Baku: Heads Of Azerbaijan, Armenian PACE Delegations Meet

HEADS OF AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIAN PACE DELEGATIONS MEET

Azeri Press Agency
01 Oct 2008 21:51
Azerbaijan

Strasbourg. Fuad Gulubeyli – APA. During the session of the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), Samed Seyidov
and David Arutyuan, heads of Azer and Armenian delegation to the PACE,
met on the initiative of the PACE President Lluis Maria de Puig.

The meeting took place at the President of PACE.

As the APA bureau reports, the head of the Azerbaijani delegation Samed
Seyidov said that the meeting focused on the future activities of the
Subcommittee on Nagorno-Karabakh after the death of its chairman Lord
Russell Johnston. The meeting was also attended by PACE Secretary
General Mathias Sorinasis.

The parties agreed that because of the presidential elections in
Azerbaijan, the matter will be discussed at the PACE session in
January.

They also agreed to meet in January again.

First Stage Of The Crisis – Overcome

FIRST STAGE OF THE CRISIS – OVERCOME
Vardan Grigoryan

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
30 Sep 2008
Armenia

The bilateral and multilateral meetings held in New York on September
24-26 sketched the main tendencies of the developments expected in
the Karabakh peace process in the course of the upcoming months. And
those tendencies will become more clear and concrete following the
presidential elections to be held in Azerbaijan and the United States
on October 15 and November 4 respectively.

Prior to the above-mentioned meeting of the Armenian, Turkish and
Azeri Foreign Ministers, the OSCE Minsk Group sharply increased the
activeness of its work.

Before the start of the negotiations in New York, the three Co-Chairs
again gathered together, and warmly hugged and kissed one another in
front of the cameras like lovers who had separated from each other
temporarily.

This means that before the Armenian, Turkish and Azeri Foreign
Ministers’ meeting in New York, the OSCE Minsk Group intended to
show everyone that it was actually the only body responsible for the
Karabakh peace process.

And that intention became a reality due to the meeting with the
Armenian President on November 4, the repeated attempts of bringing
the Armenian and Azeri Foreign Minister close to the "cross bar" on
September 26 and finally, the joint statement of the Co-Chairs. The
adoption of such document testifies to the fact that t he format of
the OSCE Minsk Group is not only maintained but also applied.

Hence, during their meeting in New York, the Armenian, Turkish and
Azeri Foreign Ministers focused only on the discussion of the "regional
developments" and Turkey’s recent initiative in that connection. In
such conditions, it was quite natural that Azerbaijan, which had
great expectations of the meeting, would initiate the successive
propaganda provocation.

So, "Bakiliar.az" Web site recently disseminated the false information
that Armenia, in the person of its Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan,
has allegedly agreed to continue the talks in the trilateral format,
welcoming Turkey’s role as a mediator in the process.

This was immediately followed by MFA Spokesman T. Balayan’s September
27 statement, "The settlement of the conflict is possible only within
the frameworks of the OSCE Minsk Group, without the mediation of
other parties."

As regards the rumors (circulated by the Mass Media of Baku) that
Yerevan has agreed to Turkey’s role as a mediator in the Karabakh
settlement process, T. Balayan characterized this as something
"absurd".

The fact that no progress was observed as a result of the Foreign
Ministers’ trilateral meeting in New York was yesterday confirmed by
President Serge Sargsyan as well. "A meeting was held, but there is
no concrete result", the P resident said.

While during the press-conference held in New York, the Turkish
President reiterated his country’s "traditional" standpoint, "If the
existing problems between the two countries are resolved within the
frameworks of the Armenian-Turkish dialogue, extending the cooperation
and opening the border will become possible." That’s to say, Baku
and Ankara anticipated Russia to approve the Turkish-Azerbaijani
policy of imposing unilateral conditions upon Armenia. And because
nothing of the kind happened, everything is now returning to the same
"starting point".

