Sargsyan: Ratifying Protocols do not complete process but start it

Serzh Sargsyan: Ratifying the Protocols we do not complete the process
but start it

2010-02-13 16:07:00

ArmInfo. "It is strange not only for us but everybody why Turks
consider or state that the Armenian party delays the process of
ratification of the Armenian-Turkish Protocols",- said Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan in his interview with Al Jazeera television.

On the contrary, it is obvious that it is the Turks that delay the
process, he said. "This is unambiguous because as the leader of the
political force, which makes up the majority in the Armenian
Parliament, I rule out that the protocols will not be ratified by the
Armenian Parliament in case the Turkish Parliament ratifies them
without any preconditions",- stressed the Armenian president.

At Al Jazeera correspondent’s request, Sargsyan said how the events
will develop after both parliaments ratify the Protocols. "After
ratification of the Armenian-Turkish Protocols, the latters will come
into force, the border between Armenia and Turkey will be opened,
afterwards an intergovernmental commission will be set up which will
consist of sub-commissions, and then we will start our dialogue",-
said the president and added that by ratifying the Protocols we do not
complete the process, but start it.

According to the Armenian leader, the opening of the Armenian-Turkish
border is important for Russia and the USA as well. "This is why the
USA, Russia and European Union support this process. That is to say,
the matter concerns not only the opening of the border, but also
establishment of relations",- concluded Serzh Sargsyan.

BAKU: Azerbaijani Official Call On Co-Chair Countries To Exert Press

AZERBAIJANI OFFICIAL CALL ON CO-CHAIR COUNTRIES TO EXERT PRESSURE ON ARMENIA

Trend
Feb 12 2010
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani First Deputy Speaker Ziyafat Asgarov called on OSCE MG
co-chair countries to exert pressure on Armenia.

"The OSCE Minsk Group co-chair countries- the U.S, France and Russia
to pressure on Armenia, so that negotiations on the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict to take place within the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan,"
he said at today’s parliamentary meeting.

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.

Armenia has not yet implemented the U.N. Security Council’s four
resolutions on the liberation of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the
occupied territories.

He said otherwise, as the Azerbaijani President said, it will be
impossible to avoid other solution to the problem.

"The Armenian Constitutional Court’s amendments to the protocols
signed between Turkey and Armenia, has once again confirmed that the
country is not interested in achieving peace in the region," he said.

"However, it is expected to submit the issue of contrived "Armenian
genocide" for the Congress’ discussion Feb.24, without taking into
account Yerevan’s position."

He said the U.S. Congress should bring the question of the Khojali
genocide to the discussion.

"As there are no facts confirming the so-called "Armenian genocide ".

But, there are a lot of the facts confirming the Khojali genocide,"
he added.

The Armenian troops committed genocide in Khojali on Feb. 26, 1992.

The tragedy began early morning. Within hours, over 613 unarmed
Azerbaijani citizens were killed and among them were 106 women and 83
children. About 1,000 people were disabled by shots; eight families
were fully destroyed. A total of 25 children lost both of their
parents and 130 children lost one of them. About 1,275 people were
taken prisoner and around 150 people went missing. Eight families
were completely killed.

Azerbaijan And Turkey At Loggerheads

AZERBAIJAN AND TURKEY AT LOGGERHEADS

Panorama.am
18:57 12/02/2010

Region

The President of the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR)
Rovnag Abdullayev rejected the information spread by the Turkish
media over Baku-Ankara agreement on gas price, Turan reported.

Last week the Turkish media spread information on the abovesaid
agreement, saying 1000 cubic metres to be exported for $300.

Abdullayev said the parties are unable to reach agreement over the
issue and voiced hope the talks will continue.

Apigian-Kessel: Tekeyan Presents Master Violinist Henrik Karapetyan

APIGIAN-KESSEL: TEKEYAN PRESENTS MASTER VIOLINIST HENRIK KARAPETYAN
By Betty Apigian-Kessel

/02/12/apigian-kessel-tekeyan-presents-master-viol inist-henrik-karapetyan/
February 12, 2010

He is only 28 but if his Nov. 19, dissertation recital is any evidence,
master violinist Henrik Karapetyan’s star is destined to rise to
the heavens.

