York woodworkers to recreate Gorky’s rocking horse for Tate Modern

The Press, York, UK
March 26 2010

York woodworkers to recreate Arshile Gorky’s rocking horse for Tate Modern

12:50pm Friday 26th March 2010

By Charles Hutchinson »

Tate Modern has commissioned York woodcarver Iain Broadbent and
furniture maker John Watts to recreate a rocking horse made by Arshile
Gorky, whose retrospective exhibition will run at London gallery until
May 3.

Gorky, alongside Rothko, Pollock and de Kooning, was one of the most
powerful American painters of the 20th century and a seminal figure in
the formation of Abstract Expressionism.

Although best known for his paintings, he was a skilled carpenter too,
having been taught by his uncle in his native Armenia, and he created
the rocking horse for his daughter, Maro, in 1943.

The original is now fragile, so much so that it was too delicate to be
relocated to Iain and John’s studio. Instead they had to make their
copy by working from templates, photographs and detailed measurements
to replicate Gorky’s original method.

Iain has worked on many woodcarving and restoration projects around
Britain, and multiple examples of his work can be found on the streets
of York, for example the carved Merchant Adventurers sign on Fossgate
and the restoration of the coat of arms above the Jigsaw shop on
Stonegate.

John creates traditional and contemporary furniture for private and
corporate clients nationwide, and his past commissions in York include
a desk for the Merchant Adventurers’ Hall and a display cabinet for
the Land Registry in James Street.

Both artists will be taking part in the 2010 York Open Studios from
April 16 to 18, when 55 artists will open their doors to show how and
where they work. For more details, visit yorkopenstudios.co.uk

¢ Arshile Gorky’s retrospective at Tate Modern includes paintings and
drawings from across his career and a handful of rarely seen
sculptures. Born in Armenia, he arrived in the USA in 1920 after
fleeing from persecution in his home country and adopted the name
Arshile Gorky with reference to the Russian writer Maxim Gorky.

ions/5086400.York_woodworkers_to_recreate_Arshile_ Gorky___s_rocking_horse_for_Tate_Modern/

http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/leisure/exhibit

How Will They Repay Their Debt? Hrant Bagratyan Addresses Armenia’s

HOW WILL THEY REPAY THEIR DEBT? HRANT BAGRATYAN ADDRESSES ARMENIA’S FOREIGN DEBT

Tert.am
15:41 ~U 25.03.10

By taking out loans and overloading its foreign debt Armenia shouldn’t
compare itself with other countries, Armenia’s former Prime Minister
Hrant Bagratyan said at press conference today, reminding journalists
that the degree of development among countries differs.

According to Bagratyan, the current volume of Armenia’s foreign debt
is quite large as the export makes up only 7% of the GDP.

"How will they earn that money so they can pay back their debt?" asked
Bagratyan.

He also said that the government always responds to his statements
and remarks. According to him, it’s not unlikely that this time too
the government may instruct a deputy minister to say that Armenia’s
foreign debt has not yet reached 50% of the GDP.

TBILISI: International Conference On North Caucasus Issues

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NORTH CAUCASUS ISSUES

The Messenger, Georgia
March 25 2010

Some days ago an international conference was held in Tbilisi
dedicated to the problems in the North Caucasus. The major outcome
of the conference was that Circassian representatives asked the
Georgian Government to recognise the Circassian genocide carried
out by Russians in the 19th century, when they claim two million
Circassians were exterminated in what is now the Krasnodar region
of the Russian Federation, which until the 19th century had been a
Circassian homeland. About 1 million Circassians were forced to leave
Russia and emigrated to Turkey.

