Անթիլիաս – Ն.Ս.Օ.Տ.Տ. ԱՐԱՄ Ա. ԿԱԹՈՂԻԿՈՍ ՄԵԾԻ ՏԱՆՆ ԿԻԼԻԿԻՈՅ ԿԱԹՈՂԻԿՈՍՈՒԹԵԱՆ «ԱՍՊԵՏԻ ԿԱՐԳ»Ի ՇՔԱՆՇԱՆՈՎ ՊԱՐԳԵՒԱՏՐԵՑ ՏԻԿ. ՄԷԹԹԻ ՏՈՒՄԱՆԵԱՆԸ

Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
PO Box : 70 317 Antelias – LEBANON
Tel: (+961-4) 410 001 / 3
Fax: (+961-4) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]


Ն.Ս.Օ.Տ.Տ.
ԱՐԱՄ Ա. ԿԱԹՈՂԻԿՈՍ  ՄԵԾԻ ՏԱՆՆ ԿԻԼԻԿԻՈՅ ԿԱԹՈՂԻԿՈՍՈՒԹԵԱՆ
«ԱՍՊԵՏԻ ԿԱՐԳ»Ի ՇՔԱՆՇԱՆՈՎ ՊԱՐԳԵՒԱՏՐԵՑ ՏԻԿ. ՄԷԹԹԻ ՏՈՒՄԱՆԵԱՆԸ

 

Շաբաթ, 26 Յունուար
2019-ի երեկոյեան, յարգելով Կաթողիկոսարանի եւ Թռչնոց Բոյնի, ինչպէս նաեւ Ամերիկայի
Արեւմտեան թեմի Ազգային Առաջնորդարանի նուիրատու տոքթ. Գրիգոր Տումանեանի յիշատակը,
Ն.Ս.Օ.Տ.Տ. Արամ Ա. Վեհափառ Հայրապետը  Մեծի
Տանն Կիլիկիոյ Կաթողիկոսութեան «Ասպետի կարգ»ի շքանշանով պարգեւատրեց անոր այրին՝ Տիկ.
Մէթթի Տումանեանը։ Պարգեւատրման ներկայ էին Ամերիկայի Միացեալ Նահանգներու Արեւմտեան
թեմի Առաջնորդ Գերշ. Տ. Մուշեղ Արք. Մարտիրոսեանը, ինչպէս նաեւ Տումանեան ամոլին զաւակները՝
Տոթք. Կրեկ Տումանեանն ու Նենսի Տումանեան Փանոսեանը։

 

Խօսելով Կաթողիկոսութեան
երկար տարիներու բարեկամ եւ բարերար Տումանեան ընտանիքին մասին, Վեհափառ Հայրապետը
գնահատեց անոր ցուցաբերած նախանձախնդրութիւնը եկեղեցւոյ հանդէպ՝ մաղթելով, որ Տումանեան
ընտանիքը շարունակէ Աստուածահաճոյ իր ծառայութիւնը՝ աջակցելով եկեղեցւոյ առաքելութեան։

 

 


Communication & Information Department

Expert says NK conflict settlement without Artsakh’s participation is impossible

Expert says NK conflict settlement without Artsakh’s participation is impossible

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15:36,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. The negotiation process for the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict cannot have any progress without the participation of Artsakh, Ruben Safrastyan – Director of the Institute of Oriental Studies, said during a press conference, reports Armenpress.

“I have no major expectations that a new development will take place in 2019 in the negotiation process on the Artsakh conflict. I don’t think there are preconditions for that. The negotiation process can become real only when Artsakh becomes a main participant of the negotiation process. Therefore, I don’t think that we will see real developments in the Artsakh conflict”, the expert on Oriental studies said.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




New investments to be made in Armenia (video)

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan continues the meetings with the businessmen and investors of different countries on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos.

On the second day of the Forum Pashinyan met with Arne Sorenson, President and CEO at Marriott International, Inc, during which the opportunities to expand the company’s activities in Armenia were discussed. PM Pashinyan highly valued the company’s activity in Armenia and stated that the Marriott hotel is very popular in Armenia. The PM said the Armenian government is interested in developing and expanding the famous international hotel network in the country.

