Uzbekistan: Nukus Contemporary Art Museum Survives Amid Hardship

UZBEKISTAN: NUKUS CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM SURVIVES AMID HARDSHIP

Eurasia Insight
ticles/eav091409c.shtml
9/14/09

Lost in the rough of present-day economic hardship and environmental
degradation, Uzbekistan’s state art museum in Nukus is a little-known
treasure that houses a trove of the Soviet era’s unacknowledged
cultural heritage. The museum, which contains perhaps the best
collection of Russian avant-garde art outside of Moscow, recently
celebrated 25 years since the death of its remarkable founder.

Through the 1960s and 1970s, Igor Savitsky traveled across the Soviet
Union, seeking out the art of blacklisted, imprisoned and forgotten
artists who created works in officially discouraged styles. He ended up
amassing more than 90,000 pieces that, taken collectively, now stand
as a monument to the irrepressible nature of human creativity. Soviet
Communism attempted to reengineer the mind: Savitsky’s collection
proved that the Soviet experiment could not succeed.

"He had no rivals. No one else was going around to the families of
the artists trying to acquire these works — many were given to
him — because there was no official interest," says John Bowlt,
Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of
Southern California.

Igor Vitalievitch Savitsky was born to an intellectual family in
Kyiv, Ukraine, in 1915. After the family moved to Moscow in the
1920s, Savitsky studied with several artists while apprenticing as
an electrical fitter at the Hammer and Sickle factory. Because of
health concerns, he was not drafted into service in World War II,
and instead he entered the Surikov Art Institute in 1941.

In 1942, the Surikov Institute evacuated to Samarkand, in the Uzbek
Soviet Socialist Republic. Despite the hardships of wartime, Savitsky
immediately took to life there. He discovered a community of artists
already working in Samarkand, many of whom reveled in their distance
from the official Soviet art establishment in Moscow.

In 1950, Savitsky accepted an invitation to serve as the official
artist on an archeological expedition deep in the desert of
Karakalpakstan, the autonomous republic in the Uzbek Republic’s far
northwest of which Nukus is the capital.

Savitsky traveled across Karakalpakstan for the next seven years,
gathering ethnographic objects for delivery to museums in Moscow
and Leningrad. Later on, this experience would prove useful, as,
amid his efforts to gather avant-garde works, he collected unique
handicrafts of the nomadic Karakalpaks, aiming to preserve a record
of their dying culture.

In the late 1950s, following the completion of the archeological
expedition, Savitsky settled in Nukus, where he taught young artists
about the visual arts and painting. To offer examples, he started to
pull together pieces by Central Asian artists. Soon he was traveling
across the vast breadth of the Soviet Union on the hunt for artists’
works.

He quickly widened his search to include pieces by disgraced and
blacklisted artists, many of whom had perished. He filled train
compartments with pieces of art that held no interest to the official
art establishment.

Because Karakalpakstan was a center for the Soviet military’s
research and testing of biological weapons, it was a closed area,
meaning non-residents could not visit. Karakalpakstan’s isolation
and desert environment thus worked to Savitsky’s advantage, as it
kept watchful eyes away.

"By being on the periphery, he was able to escape possible punishment
or even imprisonment for his unusual behavior, and it was to his
advantage to be away from the axis of power in Moscow," says Bowlt.

Local officials adopted a hands-off attitude toward him. By 1966,
Savitsky had received permission from local officials to open the
Nukus Fine Arts Museum on the second floor of an Academy of Science
building. He covered the walls there with paintings and drawings and
filled the corners with sculpture.

Many of these works are by lesser-known artists working outside the
cultural circles of Moscow and Leningrad who would have been long
forgotten had Savitsky not preserved their works. "Many names are
unfamiliar to this day, and we should be grateful to Savitsky for
putting together these unusual canvases by these unusual artists,"
notes Bowlt. "It’s interesting to see how Cubism or Constructivism
was interpreted in the far-flung regions of the Soviet empire. Local,
indigenous artists often synthesized Western trends with their local,
often folkloristic motifs."

