FM: US Assistant State Secretary Regrets Her Statement on Karabakh

US ASSISTANT STATE SECRETARY REGRETS FOR HER STATEMENT ON KARABAKH:
ARMENIA’S FM

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22. ARMINFO. In a phone talk with Armenia’s Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanyan US Assistant Secretary of State Elizabeth
Jones expressed regret that her statement received such a response in
Armenia. She said that she was not thinking and could not think of
Karabakh when mentioning criminal, separatist regimes in the territory
of the former Soviet republics.

In an interview to OTA Oskanyan says that this phone call can put an
end to the problem for despite the ambiguity of the statement there
could be not other outcome. The US’ involvement in the Karabakh peace
process, their previous statements, their consistency and awareness,
their annual target aid to Karabakh – all this implied that there was
some mistake. “I am glad and appreciate Ms Jones’ today’s call,” says
Oskanyan.

Oskanyan says that he was amazed by the reaction of the Armenian
public as “such deep charges must not be neglected.” The reaction was
to what was presented by the press. One could not draw other
conclusions from what was written as the statement was equivocal. The
equivocality of the statement and the fact that Karabakh was also
mentioned in such serious charges were enough for such public
response, says Oskanyan.-0

FM: League Of Arab States’ Position on Karabakh Issue Very Important

LEAGUE OF ARAB STATES’ POSITION ON KARABAKH ISSUE VERY IMPORTANT FOR
ARMENIA: ARMENIA’S FM

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22. ARMINFO. The signing of a mutual understanding
and cooperation memorandum by Armenia’s Foreign Ministry and the
General Secretariat of the League of Arab States is really a historic
event, says Armenia’s FM Vardan Oskanyan.

He says that this is a ground for the further deepening of bilateral
relations. This event reflects the centuries-long friendship of the
armenian and Arab nations and “now we have managed to institutionalize
our relations with not only individual Arab states but also their
alliance.”

The Arab world is very important for Armenia. Armenia has communities
there. It recently showed small participation in Iraq. It has its own
stance on Palestine and is contributing to statehood formation
there. “We give high importance to the Arab states’ position on the
Karabakh issue, we cooperate with them at international
organizations.” “So the memorandum will allow us to work more
effectively and to help each other through cooperation,” says
Oskanyan.
From: Baghdasarian

There Is Clash of Two Intl Principles of Conflict Settlement in NK

THERE IS CLASH OF TWO INTERNATIONAL PRINCIPLES OF CONFLICT SETTLEMENT
IN KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22. ARMINFO. There is a clash of two international
principles of conflict settlement in the Karabakh peace process, US
Ambassador to Armenia John Evans says in an interview to Armenia TV.

They are the principles of territorial integrity and national
self-determination right. This clash is a puzzle for the diplomats
involved. There still is a real prospect for settlement but this
requires flexibility and commitment to compromise. In its position
OSCE gives high importance to the territorial integrity principle but
one should be very careful and dimplomatic here, says Evans.

Abolishment of Section 907 – Result of Terror Acts Agains US

ABOLISHMENT OF SECTION 907 OF FREEDOM SUPPORT ACT – RESULT OF TERROR
ACTS AGAINST U.S.

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22. ARMINFO. The abolishment of section 907 of
Freedom Support Act in 2001 was a reaction to the terror acts against
the US, says US Ambassador to Armenia John Evans.

The abolishment of the section banning military support of Azerbaijan
was an attempt to find ways of cooperation with that country in
fighting terrorism in the regions like Afghanistan. The truth is that
the US is developing active military cooperation with both Armenia and
Azerbaijan. The recent dispatch of Armenian peacekeepers to Iran is a
vivid proof of such cooperation. The US welcomes it. It is important
that nobody in Moscow, Washington or any other world capital wants to
break the equilibrium in the South Caucasus as everybody wants peace
in this region. Naturally any bellicose statements are blamed for both
sides would like to avoid war resumption. On the contrary, the US is
encouraging the sides in their search for peaceful solutions to their
conflict.

