ARF Bureau representative inaugurates Hay Dat office in New Julfa

ARF Bureau representative inaugurates Hay Dat office in New Julfa

10.07.2006 16:47

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – At the blessing of Bishop Babken Charian, Primate
of the Isfahan Armenian Diocese, Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Bureau representative Hrant Margarian and prominent Iranian Armenian
Tatul Oahanian inaugurated on July 7 the new building of Hay Dat
office in New Julfa.

As reported by the Iranian Armenian newspaper Alik, later in the
day the local Armenian community met with Hrant Margarian at the
Ararat Hall. Issues related to Artsakh, Kavakhk and Republic of
Armenia were discussed. Margarian detailed the ARF stance in the
forthcoming parliamentary and presidential elections.

Incidentally, New Julfa is Margarian’s birthplace.

Vahan Hovhannissian: Armenian Delegation Carried Out Successful Acti

AZG Daily #128, 07/11/2006

Conclusion

VAHAN HOVHANNISSIAN: ARMENIAN DELEGATION CARRIED OUT
SUCCESSFUL ACTIVITIES AT OSCE JULY SESSION

Vahan Hovhannissian, Vice-Speaker of RA National Assembly, said that
July session of OSCE Parliamentary Assembly is extremely fruitful
for Armenia. He stated that the resolution submitted by delegates of
Georgia, Azerbaijan and Turkey on Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan project was
disapproved by OSCE PA. He added that Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan project
contradicts the norms of regional cooperation as it is directed
to isolation of Armenia. "We managed to get adopted the text of
the resolution that we planned," Hovhannissian said. The Armenian
delegation also managed to hinder adoption of the resolution for
the construction of Kars-Akhalkalaki railroad. Another resolution
of Georgia, Azerbaijan and Turkey, declaring "nothing can approve
separatism," was disapproved by OSCE PA. The Spanish delegates who
emphasized that in case of discrimination, the national minorities
have the right to protect their rights strictly criticized this
project. Moreover, the commission for humanitarian issues adopted the
resolution on the important part that the national minorities play
in the life of a state (in the context of the Armenian residents
of Samtskhe Javakheti region of Georgia this is one of the most
important resolutions). As for the commission of political issues,
the Armenian delegates managed to get adopted the resolution on the
fact that the referendum in Monte Negro is a good example of balance
between the right of the nations for self-determination and territorial
integrity. Besides, the Russian and the Armenian delegates hindered the
adoption of the amendments to the resolution that forbids to consider
the future status of Kosovo as a precedent submitted by the Georgian,
Azeri and Turkish delegates. It’s worth mentioning that the co-authors
of the Armenian initiatives were RF, Canada, Switzerland and Monaco.

Moreover, the delegates of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly consider
the statement of Matthew Bryza, OSCE MG Co-Chair, as an appeal to the
Armenian and Azerbaijani people, and as a attempt to activate public
diplomacy, without turning to the executive power. Vahan Hovhannissian,
Vice Speaker of RA National Assembly, head of RA Delegation to OSCE
PA, said this today.

"Everybody realizes that Armenia is maximally compliant, extremely
compliant in Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement, but none can say
what will the sides reach by the end of the negotiations, though Goran
Lenmarker, newly elected chairman of OSCE PA, is quite optimistic about
the prospects of Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement," Hovhannissian
said. He stated that earlier the official Baku had declined more
beneficial for Azerbaijan suggestions, as well.

Hovhannissian said that Azerbaijan hopes to increase its military
capacity. He added that even when in 1990-ies the military budget of
Azerbaijan also surpassed that of Armenia, we, the Armenians could
successfully resists their attacks.

Since 1998, OSCE MG took three initiatives and each of them was
more and more acceptable for Armenia. Vahan Hovhannissian, Head
of RA Delegation to OSCE PA, Vice Speaker of RA National Assembly,
said this at today’s press conference. Thus in 2001, in Key West,
the mediators suggested Armenia to secure a corridor for Baku to
communicate with Nakhijevan, in Rambouillet this point was not even
discussed. "The more the international structures get familiarized
with the Nagorno Karabakh conflict essence, the more beneficial for
Armenia their approaches become," he said.

