tr: Parvis de l’Hôtel de Ville – Hommage musical Charles Aznavour – Mardi 21 mai de 17 à 21h

          Rectificatif, par erreur Alakyaz N° 73 avait indiqué le 22 mai pour l’hommage à Charles Aznavour, le bon programme est le suivant:

          Hommage musical à Charles Aznavour

Parvis de l’Hôtel de Ville – mardi 21 mai 17h-21h

 

A l’occasion du 95e  anniversaire de sa naissance,

Paris rend hommage en musique à Charles Aznavour (1924-2018),

auteur, compositeur, interprète

 

17h – 18h : 6 morceaux d’Aznavour sont interprétés par un piano sans musicien 

– Je M’voyais Déjà

– Les Comédiens

– La Bohème

– Emmenez-moi

– La Mamma

– Mes emmerdes

 

18h-19h : La chorale de l’hôtel de ville chante « Emmenez-moi » et « La Bohème »

3 passages à 18h/18h30/19h

 

19h-21h : Hommage musical à Aznavour 

– 19h Erik Berchot (piano)

– 19h45 Joana Mendil (voix)

– 20h André Manoukian (piano, voix)

– 20h30 Essaï Altounian (piano, voix)

 

Pendant la totalité de l’hommage : projection de photos d’archives sur écran géant 

 

Innovate Armenia Comes to USC on May 18

For Immediate Release


May 7, 2019


USC INSTITUTE OF ARMENIAN STUDIES
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, California, USA
Contact: Syuzanna Petrosyan, Associate Director
[email protected] | 213.821.3943


Innovate Armenia Comes to USC on May 18

Innovate Armenia -- the festival of ideas, music and action -- will once again 
burst on to the USC Campus on Saturday, May 18, from 10 am to 6 pm. Want to 
know what to expect?

Imagine you walk into USC at 10:00 am on Saturday, May 18. Parking is easy. You 
grab a (free) cup of coffee from Serj Tankian's Kavat Coffee or Henry's House 
of Coffee from the DIALECTS OF COFFEE station. Maybe you stop and record a 
conversation with journalist Liana Aghajanian about your memories of coffee, 
family, immigration and different traditions of making coffee. Then you head 
inside to Bovard Auditorium and listen to six different scholars talk about 
connecting to identity and memory in old Armenian towns and routes throughout 
Turkey. 

You get ready to listen to a conversation with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan 
live via Skype about HOW TO BUILD A COUNTRY.

You decide it's time for some jingyalov hats, kabob tacos or some other 
innovative mix of familiar food from Z's. You grab a bite while you listen to 
Garabala (from Beirut), the Nur Qanon Ensemble (from Yerevan), or Richard 
Hagopian (from Fresno) on the day-long music stage. 

You walk back into Bovard just in time for SOUND STORIES -- a surprise 
collaboration between the Institute and Element Band -- presenting the stories 
we don't know about the music we love. 

Now you're ready for an afternoon of talks on HOW TO BUILD A COUNTRY, 
POST-REVOLUTION -- by ministers and policy makers from the Government of 
Armenia. 

It’s been a really stimulating day and you could use a glass of beer, so you 
head outside and sample (free) craft Armenian beer while you listen to the beer 
guru himself, Charlie Papazian, talk about the 4,000 traditions of Armenian 
craft beer. Then you walk around the various booths where organizations from 
Armenia can work with you to discuss how you can connect. You make sure to stop 
by the Institute’s booth to say hello to the staff and student workers, and to 
learn about what it is that the Institute does.

Innovate Armenia is at the intersection of innovation and engagement. Come play 
your part.

About the Institute

Established in 2005, the USC Institute of Armenian Studies supports 
multidisciplinary scholarship to re-define, explore and study the complex 
issues that make up the contemporary Armenian experience—from post-genocide to 
the developing Republic of Armenia to the evolving diaspora. The institute 
encourages research, publications and public service, and promotes links among 
the global academic and Armenian communities.

For inquiries, write to [email protected] or call 213.821.3943. 





