Writer William Saroyan’s Longtime Fresno Home Opens as Museum

Fresno State Univ.
Friday 7:58 AM EST
Writer William Saroyan's Longtime Fresno Home Opens as Museum
 
FRESNO, California
 
 
The Fresno house where famed writer William Saroyan spent the last two decades of his life will open as a museum on Aug. 31, the 110th anniversary of his birth, with a private reception. Beginning in September, the William Saroyan House-Museum will be open for tours by appointment online.
 
A grand opening celebration for the William Saroyan House-Museum will be held at Fresno State's Satellite Student Union at 7 p.m. on Aug. 31. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. with an exhibition devoted to Saroyan's life. A formal program will begin at 7 p.m. with a movie about the Saroyan House-Museum project, speakers and musical performances, followed by a reception. Entrance is free, but preregistration is required.
 
In 2016, Arthur Janibekyan, founder of the Renaissance Cultural and Intellectual Foundation, purchased Saroyan's house (2729 W. Griffith Way), saving it from foreclosure.
 
"The opening of the Saroyan House-Museum in Fresno marks an important milestone in the history of our community," said Barlow Der Mugrdechian, coordinator of the Armenian Studies Program at Fresno State. "I am particularly happy that the main opening ceremonies will take place at Fresno State, since the Armenian Studies Program has had a long history teaching courses on Saroyan and organizing numerous conferences dedicated to him. It is the right time for the opening of the house-museum."
 
Saroyan was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1940, the New York Drama Critics' Circle award and, in 1943, he won the Academy Award for Best Story for the film adaptation of his novel "The Human Comedy."
 
The museum will be full of interactive and innovative exhibits, making it unique in the region. Technology will allow a hologram of Saroyan to greet visitors. The museum will feature a large digital archive, including exclusive photos and examples of his graphic and literary work.
 
In addition, according to Saroyan's will, a research area will be created within the house for students, scholars and other interested individuals to benefit from the vast heritage that Saroyan left behind.

Yerevan reminded Baku of half a million Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan

Arminfo, Armenia
Yerevan reminded Baku of half a million Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan

Yerevan July 20

Marianna Mkrtchyan. The representative of Azerbaijan visually demonstrated the degree of hatred towards Armenia and the Armenian society, which the Azerbaijani government sows in its own society.

This was stated during the meeting of the 15th OSCE conference for the South Caucasus media "Quality journalism for reliable and reliable information" in Tbilisi, Head of the Department of Information and Public Diplomacy of the Armenian Foreign Ministry Helen Harutyunyan, reacting to the anti-Armenian statement of the representative of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Khimket Hajiyev.

Since I was deprived of the right to reply to some accusations made against Armenia yesterday by the representative of Azerbaijan, I take this opportunity to respond and to set the record straight. And indeed, since the session is about countering the have speech, it seems to be the right setting to respond to the hate speech directed against my country. But before coming to the subject of the matter I would like to express my concern at the continuous abuse of this platform to disseminate anti Armenian propaganda, hatred and false information under the inaction of the moderator. I would like to strongly request the moderators of the sessions to be attentive and to exercise their authority and prevent panelists from using this format for conducting what should be called hostile information directed against another country. I hope that the organizers will draw necessary conclusions and we will not have the same situation next year.

On the other hand, the representative of Azerbaijan vividly showed the extent of hostility towards Armenia and the Armenians that the Azerbaijani government is cultivating in the country. And with each passing year this narrative is being enriched with new nuances. Mr Hajiyev went as far as to accuse Armenia of committing a holocaust, uttering an allegation which relates to an extremely sensitive subject for the people who survived the Genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire. It seems, that you do not know the value of the word, but we do. And firmly reject all your groundless accusations. And when it comes to refugees, then we should speak about the almost half a million Armenians that barely escaped with their lives from the rampage of marauding gangs in the Armenian districts of the cities in Azerbaijan, including the capital, escaped with nothing but the clothes on their backs. But the Armenian government did not keep them hostage of foreign policy games, since the rights of these people were the ultimate value.

