Serzh Sargsyan Leaves For Moscow

SERZH SARGSYAN LEAVES FOR MOSCOW

news.am
May 7 2010
Armenia

Tomorrow RA President Serzh Sargsyan will leave for Moscow to
participate in the informal summit of CSTO member states and solemn
events dedicated to the 65th anniversary of victory in the Great
Patriotic War.

The CSTO informal summit is scheduled for May 8, RA Presidential
press secretary Armen Arzumanyan stated.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev will also participate in May 9
events, but the meeting between Armenian and Azerbaijani Presidents
is not scheduled in Moscow.

American Armenians To Attend Service In Surb Khach On Akhtamar Islan

AMERICAN ARMENIANS TO ATTEND SERVICE IN SURB KHACH ON AKHTAMAR ISLAND

news.am
May 7 2010
armenia

American Armenians intend to attend service in Surb Khach on Akhtamar
Island (Turkey) to be held on September 12.

Turkish Consul General in LA Hakan Tekin informed that many Armenian
showed willingness to participate in the opening ceremony of the
church and a divine liturgy. They even booked the tickets to Turkey.

Turkish Ministry of Culture permitted churching in Surb Khach only
once a year. And on September 12 the first service will be held. Van
Governor assured Spiritual leader of Constantinople diocese Archbishop
Aram Ateshyan, who arrived in Van last month to familiarize himself
with preparatory works, that Armenians will receive warm welcome.

Sao Paulo U hosts `The Prototype Genocide of Modern Times’ conf.

ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
Tel: 416-250-9807 Fax: 416-512-1736 E-mail: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

CONTACT: Patil Halajian

DATE: May 7, 2010 Tel:
416-250-9807

Latin America’s Largest University Hosts International Conference on `The
Prototype Genocide of Modern Times’ in Partnership with Zoryan Institute and
Governments of the State of Sao Paulo and the Republic of Armenia

Scholars from Argentina, Armenia, Brazil, Canada, Switzerland, Turkey and
the United States participated in an international conference, the first of
its kind in Brazil, on `The Prototype Genocide of Modern Times,’ held at the
University of Sao Paulo (USP), Brazil, April 22-24, in commemoration of the
95th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

The conference was co-organized by the University of Sao Paulo Laboratory
for the Study of Ethnicity Racism and Discrimination, the State Government
of Sao Paulo Secretary of Institutional Affairs, the Consulate General in
Sao Paulo representing the Government of Armenia, and the Zoryan Institute.

The conference was opened by Prof. Dra. Maria Luiza Tucci Carneiro,
Associate Professor at the Department of History, USP, and Coordinator of
the Laboratory for the Study of Ethnicity Racism and Discrimination. She
welcomed everyone and described the reasons for the university’s partnership
in this conference.

Prof. Dr. Celso Lafer, former Brazilian foreign and commerce minister,
Professor of Philosophy of Law at USP and President of the Research
Foundation of the State of Sao Paulo, spoke strongly in affirming the
Armenian Genocide. He was followed by Prof. Dr. Dalmo de Abreu Dallari,
Emeritus, Faculty of Law of USP, and a jurist with the Permanent Peoples’
Tribunal. He noted that the Verdict of the Tribunal’s hearing in Paris in
1984 on the Armenian Genocide was key in the UN Subcommission of Human
Rights Report of 1985, affirming that the World War I Armenian experience at
the hands of the Ottoman Turks was genocide.

K.M. Greg Sarkissian, President of the Zoryan Institute, in his opening
presentation of the academic portion of the conference, explained the
rationale for the theme, `the prototype of modern genocide.’ He described
the phenomenon, whereby a government turns against an identifiable ethnic
minority among its own citizens with the intention of destroying them, as a
perceived solution to its political problems. This marked a change from the
mass slaughter of populations that occurred many times throughout history,
associated with war, imperialism and conquest. The Armenian Genocide is now
widely understood to be the `prototype’ of modern genocide, as labelled by
Prof. Robert Melson, who first coined the term.

