Ղազախստանը հետաքրքրված է Հայաստանի հետ տնտեսական կապերի խորացմամբ

  • 20.05.2019
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  • Հայաստան
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Աշխատանքային այցով Ղազախստանում գտնվող Հայաստանի Հանրապետության նախագահ Արմեն Սարգսյանն այսօր հանդիպում է ունեցել Ղազախստանի վարչապետ Ասկար Մամինի հետ:


Ղազախստանի վարչապետը շնորհակալություն է հայտնել նախագահ Սարգսյանին՝ տնտեսական 12-րդ ամենամյա ֆորումին մասնակցելու համար և վստահություն հայտնել, որ նման այցելությունները նպաստում են երկրների միջև հարաբերությունների զարգացմանը:


«Մեր երկների միջև առևտրատնտեսական հարաբերությունների զարգացման ներուժը մեծ է, սակայն այն ամբողջությամբ իրացված չէ: Մեր կողմից կա լիակատար ցանկություն՝ զարգացնելու տնտեսական հարաբերությունները երկկողմ հետաքրություն ներկայացանող բոլոր ոլորտներում»,-ընդգծել է Ասկար Մամինը:


Նախագահ Սարգսյանը նշել է, որ ուրախ է երկու բարեկամ երկների միջև տնտեսական փոխգործակցության հեռանկարները քննարկել վարչապետի հետ: Հայաստանի նախագահը և Ղազախստանի վարչապետը համագործակցության համար հեռանկարային են համարել մասնավորապես գյուղատնտեսության, տեղեկատվական տեխնոլոգիաների, էներգետիկայի, ենթակառուցվածքների, կրթության և զբոսաշրջության ոլորտները:


Վարչապետ Մամինն իր հերթին ասել է, որ հետաքրքրված են նշված և այլ ոլորտներում Հայաստանի հետ լիարժեք համագործակցությամբ և պատրաստ են մանրամասն քննարկել գործակցության բոլոր հնարավորությունները:


Վարաչպետ Մամինի խնդրանքով նախագահն անդրադարձել է նաև Հայաստանի ներքաղաքական իրավիճակին:

Paris to host number of events to mark the 95th anniversary of legendary artist Charles Aznavour

Panorama, Armenia
Society 21:40 20/05/2019 Armenia

May 22, 2019 marks the 95th anniversary of the co-founder of Aznavour Foundation, legendary artist Charles Aznavour. In the eve of the great artist’s birthday, different events are being organized around the world throughout the year. Among them are exhibitions, concerts, opening of monuments, naming of public places and institutions.

Aznavour Foundation press office reports that within the framework of these activities, the Paris Municipality, in cooperation with the Aznavour Foundation, organizes the following events in the French capital on May 21st, on the eve of Aznavour's birthday.

On May 21, at 11:15am Paris time, a memorial plaque will be inaugurated at the first Paris apartment building of the Aznavour family. The Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo, city authorities, prominent figures, and members of the Aznavour family will be present at the event.

The memorial plaque will be placed at the 6th district of Paris, 36 rue Monsieur-le-Prince, where the Aznavouryans originally settled and where Charles Aznavour spent his childhood.

The celebration will continue with a concert next to the Paris Municipality. It will begin at 5pm Paris time, and will be dedicated to the birthday of Charles Aznavour. The concert will feature André Manoukian, Joana Mendil, Essaï Altounian, Eric Berchot and other musicians, the source said.

Sports: Europa League final: Arsenal complain about Baku venue as British-Armenian fans denied visas for final

The Times, UK
 
 
Europa League final: Arsenal complain about Baku venue as British-Armenian fans denied visas for final
 
Matt Hughes, Sports News Correspondent
 
, 12:00pm, The Times
 
Mkhitaryan, who is Armenian, has been granted special dispensation on sporting grounds to receive a visaPaul Marriott/Alamy
 
Arsenal have held talks with the Foreign Office in an attempt to help a number of British-Armenian season-ticket holders who have been denied a visa required to attend the Europa League final against Chelsea in Baku.
 
The club are seeking to ascertain whether any pressure can be put on the Azerbaijan government to make an exception for fans who are likely to miss the final as a result of the stand-off with Armenia, countries who have severed diplomatic relations due to a conflict over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.
 