He added that several countries, in particular, Great Britain,
make efforts to get involved in the OSCE MG structure, while the
parliamentarians of various countries show their participation in
the Nagorno Karabakh issue. Hovhannissian said that if OSCE MG isn’t
active enough, parliamentary unions, for example NATO PA, will take
the initiative. He stated this development is not desirable, as the
coordination of the settlement process by new instances may annihilate
the results achieved in the current format.

The Armenian delegation emphasized the importance of shaping a working
commission in Brussels for preparation of a report on the current
situation of the Nagorno Karabakh settlement, as a report elaborated
by one reporter is much more subjective

By Nana Petrosian

ICG: Karabakh Process Enters Horrific Stage

ICG: Karabakh Process Enters Horrific Stage

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.07.2006 13:30 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The statement submitted by the OSCE Minsk Group
Co-chairs in Vienna June 22 to the OSCE Permanent Council is a very
important document, International Crisis Group Caucasus project
director Sabine Freizer said. In her words, the statement maintains
a common approach to the conflict settlement. "It appears to be the
most sincere and self-critical statement made by the mediators so far,
as for the first time since the beginning of the talks in 1994 they
have declared of inanity of their activities," Freizer said.

She said she is surprised that Armenia and Azerbaijan hold little talk
about it. "As a matter of fact the OSCE Minsk Group’s statement proves
the absence of any international format of the talks. It turns out that
the sides can proceed with the talks without mediators. Will another
mediator be appointed? If the United States, Russia and France recede
which international forces possess sufficient authority for performing
the mediating mission" I do not believe in a new mediator. We gradually
enter a horrific stage where there is no place for peaceful talks
between the sides. Such situation has occurred for the first time
since 1994," Freizer underscored, reported Azeri-Press.

Golden Apricot International Cinema Festival to Open in Yerevan July

Golden Apricot International Cinema Festival to Open in Yerevan July 10

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.07.2006 13:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ July 10-15 Golden Apricot Third International Cinema
Festival will be held in Yerevan.

Like the first two the festival will be held under the slogan:
"Armenia: A Crossroad of Civilizations and Cultures." 92 films
out of 280 presented were selected to participate in the contest
screenings. These films represent 58 countries. According to the Press
Service of the Organization Committee of the Festival, well-known
figures of the world cinema from over 10 countries – Russia, Canada,
France, US, Spain, Germany, Chile, Belgium, Turkey and Italy – will
take part in the cinema forum. Contest films will be nominated for
Fiction Film, Documentary and Armenian Panorama.

The natural dancer

The natural dancer
By LIANNE ELLIOTT

Waterloo Record, Canada
July 8 2007

Ulana Zadarko hides her face in her hands and starts to laugh. The
13-year-old ballerina is remembering the first time she tried dancing
with a partner. He was way older than her. She’s not sure exactly by
how much, but he was definitely a grown up.

And he lifted her high in the air, so high that even though she’s
not afraid of heights, she was worried he would drop her.

She didn’t know what to do. The whole thing was so strange.

"Oh my gosh, that was one of the weirdest moments of my whole life,"
she says, shaking her head.

She’s sitting cross-legged on a chair in a beautiful old ballet studio
in downtown Hamilton.

Her private lesson is about to start, but the Kitchener girl has
a few minutes to talk about her love for ballet and all the weird
moments she has survived.

Her teachers say she has real promise. They say she dances with
feeling and she has the potential to be a great ballerina some day.

She’s going to Ukraine this summer to train with Tatiana Borovik,
who dances with the Kyiv ballet.

She’s studied at the National Ballet School’s summer camp in Toronto
and she’s been offered parts with the renowned Kirov Ballet of Russia.

She’s a poised, graceful young ballerina. But on occasion, she lets
her teenage side show through.

And, like any young teenager would, she found it a little awkward to
dance one-on-one with a man for the first time.

She was partnered with Ricky Resijan, an experienced dancer who has
performed across North America.

For weeks, they practised a pas-de-deux waltz at Zadarko’s dance
school, the Hamilton City Ballet. Zadarko had to learn a complicated
set of steps and master five lifts before she and Resijan performed
at the ballet school’s June recital at Hamilton’s downtown arts centre.

"I was so scared," Zadarko says. "But in the end it turned out really
well. I was so relieved."

