RA NA Passes Amendments To Law On Rallies, Marches And Demonstration

RA NA PASSES AMENDMENTS TO LAW ON RALLIES, MARCHES AND DEMONSTRATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.03.2008 11:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On March 17, the Armenian parliament adopted
amendments to the law on rallies, marches and demonstrations with
90 votes in favor and 6 against (five members of Heritage opposition
faction and independent MP Victor Dallakyan).

In his remarks, NA speaker Tigran Torosian said that the law might be
not ideal but it aims to prevent repetition of March 1-2 events. "A
human life is dearer than hundreds of rallies," he said, adding
that the law will be translated and submitted for consideration of
international experts.

For his part, ARF Dashnaktsutyun faction member Vahan Hovhannisian
said the law is a situational solution to the problem. "We follow the
path of repressive solutions. We do not admit our mistakes but impose
limitations. Passing amendments, the authorities antagonize the people
instead of preparing them for reforms," he said. "An outside factor
should not be forgotten either. Seeds grow on a fertilized soil but
it doesn’t mean that Soros in the only to blame."

When commenting on the measure, independent MP Victor Dallakyan
underscored that those who remain in power today can be in opposition
tomorrow. "The limitations are repressive. We should bear in mind
that those who backed Levon Ter-Petrosyan voted against the incumbent
authorities, as a matter of fact. Ter-Petrosyan appeared as a generator
of popular discontent," Dallakyan said.

Heritage faction members called to vote down the draft.

In the first reading the MPs initiated an amendment which bars the
organizer of last disorders from holding actions.

The measure was adopted at the second reading, IA Regnum reports.

Armenia Not Surprised At Karabakh Resolution Passage In UN

ARMENIA NOT SURPRISED AT KARABAKH RESOLUTION PASSAGE IN UN

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.03.2008 14:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia shares the position of the world powers
which abstained from vote on Azerbaijan’s resolution on Karabakh,
RA President’s spokesman Victor Soghomonyan told a briefing in Yerevan.

"All these states do know that the resolution undermines the Karabakh
peaceful process," he said.

"Adoption of the resolution by 39 UN member states was not a surprise
for Armenia. The point is how seriously Azerbaijan treats the talks
and the OSCE MG’s disapproval of the resolution, which is non-binding
anyway," Mr Soghomonyan said when responding to a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter’s question.

On March 14, with 39 votes in favor, 7 against and 100 abstentions,
the Assembly adopted the resolution "On the situation on the occupied
territories of Azerbaijan."

Mitigations

MITIGATIONS

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
March 14, 2008

On March 13 President Robert Kocharyan signed a decree regarding the
amendments in the decree of March 1, 2008.

According to the decree subpoint 4 of the point 4 of the decree on
"Announcing a State of Emergency":

4) "The Mass Media must not spread evidently false information
regarding the state and internal political issues, leading to the
destabilization of the situation, or call for participation in illegal
events. Spreading information by means of other informational sources
is also forbidden"

Subpoint 5 of point 4 of the decree is repealed. The decree is in
force from March 14 2008.

Karabakh Will Have A Three-Tier Judicial System

KARABAKH WILL HAVE A THREE-TIER JUDICIAL SYSTEM

KarabakhOpen
14-03-2008 11:23:17

On March 12 the NKR minister of justice Narine Narimanyan presented
a package bill to the National Assembly on judicial reforms for
first reading.

The minister of justice noted that the passage of the bills will
help launch judicial reforms to set up a three-tier judicial system
in Karabakh: District Courts with one chief justice and 9 justices,
the Court of Appeal with one chief justice and three justices, and
the Supreme Court with one chief justice and 6 justices.

"The transitional provisions of the law on the judicial system hold
that the Court of Appeal must start functioning no later than July 1,
2008. The Supreme Court will continue to work, but from July 1, 2009
Constitutional and Cassation chambers will be set up in the Supreme
Court," the minister of justice said.

According to Narine Narimanyan, the offered changes are the first stage
of reforms, the following stages involve adoption of the Judicial Code.

Aztag Interview With Valentino Pace

AZTAG INTERVIEW WITH VALENTINO PACE
by Vahram Emiyan

Aztag Daily
March 5 2008
Lebanon

Valentino Pace is professor of Art History at the University of
Udine and Principal Lecturer in Art History at the Trinity College
Rome Campus, where he has taught since 1976. He is a distinguished
scholar of late antique, early Christian, Byzantine, and medieval art,
he is the author of several books and more than 130 articles.

