Eurocommission Delegation Head Completes Mission In Armenia

EUROCOMMISSION DELEGATION HEAD COMPLETES MISSION IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.10.2006 16:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Armenian President Robert Kocharian met with
Eurocommission Delegation Head Torben Holtze, who is completing his
mission in Armenia, reports the Press Office of the Armenian leader
reports. The parties expressed mutual gratitude for mutual effective
work. The President noted with content that during the mission of
the Eurocommission Delegation Head serious progress was registered in
EU-Armenia relations. The relations became more coordinated and entered
a very serious stage for Armenia. Kocharian expressed confidence that
the EU-Armenia Action Plan within the ENP will provide an opportunity
to work more closely and effectively.

Chirac Says Sorry To Turkey For Armenian Bill

CHIRAC SAYS SORRY TO TURKEY FOR ARMENIAN BILL

Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand
Oct 16 2006

ANKARA: French leader Jacques Chirac has told Turkish Prime Minister
Tayyip Erdogan he is sorry French lawmakers approved a bill making
it a crime to deny Armenians were victims of genocide at the hands
of Ottoman Turks.

"Chirac called me and told me he was sorry and he said that he is
listening to our statements and he thinks we are right and he will
do what he can in the upcoming process," he told his AK Party, in
broadcast comments, during a dinner on Saturday (local time).

France is home to Europe’s largest Armenian diaspora.

Turkey denies any genocide, saying the Armenians were victims of
a partisan war that also claimed many Muslim Turkish lives. Turkey
accuses Armenians of carrying out massacres while siding with invading
Russian troops during World War 1.

The French president’s office did not comment when contacted about
Chirac’s call to Erdogan on Saturday morning.

Erdogan, facing a rise in nationalism ahead of next year’s
parliamentary elections, warned on Friday that Ankara was considering
retaliatory measures against France.

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul repeated the government’s call for
France to scrap the bill, which has complicated Turkey’s European
Union accession bid.

AdvertisementAdvertisement"We are worried. Turkish-French relations
have been very deeply wounded. I hope that French politicians and
statesmen will see this and will take the necessary measure to prevent
further damage to France’s credibility," Gul told reporters.

FEAR BACKLASH

French businesses fear the bill will have repercussions for their
business in Turkey, a fast-growing market which imported 4.7 billion
euros’ worth of French goods in 2005.

About 100 people protested outside the French consulate in Istanbul
on Sunday, throwing eggs at the building.

Immediately after Thursday’s vote, the French Foreign Ministry said
it did not support the lower house bill, calling it "unnecessary and
untimely" and indicating it might never become law as it still needed
to be ratified by both the upper house Senate and French president.

France is believed to be home to the largest Armenian immigrant
community in western Europe, with up to half a million people of
Armenian descent living there.

They make up a powerful political lobby which cannot be overlooked
just seven months ahead of a presidential election.

However, some Turks think French politicians have a broader agenda
and are using the bill to try to block Ankara’s EU bid.

Chirac and the two leading candidates to replace him in polls due
next May – Nicolas Sarkozy and Segolene Royal – all say Ankara must
accept the genocide before joining the bloc.

The European Commission has said that recognition of the genocide
was not a precondition for Turkey entering the EU.

Jacques Chirac Never Apologized To Turkish Prime Minister

JACQUES CHIRAC NEVER APOLOGIZED TO TURKISH PRIME MINISTER

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 16 2006

In a phone talk with the Prime Minister of Turkey Rejeb Tayyib Erdogan
the President of France Jacques Chirac repeated the words about the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide he uttered during his state
visit to Armenia, Press Service of Elisee Palace told "ArmInfo.

The press service refuted the information disseminated by Turkish
media, according to which President Chirac had apologized for the
adoption of the bill penalizing the negation of the Armenian Genocide
by the lower house of the French Parliament. According to Turkish
media, Chirac had promised to block adoption of a corresponding law
in future.

"The phone talk really took place, but we do not confirm the
information disseminated by Turkish media. During the conversation
with the Turkish Prime Minister Chirac repeated the words he said in
Yerevan, emphasizing the necessity of acknowledgement of the Armenian
Genocide by Ankara if Turkey wants to join the European Union,"
the official source of the Elisee Palace noted.

