Chairman Berman Sets Committee Vote On Armenian Genocide Resolution

CHAIRMAN BERMAN SETS COMMITTEE VOTE ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION FOR MARCH 4

Yerkir
05.02.2010 12:09

Yerevan (Yerkir) – House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman, Howard
Berman (D-CA), a leading Congressional supporter of human rights
and a longstanding friend of the Armenian American community, has
scheduled a vote of his panel on the Armenian Genocide Resolution,
H.Res.252, for Thursday, March 4th, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).

"We want to thank Chairman Berman for his vision and strength
in taking this bold step to send the clear message to Turkey that
the United States Congress will not be complicit in their immoral
efforts to deny truth and justice for the Armenian Genocide," said
Ken Hachikian, Chairman of the ANCA, following his meeting yesterday
in Washington, DC with the senior California legislator. "We look
forward to working with the Chairman and all our friends on the
Committee from both parties to facilitate passage of this critical
piece of human rights legislation by both this panel and the full
House of Representatives. Our grassroots activists are mobilized to
help achieve the success of this effort."

The House Foreign Affairs Committee adopted legislation similar to
H.Res.252, on a bipartisan basis, in 2000, 2005, and 2007. These past
measures, despite their broad-based support, did not reach the House
floor for an up or down vote, largely due to strident opposition from
the Clinton and Bush administrations fearful of Ankara’s threats
of retaliation.

Turkey’s FM Adviser To Discuss In Bern Armenian Court’s Decision

TURKEY’S FM ADVISER TO DISCUSS IN BERN ARMENIAN COURT’S DECISION

Aysor
Feb 4 2010
Armenia

Armenian Constitutional Court’s decision on Armenia-Turkey protocols
still causes concerns for Turkey. On this occasion, Turkey’s Foreign
Ministry Adviser Feridun Sinirlioglu is paying today a visit to
Switzerland to voice Turkey’s position over Court’s decision.

On January 12, Armenia’s Constitutional Court began hearings on the
Armenian-Turkish protocols, which were signed in Zurich on October 10
2009 by Edward Nalbandian of Armenia and Ahmet Davutoglu of Turkey,
to rule whether they conform to the Armenian Constitution, and said
the protocols do conform. On January 18, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry
released a statement that Court’s decision contains preconditions
which are contrary to protocols’ fundamental goals.

Feridun Sinirlioglu is reported to meet in Bern with his counterpart,
Swiss State Secretary Michael Ambuhl. The agenda for the meeting is
to declare the following saying: "If Armenia doesn’t go with its
obligations, process of normalisation relations may be brought to
a stop."

A spokesperson for Swiss Foreign Ministry, Eric Royman, confirmed
that Feridun Sinirlioglu and Michael Ambuhl are to meet on February
5 in Bern.

The Court’s decision was welcomed by U.S. State Department. "The court
decision permits the protocols, as they were negotiated and signed,
to move towards parliamentary ratification. Court’s decision does not
appear to limit or qualify protocols in any way," said U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State Philip Gordon in his interview.

At the current stage of negotiations between Armenia and Turkey,
Armenia-Turkey protocols are to be ratified by Turkish and Armenian
Parliaments.

Everyone Resigned

EVERYONE RESIGNED

A1Plus.am
04/02/10

Twelve years ago this day, an exclusive political event took place
in Armenia.

The ruling party, including representatives of the Armenian National
Movement and highest ranking officials, resigned from office one
after another.

As a result of political discrepancies, in a matter of days, Armenia
was left without a government with the resignations of not only
supporters of the government, that is, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, but the
NA Chairman and two vice-chairman.

This was an exceptional phenomenon, as well as a uniquely ideological
and principled political action in the history of our country.

Switching teams has turned into a lifestyle in Armenia’s political
field.

"A1+" asked the head of the ruling parliamentary faction why there
is no culture of resigning as a team in Armenia.

"I don’t think the resignations of the time were a matter of political
culture, but a matter of principle. The entire nation had different
tendencies, including the political forces and the Armenian National
Movement. The ANM could not have continued with its motives for power
in such a conflict," said Sahakyan.