Henrikh Mkhitaryan, Arsenal’s Armenia midfield player, has been granted special dispensation on sporting grounds to receive a visa, but the club have yet to decide whether he will be included in Unai Emery’s squad for Baku as…

168: Future of the Council of Europe

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Politics
World

This year marks the 70th anniversary of the creation of the Council of Europe – an ambitious endeavour aimed at putting an end to centuries of wars on the European continent and at establishing – to quote the resolution of The Hague Congress of Europe in May 1948 – a democratic social system to free people from all types of slavery and economic insecurity. This European project, which by all accounts has resulted – at least in Western Europe – in the longest period of peace in human history and unprecedented quality of life for ordinary people, rests on some European institutions. Among them, the Council of Europe, founded in May 1949, which ensure democratic security based on shared values by upholding political democracy to protect people against the exercise of arbitrary power. It was created after the Second World War in order to achieve a greater unity between its members for the purpose of safeguarding and realising the ideals and principles which are our common heritage and facilitating their economic and social progress.

In 70 years, the Council of Europe has succeeded in creating a democratic system based on the strong institutions of democratic governance, a human rights protection mechanism and a common space of the rule of law.  This model of democratic governance at both national and local level represents as much of a landmark feature as its unique system of human rights protection centred on the European Convention and Court of Human Rights. The Council of Europe has played a key role in building pluralist and cohesive societies, which can be rightly seen as one of its main achievements.

Yet today, this model is in danger of unravelling. The protection it offers to Europeans is being challenged by far-reaching changes that affect, to varying degrees, all nations. We are witnessing the deterioration of democratic security as common values and standards are being called into question in multiple member states, and the rule of law is being regarded as an obstacle to action. We are witnessing the loss of public confidence in politicians and the institutions of governance, and in their ability to protect citizens and respond to their needs. We are witnessing the birth of new social and political movements initiated by citizens who feel ignored and let down by the system.

According to the European Union’s Eurobarometer of November 2018, more than 6 out of 10 EU citizens do not trust their government or parliament, and 8 out of 10 express mistrust in political parties. This crisis of political representation seriously undermines the functioning of representative democracy and tears at the very fabric of our societies, driving a wedge between “Us” and “Them” and fuelling a “clash” vision of society rather than a culture of living together. Stopping this destructive momentum, restoring the link between citizens and authorities requires an honest dialogue with people, a dialogue between the State and communities. This dialogue has been ongoing in our villages and towns, at the local level of our territories where mayors and councillors, local elected representatives have remained at the frontline of major events in community life, the first line of response to citizens’ concerns – and the last rampart against a more widespread rejection of political representation.

The same 2018 Eurobarometer placed the level of trust in local authorities at 50 per cent, well above the level of confidence in national governments and parliaments. Mayors and councillors, as local elected officials, are the representatives of public authorities who are closest to citizens. Central governments can and must use this proximity, the trust in local authorities and their network to rekindle democracy. Local and regional authorities are indeed crucial for upholding a strong social fabric, and there is a need to reassess their role in building a European democracy, and their impact on citizens’ participation in public institutions. The local level is an ideal one for participatory democracy as it ensures a substantial degree of people’s engagement in public affairs and decision making and provides an excellent platform for using innovative practices and tools.

Local and regional communities are also key players in asserting cultural identity and implementing national policies. National governments themselves recognised this when, in the preamble to the European Charter of Local Self-Government, they defined local democracy as one of the main foundations of any democratic regime.

They also recognised this when, in 1957, they showed their political vision by creating a conference of local authorities within the Council of Europe and transforming it 25 years ago into the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities – with the task of advancing local democracy and strengthening the important role played by local and regional communities and their elected representatives. The mission of the Council of Europe is as relevant today, in the face of the current challenges to European democracy, as it was 70 years ago, in the wake of the Second World War. Back then, a few years after the Council of Europe’s creation, member States recognised the importance of local democracy and local authorities, and the need for their input to the European construction. This role of local authorities is as ever more important today.

