Parliament Approves Government Program Of Actions For Next Five Year

PARLIAMENT APPROVES GOVERNMENT PROGRAM OF ACTIONS FOR NEXT FIVE YEARS

ARMENPRESS
April 30, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 30, ARMENPRESS: By a vote of 88 to 3 the National
Assembly approved today the government program of actions for
2008-2012. The program was voted against by the oppositional
Zharangutyun (Heritage) party.

Parliament chairman Tigran Torosian said the National Assembly stands
ready to support implementation of this ‘very important program.’
Before voting took place prime minister Tigran Sarkisian said his
government will implement changes and will begin with government
members.

‘We shall expose our defects and we shall be keeping you informed on
how we are going to carry out this program,’ he said.

He thanked the parliament for interesting debates over the program and
their suggestions and remarks many of which that were incorporated
into it. He also thanked the opposition Heritage party for their
‘moral support to the new government,’ saying it is more obligative
than frequent criticism.

The Heritage party had said earlier it would not vote for the
program because it wants a program of actions that would enforce
system changes, but said it would help the government correct its
shortcomings.

The prime minister also thanked members of the political coalition
for supporting the program.

‘I am confident that soon our people will see that the government
has come to implement sweeping reforms,’ he concluded.

ANKARA: Turkey Softens Law Restricting Freedom Of Expression, Critic

TURKEY SOFTENS LAW RESTRICTING FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION, CRITICS SAY "NOT ENOUGH"

The New Anatolian, Turkey
April 30 2008

The Turkish parliament amended a controversial law late Tuesday
and softened an article in the penal code which restricts freedom
of expression.

The parliament worked late into the night to legislate the changes
in the controversial article 301 of the penal code.

Calls for reform to the law have grown since the 2007 murder of Hrant
Dink, a Turkish journalist of Armenian descent who had been taken to
court for allegedly insulting "Turkishness."

The EU has criticized Article 301 saying it restricts freedom of
speech.

Article 301 of the penal code has been used to prosecute Nobel Prize
winner Orhan Pamuk and other intellectuals.

Since 2003, hundreds of people have been tried under the controversial
law.

However, critics argue the amendments do not go far enough. Insulting
the Turkish nation will still be a crime, punishable by two years
in jail.

Parliament voted 250-65 in favor of a government-backed proposal.

Under the reformed law:

It will be a crime to insult the Turkish nation, rather than
Turkishness.

The justice minister will be required to approve the request of a
prosecutor to open each case.

The maximum sentence will be two years in jail, rather than
three. Accoridng to the new regulations a jail sentence of up to two
years can be suspended by the judge. Thus some of the victims of the
law can also escape prison with suspended sentences.

The EU has long called for changes to Article 301, arguing that the
law places severe restrictions on free speech in Turkey. The issue
has threatened to stall Turkey’s EU accession talks.

Critics, of the amendments, however, say there are several other
articles in the penal code which the conservative hardline nationalist
prosecutors could exploit to prosecute writers and journalists who
want to express their views as many articles are too flexible and
open to interpretation.

Situation Post-Electorale Explosive A Erevan

SITUATION POST-ELECTORALE EXPLOSIVE A EREVAN

Le Temps, Suisse
29 avril 2008

ARMENIE. L’election le 19 fevrier de Serge Sarkissian a la presidence
est toujours contestee par l’opposition. Nombreuses arrestations.

Des milliers d’Armeniens ont defile jeudi dernier dans les rues
d’Erevan. Unite affichee pour commemorer le massacre des leurs par
l’Empire ottoman. Place de la Liberte, une foule compacte a brûle
des drapeaux turcs. Au meme endroit quelques semaines auparavant, un
autre rassemblement a ete le prelude a des emeutes sanglantes. L’ONG
International Crisis Group (ICG), basee a Bruxelles, vient de publier
un rapport relatant les evenements.

"Les comptes rendus varient considerablement sur ce qui s’est
reellement passe au matin du 1er mars, lorsque la police a charge
les manifestants pacifistes. Le gouvernement affirme que le groupe
s’appretait a lancer une insurrection. Cela est difficile a croire,
puisque les contestataires n’ont, a aucun moment, montre la moindre
inclination a l’usage de la violence. La veille, ainsi, une procession
avait reuni plus de 40000 personnes, sans qu’il y ait le moindre
incident", indique ICG.