ANKARA: Turkish Premier "Deeply Sad" Over French Decision, Hopes Bil

TURKISH PRESIDENT "DEEPLY SAD" OVER FRENCH DECISION, HOPES BILL NOT ENACTED

Anatolia news agency, Turkey
Oct 13 2006

Ankara, 13 October: "President Ahmet Necdet Sezer got deeply sad
over the French National Assembly’s approval of a bill on 12 October
2006 that makes any denial of so-called Armenian genocide a crime,"
said Sermet Atacanli, senior adviser to President Sezer, on Friday
[13 October].

"Mr President hopes that the bill will be received with logic in the
next legislative level and hopes that the bill will not become an
actual law in France," told Atacanli.

Atacanli added that "Mr Sezer wishes that Turkish-French relations
will not get hurt and basic rights of freedom of expression will not
get negatively affected by a French law."

Azeri Majlis to send a second protest letter to the French Parl.

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 13 2006

Azeri Milli Majlis to send a second protest letter to the French
Parliament
13.10.2006 16:15

Chairman of Azerbaijani Milli Majlis Oktay Asadov has condemned the
bill penalizing negation of the Armenian Genocide the French
Parliament adopted October 12, `Trend’ agency reports.
Asadov noted that the adoption of the bill `contradicts democracy and
human freedom.’ He said Armenians of France played a great role in
the adoption of the document.
It has been decided that on behalf of Milli Majlis a special
commission will prepare a second letter to the French Parliament. The
commission will be chaired by Vice-Speaker of Milli Majlis Bahar
Muradova.

Nagorno Karabakh Leader Denies Rumors About His Intention To Seek A

NAGORNO-KARABAKH LEADER DENIES RUMORS ABOUT HIS INTENTION TO SEEK A THIRD TERM

Armenpress
Oct 12 2006

STEPANAKERT, OCTOBER 12, ARMENPRESS: Nagorno-Karabakh leader Arkady
Ghukasian denied flatly Armenian media speculations about his intention
to seek a third consecutive term in the office.

"I do not have any intention to seek a third term in office,"
Ghukasian said to a special news briefing yesterday in Stepanakert
which he called to dispel these rumors, which he said were damaging
the democratic image of Nagorno- Karabakh.

Some media reports argued the constitution Nagorno-Karabakh is going to
adopt in December would actually mean a new countdown of presidential
terms and the plot is to pass it before next regular presidential
election to give Ghukasian a legal ground to rerun for presidency.

By Ghukasian said yesterday he would not seek a new term even if the
constitution gave him that chance.

"Moral rules are as important to me as legal norms. As a man and
a president I have done as much as I could to make the process of
democracy here irreversible," he said.

"I would never react to such insinuations except for two reasons:
the image of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic as a democratic state and
the fundamental importance of a constitution for the survival of our
state," he commented.

He stressed his priority was and has always been attaining
international recognition of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and the
strengthening of its statehood.

Projet De Loi Sur Le Genocide Armenien : Nouvel Appel De La Turquie

PROJET DE LOI SUR LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN : NOUVEL APPEL DE LA TURQUIE

Agence France Presse
11 octobre 2006 mercredi 5:02 PM GMT

Le ministre turc des Affaires etrangères, Abdullah Gul, a une nouvelle
fois appele mercredi la France a ne pas adopter un projet de loi
controverse qui punirait la negation du genocide armenien pendant la
Première Guerre mondiale, a la veille de l’examen du texte.

"J’espère que la France, patrie de la liberte où chacun peut librement
exprimer ses opinions, ne deviendra pas un pays où des gens sont
emprisonnes pour avoir exprime leurs opinions et publie des documents",
a declare M. Gul a des journalistes a Ankara.

"Si le projet de loi est adopte, la Turquie ne perdra rien, mais
la France perdra non seulement la Turquie, mais aussi quelque chose
d’elle-meme", a affirme le chef de la diplomatie turque.

L’Assemblee nationale francaise doit voter jeudi sur le projet de
loi depose par le Parti socialiste, qui prevoit que toute personne
niant la realite du genocide armenien sera punie d’un an de prison
et d’une amende de 45.000 euros.

