‘Superb’ Pacino praised by Dr. Death

‘Superb’ Pacino praised by Dr. Death

By WENN.com | Monday, April 19, 2010

Pacino plays Dr. Jack Kevorkian in the HBO network project, about the
82-year-old medic who assisted in the suicides of more than 130 people, and
the euthanasia activist admits he is delighted with the film.

Kevorkian tells the New York Daily News, "Al is a terrific guy. The film is
superb. There were times when tears came into my eyes – even after all the
experience I have."

The medic was dubbed Dr. Death in the early 1990s when he performed his
first assisted suicide as part of his ‘Mercy Machine’.

Barry Levinson’s You Don’t Know Jack also stars Susan Sarandon, John Goodman
and Danny Huston and airs in the U.S. on 24 April (10).

Haim Oron to initiate debate on Armenian Genoicde in Knesset April 2

Azg Daily, Armenia
April 17 2010

HAIM ORON TO INITIATE DEBATE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN KNESSET APRIL 28

Chairman of Meretz bloc and member of the Israeli Knesset Haim Oron,
who is the main supporter of the Armenian Genocide recognition, will
submit a debate on the issue on April 28. However, according to him,
his expectations are more than skeptical.

As April 24, when this date is commemorated worldwide, is Saturday,
Oron is going to offer this delicate issue for a discussion on April
28, after the parliamentary vacation, PanArmenian.net reports.

"I stay in touch with Armenian organizations, but this year the
government will bury this issue sooner than last time," Izsrus portal
quoted Oron as saying. "Currently Yerevan and Ankara are in a process
of negotiations, and many people do not recommend interfering. I do
not see any connection between the events which happened 95 years ago
and current geopolitics of the region, but these are the realities."

According to the source, after the appointment of Ze’ev Elkin of Likud
party to the post of chairman of the coalition, Oron has lost his ally
in the struggle for the Armenian Genocide recognition. "Earlier, he
was the leader of Israel-Armenia parliamentary friendship group,
however, now we shall wait to see what pressure will be exerted on him
by the coalition fellows. I will talk to him soon¦ Despite sharp
cooling in the Turkish-Israeli relations and many people’s desire to
do a bad turn to Turkey, I have skeptical expectations," said Oron.

Ted Bogosian And His Untruths About Monte Melkonian

Ted Bogosian And His Untruths About Monte Melkonian
By Ara Manoogian

hetq online

17.04.2 010

17 years following his martyrdom in Artsakh, Armenian national hero
Monte Melkonian is once again a victim of defamation. I came across a
very interesting interview on Radio Open Source with an Armenian
decorated filmmaker and documentarian Ted Bogosian. The subject of the
interview was Ted’s vocation – seeking the truth and telling it. Open
Source host Christopher Lydon introduced Ted Bogosian as a truth hound
and put the ‘what is truth’ question to him (see:
confessions-of-a-truth-hound/).
What I heard in response less than halfway through the interview led
me to think that Ted may have misheard Christopher, thinking he had
been asked ‘what is a lie’ or, for that matter, how to present a lie
as truth.

As someone committed to truth seeking, I was at first thrilled to
learn about an alternative experience from a prominent Armenian until
I heard the following statements made by him:

"In Armenian Journey there is a very important sequence which didn’t
make the cut. And that is that I started to pursue an interview with
a young man of my age and background named Monte Melkonian. And Monte
was born in about the same year, in the central valley of
California. And while I was at Duke, he was at Berkley, and when I
went to graduate school, he went to graduate school in Beirut. And he
was pursuing the truth about the Genocide in his own way and he became
radicalized and he went underground and started selling arms and
started selling drugs and started an Armenian terrorist movement. And
so while I was making Armenian Journey, he was in jail in France, for
having masterminded several bombings in Europe, at Orly Airport and at
Turkish embassies and other businesses, where many innocent people
were killed. And so, I went to see Monte in prison, and it was quite a
moment, because he thought that I was there to kill him since he
didn’t know who I was and wasn’t expecting a visitor that day. But I
came to start corresponding with him and came to understand his
manifesto, and I realized that what he was doing was similar to what I
was doing except in a different theater. And so, my battle was against
the media to try to tell the story one way, and his battle was more
traditional. So, that didn’t make the cut because I wouldn’t have been
able to get the film on television had I presented that manifesto. But
I mention it because I want to say that I think this sort of thing is
in the blood not only of Armenians but of people who want to tell the
truth and, that is, they’re willing to go there no matter where it
leads." (The audio fragment is at 09:16-11:36).

