Iraqi Church Leaders: We Want to Speak with Common Voice

Christian Post
Feb 20 2010

Iraqi Church Leaders: We Want to Speak with Common Voice

By Michelle A. Vu|Christian Post Reporter

`In our view, it is a development that augurs as much for the future
of the churches in Iraq as it does for Iraq as a nation,’ said the
Rev. Dr. Olav Fykse Tveit, general secretary of the World Council of
Churches, in a statement Thursday.

The Council of Christian Church Leaders of Iraq includes all
patriarchs, archbishops, bishops and heads of churches in the country
from the 14 Christian communities registered in Iraq since 1982. These
Christian communities include the Catholic, Eastern and Oriental
Orthodox as well as Protestant traditions.

The new council says its aim is `to unite the opinion, position and
decision of the Churches in Iraq on issues’ related to churches and
state with the hope of `upholding and strengthening the Christian
presence, promoting cooperation and joint action without interfering
in private matters of the churches or their related entities.’

Iraqi church leaders gathered at the monastery of St. Garabed of the
Armenian Orthodox Church in Baghdad on Feb. 9 to launch the council.
The leaders say they intend to dialogue and form relations with Muslim
brothers and sisters and to promote acceptance of each other’s
religion. The council also intends to address the issue of Christian
education and renew religious curriculum in public schools in
partnership with concerned government institutions.

"Iraqi Christians have never viewed themselves as simply a minority
community who stand for their own interest,’ Tveit noted. `They have
always shown their deep rootedness in the history and civilization of
Iraq.’

Chaldo-Assyrians, who make up most of Iraq’s Christian population,
often point out that they are Iraq’s indigenous people, tracing their
history back to Babylonian times. Yet despite their ancient heritage,
Christians in recent years have increasingly become the target of
violence.

This week, four Christians, including two students, were killed within
four days in the northern Iraq town of Mosul.

The murders have caused more Iraqi Christian families to plan on
leaving the country.

`It is very difficult to live in this kind of situation,’ said the
Chaldean Archbishop Emil Shimoun Nona of Mosul, on Thursday, to the
British branch of the charity Aid to the Church in Need.

`It is panic, panic always,’ he added. `The Christians don’t know what
will happen to them. It is the same everywhere ` in the office, at
school or even at home. They don’t know if somebody is going to kill
them.’

He believes what they are seeing with the violence is an effort to
force Christians to leave Mosul.

Nona was installed in January, replacing Archbishop Paulos Faraj
Rahho, who was kidnapped and then found dead in March 2008.

Rahho was the second most senior Catholic cleric in Iraq and his death
sparked outcry from the small Christian community over the increased
violent acts against it.

Hundreds of thousands of Christians have fled Iraq because of the
persecution. It is estimated that Christians account for nearly half
of all refugees leaving the country, although they make up less than
three percent of the country’s population.

There are only about 600,000 Iraqi Christians remaining in the
country, down from 1.2 million before 2003.

20/iraqi-church-leaders-we-want-to-speak-with-comm on-voice/

http://www.christianpost.com/article/201002

Larijani says Iran will do its utmost to resolve Karabakh dispute

Tehran Times
Feb 21 2010

Larijani says Iran will do its utmost to resolve Karabakh dispute
Tehran Times Political Desk

TEHRAN ` Tehran will spare no effort to help resolve the territorial
dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh
region, Iranian Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani said in a meeting his
Azeri counterpart Ogtay Asadov on Saturday.

Larijani suggested that regional countries can take a collective
important step to help end the long-running dispute between Azerbaijan
and Armenia.

The senior lawmaker added Iran’s strategic policy is to strengthen
peace and security in the Caucasus region.

Asadov, for his part, said great powers have fanned the flames of
crisis in the Karabakh region, adding that Baku’s policy is to resolve
the crisis peacefully within the country’s territorial integrity.

"Affordable" Housing To Young Families

"AFFORDABLE" HOUSING TO YOUNG FAMILIES

news.am
Feb 19 2010
Armenia

A special housing program for young families launched by the Central
Bank of Armenia (CBA) can only be welcomed.

But, you can sometimes find a fly in the ointment.

Late this January the RA Government approved the Affordable Housing to
Young People program. Executive Director of the Flat to Youth universal
credit institution Mher Yedigaryan said that about 300 families can
benefit from the program this year. Not a bad figure for Armenia.

The program sets both age limits (the age of both spouses is not to
be over 60, with neither of them to be over 35) and the minimum wage
limit (300,000 AMD monthly, including nearest relatives’ incomes). A
similar program launched in Russia set identical age limits, which
evoked varied responses. Compromises are inevitable, and the problem
can be settled if mortgage lending terms for other population groups
are improved.

The point is that the maximum amount of credit is 16m AMD (about U.S.

$42,000), which is sufficient for purchasing 34 sq meters of housing
in the center of Yerevan. The Yerevan center has always been "famous"
for high housing prices. As regards the "suburban" districts, this
amount would be sufficient for purchasing 45 sq meters in the Arabkir
community and up to 113 sq meters in the outlying Nubarashen community,
not far from the city dump.