It’s not surprising it turned out well. Zadarko dedicates so much of
her time to dance.

Her parents drive her to the Hamilton City Ballet four afternoons a
week. She takes lessons with studio owner Max Ratevosian, who was a
principle dancer with the Moscow state ballet and Armenia’s national
ballet.

The Armenian-born dancer came to Canada in 1990, where he taught at
the National Ballet School and Montreal’s Grands Ballets Canadiens,
before opening his Hamilton school six years ago.

He trains Zadarko in the Russian style, sometimes working with her
one-on-one, sometimes in a class setting.

"It’s not very often you meet someone like Ulana," he says. "Her talent
is something very special. It comes from nature, from inside her."

"If you get one student like Ulana, you are lucky. It’s a gift."

Zadarko’s ability to dance with passion began long ago.

"The music seems to come through her," Zadarko’s mother, Maria, says.

"At home, if music was on, she would start dancing. Even now, she
rarely walks. She’s always dancing."

Zadarko started taking lessons when she was four. She and her older
sister studied at the Academy of Dance in Waterloo, where Ratevosian
sometimes taught.

When he started his school in Hamilton, the girls followed him there.

So many milestones stand out for Zadarko since she arrived at the
Hamilton City Ballet.

She remembers how nervous she was when Ratevosian asked her to join
the most advanced class in the school, filled with women in their
late teens and early twenties.

She remembers how weird it felt to put on point shoes for the first
time.

"Oh my gosh, what a disaster," she says. "It felt so weird. It’s
harder than it looks."

But she quickly adapted to her point shoes and fit in with the older
class. Soon she was asked to join the National Ballet School’s summer
camp, which she did last summer.

Then came the offer from the Kirov Ballet in the fall. After
auditioning 70 young dancers, they picked Zadarko for a child’s part
in their production of Sleeping Beauty at the Detroit Opera House.

Unfortunately a mix-up at the American border meant she couldn’t
take the part. She found out too late she would need to apply for a
performer’s visa.

"It was quite unfortunate," she says.

But she is excited to go to Ukraine for a month this summer, the
country where her grandparents were born. She and her mother have
rented an apartment in Kyiv and Zadarko will take private lessons
two hours a day, six days a week.

Zadarko hopes this kind of training will allow her to one day dance
professionally with a company in Europe or North America.

If that doesn’t happen, she figures she’ll become a lawyer. Zadarko,
who skipped a grade and has always been a strong student, is taking
a law course when she starts Grade 10 at Cameron Heights this fall.

But dance is her first dream. Her friends at school always ask her why
she loves it so much, and she has a hard time explaining her passion.

"It’s the freedom of it," she says, pausing as she tries to think of
a way to explain the sensation. "I can never give an exact answer as
to why. It’s so hard to explain. I just fell in love and now I have
to keep on going."

Tehran: 7 MoUs On Energy Inked Between Iran And Armenia

7 MOUS ON ENERGY INKED BETWEEN IRAN AND ARMENIA

Persian Journal, Iran
July 6 2006

Iranian and Armenian officials signed up seven Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) in the fields of energy, economic and industrial
infrastructures, legal and cultural heritage cooperation. The MoUs were
signed by officials in the presence of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
and his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian.

For one document, Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki and his
Armenian counterpart Vartan Oskanian signed an MoU concerning Iran’s
development aids in the field of industrial and economic infrastructure
for Armenia.

In another MoU, Energy Minister Parviz Fattah and Armen Movsisyan
signed a cooperation agreement in the field of energy.

The two countries agreed in another document to cooperate in the
field of legal issues.

Iran’s Justice Minister Jamal Karimi-rad and Armenian Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian inked an agreement about extraditing criminals.

Dissemination of information in the field of cultural heritage was
another MoU signed up by officials from Iran’s Cultural Heritage
Organization and Armenian Ministry of Culture and Youth Affairs.

Also agreement about financing electricity power line project was
signed.

In the last MoU, the two countries agreed on the implementing program
of the third electricity power line between Iran and Armenia.

Armenia is located in the Caucasus region and borders with Georgia
in the north, Azerbaijan east, Turkey west and Iran south and it does
not have access to the open sea.