Having devoted over a decade of my life researching Monte Melkonian’s
brief and thorny path, it was especially saddening for me to hear such
irresponsible and defaming statements coming out of a fellow truth
seeker’s mouth. These statements manifest shoddiness of research,
sweeping generalizations and a self-indulgent distortion of recent
Armenian history. I would like to see one single piece of evidence
that supports Mr. Ted Bogosian’s claim that Monte Melkonian was a drug
dealer, arms dealer and a founder of a terrorist movement, who
masterminded the Orly operation. These are the three major things
against which Melkonian had been struggling with all his essence,
endangering his life in the process. It was the Orly operation that
catalyzed the split of Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of
Armenia (ASALA). To be more specific, below I have singled out each of
Ted Bogosian’s inaccurate claims. Let’s start from the most innocent
inaccuracies.

Ted Bogosian’s claim #1: `And Monte was born in about the same year.’

Ted Bogosian was born in 1951, whereas Monte Melkonian was born in
1957.

Ted Bogosian’s claim #2: `…and when I went to graduate school, he
[Monte Melkonian] went to graduate school in Beirut.’

Monte Melkonian was admitted to a graduate school at Oxford, but chose
to give up his academic career in favor of a trip to Beirut at the
onset of the second phase of the civil war and joined the defense of
Bourj Hammoud, the Armenian quarter of the city.

Ted Bogosian’s claim #3: `…and [Monte Melkonian] started selling
arms and started selling drugs…’

All the accounts of people who knew him, whether interviewed by me or
other researchers, including those who spoke up at their own
initiative, indicate that Monte was adamantly opposed to drugs, be it
for use or for sale. Throughout my research, I haven’t come across any
evidence of Monte being involved in arms or drug dealing. According to
one of Monte’s brothers-in-arms, once Monte, already a Commander of
Martuni Defense Region, refused Samvel Babayan, Commander of the
Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army, to promote an officer only because he
smoked marijuana. He had even banned his soldiers from using alcohol,
which was common practice in other detachments. More importantly,
Monte earned himself highly influential enemies after burning
lucrative cannabis fields in a noble attempt to shut down the local
drug trade. This deed was followed by a few attempts on his life. One
might assume that Monte could use the proceeds from supposed drug
sales to feed and equip the poorly armed fighters under his
command. All evidence indicates that he had ignored any such
compromise.

Ted Bogosian’s claim #4: `…he [Monte Melkonian] started a terrorist
movement.’

This is an outright false statement. ASALA, to which Ted Bogosian
refers, was founded in 1975 in Beirut, Lebanon during the first phase
of the Lebanese Civil War by Harutiun Takoshian, alias Hagop
Hagopian. This was 3 years before Monte arrived in Lebanon for the
first time. Monte was recruited by ASALA in 1980 after serving in an
Armenian militia group in the Beirut suburb of Bourj Hammoud helping
defend the Armenian population during the civil war. Furthermore,
based on the accounts of both supporters and opponents of ASALA, Monte
played a pivotal role in the violent split of the organization in 1983
into those who supported the despotic leader Hagop Hagopian and those
who disapproved his methods of struggle exactly because it took
innocent lives, as well as distracted the attention from the cause the
attacks were supposed to raise awareness of.

Ted Bogosian’s claim #5: `…he [Monte Melkonian] was in jail in
France, for having masterminded several bombings in Europe, at Orly
Airport and at Turkish embassies and other businesses, where many
innocent people were killed.’

