Defense Minister Meets With His French Counterpart

DEFENSE MINISTER MEETS WITH HIS FRENCH COUNTERPART

Aysor
Feb 11 2010
Armenia

Armenia’s Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian met yesterday with his
French counterpart Herve Morin, a spokesperson for Armenia’s Defense
Ministry said.

The parties held a talk, followed by negotiations between the Armenian
and French delegations. The sides discussed issues of the military
cooperation; items of regional, European, and international security;
programs in the framework of Armenia-France defense relations.

After talks, the parties signed an agreement on the bilateral defense
cooperation which will let the military ties between the countries
enter into force. Minister Seyran Ohanian invited Herve Morin to pay
a visit to Armenia.

It’s worth mentioning, that Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian was also
hosted by Guy Tessier, the then-President of the Defense Commission
in the French National Assembly. The officials discussed reforms
in the field of defense, and stressed the importance of development
and strengthening of the basis of public and legislative control in
relation to the armed forces.

On his visit, Minister Seyran Ohanian also attended one of the leading
military universities in Europe, the Command and General Staff College
of France.

7 Kg Of Heroin Brought To Armenia Via Armenian-Turkish Border

7 KG OF HEROIN BROUGHT TO ARMENIA VIA ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
11.02.2010 18:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ RA Prosecutor General’s Office and the RA Police
revealed cases of illicit trafficking in narcotic drugs (opium
and heroin) of big amounts. On February 8, based on data obtained
in preliminary investigation an Iranian citizen was detained on
the Ashtarak-Yerevan highway who had 4750 grams of opium in his
car. The same day a citizen of Russia Hovhannes Davtyan was arrested,
7 kilograms of heroin as found in his car. The confiscated heroin was
smuggled into Armenia – across the closed Armenian-Turkish border. The
market price of drugs made USD 2 million, press office of the General
Prosecutor’s office reported.

Arshile Gorky Is Mother’s Boy

ARSHILE GORKY IS MOTHER’S BOY

This is London
Feb 11 2010
UK

More articles by Brian Sewell Armenia, the oldest of Christian
countries, was once a land where art and architecture flourished. It
was, like Britain, a far outpost of the Roman Empire, but, unlike this
country, did not sink into a dark age with that empire’s retrenchment,
division and fall. In what is now north-eastern Turkey and beyond
its borders there, are the remains of great churches and monasteries,
architectural marvels, mathematically ingenious, the masonry crisp cut.

Melancholy: The Artist and his Mother — "here is more than personal
tragedy, here is a greater grief for his identity"

In some, the paintings that decorated their walls still survive,
despite the attempts of Muslims to wreck and ravage them for their
too evident human imagery; their ghosts find definition in more
resistant sculptural reliefs and, on a smaller scale, in manuscripts
and miniatures.

Absorbed into the Ottoman Empire by the westward march of the Turks,
Armenia lost her borders and her nationality, but the heritage
of a great culture, laid down more than a thousand years before,
established patterns that were still current late in the 19th century.

It was to these that any boy with burgeoning talent as an artist was
compelled to turn for his education — for there were no art schools
— to the painted images and gingerbread sculpture of the churches
that were so much part of his daily life. Of these, Arshile Gorky
was one — a boy with a passionate urge to draw.

Now perceived to be the last Surrealist and the first American
Abstract Expressionist, Gorky was born in Armenia in 1904, we think,
in a village near the city of Van. Many of the churches to which
he had access were destroyed during the course of the last century;
Armenians had long been persecuted, their response to pogrom so pacific
that in 1915 the Turks contemptuously embarked on a policy of genocide
so total that none survived — even now the wary traveller from the
west does not utter the word Armenian.

"Small husband": the 1912 photograph of Gorky and his mother which
was the inspiration for the picture above

A quarter of a century ago, seven ruined churches were rotting in the
hills near Van; constantly quarried for hearthstones and doorsteps,
they may by now be utterly destroyed but, by the grace of God,
the church of the Holy Cross still stands on the deserted island
of Akhtamar in the great Lake of Van, with substantial examples of
wall paintings and carvings of which Gorky was aware. His letters
demonstrate how powerful were his recollections of childhood, and
how much being an Armenian meant to him — I respond to modern life
as an Armenian from Van," he wrote from exile in America. Man cannot
escape the sensibility of his time…" He was, indeed, in thrall to it.

