American Diplomat Urges Armenian Citizens To Check Their Registratio

AMERICAN DIPLOMAT URGES ARMENIAN CITIZENS TO CHECK THEIR REGISTRATION

Panorama.am
19:29 25/04/2007

The Central Election Committee received 10 computers as a gift
from U.S. government 17 days before the elections. While signing a
memorandum on cooperation with CEC, Anthony Godfrey, charge d’affairs
of U.S. ambassador in Armenia, said, "All necessary conditions
are created to conduct elections in compliance with international
standards." Moreover, the U.S. diplomats urged the Armenian citizens
"to go to election communities and check their registration."

Armenian prime minister, Serzh Sargsyan, also present at signing of
the memorandum, underscored technical capacities for "normal process
of elections."

Garegin Azaryan, CEC chairman showed the computers to the prime
minister and the foreign diplomat. The prime minister saw the packs
in which the protocols will be brought to CEC. "If you try to open,
it will change its color and will obviously show that the pack
was opened," CEC chairman explained to the prime minister. "Are we
guaranteed that no one can open the packs?" the prime minister asked.

Anthony Godfrey asked if it is possible for the reporters and observers
to know what is going on at election night in the communities from
CEC, to which the chairman said, "Of coarse, we will be working whole
night. I will work in my office and the employees will be in front
of the monitor."

Armenian Deputy FM to partake in the sitting of the CIS Foreign Mini

ARMENIAN DEPUTY FM TO PARTAKE IN THE SITTING OF THE CIS FOREIGN MINISTERS COUNCIL

ArmRadio.am
23.04.2007 14:40

On April 24 in Astana Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosyan
will participate in the sitting of the CIS Council of Foreign
Ministers, R MFA Acting Spokesman Vladimir Karapetyan told ArmInfo.

The agenda of the sitting of the CIS Council of Foreign Ministers
includes 19 questions. The Foreign Ministers will discuss issues
related to the activity of the Cultural Cooperation Council and the
Interstate Council of Natural and Technical Disasters.

Documents on deployment of coalition forces in the Abkhazian conflict
zone will be discussed.

Turkish TV To Screen A Film Denyng The Armenian Genocide Allegations

TURKISH TV TO SCREEN A FILM DENYNG THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ALLEGATIONS

ArmRadio.am
23.04.2007 16:58

The National Television of Turkey has come forth with the initiative
to screen a documentary about the Armenian Genocide allegations titled
"The Great L ie."

The TV Channel has decided to show the cadre films about the
editor-in-chief of the Agos weekly never shown before. Here Dinks
speaks about topics, no information about the content which is
publicized.

However, "Sabah" informs that Dink’s family has expressed opposition to
this initiative. Through attorney Ayshe Bejariki they have applied to
the leadership of the TV Channel, demanding to refrain from screening
"secret materials" about Hrant Dink acquired "in an unknown way."

What else is needed to see the real face of Turkey?

What else is needed to see the real face of Turkey?

Kurdish Aspect, CO
April 21 2007

Kurdishaspect.com – By Sosun Welat

Is the brutal murder of priest in Trabzon is not enough to see this
society’s and the Turkish state’s in tolerance to other religions? Is
the barbaric murder of Hrant Dink is not enough to see the fascist
and racist face of this state?

The murder of innocent Christians in the city of Malatya just two days
ago is not enough to bring some doubts that we have about this regime
that is being pampered and appeased for more than half a century?

When these questions are asked, some would say that these are isolated
incidents. When in fact these are not isolated incidents.

Since the establishment of this Turkish regime it is been its official
ideology to purify the county’s soul and mind to Turkishness through
different methods. First it began with Armenian Genocide by the young
Turks during the last years of Ottoman Empire. After The Young Turks
ideology came to power with the establishment of Republic of Turkey it
continued up to our times. From 1920 to our times many Kurdish regions
went through massacres, internal exiles, evictions, destruction of
hamplets, villages etc. The most recent ones in Sivas 32 Kurdish
Alevis were burnt in hotel while they were honoring an Alevi saint
Pir Sultan Abdal. Through 1970 to 1980 in Sivas, Malatya, Corum,
Maras, Erzincan and many other towns Alevi Kurds were massacred by
hundreds just because they did not fit into TURKISH identity.

Just few years ago, A book store was bombed in Semdinli to stir
up unrest so that military can have a reason to start military
operations. But the operation went awry the perpetuators got caught
by the people and they were from intelligence wing of Turkish army.

After ward the current chief of staff of Turkish army Mr. Buyukanit
went further and praised his soldiers for burning the Kurdish book
store.

Just recently a Kurdish father and his five year old son were replacing
a flat tire on their truck, so that he could go to work and earn bread
money for the family, they were murdered while doing their work their
buddies riddled with bullets. The policemen that did this horrific
crime were acquitted.

