Armenian FM arrives in Equatorian Guinea

ARMENIAN FM ARRIVING IN EQUATORIAL GUINEA THIS NIGHT

PanArmenian News
Feb 19 2005

19.02.2005 13:22

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian will leave
for Equatorial Guinea this night, Arminfo agency reported. The fate of
the Armenian pilots, who were arrested on indictment of participation
in an attempt of a coup d’etat March 8 last year, is expected to be
the main topic of talks with the country leaders. The Equatorial
Guinea court has sentenced the Armenian pilots to imprisonment of
14-24 years. February 22 V. Oskanian will return to Yerevan.

BAKU: India asks time to investigate gold development reports

India asks time to investigate gold development reports

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Feb 18 2005

Baku, February 17, AssA-Irada — On Thursday, the Indian government
started investigating whether or not any Indian company is involved
in developing gold deposits in the Azerbaijani regions occupied
by Armenia.

The Indian ambassador in Baku acknowledged earlier that Indian
companies are operating in Kalbajar District of Azerbaijan, which is
under Armenia’s occupation.

The Azerbaijani ambassador to India Tamerlan Garayev told the
Azerbaijani TV channels that the Indian foreign minister has requested
official Baku some time to clarify the issue. “If any Indian company
is working in the occupied lands, serious measures will be taken
against it,” Ambassador Garayev said.*

Armenian & UAE law-inforcers agree to jointly fight against pimps &h

ARMENIAN AND UAE LAW-ENFORCERS AGREE TO JOINTLY FIGHT AGAINST PIMPS AND TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS

ArmenPress
Feb 16 2005

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 16, ARMENPRESS: Prosecutors of Armenia and the
United Arab Emirates (UAE) have agreed to create a joint task force
to draft an intergovernmental legal assistant pact. The agreement
was reached when a delegation of the Armenian prosecutor’s office
was visiting the UAE earlier this month.

Armenian prosecutor’s office told Armenpress that members of the
delegation had a series of meetings with their UAE counterparts to
focus on how to track down and call to account persons engaged in
trafficking in human beings, illegal migration and pimping.

According to the Armenian prosecutor’s office, 7 of 9 criminal cases
launched against people engaged in pimping involved 22 Armenian
pimps working in the UAE. According to International Organization for
Migration (IOM) findings, Armenia is a country of origin for women and
children who are trafficked primarily into the United Arab Emirates
(UAE) and Turkey.

Tashjian Donates Painting

TASHJIAN DONATES PAINTING
University of New Mexico-Los Alamos adds “Chamisa” to its collection

Los Alamos Monitor (New Mexico) _www.lamonitor.com_
()

February 10, 2005

Armenian-American painter Richard Tashjian has had a warm welcome in
New Mexico in the seven years since his arrival.

Along with spotlights in regional publications like Cowboys & Indians
and Focus Santa Fe, he has been part of several group shows throughout
north-central New Mexico and is currently represented by Editions
Gallery in Santa Fe and Wilder Nightingale Gallery in Taos.

“I feel fortunate,” said Tashjian, a native of Massachusetts.

“A lot of artists come here expecting to be successful, but a lot of
them aren’t. For him, success is measured by the happiness he achieves
through painting.

Recently, Tashjian donated the oil painting titled “Chamisa” to the
University of New Mexico-Los Alamos.

It is a bright and jovial piece, much like Tashjian’s own personality.
Chamisa refers to the centerpiece of the painting, a common desert
shrub with hundreds of Lilliputian yellow flowers.

As a backdrop to the orange colors of the desert scene are the Jemez
Mountains, crowned with a majestic blue sky.

“I thought it would be a good gift to give,” Tashjian said.

The painting was gratefully accepted as part of UNM-Los Alamos’
permanent art collection.

Tashjian also enjoyed success in his home state, Massachusetts,
both as an artist and in his career in advertising art.

