‘Eastern Partnership’ To Have Not Only Symbolic But Also Real Meanin

‘EASTERN PARTNERSHIP’ TO HAVE NOT ONLY SYMBOLIC BUT ALSO REAL MEANING, POLAND’S AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA THINKS

ArmInfo
2009-06-26 16:05:00

ArmInfo. The ‘Eastern Partnership’ programme will be not only
of symbolic but also real significance, Poland’s Ambassador to
Armenia Tomasz Knothe said at the International Conference ‘Earstern
Partnership and Prospects for Democracy Building in the South Caucasus’
started in Yerevan today.

‘I think that discussion of this programme gives an opportunity
to the participant-states to make contribution in the form of new
ideas. Moreover, the goals of the "Eastern Partnership" are more
ambitious than the policy of "New European Neighborhood" preceding
that. In this way European Union is demonstrating its desire to draw
the countries nearer to itself’, – he said. The ambassador also
emphasized importance of supporting the integration processes by
civil societies of the participant-states in the programme.

VivaCell Subscribers Can Search For Jobs Using Their Mobile Phones

VIVACELL SUBSCRIBERS CAN SEARCH FOR JOBS USING THEIR MOBILE PHONES

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
24.06.2009 17:04 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ According to VivaCell announcement, from now on
VIvaCell subscribers will be able to search for jobs or study programs,
participate in contests and build their careers using their mobile
phones. For detail information subscribers are recommended to visit
VivaCell website (wap.vivacell.am) and follow the "Job" link.

Russian FM: The Caucasus Platform Has A Big Potential

RUSSIAN FM: THE CAUCASUS PLATFORM HAS A BIG POTENTIAL

ArmInfo
2009-06-23 12:05:00

ArmInfo. Russia thinks the Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
Platform initiated by Ankara has a big potential, director of the
4th Department of CIS countries of the Foreign Ministry of Russia,
Andrey Kelin, said at the International Conference ‘Armenia on the
Intersection of Communications’ held in Tsakhadzor.

‘It is very much important for us that via setting up of such a
platform we shall be able to come up to resolving of some problems
without involvement of the non-regional players which would like
to have influence in the region, but they are not present in this
platform’, – he said.

Kelin also added that in Moscow they still do not know how the platform
will develop in future, but they hope to establish useful interaction
in the five-sided format via the Platform ‘with those they are talking
to at present’.

BAKU: Azerbaijani, Armenian Foreign Ministers To Coordinate Meeting

AZERBAIJANI, ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS TO COORDINATE MEETING OF PRESIDENTS: U.S. CO-CHAIR

Today.Az
cs/53306.html
June 22 2009
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers will coordinate meeting
on resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in Paris together with
the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen.

The next talks on resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between
Azerbaijani and Armenian Foreign Ministers Elmar Mamadyarov and Edward
Nalbandyan will be held in Paris on June 26, Azerbaijani President’s
Special Envoy and Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov told reporters.

"In Paris we will consult and coordinate our approach to resolution
of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and will also prepare next meeting
between Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents Ilham Aliyev and Serzh
Sargsyan. We hope the meeting will be held soon," OSCE Minsk Group
U.S. Co-Chairman Matthew Bryza told Trend News.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian armed
forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992, including
the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding districts. Azerbaijan
and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in 1994. The co-chairs of
the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the U.S. – are currently
holding the peace negotiations.

The previous meeting between the two foreign ministers was held as a
part of the meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents Ilham
Aliyev and Serzh Sargsyan in St. Petersburg on June 4.

This was fifth meeting on conflict resolution between the two
leaders. The previous meeting was held in Prague on June 7. The first
meeting was held in St. Petersburg in June 2008 and second meeting
in Moscow in late November 2008 and third was held in Zurich on
Jan. 28, 2009.

http://www.today.az/news/politi

Obama Urges Khamenei To Stop Violence

OBAMA URGES KHAMENEI TO STOP VIOLENCE

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.06.2009 14:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Barack Obama. has urged the Iranian government
to "stop all violent and unjust actions against its own people"
as protests continue in Iran against the alleged rigging of last
week’s election.

