Film about Armenian violinist Ara Malikian named best documentary at Goya Awards

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 26 2020

Armenia continues following developments in Syria: Armenia’s PM

Aysor, Armenia
Oct 24 2019

Armenia continues following the developments in Syria, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan wrote on Facebook.

“We are happy to register that the arrangements in Sochi referred to the issues relating to the security issues of Syrian Armenians we discussed with Russian President Valdimir Putin,” the prime minister stressed.

“This emphasizes the strategic-allied nature of Armenian-Russian relations. We continue following the developments in Syria, continue our humanitarian mission and our assistance to the civil population,” Armenia’s PM stressed.

Armenian Assembly of America Welcomes Rep. Eshoo’s Letter to Her Colleagues in Support of the Armenian Genocide Resolution

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Date:

Contact: Danielle Saroyan Ashbahian

Telephone: (202) 393-3434

Web: www.aaainc.org

 

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF
AMERICA WELCOMES REP. ESHOO’S LETTER TO HER COLLEAGUES IN SUPPORT OF THE
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

 

Thanks
Reps. Bilirakis and Schiff’s Call for Immediate Passage of Resolution

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Armenian Assembly of America
(Assembly) welcomed Congresswoman Anna G. Eshoo’s (D-CA) “Dear Colleague”
letter calling for support of H.Res.296, the Armenian Genocide resolution.

 

“Members of my own family were among
those murdered. My mother escaped with my grandmother from Armenia, and my
father, an Assyrian Christian, was driven from the Middle East. Both carried
the terror of the atrocities of the Ottoman Turks for a lifetime,” Rep. Eshoo stated.
“As the only Armenian-Assyrian Member of Congress, I urge you to honor the
countless individuals who were taken and join 112 of your colleagues in
cosponsoring H.Res. 296, a bipartisan resolution formally recognizing the
Armenian Genocide.”

 

Rep. Anna Eshoo is the only
Armenian-Assyrian Member of Congress. Throughout her tenure in Congress, she
has been a tireless supporter of the proper recognition of Armenian Genocide
and a strong advocate of religious freedom around the world.

 

Rep. Eshoo pointed out that 49 U.S.
states and 14 NATO Allies have already formally recognized the murder of 1.5
million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire as genocide. Official records and
proclamations are documented on the Armenian National Institute’s website –
www.armenian-genocide.org.

 

“Thank you to the Armenian American community
and the Armenian Assembly of America for your active support every year to
reaffirm the Armenian Genocide.  Your
efforts make our relatives who survived the genocide proud, and together we can
ensure that their hardships and their families who were slaughtered in plain
view will not be forgotten. I am proud to join my fellow Armenians at the
annual Armenian Genocide commemorations on Capitol Hill, and look forward to
passage of this bill,” Rep. Eshoo told the Assembly.

 

“Armenian Americans appreciate
Congresswoman Anna Eshoo for being a role model and a strong leader to bring
justice to what so many of our ancestors overcame – the Armenian Genocide. We
encourage all Members to join in reaffirming America’s proud chapter of humanitarian
intervention in helping to save thousands of survivors of the Armenian
Genocide. The Armenian Assembly of America applauds the Congresswoman’s
efforts, and we will continue to push for passage of this legislation,” Assembly
Congressional Relations Director Mariam Khaloyan said.

 

Rep. Eshoo’s letter follows that of
Armenian Caucus leaders Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) and Adam Schiff (D-CA) who last
Friday urged the immediate passage of H.Res. 296.  They stated: “As we confront atrocities that
are being committed in the present day, it weakens our standing and our moral
clarity that the Congress has for too long been silent in declaring the events
of 1915 as a genocide. As Turkish bombs fall on Kurdish cities, extremist
groups backed by Turkey commit war crimes, and hundreds of thousands of civilians
flee for their lives, it is surely not lost on Turkish leaders that for decades
their campaign of lobbying and bullying has silenced the Congress from the
simple act of speaking the truth about the events of 1915.”

 

“We fully support passage of H.Res. 296
as Congressmen Bilirakis and Schiff have urged,” Khaloyan added.