A sweeping generalization. Monte Melkonian was arrested for possession
of a falsified passport and an illegal handgun in Paris on November
28, 1985. He was sentenced to six years but served only three and a
half. The Orly airport attack, which took place on July 15, 1983, and
did kill and wound many innocent people, was masterminded by his
already archenemy Hagop Hagopian and carried out by the latter’s
supporters in Paris. The only people tried for the Orly airport attack
were Varadjian Garbidjian (also spelled as Varoujan Garabedian life
sentence, released 17 years later), Soner Nayir (15 years), Ohannes
Semerci (10 years). Parallel to the preparation of the Orly operation,
inner turmoil was in progress within ASALA due to the widening gap
between the members of the organization over the despotic leadership
of Hagopian, the methods of struggle and, specifically, the
implementation of the Orly attack. Monte was in the opposition
wing. But despite his efforts to cancel the Orly operation, it was
implemented, accelerating the final split of ASALA.

Who knows, the Karabagh war could have been a lost cause, had Monte
Melkonian been the mastermind of the Orly airport attack and therefore
gotten a life sentence? Melkonian was arrested twice. In his court
documents there was neither evidence, nor allegations supporting
Mr. Bogosian’s announcement regarding his participation in the attack
in any form, as well as arms and/or drug dealing. It would have been
convenient for the French authorities and to Monte’s enemies to find
such evidence, but there was none. To support my claim, I suggest that
interested individuals read The Right to Struggle, My Brother’s Road,
Reality, A Self Criticism and a dozen other books.

Ted Bogosian’s claim #6: `I went to see Monte in prison, and it was
quite a moment, because he thought that I was there to kill him…’

Okay, let me try to get this straight. Monte thought that Mr. Bogosian
came to the prison to kill him? So, Mr. Bogosian is saying that Monte
thought an Armenian-American filmmaker was going to walk into a high
security prison, formerly a concentration camp, armed guards watching
his every move, and kill him? What about checking for weapons before
entering the highly guarded visiting room? Ted Bogosian makes it sound
like Monte was in a health spa in the South of France.

I provided my arguments as accurately as I could and am willing to
embrace supporting evidence that proves Mr. Bogosian’s
claims. Otherwise, as a friend of mine put it, Mr. Bogosian’s
interview is more like "Ted talking about Ted – not the truth." I
welcome facts, as they will enrich our knowledge about who Monte
really was. With that said, I invite Ted Bogosian to set the record
straight by exchanging his recollections with evidence and
facts. Otherwise a public apology from Ted Bogosian is in order.

Ara Manoogian is a human rights activist representing the Shahan
Natalie Family Foundation in Artsakh and Armenia, as well as a member
of the Washington-based Policy Forum Armenia (PFA)

http://hetq.am/en/society/monte-14/
http://www.radioopensource.org/ted-bogosian-

F.Mukhametshin: "Armenia Has Good Scientific, Intellectual Bases"

F.MUKHAMETSHIN: "ARMENIA HAS GOOD SCIENTIFIC, INTELLECTUAL BASES"

Aysor
April 15 2010
Armenia

"Armenia has got a very good scientific, intellectual base and the
relations between our states allow us to hope that we can get a
support in this sphere. This project is supported by the heads of
our countries, and this piloting project has got nice prospects to
implement such kind of projects in the CIS countries," said Farid
Mukhametshin the special representative of the Russian president
in the CIS countries head of the federal agency of international
humanitarian cooperation.

He mentioned that for implementing the piloting project Armenia was
chosen as the first country.

The RA Minister of Economy Nerses Yeritsyan mentioned that there are
concrete plans with the scientific institutes and companies of Russia
which are being implemented, and the center will allow the projects
to use different sources of financing.

