Telecom Armenia starts work on fibre NGN J

Developing Telecoms
March 10 2021

elecom Armenia has begun construction on a new fibre-optic Next Generation Network (NGN) in the Armenian capital of Yerevan.

A former unit of Veon now trading as Beeline, Telecom Armenia expects the NGN to offer speeds of up to 10Gbps. Deployment has commenced in the Davidashen district of the city, although the operator does not expect to switch the network on for “several months”.

CommsUpdate quoted Telecom Armenia CEO Hayk Yesayan as saying: “We are taking a new leap into the next century by creating a new fibre-optic network that will be one of the best in the world. In existing networks, the main backbone is shared among multiple users, while in our new network, each subscriber will receive a fibre-optic channel using fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) technology.”

 

Lebanese-Armenian Woman Just Returned To Beirut After 4 Months In Azeri Captivity

The 961, Lebanon
March 11 2021

In a tearful and emotional reunion, Lebanese-Armenian Maral Najarian has returned home to Beirut, after spending the last 4 months in Azerbaijani captivity.

Najarian, who had survived the devastating August 4 Beirut Port explosion had last been seen on November 10th and was taken hostage by Azeris in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Like many Lebanese-Armenians who moved to Armenia after the blast, she decided to re-settle in Artsakh, the long-disputed region over which violent conflicts between Armenia and Azerbaijan have taken place.

Tensions between the neighboring countries rose once again and a war was waged between September 27 to November 10, forcing her to take refuge in a city in Armenia.

After the armistice was declared, she reportedly went back to the hotel in Nagorno-Karabakh, where she was staying, to collect her things. However, that was the last time she was seen – until now.

Although visibly exhausted with the tinge of her traumatic experience coloring her face, Najarian is back as a survivor of multiple hellish experiences..

is back as a survivor of multiple hellish experiences..

 

Boston Mayor Marty Walsh rescinds Khojalu proclamation, apologizes to Armenian community

Public Radio of Armenia
March 11 2021

Mayor Marty Walsh has issued a statement of apology to the Armenian community of Boston and rescinded a recent proclamation declaring February 26 Khojalu Commemoration Day, the Armenian Weekly reports.

“Unfortunately on our part, this was done without our typical review process, which includes conferring with all those potentially impacted,” the apology letter reads.

“Following conversations with leaders of the Armenian-American community, we realize that this proclamation has been hurtful to many of you.” 

For the past week, members of Boston’s Armenian community and abroad have been contacting the mayor’s office, urging him to reverse the proclamation following a call to action from the Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region (ANCA-ER). 

“The ANC-of Eastern Massachusetts would like to thank the mayor for acting on this quickly. It was very clear that it wasn’t professionally vetted,” said chairman Aram Kaligian in an interview with the Armenian Weekly. “The mayor has been a friend to the community,” he continued. 

Indeed, Mayor Walsh, who is preparing for his transition to become the US Secretary of Labor, has participated in several Armenian Genocide commemorations both at the Massachusetts State House and Armenian Heritage Park, where he proclaimed that Armenians have made Boston a “stronger city.”

“Our goal when issuing a proclamation is to honor and celebrate the contributions of Bostonians from all walks of life, and not to engage in international matters that can cause pain or divisiveness,” the letter reads. 

This is not the first time that a municipal or state government has declared February 26 Khojalu Commemoration Day. Nearly identical proclamations were announced by the mayor of Portland, Maine and the governor of Minnesota. Each of these declarations followed appeals by local Azerbaijani community organizations, including the Azerbaijani Society of Maine and the Azerbaijani Association in Minnesota.

According to various Azerbaijani news sites, the Boston proclamation was adopted on the initiative of the New-England based Azerbaijan Center. All three cite Human Rights Watch in marking the 29th anniversary of the “largest massacre of the 1990s, the Khojalu Massacre.” The ANC of Eastern Massachusetts underscores, however, that the proclamations are rife with distortions and exaggerations and erase the role of Azeri troops in the fighting around Khojalu. 

