Armenia votes against anti-Russian UN resolution on Crimea

PanArmenian, Armenia
Nov 17 2018

PanARMENIAN.NetArmenia on Friday, November 16 voted against the Ukraine-led resolution which "condemns human rights violations in the region". The bill was nevertheless approved by the Third Committee of the UN General Assembly.

The Kiev-backed document was supported by 67 delegations. 26 voted against, including Russia, Belarus, China, India, Serbia and South Africa. 87 nations abstained.

It is the third time that the Committee which is engaged in social, humanitarian affairs and human rights issues has endorsed such a resolution.

The United Nations General Assembly will consider two resolutions on Ukraine at the 73rd session in December: one that focuses on "the violation of human rights in Crimea" and the other on "the militarization of the Sea of Azov."

Commentary: Quantum politics and predicting the US-China rivalry

Channel News Asia, Singapore
Nov 11 2018

A paradigm shift is needed to understand modern geopolitics, says University of Hong Kong's Andrew Sheng.

China is currently in an escalating trade war with the Trump administration (Photo: AFP/STR)

HONG KONG: US President Donald Trump’s recent United Nations address provoked a number of responses. One of the most interesting came from former physicist and current President of Armenia, Armen Sarkissian. 

In an interview with the Financial Times, Sarkissian argued that we need to think about politics like we think about "quantum behaviour". He went on to suggest that "we are living through a dynamic process of change" and that "we have to look at our world in a completely different way".

But what has "quantum politics" got to do with geopolitical rivalry?

The West’s underlying worldview derives from an empirical perspective of science that emerged during the scientific revolution. 

In the 18th century, leading thinkers pushed for scientific methodologies that were both rational and mechanical. They assumed the world could be observed and objectively measured independently of human sentiment.

This paradigm began to dominate Western philosophy and the human sciences. Ever since science and mathematics began being taught in schools, this classical paradigm has dominated non-Western and Western societies alike. 

It was a comforting view of the world — science could remove uncertainty in the quest for human improvement.

But when Albert Einstein’s theories of relativity emerged in the early 19th century — followed by the quantum theory of Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg’s uncertainty principles — views began to diverge as to what science was telling us. This uncertainty also spread to the social sciences.

WORLD FILLED WITH UNCERTAINTIES

Flora Lewis was the first to observe this schism in scientific thought, arguing that modern physics proves that "the world is a mass of uncertainties" where "predictions of reality must be based only on waves of probability". 

The social sciences appeared to be offering solutions with certainty under circumstances where apparently there was none. Lewis suggests that "the quantum mechanics of politics" demands from us an understanding that flux is inevitable.

Armen Sarkissian, who was chosen by Armenia's parliament as the country's new president, attends a parliamentary session in Yerevan, Armenia March 2, 2018. (Photo: REUTERS/Vahram Baghdasaryan/Photolure)

When the Global Financial Crisis broke out in 2007, the British Academy admitted to the Queen of England that they failed to see the crisis coming. It was an admission that mainstream economic and political theory did not correspond with reality.

Indeed, the failure of polls to predict Brexit or Trump’s election confirms that expert paradigms are flawed. The idea that economic systems are inherently stable is being challenged. Without economic stability, political instability is a likely consequence.

So what concepts in quantum theory might help us understand international relations today? The non-classical world is one of multi-states, entanglement and relativity — all of which put uncertainty at the heart of natural and human behaviour.

Classical social science suggests that everything is well defined and either good or bad, so truth is absolute. But quantum theory suggests that multiple states can exist simultaneously, like Schrodinger’s cat, both dead and alive simultaneously. 

This leads to entanglement, where purity becomes unattainable. In economic terminology, the externalities are always non-zero.

US-CHINA RIVALRY

What relevance is this to current US–China tensions?

Henry Kissinger once said that to Americans, every foreign policy problem has a unique and elegant solution. For the Chinese, every solution brings multiple problems. Historian Wang Gungwu suggests that Americans think in terms of ideology, whereas the Chinese think in terms of systems.