Asbarez: Tens of Thousands March for Justice at the Turkish Consulate

Tens of thousands turned out to March for Justice at the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles

Tens of thousands of community members were joined on Wednesday by leading elected officials and more than 50 coalition partners at the annual March for Justice in front of the Turkish Consulate General in Los Angeles to demand justice and righteously condemn Turkey’s continued denial of the Armenian Genocide.

Raising their voices on stage in solidarity with the Armenian Cause were representatives Adam Schiff and Brad Sherman, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti and Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Koretz in whose district the demonstration was taking place.

The March for Justice, organized by the Armenian Genocide Committee—a coalition of the major community organizations and religious denominations—featured a short program that was guided by Masters of Ceremonies Armen K. Hovannisian, Esq. and Tenny Khachatourian, each of whom drew on their personal experiences as descendants of Genocide survivors to advance the call for justice and recognition of the Genocide. The program began with invocation offered by clergy headed by the leaders of all Armenian denominations.

Watch the entire March for Justice covered live by Asbarez on Facebook.

The Armenian rapper and activist R-Mean rallied the crowd during a march through a performance of his signature song “Open Wounds,” while children holding the tai-color flooded on stage. The American and Armenian National Anthems were performed by students from area Armenian schools. The program also featured a moving performance by the Element Band.

Speaking on behalf of the youth was Raffi Jivalagian whose impassioned speech highlighting the role of the new generation in advancing the Armenian Cause, closed the program.

Asbarez will have complete coverage of the March for Justice in upcoming editions.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/24/2019

                                        Wednesday, 

Armenia Marks Genocide Anniversary


Armenia -- People walk to the Tsitsernakabert memorial in Yerevan during an 
annual commemoration of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey, April 24, 
2019.

Tens of thousands of people marched to the Tsitsernakabert memorial in Yerevan 
and laid flowers there on Wednesday as Armenia marked the 104th anniversary of 
the 1915 genocide of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey.

As always, the annual procession began with a prayer service held by Catholicos 
Garegin II, the supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, by the eternal 
fire of the hilltop memorial overlooking the city center. The ceremony was 
attended by President Armen Sarkissian, Prime Minister Prime Minister Nikol and 
other senior state officials.

“It is the day to recall once again the tragedy of our compatriots who had 
suffered ferocities and had been expelled from the land of their ancestors … to 
tell the world once again about the Genocide -- the most hideous crime against 
humanity -- and to call for soberness and a fight against denial,” Sarkissian 
said in a written statement issued on the occasion.

“Impunity that followed the Armenian Genocide had opened the doors for other 
grave crimes against humanity and genocides: remember the Holocaust, the 
tragedies in Cambodia and Rwanda,” he said.


Armenia -- Catholicos Garegin II holds a prayer service at the Tsitsernakabert 
memorial in Yerevan during an annual commemoration of the 1915 Armenian 
genocide in Ottoman Turkey, .

A separate statement released by Pashinian noted not only the slaughter of some 
1.5 million Armenians but also the destruction of Armenian cultural heritage in 
the Ottoman Empire.

“We were consistently deprived of the land on which Armenian culture and 
Armenian identity were formed and developed over thousands of years,” read the 
statement. “The cultural heritage that constitutes the Armenian identity -- 
thousands of schools, churches and monasteries -- was erased from the face of 
the earth.”

Pashinian also recalled the World War One-era massacres of hundreds of 
thousands of Greeks and Assyrians perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks. Armenia 
officially recognized them as genocide in 2015.

Both the president and the prime minister made clear that Yerevan will continue 
to seek greater international recognition of the Armenian genocide.

Turkey continues to deny a premeditated government effort to exterminate the 
Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire. Its vehement denials are dismissed 
by most scholars outside Turkey.

“The historical record on the Armenian Genocide is unambiguous and documented 
by overwhelming evidence,” the International Association of Genocide Scholars 
said in 2007.

Pope Francis and his predecessor John Paull II prayed at Tsitsernakabert when 
they visited Armenia in 2016 and 2001 respectively. They both officially 
recognized the genocide, as did more than two dozen nations, including France, 
Germany and Russia.



Corruption Charges Against Senior Official ‘Not Fabricated’

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian (R) addresses protesters outisde his 
office in Yerevan, December 24, 2018.

