Press Freedom In Armenia Decreased

PRESS FREEDOM IN ARMENIA DECREASED

AZG Armenian Daily
23/10/2008

Statistics

Press freedom in Armenia has decreased markedly over the past year,
an international media rights group said on Wednesday, pointing to a
temporary ban on independent news reporting imposed by the Armenian
Government in March, Azatutyun reported. The Paris-based Reporters
Without Borders (RSF) put Armenia in 102nd place in its latest World
Press Freedom Index covering 173 nations. Armenia ranked 77th in the
previous RSF survey released a year ago.

RSF found an even shaper deterioration of the situation with media
freedom in neighboring Georgia which the United States and the
European Union regard as the most democratic and liberal of the
three South Caucasus states. Georgia, which went through a state of
emergency in November 2007 and a brief war with Russia last August,
slipped 54 places to 120th in the survey. Azerbaijan fared even worse,
falling from 139th to 150th spot in the rankings.

Karabakh Talks Planned

KARABAKH TALKS PLANNED

News in Brief
The Moscow Times
22 October 2008
Russia

YEREVAN, Armenia — President Dmitry Medvedev said Tuesday that he
would host peace talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which appear
willing to negotiate a settlement of their 20-year conflict over the
disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Medvedev’s announcement follows a statement by a U.S. diplomat that
the United States also would step up efforts to help settle the
conflict.

AGBU Discover Armenia Trip Exposes Diasporan Teens to Their Heritage

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

AGBU’s Discover Armenia Trip Exposes Diasporan Teens to Their Heritage

For the fifth consecutive year, AGBU’s Discover Armenia organized an
action-packed trip to Armenia and neighboring Karabakh for diasporan
youth ages 15 to 18. From August 8 – 27, 22 youths from 13 cities and
6 countries spent 20 unforgettable days in Armenia under the direction
and guidance of Herminé Duzian, AGBU Diaspora Youth Programs
Coordinator in Armenia. The youths hailed from Belgium (Anvers),
Canada (Toronto, Montreal), France (Paris, Marseilles, Vienne,
Valance, Bordeaux), Germany (Munich), Lebanon (Beirut), and the United
States of America (New Jersey, New York, California).

Along with visits to Garni, Geghard, the Holy See of Etchmiadzin,
Noravank, the AGBU Nork Children’s Center, Oshakan, the
Tsitsernakabert Armenian Genocide Museum, Sardarapat, Sevan, the
AGBU-sponsored Vazkenian Theological Seminary and other landmarks and
museums, the participants also learned the value of volunteerism by
helping with the renovation of homes in the village of Khor Virap,
which was sponsored by the Fuller organization, and in the cleaning of
the Khosrov Forest State Preserve, coordinated by the World Wildlife
Fund.

The youths had a number of unique once-in-a-lifetime experiences,
including climbing Armenia’s highest mountain, Mount Aragats, and
spending an unforgettable evening with renowned Armenian pop singers
Shushan Petrossian and Arsen Grigorian at the AGBU Camp Antranik in
the Lori region.

The group also went to Karabakh, where they became acquainted with
local AGBU projects and visited the city of Shushi and the medieval
monastic complex of Gandzasar.

The trip aims to expose participating youth to the wondrous nature of
Armenia and the lives of its citizens. "This is my first time in
Armenia and I liked it a lot. I will definitely return in the
future. I will help my people as much as I can to make Armenia a
better place," said Haigaram Kalindjian, who grew up in Lebanon and
currently attends a Canadian college.

Talin Knadjian of Belgium shares Kalindjian’s enthusiasm: "When we
went to Khor Virap to help renovate houses, we got acquainted with
several young people there. They asked me what I do and I became
acquainted with their everyday activities. They were very kind to us
and were very happy that a group of Armenians from abroad had come to
help them. It was all very memorable."

For more information about next year’s Discover Armenia trip, please
email Herminé Duzian at [email protected].

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City with
an annual budget of $36 million, AGBU preserves and promotes the
Armenian identity and heritage through educational, cultural and
humanitarian programs, annually touching the lives of some 400,000
Armenians on six continents.

www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org

Azerbaijan Keen To See Armenia Prosperous – Diplomat

AZERBAIJAN KEEN TO SEE ARMENIA PROSPEROUS – DIPLOMAT

Azad Azarbaycan TV
October 11, 2008 Saturday
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan is interested in Armenia’s prosperity. If Armenia makes
correction to its own policies and becomes a responsible actor in
international relations, then it may ensure its own prosperity,
the spokesman of the Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry, Xazar Ibrahim said.