Sarkissian explained the meaning of April 24, which the beginning of
deportation and mass killings of the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek population
of the Ottoman Empire. He added, `The year 1915 was the beginning of the
Ottoman genocidal policy of ethnic cleansing and massacres, which continues
in Turkey today because of its official state policy of denial.’ He noted
that Prof. Roger W. Smith first pointed out some years ago, and it is now
recognized by scholars, that denial is the last stage of genocide, since it
continues to victimize the survivors and their descendants. Noting that
Brazil was among the first countries to vote for the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights and sign the UN Genocide Convention in 1948, Sarkissian
called upon Brazil to be among those countries who refuse to be complicit in
the ongoing crime of genocide denial by officially recognizing it.

Prof. Steven L. Jacobs of the University of Alabama gave a comprehensive
explanation about Raphael Lemkin, the man who conceptualized and coined the
term `genocide.’ He pointed out Lemkin’s obsession with the fact that there
were no laws to punish the mass killing of a whole people, such as the
Armenians, by their own government, Ottoman Turkey, even though there were
laws for punishing the killing of a single person. The 1921 trial in Berlin
for the assassination of Talat Pasha, one of the architects of the Armenian
Genocide, by Soghomon Tehlirian and his acquittal was a major influence on
Lemkin and his determination to secure international support outlawing the
crime of genocide through the United Nations. Lemkin considered the Armenian
case so important that it is the only case in all of his papers where a
full-length manuscript has been written independently and accompanied by a
shorter manuscript. In that study he noted, `A strong parallel may be drawn
between the extermination of the Armenians by the Turks and the
extermination of the Jews by the Germans.’

Dr. Sévane Garibian, Senior Lecturer in Philosophy of Law at the University
of Neuchtel, Switzerland, spoke on `The Armenian Genocide and the
Development of the Modern Concept of Crimes against Humanity.’ She described
the declaration of the Allied Powers on May 24, 1915, which said, in
essence, `In view of these new crimes of Turkey against humanity and
civilization, the Allied governments announce publicly … that they will
hold personally responsible … all the members of the Ottoman government
and those of their agents who are implicated in such massacres,’ and
explained how this was a major event in bringing the concept of `crimes
against humanity’ into modern international law.

Mr. Ragip Zarakolu, renowned human rights activist and publisher in Turkey,
spoke about `Modern Turkey and the Armenian Genocide.’ He made insightful
comments about the nature and motives of denial of the Armenian Genocide by
the Turkish State. He drew parallels with the State’s problematic treatment
of other subjects in the political and social life of the country,
specifically in relation to minorities and their rights. For example,
currently about 1,000 mid-level Kurdish politicians are jailed, preventing
them from running in the next election. Zarakolu emphasized that the AKP,
Turkey’s current ruling party, has made some progress in adopting certain
European standards into Turkey’s constitution, under the pretext of
democratization. However, the gag order imposed on the Armenian Genocide
issue, coupled with the replacement of military hegemony in the country’s
institutions by a new hegemony of a police state, has raised fear among
Kurds, Alevis and non-Muslim minorities of the outbreak of mass violence
against them, just like the Armenians 95 years ago.

Prof. Dra. Maria Luiza Tucci Carneiro, of the USP, spoke about `Brazil in
Front of the Armenian Genocide, the Holocaust and the UN Resolution.’ She
analyzed Brazil’s political position – government, press and Brazilian
diplomats – since the Armenian Genocide until the integration of the crime of
genocide in International Law. Through diplomatic documents and articles
published by important Brazilian newspapers, she related the multiple
discourses about the Armenian Genocide as prototype of the modern genocide,
from 1915 to 1948. She referred to historical archives that documented
Armenian refugees fleeing the Genocide and coming to Brazil. She explained
how politicians during the debate at the UN on the Genocide Convention felt
that issue did not concern them, stating, `Brazilian people are homogeneous,
made up of heterogeneous races. Therefore, the problem of genocide does not
concern us directly. It is a crime the common Brazilian man cannot figure
out, but it horrifies him anyway.’ However, in 1956, Brazilian law accepted
genocide as a crime, adopting the same definition ratified by the UN
Convention.