Because of being an ally of the west against the old Soviet Union up
until the collapse of USSR the west turned blind eye to this regime.

In fact Islamic and nationalistic organizations that were teaching
intolerance were supported by the state and indirectly by the west.

With the fall of Berlin wall a new world order started to emerge. By
the end of first Gulf War it was explicitly brought to our attention
by the elder President Bush.

With this new world order came globalization, more freedom and
opportunities for the under served and oppressed. Democracy seemed
to flourish in Africa; Nelson Mandela came to Presidential palace
from prison. States, people and minds changed.

It seems that Turkey is stuck in the past. They are still teaching in
their school that the TURKISH race is the best on this earth. Through
their official and unofficial KURAN-KURSU (religious seminary) the
Whabi Islam does not tolerate any other religion. At the same time
through their official or semi official organizations they are opening
up mega mosques through out Europe and US.

When Kurds fight either by force or non-violence we are labeled as
terrorists. It is the state of Turkey that can not stand an idea
of Kurdishness. As just few years back an official from the Turkish
government stated that even if Kurdistan was established as far away
as Argentina they will oppose it.

If today there is a PKK and it is fighting Turkey it is the product
of intolerance of TURKISH state of mind and its policies. Now they
want to use PKK presence in Qandil Mountains as pretext to attack
South Kurdistan.

They are well aware that dislodging PKK from Qandil does not put an
end to PKK. Their aim is not PKK. They are not afraid of PKK. They
are afraid of Southern Kurdistan; they want to get rid of Kurdistan
Regional Government no matter what it takes because they can not
stand it.

The west can not afford by keeping status quo with Turkey. They will
not change. Their agenda is to conquer Europe through becoming a
member of it. Not the way Ottomans did it.

They are good at one thing, conquer, destroy originality, and rule.

Look at Anatolia, it belongs to 3, 4 civilizations from Summerians,
Hitits, Arartu, Greeks to Romans and many others. Structures
changed to mosques, name of towns, cities, regions changed to hide
true identities. As recently supposedly Ax(Ah) Tamar Church in the
middle of Van Lake was restored to its originality but its name from
Ah Tamar changed to Ak damar. This highlights their intolerance.

As with US there are some circles and especially well paid lobbyists in

Washington sees Turkey as a giant pillar of the region which needs to
be kept as any ally at all costs. Unfortunately they have not seeing
the real face of Turkey yet, even though Turkey has acted against US
interests for some time.

In time we will see more prevailing acts from Turkish State and U.S
decision makers would come to the right conclusion that there is no
need for an ally such as TURKEY.

Let’s hope it will be soon.

ml

http://www.kurdishaspect.com/doc042107SW.ht

Exchange Of Fire In Place Of Yerevan Called "Vstrech"

EXCHANGE OF FIRE IN PLACE OF YEREVAN CALLED "VSTRECH"

Noyan Tapan
Apr 19 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 19, NOYAN TAPAN. An exchange of fire took place among
unknown people in the place called "Vstrech," near the Yerevan railway
station, on April 19. There are no victims, and information about
those injured is being defined. It is only known that a child was
injured from broken glasses in the consequence of the event.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by Sona Truzian, the Press Secretary of the
RA Prosecutor General, a criminal action was brought on the occasion
of the happened, based on Part 4, Article 258 of the RA Criminal Code.

Tigran Mansurian digs deep for his craft; Perhaps Armenia’s top…

Tigran Mansurian digs deep for his craft

Perhaps Armenia’s top living composer, he says writing music is always a
struggle

Los Angeles Times
April 20, 2007

By Chris Pasles, Times Staff Writer

Armenian composer Tigran Mansurian may not be a household name. But in
his homeland, in Armenian diaspora communities and in Europe’s new music
circles, he is regarded as Armenia’s greatest living composer. Recently,
he’s been getting even wider notice.

The taste-making German label ECM has issued four CDs of his music
("Monodia" was nominated for a 2005 Grammy), and a fifth is planned.
Within the last month, New York has heard two U.S. premieres: "Con
Anima" for string sextet at Merkin Concert Hall and an Agnus Dei for
clarinet, violin, cello and piano at Carnegie Hall. And between tonight
and Wednesday night, the Glendale-based Lark Musical Society, which
sponsors the enterprising Dilijan Chamber Music Series, is presenting "A
Mansurian Triptych" – three concerts programmed to commemorate the 92nd
anniversary of the Armenian genocide.

Mansurian’s epic a cappella choral work, "Ars Poetica," will be
performed tonight at the downtown L.A. Colburn School’s Zipper Concert
Hall. Selections from his chamber music, including the Agnus Dei, will
be played Monday at Zipper. And on Wednesday, orchestral works,
including the U.S. premiere of his Violin Concerto No. 2, titled "Four
Serious Songs," and his Viola Concerto, " … and then I was in time again
… ," will be played at the Alex Theatre in Glendale.

