Greek Armenians Organized Anti-Protocol Signature Drive

GREEK ARMENIANS ORGANIZED ANTI-PROTOCOL SIGNATURE DRIVE

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.10.2009 19:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian community of Greece protests against
RA-Turkey rapprochement Protocols’ conclusion. Recently ARF
Dashnaktsutyun and Ramkazar Azatakan organized anti-Protocol signature
drive, with 2810 Armenian community representative’s signatures
collected as a result. Greek Armenians also addressed an open letter
to RA President Sarzh Sargsyan, expressing their apprehensions on
Protocols conclusion.

Today, ARFD and Ramkavar Azatakan representatives will meet RA
Ambassador in Greece Gagik Galechyan to present copies of signatures,
Azat Or Armenian newspaper reported.

BAKU: Turkey Pursues Independent Foreign Policy: FM

TURKEY PURSUES INDEPENDENT FOREIGN POLICY: FM

Trend
Oct 21 2009
Azerbaijan

Turkey was not acting on behalf of anyone and Turkey has always
pursued independent foreign policy," said Turkish Foreign Minister
Ahmet Davutoglu, making a speech before the members of the Turkish
Grand National Assembly, who will discuss the Turkish-Armenian protocol
today, TRT 3 television channel reported.

"Nobody has the right to accuse Turkey that it acts under the pressure
of external forces," Davudoglu said.

The events around the Azerbaijani flag in Bursa are not part of the
Turkish foreign policy and those who want to present it in the light
of diplomacy, they want to harm the Turkish-Azerbaijani relations,
the minister added.

On Oct. 21, the Turkish parliament launched discussions on the
Armenian-Turkish protocol.

During the speech by the MP from the ruling Justice and Development
Party of Turkey Omer Chelik, MPs from the opposition left the meeting
hall of Parliament as protest.

Turkish and Armenian foreign ministers Ahmet Davutoglu and Edward
Nalbandian signed the protocols Ankara-Yerevan in Zurich on October 10.

First 20 Tons Sent

FIRST 20 TONS SENT

t
04:33 pm | October 20, 2009

Society

The first 20 tons of India rubber produced at the renovated 1-12
chloroprene production unit were sent, as reported by the "Nairit
Factory" CJSC production-dispatcher service.

Let us remind that a huge accident had taken place on May 14 at
the chloroprene production unit and resulted in the death of four
factory workers.

http://a1plus.am/en/society/2009/10/20/nairi

Armenology Chair To Be Closed In Freie Universitat Berlin

ARMENOLOGY CHAIR TO BE CLOSED IN FREIE UNIVERSITAT BERLIN

PanARMENIAN.Net
21.10.2009 16:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Chair of Armenian Studies of the University "Freie
Universitat Berlin" will be closed, Jirayr Kocharian , the lecturer
"Freie Universitat Berlin", Doctor of Indo-European and comparative
linguistics department told a press conference in Yerevan today. "The
general funding for the departments of Indo-European and comparative
linguistics reduced, and the chair of Armenian studies will also be
closed," Jirayr Kocharian said.

According to him, different countries pay for the department, which
represents their country and culture. "Director of the University
said that he was ready to provide room and open the lectureship,
with the annual budget of 48 000 euros, half of which will be paid
by the university," he said, adding that they expect the Armenian
side to provide the rest of financing.

"If we do not have our own chair, we lose not only the scientific
center, but also the presence and prestige of Armenia in Germany,"
the lecturer "Freie Universitat Berlin" said, adding that the Azeris
are already preparing their chair.

Concert Of Armenian Classical Music To Be Held November 9 In Moscow

CONCERT OF ARMENIAN CLASSICAL MUSIC TO BE HELD NOVEMBER 9 IN MOSCOW

PanARMENIAN.Net
21.10.2009 18:37 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Concert of Armenian classical music will be held
November 9 at the Moscow theater hall "Studio". The concert program
includes works by Aram Khachaturyan – Sonata-Song for viola solo, Arno
Babajanyan – Trio for piano, violin and cello and Edward Mirzoyan –
String Quartet.

Karen Shahgaldyan (violin), Sona Azaryan (violin), Maxim Novikov
(viola), Boris Lifanovskiy (cello), Yakov Katsnelson (piano) will
perform at the concert.

