Culture Worker Vs, Minister Of Culture

CULTURE WORKER VS. MINISTER OF CULTURE

Panorama.am
Source: Panorama.am
19:00 09/01/2007

A district court will hear the case of Levon Abrahamyan against the
Minister of Culture Hasmik Poghosyan on January 17. Abrahamyan is the
former director of the Music Chamber Theater. He wants the court to
consider invalid the order issued by the minister of culture which
instructs to dismiss Abrahamyan from his post.

A new director has already been appointed. Abrahamyan said he had
personally talked the theater employees into accepting the new
appointment.

One of the reasons for the dismissal mentions that Abrahamyan is no
more "trustful." The former director said has been trusted a lot of
important events in the past, among them HayFest Cultural Festival,
One Nation – One Culture Festival and Days of Armenia in Russia.

Anti-Genocide Documentary ‘SCREAMERS’ To Be Screened On Capitol Hill

ANTI-GENOCIDE DOCUMENTARY ‘SCREAMERS’ TO BE SCREENED ON CAPITOL HILL

ArmRadio.am
10.01.2007 15:20

SCREAMERS, the gripping documentary about the multi-platinum,
Grammy-award winning band "System Of A Down’s" campaign to end the
cycle of genocide, will be screened before a Congressional audience
on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, January 17th, reported the Armenian
National Committee of America (ANCA).

The evening’s program – which is being hosted by Congressmen Adam
Schiff (D-CA) and Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Save Darfur, the ANCA
Endowment, and the Raffy Manoukian Charity – will start with a 6:30
pm reception, continue with a 7:30 pm screening, and conclude with
a discussion with the film’s director Carla Garapedian and special
guests. It will take place in the Mumford Room on the sixth floor of
the James Madison Building of the Library of Congress.

"SCREAMERS is about exposing the denial of all genocide, Armenia,
the Holocaust, Cambodia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, the Iraqi Kurds and
the current horror in Darfur," said Garapedian. "It is about making
sure the same critical message George Clooney and Don Cheadle are
‘screaming’ about is heard, that these atrocities ‘never happen
again.’ And I believe, it is this generation, the ‘screamers’,
who will make sure all genocide is recognized and ends, because
‘screamers’ will no longer tolerate or accept previous generations
of politicians and humanitarians who have so miserably failed them."

SCREAMERS debuted at the American Film Institute Film Festival on
November 2nd and won the coveted AFI Audience Award. On hand for the
opening were Garapedian, "System Of A Down" band members Serj Tankian,
John Dolmayan and Shavo Odadjian, producers Pete McAlevey and Tim
Swain, sponsor Raffy Manoukian of the Raffy Manoukian Charity and a
host of genocide recognition and prevention activists from the ANCA,
Save Darfur, and other groups.

SCREAMERS is a production of MG2 productions in association with BBC
Television and The Raffi Manoukian Charity. Garapedian, a veteran
reporter who has made a career of covering the most difficult stories,
from Chechenya to repression in Afghanistan, follows the European
tour of "System Of A Down" and their ongoing efforts, through music
and activism, to raise awareness about denial of all genocide, tracing
the band members’ own personal journey of their grandparents surviving
the Armenian Genocide and its legacy of a century of atrocities. The
film, distributed by Maya Entertainment, is currently playing in
the Los Angeles area and will open on January 26th in New York City,
Washington, DC, Boston, Chicago and Detroit.

Iran-Armenia Pipeline To Be Launched In First Quarter Or Half Of 200

IRAN-ARMENIA PIPELINE TO BE LAUNCHED IN FIRST QUARTER OR HALF OF 2007

Regnum, Russia
Jan 9 2007

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan gave no clear comment on a
statement made earlier by the Iranian side that Armenia cannot receive
the Iranian gas via the Iran-Armenia pipeline. Answering a question
whether the statement made by spokesman for the construction project
Mohammed Reza reflects the reality, the Armenian foreign minister
said that "probably, the gas pipeline is physically ready, but it
is necessary to carry out tests." According to him, the works are
expected to be finalized in the first quarter or half of the current
year, and after that the Iranian gas will come to Armenia.