What audiences will hear is "very strong emotional music," according to
Anja Lechner, cellist of the Munich, Germany-based Rosamunde String
Quartet, which has recorded three Mansurian works for ECM. "That’s maybe
why it goes directly to people’s hearts."

Mansurian himself believes that music has a spiritual purpose. "There
are two main roots to music," he said in an interview this week. "The
first one is the religious, Christian aspect, the issue of pain and
spirituality, the pain of Christ being crucified and the guilt that
comes from it and our relationship to God. The second one is our
instinctive search for Paradise Lost. That’s what makes music."

Because he shifted between Armenian and Russian, Mansurian was speaking
through several interpreters at the Lark Musical Society offices. A
gentle, elegant man with flowing white hair, he spoke in a light,
precise tenor, often animating his remarks with eloquently shaped
gestures that belied the struggle he said composing has always been for him.

"Since childhood to now, my fingertips are bleeding from the conflict,"
he said. "It was always my personal fight or mission."

Born Jan. 27, 1939, to Armenian parents in Beirut, he moved with his
family to Soviet Armenia in 1947 and then in 1956 to the capital,
Yerevan, where they settled. He studied at the Yerevan Music Academy and
at the Komitas State Conservatory, where, after earning a doctorate, he
taught and later became rector.

He won two first prizes in the All-Union competition in Moscow in 1966
and 1968 and the Armenian State Prize in 1981.

Armenia is still his home, but his daughter, Nvart Sarkissian, lives in
Glendale, and because his wife, Nora Aharonian, died last year, he plans
to spend more time here.

His early works combined neoclassicism and Armenian folk traditions.
Subsequently, he adopted 12-tone and serial techniques. His more recent
works are a mix of all these influences.

"I have tried to find myself in the old Armenian music," he said. "I
have tried to find myself in Boulez’s serialism. When you go deep in
these traditions, you will find the things that are true to your
individual roots. Generally, I compose what’s been developing and
growing inside me for a long time."

In addition, he said, he has always been drawn to the written word. "As
a musician, the Armenian language was one of my first teachers," he
said. "One’s childhood tongue and the first impressions of language are
very important for any musician."

"Four Hayrens," for example, is a setting of Armenian poems. "Ars
Poetica" consists of poems by Yeghishe Charents, a victim of Stalin’s
purges. The title of his Viola Concerto, " … and then I was in time
again … " is a line spoken by Quentin Compson, the doomed hero of
Faulkner’s "The Sound and the Fury."

"I have devoted 10 years of my life to Faulkner," he said, before
spontaneously reciting the opening of that novel in Russian.

"He’s difficult, but once you go into Faulkner, there is no higher joy.
If I were to choose the person who was most significant to me, it would
have been Quentin because of his incredible honesty."

Mansurian read the book first in Russian, but upon later reading an
Armenian translation, he said, he discovered that the Soviet version had
been heavily censored.

"Just like the Soviet state got involved in every other aspect of life,
it got involved in translations," he said. "That’s how things were done."

Living under the Soviet system, he added, was "some sort of different
Faulknerian tale. It was another monumental feeling of loss."

For all his identification with his homeland, Mansurian said he prefers
to regard himself as a composer rather than an Armenian composer.

"To be truthful to myself, I have to rely on my genetic memory and my
way of praying and my whole being, which is of course very Armenian," he
said. "But not in order to be called Armenian – just in order to be true
to myself."

Email Chris Pasles at: [email protected]

*

‘A Mansurian Triptych’

Where: Zipper Concert Hall, Colburn School of Performing Arts, 200 S.
Grand Ave., L.A.

When: 8 p.m. today (choral works) and 8 p.m. Monday (chamber works)

Also

Where: Alex Theatre, 216 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale

When: 8 p.m. Wednesday

Price: $20 to $75 ($15 for students and seniors) for each concert

Contact: (818) 500-9997 or

ht tp:// pr20,0,6959414.story?coll=cl-music-features

http://www.dilijan.larkmusicalsociety.com
www.calendarlive.com/music/la-et-mansurian20a

Members Of CIS IPA Commission For Monitoring Of Parliamentary Electi

MEMBERS OF CIS IPA COMMISSION FOR MONITORING OF PARLIAMENTARY ELECTION IN ARMENIA TO ARRIVE IN YEREVAN ON APRIL 19

Arka News Agency, Armenia
April 18 2007

YEREVAN, April 17. /ARKA/. Members of the CIS Inter-Parliamentary
Assembly (IPA) Commission for monitoring of the parliamentary election
in Armenia are to arrive in Yerevan on April 19.