Savitsky was intermittently ordered to stop collecting. Usually, he
pretended to obey, but he continued using backdoor methods. Slowly,
he earned notoriety among the small group of Soviet art officials and
connoisseurs in Moscow, eventually finding an important benefactor
in the Soviet Minister of Culture.

Savitsky’s frantic collecting created a desperate need for more space,
and he eventually won approval for a new museum building. Construction
began in 1971, continued in fits and starts through the decade, but
stalled by the late 1970s. For more than 20 years, the half-built
structure collected dust.

Through it all, he lived as an ascetic, eating little and sleeping
only a few hours a night. Anonymous letters denounced him, and vast
collecting debts mounted. His health deteriorated. Thin, frail,
spurning medication, Savitsky died in Moscow on July 27, 1984.

Before Savitsky died, he entrusted the museum directorship to
29-year-old Marinika Babanazarova. This year also marks her 25th year
as the steward of the Savitsky of the museum.

After Uzbekistan declared independence in 1991 and Karakalpakstan
lost its status as a "closed" region, a stream of diplomats and other
foreign art lovers traveled to Nukus. From this group of mostly Western
enthusiasts sprang Uzbekistan’s first-ever museum support group, the
"Friends of Nukus Museum."

These days, Nukus has little that recommends itself. The nearby
Aral Sea continues to shrink, spreading heath risks and economic
misery. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. The Savitsky
Museum is one of the few bright spots in an otherwise bleak local
landscape.

The friends’ group pushed for the completion of the new museum, which
opened in 2003 and bears its founders name: the I.V. Savitsky State
Art Museum of the Republic of Karakalpakstan.

>From the government the museum receives only money for staff
salaries. The museum must pay for security and restoration efforts
itself. As Savitsky instructed that no piece of the collection could
be sold, the museum cannot raise funds by selling any of its art,
although many collectors and Western museums have put pressure on
Babanazarova to do so.

The museum does receive limited support. The Friends of the
Nukus Museum works to broadcast the museum’s unique contents
and history. Some restoration efforts have been underwritten by
Restaurateurs Sans Frontieres and funding from the German Embassy,
as well as the Friends group and private donors.

Coming up in October, Babanazarova intends to publish a memoir in
London that she has written about Savitsky and his collection.

http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insightb/ar

Thousands Come Together For AYF Olympics In Providence

THOUSANDS COME TOGETHER FOR AYF OLYMPICS IN PROVIDENCE
by Vincent Lima

-thousands-come-together-for-ayf-olympics-in-provi dence
Friday September 11, 2009

Athletics, dancing, and socializing to rekindle the spirit

Providence – Again and again over the long Labor Day weekend in
Providence, dance floors came alive with the rhythm and energy of
traditional Armenian music, as thousands of Armenian-Americans from
every community in the eastern United States and beyond gathered for
the Armenian Youth Federation’s 76th Olympic Games.

Competing in track and field, swimming, tennis, and golf, the AYF
Providence Varantian Chapter, with 252.5 points, edged out the
Philadelphia Sebouh Chapter, which accumulated 232 points and ended
its three-year winning streak. This was the 38th victory for the
Providence athletes in 76 years.

Besides Philadelphia, no other chapter even came close to Providence
in score. Third place went to the Greater Boston Nejdeh Chapter,
with 46.5 points.

Records broken

"I’m hoping that next year, Boston, Detroit, and New Jersey can come up
with teams that make it even more competitive," Providence coach Steve
Elmasian told the Armenian Reporter. "A lot of people are saying this
is Olympics the way it used to be: large crowds, great competition,
good athletes, good spirit, and an exciting finish."

Indeed, up to 800 people were in the stands, cheering the athletes
on during the games.

"We did catch some breaks," Mr. Elmasian allowed. "Some things went our
way, some things didn’t, but I think more things did than didn’t. Like
[Lefty Gomez] used to say, ‘I’d rather be lucky than good.’ I think
we were a little bit of both."