Le Karabagh n’Est Pas Sujet A Negociations Avec La Turquie, Rappelle

LE KARABAGH N’EST PAS SUJET A NEGOCIATIONS AVEC LA TURQUIE, RAPPELLE E. NALBANDIAN
Gari

armenews
vendredi16 avril 2010

Le ministre armenien des affaires etrangères Edouard Nalbandian a
declare mercredi 14 avril que l’Armenie avait refuse de discuter du
conflit du Karabagh avec la Turquie au cours des rencontres qui se sont
deroulees a Washington la veille. Il a tenu a rappeler que la Turquie
n’est pas partie prenante dans le processus de paix au Karabagh et
ne le sera pas. "La partie turque a tente d’engager les discussions
sur le Karabagh, mais nous avons repondu que la normalisation entre
l’Armenie et la Turquie ne pouvait pas etre liee au règlement du
conflit du Karabagh. Je ne vois aucune raison de discuter de la
question du Karabagh avec la Turquie. Tout d’abord la Turquie ne
peut pas etre un mediateur dans le processus de règlement de ce
conflit. Ensuite, l’Armenie ne fera jamais poussee de concessions sur
la question du Karabagh dans l’objectif de normaliser les relations
avec la Turquie. Relier les deux questions nuira aux deux processus
", a declare M. Nalbandian, durant son compte-rendu que la visite du
president Serge Sarkissian a Washington.

" C’etait une visite très importante. Ces reunions sont importantes
tant pour ce qui concerne le renforcement des relations bilaterales
que l’examen des questions regionales et internationales interessant
les deux parties ", a ajoute M. Nalbandian. "Les reunions qu’a eues
le president Sarkissian avec le president Obama et avec Mme Clinton
ont donne l’occasion de poursuivre le dialogue constructif entre les
deux pays ainsi que les discussions sur la normalisation des relations
armeno-turques et la resolution du conflit du Karabagh", a poursuivi
le chef de la diplomatie armenienne. Commentant la rencontre entre le
president Sarkissian et le premier ministre turc Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
toujours a Washington, M. Nalbandian a declare qu’elle "a permis
d’avoir une idee claire sur la position de la Turquie." M. Nalbandian
a souligne ainsi que les efforts persistants de la Turquie visant
a lier les deux processus vont a l’encontre de la lettre comme de
l’esprit des protocoles. "Si la Turquie a modifie sa position, alors
nous devons en tirer des conclusions appropriees pour determiner
s’il y a bien des interlocuteurs côte turc [avec qui nous pouvons
poursuivre le processus], a-t-il declare devant les journalistes
armeniens a Washington. Les negociations de Washington "ont confirme
nos conclusions sur le processus de reconciliation turco-armenienne"
et M.Sarkissian " les fera connaître au moment opportun ", a ajoute
le ministre armenien des affaires etrangères sans plus de precisions.

Par ailleurs, M. Nalbandian a eu l’occasion de discuter du processus
de normalisation avec son homologue turc M. Davutoglu lors d’un
dejeuner de travail organise par Mme Clinton pour les ministres
des affaires etrangères participant au sommet de Washington. "Leur
conversation a porte sur la poursuite des discussions qu’avaient
eues la veille le president Sarkissian et le premier ministre turc,
a fait savoir le ministère armenien des affaires etrangères dans un
communique laconique. Le 13 avril dans l’après-midi, M. Sarkissian
avait rencontre la secretaire d’Etat americaine Hillary Clinton en
marge du sommet sur la securite nucleaire. Mme Clinton a reitere la
position du president Obama articulee la veille lors de sa rencontre
avec le president armenien, a savoir qu’il souhaitait voir les
parties poursuivre le processus de normalisation des relations entre
la Turquie et l’Armenie sans conditions prealables.

M.Sarkissian a egalement rencontre le 13 avril l’un des principaux
auteurs de la resolution relative a la reconnaissance du genocide
des Armeniens, le representant democrate de Californie Adam Schiff,
dont il a remercie la longue et patiente contribution a la campagne
de reconnaissance du genocide armenien par les Etats-Unis.