Valentino Pace has been an editor of several scholarly journals,
including University of Siena’s Iconographica, and Belgrade
University’s Zograf. He is a member of the Norwegian Academy of
Sciences and Letters. Before becoming a professor in the Italian
university system, he worked for three years at American research
universities, as Visiting Associate Professor at the John Hopkins
University (1985-1987) and Visiting Senior Fellow at Princeton
University (1987-88).

During a visit to "Aztag" newspaper Valentino Pace granted me the
following Interview.

Vahram Emiyan: When did you become interested in Armenian art and why?

Valentino Pace: In 1980, during my first visit to Jerusalem, I was
introduced to the Armenian Patriarchate and there I had this grate
luck of looking at the manuscripts, and I fell in love with Armenian
art and Armenian miniatures. And that was the very beginning.

V. Emiyan: What importance do symbols represent in Icons?

V. Pace: Symbols have a great importance in Christian art in
general. The importance is that they try to touch the feelings and
devotion of the faithful in a visual way. And they have been widely
used in both Western and Byzantine art.

V. Emiyan: Are those symbols similar in different cultures?

V. Pace: There are certain symbols which have been used more in
certain areas and less in others and vice versa. I wouldn’t say
that the whole branch of symbolism is common to every facet of the
Christian world. Christian symbols in early Christian art in Italy
may be not understandable here and vice versa.

V. Emiyan: What are the basic qualities of Iconography?

V. Pace: Iconography is rather a fixed grammar which must help you
trough the images to make clear the ideas of the patron. So if the
patron is a religious figure, a bishop or a priest, he knows the
system of signs which would make his faithful confident with its
beliefs. If there is a good system of communication, if there is a
clear net of images Iconography can work very well. In some cases
Iconography could be difficult, if the patrons perhaps did not make
their message clear. Normally Christian Iconography works very well,
since it is based on an established net of images which can be
understood by every one.

V. Emiyan: What about the basic qualities of the artist?

V. Pace: During the Middle Ages the artist relied on his experience,
his visual experience, on tradition, which he learned from elders,
and in this way he transmits his ideas further and it depends on the
quality of the artist. Great artists, like Toros Roslin for example,
make the message even more beautiful. Iconography does not need
to reach for itself a very high quality, because if you represent
a cross it’s a cross, you understand it whether its just two lines
or something flourished around. An artist makes it also possible to
give an esthetic visual impact. And there are great artists and bad
painters or sculptors.

V. Emiyan: Is Iconography an elitist art?

V. Pace: No I wouldn’t say so. If Iconography turns into an elitist
art it looses its message. It becomes a kind of secret society. It
can be as well like that. But since Iconography is basically a way of
transmitting a meaning…if you and me were to join a secret society
to prepare something which may not be pleasant for others, we will
use cryptic Iconography and then it goes like that. But basically
Iconography is a system of images which makes the idea clear for
every one.

V. Emiyan: But in a secular world people don’t understand the Bible
very well, and when an Icon represents two images, one from the
Old Testament and the other from the New Testament and fuses them
together…

V. Pace: This is a crucial question that you are dealing with, and
as a professor I know that the situation is getting worse and worse.

Thirty years ago I would have never expected questions from students
that I get today. Since the students and society are becoming more
and more lay, and they don’t read any Christian text, I wouldn’t be
surprised that sometime in the near future a student will ask me "who
is this nice lady who is surprised to meet a person who has wings"?

Without realizing it’s simply the Annunciation. I would say chances
of getting this kind of questions are getting greater. It’s a tragedy
in away, because whether you are Catholic or not you should know
History at least. But it goes like that. It’s a disaster. An Italian
student, three months ago, after my first or second class came to
me and asked "professor could you be more clear about some issues
you are saying"? When I said sure, he asked: "you have been speaking
about an Old and New Testament. What do they mean"? I think even in
soviet Russia in the worst times, and perhaps just for that reason,
people knew what are the Old and New Testaments. And this was in
Italy three months ago! That’s desperate. I’m sure if I go to China
I wouldn’t understand anything of the symbolism of the images in
China, but in that case I’m ignorant. If I belonged to that society I
think I should at least have an idea. You know there has been a lot
of discussion about the Christian roots of Europe. I’m a quite lay
scholar, but I must say that we can not deny the Christian roots of
Europe. That is a part of our society and it must be stressed in a way.