Commenting on Armenian Foreign Minister Edvard Nalbandyan’s opinion
that Nagornyy Karabakh’s status should be determined by the people
of Nagornyy Karabakh, Xazar Ibrahim said that there are no people of
Nagornyy Karabakh.

"There are no people of Nagornyy Karabakh. The international community
may get confused if we refer to the region or town population within
a country as people. Therefore, it will be useful if Mr Nalbandyan
clarifies his words, because such things neither correspond to
international law nor to negotiation process," Ibrahim said.

Author Takes Aim At Bullying

AUTHOR TAKES AIM AT BULLYING
Kim Lunman

Brockville Recorder and Times
Monday, October 20, 2008
Canada

The psychology behind bullying schoolchildren in North American
schoolyards is not so far a step from the genesis of genocide around
the globe, renowned author Barbara Coloroso told parents and educators
here Saturday.

"It’s a short walk from bullying to hatred to genocide," the author
of The Bully, the Bullied and the Bystander, Coloroso told about
200 people at the 2008 Upper Canada District School Board (UCDSB)
School Council Fall Forum at South Grenville District High School.

"Bullying is about contempt for another human being," said Coloroso,
whose latest book Extraordinary Evil: A Brief History of Genocide
and Why It Matters was at the centre of controversy earlier this year
when the Toronto School Board removed the book from its reading list
against a backlash of criticism.

Coloroso, an international best-selling author, said the dehumanizing
that happens when children bully each other is no different from
the dehumanizing that occurs leading up to genocide, including the
Holocaust and Rwanda when people are reduced to being "an it" instead
of a human being.

"It is a short walk," said Coloroso, who visited Rwanda several
times after the 1994 genocide to work with orphans and lecture at the
National University of Rwanda. "We have to stop it in our schools,"
adding: "Verbal bullying cannot be tolerated."

She also referred to the murder of Victoria teenager Reena Virk by
her classmates that shocked North America not just for its violence,
but for the blatant bystanding of other teens who did nothing but
watch the brutal attack.

"Her classmates cheered on while her attackers broke her arms and
drowned her," said Coloroso.

The author and married mother of three children, who resides in
Littleton, Colorado, has international best-selling books on parenting,
teaching, school discipline, including titles such as Just Because
It’s Not Wrong Doesn’t Make It Right, Kids Are Worth It! Giving Your
Child the Gift of Inner Discipline and Parenting Through Crisis:
Helping Kids in Times of Loss, Grief and Change.

But her latest book Extraordinary Evil: A Brief History of Genocide
and Why It Matters sparked controversy when the Toronto Public School
Board removed the book from its reading list last spring on the grounds
Coloroso was not a professional historian. The Writers Union of Canada
and other literary organizations endorsed an appeal of the decision.

Following months of debate and backlash, the Toronto school board
decided to include Coloroso’s book as a text examining the psychology
of genocide and gave final approval in June for the course to go
ahead in 11 city high schools, reaching about 300 Grade 11 students.

That prompted outcry from the Turkish Embassy and the Turkish
community, saying it’s wrong to teach about the killings of 1.5
million Armenians in 1915 in Turkey alongside the Holocaust and the
Rwandan genocide.

Gamburyan To Return At UFC 94

GAMBURYAN TO RETURN AT UFC 94
PatrickOBannon

Impact Wrestling News
10/20/2008

Lightweight prospect Manny Gamburyan is returning to action at
the UFC’s Super Bowl weekend card, UFC 94, on Jan. 31 in Las
Vegas. Gamburyan confirmed the fight to MMAWeekly.com on Sunday.

Though bout agreements have not been signed, he says he has agreed
to face Brazilian Thiago Tavares. Tavares’ American representatives
were unavailable for comment.

Gamburyan, 27, has gone 2-1 in the UFC since an injury loss to Nate
Diaz dashed his chance at winning the fifth season of "The Ultimate
Fighter." The Armenian fighter caught another piece of bad luck at
UFC 87, losing by quick knockout to fellow Ultimate Fighter 5 alum
Rob Emerson.

