Asbarez: Pressure to Fire Armenia’s Supreme Judicial Council Head Mounts

Head of the country’s Supreme Judicial Council Gagik Jhangiaryan


Pressure is mounting on Armenia’s authorities to fire and prosecute the head of the country’s Supreme Judicial Council Gagik Jhangiaryan after a secret recording of him surfaced on Monday, in which he is allegedly blackmailing his predecessor Ruben Vartazaryan, who was controversially suspended from his position last year when he criticized Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

The Supreme Judicial Council, however, signaled its reluctance to take action against Jahangirian, who also has been a controversial in Armenian political circles for more than a decade.

Vartazaryan, who was fired last year, released the secret recording of a conversation he had with Jhangiaryan during a dinner meeting last year. Jhangiaryan can be heard on the recording urging Vartazaryan to resign or face criminal charges.

Armenian authorities faced on Tuesday growing calls to sack and prosecute the acting head of the country’s judicial watchdog accused of blackmailing his predecessor at odds with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Jhangiaryan has not yet disputed the authenticity of the recording.

Vartazaryan did not heed Jhangiaryan’s call and was charged with obstruction of justice. In April 2021, the other members of the Supreme Judicial Council suspended Vartazaryan, with Pashinyan supporters accusing him of allegedly planning to free opposition figures jailed or prosecuted since Pashinyan came to power.

The SJC is a judicial watchdog group, which is tasked with nominating judges and monitoring their work. The group is empowered to take disciplinary action or fire judges if it concludes they are fulfilling their responsibilities.

Vartazaryan has denied any wrongdoing and has rejected the charges brought against him. He has maintained that the entire incident was machinated by the government, which allegedly sought to oust him from the SJC and appoint a loyalist—Jhangiaryan, who in the recording says that he wants to prevent former president Robert Kocharian from coming to power.

After the release of the recording, opposition groups and activists swiftly reacted to the contents of the conversation, with one activist, Daniel Ioannisyan, telling RFE/RL’s Armenian service that he has filed a “criminal report” with the country’s prosecutor general’s office, which said that it has launched an inquiry.

“It is absolutely unacceptable for an individual carrying out such deeds or making such a confession … to continue to serve as head of the Supreme Judicial Council,” Ioannisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

The SJC discussed the scandal at a meeting held on Tuesday. One of its members, Grigor Bekmezyan, said that neither he nor any of his colleagues demanded disciplinary proceedings against Jhangiaryan.

“Mr. Jhangiaryan gave us clarifications and explanations,” Bekmezyan told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “We are satisfied with what we have at this point. In order to have a full picture, we need a full audio [of the February 2021 meeting with Vartazarian.]”

After the release of the recording, the opposition Armenia Alliance addressed a letter to Lynne Tracy and Andrea Wiktorin, the ambassadors of the United States and the European Union in Armenia, urging them to publicly voice their assessment of the situation, given their long-standing praise for Armenia’s judicial reforms.

Wiktorian was one of the speakers at a judicial reforms conference in Yerevan, from which the opposition members of parliament were banned.

In its letter, the Armenia Alliance tells the ambassadors that the recording “contains elements of criminal offenses, interference in pending criminal cases, as well as literal threats in case of refusal to fulfil specific demands. We have voiced the existence of such phenomena in Armenia many times only to encounter your silence. These circumstances are to be examined by the law enforcement bodies, to which, however, according to the recording, the well-known member of the Supreme Judicial Council, Gagik Jhangiaryan, in fact, feels entitled to give mandatory instructions.”

“The recording also contains a promise to interfere in political activities, the consequences of which are in fact recorded, including through allegedly fair and transparent parliamentary elections. Gagik Jhangiaryan, the person vested with exclusive authority in charge of the judiciary, confesses that he has undertaken to interfere in the political activities of Robert Kocharian, who led the pre-election list of the ‘Armenia’ alliance, and the ARF. It is worth noting that on the day of the snap elections, June 20, 2021, as well as in the pre-election and post-election periods, we have voiced the obviously biased, dependent behavior of the judiciary towards the opposition political team over and over only to face your silence again,” said the letter.

