RFE/RL – Armenia More Secure Now, Says Pashinian

Հունվար 03, 2025


Armenia – Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian delivers a New Year message to the nation, Yerevan, December 31, 2024.

Amid widespread fears of another war with Azerbaijan and Baku’s demands for more Armenian concessions, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has claimed to have made Armenia much more secure in the past year.

In his New Year’s Eve address to the nation, Pashinian said that his country is “entering 2025 in a significantly more peaceful, significantly more stable, significantly more secure environment, and significantly more independent, significantly more sovereign, significantly more confident than before.”

“The year 2024 has been the most peaceful and calm year for our country in the last twenty years, and this fact really needs to be analyzed deeply and seriously,” he said, adding that his policies will keep Armenia on that trajectory.

In that context Pashinian touted unilateral territorial concessions to Azerbaijan which he made last spring, sparking massive anti-government protests in Yerevan. He described them as a “success story.”

Pashinian’s domestic detractors maintain that the handover of four disputed border areas and Pashinian’s broader appeasement policy will not bring real peace and will only encourage Baku to seek more Armenian concessions.

Following the handover, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev renewed his demands for a change of Armenia’s constitution which he says contains territorial claims to his country. He went on to set other preconditions for an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. Those include the return of Azerbaijanis who lived in Soviet Armenia until the late 1980s and an end to Yerevan’s arms acquisitions.

Aliyev again demanded an end to those acquisitions in his New Year address to the nation, saying that they pose a security threat to Azerbaijan, the defense budget of which is almost three times higher than Armenia’s.

“I consider it my duty to once again warn the Armenian leadership to avoid this dangerous path,” he said, adding that “Armenia is unable to compete with us either militarily or in any other field.”

Armenian officials said earlier that Baku may be planning to launch another military aggression against Armenia after hosting the COP29 climate summit in November. Pashinian’s administration is anxious to prevent such invasion by negotiating the peace treaty.

RFE/RL – Russian Gold Sends Armenia-UAE Trade Skyrocketing

Հունվար 03, 2025


Russia – An employee of Zoloto Severnogo Urala company holds cast bars of gold made near the town of Krasnoturyinsk, Severdlovsk Region, March 6, 2007.

Armenia’s trade with the United Arab Emirates (UAE) grew more than fivefold, to almost $5 billion, in the first ten months of 2024 as the South Caucasus country seemed to become a major conduit for exports of Russian gold and diamonds to world markets.

Government data shows that Armenian exports to the UAE accounted for over 98 percent of the trade volume, technically making the Gulf nation Armenia’s leading export market. Armenian goods and commodities accounted for a small percentage of that, however.

The Armenian government’s Statistical Committee reported in January-October 2024 more than fivefold increases in both imports and exports of gold, diamonds and various jewelry items which totaled $6.8 billion and $7.4 billion respectively. Although Armenia has gold production, diamond-cutting and jewelry industries important for the domestic economy, their annual turnover could only generate a fraction of these figures, meaning that external factors were behind the astronomical rises.

According to the committee, Russia’s exports to Armenia surged by $5.6 billion to nearly $8.3 billion in the same period. Armenian media outlets reported throughout the year sharp rises in shipments of Russian gold and, to a lesser extent, diamonds to Armenia and their subsequent re-exports, possibly after some processing, to third countries.

UAE — An aerial view of the Marina Beach in the Gulf emirate of Dubai, July 8, 2020

Citing the national customs service, the investigative publication Hetq.am said that Armenia imported about 66 tons of gold worth $4.4 billion already in the first half of 2024 and that almost all of it came from Russia. The latter cannot directly supply the precious metal to Western buyers due to sanctions imposed after its 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Armenia shipped nearly as much gold abroad during the same period, with the UAE absorbing around two-thirds of those exports and the rest of them mostly going to China. This explains why Armenian exports to China nearly tripled in January-October to almost $1 billion.

In a recent article, Hetq.am identified more than a dozen Armenian firms involved in large-scale imports and re-exports of Russian gold. According to it, one of those firms is linked to the family of Khachatur Sukiasian, a wealthy businessman and parliamentarian representing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party.