It is worth mentioning that Mohammed Reza announced that Iran was
ready to start gas delivery to Armenia at any time, but the Armenian
side was not ready to receive the gas. The Iranian side accomplished
all works necessary for starting gas delivery and installed necessary
equipment. The Armenian side asked for a meeting in late March to
discuss the project and issues of energy supply from Armenia to Iran.

The gas pipeline that connects Iran and Armenia has a diameter of
700 mm, its planned annual capacity is 1.2 billion cubic meters of gas.

Initially, amount of the gas sent to Armenia will be 1.1 billion
cubic meters, since 2019 it will reach 2.3 billion cubic meters. The
contract was signed for 20 years.

To reach the planned amount, the Armenian side is expected to lay
some more 197 km of the pipe. For each cubic meter of the Iranian
gas Armenia is supposed to return 3 kwh of electric energy.

All Armenian Roads Open

ALL ARMENIAN ROADS OPEN

Noyan Tapan
Jan 08 2007

YEREVAN, JANUARY 8, NOYAN TAPAN. As of January 8 morning, all
republican and inter-state roads of Armenia, including Yerevan-Tbilisi
road, are open.

Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed about it from Press Service
of RA Ministry of Transport and Communication.

All Appointments Of The Patriarch Are Postponed

Lraper.org
ALL APPOINTMENTS OF THE PATRIARCH ARE POSTPONED

On Monday evening, 25 December 2006, His Beatitude Mesrob II, Armenian
Patriarch of Istanbul and All Turkey, felt acute pain in this abdomen and by
decision of the expert Dr. Garbis Yakupyan and Dr. Mirican Miroglu was taken
to the Yedikule Holy Saviour Armenian Hospital for observation. After four
hours of tests and the administration of serum to His Beatitude the
Patriarch, a diagnosis of "gastroenteritis" was made. His Beatitude the
Patriarch discharged himself in the early hours of the morning and returned
to the Patriarchate. His Beatitude the Patriarch continues to be treated by
the expert doctors named above, plus the hospital’s Chief Surgeon Dr. Arman
Cakir. All appointments of His Beatitude the Patriarch have been postponed
for now.
PATRIARCHAL SECRETARIAT

Armenia eyes B2B opportunities with Canada

Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Canada
Dec 27 2006

Armenia eyes B2B opportunities with Canada

Toronto, January 18-20, 2007 > Armenia may be off the radar for many
Canadian exporters, but that just may change with Expo 2007, a
business-to-business exposition that is expected to attract hundreds
of Armenian exporters.

Today, the former Soviet republic boasts one of the fastest growing
markets in the Caucasus region, due in part to major economic
reforms.

`Armenia has one of the most liberal trade regimes in the world,’
says Vahram Pirjanian, President of the Canada Armenia Business
Council (CABC). This status is especially noteworthy given the
country’s hardships as a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union
in 1991. After the collapse, the economy was hit hard and its gross
domestic product per capita fell by 75%.

But 1994 marked a turning point, when Armenia’s government revamped
its fiscal and monetary policies which put the country on the road to
economic recovery.

And Canada has started to reap the benefits of this reform.
Information technology is one of Canada’s leading exports to Armenia
and Armenian exports to Canada are mainly comprised of finished
products and services such as jewellery, apparel, beverages and other
manufactured goods.

But Pirjanian believes more can be done to deepen Canada-Armenia
trade relations.

`In the past, questions always revolved around Armenia’s political
environment. Now, we are asked how and where to make investments in
Armenia. It is possible to invest in and trade with Armenian
businesses and make a profit, create jobs and increase exports. The
participation of so many businesses and representatives at Expo 2007
is a clear indication that greater trade opportunities exist.’

For more information, contact:
Vahram Pirjanian
CABC
Tel.: (416) 574-6704

rt/view.aspx?isRedirect=True&id=384713&lan guage=E

http://w01.international.gc.ca/canadexpo

Turkish prime minister warns sectarian tensions in Lebanon will affe

Turkish prime minister warns sectarian tensions in Lebanon will affect region

International Herald Tribune, France
Jan 3 2007

Associated Press

BEIRUT, Lebanon: Turkey’s prime minister warned that growing
sectarian tensions in Lebanon will affect the entire Middle East
if left unchecked and offered to mediate in the political crisis if
asked by rival factions.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrived here on a one-day
visit for talks with feuding Lebanese leaders on the country’s
deepening political crisis.

