International School Of Young Astronomers To Open At Byurakan Observ

INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF YOUNG ASTRONOMERS TO OPEN AT BYURAKAN OBSERVATORY IN ARMENIA

ARMINFO
Monday, September 10, 14:38

International School of Young Astronomers will open at Byurakan
Observatory in Armenia on September 15 and continue till September 23.

The school will bring together nearly 35 students and young
astronomers from Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Egypt, Iran and other
countries. Prominent scientists from various countries have been
invited to Armenia to deliver lectures and hold practical exercises.

Among them are Jayant Narlicar – astrophysicist (India), and Laureates
of Viktor Hambartsoumyan Prize Jaan Einasto (Estonia), Gagik Israelyan
(Spain), and Igor Noviko (Russia).

The International Summer School at Byurakan has been held once in
two years since 2006.

Artsakh Youth Calls For Condemning Axe-Killer’s Release

ARTSAKH YOUTH CALLS FOR CONDEMNING AXE-KILLER’S RELEASE

TERT.AM
10.09.12

The youth organizations of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Republic
have issued a statement, condemning the Azerbaijani authorities for
glorifying army officer Ramil Safarov’s brutal murder committed on
ethnic grounds.

They express deep concerns over the decision to extradite and pardon
the axe-killer who hacked the sleeping Armenian officer, Gurgen
Margaryan, to death in Budapest back in 2004.

The youth organizations say that they have been closely following
different states and international organizations’ reaction to the
crime over the past week before voicing their position. Hailing the
world countries and international organizations’ criticism of Hungary
and Azerbaijan and considering condemnatory statements not enough for
preventing future tragedies, they call for international efforts (1) to
suspend collaboration with Azerbaijani organizations (governmental and
non-governmental), (2) to stop selling weapons to the country and (3)
to establish or strengthen cooperation with the society and government
bodies of Nagorno-Karabakh in an effort to guarantee the country’s
security and the protection of its population’s fundamental rights.

Families In Shinuhayr Get Real Medicine Foundation Support

FAMILIES IN SHINUHAYR GET REAL MEDICINE FOUNDATION SUPPORT
by Nairy Ghazourian

Published: Monday September 10, 2012

Real Medicine volunteers with locals in Shinuhayr.

Shinuhayr, Armenia – “You give but little when you give of your
possessions. It is when you give of yourself that give you truly”
said the Lebanese American poet Kahlil Gibran.

This adage holds true for my good friend Shant Minas, a long-time
supporter and advocate of Real Medicine Foundation (RMF’s) work in
Armenia and now his circle of friends who are here with us not only
to give of their possessions but also of themselves and their time
to the most destitute families in Shinuhayr, Armenia.

As I was preparing to depart for Armenia, Shant Minas phoned me one
night and said: “Nairy jan- a group of my friends and I will be there
around the same time as you and we’re planning to go to Tatev, Syunik.

Tell me, what can we do for Shinuhayr? The guys are ready to do what
it takes.” Touched and inspired by Shant’s request, I contacted RMF’s
project coordinator on the ground, Stella Arzumanyan and asked for
a list of most needed items for the clinic and the families. In her
reply, Stella’s unequivocal recommendation was FOOD. The families
need food Nairy jan- She said. Food is very expensive these days and
the majority of socially disadvantaged families usually have four to
six kids and perishable food would be most appreciated and valued by
them and the children.

So FOOD it is we said.

In the early morning hours on August 12, I met Shant and the rest of
the group in front of the famous “Shawerma” restaurant on Sayat Nova
street in Yerevan. Our van accommodated nine, and the van before us
seated the rest of our group; five young men from San Francisco. On
our way to Syunik, we made our two famous stops at Khor Virab,
then Noravank. Of course, not to deviate from our famous Armenian
tradition, 30-minutes post Noravank, we stopped at an ethnic restaurant
on the river and broke bread, toasting to life, friendships and to the
“resurrection of a new and prosperous Armenia.” The spirits were full
of hope and passion. We shared stories and ideas of how each one of us
in our own unique way can help and add value to the motherland. With
such high spirits, we arrived in Goris around 9pm and checked into
the Mina hotel.

