Toronto: Spotlight On Luminato

SPOTLIGHT ON LUMINATO
By Jason Macneil, Special To Sun Media

Toronto Sun, Canada
June 1 2007

For the next 10 days, you may see many things around Toronto which do
not fit neatly into the traditional realms of the art world. However,
the Toronto Festival Of Arts & Creativity, better known as Luminato,
is well worth checking out and with plenty of free events planned,
including a June 1 opening night concert with Chantal Kreviazuk,
Gordie Sampson and Molly Johnson. And many of these events are not
just one-night only affairs. Here are ten of the bigger events taking
place which should shed some light on Luminato:

[parts omitted]

5. AURORAS/TESTIMONY — June 1, The Distillery Historic District
(Artcore)

Film director Atom Egoyan and Kutlug Ataman show two video works which
make their world premiere. Egoyan’s piece concerns the life of Aurora
Mardiganian, a young girl whose story of survival is documented in
the book Ravished Armenia. Meanwhile, Ataman’s piece is a tribute to
his childhood nanny.

WARSAW: Interior Minister Starts Visit To Armenia

INTERIOR MINISTER STARTS VISIT TO ARMENIA

PAP Polish Press Agency
May 30, 2007 Wednesday

Interior Minister Janusz Kaczmarek started a visit to Armenia on
Wednesday during which he is scheduled to discuss border security,
illegal immigration, combating organized crime and terrorism.

Ministry spokesman Michal Radon has told PAP that during a five-day
tour of the region Minister Kaczmarek will also visit Georgia and
Azerbaijan. Minister Kaczmarek has been accompanied by Poland’s police
chief Konrad Kornatowski and border guard deputy chief Jacek Bajger.

The programme of the visit to Armenia envisages a meeting with Prime
Minister Serge Sargsyan and talks with the Territorial Administration
Minister and head of Armenia’s police.

Exam On Armenian Language And Literature Started In The Republic

EXAM ON ARMENIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE STARTED IN THE REPUBLIC

ArmRadio.am
01.06.2007 10:44

For the first time the united and graduation exams on Armenian
language and literature started in the schools of the republic. Early
morning the tests wrapped in plastic sachets were opened in presence
of pupils. Starting 5 a.m. these were distributed to educational
establishments and united examination centers.

The examination tests have been published in a specialized
printing-house in London.

The state graduation exam will last 100 minutes, the united exam –
180 minutes.

The graduates will know the results of the united exam in six days. The
results of the graduation exams will be known by June 20.

Fresno Students Reach Out To Armenia: Manchester Council Will Adopt

FRESNO STUDENTS REACH OUT TO ARMENIA: MANCHESTER COUNCIL WILL ADOPT A VILLAGE SCHOOL
Margaret Slaby

The Fresno Bee – California – KRTBN
Published: May 31, 2007

In the past, student council members at Manchester GATE School have
directed most of their outreach efforts to the local community. They’ve
held canned food, book and stuffed animal drives and collected items
to fill gift boxes for needy children.

But now there’s something much bigger in the works. The council will
adopt a village school in Armenia. Although it hasn’t been confirmed,
Manchester most likely will adopt the village school of Hermon.

Anita Ullner, student council faculty adviser and a sixth-grade
teacher at Manchester, envisions an effort to raise money for desks,
chairs, books, supplies and a computer. She also hopes the schools
can exchange letters and photographs.

"This is going to go on for years, as far as I’m concerned," Ullner
says.

The project came about when Kristina Garabedian, 21, a former
Manchester student now attending Pacific Lutheran College in Tacoma,
Wash., spoke to the council about helping an Armenian school. Her
father, Robert Garabedian, who is a dentist, has gone to Armenia every
summer for the past nine years to provide free dental work and set
up clinics. Kristina and her brother, Michael, 19, as well as their
mother, Sharon, have gone on some of the trips.

Seven years ago, Kristina founded Shoebox Caring, a nonprofit
organization that provides school supplies and other essentials to
Armenian schoolchildren.

Two years ago, through Shoebox Sharing, Fresno’s Gibson Elementary
adopted the Armenian village school of Goshtanik and raised money to
buy desks, chairs, blackboards and a computer; that project is ongoing.

Robert, Sharon and Kristina will travel to Armenia in June to work
out the details of Manchester’s project.

"It’s a wonderful thing when you see the look on these kids’ faces,"
Sharon Garabedian says. "There are kids who haven’t been able to go
to school because they didn’t have a pencil to write with; the only
thing they have to write on are old newspapers. Our 10-cent notebooks
are like gold to them."

