ANKARA: We Are In A Critical Time Period To Implement Protocols Betw

WE ARE IN A CRITICAL TIME PERIOD TO IMPLEMENT PROTOCOLS BETWEEN TURKEY AND ARMENIA, U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN

Journal of Turkish Weekly
April 13 2010

Spokesman of the U.S. Department of State, Philip Crowley, said Tuesday
all involved parties were in a critical time period to encourage the
implementation of protocols between Turkey and Armenia.

In response to a question on U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s
meeting with her Turkish counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu on Tuesday,
Crowley said that the two leaders discussed the normalization of
Turkish and Armenian relations and Bosnia-Herzegovina’s relations
with NATO.

Clinton-Davutoglu meeting was very positive and lasted 45 minutes,
Crowley said.

They will meet once more either this evening or on Wednesday, Crowley
also said.

Ahmet Davutoglu: It Is Unquestionable For Turkey To Leave Azerbaijan

AHMET DAVUTOGLU: IT IS UNQUESTIONABLE FOR TURKEY TO LEAVE AZERBAIJAN OUT OF THE CYCLE IN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS IN ANY MANNER

ArmInfo
2010-04-13 16:13:00

ArmInfo. As usual, Nagorno-Karabakh was the main issue during the
meeting of the Turkish prime minister and Armenian president in
Washington, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in his
interview with APA.

He pointed out that Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan "is very interested
in explaining to the Armenian leaders the sensitive points of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We believe Azerbaijan is an integral part
of a solution to the problem in the Caucasus and says its exclusion
from the process is out of the question. It is unquestionable for
Turkey to leave Azerbaijan out of the cycle in any manner. Before the
U.S visit, I spoke with Azerbaijani diplomats. Our representative has
been both in Baku and Yerevan. We communicate with them very often".

"It is also important for Turkey for the Obama administration to focus
its attention on this topic. I want to reiterate that the liberation
of the occupied Azerbaijani territories was one of the goals of
the Turkish-Armenian protocols, in addition to normalization of the
Turkey-Armenia bilateral relations. We will maintain our peaceful
perspective but we will not let anyone put pressure on Turkey over
issues on which we can give no concessions. We hope our counterparts
on this issue had received the message. The international community
must understand that, one-sided peace is impossible in the South
Caucasus",- said Davutoglu.

Obama, Erdogan To Meet In Washington

OBAMA, ERDOGAN TO MEET IN WASHINGTON

armradio.am
12.04.2010 18:30

U.S. President Barack Obama will meet Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday, on the sidelines of his nuclear security
summit in Washington, the White House said.

The meeting, which was not previously announced, will occur just over
a week after Turkey decided to return its ambassador to Washington
after a row over moves in Congress to recognize the World War I
massacres of Armenians as genocide.

"We very much wanted to have this opportunity to consult with Prime
Minister Erdogan," said Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser,
adding that the talks would focus on Iran, Armenia and other issues,
the Hurriuyet Daily News reports.

The meeting will also take place as Turkey seeks to revive stalled
reconciliation efforts with Armenia. Obama is due meanwhile to meet
Armenian President Serge Sarkisian in a separate bilateral meeting
on Monday.

Turkey recalled Ambassador Namık Tan on March 4 immediately after
the House of Representatives’ Foreign Affairs Committee adopted
a resolution recognizing 1915-17 massacres of Armenians under the
Ottoman Empire as genocide.

Gross International Reserves Of Armenia Reduced By 7.7%

GROSS INTERNATIONAL RESERVES OF ARMENIA REDUCED BY 7.7%

PanARMENIAN.Net
April 12, 2010 – 15:18 AMT 10:18 GMT

Armenia’s gross international reserves decreased by $154.8mln or 7.7%
during the first two months of 2010, totalling $1.85 billion.

Meanwhile, Armenia’s international reserves reduced by 4.6% in
February, as compared with January 2010, the Armenian Central Bank
said in its monthly bulletin.

Besides, the special drawing rights (SDR) in the International
Monetary Fund decreased by 3.6% in January-February 2010, amounting
to $120.2mln.

Armenia’s foreign currency assets reduced by 8% during the period
under review, totaling $1.73 billion.

