Radical Opposition Gears For Post-Election Protests

RADICAL OPPOSITION GEARS FOR POST-ELECTION PROTESTS
By Emil Danielyan

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
May 3 2007

The Hanrapetutyun (Republic) party and two other radical opposition
groups rallied several thousand supporters in Yerevan on Thursday,
telling them to gear up for anti-government demonstrations expected
to follow the May 12 parliamentary elections.

They dismissed President Robert Kocharian’s warnings not to dispute
the official vote results which will likely give his political allies
a comfortable majority in the next National Assembly.

Meeting with university students in Yerevan last week, Kocharian warned
that fresh opposition attempts to force him into resignation would
meet with a tough government response. He also said the vast majority
of Armenians oppose the kind of post-election "colored revolutions"
that toppled the ruling regimes in neighboring Georgia and other
former Soviet republics.

"The fact that so many of you are here is the reason why Robert
Kocharian rushed to Yerevan State University and gave a speech there,"
Hanrapetutyun leader Aram Sarkisian said in a speech at the rally in
central jointly held by his party, Aram Karapetian’s Nor Zhamanakner
Party and the Impeachment bloc led by supporters of former President
Levon Ter-Petrosian.

Sarkisian claimed that Kocharian is scared of the prospect of
opposition protests. "Kocharian has developed a tradition. As soon as
he experiences fear he goes to YSU to appeal to the people," he said.

"He is also trying to intimidate all of us."

Sarkisian, Karapetian and other speakers would not specify what exactly
they will do if the elections fall short of democratic standards,
promising to shed more light on their plans at another gathering
scheduled for next Thursday.

"If they again ignore our will, if they trample on our rights, if
they again look down on us, we will have one thing to do," said
Sarkisian. "We will rise up and gather in this square on May 13
… We will march ahead of you, we won’ hesitate, we won’t run away,
we won’t get scared."

Armenia’s leading opposition forces, including Hanrapetutyun, had
already tried to replicate the ex-Soviet democratic revolutions three
years ago. But their joint campaign failed not least because of poor
attendance of their rallies.

The rally held by the three radical opposition groups is apparently
the biggest pre-election gathering held in Armenia so far. Speaking to
RFE/RL, Sarkisian seemed confident that they will pull larger crowds
in the coming weeks.

"We definitely expect that the people will increasingly participate
in our rallies," he said. "Every rally we hold is bigger than the
previous one, which makes me really happy."

Serbs Of Kosovo Say Independence Is Not Way Out Of Current Situation

SERBS OF KOSOVO SAY INDEPENDENCE IS NOT WAY OUT OF CURRENT SITUATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.05.2007 13:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Head of UN Security Council’s mission, Belgium’s
Permanent Representative to the UN Johan Verbeke reported for the tour
to Balkans to the Security Council. He said, the visit of the mission
to Belgrade and Pristina was successful. Mission members succeeded in
drawing the full picture of the real situation in political, economic
and social development of Kosovo. Besides, from the first hand the
mission could get information about views of different communities
concerning their future.

Johan Verbeke reminded the delegation visited the region on Russia’s
initiative with the aim to examine fulfillment of UN Security
Council’s 1244 resolution and "Standards for Kosovo" plan, which
also was approved by the Security Council. Those standards suppose
functioning of democratic institutions, rule of law, freedom of
movement, return of refugees and their reintegration, development of
economy, protection of property rights and dialog with Belgrade.

Belgium’s Permanent Representative stated that all interim institutions
of power and other administrative bodies are established in Kosovo
and they function rather successfully, however still the region is in
the stage of post-conflict reconstruction. In his words, Albanians
and Serbs of Kosovo still isolate themselves and there is no united
multiethnic society in Kosovo. The Belgian Ambassador informed mission
members held a number of meetings with leaders of Serbia and Kosovo,
representatives of both Albanian and Serbian communities of Kosovo,
as well as other national minorities of the region. They also visited
south and north Mitrovica. Security Council’s mission also met with
NATO and European Union representatives, as well as Secretary General’s
Special Envoy Marti Ahtisaari in Vienna.

