BAKU: OSCE fact-finding mission visits Zangilan

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Feb 3 2005

OSCE fact-finding mission visits Zangilan

Baku, February 2, AssA-Irada
The OSCE fact-finding mission, conducting monitoring in the occupied
Azerbaijani territories, visited the Zangilan District on Wednesday,
Armenian media said. According to the mission’s schedule, however, it
was expected to conduct monitoring in the Gubadly District.
Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov told journalists that no changes
have been made to the mission’s schedule and that Baku considers
Armenian press reports biased.
On Tuesday, the mission visited the Jabrayil, Fuzuli and Lachin.
The mission will conduct monitoring for a week, spending a day in
each of the seven Azerbaijani districts. Afterwards, it will prepare
a relevant report within the following ten days and submit it to the
OSCE Permanent Council in Vienna.*

International mission fails to find settlers in Karabakh – Armenian

International mission fails to find settlers in Karabakh – Armenian paper

Azg, Yerevan
2 Feb 05

Text of Tatul Akopyan’s report by Armenian newspaper Azg on 2 February
headlined “OSCE monitoring mission on banks of Araz” and subheaded
“They are looking for settlers in these territories”

A retired Italian diplomat, (?Mario Sika), has told us that he and the
other members of the [OSCE] monitoring mission do not want journalist
to approach them when they talked to locals. Sika used to be the
assistant of Mario Raffaelli, the first chairman of the OSCE Minsk
Group, and unlike other diplomats, he visited the NKR [Nagornyy
Karabakh Republic] at the time when Azerbaijan had occupied 48 per
cent of its area.

There has been no case of hindering the activities of the monitoring
mission, as Europeans and an American, who have covered dozens of
kilometres inspecting the region, have met only a shepherd, a farmer
and a few people passing the road.

On 2 February, Yuriy Merzlyakov and Bernard Fassier, the OSCE Minsk
Group co-chairs, spent the whole day on the left bank of the Araz
River in Cabrayil and Fuzuli districts that formerly belonged to
Azerbaijan. Steven Mann, the US co-chair, returned to Washington after
having visited Karvachar [Kalbacar].

Ms Emily Haber, head of the monitoring mission, in response to our
question whether the Karabakh authorities supported their activities
or created any technical obstacles to hinder the mission’s work, said
that everything was wonderful and that they visited any area they
wished.

“Ms Haber, may I write in our newspaper that the Karabakh authorities
have created all the required conditions for your activities?” I asked
the German lady who kept smiling all the time. “Yes, you may write
that,” she said. This seems to be the only comment I managed to
get. Neither Ms Haber nor the members of the mission nor the OSCE
co-chairs answered other questions. “No comment. It is a technical not
a political mission,” Ms Haber said, though they had promised earlier
that they would have a press spokesman.

Obviously, the monitoring mission arrived in the NKR from Baku through
Yerevan “armed” with maps. The members of the mission are looking for
settlers in different places, but they fail to find them. In Cabrayil
and Fuzuli they did not find a single inhabited house. The situation
differed in Karvachar, where residents of Shaumyan [Goranboy],
Getashen [Caykand] and Mardakert [Agdara] occupied by Azerbaijan
settled after their houses and possessions were seized in 1991-92.

After finishing the monitoring, the OSCE mission will prepare a report
for the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs. They have to find out whether
Armenia and the NKR are conducting an official policy of settlement in
areas outside Nagornyy Karabakh’s administrative border.

A Minsk Group co-chair has said in a conversation with us that
processes like this do not contribute to the settlement of the
Karabakh issue but to some extent distract attention from the essence
of the conflict. Asked about whether they are going to carry out
monitoring [of the part] of Shaumyan, Getashen and Mardakert occupied
by Azerbaijan, a member of the mission said that this could not be
ruled out if Armenia applied to the UN in this regard.

In 1991, the Azerbaijani authorities settled people in over 100,000
houses. Armenians used to live in those houses and were forced to
leave their permanent place of residence.

The OSCE monitoring mission and the Minsk Group co-chairs are expected
to continue inspecting the left bank of Araz in Zangilan District that
formerly belonged to Azerbaijan.

Russian, Azerbaijani officials hail bilateral ties

Associated Press Worldstream
February 2, 2005 Wednesday 12:11 PM Eastern Time

Russian, Azerbaijani officials hail bilateral ties

by AIDA SULTANOVA; Associated Press Writer

BAKU, Azerbaijan

Russia’s foreign minister on Wednesday repeated Moscow’s backing for
international mediators’ efforts to resolve a decade-old conflict
between Azerbaijan and Armenia over a disputed enclave.