EU To Finance Armenian Reform Plan

ARMENIA : EU TO FINANCE ARMENIAN REFORM PLAN

TendersInfo
April 7, 2010 Wednesday

The European Union pledged on Tuesday to provide Armenia with 157
million euros ($213 million) in fresh assistance designed to support
political and economic reforms stemming from its participation in
the EU s Eastern Partnership program.

The EU s Enlargement and Neighborhood Policy Commissioner Stefan
Fule signed a relevant memorandum of understanding with the Armenian
government during a visit to Yerevan that focused on the scheme
offering six former Soviet republics closer ties with the bloc.

The document, worked out by Armenian and EU officials after months
of consultations, identifies of a plan of reforms which the Armenian
authorities are to carry out in 2011-2013. Officials said the EU
funding will be channeled into its implementation.

The so-called national indicative program has not yet been made
public. The government s press office quoted Prime Minister Tigran
Sarkisian as saying during his meeting with Fule that one of its
key aims is the establishment of democratic structures and effective
system of governance. That will reduce the scale of corruption and
foster the development of small and medium-sized business and more
transparent operations of big business, he said.

It remained unclear whether the EU expects the authorities in Yerevan
to hold free and fair elections, improve their human rights record
or address the lingering fallout from the 2008 post-election unrest
in Armenia as a result of those reforms. Fule made no mention of
these issues during a joint news conference with Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian and in a speech at an international human rights
conference that began in Yerevan on Tuesday.

The European Union has a strategic interest in stability, prosperity
and development, and we are glad that the relationships between the EU
and Armenia are enhancing, Fule told journalists. Eastern Partnership
is raising them to a new level, he said.

Under the scheme also covering neighboring Azerbaijan and Georgia,
Armenia is to negotiate an association and free trade agreement
with the EU. Visiting Yerevan last month, Spanish Foreign Minister
Miguel Angel Moratinos said the EU intends to speed up the planned
association talks.

Fule confirmed this after talks with Nalbandian. I expressed the hope
that we will soon be able to start negotiations on the association
agreement between the European Union and Armenia, he said.

The EU commissioner put a particular emphasis on the economic
component of the deal, saying that it envisages not only free trade
but also policy harmonization. The European Union is offering a very
strong instrument to Armenia to get Armenia closer to the European
Union. It is about a deeper political association and deeper economic
integration, he said.

Robert Kocharyan: I Pity Levon Ter-Petrossyan As He Is Much Too Preo

ROBERT KOCHARYAN: I PITY LEVON TER-PETROSSYAN AS HE IS MUCH TOO PREOCCUPIED WITH GOSSIPS

ArmInfo
2010-04-08 17:46:00

ArmInfo. Levon Ter-Petrossyan and ANM activists have amused me. They
are playing a strange game: they first decide that I dream of coming
back into politics, then, start trying to prevent my come-back and,
finally, when they see that I have not come back, keep up their
heels as if it was they who stopped me. Any move I make or any word
I say makes them panic, says the second president of Armenia Robert
Kocharyan.

The press service of Kocharyan’s office quotes him as saying: "I would
advise those gentlemen not to strain too much – they are not used
to such pressures and may get piles. If I decide to come back into
politics, I will say it openly. If those gentlemen tried to strain
what normal people call "brains," they would understand this." "I have
never cared for what those ‘ex bosses’ (as Ter-Petrossyan termed it)
think of me. I think that they don’t like me much and I am proud to
have deserved such an attitude. I was an efficient president in both
Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh and this annoys some people. This is
the usual way with weak and envious men. They just can’t help it,"
Kocharyan said.

"The last time I was in Dubai was three years ago on an official visit
and I never met President Sargsyan in Paris in early March. I pity
Levon Ter-Petrossyan as he is much too preoccupied with gossips,"
he said.

BAKU; Azerbaijani Deputy Prime Minister: "Armenians Come To A Deadlo

AZERBAIJANI DEPUTY PRIME MINISTER: "ARMENIANS COME TO A DEADLOCK"

APA
April 9 2010
Azerbaijan

Baku. Rashad Suleymanov – APA. Armenia comes to a deadlock, said
Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan Ali Hasanov, APA reports.

Hasanov said the international community increased its interest to
the Nagorno Karabakh problem. "The countries patronized Armenia over
18-20 years tired of this patronage. Despite that the international
community increased its interest to the problem. Armenians don’t
intend to leave their traditional claims".

Hasanov said some countries were not interested in the solution of
this conflict.