The lucrative trade operations appear to have also involved Russian diamonds likewise covered by U.S. and European Union sanctions. In 2023, Armenia reportedly exported (mainly to the UAE) 4.5 million carats of diamonds worth about $590 million, a volume by far exceeding the combined annual output of Armenian diamond-cutting firms. The Armenian customs service has still not released any diamond-related data for 2024.

Armenian entrepreneurs have also taken advantage of the sanctions by re-exporting many Western-manufactured goods to Russia. This was the main driving force behind rapid economic growth registered in the country in 2022 and 2023. That growth moderated in 2024 and is projected to slow further this year.

Discover Armenia For The Best Value In Outstanding Brandies

Forbes
Jan 4 2024

Discover Armenia For The Best Value In Outstanding Brandies

Armenia’s brandies represent outstanding quality and value, especially for ultra-aged expressions of 20 years or more. Here are backgrounds and tasting notes on 20 top-rated Armenian brandies.

Joseph V Micallef

Armenia has a long-standing tradition of brandy production. Produced mainly from indigenous grape varieties, their brandies represent outstanding quality and value, especially for ultra-aged expressions of 20 years or more. Here are 20 top-rated Armenian brandies, all awarded gold medals or higher in multiple international spirit competitions, with brief backgrounds on their distilleries and tasting notes on their brandies.

A Brief History of Armenian Brandy

Armenia is a small country in the South Caucasus nestled between the Anatolian Peninsula and the Caspian Sea. Along with its northern neighbor, Georgia, the region is believed to be the birthplace of wine. Although it is likely that wine making had multiple independent centers of origin, the oldest historical evidence of winemaking, going back more than 6,000 years, is found in this region.

According to local legend, Armenians have distilled wine into brandy since the 12th century. There is little definitive evidence of this. If true, then the production of brandy in Armenia predated alcohol distillation in Spain and France by several centuries.

In the late 19th century, a thriving brandy industry developed in Armenia. Taking advantage of the popularity of Cognac in Russia, a consequence of the anti-German, Franco-Russian alliance that preceded World War I, Armenian Brandy was also labeled Kanyak, the Armenian spelling for Cognac.

For a brief time, one Armenian producer, Nikolay Shustov, official supplier of Armenian brandy to the Russian Tsar Nicholas II, had the right to label his brandy as Cognac. Shustov & Sons eventually became the Yerevan Brandy Company, Armenia’s largest brandy producer.

Brandy production is still a big business in Armenia. Yerevan, the country’s capital, boasts more brandy distillers per capita than any other city, including Cognac.

The Armenian government sold the largest Soviet-era brandy distiller, the Yerevan Brandy Company, to French spirits giant Pernod-Ricard in 1999. It’s exported to over 20 countries, and the most common brand of Armenian brandy found abroad.

The country currently produces around 20 million liters, about 5.7 million gallons, 90 percent of which is exported.

Armenian brandy production has several interesting features. It only utilizes indigenous grape varieties. Armenia has over 200 indigenous grapes, only a few of which have been studied.

Only Voskehat, Garan Dmak, Mskhali, Kangun and Rkatsiteli (a Georgian grape variety) can legally be used for brandy production. Grapes are grown widely in Armenia, with the best coming from the Ararat Valley beneath Mount Ararat in Western Armenia. Grapes also provide the alcohol base for fruit vodkas and unflavored vodkas.

Brandy is produced in Charentais stills, as in Cognac, using a double distillation process. Maturation occurs in casks made from Caucasian/Persian oak, Quercus macranthera. Caucasian oak is believed to impart flavors of dried fruit, dried herbs, vanilla, and chocolate notes. These are aroma and taste elements closely associated with Armenian brandy.

Armenia’s Top Brandy: Tasting Notes

Ararat Nairi 20 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company

International Wines & Spirits Competition (IWSC), Gold; San Francisco World Spirits Competition (SFWSC), Double Gold; International Spirits Challenge (ISC), Gold; New York International Spirits Competition (NYISC), Gold; Concours Mondial de Bruxelles (CMB), Gold.