Now, it was time to get down to business and ask the group for
their heartfelt donations. Within ten minutes, Shant Minas and Armen
Davoodian collected $815.00 equivalent to 335,000 Drams. Within minutes
thereafter, RMF’s coordinator Stella was at our door to pick me up to
go purchase the food, have it packed and delivered to the Shinuhayr
clinic to be distributed the next day by these Good Samaritan friends
of RMF.

We spent two and a half hours at the supermarket in Goris that night.

The amount raised allowed us to purchase 1.5 months’ food supply for
30 most vulnerable families. Each bag contained two large cans of lard
(yough), four (1.5 L) bottles of sunflower oil, a large bag of rice,
pasta, vermicelli, lentil, barley, granulated sugar and sugar cubes.

Within minutes, we had taken over the entire market. Boxes and cases
were being opened to accommodate our needs. The locals that came in to
shop were looking in amazement and suddenly the talk of the town late
at night became: “They are moving the supermarket to the hospital!”

People offered to help and within two hours we had 30 large yellow
bags, one for each family ready to be delivered to the clinic. We
hired two taxies and Stella took care of the rest.

Early the next morning, after the most delicious and organic
breakfast of eggs, cheeses and home-made bread and raspberry jam,
we headed to Shinuhayr’s clinic. We were greeted by the staff and
designated members of the 30 families. The clinic’s head physician
thanked RMF and friends of RMF for all their support throughout the
past 3 years and emphasized the impact RMF is making in Shinuhayr and
its surrounding seven communities. One of our group members, Edwin
Babadjanian, an endodentist by profession was interested to find out
about the dental services available to the community and was saddened
to hear that dental care was completely unavailable until nine months
ago when ARS donated a dental chair with minimal supplies. Today,
few who can afford to pay for their services are able to receive
minimal care. However, the lack of running water at the clinic, a
fully equipped dental office and funds make it impossible to provide
services to the community at large, especially children.

As Dr. Babadjanian leaned over to lift a yellow bag to personally give
to the first family in line, he was emerged in deep thoughts trying to
figure out how he can help the dental health situation in Shinuhayr…

next were Shara Nazarian and his lovely wife Suzan greeting the next
family in line. Each person in the group took time to speak to the
family members, exchange their thoughts and engage in the experience
of making a difference in someone’s life that truly needs it.

The families were very happy and many of them were in tears as they
expressed their gratitude. As we prepared to say our good- byes a
middle aged woman, a beneficiary of RMF’s monthly stipend for medicine
approached me, held my hand and with tears and prayers on her lips
thanked us for supporting her healthcare needs. Inspired and touched,
we headed back to our van.

As we drove away from the clinic, there was still silence in the van.

Everyone reflected on their experience. They felt how each and every
single one of them, in their own small or big way were able to put
a smile on the face of a person in need. Aside from their monetary
donations to supply the food, these young men and women gave of
themselves and their time sowing seeds of kindness. But most of all,
they gave Hope. And Hope is what inspires and keeps the candle burning.

On behalf of the Real Medicine Foundation, I’d like to thank Shant
and his brave and kind circle of friends for touching the lives of so
many in Shinuhayr and igniting the flame of hope among its people. And
HOPE… is a good thing.

“You give but little when you give of your possessions. It is when
you give of yourself that give you truly” said the Lebanese American
poet Kahlil Gibran.

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-09-10-families-in-shinuhayr-get-real-medicine-foundation-support-

Armenian Children’s Choir Back From Japan Tour (Video)

ARMENIAN CHILDREN’S CHOIR BACK FROM JAPAN TOUR (VIDEO)

10.09.12

After a 40-day concert tour in 18 cities and towns of Japan, the
Little Singers of Armenia are back home.

At a news conference on Monday, their artistic director, Tigran
Hekekya, said the choir’s concert program was devoted to the 20th
anniversary of the Armenian-Japanese diplomatic relations and the
500th anniversary of Armenia’s printing art, as well as UNESCO’s
decision to declare Yerevan a 2012 World Book Capital.

“We received the invitation from the Min-On organizations which
annually arranges 1,000 concerts. They involve only those foreign
musicians and choirs which, apart from being internationally acclaimed,
rank higher than Japanese performers. The purpose is to enable them
to learn more,” he said, adding that the organization has 8,000 choirs.

Hekekyan noted that their concerts, held in Japan’s best concert-halls,
always met a crowded audience.