Illegal Drugs Producer Revealed In Armenia

ILLEGAL DRUGS PRODUCER REVEALED IN ARMENIA

ArmInfo
2010-04-16 12:19:00

ArmInfo. The National Security Service operatives revealed a group
engaged in contraband and illegal production of drugs on April 14,
the National Security Service press-center told ArmInfo.

The investigation revealed that certain Armen Arakelyan, a citizen of
Armenia, together with two citizens of Georgia illegally imported a
large quantity of drugs in Armenia. In addition, an illegal production
of medical preparations was revealed at the house leased by A.
Arakelyan. The drugs were produced without relevant permission,
observing no technologies and standards, and were sold to the city
pharmacies. A criminal case has been initiated on the fact. Armen
Arakelyan and his criminal associates have bee arrested.

ANKARA: Honor History, Homeland Says Nobel Prize Winner Gunter Grass

HONOR HISTORY, HOMELAND SAYS NOBEL PRIZE WINNER GUNTER GRASS

Hurriyet Daily News
an-author-gunter-grass-questions-eu-criteria-for-m embership-2010-04-16
April 16 2010
Turkey

Nobel Prize winner Gunter Grass discusses the credibility of
EU membership criteria, the author’s role in promoting minority
perspectives and the weight of history. The German author appears at
a panel this week with Turkish counterpart YaÅ~_ar Kemal, who shares
his rural background and high literary standing

Legendary literary figures Gunter Grass and YaÅ~_ar Kemal saw their
rural "native towns as the center of the world," the German novelist
said when he met his Turkish counterpart at a panel discussion
Thursday afternoon.

Both authors come from the periphery: Kemal was born in Cukurova
in Turkey’s south, while Grass was born in the free city of Danzig,
today’s Gdansk in Poland. Though he came to West Germany as a refugee
in 1945, Grass frequently returns in his fiction to the Danzig of
his childhood.

"YaÅ~_ar Kemal and I have both come from the rural areas and saw our
native towns as the center of the world," Grass said of the Turkish
novelist of Kurdish descent, who is best known for his stories of
village life.

"The one who breaks away from his land cannot be a novelist," said
Kemal, adding that when he lived in Istanbul, or even in Sweden,
he always wrote about Cukurova.

The two writers’ dedication to their native lands was one of the
factors that have created a strong bond between them. When Kemal was
awarded a peace prize at the Frankfurt Book Fair in 1997 and was asked
who he would like to present the award, he chose Grass. Organizers
had previously asked the German author to present an award, but he
always said no.

"Then they called me and said Gunter Grass had accepted," Kemal said.

"I gladly accepted the offer," Grass said. "When I read him, I felt
as I was reading someone from my own native town."

The two authors have established a strong relationship since that
time. This week, they came together within the framework of a European
Union project called Turkish Literature in Europe, European Literature
in Turkey.

Both writers have been described as sharing the common characteristic
of being the voice of the victims, of the disadvantaged and members
of minority groups. Yet they also share another commonality that is
less known to the public, said Osman Okkan, the spokesman for the
Turkish-German Cultural Forum who moderated the panel. Kemal’s native
language is Kurdish and Grass speaks a language not known by many;
his mother is of Kashubian origin, part of a group of Slavic people
distinct from the Poles.

Perhaps it was this specific background that has made both authors so
vocal in their views about protecting the rights of minorities. "An
author should voice the views of the minority, not those of the
majority," Grass, who is in his early 80s, said in response to a
question. The German writer was vocal in his criticisms of both Europe
and Turkey, and careful in his choice of words – he avoided using
the controversial term "genocide" in talking about the events of 1914.

Grass also questioned the credibility of the European Union’s
membership criteria, arguing that even some European countries do not
meet the 27-nation bloc’s requirements. "Which country is included
in Europe and which is not?" he asked. "Some countries do not meet
EU criteria. Would today’s Italy under Berlusconi be an EU member? We
need to question that."

Coming from a country that is known to oppose Turkey’s accession to
the EU, Grass caused a stir in Germany – and won fame in Turkey – when
he wrote a book based on his experiences posing as a Turkish worker.

