Friday, January 19, 2017 Sarkisian's Pick For Next Armenian President Announced . Emil Danielyan Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (R) meets with Armenian Ambassador to Britain Armen Sarkissian in Yerevan, 19Jan2018. President Serzh Sarkisian officially confirmed on Friday that he wants a former Armenian prime minister currently serving as Armenia's ambassador to Britain to succeed him as head of state in April. Meeting with Ambassador Armen Sarkissian (no relation), he said the governing board of his ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) unanimously accepted late on Thursday his proposal to nominate the prominent diplomat for the post of president of republic. Sarkissian, who has lived in London for nearly three decades, did not immediately accept the nomination. He said he needs to hold consultations with major political parties, civic groups, prominent intellectuals and "business circles" before making a "final decision." "And if I make a decision [to accept the nomination] after those meetings I will strive to perform the duties of Armenia's president with honor and to live up to the confidence which I have heard from you and your party comrades and which I hope to also hear from other fellow citizens," added the 64-year-old former scholar. The end of Sarkisian's decade-long presidency on April 9 will complete Armenia's transition to a parliamentary system of government. It means that most of the presently sweeping presidential powers will be transferred to the prime minister and his cabinet. Also, the next president will be elected by the parliament, rather than popular vote, as has been the case until now. The ruling HHK controls the majority of seats in the National Assembly. It is therefore in a position to install Sarkisian's pick for the next president. The outgoing president, who could remain in power as prime minister, said earlier this week that his successor should be a renowned but politically inexperienced individual who speaks foreign languages and has "broad connections" in Armenia and its worldwide Diaspora. In remarks publicized by the presidential press office, he clarified on Friday that the next president must be "politically prepared and hardened but not politicized." "He must be able to organize dialogue between various political forces and, if necessary, ease tensions between various strata of the society," he said, adding that Armen Sarkissian fits the bill. "You are an acclaimed scholar, you held the post of Armenia's prime minister, you have a great deal of diplomatic experience, and this is the reason why we have seriously considered your candidacy," Serzh Sarkisian told the ambassador. The president also expressed hope that should he decide to accept the HHK offer Sarkissian would try to win the backing of the three other political groups represented in the National Assembly. Those are the HHK's junior coalition partner, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, Gagik Tsarukian's alliance and the opposition Yelk bloc. Yelk fielded its own presidential candidate late last year. A physicist and mathematician by education, Armen Sarkissian worked at the Cambridge University when he was appointed as newly independent Armenia's first ambassador to the United Kingdom in 1991. He served as prime minister for four months in 1996-1997 before being again named ambassador in London. His second ambassadorial stint was cut short in 1999 by then President Robert Kocharian. Sarkissian stayed in London and went on to work as a senior advisor to major Western corporations such as BP, Alcatel and Bank of America. He also founded and ran the Eurasia Center of a Cambridge University business school from 2001-2011. He was appointed as Armenian ambassador to Britain for a third time in 2013. Sarkissian, who is thought to have made a big fortune in the UK in the 2000s, has rarely commented on political developments in Armenia. He said on Friday that Armenia is now entering a "period of big changes" that should turn it into a "more democratic country." Government Reports Strong Growth In 2017 Armenia - Workers at a new textile factory in Yerevan, 5Oct2017. Armenia's economy grew by around 6.7 percent last year after stagnating in 2016, the Finance Ministry said on Friday. Finance Minister Vartan Aramian and other senior ministry officials presented preliminary macroeconomic data for 2017 at a meeting with Prime Minister that focused on the economic situation in the country. The Armenian government had forecast a 3.2 percent growth rate for 2017 more than a year ago. It revised that target upwards to 4.3 percent in September. In its World Economic Outlook released in October, the International Monetary Fund said that Armenian growth will reach 3.5 percent. For its part, the World Bank said earlier this month that the Armenian economy was on course to expand by 3.7 percent in 2017. According to a government statement on Friday's meeting, the Finance Ministry leadership attributed the 6.7 percent growth estimate to the better-than-expected performances of the services and construction sectors. It also cited a 7.3 percent rise in the government's 2017 tax revenue and a 13.4 percent surge in cash remittances from abroad. Karapetian told the ministry officials that 2018 will be an "extremely important" year for the domestic economy. "This year we must lay the groundwork for