The traditional images of Armenian art are frontal and hieratic. In
painting the proportions are elongated, but in sculpture they
are stunted; faces in both are oval, the eyes large, unfocused and
deep-socketed; what sense of volume there may be is implied by line and
the sculpture is in low relief. These were the formulae that little
Gorky carried with him when, with his mother and sister, he fled in
1915 into the Russian borderland to the north-east; there, in 1919,
in his arms, his mother died of starvation and grief, and his long
journey to America began. He was fortunate; chance could so easily
have sent him on the genocidal marches that wiped out more than a
million Armenians when the Turks drove them south to die either en
route or in the desert near Aleppo. The appalling events that were
in some measure the experience of all Armenians in Turkey during and
after the Great War formed Gorky’s mind, burdening him with melancholy
that was to overwhelm him.

Dark: one of Gorky’s splendid drawings, Nighttime, Enigma and Nostalgia

He escaped to America in 1920, hoping to join his father who had
emigrated there years earlier to avoid being drafted into the Turkish
army. The reconciliation failed. Living in Boston, Gorky developed
a museum habit — western cultures absorbed at random. Moving to New
York in 1925, he joined the Grand Central School of Art as a student
— perhaps still only 21 — but swiftly graduated to the status of
monitor-teacher (I suspect the school was less grand than its name
suggests) and remained there until 1931.

America was hardly the place for a would-be painter between the
wars — Paris was pre-eminent, and even London could claim to
be an intellectually livelier place until New York was given its
chance by the Second World War. Gorky was neither well taught in the
technical sense nor exposed to long traditions and established stimuli
that could convert him from provincial fumbler into metropolitan
genius. He became a mere imitator. As Cézanne was in high fashion,
Gorky clumsily and tentatively tried his brushwork and colour
without understanding the purpose of either. Aware of Picasso,
presumably from illustrated magazines rather than direct experience,
he tried his hand at decorative abstractions of still life reduced
to flat patterns. When Picasso developed a mannerism of cool tones
and heavy intersecting lines, jagged and angular, unrewarding to
the point of emptiness, Gorky mimicked him. To Picasso’s large,
heavy semi-classical faces his response was powerful and emotional,
recognising in them a character that recalled Armenian art — but he
broke new ground in imitating them.

The Picasso paths exhausted, Gorky turned to Miró for mentor and
produced jazzy imitations of no merit. He became a Surrealist, though
only in the most debilitated sense, and fell under the influence of
Matta, a tag-end member of that by then desuetudinous group. What
little originality there is in Gorky’s work is in the paintings of
the mid-Forties, when his landscape abstractions struck an authentic
personal note — but had his scribbles and drips not been adopted
with enthusiasm by American painters and noisily promoted as Abstract
Expressionism, these paintings too would seem as negligible as all
the others.

Tate Modern has given Gorky a far larger and grander exhibition than he
deserves, for he is, at best, a minor painter, often uncomprehending
and incompetent. Many visitors, unaware of the unrelenting propaganda
that since his death in 1948 has presented his work as "the last
great flowering of Surrealism and the first great flowering of modern
American painting" (Tate Gallery exhibition catalogue 1965), will
wonder why they have paid a tenner to look at so many canvases that
are obviously no better than dim-witted imitations.

His early paintings suggest that he hardly knew how to control the
consistency and texture of paint or with which brushes to apply it,
and that for at least the first decade he was a clumsy and ignorant
amateur.

The case is different with his drawings; these suggest that he
responded with sensibility, intelligence and a high degree of technical
skill to the academic teaching of drawing in his day, that in drawings
he could express far more expertly any interest he had in form and
volume, light and space, and that with extraordinary skill he could
imitate in graphite, and in pen and ink, the related techniques of
etching. I am convinced that in two portrait studies of the later
Thirties, he had looked intelligently at those masters of economy,
Ingres and Cocteau, and that in the paintings of a decade later it
is the drawn line that lends order to the chaos of surreal forms,
often Dalí-like, in a fantasy of hubbub and disorder.

To assume, as the jabberwocky-driven critic Clement Greenberg did,
that Gorky was a painter of more than national importance" is to
assume that he knew what he was doing. He did not. His paintings were a
combination of idiom — first borrowed and then habitual — with happy
and unhappy accident. In the late works, the images scribbled, doodled,
smudged and the colour scrubbed on to the canvas or, occasionally,
thinly staining it with a wash, as in contemporary Parisian tachisme,
he was released from all formal responsibilities.

