Armenia Returns The Azerbaijani Captive Tomorrow

ARMENIA RETURNS THE AZERBAIJANI CAPTIVE TOMORROW

Aysor
April 6 2010
Armenia

Tomorrow on April 7 on the close to the Armenian – Azerbaijani
borderline in Yeraskhavan – Sadarak point the Armenian side will pass
to Azerbaijan the citizen of the Azerbaijani Republic Rafik Rahman
ogli, who had violated the border, informs the information and public
relations department of the RA DM.

By the mediation of the Red Cross international organization Armenia
passed to Azerbaijan the two corpses of the Azerbaijani militants
who were killed as a result of the circumstances taken place in
Koti village.

Armenian Killings Prove A Challenge For LAPD

ARMENIAN KILLINGS PROVE A CHALLENGE FOR LAPD

Daily Breeze
April 6 2010
CA

The shooting deaths of four Armenian men in a North Hollywood cafe is
expected to be a challenge for detectives with the Robbery-Homicide
Division, who are working today to establish a motive.

There was no official word if members of the Southern California
Eurasian Organized Crime Task Force were helping Los Angeles police
in the investigation. The multi-agency task force was formed several
years ago to help deal with such crimes.

So far, detectives have gotten conflicting accounts of what happened
Saturday afternoon at the often-closed Hot Spot Cafe, a restaurant
with dark, tinted windows at 11651 Riverside Drive.

According to the Hot Spot’s owner, a group of 30-40 had reserved
the cafe earlier that day and arrived around 1 p.m. after attending
a funeral.

Artour Balian told the Los Angeles Times the victims who were shot
were the only customers left after most of the larger group left.

Balian told The Times the men were sitting quietly, talking among
themselves and apparently at ease. He said the group was served a
traditional Armenian spread, including short ribs, sturgeon and hummus.

Balian left the cafe to go home but got a call almost immediately,
around 4:30 p.m.

"They said `hurry up hurry up, they’re killing each other,"’ Balian
told The Times.

Detectives reportedly are skeptical of some witness accounts and
unsure if there was one gunman or two. Police said one suspect was
described as an Armenian man about 30.

Three of the men at the table died where they fell, and a fourth died
at a hospital.

All four of the fatally shot men were of Armenian descent: Harut
Baburyan, 28, Sarkis Karadjian, 26, Vardan Tofalyan, 31, and Hayk
Yegnanyan, 25.

Two other wounded men, whose names have not been made public, were
hospitalized. At least 17 bullets were fired, leading to police to
believe there may have been more than one gunman.

Early Sunday, police had a white Toyota with blood splattered on it
towed away from the restaurant.

Community leaders in the Valley Village area learned a day after
the shootings that Los Angeles police were working with officers in
predominately- Armenian Glendale "to apprehend the suspects."

Police have not said if the bloodshed was connected to the shooting
death a woman in Hollywood a week earlier.

Karyn Safaryan was found shot to death in an apartment parking area
in the 5800 lbock of Lexington Avenue. Her husband and one of her
two daughters were shot to death in Hollywood in 2008. The surviving
daughter has been offered police protection.

/ci_14828744

http://www.dailybreeze.com/latestnews

Levon Ter-Petrosyan: Serzh Sagsyan Will Make Concessions

LEVON TER-PETROSYAN: SERZH SAGSYAN WILL MAKE CONCESSIONS

news.am
April 6 2010
Armenia

"I am inclined to think that Serzh Sargsyan will sign the Madrid
document proposed by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs as an ultimatum,
a document that provides for immediate return of five regions of
Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijan," Levon Ter-petrosyan, Chairman of
the opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC), stated at a rally
in Yerevan on April 6.

The Armenian President has a hard choice to make: either signing the
Madrid document, which will evoke a violent reaction on the part of
both the present and the former partners in the ruling coalition,
or reject it in order to gain time. In any case, he will have to go
back on his promises to the international community and find himself
under serious international pressure.