According to Johan Verbeke at the meeting with Security Council’s
mission in Belgrade Serbian leaders underlined they categorically
oppose the idea of granting Kosovo any form of independence. One
more time Serbian authorities confirmed their readiness to grant
a wide autonomy to the region. Serbia insists on returning to
negotiations. Belgrade thinks that Pristina has not fulfilled the
international standards and demands of 1244 resolution. They draw a
special attention to the extremely low number of Serbs who returned
to the region.

The head of the delegation said Albanians of Kosovo fully support
Ahtisaari’s plan. They call on sooner solution of their fate. He also
added that the stance of Serbs of Kosovo differs from Albanians’
position on the issue. During meetings with leaders of Serbian
community they stated that independence is not a way out of the
current situation, the UN Press Office reports.

IT-Sector Is Armenia Has Been Growing Both Qualitatively And Quantit

IT-SECTOR IS ARMENIA HAS BEEN GROWING BOTH QUALITATIVELY AND QUANTITATIVELY LATELY: RA DEPUTY MINISTER OF TRADE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Arminfo Agency
2007-05-03 13:33:00

IT-sector in Armenia has been growing both qualitatively and
quantitatively lately, RA deputy Minister of Trade and Economic
Development Tigran Davtyan said at today’s Conference on the
competitiveness of Information Technologies in Yerevan.

According to him, a tendency of development of the servicing sectors,
the telecommunications, in particular, has been recently marked
in IT-sphere, especially after entry of the new communication and
demonopolization operator in the market. T. Davtyan said it is
scheduled to develop a new concept and new approaches to assure the
continuance of the development stage and rise of competitiveness of IT-
sector. According to the Chief Advisor of RA President on economic
issues Vahram Nersisyants, presently, the IT-sector provides 2%
of GDP and has good development prospects. The development of this
sector contributes to the growth of economy in general, he said.

To note, the "Competitive Armenian Private Sector" Programme, financed
by USAID, has become the Conference initiator.

8 Thousand Policemen To Watch Elections

8 THOUSAND POLICEMEN TO WATCH ELECTIONS

A1+
[08:12 pm] 02 May, 2007

RoA President Robert Kocahrian met with Hayk Harutyunyan, the Chief
of the Armenian Police.

Hayk Harutyunyan was assigned to check electoral rolls in due time
and submit the data with electoral commissions and constituencies.

According to the Chief of the Armenian Police over 8000 policemen
will be engaged in the maintenance of public order on May 12.

The parties also spoke of the criminal scene in the republic.

"Time To Occupy Oneself With Weeding Comes" Galust Sahakian Says

"TIME TO OCCUPY ONESELF WITH WEEDING COMES" GALUST SAHAKIAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan
May 02 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 2, NOYAN TAPAN. Representatives of the Republican Party
of Armenia always speak discreetly about those political forces
with which they once cooperated. Galust Sahakian, the head of the
RPA faction of the National Assembly made such a statement at the
May 2 press conference, at the journalists’ request commenting upon
the overheard conversation between Chairman of the Orinats Yerkir
(Country of Law) party Artur Baghdasarian and Deputy Ambassador of
Great Britain to Armenia Richard Hyde. He, however, mentioned that
the secret conversation with the foreign diplomate is an indmissible
phenomenon for him. G. Sahakian reminded that during the previous
years he publicly "gave the alarm" "about everything" connected with
the OYP. "I will be very sad if the people did not pay attention to
that fact during the elections," G. Sahakian.

In the republican deputy’s opinion, melons and gourds are more tasty
if weeds growing near them are periodically uprooted. In the OYP sense,
in G. Sahakian’s words,"the time has come to be engaged in weeding."

Eurovision Song Contest: Armenia: Hayko Back From Touring

ARMENIA: HAYKO BACK FROM TOURING
Thanos Economou reporting from Athens (Greece)

oikotimes.com, Greece
April 29 2007

source: ARMTV
photo: ARMTV
video: youtube.com

ARMTV ANNOUNCES SPOKEPERSON

EUROVISION.AM REPORTS: Hayko has just returned from the promotional
tours to Bulgaria, Greece, Ukraine and Belarus! He had an
exciting visits and interesting interviews over different TV shows,
Radio-stations, he met a lot of fans and actually he is very thankfull
for the energy and love they spread around. We are also thankfull to
our colleagues, who have arranged and organized quite a busy schedule
for Hayko!