Les Armeniens estiment que jusqu’a 1,5 million des leurs ont peri
dans un genocide orchestre par l’Empire ottoman entre 1915 et 1917.

La Turquie declare qu’il y a eu des massacres de part et d’autre et
recuse avec vigueur les accusations de genocide.

Si le projet de loi est approuve par les deputes a l’Assemblee
nationale, il devra encore, pour entrer en vigueur, etre approuve
par le Senat, un processus qui devrait prendre beaucoup de temps.

Ankara, très irrite par le projet de loi socialiste, a averti que
son adoption porterait un coup sevère aux relations bilaterales et
que les firmes francaises se verraient dans ce cas exclues de marches
potentiellement fructueux.

Les responsables turcs estiment generalement que le depôt du projet
de loi a ete dicte par des considerations de politique interieure
francaise et constitue un geste a l’adresse de la communaute armenienne
avant les elections de 2007.

La communaute armenienne de France compte quelque 500.000 personnes,
un electorat qui n’est pas negligeable.

Le gouvernement francais s’est dissocie du projet de loi, declarant
qu’il n’etait "pas necessaire". Le parti de droite majoritaire,
l’Union pour un mouvement populaire (UMP), est embarrasse, certains
de ses deputes se declarant pret a voter pour le texte socialiste.

L’unanimite ne règne pas non plus au Parti socialiste, où certains
deputes sont hostiles au projet de loi.

En Turquie, en revanche, toutes les tendances politiques sont unies
dans une meme condamnation du texte.

–Boundary_(ID_ChIChfApRRPESaq5SBGSGQ)–

Publisher And Jazz Enthusiast

PUBLISHER AND JAZZ ENTHUSIAST
Adrian Dannatt

The Independent/UK
09 October 2006

Jean Claude Abreu, publisher, collector and musicologist: born
Paris 11 January 1922; married 1960 Mary-Sargent Ladd (one son, two
daughters; marriage dissolved), 1973 Georgiana Manley; died Paris 9
September 2006.

Jean Claude Abreu was last of a generation who regarded even the
mildest self-promotion as utter anathema, his resistance to any form
of fame ensuring his contributions to our culture went persistently
unnoticed. As a man of letters, conversationalist, mountain climber
and jazz expert, Abreu was the ultimate enthusiast for everything
from Formula One to chess, tennis and even yoga, of which he was a
Parisian pioneer.

He was born in Paris in 1922 to a French-Armenian mother and a father
from the fabled Abreu family of Santa Clara, Cuba, a town created by
his family and dominated to this day by a sculpture of its founding
Abreu.

Educated at the Ecole des Roches in Normandy, where his passion
for American jazz was first lit with a clandestine wind-up, Abreu
went to Harvard to study science before going to live in Cuba at the
Quinta Palatino. This eccentric mansion was built by his grandmother,
who filled it with 360 species of exotic monkeys, donated to Harvard
upon her death. Abreu assisted with aspects of the family business,
but as a young man in his bachelor retreat overlooking Havana’s old
harbour he knew everyone, from the writer Lezama Lima to Julio Lobo,
"the richest man in Cuba", and was also constantly travelling (by
ocean liner, of course), returning regularly to Europe and spending
six months in Mexico City as a simultaneous translator for Unesco.

In 1952 Abreu inherited and began developing land around the suburbs
of Havana, but these properties were swiftly requisitioned with
the revolution.

Abreu left Cuba soon after, in 1960, but he had already been spending
much of his time elsewhere, not least in Zermatt, the alpine town he
had discovered in Switzerland.

In 1956, Abreu had begun construction on his mountain residence,
named Chalet Turquino after the highest summit in Cuba, the first
building constructed in Zermatt by a foreigner. With its 12 bedrooms
and adjoining bathrooms, Turquino was soon filled with a roster of
international characters, from Alan Clark and Mark Birley to the
actor Robert Montgomery and painter Ernst Fuchs, many of whom were
later to take a place in Zermatt.

Thus Abreu created Zermatt society, transforming it from a remote
village into a fashionable resort. But Abreu was not there merely
for parties; much time was spent walking and climbing mountains,
all of which he conquered, Matterhorn and Monte Rosa included.