Armenia-Turkey protocols signed while critics claim betrayal

Armenia-Turkey protocols signed while critics claim betrayal

21.10.2009 From Yerevan, Onnik Krikorian

The reactions in Armenia to the signing of the protocols with Turkey.
The political scenario, the public debate. A survivor of the 1915
genocide speaks out

After months of secret negotiations, the announcement of two historic
protocols to first establish and then normalize relations between
Armenia and Turkey were finally signed on 10 October. If ratified by the
parliaments of both countries, the border – closed by Turkey in 1993 in
support of Azerbaijan during the war with Armenia over the disputed
territory of Nagorno Karabakh – could be opened within two months.
Predictably, despite the promised benefits of economic development and
stability in an otherwise troubled and highly volatile region,
nationalist and other political forces in Armenia as well as its
Diaspora, Azerbaijan and Turkey are up in arms against such a move.

Yet, despite initial concerns about the possibility of large scale
protests against the agreement in Armenia, and not least following last
year’s highly controversial presidential election, there has so far been
little visible opposition since the protocols were announced in August.
Indeed, the main nationalist Armenian Revolutionary Federation —
Dashnaktsutyun (ARF-D) has even called off its round-the-clock strike
held outside the two main government buildings on Yerevan’s central
Republic Square. It did so the day before the historic agreement after
barely managing to rally more than 10,000 people over an issue
considered central not only to local ethnic identity, but also to its
own ideology.

Moreover, a second demonstration held on Friday in direct response to
Wednesday’s football match between Armenia and Turkey was even less
successful. Key members of the party might say that opposition to the
protocols will eventually snowball, but only an estimated 1,500 people
turned out even though the protest was staged on a busy central Yerevan
street. Speaking to Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso and the Wall Street
Journal just an hour before the demonstration, Armenia’s foreign
minister, Eduard Nalbandyan, seemed confident and calm despite calls for
his resignation from a party that was until recently part of the ruling
government coalition. It resigned in April precisely because of this new
push to normalize relations.

Even so, the traditional extra-parliamentary led by Armenia’s first
president, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, argues that the ARF-D cannot be taken
seriously until it sets its sights on removing the incumbent president,
Serge Sargsyan, from power. Armen Rustamyan, Dashnakstutyun’s head,
admitted that there are no such plans yet. "That’s an explicit demand.
That is not a resignation demand yet, but it could logically develop
into a resignation demand," he declared at Friday’s rally. The same line
is echoed by Giro Manoyan, head of the party’s Hay Tahd (Armenian Cause)
office, a body which considers recognition of the 1915 massacre of up to
1.5 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide to be
non-negotiable.

The last remaining survivors of that tragedy would agree. Speaking at
her Yerevan apartment, 99-year-old Yelena Abrahamyan, for example, is
steadfast in her opposition to a border opening until Turkey apologizes.
She is also unlikely to be swayed by reassurances from the government
that the establishment of a historical commission as part of the
normalization process would not lead to eventual denial of what many
historians and countries already consider as the first genocide of the
20th Century. Activists and nationalists in Armenia and the Diaspora are
also opposed to the recognition of the existing border. They instead
believe that Turkey should make territorial reparations to Armenia even
if many more Turks and Kurds now inhabit the land.

Even so, it is difficult to accurately gauge the majority view held by
most Armenians and many suspect that those voicing their opposition to
the protocols face an uphill struggle. This is especially true for
Ter-Petrosyan’s extra-parliamentary Armenian National Congress (ANC),
which might be considered somewhat disingenuous if it tried too hard to
exploit the signing only for the sake of regime change. Nevertheless,
that hasn’t stopped the ANC from toughening its stance in a statement
last week condemning the signing as `immoral and inadmissible.’ Despite
this, however, neither the ARF-D nor ANC appear willing to work together
to prevent the protocols from being ratified. Both, in fact, face a
serious dilemma.

"Those who have traditionally had pro-government positions but are known
for their nationalist views are in a difficult situation," wrote the
Hraparak newspaper about such dilemmas. "If they [ARF-D] welcome the
normalization of relations with Turkey, it will mean a betrayal of their
century-old stance. If they don’t welcome it, it will mean that they
betray Serzh Sargsyan. No less difficult is the plight of those who have
traditionally had an opposition stance but have always spoken of
development and democracy, good relations and open borders with
neighbors. […] So from any vantage point, the winner in this situation
is Serzh Sargsyan."

Another more moderate opposition paper spells out the situation even
more directly, and especially as it relates to what seems to be the
extra-parliamentary opposition’s hope of exploiting concerns about a
possibly parallel process to resolve the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.
Nalbandyan, however, is adamant that the Armenia-Turkey protocols and a
peace deal with Azerbaijan remain separate processes although the
international community must surely hope that normalization of relations
with Ankara might at least assist resolution of a conflict on hold since
the 1994 ceasefire. Ironically, despite opposition claims, anti-Turkish
sentiment within Azerbaijan is reportedly on the rise because of the
protocols.