Today, sustaining the European model requires, as never before, greater involvement of the local communities and their authorities. Local and regional authorities can help significantly to reconnect with citizens and restore confidence in institutions The Council of Europe member States created the Congress to strengthen the local and regional dimension of European democracy. As the assembly of local and regional elected representatives of 47 European countries, as the voice of more than 150 000 territorial communities in Europe, and the monitoring body for the European Charter of Local Self-Government, the Congress is well placed to contribute its experience and that of the municipalities and regions it represents, in order to develop comprehensive strategies aimed at revitalising and regenerating European democracy.

As we celebrate 70 years of the Council of Europe, it is essential to recognise territorial democracy as a crucial pillar of our democratic system.

Anders KNAPE

President of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities

The article was provided by Anders Knape to Emin Yeritsyan, the head of Armenian delegation in Congress of Local and Regional Authorities and the head of Union of Communities of Armenia. 




Turkey and France clash over remembrance of the 1915 Armenian genocide

Merco Press
Turkey and France clash over remembrance of the 1915 Armenian genocide

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan upped his war of words with French counterpart Emmanuel Macron for creating a day of remembrance for the 1915 Armenian “genocide”.

Macron decided in February to formally mark the mass killings and forced deportations of Armenians by troops from the Ottoman Empire - which preceded modern-day Turkey and sided with Germany and Austro-Hungary in World War I.

France last week held its first “national day of commemoration of the Armenian genocide”.

It was the first major European country to recognize the massacres as genocide in 2001 and Macron has said his decision on a commemoration is designed to show Paris “knows how to look history in the face”.

But Erdogan, who has urged “political novice” Macron to “focus on massacres committed by French troops during the colonial era”, again denounced the idea.

“Delivering a message to 700,000 Armenians who live in France will not save you, Monsieur Macron,” Erdogan told a gathering of his ruling party in Kizilcahamam, north of Ankara.

“Learn first to be honest in politics – if you are not you cannot win,” said Erdogan, adding he had told Macron his views several times face to face.

Turkish officials have indicated France should look first at its own record, notably in Algeria and its role in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

Rwanda's current government accuses Paris of being complicit in the atrocities committed by the majority Hutu community on minority Tutsis.

France has always denied the allegations and Macron announced the creation of a panel of historians and researchers earlier in April which will be tasked with investigating France's role.

Some 30 countries and a number of historians recognize the 1915 massacre of between 1.2 and 1.5 million Armenians as genocide.

Ankara rejects the term, saying World War I brought countless fatalities on both sides against a further backdrop of famine and civil war.

Armenians commemorate the massacres on April 24 - the day in 1915 when thousands of Armenian intellectuals suspected of harboring nationalist sentiment and being hostile to Ottoman rule were rounded up.

At the Paris commemoration, French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe declared France wanted to contribute to having the massacre internationally recognized as a crime against humanity.

He added Paris “will not be impressed by any lies” on the matter and supported “historical accuracy and reconciliation”.

Three police officers from Sevan PD indicted for torturing, humiliating handcuffed suspect in 2018

Three police officers from Sevan PD indicted for torturing, humiliating handcuffed suspect in 2018

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17:17,

YEREVAN, APRIL 23, ARMENPRESS. Three police officers of the Sevan Police Department are charged with abuse of power and torture as the Special Investigative Service concluded an investigation into an October 7, 2018 case.

On that day, a misdemeanor suspect was detained by the Sevan Police Department officers and taken into custody at the local police station.

According to the investigators, two officers physically abused the handcuffed suspect at the station. He was then taken to another room, where another officer, a high-ranking one, joined the two and resumed torturing the suspect by beating him. The officers also humiliated the suspect by expectorating on him.

The suspect sustained numerous physical injuries.

One of the officers is arrested pending trial, while the other two are on bail and banned from leaving the country.

The Special Investigative Service has concluded the investigation and the indictment has been sent to the prosecutor for further proceedings.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Opera: Kaj Nazar review at Bishop Centre, London – ‘witty revival of Armenia’s first comic opera’

The Stage, UK
                    The cast of Kaj Nazar at Bishop Centre, London. Photo: Zorik Gasparian
by Yehuda ShapiroApr 16, 2019

Kaj Nazar by Haro Stepanian, billed as Armenia’s first comic opera, has not been seen since its premiere in Yerevan in 1935. It was possibly a victim of Soviet displeasure.