If Abreu can take credit for "inventing" Zermatt he was also busy
creating another monument, the magazine L’Oeil, first published
in 1957, entirely thanks to his generosity. Contacted by the
writer Georges Bernier with the idea of creating a luxurious,
sophisticated publication to cover all visual and decorative arts,
Abreu agreed to become backer and publisher. This celebrated
publication (the only magazine in Dr Lacan’s waiting room) still
appears today and was subsidised by Abreu until 1972, when he sold
the title. Characteristically he ensured his name never once appeared
on the masthead or even in the smallest print.

Abreu’s interest in the arts began back in Cuba, with friends like
Wilfredo Lam or Cundo Bermúdez, and continued in an eclectic manner,
juxtaposing an Egyptian falcon in his collection with a Courbet
or Claes Oldenburg. A major contribution also came from his aunt,
Lilita Abreu, close confidante of "les Sept" and an adored muse to
the writers Saint-John Perse and Jean Giraudoux.

On her death Lilita left Abreu major works by Vuillard, Bonnard and
Klee, and a Picasso or two.

Over the decades the collection was displayed with soigné relaxation
in a series of suitable apartments around Paris, Abreu being au fait
with the work of leading decorators of the day, not least his fellow
Cuban exile Emilio Terry. Grandest of these abodes was an Hôtel
Particulier with its own park in the Marais which he swapped for a
high-ceilinged apartment on the rue Verneuil, his final habitat,
adorned with perfect pitch by the great Italian designer Renzo
Mongiardino.

In 1960 Abreu married Mary- Sargent ("Didi") Ladd, a Boston
debutante who had graced the cover of Harper’s Bazaar, whose family
covered Republican politics, Intelligence operatives and, indeed,
the portraitist John Singer Sargent. The Abreus entertained on a
generous scale for an astonishing range of people, the sort of people
whose inherent glamour depends upon its being hidden from the larger
public. These included the Surrealist poet Joyce Mansour, Nan Kempner,
Hans Bellmer, the Scottish laird Simon Fraser, the screenwriter Paul
Gégauff, the shipping magnate Jean Alvarez de Toledo and a judicious
scattering of crown princes.

But some of Abreu’s most favoured figures were his "fournisseurs"
or specialist suppliers, not least his English tailor who catered to
his strict palette of grey suits and blue shirts. There was also his
expert car mechanic and his personal horological provider. Abreu was
fiercely loyal to these artisans, going specially to Geneva for any
work that needed doing on watch or automobile, as he had a delight
in alterations and improvements.

For Abreu had a brand theory – never buying from the best-known
source but the more recherché competition. As he put with his usual
Anglo-Gallic admixture; "Second to best, plus difficile a trouver,
encore plus cher."

Thus his man at Gubelin in Geneva would create a version of the
Rolex Explorer made from white gold, absolutely indistinguishable
from others but far more costly. He would also have his "trombone"
collar-stiffeners crafted from white gold, precisely because they
were never visible. Or he would drive his new Aston Martin DB4 over
to Switzerland to have it fitted with radial tyres and family seating.

This accommodated his progeny, two daughters and a son, on numerous
trips through the mountains, emulating his favoured Formula One
drivers. Having remarried in 1973, to the equally ideal Wasp beauty
Georgiana ("Georgie") Manley, Abreu continued his charmed existence
of reading, skiing, climbing and collecting – friends and objets –
and not least improving his important jazz collection.

A tootler himself, Abreu had a particular love of Pee Wee Russell,
matched by his passion for Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Louis
Armstrong. In fact one of his few recorded public acts was to vote
on the international panel for the Jazz Hall of Fame put together by
his old friend Ahmet Ertegun.

In respect of his Cuban heritage a formal mass for the eternal
peace of "Juan Claudio", complete with children’s choir, was given
by Monsignor Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, Vicar General of Havana
in the city’s Art Deco church of San Agustín. Meanwhile in France
his memorial was attended by le tout Paris from the Ganay brothers,
Francois Pinault, Barbara of Yugoslavia and Jean d’Ormesson – who gave
an oration recalling yacht trips through the Aeolian islands. Here
he arose early to see Abreu already on deck playing his clarinet,
but with typical discretion silently, so as to wake no one.