Over 100 people attended the evening event held at the Bloomfield
Township Library presented by the Metro Detroit area Tekeyan Cultural
Association. Introduction was by Edmond Azadian with additional
comments by Nora Azadian.

Henrik is a DMA (doctor of musical arts) candidate in violin
performance at the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre,
and Dance, the equivalent of a performance Ph.D. which he will receive
next spring. He was accepted to do his doctoral studies in 2007 with
full tuition and a part-time teaching appointment as a grad student
instructor.

The Michigan School of Music is rated as one of the best schools
in the country, accepting only two to three violinists a year from
scores of applicants. Being selected is an honor.

Karapetyan is a Yerevan native and comes from a family of musicians.

Locally, he is the nephew of Anahit Toomajan, wife of Prof. Dicran
Toomajan, so he comes with an impressive pedigree. He speaks Armenian,
Russian, French, and excellent English.

He began his music lessons at the age of six at the Spendiarian
Special Music School of Yerevan. In 1997, he entered the Komitas
State Conservatory of Music in the class of distinguished professor S.

Akhnazaryan.

He performed as the conservatory’s orchestra concertmaster during the
premiere performance of J.S. Bach’s "Matthew’s Passions" in Armenia.

He was a semi-finalist in an international competition held in France
thereafter traveling through Europe as a member of the "Serenade"
Chamber Orchestra.

Karapetyan moved to the U.S. in 2001 as a graduate student, during
which time he held the concertmaster’s position with the Plymouth and
International Symphony Orchestras. In 2005, he completed a recording
project featuring violin-piano miniatures performed by himself and
his wife Yevgenya Lavrovskaya.

In 2004, Karapetyan joined the Michigan Opera Theatre as a section
violinist. He teaches lessons and master classes, and is a clinician
and freelancer in the Detroit area. As the violinist of the "Luminare"
duo, he performs close to 100 shows annually together with his wife.

His concert "Medieval Voices-Modern Reflections" consisted of
modern music compositions inspired by the Armenian religious music
tradition, including works by Sharafyan, Alan Hovhaness, Aghajanyan,
and Baghdasaryan. Two world premieres were played at the concert,
one featuring a piece by Karapetyan-the very exciting "The Birth
of Vahakn"-and a piano trio by Daniel Thomas Davis commissioned for
the occasion.

Karapetyan gives his good, non-Armenian friend Davis (the composer
of "Diary of Scattering") high marks as an outstanding composer of
our time. Perhaps a first, Davis’s "Scattering" was inspired by the
Armenian religious tradition. His inspiration was the history of the
Armenians-including the genocide and the resulting diaspora-evoking
great emotion with his lovely composition. My conversation with Davis
revealed he had a friendship with a Watertown, Mass. Armenian. That
influence resulted in composing a magnificent tribute to Armenians
everywhere.

Credit must be give to Karapetyan. Amongst his ambitions is to bring
Armenian music widely to non-Armenian audiences, accomplishing that
by including non-Armenians in the process as performers and composers,
as was done tonight.

Karapetyan is in exceptional company with the likes of Komitas,
Tahmizyan, Atayan, and Kooshnarian, all of whom consider Armenian
religious music as the purest expression of true Armenian spirit
and character. Appropriately, Karapetyan has a photo of himself with
Komitas’s statue, which stands in downtown Detroit on Jefferson Ave.

For a year, the master violinist was the director of the choir at St.

Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church of Dearborn.

The future for Henrik Karapetyan? He sees himself comfortable in
an academic environment of a college or university where he can
simultaneously teach and perform. In his collaboration with Davis,
Karapetyan says, "I have been lucky to have him in my project. My
intention is to bring this to wider audiences and I hope to get other
Armenian communities nationwide interested in it."

Henrik and Yevgenya Karapetyan have a son and reside in Rochester. As
if his agenda were not ambitious enough, his other interests
include chess, reading, and writing. Not only is he a violinist of
accomplishment, he is also a prize winner of the Armenian National
Competition of Young Writers in 1996. He was been blessed with many
talents.

Armenian communities alert: If you want to avail youselves of Henrik
Karapetyan’s project and enlighten others about beautiful Armenian
music, do yourselves a favor, contact him at [email protected].

