2018 uprising leads to a ‘technological revolution’, Armenian PM says

EurActiv
Oct 8 2019
<img width="799" height="450" src=”"https://www.euractiv.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2019/10/48857278123_c16e33fb69_c-799×450.jpg" class="attachment-16×9 size-16×9 wp-post-image" alt="" />

Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan at the Opening Ceremony of the WCIT 2019, Yerevan, Armenia.

Referring to the recent growth of the tech export markets in Armenia, Pashinyan said the country had a newfound “confidence” following last year’s uprisings.

“The ongoing economic revolution will in turn lead to a technological revolution,” Pashinyan told the World Congress on Information Technology.

“We will be able to turn Armenia into one of the technological innovations leader in the world, a true technological centre,” he told participants at the congress, which takes place in Yerevan, Armenia, this year.

Armenia’s 2018 uprisings, dubbed the ‘velvet revolutions’ due to their peaceful nature, comprised of a series of anti-government protests in Spring 2018 which were led by Pashinyan, then a member of Parliament, alongside civil groups.

The protests had taken place in response to former Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan’s consolidation of power in the country, as well as allegation of widespread corruption across government.

Following Pashinyan’s imprisonment for his part in the protests, the government eventually stood down and opposition parties all rallied behind the imprisoned leader, leading to his appointment as Armenia’s Prime Minister.

After the change in government, Armenia has adopted a liberal approach to trade and investment and is seeking to reposition itself as a nucleus of innovation in the Transcaucasia region. Along this axis, the country is hosting this year’s edition of the World Congress on Information Technology, which aims to highlight the potential of IT across public an private sectors.

The theme of this year’s congress is ‘the power of decentralisation’ – a leitmotif that the Armenians are yielding to highlight their newfound geopolitical strategy. Rather than forming hardline alliances with specific regional partners, the country is seeking to position itself as a “network nation,” a country that is able to maintain positive relations with different partners around the globe, Armenia’s Deputy Education Minister, Arevik Anapiosyan, told EURACTIV.

Armenia’s own relations with neighbours Turkey and Azerbaijan remain frosty. The Turkish government still fails to recognise its role in the 1915 genocide that nearly wiped out the rural Armenian community, while Armenia and Azerbaijan are at loggerheads over the sovereignty of the Nagorno-Karabakh region – a disagreement that escalated in 2016, resulting in violent conflicts.

Meanwhile, on Monday, Armenia’s Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan said that the theme of decentralisation being rallied by the country is directly related to the 2018 uprisings.

“The connection between the Revolution and the power of decentralization was that the main success of the Revolution was linked with the decentralization itself,” Avinyan said, responding to a question from EURACTIV.

“In April 2018, when various citizens of Armenia started carrying out actions in groups, blocking different streets in the capital Yerevan and the provinces, it was already clear that the Revolution was going to succeed because there was a new common logic which didn’t have central governance, people were just conducting actions of common logic in a decentralized manner.”

“The power of decentralisation is this that this phenomenon was out of control”, he added.

One specific area in which Armenia is seeking to attract tech firms to the region is by proposing attractive tax regimes, at a time in which global tech giants face the possibility of higher levies in the EU.

Prime Minister Pashinyan sat down with Senior Vice President at Pixar Animation Studios Katherine Sarafian and Rajiv Ramaswami, CEO of VWmare, on the sidelines of WCIT yesterday. The Prime Minister was unambiguous in saying that tech firms can obtain a series of benefits in the country, including a decrease in income tax for IT companies from January 2020 in addition to far-ranging privileges for start-ups.

Deputy Education Minister Anapiosyan told EURACTIV on Monday that the notion of a digital services tax for Armenia – an additional levy for tech firms operating online – was “definitely not a priority” for her country.