Its title, which means Nazar the Brave, is not without irony. Drawing on traditional stories and a narrative by the poet Hovhaness Toumanian, it tells of a lazy, arrogant villager who somehow ends up as a supreme, war-mongering ruler. Starting off rather like the Grimm Brothers’ Valiant Little Tailor, it becomes closer to Rimsky-Korsakov’s caustic opera The Golden Cockerel.

Combining folk elements and sometimes abrasive modernism, the score is piquant, unpredictable and often witty. Its impact is assured by the conductor, Levon Parikian. The first two acts weave together flexible arioso and mercurial instrumental motifs, while Acts III and IV bring some longer-breathed numbers, including a dance sequence and a sinuous aria for Nazar’s long-suffering wife, Ustian.

Sung and played with spiky charm by Tereza Gevorgyan, she keeps close tabs on the Nazar of Berk Karazian. He pitches his comic antics precisely – this anti-hero is both exasperating and strangely endearing – while sustaining a lyrical tenor line. Aris Nadirian, London Armenian Opera’s artistic director, is a powerful vocal and physical presence as Sako, who becomes Nazar’s general, and each of the supporting singers makes a memorable impression.

Wisely, director Seta White does not encourage them to overact, not does she play for easy farcical laughs. Rather, she creates a series of almost ritualistic tableaux with simple decor, richly detailed costumes, a procession around the theatre and surreal projections such as a moon that becomes a rolling eyeball.

https://www.thestage.co.uk/reviews/2019/kaj-nazar-review-bishop-centre-hammersmith-armenia-comic-opera/?login_to=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thestage.co.uk%2Faccounts%2Fusers%2Fsign_up.popup

USC Institute of Armenian Studies Announces Chitjian Researcher Archivist

For Immediate Release
 

April 1, 2019

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


USC Institute of Armenian Studies Announces Chitjian Researcher Archivist 
 
Los Angeles, Calif. –The USC Institute of Armenian Studies has named Gegham 
Mughnetsyan as the Institute’s Chitjian Researcher Archivist. The naming is in 
honor of long-time Institute donor, philanthropist and distinguished community 
member Sara Chitjian. 

She was one of the Institute’s first donors and supporters. Miss Chitjian 
believes in the value of education and scholarship to achieve fairness and 
justice. She taught that as a teacher, she supports that as a philanthropist.

Sara Chitjian was born in Mexico City in the family of Ovsanna and Hampartzoum 
Chitjians who were survivors of the genocide. The family relocated to East Los 
Angeles in 1935. Miss Chitjian graduated from UCLA in 1956 and began a teaching 
career at the Los Angeles Unified School District which lasted for 34 years. 
 
In retirement Miss Chitjian has dedicated her time to the archiving of the 
Armenian Genocide, specifically through the documentation of a rich and complex 
family history. Her father Hampartzoum was a great storyteller and one of those 
who told his family story countless times to various scholars, journalists, 
photographers and filmmakers. He was also a regular in Miss Chitjian’s 
elementary school classes where he helped children from a variety of 
backgrounds begin to understand genocide. It helped that Mr. Chitjian was a 
child survivor and his memories were those of a child, making his stories very 
relatable to children and young people. 
 
Gegham Mughnetsyan, Institute research associate since 2016, received his 
undergraduate degree from University of California, Berkeley in Peace and 
Conflict studies where his focus was on US foreign policy toward Nagorno 
Karabakh. Mr. Mughnetsyan went on to complete his graduate degree at the 
American University, in Washington DC, where he studied International Affairs. 
 
At USC, Mr. Mughnetsyan works with post-genocide diasporan archival materials. 
The work entails documentation, translation and collection building.  
 
Since February of 2018, Mr. Mughnetsyan has been leading an oral history 
initiative tasked with recording, translating, transcribing the stories, and 
digitizing archival documents about the community of Armenian displaced persons 
who, in the course of World War II, were uprooted from their homes in the 
Nazi-occupied regions of the Soviet Union, ended up in a refugee camp in 
Germany and, after the war, found refuge in the United States. 
 
These are just two of the more-than-dozen programs at the USC Institute of 
Armenian Studies.
 
