Monthly Archives: December 2011

European Court and Buzand Street in Yerevan

Northern Avenue under construction

One of the best immediate benefits to Armenia joining a number of European bodies after independence was their agreement to join the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).  This article in the Armenian Weekly is about the residents who used to live in the very heart of central Yerevan.  Their homes were taken with eminent domain in order to build the Northern Avenue – a pedestrian bulevard connecting the Opera to Republic Square.

Most of the homes were very dilapidated, due to the fact that for about 75 years they had been slated for demolition in order to build this street.  It took a while, but the residents knew the day would come.  The problem was not so much in the taking of the property, but rather the problem was that the compensation for their land was for most residents unconscionably low.  Instead of their home and land in the center of the city, they couldn’t even buy an apartment in the center with the money they received, they had to move far from their neighbors, shops, friends, etc.  The buyers of the land were developers who were building luxury shops and apartments, selling at prices never before seen in Armenia.  If they had given the previous owners of the land fair market value, or had given them equivalent apartments in the new buildings, I don’t think anyone would have complained. Read more »

Sacre Bleau! French anti-denial bill

The French Parliament again passed a bill criminalizing the denial of the Armenian Genocide. Five years ago it passed a similar bill which did not pass in the French Senate. Now again we’ll wait to see if it passes in the French Senate in order to become actual law. It is already against the law to deny the Jewish Holocaust.

Five years ago, and once again today Turkey made a lot of threats and had a massive temper tantrum. This of course causes massive publicity for the bill, and brings a great deal of free publicity to the facts of the Armenian Genocide, and exposes many new people to this once forgotten chapter of history.

Some argue that this limits free speech, but let me point out the following facts before you decide.

  • It is already against the law to deny the Jewish Holocaust in France
  • Hate speech not protected in many “free” countries, and genocide denial is certainly hateful
  • The Armenian Genocide and Jewish Holocaust have both been subjected to international campaigns of denial.  The former run by the Turkish Government and the latter by Neo-Nazi groups.
  • For years the efforts of the Turkish government achieved great success in squashing all public discourse or recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
  • The eighth stage of genocide is widely accepted to be the stage of denial.  Therefore, I feel strongly that to deny a genocide is to contribute to the last stage of genocide.  In other words, Genocide denial is an act of genocide, and is technically already against the law in any country that accepts the genocide convention.
I  appreciate this step by the French.  It is disgraceful that Turkey continues to deny this chapter of history, and this type of bill will slowly help them recognize that the costs of their hateful denial are actually higher than recognition.

Armenian Soap Operas at their Finest

I don’t watch a lot of TV in Armenia. Maybe it’s because I have two young daughters and don’t really have time. Or maybe it’s because there is a limited number of quality shows. But the few times I have watched TV, I have found the soap operas to be the most mind-boggling. ArmComedy summarized their quality in a great short clip I recommend you all watch.  Enjoy!

Karabakh birth program

The New York Times had an informative little article called “The National Womb” this week, on the governmental program to increase the birth rate by giving cash and homes to couples for getting married and having babies.  There was also a good accompanying photo slideshow.

The program appears to be successful, with an almost 25% increase in births since the program started 4 years ago.  It does ask a good question though at the end about focusing on keeping the current and future population from emigrating by working on good employment opportunities as well.  A question Armenia badly needs to address as well, as people have been emigrating in waves since the 1980s.

I wanna be a Spyurkahay…

So freakin funny!  (once you get past the sad truth)

What I Had Missed

During my recent Paris trip, I had the pleasure of taking in 3 films. For some reason, they were all about social issues haunting humanity.

The first film was a Hollywood production of Contagion. An epidemic, the most dangerous ever, has killed millions world wide. The source of the illness was China – funny, a few decades ago, it would have been Russia ;) A remedy was developed…. Of course, by an American scientist – this time it was a woman ☺ It was fine, not the best film I have seen.

The second, Polisse, is a MUST SEE! A highly controversial French film that was directed by a young woman who was herself a victim of a sex crime as a young child. She presents a team of police officers who deal with children. With an amazing cast, the film covers all kinds of issues. It is hard, raw and true. Pedophilia, insect, sexual favours at school through peer pressure, pornography, immigrants, poverty, suicide, physiological stress, inter-police frictions, love, anger, reconstructed families, religion, gender issues, sexuality, … it was powerful; cult film.

The third film was by non other, Robert Guedikian. The narration of Les Neiges de Kilimanjaro was splendid. It takes place in Marseille near the beautiful Mediterranean sea. However, the distress of economic crisis, human kindness, crime and punishment and family values were showcased in this beautiful, beautiful film. I can honestly say this is one of Guedikian’s best film.

I had missed going to the movies and being blown away by the big screen and its moving images. Armenia needs to consider screening good films, not just mass distributions of cheap romantic-comedies and such. I am counting on the new generation of Armenian filmmakers to save us from this whirlpool. Not sure if I should hold my breath though.

Junior Eurovision

I’m embarrassed to say I watched Junior Eurovision song competition this year.  Adult Eurovision (just called plain old Eurovision) is huge, and since Armenia was hosting Junior Eurovision this year and I’d seen posters and some vans with the logo, I thought it would be pretty big.  It was quite disappointing…  only 13 countries competed, so only 12 guest countries.  3 were from Western Europe and the rest from closer to Armenia.  Each song was less remarkable than the others, and the winners, Georgia with some song about candy were clearly pandering to the candy lovers out there.  Selling themselves for votes… and it worked.

I won’t bore you with any more details, except to say the Armenian male host of the show had the strangest accent I could imagine.  I don’t know where it comes from, it’s not an Armenian accent, not a Russian accent…  does anyone know?  Here’s a video report on the competition in case you want to see just how I managed to waste 2 hours of my life.

http://www.armenialiberty.org/media/video/24411231.html

Don't leave a message

This morning I had a major accomplishment.  I stopped by an office for 5 minutes to ask something I’d been trying for months to find out.  I’d called the office at least a couple of dozen times, but they’d always say to “call back” in a few minutes, in the afternoon, tomorrow, or some other vague time because the technician wasn’t there.  Offices here just don’t take messages.  They tell you to call again later.  It can be quite a pain, since many people aren’t at their desks much of the time.  So this was one of those minor victories that counts for a lot.

It’s December.  The temperature has warmed up to above freezing during the days, after at least a week or two of freezing cold temperatures and snow in late November.  This has been a big relief, and the forecast calls for more of this “warm” weather.