Established in 1887, the Yerevan Brandy Company is renowned worldwide for producing Armenian brandies from local grapes and unique oak casks.

The rich and flavorful brandy features dark chocolate, dried fruit, and honey flavors, with a long, complex, velvety finish.

Armenia 25 YO Brandy, Great Valley Wine & Brandy Factory

Great Valley emphasizes traditional production methods and quality aging in Armenian oak barrels in the Ararat Valley.

The brandy features vanilla, dried fruit, and oak notes, with a refined, elegant finish.

Ararat Dvin 15 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Double Gold SFWSC, Double Gold; ISC, Gold; NYISC, Gold; CMB, Gold.

The brandy features cinnamon, clove spices, dark chocolate, and nutty undertones, with a long, luxurious finish.

Proshyan Brandy Factory 20 YO, Proshyan Brandy Factory

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold; NYISC, Gold; ISC, Gold.

Established in 1887, Proshyan is a historic brandy producer using unique traditional Armenian winemaking traditions.

The brandy features fruit, vanilla, and almond, with a long, warming, smooth finish.

Ararat Vaspurakan 15 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold; ISC, Gold; NYISC, Gold; CMB, Gold.

Fig, caramel, and dark dried fruit dominate the palate, with a smooth, velvety, lingering finish.

Ararat Akhtamar 10 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold; NYISC, Gold; ISC, Gold; CMB, Gold.

A slightly lighter style of Armenian brandy featuring caramel, apricot, and toasted oak, with a balanced, smooth finish.

Armenia 15 YO Brandy, Great Valley Wine & Brandy Factory

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold; ISC, Gold; NYISC, Gold.

The brandy features dried apricot, oak, and vanilla, with a balanced, long-lasting finish.

Noy Classic 20 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy-Wine-Vodka Factory

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; NYISC, Gold; ISC, Gold; CMB, Gold.

One of Armenia’s top brandy producers, Noy, is known for utilizing traditional Armenian methods and local oak barrels for their distinguished brandies.

The sweet brandy exhibits oak, dried fig, and spice notes and a refined, smooth finish.

Mané 18 YO Brandy, Proshyan Brandy Factory

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold; ISC, Gold; NYISC, Gold.

The brandy features caramel, dried fruit, and subtle spice, with a robust, full-bodied, and smooth finish.

Ararat Ani 7 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold; NYISC, Gold, ISC, Gold.

The sweet brandy features vanilla, dried fruits, and a hint of almond, with a rich, layered finish.

Great Valley Armenian Oak 10 YO, Great Valley Wine & Brandy Factory

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold, NYISC, Gold; CMB, Gold; ISC, Gold.

The brandy features seasoned oak, honey, subtle spice, and a smooth, complex finish.

Noy Araspel 15 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy-Wine-Vodka Factory

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; NYISC, Gold, ISC, Gold, CMB, Gold.

The brandy features hazelnut, honey, ripe fruit and a long, rich finish.

Ararat Armenia 20 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold, NYISC, Gold; ISC, Gold.

The brandy features dark chocolate, toasted almond, and caramel, with a smooth, refined finish.

Noy Tirakal 10 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy-Wine-Vodka Factory

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; NYISC, Gold; CMB, Gold; ISC, Gold.

The brandy features vanilla, dried fig, and soft spice with a smooth, elegant finish.

Mané 15 YO Brandy, Proshyan Brandy Factory

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold; ISC, Gold; NYISC, Gold.

The brandy features dried fruit, honey, warm spices and a rich, smooth finish.

Ararat Otborny 7 YO Brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold; NYISC, Gold; CMB, Gold; ISC, Gold.

The brandy features caramel, apricot, vanilla, and a long, balanced finish.

Noy Grand Reserve 15 YO Yerevan Brandy-Wine-Vodka Factory

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold; NYISC, Gold; ISC, Gold.

The brandy features fig, vanilla, dark chocolate, and a smooth, luxurious finish.

Ararat Armenia Select 15 YO Yerevan Brandy Company

SFWSC, Gold; IWSC, Gold; NYISC, Gold; ISC, Gold; CMB, Gold.