Shortly after his arrival, Erdogan met with Lebanese premier Fuad
Saniora whose Western-backed government is facing increasing pressure
in the form of street protests led by Hezbollah and other opposition
groups.

"I told Saniora that sectarian differences will leave repercussions
on the region," Erdogan told reporters.

"I also told him that all parties in Lebanon and all states in the
region must act to solve this problem," Erdogan said, stressing that
a solution to the Lebanese crisis should be reached through dialogue.

Erdogan’s visit came as the growing political and sectarian tensions
among Lebanese factions threaten to tear the country apart. It also
came more than a week after Arab League chief Amr Moussa said that
his efforts have failed to reach a solution to the crisis.

Tensions between pro- and anti-Syrian groups erupted when six
pro-Hezbollah Cabinet ministers resigned in November after Saniora
rejected their demand for a new national unity government that would
give Hezbollah and its allies a veto power on key Cabinet decisions.

Erdogan met Saniora who has been living at his office complex in
central Beirut amid a tight security cordon near the thousands of
Hezbollah supporters and allies camping nearby.

Erdogan, speaking in Turkish, said Turkey was not mediating in the
Lebanese crisis but was ready to do so if asked to help by feuding
parties.

Saniora said because of its close ties with the Arab world, Turkey
can play "an important role" in promoting a solution to the Lebanese
crisis.

"We stressed on stability in Lebanon and its impact on the region,"
he said.

Before meeting with Lebanon’s president and Parliament Speaker Nabih
Berri, a Hezbollah ally, Erdogan flew by a Turkish military helicopter
to southern Lebanon where he inspected Turkish troops serving with the
U.N. peacekeeping force known as UNIFIL. He reviewed an honor guard,
thanked troops for their service and had lunch with military officers.

Some 260 Turkish troops, deployed near the southern port city of Tyre,
are helping rebuild bridges and roads damaged in last summer’s war
between Hezbollah and Israel. Turkish officials said that the total
number of Turkish personnel in Lebanon would ultimately reach 681,
including sailors and engineers.

Erdogan also said he will meet later Wednesday with legislator Mohammed
Raad, head of Hezbollah’s 11-member parliamentary bloc.

While Erdogan was meeting Saniora, thousands of Armenians, raising
Lebanese and Armenian flags, gathered in the streets north of Beirut
shouting slogans against the Turkish premier’s visit, witnesses said.
All shops in the Armenian neighborhood of Bourj Hammoud north of
Beirut closed for a couple of hours.

"Turkey, Israel’s strategic ally, cannot keep peace in Lebanon," read
a placard by the protesters. The protesters dispersed peacefully but
the demonstration caused a traffic jam on Beirut’s northern highway.

Ahead of Erdogan’s arrival, about 100 Armenian citizens, waving
Lebanese flags, also gathered outside the Beirut airport to protest
his visit.

In October, thousands from Lebanon’s 80,000-100,000 strong Armenian
community rallied in downtown Beirut to protest Turkish participation
in the U.N. peacekeeping force because they blame Turkey’s Ottoman
rulers for the mass killing of Armenians in the early 20th century.

Turkey, a U.S. ally and NATO’s only predominantly Muslim member,
has close ties to both Israel and Arab states.

Vimpelcom Puts Into Technical Exploitation Network In Georgia

VIMPELCOM PUTS INTO TECHNICAL EXPLOITATION NETWORK IN GEORGIA

Tbilisi, December 28. ArmInfo. OJSC VimpelCom (trade mark Bee-line)
has announced about technical exploitation of the network Mobitel
Ltd. in Georgia. VimpelCom acquired 51% stake in the Georgian
operator Mobitel Ltd. for $12.6 million in July and option for
acquisition of the remaining 49% stake. Mobitel has a license for
provision of GSM-1800 services till the middle of 2013. However, the
company did not provide the services. VimpelCom reports that Mobitel
established GSM/GPRS/EDGE net within 6 months. The net is ready to
introduce services of the third generation (3G). At present, Next
Generation Network (NGN) equipment and Alcatel base stations have
been installed. The equipment is being integrated, Russian Media
report. The installed capacity of the activated net is designed for
300,000 subscribers, whose number can be increased to 1 million. "We
are actively preparing for the start of the operational activity of
Mobitel in the territory of Georgia in accordance with the earlier
scheduled plans. The activation of the net is an important step for
the development of the company. We managed to make this step within
the unprecedented short terms," says Executive Vice President for
Business Development in CIS, Chief Technical Director of VimpelCom
Sergey Avdeev. As Nikolay Pryanishnikov, VimpelCom Executive Vice
President stated earlier, the net in Georgia was to be put into
commercial exploitation in the first quarter of 2007. To recap,
Vimpelcom holds also 90pct stake in ArmenTel CJSC.