He is part of many permanent art collections in Massachusetts, the
country of Armenia, Washington, DC and now New Mexico. He created the
Armenian Artists Association of America and between 1979 and 1990,
traveled frequently to Armenia to organize shows. In 1990 he was
invited to the 100th anniversary dedication for the Russian-Armenian
marine painter, Hovhaness Aivazovsky in Crimea, Russia. He was also
listed in the German Artistic Encyclopedia:Cultural Artist of All
Times and Nation.

Tashjian describes his latest paintings around the Jemez Mountains,
and the areas around Taos and Nambe’ as colorful. He hopes to exhibit
these lastest works in the spring.

***

http://www.lamonitor.com

Turkish businessman denies Azeri efforts to hinge open borders on NK

TURKISH BUSINESSMAN DENIES AZERI EFFORTS TO HINGE OPEN BORDER ON KARABAGH CONFLICT

ArmenPress
Feb 14 2005

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 14, ARMENPRESS: Kaan Soyak, the Turkish cochairman
of the Turkish-Armenian Business Development Commission (TABDC) told
a press conference in Yerevan today that the trade between the two
nations last year amounted to $120 million. Soyak said he has come to
Armenia to look together with Eurasia Foundation into prospects for
developing ties Armenia after Turkey opens its closed border. Soyak
argued that open borders may triple the current trade volume.

Soyak said he has been working to prove that open borders would
benefit both Turkey and Armenia and even invited officials of the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation/Dashnaktsutyun to Turkey to start
dialogue on urgent issues. The Dashnaktsutyun party is against the
open border saying that Turkey must first acknowledge the killing of
around 1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman empire. “Dashnaktsutyun
is a serious party with wide experience and I am ready to exert every
effort to have this dialogue happen,” he told reporters.

Soyak also spoke about the most sensitive issue in Turkish-Armenian
relations, the 1915 genocide, saying it has become a topic of debates
in Turkey just a couple of years ago. “Our organization is doing
what it can so that more broader segments of Turks get involved
in discussions on this problem and to learn the historical truth,”
he said. Incidentally, Soyak used the word “genocide” when talking
about the events of 1915.

Soyak said the TABDC works also for establishment of cultural and
business contacts and is organizing trips of Turkish Armenians
to Yerevan and vice versa. He added that TABDC is criticized in
Azerbaijan and Turkey. “Azerbaijan is campaigning aggressively in
Turkey to link the opening of the border with the resolution of the
Nagorno Karabagh conflict. We are against it and we believe that
borders must be open irrespective of whether the conflict is solved
or not yet,” he said, adding that in today’s world there is no gain
in keeping a couple of borders closed as countries will always find a
way to survive.” I believe we need to have a constructive approach,
to open the borders and solve the problems with a vision enabling
us to carry the conflicts to international platforms and solve the
problems with an active diplomacy, and to work towards it together.”

TABDC, established in 1997 is the only Turkish-Armenian joint
organization, a well-known businessman Arsen Ghazarian is the
co-chairman of the Armenian side.

Democracy rising in ex-Soviet states

Christian Science Monitor (Boston, MA)
February 10, 2005, Thursday

Democracy rising in ex-Soviet states

By Fred Weir Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

Aftershocks of Ukraine and Georgia are stirring up rallies in Central
Asia.

The peaceful street revolts that recently brought democratic change
to Georgia and Ukraine could spawn copy-cat upheavals against
authoritarian regimes across the former Soviet Union, experts say.

Waving orange scarves and banners – the colors of Ukraine’s
revolution – dozens of Uzbeks demonstrated in the capital Tashkent
last week over the demolition of their homes to make way for border
fencing.

According to the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, the protest
compelled the autocratic government of Islam Karimov, widely
condemned for human rights abuses, to pay compensation.

In Bishkek, capital of Kyrgyzstan, hundreds of pro-democracy
activists rallied on Saturday to demand that upcoming parliamentary
elections be free and fair.

>>From Kyrgyzstan on the Chinese border to Moldova, where Europe’s only
ruling Communist Party faces elections next month, opposition parties
are eagerly studying Georgia’s “Rose Revolution” and Ukraine’s
“Orange Revolution,” which led to the triumph of pro-democracy
forces. Opposition groups are even selecting symbols for their
banners when the moment arrives – tulips for the Kyrgyz opposition,
grapes for Moldova’s anticommunists.

