Head Of FAAE Centers On Armenia-Turkey Protocols At Salzburg Global

HEAD OF FAAE CENTERS ON ARMENIA-TURKEY PROTOCOLS AT SALZBURG GLOBAL SEMINAR

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 10, 2010 – 20:27 AMT 15:27 GMT

May 9-12, Salzburg Global Seminar brought together a group of
participants for a session entitled "What Turkey? What Europe?"

Among those participating are high ranking Turkish and EU officials,
including Foreign Ministers of Austria, Turkey and Sweden: Michael
Spindelegger, Ahmet Davutoglu and Carl Bildt.

Head of Forum of Armenian Associations of Europe (FAAE) Ashot Grigoryan
spoke at the session, centring on Armenia-Turkey Protocols.

He also dwelled on Genocide issue, unblocking of Armenia, situation
in South Caucasus and relations with Azerbaijan, FAAE reported.

New Video on Armenian Church Youth Centers

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address: Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Office of Foreign Communications
Tel: +374-10-517163
Fax: +374-10-517301
E-Mail: [email protected]
Website:

New Video on Armenian Church Youth Centers

The Shoghakat Television Company recently produced a short video on the
Armenian Church Youth Centers. 3,500 boys and girls attend after-school
classes at the network of seven Armenian Church Youth Centers throughout
Armenia. The first three opened in Yerevan in 1991, through the sponsorship
of the Armenian General Benevolent Union. Four more have since opened in
Vanadzor, Ashtarak, Vagharshapat (Etchmiadzin) and Kanaker. Two more are
scheduled to open in the near future in Gyumri and southern Armenia.

Watch the video at:

And visit the Armenian Church’s channel on YouTube for new videos added
every week:

##

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Dxl_O-foBroQ
http://www.youtube.com/armenianchurch
www.armenianchurch.org

ISTANBUL: Illiberal democracy in France (and beyond)

Hurriyet, Turkey
May 7 2010

Illiberal democracy in France (and beyond)

Friday, May 7, 2010
Mustafa AKYOL

I had coffee the other day with a colleague who told me why he had
recently declined a job offer from a French media company. In fact, he
was initially quite interested. The salary looked pretty decent, and
the city where he would have to live, Lyon, seemed appealing. He even
found a few nice possible schools there for his 10-year-old son.

But then came the bad news from Lyon. `We would love to welcome your
wife and child as well,’ the employers said. `But, sorry, you can’t
bring them for the initial 24 months.’

This, they explained, was the result of a new `immigration law’ the
French Assembly had passed under the auspices of President Nicholas
Sarkozy. After two years, they added, the benevolent French Republic
would perhaps be kind enough allow the broken family to reunite. (Yes,
not certainly, just perhaps.)

`This is insane,’ my friend wrote back to his would-be employers. And
then he, quite wisely, declined to move to a country that seems to
have little respect for the most quintessential human institution: the
nuclear family.

Burqa matters

Yet this was only the second news I heard last week about the growing
illiberalism in France. The other story even made the global
headlines: the ban on the burqa, the all-covering Islamic veil, which
the French Assembly will most probably pass next week.

Before that, though, let me note this: I am really not a fan of the
burqa, which covers everything but the eyes of a woman. I wish no
women ever wore that. As a Muslim, I also think it is not a
requirement of Islam, but a medieval tradition that is quite
burdensome on women. In fact, I am even willing to discuss whether the
headscarf ` which covers just the hair, not the face ` is a
requirement of Islam as well.

But all of these are my own opinions, and I don’t think I have the
right to impose them on others. Most French politicians, however, and
the voters they represent, seem to believe they have that very right.
Nadine Morano, the `family minister’ of France, makes this all obvious
by heralding that everyone who visits her country will soon `respect
the law and uncover their faces.’

What Ms. Morano probably doesn’t realize is that her line sounds very
much like that of the Taliban, who ask all female visitors to respect
the law and cover their faces.