Law-enforcement authorities had sufficient grounds to bring corruption charges 
against the head of an Armenian anti-graft agency, Prosecutor-General Artur 
Davtian insisted on Wednesday.

Davtian dismissed claims by Davit Sanasarian, the suspended head of the State 
Oversight Service (SOS), that the charges were “fabricated” by the National 
Security Service (NSS).

“There is no way a criminal case can be fabricated against anyone,” he told 
reporters. “Forget about that word. There is no such thing.”

Davtian said the ongoing criminal investigation into alleged corrupt practices 
within the SOS, a government body tasked with combatting financial 
irregularities in the public sector, will be “absolutely objective and 
comprehensive.”

The NSS indicted Sanasarian last week as part of that probe. It arrested two 
other senior SOS officials in late February, saying that they attempted to cash 
in on government-funded supplies of medical equipment to three hospitals. 
Sanasarian is accused of helping them enrich themselves and a private company 
linked to them.

Sanasarian, who actively participated in last year’s “velvet revolution” and 
has been a political ally of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian until now, strongly 
denies the accusations. The former civic activist’s lawyer, Inessa Petrosian, 
has claimed that the high-profile case is based on “false testimony” given by 
SOS officials against her client.

Earlier this week, Petrosian asked the Office of the Prosecutor-General to 
order another law-enforcement body, the Special Investigative Service (SIS), to 
take over the probe. Davtian said there are “no grounds yet” to grant the 
request.

Sanasarian’s supporters, among them leaders of some Western-funded 
non-governmental organizations, have defended him on social media, denouncing 
the NSS and its influential director, Artur Vanetsian, in particular.

Pashinian hit back at the critics on Saturday, saying that they place their 
personal relationships with Sanasarian above the rule of law. “Davit is also my 
friend, but be aware that there are no untouchable persons in Armenia,” he said.



Tsarukian Denies Mixing Politics With Business

        • Gayane Saribekian

Armenia - Gagik Tsarukian and other deputies of his Prosperous Armenia Party 
arrive for a parliament session in Yerevan, April 8, 2019.

Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) leader Gagik Tsarukian denied on Wednesday any 
connection between his political activities and business interests, comparing 
himself to U.S. President Donald Trump and Italy’s former Prime Minister Silvio 
Berlusconi.

Tsarukian was accused by pro-government lawmakers of mixing politics and 
business during last week’s heated debates in the Armenian parliament on a 
government proposal to impose tariffs on cement imported to the country. The 
tycoon and his allies said the proposed measure is not far-reaching enough to 
protect domestic cement manufacturers.

The largest of them, the Ararat Tsement plant, is owned by Tsarukian. The 
latter has warned that he could lay off most of its 1,100 workers unless the 
tariffs also apply to Iranian clinker, a material developed before the final 
stage of cement production.

Deputies from the ruling My Step bloc said Tsarukian’s position on the issue is 
motivated by his personal business interests. One of them, former journalist 
Hayk Gevorgian, told the tycoon to make a choice between business and politics.

“He is too little a person [to make such statements,] let him go back to 
journalism,” Tsarukian said of Gevorgian. “All over the world successful 
politicians are business owners,” he added, pointing to Trump and Berlusconi.

Tsarukian insisted that he is concerned about the fate of Ararat Tsement 
workers, rather than his profits.

The Armenian constitution bars members of the National Assembly from engaging 
in entrepreneurial activity. The BHK leader claims that he meets this 
requirement because he only owns dozens of businesses and does not manage them.

The cement tax controversy came amid mounting tensions between Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian’s My Step and the opposition BHK which has the second largest 
group in the parliament. Some Tsarukian-owned businesses were raided by tax 
officials shortly after the BHK leader criticized the government’s economic 
policies early this month. The State Revenue Committee denied that the tax 
audits are politically motivated.

Senior representatives of the two political forces traded fresh accusations on 
the parliament floor on April 18. Pashinian and Tsarukian met to discuss the 
cement dispute and other contentious issues later that day.

“The [economic] issues that we discussed found solutions,” Tsarukian told 
reporters on Wednesday. He did not elaborate.

Tsarukian also stood by his criticism of the current government’s track record, 
saying that the economic situation in Armenia has not improved since Pashinian 
came to power almost a year ago. “I’m not saying there have been no changes,” 
he said. “But there has been no socioeconomic change and that’s the main 
problem.”



Yerevan Reports More Agreements With Russian Arms Exporter


RUSSIA -- Vehicles are parked near the office building of Rosoboronexport 
company in Moscow, March 1, 2016

Armenia will continue to acquire Russian weapons “very vigorously,” Defense 
Minister Davit Tonoyan said on Wednesday after holding fresh talks with the 
head of Russia’s state-owned arms exporter, Rosoboronexport.

Tonoyan and Rosoboronexport’s Alexander Mikheyev met on Tuesday on the 
sidelines of an international security conference held in Moscow.

“The parties reached a number of new agreements on expanding the scope of 
cooperation and ensuring its continuity,” the Armenian Defense Ministry said in 
a short statement on the meeting. It did not elaborate.

Tonoyan, who was appointed as defense minister in May 2018, and Mikheyev met on 
at least two occasions last year. Their latest talks came two months after 
Russian and Armenian officials signed fresh defense contracts in Moscow. Their 
details have still not been made public.

Earlier in February, Yerevan confirmed the signing of a Russian-Armenian 
contract for the purchase of four Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter jets to the Armenian 
Air Force. The total cost of the deal remains unknown.

Speaking to Russian journalists on Wednesday, Tonoyan reiterated that the 
multirole jets will be delivered to Armenia by the beginning of 2020. The 
Armenian side has already made first payments for them, he said, according to 
the TASS news agency.

The minister also reaffirmed Yerevan’s plans to buy more such Russian 
warplanes. “We will be arming and rearming ourselves very vigorously,” he 
added. “The purchases of Russian weaponry will continue.”



Press Review



“It’s now wrong to speak about the Armenian genocide the way Soviet Armenian 
intellectuals did in the 1960s and 1970s,” writes “Aravot.” “They were 
talented, patriotic people. Their task was to pass on to the next generations 
the pain endured by our nation and to keep the memory of that suffering live. 
We don’t have to keep that memory live as our grandchildren will know very well 
what happened in the early 20th century. Our task is much more pragmatic now.” 
The Armenians, the paper says, must now remember that their ancestors were not 
only massacred by the Ottoman Turks but also deprived of their land and 
properties. It says they must also strengthen their independent state and 
instill a notion about its “eternity” in younger generations.

Lragir.am quotes President Armen Sarkissian as revealing that in April 2018 he 
received dozens of phone calls from people urging him not to meet Nikol 
Pashinian in Yerevan’s Republic Square. The online publication praises 
Sarkissian for ignoring those appeals, saying that his open-air meeting with 
Pashinian impressed many Armenians and made them feel more confident about the 
future of their country. “Who made those phone calls to President Sarkissian?” 
it asks. “Will he name names soon or choose to publicize that at a more 
opportune moment when the new Armenia feels the need to have those names 
disclosed?”

“Zhamanak” reports that a deputy chairman of the former ruling Republican Party 
(HHK), Armen Ashotian, said on Tuesday that Serzh Sarkisian decided to resign 
before his deputy prime minister, Karen Karapetian, met with Pashinian at a 
detention center in Yerevan on April 23, 2019. Ashotian thus denied a statement 
to the contrary made by parliament speaker Ararat Mirzoyan. The paper wonders 
if Karapetian knew about Sarkisian’s resignation when he discussed it with 
Pashinian. It speculates that Karapetian was acting on a foreign power’s orders.

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org



Sports: Oumiha, Grigoryan and Gadzhimagomedov won gold medals at the Cologne Boxing World Cup

International Boxing Association (AIBA):
April 15, 2019 Monday


Oumiha, Grigoryan and Gadzhimagomedov won gold medals at the Cologne Boxing World Cup

LAUSANNE, Switzerland

Boxers from 21 countries showed their strengths at the Cologne Boxing World Cup. 17 winners representing 11 nations were crowned. France's defending AIBA World Champion Sofiane Oumiha and the Russian team made a brilliant performance.

Armenia's Anush Grigoryan, light flyweight (48kg) title holder from the EUBC U22 European Boxing Championships in Vladikavkaz, arrived in Cologne with confidence. She was focused in her final against Ireland's Carly McNaul from the first seconds, and her counter-punches delivered her a gold medal. In the men's light flyweight (49kg) final the Armenian boxer and Rio 2016 Olympian Artur Hovhannisyan lost to Thailand's Wuttichai Yurachai in a spectacular fight.

France's Olympic silver medallist Sofiane Oumiha, unbeaten since June 2017, changed his weight class to the light welterweight (63kg). Oumiha adopted the strength of the punches quickly and advanced to the final against Thailand's AIBA 2015 World Championships bronze medallist Wuttichai Masuk. Both are amazing technician, mainly counter-attacking fighters. This time mostly Masuk moved ahead and their narrow battle with impressive combinations that delighted the crowd. Oumiha's strong finish at the last round carried him a victory.

The Russian team attended with 20 boxers, five of them earned gold medals. Albert Batyrgaziev is a strong future hope at the bantamweight (57kg) who dominated his final against Germany's veteran Raman Sharafa, knocking down his rival once. Gabil Mamedov met the German Hamsat Shadalov and surprisingly defeated this talented rival in the final of the lightweight (60kg).

London 2012 Olympic Games bronze medallist Andrey Zamkovoy won a re-match against his teammate Khariton Agrba in the welterweight (69kg) final. Russia's promising star Muslim Gadzhimagomedov had to push it to the max to beat Ireland's Anthony Browne at the heavyweight (91kg). The fifth Russian gold medal was captured surprisingly by Sergei Egorov who triumphed over his National Champion teammate Ivan Veryasov in the super heavyweight (+91kg).

List of the winners of the Cologne Boxing World Cup

Women's 51kg: Anush Grigoryan, Armenia

Women's 54kg: Maisnam Meena Kumari Devi, India

Women's 57kg: Michaela Walsh, Ireland

Women's 60kg: Mira Potkonen, Finland

Women's 64kg: Yang Chengyu, China

Women's 69kg: Yang Liu, China

Women's 75kg: Lauren Price, Wales

Men's 49kg: Wuttichai Yurachai, Thailand

Men's 52kg: Billal Bennama, France

Men's 57kg: Albert Batyrgaziev, Russia

Men's 60kg: Gabil Mamedov, Russia

Men's 63kg: Sofiane Oumiha, France

Men's 69kg: Andrei Zamkovoy, Russia

Men's 75kg: Osley Iglesias, Cuba

Men's 81kg: Abu-Lubdeh Abdulrahman, Germany

Men's 91kg: Muslim Gadzhimagomedov, Russia

Men's +91kg: Sergei Egorov, Russia

Ukraine President: I hope everything works out for Pashinyan

News.am, Armenia
Ukraine President: I hope everything works out for Pashinyan Ukraine President: I hope everything works out for Pashinyan

17:58, 14.04.2019
                  

President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko conveyed his greetings to Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan in response to an Armenian journalist’s question at Olimpiyskiy Stadium where he had arrived to participate in a debate with Ukrainian presidential hopeful Vladimir Zelensky, but Zelensky hadn’t shown up.

Poroshenko stated that he has met with Pashinyan several times at various international forums and has expressed his support to the reforms of the “new President of Armenia”, stating that he hopes “everything works out for Pashinyan”. Poroshenko stated that Armenia and Ukraine have great potential for the development of cooperation in the spheres of economy, human contacts and culture.

Talking about the Armenian community of Ukraine, Poroshenko stated that he is always inclined to make sure the citizens of Ukraine of Armenian descent feel at home. “Ukraine protects the rights of national minorities,” he said, adding that protection of the rights of the Armenians of Ukraine is under the supervision of the head of state.

Armenian Foreign Minister pays tribute to the memory of Rwandan genocide victims

News.am, Armenia
April 7 2019
Armenian Foreign Minister pays tribute to the memory of Rwandan genocide victims Armenian Foreign Minister pays tribute to the memory of Rwandan genocide victims

20:00, 07.04.2019
                  

Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan visited the Rwandan Genocide Museum during his official visit to Kigali and paid tribute to the memory of the victims, the press service of the Armenian Foreign Ministry reported.