Speaking during a trip to this Caspian Sea nation, Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov pledged that Moscow would continue working with other
mediators to resolve the impasse over Nagorno-Karabakh – a largely
ethnic Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan that has been controlled by
ethnic Armenian forces for more than a decade.

“We hope that this process will lead to an agreement,” Lavrov said
after talks with his Azerbaijani counterpart, Elmar Mammadyarov.

Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a six-year war that killed some 30,000
people and drove a million from their homes, before ending in a shaky
cease fire in 1994.

Repeated efforts to negotiate a resolution to the conflict have
failed, and tensions between the two former Soviet countries remain
hostile. The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe has
actively been trying to broker a final deal.

During the 1990s, Azerbaijan often accused Russia of backing Armenia,
but relations between Moscow and Baku have improved in recent years.

Mammadyarov said Russian-Azerbaijani ties were developing in a
“stable and very intensive way, particularly over the last year.”

“We highly assess the strategic partnership with Azerbaijan,” Lavrov
said.

Azerbaijan, an oil-rich nation on the Caspian Sea that borders Russia
in the volatile Caucasus Mountains region, has sought to cultivate
relations with the United States and other Western nations to balance
Moscow’s influence in the region.

The U.S. administration sees the Caspian region as key to reducing
dependence on Middle East oil, and it has strongly backed a US$3.6
billion ([euro]2.8 billion) pipeline that will pump Caspian Sea oil
through Georgia to Turkey’s Mediterranean coast for export to Western
markets.

Asked about Azerbaijan’s efforts to develop closer ties with NATO,
Lavrov said that Russia had no complaints and added that Moscow also
had friendly ties with the alliance.

“Azerbaijan is a sovereign state, and like any sovereign state is
free to choose its foreign policy partners,” Lavrov said.

Armenia to Showcase Its Machine-Building at USA Fair

ARMENIA TO SHOWCASE ITS MACHINE -BUILDING AT USA FAIR

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian Development Agency
(ADA) will take several samples of Armenian machinery building to
showcase them at WestTech fair that will take place in the USA on
April 4-7. On the sidelines of the exhibition a conference on
investment opportunities will be held.

Armenian representatives will also take part this year in another
business forum in China. The ADA will also represent Armenia at
AICHI-2005 exhibition in Japan.

Apart from that the ADA plans also to conduct three major
advertising campaigns to showcase Armenia’s achievements in organic
chemistry, high technology and bio-technology. The first will be in
Europe, the second in the USA and the third in Australia.

Eastern Diocese Readies Preps For Genocide 90th Anniversary Commem.

EASTERN DIOCESE READIES PREPARATIONS FOR GENOCIDE 90TH ANNIVERSARY
REMEMBRANCE

YEREVAN, January 28 (Noyan Tapan). The law “On Parties,” in essence,
froze the desperate situation formed in this sphere and closes the way
to formation of new political forces. Vigen Khachatrian, a member of
the “Club of Political Dispute,” declared this during the discussion
of the amendments to the law “On Parties” organized on January 27 in
the club. According to him, under the formed conditions when really
the parliament and parties don’t form the executive power and aren’t
able to control it effectively the amendment introduced to the law
gives new levers for control over the parties to the executive power.
Khachatrian also said that this “innovation” will contribute to
strengthening of monopoly positions of pro-governmental parties.

According to him, the amendments introduced to the law are really
aimed at limitation of political competition as the most important
condition of modern democracy. “Not encouraging but hampering
principles are the basis of the amendments.” In Khachatrian’s opinion,
the main provision of the Constitution, according to which the parties
are free to be formed and contribute to formation of political life of
the country, should be fixed and developed in the law. According to
another proposal of the speaker, they should introduce additions to
the law taking into consideration the demand of Article 7 of the
Constitution, according to which the structure and work of the parties
can’t contradict the democratic principles. According to Vigen
Khachatrian, the law badly reflects the mechanisms that will provide
fulfilment of the constitutional demand regarding publicity of
financial activity of parties. Samvel Nikoyan, an MP, a member of the
“Republican Party of Armenia” faction, and Stepan Zakarian, an MP, a
member of the “Ardarutiun” (“Justice”) faction, made reports during
the discussion.

Arrested Leader of Armenian Aryans Goes on Hunger Strike

ARRESTED LEADER OF ARMENIAN ARYANS GOES ON HUNGER STRIKE

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28. ARMINFO. The recently arrested leader of the
Armenian-Aryan Order party Armen Avetissyan has gone on hunger strike.