It is easy to see how these characteristics could be enlisted as
justification for the genius of unpremeditated spontaneity in the
unconscious mind and hand claimed by his immediate contemporary
Willem de Kooning, and by the slightly younger Jackson Pollock, both
of whom served to bolster Gorky’s reputation as the stud who sired
their rough and ready kind of gestural Abstract Expressionism. We
should blame him for the scribbles of Cy Twombly too.

A pair of early paintings may, for their immediate appeal to the
emotions, slow the sane man’s hurrying pace. They are near identical
portraits of Gorky and his Mother as they were in 1912, based on
a photograph taken then, but not begun until 1926 or so. Neither is
finished; on one he spent a decade, on the other at least half as long
again, but there is little evidence of heavy reworking or adjustment
and nothing to suggest how much their development was inter-dependent.

Hieratic, ancient Armenian in a formula revised through the eyes and
harmonies of Pink Period Picasso, they date from a thousand years
before. Into them Gorky put many layers of meaning: they tell us of
his memories of Van, perhaps even of the enthroned Virgin Mary carved
on the wall of Akhtamar, of his small husband" responsibility for his
mother in the absence of his father, of a certain social status implied
in his dapper shoes and the collar of his overcoat (is it velvet or
Astrakhan, both a sign of difference perhaps important to a man who
has had to earn a pittance as a labourer in factories?), and of a
whole nation driven from ancestral land and property; here is more
than personal tragedy, here is a greater grief for his identity —
I am an Armenian"; here too he expresses fellowship with Picasso’s
wider-ranging melancholy imagery.

Gorky came to a wretched end. In January 1946 fire destroyed the
contents of his studio — two dozen paintings, his books and "all the
drawings of these past three years …". In March rectal cancer was
diagnosed, colostomy the consequence. Recovering, during the summer,
he completed 292 drawings "and they are good too," he said. How could
they be? — the sane man asks — and in February 1947 a reviewer damned
them as doodlings of only psychological interest. In December, Gorky
was depressed enough to ask his daughter Maro, then not quite four,
to choose the tree from which to hang himself. Six months later, by
then demoralised by increasing estrangement from his family, a road
accident broke his neck and disabled his painting arm; his rage and
depression worsening, on 16 July 1948 his wife and children left him.

Five days later Gorky hanged himself — with an already broken neck
it was, perhaps, an easier death than we might think.

Greenberg immediately extolled him as "one of the most important
painters of his generation anywhere in the world" — and that, of
course, is the gospel of this exhibition. Alas, much though I would
like him to have been the Armenian Michelangelo, very little in our
thoroughly mendacious art world could be further from the truth.

Armenian President To Visit Syria In March

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT TO VISIT SYRIA IN MARCH

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.02.2010 19:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the second half of March, Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan will pay a return visit to Syria.

As Armenian Ambassador to Syria Arshak Poladyan told PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter, meetings with President Bashar Assad as well as other Syrian
officials are on RA leader’s agenda.

"A number of agreements will be signed during presidential visit to
Damascus," the Ambassador said.

Serzh Sargsyan has also planned a meeting with Armenian community
and participation in Armenia-Syria business forum.

Arman Melikyan: Turkey Will Intensify Its Anti-Armenian Policy, If T

ARMAN MELIKYAN: TURKEY WILL INTENSIFY ITS ANTI-ARMENIAN POLICY, IF THE PROCESS FAILS
Karen Ghazaryan

"Radiolur"
09.02.2010 17:35

"If the Armenian-Turkish process fails, Turkey will intensify its
anti-Armenian activity in the region. Armenia is not ready for it,"
ex-Foreign Minister of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Arman Melikyan
told a press conference today.

Touching upon the possibility of resumption of war in Nagorno Karabakh,
Arman Melikyan said "we should not be afraid of war; we must simply
be ready for it, simultaneously using all means to prevent that danger.

The ex-Foreign Minister does no think the possibility of resumption
of war is greater than it was five years ago.

California State Central District Court Decision To Recompense Heirs

CALIFORNIA STATE CENTRAL DISTRICT COURT DECISION TO RECOMPENSE HEIRS OF THE ARMENIANS KILLED IN OTTOMAN EMPIRE COMES INTO EFFECT

ArmInfo
2010-02-09 13:07:00

ArmInfo. U.S. District Court of the State of California approved
996 descendants of the of victims of the Armenian Genocide who will
receive compensation from French insurance giant AXA for unpaid life
insurance benefits. Out of the $17.5 million USD settlement awarded,
$11 million USD will be split among the descendants, with the rest
going to humanitarian organizations and lawyer fees.