“Failure to provide answers to the aforementioned questions in a short period of time will be considered, by reasonable logic, as evidence of your support regarding the stated vivid unlawful atrocities.
The copy of this letter has been forwarded to all the ambassadors accredited in Armenia,” the Armenia Alliance said in the letter.

Armenian judicial watchdog head must be immediately ousted, says opposition MP

Panorama
Armenia –


The head of the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) overseeing Armenian courts, Gagik Jhangiryan, cannot stay in office, MP Aram Vardevanyan of the opposition Hayastan bloc told reporters before an opposition rally in Yerevan on Monday evening.

His comments came after suspended SJC head Ruben Vardazaryan released a secretly recorded audio of his conversation with Jhangiryan, who can be heard warning the official to resign or face criminal charges.

Vardazaryan was suspended as SJC chairman and charged with obstruction of justice in April 2021. Subsequently, Jhangiryan took over the SJC pending the outcome of the criminal case.

The Supreme Judicial Council downplayed the audio recording in a statement, refusing to comment on the “private conversation recorded without Jhangiryan’s knowledge.”

Vardevanyan called for bringing the judicial watchdog head to account for “abuse of office”.

“He must be immediately dismissed and prosecuted based on his self-incriminating statements,” the lawmaker said, adding his resignation would reduce the risk of interference into criminal investigations.


Jack Torosian biography: 13 things about Armenian entrepreneur, artist from Glendale, California

 
CONAN Daily
June 15 2022
Jack Torosian is an Armenian-American entrepreneur, producer and artist from California, United States. Here are 13 more things about him:
  1. Born Akop Torosian in Erevan, Armenia, he immigrated to California as a teenager.
  2. Aside from Glendale, he has lived in other parts of California including Granada Hills, Porter Ranch and Canoga Park.
  3. His brother Robert Torosian is married to Marina Fermanyan.
  4. Professionally known as No Limit Boss, he owns the Papillon International Bakery in Glendale, California and No Limit Super Gym in North Hollywood, Los Angeles, California and in Miami, Florida, USA.
  5. In April 2014, he was involved in a triple shooting at a body shop in North Hollywood.
  6. In 2015, his son Niko Torosian was born. In December 2015, he was convicted of possessing a deadly weapon with the intent to commit assault and sentenced him to three years of probation. 
  7. In 2018, his son Noah Torosian and his daughter Mila Torosian, who are twins, were born.
  8. In November 2020, he and other members of the Armenian community took to the streets of Los Angeles to protest the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia in Artsakh.
  9. He is Elda Madatyan‘s former husband. On November 25, 2020, she filed for divorce in Los Angeles.
  10. In March 2022, he released dance music singles titled “Dawning“, “Despair” and “Silhouette“.
  11. On June 11, 2022, he was caught on camera being agitated over a Mexican juice vendor setup outside his No Limit Super Gym in North Hollywood, saying to the people setting up Lety’s Aguas Frescas, “This is not a Mexican hangout”.
  12. On June 12, 2022, he was arrested at the Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles while he was trying to get on a plane to Miami. He was accused of threatening one of his employees with a weapon.
  13. He was 40 years old when he was arrested on June 12, 2022.
https://conandaily.com/2022/06/15/jack-torosian-biography-13-things-about-armenian-entrepreneur-artist-from-glendale-california/

Armenia Issued Stamp To Honor The Lebanese-Armenian Nobel Prize Laureate Ardem Patapoutian

the 961
Lebanon – June 15 2022

Armenia has issued a postage stamp to honor the Lebanese-Armenian Nobel Prize Laureate, under the theme of “World famous Armenians: Ardem Patapoutian.”

The stamp has been put into circulation with a value of 350 AMD and depicts the molecular biologist and first Lebanese-born Armenian Nobel Prize winner.

Born in 1967 in Lebanon, Ardem Patapoutian was a chemistry student at the American University of Beirut (AUB) before emigrating to the United States. He graduated from the University of California in 1990 and earned a Ph.D. in the California Institute of Technology in 1996.

In 2021, Patapoutian was jointly awarded with David Julius the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine “for their discoveries of receptors for temperature and touch.”

