No survivors after Armenian Airlines plane crashes into Black Sea

CBC News, Canada
May 3 2006

No survivors after Armenian Airlines plane crashes into Black Sea

Last Updated Tue, 02 May 2006 23:06:22 EDT
CBC News

An Armenian Airlines plane carrying more than 100 people has crashed
into the Black Sea, just off the Russian coast. Emergency officials
say there are no survivors.

The accident happened near the resort city of Sochi in southern Russia.

Local media report that debris has been found in the water six
kilometres offshore. One report says the body of a woman – a passenger
on the plane – as well as lifejackets have been recovered from the sea.

The flight originated in Yerevan, Armenia and was to have landed
in Sochi.

But the Itar-Tass news agency reported that the aircraft, an Airbus
320, disappeared from radar screens as it was making its approach.

The plane was carrying 112 passengers and crew members.

Russian emergency officials said all of the people on board the plane
were killed in the accident.

Press Release: The Arts Of Photography, Poetry and Translation

For Immediate Release

May 2, 2006

65 Main Street, Watertown MA 02472
Contact Person: Mariam Stepanyan
Phone: 617.926.2562
Email: [email protected]
Website:

_________________________________ _______________________________________

The Arts of Photography, Poetry, and Translation.

The Arts of Photography, Poetry, and Translation is the title of an
uncommon exhibition at the Armenian Library and Museum of America’s
Terjenian Gallery, featuring photojournalist Armineh Johannes.

Illustrating the photography are selected poems from *I Want to Live*
by Shushanik Kurghinian, translated by Shushan Avagyan, and from the
*Other Voice: Armenian Women’s Poetry Through the Ages*, translated
by Diana Der-Hovanessian.

DATES: May 14 – 28 during museum hours.

RECEPTION: Sunday, May 21, 2006, from 1:30 – 3:30 pm.

Armineh Johannes is an award-winning photojournalist whose assignments
and interests have taken her to Armenia for the last seventeen years,
and to some eastern and middle-eastern countries as well. The majority
of the photographs in this exhibition are from her “Transitions”
series which try to capture those elements in these societies that may
be in the process of disappearing, namely the traditional, the rural,
what is considered pre-industrial and everlastingly old-world. These
photos do not suggest revolution or upheaval of the overt kind;
rather they evoke those internal question marks and hidden tumults
that are part of every man’s and woman’s life.

The poetry linked to the images varies. Kurghinian’s from I Want to
Live volume, deals with social issues, feminism, and confrontation
with established values and oppressive norms. The poetry from the
“Other Voice” extends the spectrum.

The forced juxtaposition of the photos with the selected poetry
provides some unusual tensions, reflecting the tension always inherent
in Kurghinian’s poetry, and the range of emotions called forth by
the number of poets in the “Other Voice.”

Is the pretty bride sitting on a patterned couch menacingly sandwiched
between two huge tiger faces, in fact happy bedecked in bracelets,
or is she Kurghinian’s bride whose gold ringlets attest to the fact
that she is “Sold.” Will the little girl with the black cat eventually
reflect her mother’s high ideals as the poem “Gift to my Daughter”
suggests, or just her own mischievous spirit. What about the little
swaddled infant with the alert eyes? Viewing Johannes’ web site and
people with more eastern non-Armenian eyes, provides further reflection
and questions about what their future holds.

Hopefully this exhibition will be a beginning exploration for the
viewer of how photography stimulates thought, and how poetry captures
images with a minimum of words.

To stimulate audience participation, and interest in the power
of translation, a poetry contest is an integral part of this
exhibition. Two of Kurghinian’s poems, chosen by Karine Marino,
are available for translation from the Armenian. To make the
contest accessible to all, the Armenian comes with a literal,
word-by-word translation into English. The best poetic translation,
as judged by a jury of three, will receive a $100 (one hundred
dollar) award. The two poems are short love poems, in contrast to
the more serious and purposeful poetry of Kurghinian’s in the I
Want to Live poetry book, to expose another aspect of this poet to
the public and to solicit a greater response to the contest. These
poems are available online on the publisher’s web site, AIWA Press,

Don’t miss this unusual exhibition. Bring your family and friends.