“This is clearly part of a Turkish-Azeri propaganda effort to reduce the significance of the Armenian Genocide and crimes against humanity that the Turkish government has committed in the past,” Kaligian said. “It’s also a way of reducing the culpability of the present Turkish and Azeri governments in their war crimes against Armenians.”

Middlesex Sheriff Peter Koutoujian, who has known Mayor Walsh since 1996 during their time together in the state legislature, commends local activists for mobilizing and asking the mayor to reconsider the February 26 statement. “This is a proud day for our community in Greater Boston. This is a proud day to be Armenian,” said Sheriff Koutoujian in an interview with the Weekly. “We were recognized, and we were respected. This is a good day for our community to show that people believe in us.”

https://en.armradio.am/2021/03/11/boston-mayor-marty-walsh-rescinds-khojalu-proclamation-apologizes-to-armenian-community/

Bank is being built on Armenian and Catholic cemetary in Ankara

Panorama, Armenia

The Ankara Branch of the Chamber of Architects has called for construction to be halted on a bank in the capital, citing the presence of Armenian and Catholics graves on site, Ahval news outlet reports.  

Construction for the state-owned İller Bank in Ulus district is taking place illegally, the chamber said, noting that crews have discovered human bones during the digs, likely part of cemeteries belonging to the minority groups nearby.

Human bones discovered during construction were taken for examination by experts at the city’s Museumof Anatolian Civilizations, chamber chairmanTezcan Karakuş Candan said, with sources showing the area as hosting a Catholic and Armenian cemetery, alongside a Turkish bath (hamam).

"The ongoing construction, despite this (information), is a great disrespect to the multiculturalism of Anatolia,’’ Candan said. "It is inhumane to be dumping concrete on top of those who lived in Anatolia, regardless of their religion, language or race.’’

Candan said authorities that green lighted the construction were committing a crime by violating Law No. 2863 on the Conservation of Cultural and Natural Property’’and the chamber would be taking to the matter to court.

It is reminded that during the Ottoman Empire, present-day Turkey was home to a thriving ethnic Armenian community. But as the empire began to collapse during the First World War, Ottoman authorities were responsible for the systematic killing of up to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians, a mass murder now widely accepted to have been a genocide.

CivilNet: BREAKING: Azerbaijan Releases Armenian Woman After Months in Captivity

CIVILNET.AM

11 Mar, 2021 03:03

Maral Najarian, the Lebanese-Armenian woman captured by Azerbaijani forces in Karabakh soon after the Second Artsakh War, has been released. 

After months in captivity, Najarian, who was born in Lebanon, was reunited with her family at the Beirut-Hariri International Airport at around 9:30 p.m. local time. 

At around 8 a.m. local time on Wednesday, Najarian was flown from Azerbaijan to Istanbul, Turkey where she was held most of the day, Armenian Weekly reports.

Human rights activists say that Azerbaijan still holds over 200 Armenian hostages, most captured after the signing of the November 9 ceasefire. They include military personnel, as well as civilians and women.

What Armenia’s Rising Basketball Star Can Teach Us About Building A Brand

Forbes
March 4 2021

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Gary Chivichyan NBA player

Gary Chivichyan

Tapping into a specific aspect of your identity, be it as an underdog, a risk-taker, or something else, is a critical step in building your personal brand. 

Embracing that part of yourself not only gives you an instant authenticity boost, but it also can give you something to build your brand around if you need help getting started. 

For Gary Chivichyan, an Armenian basketball player who’s currently in close talks with the NBA’s Houston Rockets, New York Knicks, and Los Angeles Clippers G-league affiliates, that’s meant stepping into his role as an underdog. He was the first Armenian ever to be eligible for the NBA G-League draft in 2021, as well as becoming the first Armenian to be nominated for an ESPN ESPYS award. Chivichyan was 1 of the 195 players who were given a player's contract. He was chosen as the New York Knicks (Westchester) placement in the  2021-2022 NBA G-League draft on January 11th, which consisted of NBA veterans and top prospects such as Lance Stephenson, Michael Beasly, Admiral Schofield, and more. 

