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Lavrov comments on Zelensky’s announcement about possible large-scale war with Russia

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 20:29,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS. According to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation Sergey Lavrov, the statement of the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky about the danger of starting a war with Russia does not even deserve attention.

՛՛I think that statement is not even worth paying attention to. We are used to those vulgar statements, which are full of anti-Russian sentiment’’, ARMENPRESS reports, citing Ria Novosti, Lavrov said.

The Russian Minister expressed regret that Zelensky, who came to power under completely different slogans and received support also in eastern Ukraine, now declares that anyone who lives in Ukraine but considers himself a Russian, should go to Russia.

Earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that he considered a large-scale war with Russia possible.




Chess: Champions Showdown: Levon Aronian defeated by Garry Kasparov

News.am, Armenia
Sept 10 2021

In the fifth round of Champions Showdown Chess 9LX in St. Louis, Levon Aronian competed with world’s 13th champion, 58-year-old Russia-based Garry Kasparov, who played with black figures and won in the 66th step.

In the first four rounds, the 38-year-old Armenian chess grandmaster defeated Hikaru Nakamura, was defeated by Peter Svidler, tied the match with Fabiano Caruana and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave.

With 2 points, Aronian shares the 7th-8th places with Shakhriyar Mamedyarov.

In the remaining 4 rounds, Aronian’s opponents will be Wesley So, Sam Shankland and Leinier Dominguez.

The tournament will end on September 11. The prize fund is $150,000, and the winner will receive $37,500.

Armenia PM returns to Yerevan, greeted by members of Security Council at airport again

News.am, Armenia
Sept 9 2021

The official visit of Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan to Georgia is over, the press service of the Government of Armenia reports.

Pashinyan returned to Yerevan, and again, he was greeted by members of the Security Council at Zvartnots International Airport. Although this isn’t mention in the government’s official press release, the photos posted on the government’s website serve as evidence of this.

“During the visit, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had meetings with Prime Minister of Georgia Irakli Garibashvili and President Salome Zourabichvili, paid tribute at the Heroes Square in Tbilisi and attended the official lunch served on behalf of the Prime Minister of Georgia and in honor of the Prime Minister of Armenia.

Nikol Pashinyan held high-level talks with Irakli Garibashvili and discussed the agenda of Armenian-Georgian relations. One of the key issues was the prospect for opening an era of stability, peace and development in the region. The interlocutors agreed to expand the Armenian-Georgian partnership and promote regional dialogue through joint efforts and programs. In this context, the Prime Minister of Armenia had an effective meeting with the President of Georgia as well.

The Prime Minister’s official visit to Georgia ended with a non-formal meeting with the Prime Minister of Georgia in Batumi where the Prime Minister of Armenia was told about the programs for growth of tourism and the actions aimed at improving infrastructures. The Armenian and Georgian counterparts expressed satisfaction with the talks and agreed to continue the active contacts officially and unofficially.

This evening, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan returned to Yerevan,” the press release states.

https://news.am/eng/news/662052.html


Film: ​Fortress: Shooting of new film co-produced by Armenia kicks off in Sicily, Italy

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 7 2021

Fortress: Shooting of new film co-produced by Armenia kicks off in Sicily, Italy

September 7, 2021, 10:58 1 minute read


The shooting of the full-length feature film Fortress directed by Jessica Woodworth and co-producer of the Armenian side Angela Frangyan has started in Sicily, Italy. The film is a co-production between Armenia, Belgium, Italy, Bulgaria and the Netherlands, the Armenian National Cinema Center informs.

Armenia has both financial and creative participation in the film, which stars Armenian actor Samvel Tadevosyan, Hollywood actress Geraldine Chaplin and others.

Co-producer of the Armenian side Angela Frangyan says: “When I was told that Jessica Woodworth was in Armenia a looking for a “fixer,” a person that would look locations and accompany the team, I immediately agreed, thinking that it was a good opportunity to show my favorite places to the famous director. The Armenian lands became a real inspiration for the director. Later, they invited me to the Netherlands and offered to be their co-producer, even though I had no experience with such a large project.”