30018 Out Of 62531 Of Applicants Passed Retraining In 2006 To Partic

30018 OUT OF 62531 OF APPLICANTS PASSED RETRAINING IN 2006 TO PARTICIPATE IN ELECTION COMMISSIONS OF ARMENIA

Yerevan, December 27. ArmInfo. 36 018 out of 62 531 applicants passed
retraining to participate in the structures of election commissions of
Armenia, the chairman of the Central Election Commission of Armenia,
Garegin Azaryan, said at today’s press-conference.

According to him, 14892 applications were received from Yerevan in
2006, 4 279 – from Aragatsotn region, 4 964 – from Ararat region, 5
462 – from Armavir region , 5 163 – from Gegharkunik region, 4 099 from
Kotayk region, 7 764 from Lori region, 7 787 from Shirak region, 4 190
from Siunik region, 981 from Vayots Dzor and 2 950 from Tavush region.

According to G. Nazaryan, elections of the local government bodies
were held in 162 communities of the Republic in 2006, 103 of which
had elected the Head of the community. Municipal elections will be
held in 2007 in 120 communities of the Republic, G. Azaryan said.

Ottawa: 2006 A Busy Year In Diplomatic Circles

2006 A BUSY YEAR IN DIPLOMATIC CIRCLES
by Jennifer Campbell, Citizen Special

Ottawa Citizen, Canada
December 27, 2006 Wednesday
Final Edition

On the diplomatic scene, 2006 was a year for high-profile departures.

Toward summer, we learned New Zealand High Commissioner Graham
Kelly was heading home, and British High Commissioner David Reddaway
announced he was leaving. Diplomatically coy in the beginning, Mr.

Reddaway wouldn’t say where he was going, but eventually, his
government announced it was Ireland. Then, there was a flood of
departures of faces that had become well known: Irish Ambassador
Martin Burke returned to Dublin; EU Ambassador Eric Hayes returned
to Brussels; and Mexican Ambassador Maria Teresa Garcia de Madero
returned to Mexico.

Carlos Miranda, dean of the diplomatic corps, retired after 14
years, saying he’ll divide his time between Ottawa, where he has a
pied-a-terre, Quebec, where he has a cottage, and Costa Rica. His
departure made Mauricio Rosales Rivera, ambassador of El Savador,
the new dean.

A couple of embassies that had left their ambassadorial posts vacant
for more than a year filled the voids. German Ambassador Christian
Pauls left Ottawa in June 2005 and his replacement, Matthias Hopfner,
only arrived in September.

Meanwhile, Saudi Ambassador Mohammed Al-Hussaini, who had been here
for seven years, left in the summer of 2005 to take his country’s
top job in Turkey. His replacement, Abdulaziz Al-Sowayegh, presented
his credentials at Rideau Hall the same day as Mr. Hopfner. A few
days later, Mr. Al-Sowayegh hosted a lavish national day reception
that coincided with the long-awaited "coming out" of the recently
completed building on prime Sussex Drive real estate.

June saw the reopening of a high commission that had closed 10 years
earlier. Lesotho had always planned to reopen the mission it was
forced to close a decade ago for financial reasons.

"The closure of the mission in Ottawa was unfortunately misinterpreted
by some as a severance of diplomatic ties between Lesotho and Canada,
but quite the contrary was true," said Mots’eoa Senyane, the high
commissioner who reopened shop in a high commission on Clemow Avenue
in the Glebe. Ms. Senyane explained that her country’s representative
in Washington also looked after Canada from 1996 to 2006. Lesotho
had a mission in Ottawa for 20 years prior to closing in ’96.

