Investigative committee releases footage from scene of Armenian’s death in Moscow

News.am, Armenia
Nov 21 2018
Investigative committee releases footage from scene of Armenian’s death in Moscow Investigative committee releases footage from scene of Armenian’s death in Moscow

15:43, 21.11.2018
                  

The Investigative Committee of Russia has released a footage from Moscow International airport where an Armenian man had been found dead on the runway, RBC reported.

The Investigative Committee found parts from the man's coat and a shoelace among the fragments scattered on the runway.

According to Mash TV Channel, at about 6:00 pm the Armenian citizen arrived at airport. The man has been escorted by police to the boarding gate, but then walked away instead of boarding a bus to the plane.

The Investigative Committee establishes the circumstances of the accident. A pre-investigation check is conducted; the initiation of a criminal case has not been reported yet.

As reported earlier, the Armenian embassy in Moscow confirmed reports on the death of Armenia national Yepremyan A. (born in 1993) as a result of the accident on the runway of Sheremetyevo International Airport.

“The diplomatic mission was informed by Russia’s investigative committee that the investigation into the reasons of the accident continues. The embassy is in contact with the relevant agencies of Russia. The additional information will be provided later,” the embassy said in a statement.

Armenian police prevent man from setting himself on fire near Russian embassy

AMN Al-Masdar News, Iran
Nov 21 2018


BEIRUT, LEBANON (11:50 A.M.) – Armenian police prevented a man from setting himself on fire near the Russian Federation’s embassy in the capital city of Yerevan, the Shamshyan publication reported this morning.

According to the report, an 81-year-old resident of Armenia’s Tavush province told the police forces that he was going to set himself on fire because of the current social conditions inside the country.

The man was then arrested by the Armenian police as he was carrying a bottle of gasoline near the Russian embassy.

No further details were released.          

https://www.almasdarnews.com/article/armenian-police-prevent-man-from-setting-himself-on-fire-near-russian-embassy/                                                    

Pashinyan: Now do we agree to return two more Ramil Safarovs to Azerbaijan?

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 20 2018

The Acting Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan said at a press conference Tuesday that he was planning to meet with parents of Karen Ghazaryan who is held captive in Azerbaijan.

"My wife has already visited his family twice, which means the issue has always been central to us. But the action which took place recently, frankly speaking, was surprising to me. Who was this action against? If it was against the actions of the Azerbaijani authorities, why would they close the road, which, in general, is one of the strategic goals of Azerbaijan? If this action was against us because we did not pay enough attention to the problem, why has the prime minister's wife paid a visit to the family twice and have we had such a precedent when the family in a similar situation has received so much attention? If it refers to Armenia’s efforts towards return or exchange of captives, of course, it should be implemented, but should the process not be in line with the interests of Armenia or do we mean we should return him at any cost no matter what reactions it might receive from the society," Nikol Pashinyan said.
According to him, this is not an easy issue.

The Acting Prime Minister mentioned that there is another guy besides Karen Ghazaryan, who is in captivity as well. "Why do not they block roads block for him? Because he is an orphan? Are we being guided by this logic, he is an orphan, let him stay there?"
Nikol Pashinyan said that now Azerbaijan offers to exchange everyone with everyone, but should we take that way?

"One of the two Azeris in Artsakh was sentenced to death and another to 20 years of imprisonment because they killed two people, including a young man, and wounded another person. Now do we agree to return two more Ramil Safarovs to Azerbaijan, do we agree with this option? I understand and treat the grief of this family with great respect but I cannot understand the closing of the Armenian-Georgian road," he said.

 According to Nikol Pashinyan, if someone thinks that something could have been done and has not been done, then they are misinterpreting the situation. "I will meet with Karen Ghazaryan's parents and will have a sincere conversayion with our compatriots," said the Acting Prime Minister.

Armenia’s acting DM, Gen. Camporeale meet in Kabul

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 20 2018
Armenia’s acting defense minister Davit Tonoyan met in Kabul today with Deputy Commander of RS troops deployed in Afghanistan General Salvatore Camporeale, spokesperson Artsrun Hovhannisyan reports.

The Italian general briefed on the battle-worthiness of the troops, peculiarities of their service.

During the meeting the interlocutors discussed duty peculiarities and technical means used during their service.