La foule, cependant, etait massee la pour recuser les resultats du
scrutin presidentiel du 19 fevrier ayant consacre la victoire de Serge
Sarkissian, successeur designe de Robert Kocharian. "Les autorites
ont certainement commence a se sentir nerveuses devant l’obstination
des manifestants, poursuit l’ONG. Les violences qui ont eclate – tirs
d’armes a feu, incendies et pillages – ont entraîne la mort de sept
civils et d’un policier. Plus de 450 personnes auraient ete blessees,
dont plusieurs dizaines de policiers et de soldats."

La place est balayee en quelques heures, l’etat d’urgence decrete pour
vingt jours. Le gouvernement evoque "une conspiration internationale"
pour justifier la levee de nombreuses libertes et l’arrestation
d’une centaine d’opposants, partisans de l’ancien president Levon
Ter-Petrossian, candidat malheureux du scrutin de fevrier. Le chef de
l’Etat suspend la loi martiale le 21 mars, non sans avoir fait adopter
quelques jours auparavant un texte restreignant les rassemblements
politiques. "Le vote a ete expedie lors d’une session d’urgence par
un parlement totalement domine par le parti au pouvoir", denonce ICG.

L’ONG regrette la discretion de la communaute internationale durant
cette crise, la plus grave qu’ait connue l’Armenie depuis la guerre
contre l’Azerbaïdjan au sujet du Nagorny-Karabakh – terminee
en 1994. "Un certain nombre de pays ont salue les resultats de
l’election du 19 fevrier un peu trop rapidement", deplore ICG. Si
l’Organisation pour la securite et la cooperation en Europe (OSCE)
a estime que le scrutin avait ete globalement en accord avec les
standards internationaux, ICG evoque de "graves irregularites". La
repression sanglante du 1er mars a suscite un peu plus d’indignation.

Presse bridee

Deux mois après le soulèvement, les opposants sont toujours
emprisonnes, les intimidations frequentes et la presse bridee. "La
societe armenienne n’a jamais ete aussi polarisee, la situation est
veritablement explosive", note Vicken Cheterian, charge d’etudes
sur l’Armenie pour l’ONG genevoise Cimera. International Crisis
Group denonce encore le verrouillage du système, les dirigeants
etant soutenus par les oligarques et contrôlant totalement l’armee,
le parlement ou encore la justice.

"C’est Levon Ter-Petrossian qui a faconne cette organisation qu’il
entend aujourd’hui renverser, souligne Vicken Cheterian. L’Armenie
s’inscrit toujours dans la continuite. Serge Sarkissian fera la meme
politique que Robert Kocharian, meme si les recents evenements le
pousseront certainement a prendre quelques mesures symboliques comme
l’eviction des dirigeants les plus corrompus."

A lire sur "Armenia: Picking up the
Pieces".

–Boundary_(ID_p6ajwsMEZ2ZfMmyv NUVxSg)–

http://www.crisisgroup.org:

Armenia to Develop Comprehensive Child Protection Training Manual

PRESS RELEASE
Children of Armenia Fund (COAF) – Yerevan Office
53-55 Pavstos Buzand Street, 0010
Yerevan, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Inessa Grigoryan
Tel: (+374 10) 522076; 562068
Fax: (+374 10) 522076
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

Children of Armenia Fund – New York Office
162 Fifth Avenue, Suite 900,
New York, NY 10010, USA
Contact: Samantha Wagar
Tel: 212 – 994 – 8234
Fax: 212 – 994 – 8299
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

ARMENIA TO DEVELOP COMPEHENSIVE CHILD PROTECTION TRAINING MANUAL

Yerevan, Republic of Armenia, April 30, 2008 ¾ On April 25, 2008 the
Children of Armenia Fund (COAF) in partnership with UNICEF held a
roundtable to launch the development of a Comprehensive Child Protection
Training Manual which intends to build the capacity of professionals
working with children. The project is implemented on a co-sponsorship
basis and aims at creating a unified and integrated approach to
addressing children’s needs in Armenia.

