Planned military exercises held in NKR

Planned military exercises held in NKR

ArmRadio.am
19.05.2007 15:00

The NKR Defense Army is holding planned exercises, Spokesman of the
NKR Ministry of Defense, Lieutenant-Colonel Senor Asratyan told
ArmInfo.

`The exercises are called to raise the efficiency of our army,’ Senor
Asratyan declared. He refuted the assertions of the representatives of
the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry that `the exercises are held by the
Armed Forces of Armenia.’ Senor Asratyan assures that divisions of the
Armenian Armed Forces are not participating in the military exercises.
`Naturally, we are periodically conducting and will conduct military
exercises. Due to our work, the foreign experts have characterized the
Nagorno Karabakh army as one of the most efficient in the region,’
Senor Asratyan underlined.

Soviet Architects and Their Edifice Complex

Architecture Review | ‘Cosmic Communist Constructions Photographed’

Soviet Architects and Their Edifice Complex
By NICOLAI OUROUSSOFF

New York Times
May 16, 2007

The nonprofit Storefront for Art and Architecture has been around for a
quarter-century now. A tiny wedge-shaped space on a noisy street at the edge
of Chinatown, it built its reputation on managing to work its many
limitations to its advantage. Its best shows, typically thrown together on a
shoestring budget, had a raw immediacy that the bigger art institutions can
rarely match.

Yet in the last several years Storefront seemed to have lost its edge. Apart
from one or two exceptional shows, it seemed to cater more and more to
architectural insiders.

Now the energy is back. After last winter’s sparkling and insightful show on
architectural magazines from the 1960s and ’70s, we have `CCCP: Cosmic
Communist Constructions Photographed,’ an exhibition on Soviet architecture
from the ’70s and ’80s. It should be an eye-opening experience for those who
assumed that Soviet architecture died with the rise of Stalin.

Covering a period that has largely been ignored by academics and mainstream
architects, the show is packed with obscure architectural gems. Its subject
feels particularly timely given that young architects are now beginning to
re-examine the work of the Soviets’ cold war counterparts in Western cities
like Rotterdam and São Paulo.

Organized by Storefront’s new director, Joseph Grima, the show relies almost
exclusively on the photographs of Frédéric Chaubin, a Paris-based magazine
editor who spent five years traveling across the former Soviet Union,
uncovering forgotten architectural works in cities like Tbilisi, Yalta and
Yerevan. The results are a revelation.

Among the outright gems is Georgy Chakhava’s 1975 Roads Ministry building, a
monumental grid of interlocking concrete forms rising on a steep wooded site
in Tbilisi, Georgia. The project’s genesis might prompt most architects, so
often at the mercy of clients’ fantasies, to swoon with envy. Mr. Chakhava
was not only an architect but also the minister of highway construction. As
such, he was not just his own client; he could also hand-pick the project’s
site.

Yet the ministry building’s design also debunks many of the standard clichés
we hold about late Soviet architecture. Rising on an incline between two
highways, the building’s heavy cantilevered forms reflect the Soviet-era
penchant for heroic scale. Yet they also relate sensitively to their
context, celebrating the natural landscape that flows directly underneath
the building.

The composition of interlocking forms, conceived as a series of bridges,
brings to mind the work of the Japanese Metabolists of the late ’60s and
early ’70s, proof that Soviet architects weren’t working in an intellectual
vacuum.

Similarly, the Druzhba (Friendship) Sanitarium in Yalta, Ukraine, designed
by Igor Vasilevsky and completed in 1986, is an object lesson in bold
architectural strokes. The resort building’s cylindrical form stands on a
hill overlooking a beach in what was then an exclusive resort town. To
enter, visitors cross a bridge encased in a glass tube and then descend into
the complex, which is supported on massive legs housing the elevators and
stairs. Conceived as a `social condenser,’ the building’s core is occupied
by a cinema, dance hall, swimming pool and cafe. Circling this core are the
guest rooms, arrayed in a dazzling saw-tooth facade orienting each room
toward the water and sunlight, while giving the structure an eerie
science-fiction quality. (Think Stanley Kubrick’s `2001: A Space Odyssey.’)