The reason is that Avetissyan has been placed in the same cell with
criminals who used violence against him. Avetissyan’s lawyer Melania
Arustamyan and an ombudsman representative are now in the cell to
inquire into the situation.

Thursday MPs Viktor Dallakyan and Manuk Gasparyan asked Yerevan’s
Prosecutor Hrach Badalyan to change the measure of restriction against
Avetissyan.

To remind, Avetissyan was arrested for kindling ethnic, racial and
religious strife.

BAKU: Azeri leader upbeat on peaceful solution to Karabakh – agency

Azeri leader upbeat on peaceful solution to Karabakh – agency

Azartac news agency, Baku
27 Jan 05

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has said that he hopes that
concrete results will be achieved in the talks to settle the Nagornyy
Karabakh conflict mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group.

Despite the 10-year-long negotiations held within the framework of the
Minsk Group, no results have been achieved in the search for a
peaceful settlement to the Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict, President Aliyev said at a meeting with the new French
cochairman of the Minsk Group, Bernard Fassier, on 27 January.
However, intensification of the activities of the group and the
continuation of talks between the foreign ministers give us hope that
some progress will be achieved in the settlement of the conflict, the
state-owned Azartac news agency quoted Aliyev as saying.

Italia-Armenia: Ciampi, appoggiamo avvicinamento all’UE

ANSA Notiziario Generale in Italiano
giovedì 27 gennaio 2005

ITALIA-ARMENIA: CIAMPI, APPOGGIAMO AVVICINAMENTO ALL’UE ;
COLLOQUIO E COLAZIONE AL QUIRINALE PER PRESIDENTE KOCHARIAN

ROMA

(ANSA) – ROMA, 27 GEN – “L’Italia appoggera’ l’Armenia
nell’avvicinamento all’Unione Europea”, ha detto Carlo Azeglio
Ciampi accogliendo al Quirinale il presidente della Repubblica
caucasica, Robert Kocharian, in visita ufficiale in Italia.

Ciampi ha accolto l’ospite nel cortile d’onore, dove i
reparti militari schierati hanno tributato gli onori militari.
Dopo i colloqui e l’incontro con i giornalisti, lo ha trattenuto
a colazione.

Il presidente della Repubblica ha definito promettenti le
opportunita’ di rafforzare i rapporti bilaterali sul piano
politico ed economico, e ha incoraggiato le autorita’ di Erevan
a consolidare le fondamenta dell’ economia di mercato, a
proseguire “con tenacia” sulla via delle riforme necessarie
per affermare lo stato di diritto e una democrazia matura; a
risolvere per via negoziale la crisi del Nagorno-Karabakh,
attraverso il dialogo e lo spirito costruttivo.

Nella Repubblica Armena, che fa parte della CSI (Comunita’ di
Stati Indipendenti che riunisce 12 dei 13 Stati ex Urss)) e ha
da sempre rapporti preferenziali con Mosca, il presidente
Kocharian ha avviato una politica che guarda verso Occidente e
in particolare verso Bruxelles. All’ospite Ciampi ha detto che
le porte dell’UE sono aperte a rapporti piu’ stretti, di buon
vicinato e di maggior cooperazione con Erevan. Ma ha anche
sottolineato che e’ difficile immaginare qualcosa di piu’,
perche l’Europa unita e’ una realta’ omogenea e percio’ non
puo’ estendere i suoi confini all’infinito.

“L’Unione Europea trae la sua forza dal superamento delle
divisioni del passato e – ha spiegato Ciampi – dalla vocazione a
costruire un futuro comune fra popoli che condividono la stessa
storia, la stessa cultura, e che perseguono comuni interessi. La
volonta’ di lavorare insieme, nel rispetto della dignita’ umana,
dei diritti delle minoranze, delle diversita’, e’ essenziale per
il successo dell’integrazione europea. Questo e’ lo spirito con
cui l’UE opera alle proprie frontiere: nei Balcani per
riportarvi dialogo e convivenza; nel Caucaso per rendere
duraturi la democrazia, lo sviluppo, la pace. L’adesione
convinta ai valori fondanti della Costituzione europea – ha
concluso – rappresenta le fondamenta dei rapporti di vicinato
con l’Unione Europea. Su queste basi l’Italia appoggera
l’avvicinamento dell’Armenia all’UE”.(ANSA).