 

H.Res. 296 was introduced this April by
Reps. Schiff and Bilirakis along with Reps. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), Peter
King (R-NY), and Jackie Speier (D-CA), and currently has 112 co-sponsors to
date. During the Assembly’s 2019 National Advocacy Conference last month, Armenian
Americans from across the U.S. met with Member of Congress urging its adoption.

 

Established in 1972, the Armenian
Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based nationwide organization
promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly
is a non-partisan, 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

 

###

NR# 2019-062

Available online:  

A1+: Little Armenia opens a big door for the world to become a stronger and more active part of the world – Aurora Forum co-founder (video)

Among the forums that were held, Aurora is perhaps the most original, optimistic and unique one, says forum co-founder Nubar Afeyan.

"Little Armenia opens a big door for the world to become a stronger and more active part of the world, and the world to be represented much more in Armenia and Armenians," said Afeyan, adding that the Aurora Forum aims to make Armenia place one of the international platforms, like Davos, New York, London and other developed countries, where important topics are discussed.

Within the framework of the forum today, a new international postage stamp by HayPost, featuring 2018 Aurora Prize Laureate Kyaw Hla Aung, was cancelled.

The Aurora stamp is issued in 12,000 copies valued at 350 AMD.

Aurora forum was held on , during the inaugural Aurora Forum, in the Kamar Business Center in Yerevan.


Armenian defense minister hosts US Congress members

Armenian defense minister hosts US Congress members

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 12:48, 8 October, 2019

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 8, ARMENPRESS. Defense Minister of Armenia Davit Tonoyan on October 7 hosted US Congresswomen, members of the Congressional Armenian Caucus Jackie Speier and Judy Chu, the ministry told Armenpress.

During the meeting the minister highlighted the constant support of the US Congress members aimed at strengthening the Armenian-American relations and introduced the guests on the process and prospects of the bilateral cooperation in the defense field. Minister Tonoyan expressed hope that the efforts of the Congressmen will contribute to further deepening the cooperation on this direction.

The meeting participants also discussed other issues of mutual interest.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenia to take pilot population census

ARKA, Armenia
Oct 4 2019

YEREVAN, October 4. /ARKA/. The government of Armenia will take a pilot population census in a number of communities to check out a new census methodology and its technical modalities, Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan said today.

Avinyan was quoted by his press office as saying that the population census is very important, because the collected and analyzed data will serve as a basis not only for developing a demographic policy, but also for the organization of electoral processes and planning of a socio-economic strategy. He said therefore, every effort should be made to ensure that the pilot population census is taken at high level and with accuracy.

Avinyan said not only the results of the census are important, but also the process itself, since it is an excellent exercise for developing state offices and identifying their omissions.

The pilot population census will be conducted in the Artik community of Shirak region and the communities of Aramus, Akunk, Kamaris and Mayakovski of Kotayk region. Avinyan asked the head of the National Statistical Committee to personally oversee the pilot population census. -0-



World’s largest Yezidi temple opens in Armenia

Rudaw, Kurdistan Region, Iraq
Sept 30 2019
World’s largest Yezidi temple opens in Armenia 
                                           
22 hours ago                                                                                                                                                          
Shahla Omar

First deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan used the occasion to draw comparisons between the tragic recent histories of Yezidis and Armenians.

“Unfortunately, in their modern history, Yezidis like Armenians have also fallen victim to genocide," Mirzoyan said in a Sunday statement.

"It is symbolic and logical that the largest Yezidi temple in the world is in Armenia. Armenia is home to the Yezidi people. The children of the Yezidi people have been alongside their Armenian brothers for many fatal and heroic moments,” he added.

Quba Mere Diwane was built just a few meters away from Ziarat, Armenia’s first Yezidi temple established in 2012. Funded by Armenian-born, Russia-based Yezidi businessman Mirza Sloian, the new, 25 meter-tall temple towers over its humble predecessor.

Yezidi communities traditionally resided in the Kurdish-majority areas of modern day northern Iraq and eastern Turkey. A sizeable Yezidi community was established in what is now Armenia in the 1820s, formed by those who fled the Ottoman Empire's persecution of non-Muslim minority groups.  Armenia’s last census, held in 2011, put the number of Yezidis in the country at over 35,000, making the ethnoreligious group Armenia's largest minority.

Persecution and the pursuit of refuge have continued to haunt Yezidis, most recently at the hands of Islamic State (ISIS) in Iraq and Syria.