The brandy features spice, oak, dark chocolate, and a complex, full-bodied finish.

Mané 20 YO Brandy, Proshyan Brandy Factory

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Gold; CMB, Gold; ISC, Gold; NYISC, Gold.

The brandy features caramel, spice, toasted oak, and a smooth, elegant finish.

Ararat Nairi Reserve 30 YO, Yerevan Brandy Company

IWSC, Gold; SFWSC, Double Gold; NYISC, Gold; ISC, Gold; CMB, Gold.

The brandy features dark chocolate, raisin, caramel, and a velvety, lingering finish.

These Armenian brandies showcase excellence in craft and aging, reflecting Armenia’s deep tradition in brandy production. They are outstanding brandies, especially the ultra-aged ones, many of which retail for under $50. You can find Armenian brandies at most specialty liquor stores. The best selection is at Glendale-based Remedy Liquor. The store caters to the large Armenian community in Glendale and stocks many ultra-aged expressions.


UNICEF: For the first time, Armenia rolls out needs-based cash assistance for

UNICEF
Dec 3 2024

Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs and UNICEF, with the support of the German Federal Foreign Office, launch one-time needs-based cash assistance through seven different e-cards.

03 January 2025

YEREVAN, 3 January 2025 – Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs in partnership with UNICEF and with the support of the German Federal Foreign Office, announced today of the launch of a one-time needs-based cash assistance to displaced and host community families that, for the first time, will go through an electronic payment system. The benefits are planned to reach 4000 families across Armenia from 2024 to 2025, namely families with children, pregnant women, families with newborns, children with disabilities, single-parent households, children out of school due to socio-economic issues, families in need of urgent social support and who have not been eligible for previous state social programmes.

This assistance programme was rolled out through the Unified Social Service Territorial Centers who identified vulnerable households through a multi-sector needs assessment. Family vulnerability was determined through an automated indexation method looking into the demographic situation, priority and material needs that will qualify families for three out of the following seven e-cards: New Year (AMD 50,000), Childcare (AMD 40,000), Clothing and shoes (AMD 25,000), Healthcare (AMD 25,000), Back to school (AMD 60,000), Cozy home (AMD 60,000), and Urgent food (AMD 11,000 – 44,000).

“The social issues faced by compatriots after forced displacement from NK have always been at the center of attention of the Armenian Government. A number of programmes have and continue to be implemented to support living and other expenses, as well as sustainable employment and housing solutions. We are pleased that our partners are beside us throughout this process. This initiative is yet another essential step forward in the implementation of the Social Ambulance programme and the continuation of the already tested food cards. I am full hope that this will serve its purpose,” said Narek Mkrtchyan, Minister of Labor and Social Affairs.

“Germany supports Armenia’s efforts to further assist refugee families from Nagorno-Karabakh and vulnerable families in host communities in their long-term recovery and inclusion, especially during the cold season that brings additional needs. We have extended funding through this partnership for a combination of cash assistance and care interventions that will deliver needs-based services to families, including e-cards covering crucial needs ranging from clothing, healthcare and newborn care or household items, as well as case management and mental health and psychosocial support services. This programme will also build the capacity of social service workforce and frontline professionals in identifying families in need, protection from violence and prevention of family separation,” underlined Erik Tintrup, Deputy Head of Mission of the Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany in Armenia.

“It is crucial to match limited resources with the increased need for support to children and their families who have been displaced or live in host communities across Armenia. To that end, UNICEF has supported the Ministry in the development of the new Law on Social Assistance, putting an emphasis on increasing the shock-responsiveness of the social protection system. The e-cards system, developed within this new cash assistance programme will remain as a tool for regular state assistance programmes and be scaled-up for emergency response, when necessary, contributing to increased coordination by the Government with civil society and donors,” noted Christine Weigand, UNICEF Representative in Armenia.

An Urgent Food e-card will be introduced in partnership with the World Food Programme (WFP) as part of a pilot initiative. This approach adds a new tool to WFP’s existing food assistance projects, offering displaced and host families an additional way to access nutritious food during the challenging winter months. While traditional bank cards will continue to be used, the digital platform provides a complementary option to reach people in need, especially when addressing multiple needs at once.