Manchester’s student council, which consists of about 40 third-
to sixth- graders, will begin fundraising for the project this
fall. Students already have collected children’s-size Manchester
T-shirts, says council president Joey Perales, 11, a sixth-grader.

Sixth-grader Alex Julian, 11, who was council president last fall,
likes reaching out, whether in Fresno or Armenia. "We feel really
good after we help people," he says.

In October, the council collected more than 5,000 books for Read
Fresno.

"That was a lot of fun," asys sixth-grader Emily Kearns, 11. In
December the council gathered about a dozen boxes of essentials
such as toothpaste, crayons and snacks for Mission Treasure Box,
a project started by Clovis’ Phoenicia and Robert Martinez to help
low-income elementary school children. The council collected almost 400
stuffed animals for a local trauma intervention program and Children’s
Hospital Central California in 2005 and has held canned food drives
for the Fresno Rescue Mission. The council also raised about $3,000
two years ago to help a family displaced by Hurricane Katrina.

"I think helping people is great," says fifth-grader Kennady Reason,
11, the council’s fall secretary/vice president. "We’re helping our
community and building leadership."

The council also directs its efforts toward campus. "We try to improve
the school system and make it fun," says sixth-grader Daria Etezadi,
12, council vice president. Sixth-grader Courtney Lowe, 11, council
secretary, says suggestion boxes are placed in each classroom; the
council votes on items.

Council members also can be found picking up trash on campus.

"Our mission is to serve our Manchester community, whether it be our
neighborhood or in Fresno," Ullner says. "It’s about helping others,
and, hopefully, it becomes part of who they are."

The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or at (559)
441-6758.

Azerbaijan: Building Bridges For President Aliyev’s Re-Election?

AZERBAIJAN: BUILDING BRIDGES FOR PRESIDENT ALIYEV’S RE-ELECTION?
Mina Muradova and Khazri Bakinsky

EurasiaNet, NY
May 30 2007

An ambitious infrastructure upgrade campaign has taken Azerbaijan
by storm in recent months, but some economists point to the 2008
presidential vote as the prime reason for the state-funded building
boom and question the projects’ transparency.

Infrastructure projects will account for a staggering 87 percent of
this year’s government investment programs, recently revised to total
$2.2 billion (1.9 billion manats), according to Oktai Ahverdiyev,
chief of the Cabinet of Ministers’ finance department.

Under this plan, by the end of 2007, Azerbaijan will have five
new airports – some in the remotest parts of the country. Aside
from existing international airports in the western town of Ganja,
Azerbaijan’s second largest metropolitan area, and the exclave of
Nakhchivan (bordering Armenia and Iran), an international airport
is planned for the southern town of Lenkoran, close to the Iranian
border. Airports in Sheki, a popular tourist destination in northern
Azerbaijan, and Zaqatala, a small nearby town, will handle smaller
planes. The cost for these facilities has not been made public.

Extensive highway and bridge projects are also in the works. In
2007, the government plans to spend $500 million on the construction
and repair of highways – a figure that is 80 percent higher than
2006 expenditures, APA news agency reported, citing the Ministry of
Transportation. Ten new bridges and 18 underpasses are planned for
Baku to lessen the city’s growing traffic congestion. In addition,
repairs will be carried out on 40 bridges between Baku and the Russian
border, and a new highway will be built from the Azerbaijani capital
to the Iranian border.

At an opening ceremony for one of Baku’s new bridges in March,
President Aliyev declared that the bridge building shows Azerbaijan’s
economic muscle. "It means that we are becoming strong," media
outlets reported him as stating. The 200 million manat ($232 million)
allocated for the bridges and underpasses "will not be to make a
profit," he elaborated, stressing that "[a]ll of this is done for
the people’s welfare."

Senior government official Ahverdiyev has stated that "poverty
reduction" will also be included in the campaign. Planned expenditures
will target improvement of "the water supply, sanitation systems,
education [system] and healthcare," Aheverdiyev told Trend news
agency recently.

Some questions, however, surround the details.

"Azerbaijan’s infrastructure needs to improve, but first it should be
seriously studied to define priority highways and bridges [for work],
which of them can really eliminate problems with traffic jams," argued
economist Azer Mehtiyev, deputy chairman of Baku’s non-governmental
Center for Economic Research. Money for these improvements has so
far been allocated without such a hit list, he added.