"The irony is that Serzh Sargsyan will lose power in any case. But
I am inclined to think he will sign the document, as in this case he
will at least get guarantees of personal security, including political
asylum, from the international community," Ter-Petrosyan said.

The ANC leader also stressed that there is no sense in talking about
the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations now, as this process
is immediately linked to the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process. "We have
repeatedly stated that, and our forecasts are coming true," he said.

At today’s rally the Opposition leader did not set the date of the
next rally. "Rapid political developments are expected this month,
so the date of the next rally is too early to fix," they said.

Thousands of Orthodox celebrate holy fire ritual

Thousands of Orthodox celebrate holy fire ritual
By YANIV ZOHAR (AP)
03/04/10

JERUSALEM – The sound of drumbeats and hymns and light from thousands
of candles and torches filled Christianity’s most revered shrine
Saturday as Orthodox faithful celebrated Easter Week’s holy fire
ritual.

Orthodox Christians believe Jesus was crucified and buried at the site
where the Church of the Holy Sepulcher now stands, and that a flame
appears spontaneously from his tomb on the day before Easter to show
he has not forgotten his followers.

Worshippers carrying torches or bundles of 33 tapers signifying the
years of Jesus’ life waited in excited anticipation as the Greek
Orthodox Patriarch in the Holy Land, Theofilos III, removed his
embossed gold-and-white mitre and descended with Greek Orthodox,
Armenian and other Eastern rite clergy into the tomb.

After the flame appeared there, he passed it from inside the tomb to
believers inside the church’s main hall, who rushed to light their own
candles and torches, illuminating the darkened church within seconds
and filling it with smoke. Church bells pealed, and some of the
faithful passed their hands through the flames they held, reflecting
their belief in the fire’s divine and beneficial nature.

Worshippers hoisted one of the clerics who had gone into the tomb on
their shoulders after he emerged, waving a bundle of lit tapers.

"It’s (a) very huge experience and it’s a holy place," said a Serbian
woman who identified herself only as Irena.

Light from the holy fire was taken afterward to the Church of the
Nativity in the West Bank town of Bethlehem, where tradition holds
Jesus was born, and aboard special flights to Athens and other cities,
linking many of the 200 million Orthodox worldwide to their spiritual
core.

The thousands who filled Jerusalem’s cavernous Church of the Holy
Sepulcher began lining up for the ceremony hours earlier. Video
screens set up in various places in the Old City broadcast the
ceremony live for the thousands more who could not fit inside.

Some of the celebrants held church flags, while others beat hand drums
and sang hymns.

The various Orthodox denominations grouped into different areas of the
church, which was heavily secured by Israeli forces.

Police spokesman Shmuel Ben-Ruby said about 2,500 police were
stationed in the area, including as many as 1,500 within the church
itself. He estimated that between 8,000 and 10,000 worshippers packed
the church and about 7,000 more spilled over into its cobbled
courtyard.

The holy fire ritual dates back at least 1,200 years. The precise
details of the flame’s source are a closely guarded secret.

This year, Orthodox Easter coincides with observances by other
Christian denominations, bringing a large number of Easter pilgrims to
the narrow alleys of Jerusalem’s Old City.

Civilizing The ‘Barbarians’

Hubble-Bubble
Forbes

Civilizing The ‘Barbarians’

Melik Kaylan, 04.02.10

Two "black widows," likely of Chechen origin, killed dozens of riders Monday
on the Moscow subway. Russian television said virtually nothing of the
appalling events through the entire day. Moscow residents resorted to radio
and the Internet for information. Sanguinary Chechen rebel leader Doku
Umarov claimed he ordered the suicide bombings, though a spokesman had
already denied it. The head of Russia’s Security Council publicly hinted
that Georgia may be involved, especially with that man Saakashvili in
charge, "whose behavior is unpredictable."