All this testifies to the primitiveness and unilateral character of the
Armenian-Turkish dialogue and the viewpoints and assessments recently
expressed in our reality with regard to the expediency of the Armenian,
Turkish and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers’ meeting in New York. And
the reality is that every time there is any deterioration in the
Russian-American or the Russia-West relations, Armenia becomes faced
with the danger of the formation of a new "Lenin-Atatyurk" alliance.

To be able to resist such critical moments and demonstrate the required
flexibility, we should set aside all our narrow party interests and
primitive attempts of taking advantage of the threat faced by the
country and realize that the same situation may be repeated in the
near future as well.

Armenia should by all means have active mechanisms20for counteracting
the "Turkish card" raffled by Azerbaijan because the possible
deterioration in the Russian-American relations may really lead to
our country’s encirclement by Turkey and Azerbaijan.

We Should Not Expect Much, As The Present Problems Have A Very Long

WE SHOULD NOT EXPECT MUCH, AS THE PRESENT PROBLEMS HAVE A VERY LONG STORY
By H. Chaqrian

AZG Armenian Daily
01/10/2008

Armenia-Turkey

Says Turkish Foreign Minister

On September 26 in New York took place the trilateral meeting of
Foreign Ministers of Armenia, Turkey and Azerbaijan. Seemingly, the
most important achievement of that meeting was the decision was to
continue dialog between the aforementioned states in that format. The
meeting caused much consideration in international press, and the
response was positive for the most part.

Before referring to the comments, it should be mentioned that the
trilateral meeting was preceded by another meeting of Edward Nalbandian
and Ali Babacan, which lasted for about 40 minutes.

In a joint press conference after the meeting of the three Foreign
Ministers Ali Babacan said that Caucasus has great capacities. "if
peace and stability in Caucasus are achieved, great things can be
done. It is also important in sense of geopolitical location of
the region. Today we discussed the opportunity of establishing the
Caucasian Stability and Partnership Platform, as well as issues
peculiar to the region."

The Armenian Foreign Minister thanked his Turkish colleague for
arranging the meeting and appreciated Turkey’s initiative about the
Platform. He said that the Armenian and Turkish discussed opportunities
of full normalization of the relationships between the two countries
and exchanged opinions.

Mamedyarov said that taking into consideration all the risks and
problems in Caucasus, the meeting of the Armenian Turkish and
Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers was very important.

On the same day Ali Babacan gave a live interview to CNN-Turk. He
said that the dialogue between Armenia, Turkey and Azerbaijan shall
continue in the trilateral format and said that diplomatic contacts
between Armenia and Turkey, which started almost a year ago, shall
develop. Referring to the issues of opening the Armenian-Turkish
border and of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Foreign Minister said,
"We should not expect much, as the present problems have a very long
story, some of them were originated in the times of World War 1. We
will proceed at a slow pace. We have a plenty of problems to consider".

We would like to add that Turkey removed any restrictions from its
airspace for flights to and from Yerevan. The Embassies of Turkey
received permission to attend receptions organized by the Armenian
Embassies around the world.

Azerbaijan Hails Iran’s Efforts For Regional Conflicts Resolution

AZERBAIJAN HAILS IRAN’S EFFORTS FOR REGIONAL CONFLICTS RESOLUTION

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.09.2008 18:07 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Resolution of some regional problems will become
possible after the Nagorno Karabakh conflict is settled, Azerbaijani
Deputy Foreign Minister said.

"Iran, aspired to develop relations with all countries in the region,
wishes all regional conflicts were resolved peacefully. All we hail its
efforts to that end," Araz Azimov said, the Azeri Press Agency reports.

Canada MFA celebrates the photography of Yousuf Karsh

Taunton Daily Gazette, USA

MFA celebrates the photography of Yousuf Karsh

Yousuf Karsh/Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

8. Self-portrait Yousuf Karsh, Canadian (born in Turkish Armenia),
1908�002 about 1962 Photograph, gelatin silver print *Lent by the
photographer� estate *Photograph c Estate of Yousuf Karsh
*Photograph courtesy, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston – More related
photos

By Chris Bergeron/Daily News staff
GHS
Posted Sep 28, 2008 @ 12:03 AM

taking his world-famous portraits, Yousuf Karsh sought to reveal his
subject’s "hidden" character by capturing ephemeral emotions concealed
beneath the mask of celebrity.

