Paper: Ex-Minister Oskanian To Be Deprived Of Immunity?

PAPER: EX-MINISTER OSKANIAN TO BE DEPRIVED OF IMMUNITY?

PanARMENIAN.Net
September 25, 2012 – 11:51 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – According to Hraparak daily, Armenian National
Assembly may discuss Prosecutor General Aghvan Hovsepyan’s involvement
in former minister Vartan Oskanian’s possible deprivation of immunity.

“This doesn’t however, imply that Oskanian will be arrested, he will be
simply deprived of immunity to face the National Security Service as a
“defendant” at this stage. As for the Prosecutor General’s involvement
in the discussion, it is likely to take place October 1, with 20-minute
speeches by Hovsepyan and Oskanian to be followed by a discussion,”
the daily says.

Parliament speaker Hovik Abrahamyan will be tasked with ensuring MP
votes for the Prosecutor General’s efforts to yield tangible results,
the paper reports.

Over 53% Of Armenians Vote

OVER 53% OF ARMENIANS VOTE

Vestnik Kavkaza
Sept 24 2012
Russia

342,138 people (53.31% of voters) have voted in five regions of
Armenia, News Armenia reports.

According to reports at 8 pm, 539 polling stations closed down. Voting
of local autonomies will be concluded in 18 hours. The protocol on
election results will be ready on the 5th day of vote.

Armenia held local votes in five regions on September 23. There were
3147 candidates involved. 521 candidates wanted to become heads of
communities. 176 of them are independent, 241 of the Republican Party,
69 of Prosperous Armenia, 21 of Dashnaktsutyun, 6 of Orinats Yerkir
and 2 per the Communist Party and Democracy and the Labour Party.

Heritage, Democratic Party, National Identification Union, Armenian
National Movement had 1 candidate each.

2626 candidates ran for the Council of Elders. 1527 of them were
independent, 612 of the Republican Party, 355 of Prosperous Armenia,
65 of Dashnaktsutyun and 41 of Orinats Yerkir.

Armenia Not In Freedom House Annual Report

ARMENIA NOT IN FREEDOM HOUSE ANNUAL REPORT

news.am
September 24, 2012 | 22:56

YEREVAN. – The Freedom House NGO published its annual report which
estimates internet and digital media in 47 states.

The report has no information on Armenia, however, it states that in
some cases there were problems with the Internet in Armenia.

According to information on Georgia, telecommunication structure is not
sufficiently developed there. To note, the report divided the states
into three parts. Free states are Estonia, US, Germany, Australia,
Hungary, Italy, Georgia. Partially free are Nigeria, South Korea,
Uganda, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Kazakhstan. Among not free are Thailand,
Pakistan, Belarus, Uzbekistan, Syria, China, Cuba, Iran.

Cultural And Archeological Heritage Seminars For School Children In

CULTURAL AND ARCHEOLOGICAL HERITAGE SEMINARS FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN IN EREBUNI MUSEUM

armradio.am
24.09.2012 12:50

Starting from 25 September 2012, thematic seminars for school children
on cultural and archeological heritage will be launched in “Erebuni”
Historical & Archaeological Museum-Reserve in the context of an EU
funded project.

Four schools from Yerevan and one school from the region are included
in the first cycle of the seminars. Seminars include in total 10
classes and are addressed to school children aged 12-15.

The “Cultural Heritage: preserve the past for future” thematic
seminar will not only introduce the schoolchildren to the general
concept of heritage, but will also suggest a simplified course about
special concepts in the sphere of heritage, emphasizing the need
for appreciating heritage and transferring it from one generation
to another.

The second thematic seminar will concentrate on preservation of
archaeological sites and especially on awareness and preservation
problems of Erebuni castle, which is situated in the dense urban
environment of Yerevan.

The seminars are organized in the framework of the “Regional
Cooperation for Culture Heritage Development” project, implemented
under the European Commission Eastern Partnership Culture Programme,
in cooperation with “ICOMOS/Armenia” NGO and the project implementing
partner “Erebuni” Historical & Archaeological Museum-Reserve in
cooperation with the Ministry of Education and Science.

