ANKARA: Gul To Sarkisian: Let’s Not Forget Our Commitments

GUL TO SARKISIAN: LET’S NOT FORGET OUR COMMITMENTS

Hurriyet
Feb 11 2010
Turkey

President Abdullah Gul said Thursday that Turkey and Armenia will
continue to work to move the normalization process forward based on
the understanding reached between the two countries Nov. 10.

"We have to be aware that concluding this historic process will require
honoring our commitments in their entirety as well as displaying
adequate political courage and vision," Gul said in his response to
a message given by Armenian President Serge Sarkisian.

Turkey allowed Sarkisian’s plane to use the country’s airspace while
flying to London last week. The Armenian president sent a courtesy
message to Gul while passing through Turkish airspace.

The normalization process has faced difficulties following the Armenian
constitutional court’s underlining that the protocols signed between
Turkey and Armenia should not breach that country’s Independence
Declaration. Article 11 of the declaration says that Armenia will
always stand for the worldwide recognition of the events of 1915 in
the Ottoman Empire as genocide.

Though the court found the protocols compatible with the constitution,
this reference caused deep concerns in Ankara. Gul’s comment that
the process should move forward based on the understanding reached
between the two countries directly refers to this ongoing row.

"I also agree with you that responsible governance necessitates both
standing behind words and supporting words with deeds," the Turkish
president said. "Overcoming the long-established prejudices and
nurturing mutual understanding and trust among our two neighboring
peoples were indeed our main objectives when endorsing the process
of normalization between our countries. You should have no doubt
that our determination to move these objectives forward is intact,
provided that this resolve and commitment remains reciprocal."

The protocols, which envision the opening of the sealed border and
establishment of diplomatic relations between the two neighboring
countries, must be ratified by both parliaments before they can enter
into force.

OSCE Chairman-In-Office, State Secretary, Minister Of Foreign Affair

OSCE CHAIRMAN-IN-OFFICE, STATE SECRETARY, MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF KAZAKHSTAN TO VISIT SOUTH CAUCASUS
By Hovik Afyan

AZG DAILY #24
12-02-2010

OSCE Chairman-in-Office, State Secretary, Minister of Foreign Affairs
of Kazakhstan Kanat Saudabayev will pay a visit to South Caucasus
this week.

On February 14, Mr.Saudabayev will arrive in Baku. The next day he
will be received by the Azerbaijani President. Meetings with the
Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov and Chairman of Milli
Mejlis Oqtay Asadov are scheduled the same day. Saudabaev will also
meet with the leaders of the Azerbaijani political parties.

Later, Saudabayev will leave Baku for Yerevan and then for Tbilisi.

To recall, when taking the OSCE chairmanship Kazakhstan announced from
the tribune of the UN Security Council that it would make a special
effort to resolve the frozen conflicts, especially in the territory
of former Soviet Union.

Armenia’s GDP Change Can Vary From -3 To +3 Per Cent In 2010

ARMENIA’S GDP CHANGE CAN VARY FROM -3 TO +3 PER CENT IN 2010

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
11.02.2010 15:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ If the second wave of the crisis does not hit the
world economy, Armenia’s GDP in 2010 would change from -3% to +3 per
cent, Manuk Hergnyan , chairman of the "Economy and Values" research
center told a press conference on February 11 in Yerevan. However,
according to him, the inflation rate within the current year can vary
from 6 to 9 per cent.

The national currency exchange rate is not likely to undergo sharp
depreciations. "Economy and Values" research center proposed to
the Government of Armenia to develop a strategic model of stable
development of the country.

"We need to develop a model of sustainable development, instead of
having the economy, where the money remittances fuel the construction
sphere, experiencing problems with deficit," he said.

In addition, according to Hergnyan, long-term strategy of Armenia
cannot rely on the fact that the country has open communications, since
"they can close". The model of sustainable development should be based
on the lessons Armenia learnt in a crisis, as well as on technological
potential, on the knowledge-based economy. Budgeted growth is expected
at 1.2 per cent, inflation is projected at 4 1.5 per cent.

Armenian Group Buys Site

ARMENIAN GROUP BUYS SITE

Burbank Leader
Feb 10 2010
CA

DOWNTOWN — The Burbank Armenian Cultural Foundation has entered
escrow on a $2.5-million downtown facility, capping a long-running
search for a building to house several community organizations.

The foundation, a combination of community-based groups, has taken
advantage of the down real estate market and an anonymous donation to
relocate several offices from 361 E. Magnolia Blvd. to the proposed
facility at 75 E. Santa Anita Ave.