Combining a courtly demeanor with darkroom brilliance, the Armenia
native photographed royalty and despots, starlets and artists
transforming their public faces into iconic images.

In celebration of the 100th anniversary of Karsh’s birth, the Museum
of Fine Arts is exhibiting a broad sampling of memorable
black-and-white photographs that display his eye-catching artistry
throughout the arc of his career.

Pablo Picasso gazes with penetrating eyes past a vase bearing the
figure of an amply endowed nude. Regal yet reserved beneath her crown,
Princess Elizabeth stands at rest in her royal gown. Pale as a corpse,
a cadaverous Andy Warhol holds a paintbrush in his delicate, hairy
hands.

The just-opened exhibit, "Karsh 100: A Biography in Images," comprises
about 100 images including famous personalities and lesser-known
landscapes, experimental shots and photos of Canadian laborers and
landscapes that show another side of the artist.

Organized by curator Anne Havinga, the exhibit presents a balanced,
visually pleasing portrait of one of the 20th century’s great portrait
photographers.

The MFA’s Estrellita and Yousuf Karsh senior curator of photographs,
she attributed Karsh’s ability to freeze a subject’s character in
memorable images to "his uncanny ability to make people feel at ease."

Born in 1908 in the former Eastern Ottoman Empire, now present day
Turkey, Karsh achieved international recognition following decades of
diligent preparation. After relatives were killed during the Armenian
genocide, his family moved to Syria and Karsh was sent in 1924 to live
in Canada with an uncle who was a professional photographer. Impressed
by his nephew’s ability, his uncle sent Karsh to Boston to serve as an
apprentice with John Garo, an experienced photographer who became his
mentor.

Karsh’s best-known work, a portrait of a defiant Winston Churchill
that launched his career, resulted from a fortunate mix of the
photographer’s determination and instinctive professionalism, Havinga
said. Allowed only two minutes to photograph Churchill, who was
visiting Canada just weeks after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, she said
Karsh "respectfully" plucked a cigar from his lips, prompting an
expression of indomitable will that came to represent British
resistance.

Opening the exhibit, Estrellita Karsh said her late husband
photographed "people who mattered, people who left their mark on the
world."

"I hope this exhibit shows what kind of person Yousuf was. I think it
shows the intertwining of his personality and work because they are
one and the same thing," she said.

Shedding a different sort of light on Karsh’s personal and technical
approach, the exhibit also includes one of his large-format cameras,
preparatory studies for his portraits and a revealing transcript of a
conversation with Albert Einstein during a 1948 photo session that
clearly intended to put the great man into a pensive mood.

In a revealing back-and-forth, Karsh asked Einstein about possible
connections between music and mathematics, the likelihood of Russian
imperialism and whether he felt optimistic about the future during the
atomic age.

Throughout the mid-20th century, Havinga said, "Karsh’s name became
synonymous with the highest level of photographic portraiture and
being ‘Karshed’ was an honor for sitters."

Visitors to the show will feel as if they’re viewing a cavalcade of
20th century stars such as Audrey Hepburn, Ernest Hemingway,
Jacqueline Kennedy, Mother Theresa, Rudolf Nureyev, the Duchess of
Windsor, Harry Truman, Georgia O’Keeffe and Ronald Reagan.

Jerry Fielder, who served as a consultant for the show, praised Karsh
for his meticulous preparation for each photo session and expertise
editing his images. The curator and director of Karsh’s estate, he
explained the artist typically shot with a large-format camera that
used an 8-by-10-inch negative that captured his subjects in remarkable
detail.

Fielder said Karsh usually shot about 15 negatives for every two-hour
session. "Yousuf researched his subjects for talking points during the
session. And he had an extraordinary control of light. In the dark
room, he was the master of light and composition," he said.

But in the act of shooting, Karsh aimed to capture on film "the vision
of people he saw," said Fielder. "He was always looking for what was
natural in his subjects."