BAKU: Azeri Official Sees Armenian FM’s US apology remarks as PR

Azeri official sees Armenian minister’s US apology remarks as PR move

ANS TV, Baku
22 Jan 05

Excerpt from report by Azerbaijani TV station ANS on 22 January

[Presenter] The recent statements by [outgoing US Secretary of State]
Colin Powell and [US Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs] Elizabeth Jones have caused a wave of sharp public
outcry in Yerevan.

[Passage omitted: reported details; Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan said that Elizabeth Jones telephoned him to apologize for
having earlier used the term of criminal separatists with regard to
Nagornyy Karabakh]

[Correspondent over archive footage] While commenting on the
developments unfolding over Elizabeth Jones’s statement, Azerbaijani
Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov, who is also the Azerbaijani
president’s special representative for the Karabakh negotiations, has
said that Oskanyan’s revelation was nothing but a PR move and advised
that statements of this kind should not be treated seriously.

He said Oskanyan’s anxiety over Elizabeth Jones’s statement was
further proof of Armenia’s role in the occupation of Azerbaijani
lands.

I think Mrs Jones’s statement was objective and reflected the
reality. She said nothing that did not reflect the official position
of the USA because the USA has repeatedly stated its recognition of
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. Colin Powell has repeatedly
pointed to the existence of separatist forces in regional conflict
zones and of the countries supporting them from the outside. And if
someone is worried about the situation that has shaped, then they
should take a more active part in the process of negotiations, end of
quote.

Ceyhun Asgarov for ANS.

Yushchenko-third and youngest Ukrainian president

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
January 23, 2005 Sunday 1:39 AM Eastern Time

Yushchenko-third and youngest Ukrainian president

KIEV

New Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko enters his presidential
office on Sunday. He is the third head of state in independent
Ukraine: Leonid Kravchuk was the first. Then, Leonid Kuchma was
elected two times, but Yushchenko is the youngest of them: a month
later, he will turn 51 on February 23. He had been born in the
village of Khoruzhevka, Sumy Region in 1954.

In 1976, Yushchenko graduated from the Ternopol financial and
economics institute. Then, he served in border troops of the Soviet
Army on the Soviet-Turkish border, not far from the then city of
Leninakan, Armenia.

Since 1976, he worked in the banking system at first as an economist
and then head of a branch of the State Bank of the USSR in the Sumy
Region. Between 1985 and 1999, he was moving up the ladder of the
banking career up to the head of the Ukrainian republican branch of
the State Bank of the USSR.

In 1984, he graduated from the post-graduate courses of the Ukrainian
research institute of economics and agriculture, receiving the degree
of Candidate of Economic Sciences. Since 1992, worked as first deputy
board chairman of the Ukraina commercial agro-industrial bank.
Chairman of the Ukrainian National Bank between January 1993 and
December 1999.

The republic carried out successfully a monetary reform under his
guidance. He established a state treasury and started setting up a
mint. In 1997, Yushchenko ranked among the six best bankers of the
world.

He was Ukrainian prime minister from December 1999 and to April 2001.
In January 2002, Yushchenko formed and headed the election bloc Our
Ukraine, incorporating ten center-right parties. The bloc received
the highest support among other parties and blocs at the
parliamentary election in March 2002 – 24.7 percent electors voted
for it. Yushchenko headed the Our Ukraine parliamentary faction,
numbering 101.

On December 26,2004, Yushchenko carried the elections, winning 51.99
percent of the electorate in the rerun of the second round of
elections.

He married the second time. Has five children: two sons and three
daughters as well as two grandsons.

Here comes the new Petrosian

The New York Post
January 16, 2005 Sunday

HERE COMES THE NEW PETROSIAN

by Andy Soltis Chess Grandmaster

DO you believe in reincarnation? Play over this week’s game before
answering.

Yes, Black’s name is really Tigran Petrosian, the same as the ninth
world champion, and yes he is an Armenian grandmaster.

But this Petrosian was born just one month after his great
predecessor died of cancer in August 1984.

Both Tigrans showed remarkable talent before they were 16 – although
there’s a noticeable difference in their playing styles, as this
week’s game shows.

The “Iron Tigran” who became the world’s most cautious elite player
in the 1950s and ’60s would never have sacrificed a piece on the
fourth move, as Black did here. Nor would he have disdained a draw by
repetition at move 12 and chosen to launch a speculative attack with
his king sitting precariously at f6.