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010

Armenia Takes A Step Forward In Civilized Society Building

ARMENIA TAKES A STEP FORWARD IN CIVILIZED SOCIETY BUILDING

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.02.2010 16:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today, February 12 RA National Assembly hears drafts
law on Compulsory Auto Liability Insurance, centering around social
aspects of the bill discussed.

According to the chairman of the NA Standing Committee on
Financial-Credit, Budgetary and Economic Affairs Gagik Minasyan,
the bill will allow for road accidents’ prevention and defence of
injured party’s interests. "The new insurance system is another step
forward in civilized society building," he stated.

CBA Vice President Vache Gabrielyan , in turn, noted that the law
on Compulsory Auto Liability Insurance will boost development of
insurance market in Armenia, raise competitiveness level and lay
foundation for insurance culture in the country.

The draft law on Compulsory Auto Liability Insurance will become
effective from the year 2011, PanARMENIAN.Net correspondent reported
from RA NA.

Ohanyan Presented Military Cooperation Prospects In Paris

OHANYAN PRESENTED MILITARY COOPERATION PROSPECTS IN PARIS

news.am
Feb 10 2010
Armenia

Feb. 9, RA Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan met the Executive Director
of the Foundation for Strategic Research Camille Grand in Paris.

After the tete-a-tete meeting Ohanyan presented principles of Armenia’s
defense policy in South Caucasus, security priorities, major trends
of international cooperation in military field, as well as RA Defense
Ministry’s stance on regional issues. French Foreign Office and Defense
Ministry representatives, journalists and scholars attended the event,
RA Defense Ministry Press Service informed NEWS.am.

The delegation also visited Mourmelon military training center and
met with its leadership.

Within the framework of the visit Ohanyan met with the head of Chief
of Defense staff of France, General Jean-Louis Georgelin to discuss
military cooperation issues.

Azeri Islamic Party Condemns Israeli Foreign Minister’s Visit To Bak

AZERI ISLAMIC PARTY CONDEMNS ISRAELI FOREIGN MINISTER’S VISIT TO BAKU

Vision of the Islamic Republic of Iran Sahar TV (in Azerio)
Feb 8 2010
Iran

The leader of the Islamic Party of Azerbaijan has denounced a scheduled
visit by the Israeli foreign minister to Baku as an "insult" to
the country.

In an interview with Iran’s Sahar 1 TV channel on 8 February, Haci
Movsum Samadov urged the authorities "to prevent the arrival of such
a criminal" in Azerbaijan.

"We view this visit as an insult to our nation, as a black stain on
our history, and we want and demand that relevant organizations stop
his arrival," Samadov said.

Avigdor Lieberman is expected to visit the Azerbaijani capital on
9 February.

Also speaking on Sahar 1 TV, Islamic scholar Leyla Abbasova said:
"I would not like we have that Jewish Zionist sitting at our table."

Novrasta Ibrahimova, chairwoman of the board of women of the party,
asked the Azerbaijani leadership why Avigdor Lieberman, whose country
"has brought the whole world into darkness", was visiting Azerbaijan.

Another activist of the Islamic Party Emilya Tagiyeva described
"Karabakh’s occupation as a continuation of Quds".

At Tate Modern, Gorky’s Power And Poetry

AT TATE MODERN, GORKY’S POWER AND POETRY
By Valerie Gladstone

New York Times
9/at-tate-modern-gorkys-power-and-poetry/
Feb 9 2010

Starting tomorrow, fans of Arshile Gorky should head straight to the
Tate Modern (Bankside, SE1; 44-207-887-8888; ),
which is hosting the first major retrospective of the enormously
influential artist to be seen in Europe in about 20 years.

One of the most revered painters of the 20th century, the Armenian-born
Gorky produced paintings of haunting grandeur.

Synthesizing the work of artists like Breton, Cézanne and Picasso,
he helped to create the Abstract Expressionist movement (he was a
teacher to Mark Rothko and a friend to Willem de Kooning). But Gorky,
who escaped the Armenian genocide in 1915, also led a difficult life
— evident in the evolution of his work — and ultimately committed
suicide.

The Gorky exhibition, which originated at the Philadelphia Museum
of Art and runs at the Tate through May 3, features the particularly
searing painting "The Artist and his Mother," which exposes the rawness
of Gorky’s pain at seeing his mother die of starvation. In contrast,
after spending time in the countryside with his wife in the ’40s,
he began painting radiant works, such as the luminous "Waterfall,"
with its fluid, amorphous shapes and drips of liquid paint.

