New Prospects For Armenia-Poland Cooperation

NEW PROSPECTS FOR ARMENIA-POLAND COOPERATION

news.am
March 9 2010
Armenia

March 9, RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan met with the newly appointed
Polish Ambassador to Armenia Zdzislaw Raczynski.

RA PM made a point of Polish Premier’s impending visit to Armenia
and emphasized that it will give new impetus to Armenia-Poland
relations, as well as contribute to their further development and
mutually beneficial cooperation, RA Information and PR department
informed NEWS.am.

Polish Ambassador appreciated high Armenia’s involvement in EU Eastern
Partnership project considering it a basis for the enhancement of
collaboration.

The parties also referred to the signing of "Economic cooperation
between Armenian and Polish Governments" agreement and the
intensification of bilateral relations.

Poland’s PM Donald Tusk To Visit Armenia

POLAND’S PM DONALD TUSK TO VISIT ARMENIA

Aysor
March 9 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian hosted Tuesday Poland’s
Ambassador to Armenia ZdzisÅ~Baw Raczynski, a spokesperson to the
State Office said.

The parties discussed items of the bilateral cooperation between
the two countries. Tigran Sarkisian stressed the importance of the
scheduled visit of his Polish counterpart Donald Tusk to Armenia. He
said that the upcoming visit will contribute to strengthening of the
Armenian-Polish relations.

ZdzisÅ~Baw Raczynski, in his part, said of the EU Eastern Partnership
Plan, which can serve as a basis for deepening the bilateral ties.

Prime Minister Tigran Sarkisian and Ambassador ZdzisÅ~Baw Raczynski
also considered issues, related to the Armenia-Poland Intergovernmental
Agreement on economical cooperation and strengthening of the bilateral
relations, which is reported to be signed between the countries.

Obama Appeases Turkey On Armenia

OBAMA APPEASES TURKEY ON ARMENIA
Susan Cornwell and Arshad Mohammed

The Sunday Independent (South Africa)
March 07, 2010

WASHINGTON: The administration of US President Barack Obama has
sought to limit fallout from a US resolution branding the massacre
of Armenians by Turkish forces in 1915 as "genocide", and vowed to
stop it going further in Congress.

Turkey has recalled its ambassador after a House of Representatives
committee approved the non-binding measure condemning the killings
on Thursday.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Congress should drop the
matter now. "The Obama administration strongly opposes the resolution
that was passed by only one vote in the House committee and will work
very hard to make sure it does not go to the House floor."

The resolution squeaked through the House Foreign Affairs Committee
23-22 despite a last-minute appeal against it from the Obama
administration, which feared damage to ties with Turkey. The Nato
ally is crucial to US interests in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and the
Middle East.

The issue puts Obama between Turkey, a secular Muslim democracy
that looks toward the West, and Armenian Americans, an important
constituency in states like California and New Jersey, ahead of the
November congressional elections.

After the committee’s vote, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
warned of possible damage to ties with the US.

Muslim Turkey accepts that many Christian Armenians were killed by
Ottoman Turks, but denies that up to 1.5 million died and that it
amounted to genocide.

The US envoy in Ankara, James Jeffrey, distanced the Obama
administration from the resolution after being invited for talks
by Turkish officials. "We believe that Congress should not make a
decision on the issue," he said.

The resolution urges Obama to use the term "genocide" when he delivers
his annual message on the Armenian massacres in April.

He avoided using the term last year, although as a presidential
candidate he said the killings were genocide. – Reuters

Enterprise To Deal With Export And Import Problems To Be Established

ENTERPRISE TO DEAL WITH EXPORT AND IMPORT PROBLEMS TO BE ESTABLISHED

Noyan Tapan
March 9, 2010

YEREVAN, MARCH 9, NOYAN TAPAN. During the March 9 meeting with the
Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, the members of the Council
of the National Union of Farmers spoke about their problems related
to agricultural development, in particular the current problems in
poultry farming, potato and vegetable growing, sheep breeding and
beekeeping. Priority was given to expansion of the opportunities to
export agricultural products, improvement of the legislative field,
and elaboration of a model of long-term development of agriculture.

The RA Government Information and PR Department reports that
T. Sargsyan gave instructions to the minister of agriculture regarding
solution of the indicated problems. He assigned the ministry of
agriculture to establish jointly with the National Union of Farmers
an enterprise to deal with export and import problems. The prime
minister attached importance to the development of an efficient
model of cooperation, saying that he would personally control the
implementation of joint projects.

US House Decision Won’t Go Unanswered: Erdogan

US HOUSE DECISION WON’T GO UNANSWERED: ERDOGAN

Tert.am
13:57 ~U 09.03.10

Turkey will take retaliate against the passing of Armenian Genocide
Resolution 252 by the US House of Representatives Foreign Affairs
Committee, siad Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the
airport prior to leaving for Saudia Arabia, reports Turkish news
agency Ankara.