Arne Sorenson informed that currently they are discussing issues on implementing investment programs by the Marriott International and opening new hotel as a result. The company CEO attached importance to the Armenian government’s steps aimed at improving the business environment and expressed confidence that these activities will contribute to the effective implementation of the programs.

During the meeting with CEO of the Russian Direct Investment Fund Kirill Dmitriev, the Armenian PM noted that there are good opportunities and conditions for investments in Armenia after the recent changes. He said the government is ready to assist the ongoing programs of the Fund and discuss the possibilities for implementing new investment projects.

Kirill Dmitriev introduced Pashinyan on the process of ongoing programs in the fields of agriculture, industry and energy, adding that the Fund will continue the policy of implementing new programs in Armenia. He stated that given the new opportunities in Armenia, they are going to take actions to bring their international partners to Armenia.

The Armenian PM also met with the CEO of Corporation America Martin Eurnekian during which they discussed the upcoming investment programs in aviation and other sectors of Armenia. In particular, they touched upon the expected works in Yerevan’s Zvartnots, Gyumri’s Shirak airports, the future management and development of HayPost CJSC, as well as the plans related with the previous building of the Armenian foreign ministry located in the Republic Square.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/21/2019

                                        Monday, 

Trump Congratulates Pashinian, Urges Karabakh Peace


Belgium - U.S. President Donald Trump and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian talk during a NATO summit in Brussels, 11 July 2018.

U.S. President Donald Trump stressed the importance of resolving the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict when he congratulated Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
on winning Armenia’s recent parliamentary elections.

“Congratulations on your appointment as Prime Minister of Armenia and your 
coalition’s success in the December 9, 2018 parliamentary elections,” Trump 
said in a letter made public by Pashinian’s press office at the weekend.

“The United States supports a prosperous, democratic Armenia at peace with its 
neighbors,” he wrote. “Together, we can make progress on deepening trade 
between our countries, strengthening global security, and combating corruption.”

“A peaceful solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will help these efforts,” 
added Trump.

Visiting Yerevan in October, Trump’s national security adviser, John Bolton, 
said Washington expects Pashinian to take “decisive steps” towards a Karabakh 
settlement after his widely anticipated victory in the snap elections. 
Pashinian should have a “very strong mandate” to reach a compromise peace deal 
with Azerbaijan, Bolton said after talks with the Armenian leader.

Pashinian’s My Step bloc won as much as 70 percent of the vote in the 
elections. The U.S. Embassy in Armenia was quick to praise the conduct of the 
vote, echoing its positive assessment by European observers.

The U.S. has long been spearheading, together with Russia and France, 
international efforts to end the Karabakh conflict. Diplomats from the three 
world powers co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group have organized and attended four 
meetings of the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in the last six 
months.

The mediators seemed encouraged by the most recent of those meetings which took 
place in Paris on January 16. In a joint statement, they said Foreign Ministers 
Zohrab Mnatsakanian and Elmar Mammadyarov “agreed upon the necessity of taking 
concrete measures to prepare the populations for peace.”

The Minsk Group co-chairs also said that they will visit the region soon to 
meet with Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Aliyev and Pashinian spoke to each other for the first time on the sidelines of 
a summit of former Soviet republics held in Tajikistan in September. There has 
been a significant decrease in ceasefire violations around Karabakh and along 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani border since then.

The two leaders talked again during another ex-Soviet summit that took place in 
Russia in early December. Aliyev said afterwards that the year 2019 will see a 
“new impetus” to the Karabakh peace process.



Most Armenian Ministers Reappointed

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Ministers at a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, January 17, 2019.

The Armenian ministers of defense, finance and foreign affairs as well as eight 
other members of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s cabinet have been formally 
reappointed to their posts.

President Armen Sarkissian signed relevant decrees on Saturday more than one 
month after Pashinian’s My Step bloc swept to a landslide victory in 
parliamentary elections that completed last spring’s “velvet revolution” in 
Armenia.

In another decree, Sarkissian appointed Zaruhi Batoyan as minister of labor and 
social affairs. She has served as a deputy minister in the same agency until 
now.

Batoyan, 39, is the first new minister in Pashinian’s post-election cabinet. 
She is also its sole female member so far.


Armenia - Zaruhi Batoyan, the newly appointed minister of labor and social 
affairs.