“We had 16 concerts and six meetings with two different choirs. It
was a big honor for their choirs, as they themselves admitted. We
had taken six Japanese songs, and the children ran the concerts in
Japanese, introducing the song and the author,” he added.

The maestro further shared his impressions of the Japanese reception
and the time spent in the country.

“We crossed the country from north to south twice for conducting the
concerts. In addition, the children toured the country. We had many
meetings with the local choirs,” he added.

The young singers attending the news conference also spoke of their
impressions, focusing particularly on the Japanese hospitality.

“The long tour was a good experience for us, and we managed to
overcome [the difficulties] also thanks to the Japanese people’s
attitude. They were very warm to us,” said Hripsime Muradyan, one of
the young singers.

Hasmik Muradyan, choir member, stressed the importance of the
opportunity to get to know the highly developed Japanese culture.

Hekekyan said at the end that the very costly event was made possible
thanks to the hosting country which covered all their expenses,
including insurance.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2012/09/10/little-singers/

Hye Votes Campaign Kick-Off Draws Over One Hundred Volunteers

Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
September 10, 2012

Contact: William Bairamian
Tel: 818-500-1918

HYE VOTES CAMPAIGN KICK-OFF DRAWS OVER ONE HUNDRED VOLUNTEERS

GLENDALE – The Hye Votes Campaign Kick-Off officially opened its doors
to the public on Saturday with a successful event that drew over a
hundred volunteers from the community ready to hit the streets and
register voters in the weeks before Election Day on November 6. After
a short introduction by Hye Votes executive director Elen Asatryan,
Community Outreach Coordinator Talar Malakian and Volunteer
Coordinator Ara Karamian prepared the new volunteers with information
on voter registration best practices. While the Hye Votes office was
abuzz with the sound of incoming calls and phone bankers answering
questions, young and old volunteers from throughout the Los Angeles
area grabbed clipboards, pens, and registration forms before leaving
to register new voters.

`The Armenian American community is already one of the most active in
the United States and its strongest base is in Southern California,’
noted Asatryan. `Hye Votes will be tapping into the even greater
potential of our community to further develop our role as engaged and
motivated citizens in the American civic process.’

Hye Votes was established to achieve the following goals: to
significantly increase the numbers of registered voters; to create
public awareness regarding the importance of civic engagement and the
electoral process; to provide voters with comprehensive nonpartisan
information about the contests on their ballots; and, to encourage
civic engagement and volunteerism by partnering with local non-profit
organizations and student groups.

Those interested in becoming involved may contact Ara at 818-533-8683
or at [email protected]. The office is located at 211 W. Chestnut St,
on the third floor of the Karamanoukian Glendale Youth Center in
Glendale, CA.

The HyeVotes Campaign was launched by the Armenian National Committee
of America-Western Region in 2012, as a region-wide, non-partisan
initiative to engage community members in the electoral process. The
HyeVotes efforts, in coalition with a network of non-profit
organizations, student groups, and community members, are intended to
register and encourage the community to vote in the November 6 General
Election while also serving as a source for voter information.

The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the
largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots advocacy
organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination
with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the
Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country,
the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community
on a broad range of issues.

###

Attached:
Photo, Hye Votes Volunteers
Photo, ANCA HV and WR staff, community members, Councilman Jack Hadjinian

www.ancawr.org

Safarov Protest At Hungarian Consulate In New York City

SAFAROV PROTEST AT HUNGARIAN CONSULATE IN NEW YORK CITY

ARMENPRESS
10 September, 2012
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, SEPYTEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS: A broad-based coalition of Armenian
American political, religious, student and youth organizations
joined in rallying against Hungary’s extradition and Azerbaijan’s
pardon of axe-murderer Ramil Safarov. The protest demonstration was
simultaneously accompanied by candle lightening.

Thus New York and New Jersey Armenians expressed their indignation
concerning the event. As Armenpress reporter informs from New York the
participants were chanting “Shame on Hungary”, “Shame on Azerbaijan”
, “Shame on Turkey”, “Alliyev grand lier “, ” Azerbaijan should bear
responsibility” , “The justice must be repaired”, ” No more blood for
oil”, “Axe murderer criminals should be subjected to the justice”
slogans. As a logical continuation the slogan ” NKR recognition
-expiation of the committed crime” followed. In the end of the
launched rally the participants laid candles and flowers in front
of Gurgen Margaryan photo in Hungarian Consulate. The lights of the
Consulate went on as a sign Consulate employees were following it,
in case the majority of Consulate employees were habiting in adjacent
areas, from where the rally could be easily seen.

Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov axed to death Armenian innocent
officer Gurgen Margaryan when the latter was sleeping , February 19,
2004 in Budapest . The two officers were taking a training program
in Budapest under the auspices of NATO’s Partnership for Peace Program.

Hungarian court sentenced Ramil Safarov to life imprisonment, without
a right to be pardoned during the first 30 years in jail. Yet the
criminal was extradited by Hungary Government on August 31, 2012. On
the same day the assassinate was granted pardon by Azerbaijani
President. Armenia has suspended its diplomatic relations with Hungary.

Le Memorial Du Camp Des Milles Evoque Le Genocide Armenien

LE MEMORIAL DU CAMP DES MILLES EVOQUE LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN
Stephane

armenews.com
mardi 11 septembre 2012

Le Camp des MiIles, près d’ Aix-en-Provence, est le seul camp francais
d’internement et de deportation de la seconde guerre mondiale encore
intact : cet important lieu de memoire sera desormais ouvert au public.

Jean-Marc Ayrault, accompagne de plusieurs autres ministres, inaugure
le Memorial du camp des Milles le 10 septembre. La date est symbolique,
car c’est justement le 10 septembre 1942 que le dernier train demarra
du camp des Milles, destination Auschwitz.

Entre 1939 et 1942, la tuilerie du camp des Milles fut utilisee dans un
premier temps comme lieu d’internement pour les ” etrangers ennemis “,
pour la plupart des Allemands et des Autrichiens ayant fui le nazisme
: parmi eux des intellectuels ou des artistes, tel que Max Ernst ou
Hans Bellmer. Le camp des Milles devint par la suite un instrument
au service du regime de Vichy et servit de camp de deportation pour
les Juifs.

Les chiffres parlent d’eux-memes : plus de 10 000 personnes furent
internees au camp des Milles et 2 000 envoyees dans les camps de
concentration.

Le bâtiment de brique rouge, unique et precieux temoin des camps
d’internement qui ont existe en France, a ete garde au maximum dans
son etat initial. Le visiteur y decouvrira les dortoirs, mais aussi la
” salle des peintures ” – ancien refectoire des officiers decore par
des peintres detenus, ou des videos et des document d’archives.

Cette visite invite a la reflexion, pour que cette page indicible
de notre histoire construise un futur où se realise enfin le “plus
jamais ca”.

Ce troisième volet ( le volet reflexif) est destine, en s’appuyant
sur la force evocatrice de ce lieu imposant et sur le travail
scientifique accumule depuis la guerre, a renforcer la vigilance
et la responsabilite du visiteur face a la permanence des grandes
questions ethiques soulevees par le traumatisme civilisationnel de
la Shoah dont ce lieu rend compte, par les autres crimes contre
l’humanite de la dernière guerre, contre les Tsiganes notamment,
et plus generalement par l’autoritarisme et le totalitarisme.

Jusque-la, le visiteur s’est trouve confronte au passe et a son poids
emotionnel. Avec le volet qui s’ouvre, la memoire-reverence devient
memoire-reference : le visiteur est invite a depasser la distance qui
le separe du passe pour amorcer une reflexion pluridisciplinaire sur
le present et l’avenir prenant appui sur l’experience historique.

Bien entendu, tout lieu de memoire concourt a l’education, voire a
l’education civique. Mais ce volet, baptise “Comprendre pour demain”,
se veut ainsi etre un temps reflexif complementaire et largement
innovant sur un lieu de memoire. L’experience semble montrer en effet
que l’emotion sur le passe, l’information historique ou la reference
rhetorique aux “lecons de l’histoire” ne suffisent pas ou plus toujours
pour identifier et combattre les expressions sans cesse renouvelees
du racisme, de l’antisemitisme, du fanatisme et de l’intolerance.