But what’s refreshing about this exhibition is its lack of an ideological
agenda: it is open to all sorts of possibilities. The Gaudiesque romanticism
of a sanitarium in Druskininkai, Lithuania, for example, spins the aesthetic
off in yet another direction. Built as a series of interlocking cylinders,
its forms are lifted slightly off the ground to create the illusion of
lightness. Decorative concrete ribbons spill out over the facade; columns
for draining rainwater splay open at the bottom. The building looks as
though it’s unraveling, a blend of creativity and madness spilling out into
full view.

In another project, a sports complex and opera house in the Armenian
capital, Yerevan, an open-air terrace steps down into the earth, flanked by
a pair of immense concrete walls and narrow staircases that evoke the
excavation of some forgotten futurist city – not a bad metaphor for the
entire show.

Mr. Grima situates these projects in a historical context with a timeline
that extends from one end of the gallery to the other. 1969: Ludwig Mies van
der Rohe and Walter Gropius die. 1972: Nixon visits China. 1974: Peter
Eisenman’s House VI completed. 1988: McDonald’s opens in Moscow. The
interplay between major political events and more obscure architectural ones
is a simple and effective gesture, suggesting how cultural invention takes
its rightful place alongside political action in shaping who we are.

Like most Storefront shows, this one is supported by a free newsprint
catalog that offers a more detailed analysis of the designs – plans,
sections and historical photos – as well as a peek into the mentality of
Soviet architects of that era. It can be as revealing as the exhibition
itself.

One would have wished for more detailed drawings of some of the projects and
more biographical detail on the architects themselves. Who are these people?
We don’t really know. Nonetheless, the show opens our eyes to unknown
territory. Compelling and easy to digest, it piques our interest in ways
that some larger institutions, ever more averse to risk, often fail to do.
And that’s good enough.

`CCCP: Cosmic Communist Constructions Photographed’ continues through June
16 at the Storefront for Art and Architecture, 97 Kenmare Street, Little
Italy; (212) 431-5795, storefrontnews.org.

5/16/arts/design/16cold.html

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/0

Leaders of Armenian parliamentarian elections not changed

PanARMENIAN.Net

Leaders of Armenian parliamentarian elections not changed
13.05.2007 12:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the result of processing votes
from 1638 polling stations (votes of 1144508 citizens)
of the parliamentarian elections to the RA NA,
Republican Party of Armenia, `Prosperous Armenia’ and
ARF Dashnaktsutyun continue to be the leaders as
before.

The general picture of voting is the following:

Republican Party of Armenian – 387 522

`Prosperous Armenia’ Party – 169 837

ARF Dashnaktsutyun – 149 670

`Orinats Yerkir’ Party – 78 374

United Labor Party – 49 389

`Dashink Party’ – 27 823

`National Unity’ Party – 41 007

`Heritage’ Party – 56 065

`Republic’ Party – 18 524

People’s Party – 29 916

`New Times’ Party – 36 647

People’s Party of Armenia – 19 339

`Impeachment’ block – 13 154

Communist Party – 7 261

National Democratic Party – 6 585

`Democratic Way’ Party – 6 113

`National Consent’ Party – 41 007

Democratic Party of Armenia – 2 901

`Christian-Democratic Revival’ Party – 2 780

Marxist Party of Armenia – 2 365

United Liberal National Party – 2 078

Youth Party – 1852

`Hnchakyan’ Social-Democratic Party – 792.

France’s new face

PanARMENIAN.Net

France’s new face

Nicolas Sarkozy is going to establish Mediterranean Alliance with
North African countries. Turkey is not included in this Alliance.
09.05.2007 GMT+04:00

For the first time in the history of France the President of the
country is someone who is French only for one fourth. Nicolas
Sarkozy’s victory has already evoked contradictory comments both among
politicians and the world press. In his speech immediately after the
results of the election were announced Sarkozy said, `I will do
everything for France to go back to Europe, but this must be the
Europe protecting its citizens, and not a `Grecian horse’ of
globalization, which may be a serious threat for the social
attainments existing in different European countries.’

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ His first official visit President Sarkozy is
planning to make to Germany, and whatever is spoken about the `new
policy’, Jacques Chirac’s legacy in the home policy of France will
still exist for a long while. The truth is that Sarkozy will be more
moderate towards Russia than his predecessor was. The `friendship
age’ is becoming a thing of the past, and even President Putin didn’t
mean to Chirac what the late Boris Eltsin did. We may say that Sarkozy
is the New France establishing its relations with the rest of the
world on completely different and more pragmatic bases. The part of
his speech where the President spoke about the country’s relations
with the USA was the most unusual one. `America may count on our
friendship, and France will always be near. However, friendship also
means a possibility of thinking otherwise, and France will always
defend its positions in case of any kind of divergences,’ he said in
his speech. By the way Sarkozy was the only one among the French
politicians who has recently met President Bush.

Yet Sarkozy kept the most interesting thing for later. The newly
elected President of France is going to establish Mediterranean
Alliance together with North African countries. Turkey is not included
in this Alliance. If Sarkozy’s pre-election statements against
Turkey’s integration into EU do not undergo any changes, Turkey will
have to forget about Europe for the next 7 years. However Turkey’s
Prime-Minister Recep Erdoghan hopes that `the French President will
switch from the pre-election rhetoric to normalization of the
relations between their countries, which has lately been far from
being warm,’ Turkish Daily News writes. Turkey strongly hopes that
Sarkozy will set a veto on the bill about criminalization of the
denial of the Armenian Genocide, and, judging by what was stated in
the Turkish-Azeri press, will refuse `hearing the Armenian Community
in France’. For some reason Baku hopes that the newly elected
President will treat Azerbaijan better than his predecessor.

It is clear that our neighbor would love to see Armenia and France in
unhealthy relations with each other. However, it should not be forget
that France was one of the first countries who spoke against the
Armenian Genocide of 1915 and sheltered a big number of refugees. As
for Azerbaijan’s hope that the new President will bring some negative
changes in the relations of Armenia and France, it should be mentioned
that the Armenians have done so much for France that the
Armenian-French relations do not depend on the Presidents any more.

But unfortunately the elections didn’t put an end to some disorder in
the country. Ségolène Royal announced on Radio RTL, that if Sarkozy
wins the elections, the whole country and first of all the poor
suburban areas will suffer a strong wave of violence. Such a provoking
announcement was a shock for many French, particularly when this
provocation was heard and had its say in the further developments of
the events.

After the results of the election were announced cases of a number of
clashes were registered between the young and hot-blooded supporters
of Royal with the police and with the followers of Sarkozy. Over 400
cars were burned, shop-windows of many magazines were broken. The
police had to implement tear-gas to gain control over the crowd, just
what it had to do last year when the cities of Paris were in
disorder. By the way, that time the situation was taken under control
by the help of the very Sarkozy, so he is very unlikely to stand such
a situation again. However, with some unknown reasons, implementing
force during demonstrations in France and in a number of European
countries is not something unusual, while in other countries it is
regarded as a violation of human rights…

«PanARMENIAN.Net» analytical department

ANKARA: Turkey sets up monitoring against nuclear dangers from ANPP

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
May 11, 2007 Friday

TURKEY SETS UP MONITORING AGAINST POSSIBLE NUCLEAR DANGERS FROM
ARMENIAN POWER PLANT

Ankara, 11 May: Turkish Energy and Natural Resources Minister Hilmi
Guler stated that Turkey established a "Radiation Early Warning
System Network (RESA)" against probable dangers that may arise from
the Metsamor nuclear power plant located in Armenia.