Karsh’s images became so ingrained in the popular mind that viewers
passing through the galleries may have the curious sensation of seeing
famous people who looked just like they thought they would.

Sitting beneath a horned elk skull, a black-clad Georgia O’Keeffe
resembles a monk meditating in an austere cell. Wearing a dark
burnoose and white hood, Ibn Abdul Aziz Faisal, who became king of
Saudi Arabia, appears to be lost in deep thought. Practically spilling
out of her gown, sexy Swedish starlet Anita Ekberg purses her lips and
closes her eyes in a seemingly private rapture.

Many of Karsh’s best-known portraits feature a subject whose features
are illuminated by studio lights set against a dark background.

Sometimes that format contributes to a posture or expression that
belies our expectations.

Shot in extreme close-up, Fidel Castro’s deep-eyed gaze exudes a
somber gravitas. Boris Karloff sits pensively, looking tired rather
than monstrous. Appearing atypically nervous in a strapless gown,
28-year-old Jacqueline Kennedy looks quizzically into the camera.

A viewer might reasonably wonder did Karsh actually "capture" his
subjects’ true characters or merely confirm public expectations of
what a statesman, Hollywood ingenue or tormented artist would look
like?

In a memoir titled "Portfolio," Karsh wrote of photographing the
famous: "The endless fascination of these people for me lies in their
inward power."

"It is part of the elusive secret that hides in everyone and it has
been my life’s work to catch on film. The mask we present to others,
and too often to ourself, may lift only for a second – to reveal that
power in an unconscious gesture, a raised brow, a surprise response, a
moment of repose. This is the moment to record," Karsh said.

Estrellita Karsh expressed hopes the exhibit conveys her late
husband’s abiding affection for Boston as a place where he established
his signature style while living in difficult conditions.

"For Yousuf, it began in Boston. It happened in Boston. He called
Boston his spiritual home. He called this museum his university," she
said. "The man who lived in the YMCA now has works in the permanent
collection of the MFA. The wheel has turned full circle."

THE ESSENTIALS:

The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, is open seven days a week. Hours:
Saturday through Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 4:45 p.m.; and Wednesday through
Friday, 10 a.m. to 9:45 p.m.; (Thursday and Friday after 5 p.m. only
the West Wing is open).

General admission (which includes two visits in a 10-day period) is
$17 for adults; $15 for seniors and students 18 and older. Admission
for students who are university members is free as is admission for
children under 17 during non-school hours.

The MFA is offering several courses, events and activities in
conjunction with this exhibit.

A 4-course session on "Photography: People, Places and Points of View"
will be offered Tuesdays, Nov. 11 and 18, Dec. 2 and 9, from 10:30
a.m. to noon in the Remis Auditorium. The course will also be offered
on Wednesdays, Nov. 13 and 19, and Thursdays, Dec. 4 and 11, from 7 to
9:30 p.m. in the Riley Seminar Room. The course is $72 for MFA
members; $88 for non-members; for single sessions, MFA members, $20
and non-members $25.

On Thursday, Nov. 20 at 7 p.m., Sally Mann will discuss her
award-winning photography in the Remis Auditorium. MFA members $18;
non-members, $22.

On Thursday, Oct. 16 at 11 a.m., curator Anne Havinga will discuss the
exhibit.

A series of nine movies, "Photography on Film," will begin Nov. 13 and
run through Dec. 18. Call for details.

For information, call 617-267-9300 or visit

www.mfa.org.

Athens: Vartholomeos in Armenia

Athens News Agency, Greece

Vartholomeos in Armenia

Ecumenical Patriarch Vartholomeos (Bartholomew I) arrived for an
official visit to Armenia on Saturday, where from Yerevan he expressed
his brotherly wishes towards the Armenian people.

Vartholomeos’ visit to Armenia comes on the occasion of his
participation in Armenian Patriarchate services, while he also
expressed his satisfaction on at his first visit to the Caucasus
country.