One of the last battles between the Russian regular forces and
Circassian troops took place at the site where the 2014 Sochi Winter
Olympics are due to be held. The Circassian delegation is preparing
an application to the Georgian Parliament asking it to recognise the
genocide of the Circassian people. Georgian analysts and specialists
in Caucasus issues think that discussing Circassian problems is very
important for Georgia for a variety of reasons. The Circassians are
a related people to the Abkhaz and are very influential in Abkhazia,
as Circassians even participated in the military operations against
Georgia. Current Georgian-Circassian relations can also be addressed
within the context of the present confrontation between Georgia and
Russia. For this reason Circassian national movement leader Patima
Tlisova thinks that there is a quite substantial probability that
the Georgian Parliament will recognise the Circassian genocide as
Georgia could use this as a political tool against Russia.

MP Nugzar Tsiklauri has stated that the Georgian Parliament will by
all means consider the Circassian people’s request but this could be a
very long process. The situation is quite complicated. Acknowledging
this genocide will irritate Russia, and analyst Mamuka Areshidze
thinks that Armenia will then demand that Georgia also recognise
the Armenian genocide. Any kind of decision should be taken only in
Georgia’s interests.

Chairman of the Caucasus People’s Confederation Zaal Kasrelishvili
thinks it unlikely that Parliament will recognise the genocide,
however he considers that more attention should be paid to the problems
of the North Caucasus people. If we dig deeper into this issue we
might discover that the Russians have committed acts of genocide
against several North Caucasus peoples, such as the Circassians,
Abkhaz, Chechens, Dagestanis and Muslim Ossetians, at different
times. Several hundred thousand Chechens were killed during the two
Chechen wars conducted by Russia against one of its regions at the
end of the last century, and Chechen nationalists insist that this
is another unrecognised genocide.

There are certain issues, in particular ones involving Russia, to
which the international community turns a blind eye. Things like
genocide are only taken seriously when they receive wider resonance,
as we can see from the international reactions to the Nazi holocaust
and the documented genocides in Rwanda, Darfur, Cambodia and various
other places. Here we may have another reason why Russia is determined
to put itself on one side of the fence and Europe on the other.

Sweden’s Socialist Model Fit For Armenia’s Sustainable Development

SWEDEN’S SOCIALIST MODEL FIT FOR ARMENIA’S SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.03.2010 12:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Sweden’s socialist model is fit for Armenia’s
sustainable development, according to Artsvik Minasyan, member of
ARF Dashnaktsutyun.

"This model is based on economic democracy, increase of social
production, employment policy, reward distribution and social
equality," Mr. Minasyan told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. "Our party’s
suggestion about reorganization of national policy came across an
inadequate reaction of the government."

Yerevan hosts a two-day conference on socialist approach to challenges
Armenia is facing, upon completion of which a resulting document will
be drawn up for further submission to the RA government.

The event brought together experts and politicians from Armenia,
Sweden, Chile, Iran and Russia.

AGMI Considers Events Dedicated To 100th Anniversary Of Genocide

AGMI CONSIDERS EVENTS DEDICATED TO 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF GENOCIDE

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.03.2010 15:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Starting the year 2010, Armenian Genocide Museum
Institute will consider events dedicated to the 100th anniversary of
Genocide, AGMI director Hayk Demoyan said.

During a news conference in Yerevan, Mr. Demoyan announced the
list of events to be held in commemoration of the 95th anniversary
of Genocide. "On April 19-20, Yerevan will host an international
conference on Genocide. On April 22, the museum will hold an exhibition
entitled "Armenian Genocide in headlines", featuring foreign newspapers
highlighting the issue. Exclusive materials collected over the
last year will be demonstrated in one of museum halls on April 23,"
he stated.

For the first time in the museum’s history, the scholarship after
Raphael Lemkin, a Polish lawyer of Jewish descent who first introduced
the term Genocide, was established for students intending to major
in Armenian Studies.

Next year, the museum plans to hold an international conference
entitled "Reaction of Scandinavian countries to the Armenian Genocide."

He also informed that the territory of the museum will be enlarged.

The Armenian Genocide (1915-23) was the deliberate and systematic
destruction of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during
and just after World War I. It was characterized by massacres, and
deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to
lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of deaths
reaching 1.5 million.

The majority of Armenian Diaspora communities were formed by the
Genocide survivors.