Votes Don’t Belong To Oligarchs

VOTES DON’T BELONG TO OLIGARCHS

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 10:18:04 – 24/09/2012

Member of Parliament Hrant Bagratyan, ANC parliamentary group, former
prime minister of Armenia, says the government is unable to solve the
issues raised during the meeting of Serzh Sargsyan and the ministers.

Lragir.am asked him whether the government will be able to fight
kickbacks and corruption. Bagratyan says it will not because the
mechanism of state procurement is designed for big companies, while
the procurement legislation does not involve small and medium-sized
businesses in procurement. Third, the government and its head are
wedged in corruption schemes.

Bagratyan could not remember a single example of an attempt to fight
corruption.

As to possible punitive actions, Hrant Bagratyan does not rule out
some. “The electoral situation may force Serzh Sargsyan to carry out
certain reforms. He needs votes, which is the only thing that belongs
to people and not the oligarchs,” Hrant Bagratyan says.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/country27461.html

Accept Armenian Syrians With Arms Wide Open

ACCEPT ARMENIAN SYRIANS WITH ARMS WIDE OPEN

Story from Lragir.am News:

Published: 13:24:54 – 24/09/2012

The government should define some privileges for the Armenian Syrian
businessmen for them to come here and establish businesses, says
Diaspora Armenian businessmen Vahagn Hovnanian.

Hovnanian noted that Armenian Syrians are passing through hard times
and besides the government, the Armenian people should also help them.

He says that the rich people need to think how to help them for our
compatriots not to leave for other countries. “We need to accept them
with the arms wide open”, says Hovnanian.

The businessman says that he offers jobs to the Armenian Syrians, he
is ready to provide businessmen with territories, but no one has yet
turned to him. He noted that he applied to the ministry of Diaspora,
but no request has been sent to him yet.

He noted that the Armenian Syrians have not yet decided whether they
want to stay in Armenia or not, so they don’t hurry establishing a
business here.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/economy27468.html

Le Soutien De La Conference Des Eglises Europeennes Au Peuple Armeni

LE SOUTIEN DE LA CONFERENCE DES EGLISES EUROPEENNES AU PEUPLE ARMENIEN.
Stephane

armenews.com
lundi 24 septembre 2012

La reunion annuelle du Comite central de la Conference des Eglises
Europeennes (CEC ou KEK) s’est tenue du 12 au 16 septembre a l’Academie
orthodoxe de theologie de Chania en Crete.

Le thème principal de cette session etait la crise economique mondiale
et ses effets sur les populations. La question du chômage des jeunes,
de la regulation du système bancaire en Europe, de l’accueil des
migrants et de la xenophobie qui s’exprime dans de nombreuses societes
ont aussi ete abordees lors des diverses seances du Comite central
de la CEC.

A l’issue des travaux, plusieurs resolutions ont ete votees par
les representants des Eglises membres de la conference. L’essentiel
du message delivre a cette occasion consistait en une adresse aux
autorites de l’Union Europeenne les invitant a prendre en consideration
les plus vulnerables dans leurs societes. Une attention particulière a
ete accordee a la situation economique en Grèce et a la pauperisation
qui atteint toute la societe grecque.

En reponse au message qui leur avait ete adresse par sa Saintete
Karekine II, le Comite central de la CEC a exprime sa reprobation
devant l’amnistie accordee par le president de l’Azerbaïdjan a
l’assassin de l’officier armenien Gourgen Margaryan et assure le
peuple armenien de sa sympathie et de son soutien. Il est a noter que
la prochaine assemblee generale de cette organisation ~cumenique aura
lieu a Budapest du 3 au 8 Juillet 2013. Le thème du rassemblement sera
: ” Et maintenant, qu’esperez vous ? : la CEC et sa mission dans une
Europe en mutation “.

La Conference des Eglises europeennes est une union de plus 120 Eglises
: Anglicane, Orthodoxes Chalcedoniennes et Orthodoxes Orientales
(dont l’Eglise armenienne), Protestantes et Vieille-Catholique et de 40
associations confessionnelles de tous les pays d’Europe occidentale et
orientale. L’Eglise Catholique bien que n’etant pas membre de la CEC
suit ses travaux grâce a la presence d’observateurs. Fondee en 1959,
la CEC a ses bureaux a Geneve, Bruxelles et Strasbourg.