The planned consolidation comes as similar foundations in Pasadena,
Hollywood, Montebello and Torrance have converted existing buildings
into community and athletic facilities.

"We’ve been looking in spurts and longer stretches for 20 years,"
said Garen Yegparian, chairman and co-founder of the Armenian
National Committee of Burbank. "Financially, the fates have come
together in that we secured the donation and found a property that
could accommodate many of the aspects we envisioned."

advertisement The 14,410-square-foot building at First Street and
Santa Anita Avenue would serve the Armenian National Committee of
Burbank, and local chapters of Homenetmen, Armenian Youth Federation
and Armenian Relief Society.

Organizers said they hoped the potential for increased outreach and
new programming would help them reach more people.

"It gives us a chance to garner more interest in the community," said
Shahan Boghigian, chairman of the Armenian Youth Federation of Burbank.

The Armenian Relief Society, which provides assistance to immigrants
and refugees, went from $7,500 for fiscal year 2008-09 to $4,000 this
year in federal grant funding, according to city records.

The Homenetmen Sipan Chapter is a large organizer of youth athletic
activities that culminate in the summer Navasartian Games and
Festival. The Armenian Youth Federation focuses on human rights,
outreach and mentoring.

Both groups, which have seen ebbs and flows in their membership over
the past decade, are expected to draw stability from the center,
organizers said. They would share the proposed meeting and computer
rooms, a social hall and basketball court, a significant departure
from the community building on Magnolia Boulevard.

"Right now, the best way to put it is, it’s a zoo," Yegparian said.

To help speed things along, the foundation received a $500,000
anonymous donation and agreed to match the funds, Yegparian said.

Still, several hurdles remain to be cleared.

Foundation members would likely need special permits for parking and
a change in use for the former International Recording Corp. building,
Deputy City Planner Michael Forbes said.

Another obstacle is fundraising, which continues with
a $1,000-per-person gala scheduled for Feb. 21 at the proposed
community center.

Armenian Player Scores Winning Goal For Maccabi Tel Aviv FC

ARMENIAN PLAYER SCORES WINNING GOAL FOR MACCABI TEL AVIV FC

Tert.am
13:11 ~U 10.02.10

Maccabi Tel Aviv FC won the match with Maccabi Netanya FC (3-1) in the
1/16 final round of the Israel State Cup football championship. This
paved the way for Maccabi Tel Aviv to advance to the 1/8 final round.

Russian-born Armenian national team striker Yeghia Yavruyan, who
holds Israeli citizenship and plays for the Israeli Premier League,
scored the third goal for Tel Aviv’s Maccabi.

Earlier, during the last two rounds in the Israeli championship,
Yavruyan had scored 3 goals.

President Sargsyan Visits London

PRESIDENT SARGSYAN VISITS LONDON
Shakeh Avoyan

"Radiolur"
10.02.2010 11:10
London

President Serzh Sargsyan’s visit to Great Britain continues. At
the Buckingham Castle President Sargsyan will meet the Queen of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Elisabeth II. At
his residence in London the Armenian President will receive British
Foreign Minister David Miliband and will later meet Prince Charles.

Yesterday the delegation headed by president Sargsyan visited the Tate
Museum of modern art, which displays the works by American Armenian
artist Arshile Gorky.

Armani, Papasian Bring `Sojourn’ to New York

Armani, Papasian Bring `Sojourn’ to New York
By Editor on Feb 7, 2010 in Arts

Gerald Papasian and Nora Armani outside Joe’s Pub, with a poster for
their performance.
By Florence Avakian
Special to the Mirror-Spectator