“This integration into the Idram application offers families a seamless way to meet their dietary needs, especially during winter when vulnerabilities are heightened,” said Nanna Skau, WFP Representative and Country Director in Armenia. “This initiative reflects WFP’s ongoing commitment to enhancing food security while promoting dignity, choice, and resilience.”

All cards will be active from December 2024 to 28 February 2025 through the Idram payment system, while the Armenian Association of Social Workers and the non-governmental organization Armenian Progressive Youth will support UNICEF in coaching of social workers, providing families with case management, as well as additional information on the use of e-cards and feedback mechanisms.

For more information about the needs-based cash assistance programme visit this page. 

For questions on the multi-sector needs assessment, please contact Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs hotline 114.

For questions or complaints about the e-cards, please contact UNICEF partner Armenian Progressive Youth NGO at 095 889 388.

For technical support with Idram apps (Idram and ID Plus), please contact: 060 700 700 or 098 700 970 (Telegram/WhatsApp).

https://www.unicef.org/armenia/en/press-releases/first-time-armenia-rolls-out-needs-based-cash-assistance-displaced-and-host

Ancient genomics reveal the origins of Italo-Celtic and Graeco-Armenian langua

Archeology News
Jan 4 2025

A new study revealed key insights about Mediterranean language families’ origins, including Italo-Celtic and Graeco-Armenian branches of Indo-European. An international team of geneticists and archaeologists conducted this research. They examined how ancient migrations influenced the emergence of linguistic groups that shaped Mediterranean civilizations.

The team published their findings on the preprint server bioRxiv. They analyzed genetic data from 314 ancient individuals who lived in the Mediterranean 5,200 to 2,100 years ago. The researchers used advanced genome sequencing and strontium isotope analysis. This revealed significant genetic and cultural differences between eastern and western Mediterranean populations.

The study pinpoints two key migration patterns that had an impact on the genetic and linguistic roots of the Mediterranean. People in the Western Mediterranean, including those in Spain, France, and Italy today felt the influence of the Bell Beaker culture, a group with origins in Western Europe. This culture is linked to the rise of Italic and Celtic languages.

In contrast, populations in the eastern Mediterranean, like those in Greece and Armenia, showed direct genetic input from the Yamnaya, a group of herders from the Western Steppe area covering parts of today’s Ukraine southern Russia, and Kazakhstan. These movements set the stage for the development of classical Greek and Armenian languages. The findings align with the linguistic hypotheses of Italo-Celtic and Graeco-Armenian.

Distribution of Bell Beaker-derived and Yamnaya-derived ancestry proportions obtained from the IBD admixture model. The proportion of each steppe source is standardized by the total steppe contributions, i.e. the sum of Corded Ware, Bell Beaker and Yamnaya-Samara contributions. Credit: Fulya Eylem Yediay et al., (2024)

The genetic evidence supports linguistic theories about how Indo-European languages diverged in the Mediterranean. The researchers showed how people from the steppes brought their genes and introduced big cultural changes. These included chariot technology and advanced metallurgical techniques, which local societies adopted.

In Italy, people of the Bronze Age in the north and central parts had genes linked to the Bell Beaker culture. This ancestry matches the Italic languages, including Latin, which later spread across the peninsula. On the other hand, people in southern Italy and along the Adriatic coast showed more Yamnaya influence mirroring the genetic patterns seen in Greek and Balkan groups.

Bronze Age spread of Yamnaya Steppe pastoralist ancestry into two subcontinents—Europe and South Asia. Credit: DEMIS Mapserver / Wikimedia Commons

The results question older ideas, like the Italo-Germanic theory, which proposed closer language connections between Italic and Germanic languages. The research also uncovered complex situations such as mixed genetic heritage in the Balkans coming from Bell Beaker Yamnaya and Corded Ware cultures.