Centre d’information du diocèse de France de l’Eglise armenienne

Mikhaïl Simonyan, violoniste engagé

Ouest-France
jeudi 20 septembre 2012
prebotte Edition

Mikhaïl Simonyan, violoniste engagé

Nouvelle star du violon, il se produit ce soir et vendredi soir à
l’Opéra. Un virtuose pas comme les autres.

Pour son premier concert en France avec un orchestre, Mikhaïl Simonyan
sera ce soir avec l’Orchestre symphonique de Bretagne. Le virtuose
russe a calqué une partie de son programme sur son premier album, paru
chez Deutsche Grammophon, la référence : Khatchaturian et Barber !
Etonnant. Il ne jouera pas Barber à Rennes. Les jeunes virtuoses sont
habituellement pressés de se distinguer dans les concertos de Brahms
ou Tchaïkovski. « Pas moi,répond-il, parce que Khatchaturian et
Barber, ce sont les deux côtés de moi-même. » Et, ajoute-t-il, « je ne
suis pas seulement un violoniste, je suis d’abord une personne. »

Anticonformiste

Le jeune homme a de la personnalité. « Je suis né en Russie mais j’ai
été élevé dans le respect de la culture arménienne. Je sais que la
France soutient l’Arménie. Il m’a donc semblé normal de jouer ici le
concerto de Khatchaturian… » S’il s’affirme formé à l’école de
violon russe, son professeur ayant été élève du grand David Oïstrakh,
Mikhaïl Simonyan assure que son approche de ce concerto est très
différente. « Pour moi, il est riche de notre musique traditionnelle.
»

L’anticonformisme de ce jeune virtuose ne s’arrête pas là. Depuis deux
ans, il soutient, parfois de sa présence, l’école « Beethoven, no
bullets » en Afghanistan. « Je voulais aller jouer pour les soldats
américains, on m’a dit non, on m’a conseillé une action moins
dangereuse. Il y a 400 élèves inscrits. Quand ils disent merci, c’est
du fond du coeur. Mon frère est dans les forces spéciales, en
Tchétchénie. » Ces engagements ne l’empêchent évidemment pas de
travailler Stravinsky, Nielsen ou Szymanovski. Des compositeurs qui
lui sont chers.

Gérard PERNON.

Jeudi 20septembre et vendredi 21 septembre à 20 h, à l’Opéra. Au
programme : Khatchaturian, Strasnoy et Rimski-Korsakov. Rens. 02 99 27
52 75.

Ararat in Armenia? Apple Maps turns sour

The Age (Melbourne, Australia)
September 22, 2012 Saturday
First Edition

Ararat in Armenia? Apple Maps turns sour

by ASHER MOSES AND LUCY BATTERSBY

APPLE’s new map application for iPhones and iPads has been panned and
derided on the first days of its release for incomplete directions,
poor location ability and basic mistakes.

Users have already found roads, businesses and even entire towns such
as Mansfield, Goulburn, Kiama, and Cairns in the wrong places.

Apple released its new operating system – called iOS 6 – this week,
which removes Google Maps from devices and replaces it with Apple’s
own offering based on mapping data from TomTom.

The new iPhone 5 comes with iOS 6 installed and existing devices can
be updated at any time.

In Melbourne, users have found Apple’s map ignores the city’s toll
roads, instead sending drivers on long diversions.

“This is especially disastrous if you want to get directions to
Melbourne Airport from the east or the south-east, both of which rely
on toll roads for a quick and direct route to [and from] the airport.
Using my house as a starting point, Maps currently sends me on a route
that covers an extra 15 kilometres, turning what should be a 45km
journey into a 60km journey in order to avoid tolls,” iPhone owner
Matt Hui said.

Another reader, Charles Edge, said there was no way to select toll
roads on the Apple map.

“On a specialised GPS, routes and road types can be selected. Under
the Apple system, we get three alternatives, all of which bypass toll
roads and we can’t find any way to make it put them back,” he said.

A search for the regional town of Ararat sent The Age straight to
Ararat, Armenia, without offering an option to view the closer
Victorian town.

And new 3D images are technically impressive, but visually
disappointing. Roads and railway tracks appear to end at right angles
at tunnel entrances while buildings, cars, people and trees have
freakish angular qualities.

Melbourne’s Federation Square comes up cleanly, however.

