Category: 2017
Book: New book reaffirms Armenian ethnicity of master architects behind Istanbul’s look
Armenpress News Agency , Armenia December 7, 2017 Thursday New book reaffirms Armenian ethnicity of master architects behind Istanbul's look YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. Hundreds of buildings have been built in Istanbul by the Balyan family. For many years Turks were denying the fact that the Balyans were Armenians, but today, this fact is being accepted already in Turkey itself. Ashot Grigoryan’s “Treasures of the gardens of the Armenian People: Balyans” book once again affirms the Armenian ethnicity of the Balyan family. Head Scientific-Secretary of the A. Tamanyan National Museum-Institute of Architecture Ashot Grigoryan told ARMENPRESS that collecting an archive about Armenian architects in foreign countries has been on the museum-institute’s agenda. “Upon collecting materials on architects who lived or still are living in Turkey, it turned out that there is a big gap about the Balyan architect generation. The Balyan’s were very famous architects in Turkey, but their Armenian ethnicity was rejected for many years”, he said. The book shows facts, how the Balyan’s appeared in Istanbul, who they were, whether or not it was a coincidence that Armenian architects were also working in Istanbul even before the Balyans. “And it turned out that before the Balyans, architect Sinan was working in Istanbul, and Turkey again denies his Armenian background”, he said. Grigoryan says materials about the Balyans were found in Italy upon research. Grigoryan said the Balyan’s have hundreds of works in Istanbul, both Ottoman and Armenian buildings. “These are palace and military buildings, residential homes, towers, bridges, dams. The Balyan’s are also the architects of many districts. They also built churches and hospitals for the Armenian community. Nearly 90% of their buildings are preserved today”, he said. Grigoryan says the DolmabahçePalace of Istanbul is among the most famous works of the Balyans.
Armenian FM meets with Sergey Lavrov in Vienna
Armenian foreign minister Edward Nalbandian had a meeting with Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov in Vienna within the frames of the OSCE Ministerial Council.
At the meeting the two ministers discussed the agenda of Armenia-Russia relations, as well as the implementation process of agreements reached between the leaders of the two countries. The FMs also exchanged views on different directions of the OSCE activity. Nalbandian and Lavrov touched upon the peaceful settlement process of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.
FM Nalbandian meets OSCE Secretary General in Vienna
Armenian foreign minister Edward Nalbandian met with OSCE Secretary General Thomas Greminger on the sidelines of the 24th OSCE Ministerial Council in Vienna.
At the meeting issues relating to Armenia’s engagement within the OSCE, the existing cooperation at different platforms were discussed. The officials noted with satisfaction that the ‘Cooperation program with Armenia’ provides good opportunities to strengthen and deepen the mutual partnership within the OSCE.
The Armenian FM and the OSCE Secretary General also touched upon a number of issues of the OSCE agenda, as well as the results of the session of the Ministerial Council.
Minister Nalbandian presented the efforts of Armenia and the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries aimed at peacefully settling the Karabakh conflict, as well as talked about the meetings held two days before with the Minsk Group Co-Chairs and the Azerbaijani foreign minister.
Rice samples are sent to testing based on the citizen’s complaint
The State Service for Food Safety of the Ministry of Agriculture of the Republic of Armenia has taken state control measures on the basis of the complaint filed by Narine Kirakosyan. Her concern was about the rude smell of rice and the dark spots seen in the pamela.
SFSA employees visited the “Nush” sales point at Tigran Petrosyan 11/2, Davitashen district sent the sample of its rice to the laboratory for examination.
At the same time, the Service has also conducted monitoring in the importing organization “Armen-Hamik” LLC. 130 kilograms of rice was found in the store, from which a sample was sent to the laboratory for examination. This batch is also suspended until the results are clear.
A sample of plamellos sold at the Yerevan City supermarket at 25/5 of the same street has been sent for laboratory, too. The results will be published.
Warning of the US State Department
After Donald Trump’s declaration of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, US state institutions in various parts of the world have begun to use additional security measures. As the State Department states, these institutions may be temporarily shut down or periodically terminated by public services. In these cases, US embassies and consulates will work to provide services to US citizens in case of emergencies.
The Foreign Office also urges Americans around the world to carefully follow the emerging developments and, if necessary, contact with embassies and consulates.
Sports’ “formula” from World Figure Skating Champion (video)
“I wanted to become a surgeon, but I did not. Why? I would answer because I became a figure skater,” says Irina Slutskaya, a world renowned Russiam figure skater, a double world champion, and a Moscow regional (oblast) duma member.
Today, she held a master class at the Irina Rodnina Figure-Skating School.