The study highlights the Mediterranean as a lively center of genetic and cultural mixing during the Bronze Age. Cyprus, for example, became a crossroads for influences from Greece, the Levant, and Anatolia. In the same way, ancient Italian groups showed varied ancestry combining local Neolithic farmer lines with newcomers from Central Europe.

The study is a big step forward in grasping how Indo-European languages split up in their early days. While the findings clear up many points about how languages branched off, they still don’t answer everything. For example, we’re still not sure about the exact links between all parts of the Indo-European family tree.

By combining genetics, archaeology, and linguistics, this research offers a strong way to explore how human history is all tied together.

More information: Yediay, F. E., Kroonen, G., Sabatini, S., Frei, K. M., Frank, A. B., Pinotti, T., … Willerslev, E. (2024). Ancient genomics support deep divergence between Eastern and Western Mediterranean Indo-European languages. bioRxiv. doi:10.1101/2024.12.02.626332
https://archaeologymag.com/2025/01/origins-of-italo-celtic-and-graeco-armenian-languages/

Armenpress: US, Germany, and France provided a significant share of humanitari

Armenia12:49, 4 January 2025
Read the article in: العربيةFrançaisՀայերենРусский

YEREVAN, JANUARY 4, ARMENPRESS.  In the first ten months of 2024, from January to October, Armenia received 84 million 188.8 thousand dollars  in humanitarian aid, a 4.2-fold increase compared to the same period in 2023, according to the Statistical Committee.

The majority of the humanitarian aid received during this period comprised products from the chemical and related industries, totaling 63 million 386.8 thousand dollars, a 5.2-fold increase compared to the same period in 2023.

A substantial part of the humanitarian aid also consisted of non-precious metals and articles made from them, as well as land, air, and water transport means, devices and apparatus, machines, equipment, and mechanisms.

The largest share of humanitarian aid to Armenia was sent by the United States, totaling 44 million 583.4 thousand dollars, accounting for 53 percent of the total aid received in the 10-month period. Germany ranked second with 8 million 158.7 thousand dollars, making up 9.7 percent of the total, while France was third with 3 million 660.2 thousand dollars, accounting for 4.4 percent.

Humanitarian aid was also sent to Armenia from Switzerland, China, Italy, India, and other countries.

Published by Armenpress, original at 

Canberra: #FreeArmenianHostages: Paul Fletcher MP Sponsors Armenian Political

Armenian National Committee of Australia
Jan 5 2025

#FreeArmenianHostages: Paul Fletcher MP Sponsors Armenian Political Prisoner Davit Ishkhanyan





CANBERRA: Paul Fletcher MP – Federal Member for Bradfield has penned a powerful letter to the Azerbaijani Embassy calling for the immediate release of Mr Davit Ishkhanyan, former Speaker of the National Assembly of the Republic of Artsakh.

The letter addressed to Mr Vagif Jafarov, Charge d’Affaires of the Embassy of the Republic of Azerbaijan, calls on the Azerbaijani representative to provide regular updates as to the condition of Mr Ishkhanyan’s mental and physical health on a monthly basis.

Mr Ishkhanyan is one of 23 Armenian Hostages known to be held captive by Azerbaijani forces since the ethnic cleansing of Artsakh in September 2023.

The letter reads: “I had the pleasure of personally meeting with Mr Ishkhanyan in our Federal Parliament alongside a dozen of my parliamentary colleagues back in 2019 and thus the conditions of his arrest and detention by the State Security Service of Azerbaijani are of particularly special concern to me.”

Mr Fletcher ended his letter with the following powerful remarks: “The world is watching Azerbaijan. Australia is watching Azerbaijan.”

Fletcher who also serves as the Co-Chair of the Australia-Armenia Inter-Parliamentary Union in Federal Parliament championed a historic first-ever motion on the Republic of Artsakh in Federal Parliament calling for pro-Armenian measures including the release of all Armenian Hostages. Read more about the motion here.

