Only We Have Precise Ideological Positions: Says Leader Of Armenian

ONLY WE HAVE PRECISE IDEOLOGICAL POSITIONS: SAYS LEADER OF ARMENIAN COMMUNISTS

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Oct 24 2006

"None of political parties but us come up with precise ideological
positions", Rouben Tobmasyan, First Secretary of the Central Committee
of Communist party of RA, said at the press conference in the
‘Pakagits’ club today.

He pointed out that the main political players seeking Parliamentary
majority do not present an action plan and make the election campaign
a cheap bargain for votes. "Potato distributed to villagers can have
only a momentary effect and the five-year exploitation will follow
afterwards. People get all this but within the last 15 years they
were brought to such extreme poverty that they are ready to sell
their votes once again for nothing", said R. Tovmasyan.

He insists that majority of Armenians are for return to the socialist
regime. And this is the reason why they are targeted by a black PR
that is widely spread in the IT policy of the majority of electronic
Mass Media. "Nowadays, TV channels use every chance to criticize
this or that moment of Soviet history and to blacken activities of
Communists. Meanwhile, people keep leaving the country and only the
Army celebrates the Independence Day. Laborers (who add 12% to economy
growth) do not come to the Republic Square during celebrations",
pointed out the communist leader.

He said that one of the manifestations of anti-Communist hysteria are
interior conflicts of the parties. As a result some high officials were
bribed. "Sanatruk Sahakyan, Ex-Second Secretary of Central Committee
(CC) of the Communist Party, who at first acted as a radical Communist
and, when later expelled from the party, entered a rightist-liberal
‘Orinats Yerkir’ party. I think he and alike party members have signed
their political obituary notices. I do not want to comment on their
further steps any more", said R. Tovmasyan.

Henri Cuny Indicates Necessity To Continue Negotiations On Karabakh

HENRI CUNY INDICATES NECESSITY TO CONTINUE NEGOTIATIONS ON KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

Noyan Tapan
Oct 24

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 24, NOYAN TAPAN. "There should be an understanding
about the necessity to continue negotiations on the Karabakh
conflict settlement because it proceeds from the interests of both
countries." The French Ambassador to Armenia Henri Cuny, who completes
his diplomatic mission in Armenia stated this at the October 24 press
conference. He said that the OSCE Minsk Group is continuing its work:
today a meeting of the French foreign minister with his Armenian and
Azerbaijani counterparts is taking place in Paris. He also reminded
about the RA President Robert Kocharian’s words that "nobody, except
for the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan, is familiar with the
Karabakh file as well as Jacques Chirac." In the words of H. Cuny,
France played a great role in resumption of the negotiations on
peaceful settlement of the Karabakh conflict in 2006. "Within the
framework of the negotiation process, the co-chairs implement the work
on harmonization, but the decision on choosing the "melody" is taken
by the presidents of the two countries," the ambassador noted. As
regards the possible impact of the law on criminal repsonsibility
for denial of the Armenian Genocide, which was adopted by the French
National Assembly, on the Armenian-Turkish relations, Ambassador
Cuny stated:"Your future is in your hands." In connection with talks
about France’s support for former NA speaker Artur Baghdasarian,
H. Cuny said: "France does not interfere in the internal affairs of
any state. At the same time, it does not prevent the establishment of
friendly relations with certain people. Artur Baghdasarian has always
been quite friendly disposed to France and supported Francophonie
in Armenia." Nenri Cuny stated that his country expects transparent
elections to be held in Armenia: "We will follow the elections with
great attention."

Collection Of Fashion Designers Tarloyan Brothers Residing In France

COLLECTION OF FASHION DESIGNERS TARLOYAN BROTHERS RESIDING IN FRANCE
SHOWN FOR FIRST TIME IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 20, NOYAN TAPAN. October 19 showing of splendid
collection of clothes of Tarloyan brothers residing in France was among
the series of cultural events organized in Yerevan in connection with
Year of Armenia in France. These collections on subjects "Inquisition"
and "Escape" including 150 clothes were shown in Paris before this. In
the collection Gevorg and Vardan Tarloyans tried to present the history
of the medieval period through showing of medieval clothes. "We try to
show not only the clothes, but also by means of models to present some
historic period, literary or opera creations that are accompanied by
music making the show perfect," the brothers emphasized. The Tarloyans
expressed the hope that very soon they will again appear before the
Armenian spectator with a new collection. Vardan and Gevorg Tarloyans
graduated from Art College after P.Terlemezian and later, from Yerevan
Art Academy. They profoundly studied Armenian miniature painting and
got specialized in this branch of art. In 1991 they left for Holland,
then for Belgium and in 1993 settled in the capital of France where
they graduated from Paris Fashion Higher School. The brothers had
their training practice at Chanel, Christian Dior and other fashion
houses. Currently they work independently and soon production of the
clothes designed by them will start.