Considered heretics by ISIS because of their faith, the community was subjected to particular violence by the militant group. Men were abducted and killed en masse, while women were trafficked and forced into sexual slavery. Thousands of Yezidis remain missing.

Of Iraq’s once 500,000-strong Yezidi community, some 100,000 have fled the country entirely – with a small number of them seeking refuge in Armenia – while 360,000 remain internally displaced.

Yezidi genocide in Iraq was recognized by Armenia’s parliament in January 2018.

Yezidi figures and advocacy groups have said temples like Quba Mere Diwane and the holy site of Lalish, which is currently undergoing restoration, act as sites of permanence amidst waves of displacement and help the group’s distinct cultural and religious practices from destruction.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/world/29092019
World’s largest Yezidi temple opens in Armenia                                            
22 hours ago  |  1,127 Views 2 Comments
Shahla Omar
Tags: Yezidis Armenia

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region  The world's largest Yezidi temple was opened Sunday in Armenia, where the ethnoreligious group are the largest minority, in a ceremony attended by the deputy prime minister and other Yerevan officials. 

Located in Aknalich, 35 kilometers west of the capital city of Yerevan, Quba Mere Diwane consists of seven domes surrounding a central, arched roof, and houses a prayer hall, a seminary, and a museum.

First deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan used the occasion to draw comparisons between the tragic recent histories of Yezidis and Armenians.

“Unfortunately, in their modern history, Yezidis like Armenians have also fallen victim to genocide," Mirzoyan said in a Sunday statement.

"It is symbolic and logical that the largest Yezidi temple in the world is in Armenia. Armenia is home to the Yezidi people. The children of the Yezidi people have been alongside their Armenian brothers for many fatal and heroic moments,” he added.

Quba Mere Diwane was built just a few meters away from Ziarat, Armenia’s first Yezidi temple established in 2012. Funded by Armenian-born, Russia-based Yezidi businessman Mirza Sloian, the new, 25 meter-tall temple towers over its humble predecessor.

Yezidi communities traditionally resided in the Kurdish-majority areas of modern day northern Iraq and eastern Turkey. A sizeable Yezidi community was established in what is now Armenia in the 1820s, formed by those who fled the Ottoman Empire's persecution of non-Muslim minority groups.  Armenia’s last census, held in 2011, put the number of Yezidis in the country at over 35,000, making the ethnoreligious group Armenia's largest minority.

Persecution and the pursuit of refuge have continued to haunt Yezidis, most recently at the hands of Islamic State (ISIS) in Iraq and Syria.

Considered heretics by ISIS because of their faith, the community was subjected to particular violence by the militant group. Men were abducted and killed en masse, while women were trafficked and forced into sexual slavery. Thousands of Yezidis remain missing.

Of Iraq’s once 500,000-strong Yezidi community, some 100,000 have fled the country entirely – with a small number of them seeking refuge in Armenia – while 360,000 remain internally displaced.

Yezidi genocide in Iraq was recognized by Armenia’s parliament in January 2018.

Yezidi figures and advocacy groups have said temples like Quba Mere Diwane and the holy site of Lalish, which is currently undergoing restoration, act as sites of permanence amidst waves of displacement and help the group’s distinct cultural and religious practices from destruction.

President Rouhani Due in Armenia to Attend Eurasia Summit

Iran Front Page
Sept 29 2019

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani arrives to address the 74th session of the United Nations General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York City, New York, US, Sept 25, 2019.

Iran’s president is to travel to Armenia to take part in the summit of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) in Yerevan on October 1, 2019.

Hassan Rouhani is scheduled to deliver a speech at the event, which will also be attended by his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin.

According to Rouhani’s deputy chief of staff for communications and information, Parviz Esmaeili, the president will address the EAEU high-profile summit on Tuesday.

“In addition to delivering a speech at the summit and discussing Iran’s extensive potential and capabilities for trade cooperation with the EAEU, the president will hold bilateral meetings with Armenian prime minister and other senior officials,” said Esmaeil.

The most important issues regarding Tehran-Yerevan relations, as well as the latest status of the implementation of joint agreements and projects, will be discussed during the meetings, he noted.