NEW YORK – A man and a woman, representing the Armenian people and
their cultural and survival spirit, came out on a small, lit
stage. They warmly greeted a large audience in a darkened New York pub
on January 18, repeating again and again, `Good day,’ from a poem by
Paruyr Sevak.
So started a fascinating dramatic journey with dozens of Armenian
poetic masterpieces – some well known, many not, brought to life by
theatrical artists Gerald Papasian and Nora Armani, on stage at Joe’s
Pub, where they performed the play they wrote and have staged
frequently, `Sojourn to Ararat.’ The themes covered Armenian identity,
homeland, daily chores, love, suffering, genocide, exile, dispersion
and life in a new land. Interspersed throughout the 65-minute
performance were vocalizations, and haunting songs and music by the
legendary composers Komitas and Sayat Nova.
The props were minimal – one or two costumes, two chairs, two stacks
of paper and an Armenian drum, a minimum of objects conveying maximum
effect. The use of the paper became especially symbolic as page after
page was crumpled and thrown on the floor, representing either piles
of lentils, blazing fires or dead bodies, as well as what is left of a
creative and vibrant culture. At the end of the play, the crumpled
papers were gathered together and reassembled into the original two
stacks, connoting renewal and rejuvenation.
Another symbolic gesture occurred when towards the conclusion of the
presentation, all the props were piled together in one large heap and
dragged around the stage signifying the leaving of their ancestral
homeland, and starting life in a new and foreign country. But the
yearning for the homeland never dies. This was delicately dramatized
in Kuchak’s `I Was the Seedling,’ where he notes, `I was the seedling
of a peach, among stones and rock did I grow. They pulled me up, and
transplanted me to a far-away alien row. They make fine sugar water
and drench me from head to tow. Oh, carry me back to my homeland. Feed
me on melting snow.’
Through music, expert intonation, acting, interpretation and
coordinated movement in a small space, the talented actors conveyed
the story of the Armenian people from pagan times to the present. In
reality, it could have been the timeless story of the human race. In
a telephone interview with actor Gerald Papasian, he related that his
`dream with this production was to try to share, promote and make
known Armenian treasures. Some are little jewels, and due to the
translation (many done by the actors themselves), people who have no
access because of language barriers can discover their beauty.’
At the beginning of this project, the motivation was `simply to recite
our poems to people who are not aware of them,’ Papasian noted. But
after 200 to 300 poems, `we had to go through the elimination process
to see what message we are conveying. Left with 40 to 50 poems, we
listened and let the poets tell their own story. We deliberately
avoided the time factor. Many of the poems relate loss, hope, Paradise
Lost, Paradise Sought, themes that are universal.’
There were soul-searing poems. In Siamanto’s well known `The Dance,’
20 young Armenian virgins during the Genocide are forced to dance,
lashed by a `bestial mob’ who roar `You must dance.’ As whips tear the
flesh of their naked bodies, they finally collapse from exhaustion,
and are doused with kerosene. `The singeing bodies danced and writhed
towards death,’ he writes, evoking a horrifying vision.
And who can ever forget Vahan Tekeyan’s soul-searing message in
`We Shall Say to God,’ in which he pleads, `Send us to hell. Send
us to hell again. You made us know it alas, all too well. Save
paradise for Turks. Send us to hell.’
But in a later poem, `Prayer on the Threshold of Tomorrow,’ Tekeyan
sensitively voices unquenchable hope. `Lord, we need your goodness
this day. Impart your wisdom now, to this world, this tortured
nothingness, you must not allow this tragic end. . . For our sakes,
pour love into the hearts, and not sorrow in the mighty of today, and
the strong of tomorrow. . .Let strife be brief. Make supreme justice
triumph. . .Let peace reign. Tear down all fortresses and impregnable
walls. And lance your wrath against the barricades of armored
arrogance. Divide the world’s wealth evenly. Let crowds through the
entrance to your pastures stampede at the last fall of the last
tower. But, o Lord, let them break no tree, nor crush a single
flower.’