General Camporeale expressed gratitude for the service of 121 Armenian peacekeepers in Afghanistan, who, he said, are known for their high discipline and unprecedented readiness.

The Society for Armenian Studies, Newsletter

The Society for Armenian Studies
Newsletter Volume XLII, No. 1, Fall 2018

 

 
Message From the President:
 
Since its inception in 1974, the Society for Armenian
Studies has played an important role in advancing
the field of Armenian Studies in the U.S. However,
the field has changed and developed dramatically in
the last forty four years. From a handful of Arme-
nian Studies chairs and programs and a small group
of scholars, today there are more than 14 chairs and
programs in the United States that are extensively in-
volved in research and teaching on the undergraduate
and graduate levels.
Research in the field of Armenian Studies in the U.S.
has also advanced. More and more graduate students
are conducting interdisciplinary research, bridging
Armenian Studies with history, literature, linguistics,
sociology, and political science among others. Despite
these developments, Armenian studies faces substan-
tial challenges with the major challenge being how
to make the field relevant in the 21st century with the
changing nature of the academic world and staying
strong in an era of declining interest in the humanities.
SAS is currently involved in addressing these issues.
We are revamping the organization to stay current
with the ever-changing pace of the academic world.
 
With this aim in mind, SAS is bringing in new energy.
This year more than twenty members joined the
 
organization. We also intend to involve SAS members
in the activities of the Society. We believe that through
collective work, we will be able to achieve our goals.
Furthermore, we understand that today’s graduate
students are tomorrow’s leaders in the field and the or-
ganization. Hence,
we are planning on focusing a great deal of energy
on developing and mentoring the more than 40 or so
graduate student members. Since I assumed the
presidency of the Society in January of this year, we
are pursuing the following projects:
 
1) In order to understand the condition of the So-
ciety, we have undertaken two surveys: One dealt with
the relations of the SAS with the Armenian Chairs
and Directors of Programs and the other dealt with the
general membership. The surveys were conducted by
Executive Council member Dr. Vahe Sahakyan. The
results are published in this newsletter.
 
2) We are updating our membership on a
bi-monthly basis with the latest scholarship produced
by its members. To date, we have sent out six an-
nouncements.
 
3) We have launched the SAS Podcast Series,
which interviews the authors of the latest books in
Armenian Studies. To date, we have conducted 8 inter-
views and more are on the way.
 
4) We have prepared an extensive list of the digi-
tal archives of primary sources pertaining to Armenian
Studies so that scholars can have easier and faster
access to these sources.
  
5) We are collaborating with other Armenian
chairs and academic programs.
 
6) We are continuing with our Annual Conference
Series. This year it is dedicated to the Centennial of
the Republic of Armenia (1918-1920)
 
7) Inauguration of the SAS-Fresno State Arme-
nian Studies Series-Publication Series is underway.
 
I am confident that with your involvement we will be
able to develop these projects and add new ones. It is
my hope that the SAS will become a strong organiza-
tion. I am looking forward to meeting all of you at our
annual meeting in November 15, 2018 and welcome
any comments or suggestions you might have.
 
 
Best,
Bedross Der Matossian
President of the Society for Armenian Studies (SAS)
 
To read the complete newsletter, please visit

Water price may be raised in Armenia

ARKA, Armenia
Nov 20 2018

YEREVAN, November 20. /ARKA/. The Public Services Regulatory Committee of Armenia is conducting public discussions to raise water prices for consumers. 

Veolia Jur, the sole water distributor and sewerage operator in Armenia, which is a subsidiary of France’s Veolia Generale des Eaux, has applied to the Public Services Regulatory Committee of Armenia to increase water prices.  

In its application, the company proposes to raise the price for drinking water from the present AMD 191,414 per one cubic meter to AMD 205,125 (VAT included). 

The price-making process is impacted by changes in retail sales volumes, inflation, the electricity price and other indicators. 

In accordance with the concession management program, the company had to operate with AMD 186 per one cubic meter in 2018, in 2019 the price is stipulated at AMD 194.4 and in 2020 at 202.8. 
After the peaks to AMD 2012.4 in 2023, it will start going down until it reaches AMD 129.6 per one cubic meter in 2031. 

The Armenian regulator has considered the company’s request, conducted its own monitoring, taking into account all factors, and now proposes to set the price for drinking water at AMD 202,272, which is lower than the price proposed by the company by AMD 2,853. 

The price for the company’s retail services, sewerage and waste water depuration is AMD 191,414 (VAT included) from January 1, 2018. –0—-

Military memorandum signed between Belarus and Azerbaijan addressed against Armenia’s interests: Acting PM

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 20 2018

Armenia condemns military memorandum signed between Belarus and Azerbaijan, Armenia’s acting PM Nikol Pashinyan said at a news conference today, stressing that such deals are aimed against Armenia and its interests.

“We must get reciprocal explanations from each other. Each of the CSTO member states should clearly know what commitments it has before the other member state, before its military-political ally, what commitments each member state has before the organization and the opposite – the commitments the organization has before its member states,” Pashinyan said.

He said Armenia fully implements its commitments which unfortunately cannot be said about its other partners.

“Our issue is clear. We are going to give new content to the CSTO, to specify the commitments and mutual relations,” the acting PM said.

With English translation, controversial Azerbaijani novel to reach global audience

EurasiaNet.org
Nov 20 2018

Joshua Kucera Nov 20, 2018

Five years ago, Akram Aylisli was perhaps the most notorious man in Azerbaijan. Upon the release of his novel, Stone Dreams, he was the subject of a state-sponsored smear campaign claiming that his sympathies toward Armenians made him a traitor to his nation. In response, the support from abroad was just as strong, and an international group of prominent academics nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Today, 80-year-old Aylisli’s life is much quieter: The protests against him have long faded, and his name now rarely appears in the press. He only occasionally leaves his apartment in central Baku, and when this reporter called on him at home he was watching the Russian-language History Channel on mute.

But he and Stone Dreams are again about to enter the spotlight: The first authorized English-language translation of the book comes out November 21, along with two other novels in the trilogy, Yemen and A Fantastical Traffic Jam. In an interview with Eurasianet, Aylisli expressed high hopes for the new edition. While it has been available in Russian, “in English – that’s something different,” he said.

“If the book finds an audience, finds its readers, in some way carries a resonance in some countries, then that is my power, immortality,” he said. The authorities who have caused him so much trouble, he added, “know well that to physically destroy me is very easy, but morally they are powerless.”

Aylisli was once one of Azerbaijan’s most famous writers, and he enjoyed the favors of the state – both the Soviet Union and independent Azerbaijan. His works were taught in school and he was a member of parliament from 2005-2010.

But the controversy began in 2013 when a translation of Stone Dreams was published in the Russian literary journal Druzhba Narodov. The novel alternates between narratives of Aylisli’s ancestral village of Aylis, in Nakhchivan, where Armenian residents were killed and driven out during World War I; and Baku as the Soviet Union collapsed, where Armenians were subjected to pogroms.

“If a single candle were lit for every Armenian killed violently, the radiance of those candles would be brighter than the light of the moon,” one of Aylisli’s characters in Stone Dreams says.

Aylisli maintains that Stone Dreams portrays Azerbaijanis positively, as humanists who tried to hold on to moral values while others around them were succumbing to nationalist hatred and crass opportunism. “I didn’t write with hate, but with love,” he told Eurasianet.

“The principal theme of Stone Dreams is the tragedy of the main character, who can’t find a place for himself in a society that has turned political amorality into a national idea, and who therefore stands alone against the times,” Aylisli writes in a new afterword to the English-language edition. (This reporter also contributed a foreword to the new edition.)

Aylisli also argues – and many agree – that the problem was not Stone Dreams and its sympathetic treatment of Armenians, but the next novel in the trilogy, A Fantastical Traffic Jam. The portrayal of a dictator in that book may have resembled too closely Heydar Aliyev, the father of current president Ilham Aliyev who is celebrated as the father of modern Azerbaijan.

Nevertheless, anti-Armenian sympathies are easier to manipulate in Azerbaijan than are pro-Aliyev ones, and a campaign against Aylisli took place across Azerbaijan, with crowds of people burning his books and picketing against him. One politician offered a reward of more than $10,000 to anyone who cut off Aylisli’s ear and brought it to him; others demanded Aylisli undergo a blood test to determine if he was truly Azerbaijani. Aliyev, citing Aylisli’s “deliberate distortion of the history of Azerbaijan by his entirely slanderous pronouncements,” issued a decree formally stripping Aylisli of his title as “People’s Writer” and revoking the special pension he had received as a distinguished artist.