"Gorky is a great artist," Matthew Gale, a curator at the Tate Modern,
said, "and this is an opportunity for a new generation to reassess
the power and delicate lyricism of his work in depth. Abstract
Expressionism was vitally infused with his example. As is often
the case, however, it was the influence of an attitude — in Gorky,
passionate, exacting, inventive, ultimately tragic — that was more
powerful than any stylistic influence."

The Tate Modern is open Sunday to Thursday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.; Friday
and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.

http://intransit.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/0
www.tate.org.uk/modern/

Is/Was There A Genocide In Palestine?

IS/WAS THERE A GENOCIDE IN PALESTINE?

The Palestine Telegraph
Feb 8 2010

London, February 8, (Pal Telegraph) – Having commemorated Holocaust
Memorial Day with Holocaust survivor Hajo Meyer and some Jewish
friends, after a talk at Goldsmith University last week, I feel
that Palestinians have many common experiences with the survivors of
the Holocaust.

The way Meyer was imprisoned in the ghetto and moved across the
checkpoints could be a stereotypical image in occupied Palestine. I
was personally amazed to hear Hajo Meyer himself saying that the
Palestinian suffering is so close to the Holocaust and sometimes it
is the same. I was amazed because I heard it not from a Palestinian,
but from a Jewish man who has suffered a lot.

For a long time, it has been widely argued that genocide has never been
committed in Palestine. Some media outlets close to the Palestinian
viewpoint reckon there was genocide, one that is still in progress. The
Israeli narrative rejects the use of this term for the Palestinian
experience. Without doubt, the Germans perpetrated a heinous crime
and genocide against the Jews in World War Two. This should never
even be argued. Around 6 million Jews were killed across Europe in
an act that can never be tolerated by humanity. It was a huge crime.

There have, however, been genocides against many other peoples such as
the American Indians and the Armenians, which must also be remembered.

Most of these genocides are on a smaller scale than the Holocaust, but
surely the fact that genocide has occurred must be condemned no matter
the scale. Indeed, this seems to be the feeling of many Holocaust
survivors themselves. They believe it is crucial to recognize, condemn
and fight against genocide wherever it is happening no matter whether
it is a few thousand or millions.

The core question here is, have the Palestinians suffered genocide by
Israel? Has Israel really ethnically cleansed Palestinians? Does the
term genocide apply in the Palestinian case? Is it legally applicable?

Readers can make their own judgment via this analysis.

In 1944, Polish-Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin coined the word "genocide"
by combining "geno" from the Greek word for race or tribe, with
"cide" from the Latin word for killing. He proposed that genocide
consists in "a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the
destruction of essential foundations of the life of national groups,
with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves."

Is this really happening; has it happened in Palestine? According
to the vivid history of the founding of Israel, thousands of violent
actions have been committed against one group of people: Palestinians.

Over 535 villages were destroyed, thousands were massacred, and around
800,000 were driven from their homes by force or fear of force. In all,
a process referred to by Israeli historian Ilan Pappé and others as
‘ the ethnic cleansing of Palestine’. If genocide is concerned with
the annihilation of a group, surely this is genocide.

On December 9, 1948, the United Nations approved the Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. This convention
establishes "genocide" as an international crime, which signatory
nations "undertake to prevent and punish." It defines genocide as:
[G]enocide means any of the following acts committed with intent
to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or
religious group, as such:

(a) Killing members of the group; In 1948, thousands of Palestinians
were exterminated as terrorist Jewish groups like the Stern, Haganah
and Irgun, launched guerrilla wars against civilians. The attacks
amounted to ethnic cleansing with intent as many villagers were told
to leave or they would be killed.

Deir Yassin massacre took place on April 9, 1948. Over 100 villagers,
including women and children, were annihilated. Some were shot by
live ammunition while others burned to death as rockets rained down
on the village. The prisoners were killed after being paraded through
the streets in occupied Jerusalem. In 1956, and after hundreds of
massacres committed in 1948, a massacre took place in Khan Younis in
the middle of the Gaza Strip. The victims were up to 500 from the
normal villagers. Other numbers were from the Egyptians who were
policing the area at that time.