Athletes broke at least four AYF Olympics records this year. Lynne
Tutunjian of Providence broke the women’s 50-yard breaststroke
record, and took gold in the 25-yard freestyle and 25-yard butterfly
contests. Her brother Stephen Tutunjian of Providence broke the men’s
triple jump record. Andrea Tateosian of Providence threw her javelin
112 feet 1.5 inches, breaking the women’s record in that sport by 1.5
inches. From Granite City, Ill., Michelle Hagopian broke the women’s
discus record and won gold in golf and baseball throw.

High scorers

Some of the most impressive individual performances came from
Philadelphia athletes. Mark Williams brought in gold for the 100 meter,
200 meter, and 400 meter sprint, while Michael Kaiserian did the same
for the 50-yard backstroke, the 50-yard freestyle, and the 100-yard
freestyle swimming contests. Jessica Sarkisian and Emanuel Mkrtchian,
both of Philadelphia, won gold in the pentathlon.

Mr. Elmasian appreciated the efforts of the three record-breakers from
Providence and another high scorer – his chapter’s Paul Chobanian
won gold medals in discus, javelin, and shot put – but he was not
willing to single them out for praise.

"We had a couple of high scorers, yes, but the girls grabbing 3rd and
4th in the weight events to us was key, because we really had this
coming down to a one- or two-point difference in the end. So every
kid coming out there – this is the 76th Olympics and this is the 38th
time we’ve won it, and we’ve always won it on the thirds and fourths,
so I can’t give you a name."

Music

Organizing committee member Fotini Dionisopoulos was "extremely pleased
with how the social events went." They were her responsibility. She
noted that clarinetist Hachig Kazarian first performed at the AYF
Olympics 50 years ago, and he was back this year, as popular as ever.

What pleased her most, however, was that a band composed of AYF
members likewise proved popular. They "filled a hall. We didn’t
need a superstar. The AYFers were thrilled and they danced until 3
a.m. and they wanted more. That was my biggest success of the weekend,"
Ms. Dionisopoulos said.

At the same time as the younger crowd was dancing to the traditional
music played by their peers, a dance for AYF alumni drew some 950
participants. "The dance floors were packed with well-behaved, happy
people. What more could you ask for?" Ms. Dionisopoulos smiled.

Waterfire

But the Armenian music was not limited to the dance floors. Every other
week or so throughout the summer and early fall, the city of Providence
gathers downtown for Waterfire. While dozens of bonfires burn in
the city’s rivers, casting golden shadows, families mill about town
listening to music broadcast over an extensive system of loudspeakers.

On the evening of September 5, thanks to the efforts of Manoog
Kaprielian, every third or fourth song was an Armenian one. Between
15 and 20 thousand people, most with no connection to the Armenian
community, enjoyed the evening.

Meanwhile, at the auditorium of the Rhode Island School of Design,
a mostly non-Armenian audience listened to soprano Noune Karapetian
perform Armenian classics.

The unsung hero

Mark Mesrobian, who chaired the organizing committee, had low
expectations for the weekend, "because of the dour economy." In
addition, the Providence Armenian community had hosted the Homenetmen
Games over the Fourth of July weekend.

"We have exceeded expectations in the number of participants, in the
number of attendees, in the social events, which were all very well
attended," he said. "Instead of a mediocre event, it’s turned into
a true success."

Also successful was the ad book, a collection of paid congratulatory
messages that helps support the organization. Pauline Getzoyan was
in charge of the ad book, which brought in $4,000 more than expected,
she said.

"It was successful because of the whole committee," she said. "My
committee worked really hard to involve people." Carol Mesrobian and
Maro Dionisopoulos called people individually. "Auntie Carol hurt
her leg a few weeks ago, so she was stuck at home and spent her time
making calls," she added.

Steering Committee member Steve Mesrobian said, "I think the real
unsung hero is the Providence community. It pulled off two major
Olympic games in nine weeks and had the energy to do it. We had
volunteers with a smile on their face working hard."

The image of Armenians

Scott Avedisian, who has been the mayor of Warwick, Rhode Island’s
second-largest city, for 10 years, spoke at the opening ceremony. So
did Allan Fung, mayor of Cranston, R.I.