Obama said: "The Iranian government must understand that the world
is watching. We mourn each and every innocent life that is lost.

"The universal rights to assembly and free speech must be respected,
and the United States stands with all who seek to exercise those
rights."

In her turn, German Chancellor Merkel called on Iran to refrain
from using violence against demonstrators, free detained opposition
members, allow free media reporting and conduct a recount of votes
in the election.

Later at a news conference, Merkel said Iran could earn trust from
the international community by inviting observers to oversee a vote
recount.

"One could eliminate doubt, very well I believe, by simply repeating
the count transparently and if needed also with international
observers. And then trust could grow," news agencies cited her as
she saying.

Georgia Interested In Construction Of Batumi – Akhalkalaki – Giumri

GEORGIA INTERESTED IN CONSTRUCTION OF BATUMI – AKHALKALAKI – GIUMRI SUPERHIGHWAY

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.06.2009 11:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The construction of the highway from Armenia to
Batumi is interesting in the framework of the Black Sea Economic
Cooperation , Ara Nranyan, advisor to ARF Dashnaktsutyun, deputy of
the RA National Assembly and member of the Armenian delegation to
BSEC parliamentary assembly, told a PanARMENIANNet reporter .

"Georgian side again affirmed its determined intention and readiness
to carry out the construction of the new Batumi – Akhalkalaki –
Giumri super highway , " he said.

According to Mr. Nranyan, even Georgia, a country which is not supposed
to have transportation problems has found itself in an unfavorable
situation. According to MP Nranyan, the construction of that highway
has a practical value for Armenia, since opens an alternative way
to the Black Sea cost and for Georgia, "as possibility to connect
Eastern and Western parts of the country".

Armenian city lives in a school museum

Armenian city lives in a school museum

Daniel Bardsley, Correspondent

NOR KHARBERD, ARMENIA // Safaryan Yepraksya is a mine of information
about the province of Kharberd in what used to be Western Armenia.

The 55-year-old schoolteacher tells how there were 300 Armenian
villages, each having up to 500 houses, plus dozens of Armenian churches
and schools in the province, the capital of which was a city also known
as Kharberd.

These figures are also displayed on the wall of the tiny museum she has
created in a school in Nor Kharberd or new Kharberd, a district in the
south of the Armenian capital, Yerevan, named after what Armenians
consider a lost province.
Ms Yepraksya said there were 280,000 people, half of them Armenians, in
old Kharberd, as it is sometimes referred to, at the time of the
`genocide’ in which Armenians were driven from the area.

`The majority of those born in Kharberd ended up in France, Lebanon and
other countries,’ she said. `Nor Kharberd was founded [in 1929] when
they came to live here.’

The province, now in Turkey, where it is called Elazig, has seen brisk
economic and population growth in recent years and is home to around
600,000 Turks, Azeris and Kurds.

Ms Yepraksya, a 55-year-old history teacher, spent nearly 10 years
gathering material for the museum before it opened in 1983. She said she
has always been interested in the history of Western Armenia, the term
she uses for what is now eastern Turkey.

As well as being used for classes at Nor Kharberd secondary school
number two, Ms Yepraksya said the museum also attracts diasporan
Armenians from countries such as Lebanon, France, Russia and Greece.
Some, she said, are the children and grandchildren of former Kharberd
residents.

According to the museum, 68 churches, 83 schools and 12 monasteries were
destroyed during the `genocide’.

Turkey does not recognise the events as genocide and disputes the
Armenian assertion that 1.5 million of its people were killed, saying
the actual figure was one fifth of this.

The museum has black-and-white photographs of the residents of the
original Kharberd and recent colour pictures of their descendants, some
of whom live in the United States and other western countries.