Participating in the event were dignitaries from the National Assembly
and Government of Armenia, as well as professionals from international
organizations, educational institutions and representatives of local
NGOs. COAF was represented by Arpie G. Balian, Country Director and
Naira Gharakhanyan, Community Development Program Manager. In her
welcoming remarks, Dr. Balian highlighted the importance of providing
opportunity to all professionals dealing with children to master the
principles of child protection and team up in seeking appropriate and
uniform solutions. "The existing shortage of training materials and
adequately trained human resources in the country, coupled with the lack
of standards and ethical guidelines, results in inappropriate and
inconsistent case management. This is the main drive why COAF and its
key partner UNICEF launched this project. "

The UNICEF Representative in Armenia, Mr. Sheldon Yett, spoke of the
importance of multi-disciplinary approach in dealing with child issues.
"Individuals working with children require a wide range of knowledge and
an interdisciplinary approach. Standard case management guidelines and
protocols need to be in place. We hope this package will contribute to
dissemination of the knowledge required for effective strategies needed
to address child protection-related issues in Armenia."

The project outlines, including the structure and topics of the upcoming
manual, were presented by Dr. Gharakhanyan, COAF Community Development
Program Manager. "The initiation of a Comprehensive Child Protection
Training Manual was based on the assessment of existing child protection
programs in Armenia. The results have shown gaps in the knowledge and
skills of professionals working with children, especially pertaining to
child protection issues, lack of cooperation among service providers and
critical need to adopt a multidisciplinary approach in provided
services." Upon completion of the project, work will focus on getting
the manual adopted in the curricula of different pre-service and
post-graduate institutions countrywide (including universities and other
specialized training institutions).

An open discussion followed, during which the participants exchanged
ideas and explored avenues of further collaboration. The round table
concluded with a summary of the proceedings presented by Dr. Balian and
a call to experts and professionals to come up with recommendations and
commit to active participation in the project implementation.

# # # # #

www.coafkids.org
www.coafkids.org

Excerpts From The Paper, "The Armenian, Assyrian, Greek, Kurdish And

EXCERPTS FROM THE PAPER, "THE ARMENIAN, ASSYRIAN, GREEK, KURDISH AND ‘OTHER’ GENOCIDES

Kurdish Aspect, CO

A pril 28 2008

The Politics of Genocide Recognition and Denialism"

Presented at The Armenian/Assyrian Genocide Day Conference, The Grand
Committee Room, The House of Commons, The UK Houses of Parliament,
24th April 2008. Organised by Armenian Solidarity with the Victims
of All Genocides (ASVAG) and Nor Serount Cultural Association, and
supported by The Foundation for Relief and Reconciliation in the Middle
East, The European NGO Working Group Recognition – Against Genocide,
for International Understanding, The Seyfo Centre, The Aegis Trust
and The Genocide Prevention UK All-Party Parliamentary Group.

In recent years, … even as there has been greater international
public recognition of the Armenian, Assyrian, Greek, Kurdish and
‘Other’ genocides (as a consequence of concerted initiatives
by concerned individuals, Armenian, Assyrian, Greek and Kurdish
communities and other people and organisations interested in exposing
and confronting international genocidal crimes), certain governments,
politicians, academics and lobbying groups have mobilized (and often
collaborated with each other) to engage in denialism of these "events"
due not to genuine uncertainty about the fate of these targeted
"peoples/groups", but to advance cynical personal and/or nationalist
and/or geopolitical/economic/ideological agendas …

Thomas O’Dwyer, writing in Ha’aretz … has commented upon the manner
in which, "not for the first time, we have witnessed the State of
Israel’s complicity in the lie … This is political expediency at its
most morally bankrupt. Tripping over itself in its stupid defense of
the untenable Turkish position [which denies the Armenian genocide],
the Israeli Foreign Ministry has again and again played an active role
in suppressing even discussion of the issue … What is shocking is
that there should be any question whatsoever of Israel denying the
murder of a nation … Turkey’s denials of the Armenian massacre will
not endure – but the memory of Israel’s refusal to speak out against
the denial just might". To Rabbi Kenneth I. Segal, spiritual leader
of the Beth Israel Congregation in Fresno, California, "a ‘political
stench’" has, indeed, "emanated from the role played by the Israeli
Embassy in the United States in the matter" …