The cabinet members who have kept their jobs also include senior My Step 
figures such as Education Minister Arayik Harutiunian and Local Government 
Minister Suren Papikian as well as Justice Minister Artak Zeynalian. The latter 
is a leading member of a pro-Western bloc that challenged My Step in the 
December 9 elections.

The reappointed Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan, Finance Minister Atom 
Janjughazian and Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian are technocrats not 
affiliated with any party or bloc.

Two of Armenia’s three deputy prime minister, Tigran Avinian and Mher 
Grigorian, were reappointed last Wednesday.

Pashinian indicated on Thursday he has still not made a final decision on the 
structure of his government. He said he will therefore name only two-thirds of 
his ministers for the time being.

In a live Facebook address aired the following day, the premier reaffirmed his 
intention to reduce the number of government ministries, saying that will make 
the executive branch more efficient and less susceptible to corruption. He 
specifically defended the widely anticipated closure of the Diaspora Ministry 
and the Culture Ministry’s merger with the Education Ministry.

Ever since he came to power in May Pashinian has repeatedly pledged to downsize 
the state bureaucracy, saying that it is bloated and inefficient.

A tentative government bill circulated last month calls for reducing the number 
of ministries from 17 to 12. It sparked street protests in December by hundreds 
of Diaspora and culture ministry employees fearing a loss of their jobs.

Some public administration experts question the wisdom of having fewer 
government ministries. They say that the new “super ministries” would only slow 
down the work of the state apparatus.


Armenia - Bright Armenia party leader Edmon Marukian speaks at an election 
campaign rally in Masis, November 28, 2018.

Also, some opposition groups, notably the Bright Armenia Party (LHK), have 
criticized Pashinian’s apparent reluctance to curtail his sweeping executive 
powers inherited from the country’s former leaders. The controversial bill 
would keep Armenia’s police, National Security Service (NSS) and tax and 
customs services accountable to the prime minister, rather than his cabinet or 
the parliament.

These agencies were directly controlled by the presidents of the republic under 
the previous, presidential system of government. Former President Serzh 
Sarkisian made sure that they will be subordinate to the prime minister when he 
enacted controversial constitutional changes that turned Armenia into a 
parliamentary republic.

Sarkisian planned to stay in power as prime minister after serving out his 
second presidential term in April 2018. Pashinian, Edmon Marukian and other 
leaders of the now defunct Yelk alliance accused him of introducing a “super 
prime-ministerial” system of government with the aim of maintaining a tight 
grip on power.

Marukian, who leads the LHK, again demanded last week that the police, the NSS 
and the State Revenue Committee (SRC) be turned into ministries. “Public 
attention is focused on the Diaspora and culture ministries but the key thing 
here is the police, the NSS and the tax collection body, which must be placed 
under a parliamentary oversight,” he told reporters.



Provincial Governors Under Fire Over Bonuses

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia - Garik Sargsian, the mayor of Nor Kyank village, April 14, 2017.

Opposition lawmakers condemned on Monday Armenian provincial governors for 
paying themselves and their staffers lavish yearend bonuses.

The governors of at least three provinces -- Ararat, Armavir and Syunik -- 
reportedly received financial rewards equivalent to their monthly salaries. 
They all have been in office for less than a year.

According to the Hetq.am investigative publication, Ararat’s Garik Sargsian 
paid himself an extra 690,000 drams ($1,420) late last month. He earns 660,000 
drams per month.

A member of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, Sargsian was 
the mayor of a village in Ararat before being appointed as regional governor in 
June. He famously claimed to have sold a car belonging to the village 
administration to save local funds and used a bicycle to ride to work.

Representatives of the two opposition parties represented in the Armenian 
parliament denounced the bonuses as unethical and profligate.

“This is unacceptable to us,” said Ani Samsonian of the Bright Armenia Party. 
“I think that after this outcry the governors should reconsider their 
approaches because paying such lavish bonuses from the state budget … is 
inadmissible.”

Sergey Bagratian, a Prosperous Armenia Party deputy who had served as a 
governor, said while the bonuses are not illegal it is morally wrong for the 
governors to reward themselves.

“Only the lowest echelons [of provincial administrations,] whose salaries are 
low, should get bonuses,” Bagratian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “I never 
rewarded myself.”

