Month: December 2008

  • New office of Azerbaijani consulate general to be opened in Kars city

    New office of Azerbaijani consulate general to be opened in Kars city

    Azerbaijani MPs have left for Turkey to take part in the inauguration of the new office of Azerbaijani consulate general in Kars,Turkey.

     

    Azerbaijani MPs Nizami Khudiyev and Rustam Khalilov have left for Turkey today. They will take part in the inauguration ceremony of the new office of Azerbaijani consulate general in Kars city, Turkey.  

    Press service of Milli Majlis (Parliament) informed ANS PRESS that Azerbaijani deputies will be familiarized with the activity of the consulate general within their visit on December 2-4.

  • Armenian Groups In U.S. Hail Hillary Clinton Nomination

    Armenian Groups In U.S. Hail Hillary Clinton Nomination

    By Emil Danielyan

    The two main Armenian lobby groups in the United States have warmly welcomed Hillary Clinton’s nomination as secretary of state, citing her stated support for U.S. recognition of the Armenian genocide and the strengthening of America’s relations with Armenia.

    “We are certainly pleased to see that, for the first time in recent memory, an individual with a strong record in support of Armenian Genocide recognition will serve as America’s Secretary of State,” Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) , said in a statement issued late Monday.

    “Never before have we had such an alignment whereby the incoming President, Vice-President and Secretary of State have a clear and demonstrated record of support for affirmation of the Armenian Genocide, as well as genocide prevention,” said Bryan Ardouny, executive director of the Armenian Assembly of America (AAA).

    Both Clinton and her erstwhile Democratic Party rival, President-elect Barack Obama, pledged to described as genocide the 1915 mass killings and deportations of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during the U.S. presidential race. As senators, they co-sponsored relevant draft resolutions in the U.S. Congress that were blocked by the Bush administration under strong pressure from Turkey. Former President Bill Clinton likewise opposed such resolutions, pointing to the strategic character of Washington’s relations with Ankara.

    “I believe the horrible events perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire against Armenians constitute a clear case of genocide,” Hillary Clinton said in a January message to the Armenian-American community. “I have twice written to President Bush calling on him to refer to the Armenian Genocide in his annual commemorative statement and, as President, I will recognize the Armenian Genocide.”

    The former U.S. first lady also promised to “expand and improve” U.S.-Armenian relations. “As President, I will expand U.S. assistance programs to Armenia and to the people of Nagorno-Karabakh,” she said.

    Turkish leaders have already urged Obama to stick to the outgoing U.S. administration’s policy on the subject that has avoided the use of the politically sensitive word “genocide” with regard to the 1915 killings.

    Some Armenian political circles are increasingly worried that Ankara might try to exploit its ongoing diplomatic dialogue with Yerevan for convincing the new U.S. president to renege on his campaign pledge. A leader of the influential Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) party warned last month that President Serzh Sarkisian will endanger U.S. recognition of the genocide if he agrees to a Turkish-Armenian academic study on the subject proposed by Ankara.

    Sarkisian indicated earlier this year he does not object, in principle, to the idea of Turkish and Armenian historians jointly determining whether the World War One-era massacres constituted a genocide. His predecessor, Robert Kocharian, rejected the idea out of hand. Many in Armenia and especially its worldwide Diaspora view it as a Turkish ploy designed to scuttle the genocide’s recognition by more nations and the U.S. in particular.

    https://www.azatutyun.am/a/1598670.html

  • Turk art in Miami

    Turk art in Miami

    ISTANBUL – Art Basel Miami Beach is the most important art show in the United States, a cultural and social highlight in the region. It is the sister event to Switzerland’s Art Basel, the most prestigious internatıonal art show for the past 39 years

    Turkish artist Gülay Alpay will create worlds within worlds at an artist fair in Miami. The artist will make use of every inch of the 10 x 6 x 10 foot space that delineates artists’ booths by making this measurement also the size of her work. This is a method Alpay has come to be known for as a means of entering her paintings and existing within them. The use of space is a way visitors are welcomed to interact and participate in her world and her art.

    Alpay will recreate her studio at the Artist Fair in an Open Studio Tour where visitors can enter the artist’s state of mind. Alpay has an extensive social and technological network with artists and non-artists alike and visitors can make submissions to her work within her recreated studio space. All doodles submitted to her space will appear in Alpay’s final installation, creating a multi-colored base, with all the spontaneity the Miami Artist Fair can handle.

    This world made of silk and acrylic paint will offer many surprises including painting clothed in silk, that will have its last strokes of paint spontaneously added by the artist as a collaboration between the artist and the visitor or buyer. Alpay is looking forward to exchanging and fusing her volatile and brilliantly colorful energy with each and every person who visits her studio at The Artist Fair, doing so playfully, spontaneously and for the sake of peace and beauty.


    Most important art show in the US
    The Art Basel Miami Beach show is the most important art show in the United States, a cultural and social highlight in the region. As the sister event to Switzerland’s Art Basel, the most prestigious worldwide international art show for the past 39 years, Art Basel Miami Beach combines an international selection of artists from top galleries with an exciting program of special exhibitions, parties and crossover events featuring music, film, architecture and design. Exhibition sites are located in the city’s beautiful Art Deco district, within walking distance of the beach and many hotels.

    An exclusive selection of more than 220 leading art galleries from North America, Latin America, Europe, Asia and Africa will exhibit 20th and 21st century artworks by over 2,000 artists. The exhibiting galleries are among the world’s most respected art dealers, offering exceptional pieces by both renowned artists and cutting-edge newcomers. Special exhibition sections feature young galleries, performance art, public art projects and video art. The show will be vital event for art lovers, allowing them to both discover new developments in contemporary art and experience rare museum-caliber artworks.

    Venue: Shelborne Hotel, Miami Beach, Florida
    Date: December 4-7, 2008 Interactive Public Art
    Installation/ Performance
    Curated by Tchera Niyego

  • ‘US knew about Mumbai terror attacks’

    ‘US knew about Mumbai terror attacks’

    US intelligence agencies have been aware of a potential attack ‘from the sea against hotels and business centers’ in Indian port city of Mumbai. One US intelligence official said India had been told of an apparent plot to launch an attack from the sea, the AP agency reports. The official added specific locations, including the Taj hotel, were listed in the US warning.

    Taj Mahal Hotel
    Press TV

     

  • Award-winning Cyprus Missing Persons Documentary

    Award-winning Cyprus Missing Persons Documentary

    ATAA to Screen Award-winning Cyprus Missing Persons Documentary,”The Vanished Bus”

    ATAA is pleased to announce the screening of the award-winning Turkish Cypriot documentary, “The Vanished Bus” (Kayıp Otobüs), at the Turkish House in Dupont Circle on Friday, December 5, 2008, 7pm.
    “Kayıp Otobüs” investigates the 1964 kidnapping and massacre of 40 Turkish Cypriot workers, whose lives came to a violent end at the hands of Greek Cypriot militias bent on creating an ethnically and religiously homogenous Greek Christian Orthodox island united with Greece.  Forty years after the Missing Persons saga began, the remains of the 40 workers were discovered in a mass grave.

    Producer Fevzi Tanpinar will make opening remarks and answer questions.  “Kayıp Otobüs” was successfully shown by the United Nations in a Buffer Zone Event in Nicosia, and by the Council of Europe, which houses the European Court of Human Rights.  The documentary is a finalist in the Boston Film Festival, which is being held this week.

    Please join us at the ATAA Turkish House, located at 1526 18th Street, NW, Washington DC. Refreshments will be served.