Tavares, 23, is coming off two losses, most recently to Kurt Pellegrino
at UFC 88. Despite impressive performances in all showings, the
Brazilian has a .500 record in the Octagon with three wins and
three losses.

"He’s a phenomenal fighter," Gamburyan said. "I’m really happy I’m
fighting him. With a good victory, that’s going to put me on top
for sure."

Conducting Dims Soprano’s Star

CONDUCTING DIMS SOPRANO’S STAR
Tamara Bernstein

Globe and Mail
October 20, 2008
Canada

Isabel Bayrakdarian with the Manitoba

Chamber Orchestra

Pianist Serouj Kradjian

Guest conductor Anne Manson

Roy Thomson Hall

In Toronto on Friday

As 8 p.m. drew near, I looked around in dismay at the many empty
seats in Roy Thomson Hall. How could this be happening? If there were
one sure bet on Toronto’s autumn concert lineup, this would be it:
the glorious soprano Isabel Bayrakdarian singing repertoire from
the Armenian tradition that is so close to her heart, joined by her
supremely talented pianist (and husband) Serouj Kradjian and the
strings of the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra.

I’d already heard much of the program (with a different orchestra) on
Bayrakdarian’s gorgeous new CD of songs by Armenian composer Gomidas
Vartabed (also known as Komitas Vardapet), who lived from 1869 to
1935. The one unknown on the lineup was U.S. conductor Anne Manson,
but what an impressive bio she has! The concert program cites a rave
review from the New York Times and lists prestigious gigs at the
Salzburg Festival and Glimmerglass Opera, among other achievements.

The disconnect between that glamorous bio and the time-beater who stood
on the podium Friday boggles the mind. I can’t remember encountering
such stiff, unnuanced conducting, and so little feel for a vocal line,
on a professional stage.

I kept wanting to close my eyes, not only to avoid the irritating
sparkles on Manson’s jacket (a sartorial gaffe that distracted from
both the music and the singer’s physical presence) but to avoid the
sight of her outsized gestures – Manson seemed to think she was
conducting a 100-piece orchestra plus massed choirs, not a small
string group that scarcely followed her anyway.

I’m dwelling on the conducting because Manson ruined the concert,
which was sponsored by the International Institute for Genocide and
Human Rights Studies and is part of a tour "dedicated to the victims
of all genocides." Along with music by Gomidas, the program included
works by Bartok, whose passionate investigations of traditional
Hungarian, Balkan and Arabic repertoires are kindred to Gomidas’s
work with Armenian traditional music, and by Jewish composer Gideon
Klein (1919 to 1945), a victim of the Nazi Holocaust. Gomidas himself
survived the Armenian genocide but was so shattered by its horrors
that he ended his days in a mental institution outside of Paris.

Bayrakdarian was in beautiful voice for the evening, but she did not
connect with the layers of emotion or history in Ravel’s Deux melodies
hebraïques, which includes the Kaddish sung by Jewish mourners. But it
must have been difficult when Manson was bulldozing through Ravel’s
miraculous setting, which ought to be a discreet shimmer of mystical
light.

The Gomidas folk song settings, which Kradjian has arranged for string
orchestra, made up the bulk of the program. They are wonderful pieces
in which vocal ornamentation caresses the beautiful Armenian melodic
modes, and through which ghosts of Schubert, Delibes and other European
composers flit. The sweet yet wild sound of the duduk, a traditional
Armenian reed instrument, performed by Hampic Djabourian, was a real
treat. But under Manson’s direction, Bartok’s Rumanian Folk Dances
and a set of Greek Dances by Nikos Skalkottas were an ordeal.

Kradjian’s performance of five dances for solo piano poured balm on the
wounds inflicted by Manson: Here at last were subtlety and suppleness,
innate musicality, spontaneity and the connection of soul to soul.

Under the circumstances, it was hardly surprising that Bayrakdarian
did not offer as moving an interpretation of the music as she does
on the CD.

As for the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra, which is currently without a
music director, I note with concern that Manson is conducting three
of its nine concerts this season. If the orchestra is shopping for
a music director, the musicians, and their audiences, deserve better.