Prof. Emeritus Robert F. Melson of Purdue University discussed `The Armenian
Genocide as Precursor and Prototype of Modern Genocide,’ taking a
comparative approach. He put forward the position that the Armenian Genocide
was not only the first total genocide of the 20th century, but that it also
served as the prototype for genocides that came after. In particular, the
Armenian Genocide approximates the Holocaust, but at the same time, its
territorial and national aspects, which distinguish it from the Holocaust,
make it an archetype for ethnic and national genocide. In both the Armenian
Genocide and the Holocaust, a deliberate attempt was made by the government
of the day to destroy an ethno-religious community of ancient provenance.
When comparing the two cases, a pattern becomes apparent. This pattern shows
some differences, however, and it is those differences that link the
Armenian Genocide not only to the Holocaust but also to later instances of
that crime.

Prof. Vahakn N. Dadrian, Director of Genocide Research at the Zoryan
Institute, analyzed `The Armenian Genocide as a Dual Problem of National and
International Law.’ He described first the elements of the Armenian Genocide
within Turkish national law after the end of WWI. These include the charge
of crimes against humanity by the Allied Powers, the post-war debates in the
Ottoman Chamber of Deputies and Senate about what had happened to the
Armenians, and the Military Tribunal and Courts Martial, which prosecuted
the perpetrators of `crimes against the Armenians.’ Within international
law, he pointed out that principles arising out the Armenian case are found
in the Nuremberg charter and in the UN Genocide Convention, and in
comparison with the Eichmann case, the principle of state succession. Thus,
Turkey is responsible for acts committed by the Ottoman State.

Prof. Dr. Marcio Seligmann-Silva, Lecturer of Literary Theory at the
University of Campinas in Sao Paulo and researcher at the National Council
of Technological and Scientific Development, spoke on `The Armenian Genocide
and the Question of Evil Memory in the XX Century.’ He dealt with the
question of the necessity of bearing witness after genocide as a way to give
meaning to the event and to allow for the progression from victim to citizen
with rights, including the right to sue in court those responsible for the
genocide. Bearing witness is often confronted with denial. Nevertheless, it
is a process that encompasses individual, collective and national trauma and
allows the victim to work through the envisaging of justice, truth and the
reconstruction of the person and of post-genocide societies. The Armenian
Genocide occupies a key position in the history of genocides and of denial.
As an example of extreme genocide denial, it argues for the necessity of
bearing witness.

Prof. Emeritus Roger W. Smith of the College of William and Mary, and also
Chairman of the Academic Board of Directors of the Zoryan Institute, spoke
on `Remembrance and Denial.’ Without remembrance of past examples of
genocide, there would be no sense of urgency in the present, no perceived
need to prevent future atrocities. We would cut ourselves off from the
knowledge of the causes and sequences of genocide, knowledge that might help
prevent other peoples from being subjected to this crime against humanity.
Denial of genocide has become the universal strategy of perpetrators. Those
who initiate or otherwise participate in genocide typically deny that the
events took place, that they bear any responsibility for the destruction, or
that the term `genocide’ is applicable to what occurred. Denial, unchecked,
turns politically imposed death into a `non-event.’ The Armenian Genocide,
in fact, illuminates with special clarity the dangers inherent in the
political manipulation of truth through distortion, denial, intimidation,
and economic blackmail. No other regime has gone to such extreme lengths to
deny that a massive genocide took place as Turkey. That democratic
governments (the United States, Great Britain, and Israel) have supported
Turkey in that effort, raises significant questions about governmental
accountability and the role of citizenship in a world in which truth
increasingly comes in two forms – `official’ and `alleged.’

Prof. Khatchik Der Ghougassian teaches international relations at the
University of San Andrés in Buenos Aires and is a Visiting Adjunct Professor
at the American University of Armenia. He analyzed the complexities of `The
Armenian Genocide and international power relations.’ In the 19th century,
the European Powers utilized the struggle for the rights of the non-Muslim
minorities as one of their pretexts for involvement in the Ottoman Empire.
After the start of World War I, the Allied Powers made the first
international attempt at humanitarian intervention by warning the Young Turk
leaders that they would be called to account for their wholesale massacre of
Turkey’s Armenian population. After the post-WWI peace negotiations, Armenia
dropped from the international agenda until 1965, 50 years after the
Genocide, when Armenians around the world began to revive the world’s
attention and conscience on that injustice. The Armenian Genocide has come
increasingly on the world stage as an issue in the United Nations, as a
subject of official recognition by national and international governments
and official bodies, and even as an issue for Turkey’s accession to the
European Union. He discussed the place of the Armenian Genocide in Armenia’s
foreign policy and suggested how it could be employed more effectively.