The Armenian National Committee of Australia has expressed its deep gratitude to Mr Fletcher for his powerful letter and commitment to the release of all Armenian Hostages.

https://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/-FreeArmenianHostages–Paul-Fletcher-MP-Sponsors-Armenian-Political-Prisoner-Davit-Ishkhanyan



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Canberra: #FreeArmenianHostages: Michael Sukkar MP Sponsors Armenian Political

Armenian National Committee of Australia
Jan 5 2025

#FreeArmenianHostages: Michael Sukkar MP Sponsors Armenian Political Prisoner Bako Sahakyan

CANBERRA: The Hon. Michael Sukkar MP – Federal Member for Deakin has written to Azerbaijan’s Chargé d’Affaires, Mr Vagif Jafarov, calling for the immediate release of Armenian political prisoner and former President of the Republic of Artsakh, Bako Sahakyan, reported the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU).

In his letter, Sukkar advised the embassy of his intention to act as a sponsor for Mr Sahakyan and urged the Embassy to provide monthly updates on Mr Sahakyans's physical and mental well-being.

Sukkar, who is one of the over 100 Australian Friends of Artsakh is now the second Australian elected official to sponsor an Armenian hostage illegally imprisoned by Azerbaijani authorities, since Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of the Armenian population living in the Republic of Artsakh in September 2023.

In his letter to Mr Jafarov, Sukkar said: “My decision to sponsor Mr Sahakyan comes in the wake of reports from the lawyers of Armenian political prisoners, in particular Jared Genser who wrote to the UN Special Rapporteur on torture detailing harrowing cases of inhumane treatment.”

Michael Kolokossian, Executive Director of the Armenian National Committee of Australia, expressed the community’s deep gratitude to the Hon. Michael Sukkar MP for his commitment to act as a political sponsor for Mr Bako Sahakyan, underscoring the importance of such advocacy in the fight for justice.

"As the physical and mental well-being of Armenian political prisoners continues to deteriorate, we are intensifying our advocacy efforts to secure their release. Azerbaijan must understand that Australia, along with the international community, is closely monitoring the situation, and we call for the immediate release of all illegally detained individuals," Kolokossian said.

A motion debated in the Australian Federal Parliament’s Federation Chamber on the 3rd of June 2024, championed by Paul Fletcher MP similarly called for pro-Armenian measures, including the release of all Armenian hostages. Read more about the motion here.


https://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/-FreeArmenianHostages–Michael-Sukkar-MP-Sponsors-Armenian-Political-Prisoner-Bako-Sahakyan


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Sydney: Armenian Resource Centre Receives Additional 300 Thousand Dollars in A

Armenian National Committee of Australia
Jan 5 2025

Armenian Resource Centre Receives Additional 300 Thousand Dollars in Australian Government Funding

SYDNEY: The Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU) announced at its annual Annual Gala that the organisation has helped secure approximately $300,000 for the Armenian Resource Center of Australia (ARC-AU)  from the Australian Department of Social Services.

The funding, provided through the Settlement Engagement and Transition Support Program, will enable the ARC-AU to directly support newly arrived Armenian migrants displaced by conflicts in the Middle East, helping them settle in Australia and rebuild their lives.

Letters of support for the ANC-AU's funding request were received from various local, state and federal elected including, Senator Deb O’Neil – Senator for New South Wales; Mr Jerome Laxale MP – Federal Member for Bennelong; Dr Sophie Scamps MP – Federal Member for Mackellar; Ms Kylea Tink MP – Federal Member for North Sydney; Mr Mark Coure MP – NSW State Member for Oatley; Mr Tim James MP – NSW State Member for Willoughby; Mr Jordan Lane MP – NSW State Member for Ryde; Dr Hugh McDermott MP – NSW State Member for Prospect and former Ryde City Councillors Mr Sarkis Yedelian OAM and Mr Bernard Purcell.

In 2023, representatives from the ANC-AU office and ARC-AU Chairperson Tro Tufenkjian met with the Hon. Andrew Giles MP, former Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, and Multicultural Affairs, to convey their gratitude and discuss the allocated funding.

Executive Director of the Armenian National Committee of Australia, Michael Kolokossian said, “We are pleased to make this very exciting announcement for our community. These funds will go a long way for the Armenian Resource Centre of Australia and will help us in assisting and providing support to the most vulnerable Armenians of our community here in Australia.”