"At this time there is no roadmap or anything else on this issue…

however, undoubtedly, that step won’t remain without a response. There
will be adequate steps [taken]," said Erdogan.

Three Apples: A Slab Of Meat In Your IPod

THREE APPLES: A SLAB OF MEAT IN YOUR IPOD
By Paul Chaderjian

-meat-in-your-ipod/
Mar 8th, 2010

It’s past one o’clock on a Thursday morning, and "Coast to Coast AM,"
my favorite late-night radio talk show is beaming via headphone into
my left ear from an AM radio station in Los Angeles.

It has just rained, and inhaling that fresh, clean smell of fresh air
after a downpour prompted my first thought of gratitude on this day.

The Queen of Media, Oprah Winfrey, once preached about keeping
a gratitude journal, and since I’ve noticed that focusing on all
the blessings we have paves the way for even more blessings to be
grateful for.

We live in an amazing era and must not overlook the amazing blessings
we experience daily. From scientists growing replacement organs for
the ill to having water on tap when needed, every second of our modern
lives is pregnant with blessings and joy.

>>From the beauty of nature to the miracles of our five senses, from
overweight pets cuddling-up next to us while we read a good book to
laying in bed and composing this column on my phone – every single
minute detail of our lives can simply be wondrous.

And to think we would’ve never existed had our grandparents not been
real life heroes with the will to live and who survived the Turkish
barbarism of intolerant sociopaths and psychopaths (intraspecies
predators).

Another blessing are human connections, exchange of ideas, opinions,
respect, and tolerance. How great that Armenians learned from the
Turkish intolerance and oppression that resulted in a genocide and can
be as different from one another, hold no common values or opinions,
and yet still accept one another as an Armenian and as a human.

Not all of us have learned though, and some Armenians out there find
opportunities where they shouldn’t and become judge and jury about
what opinions should have an audience what should not.

I learned this lesson when last week I wrote that this year’s
Eurovision song was not an Armenian song. Who was I to judge, but I
had. My criticism was about bad lyrics, and I apparently upset a few
intolerant Armenians.

"Too many people just like the author of this piece decide that they
are cultural experts," said one anonymous critic. "It’s time for them
to be quiet and go away."

Pack up and dissolve into a non-Armenian existence because I don’t
like bad lyrics? Really? Funny.

See how fragile human connections and interactions are? All efforts
should be made to fuel and bond us, however different we are, rather
than cut off dialogue because we hold a different opinion about one
song’s lyrics.

Why I write about connections is because that’s what make us human
and allows for subcultures and hence cultures to be created and
maintained. Connections – be it one-on-one, through small groups in
foreign lands, or through mass media – are what have preserved our
ethnicity, which could’ve easily been forgotten history.

As I listen to a scientist talking in my ear about genies talking to
humans and Shamanism, I am writing about how one innovative, young
Armenian has started fresh, new dialogue between his peers utilizing
Information Age technologies and creating a novel new podcast.

Where no dialogue had existed, one young man and his friends are able
to use the Internet to create new human connections, new Armenian
subcultures, where they didn’t exist before.

Nisanian on the left, Babayan on the right, and Meline Tovmasian
guest host on the bottom.

Here’s how I made a connection with these young Armenian broadcasters.

It was thanks to my father’s uncle, Shukri Keri, who was six-years-old
during the Genocide. He was found alive underneath corpses by Bedouins
searching through Armenian bodies for salvageable belongings.

Shukri Keri lived with these nomadic Arabs for more than a decade and
the only Armenian he could remember were the words of Psalm 23. An
Armenian merchant doing business with the Bedouin found my dad’s uncle
in the Syrian desert and alerted the AGBU in Beirut to rescue him so
that he could live as an Armenian once again.

It was Shukri Keri’s granddaughter, actress and comedienne Lory
Tatoulian, who had been a guest on a podcast called Raw Radio
and her appearance was mentioned on Facebook by her friend Yeghia
Elvis. I wanted to hear her interview, so I searched the iTunes
podcast directory for "Raw Radio" and found it with a few clicks. The
graphic for the podcast is a slab of raw meat to demonstrate the
podcast’s premise, and for a second I wasn’t sure this was what I
was looking for.

Within seconds, however, I was listening to this amazingly entertaining
and interesting Armenian talk show hosted by a 30-year-old named
Alex. Raw Radio is on iTunes but can also be heard via the web page
rawradiopodcast.blogspot.com.