Armenian PM expresses hope for opening border and establishing diplomatic relations with Turkey

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 10:26,

YEREVAN, JUNE 14, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan commented on the ongoing process of normalizing the relations between Armenia and Turkey in an interview to Al Jazeera, calling the current dialogue “positive” and expressing hope for achieving “tangible results”.

“We have started conversation through special representatives of Armenia and Turkey. The situation is that the conversation itself is very positive, and we hope that we will have tangible results. Now I can’t say that we have no any results because after the start of the conversation, for example, we have established direct flights between Armenia and Turkey. But it is something that we had before. I hope we will be able to establish diplomatic relations and open the border between Armenia and Turkey which is closed for thirty years”, he stated.

Using Armenian Professionally

Dr. Kristi Rendahl, Belmont, Mass., May 28, 2022 (Photo: Lalai Manjikian)

Sometimes we’re asked a question and only later do we wish we had paused and been more thoughtful in our response. And so it was when a participant at the Hamazkayin Cultural Retreat in Boston in May asked if Armenian has served me professionally, at once wondering how they could make the case for young people to prioritize learning Armenian. 

At face value, the answer would be that I don’t use Armenian on a daily basis in my job, but the question – and especially the driving sentiment – deserves more consideration than that. 

What does it even mean to be a professional and when have we arrived? Armenians ask “inch masnaget es,” and I’ve never had a simple answer. I studied music and communication in undergraduate university. I moved to Armenia; studying music and communication helped me communicate with Armenians. Armenians helped me grow into myself which, long story short, led me to where I am today.  

When I lived in Armenia 25 years ago, everywhere I looked the Armenian language was an entrance to something new, foundational, essential. 

My friend Gayane patiently spoke Armenian with me as I clumsily responded, occasionally surprising her with a new word: xraxusel impressed her one day. My friend Tom knew Armenian so well he followed the laws of the newly independent Armenia as fast as they were drafted. Hagop and Anahit taught me songs in Armenian with melodies that helped me understand pain and loss better than any history book or conversation ever could. 

Armenians spoke of love and pain in ways unfamiliar to me as someone from a stoic culture that spoke of neither. Armenian invited me to be me in new ways.

On a basic level, Armenian is just an extension of the vocabulary I learned before the age of 21. Another participant at the Hamazkayin event noted that children do not distinguish between languages until grownups tell them to do so. Children simply know to use this word with this person and that word with that person.

Words are building blocks, and if you ask most any kid, they’ll tell you that more blocks are better. Armenian, as a flexible language in many respects, is ideal for the person who wants to build cool things, including ideas, stories and ways of being.

As an odar (and I know that there is some negative connotation with that word but I use it with no such baggage attached), Armenian differentiates me. It sounds like nothing else, it looks like nothing else, it makes me feel like nothing else. 

I hadn’t spoken much Armenian the past couple of years, so for two weeks before the event, which was conducted in a mixture of Eastern and Western Armenian, I sat on my couch and read Kristine Sargsyan’s book out loud each morning with a cup of coffee. My mouth and ears and mind reoriented to another way of communicating.

And it’s a language, sure, or an extension of a vocabulary, however you wish to see it, but it’s also a powerful statement about survival. I’d say resilience, but I’m sort of bored of that word; I know plenty of people who wish they weren’t so remarkably resilient and that life were just more peaceful. 

It is possible that speaking Armenian is in fact revolutionary.

Survival is something else. A scar is beautiful, why? Because it’s evidence that you survived. A language, however many or few words remain in collective memory, is indicative that people have made it through, identity intact, one generation conveying to the next the stories they deem most valuable, or at least readily accessible in their mind. It is possible that speaking Armenian is in fact revolutionary.

The Armenian language is not only about oppression, genocide and transgenerational trauma though. It is also one that expresses the mundane and points guests to the best nearby coffee shop and wrestles with complex social issues of right now and relates to complicated societies around the world in deeply empathetic ways. It is a framework for understanding this moment in time and one that is as relevant as any other framework.

The language, whether Eastern or Western, is more than syllables and a reluctant accommodation for more commonly used languages. I have spoken Armenian in Ethiopia, Mexico, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Canada, England, Turkey, Greece, the United States, Artsakh and elsewhere. This is notable because it requires effort to provide the world with such tangible evidence of your presence. Doing so would seem to suggest that much more is possible, too. 

