Titanic Survivor great-granddaughter to wed among Titanic artifacts

FOX6Now.com Milwaukee
May 10 2009

Survivor’s great-granddaughter to wed among Titanic artifacts at
Milwaukee museum

May 10, 2009

MILWAUKEE (AP) ‘ A couple with a special connection to the Titanic
will wed among the ship’s artifacts at the Milwaukee Public Museum.

Twenty-eight-year-old Melissa Vartanian (vahr-TAHN-yan) and
31-year-old Vache Mikaelian (Va-CHAY mih-KAHL-ihn) will be married
Friday at "Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition."

Melissa Vartanian’s great-grandfather, David Vartanian, was fleeing
Turkish occupation in Armenia when he boarded the Titanic. He planned
to later send for his new bride, Mary.

When the ship sank, Vartanian hung on the side of a lifeboat. After
recovering, it took him about six years to find his wife and another
five or so to be reunited.

The couple was chosen through a contest held by WTMJ-TV.

Melissa Vartanian says the wedding will be a tribute to her
great-grandparents’ love story.

anicwedding,0,2304236.story

http://www.fox6now.com/news/sns-bc-wi–tit

Armenia Refused To Participate In NATO Exercise Due To Alliance’s Se

ARMENIA REFUSED TO PARTICIPATE IN NATO EXERCISE DUE TO ALLIANCE’S SEC. GEN. STATEMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.05.2009 20:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s refusal to participate in NATO military
trainings due in Georgia is conditioned by NATO Secretary General
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer’s recent statement on NKR conflict, RA Defense
Minister Seyran Ohanyan stated.

At the meeting with Azeri President, NATO Secretary General
indicated only territorial integrity principle among international
norms. According to RA Defense Minister, International Organizations,
participating in NKR conflict settlement indicate all norms of
international rights: territorial integrity principle, as well as
nation’s right for self determination and non-use of force.

At his meeting with Azeri President Ilham Aliev, NATO Secretary General
stated that NATO supports NKR conflict settlement within the framework
of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

President Of Armenia To Attend The Eastern Partnership Summit In Pra

PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA TO ATTEND THE EASTERN PARTNERSHIP SUMMIT IN PRAGUE

armradio.am
06.05.2009 11:09

The President of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, will leave for Prague on
May 7 for a two-day working visit. In Prague President Sargsyan will
participate in the Eastern Partnership Summit and deliver a speech.

Within the framework of the process of settlement of the Karabakh
issue, Serzh Sargsyan will meet his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham
Aliyev.

In the capital of the Czech Republic Serzh Sargsyan will have working
meetings with the President of Ukraine, Viktor Yushchenko, and the
President of Turkey, Abdullah Gul.

PA: First positive signals will hopefully lead to an amnesty

PRESS RELEASE
Council of Europe Press Release
Spokesperson and Press Division
Ref: 215b03
Tel. +33 3 88 41 25 60
Fax. +33 3 88 41 34 11
E-mail: [email protected]
For more informations:

Armenia: first positive signals will hopefully lead to an amnesty,
according to Parliamentary Assembly co-rapporteurs

Strasbourg, 05.05.2009 – "While it is too early to give a full
assessment of the effects of the changes to articles 225 and 300 of the
Criminal Code of Armenia, the first signals give reason for optimism"
stated the two co-rapporteurs with respect of Armenia, George Colombier
(France, EPP/CD) and John Prescott (United Kingdom, SOC), after the
discussions that took place last week in Strasbourg in the Monitoring
Committee of the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) on the
recent political developments in Armenia.

The two co-rapporteurs were especially satisfied that the problematic
charges under articles 300 ("Usurpation of State power") and the old
225-3 ("mass disorder accompanied by murder") have been dropped by the
Prosecution in the cases against the 7 opposition members that are
currently in the Courts. "This confirms our view that the events on 1
and 2 March 2008, can not be seen as an attempt to a coup d’état. This
will hopefully help reduce the political controversy around the court
cases as well as the independent investigation into the events of 1 and
2 March 2008", they said.