“The current work of the researcher archivist at the Institute reflects the 
spirit of Sara Chitjian’s life-long dedication to Armenian archives – 
especially as they relate to genocide and the post-genocide period -- and the 
naming of the position is a fitting tribute to her legacy,” said Institute 
Director Salpi Ghazarian whose relationship with Miss Chitjian goes back 
decades. “Miss Chitjian was my 6th grade math teacher; her father was one of 
the first to tell his life story first to J. Michael Hagopian, then to me as a 
student in Professor Richard Hovannisian’s UCLA class, later again to our team 
at the Zoryan Institute. Each of these interviews was more extensive than the 
last. Miss Chitjian’s mother’s journey, too, is invaluable.  Recognizing the 
importance of remembering that generation and their stories, Miss Chitjian has 
dedicated her life to helping others remember. We are indebted to her.”   
 

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.
 
For inquiries, write to [email protected] or call 213.821.3943




Art: Gallery Z Announced New Exhibit “Armenian Artists from Around the World”

Go Local Prov, Rhode Island


Monday,

 

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Gallery Z announced new exhibit "Armenian Artists from Around the World" PHOTO: Gallery Z

Gallery Z on Federal Hill is set to showcase Armenian artist from around the world as part of their April exhibit “Armenian Artists from Around the World.”

The exhibit will open on Thursday, April 4 and run through Sunday, May 26.

There will be an opening reception on Thursday, April 18 from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.

The Exhibit

At the “Armenian Artists from Around the World,” exhibit will feature an “extensive niche collection” of fine artists of over 400 established artists of Armenian origin.

There will be two special events at the gallery this month.

On Thursday, April 11th, 6:30-8 p.m., an author here from Armenia, Dr. Melineh Anumyan, will be presenting her book, Acknowledgement, and Condemnation:  The Trials of Young Turks in 1919-1921 and 1926.

Refreshments will follow.

The following week, an opening reception for the exhibit of “Armenian Artists from Around the World” will take place with Gallery Night Providence on Thursday, April 18, 2019, from 5-9PM.

Featured Artists

April's featured artist is Harut Aghajanian, an Armenian artist born in Iran in 1956.  He studied at Terlemezian College art school in Yerevan from 1984 to 1987.  His highly intricate figurative works on paper are in both black & white and soft wash tones.   His paintings have been exhibited in Beirut, Lebanon, and Boston.

Anoush Charlene Bargamian, a.k.a. Sweet Angst, born (1963) and raised in Providence, is an artist/art educator living and working in Chicago.  Her abstract paintings and prints employ many mixed media.  Her Horses of Honor public art installation was installed in 2014 at the Chicago Police Memorial Foundation, UBS Tower, Chicago, IL.

Harutune Hovhanesian Born in 1922, Harutune taught for 25 years at the Yerevan Teachers’ Training Institute, and states:  “A bad teacher represents the truth; a good one teaches how to find it.

George V Kaprielian, born in Providence, “Varki” is a self-taught local photographer who has commemorated notable Providence landmarks in striking close-up angles.

Kevork Mourad, born 1970 in Syria of Armenian origin, is a world-renowned artist who also combines art with music, dance and theatre. He has had solo exhibitions around the world and has works in museums worldwide.  He has produced and directed plays and musical-visual projects, has perfected a technique of spontaneous painting to live music, and is a teaching-artist member of Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble.  A new visual-musical piece commissioned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC, premiered there on November 2, 2018.  He lives and works in New York City when not traveling internationally.

Marsha Nouritza Odabashian has exhibited in galleries and museums in Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island, California and Louisiana and has works is in numerous collections.

EU nations unanimously agree to delay Brexit

EU nations unanimously agree to delay Brexit

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09:49,

YEREVAN, MARCH 22, ARMENPRESS. The United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the European Union (Brexit) will be postponed until April 12 if the UK parliament votes to reject the draft withdrawal agreement with Brussels, and until May 22 if the deal is approved, the EU summit said in its final statement, TASS reports.

“The European Council agrees to an extension until 22 May 2019, provided the Withdrawal Agreement is approved by the House of Commons next week”, it said. “If the Withdrawal Agreement is not approved by the House of Commons next week, the European Council agrees to an extension until 12 April 2019 and expects the United Kingdom to indicate a way forward before this date for consideration by the European Council”, the statement reads.

European Council President Donald Tusk told reporters in Brussels the United Kingdom accepted the European Union’s scenarios.

However, neither Tusk nor European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker could answer the question of how long the “long delay” may last.