You could say that Armenian as a second, third or fourth language is impractical and superficially of little value, but this is not a zero-sum game. There is room for a much bigger vocabulary: one that includes words that we call Arabic, words that we call French, words that we call Spanish. 

To leave out words that we call Armenian is, in a way, casting doubt on people’s capacity for building. And if I’ve learned anything about Armenians, it’s that no one should second guess their capacity to learn, create and contribute. Were it not for this truth, I wouldn’t speak Armenian.

Kristi Rendahl is associate professor and director of the nonprofit leadership program at Minnesota State University, Mankato. Prior to starting with MSU in 2017, she worked for over 20 years with nongovernmental organizations on several continents, including living in Armenia from 1997-2002. She speaks Armenian and Spanish.


Armenian Chief Compulsory Enforcement Officer holds thematic-discussion on 15th World Day of Judicial Officer

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 16:17, 9 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 9, ARMENPRESS. Today, on 9th of June, the Chief Compulsory Enforcement Officer of Armenia, Sergey Meghryan held a thematic-discussion on the occasion of the 15th World Day of the Judicial Officer with the participation of the management team and enforcement officers, his office said.

Each year, on this day, member-states of the UIHJ participate in this event in various formats. The theme of this year’s discussion was: "Judicial Officer, element of stability in a changing world."

In his opening remarks, the Chief Compulsory Enforcement Officer referred to the effective and active cooperation of the Compulsory Enforcement Service with the International Union of Judicial Officers on strengthening the international partnership, reforming the enforcement sector, and advising on best practices and solutions to the problems occurred while overcoming the coronavirus-induced crisis. According to him, the theme of this year’s discussion is vital in the changing reality of post-COVID and post-war Armenia, where the compulsory enforcement officer overcomes new challenges in their day-to-day work to defend the rights of Service beneficiaries.

The thematic discussion hosted the Deputy Chief Compulsory Enforcement Officer Levon Balyan, the Assistants to the Chief Compulsory Enforcement Officer Varduhi Petrosyan and Elina Geghamyan, the Head of the Legal Department of the Chief Compulsory Enforcement Service Gohar Mkrtchyan, and the Head of the Special Department of Non-Property Enforcement Proceedings Vardan Melikbekyan as speakers.

The speakers highlighted in their speeches the importance of the cooperation between the Service and the UIHJ in the post-crisis situation, the reforms  implemented in the enforcement sector and their continuity, the importance of having a stable and consistent enforcement system for guaranteeing the realization of the fundamental right to fair trial, the execution of non-property enforcement proceedings in post-crisis situations, and referred to the necessity of developing a clear post-crisis communication strategy in the public administration system.

A panel discussion was held at the end of the event where the issues raised were actively discussed.

The Compulsory Enforcement Service of Armenia has been a full member of the International Union of Judicial Officers since 2015. Formed in 1952, the Union currently has more than 96 member states.

Armenian firefighter sets new Guinness World Record

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 11:54, 30 May 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 30, ARMENPRESS. An Armenian rescuer-firefighter set a new Guinness World Record.

Zorik Poghosyan from the #2 Firefighting-Rescue Detachment of the Ministry of Emergency Situations lifted a 175kg barbell, placed it on his shoulders and walked for 1 meter and 90cm in the squat position, and then turned around and stood up.

This is the fifth world record set by Zorik Poghosyan, a local of Vanadzor.

[see video]

60 injured as protesters clash with police in Yerevan

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 11:57, 4 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 4, ARMENPRESS. A total of 60 people were hospitalized as anti-government protesters clashed with the police in Yerevan in front of the Prime Minister’s residence on June 3, the ministry of healthcare said.

Among the hospitalized 39 are police officers.

As of 08:30, June 4, 50 of the injured were discharged from hospitals. 

The other injured are in satisfactory condition.

Armenia PM on hand at Wine Festival

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, together with his wife Anna Hakobyan and younger daughter Arpi, on Sunday attended the Wine Festival held in downtown Yerevan.

Pashinyan walked around the pavilions, and asked about Armenian wines.

The traditional Wine Festival in Armenia is held this year from Friday to Sunday.