"I am specifically happy because a dialogue between Armenia and
Turkey has begun," he said, outlining an initiative by Armenia’s
president, who invited his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul on the
occasion of a national football match, thereby, contributing to a
rapprochement of the two countries.

Caption: ANA-MPA file photo of Ecumenical Patriarch Vartholomeos
(Bartholomew I)

ANA-MPA Copyright © 2004-2005 All rights reserved.

President Of The Nagorno Karabagh Republic Bako Sahakyan Met A Group

PRESIDENT OF THE NAGORNO KARABAGH REPUBLIC BAKO SAHAKYAN MET A GROUP OF STUDENTS FROM THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA

Panorama.am
12:39 27/09/2008

On 26 September President of the Nagorno Karabagh Republic Bako
Sahakyan met a group of students from the Republic of Armenia at
the grand hall of the Officer’s Palace in capital Stepanakert. The
students arrived to the NKR upon the invitation of the "Base Metals"
company. According to the President such visits are of great important
and should be carried out on a periodic basis and contribute to
consolidation of efforts by the world spread Armenians in developing
Artsakh.

In a warm and free atmosphere the President answered numerous of
questions asked by the students. Special attention was paid to the
Karabagh issue within the context of recent developments in the region.

Bako Sahakyan noted that NKR’s position of has not changed. The
official Stepanakert advocates peaceful settlement of the conflict with
direct participation of Artsakh in the negotiation process. President
Sahakyan underlined that independence and security of Artsakh cannot
be a matter of any speculations.

The Head of the State rated high the speech delivered by President
Serzh Sargsyan of Armenia at the UN General Assembly, especially
points touching upon the rights of nations to self-determination. Bako
Sahakyan welcomed the dialogue between Armenia and Turkey noting
that the Nagorno Karabagh Republic should also partake in any program
aimed at establishing stability in the region.

Chairman of the NKR National Assembly Ashot Ghulyan, premier Ara
Haroutyunyan, other officials partook at the meeting.

A1+ – Armenia Should Lift Moratorium On Licensing Broadcasters

ARMENIA SHOULD LIFT MORATORIUM ON LICENSING BROADCASTERS

A1+
[07:30 pm] 26 September, 2008

VIENNA, 26 September 2008 – The OSCE Representative on Freedom of
the Media, Miklos Haraszti, today asked the Government of Armenia to
review the recently adopted amendments to the TV and radio law that
introduce a moratorium on issuing new broadcasting licenses until
the planned digital switchover, scheduled to start in 2010.

In a letter to Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, Haraszti wrote:
"By cutting off any potential applicant broadcasters from entering
the market until 2010, the limited pluralism in Armenia’s broadcasting
sector will be further diminished."

"A moratorium on new licences for analogue transmission
should not be the first step in the transition to digital
broadcasting. Digitalization should not be allowed to reduce diversity
and plurality or preserve a lack thereof. If the broadcasting landscape
in a country is not sufficiently pluralistic and diverse, it would
be appropriate to delay digitalization and undertake other reforms
first," added Haraszti.

He said that the moratorium meant that Armenia will not be able to
comply with the June 2008 decision of the European Court of Human
Rights that upheld the case of television station A1+. In June 2008 the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe also urged Armenia to
"ensure an open, fair and transparent licensing procedure" and allow
A1+ to apply for a new licence.

Since the broadcasting licence of A1+ was revoked in March 2002, the
OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media has repeatedly intervened
with the Government of Armenia in support of the television station.

Haraszti offered his Office’s legal analysis of the amendments and
recommendations, adding: "I hope that, for the sake of pluralism,
the Government of Armenia will review the amendments with the active
participation of all relevant civil society and media stakeholders."

The "Law on Making a Supplement to the Republic of Armenia Law on
Television and Radio" will enter into force on 27 September.