With is obsession with the US–China bilateral trade deficit, the President Donald Trump thinks that any deficit is a win for China. Classical game theory suggests that, absent knowledge, the two countries will not cooperate so as to avoid costly tariffs. 

But even in situations of uncertainty, cooperation on global issues can be a win–win. Global and national political problems are more complicated than ever and classical paradigms cannot readily explain how this has come to pass.

China's trade deficit with the US jumped almost 20% in the first quarter of the year (Photo: AFP/Johannes EISELE)

Brexit and the US–China trade war are all about disentanglement, an unravelling of systems and processes that will be extremely costly and unpredictable. 

Classical thinking suggests that the shift to unilateral decision-making and bilateralism might be a win for the United States in the short-term. But the complex long-term consequences for the global system will not come cheap.

Sarkissian’s observation suggests we need to break out of classical modes of thinking in order to understand how a complex world is affected by what is akin to "quantum behaviour". 

Trump is hard to predict using conventional logic, but his strategies and tactics have a pattern — he uses uncertainty to disrupt opponents that presume conventional thinking.

The current trade war is more psychological than real — it will take time for the effects of higher tariffs to impact on the macro economy and consumer decisions. But the rules of psychological warfare seem to suggest that threats have zero marginal cost, with high payoff if opponents yield to threats.

Sun Zi’s classical phrase is embedded in over 3000 years of Chinese thinking — know yourself before knowing your enemy. 

There are no easy battles, only long wars and the most difficult task of all is conquering one’s self. In this, the insights of quantum theory, which have similarities with Chinese systemic thinking, might just help.

Andrew Sheng is Distinguished Fellow at the Asia Global Institute, University of Hong Kong. This commentary first appeared in East Asia Forum.


CSTO blocks Armenia chairmanship after row with Russia

BBC Monitoring, UK
Nov 9 2018
CSTO blocks Armenia chairmanship after row with Russia

By BBC Monitoring

The Russia-led CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organisation) military alliance appears to have blocked Armenian attempts to appoint another chairman after the country's previous occupant of the rotating post was dismissed.

Russian business daily RBC said on 8 November that Armenia had hoped the alliance would appoint another representative of the country as its next secretary-general after Yerevan recalled Yuri Khachaturov in a move that angered Moscow. The country's 3-year rotating chairmanship is due to run out at the end of 2019.

"Of course Armenia wants an extension. All the heads of state have said that there is only one year left [in Armenia's term] and he [a new Armenian secretary-general] will not manage to visit all these countries. Therefore we need the next secretary-general to be a proper active one, from Belarus… According to our charter, in alphabetical order the next after Armenia is Belarus," Kazakhstani President Nursultan Nazarbayev said at a summit of the bloc in Astana, Interfax news agency reported on 8 November.

Following Khachaturov's dismissal, his deputy, Russia's Valery Semerikov, was appointed as the bloc's acting secretary-general.

"A significant amount of time has been set aside for the issue of choosing a new CSTO secretary-general. The heads of state have agreed to make a final decision on the matter in St Petersburg on 6 December," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, as quoted by Interfax on 8 October.

Another CSTO summit is expected to take place in St Petersburg on that date, Peskov confirmed.

In July, Armenia called for Khachaturov to be removed from the CSTO post after he was charged with "overthrowing the constitutional order" in connection with the violent suppression of mass protests against the outcome of the 2008 presidential election.

Official results handed victory to the then President, Serzh Sargsyan, but prompted allegations of vote-rigging from the opposition. At the time, Khachaturov was a commander of the Yerevan military garrison.

In August, influential business paper Kommersant suggested that Armenia's decision to open court proceedings against Khachaturov had caused Russian authorities "particular irritation".

The CSTO includes Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan.

Karabakh refuses to swap prisoners with Azerbaijan

Interfax - Russia & CIS Military Newswire
November 1, 2018 Thursday 7:11 PM MSK


Karabakh refuses to swap prisoners with Azerbaijan

YEREVAN. Nov 1

Azerbaijan's offer of an all-for-all exchange of prisoners and
captives with Nagorno-Karabakh is incommensurate, the breakaway
republic said.

