Sports: Henrikh Mkhitaryan: “I want to leave my name in Arsenal as a legend”

Panorama, Armenia

Armenian national football team and Arsenal midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan spoke about his previous football clubs and the Arsenal transfer in an interview with FourFourTwo.

The Armenian international noted that it was thanks to his father that he got interested in football, reports Panorama.am.

“When I went to Brazil at 13 years old it was not easy being far away from your home, your parents and family, but, of course, the only thing you had to understand [was] that if you wanted to become a football player, you had to handle it,” he said.

Mkhitaryan also talked about the days spent in Metallurg and Shakhtar Donetsk.

Speaking about his transfer to Arsenal, the footballer said he was eager to play for the club since he wanted to enjoy playing attacking football. 

"I will try my best for the club to achieve as much as we can. I want to leave my name in Arsenal as a legend because it’s not easy to come to a team where you have been dreaming of playing for since you were a child," Mkhitaryan said.  

Eurovision: Armenia’s Sevak Khanagyan concludes first rehearsal

Eurovision TV

Sevak Khanagyan, who represents Armenia at the 2018 Eurovision Song Contest, just finished his first rehearsal on stage. He will represent his country with the song 'Qami'.

Singer-songwriter Sevak Khanagyan was born in 1987 in Metsavan, Armenia. On the 25th of February he won the Armenian national selection Depi Evratesil with his song Qami, leading both the international jury vote and the televote.

The song Qami is written by Anna Danielyan, who Sevak coached in the 2017 The Voice of Armenia, and by Victoria Maloyan. The music was composed by Sevak Khanagyan himself.

Sevak's rehearsal starts with calm white lighting, with red and white lights flashing halfway through the song. Sevak is on the stage all by himself, without backing singers or dancers, which adds to the power of the performance.
The impressive prop structure on stage also adds to the strength of Sevaks' performance, as he stands in the middle of the stage surrounded by monoliths in various heights.

Eurovision.tv caught up with Sevak after his first rehearsal: "It was my first time on the Eurovision stage and I really enjoyed it. I want to thank the whole team and I can not wait to get back on the stage to perform for the audience."

Armenia will take the stage again for the second round of rehearsals on Friday, 4th of May. Sevak Khanagyn will participate in the first Semi-Final on Tuesday, 8th of May.


https://eurovision.tv/story/armenia-sevak-khanagyan-concludes-first-rehearsal-2018



PELOSI — Statement on the Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Congressional Documents and Publications



PELOSI -- Statement on the Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

SECTION: U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DOCUMENTS




Contact: Ashley Etienne/Henry Connelly, 202-226-7616

Pelosi Statement on the Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Washington, D.C. - Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi issued the following
statement marking one hundred and three years since the beginning of
the Armenian Genocide:

"More than 100 years ago, the world witnessed the beginning of one of
the greatest acts of barbarism of the 20th Century when the Ottoman
Empire began the systematic murder of 1.5 million Armenian men, women
and children. The Armenian Genocide remains a dark stain on the
history of human civilization and an enduring reminder of the need to
acknowledge and confront the past.

"For too long, the atrocities of the Armenian Genocide have been
brushed aside, devalued and denied. By refusing to repudiate those who
deny the truth of these heinous crimes, we dishonor the memories of
all those who were silenced and all those who survived to tell their
stories.

"The world cannot afford to forget the crimes of the past. Together,
we can ensure that this monstrous episode continues to challenge
future generations to right the wrongs of history, to speak out
against violence and hate in the present, and to work toward building
a future free from bigotry, discrimination and extremism in all its
forms."

Press Release Link:



Governor Brown Issues Proclamation Declaring Remembrance Day of Armenian Genocide

Targeted News Service
 Tuesday 6:50 AM EST


Governor Brown Issues Proclamation Declaring Remembrance Day of
Armenian Genocide

SACRAMENTO, California

Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., D-California, issued the following proclamation:

Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. today issued a proclamation declaring
 as "A Day of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide" in
the State of California.

The text of the proclamation is below:

PROCLAMATION

Between 1915 and 1923, Armenians were subjected to torture,
starvation, mass murder and exile from their historic homeland. 1.5
million lost their lives. The Armenian Genocide, also known as the
"First Genocide of the Twentieth Century," represented a deliberate
attempt by the Ottoman Empire to eliminate all traces of a thriving,
noble civilization.

Armenian communities all over the world commemorate this tragedy on
April 24. On this day, we honor the victims and survivors of the
genocide, and reaffirm our commitment to preventing future atrocities
from being committed against any people.

NOW THEREFORE I, EDMUND G. BROWN JR., Governor of the State of
California, do hereby proclaim , as "Day of Remembrance
of the Armenian Genocide."

IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Great
Seal of the State of California to be affixed this 23rd day of April
2018.

EDMUND G. BROWN JR.

Governor of California

Asbarez: Prime Minister Sarkisian Walks Out from Meeting with Opposition Leader Pashinian

YEREVAN—Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian on Sunday walked out from a meeting with opposition leader Nikol Pashinyan saying that a political alliance that has received seven to eight percent of the votes cannot speak on behalf of the entire population.

“[A political] alliance that has won seven to eight percent of votes does not have the right to speak on behalf of the entire population and I no longer want to continue this discussion with you if you do not accept the government’s legal demands. Good bye,” said Sarkisian before walking out.

On Saturday it was announced that the two had agreed to the meeting, which took place at 10 a.m. at the Marriott Hotel on Republic Square, the main site of ongoing demonstrations—in their 9th day—by thousands who are protesting Sarkisian’s ongoing rule. The meeting was announced after President Armen Sarkissian met with Pashinian during the protest on Saturday and held a meeting with the prime minister separately.

At the beginning of the tense meeting, which lasted less than five minutes, Sarkisian said, “I am happy that you responded to my numerous calls to dialogue, .although I don’t quite imagine how long we can negotiate in the presence of dozens of reporters, nevertheless I am happy.” 

Pashinyan responded by saying that there seemed to have been a misunderstanding, adding that he was there to discuss the prime minister’s resignation and a peaceful transfer of power and not to hold a dialogue.

“That’s not a negotiation, that’s not a dialogue,” said Sarkisian facing television cameras and journalists. “That is simply an ultimatum, blackmailing the state and legitimate authorities. You do not realize the degree of responsibility. You didn’t learn lessons from March 1 [2008]. And if we have to speak in that tone, then I am only left to once again advise you to return to the lawful area and act within the limits of reasonable actions. Otherwise the entire responsibility falls on you.”

Pashinyan said that neither he nor the protesters respond kindly to ultimatums, adding that the situation in Armenia has changed and the power has transitioned to the people.

Before leaving the meeting, Sarkisian turned to the reporters and said,“Dear reporters, it is up to you to make your own conclusions.”

 

After Sarkisian walked out, Pashinyan told reporters that the rally would continue at 7 p.m. on Sunday, only to emerge from the Marriott Hotel where hundreds of his supporters were gathered, prompting the rally and demonstration to begin, with Pashinyan leading the crowd to the Erebuni neighborhood of Yerevan.

Follow the developing news live on Azatutyun.am


Visiting Nagorno Karabakh is not a crime, Belgian lawmakers say

Public Radio of Armenia
15:31, 20 Apr 2018

Twenty-four Belgian lawmakers have signed a statement condemning the political abuse of Interpol by Azerbaijan and voicing regret over the Azerbaijani authorities’ request for an international arrest warrant against EAFJD President Kaspar Karampetian. The statement reads:

“We regret the fact that the Azerbaijani Authorities requested an international arrest warrant against the President of the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD) Kaspar Karampetian, for visiting Nagorno Karabakh /Artsakh. EAFJD is a grassroots organization, which uses the tools of civic activism to raise awareness.

Despite the fact that there is no relevant basis in international law that would prevent anyone from visiting Nagorno Karabakh, the Azerbaijani Authorities have been using various methods of intimidation and trying to criminalize visits.

There is no alternative to a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Imposing total isolation on the people of Nagorno Karabakh breaches their fundamental rights, enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and is not a constructive method of conflict settlement.

We are convinced that Interpol should not be used for political persecution or intimidation. We herewith emphasize that a sustainable conflict resolution can be achieved only through an honest dialogue between the sides, including with the people of Nagorno Karabakh/Artsakh.”

Cinema: Italian film director Vittorio Taviani dies at 88

Panorama, Armenia

The Italian film director Vittorio Taviani, who with his brother Paolo Taviani created Italian cinema masterpieces, has died at the age of 88, The Guardian reports. 

The Italian president, Sergio Mattarella, said Taviani’s death on Sunday in Rome after a long illness was “a great loss for Italian cinema and culture, which are losing an undeniable and beloved protagonist”.

The Taviani brothers were in their early 80s when they won the Golden Bear at the Berlin film festival in 2012 for the documentary Caesar Must Die, which showed inmates of a high-security prison staging the Shakespearean tragedy. At the time, Taviana said he and his brother wanted to remind audiences that “even an inmate, on whose head is a terrible punishment, is, and remains, a man”.

Their first big success came in 1977 when they won the Palm d’Or at Cannes for Padre Padrone, about a shepherd in Sardinia who sought to escape his domineering father by educating himself. The brothers came across the story in a newspaper article and then a book. “It seemed right away to us a beautiful story, a story to make,” Tsuraviani said. “We felt united with this story.”