–Boundary_(ID_+4a64Sz4Ix0suCePD4Wz3g)–

Aguilera concert to storm palace

The National, United Arab Emirates
Sunday, October 19, 2008

Aguilera concert to storm palace

Loveday Morris

Last Updated: October 18. 2008 8:53PM UAE / October 18. 2008 4:53PM GMT
Singer Christina Aguilera at the Africa Rising Festival in London, Oct
14, 2008. J Ryan / AP

ABU DHABI // Christina Aguilera’s concert at the Emirates Palace hotel
on Friday will be the biggest-budget music production the country has
ever seen, with a 14-piece backing band, a light show and a fireworks
display.

The Grammy award-winning singer, whose hits include Genie in a Bottle,
will perform on the lawns of the hotel to an expected audience of
20,000 people.

`The show will have all the bells and whistles associated with a big
American songstress,’ said Lee Charteris, the event’s producer.

The stage for the concert will be built across a large central
stairway, with 200 lights and three video screens, the largest of
which is 10 metres wide. Radio 1 DJs will appear on a second stage
before and after the concert.

Tickets, which are priced from Dh295 to Dh890 (US$80 to $222), are
still available.

Aguilera is the latest in a series of stars, including Justin
Timberlake, Bon Jovi and Elton John, to perform at the Emirates
Palace. The success of previous shows has prompted the hotel to
consider building a permanent concert stage in the grounds.

The Abu Dhabi show is part of the singer’s `Back to Basics’ tour, to
promote her latest multi-platinum-selling album. More subdued and
sophisticated than some of her earlier shows, the tour has seen
Aguilera return to her soul roots, the genre she has said most
inspires her music.

Aguilera, 27, who has sold more than 25 million records worldwide, is
scheduled to release her sixth album next year.

Born on Staten Island, New York, she was known to her neighbours as
`the little girl with the big voice’. She got her break at the age of
12, on the US talent show Star Search, which led to a role in the
Disney Channel’s children’s television show The New Mickey Mouse
Club. Her recording of the theme song for the 1998 Disney film Mulan
landed her a record deal with RCA.

The opening act for the concert was confirmed last week as Taleen
Kalbian, an Armenian-American singer.

Four years ago, Taleen, then 16 years old, debuted in the UAE by
headlining her own concert in Abu Dhabi.

Taleen, now 20, is classically trained and has been described as `the
next Christina Aguilera, meets Aaliyah and Cher seasoned with a pinch
of Celine Dion’ with a sound that is a blend of `pop, hip-hop, opera
with R&B sensibilities’.

`With a powerful voice and dynamic stage presence, Taleen was the
obvious choice to be the opening act for a superstar such as
Christina,’ said John Lickrish, managing director for Flash, the
company that organised the event.

A website, , has been set up for the Emirates
Palace concert to keep fans updated.

[email protected]

www.christinaaguilera.ae

Africa: Mandela, Obama and The Post-Racial Age

AllAfrica.com, Washington

Africa: Mandela, Obama and The Post-Racial Age

The Monitor (Kampala)
18 October 2008

Posted to the web 18 October 2008

Prof. Ali A. Mazrui

Nelson Mandela and Barack Obama are potential icons of a post-racial
age which is unfolding before our eyes. Mandela has become the most
respected Black man by all races in world history.

Obama stands a chance of becoming the most trusted Black man in US
history. No African-American has ever come so close to winning the US
presidency. But no African-American could have approached so close to
winning the US presidency without an unprecedented level of trust from
a sizable part of the white electorate.

A major cause of the Mandela-Obama respective successes lies in their
embodying a short memory of racial hatred, and their impressive
readiness to forgive historical adversaries. They have both
illustrated a remarkable capacity to transcend historical racial
divides.

Cultures differ in hate retention. Some nurse their grievances for
generations. Others are intensely hostile in the midst of a conflict,
but as soon thereafter, they display a readiness to forgive, even if
not always to forget. The Armenians, Irish and Jews fall in this
category.

Armenians were butchered in large numbers by the Ottoman Turks in
1915`1916. This story of the Armenian martyrdom of World War I has
been transmitted with passion from generation to generation.

Armenians are still demanding justice from Turkey nearly a hundred
years after the massacres. Similarly, the Irish have long memories of
grievance. Clashes occur in Northern Ireland virtually every year
concerning marches that commemorate `Orange Conflicts’ in the
seventeenth century. Jews also have strong collective memories of the
Holocaust and other outbursts of European anti-Semitism.