These officials "recognize the strength of the Armenian community, they
recognize us as a large constituency. And they’re very supportive of
us because of that," Mark Mesrobian said. Both mayors "remarked how
amazing it was to see the youth not only participating but helping
out in the field."

The AYF Olympics have been held in Providence 11 times. The last
time was in 2003. That year both the governor of the state and the
mayor of Providence spoke at the opening ceremony. This year, both
officials happened to be out of the country over the weekend.

Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian, vicar general of the Eastern Prelacy,
gave a blessing at the opening ceremony.

The Rev. Fr. Gomidas Baghsarian, pastor of Sts. Vartanantz Church,
said he was "sad because my spiritual brother – Der Torkom Hagopian
– passed away [on September 3]." But "this atmosphere, filled with
brotherly love," lifted his spirits.

He said, "They did everything the right way, with no tolerance to
anything that would bring down our image as Armenians. I prayed for the
safety of everyone and that gave us the bonus of good weather also."

http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2009-09-11

If Dashnaktsutyun Is A Force

IF DASHNAKTSUTYUN IS A FORCE

14:44:55 – 11/09/2009
ahos15148.html

Is HAK-Dashnaktsutyun cooperation possible in the context of the
Armenian and Turkish relations? The coordinator of the Armenian
National Congress Levon Zurabyan dwelt on this topic in answer to
reporters’ question on September 11.

`We are ready, if the Dashnaktsutyun is ready to reaffirm its being a
political force and not a servant of this regime’, answered Levon
Zurabyan.

Levon Zurabyan noted that they are ready to collaborate in connection
with the Armenian-Turkish and home issues on restoring the
constitutional order. `We are ready to cooperate on any issue which is
on our political platform composed of 12 points with any political
force which is an ideological-political force, says Levon Zurabyan. He
also notes that the ideological contradiction is not a problem in this
cooperation with the ARF because the Congress’s work of 1, 5 years
showed that ideological differences are not a problem in solving
fundamental issues.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/politics-lr

BAKU: Azerbaijani community of NK considers numbers in NK oversized

Trend, Azerbaijan
Sept 11 2009

Azerbaijani community of Nagorno-Karabakh considers data on number of
Armenian community oversized

Azerbaijan, Baku, Sept. 11 /Trend News, J.Babayeva/

The Public Association Azerbaijani Community of Nagorno-Karabakh
region of Azerbaijan Republic believes the information on the number
of the Armenian community of Nagorno-Karabakh does not reflect
reality.

"I do not believe that the number of the Armenian community is more
than Azerbaijani. A while ago, a group of intellectuals paid a visit
to Nagorno-Karabakh. They held meeting and observation there. The
general opinion says that the data on the Armenian population of the
Armenian community of Nagorno-Karabakh is absolutely far from
reality," Chairman of the Public Association Azerbaijani community of
Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan Republic, Bayram Safarov said in
his interview with the official website of the ruling New Azerbaijan
Party (NAP) on Sept. 11.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding
districts. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in
1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the
U.S. – are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Safarov said the number of Armenians in Shusha reaches a maximum of
1,000 people. "After the conflict, the majority of Armenians left
Karabakh. If not take into account those who have moved here later,
the number of the Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh is not so
high. The standard of living is very low there. The Armenian
leadership has brought many troubles to these people, as well. Because
of the Armenian policy, the many of them were forced to leave for work
abroad," he said.

At present, the number of the Azerbaijani community of
Nagorno-Karabakh tops 65,000 people, said Safarov. "We try to develop
a list of the Azerbaijani community of Nagorno-Karabakh and specify
the population. Of course, this is a rather complicated process. For
example, only one population of the Shusha region settled in 59
regions of Azerbaijan. There is the same situation with a list of
residents of the other regions. Despite this, we will try to meet that
challenge," said Safarov.

As to joint living with the Armenians in the event of a peace treaty,
Safarov said that "to live together with the Armenians is our fate."
"Yes, we suffered great losses due to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
and faced with serious accident. Despite this, living side by side
with the Armenians is our fate, destiny. I think time will put
everything in its place. Ordinary citizens would not support this
war. So stay with our citizens of Armenian origin is possible. Of
course, when the conflict is resolved peacefully, the Azerbaijani laws
will be applied to the region and all citizens will obey them," said
the head of the community.