“The recent events in Ukraine have made people everywhere understand
that taking to the streets gets the authorities’ attention,” says
Tatiana Poloskova, deputy director of the independent Institute of
Modern Diaspora, which studies Russian minorities in former Soviet
countries.

Georgian President Mikhael Saakashvili and newly inaugurated
Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko were clearly addressing their
former Soviet colleagues last month when they hailed their revolts as
the leading edge of “a new wave of liberation that will lead to the
final victory of freedom and democracy on the continent of Europe.”

The prospect has sent shudders through the Kremlin, still smarting
from the “loss” of pro-Moscow regimes in Georgia and Ukraine, and
reeling in the face of its own grass-roots revolt by pensioners
protesting cuts in social services. For Russia, where authoritarian
methods have been taking root under President Vladimir Putin, the
prospect of pro-democracy rebellions sweeping the former Soviet Union
seems to threaten the underpinnings of domestic stability. The
pro-Western bent of the new regimes in Ukraine and Georgia may also
threaten the economic ties Russia has built with post-Soviet regimes
from Armenia to Uzbekistan.

First in line could be Kyrgyzstan, where any official attempt to rig
parliamentary elections slated for Feb. 27 could trigger Ukrainian
popular action. Strongman Askar Akayev, who’s ruled the tiny central
Asian state for the past 15 years, has already faced street
demonstrations over a failed attempt to ban his chief opponent from
the parliamentary race. Mr. Akayev has pledged to step down in
October, and appears to be grooming his daughter, Bermet, to succeed
him. After a recent Moscow visit with Vladimir Putin, Akayev warned
that if the opposition takes to the streets, “it would lead to civil
war.”

But some Russian experts see a “Tulip Revolution” in the near future
for Kyrgyzstan, which hosts both Russian and US military bases.
“Akayev is lost,” says Alexei Malashenko, an expert with the Carnegie
Center in Moscow. “The opposition is strong, well-organized, and has
international as well as domestic backing.”

The Kremlin may fear that political ferment in Kyrgyzstan could
spread to more important allies in central Asia. The long-time leader
of oil-rich Kazakhstan, Nursultan Nazarbayev, who has fixed elections
and changed the Constitution to extend his rule, last month dissolved
the leading opposition party after it sent a delegation to Ukraine to
study the Orange Revolution. He also moved to close down a local
institute funded by global financier George Soros, who has backed
pro-democracy movements in Ukraine and elsewhere.

In Uzbekistan, which also hosts a key US military base, President
Karimov, a former Soviet politburo member, has ruled with an iron
fist since the demise of the USSR. Karimov recently jeered publicly
at those “who are dying to see that the way the elites in Georgia and
Ukraine changed becomes a model to be emulated in other countries.”
He warned bluntly: “We have the necessary force for that.”

Some experts argue that, while velvet revolution may be possible in
semi-authoritarian Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan, it is a very distant
prospect in Uzbekistan because democracy and civil society are barely
developed there. Last week’s protests in Tashkent, though based on a
narrow economic issue, hint that instability may lie just beneath the
regime’s tough and orderly surface.

Uzbekistan’s gas-rich neighbor, Turkmenistan, is run by a North
Korean-style dictatorship that permits no dissent of any kind. “In
absolutely authoritarian regimes like [Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan]
the threat of ‘Orange Revolution’ is just used by the leaders to
crack down harder,” says Masha Lipman, an expert with the Carnegie
Center in Moscow. “There is no chance for the opposition to actually
organize anything, much less a revolution.”

That paradox may help to explain why Georgians were able to rally
successfully against the lethargic regime of Eduard Shevardnadze,
when it attempted to rig the 2003 parliamentary polls, while
protesters in neighboring Azerbaijan were put down when the much more
efficient dictatorship of Gaidar Aliyev imposed the succession of his
son, Ilham, through fraudulent elections just a month earlier.