Il s’agit donc de susciter chez le visiteur une comprehension plus
intime des situations et une reaction intellectuelle constructive
en le faisant passer par les diverses etapes d’un parcours chrono-
thematique qui propose des materiaux ou des resultats relevant
d’approches et de disciplines variees, en plus de l’histoire.

À partir de l’histoire specifique du lieu, le caractère universaliste
des elements presentes sera illustre par les autres genocides averes,
armenien et rwandais. Dans cette perspective, trois grands thèmes de
reflexion ont ete definis par le Comite de pilotage : les resistibles
engrenages des intolerances ; le basculement de la democratie a
l’autoritarisme ; la responsabilite individuelle et collective face
au crime de masse.

Cette etape reflexive, en relation directe avec la connaissance
acquise dans les salles precedentes, peut s’apparenter a une station
experimentale au cours de laquelle, par divers moyens pedagogiques
(films, archives sonores, creation de scenarii, presentation de
resultats scientifiques, dispositifs interactifs divers…), le
visiteur participe au decorticage des mecanismes individuels et
collectifs qui conduisent de la haine ordinaire au crime contre
l’humanite, mais aussi de l’indifference a la resistance. Il doit
se trouver confronte a des situations historiques, mais aussi a des
postures, a des schemas mentaux, a des reflexes intellectuels qui
peuvent lui etre familiers et dont il pourrait mesurer dès lors avec
plus d’acuite les consequences sociales, heureuses ou dangereuses.

Le Parti Republicain Au Pouvoir Remporte Les Elections Locales

LE PARTI REPUBLICAIN AU POUVOIR REMPORTE LES ELECTIONS LOCALES
Gari

armenews.com
mardi 11 septembre 2012

Le HHK a proclamé sa victoire le 10 septmebre aux élections locales
qui se déroulaient la veille dans 370 communautés urbaines et rurales
dans le pays. Citant des résultats préliminaires, le parti au pouvoir
a affirmé que ses candidats l~Ravaient enmporté dans au moins 240 de
ces communes, dont Vanadzor et plusieurs autres grandes localités. Le
candidat du HHK l~Ra aussi emporté à Giumri, la deuxième ville du pays,
où il se présentait face au maire sortant, Ghoukassian, qui n~Ravait
plus l~Rinvestiture du parti présidentiel. Les principales forces
d~Ropposition ne s~Rétant guère mobilisées pour le scrutin, seul
le Parti Arménie Prospère (BHK), la 2e force politique du Parlement
dirigée par l~Rhomme d~Raffaires Gaguil Tsaroukian, anciennement allié
au president Sarkissian, a été en mesure de défier le monopole exercé
par le HHK dans la vie politique des régions et des communes.

Gabriel Vahanian, Professor, Dies At 85; Was Linked To ‘Death Of God

GABRIEL VAHANIAN, PROFESSOR, DIES AT 85; WAS LINKED TO ‘DEATH OF GOD’ MOVEMENT
By PAUL VITELLO

The New York Times
September 9, 2012 Sunday

Gabriel Vahanian, a theologian whose 1961 social critique, “The Death
of God: The Culture of Our Post-Christian Era,” gave a name to a
seemingly atheistic but widely misunderstood theological movement,
died on Aug. 30 at his home in Strasbourg, France. He was 85.

His daughter, Noelle Vahanian, confirmed his death.

Mr. Vahanian, a churchgoing Presbyterian throughout his life,
was a professor at Syracuse University when a small literary
publisher released “The Death of God,” a scholarly work that took
church leaders to task for what he considered the trivialization of
Christian teaching in the secular age. It was not an endorsement of
Friedrich Nietzsche’s 1880s-era announcement of God’s death. And it
received little attention outside university religion departments and
periodicals like The Journal of Bible and Religion. (The Journal’s
review called it a dense read, but worthwhile. “Books like this must
be written and read if Christian solutions are to be found,” it said.)

But in 1966, Mr. Vahanian reached a wider audience when Time magazine
named his book as the forerunner of several works written around
that time by scholars belonging to what the theology world called the
Death of God movement. All were grappling with some of religion’s big
questions in the post-World War II era, Time said: Would the center
hold if people stopped believing? How might religious values survive
in a postfaith world?

