Armenia wins second bronze at 2019 Military World Games

Armenia wins second bronze at 2019 Military World Games

Save

Share

 16:08, 25 October, 2019

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 25, ARMENPRESS. Armenia Gymnastics Team’s Arthur Avetisyan has won bronze at the 7th Military World Games organized by the International Military Sports Council (CISM) in China.

Avetisyan scored 14,533 points in the rings event of artistic gymnastics and won bronze.

This is the second bronze of Armenia at the 2019 Military World Games, first being won by freestyle wrestler Mher Markosyan.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




EAEU-China trade deal enters into force as sides adopt joint statement in Moscow

EAEU-China trade deal enters into force as sides adopt joint statement in Moscow

Save

Share

 18:00, 25 October, 2019

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 25, ARMENPRESS. During today’s session of the Eurasian Inter-governmental Council in Moscow the heads of government of the EAEU member states adopted a joint statement with China relating to the entry into force of the trade-economic cooperation agreement.

The joint statement highlights the importance of the EAEU-China multisectoral partnership.

The statement was made on behalf of the Prime Ministers of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and China.

The agreement creates a legal base between the Eurasian Economic Union and China for economic cooperation. It is not in the format of a free trade agreement, doesn’t envisage decrease or elimination of custom duties. The agreement aims at raising the level of transparency of the regulation system, facilitating the trade procedures, as well as developing the commercial ties.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Sports: Armenian football team players licensed as part of Konami PES 2020

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 26 2019

Sport 13:29 26/10/2019 Armenia

The Armenian Football Federation announced on Friday it has signed an agreement with Konami for the club players to appear in PES 2020 and future games. Among individual players to appear in the esport competition are Tigran Barseghyan, Marcos Oizelli, Kamo Hovhannisyan.

According to the source, months ago the an agreement was reached with the Japanese company according to which the Armenia team was licensed as part of PES 2020. After long negotiations another agreement was reached to expand the scope of cooperation. The Football Federation will organize a PES 2020 competition with winners expected to represent Armenia in the new e-Football.Open international tournament in 2020 in London.

To note, eFootball.Open is an esports tournament open to all players, competing exclusively in online 1v1 matches replaces the previous PES League competition.

Asbarez: Turkish Authorities Ban Hrant Dink Foundation Conference

Kayseri’s Surp Krikor Lusavorich Armenian Church

ISTANBUL—An international conference on “Social, Cultural and Economic History of Kayseri and the Region,” which was set to take place at the Hrant Dink Foundation’s Havak Hall from October 18 to 19, has been banned.

Initially, the conference was organized to take place in Kayseri, Turkey, yet was banned due to the interference of the local government. Consequently, the Hrant Dink Foundation’s Board of the Directors made the decision to move the conference to Istanbul.

As conference organizers were patiently waiting for the start of the conference, and speakers from Turkey and all around the world had already arrived in Istanbul, when, on Thursday, October 17 an official notice was delivered by the Sisli District Government to the foundation – the conference was banned from taking place in Kayseri. However, the notice does not mention any justification for the decision made.

The foundation released a statement explaining their decision to move the conference to Istanbul. The full statement is available below:

“The conference on ‘Social, Cultural and Economic History of Kayseri and the Region’, to take place at the Hrant Dink Foundation’s Havak Hall on October 18-19, has been banned!

As has been closely followed by the public, the conference had been initially planned to take place in Kayseri, yet was banned due to the interference of the Kayseri Governorship. Upon this development, the Board of the Directors of our Foundation decided to hold the conference in Istanbul.

At a time when all the preparations have been made, all speakers from Turkey and all around the world have already arrived in Istanbul for the conference to take place tomorrow; today on October 17th, Thursday at 17:08, an official notice of ban was given by the Sisli District Governorship to the Foundation, which does not mention any justification for the ban decision.

We regret to announce that the conference on ‘Social, Cultural and Economic History of Kayseri and the Region’, which was supposed to take place in light of the valuable scientific contributions by numerous scholars from Turkey and abroad, has been banned.”

Asbarez: Armenian Embassy to Host Book Event for Karanian’s ‘Armenian Highland’

Author Matthew Karanian

WASHINGTON—The Armenian Embassy in Washington, D.C. will host a book event for author Matthew Karanian’s “The Armenian Highland.” The event will take place on Thursday, October 24 at 7 p.m.