The brothers alternated directing scenes in their 50-year career, earning dozens of awards. Their last film, in 2017, was titled Una Questione Privata, which was credited to both but directed by Paolo alone owing to Vittorio’s health, according to Corriere della Sera.

They also produced together “The Lark Farm” (2007), a film telling about the Armenian Genocide.

They were born in San Miniato, Tuscany, in an anti-fascist family who cultivated their sense of social justice and love of culture. Asked once if the brothers ever fought, Vittorio responded: “Of course. But not on set. When we play tennis.”

In addition to Paolo, 86, Vittorio Taviani is survived by a son, Giuliano Taviani, a composer who collaborated on Caesar Must Die.

Heavy metal fights to survive, and bridge communities, in the Caucasus

EurasiaNet.org

The rock scene in the South Caucasus is shedding its political baggage.

Audience at the March 17 Caucasus Metal Battle in Tbilisi, Georgia. (All photos by Onnik Krikorian)

In a damp, dimly lit tunnel underneath Tbilisi, a singer, clad in all black, takes to the stage in a haze of cigarette smoke and strobe lights. After dropping an F-bomb, Gio Xurcilava, singer for the Georgian death metal band Infadus, references Satan: “I want you to yell so loud that even The Beast will hear us tonight!”

Infadus is one of eight bands from Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan taking the stage this evening to churn out crunching riffs and thunderous drumbeats. Onlookers bang their heads viciously, making devil horn gestures in appreciation of the performers' technical prowess.

But theatrical allusions to Satan, as well as the gothic aesthetic of many of the assembled fans, are somewhat out of step with the traditional religious conservatism of the Caucasus.

Indeed, the location of the March 17 Caucasus Metal Battle isn't accidental. Following protests from the Georgian Orthodox Church, open-air metal festivals were driven literally underground.

In 2016, a related event, the Tbilisi JAM! Fest, was interrupted after several priests, followed by dozens of supporters, tried to obstruct the event and the power inexplicably went out. “They came here yelling and accusing us all of organizing a mass sex orgy,” one of the event’s organizers told Georgia Today at the time. 

Despite going underground, however, the situation for local metalheads is improving.

“Georgia remains a deeply religious and conservative society,” Eric Hutchence, organizer of the Caucasus Metal Battle and JAM! told Eurasianet. “It’s true that we’ve had problems with extremists over the years, but attitudes are slowly changing.”

Hutchence – who is also the chairman of Georgia’s Rock Music National Association – said he first started listening to hard rock as an eight-year-old, when he came across a record by the German band Karussell while living in East Germany (he was born Ernst Khechumov and uses Hutchence as a nom de rock). His family moved to Georgia when he was 10, and he now runs the company “JAM Events” to promote artists and organize local concerts.

His current project pits bands from across the region against one another for a chance to perform at Germany’s Wacken Open Air festival – one of the biggest live events on the hard-rock circuit. He hopes that regularly sending bands to the festival will put the Caucasus on the musical map. 

“We have a strong metal community here and we can see it growing step by step as more people attend our concerts,” he told Eurasianet.

Hard rock isn’t new to the region. In 1980, Tbilisi hosted the Soviet Union’s first official rock festival, Spring Rhythms, dubbed the “Soviet Woodstock” by contemporary commentators.

Communist Georgia’s leading official at the time, Eduard Shevardnadze, hoped the festival would pacify the republic’s unruly youth following nationalist demonstrations in Tbilisi in April 1978. By channeling their energy into rock, he aimed to co-opt protest while solidifying his image as a liberal ruler.

Since gaining independence from the USSR in 1991, leaders in the Caucasus have followed that example, on occasion using rock music to present their countries as hip and modern. In 2010, Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan organized several big-name concerts, including British rock legends Deep Purple, in Yerevan. Armenia's leadership also has embraced the California-based Armenian-American metal band System of a Down, whose front man, Serj Tankian, has made himself into a sort of cultural ambassador for the country.

Not everyone is a fan.

In 2010, Armenian authorities arrested anyone suspected of being an “emo” – a name given to fans of a melancholic form of punk rock. Authorities argued that the gloomy music was undermining social stability and driving teenagers to suicide.

The country’s chief of police went further, accusing emo fans of “distorting Armenia’s gene pool.”

In Azerbaijan, two rock musicians from the band Bulistan were arrested in 2012 after they performed at a protest rally in Baku. The rock stars were reportedly beaten up by police and charged with “petty hooliganism.”