Adrian Dannatt

Jean Claude Abreu, publisher, collector and musicologist: born
Paris 11 January 1922; married 1960 Mary-Sargent Ladd (one son, two
daughters; marriage dissolved), 1973 Georgiana Manley; died Paris 9
September 2006.

Jean Claude Abreu was last of a generation who regarded even the
mildest self-promotion as utter anathema, his resistance to any form
of fame ensuring his contributions to our culture went persistently
unnoticed. As a man of letters, conversationalist, mountain climber
and jazz expert, Abreu was the ultimate enthusiast for everything
from Formula One to chess, tennis and even yoga, of which he was a
Parisian pioneer.

He was born in Paris in 1922 to a French-Armenian mother and a father
from the fabled Abreu family of Santa Clara, Cuba, a town created by
his family and dominated to this day by a sculpture of its founding
Abreu.

Educated at the Ecole des Roches in Normandy, where his passion
for American jazz was first lit with a clandestine wind-up, Abreu
went to Harvard to study science before going to live in Cuba at the
Quinta Palatino. This eccentric mansion was built by his grandmother,
who filled it with 360 species of exotic monkeys, donated to Harvard
upon her death. Abreu assisted with aspects of the family business,
but as a young man in his bachelor retreat overlooking Havana’s old
harbour he knew everyone, from the writer Lezama Lima to Julio Lobo,
"the richest man in Cuba", and was also constantly travelling (by
ocean liner, of course), returning regularly to Europe and spending
six months in Mexico City as a simultaneous translator for Unesco.

In 1952 Abreu inherited and began developing land around the suburbs
of Havana, but these properties were swiftly requisitioned with
the revolution.

Abreu left Cuba soon after, in 1960, but he had already been spending
much of his time elsewhere, not least in Zermatt, the alpine town he
had discovered in Switzerland.

In 1956, Abreu had begun construction on his mountain residence,
named Chalet Turquino after the highest summit in Cuba, the first
building constructed in Zermatt by a foreigner. With its 12 bedrooms
and adjoining bathrooms, Turquino was soon filled with a roster of
international characters, from Alan Clark and Mark Birley to the
actor Robert Montgomery and painter Ernst Fuchs, many of whom were
later to take a place in Zermatt.

Thus Abreu created Zermatt society, transforming it from a remote
village into a fashionable resort. But Abreu was not there merely
for parties; much time was spent walking and climbing mountains,
all of which he conquered, Matterhorn and Monte Rosa included.

If Abreu can take credit for "inventing" Zermatt he was also busy
creating another monument, the magazine L’Oeil, first published
in 1957, entirely thanks to his generosity. Contacted by the
writer Georges Bernier with the idea of creating a luxurious,
sophisticated publication to cover all visual and decorative arts,
Abreu agreed to become backer and publisher. This celebrated
publication (the only magazine in Dr Lacan’s waiting room) still
appears today and was subsidised by Abreu until 1972, when he sold
the title. Characteristically he ensured his name never once appeared
on the masthead or even in the smallest print.

Abreu’s interest in the arts began back in Cuba, with friends like
Wilfredo Lam or Cundo Bermúdez, and continued in an eclectic manner,
juxtaposing an Egyptian falcon in his collection with a Courbet
or Claes Oldenburg. A major contribution also came from his aunt,
Lilita Abreu, close confidante of "les Sept" and an adored muse to
the writers Saint-John Perse and Jean Giraudoux.

On her death Lilita left Abreu major works by Vuillard, Bonnard and
Klee, and a Picasso or two.

Over the decades the collection was displayed with soigné relaxation
in a series of suitable apartments around Paris, Abreu being au fait
with the work of leading decorators of the day, not least his fellow
Cuban exile Emilio Terry. Grandest of these abodes was an Hôtel
Particulier with its own park in the Marais which he swapped for a
high-ceilinged apartment on the rue Verneuil, his final habitat,
adorned with perfect pitch by the great Italian designer Renzo
Mongiardino.