The skyrocketing housing prices in post-Soviet Armenia defied
imagination. In 2008, the price for 1 sq meter of housing in a block
of flats in the Yerevan center reached 471,600 AMD (U.S. $1,580). The
global crisis, which delivered a severe blow on the Armenian economy,
as well as on the potential purchasers’ incomes, put an end to the
inexorable price rise. Last year, the average price for 1 sq meter
of housing in blocks of flats in Yerevan was 10% lower (24% lower in
USD terms) as compared with 2008.

The housing prices in the Armenian regions are much lower than in
Yerevan. In the satellite town of Abovyan the price for 1 sq meter
of housing is 55% of that in Yerevan. As regards the other regions,
it ranges from 1% of the Yerevan price (in Shamlugh, Lori region) to
67% (in Tsakhkadzor, Kotayk region). The Yerevan young people would
hardly agree to less expensive housing in Armenian regions no matter
how badly they need flats — it is much more difficult to find jobs
in the regions.

Citizens aged 19-30 constitute 18.3% of the officially registered
unemployed – the age group the housing program is intended for. The
official data, however, are only the tip of the iceberg.

As regards the "income qualification", it is not so serious, with
the nearest relatives’ incomes considered. The problem is actually
the credit interest rates.

With an annual interest rate of 10.5% and 2% subsidized by the
Armenian Government, the beneficiary will have to pay 8.5%. With
annuity payments during the 10-year credit period, the beneficiary
will pay 85% of the amount. That is, the actual price for housing
will prove to be twice as high! With differentiated payment, the
beneficiary will not overpay so much, but the actual amount remains
relatively high. Thus the current high annual interest rates disfigure
the idea of providing housing to young families in need.

The blame, of course, lies with commercial banks, which, in pursuit it
easy profits, are jacking up credit interest rates. And the reason is
not at all the lack of "long" money, but the banks’ huge speculative
margin – up to 10%. Such a margin is impossible in any civilized
country! On the contrary, after the recent global crisis credits are
issued at symbolic interest rates in a number of countries. In Armenia,
however, the CBA’s recent decision to raise the refinancing rate from
5.5% up to 6% even worsened the situation.

Apply Now for the Discover Armenia Youth Trip

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Apply Now for the Discover Armenia Youth Trip

AGBU is accepting applications for the summer 2010 Discover Armenia
Youth Trip, which runs from August 7 to August 26, 2010. This program
holds a significant place among the AGBU youth programs as it brings
together 15-18-year-old diasporan Armenian youths to spend an
unforgettable summer in Armenia. Discover Armenia offers these young
students a chance to visit various locations around Armenia, including
Garni, Geghard, Goris, the Holy See of Etchmiadzin, Khor Virap, Lake
Sevan, Matenadaran Manuscript Library, Noravank, Sardarapat, and AGBU’s
own Antranik Scout Camp in the Lori Region.

The summer of 2009 saw 20 participants from Canada, France, Switzerland
and the United States participate in this once-in-a-lifetime experience.
In addition to the social experience, Discover Armenia has a strong
community component, promoting volunteerism and service. Last summer,
students helped build a house in the Haytagh village of the Armavir
region with the Fuller Organization. As a result of this emphasis on
giving back, students are eligible to earn 40 credit hours toward
fulfillment of the community service required in their respective
schools.

The parents of a 2009 participant said, "We would like to thank [AGBU]
for giving our kids a life-changing experience in Armenia. They came
back appreciating our culture and thankful for what we have. Our
daughter had an amazing three weeks and has come back with a better
understanding of her heritage, and improved Armenian speaking skills!
She said she had the most memorable three weeks with the group, and will
never forget this trip."

Entering its 7th season, this trip will expose participating youth to
the incredible nature of Armenia and the lives of its citizens. For more
information on Discover Armenia 2010, and to download applications,
please visit, agbu.org.

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
educational, cultural and humanitarian program, annually touching the
lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit

www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org.

Burma’s Colonial Architecture Crumbles

BURMA’S COLONIAL ARCHITECTURE CRUMBLES

orld/burmas-colonial-architecture-crumbles/story-f n30266j-1225831282194
feb 17 2010

Photo: The Strand Hotel, built in 1901 by the same developers of the
Raffles in Singapore, was saved from dereliction by a renovation in
1993. Source: Reuters

THE colonial buildings of the once-grand city of Rangon, Burma, are
scattered about like tombstones in a neglected cemetery – unnoticed,
and often unwanted, relics of a lost era.

Yangon is home to one of the largest collections of undisturbed
colonial architecture in the world, with some neighborhoods left
almost exactly as they were when the country gained independence
from Britain some 60 years ago. But the buildings, already crumbling
after years of neglect under a repressive military regime, face an
increasingly uncertain future.