“It was a psychosis,” Aylisli told Eurasianet, recalling those days. “It’s such a terrible energy, a demonic force.” But he said it would have served as creative inspiration if not for his age. “I have to say, the hypocrisy of society that I ran up against also changed a lot of things. The shame is that I’m 80 years old. If I had been only 60, I would have written my best works after this. It was such a lesson to observe all this. But it’s late, it’s late.”

The reception to the book in Armenia did not help matters. It was enthusiastically received there, with a number of unauthorized Armenian- and English-language versions being published. But as yet, no Armenian writer has taken up Aylisli’s call to reciprocate his own gesture: to examine Armenians’ own crimes against Azerbaijanis.

"This novel is a kind of message to Armenians living in Karabakh; in other words, to the Armenian citizens of Azerbaijan," Aylisli said in a 2013 interview with RFE/RL. "The message is this: Don't think that we've forgotten all the bad things we've done to you. We accept that. You have also done bad things to us. It's the job of Armenian writers to write about those bad things.”

But Aylisli said he is now encouraged by the coming to power of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. “He destroyed the old ideology,” he said. “The beginning, while there’s not yet a result, is interesting, and he’s an interesting person. So regardless of the result, however all this will end, it’s an encouraging factor.”

Aylisli still writes. He published a story, “Where the Irises Don’t Grow,” in Druzhba Narodov in 2015. “There was no reaction to it whatsoever,” he said. And he goes out occasionally, and says he is greeted warmly by people who recognize him. But for the most part, he said, “I live completely isolated from society. Completely. It’s as if I’m in exile.”

The new translation, he said, is one means of breaking that isolation. “My fate, as it has turned out, now depends on the international community,” he said in the interview. “I didn’t want this. But this is how it’s turned out.”

Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of The Bug Pit.


Armenia has lowest child suicide rate in Europe

PanArmenian, Armenia
Nov 20 2018

PanARMENIAN.NetArmenia has the lowest child suicide rate among the countries of the European region, the World Health Organization (WHO) said in a fresh report.

According to the WHO, 190 million children and adolescents under the age of 18 live in the European region. 44 million of them were physically and 18 million sexually abused, and 55 million experienced psychological trauma. 90 percent of all such cases go unnoticed, the WHO said.

Child abuse is often the cause of suicide, the report says. Russia leads by the number of child and adolescent suicides in the European region and is followed by Latvia, Belgium, Finland, Moldova, Ukraine and Kazakhstan. Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, on the other hand, have the lowest child suicide rates.

WHO recommends changing the legislation, involving health workers in identifying such cases, acquainting parents with “peaceful” methods of education and teaching children how to defend themselves.

From Armenia’s Kajaran to Afghanistan: Interview with only Armenian woman working at NATO

News.am, Armenia
Nov 20 2018
From Armenia’s Kajaran to Afghanistan: Interview with only Armenian woman working at NATO

Ashkhen Gevorgyan has been living in Afghanistan for the past 3.5 years, and she works for NATO as a human resources consultant.

Speaking to Armenian News-NEWS.am via video talk, Gevorgyan said when applying for the job, she had not imagined that she would be the one to be chosen for it.

“I didn’t believe that a representative of Armenia could be hired by an international organization,” Gevorgyan said, in particular. “But in fact, I was able to get to where I am on my own.”

Gevorgyan is originally from Armenia’s Kajaran town, but she had moved to capital city Yerevan at a young age. Her first specialty is English and French translations. Subsequently, she graduated from the American University of Armenia with a Master’s degree in Business Administration.

Even though her work contract with NATO was initially for one year, she is able to continuously extend the contract, thanks to working admirably.

Gevorgyan said she had easily adapted to Afghanistan because she likes her job and the team she works with very much. Armenian peacekeepers serving in Afghanistan also help her a lot.

“It’s thanks to them that I have this job today, since an Armenian can work wherever she has a peacekeeping contingent,” she added. “I’m very proud of our boys.”

To note, Ashkhen Gevorgyan is the only Armenian woman currently working at NATO.

video at