The `law,’ in both cases, is an illiberal one that dictates to
individuals how they should walk around.

Another French politician who cheers for the burqa ban is
Jean-François Copé, the majority leader in the French Assembly. His
recent piece in the New York Times (`Tearing Away the Veil,’ May 4) is
hilarious. He says the ban is necessary for `our republican
principles’ and public safety, and supports the latter by referring to
`an armed robbery recently committed in the Paris suburbs by criminals
dressed in burqas.’

One really wonders if there was less crime in the Paris suburbs when
the burqa was not around, or whether criminals will really have a hard
time disguising themselves after the ban. Or will the all-encompassing
French Assembly pass other laws that ban large sunglasses, trimmed
hats and wigs?0

What is curiously lacking in Mr. Copé’s piece is a consideration of
the effects of the ban on the women who wear the burqa. Will they
really take it off and join the open-faced majority? Or will they
instead avoid going out and stay in their homes? The latter was the
effect of the ban on the veil that another illiberal regime ` that of
Reza Shah of Iran ` implemented in the ’20s. It was also the beginning
of a snowball-effect reaction that culminated in the Iranian
Revolution of 1979.

France, of course, is a much better place than the Shah’s dictatorial
Iran, but it is still a persistent disappointment when compared to
truly free countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom.
Such a ban would be unthinkable in those Anglo-Saxon states, no matter
how hard their societies are pressed by the threat from militant
Islamists.

The two Wests

Similarly, French laws that dictate a certain interpretation of
history ` such as requiring that the Armenian ethnic cleansing of 1915
has to be called `genocide’ ` would be unimaginable in Britain or
America. Even Holocaust denial, as delusional and disturbing as it
might be, is free in the English-speaking countries.

This difference, of course, is not just between the Anglo-Saxons and
the French, but between the former and much of continental Europe. And
the latter, I worry, is increasingly being dragged into what Newsweek
columnist Fareed Zakaria wisely calls `illiberal democracy.’ The burqa
ban was first implemented in Belgium a few weeks ago, and another
unbelievable ban on minarets was legislated by democratic vote in
Switzerland last December.

In all these countries, it seems that liberty is seen as a value valid
only for the people who look, live and worship (or not worship at all)
as the majority does.

As a non-Westerner, let me assure you that this attitude is not going
to win hearts and minds in this part of the world. It will only deepen
rifts and consolidate prejudices.

ANTELIAS: Funeral Service of Prelate of Aderbadagan late Bishop Nsha

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Director
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Watch our latest videos on YouTube here:

THE FUNERAL SERVICE OF THE PRELATE OF ADERBADAGAN LATE BISHOP NSHAN

The funeral of the deceased Bishop Nshan Topouzian was held at Saint Sarkis
church in Tabriz. Archbishop Sebouh Sarkissian the Prelate of Tehran
presided over the Holy liturgy and officiated the funeral service. Bishop
Papken Charian, Prelate of Isfahan, and clergy arriving from Lebanon
assisted the celebrant.

Following the liturgy, the body was taken to the historical cemetery in
Tabriz in procession lead by the scouts, representatives of Diocesan
Committees, and thousands of Armenian faithful who had come from the region
to put to rest their young spiritual leader.

##
View the photos here:
tos/Photos476.htm#6
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.youtube.com/user/HolySeeOfCilicia
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org

2.5 Kilometers of Gravity Irrigation Canal Opened

2.5 KILOMETERS OF GRAVITY IRRIGATION CANAL OPENED

Lragir.am
07/05/2010

The US Government Funded MCA-Armenia Program Delivers Water and
Training to Farmers

On May 7, the U.S. Ambassador Marie L. Yovanovitch and the Deputy
Prime Minister Armen Gevorgyan opened 2.5 kilometers of the 8.5
kilometers that constitutes the Aygezard gravity irrigation canal
scheme (Ararat marz) rehabilitated under the Millennium Challenge
Account-Armenia (MCA-Armenia) Program. A farmer’s plot at the 1.4
kilometer mark also was the scene for a number of other important
programmatic events, including the inauguration of the 200th
Demonstration Site under MCA-Armenia’s Water-to-Market Activity.