Serzh Sargsyan Didn’t Say Anything That Contradicts His Previous Sta

SERZH SARGSYAN DIDN’T SAY ANYTHING THAT CONTRADICTS HIS PREVIOUS STATEMENTS: MELIKYAN

Tert.am
17:21 ~U 24.03.10

Speaking about mutual concessions or concession to be made by Armenia
is, in fact, a means to preserve the status quo, said former Foreign
Minister of the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR) Arman Melikyan
at a press conference today while commenting on RA President Serzh
Sargsyan’s interview with Kuwaiti daily Al Watan during his recent
visit to Syria.

"Mr. Sargsyan is honest and consistent to the extent that today he has
not said anything that contradicts what he said previously. But that
does not mean he is right and that that political course is correct,
and will bring about positive results," said Melikyan.

According to Melikyan, the policy carried out by Armenia thus far
has been based on the wrong assumption that Azerbaijan may reject
all the proposals, and in that way, Armenia won’t have to make mutual
concessions.

Melikyan also said that the regions of Shahumyan, Martuni and Martakert
are becoming bargaining chips.

"Armenia must change the logic of negotiations. The logic of
negotiations forced upon us is working against us today, and any talk
about concessions is destabilizing the situation in Armenia, Artsakh
[NKR] and the liberated regions," said Melikyan.

Deputy: Uncultivated Agricultural Land In Armenia Is 115 Thousand He

DEPUTY: UNCULTIVATED AGRICULTURAL LAND IN ARMENIA IS 115 THOUSAND HECTARES

ARKA
March 24, 2010

YEREVAN, March 24. /ARKA/. Total uncultivated agricultural land in
Armenia is 115 thousand ha, said Bagrat Sargsyan, Deputy of Armenian
Parliament from opposition party "Dashnaktsutyun", member of standing
committee on agricultural and nature protection issues. "Currently
Armenia processes about 300-305 thousand ha of land, but the total
territory is about 420 thousand ha. Unprocessed land makes 110 thousand
ha", he said during the press-conference on Wednesday. The main reason
of not processing the land by people is fragmentation of the land into
small land plots. Such conditions result in unprofitable processing
of agricultural land. In Armenia agricultural land is divided into
1.2 million land plots and the total number of agricultural farms is
339.2 thousand. "Such a division into land plots makes difficult to
work efficiently and intensive in the farms", said Sargsyan.

ANKARA: Is The AKP Indispensable?

IS THE AKP INDISPENSABLE?
ELDAR MAMEDOV

Hurriyet
March 23 2010
Turkey

For a long time, the ruling Islam-rooted Justice and Development
Party, or AKP, was presented in the West as the only Turkish party
fully committed to the EU accession process. This image of the AKP
as Turkey’s European champion is not only deceiving, but also harmful.

It is deceiving because the AKP’s commitment to Turkey’s EU membership
is doubtful. And it is harmful because it risks alienating those
numerous Turks who are pro-European, but oppose the AKP.

Since the initial wave of reforms in 2002-2005, the AKP has
failed to deliver on major issues, such as the adoption of a new
constitution befitting a country seeking EU membership. Instead of
using its overwhelming victory in 2007 elections to promote a broad
societal consensus to this end, it rushed through some ill-prepared
and self-serving reforms, such as the popularly elected president
and lifting the ban on headscarves in universities. This selective
approach to reforms has resulted in widespread suspicion that the
AKP merely uses the slogan of EU integration as a means to weaken its
adversaries, namely the staunchly secularist military and judiciary.

This is why even some necessary steps, like the law allowing trials of
military officers in civil courts, are met with cynicism by many. The
AKP’s consistent failure to reach out to the opposition in Parliament
and in society also explains its current difficulties with pushing
forward the judicial reform.

The government’s a la carte approach to liberalization is evident on
many issues that are crucial in terms of Turkey’s progress toward
the EU. For example, the government’s vaunted "Kurdish initiative"
has come to naught after it arrested on flimsy charges hundreds of
members of the now defunct pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party,
or DTP, including its democratically elected representatives.