In addition, members of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation group convened on Monday, in a bid to support the the rollout out of innovative technological solutions in the region. Moldova’s Economy Minister, Vadim Brinzan, said that IT companies are afforded the benefit of “separate tax environments” in his country, while Olga Memedovic, Chief of Business Environment Cluster and Innovation Division at the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation, said that “innovation cycles are becoming shorter” in the region.

Meanwhile, in the EU, commissioners-designate have signalled their commitment to the idea of establishing a digital tax, in a series of written answers to MEPs published recently.

“If no effective agreement can be reached by the end of 2020, the EU should be willing to act alone” on a digital tax, said Margrethe Vestager, the incoming commission’s vice-president, who will be overseeing digital policy in the forthcoming executive.

Vestager has been tasked with the ‘poisoned chalice’ of digital taxation – incoming Commission President Von der Leyen expects the Dane to find a consensus at international level by the end of 2020 or to propose a fair European tax – a challenging task considering that a coalition of member states banded together to block the plans earlier this year, and an agreement in the OECD is unlikely.

It’s not surprising that Vestager has obtained authority in this field – as the signs have been there for many months that she had wanted to impose her political influence on the digital tax plans. In April, she told told France Inter radio that “we are becoming an increasingly digital world and it will be a huge problem if we do not find a way to raise (digital) taxes.”

In addition, in 2020 the Commission is to present sweeping reforms to age-old eCommerce rules, dubbed the Digital Services Act – a far-reaching and ambitious regulatory framework that seeks to govern the online ecosystem.

Moreover, within the first 100 days of the Commission’s new mandate, staring on November 1, Vestager will also coordinate work on a European approach to artificial intelligence, including its ethical implications.

Amid the EU’s attempt to maintain a grasp on the digital ecosystem, Armenia conversely is seeking to position itself as a liberal marketplace open for business, despite domestic difficulties still plaguing the global reputation of the country – including high unemployment rates and poverty.

For Pashinyan, however, technology may offer the country a solution to its many problems. The long-term objective, he says, is to make “the technological sphere a driving force for our economy.”

[Edited by Frédéric Simon]

https://www.euractiv.com/section/digital/news/2018-uprising-lead-to-a-technological-revolution-armenian-pm-says/


Sports: Eurasian Basketball League: Armenia’s Aragats loses to Arsenal Tula

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 7 2019

In the last game of the first round of the Eurasian Basketball League being held in Yerevan, Armenia’s Aragats lost to Russian Arsenal Tula 74-79 in a tough fight.

After two rounds, Aragats, Urartu, Arsenal Tula and Barsy Atyrau of Kazakhstan have 3 points apiece, the National Olympic Committee's press service reported.

A total of six teams from Armenia, Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus are taking part in the tournament.

My administration has laid out a vision for Armenia which places IT as its core, says PM

My administration has laid out a vision for Armenia which places IT as its core, says PM

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 16:34, 5 October, 2019

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 5, ARMENPRESS. The Government of Armenia has declared ICT to be a sector of strategic importance and is ready to reform the education system, modernize strategic infrastructures and invest in human capital to make the country a technological global leader, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said in a welcoming address ahead of the upcoming World Congress on Information Technologies (WCIT 2019) which will take place in Yerevan.

“Dear international guests, distinguished speakers and Armenian compatriots,

It is my privilege and great pleasure to welcome you all to the World Congress on Information Technology held in Armenia. I sincerely hope that over the next three days you will have a chance to enjoy everything that Yerevan has to offer.

I am extremely proud to learn that this is the first time in the WCIT’s 40-year history that the Congress is taking place in a small nation like Armenia. The World Information Technology and Services Alliance (WITSA) represents 90 percent of the global ICT community and frequently influences international public policy in IT matters.

The WITSA’s decision to hold this Congress in Yerevan is a compelling acknowledgement of Armenia’s status as a global technology hub.