“Everything in Armenia seems to be beyond any specific time and place, this is a unique attraction,” Jessica Woodworth says.

In March 2021 Eurimages announced support to the film.



Taliban fighters open fire to disperse anti-Pakistan protest in Kabul

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 12:50, 7 September, 2021

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. The Taliban opened fire to disperse an anti-Pakistan protest in Afghanistan’s capital of Kabul, TASS reports citing the France Presse news agency.

According to the news outlet, about 70 people gathered in front of the Pakistani embassy in the Afghan capital, “waving posters and chanting anti-Pakistan slogans”.

Taliban fighters are reported to have “fired in the air several times in order to disperse dozens of Afghans protesting against Pakistan’s interference in Afghanistan’s affairs”.

Russia, Armenia agree to continue efforts to remove irritants between Baku and Yerevan

TASS, Russia
Aug 31 2021
"We are convinced that all problems must be resolved by political and diplomatic means only," Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said after talks with his visiting Armenian counterpart, Ararat Mirzoyan

MOSCOW, August 31. /TASS/. Moscow and Yerevan have agreed to continue efforts to remove mutual irritants in relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Tuesday after talks with his visiting Armenian counterpart, Ararat Mirzoyan.

Lavrov said that during the talks they discussed the implementation of the November 9, 2020, trilateral agreements of the Russian, Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders that made it possible to stop the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. "We agreed not to relax attention to the efforts geared to remove mutual irritants in relations between Yerevan and Baku, including the final solution to the problem of the release of Armenian prisoners and sharing mine location maps, and reiterated the importance of further activities of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs," he said.

The situation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border has been tense since May 12, when Armenia’s defense ministry said that Azerbaijani armed forces had tried to carry out "certain works" in a border area in Syunik Province in a bid to "adjust the border." Since then, the sides have been reporting border incidents from time to time.The two top diplomats exchanged views on the situation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border outside the zone of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. "We are convinced that all problems must be resolved by political and diplomatic means only and a lasting settlement is possible only through the delimitation and demarcation of the border. The Russian president’s initiative on this matter is well known. We spoke today about how to ensure its swift implementation. We reiterated our readiness to promote this process," Lavrov stressed.

The minister expressed the hope that the activities of the trilateral working group co-chaired by the Russian, Armenian and Azerbaijani deputy prime ministers to unblock transport and economic ties in the South Caucasus would create a reliable basis for political settlement and prosperity of the entire region.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, 2020, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. On November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh. Under the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the engagement line in Nagorno-Karabakh and along the Lachin corridor that connects Armenia with the enclave to exercise control of the ceasefire observance. Apart from that, a number of districts came over to Baku’s control.

Armenian church in Malatya hosts first religious service since 1915 as a culture center

Sept 3 2021

The Surp Yerrortutyun (Holy Trinity) Armenian Church in Malatya, in east-central Turkey, on August 29 hosted its first religious service since the Armenian genocide of 1915, Turkish Minute reported.

According to Alin Ozinian’s story, Holy Trinity Church – built in the second half of the 18th century — was renovated by the Malatya Metropolitan Municipality and reopened as the Taşhoran Culture and Art Center. “From now on, the Armenian sanctuary will serve as a cultural center and the Armenian community will be allowed to hold liturgical, baptism and wedding ceremonies,” a statement released by the municipality said.

After 106 years Surp Yerrortutyun, which was long in ruins and had been closed for congregational use since 1915, reopened its doors to worship.

The restoration, which began in 2012, was halted due to a lack of funding and then restarted and completed under the auspices of Malatya Mayor Selahattin Gürkan.

The Benevolent Malatya Armenians Association (HAYDER), established in 2010 in Istanbul, provided financial support for the restoration of the church’s altar, dome and baptistery and also participated in designing the renovation.

Armenians from across the country attended the opening ceremony and the first Sunday service at the church, located in the neighborhood where assassinated Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant Dink had grown up, which was held with the participation of Armenian Patriarch of Turkey Sahak Maşalyan.