That leaves particular questions about the viability of the five new
airports, observed Zohrab Ismaylov, head of the non-governmental Center
for Market Economy Assistance in Baku. "I am not sure that airports in
Zaqatala or Lenkoran can give a profit even in the mid-term future,"
Ismaylov said. Zaqatala has a population of around 26,000 people,
according to official statistics. Lenkoran’s population stands at
under 50,000. Both towns are in non-industrial areas with no emphasis
on exports.

Both Mekhtiyev and Ismaylov, however, contend that the large-scale
investment projects have as much to do with the 2008 presidential
elections as they do with infrastructure improvements.

Decisions about the infrastructure projects "come suddenly during
[Aliyev’s] trips to the regions and in meetings with residents,"
observed the Center for Economic Research’s Mehtiyev. "There is no
clear… policy."

Mehtiyev holds that the construction projects will be used to let
Aliyev show that he has met a 2003 presidential campaign promise to
create 600,000 new jobs by 2008. At an April 13 speech to government
ministers, Aliyev reported that 535,000 jobs – the majority allegedly
permanent and outside of Baku – have been set up during his time
in office.

Public tenders for the projects have also not been held, a fact
that has spurred concerns that money for the projects, derived from
Azerbaijan’s sizeable oil income, is being misappropriated. Mehtiyev
charges that companies "close to high-level officials" act as project
contractors; Ismaylov of the Center for Market Economy Assistance
claims that a recent 371 million manat (about $369 million) increase
in state investments was approved by parliamentarians without detailed
information about the funds’ intended use.

"From the point of view of efficiency and of transparency in spending
oil revenues, the construction industry is not the best sphere,"
Ismaylov stressed. Many construction companies are unregistered and
operate wtihout paying taxes, he noted.

One pro-opposition political analyst agreed. "[Information about]
implementation of these projects is closed to the public," charged
Rasim Musabekov. "It is out of public control and gives the government
an opportunity to misappropriate oil revenues."

Government officials could not be reached for commentary.

But for President Aliyev, what matters is that signs of change are
beginning to appear.

"New business have opened, roads are paved, neighborhoods improved
and modernized," the Azerbaijani leader told reporters in April. "The
main goal is to reduce the gap [in living standards] between urban
and rural population centers. And we can achieve this."

Editor’s Note: Mina Muradova and Khazri Bakinsky are freelance
reporters in Baku.

If Armenia Pulls out, Azerbaijan Will Have to Negotiate with NK

IF ARMENIA DOES NOT TAKE PART IN THE TALKS, AZERBAIJAN WILL HAVE TO
NEGOTIATE WITH KARABAKH

Lragir.am
25-05-2007 16:44:40

Manvel Sargsyan, expert for the Caucasus Center, told reporters May 25
that nothing has changed since 1994 with regard to the settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the visit of the co-chairs to Yerevan
the day before did not bring any news.

Manvel Sargsyan also stated the statements coming from different
levels that Karabakh must participate in the talks are out of
despair. He says they have a political context. `They were
repeating all the time that the co-chairs will come after May 12,
there will be a meeting of presidents in June, but only two co-chairs
came, one did not come, they did not act seriously, they did not go to
Karabakh. They displayed that this issue would not be manipulated
during the election. Maybe it is very good.’

Manvel Sargsyan thinks Karabakh is not participating in the talks,
because ` nobody wants Karabakh to participate.’
Manvel Sargsyan reminds that after the cease-fire in 1994 the talks
were three-party for 6 or 7 months, Armenia, Karabakh, Azerbaijan. For
the international community, the format of the talks has no meaning,
and if Armenia does not take part in the talks, Azerbaijan will have
to negotiate with Karabakh. `Karabakh must deal with its
political problems but you have to cede these problems; if Armenia
does not cede, and assumes to deal with these problems, Azerbaijan
happily negotiates with you. The territorial dispute with Armenia is
one problem, with Karabakh is another problem. It immediately sets a
symmetrical problem at the heart of the territorial dispute, you took
this much, I took that much,’ Manvel Sargsyan stated.

German Cellist Denis Zhdanov To Perform Concert Program In Yerevan

GERMAN CELLIST DENIS ZHDANOV TO PERFORM CONCERT PROGRAM IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
May 25 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 25, NOYAN TAPAN. German cellist Denis Zhdanov will
perform a concert on May 26 in Yerevan, within the framework of the
National Gallery third international music festival. As the musician
mentioned at the May 25 press conference, he is in Armenia already for
the second time and participates in that festival with great happiness.