Abp. Barsamian Welcomes Catholic Abp. Dolan, Orthodox Metropolitan

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Karine Abalyan
Tel: (212) 686-0710; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

September 11, 2009

___________________________________

ABP. BARSAMIAN WELCOMES CATHOLIC ABP. DOLAN AND ORTHODOX METROPOLITAN JONAH
TO N.Y., DURING ECUMENICAL GATHERING AT DIOCESE

On Tuesday, September 8, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese
of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), hosted an ecumenical gathering
at the Diocesan Center to welcome two recently installed religious leaders:
Archbishop Timothy Dolan, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of New York, and
Metropolitan Jonah Pauffhausen, the Orthodox Church in America’s Archbishop
of Washington and New York, and Metropolitan of All America and Canada.

Leaders of the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox
churches came together at St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral for a prayer
service, commemorating the Nativity of the Mother-of-God, which is observed
on September 8, followed by a reception to honor Archbishop Dolan and
Metropolitan Jonah.

Guests received a brief tour of the cathedral and had an opportunity to
engage in a discussion at the Diocesan Center and to share their visions for
the continuing mission of the ancient Christian traditions in today’s world.

"Whether we pray to her as Theotokos, Asdvadzadzin, Our Lady, Bogoroditsa-or
in any of her numerous names-all of us look to St. Mary as something more
than an object to be venerated: she is, most of all, a Mother to be loved,"
Archbishop Barsamian said. "Among the ancient, apostolic Christian churches,
this has been our profound feeling and witness for centuries. And indeed,
our common adoration of St. Mary is one of the things that makes us a
unified family."

Archbishop Demetrios, Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in America,
delivered the invocation. He thanked Archbishop Barsamian for organizing the
day’s program and congratulated Archbishop Dolan and Metropolitan Jonah on
their new positions.

Archbishop Dolan was installed as the 10th Roman Catholic Archbishop of New
York on April 15. Metropolitan Jonah was installed as the leader of the
Orthodox Church in America on December 28, 2008.

Archbishop Demetrios also emphasized Mary’s faith and endurance in the face
of many hardships, including the inhospitable conditions surrounding
Christ’s birth, the years she spent with her family in exile, and the
witness she bore to the afflictions of her son later in life.

"It’s an ordeal of tremendous magnitude, and she went through that," he
said, adding that Mary’s story is "the superb example of suffering and being
patient under all circumstances."

The lesson is an important one in today’s world, where Christian values
often come under attack, Archbishop Demetrios said.

Archbishop Dolan and Metropolitan Jonah spoke about the warm relationship
among the ancient Christian churches in New York City, and in America
generally.

"It just strikes me that this great New York community that all of us are
honored to serve pastorally is a reflection of the universal church," said
Archbishop Dolan. "We see people of every language and background so
beautifully represented in this room today."

"To me, it is so important that we be united in our proclamation of the
Gospel of Jesus Christ," Metropolitan Jonah said.

William Cardinal Keeler, a long-time friend of the Eastern Diocese who has
visited Armenia in the past decade, also addressed the gathering.

Archbishop Barsamian presented Archbishop Dolan and Metropolitan Jonah with
carvings of biblical scenes hand-crafted in Armenia. He also presented
Archbishop Dolan with a pectoral cross and Metropolitan Jonah with a panagia
on behalf of His Holiness Karekin II, the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos
of All Armenians.

Bishop David, the General Bishop and Patriarchal Exarch of the Coptic
Orthodox Archdiocese of North America, presented the two honorees with
icons.

At the conclusion of the afternoon meeting, Metropolitan Mor Cyril Aphrem
Karim, leader of the Syriac Orthodox Church of the Eastern United States,
delivered a benediction asking God to bless and guide Archbishop Dolan and
Metropolitan Jonah, and thanking Him for the opportunity to gather in a
spirit of brotherly love.