In 1960 Abreu married Mary- Sargent ("Didi") Ladd, a Boston
debutante who had graced the cover of Harper’s Bazaar, whose family
covered Republican politics, Intelligence operatives and, indeed,
the portraitist John Singer Sargent. The Abreus entertained on a
generous scale for an astonishing range of people, the sort of people
whose inherent glamour depends upon its being hidden from the larger
public. These included the Surrealist poet Joyce Mansour, Nan Kempner,
Hans Bellmer, the Scottish laird Simon Fraser, the screenwriter Paul
Gégauff, the shipping magnate Jean Alvarez de Toledo and a judicious
scattering of crown princes.

But some of Abreu’s most favoured figures were his "fournisseurs"
or specialist suppliers, not least his English tailor who catered to
his strict palette of grey suits and blue shirts. There was also his
expert car mechanic and his personal horological provider. Abreu was
fiercely loyal to these artisans, going specially to Geneva for any
work that needed doing on watch or automobile, as he had a delight
in alterations and improvements.

For Abreu had a brand theory – never buying from the best-known
source but the more recherché competition. As he put with his usual
Anglo-Gallic admixture; "Second to best, plus difficile a trouver,
encore plus cher."

Thus his man at Gubelin in Geneva would create a version of the
Rolex Explorer made from white gold, absolutely indistinguishable
from others but far more costly. He would also have his "trombone"
collar-stiffeners crafted from white gold, precisely because they
were never visible. Or he would drive his new Aston Martin DB4 over
to Switzerland to have it fitted with radial tyres and family seating.

This accommodated his progeny, two daughters and a son, on numerous
trips through the mountains, emulating his favoured Formula One
drivers. Having remarried in 1973, to the equally ideal Wasp beauty
Georgiana ("Georgie") Manley, Abreu continued his charmed existence
of reading, skiing, climbing and collecting – friends and objets –
and not least improving his important jazz collection.

A tootler himself, Abreu had a particular love of Pee Wee Russell,
matched by his passion for Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Louis
Armstrong. In fact one of his few recorded public acts was to vote
on the international panel for the Jazz Hall of Fame put together by
his old friend Ahmet Ertegun.

In respect of his Cuban heritage a formal mass for the eternal
peace of "Juan Claudio", complete with children’s choir, was given
by Monsignor Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, Vicar General of Havana
in the city’s Art Deco church of San Agustín. Meanwhile in France
his memorial was attended by le tout Paris from the Ganay brothers,
Francois Pinault, Barbara of Yugoslavia and Jean d’Ormesson – who gave
an oration recalling yacht trips through the Aeolian islands. Here
he arose early to see Abreu already on deck playing his clarinet,
but with typical discretion silently, so as to wake no one.

–Boundary_(ID_Cvuy9rLqSnSetppdTEoKZA)–

Dutch Turkish Community Urged To Vote

DUTCH TURKISH COMMUNITY URGED TO VOTE

Malaysia Sun, Malaysia
Oct 10 2006

The Netherlands’ Turkish immigrant group wants its members to vote
in the November poll despite a dispute over Armenian mass killings
of the last century.

The dispute has resulted in the Labor PvdA and Christian Democrat
CDA parties dumping their Turkish candidates, reports the Expatica.

The Turkish lobby group IOT organized a meeting over the weekend
to agree on a course of action in response to the outrage among the
Turks over the dumping of their candidates. The leaders decided against
boycotting the national elections and urged members to withhold support
for the PvdA and CDA. They asked members to vote for the Democrat D66,
whose leader has rejected any discussion on the Armenian killings
which happened at the start of the 20th century.

Many Turks admit many deaths occurred under the Ottoman Empire during
World War I but deny committing genocide.

Romania Supports Armenia on Way to European Integration

Romania Supports Armenia on Way to European Integration

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.10.2006 14:43 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Romania is interested in Armenia continuing its
European integration process, Romanian leader Traian Basescu stated
in an interview with the Public TV Company of Armenia. At that he
noted that the beginning of this way is Armenia’s participation in
the ENP. "However, first of all interested in peace and stability in
the Transcaucasian region. In this context Romania supports Armenia
on its way to European integration," Traian Basescu said.

At that Basescu noted the historically good relations between Armenian
and Romanian peoples. Specifically, he reported that many Armenians
live in Romania, two of which have high political posts. "We are also
united by interest in stability and peace in the Black Sea region,
as well as religion and culture," the President underscored, reports
Novosti-Armenia.