From Yuroz’ Human Rights Mural: Using multiple points of view simul

Coral Springs Potpourri
A modern cubist, a furniture embellisher, and two chicks named Grace —
lassoed together
BY MICHAEL MILLS
newtimesbpb.com
27 Jan 2005

>From Yuroz’ Human Rights Mural: Using multiple points of view simultaneously

“Yuroz’s Narrative Culture of Cubism,” “Felipe R. Luque: Arte Decorativo,”
“Grace Dubow: Simply Grace!”, and “Grace Fishenfeld: Moving Along Through
Media and Idea.”
On display through February 19.
Where: Coral Springs Museum of Art, Coral Springs Center for the Arts, 2855
Coral Springs Dr., Coral Springs, 954-340-5000.

Necessity, so it goes, is the mother of invention. In the case of the Coral
Springs Museum of Art, the need is to fill about 8,000 square feet of
display space on a regular basis. Amazingly, director Barbara K. O’Keefe
does it and does it well, continuing to work with limited resources (a
minuscule budget, a staff consisting mostly of part-timers and volunteers)
and within the confines of city government.
Visit at pretty much any given time and you’ll see the results of O’Keefe’s
inventiveness. Right now, for instance, the museum is host to four solo
exhibitions: “Yuroz’s Narrative Culture of Cubism,” “Felipe R. Luque: Arte
Decorativo,” “Grace Dubow: Simply Grace!”, and “Grace Fishenfeld: Moving
Along Through Media and Idea.” The big center gallery is also temporarily
home to a separate Yuroz work, the massive painting installation United
Nations’ Human Rights Mural 2004.
Off to one side of that main gallery, the museum’s current artist in
residence, Barbara W. Watler, is also at work. (Let’s just say, for the
moment, that a sewing machine and fingerprints are involved.) Adjacent to
Watler’s makeshift workspace are the beginnings of a new art library,
featuring books donated by patrons and custom-made bookshelves. And in the
formerly open space on the other side of the center gallery, behind the
Yuroz mural, there’s now a little seating area furnished with functional art
by W.F. Withers, whose fluid designs for a trio of chairs and a table
beautifully mesh with the museum’s overall look and feel.
As for the exhibitions, while they’re all respectable — O’Keefe rarely
curates a clinker — they also vary in quality. Yuroz, born Yuri Gevorgian
in 1956 in the Soviet (at the time) Republic of Armenia, is the headliner
here. His “Narrative Culture of Cubism,” originally scheduled to end in
November but now extended through mid-February, consists of nearly 30 works,
most of them fairly large oil paintings on canvas or board, supplemented by
a few charcoal drawings.
Yuroz, as the show’s title indicates, specializes in cubism, making him
something of an oddity in contemporary art. He hasn’t, as might be expected,
imposed any radical reinterpretation on the once-revolutionary technique of
using multiple points of view simultaneously. Rather, he has adapted the
classic cubism of Picasso, Georges Braque, and Juan Gris to his own ends.
At first glance, some of Yuroz’s paintings could almost be mistaken for the
work of such early-20th-century cubist pioneers. The carefully controlled
palette, the emphasis on geometric shapes, even the subject matter — all
the basic elements are there. Again and again, Yuroz returns to the same
visual ingredients: men holding or playing guitars, women, wineglasses,
flowers, fruit.
And the subjects are almost always couples. There’s one threesome (two men
and a woman) included in the show, and a few paintings feature solo men or
women, although the women, in particular, tend to look forlorn or at least
bored without male companionship. Then again, all of Yuroz’s characters have
more or less the same blank look. Almost anything could be read into this
lack of affect. In at least one piece, Evening Light, a woman’s pose and
demeanor suggest that she’s a prostitute waiting for a customer — naked
except for a pair of bright-red heels, she sits alone with a glass of wine
at a small table, legs crossed, one arm propped on the table with the hand
cupping her chin, a cigarette dangling from the other hand, an impossibly
world-weary look on her face.
It’s tempting to speculate that women, who are almost always nude in Yuroz’s
pictures, are little more than props for the artist, except that his men
aren’t much more animated. In the exhibition’s handout, Matthew Lutt writes:
“In the art of Yuroz, lovers embrace each other with such passionate
intimacy that it is hard to tell where one ends and the other begins. They
offer roses, exchange fruit, or dance in celebration of their togetherness.”
This sounds exciting, but the paintings don’t exactly bear it out. The
couples indeed seem to melt together, although their closeness seems more a
function of the cubist style than any physical intimacy or emotional
connection. (Occasionally they even resemble conjoined twins.) Those blue
roses and pomegranates Lutt refers to, like the ubiquitous guitars and
glasses of wine, are there to lend variety to the compositions. Cubism’s