Karanian will illustrate the book talk with his photography from the lands of both Western and Eastern Armenia – lands that, for millennia, have been known collectively as the Armenian Highland.

Karanian brings these ancient Armenian lands alive in his book through a masterful combination of storytelling, historic maps, and more than 200 photographs – both modern and ancient.

The result is a book that proudly showcases an Armenia that has rarely been seen since 1915.

Admission to the private event at the Armenian Embassy is by invitation. Karanian will also present “The Armenian Highland” at a pair of public events in the Washington area on October 26 and 27.

The Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society of Washington, D.C., will host Karanian at 7:30 p.m., Saturday, October 26, at Soorp Khatch Armenian Apostolic Church, located at 4906 Flint Dr., Bethesda, MD 20816.

Karanian will also present an author talk at 1 p.m. on Sunday, October 27, at St. Mary Armenian Apostolic Church, located at 4125 Fessenden St NW, Washington, D.C. 20016.

“The Armenian Highland” book cover

Admission to each of the events is free, and the author will be available to sign copies of “The Armenia Highland” following each presentation. The book is an oversized, hardcover edition with more than 300 pages.

Additional details are available online.

168: Zhoghovurd Armenian newspaper: Unprecedented and “original” misuses at Hayastan All-Armenian Fund, there are elements of crime

Category
Politics

“The Audit Chamber of the Republic of Armenia has released the results of the audits conducted at Hayastan All-Armenian Fund in the period between August 29, 2018 and September 30, 2019. Zhoghovurd Armenian newspaper was informed that both the amounts and types of the detected misuses were unprecedented.

One of the “original” misuses is, for instance, the “made up” expenses for generator fuel used during the two-and-a-half-hour concert that the rock band System of a Down gave in Armenia on April 23, 2015. The presented funds for that concert were as much as the funds that would have been spent, if the same rock band had given a concert for about 89 hours.

The domestic appliances for the apartments of socially disadvantaged families and the equipment for capitally renovated schools and kindergartens were obtained for AMD 23,609,100 under signed contracts, but sold to the Fund for about AMD 40,000,000.

The list of these “original” misuses goes on and on. The Audit Chamber told Zhoghovurd Armenian newspaper that it had doubts about prima facie elements of crime in the Fund’s transactions during the audits.

You can read the whole article in today’s edition of the newspaper.




Armenpress: Pashinyan thanks Armenian community of LA for warm welcome

Pashinyan thanks Armenian community of LA for warm welcome

Save

Share

 01:39,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who is in the United States on a working visit, met with the executives of the Armenian community’s structures of California.

The meeting was attended by nearly 70 people, Armenia’s Honorary Consuls in Fresno and Las Vegas, as well as spiritual representatives of the Armenian community.

The Armenian PM delivered welcoming remarks at the meeting.

“Dear colleagues,

Heads of structures of the Armenian community in California,

Spiritual fathers,

I am very happy for our today’s meeting. This is really an important meeting which was planned since last year, and I can state that from the first moment of getting out of the airport I feel the environment that is formed these days by the Armenian community of Los Angeles, and I want to thank first of all for this atmosphere and readiness. It turned so that today I will have many occasions to talk, and I would like to be more in the role of a listener or a respondent at today’s meeting because I am going to deliver a thorough speech during today’s public rally. At this moment I want to say that I am very happy for this occasion, of course, we met with most of you at different occasions, but today we are meeting with such an extended format for the first time. I hope we will have another occasions to meet to discuss more concrete and practical issues. I would like to listen to you, and if you have questions, I will answer all of them with pleasure”, the PM said.

The meeting participants welcomed the Armenian PM in Los Angeles and stated that they are excited with Pashinyan’s visit, with the possibility to meet with him and discuss issues related to the Motherland, the Armenia-Diaspora ties.