There are souvenirs, ranging from pieces of white lace to vases and
jugs, collected from residents of Kharberd who fled the killings and
deportations of the early 20th century.

A simple painting of a man and woman wearing traditional Kharberd
clothing sits on the wall.

`This is the notebook of a female college student from 1911,’ Ms
Yepraksya said while reaching into a glass cabinet and picking out a
book that contained writings and a few dried flowers.
`These all came from old Kharberd. She survived the genocide and the
notebook was brought to us.’

Displays commemorate some of Kharberd’s most celebrated residents,
including the writer Tlkatintsi, who was killed near the city in 1915.
The school’s partner institution, secondary school number one, is named
after him.

Some of the first families to settle Nor Kharberd are also pictured.
Some of their descendants, among them the great-grandchildren of
Kharberd residents, attend the school.

`If you don’t inform your younger generation about historical facts,
they will gradually be forgotten,’ Ms Yepraksya said.

`That’s why we need to collect all these and teach the younger
generation so they can remember the Armenian cause.’

Ms Yepraksya said students were taught about the `genocide’ when they
were aged 10 and 11, although even when they begin at the school aged
six they have some knowledge of Armenian history. `At pre-school they’re
told we had greater Armenia, we had Mount Ararat [a mountain in
modern-day Turkey that Armenians consider their spiritual home], of how
it was ours and it’s not ours now,’ she said.

According to Hrachik Melkunyan, the headmaster of the school, which has
770 children aged between six and 17, while the museum `develops
patriotism’ it does not encourage hatred of Turkey.

`It’s not about developing hostility,’ he said. `We just tell them the
facts: who we were, where we came from as the Armenian nation.

`We know that one day the historical truth, everybody will know about it
and we know we’re showing it in a just way.’

What Mr Melkunyan would like most is to take groups of students to visit
old Kharberd and in future this might be possible.

Turkey and Armenia have held talks about establishing diplomatic
relations and reopening the border that Turkey closed in the early 1990s
over Armenia’s support for the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh,
previously controlled by neighbouring Azerbaijan.

`With great pleasure we’ll take our students to old Kharberd,’ Mr
Melkunyan said. `We want these two nations not to be enemies and to
collaborate together, if that’s possible.’


Safaryan Yepraksya spent almost 10 years gathering material for a small
museum dedicated to preserving Armenian history. Onnik Krikorian / The
National

621/FOREIGN/706209928/1002

http://www.thenational.ae/article/20090

International Labor Organization Approved Global Employment Pact

INTERNATIONAL LABOR ORGANIZATION APPROVED GLOBAL EMPLOYMENT PACT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
20.06.2009 13:13 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ International Labor Organization (ILO) has finished
its four-day summit in Geneva, UN Press Service reports.

Document calls for creating a stronger and more flexible global
system controlling financial sector and promoting world economic
growth. Its functions will also extend to supporting entrepreneurial
initiatives and acceptable employment terms and maintaining citizens’
pensions. Authors of the pact want markets and trade to be free from
protectionism and provide accessibility to all. Document also calls for
developing alternative energy sources and promoting new job openings.

Authors of the Global Pact find that Governments should make
investments in public infrastructure, elaborate special employment
programs, strengthen social protection system and adopt laws on minimal
salary. Such measure are especially important for developing countries
as they may help combat poverty and increase consumer demand. Pact
authors also call on member states and humanitarian organizations to
allocate resources for implementing the recommendations proposed.

Employers, trade unions and governments have adopted real and
practical solutions towards overcoming crisis, Daniel Funes Riocha,
ILO Crisis Management Committee’s chair said. "Real work begins now,"
he stated. "ILO, trade unions, employers and especially governments
are now required to fit the proposals to real frameworks to open
new workplaces for promoting economic growth and increasing the
population’s income," he said.