Public TV Company of Armenia has invited Sirusho to announce the
official voting results from Armenia on May 12th, 2007. Sirusho is
the Best Female Singer of the Year 2005 and one of the most famous
rising stars on the Armenian stage. Armenia participates for second
time in the history of the contest and directly to the final since
Andre achieved the 8th position last year in the Athens 2006 Eurovision
Song Contest Final.

The Biggest Concern Of The Armenian Community In Italy To Remain Arm

THE BIGGEST CONCERN OF THE ARMENIAN COMMUNITY IN ITALY TO REMAIN ARMENIAN
By Nana Petrosian

AZG Armenian Daily
02/05/2007

Two thousand Armenians live in Italy. Three hundred of them live
in Milan. They are peaceful and united round the same idea –
to remain Armenian. According to Kekel Khachatrian, who lives
in Milan, their community has no problems with the parties, as
it is very small. The only concern is to remain Armenian, and the
rest is not important. Several Armenian organizations act in Milan:
‘Armenian Union of Italy’, ‘Armenian Apostolic Church’, ‘Homenetmen’,
‘Armenian House’, etc. There is no Armenian school in Milan, because
children and youth are few here. Only private courses of Armenian are
conducted on Saturdays in the Armenian House, sponsored by Armenian
Apostolic Church. But the private courses cannot replace the school.

Learning Armenian is very important for the Armenians of Italy. The
interest in learning Armenian is bigger among the third generation
of Armenians here. During the last 15 years the interest in Armenia
and everything connected with Armenians has become bigger among the
Armenians of Italy. The children of mixed marriages also want to
learn Armenian. The percentage of mixed marriages is very big here:
only one from ten is not mixed. In spite of the above-mentioned the
community is very unanimous. Though only about half of the Armenians,
living in Milan, are active, all of them are ready to unite and act
when it concerns to the big problems, i.e. in 1965 the Armenians of
Milan could organize a commemoration ceremony devoted to the victims
of the Armenian Genocide in the General Church of Milan.

In 2005 they organized an Apostolic Service in the Church of
St. Ambrogio. It became a tradition to have ceremonies here on April
24, every year. In this year’s ceremony took part the representatives
of all sister-churches and they all blamed Turkey for the committed
Genocide. If the same happened in Lebanon, it would not be so
interesting, but we are a very small community and it is a big victory
for us, declared Kekel Khachatrian. Another victory of the Armenians
of Milan is the building of the Apostolic Church here. The Catholic
Church didn’t allow building an Apostolic Church side-by-side with
St. Ambrogio Church. At last in 1958 the Armenian Apostolic Church
was built in a new place.

Artsakh Rebirth: Construction of the Hadrout Hospital, Schools, more

PRESS RELEASE
Hayastan All-Armenian Fund
Governmental Buiding 3, Yerevan, RA
Contact: Lusine Mnatsakanyan
Tel: 3741 56 0106
Fax: 3741 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: www.himnadram. org

April 26, 2007
Artsakh Rebirth: Construction of the Hadrout Hospital, Schools, Gas and
Water Pipelines Started

Starting from 2007, the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund has been implementing
large-scale projects in Hadrout region of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic.
Tenders have been announced for construction of the Togh-Hadrout gas
pipeline, the Mets Taghlar-Azokh-Drakhtik water pipeline and the Hakaku
village school. Reconstruction of the Togh village school and the Hadrout
regional hospital are in a tender preparation stage.
The repair of the Hadrout potable water supply system is well underway. From
the Archi spring catchments a 21.8 km pipeline will deliver potable water to
the city of Hadrout. The city wells and the daily water distribution
reservoir will also be repaired. Also, the Ishkhanaket river water will be
treated and filtered in settler to insure gravity flow water distribution to
villages of Mets Taghlar, Azokh and Drakhtik. Thus, more than 2700 people
from three villages will have regular water supply.
Gas supply in the region will start with the construction of the
Togh-Hadrout gas pipeline. The about 21 km pipeline will supply gas to
villages of Jrakous, Hosher, Aknaghbyur, Kyuratagh, Ukhtadzor, Tsaghkavank,
Pletonts, Melikashen and Aygestan, and will later connect these villages to
the main gas network in the republic.
On funds raised during the 2006 telethon and on donations from the Fund’s
US-western region affiliate a school will be constructed for the Hakaku
village. 2006 telethon donations will be spent for construction and heating
of the Togh village school. It’s furnishing will be supported by the Fund’s
Argentina affiliate.
The Hadrout regional hospital project is of utmost importance when it comes
to healthcare in the region. The run-down hospital building will be
renovated, the hospital’s drinking and sewage pipelines, the roof and the
electric wiring will be repaired, a heating system will be installed.
Project C.U.R.E, in coordination with the US western region affiliate of the
Hayastan All-Armenian Fund will donate medical equipment to the Hadrout
regional hospital, which will be great support for the only regional
hospital that currently is in a deplorable state. The Fund’s US western
region affiliate has already donated three ambulances to the hospital. There
used to be one ambulance attending to 12 thousand people living in the
region. Another ambulance was donated to the Togh village health care center
by the Argentina affiliate of the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund.
Projects to help boost agriculture are also primary for the development of
the Hadrout region. Agricultural technologies have been already ordered.
Agricultural developmental projects in Hadrout region in Karabakh will be
implemented following the Mardakert agricultural project model.