My friend Owen Mathews, Newsweek’s Moscow bureau chief, with whom I appeared
on WOR Radio’s Joey Reynolds show this week, said publicly that already
there’s speculation in Russia as to whether the state secretly engineered
the attacks as a provocation. Many Russians believe that the FSB perpetrated
the notorious 1999 apartment bombings in several cities across the country
in order to justify the second Chechen War. Plus change in Russia. The sun
also rises–but never dispels the eternal murk of Russian affairs.

Already we’ve heard noises of concern in the West that the Moscow subway
enormities will fuel a return to police-state conditions. What we seldom
hear is a discussion of the Chechens–why do they do such things? Are they
merely a rabid offshoot of the infectious Islamist cult of death at large in
the world? Moscow has successfully sold its genocidal policies against the
Chechens as a legitimate reaction to mad-dog jihadism. We’ve bought into it.
But it won’t do–I’ve been to Chechnya and environs, and I can tell you that
the story is different: Something unimaginably horrifying happened there in
recent years, and before, comparable to the worst excesses of the Congo,
possibly even more depraved. And it hasn’t stopped.

A terrific op-ed in the March 30 New York Times by three Chicago researchers
into terrorism sets out to explain the nature of Chechen terrorism with its
strangely high percentage of women participants.

"Many Chechen separatists are Muslim, but few of the suicide bombers profess
religious motives. The majority is male, but a huge fraction–over 40%–is
women. Although foreign suicide attackers are not unheard of in Chechnya, of
the 42 for whom we can determine place of birth, 38 were from the Caucasus.
Something is driving Chechen suicide bombers, but it is hardly global
jihad."

It takes a stubborn kind of historical myopia to be mystified by Chechen
behavior today. The authors of the op-ed cover a great deal of recent
ground, but they shy from detailing horrors and ignore the long history–150
years and more–of Russian brutality in the Caucasus. Let me begin with
contemporary horrors. In the time I spent with Chechens in the Caucasus and
elsewhere I heard stories and saw evidence of widespread incidents so
utterly unspeakable as to rob you of sleep for a lifetime. Nothing in
Palestine or Afghanistan or Iraq or Lebanon comes close. The op-ed authors’
well-meaning assertion that "suicide campaigns are almost always a last
resort to military occupation" doesn’t begin to describe the matter,
conflating as it does the Chechen experience with other conflicts, as if
American and Israeli military campaigns might fall in the same category.

There’s no comparison. Entire buses full of women and children charred to
death by Russian missiles. Children found with hands tied and scalped to
death. Women killed by having sharp stakes driven into their vaginas. Men
tortured and left to die trapped in basins of concrete. Chechen exile groups
have proof–photographs and videotapes aplenty–but they can’t get anyone to
pay heed.

The Chechens have endured three sustained waves of genocide from the 19th
century onwards. The Czarist conquest of the Caucasus region, waged
explicitly as a Christian crusading cause, continued on and off throughout
the 19th century during which, by some estimates, half a million indigenous
Muslims were killed or displaced. (Many ended up in the Ottoman territories,
which set the scene for the massacre of Armenians during World War 1). In
1859 Alexandre Dumas traveled to the Caucasus region and subsequently wrote
a memoir of his trip. In it, he describes his astonishing reception as a
celebrity so far from Europe in the country house salons of the Russian
elites there. He also describes how his genteel hosts invited him to go
hunting–a common pastime–in pursuit of locals to kill.

In 1944 Joseph Stalin deported the entire Chechen population to the
hardscrabble steppes of Central Asia. He suspected them of wishing to
collaborate with Hitler. By some estimates only half survived. They traveled
by rail, entire families and villages (those that weren’t killed outright in
their homes) for 20 days in closed cattle cars with scant food or water.
Upon arrival they were simply dumped out in the middle of nowhere and left
to survive by their wits. Nevertheless, many Chechen soldiers, deeply valued
by their Russian officers, fought valiantly on the Russian side against
Hitler. For their pains most were deported to the Gulags in Siberia. After
Stalin died, the surviving population was allowed to dribble back to the
homelands in the 1960s. Also, so many were dying of starvation in the steppe
that the weak would crawl to the cemeteries with their last breath so as not
to be eaten by dogs first.