Armenia does not have any oil or gas resources, but has rich mines
of gold, copper, zinc and lead.

The country achieved its independence on September 21, 1991 from the
former Soviet Union.

Armenia’s population is about 3,300,000 according to the census
on 2002.

Armenian Justice Minister Reaffirms ‘Political Plans’

ARMENIAN JUSTICE MINISTER REAFFIRMS ‘POLITICAL PLANS’
By Karine Kalantarian

Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
July 5 2006

Justice Minister David Harutiunian reaffirmed on Wednesday his plans
to become more actively involved in political processes in Armenia,
which may well take the form of his participation in next year’s
parliamentary elections.

"Do I aim to engage in politics? Yes, I do," he said. "Do I have
[political] plans? Yes, I do."

Speaking to RFE/RL in March, Harutiunian admitted that he is
considering "returning to parliament." But he would not be drawn,
both then and now, on details of his possible comeback which looks
even more likely after the resignation on Tuesday of Ara Saghatelian,
his press secretary and confidante. "I have some plans relating to
the field of mass media and am confident that they will prove useful
for the development of the entire field," Saghatelian told RFE/RL
without elaborating.

The move sparked speculation that Saghatelian quit the Ministry of
Justice to organize and manage Harutiunian’s pre-election activities.

Harutiunian appeared to implicitly confirm this. "I can’t refute any
comments," he said.

"To be an independent political force one needs to have a team,"
added Harutiunian. "That I do have a team is out of question. I think
the society or any political force does not doubt that."

Despite his relatively young age, the 43-year-old minister is one the
longest serving members of President Robert Kocharian’s cabinet. He
is believed to have had considerable influence on Armenia’s courts,
notorious for their lack of independence, throughout his eight-year
tenure.

Harutiunian’s increased political clout have led some observers to
consider him a potential candidate to succeed the Armenian president
after his anticipated resignation in 2008. It remains to be seen
whether he will dare to challenge Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian
if the country’s second most powerful man officially confirms his
widely anticipated participation in the 2008 presidential ballot.

Scandal During Seminar At Congress Hotel

SCANDAL DURING SEMINAR AT CONGRESS HOTEL

Yerevan, July 6. ArmInfo. The seminar on domestic political situation
in Armenia and the foreign political developments around it resulted
in a scandal.

The political expert Igor Muradyan took the microphone of "AR" TV
company and called the company "geeks." In response to journalists
question about the reason of his anger, Muradyan stated: "I will
not apply to the court. I will better beat those who called me
pro-government on air." Muradyan kept roaring and journalists left
the conference hall as a sign of protest.

Is There Pressure On Bargavach Hayastan?

IS THERE PRESSURE ON BARGAVACH HAYASTAN?

Lragir.am
05 July 06

The Lragir.am has learned that recently Member of Parliament Ruben
Hairapetyan suggested in a friendly way that Gagik Tsarukyan, the
sponsor of the Bargavach Hayastan Party (Prosperous Armenia Party),
change his mind to open an office in Avan, the "native" community of
Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan.

For his part, Gagik Beglaryan, the head of the community of Center
also suggested that Gagik Tsarukyan should stop opening offices of
the Bargavach Hayastan Party in the Center of Yerevan and even close
down some offices.

Referendum On Karabakh Status Not To Solve Conflict Between NKR And

REFERENDUM ON KARABAKH STATUS NOT TO SOLVE CONFLICT BETWEEN NKR AND AZERBAIJAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.07.2006 17:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ For the most part, the referendum on the status of
Karabakh will bot settle the opposition between the Nagorno Karabakh
Republic and Azerbaijan, NKR President’s Advisor on Foreign Affairs
Arman Melikyan stated in an interview with Respublika Armenia
newspaper. In his words, it’s whether Azerbaijan, which cites its
Constitution and says that it doesn’t allow adoption of such decisions
by a part of its population, will agree on in some 5 or 10 years. The
idea of a postponed referendum implies a mechanism, which provide the
possibility not to find the final resolution of the conflict but to
unblock communications. At the expense of these communications serious
regional and geopolitical issues may be solved," Melikyan said. However
he did not rule out that the postponed referendum is beneficial for
some third states, which do not wish these communication to function
within next 5-10 years.