A government decision to move Burma’s capital from Yangon to a remote
redoubt named Naypyitaw in 2005 has left several of the most important
buildings almost totally abandoned, accelerating their deterioration.

Meantime, resurgent investment from China and other Asian neighbors
is triggering interest in development – including the possibility
of building shopping malls and apartment blocks where old structures
now stand.

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Related Coverage.To go or not to go: The Burma debate ..End of
sidebar. Return to start of sidebar.

Buildings at risk include Secretariat, one of Southeast Asia’s most
important modern historical sites. It was here that Aung San, Burma’s
main independence hero, and father of famed dissident Aung San Suu
Kyi, was assassinated by political rivals in July 1947, setting off
a series of events that culminated in a military takeover in 1962.

Although Secretariat, with its gaudy red-and-yellow exterior and
turrets, was ridiculed by residents when it opened in 1905, it became
a hive of government ministries and, ultimately, a regional landmark.

Today, inhabited only by a few camped-out soldiers, the dilapidated
structure is hidden from the public behind a forest of trees and
chain-link fence. Photographing the building is prohibited. Some
residents believe it is already beyond repair.

A couple of blocks away, the multistory Railway Headquarters (1896),
also of bright red brick, was built with rows of ornate windows framed
with filigreed railings and matching awnings. Today, the awnings are
collapsing and some windows are bricked in, while others are covered
in reed mats or sacks. Weeds grow from walls and spill over ledges.

The grounds are littered with metal–scraps and what look like pieces
of equipment – nearly hidden by brush and vines.

Preserving Yangon’s historic buildings rates low among social
priorities in Burma, which consistently ranks as one of the poorest
and most-corrupt nations in the world. The government is accused
of widespread human-rights abuses, including the imprisonment of
political opponents such as Ms. Suu Kyi. Some foreigners refuse on
principle to visit Burma, which is open to tourists, because of the
regime’s track record.

Still, historians are hopeful that at least some of Yangon’s buildings
will be preserved.

"It’s very hard to go around what was once the British Empire and see
so many buildings intact," says Ian Morley, an urban historian at the
Chinese University of Hong Kong who calls the city’s center possibly
"the last example of a colonial core" still intact in Asia.

"I don’t mean to come off as a raving colonialist," he says. But
"we need to be aware of where we come from," and the threats upon
Yangon’s surviving buildings "are very, very great."

Burma’s recent repressive history is one of the main reasons its
colonial buildings are still standing. The military restricted access
to the outside world after it came to power nearly 50 years ago,
and in more recent years, U.S. and European sanctions prevented many
Western companies from investing there. As a result, Yangon never
went through the frenzied development that remade Bangkok, Beijing
and other Asian cities.

New development is still minimal. But parts of Burma’s economy have
picked up in recent years, spurring construction. Trade between China
and Burma quadrupled in recent years, reaching more than $2.6 billion
in 2008. While much of that money is being spent in other parts of
the country, a handful of new apartment blocks have popped up around
Yangon or are under construction. Crews are finishing work on a tower
of 20 stories or more in the center of downtown that was started,
but left unfinished, years ago.

"You’ll probably see a lot more apartments," says Brian Agland, Burma
country director for the international relief agency CARE in Yangon.

As for the older buildings, "you’re starting to see a lot more decay"
as the government spends more time in Naypyitaw.

Burma officials have made promises in the past to preserve Yangon’s
colonial remains. The regime established a list of protected "heritage"
sites in the late 1990s that grew to include roughly 200 buildings,
including Secretariat as well as churches, schools and residences –
largely in recognition of their potential as tourist draws. Local
residents, though, say the government has for the most part ignored
its list, sprucing up a few buildings while leaving most others to rot.

During a recent visit, residents pointed to a block they said
was supposed to be protected but now is surrounded by fences and
signs promoting a future shopping mall. When asked about the site,
a resident said she was told the historic buildings there were
"accidentally damaged" and therefore no longer subject to protection.

Attempts to contact Burma authorities over several weeks to discuss
their plans for Yangon’s buildings were unsuccessful. The regime
rarely speaks to foreign journalists.

Architectural historians who have studied the city say that lower-level
government employees have expressed enthusiasm for working with
outsiders to save the buildings, but calls to more senior officials
typically go unanswered. Even basic information – such as when
structures were built – is difficult to obtain. In some cases,
records were destroyed.

Burma’s government has "pretty much villainized the buildings
as colonial eyesores, as hateful reminders of the past," says one
academic who has researched Yangon’s architecture and, like many
experts on the country, requests anonymity when discussing the regime.

Some Yangon residents say they believe the government truly does want
to renovate the buildings, preferably with help from foreign investors,
turning them into hotels or other businesses. But Burma’s tourism
industry has struggled in recent years. And many of the buildings
are in such disrepair that they would be far cheaper to rip down than
rebuild. Some are empty, roofless shells, home to buckling staircases
and sprouting trees. Open sewers feed into some courtyards.

