BAKU: Newly-Funded Azeri Party Set To Run In 2008 Presidential Elect

NEWLY-FUNDED AZERI PARTY SET TO RUN IN 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION

Turan news agency
17 Jul 07

Baku, 17 July: A new party, called New Time, was founded on 15 July.

Currently documents are being prepared for applying to the Justice
Ministry in order to register the party, its deputy chairman Faiq
Aliyev said at today’s news conference.

The founding congress was to take place on 30 May, but the Baku mayor’s
office refused to provide an accommodation and so the congress was
scheduled for 15 July, Faiq Aliyev said.

Out of the 128 delegates, 117 attended the gathering, he said. They
passed the statute and regulations of the party and adopted its
symbol. They also elected the chairman of the party board.

Musa Agayev, the new party’s chairman, said the party was created
because many national problems remain unresolved and people face
hardships. In his view, following the 2003 presidential election the
country has entered a period of stagnation "of unknown duration". Given
the lack of national ideology, the unresolved Nagornyy Karabakh
problem and rife corruption and bribery, there is a need for this
party, Musa Agayev said.

He also said that the New Time is a right-of-centre party and will
run in the 2008 presidential election.

Homecoming: Alex and Marie Manoogian’s pilgrimage ends at Echmiadzin

ARMENIANOW.COM
Administration Address: 26 Parpetsi St., No 9
Phone: +(374 1) 532422
Email: [email protected]
Internet:
Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact Babken
Juharyan)
Email: [email protected]

Homecoming: Alex and Marie Manoogian’s `pilgrimage’ ends at Holy Echmiadzin

By John Hughes
ArmeniaNow editor

They were born near Smyrna, at the dawn of a century that would soon bring
defining tragedy to their people. She migrated with her family to New York in
1915. He followed, alone, five years later, a 19 year old with $50 and hopes
that a relative’s prediction `You’ll do well,’ would be true.

They met in New York, where they married in 1930. Death separated them 63
years later; she died in 1993 and he followed her to the grave in 1996, in
Detroit, where he had become one of the most successful businessmen in his
adopted country.

Today, side by side, Alex Manoogian and Marie Tatian Manoogian were lowered
into the hallowed ground of the Mother See of the Armenian Apostolic Church in
Holy Echmiadzin.

At 10:47 this morning, following a 24-minute Church-State funeral rite,
Richard Manoogian and Louise Manoogian Simone, sprinkled soil consecrated by
His Holiness Catholicos Karekin II into the new graves of their parents, then
13 men in white shirts and black ties secured the matching almond-colored
caskets into the rain-softened ground under a rose-orange khachkar and somber
Armenian clouds a few meters from the Pontifical Residence.

>From Smyrna to New York, to Detroit, to Holy Echmiadzin, more than a century
since their births and a decade after death, the Manoogians received a final
blessing by His Holiness, who praised their devotion to education and to
Diaspora relations.

Richard Manoogian called today’s reburial of his parents `a pilgrimage . . .
that symbolized for us the shining path that always directed toward the
ancient soil of Armenia.’

None, except holy men, Catholicoi, have been laid in these grounds.

For the family patriarch, Alex Manoogian, it is the only time he has been in
Armenia since the republic gained independence in 1991. His wife first came
here in 1954 to serve in the delegation that elected Vazgen I as Catholicos.
School children lined the way to the gravesite, laying red and white
carnations in the path that passed blossoming pomegranate trees planted by the
Catholicos that Marie Manoogian helped enthrone.

Throughout Armenia and Diaspora, whether on Karabakh streets or Australian
schoolhouses the Manoogian name has become synonymous with philanthropy – most
often through association with the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU),
which Alex Manoogian joined in the 1930s and served as president from 1953-89,
until he was succeeded by his daughter.

His body rests, now, near one such building that holds the family name, the
Alex and Marie Manoogian Treasury House Museum at Holy Echmiadzin of which,
for its dedication in 1982, Alex Manoogian said: `For me it had always been a
dream to be able to add my brick to the building of the homeland.’

He was the son of a grain salesman whose devotion was to the Church. Alex
Manoogian became a deacon before pursing his dream of American success. And
when his financial dream was realized, he turned his good fortune into
building schools, but while always saying that the Church was the most
important institution.

In his early 20s Alex Manoogian held 10 jobs over seven years – sometimes two
at a time. By 1927, he was making $20 a week, and left the East Coast for
Detroit because he heard workers there were getting $25.

He was fired from the first three jobs he had in Detroit. But by 1930 he had
founded MASCO, a company that made parts for the auto industry. The company
grew into the largest building products company in the world and from it his
wealth would grow – surviving, even, the Great Depression – to allow him to
eventually donate more than $90 million to the Armenian Apostolic Church and
to cultural and educational causes.