Larry Derfner [has] also noted the following in The Jerusalem Post:
"What does the State of Israel and many of its American Jewish
lobbyists have to say about it[?] … If they were merely standing
silent, that would be an improvement … Israel and the US Jewish
establishment may say they’re neutral over what happened to the
Armenians … but their actions say the opposite. They’ve not only
taken sides, they’re on the barricades … Ninety years after the
Armenian genocide, there is a decent Jewish response to the sickening
behavior of the State of Israel, the American Jewish Committee and
[many] other US Jewish organizations: Not in our name".

The Israeli academic Yair Auron argues that "the Israeli government’s
abetting of Turkey’s denial is not only a ‘moral disgrace’, it also
‘hurts the legacy and heritage of the Holocaust" … To Robert Fisk,
we need to be aware that "the holocaust deniers of recent years –
deniers of the Turkish genocide of … Armenian Christians in 1915,
that is – include Lord Blair" … Concerning the British government’s
stance over the matter, it is, in Fisk’s view, based upon "a cynical
premise by the Blair government, namely that it could get away with
genocide denial to maintain good relations with Turkey". R.J. Rummel
remains critical of the manner in which, "for political reasons, the
[US] State Department refuses to … even acknowledge that the genocide
took place" … What is even more shocking about the US official State
Department position is that its own genocide analyst in its Legal
Department privately would appear to be clearly convinced that what
occurred was genocide … Despite this type of private acknowledgement,
however, the US government officially and publicly asserts a denialist
position …

The US government and many "establishment" figures, it should be
noted, have a habit of refusing to acknowledge certain past and
ongoing genocides. Those genocides, for example, that might be seen to
embarrass the US government and perceived geostrategic and economic
"pivotal" client states’ governments, such as Turkey. It is in this
political context, as Edward Herman has observed, that "establishment
politicians, media, and [establishment] intellectuals use the word
genocide with great abandon, but with a hugely politicized selectivity"
that we must be appreciative of:

Genocide was used often to describe the "killing fields" of Pol
Pot, but not the killing fields of Vietnam where the United States
ravaged the country, killed many more people than did Pol Pot, and
left a destroyed country and chemical warfare heritage of hundreds
of thousands of children with birth defects.

The word was never used in the US mainstream to describe Indonesian
operations in East Timor, where the invasion of 1975 and murderous
occupation killed off between a quarter and a third of the population

The word genocide is rarely if ever applied to Turkish ethnic cleansing
and massacres of its Kurds, and in fact Turkey was mobilized to
participate in the 78-day NATO (de facto US) bombing war against
Yugoslavia in 1999, supposedly to terminate "genocide" in Kosovo,
although Turkey’s attacks on its local Kurds were far more deadly than
any pre-bombing-war Yugoslav violence against the Kosovo Albanians.

The obvious explanation of the varying word usage is that Turkey was
a US ally, and its ethnic cleansing and killings were facilitated by
greatly increased US (Clinton administration) military aid, just as
Indonesia’s violence in East Timor was greatly helped by greater US
(Carter administration) aid to the killer state. Yugoslavia, on the
other hand, was a US target …

The word genocide … is never used in the mainstream to describe
the "sanctions of mass destruction" that are credibly estimated to
have killed over a million Iraqis. The establishment institutions
have avoided all but passing mention of the numbers dead, and they
suppress even more completely the evidence that the killings were a
consequence of deliberate actions, including the US and British use of
the sanctions system to block the import of medicines and equipment
to repair water and sanitation systems that were destroyed with full
recognition of the disease-threatening consequences …

It [also] remains a power-out-of-the-gun truth that … the United
States can commit blatant aggression with only slightly delayed
UN accommodation, and it and its clients don’t aggress, ethnically
cleanse, or commit genocide.