In response to the questions, the PM introduced the vision on implementing the pan-Armenian agenda and the idea of pan-Armenianism, talked about the figures of Armenia’s economic development and the positive trends, the economic activity rates, tourism, touched upon the settlement process of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, the ongoing structural reforms in judiciary, public administration system, etc.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




EU and EBRD-supported investment fund to invest 70 million EUR in Armenian economy

EU and EBRD-supported investment fund to invest 70 million EUR in Armenian economy

Save

Share

 21:47,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 20, ARMENPRESS. The European Union (EU) and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) provided up to EUR 16 million to support the launch of the Amber Capital EU-Armenia SME Fund (the Fund), a private equity fund seeking to raise a total of EUR 70 million for investment in small and medium-sized enterprises in Armenia, ARMENPRESS was informed from EBRD office in Armenia.

The Fund will be managed by Amber Capital, an international investment firm with an established office and team of professionals in Armenia, and will seek to build a diversified investment portfolio across sectors including renewable energy, agriculture, manufacturing, tourism, information technology and logistics.

Through its equity investments, the Fund will seek to enhance the competitiveness of beneficiary SMEs including through improving corporate governance and transparency and helping them to internationalise. The facility also includes capacity-building consultancy offered to local enterprises, through the EU-supported EBRD Advice for Small Businesses programme, to enhance the investment readiness and promote competitiveness of the SMEs.

“The EU is a key partner for economic development and prosperity in Armenia”, said Katarina Mathernova, Deputy Director-General for Neighbourhood Policy and Enlargement Negotiations at the European Commission. “The EU is proud to be adding a new innovative tool to unleash the potential for SME development in Armenia, creating jobs and providing concrete benefits to the people. We are confident that the EU-Armenia SME Equity Fund will support the growth and competitiveness of the Armenian economy, attract foreign direct investment and help further develop innovation based on the talents of Armenians”.

Armenian government has started building an innovative and inclusive economy, where small and medium-sized enterprises will play an important role. In this period of fundamental changes, the newly established EU-Armenia SME Equity Fund will contribute significantly to the economic advancement of the country and will create new opportunities for entrepreneurs”, said Tigran Avinyan, Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia.

“Armenia has strong history of entrepreneurship and a huge entrepreneurial potential. We are excited to support the launch of this private equity fund that will help to diversify the financing opportunities available to SMEs. This project will also help to improve the investment climate and overall diversification of the economy. We are grateful to our long-standing partner, the EU for the strong support of this project”, said Matteo Patrone, EBRD Managing Director of Eastern Europe & Caucasus.

“We are very excited to be a part of this initiative, pioneering the concept of institutional private equity in Armenia. The Fund will bring together the best of the two worlds: the highest quality investor base and strategically important corporate clients to create strong and long-lasting partnerships. We aim to become a catalyst for change with the introduction of best corporate governance standards, technology transfer and development of capital markets”, said Anush Simonyan, CEO of Amber Capital Armenia.

The EU is the biggest provider of financial support and a key reform partner in Armenia that provides on average 1 million euro per week to contribute to a stronger governance, stronger economy, stronger connectivity and people to people contacts. With annual allocations of €40 million in grants, its current substantial portfolio focuses on supporting the reform agenda of the government, private sector development, education and regional development. In addition, since 2014 more than €1 billion in the form of blended loans and grants has been invested in the energy, agriculture and transport sectors. The EBRD is the leading institutional investor in Armenia, active in all sectors of the economy. Since the start of its operations in Armenia in 1992, the EBRD has invested €1.36 billion in 178 projects in the country’s financial, corporate, infrastructure and energy sectors, with 90 per cent of investments in the private sector.

Amber Capital EU-Armenia SME Fund is created to promote the development of SMEs in Armenia through the first Armenia only equity fund.

EU provided a commitment of 11 million EUR through a partial guarantee scheme that has allowed to attract private investors to the fund, and 4 million EUR for the provision of expertise to Armenian SMEs.

EBRD provided commitments of up to EUR 5 million • Amber Capital provided commitment of up to EUR 5 million.

The fund will provide financing to strengthen the competitiveness of Armenian SMEs and support their access to international market, in particular EU.

USC Institute of Armenian Studies Will Celebrate 15 Years of Innovation and Education

For Immediate Release
 
 

 
 
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 Will Celebrate 15 Years of Innovation and 
Education
 
Tucked in between the School of International Relations and the Political 
Science and Policy departments at USC, the USC Institute of Armenian Studies 
punches above its weight as it engages with the resources of a global 
university, and targets the intellectual and strategic needs of the Armenian 
nation and the Republic of Armenia.
 