Innovation and enterprise have long been central pillars of Armenian identity. Throughout history the Armenian people have produced scientists, engineers and inventors, who have disproportionately contributed to the progress of humanity and the raising of global living standards. As a Soviet Republic, Armenia nurtured a technology ecosystem which garnered it a reputation as “the Silicon Valley of the Soviet Union”. Since independence, Armenia has consolidated its position as a technology-driven economy.

The Government of Armenia has declared ICT as a strategic are of focus, passing legislation designed to attract international technology firms, and nurture a native industry. My administration has laid out a vision for our country which places IT as its core. In order to reach our goal of turning Armenia into a global tech leader, we are committed to reforming our education system, upgrading strategic infrastructure and investing in human resources.

Today Armenian startups boast a significant presence in Silicon Valley. Armenia’s technological prowess continues to be felt throughout the tech ecosystem, be it at large tech giants or innovative startups. To ensure the preeminence of Armenian tech well into the future, we will multiply our efforts to promote the proper educational and institutional infrastructure to meet the needs of a dynamically developing industry. This will allow local firms as well as multinational corporations to operate in Armenia while benefiting from the Armenian Diaspora’s strong network and vast resources.

As the host-country for the WCIT 2019, Armenia provides an invaluable setting which will gather the world’s leading thought-leaders, business leaders and political figures to discuss some of the most significant questions facing the future of technology, the results of which may have far-reaching social, economic and political ramifications for all of humankind.

I am certain that Armenia will live up to the critical role that we have taken on.

Looking forward to welcoming you to Armenia,” the Armenian PM said in the address published in the online brochure of WCIT 2019.

600 Guests Celebrate the USC Institute of Armenian Studies 15th Anniversary 

For Immediate Release

October 4, 2019

USC INSTITUTE OF ARMENIAN STUDIES
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, California, USA
Contact: Syuzanna Petrosyan, Associate Director
[email protected] | 213.821.3943

600 Guests Celebrate the USC Institute of Armenian Studies 15th Anniversary 

“The USC Institute of Armenian Studies has been doing outstanding work for 15 
years,” said Amber Miller, Dean of USC Dornslife College of Letters, Arts and 
Sciences. “This work is central to one of our key research themes, ‘Identity 
and Culture in a Changing World.’” 

Dean Miller spoke to the 600-plus guests gathered at the Beverly Hilton Hotel 
on Sunday, September 29. The gala was hosted by the Institute’s Leadership 
Council to celebrate 15 years of championing education, innovation, and 
thoughtful change.

The evening highlighted the Institute’s work and presented a vision for 21st 
century scholarship and innovation – a commitment to producing and supporting 
research on post-genocide issues, on the global Armenian Diaspora, and on the 
Republic of Armenia. Over the last five years, the Institute has broken new 
ground by strategically funding research in areas that are crucial to Armenia’s 
development, and creating massive, world-class platforms where research and 
intellectual conversation can take place, among qualified specialists and with 
an eager and curious audience.

Since its inception, the Institute has benefited from the continuous support of 
the community.
Many of those supporters were honored during the Gala.

The Institute recognized the support of families who have funded endowments 
that support research and programming: Cabayan Family Foundation, Karapetian 
Family Foundation, Vartkes and Lucine Kassabian Family Endowment, Kazanjian 
Foundation Endowment Fund, Keyan Scholarship Fund, Kofdarali Endowment Fund, 
Melkonian Family Scholarship Fund, Nadjarian Endowment Fund, Nayasargian 
Endowment Fund, and Tufenkian Memorial Endowed Scholarship Fund. This year, the 
Baghdassarian Family Foundation and Bayramyan Family Endowment Fund were added 
to the list of donors.
 
Following the USC marching band’s performance, the evening’s unique polished 
program began with a warm welcome by Gala Banquet Committee co-Chairs, Lori 
Muncherian and Diane Cabraloff. Charles Ghailian, chairman of the Institute’s 
Leadership Council, one of the founders of the Institute, and together with his 
family a generous supporter of the Institute, also welcomed and acknowledged 
the decade-and-a-half long support of the Institute by members of the 
community, and most importantly, from the institutions that are important to 
Armenian life in the Diaspora.   