long-term sustainable growth and [growing] capital and other spending," he said, according to the statement. In its policy program approved by the Armenian parliament in June, Karapetian's cabinet committed itself to achieving an annual growth rate of around 5 percent in 2017-2022. The program describes rising exports as "the key engine" of that growth, saying that the government will strive to facilitate Armenian manufacturers' access to Russia, the EU and other foreign markets. Official statistics show that Armenian exports soared by 23.5 percent in 2017. Tsarukian In No Rush To Back Presidential Candidate . Astghik Bedevian Armenia - Businessman Gagik Tsarukian attends a meeting between President Serzh Sarkisian and Armenian parliament leaders in Yerevan, 12Jan2018. Armenia's second largest parliamentary force led by businessman Gagik Tsarukian was in no rush to endorse on Friday a presidential candidate nominated by the outgoing President Serzh Sarkisian's Republican Party (HHK). A senior member of the Tsarukian Bloc, Naira Zohrabian, said it will wait and see whether the potential candidate, Armen Sarkissian, accepts the nomination. "We will formulate a position when Armen Sarkissian makes a final decision," she told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). Tsarukian earlier did not rule out the possibility of throwing his weight behind an HHK presidential candidate. He also said that his bloc, which claims to be in opposition to the government, will not field a presidential candidate of its own. Armen Sarkissian told the outgoing president earlier on Friday that he needs "some time" to decide whether to accept the nomination. He said he will make that decision after holding consultations with leaders of Armenia's main political groups. Under the Armenian constitution, the parliament must choose the next president of the republic by March 10, one month before the end of Serzh Sarkisian's final term. A presidential candidate has to be backed by a three-fourths and two-thirds majority of lawmakers in order to win in the first and second rounds of voting respectively. A simple majority of votes is enough to win the presidency in the third round. The HHK has such a majority in the National Assembly. Nevertheless, Serzh Sarkisian stressed the importance of multi-partisan support for his preferred successor. He said he therefore hopes that Armen Sarkissian would win outright in the first round. In that case, Sarkissian would need the backing of at least 79 members of the 105-seat parliament. The ruling HHK and its junior coalition partner, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), control 65 seats between them, compared with 31 seats held by the Tsarukian Bloc. Dashnaktsutyun's parliamentary leader, Artem Rustamian, also made clear that his party has yet to decide whether to vote for Armen Sarkissian. Still, he spoke highly of the man currently serving as Armenia's ambassador to Britain. "We have known Mr. Sarkissian and have had relations with him for a long time," Rustamian told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). The opposition Yelk alliance, the fourth group represented in parliament, moved to field its own presidential hopeful, Artak Zeynalian, late last year. The constitution stipulates that only those individuals who are endorsed by at least 27 deputies can run for president. Yelk holds 9 parliament seats. It appears to have failed to win the Tsarukian Bloc's support for Zeynalian's candidacy. Armenian Opposition Supporters Rally Against Price Hikes . Karlen Aslanian Armenia - Leaders and supporters of the opposition Yelk alliance hold an anti-government demonstration in Yerevan, 19Jan2018. The opposition Yelk alliance rallied hundreds of supporters in Yerevan on Friday to protest against recent increases in the prices of fuel and some foodstuffs which it blames on government policies. The price rises were caused, in part, by new tax legislation mandating higher excise duties on fuel, tobacco and alcohol. The cost of gasoline, diesel fuel and liquefied natural gas used by most vehicles in Armenia rose by over 10 percent immediately after it went into force on January 1. Yelk leaders demanded that the authorities reverse the higher taxes when they addressed the crowd before it marched through downtown Yerevan, chanting "Reduction!"They said that the price hikes are increasing poverty in the country. "We are saying no to price hikes and demand a reduction of the tax rates that led to the higher prices of basic products," said one of them, Nikol Pashinian. "We are demanding price and tax cuts." Pashinian repeatedly urged Armenians to take to the streets in larger numbers and heighten the pressure on the authorities. But speaking to reporters, he downplayed the relatively poor attendance at the protest and said the Yelk campaign will gradually gain momentum. The outspoken oppositionist claimed that Yelk will soon hold "the biggest and most decisive rally in Armenia's history." Another Yelk leader, Aram Sarkisian, insisted in a speech that the opposition bloc will pull larger crowds in March and April after many Armenians feel the impact of the higher prices more acutely. The next Yelk rally is scheduled for February 5. Prime Minister Karen Karapetian downplayed that impact when he answered questions from Yelk leaders on the parliament floor on Wednesday. He insisted that consumer price inflation in Armenia remains low. Karapetian also defended the increased tax rates, saying that the government needs more revenue to boost its expenditures and repay foreign loans. For his part, President Serzh Sarkisian held on January 10 an emergency meeting with senior state officials to discuss ways of mitigating socioeconomic consequences of the price hikes. Sarkisian also initiated parliamentary hearings on the issue which will be held on Tuesday. Other, more radical opposition groups refused to join Friday's protest, saying that Yelk is not campaigning for regime change. Pashinian rejected that criticism. He said that the opposition cannot seriously threaten the authorities' hold on power without forcing them to scrap the rate hikes first. Press Review "Zhamanak" discusses growing indications that Armenia's ambassador to Britain, Armen Sarkissian, will become the next president of the republic. The paper dismisses as an oversimplification a widely held belief that Serzh Sarkisian wants his successor to be a weak and "easy-to-manage" figure. "It is hard to imagine that Armen Sarkissian needs to end his activities abroad to work as a figurehead president in Armenia," it says. "Sarkissian's appointment is a further indication that what is happening in Armenia is a transformation of the existing pyramid-shaped internal political system into a more multi-layered and complex system." "Aravot" hopes that the choice of Armen Sarkissian heralds the start of major changes within the ruling elite. The paper says that that elite mostly consists of thuggish individuals at present. "Chorrord Ishkhanutyun" claims that Serzh Sarkisian wanted to make Armenia "part of the Russian Empire" when he decided in 2013 to seek its entry into the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). To that end, it says, he decided to "eliminate the institution of the president" and "create a de facto one-party system" where all major decisions are made by his coterie. "Serzh Sarkisian has successfully accomplished that by changing the constitution," writes the pro-opposition daily. "Zhoghovurd" reports that Armenia's public debt continued to rise in 2017, reaching $6.77 billion in December. "Note that a large part of this debt -- $6.17 billion -- is the government's debt," the paper says. "Karen Karapetian's government is no different from the previous ones. In order to solve current day-to-day issues his government too takes new loans, leaving it to Armenia's citizens to repay them." (Tigran Avetisian) 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
Author: Raffi Khondkarian
Sports: The Armenian Ski Championships kick off in Ashotsk
The Armenian Open Ski Championships kicked off on Friday in Ashotsk which is the final he qualifier tournament ahead of the he XXIII Olympic Winter Games. As the National Olympic Committee (ANOC) reported, the tournament brought together 50 skiers from all regions of Armenia as well as from Mexico, Chile, Iran, and Tonga.
On the first day women skiers compete in the 5-km and men – in the 10-km freestyle races.
To note, the tournament which was initially planned to hold in Tsakhkadzor was moved to Ashotsk due to lack of snow. The President of the Ski Federation of Armenia Gagik Sargsyan told ANOC that Ashotsk which host an official tournament for the first time, has all the prerequisites to turn into a ski center.
Sports: Karabakh presents bid to host world football cup of unrecognized countries
Music: Meet KÁRYYN, the digital adventurer who inspired Björk
In 2017, she released the singles Aleppo, Purgatory (both from her Quanta series) and Moving Masses, from Of Light, through her own label Antevasin (a Sanskrit word that translates to “one who lives at the border”). With a promise of new material to surface this year, it’s time to get acquainted with her work.
Aleppo captures her childhood memories of visiting relatives in Syria, and she laments the city she once knew so well, contrasting it with the one that’s crumbling down. The various crunches and blips that you hear over her fragile voices are intended to echo the destruction we see played out on the news.
The pining, delicate strums of Binary feel isolated, and conjure up the quest for a soulmate between the 1s and the 0s, which should feel dystopian, but, when we’re looking to be paired up and matched online – to find love in the abyss – Binary is our hollow reality.
Supping from the same cup as FKA Twigs and Zola Jesus, KÁRYYN’s music ensnares your brain and jolts your senses. It’s an immersive experience and her sounds leave a barely there but altogether heavy imprint on your brain.
If we were ever invited round to his Killiney gaff for dinner, we now have a debate locked and loaded for him. In a recent interview with Rolling Stone, he said: “I think music has gotten very girly. And there are some good things about that, but hip-hop is the only place for young male anger at the moment – and that’s not good.”
Girly. It’s hard to know what his definition of girly is. Is it sensitivity? Is it synths? Is it wearing high heels? But if he’s worried about girliness stepping in and taking the place of the angry, male voice in the charts, I suggest he prepares himself for a new type of rage. The fearless and boundless rage of girls and women that are finally having their say in a society that was built to silence them. Take that, Bono.
Tehran: Armenians wish prosperous New Year for fellow-Iranians
Mehr News Agency (MNA), Iran January 2, 2018 Tuesday Armenians wish prosperous New Year for fellow-Iranians TEHRAN, Jan. 02 (MNA) – The following is the report recounting my visit to a church in Tehran where Iranian Armenians observed the rites of the Eve of the New Year. Late on Sunday (on the Eve of the New Year of 2018) I went to Vahidiyeh district in eastern Tehran where a community of Armenian Iranians live in a somehow big neighborhood. I was accompanied by Mehr News photographer Majid Hamed Haghdoust and political desk contributor Mohammad Mahdi Maleki. The main church of the area was Surp Targmanchats Church opened in 1968. After the 1962 earthquake ravaged the area, the International Council of Churches funded the Armenians of the neighborhood to buy a big area of land and rebuild their community. A land of 6000 square meters was specified to erecting the new venue. Before the opening of Surp Targmanchats Church in 1968, the Armenians of the district used to go to the Church of Holy Mary to do their religious chores, but the Church of Holy Mary was at a distance of 15 kilometers from where they lived. In 1945, the number of Armenians residing in the area was around 20,000. It was a sweet night full of wishes for a good New Year and people who were making resolutions for the new era ahead of them. In addition to my fellow Iranians of the religion of Christianity, there were Muslims who were attending the event to show homage to their compatriots. There were also some other non-Armenian participants who were interested in how the ceremony was held and the kind of music played. The walls were decorated by religious painting hung, most of them about the life of Prophet Jesus Christ. Upstais was a balcont where three female vocalist performed choral music accompanying the rite. The Holy Communion rite kicked off with the ringing of the bells. Everybody looked happy and smiling. Some were pondering deep to think about their New Year’s resolutions, maybe praying for their dear ones. Ghazal was a teenage Muslim girl who was attending the event along with her mother and sister. They came early and left around 02:00 a.m. after the event was over. She said that she wished good things happen to all people, regardless of their religions, whether Muslims or Christians, in the New Year. Vana Gharibian was a young ethnomusicology student at Iranian State University of Art at the level of master’s degree. She told me that in 2017 she found the real value of life and wished health for those who are bed bound. Another person in the community, was a middle-aged gold-smith who had lost his sister just some days before, but he was attending the event to respect his fellows in the church. He wished peace for all people of the world saying that it is no use to have peace in somewhere and war in somewhere else because all the world is interconnected and anything unpleasant sat anywhere can sooner or later affect the other parts of the world. There were a young Armenian couple who told me that the best thing they heard in 2017 was the news that they were going to have a baby. The pregnant lady said that she is expecting for the best event of her life, the birth of her expected baby, to happen in 2018. Another middle aged man told me that he was happy that he met his sister’s children, returning from abroad, in 2017. He described it as the best event of his last year.
Shortage of teachers and doctors in Armenia’s regions
YEREVAN. – The most demanded jobs in Armenia’s regions in 2017 were a doctor and a teacher.
During the last year there were vacancies for doctors and teachers in the regions, representative of Armenia’s employment agency Tsoghik Bezhanyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am. However, in Yerevan, vacant seats were not highly paid. According to her, the jobs of a doctor, a teacher (in the regions), an IT specialist, an engineer, an architect and an accountant were in demand in the labor market.
According to the information provided by State Employment Agency, 8,400 people found jobs in Armenia from January to November 2017.
Large-scale drug trafficking case solved in Armenia, there are arrests
YEREVAN. – The Police of Armenia on Wednesday received information that D. S., 33, was engaged in illegal acquisition and sale of narcotic drugs, and that he was purchasing these drugs from E. Gh., 42.
On the same day at 8:40pm, D. S. was detained and taken to a police station. A total of 29.2 grams of a yellow and greenish substance with ten transparent tin boxes, and three pills were found in his car, the Police press service informed Armenian News-NEWS.am.
The “discoveries” were confiscated, a forensic chemical examination was commissioned, and a criminal case was opened into this case.
On Thursday, E. Gh.’s house was searched, and where a plastic bag with 124 narcotic drug pills, about 385 grams of a hashish-like substance, and about 860 grams of a cannabis-like substance were found.
Furthermore, four guns, two hunting rifles, a weapon’s case with two bullets, and 19 separate bullets also were discovered.
D. S. and E. Gh. are arrested.
An investigation is underway.
ARS Hosts Successful Kicks-Off Reception in Anticipation of 2018 Gala
GLENDALE—The Armenian Relief Society of Western US is preparing for its major annual fundraising event by way of the ARS Gala, which will be held on Friday, February 9, 2018 at Taglyan Cultural Complex. Proceeds from the event will benefit the multitude of humanitarian programs operated by the region, including its Social Services division, local and international projects benefiting Armenia and Artsakh, educational programs, and more.
For this occasion, a kick-off reception was held on Thursday, November 30, 2017 at Glen Arden Club with the participation of a large number of ARS members, sponsors, and supporters. Welcoming remarks were delivered by Vicky Marashlian, Chairperson of the ARS Gala Organizing Committee.
On behalf of the ARS Regional Executive Board, Chairperson Silva Poladian addressed guests and explained the importance and objectives of the upcoming event. She encouraged those present to continue demonstrating their support toward the Armenian Relief Society and help the organization expand its reach. Stressing the humanitarian mission of the ARS, Chairperson Poladian affirmed that through the assistance of its supporters, the ARS would be able to further its programs and activities in Armenia, Artsakh, Javakhk, and the Diaspora.
Thereafter, Jasik Jarahian, General Manager of the ARS Regional Headquarters, enthusiastically began encouraging table sales to help ensure the success of the Gala.
Tickets for the ARS Gala 2018 are $125 per person and candle lighting sponsorships are available for $1,000. To purchase tickets and/or inquire about sponsorship opportunities, please contact the ARS Regional Headquarters at (818) 500-1343 or [email protected].
The Armenian Relief Society of Western USA, established in 1984 and with regional headquarters in Glendale, CA, has 26 chapters and more than 1,200 members in four western states. The ARS operates a Social Services Division and Child, Youth, and Family Guidance Center, one-day schools, and funds numerous youth programs, scholarships, and relief efforts. For additional information, visit www.arswestusa.org or call (818) 500-1343.
Overall inflation is manageable – Serzh Sargsyan
The prices of some products have increased in Armenia in connection with the increase in prices of these products in international markets, but the overall inflation is manageable, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan said in an interview to ARMENIA TV.
“Yes, the prices of some products have increased in connection with the increase in prices of these products in international markets, but the overall inflation is manageable. If we take into account the fact that although everyone says salaries are not increased and etc, the rate of wage increase is a bit higher than the inflation as of today. I think this is a very important factor, the same was in 2016”, the President said.
Serzh Sargsyan also commented on the proposal of some opposition forces to suspend Armenia’s members to the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). He stated that he doesn’t see rationality here. Here he just sees a desire to serve some interests or a certain belief which comes from lacking complete information on the material.
“But if they are really convinced, they can present serious facts, I didn’t hear any serious fact”, he said.
Commenting on the reporter’s observation that prices of 900 goods may increase starting from January 1, 2018, the President said: “They cannot have a significant impact in terms of drastic inflations and undermining the economy. I do not suppose this, when we became a full member of the structure in 2015, the rates for several thousand product types changed, and so what? Did our country face a drastic inflation, of course, no, therefore, now as well the impact is not huge and this impact is also compensated via other products, at more affordable prices, and I think that we have a balanced approach here and this approach leads to the fact that for instance in 2016 there was a deflation in our country. This is a fact which cannot be denied and today as well we do not have a tangible inflation”.
Hrant Dink case: Turkey trying to win the favor of the nationalist
By releasing from the court hall all the five gendarmerie officers being tried over the 2007 assassination of the Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, Turkish authorities proved they were trying to the win the favor of the nationalists, expert in Turkey Mushegh Khudaverdyan told Panorama.am, pointing out all the members of the six former gendarmerie intelligence officers complicit in the 2007 assassination of the journalist represented the nationalist party,
“Turkey’s Justice and Development party has recently formed a coalition with the the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) which is regularly organizing rallies against the national minorities living in Turkey, including Armenians. Now, the authorities are trying to win the favor of nationalists given the ongoing worries to maintain the power in the highest echelons of the leadership,” Khudaverdyan noted.
In the expert’s words, the permissiveness of the Turkish courts has even further reinforced the atmosphere of fear dominant in the national minorities residing in the country.
“Seline Doghan and Garo Paylan, MPs of Armenian origin at Turkish Mejlis have repeatedly spoken up, pointing to the negative attitude toward minorities in Turkey persisted throughout its history,” the expert said, adding those pressures gave birth to the Kurdish rebel forces in the 1970s struggling to draw the attention of Turkish authorities to end repressions and even resorted to arms to that end.