Mr. Vahanian knew and corresponded with some of the others in the
movement, including Harvey Cox of Harvard, Thomas J.J. Altizer of
Emory University and William Hamilton, who would be forced out of his
faculty post at an upstate New York seminary after the furor over the
Time article and later teach at Portland State University in Oregon.

He died in March.

None were atheists. Some were uncomfortable with the name of their
movement, since they considered themselves more like a rescue team than
an attack squad. They saw their work as a continuation of inquiries
begun by some of the great theologians of the early and middle 20th
century, including Paul Tillich, Karl Barth and Dietrich Bonhoeffer.

Mr. Vahanian, though, distanced himself from the group and its
Nietzschean aura, however ill deserved.

“He had a totally different theological sensibility from most of them,”
said Jeffrey Robbins, Mr. Vahanian’s son-in-law, who is chairman of
the department of religion and philosophy at Lebanon Valley College
in Annville, Pa. “He was an iconoclast, and a radical.

But he described himself as a lifelong, practicing, disgruntled
Protestant Christian.”

Mr. Cox, a professor emeritus at Harvard Divinity School and the author
of the best-selling 1965 book “The Secular City” — considered one of
the basic texts of the Death of God movement — described Mr. Vahanian
as a “visionary” with a traditionalist streak.

“He didn’t like the idea of pronouncements about what no one could
possibly know,” Mr. Cox said in a phone interview on Wednesday. “He
had too much respect for religious tradition.”

In his book, Mr. Vahanian criticized efforts to modernize Christianity,
implicitly rebuking the Rev. Norman Vincent Peale, author of the 1950s
self-help best-seller “The Power of Positive Thinking.” Mr. Vahanian
condemned “positive thinking” and other doctrines that reduced
Christianity to what he called “a tool for success.”

Faith had higher purposes, he said. It was for dealing with suffering;
plumbing the conscience; confronting doubts about God.

“God is not necessary, but he is inevitable,” Mr. Vahanian wrote
in 1964 in “Wait Without Idols,” displaying the gnomic style that
sometimes tried reviewers’ patience (and eschewing capital letters
when referring to the deity). “He is wholly other and wholly present.

Faith in him, the conversion of our human reality, both culturally
and existentially, is the demand he still makes upon us.”

Gabriel Antoine Vahanian was born on Jan. 24, 1927, in Marseille,
France, one of four children of Mestrop and Perouse Vahanian. His
parents settled there in the early 1920s after fleeing the ethnic
cleansing campaigns that swept Armenian areas of Turkey after World
War I. After completing his studies at the Protestant Theological
Faculty of Paris in 1949, he received his Ph.D. at the Princeton
Theological Seminary.

In 1958 he became a professor of religion at Syracuse University,
where he taught for 26 years and helped to found the university’s
graduate studies program in religion. He moved in 1984 to Universite
des Sciences Humaines de Strasbourg, for a post considered France’s
most prominent theological professorship of Protestantism.

Besides his daughter, who, like her husband, Mr. Robbins, is a
professor of religion and philosophy at Lebanon Valley College, Mr.

Vahanian is survived by his wife, Barbara; a son, Jean-Michel; and
two grandchildren.

Though he had differences with the “Death of God” theologians, Mr.

Vahanian shared “the deep sensitivity and religious passion that
animated the movement,” Mr. Robbins said.

In “Wait Without Idols,” Mr. Vahanian identified the origin of the
problem facing “Death of God” theologians as he saw it:

“It is easier to understand oneself without God than with God. The
dilemma of Christianity is that it taught man how to be responsible
for his actions in this world, and for this world itself. Now man has
declared God not responsible and not relevant to human self-knowledge.

The existence of God, no longer questioned, has become useless to
man’s predicament and its resolution.”

“This, then, is the irony of the cultural tradition of Christianity:
it has bequeathed us the idea of the death of God.”

URL:

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/09/education/gabriel-vahanian-85-death-of-god-theologian-dies.html

Rubber Stamps Missing At Some Polling Stations In Armenia

RUBBER STAMPS MISSING AT SOME POLLING STATIONS IN ARMENIA

Interfax
Sept 9 2012
Russia

Disappearance of rubber stamps has been reported at some of the
Armenian polling stations in the current local elections, the Central
Election Commission told Interfax.

Efforts are being made to fix the problem, the Central Election
Commission said, adding that the elections are continuing “their
natural way.”