It has become a good old tradition for the Azerbaijani authorities, that whenever someone is speaking about the pitiful state of democracy, human rights and the rule of law in Azerbaijan, they dodge all the questions by diverting the attention towards Armenia and the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. And by the way, the conflict is about the right of the people of Artsakh to live in a free and democratic country, which Azerbaijan is obviously not. And sooner Azerbaijan comes to terms with it, the sooner we will be able to find a sustainable peace.

Nagorno Karabakh, or I should say Republic of Artsakh is an independent state with fully functioning democratic institutions, where freedom of the media and pluralism of opinions is ensured and respected, and well recognized by the international relevant organisations. They do not put journalists in prison on bogus charges, they do not shut down media outlets and they do not restrict access of journalists and they do not put them in black lists. The authorities of Artsakh believe in the right to information and the freedom of media and ensure it both in law and in practice.

And the final observation. Mr Hajiyev has been complaining about the revelations about the widespread corruption scheme targeting European politicians, known as Azerbaijani Laundromat, which were made by the Organised Crime and Corruption reporting project. He called it unfair ''cold-war type propaganda'' against Azerbaijan without any hard evidence. But it seems, the evidence provided was enough for Italian prosecutors, for Council of Europe and its Parliamentary Assembly and others to take necessary legal actions. Instead of spending millions trying to bribe European politicians to prevent their criticism of the situation with democracy, human rights and rule of law in Azerbaijan, I would strongly recommend to try and build a genuine democratic modern state, believe me, it will be much more economically efficient and much more beneficial for the Azerbaijani people.


Armenia thanks Egypt for Genocide recognition efforts

PanArmenian, Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – President of the National Assembly Ara Babloyan at a meeting with Egyptian ambassador to Armenia Tareq Ebrahim Mohamed Maaty on Tuesday, July 17 thanked the House of Representatives of Egypt for the work in the process of the recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide.

The envoy visited the parliament on Tuesday on the completion of the diplomatic mission.

Welcoming the guest, Babloyan the Ambassador for his efforts aimed at the development of the Armenian-Egyptian relations.

Weighing in on the historical traditions and friendship between the two peoples, Babloyan stressed the development of cooperation in different areas and called for deeper inter-parliamentary cooperation.

Also, Babloyan said he greatly values the balanced position of Egypt in the most important issues for Armenia.

The Ambassador said, in turn, that the Armenian-Egyptian relations have become closer due to the Armenian community of Egypt which plays a key role in the development of the country.

Yerevan mayoral election fails due to lack of quorum

PanArmenian, Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – An extraordinary City Council session that sought to elect a new Mayor on Monday, July 16 was canceled due to lack of quorum in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital.

Only five members of the Council of Elders – Deputy Mayor Kamo Areyan and 4 members of Yerkir Tsirani (Land of Apricot) – were attending the session.

Areyan first announced a 30-minute break and declared afterwards that the session had failed due to lack of quorum.

Both Yelk (Way Out) and the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) had announced that they are not going to participate in the session.

Opposition Yerkir Tsirani party was the only one to have submitted a candidate for the Mayor’s post.

Under the current legislation, if no candidate is proposed within two weeks after the session or a candidate is unable to collect the necessary number of votes, the government can reduce the term of office of the Council of Elders and announce new elections, which are to be held within 30 to 40 days after the reduction of the Council’s term of office.

Former Mayor Taron Margaryan submitted his resignation on Monday, July 9, without providing reasons for such a move.

In November 2011, Margaryan was elected the Mayor of the city by the decision of Yerevan City Council. Following elections of the Council of the Elders in May 2013 and May 2017, he was re-elected in the post.

Veteran ARF Member Mher Chekerdemian Passes Away

Mher Chekerdemian

It is with great sorrow the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Western US Central Committee announced the passing of Mher Chekerdemian, one of its veteran members, who passed away on July 5 in Fresno, Calif.