CR: Pallone Commemorates Genocide

[Congressional Record: April 23, 2007 (House)]
[Page H3767]
From the Congressional Record Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:cr23ap07-107]

NINETY-SECOND COMMEMORATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Ellison). Under a previous order of the
House, the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Pallone) is recognized for 5
minutes.
Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Speaker, I want to thank my colleagues on the
Republican side for agreeing to let me reclaim the time. I will try to
limit my time to less than 5 minutes.
Mr. Speaker, I rise this evening to commemorate the 92nd anniversary
of the Armenian genocide. As the first genocide of the 20th century, it
is morally imperative that we remember this atrocity and collectively
demand reaffirmation of this crime against humanity.
On April 24, 1915, 92 years ago tomorrow, that day marked the
beginning of the systematic and deliberate campaign of genocide
perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire. Over the following 8 years, 11/2
million Armenians were tortured and murdered, and more than one-half
million were forced from their homeland into exile. These facts are
indisputable, but to this day the U.S. Congress has never properly
recognized the Armenian genocide.
The historical record, Mr. Speaker, on the Armenian genocide is
unambiguous and well-documented with overwhelming evidence. The U.S.
Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire at the time, Henry Morgenthau,
protested the slaughter of the Armenians to the Ottoman leaders. In a
cable to the U.S. State Department on July 16, 1915, Ambassador
Morgenthau stated that, “A campaign of race extermination is in
progress.”
Mr. Speaker, if America is going to live up to the standards we set
for ourselves, and continue to lead the world in affirming human rights
everywhere, we need to finally stand up and recognize the tragic events
that began in 1915 for what they were: the systematic elimination of a
people.
Despite pleas by Members of Congress and the Armenian-American
community and recognition by much of the international community,
President Bush continues to avoid any clear references to the Armenian
genocide, while consistently opposing legislation marking this crime
against humanity. Instead, he has chosen to succumb to shameless
threats by the Government of Turkey. I strongly believe that Turkey’s
policy of denying the Armenian genocide gives warrant to those who
perpetrate genocide everywhere, because denial is the last stage of
genocide. If the cycle is to end, there must be accountability. And
just as we would not permit denying the Holocaust, we cannot accept
Turkey’s falsification of the facts of 1915.
Mr. Speaker, I must say that in the last few months the Turkish
Government has made every effort to try to prevent the Armenian
genocide resolution from coming to the floor of the House of
Representatives. But I just want to show why denial is such a bad thing
in a sense. Last week, I came to the floor and I pointed out that when
the U.N. wanted to do a project or an exhibit at the United Nations
headquarters talking about the genocide in Rwanda, because the Turkish
Government protested the inclusion of the Armenian genocide, the
Rwandan genocide never took place. There again, if you deny one
genocide, you end up denying or impacting the other.
And the fact of the matter is that when some of my colleagues say to
me, “Well, why do you need to bring up something that occurred 92
years ago,” I say, “Because by denying this, the Turkish Government
continues to perpetrate genocide or oppression of its minorities.
Just a few weeks ago, there was something in the New York Times about
how the Turkish Government continues to persecute the Kurdish minority.
Many Kurds have been killed, driven from their homelands in the same
way Armenians were. The Kurds happen to be a Muslim people, not a
Christian people. That doesn’t matter. The Turkish Government
consistently oppresses minorities. They refuse also to open their
borders with Armenia. They have actually had a blockade of Armenia in
placed for several years, which contributes to the economic instability
of Armenia.
So this is something that must be done. It must be accomplished, that
we recognize this genocide if it continues in various ways in Turkey
today.
The second thing I would point out is that the Turkish Government has
been basically hiring lobbyists for millions of dollars to go around
and tell Members of Congress that if they pass the genocide resolution,
there will be dire consequences: Turkey will not allow supplies to go
to U.S. troops in Iraq.