As the coronavirus went rampant, Chivichyan was notified of many cancelations as he and his head trainer Vicken Eskidjian were preparing for such as showcases, camps, and scheduled workouts with multiple different NBA organizations disallowing Chivichyan and many other incoming NBA prospects to showcase their abilities to teams and scouts like they would on a regular off-season.

Chivichyan’s agent Ara Vartanian had to adapt to the unprecedented circumstances of 2020 and successfully took the first steps toward the young star’s NBA dreams by securing Chivichyan’s player's contract, making Chivichyan available for the up-coming NBA G-League draft and the regular season tentatively scheduled for the fall of 2021.

I spoke with Chivichyan recently about how he’s focusing on building his brand as he looks toward the NBA. 

Shama Hyder: People love to root for an underdog. How does embracing your underdog mentality help you build a brand that resonates with people? 

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Gary Chivichyan: My underdog mentality made me work harder than everyone else;  I was seen as a “minority” in the sport, an Armenian kid who does not belong in the NBA or anything affiliated with pro sports. Embracing that hard work, no-quit attitude and competitiveness brings out the best in me, both physically and mentally. This shows itself when I am on the court and when I talk to others, especially kids. I have embraced failures as an underdog and it has made me become better at my craft, made me improve in all facets of my game and personal life.

Hyder: Why is it important to represent your community when building your brand?

Chivichyan: I want to show kids coming from minority families that they can become who they truly wish to be—but only if they put in the consistent work to be able to do so. 

Globally, people are realizing that I have gotten to a point no Armenian has reached before, and that’s important to me because I come from a culture that has fewer than 10 million people in the world. We are almost a dying breed, and there has been so much suffering. So my branding also encompasses my country: We have faced many difficulties, but we always get better. 

That is why my community and my culture matter to me. In this difficult time, I want to be the happy story—the story that makes my people and every underdog and minority happy.

Hyder: What would you tell people who are trying to attract more attention and greater opportunities in their field? 

Chivichyan: I’d also say you have to believe in yourself and practice positive habits. You also need to understand the reasons behind your goals, and most importantly, be self-disciplined—not just motivated. 

Hyder: Your dad is an MMA hall of fame. How do you take that narrative and weave it into your own story?

Chivichyan: My father is the true testament of a warrior, a man who built his career and dynasty out of nothing. He moved from the Soviet Union at a young age, becoming a multiple-time world champion in multiple martial arts, successful MMA fighter, undefeated throughout his career.  

He and my brother, who is a pro fighter himself (ranked first in the USA in judo for the 100kg division) have been my mentors. This goes to show that every successful person needs a strong person or people behind them. Without my father Gokor Chivichyan and my brother Arthur Chivichyan, I don’t think I would be in this position.

Hyder: You’ve become an icon for young people. What are some ways that you would advise others to authentically connect with this audience?

Chivichyan: I’d tell people to simply be honest and try to communicate with young people freely and openly. When I speak with kids or young adults, I focus on telling them what’s worked for me. 

A lot of that is not letting fear get the better of you. Don’t be afraid to ask for help. Don’t be afraid to seek a teacher or mentor. Don’t be afraid to try new things. Think about how you can grow and improve, don’t set yourself back from failures, but learn from them so you can get better. 

Most importantly, don’t ever compare yourself to others, only compare yourself to the person you were yesterday. How can you get better? By focusing on small wins, you can get the glory you deserve.

Building a brand is about more than how you present yourself to the world. It’s about how you actually see yourself—your beliefs about who you are and what you have to offer. By tapping into that, you’ll be able to create something truly authentic.

AP: Armenian PM slams ‘coup attempt’ as political tensions rise

Associated Press
Feb 25 2021



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Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan waves to supporters during a rally in his support in the center of Yerevan, Armenia, Thursday, Feb. 25, 2021. Armenia's prime minister has spoken of an attempted military coup after facing the military's General Staff demand for him to step down. The developments come after months of protests sparked by the nation's defeat in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan. (Tigran Mehrabyan/PAN Photo via AP)

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — Armenia’s prime minister accused top military officers on Thursday of attempting a coup after they demanded he step down, adding fuel to months of protests calling for his resignation following the country’s defeat in a conflict with Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has faced opposition calls to step down ever since he signed a Nov. 10 peace deal that saw Azerbaijan reclaim control over large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas that had been held by Armenian forces for more than a quarter-century.