"Stepanakert received no such offer," Karabakh president's press
secretary David Babayan told Interfax on Thursday.

"As for Guliyev and Asgarov, these people are criminals, murderers,
while those being held on the Azeri side are innocent civilians whom
Baku must free in accordance with international norms," Babayan said.

"How can one compare a murderer, terrorist to an innocent person? Of
course, this cannot be considered on the same level," Babayan said,
noting that from the legal standpoint, "these people are murderers
sentenced to punishment for committing a crime."

"To make such a proposal to exchange them for innocent people is
simply blackmail," Babayan said.

An informed source told Interfax earlier that Baku had offered Yerevan
to swap their prisoners and captives under the "all for all"
prisoners.

Currently three Armenian citizens are imprisoned in Azerbaijan: Arsen
Bagdasaryan, Karen Kazaryan and Zaven Karapetyan. Baku sees them as
saboteurs and war criminals.

Karabakh has three Azerbaijanis in prison. Shahbaz Guliyev and Dilgam
Asgarov, who is a Russian citizen, are serving a 22-year sentence and
a life, respectively, for killing a Karabakh child, infiltrating
Karabakh, and spying. The third one is Elnur Huseynzade.

Kk iz

Alaverdi Copper Plant asks the government for support, otherwise the operation of the enterprise may be suspended

Arminfo, Armenia
Oct 13 2018

Alaverdi Copper Plant asks the government for support, otherwise the
operation of the enterprise may be suspended

Yerevan October 12

The workforce of the Alaverdi copper-smelting copper smelter launched
protest actions calling on the country's government to provide an
opportunity for the enterprise to significantly increase sulfur
dioxide emissions. Otherwise, the fines imposed on the company by
environmental supervisory authorities make the operation of the
enterprise unprofitable. The employees of the enterprise on Wednesday
passed a protest rally and even for a short time blocked the
interstate road leading to the Armenian-Georgian border.

In connection with the holidays, ArmInfo correspondent was unable to
contact the management of the Vallex industrial group, which owns the
company, however, according to the information contained in social
networks, it becomes clear that the original ultimatum to the
government is connected with the position of the State Inspectorate
for Environmental Protection, which recently fined the plant 380
million drams ($ 700 thousand) due to a serious violation of
environmental legislation, adopted in 2005. According to independent
observers, the position of the supervisory authority undoubtedly fits
into the fabric of the behavioral line governments aiming to regulate
the behavior of players in the country's mining industry, which, until
the April velvet revolution, tended to regulate some of their
"painful" issues with the state on the basis of informal agreements
that allowed to bypass certain standards in order to increase
production efficiency. Apparently, something similar happened at the
Alaverdi Combine and, according to a new approach, the company fined
the enterprise, gave it a 2-month period to comply with the emission
standard, for which the company simply was not ready.

In an interview with the Public Radio of Armenia, plant manager Lusine
Mezhlumyan recently reported that the practical impossibility of
fulfilling the requirements of environmental inspectorate requirements
brings to the agenda the issue of shutting down the plant, which
employs over 600 people. The problem is complicated by the fact that
the property complex of the enterprise is secured by a loan of $ 500
million, previously received from VTB Bank for the development of a
large Teghut copper- molybdenum deposit, the operation of which was
also stopped due to environmental problems even last year after the
suspension of co-financing by one from overseas lenders. Under these
conditions, servicing a VTB loan becomes extremely unaffordable for an
enterprise and a serious decline in the level of profitability of the
Alaverdi plant, in fact, may lead to its bankruptcy.

Experts with whom ArmInfo correspondent was able to talk, note that
the new government, despite the legitimacy of its position regarding
the inclination of mining enterprises to the need to strictly adhere
to environmental standards, cannot be cut off without thinking about
the undesirable economic, investment and social consequences. Note
that the Alamerda copper smelter was built in the 50s of the last
century. Its modernization under the modern enterprise is extremely
difficult and inefficient. One solution to the problem of processing
copper raw materials inside the country is the construction of a new
plant of average capacity, the interest to which is shown by Chinese
investors. By a decision of Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran
Avinyan of July 12 of this year, a working group was established to
provide state support to the preparatory work in the framework of the
construction program of the new copper smelting plant by Armenian Kopr
Program CJSC (ACP), also part of the VallexGroup. According to
preliminary estimates, the investment value of the enterprise will be
about $ 80 million. The group included representatives of 4 ministries
- economic development and investments, ecology, finance, as well as
energy infrastructures and natural resources. The work of the
enterprise will allow to get pure copper in Armenia, thanks to which
in the country it will be possible at least partially to restore
various related production. Note that Vallex Group (Vallex Group) was
established in 1998 and unites 20 subsidiary and affiliated companies.
Among them, Teghut CJSC, founded in May 2006, 100% of the shares of
CJSC belong to Teghut Investments Limited of Cyprus, 100% of which
voting shares in turn belong to Armenian Kopr Program CJSC, which is
fully owned by Valery Mejlumyan, and also CJSC "Base Metals",
operating the copper-gold deposit in the village of Drmbon, Martakert
region, NKR, Armenian Copper Program CJSC (ACP), operating the
Alaverdi Copper Smelter.

Sports: Armenian athlete grabs silver at World Youth and Junior Sambo Championships

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 13 2018
18:45 13/10/2018

The Armenian sambo team conquered a silver medal at the 2018 World Youth and Junior Sambo Championships underway in Tbilisi, Georgia.

Davit Hovsepyan was the only Armenian who secured silver medal among 11 others competing on the first day of the competition. 

Hovsepyan (48kg) reached the final blowing away the rivals and lost the final boat to the representative of Georgia, taking the silver. 

Art: Iranian-Armenian Painter Combines Western Art, Eastern Mysticism

IFP News
Oct 12 2018


Combining western arts with eastern mysticism is one of the leading features of the paintings of Iranian-Armenian artist Sonia Balassanian.

These days, Homa Gallery in Tehran is hosting a warmly-received exhibition of Sonia’s paintings, which is a combination of poetry and geometrics.

Inspired by the oriental culture, Sonia creates artworks with western themes. The artist’s exhibition displays a collection of works from the different stages of her artistic development.

Some of Sonia’s paintings include some irregularly interconnected lines resembling some repeated words. This gives the audience a sense of facing a piece of writing. The artist has used only cold and dark colours to convey the special themes in her mind.

In some of her works on display in Homa Gallery, the artist deals with some architectural elements from the east and uses geometric forms, fabrics and layouts as main themes of her abstract paintings. For example, in one piece, she has used white bricks within a barrel vault to portray the image of Iranian markets.

In her minimalist pieces, Sonia uses a combination of ochre color with blue, grey and white reminding the audience of the classic Persian architecture.

She takes advantages of her homeland’s art to recreate the monotonous rhythm of brick buildings in an innovative form.

Sonia is an Iranian-Armenian artist who left Iran in 1965 for New York, and has since been living there. She holds a BFA from the joint program of Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and the University of Pennsylvania, as well as an MFA from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. She is also an alumnus of the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program. Her numerous works have been exhibited internationally.

Sonia has won several prestigious awards from Philadelphia and New York’s museums and universities.  Her works are now held in Tehran Museum of Contemporary Arts, Armenia’s Contemporary Arts Center and personal collections in various parts of the world. They have also been put up for auction at Christie’s and Tehran auctions, among others.

She is one of the most influential artists in Iran’s modern art, and has created some leading artworks.

Sonia’s works will be on display in Homa Gallery until October 16.