Director Salpi Ghazarian spoke on the intrinsic place this unique Institute can 
have in the lives and work of each organization and institution in Armenian 
life.  “The Institute is about making connections -- a meaningful connection to 
the past, a collaborative connection among innovators,  strategic connections 
between Armenia’s policymakers and the research that is essential to policy. 
The active and substantial support of the community will make it possible for 
the Institute to continue and expand this essential work.”

The Institute’s Academic Council, Professor Daniel  Mazmanian, formerly dean of 
the Price School of Policy, Professor Donald Miller, formerly head of the 
School of Religion, and Professor Manuel Pastor, the Turpanjian Chair of Civil 
Society and Social Change, and director of the USC Center for the Study of 
Immigrant Integration took the stage. They recognized Mr. and Mrs. Gerald and 
Patricia Turpanjian, benefactors of the Institute, for their early and 
sustained championing of the Institute as testimony of unwavering faith in 
nation and education. The Turpanjians have established two chairs that bear 
their family’s name: the Chair in Contemporary Armenian Studies and the Chair 
in Civil Society and Social Change. 

The evening’s program revolved around the Institute’s groundbreaking program 
and those who make that programming possible. Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian 
shared a message to recognize the Innovation Generation, as represented by Nina 
Achadjian, principal at Index Ventures and founder of HIVE ventures, and Ara 
Mahdessian and Vahe Kuzoyan, co-founders of Service Titan, a software company 
with an estimated value of over $1.5 billion, and recently recognized by Forbes 
as one of the top 15 cloud-based solutions in the world. 

Next, former US Ambassador to Armenia John Marshall Evans, a member of the 
Institute’s National Council, reinforced the value of the Institute’s DISPLACED 
PERSONS PROJECT. A number of the three dozen DPs who have been interviewed by 
the Institute were recognized for entrusting their stories, documents, and 
memories to the Institute, for further use by researchers.  

Another Institute program that reaches beyond the university into the public 
square is the Institute’s MEDIA CENTER, made possible with the support of 
Varant and Hoori Melkonian. To recognize this generous and visionary gift, Apo 
Boghigian, the new director of the Civilitas Foundation and CivilNet, shared a 
message on the significance and impact of media (traditional and social) in the 
world, and especially for the Armenian world. 

The USC POLICY FELLOWS program, an Institute collaboration with the government 
of Armenia and the City of Los Angeles was introduced by Councilmember Paul 
Krekorian whose office makes the program possible. The Institute recognized the 
JHM Foundation for their support of this program as an expression of their 
belief in the importance of strategy and planning for Armenia. Accepting the 
recognition on their behalf were the two current Policy Fellows Armine 
Chakhalyan from Armenia and Haik Mayilyan from Karabakh. 

Finally, the newest of the Institute’s programs was introduced -- THE USC 
TACORI CENTER -- a multipurpose location, just 20 minutes from Yerevan that 
will become an important regional conference and retreat center. This is 
affirmation of the Institute’s commitment to advancing scholarship about and in 
Armenia. Armenia’s Ambassador to the United States, His Excellency Varuzhan 
Nersesyan, sent a message thanking the Tacorian Family for their vision and 
commitment. 

The program included selections from SOUND STORIES --  a unique collaboration 
between the Element Band and the Institute, first performed at INNOVATE ARMENIA.
 
About the Institute
 
Established in 2005, the USC Institute of Armenian Studies supports 
multidisciplinary scholarship to re-define, explore and study the complex 
issues that make up the contemporary Armenian experience – from post-Genocide 
to the developing Republic of Armenia to the evolving Diaspora. The Institute 
encourages research, publications and public service, and promotes links among 
the global academic and Armenian communities.