Historical Reality At URI, Abstract Art At RIC

BILL VAN SICLEN: HISTORICAL REALITY AT URI, ABSTRACT ART AT RIC

Providence Journal
April 6 2010
RI

In many ways, it’s hard to imagine two more disparate exhibits than
the ones currently on view at URI’s downtown Providence campus and
the Bannister Gallery at Rhode Island College.

The URI show, "The Armenian Genocide: 95 Years Later, A Remembrance,"
explores one of the darkest chapters in 20th-century history: the
systematic expulsion and murder of more than 1.5 million Armenians
by Ottoman Turkish forces between 1915 and 1922. Organized by Berge
Zobian, an Armenian-American photographer and the owner of Gallery Z
on Federal Hill, the show combines archival materials such as period
posters and photographs with original artworks.

The result is a hybrid show — part memorial, part history lesson and
part art exhibit — that commemorates what many scholars believe is
the first modern example of state-sponsored genocide.

The RIC show, meanwhile, is a fairly traditional group exhibit. Titled
"Abstraction in Providence" and organized by RIC gallery coordinator
James Montford, it features the work of five local artists — Mahler
Ryder, Ruth Dealy, Irene Lawrence, Lloyd Martin and Donna Bruton —
all of whom embrace abstraction to greater (Lawrence, Martin) or lesser
(Dealy, Bruton) degrees.

Despite their differences, however, the two shows have at least one
thing in common: both illustrate how good intentions can be undermined
(or at least muffled) by curatorial missteps.

Fortunately, that’s less of a problem at RIC than it is at URI.

Though "Abstraction in Providence" never really gets around to
addressing the question implied by its title — to wit, is there
something unique or exceptional about abstract art in Providence? —
the quality of the art generally makes up for the show’s thematic
shortcomings.

Martin, for example, may be better known in New York and Los Angeles
than he is in home state, where he typically keeps a low profile.

Nevertheless, this Pawtucket-based painter is worth watching, both
for his refined color sense and his muscular, hands-on approach to
geometric abstraction.

Both qualities can be found in "Current," a mural-sized work in which
long bands of white paint alternate with bursts of rainbow-hued color.

The result suggests a classic New England church — all prim white
clapboards and smoldering stained glass windows — as reinterpreted
by the great Dutch modernist Piet Mondrian.

While Martin’s paintings have an architectural heft and solidity,
those of Providence painter Irene Lawrence conjure up an array of
more evanescent effects. The smudgy gray and black brushstrokes of
"Eros Negri/2" suggest a nighttime view of water, while the more
symmetrical yellow-gray marks that dominate "Motives for Writing
V" evoke a similarly watery scene during the day. (In both cases,
Lawrence seems to be channeling the spirit of one of the great artistic
beachcombers of all time: Claude Monet.)

Dealy, of course, is well known in Ocean State art circles, both for
her powerful series of self-portraits and for her well-publicized
struggles against uveitis, a severe eye disease. The two large
portraits on display here are typical of her work, in which raw
emotions and clashing colors eventually give way to a strange kind
of serenity.

It’s also nice to see some of Mahler Ryder’s buoyant mixed media
sculptures, which deftly mix elements of cubist-style collage and
jazz-inspired improvisation. (Ryder, a prominent African-American
artist and a longtime professor at the Rhode Island School of Design,
died in 1992.)

Still, perhaps the show’s biggest surprise is Bruton, an artist who’s
been around for a while (she joined RISD’s painting faculty in 1993)
but whose work hasn’t received much attention or exposure in these
parts.

Partly, that’s Bruton’s own fault. Though paintings like
"Co-Ordination" and "The Healing Source" draw on a wide range of
contemporary sources — everything from children’s drawings and
outsider art to the Pattern and Decoration movement of the 1970s —
the results feel so wonderfully spontaneous that you can easily miss
the sophistication behind them.

The URI show, on the other hand, isn’t so lucky. Though many of the
individual artworks are powerful in themselves, the show’s sprawling
layout and lack of background information make it difficult to place
the materials in a larger historical context. What’s more, the show
combines objects of genuinely historic and artistic value — notably
period photographs of the death marches and murder campaigns carried
out by Ottoman troops and posters celebrating Armenian solidarity —
with other works that border on kitsch.

That’s not to say there aren’t some memorable pieces in the exhibit.