Tigran I might have grabbed material as Tigran II did, missing the
superior 20 . . . Ke7!. But he might have improved on the second
Tigran by finding the spectacular mate six moves later – 20 . . .
Bxg3+ 21 Kxg3 Qd3+ 22 Kh4 Qd8+! etc.

We’ll be sure to hear more about Tigran II, who eventually tied for
second in the World Junior, at the same age that Tigran I was making
his debut in the world’s strongest event, the Soviet Championship.

Now do you believe in reincarnation?

Will We ‘Never Forget’?

Washington Post
Jan 23 2005

Will We ‘Never Forget’?

By Samuel Pisar
Sunday, January 23, 2005; Page B07

Sixty years ago the Russians liberated Auschwitz, as the Americans
approached Dachau. The Allied advance revealed to a stunned world the
horrors of the greatest catastrophe ever to befall our civilization.
To a survivor of both death factories, where Hitler’s gruesome
reality eclipsed Dante’s imaginary inferno, being alive and well so
many years later feels unreal.

We the survivors are now disappearing one by one. Soon history will
speak of Auschwitz at best with the impersonal voice of researchers
and novelists, at worst with the malevolence of demagogues and
falsifiers. This week the last of us, with a multitude of heads of
state and other dignitaries, are gathering at that cursed site to
remind the world that past can be prologue, that the mountains of
human ashes dispersed there are a warning to humanity of what may
still lie ahead.

The genocides in Armenia, Cambodia, Bosnia, Kosovo and Rwanda and the
recent massacres of innocents in the United States, Spain, Israel,
Indonesia and so many other countries have demonstrated our inability
to learn from the blood-soaked past. Auschwitz, the symbol of
absolute evil, is not only about that past, it is about the present
and the future of our newly enflamed world, where a coupling of
murderous ideologues and means of mass destruction can trigger new
catastrophes.

When the ghetto liquidation in Bialystok, Poland, began, only three
members of our family were still alive: my mother, my little sister
and I, age 13. Father had already been executed by the Gestapo.
Mother told me to put on long pants, hoping I would look more like a
man, capable of slave labor. “And you and Frieda?” I asked. She
didn’t answer. She knew that their fate was sealed. As they were
chased, with the other women, the children, the old and the sick,
toward the waiting cattle cars, I could not take my eyes off them.
Little Frieda held my mother with one hand, and with the other, her
favorite doll. They looked at me too, before disappearing from my
life forever.

Their train went directly to Auschwitz-Birkenau, mine to the
extermination camp of Majdanek. Months later, I also landed in
Auschwitz, still hoping naively to find their trace. When the SS
guards, with their dogs and whips, unsealed my cattle car, many of my
comrades were already dead from hunger, thirst and lack of air. At
the central ramp, surrounded by electrically charged barbed wire, we
were ordered to strip naked and file past the infamous Dr. Josef
Mengele. The “angel of death” performed on us his ritual “selection”
— those who were to die immediately to the right, those destined to
live a little longer and undergo other atrocious medical experiments,
to the left.

In the background there was music. At the main gate, with its
sinister slogan “Work Brings Freedom,” sat, dressed in striped prison
rags like mine, one of the most remarkable orchestras ever assembled.
It was made up of virtuosos from Warsaw and Paris, Kiev and
Amsterdam, Rome and Budapest. To accompany the selections, hangings
and shootings while the gas chambers and crematoria belched smoke and
fire, these gentle musicians were forced to play Bach, Schubert and
Mozart, interspersed with marches to the glory of the Fuhrer.

In the summer of 1944, the Third Reich was on the verge of collapse,
yet Berlin’s most urgent priority was to accelerate the “final
solution.” The death toll in the gas chambers on D-Day, as on any
other day, far surpassed the enormous Allied losses suffered on the
beaches of Normandy.

My labor commando was assigned to remove garbage from a ramp near the
crematoria. From there I observed the peak of human extermination and
heard the blood-curdling cries of innocents as they were herded into
the gas chambers. Once the doors were locked, they had only three
minutes to live, yet they found enough strength to dig their
fingernails into the walls and scratch in the words “Never Forget.”