Prof. Herbert Hirsch, Professor of Government and Public Affairs at Virginia
Commonwealth University, explored `The Lessons of the Armenian Genocide for
the Prevention of Genocide.’ Within the last ten years, at least four major
international and national prescriptions have appeared outlining the
mechanisms necessary to prevent genocide. Hirsch analyzed their strengths,
weaknesses, confirming that action lags behind academic forums. This is
because the overriding principles in international relations are state
sovereignty and national interest. The study of the genocides of the 20th
century has suggested to analysts certain models for the prevention of
genocide. These include humanitarian intervention, protection of civilians,
peacemaking, and punishment of the perpetrators. This has led to calls for
creating an early warning system which would alert the public and exert
pressure on nations or groups to stop atrocities, and the creation of a UN
Rapid Reaction force. Each of these has its shortcomings that limit freedom
of action, to monitor, follow prescription, and establish rules of
engagement while doing no harm, and including the ability to build. The
adoption of the Responsibility to Protect has been a step in the right
direction, but this has not been effective because of the lack of political
will. Hirsch explored the sources of this lack of political will.

Prof. Dr. Anita Novinsky, Historian and Lecturer of the Department of
History and President of the Laboratory of Studies on Intolerance, USP,
spoke on `Education for Life.’ She described the profound questions
philosophers and theoreticians have wrestled with in modern times regarding
how man can commit such violence against fellow humans. In the words of
Theodor Adorno, the fight against war and aggression will be in vain if we
do not change our educational systems. We can find the reasons of the
genocides in the 20th century in the resurrection of aggressive
nationalisms. She described how perpetrators of genocide are formed during
their childhood years, and proposed the need for an educational system that
teaches the value and the sanctity of human life.

The Zoryan Institute is the parent organization of the International
Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, which runs an annual,
accredited university program on the subject and is co-publisher of Genocide
Studies and Prevention: An International Journal in partnership with the
International Association of Genocide Scholars and the University of Toronto
Press. It is the first non-profit, international center devoted to the
research and documentation of contemporary issues with a focus on Genocide,
Diaspora and Armenia. For more information please contact the Zoryan
Institute by email [email protected] or telephone (416) 250-9807.

www.zoryaninstitute.org

Nanoscience: Research On Nanoscience Described By E.M. Kazaryan And

NANOSCIENCE: RESEARCH ON NANOSCIENCE DESCRIBED BY E.M. KAZARYAN AND COLLEAGUES

Technology News Focus
May 5, 2010

"For the regime of strong quantization the interband transitions in
narrow-gap InSb cylindrical quantum dots are theoretically investigated
in the presence of homogeneous magnetic field. In the frame of two-band
Kane model for electrons (light holes) and parabolic dispersion for
heavy holes, the absorption coefficients of non-interacting quantum
dot ensemble are calculated," scientists in Yerevan, Armenia report.

"The absorption threshold frequencies are defined. It is shown that
these frequencies correspond to infrared range. The influence of
Coulomb interaction between electron and hole on the energetic spectrum
of the mentioned system is discussed in framework of perturbation
theory," wrote E.M. Kazaryan and colleagues.

The researchers concluded: "Quantitative calculations are performed
using the recent experimental data on the growth of InSb quantum dots."

Kazaryan and colleagues published their study in the Journal of
Computational and Theoretical Nanoscience (Interband Absorption
in a Narrowband InSb Cylindrical Quantum Dots in Presence of the
Magnetic Field. Journal of Computational and Theoretical Nanoscience,
2010;7(2):486-491).

For additional information, contact H.A. Sarkisyan, Russian Armenian
University, 123 Hovsep Emin St., Yerevan 0051, Armenia.