On September 29, 2019, the USC Institute of Armenian Studies Leadership Council 
will host a gala at the Beverly Hilton Hotel to celebrate 15 years of 
championing education, innovation, and thoughtful change. Guests will hear 
about the mission and current projects of the Institute, and will be offered 
the opportunity to take part in and support programs that look to the future 
(armenian.usc.edu/2019gala). 
 
“We ask -- What are the grand challenges facing Armenia and Armenians -- and we 
develop research and programming around the search for answers,” explains Salpi 
Ghazarian, who has been director of the Institute since 2014.  
 
The Institute was conceived and created by a group of Los Angeles community 
leaders who, together, represent the entire community. All of the major 
institutions and segments of the community believed in the need to create and 
support an intellectual center that would feed the needs of all segments of the 
community and the nation.  This is reflected in the composition of the 
Institute’s Leadership Council, who, to this day, lead the work of securing the 
resources to allow the Institute to flourish. The members are: Diane Cabraloff, 
Charles Ghailian, Vahe Karapetian, Michael Kazanjian, Frank Melkonian, Prof. 
Donald Miller, Lori Muncherian, Gerald Papazian, Sinan Sinanian, Hon. Dickran 
Tevrizian, Savey Tufenkian.  Also part of the Leadership Council were the 
recently deceased, and much-beloved Dr. Mihran Agbabian and John Berberian.
 
Chaired by entrepreneur and community leader Charles Ghailian, the Leadership 
Council continues to enlarge the Institute’s support base and welcome a new 
generation of donors and thinkers to ensure the Institute’s longevity. 
 
In the first decade, under Professor Hrair Dekmejian’s leadership, there were 
several conferences held in conjunction with various community entities. 
Although the Institute is not a teaching Institute, Professor Dekmejian 
initiated several classes that offer students an opportunity to learn about 
history and culture, as part of their university studies.
 
Over the last five years, the Institute has broken new ground by strategically 
funding research in areas that are crucial to Armenia’s experience, and 
creating massive, world-class platforms where the research and intellectual 
conversation can take place, among qualified specialists and with an eager and 
curious audience. 
 
Among the most notable of these programs were two events: The first was called 
“Celebrity Diplomacy: Redefining Armenia’s Role in the Diaspora.” Then, weeks 
following what has come to be called Armenia’s Velvet Revolution, the Institute 
convened a second program, inviting political scientists and activists to 
participate in a second program entitled “Now What? Armenia Tomorrow.”  The 
programs featured newly elected Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, newly selected 
President Armen Sarkissian, former speaker of Georgia’s parliament David 
Usupashvili, in addition to others from all over the world who were present 
virtually. Both events were live-streamed in both English and with Armenian 
translation and were watched by 16,000 people around the world.
 
Institute Associate Director Syuzanna Petrosyan is responsible for the 
Institute’s global outreach. “These live presentations, together with thousands 
of attendees, ensure that each speaker, each expert, each scholar, and each 
program is taken beyond Southern California, and to policy and change makers 
around the world,” she says. 
 
Many of the speakers who are invited to participate are from among the three 
dozen researchers around the globe who have been supported by the Institute and 
its donors as they  study  Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. Scholars from Brazil, 
China, Poland, the US, and of course, Armenia, went to the region to explore 
and write about the economy, health care, education, foreign policy, women’s 
issues among a host of topics. “This is an important contribution to broadening 
the discourse in the international media and academia and provide data-based 
research to policy makers in Armenia,” said Dr. Lilit Keshishyan, a research 
associate at the Institute. In October, the Institute will announce a special 
and very timely call for research, this one entitled, “From a Democratic 
Breakthrough to Challenges of Consolidation in Armenia.” 
 
“The world was very interested in how and why the Velvet Revolution happened.  
That interest continues, but it’s important to do the research that begins to 
offer answers,” says Institute Deputy Director Shushan Karapetian.  
 
As new generations of diasporan Armenians come of age, they will not only need 
access to knowledge but also new knowledge to sustain their complicated 
identities in the societies that they live in. The Institute’s Digital Diaspora 
Initiative is creating, gathering, digitizing, and making accessible materials 
that comprise the Armenian Diaspora experience with the aim of not only further 
integrating the Armenian experience within a global context, but providing new 
generations access to their own histories. 
 