"Results of the radioactivity analyses and station measuring
conducted in provinces close to the nuclear plant were within natural
limits so far," stressed Guler.

In his reply to a motion with question, Guler noted that the regions
that may be harmed in case of an accident at the Metsamor nuclear
power plant were determined in accordance with international
standards and experiences.

Underscoring that RESA was established taking into consideration the
locations and meteorological conditions of the nuclear power plants
in neighbouring countries, Guler said the system ran for 24 hours
continuously and checked the radiation levels via 78 stations.

"When the increase in the gamma radiation in the air exceeds the
threshold, the system warns the Turkish Atomic Energy Authority’s
(TAEK) crisis centre in Ankara automatically," said Guler.

"Closure of the reactor is not possible"

Moreover, Guler stressed that closure of the reactors in Armenia was
not possible in line with the convention on nuclear safety, which is
the only international platform related to the safety of nuclear
power plants.

Guler said Armenia could only be warned to carry out more-serious and
rapid activities in order to improve the safety of reactors.

Forte mobilisation pour Narek, collegien nemois

MIDI LIBRE
11 mai 2007 vendredi

Forte mobilisation pour Narek, collégien nîmois

AUTEUR: R. B.

Sans-papiers « C’est injuste ce qui arrive à Narek. On est là pour le
soutenir lui et sa famille. » Edwina et Amélie, 14 ans et demi,
collégiennes au Mont-Duplan sont des copines de classe, en 3e 3, de
Narek Aghadjanian, 16 ans.

Cet adolescent et ses parents sont sous le coup d’une obligation de
quitter le territoire français sous 30 jours. « C’est un élève
sérieux, nous avons cherché à le faire progresser en français,
regrette Benoît Audema, professeur d’histoire-géo au collège de
Mont-Duplan. Nous nous sentons solidaires de ce qui lui arrive. »
Hier matin, Edwina, Amélie et M. Audema étaient parmi la centaine de
personnes – syndicalistes, élus communistes, représentants des
fédérations de parents d’élèves, membres d’associations, notamment la
Cimade et le Réseau éducation sans frontières (RESF) ? qui se sont
mobilisées devant les grilles du tribunal administratif où le recours
formé par les parents de Narek contre la décision préfectorale était
examiné. Le père de Narek est Arménien, sa mère Azéri. Une situation
délicate, dangereuse dans nombre de républiques caucasiennes de
l’ex-URSS, agitées par les conflits ethniques. C’est ce qui, selon
RESF, a poussé la famille Aghadjanian à la fuite depuis une enclave
arménienne en Azerbaïdjan. En France depuis à peu près deux ans, les
Aghadjanian se sont vu refuser le statut de réfugié par l’Office
français de protection des réfugiés et apatrides (Ofpra), puis la
commission de recours des réfugiés (CRR), avant de se voir récemment
signifier par la préfecture l’obligation de quitter le territoire.
Depuis le 30 avril, Narek ne vient plus en classe. Et hier, ni lui ni
ses parents ne se sont présentés au tribunal administratif. Une
difficulté supplémentaire pour la défense de leur cas. L’avocate, que
le couple Aghadjanian avait contactée une première fois, n’a pu
plaider pour eux, embarrassée de ne pouvoir présenter des documents
prouvant les origines azéris de la mère. A l’audience, sans surprise,
le commissaire du gouvernement s’est prononcé contre le recours de la
famille Aghadjanian, considérant en particulier que la preuve n’était
pas faite que leur vie de famille ne pouvait pas se reconstruire en
Arménie. Le tribunal donnera sa décision sous trois semaines. « Ils
ont tellement peur d’être arrêtés qu’ils n’exercent même pas leur
droit à la défense » , regrettait Luc Vershueren de RESF.R. B. Le
soutien d’une centaine de personnes, hier au tribunal administratif.
J. M.