Is it any wonder that when the Soviet Union collapsed, the Chechens,
followed by the neighboring Ingush and Daghestanis, all of whom had suffered
similarly, could think of nothing but freedom from Moscow? In the first
Chechen War of the early 1990s they kicked the Russians out of the capital
Grozny–a conflict in which there’s scarcely a mention of religion or Jihad.
During that war, many Caucasus Turks from families originally purged in the
various Russian campaigns went back to fight. They provided weapons, food,
medicine and a crucial sense of solidarity with the outside world.

But no, Moscow would not let the Chechens go. Putin came to power and
relaunched the Chechen campaign in 1999. The bombings of low rent apartment
blocks in three Russian cities served as a casus belli, even though most
Russians believed their own security services likely perpetrated the
outrages. In that year, the U.S. was allowed to bomb Belgrade, the Turks
were allowed to capture the PKK Kurdish insurgent leader, and Turkish
authorities cut off the secret supply lines to Grozny. Though no one in
authority has publicly said so, I believe the three countries struck a deal,
and the Chechens were left to fend for themselves.

During the Second Chechen War of 1999, Russian forces deployed notorious
bands of contratniki–paid irregulars many of whom are ex-convicts,
criminals or bandits on the run–from elsewhere. They were encouraged to
loot and decimate the locals along the way. Grozny itself underwent a kind
of carpet bombing campaign in which some 40,000 (other estimates says
between 100,000 and 200,000) inhabitants were killed or purged including
many ethnic Russians who couldn’t or wouldn’t leave. The city became another
Hiroshima.

During and after the second battle for Grozny it was impossible for foreign
journalists to survive in Chechnya because Moscow encouraged a dirty
campaign of kidnapping and murder against them by proxy gangs of Chechens.
Indeed, word was leaked that all western observers were secret spies for the
Russians. In such an environment, only foreign bearded jihadis of equal
cruelty to the Russians could survive. And even they, having successfully
alienated the world, didn’t survive long. (There is some evidence that in
the Caucasus as in the former Central Asian republics, Moscow allowed
foreign Islamists to operate for a while as mentioned in Ahmad Rashid’s book
"Jihad In Central Asia".)

The average Russian thinks of the average Chechen as a kind of savage animal
unfit to breathe the air of civilization. Fit only for extermination. How
civilized would any of us be after suffering continuous Russian campaigns of
genocide? If the Chechens are such animals, why were Russian invasion forces
full of Chechen conscripts during the occupation of Georgia? Either Chechens
are too dangerously savage for use in civilized warfare or Russians use them
for exactly that reason as long as they’re directed against others. And why
hold on to a land of purported subhuman barbarians unless you intend to
empty the place of its population and keep the land? Meantime, Chechnya
itself resembles a post-apocalyptic landscape of refugees, feral dogs, war
criminals, armed gangs and shells of buildings where order is kept through
the predation of one set of Chechens against another.

The world must certainly mourn and deplore the atrocities on the subway, and
before that in the school at Beslan and elsewhere, but we should remember
how the brutality began and why it continues. The Chechens undergo a new
genocide with each change of regime in the Kremlin: the Czars, the Soviets
and now Putin. Why are there no Chechen Genocide bills appended to the
Armenian one in the US Congress, in the legislative assemblies of Sweden and
France and elsewhere? Why do we care more about atrocities from a century
ago and not from today in countries barely a few hundred miles apart? And
finally one might say this–if the Kremlin would wish the Chechens to become
more civilized, it should offer them a proper civilization to join.

Melik Kaylan, a writer based in New York, writes a weekly column for Forbes.
His story "Georgia in the Time of Misha" is featured in The Best American
Travel Writing 2008.

Protestations D’Associations Turques

PROTESTATIONS D’ASSOCIATIONS TURQUES
par Jean Eckian

armenews
vendredi2 avril 2010

PROPOS D’ERDOGAN

A la suite des votes de la Chambre des Representants des Etats
Unis et du parlement suedois a propos du Genocide des Armeniens, le
premier ministre turc, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, avait menace, a la BBC,
d’"evacuer", pour ne pas dire deporter, des dizaines de milliers
d’immigrants armeniens sans papiers, mais toleres.