Call for freedom of speech rings hollow

Call for freedom of speech rings hollow

By RM Walters

FT
October 17 2006 03:00

Sir, Your clarion call "Threat to free speech" (editorial, October 13)
has a hollow ring to it. Consider for a moment how much free speech the
ordinary citizens of the European Union have been allowed to date over
whether they wish Turkey to join (and likewise, Romania and Bulgaria);
and how much free speech Turkey allows its intellectuals (let alone
its Kurdish minority). It is quite understandable if France’s Armenian
minority do not want Turkey to be encouraged to rewrite history.

R. M. Walters,

Upminster RM14 1BP

ANKARA: Turks protest outside French Embassy in Bucharest

Turks protest outside French Embassy in Bucharest:

Turkish Daily News
Oct 20 2006

Diplomacy Newsline
Friday, October 20, 2006

ANK – TDN with AFP

Some 30 Turkish residents of Romania demonstrated on Wednesday outside
France’s embassy in Bucharest against a French bill making it a crime
to deny that Armenians were victims of genocide at the hands of the
Ottoman Empire.

They held up banners in French saying that politicians should not
legislate on historical matters.

Some of the demonstrators left a letter of protest at the embassy,
reported the Mediafax news agency.

The bill, which needs to be approved by the French Senate and president
to become law, provides for a year in jail for anyone denying the
alleged genocide. It was approved by a vote in the lower house of
the French Parliament last Thursday.

Moscow officials pursue Caucasian residents

Moscow officials pursue Caucasian residents
By Vahe Avanesian and Lala Nuri in Moscow and Sopho Bukia in Tbilisi

Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Oct 19 2006

Georgians in Russia fear for their future as Moscow-Tbilisi dispute
escalates

For a week now, Gia Paichadze has not left his apartment on Bagritsky
Street in Moscow, which he’s been renting for two years, except for
a quick dash to a nearby kiosk to buy food or a newspaper.

A week ago, Paichadze was still working as the manager of a chain of
grocery shops outside Moscow. The shops, which all belonged to ethnic
Georgians, have now all been shut down, and signs on the doors say
they are "closed for technical reasons".

Paichadeze said they had taken the decision to shut the shops
themselves, after the daily visits by tax officials, health inspectors
and others had become unbearable.

"The point is that we are Georgians, and that explains everything,"
he told IWPR by telephone. "My documents are in perfect order, but
showing my face on the street is still a risk. I stay at home and
watch the news. I’ll wait for a couple of months, and if things don’t
calm down, I’ll leave."

Moscow has kept up the heat on Tbilisi following the latter’s arrest of
four Russian officers on espionage charges on September 27, even though
the four were later released and handed over to the Russian side.

Moscow cut off all air, land, sea and postal links with its southern
neighbour. It has also imposed restrictions on bank transfers, directly
hurting the hundreds of thousands of Georgians working in Russia.

Over the last few days, Moscow courts have handed down deportation
sentences on 130 illegal migrants from Georgia and around 700 Georgian
citizens have left the Russian capital.

On October 17, Georgian citizen Tengiz Togonidze, 58, died in Moscow’s
Domodedovo Airport a few hours before he was about to be deported,
raising a storm of protest in Georgia.

Georgia’s foreign ministry accused the Russian authorities of violating
the rights of Georgian citizens. The ministry said Togonidze, who
was asthmatic, did not receive proper medical aid – an allegation
the Russians have denied.

Russia’s federal migration service says that deportation flights of
Georgians continue. People are being detained on the street and taken
to one of eight special stations set up in Moscow. A court ruling
is needed for the deportation to go ahead, but this is basically
a formality.

Mikhail Tyurkin, deputy director of the federal migration service,
said, "An analysis of requests from regions and subjects of Russia
has led us to conclude that we don’t need Georgian citizens at
the moment. They will be given neither quotas for living, nor for
temporary work."