(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
Nowadays, the deadly siege in Gaza could be considered as genocide
under this item. Bodily harm has been caused not only within the time
of the siege or the last war on Gaza in December 2008/January 2009,
but since the beginning of the Israeli occupation of Palestine.

With the maintenance of the siege, the scale of victims in Gaza is
always on the rise. The overwhelming majority of those victimized were
civilians, whereas only a small minority was resistance fighters. Some
agencies cite that 93% of those victimized were civilian, while only 7%
were resistance fighters (See Oxfam Report).

Organized and systematic attacks against civilians in Gaza can also be
considered to be part of the genocide. Several months before Operation
Cast Lead, an Israeli minister even used the term ‘holocaust’ to
describe what is planned for the citizens of Gaza. On 28th February
2008, the Guardian, BBC and other media outlets reported the story
under the title, "Israeli minister warns of Palestinian ‘holocaust’".

The Guardian reported that:

"An Israeli minister today warned of increasingly bitter conflict
in the Gaza Strip, saying the Palestinians could bring on themselves
what he called a "holocaust".

"The more Qassam [rocket] fire intensifies and the rockets reach a
longer range, they will bring upon themselves a bigger shoah because
we will use all our might to defend ourselves," Matan Vilnai, Israel’s
deputy defence minister, told army radio.

Shoah is the Hebrew word normally reserved to refer to the Jewish
Holocaust. It is rarely used in Israel outside discussions of the Nazi
extermination of Jews during the second world war, and many Israelis
are loath to countenance its use to describe other events."

Guardian:
/world/2008/feb/29/israelandthepalestinians1

Anot her genocidal act, which is causing mental harm, is also
applicable. In Gaza, the recent siege is affecting all aspects of
life. The children are suffering from severe health problems in terms
of malnutrition, anemia and other conditions caused by poor diet. As
pointed out in many UN agency reports, all Gazan children suffer
with mental and emotional problems. Stress and trauma are leaving the
children sick-minded due to constant fear. They have no opportunities
for fun and joy, as the Israeli blockade even includes a ban on toys
and the conditions of life are so hard. It is not an exaggeration to
say that a considerable number of the Gazan population are exhausted
and mentally drained, as their life is lifeless. They live with fear,
deprivation, war, restriction of freedom and death.

(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated
to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;

This has been happening for years since the establishment of the state
of Israel. Focusing on the Gaza strip now, the siege has impacted
every single corner of life. Living conditions are disastrous at the
moment. Factories have stopped operating, while food barely comes in.

Add to that, people are trapped in a concentration camp that has two
gates that open irregularly.

The Israeli blockade on exports and on all but humanitarian imports
has forced 98 percent of Gaza’s industry to close. Around 1.5
million Palestinians live in the 360 square km (139 square mile)
of Gaza Strip. More than three-quarters of them are refugees whose
families were driven from their land in what is now Israel in the
1948 Arab-Israeli war.

The remaining two characteristics of what constitutes genocide include
imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; and,
forcibly transferring children of the group to another group. These
remaining two characteristics are most evident in the 1948 Arab-Israeli
war and the 1967 war.

http://www.guardian.co.uk

BAKU: USA, Russia’s fair position may help settle Karabakh conflict

Day.az , Azerbaijan
Feb 2 2010

USA, Russia’s fair position may help settle Karabakh conflict – Azeri official

The USA, Russia and France have yet to demonstrate fair position on
the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict which can seriously influence the
conflict settlement, a senior Azerbaijani official has said.

"The USA, Russia and France play a significant role in the settlement
of [Nagornyy Karabakh] conflict. Their concrete, fair position can
play an important role in the settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict. So far, I do not see such position and therefore we are
unable to make serious steps," Novruz Mammadov, head of the foreign
relations department of the Presidential Administration said in an
interview, according to day.az website.

Novruz Mammadov believes that Russia’s active involvement in the
settlement process gives hope: "Russian President Dmitriy Medvedev’s
participation in the Sochi meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian
presidents gave hope to achieving positive outcome…I believe that
positions [of Azerbaijan and Armenia] can become closer only through
such format."

Mammadov has urged the USA and France to have a fair position on the
conflict settlement.

"Not just Russia but USA and France who play a significant role in
international processes should get involved in the process. I believe
that the three countries can make efforts and thus take a fair
position."