Armenian Justice Ministry press-service reported that given the high
public interest in the insurance benefits of the relatives of the
Armenians killed in the Ottoman Empire, the RA Ministry of Justice
appealed to executive director of the regulatory commission at the
French AXA Insurance Company, Barsegh Gartalian. The latter said
that relevant court decision was adopted in the summer of 2009 and
was postponed till January 2010 for technical reasons.

AXA Settlement Claim Fund received a total of 13790 claims and rejected
12794 for lack of necessary documents.

Karen Shakhnazarov’s "Ward N6" Wins 2 Awards At International Film F

KAREN SHAKHNAZAROV’S "WARD N6" WINS 2 AWARDS AT INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL IN TEHRAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.02.2010 17:10 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Karen Shakhnazarov’s "Ward N6" gained 2 Crystal
Simorgh awards at 28th international film festival in Tehran, having
won in Best foreign film and Best actor nominations. The Best Actor
award went to Vladimir Ilyin.

A total of 80 films contended for the Crystal Simorgh at Tehran’s
international film festival due on January 23-February 4.

Karen Shakhnazarov was born on July 8, 1952 in the city of Krasnodar
(southern Russia). As a boy, Karen liked drawing and staged plays in
a school theater. In 1975 he graduated from VGIK (Moscow School for
Cinematography) where he studied film directing under Igor Talankin.

For two years he worked at Mosfilm Studios as a director’s assistant.

He made three short films before he debuted in 1980 with his first
full-length feature Kind Men (Dobryaki), a low-key comedy about an
ambitious and cynical careerist.

The retro musical comedy We Are from Jazz (My iz dzhaza, 1983)
marked the beginning of Shakhnazarov’s long-term collaboration with
scriptwriter Aleksandr Borodyansky, who has cowritten almost all of
his films. Another nostalgic musical comedy followed in 1985, A Winter
Evening in Gagry (Zimnij vecher v Gagrakh, 1985), making Shakhnazarov
one of the most commercially successful directors in Russia.

Ireland to face Russia, Slovakia, Armenia in European Championships

Irish Central, Ireland
Feb 7 2010

Ireland to face Russia, Slovakia, Armenia in European Championships 2012

By SEAN O’SHEA, IrishCentral.com Staff Writer

Following today’s draw for the qualifying stages, Ireland is in Group
B of the European Championships. The country will play against Russia,
Slovakia, FYR Macedonia, Armenia, and Andorra, according to RTE.

Former Ireland international player Ray Houghton was optimistic after
the draw. `I’m delighted,’ he told RTE. `The other top seeds are
further ahead of us but Russia are certainly beatable.

`I actually think we can win it,’ he added, `I certainly believe the
number one spot is there for the taking.’

Northern Ireland face some tough challenges. They are Group C along
with world champions Italy. The group also has Serbia, Slovenia,
Estonia and the Faroe Islands.

England are in Group G with Wales, Switzerland, Bulgaria and
Montenegro, and Germany is in Group A.

9 Accountants Get Qualification Certificates, RA Ministry Of Finance

9 ACCOUNTANTS GET QUALIFICATION CERTIFICATES, RA MINISTRY OF FINANCE SAYS

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.02.2010 10:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Ministry of Finance has published the
results of the latest accounting exam. 9 out of 17 contenders were
reported to get Certificate of Accountant. 234 accountants have got
qualification certificates in Armenia as of February 4, 2010.

Al-Jazeera: Nagorno-Karabakh Tensions Fester

NAGORNO-KARABAKH TENSIONS FESTER
By Matthew Collin in Nagorno-Karabakh

Al-Jazeera.net
jazeera.net/focus/2010/02/20102412115655290.html
F eb 5 2010
Qatar

In the frontline trenches of Nagorno-Karabakh, the long-running
conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis over the disputed mountain
enclave continues.

In the village of Khramort, children make their way home from school
for lunch, some laughing and joking with each other, others holding
on tightly to their mothers’ hands.

But further along the rocky track which winds its way upwards towards
the snow-covered mountain overshadowing the village, there is no more
laughter to be heard, and no human life to be seen either.

Here, rows of houses stand derelict; burnt out during the war in the
1990s, when Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians, backed by Armenia itself,
seized control over the region from Azerbaijan.

Khramort is not far from the frontline, where the Karabakh Armenians
and the Azerbaijanis have been dug in to their fortified positions
amidst an uneasy standoff since the ceasefire in 1994.