But several hundreds of thousands of people and the government have
differing tendency today as well. In response to that, Sahakyan said:
"In other words, the people finds that we have to give Karabakh back,
while we say that we should not give Karabakh back. The position
of the majority of today’s authorities and political forces is that
Karabakh can never be a part of Azerbaijan. Everyone believes that we
must have roads to Turkey. The concerns are a different story. So,
there is an essential difference between political principles. Back
then, the orientation was that Karabakh could have stayed within
Azerbaijan with a special status," said Sahakyan.

If the government didn’t want to resign, nobody would force it to do
that, like what happened in 2008 when the rallies with the demands
of hundreds of thousands of people did not lead to a resignation. In
response to that, Galust Sahakyan said: "An entire wing of government
was against the policies led by Levon Ter-Petrosyan."

We asked Sahakyan if he believed that the entire team would resign in
the case of Serzh Sargsyan’s possible resignation. "Of course, that is
a norm applied around the world, but it only happened once in Armenia."

Head of the ARF faction Vahan Hovhannisyan said: "I would tie the
culture of teamwork with the ideological grounds. If the team was
created with an ideology, if it is the ruling elite, it is obvious that
the team will work together and resign together with the same goals,
methodology and the same ideology. However, if the team is created
for financial interests or interests of one group, it is impossible
to expect any unity."

Vahan Hovhannisyan recalled that the resignations of 1998 are the
only resignations in the history of the Republic of Armenia. "The
ARF left the coalition and we all left government."

Are those who claim that only the Armenian National Movement and the
ARF are ideological in Armenia? To this, Vahan Hovhannisyan said that
those people are not wrong.

Vahan Teryan’s 125th Jubilee Will Be Marked In Armenia And Djavakhq

VAHAN TERYAN’S 125TH JUBILEE WILL BE MARKED IN ARMENIA AND DJAVAKHQ

Panorama.am
15:16 03/02/2010

125th jubilee of famous Armenian writer Vahan Teryan will be marked
both in Armenia and Djavakhq, Arushan Hakobian, the director of
"Vahan Teryan" cultural center told at news conference. He said a
jubilee committee chaired by Armenian PM Tigran Sargsyan is formed
and that the event agenda has already been drafted. It was said that
that on 9 February the first event will get underway, as the writer’s
birthday will be marked. Vahan Teryan’s activities, political views
and other information will be included in the encyclopedias. During
the whole year events devoted to the renowned writer will be held in
Armenia and Djavakhq.

AAA: Coalition of Armenian, Jewish Leaders Launch Grassroots Petitio

PRESS RELEASE
February 2, 2010
Contact: Press Department
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434

COALITION OF ARMENIAN, JEWISH COMMUNITY LEADERS LAUNCH GRASSROOTS PETITION
FOR U.S. REAFFIRMATION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Armenian Assembly Urges Swift Passage of Armenian Genocide Resolution

Boston, MA – Today, leaders from Boston’s vibrant Armenian and Jewish
communities launched an online grassroots petition urging all people
of conscience to sign a letter to President Obama and Congress that
calls for swift passage of H. Res. 252, the Armenian Genocide
resolution currently pending in Congress, reported the Armenian
Assembly of America (Assembly).

"The Assembly commends the work of this important human rights
coalition and calls on all American citizens to affirm the U.S. record
on the Armenian Genocide by signing the petition to your elected
Representatives," stated Assembly Grassroots Director Taniel
Koushakjian. The Armenian American Action Committee of Massachusetts
(ARAMAC-MA), Armenian National Committee of Massachusetts, the
Massachusetts Jewish community and Assembly anti-genocide coalition
partner Investor’s Against Genocide were instrumental in launching the
petition and resource page.

The Boston based coalition of Armenian and Jewish communities have
been engaged in a robust civil society dialogue, which was the outcome
of a 2007 rift where the local Massachusetts branch of the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) broke with national ADL leader Abraham
Foxman in acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. ADL later altered their
position, and just last month stated, "We continue to believe that
there was a genocide..," yet continue to oppose legislation in
Congress that would affirm the incontestable truth.