In 1993 Alex Manoogian was named a National Hero of Armenia by President Levon
Ter-Petrosyan. Poor health prevented him from receiving the award in person,
but his daughter said it was her father’s proudest moment.

Today Louise Manoogian Simone said her parents `have started a new era in
their lives’.

And perhaps completed another, forecast 25 years ago when Alex Manoogian
inaugurated the museum on the grounds he and his wife’s remains now share:

`Here, on this blood-soaked and incense filled fragment of our Homeland, the
wandering spirit of the Diaspora Armenian shakes off all its burdens, discards
its alien garbs, and like a purified ray of light bows to kiss the stones
where the Only Begotten Himself descended and where the restless feet of our
forebears trod,’ he said in 1982. `The Armenian emigrant for centuries has
constructed palaces and churches, schools and institutions, but the only
testimonials that remain from those structures and their bustling activities,
from Singapore to India and from Indonesia to Poland, are the solitary
gravestones. It is only that which is erected on Armenian soil that remains
forever; only on that soil does the Armenian Church dome toll vibrantly
alongside the Cross-stones.’

www.armenianow.com

UW Violinist Manoogian dies at 71

The Capital Times (Madison, Wisconsin)
July 13, 2007 Friday
ALL EDITION

UW VIOLINIST MANOOGIAN DIES AT 71

Jacob Stockinger The Capital Times

Virtuoso violinist and longtime University of Wisconsin-Madison
Professor Vartan Manoogian died Thursday in Spain. He was 71.

Manoogian was also the director of the annual Madeleine Island
Chamber Music Festival, held each summer in the Apostle Islands in
northern Wisconsin on Lake Superior. He returned each summer to a
festival in Spain where he taught and performed and frequently
performed at festivals in Germany, Italy and Switzerland.

"We are shocked and devastated. This was such a surprise," said John
Schaffer, director of the UW School of Music, who has worked with
Manoogian for 20 years. "Yesterday there was a pall over the whole
school. Vartan was so alive and vibrant. He was such an elegant and
kind man."

According to Schaffer, the cause of death is still not known,
although cardiac problems are suspected.

"Vartan was one of the most valuable members of the music faculty,"
Schaffer said. "He is going to be seriously missed. I think that’s
the sentiment all my colleagues feel. It’s a sudden loss, and he left
such a legacy. To replace him and move on just won’t be possible.
Whatever happens will have to be different."

At the time of his death, Manoogian was working on a multiple-CD
recording project of violin trios for students. He wrote a
four-volume series of books on violin technique and created a video
guide to orchestral bowing. He also recorded the complete solo
sonatas and partitas of J.S. Bach, which he performed together for
the first time in 2000 in Madison.

Manoogian was known for his devotion to both the classical repertoire
and new music, and he enjoyed unusual crossover performances, such as
playing Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto with the UW Marching Band and
doing improvisational performances with UW jazz saxophonist Roscoe
Mitchell.

Manoogian was born in 1936 in Baghdad to Armenian parents, who had
sought political asylum there. At age 16 he went to France to study
at the National Conservatory in Paris, where he won top prizes and
took master classes from composer and violinist George Enescu. He
then came to America and studied under master violin teacher Ivan
Galamian at the Juilliard School of Music in New York.

He returned to Europe, where he took a post with the Lausanne Chamber
Orchestra in Switzerland and then became the concertmaster of the
renowned Orchestre de la Suisse Romande under famed conductor Ernest
Ansermet.

Back in the United States, Manoogian taught at the prestigious North
Carolina School of the Arts, where he also played in the Claremont
String Quartet, and at Indiana University. In 1976 he won an Emmy for
a performance of a Mozart violin concerto on educational television.
Many prominent composers dedicated new works to him.

He came to the UW-Madison in 1980, where he performed solo, and often
with other faculty members. He quickly established a reputation for
teaching top-ranking students who went on to major professional music
careers.

Manoogian is survived by his wife of 40 years, artist Brigitte
Manoogian, and their son, Avedis, a pianist in Minneapolis who often
performed with his father.

Four More People Are Being Searched For Concerning Murder Case Of Se

FOUR MORE PEOPLE ARE BEING SEARCHED FOR CONCERNING MURDER CASE OF SERDRAK ZATIKIAN

Noyan Tapan
Jul 11 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The body of the preliminary
investigation has found out the mechanism and motivations, as well as
the identity of the main participants, who committed and organized
the murder of the son of Vahan Zatikian, the former head of the
Malatia-Sebastia community of Yerevan.