Have we already forgotten?

I also witnessed an extraordinary act of heroism. The Sonderkommando
— inmates coerced to dispose of bodies — attacked their SS guards,
threw them into the furnaces, set fire to buildings and escaped. They
were rapidly captured and executed, but their courage boosted our
morale.

As the Russians advanced, those of us still able to work were
evacuated deep into Germany. My misery continued at Dachau. During a
final death march, while our column was being strafed by Allied
planes that mistook us for Wehrmacht troops, I escaped with a few
others. An armored battalion of GIs brought me life and freedom. I
had just turned 16 — a skeletal “subhuman” with shaved head and
sunken eyes who had been trying so long to hold on to a flicker of
hope. “God bless America,” I shouted uncontrollably .

In the autumn of their lives, the survivors of Auschwitz feel a
visceral need to transmit what we have endured, to warn younger
generations that today’s intolerance, fanaticism and hatred can
destroy their world as they once destroyed ours, that powerful alert
systems must be built not only against the fury of nature — a
tsunami or storm or eruption — but above all against the folly of
man. Because we know from bitter experience that the human animal is
capable of the worst, as well as the best — of madness as of genius
— and that the unthinkable remains possible.

In the wake of so many recent tragedies, a wave of compassion and
solidarity for the victims, a fragile yearning for peace, democracy
and liberty, seem to be spreading around the planet. It is far too
early to evaluate their potential. Mankind, divided and confused,
still hesitates, vacillates like a sleepwalker on the edge of an
abyss. But the irrevocable has not yet happened; our chances are
still intact. Pray that we learn how to seize them.

The writer is an international lawyer and the author of “Of Blood and
Hope.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Bending Folk to Fit a 12-Tone Style and Vice Versa

New York Times
Jan 23 2005

Bending Folk to Fit a 12-Tone Style and Vice Versa

Stephanie Berger for The New York Times

Photo: The Kronos Quartet, which plays three works by the Azerbaijani
Franghiz Ali-Zadeh on a new CD.

N a 1947 essay, Arnold Schoenberg dismissed with a sweep the
possibility that folk music could have a meaningful relationship to
art music. “They differ perhaps no more than petroleum and olive oil,
or ordinary water and holy water,” he wrote, “but they mix as poorly
as oil and water.”

In the eyebrow-raising climax of his rant, Schoenberg conflated folk
music with any non-Western musical tradition and imagined the
“nightmare” that might have ensued if Japan had conquered America,
England and Germany and imposed its scales on the rest of the world.
“Friends of Eastern Asiatic music claim that this monodic music is
capable of such variety as to express every nuance of human feeling,”
he wrote. “This may be true, but to the Western ear it sounds – ah –
different.”

What would Schoenberg make of Tigran Mansurian or Franghiz Ali-Zadeh,
two modern composers from the former Soviet Union whose work is
influenced by his 12-tone methods but who deliberately integrate the
traditional music of their cultures into their compositions?

Mr. Mansurian is Armenian. His latest album, “Monodia,” a two-CD set
from ECM, showcases the violist Kim Kashkashian, who has long
explored folk music alongside new music. The opening concerto, “And
Then I Was in Time Again,” nominated for two Grammy awards, is
striking, as she and the orchestra – the Munich Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Christopher Poppen – trade long, jagged phrases.

But “Confessing With Faith,” where the viola acts as a fifth voice
against the four singers of the Hilliard Ensemble, is the most
haunting work. It is a setting of seven prayers by the 12th-century
Armenian priest and composer St. Nerses Shnorhali. The Hilliard’s
countertenor, David James, captures the characteristic acoustical
brilliance of the highest voice soaring up to the stone cupola of an
ancient church.

Yet Mr. Mansurian’s composition is by no means a faithful rendering
of sharakan, the Armenian hymn form. The rhythmic force of the second
movement charges this typically sober idiom with nearly chaotic
intensity.