Gender equality is one of the fundamental values of the EU. But in
terms of empowerment of women Turkey has suffered severe setbacks
since 2002. According to the U.N. Human Development Program report
released in October 2009, Turkey is ranked 101st out of 109 countries.

The percentage of women in government executive positions decreased
from the already low 15 percent in 1994 to 11 percent in 2009. Women
have only 0.42 percent of seats on municipal councils, and out
of Turkey’s 2,948 mayors, only 27 (0.9 percent) are women. For a
country that once had a female prime minister and minister for foreign
affairs this is a shame. But whenever the AKP and their supporters are
confronted with this situation, they usually point to the headscarf
ban as the "mother of all problems" of Turkish women, conveniently
forgetting that for many the headscarf itself is a symbol of female
submission. While the minister in charge finds time to criticize
"erotic scenes" on TV, the government does nothing to reverse downward
trends in women’s participation in public life.

Nor is it fighting other forms of inequality and discrimination. There
is still no government body responsible for equality and
non-discrimination, as required by the EU.

Another key area where the AKP government is failing to meet European
standards is in social rights. The failure to approve for many
years the trade unions’ law is a major impediment to the start of
negotiations with the EU on the social and employment chapter, a part
of the harmonization package. The government’s indifference to the
plight of the striking workers of the now privatized former alcohol and
tobacco monopoly known as Tekel illustrates its skewed understanding
of economic liberalism. In line with this is the government’s failure
to provide effective social protection in a country where 19 percent
live below the poverty line, and the number of those covered by social
security is merely 80 percent and decreasing.

In the field of foreign affairs the much vaunted "zero problems"
policy of the AKP is fast becoming "zero results" policy. The
rapprochement with Armenia has come to a halt, while the relations
with Azerbaijan have also been damaged in the process. The high
hopes of Turkey becoming the key actor in the South Caucasus are thus
fast diminishing. Although this is not entirely the fault of the AKP
government, there is no progress on Cyprus either. The improvement of
Turkeys relations with Syria and other Arab countries is welcome, but
it should not have come at the expense of Turkey’s ties with Israel.

The damage done to the relations with Israel undermines Turkey’s
ambitions to become a credible mediator in the Middle East conflict
and will be difficult to repair. Erdogan’s embrace of leaders like
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran and Omar al-Bashir of Sudan has fueled
further suspicions about a pro-Islamist turn in AKP’s foreign policy.

Most worrying of all is the Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
alarmingly low tolerance of criticism. A huge fine imposed on the Dogan
Media Group for the supposed tax evasion was universally regarded
as politically motivated. The prime minister’s recent threats to
columnists who "create tension in the country" raise serious doubts
about whether he understands the notion of the freedom of speech
at all.

After almost eight years in power, the AKP looks increasingly tired,
intolerant and incapable of delivering on the EU track. It is now
a duty of the main opposition People’s Republican Party, or CHP,
and emerging forces, such as Mustafa Sarigul’s Movement for Change
in Turkey, to provide a serious alternative to the AKP while
reinvigorating the pro-EU agenda. This would be a healthy process.

Most importantly, it would reconnect with the European project those
Turks who are pro-European, but alienated by AKP policies. European
progressive parties have a role to play in order to help this process.

* Eldar Mamedov is a political adviser to the Socialists and
Democrats group in the European Parliament, but is writing in a
personal capacity.

Kocharyan’s Karabakh Origin Disturbed

KOCHARYAN’S KARABAKH ORIGIN DISTURBED

/meliqyan
06:31 pm | March 23, 2010

Former NKR Minister of Foreign Affairs Arman Melikyan is certain
that Serzh Sargsyan’s call to Azerbaijan to sign an agreement on no
application of force will not have any impact on the Nagorno-Karabakh
peace process.

"Azerbaijan has already rejected the proposal and there is no
realpolitik there. The Armenian side is already being too friendly
by expressing willingness to hand territories and receiving Azeri
refugees. In other words, Armenia is in a losing position in foreign
politics," Melikyan told "A1+".

He reminded that the idea of signing an agreement on no application of
force had been stated several times by former Russian Co-Chair of the
OSCE Minsk Group Vladimir Kazimirov. "The repetition of this thesis
by the Armenian authorities goes to show that Armenia doesn’t have
its own vision of the conflict settlement. This is the major issue."

According to Arman Melikyan, what Serzh Sargsyan is doing today is the
continuation of the policies of Robert Kocharyan and Vardan Oskanyan.

"Serzh Sargsyan didn’t know what kind of situation he was going to
be in and that’s a different story."

He agrees with former RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan that
the state of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was more extenuating in
1998 than it is now. "Whereas the foundation for change of power in
1998 was the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, now we have the issue of the
inter-political crisis as well. Today we must be able to confront these
two largest challenges. If we don’t come to a consensus on a number
of issues relating to domestic policy, we will be doomed to failure."

Touching upon the statements by representatives of international
organizations according to which Nagorno-Karabakh was left out
of the peace process thanks to Robert Kocharyan who found it
appropriate to represent Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh in the
talks and what Serzh Sargsyan is doing today, Arman Melikyan said:
"Of course, representatives of international organizations will use
our errors to pursue their interests. I think Kocharyan’s origin of
Karabakh disturbed the process more because he started representing
Nagorno-Karabakh in the negotiations. This process of an inertial
character also engaged Serzh Sargsyan."

The former NKR Foreign Minister finds that Serzh Sargsyan further
complicated the state of the Armenian side. "He further complicated
the issue with his nonsensical Turkey-Armenia Protocols. If the logic
of the talks doesn’t change, the Armenian side will face inevitable
handover of territories. The Armenian authorities are obliged to
include all issues concerning Armenia in the talks, including the
integration of half a million Azerbaijani Armenians and the Azerbaijani
aggression in the international arena, etc."

Arman Melikyan agrees that the Turkish-Armenian relations and the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have gotten so mixed up that it is hard to
say the precondition of what is.

Melikyan doesn’t exclude that the sides will soon be imposed to
sign a document on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, but he is sure
of that. "I am more than sure that when the moment comes, even this
kind of government will find the strength inside and resign. I don’t
consider anyone a traitor in this country. They can be unintelligent,
unprofessional, but not a traitor. We simply have to lay the necessary
foundations for a new government starting today."

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2010/03/23

We’re Not Indifferent To The ‘Great Calamity’ Of 1915: Turkish Reade

WE’RE NOT INDIFFERENT TO THE ‘GREAT CALAMITY’ OF 1915: TURKISH READERS RESPOND

Tert.am
16:56 23.03.10

In a letter to the editor published in Turkish daily Taraf today,
a group of readers criticized Turkish state policy to refute the
fact of the Armenian Genocide and Turkish PM Recept Tayyip Erdogan’s
threats last week to deport Armenians living illegally in Turkey .

The letter signed by Taraf readers C. Murat Ozgunay, Omer Faruk,
Hurriyet Karadeniz, Yeter Ozdemir Å~^ahin, Adnan Genc, Erdal
Karayazgan, Serap Kaya, Nesrin Aslan, Ayla Å~^eÅ~_an, Ali Å~^enalp,
Erdal Karayazgan, MuhteÅ~_em Ozdamar, Necmi Demirci, and Nedim
Arul reads:

"We cannot remain indifferent to the 1915 ‘Medz Yeghern’ [Great
Calamity] under the Ottoman Empire; our conscience doesn’t allow its
denial. We dismiss that injustice, [we] sympathize with our Armenian
brothers. We condemn Prime Minister Erdogan’s statement on ‘keeping
needy Armenians hostage,’ deeming it to be heartless."

A number of Turkish media have republished the Taraf letter, labelling
it "shocking."