"It is very pleasant for me to perform a concert in Yerevan as I
feel warmness and good reception of the Armenian spectator: the
Yerevan spectator is more sensitive towards the classic music,
art than representatives of many and many European countries," D,
Zhdanov said. Though the cellist will not perform works of Armenian
composers during the coming concert, however, he is greatly interested
in works of Armenian musicians and estimate them as the best models
of the classic art.

To recap, D. Zhdanov was awarded the last year the Spectators’
Sympathy prize and the special prize of jury at the A. Khachaturian
international music competition. He now lives and creates in Germany,
is a post-graduate student of the Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy higher
school of music and theater of Leipzig.

Syria: Ancient Glories, Modern Conflicts

SYRIA: ANCIENT GLORIES, MODERN CONFLICTS

Agence France Presse — English
May 24, 2007 Thursday 1:22 PM GMT

Syria, set to reelect its president on Sunday in a one-candidate
referendum, is a country steeped in history that today is embroiled
in some of the world’s most intractable dramas.

In addition to the decades-long conflict with Israel to the south and
controversy over its role in Lebanon to the west, Syria has since 2003
found itself on the front lines of the US-led war in Iraq, to its east.

A brief factfile:

HISTORY: Since ancient times what is today Syria has been ruled,
among others, by the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans, the Byzantines
and a series of Islamic empires concluding with the Ottoman, which
collapsed in the early 20th century.

The country is home to many historic sites, and it was on the road
to Damascus, one of the world’s oldest cities, that the Christian
apostle Saint Paul "saw the light" and was converted.

Syria’s modern borders were defined after World War I, when the
country came under French administration and was shorn of several
territories including what is today Lebanon.

Independence after World War II brought a series of coups, culminating
with a military regime under Hafez al-Assad, whose son, Bashar,
succeeded him on his death in 2000 and is still in power today.

Under the elder Assad, Syria was for many years close to the Soviet
Union and professed strong Arab nationalism, although a split with the
dominant party in neighbouring in Iraq led it to form a long-lasting
alliance with Iran.

In the 1967 Arab-Israeli war Syria lost the strategic Golan Heights to
Israel. A decade later Assad’s military intervention in Lebanon was at
first welcomed by the West but later turned sour, ending only in 2005.

Since 2004 the United States has imposed economic sanctions on Syria,
accusing it of supporting terrorism.

In recent years Syria has taken in around one million Iraqi refugees,
fleeing the effects of the US-led invasion of 2003.

GEOGRAPHY: At 185,000 square kilometres (71,000 square miles), Syria
is slightly smaller than Britain.

CAPITAL: Damascus

POPULATION: 19 million, almost all Arabs, with small Armenian and
Kurdish minorities.

LANGUAGE: Arabic

RELIGION: Muslim (90 percent), a majority of which are Sunni, but
with a minority belonging to the Allawite sect, to which the Assad
family belongs. Christian (10 percent).

ARMED FORCES: Estimated at about 308,000

ECONOMY: Syria has modest amounts of oil, and farming accounts for
around one-third of Gross Domestic Product. The World Bank classifies
Syria as a middle income counry, with a per capita GDP of 1,200
dollars in 2006.

Much of the economy is state controlled, though a modest programme
of privatisation is underway.

Presentation Of Armenian Brandy Organized In London

PRESENTATION OF ARMENIAN BRANDY ORGANIZED IN LONDON

Noyan Tapan
May 24 2007

LONDON, MAY 24, NOYAN TAPAN. A presentation of Armenian brandy took
place at the House of Lords on May 23. NT was informed from the RA
MFA Press and Information Department that the purpose of the event
was to present this Armenian product to British consumers, as well
as to establish business links between the Yerevan Brandy Company
and local business circles.

ANKARA: Freedom Of Thought To Be Debated In Istanbul

FREEDOM OF THOUGHT TO BE DEBATED IN ISTANBUL

Turkish Press
May 24 2007

ISTANBUL – Freedom of thought in Turkey and its neighbors and regional
countries will be discussed in the Fifth Istanbul Meeting, organized
by the Uskudar Municipality and Freedom of Thought Association,
the municipality said on Wednesday.

According to a statement by the municipality, the meeting will be held
on May 25th-27th and dedicated to Hrant Dink, the editor-in-chief of
Agos weekly who died in an armed attack in January.

Representatives of NGOs from Bulgaria, Greece, Turkish Republic
of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), Greek Cypriot administration, Syria,
Iraq, Iran, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia, as well as executives
of international organizations and societies will participate in
the meeting.