Consequently, they are NOT adequately held to account for international
genocidal crimes. In Turkey’s case, internationally respected genocide
scholars such as Tove Skutnabb-Kangas point out that Turkey remains
in breach of two articles of the United Nations’ Genocide Convention
… For geo-political reasons, the US, UK, and German governments,
particularly in the post-Second World War period, due to NATO linked
agendas, ‘post-9/11’ and other geostrategic and economic concerns,
have not only chosen to not recognize any [Kurdish] "genocide",
they have been complicit and instrumental in facilitating this
very genocidal process. It is important to note that complicity in
genocide is identified as a major international crime by the 1948
Genocide Convention … [Moreover], according to Cengiz Candar, the
Turkish journalist, Turkey continues to practice cultural genocide
against the Armenians in Turkey. According to the internationally
respected Turkish investigative journalist Ahmet Kahraman, currently
in exile, the Turkish state continues to engage in cultural genocide of
Armenians, Kurds and Greeks. And yet, despite this, from the US and UK
governments who supposedly stand for "human rights", "humanitarianism"
and a commitment towards speaking out against ‘genocide’, there
is no condemnation or serious examination or appraisal of these
"genocide" charges that have been levelled, just as there is no
serious appraisal or "recognition" of the past Armenian, Assyrian,
and Greek genocides. Or, indeed, serious appraisal or "recognition"
of the genocides in Vietnam, or Iraq (under sanctions, or after). The
list goes on …

Concerning the question:

Do the UK and US governments hinder the process of reconciliation by
their one-sided pro-Turkish government stance?

I think they do. Reconciliation cannot meaningfully take place even
as cultural genocide continues, and the Turkish state refuses to
acknowledge its own ongoing and past genocidal policies and practices,
that themselves derived "inspiration" from the even earlier – also
denied (alongside with the US and UK governments) – genocidal phase
under late Ottoman (CUP) rule. As Andrew Kevorkian has commented:

What is eminently clear is that there is a genocide of the Kurds
going on (since about 1925) … But, as long as Turkey can lie about
the Kurds, with American support, the genocide will continue – like
an inexorable spreading cancer.

And with a genocide continuing in its many manifestations against
Kurds, Armenians and ‘Others’, there is little chance of reconciliation
developing meaningfully.

As the Turkish Human Rights Association noted on Armenian Genocide
Recognition Day (24th April) in 2006 (and this has to be reflected
upon, given knowledge of the Turkish, US and UK governments’ continuing
denial of the "reality" of the Armenian and ‘Other’ genocides):

Denial is a constituant part of the genocide itself and results in
the continuation of the genocide. Denial of genocide is a human
rights violation in itself. It deprives individuals the right to
mourn for their ancestors, for the ethnic cleansing of a nation,
the annihilation of people of all ages, all professions, all social
sections, women, men, children, babies, grandparents alike just
because they were Armenians regardless of their political background
or conviction. Perhaps the most important of all, it is the refusal
of making a solemn, formal commitment and say: "NEVER AGAIN" …

Turkey will not be able to take even one step forward without putting
an end to the continuity of the Progress and Union manner of ruling.

Indeed, for the Turkish Human Rights Association: "Unless the Turkish
state agree[s] to create an environment where public homage is paid
to genocide victims, where the sufferings of their grandchildren is
shared and the genocide is recognised", there can be no progress.

If we ask ourselves the question:

Will the planned state visit by HM the Queen to Turkey in May be a
seal of approval on the Turkish government’s distortion of the truth
of the genocide, and the continuing cultural genocide in Turkey?