What follows are photos of her works retrieved from Honar Online:

Կարևոր է ԵԱՏՄ ծրագրերում Հայաստանի ինտեգրման անհրաժեշտությունը. նախարար

  • 05.10.2018
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  • Հայաստան
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ՀՀ տրանսպորտի, կապի եւ տեղեկատվական տեխնոլոգիաների նախարար Հակոբ Արշակյանն ընդունել է Եվրասիական տնտեսական միության (ԵԱՏՄ) ներքին շուկաների, տեղեկատվայնացման, տեղեկատվական-հեռահաղորդակցական տեխնոլոգիաների կոլեգիայի անդամ, նախարար Կարինե Մինասյանի գլխավորած պատվիրակությանը։


Ինչպես հայտնում են նախարարության մամուլի ծառայությունից, ողջունելով ներկաներին՝ Հակոբ Արշակյանն ընդգծել է Եվրասիական Տնտեսական Միության (ԵԱՏՄ) շրջանակներում իրականացվող տարածաշրջանային ծրագրերում Հայաստանի ինտեգրման անհրաժեշտությունը՝ առանձնակի կարեւորելով ԵԱՏՄ ֆորումի անցկացումը Հայաստանում։


Անդրադառնալով ԵԱՏՄ շրջանակներում իրականացվող գործընթացներում մեր երկրի մասնակցությանը՝ Կարինե Մինասյանը դրանցում առանձնացրել է երեք հիմնական նպատակ՝ նախ Հայաստանը ներկայացված լինի ԵԱՏՄ ծրագրերում, ապա ներգրավված լինի նախագծերում եւ, վերջապես, սեփական ծրագրերը ներկայացնի։


Հանդիպման ընթացքում ներկայացվել են այս երեք հայեցակարգերի հետ կապված մի շարք մանրամասներ, քննարկվել եւ ճշգրտվել են ԵԱՏՄ ծրագրերում մեր կազմակերպությունների մասնակցության հետ կապված հարցեր:


Պայմանավորվածություն է ձեռք բերվել ԵԱՏՄ ծրագրերն ավելի խորությամբ ուսումնասիրելուց հետո առաջիկայում քննարկել դրանցում հայկական կազմակերպությունների ներգրավման հնարավոր տարբերակները։

Charles Aznavour, France’s ‘Frank Sinatra,’ Dies at 94

Hollywood Reporter
Oct 1 2018

Charles Aznavour, singer and actor, whose gestures and expressions conveyed the romance of Paris to worldwide audiences, has died.

An actor turned singer, he epitomized the French chansonnier: His songs were half-sung, half-spoken acclamations of love. A popular-song stylistic, Aznavour was a charismatic stage presence, despite his 5 ft. 3 inch height and pedestrian appearance. He headlined at such Parisian venues as the Olympia and was very popular with international audiences.

In 2005, he was chosen as Entertainer of the Century in an on-line poll conducted by Time magazine, topping such superstars as Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra.

In a career that spanned roughly six decades, Aznavour wrote more than 1,000 songs and sold more than 100 million records. He often wrote songs that were considered immoral. Until 1960, 60% of his songs were banned from the French radio. He also wrote music with political or social themes, which he dubbed his “faits de societe” songs.

He was sung by all the great French musical stars, including Edith Piaf, his onetime mentor, and Maurice Chevalier.

As an actor, his most memorable role was as the barroom pianist with a troubled past in Truffaut's Shoot the Piano Player.

When queried about which profession he preferred, singing or acting, he said, Each of my songs is a story. He called himself a “happy sad singer.”

In 1994, he signed a deal with EMI, which authorized re-release of his life's recordings, which was packaged in a series of 30 CDs in 1996. He was feted with a cover on Billboard that year, rare for a foreign singer.

His first film Head Against the Wall won him the Crystal Star Award from the French Motion Picture Academy. He was also memorable as the marathon runner in The Games, and as a Jewish shopkeeper in Volker Schloendorff's The Tin Drum.

He also performed in Atom Egoyan's “Ararat, a film about the Armenian genocide. He was instrumental in erecting a commemorative statue for the victims in Paris.

As a singer, Aznavour packed French theaters and music halls. During a 15-year period in the '60s and '70s, only Elvis Presley, the Beatles and Elton John topped Aznavour in sales. He had a hit single, She, in 1974, which later was used covered by Elvis Costello in the romantic comedy Notting Hill, and was also used in Tadpole.

He was popular with mainstream U.S. audiences, as well: On U.S. television, Aznavour performed in a dual concert on TV with Liza Minnelli titled Love from A to Z.

He entertained at the Hollywood Bowl with a program of songs in French and English, accompanied by the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He finished with Yesterday When I Was Young, which he wrote.

Sad eyed and slight-framed, Aznavour won audiences by simple emotion. Time magazine once characterized his music: “His words are the plea of any poor devil, sung in any poor devil's voice.”

“I sing about the ordinary things of life. My ideas are everyone's ideas. My problems are their. …. So the audience accepts me. I am not a handsome, talented man. My voice is froggy, everything about me is common. They identify with me.”

In 1975, he starred in Claude Chabrol's “Folies Bourgeoises, and, in 1983, starred in another Chabrol film, Le Fantome du Chapelier.

In U.S. films, he also played a wild hunchback in Candy and a villain in Harold Robbins' The Adventurers.

Other film credits include: Tomorrow is My Turn, Taxi for Tobruk, High Fidelity and Paris in the Month of August. For 20th Century Fox, he played a European police chief in Sky Riders, which also starred James Coburn and Susannah York.

He was born as Shahnour Varenagh Aznavurjian on May 22, 1924 in Paris of Armenian parents. His father was a singer, his mother an actress. At age nine, he entered acting and at 11 left school. He was 16 when World War II began and survived by selling newspapers and sweeping streets. He teamed with actor Pierre Roche in a double act, and began song-write collaboration with Roche. He wrote songs for the likes of Edith Piaf and Maurice Chevalier.

Aznavour was a member of the jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 1986.

Most recent films include Le Comedien, Les Momes, Laguna, and Ennemis publics.

He was married five times and had five children: Seda, Patricia, Katia, Patrick and Mischa. 

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/charles-aznavour-dead-frances-frank-sinatra-was-94-1148204

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Note Need for Compromises for Nagorno-Karabakh Settlement

Sputnik News Service
 Friday 12:01 AM UTC


OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Note Need for Compromises for
Nagorno-Karabakh Settlement


YEREVAN, September 28 (Sputnik) – The sides to the conflict in the
Nagorno-Karabakh region should make compromises in order for the
situation to be settled, the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group,
mediating the negotiations on the crisis resolution, said in a
statement on Thursday.

On Wednesday, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov and his
Armenian counterpart Zohrab Mnatsakanyan met for talks on the
sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York City. The co-chairs
of the OSCE Minsk Group (Igor Popov of Russia, Stephane Visconti of
France and Andrew Schofer of the United States) met separately and
jointly with the two top diplomats over the past days. Personal
Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk also
participated in the negotiations.

"The Co-Chairs and the Ministers discussed the situation in the region
and sought clarification with respect to several recent statements and
incidents of concern. The Co-Chairs expressed deep regret over the
continuing and unnecessary loss of life. They cautioned the Ministers
about the dangers of escalation, called on the parties to engage
constructively in a positive atmosphere, and to avoid inflammatory
rhetoric. The Co-Chairs underscored that a comprehensive settlement
will require compromises on all sides," the statement read.

Mammadyarov and Mnatsakanyan, in their turn, reiterated the importance
of taking steps to defuse tensions in Nagorno-Karabakh, according to
the statement.

Earlier in the day, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said that
Mammadyarov and Mnatsakanyan had agreed to resume their talks on the
conflict settlement in October. Moreover, the co-chairs of the OSCE
Minsk Group had agreed that they would visit the region the next
month, the ministry added.

Azerbaijan's Armenian-dominated region of Nagorno-Karabakh proclaimed
its independence in 1991 which resulted in a military conflict in the
area.

The OSCE has been mediating the talks on the status of the region since 1992.

Baku claims that the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR)
had occupied its territory, and insists on the preservation of
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, while the interests of the
self-proclaimed republic in the peace process are represented by
Armenia, as NKR is not a part of the talks.