Industrial Production Grows 4.3% January-March 2007 year over year

INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION GROWS BY 4.3% IN ARMENIA IN JANUARY-MARCH 2007 ON
SAME PERIOD OF LAST YEAR

YEREVAN, MAY 11, NOYAN TAPAN. In January-March 2007, industrial
production of 152 bln 365 mln drams (about 423.9 mln USD) was made in
Armenia. Industrial production of 151 bln 907.7 mln drams was sold,
including production of 15 bln 882.4 mln drams – in CIS countries, and
production of 33 bln 241.2 mln drams – in other countries.

According to the RA National Statistical Service, the industrial
production grew by 4.3% in the indicated period on January-March 2006,
industrial production without the production and distribution of
electricity, gas and water – by 2.8%.

ANKARA: Turkey Hopes New French President Will Act Responsibly

TURKEY HOPES NEW FRENCH PRESIDENT WILL ACT RESPONSIBLY

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
May 7 2007

Ankara, 8 May: Turkey expressed hope that French President-elect
Nicolas Sarkozy will act responsibly to boost bilateral relations
between Turkey and France.

Diplomatic sources recalled that matters like Armenian issue,
which does not concern Turkish-French relations directly, harmed
bilateral ties.

Remarking that they felt sad over negative statements by Sarkozy on
Turkey’s EU bid during his election campaign, sources expressed their
hope that this rhetoric won’t become official policy of France.

Prize For Taner Akcam’s Book Tribute To Hrant Dink

PRIZE FOR TANER AKCAM’S BOOK TRIBUTE TO HRANT DINK
By Aghavni Haroutiunian

AZG Armenian Daily
09/05/2007

"Disgraceful Act. The Armenian Genocide and Turkey’s Responsibility"
book by Professor Taner Akcam, Turkish Historian, Visiting Associate
Professor at the University of Minnesota, won the Minnesota Book Prize.

Associated Press informed that the author of the book stated that the
abovementioned prize will be a tribute to the memory of Hrant Dink,
editor-in-chief, of the Istanbul based "Agos" newspaper.

Central Bank Of Armenia Puts Into Circulation Commemorative Golden C

CENTRAL BANK OF ARMENIA PUTS INTO CIRCULATION COMMEMORATIVE GOLDEN COIN DEDICATED TO 15TH ANNIVERSARY OF SHUSHI LIBERATION

Arka News Agency, Armenia
May 7 2007

YEREVAN, May 7. /ARKA/. The Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) put into
circulation a commemorative golden coin dedicated to the "15th
anniversary of liberation of Shushi".

The CBA press service reported that the coin’s nominal value makes
AMD 10,000. The coin is made of gold – 900 standards, its diameter
makes 22mm, and weight – 8.6g.

On the coin’s obverse on the background of the eternity sign a soaring
eagle is depicted, under which the nominal value "10000" and "DRAM"
are minted. "The Central Bank of the Republic of Armenia 2007" is
written in Armenian on the coin’s circumference.

On the reverse the medal for "Shushi liberation" is minted in the
coin’s centre, and the arms of the RA Armed Forces – to the left,
"15th anniversary of Shushi’s liberation" is minted on the coin’s
circumference.

The outlines of the coin are designed by the member of Armenia’s Union
of Painters Haroutiun Samuelyan. The coins are made in Poland’s Mint.

Shushi is the second biggest city of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

For the first time Shushi was mentioned at the beginning of XVIII
century. In that period there was a fortress at that place.

In 1857, Shushi received a status of a city. In the 60s of the XIX
century it became one of the Caucasus’ religious centers.

In 2007, they celebrate the 15th anniversary of liberation of the
Armenian fortress Shushi, Karabakh, during the Armenians’ liberation
war for Artsakh.