It’s also hard, if not impossible, to persuade locals to restore
buildings on their own, in part because they lack financing in Burma’s
cash-starved economy. Plus, some residents view the buildings as
uncomfortable eyesores and prefer the advantages of newer buildings
with modern amenities.

The preservationists who do follow the buildings have focused their
energies on publicizing them to foreign visitors in the hopes that
international attention will spur Burma officials. Historians are
also encouraging the many foreign institutions in Burma- especially
international aid agencies – to take over and repair historic
structures.

The group CARE, for instance, moved into a two-story, early-1900s house
in Yangon’s Embassy District two years ago and restored some of the
interior and two damaged verandas. "I just thought it had potential,"
says Mr. Agland, the CARE country director. Now "we have big meetings
out on the verandas."

Other buildings that have been saved include the Strand hotel, built
in 1901 by Armenian brothers whose chain included the famous Raffles
Hotel in Singapore. With teak-framed windows, tiled floors and vaulted
ceilings, it was for many decades a required stop for wealthy European
travelers in Asia. But by the 1970s, guests described a building
filled with rats and bats, with faucets that issued murky brown water.

Refurbished with the help of foreign investors in the early 1990s at
a cost of several million dollars, it has since hosted the likes of
Mick Jagger.

But such high-cost projects are risky. A Strand official says the
hotel has barely broken even in recent years, since international
sanctions were imposed. And while there’s talk that Secretariat or the
Railway Headquarters will be similarly restored with money from China
or Singapore, few locals believe it will happen anytime soon, if ever.

Built on an early Buddhist pilgrimmage site near a hilltop shrine
called Shwedagon, Yangon was little more than a small town until
the mid-19th century. The British seized the area in the 1850s as
Britain conquered what was known as Burma, and expanded the city –
which they called Rangoon – to become a strategic river port.

Led by a superintendent who had worked on city planning in Singapore
and an army engineer, Lieutenant A. Fraser, the British laid out the
city on a grid and drained swampy areas. Population tripled to about
135,000 in the early 1880s, and by the early 1900s, Rangoon was one of
the most cosmopolitan cities in the British Empire, with streetcars,
gaslights and public gardens. It boomed further over the next several
decades with exports of rice, teak and other goods.

In the city’s heyday, engineers added entire neighborhoods of
European-style buildings, blending Victorian architecture with more
exotic flourishes from West Bengal and other parts of the empire.

Wealthy traders built teak mansions topped with elaborate cupolas.

Along Pansodan Street downtown, businessmen created a miniature
version of lower Manhattan, with banks, insurance companies and
trading houses graced by thick columns, pillars and arches. Later
buildings incorporated Art Deco designs.

The Rowe & Co. department store (1910), for example, became known
as one of the ritziest shopping centers in Southeast Asia, with its
patterns of red and yellow brick, topped with a tower reminiscent of
Philadelphia’s Independence Hall. Although still used today – as an
immigration office – many of the windows are knocked out or covered
with tarps, and dark black stains cover the exterior.

Many of the grandiose British buildings confused or annoyed local
residents. A famous local joke held that Rangoon’s High Court (1911),
with a clock tower rising above the nearby shophouses and plenty of
the city’s ubiquitous bright red brick, was designed by "a convict
with a grudge against the judge." The building remains in relatively
good shape, as it is still used for some court proceedings, and during
a recent visit workers were seen repainting parts of the exterior.

In one case – the Rangoon City Hall (1936) – a Burmese architect
(with Western training) was called in to make the building more
suitable to local tastes. He visited the ancient city of Bagan and
other sites around the country to study pagodas and monasteries,
elements of which he added to the city-hall design. The cream-colored
building includes Burmese spires and mannered Asian arches, creating
a unique West-meets-East mix, like a British ministry doubling as a
Buddhist temple.

Burma entered a period of tumult after independence in the 1940s,
and new development came to a virtual standstill after the military
took over. There was a brief flurry of new construction – including
several high-rise towers – in the 1990s, when the junta liberalized
Burma’s economy to attract more foreign capital. But the miniboom
ended abruptly with the 1997 Asian financial crisis and tough economic
sanctions from the US and Europe.

It’s still possible the recent increase in Asian investment in Burma
could help save some of Yangon’s buildings, if companies decide
to make use of them. Some of the surge in foreign-aid money that
followed Cyclone Nargis in 2008 went to fix up houses like the one
CARE now uses.

For now, residents are sceptical. One bookshop owner in central Yangon
says he doubts officials "will do their job" and protect buildings on
the government’s own heritage list. And without proper restoration,
says another Yangon resident, "they will soon disappear."

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/travel/w

‘It Would Be Interesting To Meet Hovsepyan,’ Says Russia’s Arshavin

‘IT WOULD BE INTERESTING TO MEET HOVSEPYAN,’ SAYS RUSSIA’S ARSHAVIN

Tert.am
17:02 ~U 16.02.10

In an interview with the Russian-language daily Sport Express, Andrei
Arshavin, an attacker and captain of the Russian national team who
plays for the English Premier League team Arsenal, spoke about his
team’s and his competitor team’s chances in the UEFA Euro 2012 draw.