Serzh Sargsyan: It’s Time To Seriously Consider The Right Of People

SERZH SARGSYAN: IT’S TIME TO SERIOUSLY CONSIDER THE RIGHT OF PEOPLE TO SELF-DETERMINATION

armradio.am
26.09.2008 11:10

Speaking at the 63rd session of the UN General Assembly on 25
September, the President of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, said he
represented a country, which in recent weeks, had been in an
unacceptable situation. Blood had been shed in the South Caucasus,
and once again, innocent people had died because leaders failed to
bring a peaceful resolution to existing conflicts. The unsettling
expression "cold war" had again emerged, and the Assembly’s main task
should be a joint demand to unequivocally rule out such developments.

Indeed, he called for establishing a new viable structure, as it was
impossible to tackle today’s challenges exclusively with structures
established after Second World War. The world continued to respond
to today’s nettlesome challenges — terrorism, international crime
and drug trafficking among them — through institutions envisaged
to merely smooth over controversies. Regional cooperation could be
among the essential means to address such challenges, and Armenia
had always promoted such action as the most effective way to address
existing problems. Open borders and interrelated economic systems
were also crucial.

On rising food and fuel prices, he said the world continued to
witness unilateral sanctions and border closures. Existing problems
with neighbouring State s could not be solved without dialogue, and
with that in mind, he was pleased at Turkish President Abdullah Gul’s
"bold decision" to accept his invitation to come to Yerevan as part
of the "football diplomacy" initiative. The time had come to solve
Armenian-Turkish problems, and Mr. Sargsyan was certain of the need
to move resolutely in that direction.

Events in the South Caucasus region held "very serious" lessons for
the world, he explained, saying first that the United Nations must
strictly follow the spirit of its Charter. Should any Member State
increase its military budget, among other things, it must receive a
rapid and firm response. "Prevention is preferable over cure," he said.

It was also time to seriously consider the right of people to
self-determination, and he opposed the idea that each claim be
resolved through secession. There was no doubt that to be viable,
such an outcome should be endorsed by all parties involved, which was
why Armenia continued to negotiate with Azerbaijan in the framework
of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
Minsk Group, seeking recognition by that country for the independent
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh, which had been independent for two
decades. Those people had been subject to brutal war, and for years,
had been on the brink of extinction. They had neither a regular army
nor any ability or =0 Aintention to occupy any Azeri territory.

In recent months, a resolution related to one episode in the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict had been adopted with only 30 of 146 States voting
in favour of it. A sensitive problem, with "deep roots and bloody
developments", had been decided upon by the majority to support one of
the parties. That outcome had been "more than predictable". He hoped
that Azerbaijan’s real interest was in the peaceful and comprehensive
resolution of the conflict. The process mediated by the Minsk Group
aimed to reach that goal, and Armenia had undertaken serious work
with the mediation of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs.

Noting that this year marked the sixtieth anniversaries of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and of the Convention on
Genocide Prevention, he said that such anniversaries were more than
merely "important".

His country would do everything possible to advocate continuously for
the Genocide Convention, and he recognized that Armenia had "important
things to do" to guarantee the full implementation of the Universal
Declaration. On that road, Armenia was trying not to repeat others’
mistakes.

Despite Refusal Of Yerevan Mayor’s Office, Armenian National Congres

DESPITE REFUSAL OF YEREVAN MAYOR’S OFFICE, ARMENIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS TO HOLD MEETING ON SEPTEMBER 26

Noyan Tapan

Se p 24, 2008

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 24, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian National Congress
(ANC) announced in advance and applied to Yerevan mayor’s office with
notification of holding a meeting and a march on September 26. The
mayor’s office rejected this application based on an unfounded and
false motivation. This time the leitmotif of the meeting will be the
election of head of Yerevan’s Kentron community on September 28. For
that reason the ANC’s candidate for Kentron community head Ararat
Zurabian also applied to the mayor’s office with the request to hold
a meeting-rally with voters within the framework of his pre-election
campaign. However, according to a statement of the ANC, the mayor’s
office rejected this application, this time violating the Electoral
Code as well.

"We consider such refusals as unacceptable because they violate the
Armenian citizens’ constitutional rights and their rights enshrined
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. We will exercise our
rights and hold a meeting on September 26," is said in the statement
of the ANC.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=117679