While noting that questions have been raised about the decision of the
prosecution to charge the seven for having personally organised the mass
disturbances on 1 and 2 March 2008, the co-rapporteurs stressed that it
is now up to the courts to decide if these charges under the recently
amended article 225-1 can be substantiated. In that respect, Georges
Colombier and John Prescott welcomed the information they received that
the proceedings in these cases were well under way and expected to be
finalised in the near future. "It is in the interest of all that these
cases are concluded as soon as possible", they said.

However, they underlined again the Assembly’s demand that that all
persons deprived of their liberty in relation to the events of 1 and 2
March, and who did not personally commit violent crimes, should be
released. "It is our strong conviction that the continued detention of
these persons undermines the possibility for a meaningful dialogue
between authorities and opposition and ultimately the normalisation of
political life in Armenia. Therefore, especially with the proceedings in
the courts coming to a close, we hope that the authorities will give
renewed consideration to our suggestion to declare an amnesty for all
those charged for the events of 1 and 2 March 2008", they stressed.

In this respect, they also highlighted the importance of the upcoming
local elections in Yerevan for the normalisation of political life in
Armenia". The fact that Levon Ter Petrossyan has decided to be a
candidate in these elections should be seen as a clear signal of the
Armenian National Congress that it wants to overcome the political
crisis and play its role as a political force in the democratic
institutions in the country. This should be strongly welcomed", stated
the co-rapporteurs. They therefore stressed that it is now of utmost
importance that the authorities, as well as all political stakeholders,
will ensure that these elections be held in full compliance with the
democratic standards of the Council of Europe.

http://www.coe.int/

Russia Accuses Azerbaijan, Georgia Of Abetting Fund Transfers to…

ijan_Georgia_Of_Abetting_Transfer_Of_Funds_To_Nort h_Caucasus_Resistance/1621351.html

Caucasus Report

Russia Accuses Azerbaijan, Georgia Of Abetting Transfer Of Funds To
North Caucasus Resistance

May 04, 2009

Three days after the Georgian Foreign Ministry rejected as unfounded
Russian allegations that Chechen militants are again using Georgian
territory as a base from which to launch acts of terrorism in
Chechnya, Russian Prosecutor-General Yury Chaika on April 30 accused
both Georgia and Azerbaijan of failing to take effective measures to
curtail the flow of funds to the North Caucasus resistance.

In his annual report on law and order in Russia in 2008, Chaika
alleged that in most cases the cash is transferred from sponsors
abroad by couriers who enter the Russian Federation via Azerbaijan or
Georgia, if necessary bribing Russian border guards.

Georgian Foreign Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili immediately
responded that his ministry does not know of a single such case, and
has received no official communication from the Federal Border Service
that couriers have been intercepted.

In Baku, Eldar Sultanov, who heads the press service of the
Azerbaijani Prosecutor-General’s Office, was quoted by the online
daily zerkalo.az on May 1 as saying that the office has received no
formal notification of any such cases from its Russian counterpart.
For that reason, he declined to comment on Chaika’s statement.

http://www.rferl.org/content/Russia_Accuses_Azerba

Issues Connected With Further Development Of Armenian-Russian Cooper

ISSUES CONNECTED WITH FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF ARMENIAN-RUSSIAN COOPERATION DISCUSSED

ARMENPRESS
MAY 5, 2009
YEREVAN

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan received today the head of
Russian Foreign Intelligence Service Mikhail Fradkov.

Public relations department of Armenian Government told Armenpress
that issues connected with the further development of cooperation
between the sides have been discussed.

Tigran Sargsyan and Mikhail Fradkov agreed that such meetings and talks
which are regularly conducted within the frameworks of Armenian-Russian
strategic partnership and the exchange of thoughts on issues of
mutually interest help in focusing the attention on the political,
economic and security issues ongoing in the world, region and in the
two states with an intention to combat new challenges collaboratively,
find efficient ways out of the established situation as well as to
indicate the further directions of cooperation.