“It’s the third time I’ve been in your city. In the first time that I came here in 2015, I participated in an ice show with Plushchenko, and then I came for the second time to the opening of this sport school,” says the figure skater.
The premiere of the “Akhtamar” ice show will take place in November 2018 in Yerevan, where she will act as the goddess Anahit.
“It is the first time that the legend will be performed,” says Irina Slutskaya, “I think this story will move everyone. We all know what Lake Van means for the Armenians around the world, which is today in Turkey, and the exciting story of Akhtamar. We will tell this beautiful story through dance, music and our souls. ”
Irina Slutskaya answered to the question about her expectations from the children attending Irina Rodnina Figure-Skating School, “Let’s do not forget that figure skating is not just a sport, it is an art and it is not only about champions, but also participants of beautiful ice shows. It is important that today there is such sport school, but for the victories, children need to work.”
Persistence, patience, diligence, confidence in one’s own strength, and strong nerves are the sports’ “recipe” by Irina Slutskaya.
Armenia Adopts Law Against Domestic Violence at Last
BY RUPEN JANBAZIAN
From The Armenian Weekly
YEREVAN—The National Assembly of Armenia on Friday adopted legislation aimed at combating domestic violence by introducing criminal and administrative liability against those found guilty of the newly defined crime.
The law was passed with 73 votes for and 12 against, with 6 abstentions, after debate and some resistance from a few parliamentarians.
Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan’s government pushed the bill through despite opposition from some of his fellow Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) members. The 12 parliamentarians who voted against the bill, however, were all members of the Tsarukian bloc—a self-described opposition party.
Critics of the bill argued that government interference in family affairs would run counter to Armenian traditional values and undermine the fabric of Armenian society.
The Armenian Revolutionary Federation parliamentary bloc in Armenia, a coalition partner in Armenia’s RPA-led government, first voiced support for the adoption of the bill in October. ARF went on record to say it viewed the proposed bill as an essential part of a societal value system, and necessary for a healthier society.
“The heated discussions and the many opposing views—even regarding our society’s value system—are evidence that problems exist within our society. Any manifestation of violence is reprehensible, especially if it is taking place in the family,” ARF Supreme Council representative Aghvan Vardanyan noted at the time during an interview with Yerevan-based Yerkir Media.
Some Armenian organizations, such as the pan-Armenian Armenian Relief Society (ARS), also voiced support for the proposed bill. “As a country that takes pride in having given women the right to vote during the Independent Republic of 1918—and also having appointed a woman to a diplomatic post at a time when women in most of the developed world did not have the right to vote—this bill comes at an important stage for gender equality in today’s Armenia,” read a part of a statement released by the ARS on Oct. 24.
A petition calling for the Armenian government to pass a law criminalizing domestic violence emerged in late October on the website Change.org. The petition, addressed to Prime Minister Karen Karapetyan, was the result of a grassroots effort by some in the Armenian Diaspora to have a say in the debate taking place in Armenia.
The author of the petition, Annette Moskofian, an active member of the ARF, called for people to sign the petition to help pioneer what she called “a more just Armenia.”
“[We] had strong, progressive legislation and respected equality of genders [during the first Armenian Republic of 1918]. Our present Republic needs to be even more progressive and democratic than the previous one,” she told the Armenian Weekly’s Karine Vann in an interview.
The petition received nearly 3,000 signatures from supporters around the world.
Separately, a statement released by a group of Diaspora Armenian artists, scholars, and writers a little over a week after the petition was released called on the Armenian authorities to adopt the law. The more than 50 signatories included artist and activist Serj Tankian; actor and playwright Eric Bogosian; novelists Chris Bohjalian, Micheline Aharonian Marcom, and Nancy Kricorian; artist and author Vahe Berberian; photographer Scout Tufankjian; and journalist David Barsamian.
Armenia’s Justice Ministry amended the initial draft of the bill, expanding the name from “Prevention of domestic violence and protection of victims of domestic violence,” to “Preventing violence in the family, protecting the victims of violence in the family, and restoring harmony in the family.”
Several groups, including the Yerevan-based Coalition to Stop Violence against Women, criticized the changes to the name and certain parts of the bill. “From the new title of the law, it is obvious that the draft law underwent conceptual changes, shifting from the protection of an individual into ‘family harmony,’ which not only lacks a legal definition but also contradicts local and international legal norms,” read a statement released by the coalition last month. The group also expressed concern that one of the basic principles under the bill’s second article enshrined the protection and maintenance of the “traditional Armenian family.”