On the sidelines of the summit, President Rouhani will also hold separate meetings with a number of participating leaders to exchange views on topics of mutual interest, as well as regional and international developments.

A high-ranking politico-economic delegation will be accompanying Rouhani on this visit, said Esmaeili, adding that the president will return to Tehran on Tuesday night.

Rouhani’s participation at the EAEU summit was confirmed by Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan on Sept. 7, who said in an interview that “we have a wide-scale agenda with Iran, and we are looking for frameworks and effective ways for cooperation in the fields of regional security, development of infrastructure, and energy diversity to reach a positive result that would benefit all of our countries.”

“Armenia’s membership at the EAEU will provide the condition for us to expand cooperation with Iran, as well as Singapore and Egypt,” he had noted.

The EAEU meeting of leaders in Yerevan is a major regional event which is said to help Tehran increase its non-oil exports amid US sanctions.

The invitation came more than a month after Iran ratified a parliamentary bill to launch a free trade zone with EAEU members, namely Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Armenia and Kyrgyzstan.

The agreement is expected to hugely boost Iran’s trade transactions with countries to the north of a region in northern Asia and Eastern Europe called Eurasia.

At UN, a world stage for disputes often out of the spotlight

Associated Press
Sept 28 2019
At UN, a world stage for disputes often out of the spotlight

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The Middle East. Trade tensions. Iran’s nuclear program. Venezuela’s power struggle. Civil wars in Syria and Yemen. Familiar flash points such as these got plenty of airtime at the U.N. General Assembly’s big annual gathering this week.

But some leaders used their time on the world stage to highlight international conflicts and disputes that don’t usually command the same global attention.

A look at some of the less-discussed controversies trying to be heard:

___

NAGORNO-KARABAKH

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan landed one of the coveted first few speaking slots, and he devoted a bit of his wide-ranging speech to a clash in the Caucasus: a standoff between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

The mountainous, ethnic Armenian area of about 150,000 people is recognized as part of Azerbaijan in U.N. Security Council resolutions dating to the 1990s. But Nagorno-Karabakh and some neighboring districts have been under the control of local ethnic Armenian forces, backed by Armenia, since a six-year separatist war ended in 1994.

Both Azerbaijan and Turkey have closed their borders with Armenia because of the conflict, cutting trade and leaving Armenia with direct land access only to Georgia and Iran.

Russia, the U.S. and France have co-chaired the so-called Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, attempting to broker an end to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

In speeches and rebuttals at the General Assembly, Armenia and Azerbaijan accused one another of misstating history, disrespecting human rights and standing in the way of a settlement.

___

NORTH MACEDONIA

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ “state of the world” address was largely a grim one , but he pointed to a few matters moving “in promising directions” — among them relations between Greece and the new Republic of North Macedonia.

Greece and what the U.N. cumbersomely used to call the “Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia” sparred for nearly three decades over the latter’s name. It was adopted when the nation, which has a current population of about 2.1 million, declared independence from the former Yugoslavia in 1991.

Greece said the use of “Macedonia” implied territorial claims on its own northern province of the same name and its ancient Greek heritage, not least as the birthplace of ancient warrior king Alexander the Great. Athens blocked its Balkan neighbor’s path to NATO and EU membership over the nomenclature clash.

It became “infamous as a difficult and irresolvable problem,” in the words of now-North Macedonian Prime Minister Zoran Zaev.

Repeated rounds of U.N.-mediated negotiations proved fruitless until June 2018, when the Skopje government agreed to change the country’s name to North Macedonia. The switch took effect this February.

European Council President Donald Tusk said this month that North Macedonia is now ready to start EU membership talks. It expects to become the 30th NATO member soon.

The deal has been contentious within both countries, though, with critics accusing their governments of giving up too much. Regardless, North Macedonia’s prime minister highlighted it with pride from the world’s premier diplomatic podium.

“We can see nothing but benefits from settling the difference,” Zaev said, calling it “an example for overcoming difficult deadlocks worldwide.”

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis didn’t dilate on the deal, saying only that his country supports EU bids by all the western Balkan countries if they respect their obligations to the EU and their neighbors.

___

WESTERN SAHARA

A mostly desert expanse along the northwest coast of Africa, Western Sahara has been a center of friction between Morocco and Algeria for almost half a century.