Lena Nazarian, a deputy parliament speaker representing Pashinian’s My Step 
alliance, also disapproved of the governors’ decisions. She said that they 
should have been “more modest in paying themselves bonuses.”

But Lilit Makunts, the leader of My Step’s parliamentary faction, was less 
categorical. “If the law allows that, does not forbid that, I can’t speak out 
against it,” she told reporters.

Still, Makunts said the parliament majority should discuss the issue and 
consider legally restricting the governors’ ability to get extra pay at will.

Minister for Local Government Suren Papikian, who supervises the provincial 
administrations, also defended the governors when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service later on Monday. He said that the bonuses are one way to partly offset 
a big pay gap between public and private sector employees.

“Once a year a governor can be rewarded with a relevant government body’s 
permission,” he said.

Papikian at the same time criticized Sargsian, the Ararat governor, for getting 
a bonus exceeding his monthly salary. “I had a phone conversation in connection 
with that and I think that the relevant government body will take steps or at 
least give explanations,” added the minister.



Moscow, Baku Spar Over Azeri Travel Ban For Armenians


AZERBAIJAN -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (R) and Azerbaijani 
Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov attend a ceremony in Baku, November 20, 2017

A diplomatic spat between Russia and Azerbaijan intensified over the weekend, 
with Baku continuing to refuse to allow Russian citizens of Armenian descent to 
visit the South Caucasus country.

The Azerbaijani government has long maintained a travel ban for not only 
Armenia’s citizens but also ethnic Armenians from other countries because of 
the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. It considers any Armenian presence on 
Azerbaijani soil a security risk.

On January 11, Russia renewed its demands for the lifting of the ban for its 
ethnic Armenian citizens. The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria 
Zakharova, said the “blatant violation” of their rights is “incompatible with 
friendly ties between the two countries.”

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry rejected Zakharova’s remarks as “provocative” and 
“anti-Azerbaijani.” The ministry defended the travel ban, blaming it on 
Armenia’s “policy of aggression against Azerbaijan.”

The Azerbaijani ambassador in Moscow, Polad Bulbuloglu, claimed, for his part, 
that ethnic Armenians are not allowed into his country for the sake of their 
own security.

The Russian Foreign Ministry condemned the Azerbaijani statements as “going 
beyond the bounds of diplomatic propriety.” “Depending on a meaningful reaction 
of the Azerbaijani side, we will decide our further steps,” it warned in a 
statement issued on Friday.

Baku remained defiant, saying that the Russian statement amounts to an 
ultimatum and contradicts “the basis of strategic relations between Azerbaijan 
and Russia.”

According to Zakharova, there were at least 16 cases of Russian nationals 
denied entry to Azerbaijan “on ethnic grounds” in 2018. The most recent of them 
was reported late last month. Kristina Gevorkyan, an ethnic Armenian holder of 
a Russian passport, said that she was held in detention at Baku’s Heydar Aliyev 
international airport for 13 hours before being deported to Russia.




Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


Armenia convict serving life sentence dies

News.am, Armenia
Jan 6 2019
Armenia convict serving life sentence dies Armenia convict serving life sentence dies

11:15, 06.01.2019
                  

Armenak Mnjoyan, who was serving a life sentence in Armenia, has died.

“Armenak Mnjoyan was 54 years old,” reads, in particular, the respective statement posted on the Free Arsen Arzrouni Facebook page.

Mnjoyan’s health condition grew worse on Thursday morning, at the Nubarashen penitentiary in capital city Yerevan. He was hospitalized having suffered a heart attack and swelling of the lungs.

Armenak Mnjoyan was arrested in 1995, and in 1996, he was sentenced to death.

But in 2003, and by a decree of the President of Armenia, Mnjoyan’s death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment.

Turkish Press: Lena Chamamyan reflects her culture with latest song ‘I am Syrian’

Daily Sabah, Turkey
Jan 4 2019
ANADOLU AGENCY
ISTANBUL

Syrian artist of Armenian origin Lena Chamamyan is considered one of the best singers of her generation. Chamamyan, who blends traditional songs of the Middle East with Western instruments and interprets them in a unique style, started her music career with a concert that she gave at the age of 5. The artist, whose father is from Kahramanmaraş province while her mother is from Mardin province, told Anadolu Agency (AA) that Istanbul has a very special place for her, and she is always pleased to come to the city.