Herman Purutyan, ARAMAC-MA State Chair and coalition member stated,
"This is an exciting collaboration of two communities, who have
experienced the ultimate crime against humanity, to stop future
genocides wherever they may occur. As two communities, Jewish and
Armenian, we ask our fellow citizens to let the President and Congress
know that the recognition of the Armenian Genocide is critically
important, not only because it is morally the right thing to do, but
also it is necessary to prevent such crimes from happening again."

ARAMAC-MA activists and Boston area Jewish community leaders have been
pressing American Jewish groups, such as the ADL, to cease assisting
the government of Turkey in its denial of the Armenian Genocide. In a
January 10, 2010, letter to the Jewish Times of South Jersey, three
prominent Rabbis from Massachusetts wrote that "precisely because of
our experience, Jews and Jewish groups need to be fighting genocide
denial, not engaging in it as a way of validating the tragedies of our
own history."

Mirrored after H. Res. 106, the Armenian Genocide resolution which
passed the House Committee on Foreign Affairs in 2007, H. Res. 252
boasts 137 cosponsors and is currently pending in the aforementioned
committee. "What the world witnessed at the turn of the 20th century
is being repeated again at the dawn of the 21st century today in
Darfur. By signing the online petition, one can play an important role
in helping to end the vicious cycle of genocide," stated Assembly
Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public
understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a
501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

###

NR# 2010-007

80th Birth Anniversary Of Composer Edgar Hovhannisyan To Be Celebrat

80TH BIRTH ANNIVERSARY OF COMPOSER EDGAR HOVHANNISYAN TO BE CELEBRATED IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.02.2010 16:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On February 5, Aram Khachaturian concert hall will
host a concert in celebration of composer Edgar Hovhannisyan’s 80th
birth anniversary.

Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra, under the guidance of Vardan Hokobyan
will perform a concert program featuring compositions of Hovhannisyan,
Spendiarian and Prokofiev.

Edgar Hovhannisyan, (January 14, 1930 – December 28, 1998) was
an Armenian composer, Professor of Composition at Yerevan State
Conservatory, People’s Artist of the USSR (1986).

He graduated from Yerevan State Conservatory in 1953, then pursued
post-graduate work at the Moscow Conservatory, under famed Armenian
composer Aram Khachaturian. He was the director of the State Opera
and Ballet Theater in Yerevan in 1962-1968.

Hovhannisyan is widely considered among the most influential Armenian
composers of the 20th century. He is the author of ballets, including
"Joan of Arc", "Sulamif", and "Marmar". He also experimented with
various musical styles, including neo-classical, folk-based styles,
and even jazz ("Concert Variations for Saxophone and Jazz Orchestra"),
opera ("The Travel to Erzrum"), various vocal-orchestral works (e.g.

the oratorio "Grikor Naregatsi", the hymn of Yerevan), and numerous
film scores.

Group That Feeds Needy At Odds With Fire Chief

GROUP THAT FEEDS NEEDY AT ODDS WITH FIRE CHIEF
By Shawn Regan; [email protected]

The Eagle Tribune
February 02, 2010 12:13 am

HAVERHILL – The director of a group that feeds and helps the city’s
needy says fire Chief Richard Borden is blocking her plans for
expansion. But the chief said he is merely following the building
code and has no discretion over the matter.

Marlene Yeo, director and founder of Somebody Cares New England,
operates a food pantry, cafeteria and Community Christian Fellowship
church at the edge of the Acre neighborhood, just north of downtown.

Since opening in 2008 in the Pentucket Building at the corner of
Winter and White streets, police said they are seeing fewer crimes
in the neighborhood.

With the economy in the tank and joblessness on the rise, Yeo’s
organization, which caters to the homeless and unemployed and their
children, is bursting at the seams.

The cafeteria at 125 Winter St. is small and city rules don’t allow
more than 50 people inside at once. The church, which has the same
occupancy limit, is packed for two Saturday services.

"The space is extra tight," Yeo said of the church at 129 Winter St.