"Before, Serzh Sargsyan was with the party of war, while Levon
Ter-Petrosyan with the party of peace," Aravot editorialized, noting how
the conflict is often used for internal political purposes whatever the
situation. "Now they seem to have swapped roles. But in reality, the
real supporter of peace is he who takes into account the Karabakh
people’s opinion and the biggest pacifist is he who removes the Karabakh
issue from the agenda of the political struggle in Armenia. There are so
many things that can be said of the authorities that they did not have
to invent Karabakh’s sellout [by Serzh Sargsyan]."

Moreover, such accusations merely end up confusing people. One taxi
driver approached by Osservatorio, for example, said he was in favor of
open borders with Turkey, but then paused before continuing. `They say
the government is going to ignore the Genocide and sign a peace deal
with Azerbaijan, but I don’t know what to believe anymore. It’s all
politics at the end of the day and neither side will let me decide
anything.’ More confusingly, while one senior activist in
Ter-Petrosyan’s HIMA! youth movement has been using Facebook to turn
others against the agreement, he instead declined an interview with the
BBC on the grounds that he actually supported the protocols.

For now, therefore, with society divided and also disorientated, neither
Ter-Petrosyan’s extra-parliamentary opposition nor the ARF-D appears
strong enough to prevent the Armenia-Turkey protocols from being
ratified by the Armenian National Assembly. Instead all eyes are on
Turkey, which should present the protocols to parliament on 21 October.
In Armenia, the protocols will first have to be sent to the
Constitutional Court, then to the President’s Office, and only then on
to the National Assembly. One local diplomat speaking on the condition
of anonymity said a speedy ratification by the Turkish parliament would
theoretically see the same happen in Armenia.

But, however the much-touted football diplomacy plays out in the
political realm, other such as British-Armenian businessman Charles
Masraff remain hopeful. Although planned eight months earlier and
without any knowledge of the existence of the protocols, the marriage of
his [ethnic Armenian] son to a Turkish fiancée coincidentally occurred
on the same day that the agreements were signed in Switzerland. Last
week, on his return from the wedding in Turkey, Masraff held a special
party at his Yerevan cafe just two days after the Armenia-Turkey
football match to celebrate both events and to symbolically usher in
what many hope could be a new chapter in relations between the two
countries.

Time will tell if such optimism is warranted or not.


le/articleview/12016

http://www.osservatoriobalcani.org/artic

President Sargsyan Visits Nagorno Karabakh

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN VISITS NAGORNO KARABAKH

armradio.am
21.10.2009 17:35

On October 21 President Serzh Sargsyan has left for the Nagorno
Karabakh Republic on a two-day working visit.

Accompanied by NKR President Bako Sahakyan, Armenian Defense Minister
Seyran Ohanyan supreme command staff, President Serzh Sargsyan visited
the defense positions of the Republic of Armenia, familiarized with
the fighting capacity of the armed forces, the ongoing army-building
activity.

President Sargsyan participated in the solemn ceremony of handing
over keys of a newly built dwelling house to families of servicemen
and putting into operation some military infrastructures.

Serzh Sargsyan has invited the senior Officers of the Armed Forces
to traditional consultations in Stepanakert.

If Turkey Does Not Admit Committing Genocide, This Means It Is Ready

IF TURKEY DOES NOT ADMIT COMMITTING GENOCIDE, THIS MEANS IT IS READY TO COMMIT IT AGAIN, LARISA ALAVERDIAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan
Oct 20, 2009

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 20, NOYAN TAPAN. Larisa Alaverdian, Secretary of
the parliamentary "Heritage" faction, non-party woman is in favor of
Turkey’s lifting blockade imposed on Armenia, but she is categorically
against the ratification of the Armenia-Turkey protocols signed in
Zurich. She stated this during a meeting with reporters on October 20.

She said that despite the claims of the authorities, the protocols
contain no statement about the establishment of relations without
any preconditions. Quite the opposite, in these documents, the
establishment of diplomatic relations is linked with the recognition of
the existing border between the two countries, which has no precedence
in international practice.

In the opinion of L. Alaverdian, if Turkey does not admit that its
former political system used genocide as a policy, it means that
"it is ready to commit it again".