"We need to learn to deal with problems," he said, adding that it is
not good to point fingers at each other.

Just as Germany did, Turkey should learn how to deal with its past,
Grass added.

"We are not proud of our past. But the crimes committed by past
generations are not accepted by the generations that follow," he
said, adding that Turkey should learn from this experience in dealing
with the World War I-era killings of Armenians at the hands of the
Ottomans. "Turkey should not turn a blind eye to the massacres of
1914. A million and a half people murdered should not be ignored."

Saying that the effect of literature in changing society "makes itself
felt very slowly," Grass called on citizens to take an active role,
noting the mass protests held in Turkey in response to the murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

Grass confessed that it has been extremely difficult for him to accept
the documented deaths in his country, saying many countries such
as France, Britain, the Netherlands and Belgium also have terrible
events in their pasts.

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/n.php?n=germ

BAKU: Azerbaijan withdraws U.S. from Minsk Group on Armenia-Azerbaij

AZERBAIJAN WITHDRAWS U.S. FROM MINSK GROUP ON ARMENIA-AZERBAIJANI CONFLICT AND CEASES ENERGY CO-OPERATION

Azerbaijan Business Center
April 16 2010

The latent conflict between the Barak Obama Administration and
Azerbaijan started acquiring tangible outlines.

Ali Hasanov, the head of the Socio-Political Department of the
Azerbaijan Presidential Administration, stated today that Azerbaijani
authorities and the public had started taking adequate moves and were
seeking alternate ways linked with the Garabagh problem settlement.

"Already now there formed public opinion against United States’
participation in the OSCE Minsk Group on Nagorno Garabagh conflict
as it has given nothing to Azerbaijan," he said.

In his opinion, the U.S’ ambiguous role on Garabagh can also have
impact on US-Azerbaijani energy co-operation.

"The U.S., being a peacemaker in Garabagh, should pursue more careful
policy. And the moves taken lately in the U.S. concern the Azerbaijani
public," Hasanov stressed.

Nevertheless, Azerbaijan considers the U.S. its strategic partner and
became one of the first Moslem states that entered in the coalition
led by America, despite it was regarded ambiguously by the Moslem
community.

"Azerbaijan has always been a reliable energy partner of the U.S. and
that is why U.S’ current attempts to tackle Armenia’s economic
problems unilaterally in damage to Garabagh conflict settlement cause
perplexity in Azerbaijan. At the same time no grave attempts are taken
on Garabagh conflict settlement. WE don’t see these attempts. Instead
to make Armenia to decline from occupation policy the U.S. tries to
withdraw Armenia form economic crisis. That is why nobody should be
blamed for anti-American statements and first of all against the U.S.

Congress and American circles making decisions under pressure of the
Armenian lobby," Hasanov said.

Washington Interested In Arrest Of Armenian Journalist In Tra

WASHINGTON INTERESTED IN ARREST OF ARMENIAN JOURNALIST IN TRANSDNIESTRIA

Tert.am
15.04.10

No detail on the arrest of Armenian national journalist Ernest
Vardanyan in Transdniestria will be publicized till the end of the
investigation, the President of the Transdniestrian Moldovan Republic
Igor Smirnov said at a meeting with US Ambassador to Moldova Asif
Chaudhry in Tiraspol, quoted by the Regnum news agency.

In response to the American diplomat’s question why Vardanyan was
arrested, Smirnov has reportedly said that he had violated the
Transdniestrian law.

Vardanyan was arrested by Transdniestrian state security services on
April 7 on high treason charges. According to the local law he can
face 12-20 years in prison for high treason.

Moldovan authorities are also interested in Vardanyan’s release and
have called on Transdniestrian authorities to set him free.

Moldovan Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Osipova was reported saying that
"such trick by the political police may add tension in the region,"
adding that Vardanyan’s arrest make his case an unprecedented one
which can kick up wide international response.

Vardanyan is well-known in Moldova as an independent journalist whose
articles and commentaries are often critical of officials in both
Chisinau and Tiraspol.