{time} 2220

They have actually taken to having Members of Congress called and
told that their own soldiers in Iraq might be threatened if they pass
the genocide resolution.
Well, again, this is the type of bullying that we, as a free
government, should not allow because bullying is essentially the same
thing that takes place when genocide takes place. Why should we give in
to the threats of a country that tries to bully our country over such
an important issue as the genocide?
Now, let me just mention, Mr. Speaker, to wrap up, that tomorrow
evening at 6:30 the Armenian Caucus, which I cochair, will host an
Armenian genocide commemoration event with the Armenian embassy, and I
hope that many of the Members will attend this.

____________________

Critics’ Forum Article – 4.21.07

Critics’ Forum
April 21, 2007

Film
Dark Forest of History: The Making of a Documentary
By Hovig Tchalian

A special edition DVD of the film, Dark Forest in the Mountains:
Surviving the Theater of Perpetual War, has recently been released by
Fugitive Studios. The DVD includes the documentary of the same name,
which recounts episodes in the Nagorno-Karabagh conflict and was
originally filmed in 1994. This re-mastered version of the original
DVD (the first re-release won the AFFMA Awards Jury Prize in 2002)
also includes additional footage, a journal of war photos, and a
brief but arresting digitally animated history of Armenia.

By far the most significant addition to the DVD, however, is the
documentary film, Hands and a Homeland, shot by the filmmaker, Roger
Kupelian, upon his return to Armenia a decade later, in 2004. The
new documentary includes interviews with people involved with and
affected by the war – soldiers, medics and surviving families with
whom Kupelian came in contact as an embedded journalist on the front
lines in 1994.

By their very nature, documentaries are often fragmented, episodic.
And Kupelian’s films are, in that respect, true to the genre. The
juxtaposition of the two films, in fact, acts as an additional
fragmentation of sorts, allowing the later film to serve as a gloss
on the earlier one. The result is a complex composite that
highlights both the strengths and weaknesses of Dark Forest, raising
in the process a number of important issues about the two films,
their subject matter, as well as the documentary form itself.

The 1994 film focuses primarily on the origins of the Nagorno-
Karabagh conflict. It also documents the daily lives of the soldiers
and families struggling through the protracted war precipitated in
the early 1990’s between the neighboring nations of Armenia and
Azerbaijan. We see original footage of the war as well
as "portraits" of soldiers and commanders, medics and heroes,
families and children. Interviews with scholars and historians and a
narrative voiceover provide additional explanation and commentary.

The first few episodes of the 1994 film are by far the most
episodic. Together, they present the immediate background to the
conflict. (The separate animated history places it in its larger
historical context.) They also weave in several portraits of
soldiers and commanding officers, including one of Garo Kahejian, a
leader of a group of men who is reported as having been killed in
battle, but only after being presented as, ironically, himself
the "grandson of Genocide survivors."

This final portrait is woven in somewhat less than deftly,
unfortunately, leaving the impression that, in this case at least,
what matter is less the story of Garo than its historical
antecedent. Without immediate recourse to the animated history of
Armenia, the viewer is surprised, almost taken aback, by the sudden
introduction of the Genocide question at this point in the film. The
sudden shift in focus fails to do justice to the historical irony of
Garo’s tale, allowing it to be engulfed by the enormity of the
subject instead of presenting it as one element (albeit an important
one) in the film’s larger trajectory.

The rest of the 1994 film and its 2004 epilogue offer a direct, and
by and large more compelling, response to this initial moment of
crisis. In essence, the films together try to answer the implicit
question raised by the first – "How does one begin to speak of the
Genocide?"