Chairperson of the Armenian Resource Centre, Tro Tufenkjian said, “We wish to express our gratitude to the former Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs, the Hon. Andrew Giles MP and all elected officials from local, state and federal politics who helped secure this crucial funding for our community."

The Australian Department of Social Services additional funding of approximately $300,000 – which is part of over $1,200,000 granted to a Consortium that includes the Armenian Resource Centre, the Assyrian Australian Association, the Chaldean League and the Antiochian Orthodox Archdiocese – will cover operational expenses to assist with the resettlement of migrants.

Established in 2017, the ARC-AU is an independent, community-led organisation providing settlement support services to Armenians who have migrated to Australia for humanitarian reasons or are existing vulnerable residents and helps improve the lives of Armenian community members in Australia by provision of access to support services that meet their settlement and social needs.

https://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/Armenian-Resource-Centre-Receives-Additional-300-Thousand-Dollars-in-Australian-Government-Funding


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TEHRAN: TMoCA to hold Marcos Grigorian’s commemoration ceremony

TEHRAN TIMES
Iran, Jan 5 2025

TMoCA to hold Marcos Grigorian’s commemoration ceremony

TEHRAN-The commemoration ceremony of the late Iranian Armenian artist Marcos Grigorian will be held on Tuesday at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art (TMoCA).

Organized on the occasion of the 100th birth anniversary of the renowned artist, the ceremony is held simultaneous with the exhibition “Marcos Grigorian: A Retrospective” which is underway at the TMoCA, Mehr reported.

The event will have several speakers including painter Mehdi Hosseini who was a friend of Grigorian’s, painter and art critic Hassan Mourizinejad, documentarian Hamidreza Zeinali who has made a documentary about Grigorian, director of the Marcos Grigorian Foundation, and visual artist Michel Allahverdian, and cultural counsellor at the Embassy of Ireland in Iran Hrachya Mkhitaryan.

Marcos Grigorian (1925–2007) was an impactful artist and gallery owner, celebrated as a pioneer of modern Iranian art. 

Born in Kropotkin, Russia, to an Armenian family fleeing massacre, he moved to Iran in 1930, where he later opened the Apadana Gallery in Tehran in 1949. Grigorian studied at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Rome, graduating in 1954, and subsequently established the influential Galerie Esthétique in Tehran. He was instrumental in organizing the first Tehran Biennial in 1958 and was a dedicated educator at the Fine Arts Academy. In the 1960s, he relocated to the United States, establishing Universal Galleries in Minneapolis. 

In 1975, Grigorian helped organize the Group of Free Painters and Sculptors in Tehran and was a founder member. Other founding artists included Gholamhossein Nami, Massoud Arabshahi, Morteza Momayez, Mir Abdolrez Daryabeigi, and Faramarz Pilaram.

His series “Earthworks” was on canvas and it used a mixture of clay and straw called “kahgel,” which is commonly found as a building material in villages in Iran. He exhibited his clay and straw works in Yerevan in 1991. Grigorian was also an early artist with land art in Iran.

In his later years, he settled in Yerevan, Armenia, where he created the Museum of the Middle East and donated thousands of artworks. His legacy was marred by tragedy when he was fatally assaulted in 2007.

The “Marcos Grigorian: A Retrospective” exhibition, currently underway at the TMoCA, provides a scholarly overview of five key phases of Grigorian's career, highlighting his contributions to the history of art. 

The retrospective features his expressionist paintings, as well as his iconic “earth art” and works created with straw and clay.

This is the debut solo exhibition of Marcos Grigorian's works at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art in over four decades of operation. The exhibit is organized by the Marcos Grigorian Foundation in Yerevan, Armenia.

This exhibition seeks to contribute to introducing this artist and his considerable influence on the evolution of Iranian contemporary painting to the current generation of painters and art enthusiasts.

The commemoration ceremony of Marcos Grigorian will start at 3 p.m. on Tuesday. Admission is free for the public.

SS/SAB
 

https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/508310/TMoCA-to-hold-Marcos-Grigorian-s-commemoration-ceremony


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