 
 






Asbarez: Armenian Women in Media Panel to Kick off 2019 ANCA-WR Grassroots Conference

ANCA-WR’s Armenian Women in Media panel will be held on October 18

GLENDALE—A star-studded panel featuring the community’s brightest women in media, followed by a live performance by Bei Ru, will kick off this year’s ANCA-WR Grassroots Conference, the signature gathering of experts in law, politics, media, and advocacy that takes place biennially and is organized by the Armenian National Committee – Western Region. The conference will take place on October 18 and 19 at the Pasadena Convention Center at 300 E. Green St., Pasadena, CA 91101.

The Armenian Women in Media panel will feature Sona Movsesian from Conan, Araksya Karapetyan from KTTV Fox 11’s Good Day L.A., Anna Kachikyan from The Armenian Report, Ella Sogomonian from KRON ON, and Ellina Abovian from KTLA 5 News.

For more information and to secure seats, please visit the website.

“Over the years, this conference has established itself as the premier venue to discuss some of the most urgent and important matters for our community,” remarked 2019 ANCA-WR Grassroots Conference Organizing Committee Chair Nyree Tognozzi. “We look forward to building on that legacy as we gear up for the highly-anticipated 5th ANCA-WR Grassroots Conference.”

“As in the past, we expect this year’s Grassroots Conference to attract hundreds of participants,” remarked ANCA-WR Board Member and organizing committee liaison Ayk Dikijian, Esq. “The organizing committee has been hard at work for months undertaking the necessary preparations to bring some of the brightest minds together to share their knowledge and expertise with our community, ensuring the success of this event.”

The media is an essential tool to promote and advance important issues and can be a challenge to navigate when it comes to issues important to the Armenian community. This panel will discuss various media opportunities, as well as the factors and considerations that go into media content. Each panelist will bring her unique experience and knowledge to educate the conference on the dynamics of today’s media in the United States and abroad.

The panel will take place on Friday, October 18 at 7:30 p.m. at the Pasadena Convention Center, and will be followed by the ANCA-PN welcome cocktail reception and live performance by acclaimed artist, Bei Ru.

The two-day conference will continue the following morning, Saturday, October 19, at the same location, and include a live performance by the Element Band, compelling panels covering Civic Engagement, Artsakh and Activism, Turkey, Homeland and the Diaspora. Lunch is included for all registered attendees.

The Armenian National Committee – Western Region is a grassroots public affairs organization devoted to advancing issues of concern to the Armenian American community.

http://asbarez.com/186255/armenian-women-in-media-panel-to-kick-off-2019-anca-wr-grassroots-conference/?fbclid=IwAR0EPqgQJUVYieBwKheJ4MU2IZdU29RcoQkslHQfmQjqeGdU-4hamyCoZqY

Sports: World Men’s Boxing Championships: Duryodhan Singh Negi triumphs over Armenia’s Koryun Astoyan

Mumbai Mirror, India
Sept 14 2019
World Men’s Boxing Championships: Duryodhan
Singh Negi triumphs over Armenia's Koryun
Astoyan
Mumbai Mirror | Sep 14, 2019, 06.00 AM IST

Duryodhan Negi in action against Koryun Astoyan yesterday
Negi leads India’s unbeaten run at the Worlds with hard-fought win over Astoyan
National champion Duryodhan Singh Negi (inset) (69kg) claimed an exhausting 4-1 triumph over Armenia’s
Koryun Astoyan in his opening bout to enter the second round of the World Men’s Boxing Championships.
The Indian will face Jordan’s sixth seed Zeyad Eashash in the round of 32 on Monday. Eashash got a bye in the
opening round.
Astoyan seemed intimidated by the more muscular Indian but wasn’t lacking in effort. His punches were,
however, not connecting as powerfully.
The Armenian began to run out of steam in the second round and Negi took advantage to land a few lusty
combination blows.
Astoyan’s defence was particularly weak and he tried to make up for it by constantly being on the move. The
strategy was tiring for both but Negi endured it much better.
The final three minutes were a lopsided affair in which Astoyan was mostly left scurrying for cover even though
one judge favoured him over the Indian.
Commonwealth Games silver-medallist Manish Kaushik (63kg) and Brijesh Yadav (81kg) had earlier won their
opening bouts to enter the second round.