As I listened to a few episodes, I found out that Alex, who is a
talented voice-over artist and graphic designer, decided to buy a
couple of good microphones, connect them to his computers, and thus
set up a studio in his apartment.

Since last December, Alex has been inviting some friends to his place
and asking them to talk about issues that are on the minds of young
American-Armenians.

A few minutes into the first monologue of the most current episode,
I was a fan. Alex has a charismatic on-air presence. He’s a natural
performer, communicator, and broadcaster, and it’s a pleasure to
listen him.

He has one of these rare voices that you actually want to hear more
of, and that he is an Armenian with some insights into the Armenian
experience that have not been articulated in a public era was to me
sheer genius.

Though you may or may not agree with him, the fact that he’s putting
himself out there, out to millions of Internet users, is commendable.

What’s also commendable is that he and his peers don’t care what a
few pea-brained, disagreeing and anonymous Armenians with only hatred
and vitriol to contribute to our collective experience will say or
not say about them.

Through the some 14-weeks of the Raw Radio podcasts, I heard dialogue
about Armenian music, vodka and mixed drinks, card games, and the
strange Armenians who hang out eating seeds outside 7-11’s.

Raw Radio also featured interviews with innovative young people like
comedienne Lory Tatoulian, writer and event organizer Atina Hartunian,
and musician and photographer Mher Ajemian.

Raw Radio logo.These hour-long shows also featured risque subjects
like dating and sex and themes that I have only heard discussed on
mainstream media programs like George Noory’s show that I’m listening
to now. Raw Radio has tackled them all including chem-trails, 9/11
conspiracy theories, fluoride in our water, and spirituality and
intuition.

For all the decades we’ve had Armenian television stations on the
airwaves and the dozens of Armenian radio stations streaming on-line,
no one has had the audacity to create and host a frank talk show like
Raw Radio. No one has taken the time to connect with other Armenians
through media about real-life matters beyond news headlines. No one
has taken the time for simple, common man talk about common subjects.

For this we need to encourage Alex and his friends and make sure they
continue to share their outspoken spirits, thoughts, and ideas with
our community and the world.

Inspired by and surpassing Alex’s role model – the King of all Media,
Howard Stern – Raw Radio is a rare find, save for the extra and
sometimes unnecessary use of profanities. It’s also a modern-era radio
drama, taking place in Alex’s apartment, where friends are exchanging
frank ideas, unabashed, and not holding back on their opinions and
their humanity. And it’s dialogue you can also be an audience to,
that you can enjoy, and that you can use to stay connected with
other Armenians.

Raw Radio is a breath of fresh air on my iPod and computer, and
for this I am grateful this Thursday morning. It’s time for a new
generation of Armenians to take over the reigns and try to create
dialogue and real-life media in our community. Perhaps they’ll be
more defiant and not take obnoxious and uncivilized anonymous critics
to heart.

And since my thumbs are hurting from typing on my phone, I’ll stop
and ask you to discover and enjoy our young and innovative Armenian
broadcasters and their show.

Sent to Asbarez via 3ApplesBerry

http://www.asbarez.com/78050/a-slab-of

‘Unbreakable Ties That Bind’: New Exhibit By Armenian-American Artis

‘UNBREAKABLE TIES THAT BIND’: NEW EXHIBIT BY ARMENIAN-AMERICAN ARTIST ADRINEH GREGORIAN

Tert.am
08.03.10

The Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art in Yerevan
(NPAK/ACCEA) will be hosting an exhibit by Armenian-American artist
Adrineh Gregorian from March 26 to April 1 called "Unbreakable Ties
that Bind."

According to the Facebook event page created by the artist, "Adrineh’s
series ‘Unbreakable Ties that Bind: Art Transcending Three Generations
in One Family’ represents one subject matter, her family, as seen
through the eyes of two different generations that are bound by
bloodline and art.

"The series is comprised of a collection of acrylic on canvas
contemporary paintings reflecting [her grandfather] Grigor’s
photo-portraits and a collection of photographs of Adrineh’s family
today taken with Grigor’s original Zeiss Ikon camera.

"Grigor was an artist out of necessity. Art was a gift offered to him
as a means of survival; whereas for Adrineh, art is a means of
expression and a creative outlet.

"In this series, Adrineh attempts to use their commonality, art, to
unite a family whose members have had contrasting destinies and to
make a connection with the grandfather she’s never met.

"Creating and exhibiting this series throughout Armenia allows the
story of Grigor and Adrineh’s ancestral line to come full circle."

The exhibit opens at 6 pm on Friday, March 26.

US politicians call killing of Armenians ‘genocide’

EuroNews – France
March 5, 2010 Friday

US politicians call killing of Armenians ‘genocide’

A US congressional panel has labelled the 1915 killing of Armenians by
Turkey ‘genocide’. President Obama’s administration had tried to
prevent voting on the controversial issue on Thursday.