During the conversation the Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan also
presented the viewpoints of Armenia’s Government on the economic
condition of our state, negative impacts of world financial and
economic crisis and the steps undertaken to overcome it, relations
of Armenia with the neighboring states including Iran and Turkey as
well as on the regional security and cooperation issues.

Lay To Rest Ghosts Of War In The Caucasus

LAY TO REST GHOSTS OF WAR IN THE CAUCASUS
Thomas de Waal

FT
May 4 2009 19:29

While the rest of the world struggles with the first crisis of
globalisation, the Caucasus is still stuck in a pre-1914 age of
clashing Great Powers. As last August’s conflict in Georgia painfully
showed, nowhere else in the wider Europe is war such a danger.

Yet this May could be a bright moment. Russia, the US, the European
Union and Turkey – the constellation of powers with an interest
in this unfortunate region – are in brief alignment. They have an
opportunity to begin to defuse what is the least visible and the
most dangerous threat to the region and its many energy pipelines:
the unresolved Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh.

The moment follows the long-awaited announcement last month by Armenia
and Turkey, backed by the major powers, that they have drawn up a
plan to restore relations. This could see their border re-opened and
a commission formed to study the 1915 massacres of Armenians in the
Ottoman Empire.

That would be a great achievement, but there is a snag:
Nagorno-Karabakh, the unrecognised territory, legally part of
Azerbaijan, which is under Armenian control. While the Armenians
say the two issues should not be linked, Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
the Turkish prime minister, mindful of his close ally Azerbaijan,
has said that there must be progress on the Karabakh issue before
the border re-opens.

Since it began in 1988, this tiny conflict, the first ethno-territorial
war in the former Soviet Union, has defeated many mediators, beginning
with Mikhail Gorbachev. In 1991 it escalated into a full-scale war,
with more than 20,000 deaths and 1m people losing their homes. The
Armenians won in 1994, gaining control not just of the disputed
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh itself but of a large "buffer zone"
around it that comprises about 8 per cent of the territory of
Azerbaijan. Today, their armies face each other across a ceasefire line
of trenches that cuts a scar across the entire South Caucasus. Snipers
kill several people a month, but mostly the ceasefire holds.

While the conflict has remained stuck, a major energy transit route
has grown up next door to it. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline,
built by BP to export 1m barrels of oil a day to western markets,
runs just 10 miles from the ceasefire line. Fattened by new revenues,
Azerbaijan has the fastest growing military budget in the world and
now spends more on weapons than Armenia spends on its entire state
budget. Some strident Azerbaijanis are calling for the army to prepare
for a "re-conquest" of Nagorno-Karabakh, summoning up the ghost of
a war that would be a nightmare for the entire region. But talks
drag on over a draft peace plan, with the Armenian and Azerbaijani
presidents due to discuss it =0 Aagain on Thursday in Prague.

Both leaders must make painful compromises. Azerbaijan needs to
concede that it has essentially lost the territory, for the foreseeable
future, but can recover its lost land around Karabakh. The Armenians
need to accept that they must give up the occupied territories and
postpone their hopes of independence for Nagorno-Karabakh in return
for self-rule and security.

The major powers have been reluctant to push hard on this
issue. Popular resistance to change has been too strong, and both
countries have powerful foreign friends. In the US, the Pentagon and
energy companies have close links to Azerbaijan. Congress’s strong
Armenian lobby is holding up the confirmation of Philip Gordon as
assistant secretary of state, after he voiced caution over defining
the 1915 killings of Armenians as genocide.

An Armenian-Azerbaijani peace settlement will be costly. Reconstruction
of the devastated territories will have to be funded
internationally. The overriding concern of the Karabakh Armenians is
the military threat from Azerbaijan, and they will require a visible
and credible peacekeeping force before they sign up to a deal.

But the rewards would be huge, not just for Armenians and Azerbaijanis
but for everyone who has a stake in this region, from BP to the EU
to Iran. A stable settlement would also strongly boost the case for
the planned Nabucco gas pipeline to the west.