Mr. Mansurian’s Violin Concerto, played by Leonidas Kavakos, is
undoubtedly more 20th century than 12th, but a repeating four-note
passage exemplifies what Ms. Kashkashian has called an “intervallic
tension” that makes Mr. Mansurian’s music “so Armenian.” The phrase
entreats like a distant call that contributes a sense of geographic
isolation.

The music’s roots are more exposed still in recent compositions by
Ms. Ali-Zadeh, an Azerbaijani. A new Nonesuch CD, “Mugam Sayagi,”
offers four works by Ms. Ali-Zadeh, performed by the Kronos Quartet
and herself, on piano.

The distinctive sound of the album comes from Ms. Ali-Zadeh’s
confident adaptation of the Azerbaijani mugam, a complex set of modes
or scales with specific rhythmic and structural requirements.
Traditionally monophonic, the mugam is refitted here for the
polyphony of a string quartet and piano.

Ms. Ali-Zadeh’s “Oasis” begins with layers of pizzicatos that sound
like raindrops. The plucking escalates to a surprising solid rhythm
that could just as easily be coming from hand drums – an unusual
texture alongside others on the album, including whispering voices.

“Apsheron Quintet” starts with Ms. Ali-Zadeh playing an indulgently
beautiful piano run that is a contrast to the raucous explorations of
other pieces. In Music for Piano, she transforms her instrument into
a sort of zither by laying a heavy beaded necklace across the piano
strings.

In the title track, “Mugam Sayagi,” the Kronos players cover varied
terrain that reflects the moods evoked by specific mugams. In subdued
passages of sustained notes, they seem armed with a kamancheh, kanun
and oud instead of the violins, viola and cello they are playing.
Later, the quartet bends vivid tone colors into lively turns in a
section that feels like a village dance.

Ms. Ali-Zadeh’s project may call to mind the work of a compatriot,
Fikret Amirov, who first introduced Azerbaijani mugam into Western
symphonic composition in the 1940’s. But Amirov’s works sound, by
comparison, like the superficially folk-inspired symphonies of
Khachaturian or Rimsky-Korsakov.

Music by Mr. Mansurian and Ms. Ali-Zadeh is being performed in the
Juilliard School’s current Focus Festival, “Breaking the Chains: The
Soviet Avant-Garde, 1966-91.” The festival includes 29 composers
spanning the Soviet Union, but as the new recordings demonstrate,
within that vastness lies great specificity.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/23/arts/music/23toum.html

Nine Armenian charity groups to get $3 mil. of insurance settlement

Associated Press
Jan 22 2005

Nine Armenian charity groups to get $3 million of insurance
settlement

The Associated Press

Nine Armenian charitable groups will receive $3 million over the next
two weeks as part of a $20 million settlement between an insurance
company and descendants of Armenians killed nearly 90 years ago in
the Turkish Ottoman Empire.

Five organizations on the East Coast will each receive checks for
more than $333,000 during a ceremony Wednesday in New York, the Daily
News of Los Angeles reported. The remaining groups will receive
payments at a second event being organized in Los Angeles.

The organizations include New York’s Armenian General Benevolent
Union, New Jersey’s Armenian Missionary Association of America, Inc.,
and the Armenian Education Foundation, based in Glendale.

“As the grandson of two genocide survivors, I’m particularly pleased
to be handing money to these organizations, because these kinds of
organizations helped my grandparents when they first arrived here,”
said Brian Kabateck, an attorney in the lawsuit.

Lawyers for the plaintiffs said they filed the class-action lawsuit
to raise awareness of the deaths as well as to win unpaid life
insurance benefits from New York Life Insurance Co.

They contend that 1.5 million Armenians were killed in an act of
genocide by the Turkish Ottoman Empire. Turkey rejects the genocide
claim and maintains that Armenians were killed in civil unrest during
the collapse of the empire.

The legal agreement approved last July by U.S. District Court Judge
Christina A. Snyder is believed to be the first ever in connection
with the disputed event.

At least $11 million was set aside for heirs of some 2,400
policyholders while $4 million was to cover legal fees. Another $3
million was earmarked for charities, with $2 million used for
administrative costs and anything not spent on expenses going to
charities.

Potential heirs of policyholders have until March 15 to file a claim
for a portion of the settlement.