According to the information provided to Noyan Tapan by the RA
Prosecutor’s General Office, only one person, Arsen Arushanian, has
been put under arrest. Four more people, including people who organized
and ordered the murder of Sedrak Zatikian, are being searched for. The
identities of these people under the search have not been published
following the interests of the preliminary investigation.

Armenia Still Needs Russia As Military Partner

ARMENIA STILL NEEDS RUSSIA AS MILITARY PARTNER
By Nana Petrosian

AZG Armenian Daily
11/07/2007

Yesterday, RA Prime Minister Serge Sargsian stated that Armenia still
needs Russia to be its military partner that secures its safety. In
the interview to "Reuters," Mr. Sargsian said that the threat of
being attacked by Turkey is still actual for Armenia, that’s why the
existence of a Russian military station in our country is an integral
part for its self-defense.

Court To Consider Submission On Institution Of Criminal Case Against

COURT TO CONSIDER SUBMISSION ON INSTITUTION OF CRIMINAL CASE AGAINST ATTORNEY OF EX-SENATOR L. CHAKHMAKHCHYAN

arminfo
2007-07-10 14:30:00

The Tver court of Moscow will consider submission of Moscow’s
Prosecutor about availability of corpus delicti in the actions of
attorney Boris Kuznetsov per Article 283 of CC (divulgence of the
state secret). B.

Kuznetsov represents the interests of ex-senator from Kalmykia Levon
Chakhmakhchyan in the court. The consideration was postponed from
July 3, 2007.

To recall, as the attorney told earlier, during familiarization with
the case of his client, he photographed a memorandum attached to
submission to the Supreme Court on Chakhmakhchyan’s case. Later on,
I attached the copy of this memorandum to my complaint sent to RF
Constitutional Court", the attorney said and added: "The Prosecutor’s
Office considered that I divulged the state secret". Meanwhile,
the attorney explained, there was no information in this document
containing a state secret.

Presidential Candidate In Nagornyy Karabakh Republic Doubts Election

PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE IN NAGORNYY KARABAKH REPUBLIC DOUBTS ELECTION TO BE FAIR

Haykakan Zhamanak, Yerevan
6 Jul 07, pp 1, 3

Text of Qristine Khanumyan’s report in Armenian newspaper Haykakan
Zhamanak on 6 July headlined "Masis Mailyan working semi-underground"

The NKR [Nagornyy Karabakh republic] deputy foreign minister,
Masis Mailyan, who is on holiday as he is running for NKR president,
expressed his doubt to our journalist yesterday that the presidential
election in the NKR would be free and fair.

"Since the administrative resource is being used already during this
period, and it started in March and April, when attempts were made
to convince people that everything had been decided, we will hardly
have a free and fair election. We have always been different from our
neighbours because we have been able to hold free and transparent
elections that were always praised by foreign countries. Our main
argument was that we, as a more democratic country, cannot bow to not
so democratically developed Azerbaijan, which is not free according
to the evaluation of the Freedom House organization.

Those who illegally use the administrative resource and security
agencies put our country in a bad light and damage the authority and
reputation of Artsakh [Karabakh]," he said.

It is impossible to receive information about the election meetings
of NKR presidential candidate Masis Mailyan beforehand. This is
not because the schedule is kept secret, but because decisions
about meetings are made at short notice in order to prevent the NKR
government from finding out about them ahead of time. In an interview
to Haykakan Zhamanak, Mailyan explained this saying that they have
to take these measures because the government tries to do everything
to obstruct his meetings.

"The administrative resource is being used. If a meeting is to take
place in a yard, people are sent there not to let the inhabitants
come out of their homes. Such cases have happened many times in the
capital. Concerning the meetings in villages, police and heads of
villages are involved, and they always make sure that the number of
participants is small. But they fail because then people have more
interest and desire to meet me," Mailyan said and added that for this
reason they have changed their strategy.

"We do not let them know beforehand where and when we are going to
have meetings. It seems that we are successful. We consider this a
semi-underground manner, the experience of which we had in 1988,"
Mailyan said.

We asked Mailyan to comment on the statement of known sociologist
Aharon Adibekyan that Mailyan is a "glamorous" figure, and
[presidential candidate] Bako Sahakyan is a "father", and that Karabakh
needs exactly a "father".

Mailyan only said that such statements are simply offensive for the
Karabakh people.

Taking into consideration the issue connected with meetings,
we asked Mailyan whether pressure is being put on him and
his supporters. Mailyan said that there has been no pressure
on him. Instead, his supporters are subject to "preventive
measures". Mailyan said that recently an employee of the Mardakert
power company was dismissed because he supports Mailyan.

"Conversations are held with almost all obvious supporters. However,
there is no result, and those people start working in my favour more
actively," Mailyan said.

Incidentally, [NKR president] Arkadi Ghukasyan announced in Yerevan
yesterday that Bako Sahakyan is the candidate preferred by the
government.

How can this announcement by Ghukasyan influence the election? Mailyan
said that what the incumbent president said has never been a secret.

"If the administrative resource works in favour of one candidate,
it is clear who stands behind him. As to people’s reaction, this
statement will bring more votes to me."

Armenia Criticizes EU, NATO Over Turkish Blockade

ARMENIA CRITICIZES EU, NATO OVER TURKISH BLOCKADE
By Michael Stott and Margarita Antidze, Reuters

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
July 7 2007

Armenia criticized NATO and the European Union on Friday for turning
a blind eye to Turkey’s long-running blockade of its borders, saying
Ankara’s refusal to open land routes was costing the small, landlocked
state a third of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

"Europeans are shy over these issues. They love to talk about human
rights, about democratic values but it’s much easier to talk rather
than to implement anything," Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian told
Reuters in an interview.

Turkey shut its borders to Christian Armenia in 1993 to protest against
the capture by Armenian forces of territory inside Azerbaijan, Ankara’s
historic Muslim ally, during fighting over the Nagorno-Karabakh region
Ankara says it will not reopen its frontier until Armenia reaches a
peace agreement with Azerbaijan.

The blockade, coupled with similar measures by Azerbaijan, means
Armenia has to route its trade through its land border with Georgia,
or over treacherous mountain passes that link it to Iran. Those
difficulties greatly increase costs.

Sarkisian said Armenia wanted to resume relations with Turkey without
preconditions and would not obstruct Turkey’s desire to join the EU
because this might make Ankara "more predictable".

"Although NATO officials tell us that Turkey is predictable as it’s a
member of NATO, I don’t believe it because even before our blockade
Turkey was a member of NATO when it occupied Cyprus," the prime
minister added.

Armenia and Turkey have a long history of enmity, arising from the
killings of up to 1.5 million Armenians under the Ottoman empire in
1915-17. Armenians and some European nations describe the deaths as
genocide. Turkey says they were part of a partisan conflict during
World War One. It is a crime in Turkey to refer to the killings as
a genocide.

Sarkisian, tipped by analysts as a likely future president of Armenia,
said Armenia still needed help from its strategic ally Moscow to defend
itself. Russia has 5,000 troops stationed here. "I do not think that
the Turkish threat has disappeared and our Russian military base is
a guarantee against the Turkish threat," he added.

Sarkisian also said that if Western nations granted independence to
the Serbian province of Kosovo, they "could not fail to recognize"
the right of the majority Armenian territory of Nagorno-Karabakh
to self-determination.

"I see the solution of this issue based on compromise but I do not
see any steps or reactions from the Azeri side," Sarkisian said. "We
have done all we can".

Asked about his own political ambitions, Sarkisian said it was "likely"
he would be the presidential candidate of Armenia’s ruling Republican
party, although a final decision would not come until a party congress
in the autumn.

Armenia holds presidential elections next year and incumbent President
Robert Kocharian cannot stand after serving two terms. The elections
that gave Kocharian his second term in 2003 were marred by allegations
of ballot-stuffing although international monitors deemed this year’s
parliamentary elections — won by Sarkisian’s party — an improvement.

Ararat Defeats Pyunik In Postponed Game

ARARAT DEFEATS PYUNIK IN POSTPONED GAME

Noyan Tapan
Jul 6, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 6, NOYAN TAPAN. The postponed game of the 11th stage of
the Football Highest Group Championship of Armenia between the teams
Pyunik and Ararat took place in the Republican sports ground on July
5. Ararat defeated Pyunik with a score of 4:3.

Armenian Literature To Be Advertised Abroad

ARMENIAN LITERATURE TO BE ADVERTISED ABROAD

ARMENPRESS
Jul 6, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 6, ARMENPRESS; The Union of Armenian Writers plans to
create a special body that will be advertising Armenian literature
abroad. Hovhannes Gregorian, the secretary of the Union, told
Armenpress the body will be investigating in which of world countries
Armenian literature may be in demand and which country’s literature
may be popular in Armenia.

He said Armenian authors are being translated now into European
languages- English, French, German and some others. Some of Armenian
poetry is being translated into Farsi, the official language of Iran.

He said there is a big interest in Armenian literature in some Arab
countries.

The government releases funds every year for translation of about
10 Armenian books into foreign languages. The Union of Writers has a
translation section with a 15-member team and also publishes Foreign
Literature monthly.