The opposition protests gathered pace this week, and the feud with his top military commanders has weakened Pashinyan’s position, raising concerns about stability in the strategic South Caucasus region, where shipments of Azerbaijan’s Caspian crude oil pass through on their way to Western markets.

The immediate trigger for the latest tensions was Pashinyan’s decision earlier this week to oust the first deputy chief of the military’s General Staff that includes the armed forces’ top officers.

In response, the General Staff called for Pashinyan’s resignation, but he doubled down and ordered that the chief of the General Staff be dismissed.

After denouncing the military’s statement as a “coup attempt,” Pashinyan led his supporters at a rally in the capital, and he addressed them in a dramatic speech in which he said he had considered — but rejected — calls to resign.

“I became the prime minister not on my own will, but because people decided so,” he shouted to the crowd of more than 20,000 people in Republic Square. “Let people demand my resignation or shoot me in the square.”

He warned that the latest developments have led to an “explosive situation, which is fraught with unpredictable consequences.”

In nearby Freedom Square, over 20,000 opposition supporters held a parallel rally, and some vowed to stay there until Pashinyan stepped down. Demonstrators paralyzed traffic all around Yerevan, chanting “Nikol, you traitor!” and “Nikol, resign!”

There were sporadic scuffles in the streets between the sides, but the rival demonstrations led by Pashinyan and his foes later in the day went on in different parts of the capital. As the evening fell, some opposition supporters built barricades on the central avenue to step up pressure on Pashinyan.

The crisis has its roots in Armenia’s humiliating defeat in heavy fighting with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh that erupted in late September and lasted 44 days. A Russia-brokered agreement ended the conflict in which the Azerbaijani army routed Armenian forces — but only after more than 6,000 people died on both sides.

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Pashinyan has defended the peace deal as a painful but necessary move to prevent Azerbaijan from overrunning the entire Nagorno-Karabakh region, which lies within Azerbaijan but was under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

Despite the simmering public anger over the military defeat, Pashinyan has maneuvered to shore up his rule and the protests died down during winter. But the opposition demonstrations resumed with new vigor this week — and then came the spat with the military brass.

Pashinyan fired the deputy chief of the General Staff, Lt. Gen. Tiran Khachatryan, earlier this week after he derided the prime minister’s claim that only 10% of Russia-supplied Iskander missiles that Armenia used in the conflict exploded on impact.

The General Staff responded Thursday with a statement demanding Pashinyan’s resignation and warned the government against trying to use force against the opposition demonstrators. Immediately after the statement, Pashinyan dismissed the General Staff chief, Col. Gen. Onik Gasparyan.

The order is subject to approval by the nation’s largely ceremonial president, Armen Sarkissian, who hasn’t endorsed it yet, prompting an angry outburst from Pashinyan.

“If he doesn’t sign my proposal to dismiss Gasparyan, does it mean that he joins the coup?” Pashinyan asked at the rally of his supporters. He urged the chief of the General Staff to resign voluntarily, adding that “I won’t let him lead the army against the people.”

The prime minister warned that authorities now will move more forcefully to disperse the opposition protests and arrest its participants. He bluntly rejected their demand for early parliamentary elections.

The political crisis is being watched closely, particularly in Russia and Turkey, which compete for influence in the South Caucasus region.

Russia, worried about its ally plunging deeper into turmoil, voiced concern about the tensions and emphasized that Armenia must sort out its problems itself. “We are calling for calm and believe that the situation should remain in the constitutional field,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

President Vladimir Putin spoke by phone with Pashinyan and called for the “preservation of calm and order in Armenia,” Peskov said.

While the Kremlin emphasized stability, the Russian military didn’t miss a chance to slap the Armenian leader on the wrist for debasing the Iskander missile, a state-of-the-art weapon touted by the military for its accuracy.