Ambassador Yovanovitch and the Deputy Prime Minister emphasized the
impact of infrastructure rehabilitation on improving farming practices
and attitudes of farmers, including more effective irrigation
practices, transition to higher value agriculture, and ultimately-
increased profitability of Armenian farmers. They highlighted the
increased yields and other benefits that improved irrigation will
bring to Mr. Ashot Abrahamyan, a farmer who, through hard work and
ingenuity, has struggled to maintain his two hectares of apricot
orchards for 20 years, despite extreme scarcity of water. Over 11,
000 rural residents from Aygezard, Gintver and Nor Ughi communities
will benefit from the rehabilitation of this Aygezard gravity system.

Following the official speeches water was released into the completed
section of Aygezard gravity scheme, after which the dignitaries and
guests made a tour of the 200th Demonstration Site under MCA-Armenia’s
Water-to-Market activity, a drip irrigation system installed on a
hectare of apricot orchard.

This investment in Aygezard, is an important part of the 180 million
USD worth of agricultural assistance provided by the US Government to
Armenia through the Compact signed with the Millennium Challenge
Corporation (MCC) in 2006. When completed in September 2011, the
MCA-Armenia Program expects to have refurbished major sections of
Armenia’s main canal systems, modernized some of the most urgently
needed pumping stations, introduced new gravity irrigation schemes,
re-built tertiary canals in communities across Armenia and restored
sections of the Ararat Valley Drainage system. The MCA-Armenia Program
is also training nearly 45,000 farmers in improved agriculture
practices, delivering technical assistance to water supply
institutions and providing 8,5 million USD in credit to farmers and
small agribusinesses in support of the program objectives. MCA-Armenia
press service reports.

Armenian Bar Association To Hold Annual Meeting

ARMENIAN BAR ASSOCIATION TO HOLD ANNUAL MEETING

Armenian Weekly
Fri, May 7 2010

>>From May 13-16, the Armenian Bar Association will host its 21st
Annual Meeting in Chicago at the Union League Club. The Honorable
Samuel Der-Yeghiayan, United States district court judge and the
first Armenian immigrant to be appointed to the federal bench in the
United States, will be an honored guest and keynote speaker at the
conference luncheon on May 15. Judge Der-Yeghiayan has served as a
federal district court judge for the northern district of Illinois
since 2003, having been nominated for the position by then-President
George W.

Bush.

His speech, entitled "Celebrating Armenian Heritage: Baba Ganoush is
the New Guacamole," will be delivered to bar association attendees,
their guests, local dignitaries, and the general public after a
gourmet three-course lunch catered by the Union League Club.

Yeghiayan’s keynote address and luncheon is open to the Chicagoland
Armenian community at a cost of $50 per person.

The Armenian Bar’s weekend conference will be punctuated by
legal seminars featuring speakers discussing topics of interest
to the entire Armenian legal community. The first panel, entitled
"Protection of Armenian Cultural Heritage Worldwide," will include
native Chicagoan Rachel Goshgarian, the director of the Zohrab Center;
Bedross Der Matossian, professor of Middle Eastern studies at MIT;
and local Chicago attorney Karnig Kerkonian, a managing partner of
Kerkonian, LLC.

A second panel, entitled "Electronic Discovery, Records Management,
and Privacy Issues on the Internet," will include local attorney,
James Nahikian, principal of Nahikian Global Intellectual Property
and Technology Law Group; Mark J. Nomellini, a partner in litigation
from Kirkland & Ellis LLP; and Chicago attorney, Gregory D. Hoogasian,
a vice president at the Chicago Stock Exchange.