BAKU: Nagorno-Karabakh Issue Not Included In Agenda Of Russian Parli

NAGORNO-KARABAKH ISSUE NOT INCLUDED IN AGENDA OF RUSSIAN PARLIAMENT’S COMMITTEE FOR CIS – HEAD OF COMMITTEE ADMINISTRATION

Trend News Agency
March 12 2008
Azerbaijan

Russia, Moscow, 12 March /Trend News corr R. Agayev/ The issue
of Nagorno-Karabakh has not been included in agenda of tomorrow’s
meeting of the Russian Parliament’s Committee for CIS, the head of
the Committee’s administration Maria Lazutova told Trend News. She
confirmed the reports that the Committee for CIS will hold a meeting on
13 March to discuss the prospects for settling the conflicts on-going
in the post-Soviet countries.

Previously, it had been reported that the meeting would discuss all
the frozen conflicts in CIS.

"The meeting will discuss only three unrecognized republics – Abkhazia,
South Ossetia and Trans-Dniester Region. The issue on Nagorno-Karabakh
has not been included in the agenda of tomorrow’s meeting," she said.

According to Lazutova, today approximately at 6.00pm, the Committee
will divulge an official press release on the upcoming discussion on
settlement of conflicts in the post-Soviet area.

Ombudsman Believes That Implementation Of A State Of Emergency In Ye

OMBUDSMAN BELIEVES THAT IMPLEMENTATION OF A STATE OF EMERGENCY IN YEREVAN WAS JUSTIFIED

Mediamax
March 12, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Armenian Human Rights Defender Armen Harutiunian
stated today that the implementation of a state of emergency in Yerevan
was justified, since the situation present required that very solution.

Mediamax reports that, speaking at a briefing today, the Ombudsman
welcomed the decision of the President on mitigating the state
of emergency order and spoke for lifting the limitations for the
activities of media.

Armen Harutiunian refused to comment on the criticism against him,
voiced by the current President. "The people assesses the Ombudsman’s
activities", he stated, urging the journalists to refrain from
politicizing his activity.

Unholy Row In Jordan Over Missionaries

UNHOLY ROW IN JORDAN OVER MISSIONARIES

Agence France Presse
March 11 2008

AMMAN (AFP) – Jordanian Christians are up in arms over the activities
of foreign missionaries in the Muslim conservative kingdom which is
rich in biblical sites, including the spot where Jesus was baptised.

The row erupted after the government announced last month that it
had deported an unspecified number of expatriates for carrying out
Christian missionary activities under the guise of charity work.

The move was welcomed by several Christian figures, with many
voicing concern that foreign missionaries were seeking to upset the
traditionally stable ties between Muslims and Christians in Jordan.

"Missionary groups have hidden agendas and are close to Christian
Zionists," asserted former MP Odeh Kawwas, a Greek Orthodox.

Fellow Christian Fahd Kheitan, an outspoken columnist at Al-Arab
Al-Yawm newspaper, said the majority of Christians are "very suspicious
and worried".

"The (missionaries) target the strong beliefs of traditional churches
in Jordan and try to create religious links with the Zionist movement,
which is extremely dangerous," said Kheitan.

Some Christian supporters of Israel, notably a segment in the United
States, believe the return of Jews to the Holy Land and the 1948
creation of the Jewish state are in line with biblical prophecy.

In February, acting Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh told parliament that
"some foreign groups have come to Jordan under the cover of doing
charity, but they broke the law and did missionary activities".

He did not give figures.

Converting from Islam to Christianity is strictly prohibited in Jordan
and foreign missionary groups are banned from seeking converts,
although they can run schools, charitable organisations, hospitals
and orphanages.

"For years we have been urging the government to close such Christian
shops that have nothing to do with Christianity and tolerance," said
Kawwas, referring to missionaries who convert Muslims in violation
of the law.

"It is an old problem. They create sensitivities and provoke
discord among Jordanian Christians, not to mention their threat to
Muslim-Christian coexistence," the former lawmaker said.

"These groups don’t belong to any church, but they try to hunt
followers of other churches and trick some of our Muslim brothers to
convert them," he added.

Christians represent around four percent of Jordan’s population
of nearly six million, including Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholic,
Armenian and Latin rites.

They are well integrated in the kingdom, where one Christian holds a
ministerial post while eight percent control seats in the 110-member
lower house of parliament.

The tiny desert kingdom is home to the windswept peak of Mount Nebo
overlooking the Dead Sea and the hills of Jerusalem, where according
to biblical tradition God showed Moses the Promised Land.

It is also where Jordanians say Jesus Christ was baptised by his
cousin St John and where the latter preached and was beheaded by
Herod the Great, the king of biblical Judea.