Peace will on ly work on the ground if Armenia and Azerbaijan drop
the language of nationalist hostility. Here Turkey and Armenia,
whose shared history is far more traumatic, have shown the way. If
those two nations can reach out to one another, then reconciliation
is well within the grasp of Armenians and Azerbaijanis.

The writer is author of Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan Through
Peace and War

Tigran Kotanjian Claims Victory In Dubai Open

TIGRAN KOTANJIAN CLAIMS VICTORY IN DUBAI OPEN

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.05.2009 14:14 GMT+04:00

Armenian grandmaster Tigran Kotanjian and Russia’s Dmitry Bochkarev
are sharing the top position in Dubai Open chart with 6.5 points.

In the last tour Tigran Kotanjian will play vs. Russian grandmaster
Pavel Meletin.

The other Armenian chess players proved less successful.

ANKARA: Parris: `Genocide’ reference would have frozen Turkey ties

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
May 2 2009

Parris: `Genocide’ reference would have frozen Turkey ties

President Barack Obama has figured out Turkey’s importance for the
United States much sooner than his predecessor, a former US ambassador
to Turkey has said, asserting that the ties would have been put into
deep freeze had Obama used the word "genocide" in a recent message to
refer to killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

Obama refrained from using the "g-word" in the traditional message for
an Armenian remembrance day, but the fact that he said his views on
the issue have not changed and used the Armenian phrase to describe
the World War I events led to bitter complaints from Turkey.

"I have no doubt that had the statement contained the word ‘genocide,’
US-Turkish relations would have gone into a deep freeze that would
have taken years to thaw," former US Ambassador to Turkey Mark Parris
told a conference at the private Rumi Forum in Washington on Thursday.

Asked what would be the best time for the US to recognize Armenian
genocide claims, the veteran diplomat was cautious, saying there may
never be a good time for this.

Turkey rejects Armenian claims of genocide, saying both the death
toll, said to be 1.5 million by Armenians, was inflated and that the
killings occurred as the Ottoman Empire was trying to quell Armenian
revolts for independence. Obama made firm promises during his election
campaign that he would endorse the genocide claims. During a visit to
Turkey earlier this month, he said his views had not changed but that
he also did not want to harm the ongoing process between Turkey and
Armenia to normalize relations.

Parris said both Turkey and Armenia complained about Obama’s statement
but emphasized that "it did no lasting harm," as neither the
Turkish-US partnership nor the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process
have been damaged.

Parris also underlined that the Obama administration rejected an
argument that Turkey’s government has been systematically reorienting
Turkey’s foreign policy onto an Islamist axis and that therefore it
should not be rewarded by an early presidential visit. "Whatever the
merits of this argument, the Obama administration, by scheduling the
visit, have decisively rejected it," he said.

The US ambassador also asserted that the relationship with Turkey was
now being "managed at the very top levels of our new government." He
said the US administration has been "true to its public declarations
of readiness to listen and be responsive to Turkish viewpoints and
concerns" and added, "The approach seems genuinely to be: `we have a
common problem; how can we best solve it?’ rather than `we want what
we want when we want it’."

02 May 2009, Saturday
ALI H. ASLAN WASHINGTON

American Town Of Arlington Will Host A Marathon In Memory Of Alan Ho

AMERICAN TOWN OF ARLINGTON WILL HOST A MARATHON IN MEMORY OF ALAN HOVHANNES

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.05.2009 15:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On May 2, American town of Arlington will host
number of festive events to celebrate 100 years anniversary of Alan
Hovhannes, American composer of Armenian heritage.

Alan Hovhannes monument opening ceremony, free concert in Arlington
town hall, and a marathon from New Hampshire to Alan Hovhannes’
native house will be held within celebration framework.

The composer’s father Harvard university graduate was Taft University
professor and Armenian -English dictionary author.

American composer of Armenian Heritage, Alan Hovhannes authored 67
symphonies and 434 opuses for Asian instruments.