"We call it the squishy church. People feel claustrophobic. And we
have the same problem in the cafe. It’s so small it’s hard for people
in wheelchairs and parents with children in strollers to get around.

We set up a TV in the cafe during church services so people can watch
there. And we can feed 20 to 30 people in the church when the cafe
is filled, but it’s not ideal."

Yeo is looking to move to a larger space, but the organization has
limited finances and she doesn’t want to stray too far from the Acre.

Those served by the organization don’t have transportation, she said.

Yeo thought she found a place, another empty, but larger, storefront
in the Pentucket Building at 8 White St. But the fire chief is standing
in the way, she said.

"The city code says if we have more than 50 people in the space,
it’s an assembly and the owner has to put in sprinklers that would
cost $150,000," Yeo said. "The owner can’t do it."

Yeo said she told the fire chief she would stay within the 50-person
occupancy rule for 8 White St. But Borden doesn’t believe her,
she said.

"We can’t go over 50 people in the church or the cafe because that’s
all we can fit," Yeo said. "But there’s a lot more room at 8 White St.,
and he thinks we’ll go over."

Borden said city inspectors determine occupancy limits based on the
size of the space and how it is going to be used. The chief’s role is
to enforce the inspector’s decision, and he said he has no discretion.

"I’d love to see them get into a legal building and start doing their
good," Borden said of Somebody Cares New England.

Summarizing the issues, Borden said his preliminary opinion is that
sprinklers would have to be installed in the entire Pentucket Building
before Yeo would be given an occupancy permit for 8 White St. He said
that opinion is preliminary because Yeo has not applied for a permit.

Yeo took her plight to the City Council last week, asking councilors
for help and the public for ideas about finding a new, larger home. At
the meeting, she told councilors that Borden "seems to think I’m
challenging his authority" when she tries to talk to him.

About 25 of the organization’s volunteer workers packed the council
meeting with Yeo. Councilors raved about Yeo’s impact on the city’s
needy and the Acre, but said there is little they can do to help her.

When contacted by a reporter last week, Mayor James Fiorentini said
he was unaware of Yeo’s problems.

"She does a lot of great work in the city and I’d like to see her be
able to stay," the mayor said of Yeo and her organization. "I have
no problem with where she wants to move to. But the fire chief has
a lot of independent authority."

Ideally, Yeo said she wants to buy the spacious Armenian church, St.

Gregory the Illuminator, next to City Hall. But she said she cannot
afford the $800,000 asking price. The Armenian church congregation is
building a new home on Route 125 and is merging with another Armenian
church in Lawrence.

"We could have our church and our food distribution operation and all
our offices in the Armenian church and have plenty of room," Yeo said.

"Then I’d like to open a food and thrift store business and a
restaurant on Winter Street. All I need is eight people to donate
$100,000 each."

Yeo’s organization has about $25,000 in the bank, the result of 25,
$1,000 donations, she said.

An ordained minister who has lived in Haverhill since 2003, Yeo
has been feeding Haverhill’s needy since 1999, when she would truck
food from Brentwood, N.H., to the city’s drop-in shelter. In 2004,
she began running her operation out of Trinity Episcopal Church,
before outgrowing that space.

Somebody Cares New England

Years in the city: 10 (last two in Olympia Square)

Meals served in 2009: 10,000

Bags of groceries given away in 2009: 8,000

Religious program: Two Saturday Christian services

Cafeteria: Open for breakfast and lunch on Saturday and holidays

Food pantry: Open at least once per month and in emergencies

Where it gets its food: Merrimack Valley Food Bank, Paisley and
Ingaldsby farms, and local bakeries such as Fantini and Emily’s.

‘Patriarch’ And ‘Co-Patriarch’ Chaos Among Turkey’s Armenians

‘PATRIARCH’ AND ‘CO-PATRIARCH’ CHAOS AMONG TURKEY’S ARMENIANS

armradio.am
01.02.2010 18:47

Elections for the Armenian patriarch in Turkey have been cast into
confusion with two separate applications filed to hold the polls.