Mandela came from a culture illustrative of Africa’s short memory of
hate. That culture is far from being pacifist. Wars and inter-ethnic
conflicts have been part of Africa’s experience before European
colonization and decades after independence.

What is different about African cultures is relatively low level of
hate retention. Obama’s tolerance may be due to personal
multi-culturalism. He had a white American mother, a Black Kenyan
father, and an Indonesian step-father.

His cultural ancestry includes Luo culture, Islam and Black American
Christianity. Mandela’s life passed through stages. His early days as
a nationalist were characterized by a belief in non-violent
resistance. In a sense, he carried the torch of South Africa’s Albert
Luthuli and Mahatma Gandhi. Sharpeville was a major blow to his belief
in passive resistance.

By the time that Mandela was having afternoon tea with the unrepentant
widow of the founder of apartheid, Hendrick Verwoerd, he had tough
acts to follow in African magnanimity. There were precedents of
forgiveness that he followed and improved upon.

Post-colonial Africa had produced other instances of short memory of
hate. Kenya’s Jomo Kenyatta, once condemned by a British colonialist
as a `leader of darkness and death’ was unjustly imprisoned in a
remote part of the country.

When he finally emerged from prison on the eve of independence, he
proclaimed `suffering without bitterness.’ He proceeded to transform
Kenya into a staunchly pro-Western country.

In November 1965, colonial Southern Rhodesia’s Ian Smith launched his
Unilateral Declaration of Independence from Britain, unleashing a
bitter Zimbabwe civil war. Yet, he lived to sit in a parliament of
Black-ruled Zimbabwe and was not subjected to postwar vendetta. Again,
Africa’s short memory of hate at work. In the late 1960s, Nigeria
waged a highly publicized civil war that cost nearly a million
lives. The Federal side won that war but was uniquely magnanimous
towards the defeated Biafrans. Yet, another manifestation of Africa’s
short memory of hatred.

For his part, when Mandela was finally released from prison in 1990,
this most illustrious of all Africa’s liberation fighters embarked on
a mission of healing and forgiving. This former hero of mobilization
leadership became a paragon of the reconciliation style of
leadership. He became the greatest of all African examples of
prolonged reconciliation, an exemplar of African short memory of hate.

Obama illustrated his post-racial tolerance by denouncing his
firebrand pastor, Jeremiah Wright, and leaving his own radicalized
church. Obama is more of an ideological liberal than a moral
Gandhian. Indeed, Obama is less of a Gandhian than Martin Luther King,
Jr. was. But in their different ways, Mandela, Obama and King have all
been part of the search for a post-racial age.

The writer is a professor of political science and African studies at
State University New York.

Ameriabank Plans to Purchase a Bank in Armenia

AMERIABANK PLANS TO PURCHASE A BANK IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 16, NOYAN TAPAN. Ameriabank is the most rapidly
developing bank in Armenia. Its overall capital grew 4.5fold in
January-September 2008 and made 18.7 billion drams (about 62 million
USD) at the end of the third quarter, the overall assets made over 41.2
billion drams, growing twofold as compared with early 2008, the
liabilities made 21.7 billion drams, and the credit portfolio made 23.4
billion drams, growing 7.5fold as compared with early 2008 and by 28%
in the third quarter. It is expected that in late 2008 the bank’s
overall capital will amount to 20 billion drams, and during the fourth
quarter the overall assets will increase by at least 30%, the credit
porfolio’s growth will slow down, and the liabilities will grow by 24%,
the director of Ameriabank’s development department Tigran Jrbashian
said at the October 16 press conference.

In his words, the issue of purchasing a bank in Armenia is being
discussed at Ameriabank. The candidacies of 3-4 banks are being
studied. The bank plans to open a branch in Stepanakert soon. Another
two branches will open in Armenia either in late 2008 or early 2009.

It was mentioned that Ameriabank will soon finish the introduction of a
system of management of its relations with customers. With this aim,
international experts and advisors have been involved.

According to T. Jrbashian, the bank’s guideline is servicing of
corporate customers and aggressive development with the use of the
positive factors of the financial crisis.

Ameriabank will continue its operations on placement of bonds of
various companies. The bank is currently conducting negotiations with
three Armenian companies which intend to issue bonds within the next
2-3 months.