tendency to freeze its subjects is probably why its inventors favored the
still life and may be why a Yuroz painting such as Still Life with Blue
Roses by Window is, paradoxically, more alive than his portraits of people.
A huge exception — literally — is the United Nations’ Human Rights Mural
2004, which, despite the generic title, is full of vibrant life. It consists
of six big canvases of overlapping imagery, crammed with people engaged in
all sorts of activities. Individually, the components were the artwork for
stamps issued in the United States, France, and Austria; together, they form
a dramatic narrative of the worldwide struggle for human rights.
Surrounding the mural and stretching beyond the center of the main gallery
are a dozen and a half pieces of furniture by Felipe R. Luque. The native
Spaniard, who settled in Boca Raton after living in New York, works with
wood, iron, and glass, accented with marble, granite, and quartz, all of
which he transforms into tables and consoles of varying dimensions and
shapes (and, in one dazzling piece, into a tiny bench that serves as a base
for a long, narrow, smoky mirror framed by pieces of wood that look like
tree branches).
As the introduction by Roger S. Selby explains, Luque is fond of working
with found objects, each of which might once have been part of something
else — “It might have been a tool, an armoire or a part of a machine. It
already had a predetermined configuration and a patina from constant use” —
which are then incorporated, often with minimal alterations, into the
artist’s work. This accounts for the irregular forms, as well as for a
certain poignancy unusual for furniture.
The small galleries clustered on the museum’s south side feature two Graces
with very different styles and approaches. Grace Dubow, a Texan who came to
Florida by way of Michigan, is the more traditional of the two, working
mostly in watercolors and favoring floral compositions. One grouping
features six versions of Egrets, each executed in a different medium (the
batik version is the best); it’s an interesting experiment made less
interesting by its subject matter. Of the florals, the watercolor White
Cattleya and White Orchid Tree, in painted silk, are the standouts.
Grace Fishenfeld, who still splits her time between Florida and New York, is
more adventurous, dabbling in media ranging from watercolor, pastel, and
acrylic to collage, woodcut, and gouache. She’s also more ambitious, which
can be admirable or lamentable, depending upon the outcome.
Fishenfeld often runs the risk of overconceptualizing, as in the mixed-media
piece Adam & Eve in the City or the dozen gouaches that make up The Myths.
And she can’t seem to resist editorializing, as in this description of the
pastel Anticipating a Visit: “The elderly eagerly await a visit from
children and friends and hope not to be forgotten.” She’s much better off
when her lofty subject matter is secondary to the medium, as in the woodcut
Acrobat and in several mixed-media reliefs incorporating sand.
If Artist in Residence Barbara Watler is at her post, don’t be afraid to
approach and ask her about her art, and don’t be taken aback if she keeps
right on sewing. Quilting, of all things, is the Hollywood-based artist’s
medium of choice, and sample panels and photo albums of her work are
available for examination.
It’s Watler’s quilting quirk, however, that’s of interest. She takes
individual fingerprints (there’s an ink pad and paper at hand if you’d like
to donate yours), enlarges them to varying degrees, then transforms them
into lovely abstracts on her trusty sewing machine. Leave it to the Coral
Springs Museum’s O’Keefe to find such an unusual artist and bring her to our
attention.

CoE’s Karabakh Resolution Has No Legal Impact – Armenian MP

COUNCIL OF EUROPE’S KARABAKH RESOLUTION HAS NO LEGAL IMPACT – ARMENIAN MP

Arminfo
26 Jan 05

YEREVAN

The resolution of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
(PACE) on Nagornyy Karabakh cannot have a legal impact on the
settlement of the Karabakh conflict, but it may have a political
influence on it since it reflects PACE’s official position, the head
of the parliamentary commission for defence, national security and
internal affairs and deputy chairman of the Orinats Yerkir
(Law-Governed Country) Party, Mger Shakhgeldyan, said in an interview
with our Arminfo correspondent commenting on the Nagornyy Karabakh
resolution adopted by PACE yesterday.

Of course, the document contains many provisions that are undesirable
for the Armenian side, but at the same time, it also includes points
that proceed from the interests of the Armenian side, he pointed out.

Among them, the MP named the provision that “the territory can gain
independence if its population is striving for that on the basis of
democratic processes”. The people of Nagornyy Karabakh gained their
independence in a democratic way. Moreover, the document says that no
forcible decision can be thrust upon the people of Nagornyy Karabakh,
which also meets the interests of the Armenian side.