limit, offering
him the possibility of ruling the Caucasus state of 9.2 million people
far into the future.

Pipelines pumping oil and gas to Europe are likely to maintain the
strategic importance of the mainly Muslim country whose government
has also allowed it to become a key transit route for supplying the
NATO-led mission in Afghanistan.

Eurovision is the most prestigious cultural event in the country
since independence from the Soviet Union.

In the weeks running up to what organisers promise will be a
spectacular show at the glittering new Crystal Hall on the Caspian
Sea shore, promotional posters have been plastered all over Baku and
London-style taxis decorated with Eurovision logos have appeared on
the streets.

“Azerbaijan is now coming out into the world as a developed country
that wants to live on the basis of European values,” said Aydin
Mirzazadze, a lawmaker from Aliyev’s governing New Azerbaijan party.

But as excitement has grown, reports about alleged rights violations
have also increased.

Stories of a top Azerbaijani reporter being blackmailed with a covertly
filmed sex tape to stop her investigations into the Aliyev family’s
businesses, and another campaigning journalist being beaten unconscious
by state oil company security guards have received widespread coverage.

Human Rights Watch alleges that six journalists, one blogger, two
human rights advocates and at least 10 opposition protesters are
currently in jail in Azerbaijan for political reasons.

But it is unclear if the current upsurge of campaigning activity
will have any longer-term impact, with analysts expressing doubts
that there is enough pressure for reform.

“The government does care about its image but there is relatively
little international leverage because it is awash with money and can
to an extent ignore foreign criticism,” said Sheets.

“It’s hard to see that this will result in major policy changes,”
he said.

The Democratic Party Will Not Stay In The Shadow

THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY WILL NOT STAY IN THE SHADOW
Karen Ghazaryan

“Radiolur”
23.05.2012 16:08

The Democratic Party of Armenia will not stay in the shadow, leader
of the Party Aram Sargsyan told a press conference today.

The party will convene a congress in the fall. Before that it will
take steps to develop more serious programs, he informed.

The Democratic Party suggests establishing a public parliament, which
will develop proposals related to different spheres and present them
to the National Assembly and the Government.

According to Aram Sargsyan, any political forces and NGOs are welcome
to join the initiative of forming a public parliament.

Sargsyan said they are concerned with the current issues in the
process of settlement of the Karabakh conflict, and discussions on
the issue will be held within the framework of the public parliament.

Speaking about the perspectives of forming a political coalition,
Aram Sargsyan said it would be correct for the Republican Party to
fulfill its promises on its own. As for the Prosperous Armenia Party,
many of its members, who joined the party for the sake of being in
power, will leave if it decides not to joint the coalition.

Balloon Tragedy Recalled As Victims Recover; German Specialist Prais

BALLOON TRAGEDY RECALLED AS VICTIMS RECOVER; GERMAN SPECIALIST PRAISES WORK OF LOCAL PHYSICIANS
By Gayane Lazarian

ArmeniaNow
23.05.12

A German plastic surgeon visiting Armenia has operated on eight
victims of the May 4 accident with balloons which ignited during the
Republican’s campaign concert and left more than a hundred and fifty
people injured, a few dozens suffered deep burns.

Adrian Daigler, professor at German Heidelberg’s University Clinic’s
Center of Plastic and Reconstructive and Burn Surgery, has expressed
his high opinion of the surgeries that local experts have performed
and said that: “If there is a need for assistance and treatment in
Germany, we are ready and I am at your service, however, there are
really competent specialists here”.

Norayr Davidyan, heading the Research Center of Radiation Medicine
and Burns (the Center), says they have jointly performed surgeries
together with Deigler.

“Of course, the professor’s assistance is invaluable, it also gave
a chance to familiarize with his work,” says Davidyan.

Plastic surgeries were performed on the hands, fingers and wrists of
the patients.

Eighteen-year-old Hayk Aghabekyan, student of Yerevan State Economic
University, is recovering from a surgery at the Center’s Rehabilitation
department. The German professor has operated on his hands – from
fingers to wrists – replacing the damaged tissues with the skin taken
from his thighs.

“There was this huge fire globe in the air and we were running through
it. Panic-stricken I was running right towards the fire, and so got
burned really badly,” recalls Hayk.

Hayk’s hands underwent the first surgery on May 4. Besides his hands,
which suffered the most because he tried to protect himself with them,
his ears, hair and face got burns as well.

“People took off my burnt clothes, but I put out my burning hair with
my hands. I heard that ambulance had arrived, walked to it and got
in on my own,” he says, saying that the bandages from his hands will
be removed in three days.

There are 20 patients at the Center now. Davidyan says patients from
other hospitals have been transferred to the Center because their
skin was severely damaged and wounds were too deep.

Another young patient, 19-year-od student of Pedagogical Institute
Oksanna Osipyan will also be operated on by Deigler.

“A big explosion was followed by a wave of fire, and we started
burning. Hot balloons started falling on us, the vest I was wearing
burned and stuck to me. My hands, face, the skin on my head got burnt.

My face has recovered now,” says Oksanna showing her burnt hair from
under her hat.

Resident of Talin, Arpine Ghandilyan, 20, has been at the Center for
twenty days. She has had surgery on the fingers of her left hand and
wrist (the skin was grafted from her left foot), as well as small
part of her forehead. She remembers:

“A very loud sound, and this strong breath of fire approaching me from
the front. My clothes started burning, I started burning. Some people
from behind tore off the Republican vest I was wearing. The sleeve of
my dress melted and stuck to my arm. They removed it at the hospital,”
she recalls.

Arpine says the surgery has been successful and hopes she’ll be
discharged soon.

Professor Daigler, invited by President Serzh Sargsyan, paid a two
day visit. Health Minister Harutyun Kushkyan said, however, that if
necessary the German surgeon will stay longer or come again later.

The total of 154 people suffered from the blast, 33 of whom are still
in hospitals of Yerevan.