Whilst Armenia is happy with the outcome, Turkey has recalled its
ambassador to the US.

However, the panel felt a decision was important. Speaking after the
vote, Congressman Brad Sherman said: "Long term, we will not have a
good relationship with Turkey until it abandons this effort to deny
the past and engage in genocide denial. Would we have a good
relationship with the German government denying the Holocaust? And
who would have a good relationship with us if we were denying slavery
and so many other things in our past?

It is estimated that 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman
Turks 95 years ago. Turkey accepts that some people were killed, but
it disputes the number that died and will not agree to the term
‘genocide’.

The US Congress last discussed this contentious issue in 2007.

Sergei Paradjanov season at BFI Southbank

Sergei Paradjanov season at BFI Southbank
This online supplement is produced and published by Rossiyskaya Gazeta
(Russia), which takes sole responsibility for the content.

Nadia Kidd, Ksenia Galouchko, Russia Now

Daily Telegraph/uk
Published: 4:24PM GMT 04 Mar 2010

This March the British Film Institute on London’s Southbank will host
a season of Armenian film-maker Sergei Paradjanov’s works. The
festival will include Paradjanov’s acclaimed features, short films and
documentaries.

Elisabetta Fabrizi, curator of the festival, has long nurtured a
passion for the director. Having completed her university dissertation
on his works, since 2005 she has been engaged by the idea of making
Paradjanov known to a wider international audience.

Paradjanov’s legacy has shaped the styles of several British
film-makers, including that of Derek Jarman, whose works were inspired
by The Colour of Pomegranates. Other `followers’ include the Brothers
Quay, whom Fabrizi calls `the real masters of animation’.

Although prominent in his influence on film-makers of the 20th
century, along with fashion designers, musicians and artists,
Paradjanov is virtually unknown among film lovers.

To Fabrizi, the director’s ability to bring together a variety of
cultures and religions, such as Islam and Christianity, in his films
makes them topical and modern in today’s political and social context.

So when Fabrizi met Layla Alexander-Garret, a London-based Russian art
promoter who was also searching for a venue to host a Paradjanov film
festival, she knew it was a dream come true. Together, the two
Paradjanov admirers pooled their contacts and experience, and finally
made the long anticipated two-and-a-half-month Paradjanov festival
happen.

The festival will be the biggest Paradjanov celebration ever held in
the UK. The most recent Paradjanov-themed cultural event in the UK
goes back to 10 years ago, when the Lumiere cinema put on an
exhibition and screenings in memory of his craft.

The festival will host screenings of Paradjanov’s and
Paradjanov-influenced films, including documentaries by Russian,
Ukrainian, French and German film-makers. Some screenings will be
followed by Q&A sessions with Paradjanov’s friends and collaborators,
along with Paradjanov scholars.

According to Fabrizi, the festival films will be introduced by, among
others, director Patrick Cazals and film critic and writer Tony Rayns.

The March 6 symposium will bring together a large variety of guests,
including the director of the Armenian-based Paradjanov museum and
those who have worked with Paradjanov.

Contemporary artist Mat Collishaw has been commissioned to produce a
moving image installation for the festival.

The project unites sculpture and the moving image in an atmospheric
work inspired by Paradjanov’s craft. According to Fabrizi, Collishaw,
whose show runs until May 9, has managed to poetically convey the
spirit of Paradjanov’s artistic endeavour.

Some events at the festival are being organised exclusively by
Fabrizi’s Russian partner Alexander-Garret, including the photo
exhibition by a Georgian artist Yuri Mechitov, which contains rare
pictures taken during his long friendship with Sergei Paradjanov, in
addition to a memorial concert at the Armenian Church, and a set of
events at the Pushkin House, Russian cultural centre in London, and in
Bristol.

And what could be Fabrizi’s next artistic project? Considering the
successful professional collaboration with Alexander-Garret, the
curator might opt for a season of Russian film classics.

Police Verify Arrest of Former Ministry of Culture Official

Police Verify Arrest of Former Ministry of Culture Official
2010/03/05 | 12:48

cr iminal
Ararat Davtyan

Today, Hunan Poghosyan, who heads the Police department’s Organized
Crime Division, verified rumors that Areg Hayrapetyan, who used to run
the Ministry of Culture’s Legal Affairs and Audit Division had been
arrested two days ago.

Poghosyan refused to provide any details, arguing that his division
wasn’t authorized to do so. Rumor has it that a search of
Hayrapetyan’s house revealed a second passport in his name and blank
Ministry forms signed by the minister.

http://hetq.am/en/criminal/h-poxosyan-2/