For decades Chekerdemian has been an active member of the ARF, occupying leadership positing in the party and community organizations, including serving on the ARF Western US Central Committee. He was leading figure in the advancement of the Armenian-American community life in Fresno.

The Central Committee extends its heartfelt condolences to Chekerdemian’s family, relatives and fellow ARF members.

RFE/RL – Armenia Report – 07/06/2018

                                        Friday, 

Pashinian Advocates ‘Fact-Based’ Decision On Amulsar Gold Mine

        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian holds a meeting on the Amulsar mining 
site in Jermuk, 6July, 2018

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian called for a decision on the future of 
a gold mining project at Amulsar that would be “based on facts rather than 
emotions” as he met with all stakeholders in the central Armenian province of 
Vayots Dzor on Friday.

Pashinian arrived in the town of Jermuk on the second day of his two-day tour 
of the southern and central Armenian provinces with the purpose of getting 
firsthand information about a local dispute between some members of the 
community and environmentalists on one side and an international mining company 
prospecting for gold at a nearby deposit on the other.

All roads leading to Amulsar have been blocked since June 23 by a group of 
residents of nearby communities as well as some environmental activists 
protesting against gold mining operations planned there. The protesters claim 
the operations of Lydian International, a U.S.-based mining company, would 
contaminate air and water in the mountainous area. Lydian maintains that it 
will use advanced technology to prevent any damage to the local ecosystem.


Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with protesters at Amulsar, 
6July, 2018
The company, which had won exclusive rights to develop the Amulsar deposit, 
says it has suffered millions of dollars in losses and could take legal action 
if one of the largest business projects in Armenia’s history is disrupted.

More than 1,400 people employed by the company, many of them also local 
residents, have been unable to go to work for days. More than 200 Lydian 
employees demonstrated in Yerevan on July 2 against the blockage of the 
construction site at the gold deposit imposed by the protesters despite Premier 
Pashinian’s call to end the protests.

Pashinian met with representatives of Lydian, the local communities and 
environmental activists in one place to discuss possible ways of resolving the 
situation. In particular, he insisted that an inspection involving all 
stakeholders, including experts, should be carried out to provide credible 
answers to two key questions – whether the operations of the mining site affect 
the quality of water resources and the future development of Jermuk as a resort 
town.

“I believe that decisions of the government concerning the mine must be made on 
the basis of facts rather than emotions. Theoretically, one can also make 
emotional decisions, but we should understand that emotional decisions, 
especially in state governance, are not particularly useful. And secondly, we 
now have a de jure situation and every resolution of this situation has its own 
potential development. If we make any unlawful step in this situation – even 
one that is deemed unlawful not necessarily from our standpoint but at least 
from the point of view of international relations – we may face major 
problems,” Pashinian said.

Both sides appeared to agree on an inspection of Lydian’s compliance with 
environmental norms proposed by the prime minister, but neither agreed to make 
concessions in terms of the current activities on the deposit. Community 
representatives and environmental activists insisted that construction of gold 
mining and smelting facilities at Amulsar should be suspended for the period of 
the inspection, with Lydian’s representative finding such an approach 
unacceptable.

Joao Carrelo, President and Chief Executive Officer of Lydian International, 
said that every day that goes by without activities costs the company about 
half a million dollars that it has to additionally find on the market. He said 
that due to the downtime to date the company has already incurred losses to 
offset which it has to find an additional $14 million.

“There has been an investment from the United States, Canada, the UK to the 
tune of over $400 million. Investors will only invest if they feel secure that 
their investment is secure and the environmental permits have been given to the 
company. As far as I know the company has used the highest standards in the 
industry in the world to ask for permits based on IFC (International Finance 
Corporation) and also EBRD (European Bank for Reconstruction and Development) 
standards. So, the company has a permit to work. And it has responsibility to 
all of the stakeholders to make sure it does the best job possible to the 
highest standards in the world. That includes the investors, our workforce, the 
communities and the government of the country that we are in,” said Carrelo, 
who took up his current job in May.

Lydian’s representative suggested that inspections can be carried out in 
parallel with the mining activities. “For a responsible company every day that 
goes by without activity delays all of the benefits that this project could 
bring to the community, to the country. The international community is watching 
and they want to know whether more investments will come into Armenia,” Carrelo 
added.

In their turn activists present at the discussion said that they will continue 
to stage protests and will not unblock the roads leading to the mining site.


Armenia - Gold mining facilities constructed by Lydian International company at 
Amulsar deposit, 18 May 2018.

Lydian started construction at Amulsar in 2016 after going through a lengthy 
licensing process administered by Armenia’s former government. It pledged to 
invest more than $400 million in the deposit and more than triple Armenia’s 
gold exports which stood at an estimated $100 million last year.

Gold production at Amulsar was due to start before the end of this year. It is 
not yet clear whether the continuing protests there will delay it.

The mining project is strongly supported by the U.S. and British governments. 
The U.S. ambassador to Armenia, Richard Mills, argued last year that it has 
been deemed “fully compliant” with environment protection standards set by the 
World Bank and the EBRD. The EBRD holds a minority stake in Lydian.

Mills apparently expressed concern over the disruptions when he met with Deputy 
Prime Minister Tigran Avinian on June 14. According to Avinian’s press office, 
the U.S. envoy “stressed the importance of the continuation of Lydian Armenia’s 
activities.”

According to the National Statistical Service, Lydian was the main source of 
$246 million in foreign direct investment attracted by Armenia last year.


Armenian PM Sees No Targeted Crackdown On Sarkisian Family

        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian presides over a government session, 
June 21, 2018

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has ruled out that any specific family 
in Armenia is being targeted after a series of high-profile revelations by 
law-enforcement agencies concerning close relatives of the country’s former 
president Serzh Sarkisian.

In separate statements on Thursday the Investigative Committee and the National 
Security Service said that two nephews of Sarkisian, who lost power under the 
pressure of the Pashinian-led protest movement in April, are implicated in 
different crimes. In particular, Hayk Sarkisian was named as a suspect in a 
reopened 2007 attempted murder case and Narek Sarkisian is currently wanted by 
police on suspicion of theft and illegal possession of weapons and drugs.

The statements were made after a search at the residence of Hayk’s and Narek’s 
father, Aleksandr Sarkisian, a controversial brother of the ex-president better 
known to the public as “Sashik.” A video of the search released by the National 
Security Service (NSS) late on Thursday showed large sums of money, expensive 
watches and artworks, numerous gold coins and pieces of jewelry found at 
Aleksandr Sarkisian’s apartment. The NSS said the legality of the items will be 
checked as part of the criminal investigation.

Aleksandr Sarkisian is thought to have made a big fortune in the past two 
decades. Unconfirmed reports in the Armenian press have said that he spent 
millions of dollars buying real estate in Europe and the United States.

Meanwhile, the State Revenue Committee in late June launched a probe against 
another brother of the former president, Levon Sarkisian, and his two children 
on suspicion of ‘illegal enrichment’ after law-enforcement authorities 
discovered nearly $7 million held by them in a commercial bank.

“We are not going after anyone’s family or individual, we follow alerts that 
law-enforcement bodies receive as well as the information that they have,” 
Prime Minister Pashinian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) on 
Friday, commenting on the cases.

Pashinian, who announced a crackdown on corruption after being elected prime 
minister on May 8, excluded ‘political’ solutions to legal cases involving 
crimes.

“There is no certain plan that we follow in terms of exposure. The task is 
formulated differently. Law must be respected in the country and 
law-enforcement bodies should work effectively. Whatever happens within the 
framework of these two principles is not something that we plan, but is a 
matter that comes out of the realities,” the premier said.

Pashinian, who for years spoke about widespread government corruption as an 
opposition member, stopped short of evaluating the extent of corruption exposed 
by Armenia’s law-enforcement agencies so far. He only said that he was shocked 
by “cynicism” in some cases.Pashinian also denied that ex-president Sarkisian 
tried to contact him over the investigations concerning members of his extended 
family.

Serzh Sarkisian, who had been president for 10 years, moved to the newly 
powerful post of prime minister in mid-April but stepped down within less than 
a week after peaceful street protests led by then-opposition lawmaker Pashinian.



Armenia’s Water Operator Vows To Restore Full Service In Yerevan After Shortages

        • Marine Khachatrian

Armenia -- Residents of Yerevan celebrate the festival of Vardavar pouring 
water upon each other (file photo)

Armenia’s water operator has pledged to restore full supply in the nation’s 
capital Yerevan where residents in recent days have complained about water 
shortages amid a midsummer heat wave.

Households in many districts of the city experienced difficulties as Veolia 
Djur, a French company providing maintenance of water supply and sewerage 
nationwide, reported major breakdowns in the system and had to disconnect whole 
neighborhoods from water supply for hours.

Meanwhile, air temperatures in Yerevan and the rest of Armenia in recent days 
stayed at around 40 degrees Celsius, making it more difficult for residents to 
cope with water shortages.

Gor Grigorian, an operations director at Veolia Djur, said on Friday that water 
supply in the whole of Yerevan will be restored already on July 7, incidentally 
the eve of Vardavar, a religious festival in Armenia during which people 
traditionally pour water on each other in the streets.

Grigorian did not deny that the company experienced problems with supplying 
water during the past week due to a major breakdown in the system that the 
water utility manager described as unprecedented for Yerevan.

“Sometimes breakdowns require much time to repair. Here it coincided with hot 
weather, a breakdown of pumps and a breakdown of the water main. We have never 
had such a coincidence,” Grigorian said.

Veolia Djur’s operations director said that 90 percent of the problems have now 
been solved and all problems will have completely been solved by tomorrow after 
which full water supply of Yerevan will be ensured.

The French company worked in Yerevan alone for a decade before becoming a 
nationwide water operator in 2016.


Mayor Of Armenian Town Resigns After PM’s Visit

        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia - Kapan mayor Ashot Haryapetian stands next to Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian at a public rally in the town's central square, Kapan, 07Jul2018

Ashot Hayrapetian, the mayor of Kapan, has announced his resignation hours 
after the visit of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to the southern Armenian town.

The information was confirmed to RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) by 
the mayor’s spokeswoman Armine Avagian.

Premier Pashinian was in Kapan as part of his tour of the Syunik province on 
Thursday. There he got a warm reception as held a public rally in the town’s 
central square where hundreds of local residents had an opportunity to pose 
questions to him. At the same time, Kapan residents booed at the town’s mayor, 
a member of the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), who stood next 
to Pashinian during the rally.

“You were installed here by the HHK; your regime is in the past,” Kapan 
residents shouted to Hayrapetian in the square, showing their anger.

After announcing his resignation Hayrapetian wrote in a Facebook post: “My 
ideas about how to continue programs for the community and expectations of the 
public are different.”

Hayrapetian is one of several HHK-affiliated mayors to have resigned since the 
change of government in May.

HHK leader Serzh Sarkisian, who had been president for 10 years, moved to the 
newly powerful post of prime minister in mid-April but had to step down within 
less than a week under the pressure of peaceful street protests led by 
then-opposition lawmaker Pashinian.

Pashinian was voted in as prime minister on May 8 by a parliament still 
dominated by the HHK. The Sarkisian-led party officially lost its parliamentary 
majority in the subsequent weeks as several lawmakers quit its faction.

As the focus of protests shifted to local government bodies, leaders of several 
Armenian communities, including the majors of Armavir, Hrazdan and Echmiadzin, 
resigned in recent weeks.

Activists in Yerevan have also been demanding the resignation of the Armenian 
capital’s mayor Taron Markarian, a senior figure in the former ruling party.

Meanwhile, in an unrelated development the mayor of Masis, Davit Hambartsumian, 
who is also affiliated with the HHK, was arrested on Friday on charges of 
“organizing mass disturbances and committing violence and an act of hooliganism 
with the use of weapons or items used as weapons.”

Hambartsumian was already briefly arrested in May on another criminal charge 
stemming from his alleged involvement in violent attacks against opposition 
supporters who protested against Sarkisian in April.



Press Review



“Zhoghovurd” comments on the statements made by Constitutional Court Chairman 
Hrair Tovmasian on Constitution Day that was marked in Armenia on July 5. “And 
who is now speaking about the protection of the Constitution? It is the person 
who was a key figure in the former Republican government and is the main author 
of the current Constitution that was tailored to the needs of former president 
Serzh Sarkisian and several others so as to ensure their continued stay in 
power… It can be certainly said today that the parliamentary form of government 
is a ticking bomb for the statehood of Armenia,” the paper contends.

In the context of the recent news that investigators have summoned former 
President Robert Kocharian for questioning in connection with a deadly 
post-election crackdown on opposition protesters in Yerevan in 2008 “Zhamanak” 
remembers the ex-leader’s infamous statement made in 1998 that he saw “no man 
in Armenia who could carry out a change of government.” “Talking to journalists 
then Kocharian elaborated on his ‘only man’ principle on the basis of which he 
ruled for 10 years, laying the foundation for two decades of kleptocracy… The 
‘only man’ myth has been busted before everyone’s eyes as Kocharian and his 
successor Serzh Sarkisian found themselves in total isolation. Criminal 
prosecution against them is a matter of days, probably weeks.”

“Hraparak” says Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian continues the “tradition” of 
former heads of government who surrounded themselves with numerous advisors. 
“According to the official website of the prime minister, Pashinian has one 
chief advisor, four advisors and seven advisors who work without a salary – 12 
advisors in total. It is difficult to say what kind of advice they give to the 
prime minister and whether he follows all of them or any of them. Let’s hope 
that he is not guided by the principle laid down in the famous saying that ‘one 
has to listen to all pieces of advice, but move on using one’s own brain’.”

“Haykakan Zhamanak” sees an upward trend in the real estate market, implying 
that it may be the result of the recent change of government implemented 
through peaceful street protests. Invoking the latest official statistics, the 
paper reports that housing prices in May went up in all districts of the 
Armenian capital. “It is difficult to say how far this is connected with the 
‘velvet’ revolution in Armenia, but it is remarkable that during the first 
three months of the year housing prices were going down as compared with the 
corresponding period of last year and in April real estate prices went up 
slightly only in several districts of Yerevan,” the paper writes.

(Anush Mkrtchian)





Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


AGBU PRESS OFFICE: Armenia Concludes Successful Media and Trade Events

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Website: www.agbu.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, June 28, 2018

ARMENIA CONCLUDES SUCCESSFUL MEDIA AND TRADE EVENTS

The Program Included Events in Three U.S. Cities and a Visit to the Smithsonian 
Folklife Festival in Washington D.C.

The State Tourism Committee of Armenia, along with private sector 
representatives from the Armenian tourism industry, has participated in a 
series of meetings and events in three cities to increase awareness of 
Armenia’s cultural heritage tourism offering. The culminating event in 
Washington D.C. included a visit to the Smithsonian Folklife Festival on the 
National Mall, which is showcasing Armenian cultural heritage this year.

The series of events commenced in Boston on Monday, June 25, with travel media 
appointments and a gathering of local travel trade representatives at the 
Boston offices of the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU). Hripsime 
Grigoryan, the newly appointed chairperson of the State Tourism Committee of 
Armenia, welcomed guests with a destination presentation, kicking off a series 
of educational trade workshops and networking sessions with Armenian tourism 
industry partners. 

On Tuesday, June 26, the State Tourism Committee of Armenia participated in 
another travel trade event at the AGBU Headquarters in New York City, which was 
followed by a media reception attended by travel journalists. In addition to a 
destination overview, media attendees were also treated to a presentation by 
Pulitzer Prize-winning Armenian author and poet, Peter Balakian. Balakian 
discussed Armenia’s rich history and culture, as well as his quest to discover 
his family’s historic homeland, Armenia, and his connection to the Armenian 
diaspora in America. 

While in New York, the delegation also conducted a day of travel trade 
appointments on Wednesday, June 27, with key tour operators. 

The events were organized by the My Armenia, a cultural heritage tourism 
program funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and 
implemented by Smithsonian Institution, and by AGBU, the world’s largest 
nonprofit Armenian organization.

From New York City, the delegation traveled to Washington D.C. on Thursday, 
June 28, for its final travel trade gathering at the Soorp Khatch Armenian 
Apostolic Church and an open-air cocktail reception at the Smithsonian Folklife 
Festival. The annual Smithsonian Folklife Festival is produced by the 
Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage and produced in 
partnership with the National Park Service. This is the first time Armenian 
culture will be broadly presented at the festival. AGBU is among the festival’s 
sponsors.  

“AGBU is proud to continue its long-term collaboration and partnership with the 
Smithsonian Institution, which began with the My Armenia program,” said Natalie 
Gabrelian, director of Alternative Education at AGBU. “Hosting this series of 
events aligns with our goal to educate all about Armenian culture and history. 
Encouraging travel industry insiders’ interest toward Armenia and all it has to 
offer the world is key to promoting tourism and putting it on the map for 
travelers."

“This was a very important mission to raise awareness about Armenia as a 
tourism destination,” said Grigoryan, chairperson of the State Tourism 
Committee of Armenia. “Through our partnerships with My Armenia Program and the 
Smithsonian Folklife Festival, it has been an honor to have the opportunity to 
further share our message with U.S. consumers and inspire North American 
travelers to visit our incredibly cultural destination.”

About the State Tourism Committee of Armenia
The State Tourism Committee of the Ministry of Ecnomic Development and 
Investments of the Republic Armenia is the authorized party for development and 
implementation of policies in the field of tourism. It was established in late 
2016.  

About My Armenia Cultural Heritage Tourism Program
The My Armenia Program is a cultural heritage tourism program funded by USAID 
and implemented by the Smithsonian Institution. The program harnesses the power 
of research, documentation, and storytelling to strengthen cultural 
sustainability through community-based tourism development.

About Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU)
Established in 1906, AGBU the world's largest non-profit Armenian organization. 
Headquartered in New York City, AGBU preserves and promotes the Armenian 
identity and heritage through educational, cultural and humanitarian programs, 
annually touching the lives of some 500,000 Armenians around the world. For 
more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit 
www.agbu.org.

*************************************************
PHOTO CAPTIONS:

Armenia-Trade-Events01.jpg: Hripsime Grigoryan, the newly appointed Chair of 
the State Tourism Committee of Armenia with Pulitzer Prize winning author and 
poet, Peter Balakian.

Armenia-Trade-Events02.jpg: Travel and tourism industry and media professionals 
gather at AGBU for a trade show on Armenia.

Armenia-Trade-Events03.jpg: Natalie Gabrelian, AGBU’s Director of Alternative 
Education, presents AGBU’s tourism apps and eBooks.

Armenia-Trade-Events04.jpg: Hripsime Grigoryan, Chair of the State Tourism 
Committee of Armenia, invites all to experience the sights, sounds, tastes and 
treasures of the country.


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Poland ratifies Armenia-EU Agreement

Category
World

The Polish Senate (upper house of the parliament) on June 29 unanimously ratified the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA), Armenian Ambassador to Poland Edgar Ghazaryan said on Facebook.

The CEPA has already been ratified by the Polish Sejm (lower house of the parliament) on June 7.

By the ratification of the Senate, Poland has officially ratified the agreement.

Armenia and the EU signed the CEPA in Brussels on November 24, 2017.

Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Bulgaria have also ratified the Agreement.

The Armenian Parliament unanimously ratified the CEPA on April 11.

On June 27 the Agreement has also been ratified by the lower house (Chamber of Deputies) of the Romanian parliament.

The Armenian state restoring its exclusive right to use force. The arrest of ‘General Manvel’ is aimed at disarming paramilitary feudal lords, who emerged from the Karabakh war

Regnum, Russia
June 21 2018
The arrest of 'General Manvel' is aimed at disarming paramilitary feudal lords, who emerged from the Karabakh war

by Ruben Grdzelyan
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from Russian]

The arrest of Gen Manvel Grigoryan ("General Manvel") [on 16 June] and a heightened emotional follow-up of the act without any more or less appropriate assessment of what is happening has become an informational trend in Armenia over the past few days.

The government and the state-run and private media that serve them have done a lot to make the public perceive this issue only within the emotional sphere. However, this act is far from comprising an emotional component alone. The Armenian government are quite pragmatic in their objective of getting rid of the remaining vestiges of the war that ended back 24 Years ago and transferring certain powers back to the state.

On the one hand, Grigoryan's arrest is a demonstrative punishment for those, who continue to live and become rich in Armenia and [Azerbaijan's breakaway Nagorno-]Karabakh at the expense of the past war. Grigoryan is a classical representative of the class, paramilitary bourgeois, who rose due to the war and were becoming rich for decades at the expense of ancient glory [Grigoryan was awarded the title of hero of Karabakh for his contribution to the victory of the Armenian forces in the Karabakh war]. The Yerkrapah Union of Volunteers public organisation that he headed was in high demand in the 1990s. The regular army of the country was only being formed at that time and it was volunteers organised in various formats, who replaced the state institutions that were inexistent or inefficient due to the lack of experience. After the war, such organisations helped veterans and families of the deceased and defended volunteers' rights, often interpreting these rights in a peculiar manner.

Later, as the army and state institutions came into being, the formal need in organisations like Yerkrapah started decreasing. However, changing their aims and aspirations, they joined politics. Yerkrapah became involved in politics back during the Karabakh war in 1992-1994. At the beginning, they resorted to petty criminal activities (for example, taking cars and real property allegedly for the needs of the army) and by the elections of 1996, they were already an influential force in politics, their methods remaining within the frames of the definitions of the Criminal Code. This is not a specifically Armenian phenomenon. It is called "Vietnam syndrome" and it emerges in societies effectively after any war. This is how historian Karen Ghazaryan described the phenomenon for the Regnum news agency:

[Passage omitted: description of the Vietnam syndrome by Ghazaryan]

Up until now, Grigoryan has efficiently combined complexes (psychological traumas) with the political purposes of his clan. He and his Yerkrapah that had effectively turned into a militarised structure have always been necessary to the government – [former presidents] Levon Ter-Petrosyan, Robert Kocharyan, and Serzh Sargsyan. Local feudal lords used to suppress dissent during elections and ensure votes in favour of the government not only within the frames of their dominions – the area of Ejmiatsin, but also in other regions, where Yerkrapah members were present. Due to this, the government was ready to forgive them anything. Moreover, the government delegated to General Manvel the exclusive right of the state to use force. In the meantime, duplication of absolute and exclusive rights of the state weakens the latter and, among others, reduces the standing of the state even in the eyes of those, who are part of the state machine.

It is obvious that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan does not need Yerkrapah's support at the forthcoming early parliamentary elections. The denial of rumours that Pashinyan's companion Sasun Mikayelyan intended to head Yerkrapah also confirms this. It is obvious that the organisation will be dissolved as something that turned into an atavism on the body of the state long ago. I would like to repeat that the essence of what is happening cannot be reduced to the new government's struggle against corruption. A couple of KamAz trucks full of tinned meat and a couple of offroaders stolen from the army are just an insignificant part of the top of the iceberg of corruption.

Police shake-ups of the representatives of the "thieves'" and criminal world are in the same line with the case of "General Manvel". Pashinyan is depriving individual groups the right to violence government has granted them over 25 years, obviously concentrating it in the hands of the state, which is how it should be. It is another issue, how the government will use the right of the state to use force, when it becomes exclusive.