And let all try out for the contest, to demystify poetry while
simultaneously giving the fine art of translation its due, in a spirit
of fun and competition.

Both poetry books, published in 2005, are available from AIWA,
information via aiwainc.com; and from NAASR bookstore in Belmont,
MA, as well as other bookstores in the United States and elsewhere.

The exhibition at the Terjenian Gallery at ALMA, 65 Main Street,
Watertown, MA. 617.926.ALMA (2562) , is open during
museum hours, Thursday 6 – 9 PM, Friday and Sunday 1 – 5 PM, Saturday
10 AM – 2 PM. Gallery Admission is Free.

Submitted by Gina Ann Hablanian

http://www.aiwa-net.org/AIWAwriters.
www.almainc.org
www.almainc.org

US Expert: Armenia And Azerbaijan Are Not Ready For Settlement Of Th

US EXPERT: ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN ARE NOT READY FOR SETTLEMENT OF THE KARABAKH CONFLICT

ArmRadio.am
02.05.2006 14:43

Peaceful resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict is currently
impossible, Director for international security and energy programs
of the Nixon Center Zeyno Baran said, “Turan” Agency informs.

“If the parties were ready for concessions, they would lead a different
foreign and domestic policy,” he considers.

“The possible action against Iran may have a negative influence on
Azerbaijan. However, today it is still hard to estimate the volume
of this influence,” the expert noted.

Van der Linden: Armenia Should Look to Normalize Relations w/Turkey

PanARMENIAN.Net

Van der Linden: Armenia Should Look in Future to Normalize Relations
with Turkey

29.04.2006 20:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe (PACE) René van der Linden said that to normalize
relations with Turkey Armenia should `look in the future, not using
the past to block it and look for peaceful solutions.’ `The fact that
Armenia and Turkey and CE members provides an opportunity to MPs of
the two countries to meet and discuss problems. I believe if you live
in a region and you do not have actual open contacts: trade and
economic, cultural and personal relations, you do not serve to the
cause of securing a better future for your country. It is impossible
to build a sustainable future in a region, where you are isolated from
your neighbors. I am sure that looking in the future is in the
interests of Armenia, not using the past to block it and look for
peaceful solutions.

If you want to find a solution, you will find it. However, you will
never find one securing a 100% outcome for you. Compromise is always
necessary, as the other side has its arguments and if you insist only
on your principles and feelings, it will be very hard to find a
sustainable and peaceful solution,» the PACE President said, reports
Mediamax.

ANKARA: Lithuania calls for “insight” on Genocide

Anatolian Times, Turkey
April 28 2006

Press Review

CUMHURIYET

LITHUANIA CALLS FOR `INSIGHT’ ON SO-CALLED GENOCIDE

Lithuania President Valdas Adamkus, currently visiting Yerevan,
Armenia, said yesterday that a Turkey which wants to enter the
European Union should act more `insightfully’ about the so-called
Armenian genocide. Adamkus said that if his country’s relations with
Turkey suffer due to Ankara’s current stance, they would call on
Turkey, an EU candidate country, to observe the principle of `mutual
respect.’ /Cumhuriyet/

Azerbaijan Rules Out Help For US Military Action Against Iran

AZERBAIJAN RULES OUT HELP FOR US MILITARY ACTION AGAINST IRAN

Agence France Presse — English
April 26, 2006 Wednesday 4:23 PM GMT

WASHINGTON, April 26 2006

Visiting Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev on Wednesday ruled out
his country taking part in any possible military operations against
neighboring Iran and said resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
with Armenia was a top priority for his government.