It very much will, in my opinion, depend upon the nature of the visit,
and the statements and endorsements that will accompany that visit
(relating to what is said or unsaid concerning the Turkish state’s
ongoing and past genocidal record, and its and the UK government’s
continuing Armenian/Assyrian/Greek/Kurdish genocide denialist
position). The Queen and those in her entourage and the UK government
should also reflect upon the Turkish Human Rights Association’s
observations on Armenian Genocide Recognition day in 2006, which
remain relevant today:

Turkey has made hardly any progress in the field of co-existence,
democracy, human rights and putting an end to militarism since the
time of the Union and Progress Committee. Annihilation and denial had
been, and continues today, to be the only means to solve the problem
… Today’s ongoing military build up of some 250,000 troops in the
[Kurdish] southeast of Turkey is the proof of a mindset wh[ich] is
unable to develop any solution to the Kurdish question other than
armed suppression.

http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc042808DF.html

Sydney’s Armenian Community Commemorates the Armenian Genocide

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Rights Council of Australia
P.O. Box 462, Ryde NSW, 2112, Australia
Contact name: Haig Lepedjian
Phone: +612 9809 7290
[email protected]

Sydney’s Armenian Community Commemorates the Armenian Genocide

April 26, 2008

The Sydney Armenian community came together on Sunday 20th of April
2008 for the annual commemoration of the Armenian Genocide. The annual
commemoration is organised by the three traditional Armenian Political
Parties comprising of the Armenian Democratic Liberal Party, the
Social Democratic Hunchakian Party and the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation and is supported by Sydney based Armenian religious,
cultural, educational, media, benevolent and sporting organisations.

The key note speaker at this year’s commemoration was New York Times
Bestselling Author, Professor Peter Balakian who joined political
figures, representatives and members of Sydney ‘s Armenian community
in commemorating the 93rd anniversary of the Turkish campaign to
annihilate the Armenian nation.

Represented at the commemoration were the Prime Minister of Australia,
the Honourable Kevin Rudd MP, as well as the Leader of the Federal
Opposition, Dr. Brendan Nelson. Also represented at the commemoration
were the Premier of New South Wales, the Honourable Morris Iemma and
the Leader of the Opposition of New South Wales, Mr. Barry O’Farrell
MP.

Professor Balakian, Rebar Professor of the Humanities at Colgate
University and Raphael Lemkin Prize-winning author of The Burning
Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America ‘s Response (2003)
highlighted the critical role that the Armenian Genocide played as a
precursor for other modern genocides.

The Armenian Genocide was used by infamous 20th century dictators
including Adolf Hitler in planning and justifying the execution of the
European Jews, Gypsies, communists and homosexuals during World War
II.

Professor Balakian highlighted the shared history of Armenians and
Australians which was fostered following the arrest of Armenian
community leaders and intellectuals on April 24, 1915 in Istanbul
Turkey , and the Gallipoli landing of the Anzacs on April 25, 1915 .

Balakian’s address stressed the need for worldwide recognition and
condemnation of the Armenian Genocide.

In refuting Turkish claims that the events of 1915 was an example of
the many tragedies that befell the people of the Ottoman Empire due to
the prevailing war time conditions, Professor Balakian was able to
present in a logical and systematic manner the events that prove that
the Armenian Genocide was pre-conceived and highly organised centrally
by the Turkish authorities.

Balakian stressed that besides being the first example of a modern
genocide, what made the Armenian Genocide further unique was the use
of technology by the Turkish authorities.

The telegram was extensively used to issue concise instructions to all
regions of the Ottoman Empire on how to eradicate the Armenians.

And with all able men killed, cargo trains were used to transport the
remaining Armenian population comprising of women, children and the
elderly to established concentration camps in the Syrian Desert
. These concentration camps condemned those that were transported
there to certain death by hunger and disease.

Primate of the Armenian Apostolic Church of Australia and New Zealand,
His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian in his statement to the
attendees said the days of sadness and sorrow have long past. Instead
the Armenian people in both Armenia and the Diaspora are now in
pursuit of justice and accountability.

While welcoming the growing number of countries, states, provinces and
city councils who have officially acknowledged the Armenian Genocide,
Archbishop Aghan Baliozian said what the Armenian people are seeking
is the official acknowledgment of the crimes committed against the
Armenian people by past Turkish authorities.

The Turkish acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide will prove to be
the most meaningful to the Armenian people Archbishop Aghan Baliozian
concluded, drawing a thunderous applause from the attendees.