Emus par tant violence, des dizaines d’associations turques ont emis
une petition de protestation adressee au chef du gouvernement turc.

Honte a vous Monsieur le Premier ministre !

" Vous savez, il y a 170 000 Armeniens dans mon pays dont 70 000 sont
mes citoyens. Mais nous tolerons aujourd’hui les 100 000 autres. Alors
demain, qu’est-ce que je vais faire ? Si necessaire, je vais dire a
ces 100 000 autres, allez rentrez chez vous ; je vais le faire. Et
pourquoi ? Parce qu’il ne sont pas mes citoyens… Et je ne suis
pas dans l’obligation de les garder dans mon pays. C’est-a-dire
qu’actuellement eux, avec de telles attitudes, ils nuisent a notre
approche cordiale, et ils n’en sont pas conscients. "

Ces propos honteux ont ete recueillis de la declaration du premier
ministre turc Recep Tayyip Erdogan faite au service turc de la BBC
le 16 mars, mardi a Londres.

De ces propos, nous comprenons que le premier ministre turc, afin de
calmer sa colère suite aux resolutions concernant le Genocide Armenien
votees dernièrement par les USA et la Suède, a pris pour seule cible
les Armeniens immigres d’Armenie ou de la Georgie qui luttent pour leur
survie en Turquie. Les sans papiers armeniens sont devenus recemment
les victimes faciles des politiciens de Turquie. Prives de toute
protection, defense et securite sociale, ces derniers sont pointes
du doigt. Le fait de garder en main la menace de les expulser a tout
moment de Turquie tel un atout et de s’en servir a chaque occasion
qui se presente, rappelle la deportation sous l’Empire Ottoman des
Armeniens d’abord, puis de tout autre non desire. Les sans papiers
armeniens sont des petits riens face au tout puissant premier ministre
Erdogan, mais il semblerait que le pouvoir du premier ministre est
tout juste a la hauteur de ces petits riens !

Nous voulons rappeler au premier ministre de Turquie :

Personne ne quitte son pays natal pour le seul plaisir, et personne
ne reste dans un pays etranger où elle/il ne trouve pas de travail ;

Les travailleurs armeniens, comme tous, ont droit a un traitement
humain ; Le mauvais traitement officiel dont les armeniens sans
papiers font l’objet est un crime honteux, un crime de haine ;

Il est inacceptable que des personnes sans defense deviennent l’objet
de negociation pour contrer des resolutions adoptees par les parlements
de pays tiers ;

Il est evident que de tels propos culpabilisent egalement les Armeniens
de Turquie ;

De tels propos constituent de reelles contradictions pour le Premier
ministre d’un pays ayant des ambitions internationales et dont le
defi est de rassembler les differentes civilisations, de reconcilier
les querelles et de normaliser ses relations avec l’Armenie.

Nous, associations signataires :

Nous condamnons cette mentalite proche de l’idee de deportation qui
aujourd’hui encore est en cours. Nous demandons l’arret immediat de
ces negociations honteuses menees sur le dos de personnes sans defense.

Initiative stop au racisme et au nationalisme (Irkcýlýða ve
Milliyetciliðe DurDe Giriþimi),