Morocco annexed the phosphate- and fishing-rich former Spanish colony in 1975, then fought the Algerian-backed Polisario Front independence movement until 1991, when the U.N. brokered a cease-fire and established a peacekeeping mission to monitor the truce and facilitate a referendum on the territory’s future.

The vote has never happened. Morocco has proposed wide-ranging autonomy for Western Sahara, while the Polisario Front insists that Western Sahara’s Sahrawi people — a population the independence movement estimates at 350,000 to 500,000 — have the right to a referendum.

Last year, the U.N. Security Council called for stepping up efforts to reach a solution to the dispute.

A U.N. envoy brought representatives of Morocco, the Polisario Front, Algeria and neighboring Mauritania together last December for the first time in six years, followed by a second meeting in March. But the issue of how to provide for self-determination remains a key sticking point.

The envoy, former German President Horst Kohler, resigned in May for health reasons.

At the General Assembly, Moroccan Prime Minister Saad-Eddine El Othmani said his country’s autonomy proposal “is the solution,” while Algerian Foreign Minister Sabri Boukadoum reiterated hopes for Western Sahara residents “to be able to exercise their legitimate right to self-determination.”

____

CYPRUS

A U.N.-controlled buffer zone that cuts across the city of Nicosia evinces a fraught distinction: Cyprus is the last European country to have a divided capital.

After 45 years, could that finally change? There’s “a glimmer of hope,” Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades told to the assembly.

The eastern Mediterranean island has been split into an internationally recognized Greek Cypriot south and a breakaway Turkish Cypriot north since 1974, when Turkey invaded following a coup by supporters of uniting the island with Greece. Turkey continues to maintain more than 35,000 troops in the northern third of the island, which only Turkey recognizes as an independent state. The U.N. also has a peacekeeping force in Cyprus.

Tensions have ticked up lately, particularly over natural gas exploration in waters in the internationally recognized state’s exclusive economic zone. Turkey is also drilling there, saying it’s defending Turkish Cypriots’ rights to energy reserves.

On-and-off talks about reunification have spanned decades.

Greek Cypriots have rejected Turkish Cypriots’ demands for a permanent Turkish troop presence and veto power in government decisions in a future federated Cyprus. Turkish Cypriots, meanwhile, want parity in federal decision-making, believing they would otherwise be relegated to junior partners to the majority Greek Cypriots.

A U.N. envoy made a shuttle-diplomacy effort in recent weeks in hopes of paving the way for formal talks, and Anastasiades suggested in his General Assembly speech there was some agreement on starting points for potential discussion. But he also complained that Turkey’s drilling and other activities “severely undermine” the prospect of negotiations.

Turkey’s Erdogan, meanwhile, complained about “the uncompromising position” of the Greek Cypriots.

___

BELIZE-GUATEMALA

It’s been a big year in a centuries-old argument between Belize and Guatemala.

Guatemala claims more than 4,000 square miles (10,350 square kilometers) of terrain administered by Belize — essentially the southern half of Belize. It’s an area of nature reserves, scattered farming villages and fishing towns, and some Caribbean beach tourism destinations.

The dispute’s roots stretch to the 19th century, when Britain controlled Belize and Spain ruled Guatemala.

Guatemala, which became independent in 1821, argues that it inherited a Spanish claim on the territory. Belize considers Guatemala’s claim unfounded and says the borders were defined by an 1859 agreement between Guatemala and Britain (Belize remained a British colony until 1981).

The land spat has strained diplomatic relations and at times even affected air travel between the two Central American countries.

Belize and Guatemala agreed in 2008 to ask the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Netherlands, for a binding ruling. Guatemalans voters gave their assent to the plan in a referendum last year, and Belizeans gave their approval this May.

Guatemalan President Jimmy Morales celebrated the developments in his General Assembly speech.

“This is a milestone for Guatemala, for Central America and for the world,” he said, emphasizing the peaceful process toward resolving the disagreement. “Currently, bilateral relations between Guatemala and Belize are the best they’ve ever been.”

Belize hasn’t yet given its speech.

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Jennifer Peltz is covering the U.N. General Assembly for The Associated Press. Follow her on Twitter at @jennpeltz.

https://www.apnews.com/67a1cc578ce64a1082cbfd42015fbcb2