“Azerbajian will not be engaged in any kind of potential operation
against Iran and our officials in the past, including myself, have
made (this) very clear,” Aliyev told an audience at the Council on
Foreign Relations in Washington. “Therefore I think it is time to
stop speculating on this issue.”

Aliyev, whose official visit here is his first since his election to
succeed his father in October 2003, said his country has a bilateral
agreement with Tehran that clearly forbids either country from staging
aggression against the other from their respective territories.

His comments came ahead of a meeting with US President George W. Bush
on Friday during which the nuclear stand-off with Iran is expected
to be raised.

There has been speculation that Azerbaijan, which is strategically
located between Iran and Russia and which has troops alongside US
forces in Iraq as well as Afghanistan and Kosovo, could be asked by
Washington to back any potential military action against Iran should
diplomacy on the nuclear issue fail.

Aliyev, whose White House meeting with Bush has long been sought
by his government as a way to boost his stature, said he planned to
discuss a wide range of topics with US officials, including bilateral
relations, energy and security issues as well as the conflict in the
Nagorno-Karabakh region.

He said he hoped Washington would help revive the peace process in
Nagorno-Karabakh, which is a disputed part of Azerbaijani territory
that has been controlled since the early 1990s by its majority
ethnic-Armenian population.

Aliyev made clear that his country would not relinquish the territory
and said any settlement would have to guarantee the return of
Azerbaijani refugees to the region while protecting the rights of
the local ethnic Armenian population.

“I think it’s time for the Armenian leadership to behave like
statesemen, to think what will happen in five or 10 years if the
conflict is not resolved,” he said. “The patience of the Azerbaijani
people has a limit.

“We are demanding Armenia return peacefully the land that belongs
to us.”

The 44-year-old leader also brushed aside criticism concerning his
autocratic rule and flawed parliamentary elections in November saying
that he saw no chance of any “colour” revolution in Azerbaijan.

“For that to happen, people have to be unhappy with the government,”
he said, pointing to the country’s economic prosperity.

US officials, who have been criticised for inviting Aliyev to
Washington in light of the administration’s much-touted democracy
agenda, said democratic reforms would top the agenda during the visit.

“We have said, and we mean it, that to elevate our relationship
with Azerbaijan to a qualitatively new level (…) there needs to
be sustained progress on democracy,” Matthew Bryza, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, said.

The US administration is keenly interested in energy-rich Azerbaijan
as a way to offset dependence on Russia by European markets. The
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, which is expected to become
operational soon, is designed to avoid shipping oil through congested
Turkish straits while also bypassing Russia’s pipeline network.

BAKU: We Rallied In Washington Against Armenian Claims – Tomris Azer

WE RALLIED IN WASHINGTON AGAINST ARMENIAN CLAIMS – TOMRIS AZERI
Author: S. Ilhamgizi

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
April 25 2006

A joint Azerbaijani- Turkish rally has been organized in USA to protest
against the so-called Armenian genocide, the head of the America-
Azerbaijan organization in US, Tomris Azeri told Trend.

The Azerbaijani and Turkish diasporas organized a rally in the
Times-Square park in Washington, she said. A lot of people took part in
the action, several speeches have been held and photographic materials
of the Hojali tragedy have been presented, Azeri told.

Another action with motto- Lets put an end to the propaganda of the
so-called Armenian genocide, was held beside the Turkish embassy in
US. 250 people took part in the rally.

Similar Armenian action was taking place nearby. As a result of
coordinated activities of police it was possible to avoid any
incidents.

Huit =?UNKNOWN?B?IlN06GxlcyI=?= Devant Notre-Dame De Paris A LaMemoi

HUIT “STèLES” DEVANT NOTRE-DAME DE PARIS A LA MEMOIRE DU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN

Agence France Presse
23 avril 2006 dimanche 1:31 PM GMT

Huit “stèles” geantes, a la memoire du “genocide armenien” et contre
le refus des autorites turques de le reconnaître, ont ete dressees
dimanche après-midi devant la cathedrale Notre-Dame de Paris, a
constate une journaliste de l’AFP.