The publisher’s contact information for the Journal of Computational
and Theoretical Nanoscience is: American Scientific Publishers,
25650 North Lewis Way, Stevenson Ranch, CA 91381-1439, USA.

Three Cases Of Children Trafficking Registered In Armenia During The

THREE CASES OF CHILDREN TRAFFICKING REGISTERED IN ARMENIA DURING THE PREVIOUS YEAR

ARMENPRESS
MAY 6,2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS: Three cases of children trafficking
were registered in Armenia during the previous year: the victims
are under 18 years old. Two of them have been involved in begging
and one in sexual exploitation. The latter was committed against a
17-year old girl. Representative of support and resource center of
fighting against trafficking created by the OSCE Yerevan Office and
Armenian Labor and Social Affairs Ministry David Tumasyan, today at
a joint press conference with the responsible for the OSCE Yerevan
Office democracy development program Ovsanna Babayan, pointed out
the circumstance that these three cases of children trafficking are
inner trafficking cases – that is to say, Armenian citizens have been
exploited in Armenia. He said there are sentences related to the two
cases: a person who forced begging has been sentenced to 7 years of
imprisonment and the sexual exploiter to 7 years and 6 months. The
third case is still waiting for sentence.

By the way, the resource center has been established in 2008 and during
its activity is cooperating with NGOs and the state. The center is
also participating in the order connected with the solution of the
issues of with the victims. It also partakes in trials.

Since the past year extended studies have launched with "People in
Need" as well as different NGOs connected with children’s trafficking.

Tumasyan said vulnerability of trafficking is agreed both with
financial as well as with social-economic features. In Armenia the
most vulnerable are mainly women and children.

Ovsanna Babayan said that the OSCE Yerevan Office has started dealing
with issues on fighting against trafficking from 2004 and the works
have intensified from 2006. She said cooperation has been established
with those international establishments which are involved in this
sphere and with state and non-governmental organizations. O. Babayan
said that particularly during the recent years fighting against this
evil has intensified on the state level too.

Armenia’s Time Over- Azeri Official

ARMENIA’S TIME OVER- AZERI OFFICIAL

Yerkir
05.05.2010 15:41
Yerevan

The time Armenia asked for to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
has expired, Azerbaijani Presidential Administration Foreign Relations
Department head Novruz Mammadov has said.

"Armenia has asked for two weeks in connection with resolving the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. But it took several months. There was no
response," Mammadov told media.

He said the OSCE Minsk Group is continuing to work to resolve the
conflict.

"The co-chairmen said Armenia will soon express its position. Raising
questions is the true way to resolve the conflict. Armenia should
understand this. This should be a kind of message to the presidents of
the co-chairing countries that Azerbaijan agrees with their proposals.

It is necessary to to exert pressure on Armenia to solve the conflict,"
Mammadov said.

E. Nalbandian Has Received The Delegation Of Villeurbanne City

E. NALBANDIAN HAS RECEIVED THE DELEGATION OF VILLEURBANNE CITY

Aysor
May 5 2010
Armenia

The RA foreign minister Edward Nalbandian has received the delegation
form the French Villeurbanne city headed by the Mayor Jean-Paul Bret.

As the press and information department of RA Foreign Affairs
Ministry informs the Minister welcomed the guests and highly praised
the importance of the personal contribution of Jean-Paul Bret in
strengthening and developing the Armenian-French friendship both
as a politician, and a former deputy, head of the Armenian-French
Parliamentary group, as well as one of the initiators of the law on
the Armenian Genocide recognition adopted by the French Parliament.

Mayor Jean-Paul Bret mentioned that Armenia and the Armenians are
accepted warmly all over France, as well as in Villeurbanne. He noticed
that his visit was aimed at extending the Armenian-French cooperation
and promoting the development of the relations between the two states.

The two sides stressed the importance of the cooperation of Armenian
and French cities, towns and districts which at present includes 50
cities and districts.

Turkey Made Miscalculations By Underestimating Azerbaijani Factor: S

TURKEY MADE MISCALCULATIONS BY UNDERESTIMATING AZERBAIJANI FACTOR: SABINE FREIZER

Tert.am
05.05.10

Ankara was not able to correctly calculate how Azerbaijan could
oppose to the Armenia-Turkey normalization and had to step back,
Director of Europe Program of the International Crisis Group Sabine
Freizer sain in an interview with the Vocie of America radio station.