Also in attendance were Archbishop Celestino Migliore, the Apostolic Nuncio
and the Vatican’s permanent observer to the United Nations; John Myers, the
Roman Catholic Archbishop of Newark, N.J.; Archbishop Zacharius, leader of
the Ethiopian Orthodox Church of America; Bishop Manuel Batakian, Apostolic
Exarch for Armenian Catholics in the United States; as well as
representatives of the Antioch Orthodox, the Russian Orthodox, the Bulgarian
Orthodox, and the Serbian Orthodox churches.

"It is a wonderful, hopeful sign that these brotherly gatherings have become
more frequent in recent years," Archbishop Barsamian said. "After all, we
hold the deepest things in common. We all come from ancient, apostolic
churches. We all represent ‘Old World’ traditions, transplanted in the New.
And we all strive to keep faith with the greater, timeless truths, while
trying to advance and renew our traditions for modern living."

Also representing the Eastern Diocese at Tuesday’s event were Archbishop
Vicken Aykazian, Legate of the Diocese and President of the National Council
of Churches; Very Rev. Fr. Haigazoun Najarian, Diocesan Vicar; Very Rev. Fr.
Souren Chinchinian; Rev. Fr. Mardiros Chevian, dean of St. Vartan Cathedral;
and Rev. Fr. Tateos Abdalian, director of the Mission Parish Program at the
Diocese.

###

Photos attached.

Photo 1: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Metropolitan Jonah Pauffhausen,
Archbishop Timothy Dolan, and Archbishop Demetrios at St. Vartan Armenian
Cathedral.

Photo 2: Religious leaders on the steps of St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral,
where a prayer service was held Tuesday commemorating the Nativity of the
Mother-of-God

Photo 3: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian presents Archbishop Dolan with a
carving of a biblical scene hand-crafted in Armenia

Photo 4: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian presents Archbishop Dolan with a
pectoral cross on behalf of His Holiness Karekin II, the Supreme Patriarch
and Catholicos of All Armenians.

Photo 5: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian presents Metropolitan Jonah Pauffhausen
with a carving of a biblical scene hand-crafted in Armenia

www.armenianchurch.net

Opening Armenian-Turkish Border Will Contribute To Development Of Ec

OPENING ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER WILL CONTRIBUTE TO DEVELOPMENT OF ECONOMIES OF TWO COUNTRIES, VARDAN AIVAZIAN SAYS

NOYAN TAPAN
SEPTEMBER 9, 2009
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, NOYAN TAPAN. Opening the Armenian-Turkish border
will contribute to the development of the economies of both countries
and create new perspectives such as a growth of GDP, an increase in
trade turnover, access to other markets, Chairman of the National
Assembly Standing Committee on Economic Issues Vardan Aivazian stated
at the September 9 press conference. In his words, "there are Turkish
goods in Armenia today, and we can see Armenian goods in markets of
Turkey. These goods are transported by transit routes and sold at
high prices. With the border’s opening, the situation will change,
and volumes of goods exported from Armenia to Turkey will grow".

V. Aivazian said that in order to ensure efficient economic
development after opening the border, Armenia should be prepared to
enter new markets, adding that changes in customs duties and all the
administrative links are necessary with this aim.

In his opinion, there is no need to be afraid of opening the border and
to look for negative aspects in this move. According to him, a wrong
impression has formed that only Armenia will benefit from opening
the border, and by doing so Turkey displays a good will. "This is
an incorrect approach. Turkey has its own interests, and its economy
will also reap benefits," V. Aivazian pointed out.

DigiTec Expo 2009 To Be Held In Yerevan October 2 To 4

DIGITEC EXPO 2009 TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN OCTOBER 2 TO 4

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.09.2009 16:19 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The DigiTec Expo 2009 fifth annual forum will bring
together about 50 companies and 11 thousand visitors from October 2
to 4 in Yerevan, Karen Vardanyan, executive director of the Union of
Information Technology Enterprises (UITE) told a news conference today.

According to Karen Vardanyan, the upcoming forum will be the
most interesting and informative, adding that DigiTec has already
established itself as the most interesting exhibition exhibition of
achievements in high tech industry in the region.