Compared with the Google map it replaced, Apple’s has no street view,
limited traffic information and the most basic public transport
information (no timetables).

Apple told The Age that its Maps app was “a major initiative and we
are just getting started with it”.

“We are continuously improving it and as Maps is a cloud-based
solution the more people that use it the better it will get,” a
spokesman said.

Blurring of Cultures at Louvre’s Islamic Art Wing

The New York Times
September 22, 2012 Saturday
The International Herald Tribune

Blurring of Cultures at Louvre’s Islamic Art Wing

By SOUREN MELIKIAN

PARIS — Hundreds of works of art from infinitely diverse cultures
lumped together under the banner of Islam went on view Wednesday in
the newly opened Islamic art wing at the Musée du Louvre.

In row upon row of glass cases mainly arranged on two enormous levels,
bronze vessels, ceramics, glass, the occasional bit of ivory and more,
succeed each other, often juxtaposing the art of very different lands.

In the early periods, the art of the Arab Near East, mainly of Iraq,
Syria and Egypt, is thrown together with that of the Iranian world
(the present states of Iran and Afghanistan, including the cities of
Bokhara and Samarkand, historically at the heart of early Persian
culture in Islamic times). The logical solution, a display reflecting
the main cultural areas with a chronological progression within each
one, was rejected. The result is often a visual blur and intellectual
confusion. Sheer masterpieces, like the casket inlaid with silver and
gold from 14th-century Iran, perhaps the finest in the world, do not
sufficiently stand out.

On the plus side, scores of works of art out of sight for decades are
now visible. This includes early ceramics excavated long ago in Iran,
at Shush, known as Susa to the Romans.

Some of the most important Arab bronze vessels in the world, inlaid
with silver and copper in the early decades of the 13th century, or
silver and gold in the hundred years or so that followed, can be seen
once again.

A famous basin commissioned for the Ayyubid Sultan al-‘Adil Abu Bakr
(1238-40), which was designed by Ahmad ibn ‘Umar ”known as
al-Dhaki,” as the signature stipulates, should not be missed. His
name followed on another object by the qualifier al-Mawsili is a
reminder that Mawsil — Mosul in modern usage — is the stopping place
where artists fleeing the Mongol invasion of Iran in 1219-21
introduced the aesthetics and technique of their homeland.

The equally famous basin signed by Da’ud ibn Salma al-Mawsili in the
year 650 of the Muslim calendar (1252-53), transferred from the Musée
des Arts Décoratifs is also there. The mastery of the figural patterns
reveals designers trained in pictorial ateliers although, sadly, not a
single Arab manuscript of the same high order survives.

The hugely important jar with scrolling motifs commissioned for Sultan
Salah ad-Din Yusuf (1237-60) is closely related to a basin signed by
Ahmad ibn ‘Umar. Here too, the source is to be sought in the
illumination practiced by pictorial ateliers.

Other Arab bronzes with inscriptions in Arabic and Latin conjure
memories of places where East and West met.

A ewer from Arab Spain in the shape of a peacock carries an Arabic
signature identifying it as ”the work of the Christian King’s
slave.” Underneath, an inscription in Roman capitals proclaims ”Opus
Salomonis Erat” naming the artist, probably called Sulayman, the
Arabic form of the biblical name.

Most intriguingly, a large basin is inscribed in Arabic and French to
the name of Hugues de Lusignan, King of Cyprus (1324-59). Its style
points to a Syrian master. Why a ruler from the Franco-Armenian
dynasty of Lusignan chose an Arab artist is a mystery. ”Uk min
Lazinian,” as the Arabic inscription calls Hugues, aggressively
claims — in Arabic only — to stand ”at the vanguard of the troops
of the Kings of the Franks (the West Europeans).” Two escutcheons
were engraved with the arms of Jerusalem after the basin was
completed, pointing to hopes of conquest — by then Jerusalem had long
been wrested from the European crusaders by Salah ad-Din, who entered
the city in 1187.

Other shattering conflicts are echoed in the Iranian collections, the
richest in the Louvre display.