"Turkey thought it would be able to continue the normalization of
relations without considering Azerbaijan’s opinion, but the Azerbaijani
demostrated harsh opposition. Turkey’s foreign policy was not able to
coorectly calaculate all that and now has to step back," said Freizer,
adding that the suspention of the ratification of the Protocols in
the Turkish parliament greatly affects the normalization process.

According to Freizer the ratification of the Protocols is not possible
in the near future given Turkey’s domestic situation.

"The discussions over Constitution in Turkey make the ratification of
the Protocols signed with Armenia harder. On top of all, Turkish Prime
Minister [Recep Tayyip] Erdogan has said that the Protocols will not be
ratified unless there is progress over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,"
said Freizer.

On the other hand, Freizer said there might be positive development
in the process despite the negative ones registered so far.

"Currently the Protocols should be left aside and [the sides]
should concentrate on the possible scenarios: giving priority to the
establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey, for
example. I think that is possible to do. In the recent 1.5 years the
leaders of the two countries have met for several times. And that can
turn into a real diplomatic relation. The recognition of the borders
also could contribute to it," said Freizer.

For The 6th Month Of Operation Orange Offers Its Customers Free Call

FOR THE 6TH MONTH OF OPERATION ORANGE OFFERS ITS CUSTOMERS FREE CALLS FOREVER

Tert.am
05.05.10

Exactly 6 months ago mobile phone operator Orange launched its services
in Armenia. During today’s press conference the results of company’s
6-month activity were summed up and the new offer under the motto
"good things never end" was presented.

On the occasion of the 6th month the company launched today a new
offer for the subscribers of internet and voice services.

"Everyone wishes that good things never end, that’s why we have put in
this offer everything to make our new and old customers feel that good
things never end at Orange", said Aram Lazarian, Marketing Director.

New and existing customers of voice services can choose before June
30th one Orange number and call him/her for free forever. Moreover,
the SIM cards validity period of all customers who have joined Orange
before May 5th will be extended for exactly one year: till 2011 May
5th. This will allow them to enjoy freely and without any limitation
all services Orange delivers.

All those who will join Orange Internet by June 30th, will receive
1GB additional monthly traffic for broadband Internet during one year.

Moreover, they may also make the same present to one of their friends,
by informing the Company while subscribing the Internet number of
the friend who advised them to join Orange Internet.

Summarizing the previous 6 months, Bruno Duthoit, Orange Armenia CEO,
presented the achievements of the company. Today, as in November,
Orange has the largest 3G+ coverage in Armenia, and its services are
available not only in large cities, but in small villages as well.

Orange was the first to introduce iPhone and Android-based HTC
Smartphone in Armenia, offered to its customers friendly and innovative
services, as well as brought the knowledge and experience of a european
operator to Armenia.

"After 6 months we can say that our biggest achievement is the
large Orange family. The most important for us is the trust of our
customers", said company’s CEO Bruno Duthoit.

"Our plans are clear. We will proceed with extending our 2G and 3G+
coverage with the view of covering 93% population by late August. By
the end of this year we will have around 80 shops" said Bruno Duthoit.

Shavarsh Kocharyan’s Response To His Azerbaijani Counterpart

SHAVARSH KOCHARYAN’S RESPONSE TO HIS AZERBAIJANI COUNTERPART

armradio.am
05.05.2010 11:12

"As soon as Azerbaijan is ready to return the occupied Nagorno
Karabakh regions and recognize NKR independence, when it gets rid of
its medieval mentality, Baku can ask NKR for tnegotiations on issues
of mutual interest," Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Shaavarsh
Kocharyan said, commenting on his Azerbaijani counterpart Araz
Azimov’s statements.

"Co-Chairs suggest returning 5 occupied territories of Azerbaijan
and Lachin corridor, followed by Armenia’s requesting official Baku
for time to return Lachin and Kelbajar," Deputy Foreign Minister of
Azerbaijan Araz Azimov said in an interview with public television
yesterday.