After the 1994 Jordanian-Israeli peace treaty, archaeologists
discovered ancient churches and baptismal pools on the east bank of
the Jordan River, leading them to conclude they had found the place
where Jesus was baptised.

The kingdom is also home to several tombs of the Prophet Mohammed’s
companions and Mount Nebo is a destination for Christian, Muslim and
Jewish pilgrims alike who revere Moses.

Columnist Kheitan asserts that Washington has put pressure on its
allies in Amman to allow missionaries into the country, where he
says these groups have used their relations with some officials to
"build a base".

"But the kingdom has realised now that the situation threatens the
internal front," Kheitan said.

The authorities have not provided figures about the number of
missionaries operating in Jordan, but according to a 2006 report by the
US Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour there are 42 groups.

The government’s decision to deport foreign missionaries came as
Jordan’s Council of Churches warned last month about what it called
40 sects in the kingdom that "threaten national security and create
religious discord at the heart of the Christian community and between
Muslims and Christians."

In January, the first spark of controversy was lit by a Christian
news agency, Compass Direct News, in a report accusing Jordan of
cracking down on expatriate Christians by deporting them or denying
them residency permit.

Parliament said the report was aimed at "damaging Muslim-Christian
relations in Jordan". It also insisted that Jordan’s Christians "are
an integral part of society, living in peace and harmony with their
Muslim brothers".

The church also voiced its concern.

Latin Patriarch Michel Sabbah of Jerusalem and Jordan said recently
that some foreign missionaries "have undeclared political positions
and we do not want the image of Christianity to be distorted."

In 2005 the Washington Post quoted Nabeeh Abbassi, president of the
Jordan Baptist Convention, as saying:, "We’re seeing more and more
Muslim conversions, not less than 500 a year" in Jordan over the
past decade.

He told the newspaper that about 10,000 Evangelicals worship at 50
churches in Jordan.

Supported From Outside

SUPPORTED FROM OUTSIDE

Hayots Ashkhar
Published on March 11, 2008

"In my view no one has any doubt that the wave of the regular
demonstrations was supported by the foreign powers.

Announcements, appeals "not to interfere in the peaceful
demonstrations", rallies in Los Angeles in Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s
support, the activists of which were calling their relatives and
convincing them to vote for Levon Ter-Petrosyan. Actually it is a lever
of pressure, due to which the foreign powers are trying to influence
the internal political developments in Armenia." Razmik Zohrabyan says.

Glendale-Burbank-La Crescenta communities celebrate Artsakh Lib.

PRESS RELEASE
ArtsakhisArmenia
Artsakh 20th Anniversary Coordinating Committee
407 E. Colorado St.
Glendale,Ca 91205
CONTACT: Angela Savoian
(818)243-3409
[email protected]
ww w.artsakhisarmenia.com

Under the auspices of the ARF Central Committee, the ARF Glendale
Aharonian, ARF Burbank Aghbalian, and ARF LaCrescenta Zavarian
Gomidehs have come together to form a coordinating committee for the
Artsakh?s Liberation Movement?s 20th Anniversary Commemorative events.

Adopting the slogan Artsakh IS Armenia in order to promote our utmost
solidarity with the people of NKR and their right to self
determination and struggle as a stepping-stone to the concept of a
Free, Independent, and United Armenia, an invitation is going out for
all area schools, and organizations to join the committee for the
activities which will include essay and art contests for students,
Shushi movie night, a photo/art exhibit, a literary evening, a
conference and seminar. The grand celebration is scheduled at the
Wilshire Ebell Theater on Friday May 2, 2008. For more information
check the website or email
[email protected].

The coordinating committee, in turn, has formed subcommittees to help
organize a series of events and to commemorate our national victory.

Literary Evening Sunday, April 6 at 7:00 p.m.
Glendale Library
222 E. Harvard St.
Glendale, 91205

Photo/Art exhibit & Sale the weekend of April 18-19
Opening Reception: April 18, 2008 7PM
Exhibit: Friday: April 18, 2008 7:00-10:00 pm
Saturday April 19, 2008 10:00 am to 8:00 pm
Western Prelacy
6252 Honolulu Ave.
La Crescenta, 91214

Grand Celebration Friday , May 2nd at the 8 pm at
Wilshire Ebell Theater
4401 W. 8th St.
Los Angeles, 90005

Shushi Film Fest, dedicated to the Liberation of Shushi
Friday, May 9, 2008 7-10 p.m.
Glendale Library
222 E. Harvard St.
Glendale, 91205

More details to follow about the Essay/Art contest for Students of
Armenian Heritage and the conference.

www.artsakhisarmenia.com