Parliament session begins – LIVE

Parliament session begins – LIVE

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 10:00,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. The session of the autumn sitting of the Armenian Parliament kicked off today.

A number of bills are included in the session agenda.

On September 11 the lawmakers held a Q&A session with the Cabinet members. A total of 38 MPs addressed questions to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and the ministers.


Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Fresno’s Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church 2019 Bazaar

Holy
Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church

2226
Ventura Street

Fresno,
CA. 93721

(559)
486-1141

[email protected]

FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                            

Contact:  Mary Ekmalian

                                                                                     

(310) 291-3550

                                                                                          

[email protected]                   

Local
Armenian Church Celebrates Culture with 69th Annual Food Bazaar

Fresno’s historic Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic
Church is hosting their annual food bazaar Friday, October 4th. The
event features authentic Armenian cuisine. Lunch will be served from 11AM-2PM
and dinner from 5PM-8PM.

This year’s menu features Shish Kebab and Chicken
Kebab. Meals include pilaf, Yalanchi (stuffed grape leaves), summer salad,
bread and Shakar Shi (Armenian sugar cookie). Lamb Shank is also being offered
for dinner only; orders for lamb shank must be placed by September 27th.

“Our men’s and ladies society get together and
work endless hours to prepare and cook all the foods that will be served at
both lunch and dinner,” said event chairperson Evelyn Hamamjian. “Everything
served, including dessert, is homemade at the church.”

Meals are available dine-in, drive-thru and
takeout. Doors open at 10AM. A country store will feature frozen and baked
items for sale. Vendors will be selling handmade and vintage items. Tickets for
a 50/50 raffle will also be sold.

“Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church is one of
the oldest churches in Fresno and funds raised help with the upkeep of the
church and its community,” Hamamjian said.

The church is located on the corner of Ventura and
M Street in Old Armenian Town. The sanctuary was built in 1914 and is on the
National Register of Historic Places.

“This year during the bazaar we will be offering
tours of the church,” Hamamjian said. The tours will run from 11AM-1PM and from
7PM-8PM.

There will also be live Armenian music from the
band Mark Ohanesian and Friends from 7PM-10PM.

Amulsar issue discussed during session of ruling My Step faction

Amulsar issue discussed during session of ruling My Step faction

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 13:46, 6 September, 2019

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. The issue of the Amulsar Project has been discussed during today’s session of the ruling My Step faction, Vice Speaker of Parliament, faction MP Alen Simonyan told reporters.

“The issue of Amulsar was discussed with the faction. Opinions were voiced and the current situation was presented. There was no tension, the discussions were held in a very harmonious atmosphere”, he said.

Simonyan added that there is no final decision yet on this matter, in case of having any conclusion, public will be informed.

The ruling My Step faction today convened a session at the office of the Civil Contract Party.

The session was also attended by Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan.

 Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Department of Corrections launches proceedings over recent prisoner disobedience incidents

Department of Corrections launches proceedings over recent prisoner disobedience incidents

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 16:10, 6 September, 2019

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. Proceedings are underway in regard to the September 5 disobediences by prisoners in several correctional facilities in Armenia, Department of Corrections (Criminal Executive Department) spokesperson Nona Navikyan told ARMENPRESS.

“The situation is currently under our control. Such incidents aren’t taking place any longer,” she said.

Prisoners in several correctional facilities in Armenia displayed defiance and disorder against prison administrations in the evening of September 5. The situation was brought back under control by the Department of Corrections. Minister of Justice Rustam Badasyan had later said that he will take actions according to the situation in the event of possible developments.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan