Skip to main content

Governmental commission to organize funeral of ex-interior minister Vano Siradeghyan

Save

Share

 13:25,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 20, ARMENPRESS. A governmental commission will be created to organize the funeral of Vano Siradeghyan, a former minister of interior and former mayor of Yerevan who died at the age of 74 on October 15, the prime minister’s office said.

Other details weren’t immediately available.

Siradeghyan allegedly fled Armenia in 2000 after murder and conspiracy charges were brought against him. He denied wrongdoing.

His whereabouts remained unknown.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian Museum of America partners with TUMO Center for online concert

MetroWest Daily News, MA
Oct 18 2021
Armenian Museum of America

WATERTOWN – The Armenian Museum of America reopened in June with three floors of updated exhibitions including ancient and medieval artifacts, displays on folk instruments, and two contemporary art exhibits.

At the same time, the museum is continuing to offer virtual programs for members and supporters around the world.  

The next online concert hosted by the museum will feature young vocalists and musicians from the TUMO Center for Creative Technologies. TUMO is a free education center for teens in Armenia specializing in technology and design. The TUMO Band is led by Arik Grigoryan, a member of the popular rock band Bambir. The group met during his music workshop at TUMO and they perform genres from rock to classical, fusing the traditional with the modern. 

“Our goal is to return to hosting cultural events such as this in our gallery, but we are happy to host the performances online and to partner with musicians in Yerevan and other cities for our local, national, and international members and friends,” explains Executive Director Jason Sohigian. 

“This exciting concert was recorded exclusively for the Armenian Museum, and it is free to attend thanks to a generous grant from the Dadourian Foundation, whose mission is to promote Armenian cultural identity,” adds Sohigian. “We do hope that viewers join the museum as members, though, as it supports our mission to preserve and share Armenian heritage and culture. We’ve had an impressive response to our 50th anniversary membership drive and would like to continue the momentum.” 

TUMO Center for Creative Technologies is made up of self-learning activities, workshops, and project labs that cover technology and design including computer programming, animation, game development, robotics, 3D modeling, filmmaking, and graphic design. More than 20,000 students currently attend TUMO centers in Armenia on a regular basis. In recent years, TUMO centers have opened in Paris, Moscow, Tirana, Berlin, and Beirut.  

TUMO’s music program explores many genres and instruments, as well as songwriting, composing, and the use of digital audio software. 

The 19 members of the band range in age from 14 to 23, and they go to TUMO twice a week for the afterschool music program. Ten of the group members are vocalists, and others play instruments such as cello, guitar, violin, and flute. This concert will include original songs by the band, as well as music written to accompany stories by Hovhannes Tumanyan, Mesrop Mashtots, and Rumi. Create Account

The Armenian Museum of America is the largest Armenian museum in the Diaspora. It has grown into a major repository for all forms of Armenian material culture that illustrate the creative endeavors of the Armenian people over the centuries. Today, the museum’s collections hold more than 25,000 artifacts including 5,000 ancient and medieval Armenian coins, 1,000 stamps and maps, 3,000 textiles, and 180 Armenian inscribed rugs. In addition to more than 30,000 books in is research library, there is an extensive collection of Urartian and religious artifacts, ceramics, medieval illuminations, and various other objects. The collection includes historically significant objects, including five of the Armenian Bibles printed in Amsterdam in 1666. 

The Armenian Museum of America is currently open noon to 6 p.m. Friday through Sunday. The concert will stream online on Sunday, Oct. 24 at 2 p.m. EST (11 a.m. PST) via the museum’s Facebook page, YouTube Channel, and website www.ArmenianMuseum.org, and it will be available online for later viewing. 

Armenian finance minister introduces government’s five-year action plan to German partners

Save

Share

 16:47, 13 October, 2021

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. Finance Minister of Armenia Tigran Khachatryan had a working meeting with the representatives of Berlin Economics independent consulting company and the German Economic Union NGO, the ministry said in a statement.

Minister Khachatryan introduced the guests on the government’s five-year action plan and talked about the manageability of the current foreign debt and the macroeconomic features.

The guests expressed readiness to cooperate around issues of mutual interest and stated that the German partners closely follow the activity of the Armenian government and welcome the ongoing reforms.

The sides agreed to continue the dialogue over the issue on the agenda and expressed their support to the development of the Armenian-German bilateral economic ties.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Monumentwatch.org: ‘Azerbaijani roads,’ endangered Armenian cultural heritage

News.am, Armenia
Oct 15 2021

Almost immediately after the end of the 44-day war in 2020, Azerbaijan launched two major road construction projects in the occupied territories of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), and aimed at creating highways and infrastructure leading to Shushi city, writes monumentwatch.org which monitors Artsakh's cultural heritage. It added as follows:

The first of these roads also has an ideological meaning for the Azerbaijani side. It is not accidental that it has been called "Victory Road" because, according to the Azerbaijani side, it repeats the road paved by the Azerbaijani army, special forces to "liberate" Shushi. On the way, this name was given by Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev, and it groundbreaking was held on November 16, 2020. It will be a new road directly connecting Baku with Shushi, and which, according to the Azerbaijani side, will bypass the territories under the control of Russian peacekeepers and Armenians (lenta.ru).

According to the information spread by the Azerbaijani news websites, "Victory Road" shall connect the Fizuli region with Shushi, the regional capital of Fizuli. Its length will be 101.5 km. It will pass through 20 settlements, including Togh, Mets Tagher, Avetaranots, Sghnakh, and Karin Tak, the names of which are simply mentioned in the news videos about the road.

Simultaneously with the construction of this road, the Azerbaijani side is constructing another large Fizuli-Shushi road which in some places will intersect with "Victory Road." The first road will have two lanes and the second will have six lanes. The construction of these roads is carried out by Azerbaijani and Turkish road construction companies, of which the Azerbaijani ones operate under the Azerbaijani state bodies, and the Turkish ones have extensive experience in complex road construction. Such are Azvirt, "KOLİN" İnşaat Turizm San. and some other organizations.

These two road construction projects pose a great danger to the monuments in the Azerbaijani-occupied territories of Artsakh, as the Azerbaijani side is carrying out enormous land changes and, in particular, changes in the surrounding landscape and relief—and based on the plan of the roads to be built. In particular, a large number of trees are being cut down, large-scale leveling and widening works as well as blasts are being carried out, and all buildings and structures obstructing the road are being demolished or there is a danger to them. It should be noted here that all the monuments around or near which the Azerbaijani side carries out road construction or other works are in such danger.

The Tukhnakal mansion not far from the village of Moshkhmhat, the sanctuary of Sister Heghine, the St. Astvatsatsin Church and the cemetery of Madatashen village, as well as the old bridge of Avetaranots village, and the Tahis built on the Ishkhanaget river bridge near Mets Tagher village, etc. are endangered in this way. The Azokh village memorial to the victims of the Great Patriotic War, the Armenian Genocide, and the Artsakh liberation war was also destroyed.

Large underground tunnels are being built in the Sghnakh village section. The destruction of the cemetery of Sghnakh village is a fresh result of the elimination of such a "barrier" to road construction. The areas of the large northwestern cemetery of Mets Tagher village and "Makun" Bridge have been destroyed and leveled.

According to Azerbaijani official sources, "Victory Road" will be the first to be put into operation—and this will be in the fall.

Artsakh dismisses Azerbaijani claims of having captured Armenian drone

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 14 2021

Artsakh’s Ministry of Defense has refuted the reports of the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense claiming that a drone belonging to the Artsakh Defense Army conducting reconnaissance flights, was allegedly detected and confiscated by the units of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces.

“We officially declare that this is misinformation that has nothing to do with reality,” Artsakh’s defense Ministry stated.

Azerbaijani, Russian, Armenian religious leaders to meet in Moscow

By Vafa Ismayilova

The Azerbaijani, Russian and Armenian religious leaders are expected to meet in Russia, Sputnik Azerbaijan reported on October 11.

Chairman of the Caucasus Muslims Office Sheikh-ul-Islam Allahshukur Pashazade is on a visit to Russia between October 11-14 at the invitation of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Kirill, the press service of the Caucasus Muslims Office was quoted as saying.

Within the framework of the visit, Pashazade will also have an individual meeting with the patriarch.

The Caucasian Muslims Office along with the Azerbaijani embassy in Moscow plans to organize a ceremony to commemorate the martyrs of the 44-day Patriotic War which will be attended by Muslims and representatives of other religious confessions in Russia.

In late September, for the first time after the war Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov met his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan along with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly's 76th session after.

President Aliyev repeatedly said that Azerbaijan is ready to start talks on a peace agreement with Armenia, based on the mutual recognition of sovereignty and territorial integrity of each other.

He said that such an agreement would turn our region into a region of peace and cooperation. Aliyev described transportation projects as one of the areas that can serve as the cause of peace and cooperation and stressed that the Zangazur corridor will create new opportunities for the region.

A Moscow-brokered ceasefire deal that Baku and Yerevan signed on November 10, 2020, brought an end to six weeks of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijani army declared a victory against the Armenian troops. The signed agreement obliged Armenia to withdraw its troops from the Azerbaijani lands that it has occupied since the early 1990s.

The peace agreement stipulated the return of Azerbaijan's Armenian-occupied Kalbajar, Aghdam and Lachin regions and urged Armenia to withdraw its troops from the Azerbaijani lands that it has occupied since the early 1990s. Before the signing of the deal, the Azerbaijani army had liberated around 300 villages, settlements, city centers, and historic Shusha city.

Azerbaijani press: Baku: Iran continues smear campaign against Azerbaijan

By Ayya Lmahamad

Foreign Ministry’s Spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva has said that the Iranian Foreign Ministry does not stop its smear campaign against Azerbaijan.

She made the remarks while commenting on Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian's interview with the Lebanese Al-Manar TV channel.

“Unfortunately, the Iranian Foreign Ministry does not stop its smear campaign against Azerbaijan. We strongly reject such accusations,” she said.

The spokesperson underlined that during the 44-day war, Azerbaijan stated and now stresses once again that there were no terrorists on the country’s territory. She underlined that on the territory of Azerbaijan, as a country that suffered from terror, "there has never been a place for terrorists".

“Azerbaijan liberated its lands from occupation at the cost of the blood and lives of its martyrs. As President Ilham Aliyev noted, Azerbaijan, which has over 100,000-member army, does not need mercenaries,” she said.

Abdullayeva stressed the fact that Iran had not made similar accusations during the war, and there was no reason for concern until, after the war, the new government came to power.

"Reasons for these baseless accusations are the prevention of the illegal entry of Iranian trucks into Azerbaijan’s territory and the liberation of Azerbaijan’s lands from occupation. Our advice to those who want to look for terrorists is to carefully look around themselves,” she stated.

It should be noted that last October, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry provided the diplomatic corps in the country, including the Iranian embassy, with information about the participation of Armenian mercenaries in combat operations in the country’s formerly occupied territories.

Iran's very inadequate behavior, illegal transportation of goods to Azerbaijan's Khankandi without Baku's consent, its description of Armenia as a "brotherly and friendly country", the conduct of drills along the border with Azerbaijan, the closure of its airspace to planes carrying military supplies to Nakhchivan, in the past couple of weeks has flared up tension in its relations with neighbor Azerbaijan. 

It is noteworthy that Iran's state circles, officials, MPs, and the media still continue their aggressive rhetoric against Azerbaijan, claiming about an alleged Israeli presence near its border, which Baku officially dismissed as unfounded.

Lucy Der Manuelian, pioneering US scholar of Armenian architecture and art, dies at 93

Boston Globe
Oct 3 2021

Nearly 50 and pursuing a doctorate after raising two sons, Lucy Der Manuelian took a four-hour climb up a mountain in Soviet Armenia one day in 1977 to study and photograph a 13th-century monastery.

“I had spent the first part of my life as a Belmont housewife chauffeuring my two sons around town, and then I found myself on this mountain peak,” she recalled a few years later in a Globe interview.

Through determination and a willingness to shoulder camera equipment to remote places — not to mention going toe-to-toe with the KGB — she brought the first images of that monastery and other churches back to Western academics.

A pioneering US scholar of Armenian art and architecture, Dr. Der Manuelian died Sept. 20 at home of complications from dementia. She was 93 and had lived in her Belmont house since 1965.

Dr. Der Manuelian was the first to hold the Arthur H. Dadian and Ara T. Oztemel chair of Armenian art in Tufts University’s department of the history of art and architecture, and she had been the force behind securing endowment funding for the position.

Focusing academically on the architecture and art of Armenia was all but unheard of in the United States when she began her doctoral work nearly 50 years ago.

“Her dissertation is also widely considered to be the first American dissertation dedicated to Armenian art,” wrote Christina Maranci, who chairs the history of art and architecture department at Tufts, in a tribute.

In an interview posted on YouTube, Dr. Der Manuelian said she had come to think of Armenian art and architecture “as a kind of lost treasure.”

When she spoke to audiences about her work, “everyone became enthralled and I felt very happy because many of them said that, you know, the lectures opened their eyes to a different part of the world — a part of the world they hadn’t known anything about — and to different periods of history that were important for Western civilization.”

Dr. Der Manuelian was drawn to her academic focus almost by happenstance.

“I was sitting in on courses at Harvard, and I kept running across these footnotes about Armenian art and architecture,” she said in the video interview.

“And it was very surprising to me because I had never run across any mention of Armenian art and architecture in any of the textbooks on the history of art,” she added. “And I began to realize that — on the basis of what the footnotes said — some more research in the field of Armenian art and architecture might answer some of the most important unanswered and haunting questions in the history of medieval art.”

Among those questions, Dr. Der Manuelian said, was how did “the medieval architects of Western Europe learn the building techniques that made it possible for them to build those towering Gothic cathedrals?”

Though some scholars believed there was a connection between European cathedrals and Armenian architecture techniques that were developed centuries earlier, there was no documentation in the art history books she studied.

“I thought,” she said, “why not pursue this field?”

Born on June 7, 1928, Lucy Der Manuelian grew up in Boston and Arlington, the youngest of three siblings.

Her mother, Armenouhy Altiparmakian Der Manuelian, had fled the Istanbul area in 1915 at the outset of the genocide that decimated the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire. In later years, she wrote an autobiography and stories about her family.

Dr. Der Manuelian’s father, Manuel Der Manuelian, was a successful realtor.

She graduated from Girls’ Latin School in 1946 and received a bachelor’s degree in 1950 from Radcliffe College, where she majored in English.

A few months after graduating, she married Dr. Richard L. Sidman, a neuropathologist.

Their marriage ended in 1972 after she had raised her sons David Sidman, now of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Peter Der Manuelian, now of Boston, and had settled in Belmont.

“She was totally devoted to us,” Peter said, “but she was also feeding her insatiable curiosity.”

When her sons were young, she was auditing courses at Harvard University. And in a written tribute, they both noted that she also was “perfecting her gourmet cooking skills.”

Befriending Julia Child and her husband, Paul, Dr. Der Manuelian invited them over for dinner at a time when most people would have been too intimidated to prepare a meal for the famous chef.

“It was an evening full of pleasure and satisfaction,” Child and her husband said afterward in a July 1968 handwritten thank-you note.

“She was an inspiration,” David said of his mother, who he said passed along traits such as “optimism, entrepreneurship, persistence, and caring about other people.”

Her curiosity, he added, was not confined to academic pursuits.

“She would never be able to go to a restaurant without asking the waiter where she or he was from,” David said. “She would strike up conversations with everybody. She was very interested in their stories.”

Advertisement



Once Dr. Der Manuelian’s marriage was over, she enrolled for doctoral work in Boston University and a Harvard professor, Oleg Grabar, helped supervise her dissertation on Geghard, an Armenian monastery whose cathedral was finished in the 13th century. She graduated in 1980.

Her research was partly inspired by her godfather, Arshag Fetvadjian, an Armenian artist, designer, and painter known for his paintings of architectural monuments in the ancient city of Ani, which was the region’s capital before modern-day Armenia.

Dr. Der Manuelian used photography to record her explorations in Armenia, and was awarded a fellowship by what was then the Bunting Institute at Radcliffe to study Armenian churches.

“I had taken something like 60 rolls of film with me,” she recalled with a chuckle in the video interview. “I had two cameras, four lenses, and no experience in taking pictures.”

Maranci, who now holds the Dadian and Oztemel chair at Tufts, said in her tribute that “Lucy was fearless, physically and psychologically. Before the era of drones, she hung out of helicopters to take good aerial shots of monasteries and churches.”

During tense times between the United States and the Soviet Union, “the KGB suspected that she was a spy because of all her travel and photography,” Maranci added, and that led to an encounter in Armenia’s capital city.

Advertisement



“One night they visited her in Yerevan and, to avoid handing over the film, Lucy hid it inside her dress, daring them to manhandle her,” Maranci wrote. “Art history won and we have the photographs.”

In addition to her two sons, Dr. Der Manuelian leaves two grandsons and a great-granddaughter.

A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m. Oct. 23 in Story Chapel in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge.

Dr. Der Manuelian “was always just doing a hundred things at once,” Peter said, mixing fund-raising for her academic work with attending the Boston Ballet and Boston Symphony Orchestra.

“As everyone who knew her can attest, Lucy was unconventional and indomitable,” Maranci wrote. “An avid tennis player, she had boundless energy. She believed in using every minute: She kept a stack of books in the car and read at every stoplight (often to the consternation of drivers behind her).”

Whether she was teaching or hanging out of a helicopter to shoot photos, Dr. Der Manuelian could improvise her way through any challenge.

If no parking spots were available at Tufts, Maranci wrote, “Lucy sometimes held office hours in her car.”

Iran envoy discusses extraditing convicts with Armenian Min.

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Oct 2 2021

TEHRAN, Oct. 02 (MNA) – The Iranian envoy to Yerevan and the Armenian Justice Minister discussed ways to extradite Iranian convicts to their country, and cooperation in the field of crime prevention were discussed by

Abbas Badakhshan Zohuri, Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Yerevan met and held talks with Karen Aresi Andreasyan, the Justice Minister of the Republic of Armenia. 

During the meeting, the two sides discussed various issues such as the transfer of Iranian convicts to their respective country, acceleration of the judicial process of the cases, and cooperation in the field of crime prevention.

They also expressed satisfaction with the development of friendly relations between the two countries.

During the meeting, the two sides also discussed some legal issues related to the economic activity of Iranians in Armenia.

It is worth mentioning that on September 15, the Iranian embassy in Yerevan announced that six Iranian prisoners were extradited from Armenia to the country.

ZM/FNA 14000710000196

Aliyev says “would have no objections” over OSCE-mediated meeting with Pashinyan

Save

Share

 16:44, 28 September, 2021

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev says he wouldn’t mind holding an OSCE-mediated meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

In an interview to FRANCE24, Aliyev said that if the OSCE Minsk Group of mediators (France, the US and Russia) set up a meeting with Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan, he would have no objections.