The Conservative government’s foreign policy move most discussed by
diplomats was Canada’s commitment to Afghanistan. The prime minister’s
declaration last summer that Israel’s response to Hezbollah’s advances
was "measured" was also a topic of discussion, as was his early ban
on Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers (LTTE) in Canada and the declaration that
the LTTE is a terrorist organization.

An April decision to declare what the Turks refer to as "the
Armenian tragedy" a genocide garnered swift reaction from the Turkish
government which called its top envoy, Ambassador Aydemir Erman, for
consultations. This is not something the government does lightly,
explained counsellor Yonet Tezel at the time, but it should not be
considered as drastic as if an ambassador is officially recalled
(something the Chretien government did with its ambassador to Iran
during the Zahra Kazemi affair.)

Canada attracted several prominent world figures including Mexican
President (then president-elect) Felipe Calderon, Afghan President
Hamid Karzai and King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia of Sweden.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice came to Canada on Sept. 11
to be escorted around Nova Scotia by Foreign Affairs Minister Peter
MacKay.

One of this year’s biggest changes on the international scene was the
replacement of United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Mr. Annan
retires after 10 years, some of them tumultuous, on the job. By
tradition, it was Asia’s turn to take the helm, something the
continent hadn’t done in 35 years, and the lobbying on the part
of various candidates was strong. Canada didn’t take an official
position, but that didn’t stop Shashi Tharoor from making a visit to
drum up support. Mr. Tharoor had worked at the UN since 1978 and was
considered to be a credible candidate. Sri Lanka’s Jayantha Dhanapala,
a longtime diplomat and presidential adviser, also visited Ottawa
to explain his candidacy and seek support. Finally, Thai Foreign
Minister Kantathi Suphamongkhon was in town in September and asked
for Canada’s support for Thailand’s candidate, Deputy Prime Minister
Surakiat Sathirathai. In the end, though, it was Korea that ended up
with its candidate, Ban Ki-moon, in the top spot.

The UN took a beating in Ottawa last month with Jan Pronk, who was
Mr. Annan’s special representative in Sudan, criticizing the UN’s
inaction in Darfur. Mr. Pronk was in town with the United Nations
Association in Canada as part of a speaking tour he started after being
declared persona non grata by the government of Sudan. A week later,
Iraqi Ambassador Howar Ziad criticized Mr. Annan for saying Iraqis are
worse off since the U.S. invaded. "Instead of spearheading the Saddam
Nostalgia Club, we expect the UN secretary general to be constructive
and to contribute positive ideas to the democratic process in Iraq,"
Mr. Ziad said in a statement for the Citizen.

Stay tuned to see what the diplomats think of the new UN boss in 2007.

Jennifer Campbell is a freelance writer and editor in Ottawa.

Reach her at [email protected].

– – –

Familiar Faces Go Home

On the diplomatic scene, 2006 was a year for high-profile departures,
including a flood of faces that had become well known. They included:

1. British High Commissioner David Reddaway left his posting in Ottawa
for one in Ireland.

2. Mexican Ambassador Maria Teresa Garcia de Madero, pictured with
former foreign affairs minister Pierre Pettigrew, returned to Mexico.

3. New Zealand High Commissioner Graham Kelly and his wife, Janette,
went home.

4. Irish Ambassador Martin Burke and his wife, Mary, returned to
Dublin.

5. Ambassador Carlos Miranda return to Costa Rica.

6. EU Ambassador Eric Hayes, with wife, Vibeke Grud, returned to
Brussels.

Foreign Policy Moves

Among the Conservative government’s most-discussed foreign policy
moves was the declaration that Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers is a terrorist
organization.

7. Foreign Affairs Peter MacKay, left, and Public Safety Minister
Stockwell Day talk to reporters about the decision.

Diplomatic Anger

8. Turkey quickly recalled Ambassador Aydemir Erman for consultations
after Canada declared "the Armenian tragedy" was genocide.

Iraqi Speaks Up

9. Iraqi Ambassador Howar Ziad, seen voting in his country’s landmark
elections, criticized Kofi Annan for saying Iraqis are worse off
since the U.S. invaded.

Back in Business

10. Lesotho reopened the mission in Ottawa that it had to close a
decade ago for financial reasons.