"Slovakia is a tough competitor that likes to and knows how to
counterattack. As for Ireland, there are first-class stars among them
such as Robby King, Daffy and O’Shea, and a lot of other high-ranking
football players. Andorra, as one of the smaller countries, is the
most uncomfortable place to play: the playing field is in such poor
condition that you don’t even think about football.

"I have never been to Armenia. But when I learned that, till now,
Sargis Hovsepyan, whom I have not seen for 10 years, is still playing
[there] … it would be interesting to see him," said Arshavin.

Threat Of International Sanctions With Regard To Iran Cannot Reduce

THREAT OF INTERNATIONAL SANCTIONS WITH REGARD TO IRAN CANNOT REDUCE ITS ROLE IN THE REGION

ArmInfo
2010-02-16 18:02:00

Interview of a military expert Sergey Sarkisyan with ArmInfo News
Agency

How much does the threat of international sanctions with respect to
Iran affect its positions and role in our region?

"Of course, the sanctions with respect to Iran are the constraining
factor for some countries of the region for development of political
and economic relations with it. However, these measures are not able
to essentially reduce the role of Tehran in the South Caucasus. Low
efficiency of sanctions by the West has been mainly caused by special
stances of Russia and China, and lately, by the more independent
foreign policy of Ankara and its aspiration to establish close economic
relations with Tehran, carrying out energy projects with it, first
of all.

What policy should Armenia conduct against the background of the
tension available between Iran and the West?

International sanctions with respect to Iran primarily touch on the
spheres which are either absent in the relations between Yerevan
and Tehran or are present insignificantly: in particular, these
big investments in the economy of Iran and the military-technical
cooperation.

Along with it, Armenia’s policy with respect to Iran must be aimed
at development of mutually beneficial cooperation. In parallel with
development of cooperation with Tehran, Armenia should clarify its
stance regarding bilateral relations with Iran, taking into account
the developed realities along the perimeter of Armenia’s borders –
the ongoing conflict in Artsakh and still closed border with Turkey.

Moreover, the efforts by Armenia should be directed to prevention
of escalation of tension around Iran before its growth into an armed
conflict, as well as explanation to the world community of the scales
of possible catastrophic consequences of the military operation
against Iran for the Black Sea-Caspian and Middle-East regions.

What connection may be traced in the last meetings of Robert Kocharyan
with the Iranian authorities and the visit of Iran’s foreign minister
to Armenia?

I think there is no special connection between these two visits –
they fit well into the general context of negotiations between the
two neighbouring states.

Moreover, it is not strange that ex-President of Armenia Robert
Kocharyan assumed a certain role in the foreign political activity in
a quite tense period of the increased attention by the power centers
of regional and global scales to the our region.

May the internal political instability in Iran make the authorities
revise their policy with respect to the West, in particular, refuse
from the nuclear programme?

The internal political instability in Iran has been currently caused
by a quite painful process of the power elite change, redistribution
of the weight and influence of groupings and their constituents. In
particular, it is related to withdrawal of some politicians and
religious figures, who took an active part in the Islamic revolution of
1979, from the political arena. The protest actions by the opposition
constitute no real threat to the existing power system, at least,
for now.

Nuclear program is of strategic importance for Iran and aims to
strengthen its image of the leader in the Islam world, first of all.

Tehran does not strive to have nuclear weapons. It is much
more important for Iran to achieve the research and practice and
technological level enough for independent launching of full nuclear
cycle and ensure its needs on atomic energy.

The level of motivation and the real need of Tehran in creation
or acquiring of nuclear weapons directly depends on its ability to
provide its security by political methods relying on modern but not
nuclear weapons.

Do you think that the joint using of the Gabala radar station by Russia
and USA is possible, and how will it affect the balance of forces in
the region in the context of the American-Iranian confrontation?

It should be noted that the so-called Gabala radar station is an
Information-Analytical Center Darial. It is not able to replace
the missile defense system, which the USA intended to launch in the
territory of Poland and Czech Republic not long ago. Now they consider
a possibility of its placement in Romania and in the Black Sea water
area. Gabala radar station has no option of countermissile guidance,
namely, it is the principal element of the US anti-ballistic missile
defense. Functionally, it is able to assure just tracing of Iran’s
"missile activity" and become only part of information-analytical
support of the missile defense system.

The prospects of technical and prompt cooperation of the American
and Russian missile defense system’s radar control systems seem
quite problematic.

Moreover, using of the Gabala radar station not instead but in
addition to the American missile defense system, being launched,
bears military and political problems: in due time, Iran understood
such initiative by Russia just in the context of using the current
radar station as an alternative to the newly launched systems.

In general, joint using of the Gabala radar station by Russia and
the USA will not essentially affect the military balance of forces
in the region, however, it will become another project to tighten
the Azerbaijani-Russian and Azerbaijani-American military-political
relations.