Yetvart Danzikyan, editor-in-chief of the Agos weekly newspaper, thinks it would be better if the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul had done the renovation but said it was financially impossible.

“The church opened as a culture and arts center. While it isn’t an ideal formula, maybe we should look at the bright side of things and accept this as the ‘salvation of the church.’ In Turkey, hundreds of churches are being destroyed and turned into ruins. The church in Malatya has somehow been renovated,” Danzikyan told Turkish Minute in a phone interview.

Armenian Patriarch in Turkey Maşalyan and Grigoriyos Melki Urek, deputy patriarch and the metropolitan bishop of Adıyaman, as well as Malatya Mayor Gürkan and Malatya Governor Aydın Baruş attended the opening ceremony.

“The opening of the Surp Yerrortutyun Church is a milestone for this region. For the Armenians of Malatya, this is a feast day,” said the Armenian patriarch.

According to Danzikyan, similar steps have been taken before, such as the reopening of the 10th-century Akhtamar Church situated on an island in Lake Van in eastern Turkey, but unless these steps are supported politically, we should not expect further progress in Turkish-Armenian relations.

In 2006 the Turkish government carried out a rehabilitation project to preserve the historical identity of the Akhtamar Church. In 2007 the church was opened to visitors as a museum. In 2010 the government decided to open the church for religious ceremonies once a year.

“I don’t think the opening of the Surp Yerrortutyun Church is a milestone or that it will have a hugely positive effect on Turkish-Armenian dialogue. But eventually the new Turkish generation living in Malatya will learn that Armenians once lived there,” said Danzikyan.

There have been ongoing concerns about the preservation of Armenian cultural and religious sites in Turkey. In January 2020 a 19th-century Armenian church was put up for sale on a Turkish real estate website. On January 26 Agos reported that an Armenian church dating to 1603 in the western province of Kütahya that was on the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism’s preservation list was demolished after it was acquired by a private party.

Another Armenian church, also named Surp Yerrortutyun (Holy Trinity), will serve as the “World’s Masters of Humor Art House” as part of a project to establish a “humor village” in central Turkey’s Akşehir district.

Aris Nalcı, an Istanbul-Armenian journalist based in Brussels, thinks the renovation was a success for HAYDER, which was able to establish good relations with the Malatya Metropolitan Municipality.

“Although the church opened under the name of a culture center, it seems that the government will allow Armenians to perform religious ceremonies there. HAYDER exerted great efforts for this project. Malatya Armenians living outside Malatya are still deeply attached to the city. Even though a few Armenians still live there, people who left Malatya during the ’70s and ’80s still visit Malatya to preserve their culture,” Nalcı said.

According to Armenian sources, there is a tiny Armenian community of 60 people in Malatya at the moment; however, there are several Armenians and Islamized Armenians who live in the city using Turkish names whose numbers are not clear.

The aim of the establishment of HAYDER in 2010 was to reunite the Malatya Armenians scattered all over the world with their hometown and to repair the Armenian cemetery in the city. This goal was accomplished, and the cemetery was landscaped and reopened in 2013.

“The renovation of the church is a positive step, but I don’t see it as an important move for regional tourism or Turkish-Armenian dialogue. Moreover, I am now skeptical of every step Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) government takes,” said Nalcı.

According to Nalcı, the AKP, like previous Turkish governments, is not interested in the protection of Armenian culture in Turkey. “The church was not reopened as a church, an important indication of the political atmosphere in Turkey. As long as it remains a culture center, the Armenian patriarch will not be able to even appoint a priest to the church. If everything had been done correctly, the church would have reopened as a church and a cross would have been installed there.”

However, Garabed Orunöz a board member of HAYDER, said in an interview with the Turkish press: “The patriarchate will not appoint a clergyman to the church, but Father Avedis Tabasian of the Hatay Samandağ Church will perform the rites and ceremonies in Malatya. He will go to Malatya from time to time to carry out his duties.”