While the patriarchate’s clerical board intends to elect a
‘co-patriarch,’ an ‘Entrepreneur Committee’ of community foundation
directors is insisting on electing a completely new patriarch, the
Hurriyet Daily News reports.

Upcoming elections to select a new patriarch for Turkey’s Armenians
have become increasingly enveloped in confusion as two separate
community applications to hold the polls were recently filed with
the Istanbul Governor’s Office.

The patriarchate’s clerical board recently decided to elect a
co-patriarch for the Armenian community due to the deteriorating heath
condition of current Patriarch Mesrop II. The elected co-patriarch
would then become the patriarch following Mesrop II’s death.

At the same time, the Entrepreneur Committee, a body consisting of the
directors of the community’s foundations, has initiated proceedings
to elect a completely new patriarch. This means that two separate
applications to elect the community’s religious leader have now been
filed with the Istanbul Governor.

After learning of the committee’s application, the clerical board
released a statement condemning the filing of election papers, as the
double application has cast a shadow over the co-patriarch elections
tentatively scheduled to be held May 12.

Intra-communal debate on the matter has led to calls for the election
of a co-patriarch. According to the canon law of the Armenian Apostolic
Church, an elected patriarch holds his title until death, meaning
that it is impossible to elect a new patriarch until the passing of
the incumbent one.

Nalbandian-Clinton Meeting In London

NALBANDIAN-CLINTON MEETING IN LONDON

armradio.am
29.01.2010 11:12

On the sidelines of the London Conference on Afghanistan the Foreign
Minister of Armenia, Edward Nalbandian, had a meeting with US Secretary
of State Hilary Clinton.

The heads of foreign agencies of Armenia and the United States
appreciated the friendly cooperation and high-level contacts
between the two countries and expressed willingness to continue
taking practical steps to further reinforce and deepen the mutually
beneficial cooperation.

The interlocutors touched upon the efforts of establishing
Armenian-Turkish relations. Hilary Clinton reiterated the US support
for the process of normalization of relations between Armenia and
Turkey and the soon ratification and implementation of the protocols.

Minister Nalbandian noted that the decision of the Armenian
Constitutional Court on the constitutionality of the protocols
was another evidence of Armenia’s willingness to carry out its
commitments. He added that Armenia expects the same from Turkey.

The interlocutors discussed the latest developments in the process of
negotiations on the Karabakh conflict settlement. Edward Nalbandian
attached importance to US role in the process as a Minsk Group co-chair
country and presented the results of the Sochi meeting of Presidents.

Minister Nalbandian and Secretary Clinton exchanged views on issues
of reciprocal interest.

Vardanyan Family Foundation donates 38 million drams to HAAF

PRESS RELEASE
Hayastan All-Armenian Fund
Governmental Buiding 3, Yerevan, RA
Contact: Hasmik Grigoryan
Tel: +(3741) 56 01 06 ext. 105
Fax: +(3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

29 January, 2010

Vardanyan Family Foundation donates 38 million drams to Hayastan
All-Armenian Fund
Fundraising efforts continue

Yerevan, January 29, 2010 – Following its sponsorship of a major
school-building project in Artsakh in 2009, the Vardanyan Family
Foundation contributed 38 million drams (more than U.S. $100,000) to
the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund on January 27.

The Vardanyan Family Foundation’s support in 2009 enabled the Hayastan
All-Armenian Fund to build a vitally needed school in Gishi, a village
in Artsakh’s Martuni Region.

"With its latest grant, in the generous amount of 38 million drams,
the highly regarded Vardanyan Family Foundation has once again
demonstrated that our supporters need not wait for specific
fundraising campaigns to make a donation, that genuine altruism can be
expressed at any time of the year," said Ara Vardanyan, executive
director of the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund.

"The Vardanyan Family Foundation gift not only helps us carry out
critically needed development projects, but also provides us with
invaluable moral support," Vardanyan continued. "Today, as we salute
the foundation for its steadfast assistance and particularly its
latest contribution, we encourage other Armenian industrialists to
sponsor our far-reaching initiatives across Armenia and Artsakh."

Hayastan All Armenian Fund

http://www.himnadram.org/