Explaining that many of her works that remind people of Damascus and Aleppo take place in Istanbul, Chamamyan added, "Istanbul has a special color and taste. This taste reflects on Turks and Syrians who live in Istanbul. Besides, people listen to music so much here. They have a fine ear for music. Wherever I go in Istanbul, the music played in streets and cafes are so quality."

The young artist remarked that she is planning to give a concert in Istanbul again soon, after the tickets of her latest concert in the city were sold out very quickly.

Performing mostly in Arabic and Armenian, Lena Chamamyan has also worked on French and English songs recently. 

"I was so surprised when I saw the attention of the people in Istanbul in my first concert here in 2013. Although I perform only Arabic and Armenian songs, the interest was great. When I look at social media, I see that my songs are shared most from Istanbul. Mostly Turks share them not Arabs or Syrians living here," she continued.

'Music is a reflection of each person's soul'

Lena Chamamyan emphasized that the works that she prepared with jazz, folk, oriental, fado, Sufi, African and Latin melodies carry traces of the Armenian culture, in which she was born and raised, underlining that she is always in search of innovation in music.

Adding that music is a reflection of each person's own soul, the young singer stressed, "In my works, I can never leave aside the paintings in my mind and the sounds in my ear because of the culture I have. For me, these become an integral part of Eastern and Western music. If I have to explain, I try to reflect what is happening in my mind to my music." When the young artist was trained in classical Eastern music and began to sing her works for the first time, she was criticized by classical music artists. She stated, "As time passed, I could understand better why they had criticized me. They thought that adding a new note into Arabic music destroy its sacredness. In the beginning, my family objected me to become a musician. When they see I am successful, they gave me support."

Highlighting that she was trained by European and Russian musicians, Chamamyan mentioned that she provides education in order to transfer her own culture's music to future generations.

'I tried to go beyond the usual in everything I did'

The artist, who released her first album "Hal Asmar Ellon" in 2006, said, "After the 2000s, concerts were held in historical places in Syria. I was a student at that time. As a student, I took the stage in these concerts with various bands. After the concerts, many listeners started to ask me whether I have an album or not. This request helped me release my first album. If something is born in the heart and produced sincerely, it really reaches out to the hearts of listeners. I could not only do with Eastern music or only Western music in my life. I have always tried to go beyond the usual in everything I do."

Noting that she is working on French and English songs, Chamamyan said, "I will reflect the Eastern music in these works as well. I will release my new projects as not albums but singles because they are of many different types. I do not want to collect them into one album. I will be in the studio for my latest song 'I am Syrian.'"

'We need to protect our identity'

The artist, who lives in Paris, also touched upon the issue of the civil war in Syria.

"Life is very difficult for those who are in Syria and migrate from Syria to other countries because nothing is the same as before. Nothing is left. However, I realized that our identity would be lost, and if this identity was destroyed, then there would be no country called Syria. Therefore, we need to protect our identity."

Chamamyan asserted that she understood better during the time she spent in Europe that Eastern culture contains a great richness.

"I saw that in the West that everyone has respect for each other even though they have a different point of view. They continue to live together but the situation is not the same in the East now. We need to learn about living together first. Everyone should do whatever they can do to realize this aim. Music is always constructive. But this situation cannot be fed by only art or music. They cannot save or support alone. "

 

Letter to Editor of Lowell Sun, MA: Iran has respected Armenia, and deserves respect

Lowell Sun, MA
Dec 29 2018


LETTER

The Lowell Sun

Updated:   12/29/2018 06:35:56 AM EST

The Armenian Weekly reported on the U.S. announcing new sanctions on Iran on nuclear weaponry by the Trump Administration, whereby under the Obama Administration an agreement on that issue was already made and agreed to by Tehran and the world powers back in 2015.

Armenia has vowed vigilance on this issue, since Armenia has a close relationship with Iran on trade, etc. On top of this, Armenia has been burdened by anti-Armenian countries such as Turkey and Azerbaijan, which have committed genocide and numerous atrocities against Armenia through the years. Iran has been peaceful and respectful nation with the Armenian people.