“To tell you frankly, it’s a matter of semantics,” Yerevan’s Women’s Support Center Executive Director Maro Matosian told the Armenian Weekly. “For us practitioners, we understand that this is something to appease the opponents to the law. I don’t think the title itself will create much damage. I think that the content of the law is what we should be focusing on,” Matosian said.
The law is not perfect, Matosian said: “It never is the first time.”
“In Georgia, for example, amendments were made two years after the passage to improve it. So we’re hoping for the same thing in Armenia,” Matosian explained, describing the passage of the law as a good step forward for Armenia: “It was very much necessary for Armenia to be in line with international commitments and the conventions that have demanded domestic violence laws.”
Matosian said the new law unfortunately does not criminalize domestic violence right away—that it refers instead to the penal code, which is currently in draft form. “The law also insists on reconciliation, which could be considered a negative point. In cases of domestic violence, this is not accepted practice—because there is an imbalance of power and the victim is dominated,” Matosian said.
The reconciliation clause could be damaging, since, according to Matosian, a police officer or social worker can ask a victim to return to the home and try to reconcile with an abusive husband.
According to the law, however, Armenian law-enforcement authorities will be required to stop violence within families that threatens the lives or health of their members. Police could also force a violent spouse to leave the victim’s home and stay away for as long as 20 days. Courts will be able to extend those bans for 18 months.
The law also specifies that the definition of domestic violence is not limited to physical violence but also sexual, psychological, and economic violence.
Matosian said the passage of the law is significant because it has certain provisions did not previously exist in the country: “These provisions include the training of service providers; confidentiality of the victims; protecting orders; removing the abuser from the homes for a certain period; police accompanying victims to the home to retrieve belongings; and so forth.”
“These were always needed but never in place before,” she said. “In addition, there will be an effort to open new shelters and assist existing shelters.”
For Matosian, the passage of the law sends a strong message to sectors of Armenian society that continue to deny that domestic violence exists in Armenia. “This is proof that it does actually exist and that something should be done about it,” Matosian said.
Many have argued that implementation will be difficult. Matosian said securing proper practices will, in fact, be an uphill battle. “Civil society must be very diligent in this regard, because we are really the only ones monitoring and practicing the support and assistance based on international standards. It’s not going to happen overnight,” she admitted.
Matosian also explained that it is imperative for the law to be accompanied by mechanisms. “The police, for example, will have its own mechanisms put in place regarding implementation—what to do, what not to do. The same goes for legislators, social workers, and so forth,” she noted, “We’re waiting to hear about these mechanisms to be put into place.”
Matosian’s Women’s Support Center will be “keeping an eye out” to see how the law is implemented. “We will try to identify some of the gaps, some of the necessary measures not being taken, and based on that we will make our recommendations and amendments,” she said.
The Women’s Support Center will likely be able to make these recommendations in about a year or a year and a half, after properly identifying the problems, she said: “We can monitor, we can observe, we can draw conclusions based on the evidence.”
A 2011 survey on domestic violence in Armenia, conducted by Proactive Society with support from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), found that almost 60% of survey respondents said they had been subjected to some sort of domestic violence in their lifetime.
ANCA-WR Endorses Tarkanian for U.S. Senate
GLENDALE – The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region announced Friday its endorsement of Danny Tarkanian, Republican candidate for the United States Senate from Nevada. Tarkanian will be facing incumbent Senator Dean Heller in the 2018 primary.
“As the grandson of Armenian Genocide survivors, Danny Tarkanian is committed to the cause for justice not just for his own family, but for all Armenians. Having him in the United States Senate will surely empower our community, and we look forward to working closely with him to achieve our common goals,” said ANCA-WR Chairperson Nora Hovsepian.
“I am honored and grateful to receive ANCA-WR’s endorsement and look forward to working with them during my campaign and after elected as the first American Armenian US Senator on issues of importance to our country and the Armenian-American community. As someone whose grandparents lived through the Genocide, I will be a strong voice for improving the bilateral relations between Armenia and the United States, and I will work tirelessly alongside ANCA-WR towards the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the United States government,” said Tarkanian.
A prominent businessman and son of renowned college basketball coach, the late Jerry Tarkanian who was honored at the ANCA-WR Gala Banquet in 2013 as the “People’s Champion” and Las Vegas City Council member Lois Tarkanian, Danny has proven to be a passionate advocate of Armenian American issues. In the past, the ANCA has endorsed Tarkanian as he narrowly lost his bid for Congress in Nevada’s 3rd Congressional District in 2016.
Tarkanian, a candidate familiar to the political arena, has worked consistently to galvanize the support of the people of Nevada. He’s widely known in the state as a strong candidate.