“This is our story.  Diaspora history is an integral part of world history, 
California history, local histories, and it’s up to us to ensure that the 
historic record includes this last eventful century and its incredible 
experiences -- beginning with attempted destruction of a nation, yet ending 
with statehood. There are not enough studies of this unbelievable trajectory,” 
said Ghazarian.
 
As part of the initiative, the Institute has been conducting oral histories of 
Armenians in the Diaspora and collecting photographs and other relevant 
documents representing the experiences of interviewees. The “Displaced Persons 
Documentation Project”  includes 30 recorded video interviews and 1000+ 
collected and scanned images, documenting the experiences of the displaced 
Armenians of WWII who worked in forced labor in Germany and were eventually 
granted refuge in the U.S. The larger diaspora project, an ongoing endeavor, 
continues to document the experiences of individuals who have had a hand in 
shaping diaspora communities and whose stories shed light on these communities, 
past and present.
 
The Institute’s public programming is possibly best recognized through the 
INNOVATE ARMENIA festival of ideas and action. Always live-streamed in two 
languages, it is the most direct way to provide access to the wealth of 
knowledge that exists in and about the Armenian world. The 4,000 people who 
attend include many students and young professionals who seek new ways to 
connect to the Armenian experience, and to understand it in a comparative 
context, especially in Los Angeles, where so many Diasporas converge and face 
similar challenges.
 
Another way the Institute appeals to this young generation of 21st century 
Armenians is through fun and interesting podcasts. “Podcasts are like your own 
personal radio station. It is an attractive compelling space where knowledge 
about all aspects of the Armenian experience are shared through conversations 
with the professors and researchers who spend their lives studying  language, 
history, immigration, education -- and all of it is presented through the story 
of their lives,” explains Sareen Habeshian, the Institute’s Media Content and 
Operations Manager. 
 
You can listen to the podcasts by visiting armenian.usc.edu/podcasts or 
searching for the USC Institute of Armenian Studies on iTunes, Spotify, 
SoundCloud 
(https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__soundcloud.com_user-2D799767374&d=DwIGaQ&c=clK7kQUTWtAVEOVIgvi0NU5BOUHhpN0H8p7CSfnc_gI&r=LVw5zH6C4LHpVQcGEdVcrQ&m=qSL88ClMFxXzG9kJVevmb_ywbfKhMc8mywmCPzdtgEI&s=dEwsk9PbcSjrrNGmiCBGElO-6VUPzGjPJbsFMtAmA3g&e=
 ) or anywhere you get your podcasts.]  
 
Roughly one year ago, the Institute embarked on a critical search for the 
stories of those who were directly engaged in Armenia’s independence movement.  
Recording the memories of the actors in the independence years offers a window 
to the events, circumstances, and personalities that led to the incredibly 
difficult years and decades that followed. 
 
“We want to record causes, motivations, circumstances and external factors that 
explain what happened and what went wrong,” said Associate Director Syuzanna 
Petrosyan. 
 
“UNDERSTANDING INDEPENDENCE: Oral Histories of Armenia 1988 - 1994” consists of 
long-form high quality video interviews with the participants of the 
independence movement, including environmentalists, political activists, 
members of the Karabakh Committee, journalists, teachers. The memories recorded 
on video, as well as personal mementoes, photos, notes, journals, and 
unofficial personal correspondence are digitized and secured for history. All 
of the material is made digitally available to provide sources for scholars, 
artists, filmmakers, and researchers worldwide. The digital archive will be 
incorporated into the USC Digital Libraries while the hard copies will be 
housed at the National Library of Armenia.
 
This is not the only Armenia-based program.  Soon, the USC Tacori Center will 
be open as a  unique regional retreat and conference center, open year-round to 
host students, journalists, scholars, and artists to work and create together.
 
Continuing for the second year, the Institute’s pioneering POLICY FELLOWS 
program brings mid-career civil servants from Armenia to the City of Los 
Angeles, where in cooperation with the office of Councilmember Paul Krekorian, 
they are placed in similar City positions to exchange knowledge and gain new 
perspectives.
 
“All of these programs are about the nation’s and the republic’s challenges -- 
identifying them and tackling them using the resources of a world class 
university, and a passionate, committed community. We look forward to many more 
decades of good work together,” concluded Ghazarian.
 
 
 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.