STEPHEN DULGARIAN

Chelmsford



Metal Mining Banned in Jermuk

Basic Materials & Resources Monitor Worldwide
Thursday
Metal Mining Banned in Jermuk
 
 
Direct democracy won another victory in Armenia. On December 18, 2018 Jermuk Community Council adopted a decision to approve the collective petition of its community members on Declaring Jermuk an ecological economic area and banning metal mining in the community.
 
The decision was adopted with 7 votes FOR, 0 votes against, 0 abstained, and was guided by the following legal provisions: the Law of the Republic of Armenia on Local Self-Governance, article 18, point 1, sub-point 42; the Law of Republic of Armenia on Petitions, article 4, part 1, point 3, as well as guided by the principles of the local self-governance prescribed by the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia, article 184, part 3 and the Law on Local Self-Governance, article 8.
 
Earlier in November and December 2018, the overwhelming majority of the de facto population of Jermuk exercised their rights for direct democracy and presented a collective petition supported by about 3000 signatures to the Government of Armenia, the Community Council of Jermuk, and the Head of the Community where they presented their own economic vision of the development of their region and demanded that all metal mining be banned in Jermuk and green, ecologically friendly economy boosted.
 
The signatories of the petition also mentioned:
 
By approving gold mining at Amulsar the former governments have violated our right for participation in the decision-making. Up until 2016 Jermuk the largest town in our community was not recognized as an impacted community by the Amulsar project. After 2016, when Jermuk was finally recognized as an impacted community, no public hearings, as prescribed in the law, were held in Jermuk. Lydian company and the former governments of Armenia have ignored us, they have tried to mislead or intimidate us. We demand that the new government respects the will of the people, and it is with this hope that we present this petition.
 
The Government of Armenia has not yet responded to the demands of the petition.
 
Community members of Jermuk have been blockading roads to the mining site for more than 6 months already, exercising their right to peaceful assembly, and demanding to stop all mining related activities at Amulsar.
 
P.S. Earlier this year, in May 2018, the Community Council of Noyemberyan adopted a similar decision which banned all mining exploration and exploitation activities in their community. That decision, too, was adopted based on the petition supported by 3074 members of the community. 2018 Global Data Point.

Spitak is the brilliant proof of what collective, progressive beautiful things humanity can do – Serj Tankian

Spitak is the brilliant proof of what collective, progressive beautiful things humanity can do – Serj Tankian

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18:59,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, ARMENPRESS.  U.S.-Armenian rock singer, soloist of “System of a Down” group Serj Tankian gave an interview to “Rolling Stone” magazine. ARMENPRESS reports to the question of the journalist if he is somehow connected with the 1988 earthquake of Spitak, the singer answered that his wife is a survival of the earthquake.

“My wife actually lived through the earthquake. She was in school when it happened, and luckily their building didn’t collapse. They were pretty close to the epicenter.

The years after the earthquake were the darkest days that Armenia had seen for a long time, because they were without power through heavy, cold winters. She’s told me stories of how they lit fires at school just to stay warm. Right after the earthquake, there were a lot of robberies, so crime went up. She has all these horrific stories of living without water or using only one hour of water a day. People would go, “Oh, shit, we just found out we’re going to have water in 20 minutes. Everyone run home.” You had to learn how to connect batteries so you could watch something on TV, ’cause there’s no power. My wife’s generation is unique. They know how to do everything”, Tankian said.

According to him, he was in the USA at that time and remembers going around door-to-door trying to fund-raise to send money to Armenia.

“If you go to Armenia now and go to Spitak, the city where the epicenter of the earthquake in ’88 was, you’ll see it’s such a unique city because each block, each street has completely different architecture, because one is built by the U.S., one by the Swedes, one by the Italians and another by the Germans. It is such a beautiful scene in that way. It’s really, really very emotional seeing that because it shows you what collective, progressive beautiful things humanity can do”, Tankian said.

Speaking about his future plans the rock singer said that he has some pieces intended for films.

“We have a few other soundtracks we’re going to release for films that we did a while back but never put out soundtracks for, such as The Last Inhabitant and Midnight Star, which is a video game. But I am working on a number of things right now, including Kavat Coffee, and I’m executive-producing two documentaries.

One is a film, I Am Not Alone, about the Armenian revolution. I met with the prime minister now and said, “We have to make a film about this. No one is going to believe that in 40 days, a post-oligarchic, monopolistic, corrupt regime has been replaced by a modern, progressive, democratic, true society without one person dying. No one’s going to believe that.” I’m going to compose for it as well.