ILO 3-day summit was attended by 4 thousand delegates from 183 world
countries.

Film Studies: Refugee Stories

FILM STUDIES: REFUGEE STORIES
Clarence Tsui

South China Morning Post
June 18, 2009 Thursday
Hong Kong

Carla Garapedian can still remember what crossed her mind when she
first heard the music of Armenian-American rockers System of a Down. "I
don’t understand the music at all – I just want to turn it down,"
says the American filmmaker, laughing. Little did she know that the
band would, a few months later, become the stars of her documentary
about genocide and the way international powers turn a blind eye to it.

While handing out pamphlets about the Armenian genocide at a System
of a Down concert, Garapedian was surprised by some fans’ knowledge
of the subject.

"The fans came along and said, ‘Actually, we know about this,’"
she says. The band’s music – which also touches on the persecution
their ancestors suffered almost a century ago – helped educate these
youngsters about history, she says. "I’ve spent my whole adult life
waiting for that moment – when someone comes along and I don’t have
to explain it all to them. And they knew about it because of this
rock band."

Seeing how a band could generate awareness, Garapedian contacted the
group who agreed to work with the ex-journalist on her project. The
band featured heavily in her documentary, Screamers, as they joined
forces with activists to pressure the American and British governments
to acknowledge the Turkish army’s massacre of Armenians after the
first world war.

Garapedian admits she would prefer journalists to channel such
information to the masses, but says music or film works just as
well. "It’s a good thing, in that you can access people’s emotions
through art in a way that you can’t in other media," she says. "If
the music makes you feel uncomfortable, good – you should feel
uncomfortable. If it makes you feel a bit angry – if it rattles the
cage and shakes people up … and the movie can do that."

Screamers will be part of the Refugee Film Festival, a cinematic
showcase the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and the
Crossroads Foundation organised for World Refugee Day on Saturday.

"I think the level of knowledge [among Hongkongers about forced
displacement of people] is very low, given local newspapers don’t carry
much international news," says Rosina Shing, fund-raising manager at
the UNHCR’s Hong Kong office. "I think this is the best way [to raise
awareness] under the current situation, as we can reach the masses on a
limited budget with support from Crossroads and Broadway Cinematheque."

The programme comprises feature films (The Black Pimpernel, which
revolves around a Chile-based Swedish diplomat’s decision to save
1,300 dissidents after Augusto Pinochet’s deadly putsch in September
1973) and five documentaries that touch on real-life stories in Uganda
(Uganda Rising), Darfur (The Devil Came on Horseback), Sierra Leone
(Sierra Leone’s Refugee All Stars), Cambodia (New Year Baby) and,
in Screamers, Armenia, Rwanda and Kurdistan.

"We are not the first country to have held a Refugee Film Festival,"
says Shing. "The UNHCR’s Japan office will hold its fourth one this
year. More than 8,000 people attend the film festival in Tokyo every
year, and it’s an excellent public awareness tool."

The Refugee Film Festival runs from Sunday to June 26 at the Broadway
Cinematheque; details at

www.unhcr.org.hk/en/home.html

Congresswoman Laura Richardson Supports Armenian Genocide Resolution

CONGRESSWOMAN LAURA RICHARDSON SUPPORTS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Noyan Tapan
June 19, 2009

WASHINGTON, JUNE 19, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Congresswoman of
California Laura Richardson has promised to cosponsor Armenian Genocide
Resolution 252 which was submitted to the House of Representatives.

Conveying her decision to the Armenian National Committee of America
she noted that the Genocide which was committed towards Armenians in
1915-1923 by Turks was an unprecedented event and the only convenient
definition to describe those massacres is the word "genocide" and no
one should be afraid of giving a real definition to those events.

Richardson added that the International Association of Genocide
Scholars and almost all merited historians agree that the Armenians
were the victims of the first genocide of the 20th century but Turkey
continues this reality of denial. The Asbarez daily reported this.