Georgian-owned businesses are also being targeted. The well-known
Crystal and Golden Palace casinos in Moscow have been closed down.

The official charge sheet says the casinos failed to produce licenses
for some of their slot machines and, among other violations, paid
employees’ salaries in envelopes. But it also noted that the owners
are "natives of Georgia".

The Russian police have even traced illegal migrants from Georgia
through their children. They asked a number of schools in the capital
to provide them with a list of pupils with Georgian surnames and then
questioned the children about where their parents lived, whether they
had visas and were registered.

Nato Merabishvili, who has lived in Moscow for 15 years, said her son
Kakha had been interrogated. "It’s simply a disgrace, and it was done
in such a humiliating manner!" she fumed.

Russian citizen Sveta Smirnova has a Georgian husband and their
children go to a school in the centre of Moscow. "Every morning my
parents take the kids to school and wait for them there till the end of
the studies," she told IWPR. "My children have a Georgian surname, and
they won’t be safe so long as this anti-Georgian hysteria continues."

The Russian-Georgian conflict has also affected migrants from other
parts of the South Caucasus.

Teimuraz Huseinli, chairman of the Azerbaijani Society Yeni Sabakh
(New Day) in Moscow, said police raids on food markets, where many
Azerbaijanis work, had intensified lately. "Even after the terrorist
acts in Moscow, the checking campaigns were not as pervasive as
this one," he told IWPR. "They’ve begun checking documents even in
people’s apartments. Of course, you can always buy them off, but
the prices have risen sharply. They used to take 100 to 200 rubles
(four to seven US dollars) for an expired migration card, now the
cost is at least 50 dollars."

However, Georgians, who do not have the right documents, now prefer
to pass themselves off as Armenians. Georgian citizens Kristina
Sanikidze graduated from Moscow State University. Because she had
problems getting a job, she applied for a Russian passport with her
surname changed to Akopova. "After all these events, I’ve stopped
hoping that anything good will come out of it," she said. "My Georgian
passport has expired, and I can’t even go back to Tbilisi to get a
new one… I’m a captive in Moscow, I’m even afraid of going outside."

A young Georgian named Anzori has been working on Moscow building
sites for more than a year and his temporary registration, permission
to work and visa have all expired. However, he has managed to get
himself a paper saying that his documents are being processed –
and that he has an Armenian surname.

"That means they treat me fairly OK," Anzori told IWPR. "For instance,
my friends and I – none of us has normal documents – were coming
back from work, when policemen stopped us. What else could we
do? As one of the policemen was reading my papers, we said we were
against [Georgian president Mikheil] Saakashvili and swore at the
president. They took pity on us and let us continue on our way. They
even refused to take money."

IWPR witnessed how Georgians are now being treated. A policeman stopped
an Armenian passer-by, and asked him to present his documents. At
that moment, a colleague approached him, escorting a young man. "Look,
I’ve got a Georgian," he said, whereupon the first policemen returned
the documents to the Armenian, saying he was "free", and they led
the Georgian off together.

"I don’t know when all this is going to end," said Malkhaz Janashia,
a Georgian, who has lived in Moscow for 22 years. "Georgians can no
longer walk Moscow streets free of charge, even if their documents
are faultless. You have to pay bribes everywhere. Spending one week
in the country, of which I am a citizen, has cost me 3,000 rubles
(110 dollars)."

An informal poll among Muscovites shows that most support the official
line. "I am fully supportive of our authorities’ actions, Georgians
should know where their place is," said Valentina Nikolayevna. "If
they don’t agree with their president, they should speak out."

"This is the right thing to do to all of them, especially to the
Georgians, because they’ve proved to be the most ungrateful of all,"
said businessman Mikhail Vorobyov.

Only two of more than ten people questioned were critical about the
crackdown. "Georgians are toiling for the good of our country, and
this is how we respond," said one of them, Anna Ageyeva.

Russia shows no signs of wishing to lift its sanctions against
Georgia in the near future. "The release of our [officers] does not
mean a reversal of Georgia’s deliberate anti-Russian policy," Russian
foreign minister Sergei Lavrov told foreign journalists. "And there
is not yet a good reason for us to reconsider our actions."

Vahe Avanesian is director of the Moscow office of the Armenian
TV-channel Shant. Lala Nuri works for the newspaper Azerros in
Moscow. Sopho Bukia is IWPR’s Georgia Editor in Tbilisi.

ANKARA: Baykal: No one has the right to allege Turkey committed Geno

BAYKAL: "NO ONE HAS THE RIGHT TO ALLEGE TURKEY COMMITTED A GENOCIDE ON ARMENIANS"

Turkish Press
Oct 19 2006

Press Review

AKSAM

Speaking at his party’s group meeting yesterday, main opposition
Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Deniz Baykal commented on the
Armenian bill passed last week by the French Parliament, saying that
no one had the right to say that Turkey had committed a genocide on
Armenians. Stressing that 17 countries had made this false allegation,
Baykal stated that 10 of these were European Union members. Commenting
on the recent dispute between Chief of General Staff Gen. Yasar
Buyukanit and opposition True Path Party (DYP) leader Mehmet Agar,
who suggested that terrorists should be encouraged to come down from
the mountains so they can take part in politics, Baykal criticized
Agar’s suggestion. /Aksam/

Armenian Movie Featured In Turkey

ARMENIAN MOVIE FEATURED IN TURKEY

AZG Armenian Daily
20/10/2006

"Golden Apricot" International Film Festival in cooperation with
Turkish Anatolu Kyultur NGO has organized featuring of Armenian movies
in Istanbul.

Harutyun Khachatrian’s "The Return of the Poet" was featured at
Diarbekir’s Cultural Center on Oct. 7 and at Istanbul’s Bogazici
University on Oct. 10. Besides this film, the filmmaker’s "Return to
the Promised Land" and "Documentalist" as well as Albert Mkrtchian’s
"Joyful Bus" were featured at Belgi University in Istanbul. Film
critic Artsvi Bakhchinian from Yerevan delivered lectures on the past
and present of the Armenian cinema during each screening.

Rice Warns Tehran

RICE WARNS TEHRAN
By Petros Keshishian

AZG Armenian Daily
19/10/2006

Moscow May Vote for Anti-Iranian Punishment Measures, if ….

US State Secretary Condoleezza Rice warned the Iranian authorities that
in case they continue the implementation of their nuclear program,
the Country will have to face the punishment measures that were
approved by the UN Security Council and applied against Korea.

AFP informed that Rice stated that she expects UN Security Council
to begin elaboration of the resolution on the Anti-Iranian punishment
measures already this week. Rice stated that countries like Korea and
Iran create main threats against the spreading of the anti-nuclear
regime.

On Saturday, UN Security Council unanimously adopted the bill on
anti-Korean resolution and initiated punishment measures for the
nuclear tests carried out by Korea on October 9. The American try to
make UN decide to take punishment measures against Iran as well. Iran
continues concentration of uranium in its territory.

The representatives of the European Union carried out 4 stages of
negotiations with the Iranians in order to stop the concentration
of uranium. The negotiations yielded no positive results. Thus, EU
decided to submit Iran’s "nuclear case" to the UN Security Council
to secure the implementation of the Anti-Iranian resolution.

USA and EU fear that the nuclear program of Iran will help the Iranians
create nuclear bomb. As for Russian and China, these countries are
against the anti-Iranian punishment measures and they may use their
right for veto.

Russia stated yesterday that it may vote for the anti-Iranian
punishment measures at the UN Security Council, if USA
reconsiders its decision concerning "Soukhoy" and "Rusboronexport"
Russian companies. In August, the US State department applied
punishment measures against these two Russian companies for their
military-technical cooperation with Iran.

Diamanda Galas: The Otherwordly Diva Tackles Armenia

DIAMANDA GALAS: THE OTHERWORDLY DIVA TACKLES ARMENIA
By Nicole Gluckstern

San Francisco Bay Guardian, CA
Oct 18 2006

Leave it to the Germans to invent one multisyllabic word for something
we English speakers can only express in full sentences.

Dubbing the multilingual, three-and-a-half-octave vocal acrobatics of
Diamanda Galas Schreioper (shriek opera), they’ve captured both the
technical virtuosity and the theatrical quality of her performances.

Something akin to a one-woman force of nature, the classically trained
musical extremist has long turned to the dark side for inspiration,
revealing demonic sympathies with her 1982 Litanies of Satan and
creating pieces on the AIDS epidemic for a trilogy of mid-’80s
recordings.

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http://www.sfbg.com/entry.ph