More recently, on March 26, police in Nagorno-Karabakh arrested a young woman, Asya Khachatryan, because of her blue hair. When she demanded an explanation she was reportedly slapped across the face and told “a woman shouldn’t smoke or dye her hair blue.”

Such misogyny is not uncommon, and many metal bands actively try to combat this prejudice. One such band is Euphoria, an all-female group from Armenia.

“We write about feminism, equality, and hope,” the band told Eurasianet in an email exchange. “We try to reach the very people who would find our music and themes new and controversial since we want to use our music to promote social change.”

Euphoria say they “almost always” face sexism in Armenian society, even among fans of rock music.

“Some people think metal is not a genre for women to play, and some of them dislike the issues we are raising in our music,” they said. “Thankfully, our families are very supportive of our work and appreciate the fact we are brave enough to create our kind of music in Armenian society.”

Sexism and religious conservatism are just two of the problems facing up-and-coming bands. Another challenge is the region’s geopolitics: Armenia and Azerbaijan are mired in conflict, and bands of any genre are unable to travel between the countries, leaving only Georgia as neutral ground.

This further complicates the financial troubles faced by musicians around the world, and many of the Caucasus Metal Battle participants have to work side gigs.

“Most musicians, myself included, are earning money by joining cover bands,” said Mikhail Rafiyev, front man of the Azerbaijani rock outfit Euthanation. When he's not playing metal, Rafiyev can be seen in Baku’s trendy bars performing an eclectic range, from lounge music to pop to blues.

Politicized tunes

Following Mikhail Gorbachev’s political reforms in 1987, the hardline Armenian nationalist band Vostan Hayots toured Communist Armenia to perform a rock opera about the 1915 genocide. When the Karabakh conflict broke out the following year, nationalist organizations funded a tour across the region to help mobilize Armenians. While Azerbaijanis would throw rocks at the group, fans would burn neighboring Azerbaijani villages to the ground after the band performed.

System of a Down has long played an active role in regional politics, and following the April 2016 fighting in Karabakh, Tankian wrote a politically charged song called “Artsakh,” containing lines like “fly the tricolor flag of justice” and “we are going to prevail by being Armenian.”

“I do not believe in wars and ultimately borders but I deeply believe in self-determination and life without oppression. Therefore, it is time for the world to recognize [Nagorno-Karabakh] as the Republic of Artsakh,” he told Rolling Stone that year.

At the Caucasus Metal Battle, though, politics was abandoned in favor of head-banging. After all the competitors performed, the previous winners, Tbilisi's “Scratch the Floor,” took the stage. The bass player's T-shirt read “Kill the Kardashians” – but in this context it was a middle finger to consumer culture rather than anything related to Armenians.

Hutchence said his goal was to take politics out of the music and bring fans together in a fun, relaxed environment.

“Lots of money is being spent by huge NGOs to bring people in the region together – and most of them don’t work,” he said. “We work with no grants, and no political slogans, and yet we’re succeeding in bringing young people together.”

Turkish Press: Armenia becomes parliamentary republic as new leader sworn in

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
April 9 2018
 
 
Armenia becomes parliamentary republic as new leader sworn in
 
YEREVAN – Agence France-Presse
 
Armenia’s new President Armen Sarkissian was sworn in on April 9 but power is expected to remain with his predecessor as the republic shifts to a parliamentary form of government.
 
The former ambassador to the United Kingdom took the oath of office at an extraordinary parliamentary session, his right hand laid on a 7th-century manuscript of the New Testament, and the Armenian Constitution.
 
The 64-year-old then received blessings from the head of the Armenian Church, Catholicos Garegin II.
 
Sarkissian’s inauguration allows controversial 2015 constitutional amendments to come into force, turning the country into a parliamentary republic with a strong prime minister.
 
The political shift was initiated by the outgoing president – who is no relation to the new leader — and was approved in a referendum with 63 percent of the voters backing the changes.
 
http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/armenia-becomes-parliamentary-republic-as-new-leader-sworn-in-130008
 
Critics of Serzh Sargsyan, 63, say the reforms have been designed to increase his power in a new capacity as premier.
 
The ruling party has defended the reform as a move aimed at consolidating the Caucasus nation’s democracy and improving the balance between the legislative and executive branches of power.
 
But the opposition complained of widespread violations at polling stations during the December 2015 referendum, prompting thousands to rally in protest.
 
Hand-picked by the Republican Party, Sarkissian was the sole candidate for the now mostly ceremonial presidential post.  Elected on March 2 by the National Assembly for a single term of seven years, the president is expected to mainly rubber-stamp the prime minister’s decisions.
 
Under the new legislation he is not part of the country’s Security Council.
 
A former physics professor, Sarkissian briefly served as prime minister in the 1990s.