A conference on e-government, as well as the open championship in
robotics "Armrobotics" will be held in the fringes of the forum.

Director of Enterprise Incubator Foundation Bagrat Engibaryan mentioned
that "Computer for all" project will be discussed at the forum. U-com
will be a general sponsor of the forum, while the ADC ISP will act as
an official sponsor. Since 2005, the forum has been organized under
the high patronage of the Prime Minister of Armenia.

U.S. Department Of State Officials Debate Karabakh Problem With Turk

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE OFFICIALS DEBATE KARABAKH PROBLEM WITH TURKEY

Today.Az
/55344.html
Sept 7 2009
Azerbaijan

Representatives of the U.S. Department of State have arrived in
Turkey to debate Armenia-Turkey relations and resolution of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The delegation is led by Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs
William Burns and Assistant Deputy Secretary of State Tina Kaidanow.

U.S. ambassador to Armenia Mila Iovanavic also joined them.

http://www.today.az/news/politics

The 5th anniversary of `Narekatsi’ Art Union

Aysor, Armenia
Sept 5 2009

The 5th anniversary of `Narekatsi’ Art Union

Today Narekatsi art union is celebrating the 5th anniversary of its
foundation, on this occasion a celebrating ceremony will be hold today
evening.

Narekatsi Art Union (NAU) is an NGO founded in USA in 2002 at first;
afterwards in 2004 it has opened its branch in Yerevan and in 2006 in
Shushi.

NAU annually is organizing and realizing around 300 cultural different
projects and events, particularly exhibitions, musical events,
theatrical performances, presentations of books and master
classes. During its activity the NAU has also published a series of
books, albums, CDs and DVDs, has created special websites about
different people of Art.

NAU has supported also the realization of series of festivals in the
number of which were `The Golden Apricot’ international film-festival,
`Art Olympiad’ children’s international festival, `Arevordi’ nature
protection festival, etc.

The NAU of Shushi has mainly the status of art school, which mainly
attend and get education the children of Shushi who are either
refugees from Azerbaijan, or have lost their families during the war
time. The school has more than 135 children. Summer Camp `Qnar’ is
also functioning.

NAU has also a series of new projects which need financial support for
realization. As the executive director of NAU Narek Harutyunyan
informed to Aysor.am, they have applied to many funds for getting the
support but the applications had no replies.

Soccer: Bosnia-Herzegovina keep dream alive

uefa.com
Sept 5 2009

Bosnia-Herzegovina keep dream alive

Saturday 5 September 2009
Match report by Khachik Chakhoyan from Yerevan

A goal in each half kept Bosnia-Herzegovina firmly in the hunt for a
play-off place at least as they defeated Armenia 2-0 in FIFA World Cup
qualifying to tighten their grip on second place in Group 5.

Key win
Senijad IbriÄ?iÄ? struck after six minutes and Zlatan
MuslimoviÄ? completed the scoring with 17 minutes remaining in
Yerevan to keep Miroslav BlaževiÄ?’s side well clear of
third-placed Turkey and in with a chance of catching leaders Spain,
who they meet in Zenica next month.

IbriÄ?iÄ? opener
The visiting side wasted no time taking the lead in
Yerevan. IbriÄ?iÄ? headed Admir VladaviÄ?’s cross
from the right against the post before reacting quickest to knock in
the rebound. Bosnia-Herzegovina might have put the result beyond doubt
by half-time had Gevorg Kasparov not brilliantly pushed Edin
Džeko’s 16th-minute effort on to the post. The VfL Wolfsburg
forward was further cursing his luck when he missed a penalty eleven
minutes before the break.

MuslimoviÄ? strikes
Armenia also had their chances with Henrik Mkhitaryan and Arman
Karamyan both going close, but it was the visiting side who struck
next, Džeko making up for his earlier miss when he crossed for
MuslimoviÄ? to tap in on 73 minutes. Defeat leaves Armenia
bottom of the section on one point. They next meet Belgium on
Wednesday while Bosnia-Herzegovina host Turkey in a crucial game in
Zenica.