The Azerbaijani leadership continuously makes roaring statements about
the readiness to "return the territories". How much substantiated is
such a rhetoric from the viewpoint of combat readiness of its army?

Such rhetoric aims to bolster fighting efficiency of the Azerbaijani
army, especially moral and psychological training of the manpower.

Along with it, the Azerbaijani leadership has occurred in a vicious
cycle because of its precipitate policy of militarist rhetoric which
must keep on growing "by the rules of the genre. There is a strong
possibility that such revanchist military psychosis in Azerbaijan
may get out of control of the authorities. This factor may lead
to resumption of military actions in Nagorny Karabakh despite the
prospects of destabilization of the domestic political situation
in the country and direct threat to the ruling elite which was the
initiator of this psychos.

Interview by Ashot Safaryan, February 11, 2010. ArmInfo

Gyumri’s Homeless: Still Waiting For Adequate Housing

GYUMRI’S HOMELESS: STILL WAITING FOR ADEQUATE HOUSING
Yeranuhi Soghoyan

201 0/02/15 | 16:02

Glendale Hills Fails to Deliver; New Apartments Need "Fixing"

The Glendale Hills construction company had promised to hand over
1,056 newly erected apartments to the government by the end of
December, 2009. Instead, not one apartment has yet to be transferred
to government control. The units were earmarked for those left homeless
by the 1988 Spitak earthquake.

It turns out that when Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan visited
the construction site on December 23 to officially take possession
of the apartments, he refused outright. The apartments just weren’t
"suitable" for those who had waited for twenty-one years for a place
to call their own.

After touring the site, President Sargsyan hastily convened a meeting
and put the construction firm on notice. Artashes Sargsyan, Deputy
Head of the Ministry of Urban Development’s National Urban Development
Inspectorate, confesses that the promise made by the experienced
construction company to hand over 1,000 apartments in just 7-8 months
was folly at best and one made by guys "wet behind the ears".

Glendale Hills took on more that it could chew

"If you had the occasion to meet with company management you’ll
surely have noticed that they’re young guys. They might have wanted
to do a good deed and build one thousand apartments in eight months,
but they got in over their heads. I believe they messed up in their
calculations. Most importantly, they failed to take Gyumri’s climatic
conditions into account," says Mr. Sargsyan. "First off, the work began
in May and seven months to finish the job was not enough. On top of
that, there were many inexperienced workers at the site since it was
a rush job. Now, all the problems are being fixed and our homeless
citizens can celebrate their house warming festivities come this May."

Mikayel Nersisyan, a lawyer by profession, was the managing foreman at
the Glendale Hills construction site in Gyumri. He’s now back at the
bar. Last month, a new foreman was brought in – Hovhannes Abrahamyan,
a builder by trade. Mr. Sargsyan from the ministry says the new man
is pretty experienced.

Mr. Sargsyan also says that the construction crews have changes as
well and that more experienced workers have been employed at the
job site. Sadly, experienced builders from the Gyumri area have not
been hired.

At the moment, there are 700-800 workers at the Glendale Hills site
in Gyumri.

Ministry claims all the problems will be "fixed"

Mr. Artashes Sargsyan, chosen by the Minister of Urban Development
(MUD) to monitor work at the construction site, says that the
apartments are being retiled and that all interior flaws registered
back in December are being corrected.

"Showers, with all the amenities and tiled, will be provided. And, of
course, heating. I can’t say if it will be an Ariston or Baksi heater,
but it will be one or the other," says Mr. Sargsyan. "Since they
originally set down laminate on wet cement, it’s beginning to bubble
up when they started to heat the apartments. Everything is being ripped
up and new flooring installed. In short, the shortcomings being voiced
by the people were indeed true. They’re all being taken care of."

According to Mr. Sargsyan’s calculations, had the apartments been
handed over to the homeless in their original state, back in December,
the new residents would have had to spent $3,000 on average to repair
the defects.

At the end of January, Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and Deputy Prime
Minister Armen Gevorgyan toured the newly constructed residential
neighborhood, ostensibly, according to Mr. Sargsyan, to check out
a few sample "spruced up" units and to then direct the builders
to continue in the same vein. At the same time the "HaySeismShin"
testing form had also started to conducts tests as to the structural
durability of the buildings. The inspectors wanted to see just how
much reinforced concrete had been poured in the support pillars.

Apartment size – will larger families get larger units?

Given that one of the concerns of potential new residents dealt with
the actual living space of the apartments, Hetq made a few inquiries
with the Ministry of Urban Development (MUD). It replied that the
actual living space of the newly constructed apartments was formulated
according to RoA Law 1402, passed on November 26, 2009. The minimum
and maximum surface area of the multi-unit buildings, as defined in
the preliminary planning documents, were based on the number of rooms
in each unit as follows:

1 room apartment: 40 – 47 square meters 2 room apartment: 52 – 59
" " 3 room apartment: 65 – 70 " " 4 room apartment: 77 – 80 "
" 5 room apartment: 90 – 110 " "

Apartments being constructed by Glendale Hills in Building #1 in
the Moush-2 neighborhood of Gyumri include the following sizes:
1 room apartments – 40, 42, 47 square meters; 2 room apartments –
54 and 56; 3 room apartments – 66 and 67. Kitchen space is included
in these figures.