Cooperative de femmes AMARGÝ (AMARGÝ Kadýn Kooperatifi),
Les etudiants anticapitalistes (Antikapitalist Oðrenciler),
Initiative de femmes pour la paix (Barýþ Ýcin Kadýn Giriþimi),
L’initiative des artistes pour la paix (Barýþ Ýcin Sanat Giriþimi),
La plateforme des objecteur de conscience pour la paix (Barýþ Ýcin
Vicdani Ret Platformu), La plateforme " Birbirimize Sahip Cýkýyoruz
", La compagnie des arts du spectacle du Bosphore (Boðazici Gosteri
Sanatlarý Topluluðu), CEKEV, DSÝP, La plateforme de communication de
Diyarbekir (Diyarbekir Ýletiþim Platformu), La section d’Istanbul
du parti du labeur (Emek Partisi Istanbul Ýl Orgutu), le Syndicat
des travailleurs a domicile (Ev Eksenli Calýþanlar Sendikasý), les
Jeunes civiles (Genc Siviller), Le reseau de solidarite avec les
immigres (Gocmen Dayanýþma Aðý), L’Association des droits de l’homme
(Ýnsan Haklarý Derneði), L’association de solidarite avec les femmes
de Ýzmir (Imiz Kadýn Dayanýþma Derneði), Kaos GL, L’atelier d’art
de Kumbara) (Kumbara Sanat Atolyesi), La coalition pour la paix et
la justice universelle (Kuresel BAK), Le groupe d’action universel
(Kuresel Eylem Grubu), LAMBDA Ýstanbul, Nor Zartonk, L’initiative des
femmes contre la violence et la discrimination dans les syndicats
(Sendikalarda Þiddet ve Ayrýmcýlýða Karþý Kadýn Ýnisiyatifi),
l’association pour le changement social (Sosyal Deðiþim Derneði),
L’association de solidarite sociale (Toplumsal Dayanýþma Derneði),
L’association pour la paix sur terre (Yeryuzune Ozgurluk Derneði), le
parti des verts (Yeþiller Partisi), L’association Yuzleþme Derneði,
La coalition pour 70 million de pas (70 Milyon Adým Koalisyonu),
l’initiative des 78’ards (78’liler Giriþimi).

Georgia’s Armenian Minority Looks Ahead To Local Elections

GEORGIA’S ARMENIAN MINORITY LOOKS AHEAD TO LOCAL ELECTIONS

Georgiandaily
index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id= 17995&Itemid=133
March 31 2010
Georgia

The NGO Javakhk, one of several that seek to represent the interests
of the prominently Armenian population of the southern Georgian region
of Javakheti, convened a congress in the regional center, Akhalkalaki,
on March 27 to discuss priorities and demands in the run-up to the
Georgian local government elections scheduled for May 30, Caucasus
Press reported on March 30.

The 200 participants (of an estimated regional Armenian population
of around 160,000) adopted a statement reiterating long-standing
grievances that they attribute to the allegedly discriminatory
policies of the Georgian central government. They include harassment;
restrictions on the use of the Armenian language; and disputes over
historic church buildings to which both the Georgian Orthodox Church
and the Armenian Apostolic Church lay claim.

The participants explicitly appealed to the Georgian authorities not to
create obstacles to candidates representing the region’s Armenian NGOs
who seek to register as candidates in the upcoming local elections,
and also to guarantee that the vote will be free and fair.

The appeal was by no means the first address to the Georgian leadership
in recent years. Shortly after the August 2008 Georgian-Russian war,
the Council of Armenian NGOs of Samtskhe-Javakheti released a statement
arguing that the only ay to restore Georgia’s territorial integrity and
allay ethnic tensions is to transform the country into a federal state.

The council proposed that Samtskhe-Javakheti be granted "broad
self-government" within that federal framework, including the right
to free elections for all local government bodies and jurisdiction
over culture, education, crime prevention, and environmental and
socioeconomic issues. The region would also be represented within
the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government at
the national level. And, crucially, Armenian would be designated a
regional official language, alongside Georgian.

Such measures to protect the rights of national minorities are, the
NGOs pointed out, one of the necessary preconditions for Georgia’s
successful integration into Euro-Atlantic structures.

The Georgian authorities have until very recently made little effort
to redress the Javakheti Armenians’ grievances, possibly counting on
the fact that the Republic of Armenia leadership is so dependent on
maintaining cordial relations with Georgia for overland communication
with the outside world that it cannot risk campaigning too aggressively
on behalf of its hapless co-ethnics.

And some initiatives intended to resolve problems have served only
to compound them. An example is Georgia’s point-blank rejection of an
Armenian government offer to provide Armenian-language textbooks for
schools in Javakheti. Georgian Ambassador to Yerevan Grigol Tabatadze
told journalists earlier this month that only Georgian textbooks
approved by the Georgian Ministry of Education can be translated into
Armenian, published in Armenia, and then transported to Javakheti for
use in the region’s 144 Armenian schools, Caucasus Press reported on
March 11.

http://georgiandaily.com/

The princes of Persia

The princes of Persia

James Cockington

March 31, 2010

The Sydney Morning Herald

"I wonder if an oriental carpet has sold anywhere for full price?" a
reader asks, commenting on the tendency of rug merchants to offer "up
to 80 per cent discounts" at all times.

The exception is antique carpets, where prized specimens are full
price and generally increasing in value.

The earliest known example of a sophisticated pile carpet is the
Altai, or Pazyryk, rug from southern Siberia, found in the tomb of a
warrior prince who died about 500 years before the birth of
Christ. Water flooded the grave and it turned to ice, deep-freezing
the rug. When found by archaeologists in 1949, it was surprisingly
well-preserved. Anything approaching this age would be valued in the
hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s believed some rugs have changed
hands for millions.
More readily available are fragments of ancient rugs, such as the
16th-century Indian Moghul shown here. It’s of great interest because
the colours and textures are intact.

Oriental rugs are basically of four types: nomadic (tribal), village,
city (urban) and court rugs. These are classified by such things as
the type of loom used, the type of knot and the nature of the dye.

The oldest rugs used only organic dyes or stains derived from local
plants, insects and animals. Yellow traditionally comes from saffron,
pomegranate, onion skin and camomile flowers. Red comes from the roots
of the madder plant or the cochineal insect.

By the 1880s, chemical dyes were used in most carpet regions but never
quite captured the colours of nature. Rugs featuring organic dyes are
generally considered more valuable and an expert can tell instantly if
the dye is chemical or organic. Serious collectors like to inspect the
carpet before they buy. Antique carpets are rarely bought online.

Wool quality varies depending on the sheep. The best wool comes from
the first clip and from around the neck and shoulders. Again, this
requires an expert eye.
Where they were produced is also a factor. Nomadic or tribal rugs are
usually made from wool while village rugs are usually cotton-based,
because the villagers could establish farms. City rugs are mainly
based on a standard pattern. Court rugs are usually of a more
sophisticated design. These were made for the elders, kings and
community leaders by master designers and weavers.

Court rugs are the most prized, with mint examples valued at $100,000
and up.

By the end of the 19th century, the European influence was evident.
Magnificent carpets were produced in Persia by the Anglo-Swiss firm
Ziegler & Company from the late 19th to the early 20th centuries. They
set up offices and a workshop in the town of Sultanabad to make
carpets suitable for European and American tastes. Zieglers are still
in demand today, featuring prominently at Sotheby’s specialty textile
auctions in New York and London.

Recent prices for Zieglers in fine condition range from $US50,000
($55,000) upwards. Even a faded Ziegler, circa 1890, "with moth
damage", fetched US$21,600 in 2003.

Bakhtiari rugs are among the finest of the Persian tribal rugs. These
were hand-woven by the semi-nomadic Bakhtiari tribe from Iran. The one
shown here was made for the Hessamedin Khan Bakhtiari. It bears the
date 1320 of the Islamic calendar, which translates to AD1902. This
carpet was made for a "tallar", a special room where the khan would
entertain honoured guests.

These carpets are considered works of art in the same way as a poem or
piece of music. In this case, the design is separated into four even
sections. The typical Bakhtiari design incorporates a chequerboard of
patterned squares representative of the Persian garden.

Another important category is the Afshar horse saddle cover, a style
based on the tradition of using animal pelts on early wooden
saddles. More recently in Persian society, saddle covers became purely
decorative, reserved for special occasions. In the nomad tradition,
the saddle cover was part of the dowry, woven by the bride.
Afshar weavers favoured bright colours. Their work tended to be small
because they were woven on transportable horizontal looms. These rugs
are very collectable and, in the oriental rug scale, a good starting
point. Because of their size and shape, most collectors would mount
them on a wall.

The main reference for this article is Oriental Carpets: from the
Tents, Cottages and Workshops of Asia, by Jon Thompson.

MY COLLECTION

Born in Tehran, Behruz Alligorgi first worked for a local rug merchant
when schools were closed during the Iran revolution. He became
fascinated by tribal Persian rugs that sometimes appeared in the shop.

When he migrated to Melbourne he started his own collection of antique
rugs, some of which are displayed in his showroom, Behruz Studio, at
1509 Malvern Road, Glen Iris.

He conducts regular courses on the history of oriental carpets for
others interested in the subject.

Behruz began collecting seriously by travelling to places like
Armenia, Turkey, Iran and Pakistan looking for the antiques that are
now very hard to find.
He’s been surprised to find some fine examples in Australia. His
oldest piece, a fragment from the 16th century, was found in Brisbane.
His advice to collectors is to do your research so you can identify
rugs by their colour and design style. "It is imperative to see them
first," he says. "Unless you can get a very good condition report."

This story was found at:
058816.html

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2010/03/30/1269711

"They Will Leave Armenia With Sacks Of Money"

"THEY WILL LEAVE ARMENIA WITH SACKS OF MONEY"

29/relatives
08:08 pm | March 29, 2010

Politics

Last Thursday PACE co-rapporteurs welcomed Armenia’s response to their
call for a "roadmap" to put into effect the reforms recommended in
the aftermath of the March 2008 election violence.

The relatives of the March 1st ten victims consider the co-rapporteurs’
step immoral.

"How can they speak of a roadmap if none of the murderers of the
ten victims has been disclosed or examined to date? I mean the four
policemen using Cheryomukha-7 gas-powered gun during the clashes
of March 1, 2008," said Alla Hovhannisyan, the mother of perished
Tigran Khachatryan.

The relatives are not encouraged by the authorities promises on
the roadmap or the co-rapporteurs’ statements. "The co-rapporteurs
deliberately turn a blind eye on the ten murders. I am convinced that
they have concluded a bargain with the Armenian authorities but I
cannot say on which issues."

"The co-rapporteurs have already cheated us in Yerevan. I believe none
of their words," said Jemma Vardumyan, the mother of David Petrosyan.

"My son was an ordinary serviceman and the authorities are obliged
to reveal his murder. How can they give promises if they say the
"page" of March 1 is closed?" said Ruzanna Harutyunyan, the mother
of Tigran Abgaryan.

Gor Kloyan’s father, Sargis Kloyan, does not take the statements of
international structures seriously.

"The co-rapporteurs welcome Armenian authorities as they want to leave
Armenia with a sack of money," said Mr. Kloyan who is convinced that
none of the murders will be disclosed by the acting authorities.

"Neither President Serzh Sargsyan, nor Minister of Justice Ministry
Gevorg Danelyan and head of the Armenian delegation to PACE Davit
Harutiunian have a right to participate in the international forum
of International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) due in Yerevan
on April 6-8," added the relatives.

FIDH President Souhayr Belhassen is scheduled to meet with the
relatives of the ten victims on April 5.

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2010/03/

Cher’s Son To Officially Change Name And Gender

CHER’S SON TO OFFICIALLY CHANGE NAME AND GENDER

Tert.am
16:11 ~U 31.03.10

The son of music icon Cher is to officially change his name and gender
from female to male, reports PinkPaper.com.

On Monday, the doctor of 41-year-old Chaz Bono, formally known as
Chastity Sun Bono, formally filed a legal declaration informing courts
of Bono’s gender change operation last year.

If his application is accepted, his name will be Chaz Salvatore Bono.

He has completed his transition period since starting gender
reassignment procedures last March, after 20 years of living as an
open lesbian.

Chaz is the child of Cher’s first husband Sonny Bono, who died in 1998.