The press service of Armenia’s Parliament reported that the delegation
will be headed by Vice-Speaker of the Federation Council of the
Russian Parliament Anatoly Torshin and the Secretary General of CIS
IPA Michael Krotov.

On April 19, the Commission members will meet with the Chairman of
the Central Electoral Commission (CEC) of Armenia Garegin Azarian and
representatives of the parliamentary groups of the Republican Party
of Armenia (RPA), Armenian Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsiutiun
Party, United Labour Party, National Unity Party, Orinats Erkir Party,
"Justice" alliance and the "Prospering Armenia" party.

The meetings with the Armenian President Robert Kocharian, Prosecutor
general Aghvan Hovsepian and Armenian Parliament Speaker Tigran
Torosian are scheduled for April 20.

The Monitoring Commission members are also to participate in the
meeting in Yerevan office of CIS International Institute for democracy,
development of parliamentarism and monitoring of human rights.

The Monitoring Commission members will give a press conference in the
Armenian parliament to sum up the outcome of the meetings.

Visa And Passport Department Of Police Makes Voter Lists More Accura

VISA AND PASSPORT DEPARTMENT OF POLICE MAKES VOTER LISTS MORE ACCURATE

Panorama.am
16:22 19/04/2007

As of April 18, 2 mln 318 thousand 493 voters were registered
throughout the Republic of Armenia, Alvina Zakaryan, passport and visa
department head at the police, told a meeting with reporters today. She
said some still keep their old Soviet passports and another 497 got
Armenian passports as of April 18. Some 4123 citizens, who changed
their places of living, also applied to passport and visa department
of the police.

Alvina Zakaryan said the list of military servants is specified. Some
2275 citizens, who had passed away, were taken out of the lists. The
department has opened hot line for making the lists more accurate
and 77 citizens called.

Pavilion Of Republic Of Armenia

PAVILION OF REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA

E-Flux, NY
April 19 2007

Photo: Sonia Balassanian, "Who Is the Victim?", Stills from a
multi-screen, spatial video-installation, 2006/2007, Courtesy of the
artist and the Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art,
"NPAK" in Armenian acronym, Yerevan, Republic of Armenia

Pavilion of Republic of Armenia
at 52nd Venice Biennale-2007

June 10 – November 21, 2007
Opening for press and friends:
Friday June 8, 2007 13:00-16:00
Palazzo Zenobio, (Collegio Armeno)
Dorsoduro 2596 T: 041 522-8770
Vaporetto No. 82: S. Basilio stop
Vaporetto No. 52: Zattere stop
For directions visit

Artist: Sonia Balassanian
Curator: Nina Montmann
Honorary Commissioner: Jean Boghossian
Organized by: The Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art
Hosted by: The Mekhitarian Armenian Congregation

Sonia Balassanian-Who Is the Victim?

War has changed. It has ceased to refer exclusively to war between
nations, but involves more complex structures and dislocations. The
information content the ubiquitous media images convey concerning
specific conflicts is thin, they present an unchanging picture of
misery as a universal constant of global crisis.

Memory assumes a central role in the lives of people who experience war
and henceforth shift between two extremes, the collective necessity
to remember and the individual desire to forget. For those who have
experienced war or live in fear of one, or who live with memories
of a war they actually took part in and survived, the question "who
is the victim" is never far from the surface in depictions of war’s
cruelty. But what is involved when a viewer of war images takes an
interest in or empathizes with human suffering in far-off conflict
zones? Not only those killed by war and their relatives are the
victims, but all whom the fear of war afflicts.

Compassion is an unstable emotion: "Our sympathy proclaims our
innocence as well as our impotence" (Susan Sontag). In overcoming
sympathy, a potential for action is released, a potential to lead-in
to critical protest against an economy of global war.

Wars and crisis areas are a constant feature of Sonia Balassanian’s
work. Her concern in her more recent video works are the ramifications
of a general war (albeit never referred to as such) being waged
against the individual. The images of Balassanian’s multipart video
work "Who Is the Victim?" for the Pavilion of the Republic of Armenia
at the 52nd Venice Biennale tap into this universalized misery and
suffering of war.

–Nina Montmann

Sonia Balassanian (b. 1942) is one of the most influential artists in
Armenia, working in the fields of video, performance, photo-collage
and writing. She lives in New York and Yerevan.

The Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art is publishing
an artist’s book by Rene Gabri on Sonia Balassanian on the occasion of
this project. It is also producing an accompanying Pavilion Catalogue.

Opening hours: Everyday except Monday, 10am – 6pm Press
contact: [email protected] For more information please visit:

m/displayshow.php?file=message_1176930853.txt

http://www.accea.info
http://www.accea.info
http://www.e-flux.co