MUD claims that these apartments sizes correspond to units built in
Gyumri prior to the Glendale Hills project. Here, we should take a
look back to the multi-unit buildings constructed in 2003-2004 with
the same budget. In these buildings, 2 room units measured 72 square
meters and 3 room units, 99 square meters.

It turns out that it is possible to build larger, heated units with
showers with the same amount of money.

MUD also said that according to a provision in the same Government Law
1402, it stipulates that where there are different sized apartments,
the larger ones should be allocated to those families with more
members.

These newly constructed apartments are being allocated to the homeless
based on a lottery system. And, according to the way the lottery
is devised, larger families are not assured of getting the larger
apartment, whether one, two, or however many rooms. The lottery ticket
a person draws doesn’t specify how large the actual apartment is.

MUD responded by saying that there were more than 1,000 families, with
three or more members, on the waiting list for a one room apartment.

Thus, it was been decided to allocate the 40-42 square meter units
to families of two or less and the 47 square meter units to families
of three or more.

In its reply, the MUD points out that both Minister Vardanyan and the
Deputy Minister have made several on-site inspections of the work
being conducted at Gyumri and have organized consultative meetings
to come up with solutions to existing problems.

If this is the case, why weren’t the faulty construction measures
halted in the first place? Or didn’t the official inspectors notice
that flooring was being installed on wet concrete and frozen plaster
walls were being painted?

What good are inspectors who don’t know what to look for or close
their eyes when they see something that isn’t right?

http://hetq.am/en/society/gyumri-36/

Head of SCR discussed coop with the management of `Vallex Group’

Head of SCR discussed cooperation issues with the management of `Vallex Group’

YEREVAN, February 12. /ARKA/. Shevket Shaydullin, General Director of
South-Caucasian Railway (SCR) met with Valery Mezhlumyan, Director of
metallurgical company `Vallex Group’ during his working visit to the
station Alaverdi.

During the meeting they discussed the results of cooperation between
CJSC `SCR’and `Vallex Group’, perspectives of further cooperation,
joint activities of cargo transportation of Teghut soil in Armenia.

Shaydullin mentioned that SCR helps its clients not only to organize
transportation process but also find consumption markets. The company
targets at the increase of quality services and flexible price policy.
SCR modernized the approaches of client services.

Introduction of new information technologies in the railway provided
different cooperation schemes for the clients, for example, `work in
one window’.

Besides transportation, SCR is willing to participate in organization
of logistic process of raw-material delivered to the plant `Vallex
Group’.

>From 2009, Open JSC `Geopromining’ is the client of SCR which is
specialized in mining and sale of metals. After the official part of
the meeting the managers visited the territory of the plant.

Railway workers watched the process of smelting of copper ore from
which pucks are prepared for export. Shaydullin highly appreciated the
results of joint activities and expressed hope for further
cooperation.

Concession management of `Armenian railway’ is implemented by CJSC
`South Caucasian Railway’ which is 100% affiliate of Open JSC `Russian
Railway’. SCR accepted the railway stock of CJSC `Armenian railway’ on
its balance from June 1, 2008 according to Concession Agreement signed
on February 13, 2008. The terms of concession management is for 30
years with the right of prolongation for another 10 years. – 0–

Arshile Gorky’s meander as a modern master

Arshile Gorky’s meander as a modern master
Although the artist ripped off Cézanne and Picasso, he pioneered
abstract expressionism with his luscious blob work
(Hirshhorn Museum, Smithsonian Washington, Arshile Gorky Estate)
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The Sunday Times/UK
February 14, 2010

Waldemar Januszczak

Recommend?
When I was a child, I was a sad little sod. Growing up in a Polish
resettlement camp near Swindon, living in a Nissen hut surrounded by
people who washed their dogs in the communal bath, nothing much gave
me pleasure. Except Arshile Gorky.

Chance brought him into my life. My mother would sometimes bring me
back a magazine called Knowledge from the cleaning jobs she was doing,
and this magazine always had in it a full-page reproduction of a
painting. Once, it was El Greco’s Saint Martin and the Beggar. Another
time, Van Gogh’s view of the night cafe at Arles. I cut them out and
treasured them, and, later on, when we moved to Reading, I stuck them
on the wall and stared at them for hours. The one I stared at the
longest, because understanding it was an endless experience, was The
Betrothal II, by Arshile Gorky.