The Russian Defense Ministry said it was “bewildered” to hear Pashinyan’s claim because the Armenian military hadn’t fired an Iskander missile during the conflict. It added that the Armenian prime minister had apparently been misled.

Armenia has relied on Moscow’s financial and military support and hosts a Russian military base — ties that will keep the two nations closely allied regardless of the outcome of the political infighting.

And even though the peace deal is widely reviled in Armenia with many calling it a betrayal, it’s unlikely to be revised — no matter who is in charge — following the fighting that demonstrated Azerbaijan’s overwhelming military edge.

Turkey, which backed its ally Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, would relish instability that would further weaken Armenia. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said his country strongly condemns the coup attempt in Armenia and stands against all coup attempts anywhere in the world.

The U.S. Embassy in Yerevan urged all parties in Armenia to “exercise calm and restraint and to de-escalate tensions peacefully, without violence.” In Brussels, European Commission spokesman Peter Stano also called on rival sides to “avoid any rhetoric or actions that could lead to further escalation.”

____

Associated Press writers Vladimir Isachenkov and Daria Litvinova in Moscow and Zeynep Bilginsoy in Istanbul, Turkey, contributed.

Armenpress: Armenia reports 104 COVID-19 daily cases

Armenia reports 104 COVID-19 daily cases

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YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 22, ARMENPRESS. 104 new cases of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) have been confirmed in Armenia in the past one day, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 170,506, the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention said today.

104 patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 162,098.

3 patients have died, raising the death toll to 3167.

3198 tests were conducted in the past one day.

The number of active cases is 4438.

The number of patients who had coronavirus but died from other disease has reached 803 (2 new such cases).

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Top Armenian, US officials stress need to address core issues of Karabakh peace process within OSCE Minsk Group framework

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 9 2021

Armenia's Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian on Monday held a phone call with Philip Reeker, the US Acting Assistant Secretary of European and Eurasian Affairs.

The interlocutors exchanged views on issues of bilateral agenda, emphasizing the role of the Armenia-US Strategic Dialogue in advancing and deepening the cooperation agenda. During the conversation, Ara Aivazian and Philip Reeker reiterated their mutual readiness to continue the practical efforts towards the further strengthening of the Armenian-American relations, including through regular contacts and consultations at different levels, expansion of multifaceted cooperation, the Foreign Ministry of Armenia said in a press release. 

During the phone call, the top officials discussed in detail issues of regional security and stability.  In the context of the steps being undertaken to address consequences of the Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression against Artsakh, Aivazian drew his interlocutor's attention to the inadmissibility of Azerbaijan’s efforts to create impediments in addressing humanitarian issues, in particular the repatriation of prisoners of war and captured citizens of Armenia.

The sides stressed the need to address the core issues of the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmanship, as clearly indicated in the December 3 statement of the high representatives of the co-chair countries. FM Aivazian emphasized the importance of multiplying the efforts in fighting against xenophobia to ensure lasting peace and security in the region, including through excluding the recurrence of massive human rights violations.

CivilNet: Turkey No Longer Has a Reason to Blockade Armenia, Says Armenian FM

CIVILNET.AM

10 February, 2021 18:02

By Emilio Luciano Cricchio

Turkey has no reason to blockade Armenia anymore, Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazian said during a government question and answer session in Parliament on February 10.  

Ayvazian added that there are mixed signals coming out of Ankara. On the one hand, Turkey and Azerbaijan conducted joint military exercises near the Armenian border in Kars. On the other hand, there has been talk of normalization coming from certain Turkish political figures. 

The Armenian FM went on to say that the status quo of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has been changed by military force, which was Turkey’s reason for blockading Armenia. 

Ayvazyan concluded by saying that though processes regarding normalization have not started, Armenia is taking active efforts to make its immediate surroundings safe, and to deescalate the tense atmosphere around Artsakh. 

In 1993, in the midst of the First Karabakh War, Turkey closed its borders with Armenia in support of Azerbaijan, after Armenian forces captured the district of Kelbajar. 

The border remained closed ever since.