Compiled by Hagop Tchamkertenian
Armenian Rights Council
[email protected]

Hungary offers training help to Armenian army

Hungarian News Agency (MTI)
April 25, 2008 Friday

HUNGARY OFFERS TRAINING HELP TO ARMENIAN ARMY

Yerevan, April 25 (MTI) – Hungary’s deputy defence minister Agnes
Vadai offered training assistance to the Armenian army during her
talks in Yerevan on Friday.

Armenian deputy defence minister Ara Nazaryan and Vadai discussed
Armenia’s plans to set up a NATO-compatible brigade by 2015 with help
from the US, Germany, the UK and Greece. The unit could participate in
international missions.

Vadai said Hungary had offered its expertise in expanding the civilian
base of the Armenian army and also invited military officers to
participate in a peace-keeping course in Szolnok, Central Hungary.

Earlier Vadai and her delegation met Armenian deputy Foreign Minister
Gegam Garibdzhanyan who invited Hungarian Foreign Minister Kinga Goncz
to visit Armenia. Talks also focused on a Hungarian-Armenian agreement
on dual taxation, which Hungary plans to soon have ready for signing,
Vadai said.

During the visit, the delegation laid a wreath by the Armenian
Genocide Memorial in Yerevan and a World War Two Memorial for
Hungarian soldiers.

‘Orinats Yerkir’ party leader and RF ambassador to Armenia meet

‘Orinats Yerkir’ party leader and RF ambassador to Armenia meet

2008-04-26 13:16:00

ArmInfo. "Orinats Yerkir" party leader Artur Baghdasaryan met
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Russia to Armenia
Nikolay Pavlov and adviser of RF Embassy in RA Alexander Mizhurenko.

As "OY" party told ArmInfo, the issues of further development of the
Armenia-Russian relations were discussed during the meeting. A.
Baghdasaryan also said about the decisiveness of carrying out reforms
of the formed coalitional government of Armenia. The parties emphasized
the importance of extension and deepening of the Armenian- Russian
relations on the way of implementation of social-economic reforms in
Armenia.

BAKU: Azerbaijani And Turkish Flags Burnt In Yerevan

AZERBAIJANI AND TURKISH FLAGS BURNT IN YEREVAN

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 25 2008

Yerevan -APA. People trampled a Turkish flag during a so-called
commemoration ceremony on the occasion of the incidents of 1915. The
ceremony was held in the Armenian capital, Yerevan, APA reports.

There were ugly scenes in a rally in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan
to protest incidents of 1915. A Turkish flag was laid on the road
towards the monument. Thousands of people trampled the Turkish
flag. Azerbaijani and Turkish flags have been burnt together at
night. Photos on it have been reflected in Turkish websites.

Turkish media reported that this action had been held on a state level.

Egoyan Makes Cannes Cut For The Sixth Time

EGOYAN MAKES CANNES CUT FOR THE SIXTH TIME

Globe and Mail, Canada
April 24 2008

The Canadian director’s new movie, Adoration, will compete next month
for the Palme d’Or along side films by Clint Eastwood and Steven
Soderbergh. ‘It’s always a little overwhelming when you look at the
competition,’ he tells Gayle MacDonald GAYLE MACDONALD

Atom Egoyan’s new film, Adoration, was named yesterday one of the 19
finalists that will be in competition next month for the prestigious
Palme d’Or Award at the 61st annual Festival de Cannes.

The film’s inclusion in Official Selection marks the sixth time that
a feature film from the Victoria-raised, Toronto-based director’s
work has made the cut.

Reached yesterday, Egoyan said it was "an honour" to be included,
adding "this is not something I take for granted.

"Especially with this movie. It’s a more intimate film. It’s very much
rooted in this culture and I’m so proud to represent the country at
this level."

Videos

Cannes comes back

The Cannes film festival gets ready to welcome the stars

The previous Egoyan titles in the running for the Palme d’Or include
Exotica (1994), The Sweet Hereafter (1997), Felicia’s Journey (1999)
and Where the Truth Lies (2005). Ararat, his 2002 film about the
Armenian genocide, was an Official Selection in Cannes as well.