California attorney Sara Anjargolian and other slated speakers will
comprise a third panel, which will discuss the current economic,
sociologic, and legal perspectives in Armenia. The lecture will
include a presentation of Anjargolian’s critically acclaimed photos
documenting everyday life in Armenia.

Rick Hartunian, a newly appointed U.S. attorney from Albany, N.Y., will
be another featured guest speaker and honored guest at the meeting.

"We are delighted to return to Chicago for our 2010 Annual Meeting
and hope to attract numerous Armenian attorneys from throughout
the country to participate," said Sonya Nersessian, chairman of the
Armenian Bar. "Our goal is to energize our constituents in the area,
help facilitate the interaction of our members and exchange of ideas,
and honor those at the top of our profession," she said. The meeting
will be presided over by Nersessian, from Boston, Mass., who is in
her second term as a chair of the organization. The meeting will
provide an opportunity for the Board of Governors to meet, set the
agenda of the organization, update membership on recent activities and
accomplishments, and vote on issues of importance to the organization.

Armenian Bar’s last meeting in Chicago was in 2004. Board member Amy
Hoogasian, who was a guest speaker at that meeting, is the organizing
committee chairperson for Chicago 2010. Hoogasian has assembled a
dynamic group of attorneys to coordinate the event. That group includes
Ann Lousin, a professor at the John Marshall Law School and the only
three-term chair of the Armenian Bar, along with former chair Lisa
Esayian, a partner in the prestigious law form of Kirkland & Ellis.

In addition to the legal seminars and keynote luncheon, the Bar
Association will hold a meeting of the Board of Governors, host a
Friday night reception with local dignitaries, and explore a few of
the city’s finest attractions, including a tour of the Dirksen Federal
Court Building and in-chambers meeting with Judge Der-Yeghiayan,
a tour of the new Modern Art Wing at the Art Institute of Chicago,
an architectural river boat cruise, a Cubs game, and a farewell dinner
Saturday evening at award-winning NAHA restaurant.

Bar Association sponsorship advertisements of local or national
businesses cost $250 and range up to $1,000 or more. For more
information on advertising or attending the May 15 luncheon, email Amy
Hoogasian at [email protected] or visit

www.armenianbar.org.

Armenian Archeologists At Temple Of Amenhotep III

ARMENIAN ARCHEOLOGISTS AT TEMPLE OF AMENHOTEP III

news.am
May 7 2010
Armenia

RA Ambassador to Egypt Armen Melkonyan held a meeting with Dr. Zahi
Hawass, Secretary General of the Egyptian Supreme Council of
Antiquities.

The press service of the RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs informed
NEWS.am that Dr. Zahi Hawass expressed his appreciation of the role
specialists of the Institute of Archeology and Ethnography and of
the Institute of Geology, RA Academy of Sciences, played in the
excavations at the Temple of Amenhotep III in Luxor. He also thanked
the Egyptian-Armenian specialists, the Egyptologist Gurik Suruzian
and architect and restorer Nairi Ambikian for their contribution to
research in Egypt.

The sides reached an agreement on further Armenian-Egyptian cooperation
in archeology.

Mother Will Go To The Extreme

MOTHER WILL GO TO THE EXTREME

A1Plus.am
06/05/10

Participant of the protest held today near the government building
Anahit Kirakosyan announced that she would go to the extreme and
even declare a hunger strike as a sign of protest. Pointing toward
the government building, she exclaimed: "I can’t explain to them in
any other way after they killed my son. Perhaps a hunger strike won’t
help either, but at least I’ll die and free myself from this hell."

Anahit Kirakosyan is the mother of Andranik Hayrapetyan who was killed
in peaceful conditions in one of Armenia’s military units. According
to official data, Andranik died from the shot of the opponent, but
his mother is certain that his son was killed by the military unit
commanders. The Minister of Justice informed her today that the two
culprits guilty for his son’s murder have been released by amnesty
and are back to their posts.