This gorgeous yellow painting, with its cascades of falling shapes,
felt as if it was moving: trickling from top to bottom like the sand
in an hourglass. So much was going on in it. Some of the busy coloured
shapes were outlined in thin black lines, like the ones cartoonists
use. And these cartoonish outlines gave the picture a Disneyish air,
which took the sting out of its difficulty and made it easy for a
child to love. I was six or seven, and knew nothing yet about abstract
expressionism. But I learnt the picture’s title, remembered its
maker’s name and am now delighted to see The Betrothal II lording it
over the best room in Tate Modern’s compelling Gorky show.

Gorky, too, was a refugee. He was born Vosdanig Adoian in Turkish
Armenia in about 1902. When the Turks sided with the Germans in the
first world war and set about eradicating their Armenian population –
the 20th century’s first recorded act of genocide – Vosdanig fled to
Russia, where his mother died of starvation. Somehow, he made his way
to America, where his father had already decamped. And by the late
1920s, he had turned himself into an artist and was calling himself
Arshile Gorky.

We encounter him here as a flagrant copyist, working in the manner of
Cézanne. So outrageously Cézannish is his still life of apples and
pears around a jug, the modern world would surely deem him guilty of
copyright infringement. Even at his most Provençal, though, Gorky
brings some Armenian blackness to his task. At the back of his early
paintings, there is invariably a darkness, gathering like thunder on
the horizon. In 1927, he painted a simple chair in a corner with a
cloth draped over it. Then dramatically murdered its Cézannish air by
placing a skull in the centre.

The show spends a long time watching him find himself. The first five
galleries are thick with borrowings. From Cézanne, he moved on to
Picasso, whose assorted cubistic styles he mimics with endearing
clumsiness. What Picasso achieved in moments with a few quick swishes
of his brush, Gorky takes hours and days and months over, reworking
layer upon layer, until he arrives at pictures as thick as roof
insulation. It’s as if a plasterer has taken up painting. Also
borrowed from Picasso, I suggest, is an insouciance about skipping
from abstraction to figuration. Later in art history, when the divides
hardened, artists would come to blows over such matters. Here, having
watched Gorky struggle to paint his clunky cubistic abstracts, we
suddenly find him standing next to his mother in an entirely
figurative room filled with memories.

There are two versions of The Artist and His Mother. Both took a
decade or more to paint, between 1926 and 1942. Both were based on the
same childhood photograph. The artist, as a boy of 9 or 10, stands
next to his mother, who is seated sternly like an enthroned Madonna in
a romanesque carving, her lovely face framed with a headscarf that
seems to emphasise her saint – liness. Once again, you can smell Picasso
in the room – in the beautiful rose colours of one of the versions and
the sculptural primitivism of the other – but the voice we are
listening to is, at last, the real Gorky’s.

It was in the early 1940s that he finally found himself. Which was
unusual. Indeed, among the giants of 20th-century art, it was unique.
In Europe, the war was absorbing the energy of an entire artistic
generation, and it wasn’t the time for personal growth. Yet for Gorky,
exiled in America, the war seemed to reconnect him with his lost past.
The first painting here that is unmistakably a Gorky, unmistakably
beautiful and unmistakably a masterpiece, is also the first that
refers directly to his Armenian origins. Painted in 1940-42 and called
After Khorkom, this brightly coloured choir of blobs is scattered
vividly with poppy reds and buttercup yellows. Khorkom was the village
in which Gorky was born. The 1940s was when it all happened for him.
He met his second wife, and, since he was 39 and she was 19, we can
surely imagine some of the reasons for the new spring in his step. The
wife had family in Virginia, and for the first time Gorky found
himself driving across the changing landscape of America, enjoying its
tangled rhythms and allowing them to throb in him.

In art, meanwhile, having absorbed a fully imaginary Cézanne and
Picasso, he found himself coming into real-life contact with exiled
surrealists from Europe, and his allegiances switched. It happened
overnight. One moment he was working laboriously with thick
encrustations of paint, the next he was skimming his canvases with
coloured washes and skipping round them with quick black outlines. The
zippy cartoon line work does not come from Disney after all. It comes
from Miro. The rooms ahead are filled, gloriously, with masterclasses
in pioneering abstract expressionism. Every picture is an event, as
busy clusters of blobs – some reminiscent of human dangly bits, others
of tangled forms from the American landscape – shove, slide and
trampoline across throbbing expanses of foggy colour. Something about
the relationship of these blobs to their backgrounds reminded me of
the relationship between cactuses and deserts; or plants and their
beds. But, since we are watching the influence of surrealism here, we
need to suspect psychological origins as well for the luscious blob
work: in dreams, thoughts, remembrances.

As Gorky’s art blossomed, so his life, alas, began curling up and
dying. In 1946, a fire in his studio destroyed 20 paintings. He got
cancer. His marriage broke up. His neck was broken in a car crash and
he found he could no longer paint. Eventually, after trying to hang
himself from various trees, he successfully committed suicide in 1948.
A life that had meandered its way to success so slowly plummeted to
its conclusion like a falling piano. As for The Betrothal II, it is
even more beautiful in the flesh than the beautiful memory I have of
it.

Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective is at Tate Modern, SE1, until May 3