Ukrainians were able to successfully mobilize against vote-rigging
late last year in part because Ukraine had relatively free
institutions, including a parliament and Supreme Court that the
president was not able to control. In next-door Belarus, which US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has labeled “the last outpost of
tyranny in Europe,” dictator Alexander Lukashenko has crushed the
opposition and banished nongovernmental organizations, and looks set
to be handily reelected in showpiece elections later this year.

But an upsurge looks increasingly likely in ex-Soviet Moldova, where
Communist President Vladimir Voronin has lost Moscow support. He
faces a strong challenge in next month’s parliamentary elections from
the pro-Western Christian Democrats, who reportedly are sporting
orange scarves and flags in the capital.

“The Kremlin suddenly finds itself severely challenged to change its
strategies, both at home and in former Soviet countries,” says Sergei
Kazyonnov, an expert with the independent Institute for National
Security and Strategic Research in Moscow. “It can go on depending on
political manipulations and under-the-carpet deals with local elites.
But it is already becoming obvious that there are just too many
different realities here, and an unworkable multiplicity of carpets.”

Classical Music: Diary

CLASSICAL MUSIC: DIARY

The Independent – United Kingdom
Feb 07, 2005

Michael Church

V “I didn’t try to make it; it came from inside me,” says Sir John
Tavener of his The Veil of the Temple, designed to last from dusk
till dawn in church and 150-minutes long on the new RCA Red Seal/Sony
CD released next Monday. Starting with Sufism and ending among the
Hindus, it reveals the Blessed John in unprecedentedly ecumenical
form, but I’m reassured to find his prejudices still intact. When
I ask what he means by this being “an attempt to restore the sacred
imagination”, he replies: “It’s about a dimension in art which has
got totally lost. When humanism came in with late Beethoven, art
for art’s sake became the goal, leading to things like the artist
currently exhibiting his own excrement in the Tate.”

V Who is Armenia’s greatest composer? Not Khachaturian, despite the
Soviets’ relentless promotion of Spartacus. Few outside Armenia may
have heard of Solomon Solomonian, but his fate encapsulates that
of his country, and his compositions have a uniquely compelling
force. In 1915, with 700 other Armenian intellectuals, he was seized
and tortured by the Turks; he escaped, but went mad, and he died
in a Paris asylum. He’s the subject of a suitably left-field film
at the London Armenian Film Festival, which opens on Friday at the
Institut Francais.

V The Takacs Quartet’s recordings of Beethoven’s string quartets
are being justly acclaimed, but readers of the liner notes may
wonder why none of the players is called Takacs. The ghost is Gabor
Takacs-Nagy, who co-founded the quartet, but left and now leads his
equally acclaimed Takacs Piano Trio. But it’s a shame Decca should
be so economical with the truth.

Armenian archives available for all scientists including Turkish

ARMENIAN ARCHIVES AVAILABLE FOR ALL SCIENTISTS INCLUDING TURKISH

PanArmenian News
Feb 7 2005

07.02.2005 14:30

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian archives are open for the researchers of
the whole world, though the Turkish scientists due to unknown reasons
have never requested them, said Armenian permanent representative in
BSECO Arsen Avagian when commenting on the statement of Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who said that the Armenian archives are
closed. In Arsen Avagian’s words, the document regarding the Armenian
Genocide of 1915 are kept in the Central History Archive and in the
Archive of Political Parties and are available for the scientists of
the whole world, including the Turkish ones.

Patriarch Receives French Speaker

Patriarch Receives President of French National Assembly

Lraper
Istanbul
5.2.2005

ISTANBUL (05/02/2005) – His Beatitude Mesrob II, Armenian Patriarch of
Istanbul and All Turkey, received His Excellency Mr. Jean-Louis Debré,
the President of the French National Assembly, on 4 February 2005,
Friday, at 19:30 hours, in the audience room of the Armenian
Patriarchate, Istanbul, Turkey. Accompanying the President were the
leaders of the French Opposition and Mr. Jean-Christophe Peaucelle, the
French Consul General in Istanbul.