A glazed ceramic tile once formed part of a frieze that ran in the
throne room of a palace at Takht-e Soleyman. Two fragments dug up by
German archaeologists, who did not mention what remained of the
inscription, allowed me to show in 1984 that the tile bought by the
Musée des Arts Décoratifs in 1899, like many other intact tiles
scattered across the world, came from the palace. All carry Persian
verses from the Shah-Nameh, the Book of Kings, written in the 10th
century. The choice of the verses revealed a daring act of cultural
resistance by an occupied nation.

The Iranian literati running the administrative apparatus of their
ancient land devastated by the Mongol invasion persuaded the ruler
Abaqa Khan (1266-81) to have his summer palace erected at Takht-e
Soleyman. Against architectural logic, it partly followed the ground
plan of the ruins of what had been the most important palatial and
religious complex of pre-Islamic Iran. Building on or along shattered
foundations is tricky, but this symbolized the revival of Ancient
Iran. The initiative was taken by Abaqa’s state secretary, At Malek
Joveyni, driven by an acute sense of history — he later wrote a major
history of Iran — and inspired by Nasir ad-Dîn Tusî, a Sufi with
Ismaili leanings.

Abaqa’s successor, Teküder, was converted to Islam by Sufi masters,
took the name Ahmad, and mounted the throne in 1281. At Malek
commissioned the frieze of revetment tiles in which some Shah-Nameh
verses adapted by him to the second-person singular boldly seem to
address the resident. Enraged, the Mongol establishment slayed Sultan
Ahmad.

Elsewhere, entire panel revetments from Ottoman Turkey speak of other
upheavals. The 16th-century glazed tiles were ripped off in the late
19th century from mosques and palatial structures erected in Istanbul,
a city that had been the capital of Byzantine Greece until the Turks
conquered it in 1453. Unfortunately, some imposing panels are slapped
in a row on the same partition as in some unfinished construction
site.

The same principle inspired the display of magnificent 14th-century
doors removed from Cairo mosques.

Scores of other beautiful works of art are likewise lined up by
category, some illustrating themes. Headings like ”Figuration and
Narrative in the Eastern Lands of Islam” or ”Writing in the Mamluk
and Mongol Domains” are too broad to be really helpful.

Wall texts can be misleading. One reads, in the museum’s own English
version, ”At the first sight the works in the Department of Islamic
Art tell us very little about the function or the religious or secular
context of their use.”

Walking from an Iranian 13th-century ceramic revetment tile of a
mihrab indicating the direction of Mecca, to 14th- and 15th-century
Egyptian mosque lamps, the public may wonder whether those who wrote
these lines seriously considered the objects.

A number of labels are even factually wrong. In a glass case with
ewers from the Indian subcontinent, a small brass bowl labeled
”Eastern Iran or India, circa A.D. 1600” is typical of Western Iran
in the late 16th century.

Elsewhere, two ceramic ewers seen side by side are called ”verseuses
tripodes.” One, however, which is Chinese, has no legs but a circular
base. The truly tripod piece, which is Iranian, is argued to ”owe its
profile to the Chinese model.” In fact, the flaring cylindrical body
of the Iranian vessel, with a tubular spout rising at an approximately
45-degree angle, reproduces a model known from metalwork in early
Islamic Iran.

An admirable page torn away from an early 15th-century manuscript from
the Herat school induced the label writer to speculate about the
nature of the manuscript — the complete romance of Homay and Homayun
by the 14th-century poet Khaju Kermani, or an anthology? The former,
almost certainly. Headings cut out from other pages are variously
pasted around the painting. They refer to chapters of the romance,
which the label fails to mention.

A famous bowl from northwestern Iran engraved in the 11th or 12th
century with the figure of a hare raised on its legs amid scrolls is
signed in Persian, using the standard Arabic loan-word ‘amal, or
”opus,” ‘amal-e Bu Taleb, ”the work of Bu Taleb.” The name is
corrected to ”[A]bu Taleb” by the label writer, presumably unaware
that Bu Taleb is not incorrect Arabic but follows Persian usage at
that time.

The labeling and the display alike betray insufficient familiarity
with the culture and history of profoundly different civilizations.
The problem is not unusual in Western institutions dealing with
”Islamic art,” a 19th-century construct. If art specialists shoved
together all things Buddhist from Nepal to Japan, Cambodia and
Indonesia, they would be laughed out of court.

URL:

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/22/arts/22iht-melikian22.html