A painting by Tigran Tsitoghdzyan, for example, portrays the Armenian
Genocide as a literal gash in history — a unhealed wound that opens
up to reveal faces, both young and old. A pair of somber paintings by
Kevork Mourad, meanwhile, show bodies buried underneath barren fields.

Ever better is "Screamers," a video documentary directed by the
Armenian-American director Carla Garapedian. Released in 2006,
"Screamers" follows System of a Down, a Los Angeles-based rock band,
as it tries educate audiences about the Armenian Genocide in between
head-banging sets of heavy metal music.

At one point, members of the band visit Washington, D.C., where they
buttonhole politicians who routinely vote against recognizing the
Ottoman slaughter of Armenians as genocide (a move strenuously opposed
by the present-day Turkish government). The resulting clash of history,
heavy metal and American-style political hypocrisy is priceless.

"Abstraction in Providence: Mahler Ryder, Lloyd Martin, Ruth Dealy,
Irene Lawrence, Donna Bruton" runs through April 22 at the Bannister
Gallery, Rhode Island College, 600 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Providence.

Hours: Tues.-Fri. noon-8 or by appointment. Contact: (401) 456-9765
or

"The Armenian Genocide: 95 Years Later, In Remembrance" runs through
April 30 at the URI-Feinstein Campus gallery, 80 Washington St.,
Providence. Hours. Mon.-Thurs. 9-9 and Fri. 9-4. Contact: (401)
277-5206.

For more art listings,

go to projothebeat.com and click on "Visual Arts."

art_column08_04-08-10_K2I0MV6_v10.2327783.html

http://www.projo.com/art/content/wk-_
www.ric.edu/banister.

Diaspora should be careful not to be entrapped by Turkey: Aztag

news.am, Armenia
April 3 2010

Diaspora should be careful not to be entrapped by Turkey: Aztag Editor

12:13 / 04/03/2010 Armenian Diaspora should be careful not to be
entrapped by Turkey once again, Chief Editor of Beirut-based Armenian
Aztag newspaper Shahan Kandaharian told NEWS.am, commenting on Turkish
FM Davutoglu’s intention to meet with Armenian Diaspora
representatives.

He emphasized that Turkey seeks to sow discord within Diaspora after
initial attempts to do so with Armenia and its communities. `Various
Armenian Diaspora communities favour different stances on
Armenia-Turkey reconciliation and during these meetings Turkish
representatives will definitely try to play up the fact to galvanize
Armenians against each other,’ Kandaharian said. Thus, Armenians
should reject the meetings particularly considering the impending
Genocide anniversary, when Ankara is seeking to simulate dialogue with
Armenians to pave the way for those denying the Genocide and avoiding
this word, yet not finding sufficient ground for it.

Kandaharian underlined that Davutoglu’s proposal should be viewed by
Diaspora in the context of Ankara’s policy. `Turkey tries to carry out
carrot and stick policy, clearly casting parts to the actors. Erdogan
voices threats and tough statements, while Davutoglu plays a
humanist,’ he stated, adding that this nothing else but Ankara’s game
with Armenians.

A.G.

l

http://news.am/en/news/18220.htm

EU Delegation To Armenia Held Training Seminars For Armenian NGOs

EU DELEGATION TO ARMENIA HELD TRAINING SEMINARS FOR ARMENIAN NGOS

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.04.2010 18:00 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Delegation of the European Union to Armenia
organized 2 training seminars on "Financial Procedures related to
EU grant contracts in Armenia", which were held on 30 and 31 March,
2010 at the Marriott Hotel in Yerevan. They were financed through 2
main programs: DCI (Development Cooperation Instrument for Non-State
Actors & Local Authorities) and EIDHR (European Instrument for
Democracy and Human Rights), the Delegation said in a press release

The aim of the trainings was to provide comprehensive information on
financial and accounting matters related to EU grant contracts.

Training included an introduction to the best accountancy practices,
link between the Armenian tax laws, accounting standards and the
EU financial reporting requirements and a presentation of internal
control procedures.

More than 40 financial managers, accountants and project managers of
all the beneficiaries of grant contracts (Non State Actors (NGOs),
local authorities, public administrations, etc.) participated in the
trainings presented by the audit firm Grant Thornton Amyot.

Given the positive feedback from the participants, the Delegation will
consider organizing other trainings in the future, with an emphasis
on accounting practices and tax problems.