I also have a music documentary I’m doing that’s tentatively called Truth to Power, looking through my eyes at how message becomes reality through the arts. Instead of focusing on me as an artist, it asks, how does one’s message come to fruition? Can music change the world? We’re shopping that and looking for co-production partners. We’re hoping it will be done by next year as well”, he said.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Azerbaijan Pushed to Jump the Gun? Is Armenia Starting?

Lragir, Armenia
Dec 20 2018

The spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has announced that the arms race must be prevented in the region, commenting on the sale of weapons to Azerbaijan, noting that while this is business for one country, it is a deadly instrument for our people. As is known, Russia described the sale of ammunition to Azerbaijan as business, in answer to the concerns of the Armenian side, and recently the president of Belarus Lukashenko has stated that this is business, and if the Armenians agree, he is ready to sell weapons to Armenians. Lukashenko said they he had proposed by Armenia refused, saying that it has Iskander rockets.

The comment of the spokesperson for the Armenian ministry of foreign affairs seems to be clear but the problem needs clarification. In particular, is this the official position of Yerevan to stop the race of ammunition in the region?

The point is that the representatives of the Armenian government expressed this thought two years ago, after the April war. Later the deputy foreign minister of Armenia Shavarsh Kocharyan spoke about it in one of his interviews with the European media.

Kocharyan said it is worth discussing the issue of total ban on weapons to the sides of the conflict. At the same time, he said it was his personal opinion. In other words, this was not a formal point of the policy of Yerevan.

It was a little strange, as well as it was strange that different officials in Yerevan stated that Azerbaijan is a terrorist state while the foreign minister and president of Armenia went on to discuss something with a terrorist state.

The ammunition race in the region intensified after Azerbaijan got the big chance provided by oil dollars. Baku started spending billions on buying ammunition. To say that Azerbaijan was getting armed only against Artsakh and Armenia to resolve the problems with weapons would be only one aspect of the issue.

No doubt Baku had such a purpose or is looking at this purpose. At the same time, Azerbaijan realizes that even if there is immense ammunition, obtaining the geopolitical right to use it will be essential. And here the problems become more deep and diverse. Azerbaijan achieved some success ahead of the April war in 2016 but, obviously, the success was not complete, and it was due to this that Azerbaijan did not go for putting to use its huge ammunition advantage.

The problem is not that Aliyev was stopped by deaths. Aliyev would have never stopped because of deaths. Aliyev did not go for larger scales because he did not have the geopolitical approval for that, he still does not have and most probably will not have in the nearest future. The reasons are many. Aliyev got the right to a blitzkrieg with Russia’s support, being well-aware that this agreement contains a bilateral “hidden intention” to let each other down. At the end of the day, both were “let down” by the Armenian army which crushed the hopes that the political wing of the ruling elite or rather wings, the governmental and the so-called non-governmental, had generated through its political and diplomatic shortcomings.

At the same time, the other two co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, especially Washington, encouraged Azerbaijan and Russia to jump the gun in order to discharge the regional situation.

Had Armenia had a legitimate government, after the April war the Armenian side would use the Azerbaijani-Russian mistake to gain substantial political-military positions.

Serzh SArgsyan did some things but as long and as much as his legitimacy allowed, as well as the issue of retention of power in 2011-2018. There was a possibility for more but there was not the essential for this, a great public legitimacy.

At the same time, at a quite crucial moment the police station standoff occurred further deepening the issue of legitimacy.

These circumstances led to the freezing of the situation, and it is not accidental that Baku was able to stop the series of meetings after Saint Petersburg, and the next one took place only 18 months later in Geneva where already the agenda of Vienna and Saint Petersburg were not mentioned.

The issue of ban on the race of weapons is perhaps one that could have been promoted after the April war. It is not too late. After all, this issue does not only worry or threaten Armenia and Artsakh. Azerbaijan’s spending of billions have other, maybe no less important purposes. Aliyev is trying to boost its potential to that of a regional power, on the one hand, imposing a pace of race that is beyond the ability of Yerevan, on the other hand, talking to the centers of power from a different angle.

Yerevan has potential interlocutors and has a possibility and goal to start a process of unfreezing the situation.