As regards the ongoing unification of more than a dozen parties
against the protocols, L. Alaverdian reminded that from the very
first Heritage Party demanded the RA president’s resignation, whereas
the ARF did not make such demands. In her words, the political forces
comprising the Armenian National Congress (ANC) make demands for power
shift and have united mostly around the internal political problems,
particularly social ones. She found it difficult to forecast whether
these two "driving forces" united around different problems will join
together one day.

Jermain Taylor Was Released From The Hospital In Berlin

JERMAIN TAYLOR WAS RELEASED FROM THE HOSPITAL IN BERLIN

PanARMENIAN.Net
20.10.2009 20:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On Sunday, October 18th Jermain Taylor was
released from the Hospital in Berlin, Germany, having been given
clearance by a team of Doctors to continue with a planned vacation in
Europe. Taylor was admitted as a precautionary measure after suffering
from concussion-like symptoms following his fight with Arthur Abraham
on Saturday night.

"I want thank all my fans and those concerned and let everyone
know I’m doing just fine and feeling good," said Taylor. "I want to
congratulate Arthur Abraham on his victory and wish him well in the
tournament. Right now my plans are to relax and enjoy my vacation in
Europe with my wife, Erica."

Team Taylor is equally thankful for the outpouring of support shown
by fans around the globe, and promises their number one goal is making
sure their charge is fit and healthy, boxingscene.com reported.

The Arab Maestro Guy Manoukian

THE ARAB MAESTRO GUY MANOUKIAN

New Straits Times
les/20091020101934/Article/index_html
Oct 20 2009
Malaysia

Lebanese musician and composer Guy Manoukian is motivated by the
thought of leaving his music for the next generation. RADIN SRI
GHAZALI writes.

IF singer-actress Jennifer Lopez is known to have insured her derriere,
for Lebanese musician and composer Guy Manoukian, it is his precious
fingers.

He has insured his hands for US$2 million (RM6.74 million) and keeps
away from aggressive activities including sports.

"I used to play basketball professionally before pursuing music. I
decided to stop playing the game and was asked to insure my hands,"
said the 33-year-old singer in an interview in Petaling Jaya recently.

"But I miss playing (basketball)," he added.

On the ivories, Manoukian has proven an impressive act within the
Arab continent with his exceptional music skills of defining Middle
Eastern dance music.

Manoukian’s latest album Vibes is his best work to date.

He has broadened his music to Europe, America and, recently added
Asia to his list after just a decade in the business.

After four successful albums including Senses and Sarab, Manoukian
is now out with his best album to date, Vibes.

"Critics and fans alike are raving about the music in Vibes and say
that it’s the best from me," he said.

Manoukian is on the top of the charts in his homeland. His album
debuted at No.1 since June.

"I have beaten Amr Diab (a renowned and dashing good-looking Arab
singer)," he said with a grin.

The album features sounds that uniquely define what the pianist is
all about — he is of mixed Armenian and Lebanese parentage.

"I used the elements that I grew up with and the music that influenced
me along the way as a musician. That makes my music universal.

Everyone will be able to enjoy it," he said. The album shows strong
influences with his Lebanese roots infused with pop dance.

Tracks include Shooting Star (featuring Leyla and Dash Boogie Breeze),
Vibes (featuring Lucina), Noritz (featuring Luis), Sonzey, My Land
and a song that was written for his son, To My Son.

When asked who influenced his works, he replied: "It wouldn’t be fair
because I have a lot of people to give credit to. But I am very much
intrigued with Asian beats, including Oriental and Indian rhythms.

Manoukian is no stranger to the international market. He has
worked with a handful of international acts including renowed
composer/producer Wyclef Jean.

"I met him in Las Vegas last year. His friend saw me playing and
quickly suggested me to him. We really hit it off and started talking
of a collaboration," he said.

He worked with the music maestro in Wyclef’s single called On Tour.

He has also worked with American rapper turned business mogul 50 Cent
and French rapper Diams.

Plans are also under way for another international collaboration with
songstress Shakira. "We’ll see," he said, reluctant to reveal more.

When asked if he is on a mission to overcome the stereotype of Arabs
with his music, he replied: "There is nothing to prove. We have
scholars who have established various branches of knowledge centuries
ago. We are a developed community. My music is for everyone.

"In fact, how people perceive the Arab world has changed for the
better. We don’t need albums to do it," he said.

What motivates him to be where he is now?

"When I was seven, I wanted my parents’ attention. Later in my teens,
I wanted girls’ attention. Towards my mid-20s, I was motivated to
get money to keep my music going," he explained.

"Now, my legacy motivates me to work hard. I want my music to be
inherited by the next generation, my son’s generation. I want my
music to live on," he added.

http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/artic