Ces stèles ont ete installees par le collectif VAN (Vigilance
armenienne contre le negationnisme), cree en 2004 pour “travailler a
la reconnaissance du genocide et a la condamnation de ce crime contre
l’humanite”, mais aussi “denoncer tous les genocides, defendre la
memoire des victimes, soutenir les minorites opprimees et le respect
des droits de l’homme partout dans le monde”.

Panneaux cartonnes rectangulaires de 3 mètres de haut, installes en arc
de cercle sur le parvis, ils portaient sur une face des peintures d’un
artiste d’origine armenienne, Dibasar, et sur l’autre des informations
historiques et actuelles.

L’initiative de dimanche a ete prise a la veille de la Journee annuelle
de commemoration du genocide. Il a commence le 24 avril 1915, avec
l’arrestation a Constantinople de 2.345 intellectuels qui furent
executes les jours suivants, et les Armeniens evaluent a 1,5 million
le nombre total de victimes de l’annee 1915.

“Nous voulons sensibiliser l’opinion, l’alerter du danger que
represente pour l’Europe la politique negationniste de l’Etat turc
et dresser ces stèles comme temoins d’une histoire qu’on ne peut
enterrer impunement”, ont declare a l’AFP les responsables de VAN.

Les inscriptions sur les stèles denoncent le genocide des Armeniens
en Turquie ainsi que celui, disent-elles, de 500.000 Grecs et 250.000
Assyro-Chaldeens. Elles denoncent egalement le “negationnisme officiel
en Turquie”, où ceux qui parlent de genocide sont passibles de 10 ans
de prison, et une “haine raciale” jusque dans les manuels scolaires
declarant que les Armeniens, Grecs ou Assyriens representent des
“communautes nuisibles”.

VAN demande par ailleurs que la reconnaissance par la Turquie
du genocide devienne un critère pour son admission dans l’Union
europeenne.

–Boundary_(ID_ZRtJFIQ5RaQ5Yo jbXW3Gnw)–

Cyprus Armenians Mark Genocide Anniversary

CYPRUS ARMENIANS MARK GENOCIDE ANNIVERSARY

Cyprus Mail
25 April 06

THE ARMENIAN community in Cyprus yesterday marked the 91st anniversary
of the 1915 genocide in which one and a half million of their people
were killed by Ottoman forces.

In commemoration of the genocide, a special church service was held at
the Armenian church in Nicosia attended by Greek Cypriot politicians.

House President Demetris Christofias who addressed the congregation
said the genocide of the Armenian people was a crime recognised by
almost all countries but denied by Turkey.

“It is time Turkey recognised this historical reality,” said
Christofias.

He called on the EU to pressure Turkey to acknowledge the massacre
of the Armenian people, and also the invasion of Cyprus.

The Armenian Genocide was carried out by the ‘Young Turk’ government
of the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1916. Over a million Armenians were
killed, out of a total of two and a half million Armenians living
under the Ottoman Empire.

Turkey still claims that Armenians were only removed from the eastern
“war zone”.

In addition to yesterday’s church service, the Armenian community also
organised a photographic exhibition at Nicosia’s Eleftheria Square on
Sunday and a procession along Armenias Avenue followed by a memorial
service at 8.30pm at the Armenian Genocide monument in the evening.

16 Casinos and 48 Prize Games Operate in Armenia

16 CASINOS AND 48 PRIZE GAMES OPERATE IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN. By the end of the first quarter of
2006, licences of 16 casinos and 48 prize games were valid in
Armenia. NT was informed at the RA Ministry of Finance and Economy
that in early 2006, licences of 18 casinos and 51 prize games were
valid in the country. According to the same source, licences of one
casino and two prize games were granted in March, while licences of
two casinos and three prize games were recognized invalid. It was
noted that three licences for lottery running are valid in Armenia.