This was strange for Anahit Kirakosyan because the RA Cassation Court
had acknowledged them as guilty. "The more we fight to reach justice,
the more these authorities find a way out to impede and close our
road," said Kirakosyan.

Gohar Sargsyan, mother of another victim Tigran Ohanjanyan, was
also participating in the protest. Her son was also said to die from
electrocution. However, his mother is certain that her son was killed.

A trial on Tigran Ohanjanyan’s murder began and reached the RA
Cassation Court. However, RA Military Prosecutor General Armen
Khachatryan recently demanded sending the case back to the first
instance court, which the dead soldier’s mother finds nonsensical.

Let us remind that the head of the military unit’s communication point
and the junior sergeant were charged with Tigran Ohanjanyan’s murder.

The parents of the victim were against their sentencing, while
Armenia’s two court instances justified them.

Among the protesters were the parents of Karine Atoyan, 25, and Sos
Ghukasyan, 32, who died as a result of the clumsy work by general
doctor at the hospital in Berd city of Tavush province. According
to them, there would be no murders if at least one of the murders
committed by that doctor was condemned.

Among other protesters were the families of victims of the plane crash
that took place on May 17, 2001 in Iran. They still haven’t received
their 23-month compensation and their issue remains unsolved to this
day. Every morning the families of the victims go the RA presidential
residence and then silently hold signs near the government building.

Armenian PM Leaves For Czech Republic

ARMENIAN PM LEAVES FOR CZECH REPUBLIC

Panorama.am
16:01 06/05/2010

Politics

The Armenian Government delegation headed by Prime Minister Tigran
Sargsyan has left for Karlovy Vary, the Czech Republic, on two-day
visit, to attend the sitting of the European People’s Party Group
Bureau, the information department of the government reported.

Within the framework of the visit Tigran Sargsyan is due to meet with
the Prime Minister of the Czech Republic, Jan Fischer in Prague.

OSCE Helps Promote Trial And Criminal Justice Reform In Armenia

OSCE HELPS PROMOTE TRIAL AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM IN ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
MAY 5, 2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 5, ARMENPRESS: The Head of the OSCE Office in Yerevan,
Ambassador Sergey Kapinos, met Armenia’s Prosecutor General Aghvan
Hovsepyan May 4 to discuss justice sector reforms, including
implementation of recommendations contained in the trial monitoring
report recently released by the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights (ODIHR).

An official from the OSCE Yerevan Office told Armenpress that a
workshop on ODIHR’s trial monitoring recommendations, as they relate
to pre-trial proceedings, was also held on 27 April. In March, ODIHR
published a report on the trials that took place in the aftermath of
the March 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan.

Kapinos noted the Prosecutor General’s constructive approach to
the recommendations. "We were glad to learn that some of ODIHR’s
recommendations were immediately accepted, and we understand that
certain recommendations will need time for implementation. The
OSCE Office stands ready to assist and support the endeavors of
the Prosecutor’s Office, the Ministry of Justice and the Court of
Cassation," he said.

Hovsepyan said: "We highly appreciate the support from the OSCE
to reveal shortcomings and find comprehensive solutions to help
advance the rule of law and efficiency of the justice system in
Armenia. We hope that further support will be provided to increase
the efficiency of ongoing reforms; already a number of actions are
planned to implement the recommendations in the report."

Kapinos commended actions taken by the Prosecutor’s Office to
investigate the case of Vahan Khalafyan, who died while in police
custody on 13 April. He also welcomed the Prosecutor General’s pledge
to investigate cases of alleged violence against journalists, and
to promote Prosecutor’s role in police accountability mechanisms,
a challenge addressed in a recent report by the OSCE Office.

The OSCE Office has supported the Prosecutor General to upgrade its
website to promote interactive communication and help users learn
about the activities of the Prosecutor’s Office. The OSCE Office
is also working with the Prosecutor’s Office to identify potential
areas for improvement with criminal data collection and will organize
an assessment visit by an international expert from the Gottingen
University of Criminal Law.