Armenian Foreign Minister left a note in the museum's memorial book, in particular:  "This is a reminder of another common responsibility to resist the genuine cause of the genocide, injustice, intolerance, discrimination and hatred. Denial of genocide is the continuation of genocide. 

The Armenian Genocide committed in 1915-1923 by Ottoman Turkey against the Armenian people and its continued denial reminds that no political considerations, no compromise with respect to moral responsibility, will remove that responsibility. I hope that this museum, as a genuine manifestation of the struggle against genocide and its denial, will be morally strong against the denial of that crime. "

300-year-old Armenian plaque restored

The Times of India
April 5 2019
Kamini Mathai| TNN | Updated: Apr 6, 2019, 06:46 IST

A mason works on the plaque in Saidapet

CHENNAI: As the mason plasters on the final touches to the concrete border around the 300-year-old Armenian plaquein Saidapet, social media in Armenia lights up with celebratory messages.

The plaque, which commemorates the building of the Marmalong bridge in 1726 — the oldest across the Adyar River — by Armenian merchant Coja Petrus Uscan, had disappeared from sight a few years ago owing in part to neglect and to construction work along the Saidapet Bridge. But now, the Armenian consulate in the city, in collaboration with the highways department, has managed to restore the plaque in its original spot.

“In February, a group of 20 Armenians had visited the city and they went to see the plaque,” says Shivkumar Eashwaran, honorary consul general of Armenia in Chennai. “They were upset that the plaque was virtually underground. There was an outcry in Armenia and in India,” he said.

Eashwaran was directed to the highways department, which helped dig out the plaque and restore it to its former glory. Most of the plaque was underground and had to be dug out using a crane.

“It was restored last week. We are building a granite structure around it to protect it,” said N Shanthi of the highways department.


“There was a celebration in India and Armenia when we shared pictures of the restoration. The Armenian press has covered it as a matter of pride,” says Eashwaran. The plaque will be officially unveiled after the elections in May.
The Marmalong Bridge was built at Rs 1 lakh and dedicated to the city. Uscan had decided to settle in Madras after coming to the city in 1724 and paid not only to build the bridge but also for its upkeep.

The Marmalong bridge was replaced by the Marimalai Adigal
Bridge. The plaque has inscriptions in Persian, Armenian and Latin.

 

Three years ago, history enthusiasts in the city created a
Facebook page “Retrieve the Uscan Stone” to draw attention to save the plaque.


https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chennai/300-year-old-armenian-plaque-restored/articleshow/68746479.cms?utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=iOSapp&utm_source=WhatsApp.com&fbclid=IwAR1H7PtddNnCCrSE6dBOnd5hZMGdGyw3yN6cvZGIZ6T6Owo2ZzfZDqFmM7Y


Sports: NEWS.am Sport from Sarajevo: Armenian football fans have a fighting spirit

News.am, Armenia

Samvel Sukiasyan from Sarajevo

Armenian football fans have a fighting spirit and expect the Armenian team to win over the team of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the first round EURO 2020 qualifying match on Saturday at Grbavica Staium in Sarajevo, NEWS.am Sport correspondent reported. The game will start at 23։45 Yerevan time.

The match will be officiated by Jakob Kelet. Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Italy, Greece and Lichtenstein are playing in Group J.

Armenia and Bosnia and Herzegovina faced each other in World Cup 2010. The Bosnian team defeated Armenia 2-0 in Yerevan and 4-0 in Sarajevo.

The event is covered with assistance of Ucom

Video at

Sports: European U-19 Championship Cup arrives in Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Sport 18:47 20/03/2019 Armenia

The elite round of the 2019 UEFA European Under-19 Championship will kick off in Armenia. The winning team of each of the group will arrive in Armenia in June for the champion’s title.
A total of eight teams will play in the tournament, with players born on or after 1 January 2000 eligible to participate.

To note, the annual international youth football championship is organised by UEFA for the men's under-19 national teams of Europe.

The cup of the championship has already arrive in Armenia, the Facebook page f the tournament reported.