The 19-strong competition lineup includes projects from veteran
directors including Clint Eastwood’s Changeling, Jean-Pierre and Luc
Dardenne’s Le Silence de Lorna, Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas’s
Linha de Passe, Wim Wenders’s The Palermo Shooting, and Steven
Soderbergh’s four-hour biopic, Che, about Sixties revolutionary
Ernesto Che Guevara.

"It’s always a little overwhelming when you look at the competition,"
Egoyan noted of his fellow filmmakers. "Having been on the jury
there as well, however, it begins to make more sense once you’re
in the middle of it. From the outside, it seems a little crazy to
just throw all these movies together, but they are selected quite
carefully. There’s an internal logic that you don’t really get until
you’re actually there."

The Cannes’ committee only screened Adoration this past weekend. Egoyan
and his colleagues found out they would be vying for the Palme d’Or
a few days ago.

Yesterday, Adoration’s co-producers Simone Urdl and Jennifer Weiss
said they were "thrilled" to get the news. "We certainly hoped it
would happen," said the co-founders of Toronto’s Film Farm, "and
Cannes was the place we wanted the film to go. But because we were
so late submitting it – and because there seems to be a lot of great
films out there right now – we still weren’t sure."

Urdl, who started as Egoyan’s production assistant in 1991, added "I
don’t think you can ever take these things for granted. People assume
– because it’s Atom and he has such a long history [with Cannes] –
that he’ll get in. But that’s not the case.

"Adoration is quite different than his last couple of films. And the
head of the Cannes festival had changed. So we truly weren’t sure,
and to get in, was really exciting news."

Weiss says Adoration – a film shot in Toronto last fall for about
$5.5-million – was a nice change of pace for Egoyan. "For him,
going back to this budget and scale was liberating. There’s simply
not the same pressure to make a big, splashy film with big stars. So
we have an ensemble cast, and the discovery of a new actor (Devon
Bostick) who is only now 16 and plays the lead. All those elements,
meant Atom got to have fun. It’s an extremely personal film for him,
without external pressure."

Adoration focuses on one young man’s fascination with the possibility
he’s the spawn of two historical figures – and how his personal
obsession is both enabled, and threatened, by technology.

The film also stars Scott Speedman, Rachel Blanchard, Kenneth Welsh,
and Arsinee Khanjian (Egoyan’s wife).

The director says his screenplay grew out of a true-life story he’d
heard 20 years ago about a young man who convinced his pregnant Irish
girlfriend to board a flight, carrying a bomb that she didn’t know
had been planted on her. "This story – or a version of it – is read
in the main character’s high school and it triggers his imagination,"
Egoyan explains.

The film is executive produced by Robert Lantos’s Serendipity Point
Films, and will be distributed by his company Maximum Film.

"This is the seventh time I’ve gone to Cannes in competition," Lantos
said yesterday. ". … Maybe this time, we’ll be seven times lucky
and get the Palme d’Or."

*****

The competition

The 19 films competing for the 2008 Palme d’or

(a 20th film, from France, is still to be announced):

Uc Maymun (Three Monkeys)

by Nuri Bilge Ceylan (Turkey)

Le Silence de Lorna (The Silence of Lorna)

by Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne (Belgium)

Un Conte de Noël (A Christmas Tale)

by Arnaud Desplechin (France)

Changeling

by Clint Eastwood (U.S.)

Adoration

by Atom Egoyan (Canada)

Waltz with Bashir

by Ari Folman (Israel)

La Frontière de l’aube (The Frontier of Dawn)

by Philippe Garrel (France)

Gomorra

by Matteo Garrone (Italy)

24 City

by Jia Zhangke (China)

Synecdoche, New York

by Charlie Kaufman (U.S.)

My Magic

by Eric Khoo (Singapore)

La Mujer Sin Cabeza (Woman Without a Head)

by Lucretia Martel (Argentina)

Serbis

by Brillante Mendoza (Philippines)

Delta

by Kornel Mundruczo (Hungary)

Linha de Passe (Line of Passage)

by Walter Salles, Daniela Thomas (Brazil)

Che

by Steven Soderbergh (U.S.)

Il Divo

by Paolo Sorrentino (Italy)

Leonera

by Pablo Trapero (Argentina)

The Palermo Shooting

by Wim Wenders (Germany)

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