According to Danzikyan the Turkish government does not have a general policy of preservation for Armenian historical monuments and churches. “It seems that this renovation was the result of an initiative taken by the Armenians of Malatya. With the help of their good relations with the governor and the mayor, they developed a cooperation and succeeded in securing their church. But other places of Armenian heritage in different Turkish cities are unfortunately at the mercy of treasure hunters, and the government is not willing to take any steps in these areas,” he said.

In recent years countless reports have emerged of sacked ancient churches and cemeteries in Turkey and houses that have collapsed due to excavations for contraband treasure. Looters dig into and destroy Armenian churches in the hope of finding treasure; however, what they sometimes find are ancient coins, bibles and crosses to be sold in illegal black-market auctions.

Book: Destiny of Dreams: New historical novel highlights deeply ingrained fortitude and resolve of the Armenian people

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 26 2021
Destiny of Dreams: New historical novel highlights deeply ingrained fortitude and resolve of the Armenian people 

Amidst chaos in Afghanistan, the Syrian refugee crisis, and increasing firefights along the Armenian-Azerbaijan border in Asia, Quiet Thunder Publishing releases a new book highlighting the deeply ingrained fortitude and resolve of the Armenian people, now scattered across the globe, PR Newswire reports.

“Destiny of Dreams: Time Is Dear” marks the first historical novel from acclaimed nonfiction author Cathy Burnham Martin. Starting in the early 1900s, past and present link within a painfully poignant, true story of an Armenian family struggling to survive extraordinary chaos and violence in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire. The haunting, new novel follows the Gulumian family, one of thousands who struggled amidst the first genocide of the 20th Century.

In telling the author’s own family story, the characters breathe life into the realities of political and social upheaval. K.C. Finn, a Readers’ Favorite reviewer says, “Author Cathy Burnham Martin is a master at storytelling, balancing the darker and more disturbing aspects of the story with hope and positivity.”

The unrest at the time eerily parallels modern-day struggles with intolerance, serving up a vital reminder of the importance of remembering even the harshest events in our history. The author adds, “I hope my labor of love puts a relatable face on man’s inhumanity to man. No culture should ever forget the painful chapters in history, or we risk repeating them in future generations.”

Indies Today notes, “The elegantly intertwined journey through time periods intersects in ways both heartbreaking and heartwarming. Two stories unified by one spirit, ‘Destiny of Dreams: Time Is Dear’ is not simply a story of strife, but it is a beautiful portrayal of faith, inner strength, and dignity.”

A choice read for history buffs, “Destiny of Dreams: Time Is Dear” provides a fast read with 276 pages in the paperback. Though some explicit descriptions and a couple of disturbing, though not graphic, violent scenes may be unsuitable for young readers, the retiring Chief Medical Officer of Concord Hospital, Dr. David Green observed the book’s cultural and sociopolitical relevance, stating that this “should be required reading for all American high school students.”

Japan seeks to further deepen cooperation with Armenia

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 16:47, 26 August, 2021

YEREVAN, AUGUST 26, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Japan Motegi Toshimitsu sent a congratulatory message to Ararat Mirzoyan, on the occasion of assuming the position of the Foreign Minister of Armenia, the Armenian foreign ministry said.

“Your Excellency,

I would like to heartily congratulate your Excellency on appointment as Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia.

For Japan, Armenia is an important partner in building an international order that is free and open, based on the rule of law. Cherishing the historical connections of both nations, I wish to further deepen cooperation in the wide range of fields like IT, digitization, culture and so on.

The next year will be a milestone of the 30 years anniversary of establishing diplomatic relations between our two countries and I hope that bilateral relations will furthermore expand and develop under close cooperation with your Excellency in future”, reads the letter of the Japanese FM.

Armenian Prime Minister sees “some positive signals” from Turkey over regional peace

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 11:41, 27 August, 2021

YEREVAN, AUGUST 27, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan says he sees some positive public signals coming from Turkey in terms of regional peace.

“We will evaluate these signals and we will respond to positive signals with a positive signal,” Pashinyan said during the Cabinet meeting.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan