Festival Of Youth Performances To Be Held In June In Yerevan

FESTIVAL OF YOUTH PERFORMANCES TO BE HELD IN JUNE IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
May 24 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 24, NOYAN TAPAN. A Festival of Youth Performances will
be held on June 23-30 in Yerevan on the initiative of the Armenian
Theater Figures’ Union. 8 Yerevan and 3 regional, Goris, Gavar
and Kapan theaters will take part in the festival. As Noyan Tapan
correspondent was informed by RA People’s Artist Yervand Ghazanchian,
Chairman of the Armenian Theater Figures’ Union, producers and actors
aged 30 and below will participate in the festival.

According to Y.Ghazanchian, the festival is also a peculiar review
that will gave young producers and actors an opportunity to present
their professional skills. “We should be sure that the Armenian
theater will have deserved successors after us and will develop,”
Y.Ghazanchian emphasized. According to him, it is possible that
after the festival the best participants will receive an invitation
of working at Yerevan theaters.

The festival is held with the assistance of RA Ministry of Culture
and Youth Affairs and Yerevan Mayor’s Office.

2008.3 Tons Of Humanitarian Aid Imported To Armenia In January-March

2008.3 TONS OF HUMANITARIAN AID IMPORTED TO ARMENIA IN JANUARY-MARCH

Noyan Tapan
May 23 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. 2008.3 tons of goods with a total cost
of 10.1 mln USD were imported to Armenia on the line of humanitarian
aid in January-March of the current year. 1415.5 tons of goods with
a total cost of 11.5 mln USD were imported in the same period of
2005. According to the data of RA National Statistical Service,
devices made 30.8% of the aid, machines, equipments and mechanisms
13.7%, paper and goods made from paper 11.6%, textile goods 8.7%.

Vahan Hovhannisian: France To Touch Upon Postponed Draft Sooner OrLa

VAHAN HOVHANNISIAN: FRANCE TO TOUCH UPON POSTPONED DRAFT SOONER OR LATER

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 22 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 22, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. “Sooner or later,
France, as the leader of Europe, will again touch upon that issue,
and we’ll have success this time.” Vahan Hovhannisian, the NA Deputy
Speaker, an ARF Bureau member said to journalists on May 19, touching
upon the postponing of the votion at the French NA the previous day
for the draft envisaging criminal liability for denying the Armenian
Genocide. According to him, clashes of interests are understandable,
including the one that big financial and economic circles which are
interested in Turkey influence on the Government. “But there are other
circles as well, and they will become active now,” V.Hovhannisian
assured.

According to him, the blackmail implemented by Turkey is not surpising,
either, as during the last 250 years it “has been Turkey’s main way
of leading policy.” He also emphasized that Turkey’s reaction in
the issue of recognition of the Armenian Genocide proves that the
foreign policy being implemented by Armenia is becoming effective,
and that the taken course is right.

Production Of 23 Incompleted Films Finished At Hayfilm And Hayk Film

PRODUCTION OF 23 INCOMPLETED FILMS FINISHED AT HAYFILM AND HAYK FILM STUDIOS IN 2005

Noyan Tapan
May 22 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 22, NOYAN TAPAN. Production of 23 out of the 29 films
made at Hayfilm and Hayk state film studios in 2001-2005 was finished
in 2005. The production of the remaining 6 incompleted films is in
progress at Hayfilm, and it is envisaged to complete this process
this year. According to the RA National Statistical Service, the
total production cost of the completed films makes 381.4 mln drams
(abouit 854 thousand USD). 65.9% of the total production costs or
251.3 mln drams was incurred in 2005. The revenues of the above
mentioned film studios in 2005 amounted to 552.4 mln drams, 480.2
mln drams of which was received from the RA state budget. The total
financial expenditures of the two film studios made 551.1 mln drams.

Hasmik Poghosyan Appointed Minister Of Culture

HASMIK POGHOSYAN APPOINTED MINISTER OF CULTURE

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.05.2006 19:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ By RA President’s decree Hasmik Poghosyan, the
chairwoman of the Council of the Armenian Society for Cultural Ties
will replace Gevorg Gevorgyan at the post of the Minister of Culture,
reported RA leader’s press service. To note, Gevorg Gevorgyan was
appointed the Minister of Culture in February 2006 after Hovik Hoveyan,
member of Orinats Yerkir party, handed in his resignation.

UN To Address Debasement Of Miss Universe, Eurovision

UN TO ADDRESS DEBASEMENT OF MISS UNIVERSE, EUROVISION

The Chaser (satire), Australia
May 22 2006

New York:

United Nations officials have criticised the victory of TISM, from
Norway, in the Eurovision Song Contest, as a wave of despondency
swept the impoverished Eastern European nations whose best performance
artists failed to make the grade.

“This is a terrible result: our officers will now have to deal with
the consequences of this decision,” said UN secretary for emerging
nation development Ramos-Boutros Hopkins, “dung-eating peasants have
been shown to gain a great boost in their national esteem by victory
in these sorts of empty international competitions. After all, they
stand no chance in the real world so these sorts of awards are the
equivalent of an ’employee of the month’ program at KFC. Giving the
award to a prosperous country like Norway is a total waste.”

“WE have seen this trend also debase the original purpose of Miss
Universe as well,” said Hopkins, a reference to the victories of Miss
Canada and Miss Australia in recent Universe contests, “Miss Universe
is there to stop Latin American countries from going communist: that’s
why we used to circulate it between Miss Venezeula, Miss Trinidad and
Tobago and Miss Peuto Rico. Who knows what instability will result
with these Westerners winning?”

In an emergency session, the UN is reportedly working behind the
scenes to ensure the next Miss World pageant is won by a former Soviet
Bloc nation.

“We gave it to Russia in 2002, but with the Eurovision trophy moving
West we are going to have to take some serious diplomatic measures.

Eurovision should have gone to Turkey or Armenia: we can’t give them
Miss Universe without making it obvious that the pageant’s judging
is less than objective.”

tion=com_smf&Itemid=161&?topic=2753.msg603 22;topicseen

http://www.chaser.com.au/index.php?op

Sparring over baklava spills over to Doha

Peninsula On-line, Qatar
May 21 2006

Sparring over baklava spills over to Doha

By Ayse Alibeyoglu

DOHA – The battle over the famous traditional sweet dish baklava
between Turkish and Greek Cypriots in Europe has spread to the local
pastry shops in Doha, owned by baklava makers from Istanbul and
Lebanon.

Historically, baklava was baked only on special occasions, and
considered a food for the rich in Turkey, the top choice of pastry
amongst the Turkish Sultans. It is made with layers of thin dough,
with chopped pistachio in between those layers, added with honey
syrup, various spices, baked and cut into diamond shapes.

At the celebrations marking “Europe Day” last week, baklava, which is
itself a Turkish word, was asserted by the Greek Cypriots as theirs
and introduced as a Greek Cypriot pastry in a European Union (EU)
poster presenting this traditional sweet as the national dish of
ethnically Greek Cyprus alongside the flag of Cyprus.

As a result, the baklava war between Turkey and Southern Cyprus
intensified. Turkish baklava producers are protesting Greek Cypriot
claims that the pastry is their own national creation, with support
for their protest coming from State Minister and EU Chief Negotiator,
Ali Babacan, in the EU General Secretariat.

The owner of renowned baklava producer Haci Sayid Baklava, Halil
Dincerler, commented at a recent press conference on the situation:
“Baklava is Turkish, what the Greek Cypriots are presenting is just a
copy. We will go all the way to Brussels, and we will let the EU
Ministers taste real baklava,” reported a Turkish newspaper.

The President of the Baklava and Dessert Producers Foundation, Mehmet
Yildirim, also present at the conference, gave his opinion on the
international food fight, “it is time for Turkey to stand up and
claim its national treasures, Turkey brought baklava with them all
the way from Central Asia, there are official documents proving that
baklava rightfully belongs to Turkey.”

These comments were shared with the owners of a Turkish Pastry store,
recently opened in Doha. The baklava makers from Istanbul, told The
Peninsula: “Baklava is definitely more Turkish than Cypriot, the
Greek Cypriot version of the baklava does not taste or look anything
like the original.

`Their version of the Turkish delight, calling it Cyprus Delight, is
another factor that just adds to the increasingly sticky war. Our
Pashas and Viziers (rulers) owned the recipe, though it is made
differently throughout the region, in Lebanon, Jordan and Syria no
one can claim sole rights for baklava.”

A Lebanese “baklava” maker; told The Peninsula: “We had enough wars
in Lebanon and we do not want to start another one with Turkey and
Greece.

`However the Greeks stole our recipe, but even they cannot match the
Lebanese baklava, I support Turkey, they should showcase their
baklava to the EU and the rest of the world before it is hijacked by
others. However our pronunciation of the word baklava is the correct
one.” An Armenian baklava maker working on behalf of the Lebanese
pastry shop added “the Armenians invented and improved the recipe.”

The sticky and rather complicated ‘Baklava’ battle has ensued,
yesterday. Two hundred baklava makers demonstrated in Istanbul’s
historic Sultannahmet district, with banners proclaiming “Baklava is
Turkish” whilst others read “Baklava should unify us, not divide us.”

Driver plows into Moon Walk at church carnival

Driver plows into Moon Walk at church carnival

WLNS.com (Channel 6, Detroit)
May 21, 2006

SOUTHFIELD, Mich — Several people were injured today when a driver
plowed into an inflatable “Moon Walk” at a church carnival in
Southfield.

Police say they believe the driver intentionally drove his ’94
Plymouth into the spring fair in the parking lot of Saint John’s
Armenian church. He fled the scene afterward.

It’s unclear how many children and adults were injured. A broken
pelvis was the most serious injury, police say.

WWJ-AM

?S=4931437&nav=0RbQ

http://www.wlns.com/Global/story.asp

Young protagonist required to address own social blindness

Star Phoenix, Saskatoon, Canada
May 20 2006

Young protagonist required to address own social blindness

Katie Ewards, The StarPhoenix
Published: Saturday, May 20, 2006

The foreword to Shattered, Eric Walters’s new book for young readers,
is written by Lieutenant General Romeo Dallaire. This is appropriate,
since Shattered was inspired by Dallaire and his own book, Shake
Hands with the Devil. In the foreword, Dallaire grimly points out the
fact that war veterans with physical injuries are venerated as
heroes, but soldiers who return with psychological wounds are often
ignored and marginalized.

Shattered begins with Ian, the 15-year-old protagonist, meeting just
such a man: a former soldier, now homeless. When Ian first passes
Sarge in a park, he does not see the retired soldier at all. When
Sarge makes himself known, Ian is still subject to blindness of a
sort: the teenager writes the older man off as paranoid and
worthless. His assumptions are challenged first when Sarge rescues
him from a mugging, and then again when he begins to unearth Sarge’s
past as a UN Peacekeeper. But Sarge is dismayed to discover Ian’s
lack of education about the Rwandan genocide of 1994.

Blindness is a theme in this book.

At the beginning, Ian lives in a shiny, upper-class bubble. His work
in a soup kitchen, required by his civics class, becomes an
eye-opening experience when he is taken on a tour of the alleys and
dumpsters of his city: homeless people are everywhere, unseen and
unheard. Likewise, Canada has turned a deliberate blind eye toward
Rwanda and the horrifying events which unfolded there.

As Ian explores the underbelly of the city and learns the appalling
history of the failed UN mission in Rwanda, his protective bubble
falls to pieces. He begins to obsess — not only over the Rwandan
genocide, but also those of Armenia, Cambodia, and Yugoslavia, as
well as the Holocaust of the Second World War and the “disappeared”
in Guatemala. Walters’s writing provides enough detail for these
tragedies to be memorable, but is simultaneously abstract enough to
avoid causing nightmares.

A book about homelessness and genocide inevitably threatens to become
too depressing to read. Walters avoids this trap by focusing on
individuals who affect change. He exposes a dark abyss of tragedy,
but concentrates on the light of heroism: the man who runs the soup
kitchen saves lives, just as shoemakers did in Guatemala and
Peacekeepers did in Rwanda.

But not everyone can be rescued. Will Ian save Sarge?

Shattered deals with weighty issues, but presents them in a way that
will open young readers’ eyes. It inspires readers to shatter their
own bubbles and take action.

Edwards is a freelance writer.

French MPs Postpone The Voting On The Bill Penalizing ArmenianGenoci

FRENCH MPS POSTPONE THE VOTING ON THE BILL PENALIZING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE DENIERS

ArmRadio.am
18.05.2006 17:10

Today the Socialist Party of France presented a bill on penalizing
the 1915 Armenian Genocide deniers to the consideration of the
Parliament. Hilda Tchoboyan, Head of the European Armenian Federation
said in her phone talk with ” Radiolur” correspondent that after
high discussions today, the voting on the issue was postponed
till the next session of the Parliament to be held in October
2006. At the parliamentary sitting a speech was delivered by the
Minister of Foreign Affairs of France, who attached importance to
France-Turkey relations. The speech of the Foreign Minister caused
disapproval of a number of MPs. According to Mrs. Tchoboyan, it is
apparent that pressure was exerted over the Parliament by the French
Government. Nevertheless, the Socialists and many other Deputies are
decisive to present the issue for consideration and voting at least
in the fall session.