A Beautiful Heritage
For Armenian youth, Papasian reiterated, `it is important to realize
their heritage is interesting, entertaining and to be admired by
non-Armenians. It makes you feel good to be a part of Armenian
culture. It’s not only dhol, zourna. There is a beautiful heritage.’
And this legacy is probably best described in William Saroyan’s
legendary and timeless words, `I should like to see any power of the
world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people whose
wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled,
literature unread, music unheard, their prayers no more answered. Go
ahead, destroy Armenia. See if you can do it. Send them into the
desert without bread and water. Burn their homes and churches and see
if they will not laugh and pray again. For when two of them meet
anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a new Armenia.’
This powerful performance by two gifted actors was premiered at the
Edinburgh International Fringe Festival in 1986. `We wanted to test it
before non-Armenians who knew nothing about our history or culture,’
Papasian noted. At that time, Howard Purdie wrote in The Scotsman that
`it is almost an epic play… In this splendid show, the
Armenians light up their homeland, and with it, all humanity.’ This
performance launched the whole project and led to many engagements.
In the intervening 24 years, the play has been performed more than 600
times to critical acclaim on four continents by the original cast of
Papasian and Armani, as well as by other performers. It has played in
the Smithsonian Institution, the Sydney Opera House, schools, open air
spaces, camps, festivals, etc. This play has garnered multiple honors,
including eight Drama Logue Critics’ Awards in 1988 and 1989, and won
many accolades in Armenia.
Film and theater actress Nora Armani who divides her time between New
York and Paris, was born in Egypt to Armenian parents. She has a
master’s degree from the University of London, and received her
training at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (RADA), the University
of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and Ariane Mnouchkine’s Theatre du
Soleil. Her career includes international appearances in plays by
Pinter, Shaw, Shakespeare and many performances in Armenia. She has
represented Armenia’s Ministry of Culture in Cinema, and has organized
major film events in international film festivals. Her credits include
published poems, short stories and essays, and appearances on French,
British, American and Egyptian TV. Papasian, based in Paris since
1993, was born in Egypt into a musical and artistic family. He has a
master’s degree in directing from Yerevan’s State University’s
Institute of Art and Theatre, and has studied at the famed Lee
Strasburg Institute in Los Angeles. A well-known director and actor in
Los Angeles, Paris, London, Cairo and Yerevan, he has excelled in
works by Shakespeare, Shaw, Moliere and Gogol. His many translations
include Arshag Tigranian’s `Anoush,’ which he directed at the Michigan
Opera Theater in 1981, and at the Detroit Opera Theatre in 2001. For
his staging of Shakespeare’s `Much Ado About Nothing,’ he received the
`Golden Star’ by the California Motion Picture Council. He was
recently awarded the coveted Movses Khorenatsi medal by Armenia’s
president.

http://www.mirrorspectator. com/?p=3D2811

55% Of Males Over 15 And 27% Of General Population Smoke In Armenia

55% OF MALES OVER 15 AND 27% OF GENERAL POPULATION SMOKE IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.02.2010 14:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 55 per cent of males over 15 and 27 per cent of
general population smoke in Armenia, the consumption of tobacco
remaining high in the country, RA Deputy Minister of Health Tatul
Hakobyan said.

According to him, 28 per cent of population smoke in Georgia, 18
per cent in Azerbaijan, 33 per cent in Turkey, 27 per cent in the EU
countries and 32 per cent in the CIS.

"Propaganda is an inefficient method. The most effective way to combat
smoking is to hike the prices for tobacco products," Tatul Hakobyan
told a press conference on February 5.

"The high level of tobacco consumption entails cardiovascular diseases
and lung cancer," he said. "The level of alcohol consumption in Armenia
is rather low. In our country, a person annually consumes 1.4 liters
of alcoholic drinks. The figure is similar in Georgia and Turkey,
while 4.3 liters of alcohol is consumed by a person on average in
Azerbaijan. In the EU countries, this figure is much higher and
reaches 11.4 liters."

Armenia’s Healthcare Ministry To Regulate Price Of Pharmaceuticals

ARMENIA’S HEALTHCARE MINISTRY TO REGULATE PRICE OF PHARMACEUTICALS

Tert.am
12:48 ~U 05.02.10

Armenia’s Ministry of Healthcare will focus on three main programs of
activity this year, said Deputy Minister of Healthcare Tatul Hakobyan
at a press conference today.

In particular, the ministry will continue its plan to develop and
modernize the regions proportional to cities. This year, the ministry
will focus on renovated medical centres located in Goris, Ararat,
Armavir and Idjevan. A contemporary medical centre will be built in
Armenia’s second largest city, Gyumri.

The ministry will also be focusing its efforts on modernizing emergency
services and will attempt to regulate the price of pharamaceuticals
(considered to be exorbitant by most).

Nagorno-Karabahk Settlement Top Of 2010 Agenda: OSCE Chair-In-Office

NAGORNO-KARABAHK SETTLEMENT TOP OF 2010 AGENDA: OSCE CHAIR-IN-OFFICE

Tert.am
14:06 ~U 04.02.10

OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Kazakhstan’s Secretary of State and Foreign
Minister Kanat Saudabayev, addressing the U.S. Helsinki Commission
meeting on February 2, outlined the Organization for Security and
Co-Operation in Europe’s priorities for this year.

According to an official press release issued by the OSCE: "Minister
Saudabayev emphasized that the Chairmanship has put the Organization’s
efforts to resolve protracted conflicts in Moldova, Georgia and
Nagorno-Karabakh at the top of its agenda for 2010.

"The Chairperson-in-Office will be visiting Azerbaijan, Armenia,
and Georgia in mid-February."