“Danny Tarkanian and the Tarkanian Family have been great supporters of the Armenian community in Las Vegas. They have contributed not only with the proud legacy of Danny’s late father, Jerry Tarkanian, Las Vegas’ iconic and beloved UNLV basketball coach, but also with Lois’ dedication to our community including recounting of genocide stories she heard from Jerry’s surviving family at the Centennial Commemoration. Danny and his family are with the Armenian community every step of the way as major donors to the Armenian Genocide Monument in Clark County, a memorial plaque & tree at UNLV as a tribute to Armenian Genocide survivors and supporting every significant community event from Genocide commemoration, Independence Day celebrations & telethons in Las Vegas,” said ANCA Nevada co-chair Lenna Hovanessian.
Tarkanian is the founder of the non-profit Tarkanian Basketball Academy, an organization that helps at-risk youth develop basketball and life skills. He earned his bachelor’s degree at UNLV, and his law degree at the University of San Diego. He’s worked as a lawyer, served as assistant coach with his father in Division I basketball, and started his own real estate development firm. Danny and his wife, Amy, together have four children.
“Tarkanian, a Las Vegas native since age 12, has been a pillar and supporter of the Las Vegas-Armenian community. He and his dedicated wife, Amy Tarkanian, have always been present at our community events. Recently, in June 2015, Danny and his two daughters, Lois and Ava, visited Armenia for the first time and fell in love with Armenia’s nature and culture and reinvigorated their passion towards the Armenian-American community,” added ANCA Nevada co-chair Hera Armenian.
To learn more about his campaign or to volunteer, please visit dannytarkanian.com.
The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.
All-ASA Condemns Appointment of Samantha Power to Aurora Prize Selection Committee
GLENDALE—The All-Armenian Student Association is appalled and dismayed at the appointment of Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, to the Selection Committee for the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. As a notable scholar with expertise in human rights, Power continuously failed to use her high-level position in the Obama administration to hold President Obama to his campaign promise regarding the recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
Samantha Power began her career as a war correspondent in Bosnia during the civil war, where she became critical of the Clinton administration’s near-paralysis in the face of ethnic cleansing of the Bosnian population. Her observations were summarily collected in her Pulitzer-Prize winning book, “A Problem from Hell: America in the Age of Genocide,” in which she firmly concludes that despite the outcry of “never again” following the Holocaust, the international community, particularly the United States, remains idle and ineffective in putting an end to mass atrocities.
Nevertheless, her ardent advocacy for human rights became stymied upon her appointment as the U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations. Power joined Obama’s campaign in 2008. A week before the presidential election, she released a video directed specifically to the Armenian-American community, urging them to vote for Obama because of his firm promise to recognize the Armenian Genocide once he is elected. During his eight years in office, President Obama dishonored his campaign pledge and Samantha Power – a person who knew all too well the gravity of this decision for the international community – did nothing to reverse his course.
In April 2017, Power took to social media to express regret for her failure to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide during her time on Obama’s cabinet. “I am very sorry, that, during our time in office, we in the Obama Administration did not recognize the Armenian Genocide,” Power said on Twitter. During her tenure, Power clearly prioritized political expediency over properly advocating for the issues she believes in. An _expression_ of regret, stated at a time when she has seemingly less power, is nothing but a missed opportunity. It is a disappointment not only for the Armenian community, but for the international community as a whole.
Further, it is even more disappointing that the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity, which was “founded on behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide and in gratitude to their saviors,” would reward Samantha Power with a seat on their Selection Committee. The Aurora Humanitarian Initiative is designed to raise public awareness and address some of the world’s most pressing humanitarian issues. At the forefront of these issues should be the need to hold public officials accountable for the decisions they make in protecting vulnerable communities.
The founders of the Initiative – Noubar Afeyan, Vartan Gregorian, and Ruben Vardanyan – have made a misguided decision in appointing Samantha Power to the Selection Committee. They have selectively praised her unparalleled expertise on human rights, while not recognizing that expertise alone does not justify her silence and inaction. We cannot merely praise her influential work in the past, while ignoring the fact that she fell extremely short at a time and stage that mattered the most. The All-ASA condemns the appointment of Samantha Power to the Selection Committee of the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. We urge the Founders of the Aurora Prize, Noubar Afeyan, Vartan Gregorian, and Ruben Vardanyan, to reverse this decision.
The All-Armenian Student Association (All-ASA) works to unite various Armenian-American college student organizations and serve the greater Armenian-American community through cultural, social, educational, and activist programming. As the largest confederation of Armenian student organizations in the nation, All-ASA is dedicated to collaboration among its constituent organizations, leadership development of its members, and community service.