The Patriarch greeted Mr. Debré as follows: `It is indeed a great honour
and pleasure to receive in our Patriarchate the President of the French
National Assembly. As one of the four hierarchical sees of the worldwide
Armenian Church, the Patriarchal See of Istanbul, continues to be a
witness to the Christian Armenian heritage, faith and culture since the
year 1461.

Our Patriarchate’s ties with the Republic of France are close. In fact,
the last Cilician Armenian King, Leo VI Lusignan, is buried in the
Cathedral of St. Denis in Paris. Most of the Armenians living in France
today also have their family roots in Anatolia.

Anatolia became the stage for tragic events ninety years ago. It is a
fact that hundreds of thousands of Armenian citizens lost their lives,
and of the Armenian population in the Ottoman Empire, only a small
proportion was saved from extinction. Not only were lives lost, but also
a local culture was uprooted from its natural milieu.

Both Turks and Armenians must now face their common history and must
look forward to a peaceful coexistence in the present and future world.
God has brought together the Turkish and Armenian peoples within the
same geographical area, as very close neighbours, and even as members
sometimes of the same family, whether in Anatolia or in the Caucasus.
All those concerned need to understand that there is no alternative but
to live in peace and tolerance with each other, and to expend every
effort in this direction.

This is why, together with all the other non-Moslem minorities in
Turkey, our Patriarchal See and the Turkish Armenian community support
the accession of Turkey into the European Union. As citizens of Turkey
we support this process, since all the laws of our country will thus be
upgraded; as non-Moslem minorities we support the process, since it will
give us equal opportunity before the law; as people of Armenian descent
we support the process, because it might bring the long-awaited peace
not only between Turkey and Armenia, but also amongst all countries in
the region.

It is with these sentiments, that I welcome you once again, reminded of
the words of the Gospel: ˜Peace on earth and good will amongst men of
good will! ”

Thanking the Patriarch for his welcoming remarks, Mr. Debré replied that
the French delegation was interested in whether Moslems and non-Moslems
enjoy equal opportunity in Turkey, which aspires to become an EU member.
Where are the non-Moslem clerics trained? Do ethno-religious minorities,
and also minorities not covered by the Lausanne Treaty, enjoy cultural
prerogatives? Are human rights respected, including those of women,
children and the minorities? How do the people of Turkey regard the
non-Moslems within and without Turkey? These, Mr. Debré said, were the
issues European parliamentarians were preoccupied with.

Patriarch Mesrob replied that the majority of Turkish citizens support
the membership of Turkey into the EU, knowing well that such an
integration presupposes much change in mentality and the legal system.
Many important reforms have been passed through the Turkish National
Assembly and once a full implementation is realised undoubtedly many
changes will occur in the country. `These are our thoughts and
expectations,’ the Patriarch said.

Mr. Debré, whose visit lasted about 45 minutes, thanked the Patriarch
for his reception, signed the book of honour and took leave of the
Patriarchal See together with the other members of the French National
Assembly.

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http://www.hyetert.com/haber3.asp?AltYazi=Haberler+%5C%3E+G%FCncel&amp

Armenian legislature chairman arrives in Kuwait

Qatar News Agency
February 5, 2005 Saturday 7:01 PM EST

ARMENIAN LEGISLATURE CHAIRMAN ARRIVES IN KUWAIT

Doha, February 05

Chairman Of The Armenian National Assembly (Legislature) Artour
Bagharcian Arrived Here On Saturday For A Three-Day Visit To Kuwait .

Speaking To Reporters Upon Arrival, The Armenian Official Said He
Will Have Talks With Speaker Of The Kuwaiti National Assembly Jassem
Al Kharrafi On Bilateral Relations And Will Sign As Well A Protocol
Covering All Fields Of Cooperation Between The Two Countries.

Artour Said His Country Wishes To Develop Its Relations With Kuwait
In All Economic And Political Spheres And A Sort Of Coordination In
International Forums And Conferences.