One sequence in the episode entitled "the great game," for example,
follows a group of soldiers planning a campaign. Kupelian carefully
describes the struggles and vicissitudes of battle that help
illuminate the implications of the larger conflict. Another simple
but effective sequence presents an interview with a medic, who
suggests that the battle for Karabagh is meant to avoid another
forced exodus of Armenians, like the ones from Van, Mush, and
Erzerum, in the early twentieth century.

In perhaps the most effective sequence of all, we watch and listen to
a father recount how, after several returns from battle unscathed,
his son playfully accused him of having misled him about the war and
gone off to spend time with friends instead. The father goes on to
say that his son’s curiosity about the war soon led him, along with
his cousin, to put on their fathers’ clothes and sneak off to the
battlefront.

Perhaps better than any other sequence in Dark Forest, this retelling
of a true story highlights in almost novelistic fashion the difficult
vagaries of the conflict: a son who jokes that his soldier father is
deceiving him then proceeds to assume his father’s identity and take
matters into his own hands by heading to the battlefront. The
episode illustrates in uncanny fashion both the father’s and son’s
depth of commitment to a cause and the occasional absurdity of the
war that united them in it. What is more, the audience is allowed to
take in the story unfiltered, unadorned. To his credit, Kupelian
films the father seated alone in the backseat of a car, the lens
focused on his face, telling his tale as he knows it.

Sequences such as these help make the second half of the 1994 film
more convincing than the first. In the second half, the film raises
issues more skillfully and less intrusively than in the first, less
as weighty questions that hang over the film or intrude at
inopportune moments than as the its true subtext, haunting its
narrative like the duduk music that permeates so much of its span.

The 2004 film presents a "where are they now" series of episodes in
which, during individual interviews, the people introduced in the
first film comment on the war, its significance, and its effect on
their lives. Most important of all, the 2004 film presents two
related issues that help clarify and begin to answer the questions
raised by the 1994 film – the theme of "perpetual war" and its
antecedent notion of a perpetual struggle for existence.

We are told by one of the soldiers, for instance, that the 1994 truce
between Armenia and Karabagh is no more than an illusory victory and
that the Nagorno-Karabagh region cannot be truly independent so long
as nations do not recognize its right to exist. And historian Levon
Marashlian suggests that without its "symbiotic" relationship with
Karabagh, Armenia would not survive. He adds that the historical
example of Nakhichevan serves as a solemn reminder of what can happen
to Karabagh, and by implication, Armenia itself. The region, which
lies immediately south of present-day Armenia, was carved out by
Stalin and, as a consequence, lost its entire population of
Armenians, which at one time made up 40% of the people living there.
Finally, Marashlian makes the explicit link between the Nagorno-
Karabagh conflict and the Armenian Genocide of the early twentieth
century – by killing one and a half million Armenians and thereby
bringing the nation to the brink of extinction, he explains, the
Ottoman Turks precipitated the desperate struggle for existence that
has raged ever since. The comment effectively "closes the loop" with
the one made by the medic in the 1994 film – that the struggle for
Nagorno-Karabagh is the response to the forced exodus of Armenians
from Van, Mush and Erzerum.

Dark Forest in the Mountains raises long-standing and difficult
questions about the struggle for independence, for family and for
survival and deals with them effectively and convincingly. The film
occasionally suffers from awkward moments but is generally well-paced
and features skillful editing, narration, sub-titling, and
direction. Perhaps the next iteration (in 2014?) will blend the two
films together and find an even stronger narrative thread. But until
then, the present version more than lives up to its name. (A brief
mention in the DVD’s animated history explains the somewhat
mysterious origin of the film’s title – Dark Forest in the Mountains
is a loose translation of "Nagorno-Karabagh.") Despite occasionally
losing its way, the latest version of Kupelian’s film nonetheless
skillfully navigates the dark forest of history and emerges intact.

Roger Kupelian is a visual effects artist whose credits include Lord
of the Rings and the recent Flags of Our Fathers. He is currently
working on a docudrama about the legend of Vartan Mamigonian.

All Rights Reserved: Critics Forum, 2007

Hovig Tchalian holds a PhD in English literature from UCLA. He has
edited several journals and also published articles of his own.

You can reach him or any of the other contributors to Critics’ Forum
at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
in this series are available online at To sign
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