Ghost town

Armen Grigorian, a local labourer who was chopping wood in his front
yard, watched by his four young children, said he wasn’t worried that
two armies were facing each other just a couple of kilometres away.

"After going through a war, there’s no fear in us anymore, and even
if fighting did start again, where could we escape to?" he asked.

No final peace deal has yet been signed, and although Nagorno-Karabakh
is now under ethnic Armenian control and claims to be independent,
it is still internationally recognised as being part of Azerbaijan.

Armen Grigorian’s garden offered a grim view of the nearby "ghost
town" of Aghdam, which was utterly demolished after its Azerbaijani
population fled when it fell to the Armenians during the war.

It’s a bleak symbol of a conflict which is estimated to have driven
more than a million Azerbaijanis and Armenians from their homes,
as well as leaving up to 30,000 people dead.

Grigorian insisted that Azerbaijanis should never be allowed to
return to Nagorno-Karabakh, and that the two peoples should never
live alongside each other again.

"Remember the history – when we lived together, there was war,"
he said.

"If we live together again, sooner or later, there will be war again,
so of course it’s better this way."

Rising tensions

A short drive from Khramort, Nagorno-Karabakh’s frontline troops
were running through one of their daily weapons drills in the muddy
trenches.

Many of them are teenage conscripts who are too young to remember
the war.

But 18-year-old Rafik Melkonian insisted that he and his fellow
soldiers were "ready to destroy" the Azerbaijanis.

"Our mission is to defend the borders of our homeland, protect
families, and stop our enemies moving forward," he said.

There are often exchanges of gunfire across the ceasefire line,
and soldiers are occasionally killed.

Tensions have risen in recent months after a series of tough statements
from Ilham Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s president, who has warned that if
peace talks don’t deliver results, he could order a new offensive to
retake Nagorno-Karabakh and areas around it which were also seized
by the Armenians during the war.

Energy-rich Azerbaijan has been using some of its income from oil
and gas sales to fund huge increases in defence expenditure.

"We are spending billions on buying new weapons and hardware, and
strengthening our army’s position," Aliyev said in November.

"We have the full right to liberate our land by military means."

Georgi Petrosian, the foreign minister in the unrecognised
Nagorno-Karabakh government, said he was "concerned but not afraid"
about Azerbaijan’s military build-up.

"We managed to stand up and find the strength in ourselves to declare
our independence and defend our freedom in much more difficult
situations than the one we’re in today," Petrosian said, promising
fierce defence of the self-proclaimed republic.

If fighting did resume, the Nagorno-Karabakh military would again be
backed up by Armenian troops.

Serzh Sarkisian, the president of Armenia, is a former Nagorno-Karabakh
military commander, as is Armenia’s defence minister, Seyran Ohanian,
who recently promised that his forces would get involved "in all hot
spots which might, God forbid, emerge".

The dramatic landscape of Nagorno-Karabakh – its name means
"mountainous black garden" – continues to inspire intense passions
on both sides.

Rehabilitation

But away from the frontline, in the region’s quiet little capital,
Stepanakert, there is a greater feeling of security.

Stepanakert has been rebuilt, with financial support from Armenia and
the huge Armenian diaspora, and now resembles an ordinary, provincial
post-Soviet town.

Its first western-style shopping mall opened recently, enabling
affluent locals to buy imported Italian sportswear, upmarket beauty
products and replica football shirts from Europe’s top clubs.

"This town might be quiet, but that’s better than when we were being
shelled during the war and we had to hide in basements with rats
running around," said one young woman who was visiting the mall.

Petrosian said it was time to "move forward from survival to
development", but admitted that it would take much longer to rebuild
the rest of this isolated and impoverished region.

"There is not a single place which has not suffered, and not a single
family which doesn’t need social and psychological rehabilitation,"
he explained.

Despite the hostile rhetoric, both Armenia and Azerbaijan insist
that they are committed to the peaceful resolution of the conflict,
and negotiations have intensified over the past year-and-a-half.

But even if progress is made, they completely disagree about the
final status of Nagorno-Karabakh, with Azerbaijan maintaining that
the region must not be allowed to secede.

"We will not give our land away to anyone," Ramiz Mehdiyev, the head
of Azerbaijan’s presidential administration, said recently.

The ethnic Armenians who now control the region, however, say they
will never return to Azerbaijani rule.

"Time is irreversible," Petrosian declared. "You can’t turn back
the clock."

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