Sports/Olympics: Winter Olympics 2018: Evgenia Medvedeva (Babasyan) sets new world record

News.am, Armenia
Feb 11 2018
Winter Olympics 2018: Evgenia Medvedeva sets new world record
The figure skater Evgenia Medvedeva (Babasyan) of Russia set a new world record in the women’s figure skating short program at the Olympics Winter Games 2018.

The 18-year-old athlete with Armenian roots was awarded 81.06 points for her performance.

Medvedeva set the previous record at the 2017 World Team Trophy held in Tokyo, Japan.

As reported earlier, last year she broke her own world record with a combined score of 233.41 points and became the first woman to win consecutive world titles.

Video at

Azerbaijani Press: OSCE MG co-chairs urges Karabakh conflict sides to reduce tensions

Trend, Azerbaijan
Feb 11 2018
21:23 (UTC+04:00)

  •             
  • Baku, Azerbaijan, Feb. 11

    Trend:

    The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group has called on the sides to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to take additional steps to reduce tensions.

    The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Igor Popov of the Russian Federation, Stephane Visconti of France, and Andrew Schofer of the United States of America, together with the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk, met with President Ilham Aliyev in Baku on Feb.7 and President Serzh Sargsyan in Yerevan on Feb.9, reads the statement issued by the OSCE MG on Feb.11.

    In both capitals, they also held consultations with the respective Foreign Ministers. The Co-Chairs also travelled to Nagorno-Karabakh on Feb. 9-11 and visited specific locations in the Zangelan, Kubatly, Agdam, Lachin, and Kelbajar districts, reads the statement.

    “The Co-Chairs underscored the importance of fulfilling, in good faith, all commitments undertaken during the October 2017 Summit in Geneva and at previous summits, in particular, Vienna and St. Petersburg,” reads the statement.

    The Co-Chairs also expressed deep concern over the recent loss of life on the Line of Contact. The Co-Chairs called upon the sides to take additional steps to reduce tensions, as agreed in Geneva, and to respect the ceasefire, as well as to refrain from inflammatory statements and provocative actions.

    “The Co-Chairs reiterate their commitment to helping the Sides find a peaceful solution to the conflict based on the core principles of the Helsinki Act, including the non-use of force, territorial integrity, and the equal rights and self-determination of peoples,” reads the statement.

    The Co-Chairs welcomed the parties' expressed intention to continue intensive negotiations, taking into account the current electoral period.

    Music: Armenian-born concert pianist to perform Rachmaninoff with orchestra at Mechanics Hall

    Worcester Telegram, MA
    Feb 10 2018
     
     
    Armenian-born concert pianist to perform Rachmaninoff with orchestra at Mechanics Hall
     
     
    By Richard Duckett
    Telegram & Gazette Staff
     
     
    WORCESTER — In her still young but prodigious career, the Armenian-born concert pianist Nareh Arghamanyan has a repertoire of more than 30 concertos by different composers and has made her own transcriptions of pieces by Bach, Tchaikovsky and others.
     
    But one composer stands out for the pianist who has won praises for her “dazzling technique” and been described as a “major, major, major talent … potential superstar” (Musical America magazine).
     
    “Rachmaninoff has been my most beloved composer from an early age,” Arghamanyan said. When performing concerts where a work by the Russian composer is not on the program, she will often play a piece by Rachmaninoff (1873-1943) as an encore, she said.
     
    Rachmaninoff, however, will be an emphatic part of Wednesday’s concert at Mechanics Hall with the Swedish Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra and Arghamanyan performing Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 (“Rach 2”) in a program presented by Music Worcester Inc. The concert will also feature Sibelius’ Valse Triste No. 1 and Brahms’ Symphony No. 2.
     
    “Each performance (of the concerto) I discover something different,” Arghamanyan said during a recent telephone interview. “This concerto, the whole scale of human emotion, happiness, sadness, everything, is there.”
     
    In the concerto, a tense, agitated first movement is followed by the slower, beautiful second movement with a theme that was taken by pop singer Eric Carmen for his “All By Myself” hit single, making the music all the more familiar to many. The third movement ends the work on a note of triumph.
     
    It was a psychological and emotional triumph to have finished the piece for Rachmaninoff, who dedicated the work to his psychiatric therapist after suffering from several years of depression triggered in part by experiencing a derisive response to his Symphony No. 1.
     
    “He was trying to confirm that he can really overcome his own fears and come up with something magical, not only for himself but for his own dedicated listeners,” Arghamanyan said. The concerto, which premiered in 1901, would prove to be “a huge success.” In 1909 Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 3 (“Rach 3”) also achieved great acclaim, while being considered to be technically challenging or daunting for the pianist, depending on how one looks at it.
     
    Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra, with pianist Nareh Arghamanyan
     
    When: 7:30 p.m. Feb. 14 (preconcert talk 6:30 p.m.)
     
    Where: Mechanics Hall, 321 Main St., Worcester
     
    How much: $49-$55, $17.50 students, $7.50 youth. www.musicworcester.org
     
    Among Arghamanyan’s recordings is a CD of solo works by Rachmaninoff. She said she first started playing Rach 2 at the age of 11.
     
    “To be honest, my favorite was the third (Rach 3) because the second was played so much. I started to put it away. I wanted to have a different approach to the piece,” Arghamanyan said.
     
    Coming back to the concerto led to some revelations.
     
    “Now when I perform it I understand there is a sudden discovery on the stage. The piece just blossoms. When you’re on the stage something magical happens and you understand things that you didn’t discover before. You discover hidden gems,” she said.
     
    Arghamanyan was born in Armenia in 1989 one month after the devastating Dec. 7, 1988, earthquake there that killed 25,000 people.
     
    “There was no electricity for several years,” she said. That meant one time when she was 3½ her mother would not let young Nareh go outside and play with friends because it was already getting dark.
     
    “My mother showed me the piano (in the home). She said ” ‘This is also a toy. You don’t have to go out and play.’ ”
     
    The toy would be quite a discovery.
     
    “The first time I was obsessed with the sound. ‘OK, I will play with this toy.’ ” Her mother set up a candle by the piano in the darkening house. “I discovered harmonies. When my mother came back to put another candle back on I was already playing with 10 fingers.”
     
    She started composing, and although this would be put on hold, she said that she does now write transcriptions.
     
    Arghamanyan formally began her piano studies at 5 and later studied with Alexander Gurgenoy at the Tchaikovsky Music School in Yerevan, Armenia. In 2004 she was the youngest student to be admitted to the University for Music and Performing Arts in Vienna, where she studied with Heinz Medjimorec. She still lives in Vienna.
     
    A major early breakthrough came in 2008 when she won the first prize and all special prizes at the Montreal International Musical Competition, making history as the youngest winner ever.
     
    Arghamanyan has gone on to perform with many of the world’s prestigious orchestras and frequently gives recitals in cities throughout Asia, Europe and North America, including Boston.
     
    The Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1912 and has become one of the region’s international leaders.
     
    Arghamanyan said she performed with HSO for the first time in 2016 when she filled in at 24 hours’ notice for a performance of Rachmaninoff’s Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini in Helsingborg for the orchestra’s season opener.
     
    “It was not even a full rehearsal.” However, “it was so fantastic,” she said.
     
    The orchestra clearly felt the same way, bringing Arghamanyan on its current U.S. tour as guest soloist.
     
    “The orchestra is so flexible and so supportive of the soloist,” she said.
     
    As for coming to Worcester for the first time with its significant history of being a home to many Armenian immigrants and having the first Armenian church in America, Arghamanyan said, “I’m happy I have so many of my compatriots.”
     
    The music of Rachmaninoff has some Armenian connections and similarities to Armenian songs, she said. “So this concert (Feb. 14) I’m bringing Armenia and Rachmaninoff.”
     
    Not yet 30, Arghamanyan’s success is already remarkable. “Foremost, unconditional love of what you are doing,” she said about the qualities a concert performer/recitalist must have. “This profession requires a lot of sacrifices. If you don’t have the unconditional love you will never achieve that.”
     
    However, you don’t want to be all by yourself these days, she intimated.
     
    “It’s not only hard work, it’s believing in yourself. Setting new goals. Never stop learning, being communicative. Not sitting in a corner but being more social. The competition is really, really high. It’s so many things. Hard work is from the 20th century. Nowadays technology is so advanced you have to have the communicative side. Open yourself as much as possible.”
     
     
     

    Former Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II ruled over decline of his empire

    The Daily Telegraph (Australia)
    February 9, 2018 Friday
     
     
    Former Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II ruled over decline of his empire
     
    A BRITISH expert called him “mean” and “untrustworthy” but when he died in 1918, former Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid was a very wealthy man.
     
    Troy Lennon
    The Daily TelegraphFebruary 9, 201812:00am
     
     
     
    Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II rides in an open carriage after proclaiming a new constitution in 1908.Source:Supplied
     
     
    WHEN he died a century ago this week, the deposed Sultan Abdulhamid II was one of the richest men in the world. But because his wealth was built through abuses of power he was also widely despised — within Turkey and around the world.
     
    An obituary by Lord Eversley, who wrote the widely read book, The Turkish Empire, on the decline of the Ottoman Empire, called him “the most mean, cunning, untrustworthy and cruel intriguer” in the history of Ottoman power.
     
    While some regarded the sultan as evil for his oppression and massacre of people within his empire, as well as fanning the flames of religious hatred, others believed him to be a humble, pious ruler who cared deeply about his people despite having enriched himself at their expense. Deeply paranoid about plots against him, he dissolved parliament and ruled with an iron fist over a declining realm until he was ultimately deposed by a rebellion and became known as Abdulhamid “The Damned”.
     
    A young Abdulhamid II when he was a sehzade (prince) heir to the Ottoman throne at Balmoral Castle, Scotland, in 1867.Source:Supplied
     
     
    Abdulhamid was born in Topkapi Palace in Constantinople in 1842, the son of Ottoman Sultan Abdulmecid I and his consort Tirimujgan Kadin, a Circassian woman (although Eversley was adamant she was Armenian). Since he was not expected to succeed his father, Abdulhamid was allowed to indulge a range of interests including making furniture and writing opera.
     
    When his father died in 1861 the throne went to Abdulmecid’s younger half-brother Abdulaziz. Abdulhamid accompanied his uncle — and his brother Murad — to Britain in 1867 where the princes made a favourable impression as highly intelligent, cultured and educated young men.
     
    Abdulaziz became increasingly autocratic and profligate after the death of two influential chief ministers and, in May 1876, was deposed by Turkish parliament. Abdulhamid’s brother became Sultan Murad V. Murad was a liberal who had been in touch with exiled members of the rebel Young Turk movement on a trip to Europe. But after Abdulaziz committed suicide in June and members of Murad’s ministry were murdered, he suffered a breakdown and in August was removed from power leaving Abdulhamid to inherit the throne.
     
    One of his first acts was to introduce a constitution in December 1876, in response to criticism over the Ottoman Empire’s brutal suppression of an uprising in Bulgaria, which threatened to bring foreign intervention.
     
     
    But while many assumed that he would be liberal like his brother, he soon put paid to that notion. Under the pressures to rule during a disastrous war with Russia, Abdulhamid dismissed the parliament he had created in 1877 and suspended the constitution in 1878.
     
    The empire was crumbling. The war with Russia had seen Balkan States given independence and Ottoman territory ceded to the Russians. The French occupied Tunisia in 1881 and the British in Egypt in 1882.
     
    To counter the power of other European nations, Abdulhamid inflamed local Muslim movements to rise up against European powers. He also forged ties with Germany, giving concessions such as railway construction in the Middle East, and created the alliance that would lead the Ottoman Empire into defeat in World War I.
     
    His mishandling of disputes between Kurds and Armenians lead to a massacre of thousands of Armenians in the 1890s, which would lead to further foreign pressures on Turkey and more intervention.
     
    Abdulhamid retreated further into his palace, ruling through edicts and a secret police force that clamped down on dissent, and became increasingly fearful of assassination attempts. In 1905 Armenian revolutionaries packed a carriage full of explosives and parked it outside a mosque in Constantinople the Sultan was due to visit. He only escaped death because he had been delayed arriving at the mosque.
     
    The deposed Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II in his final years, circa 1918.Source:Supplied

     
    Ottoman leader Sultan Mehmed V, the brother of Abdulhamid who replaced him in 1909.Source:Supplied
     
    But opposition to the power of the sultan was becoming more organised. The Young Turk movement, originally founded by university students, military cadets and civil servants, was growing and, with military reversals against the empire, the movement gained the support of upper levels of the military. The Young Turks wanted to reinstate the constitution and reclaim the military reputation of the empire.
    In July 1908 the Young Turks led a revolt against Abdulhamid. The sultan gave in when he realised the military’s support for the revolution and in December 1908 elections were held for a new parliament. But a failed counter-revolt in 1909 led to the government forcing Abdulhamid’s abdication. His brother, Mehmed V, replaced him.
     
    He was exiled to Thessaloniki (under Ottoman rule at the time). But when the city was overrun by the Greek army in WWI, Abdulhamid was taken back to Constantinople and imprisoned in the Beylerbeyi Palace where he died on February 10, 1918, and never saw the breakup of his former empire.
     
     

    Azerbaijan’s leader incites ire with call to occupy neighbour Armenia

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Germany
    February 9, 2018 Friday 1:34 PM EST
    Azerbaijan's leader incites ire with call to occupy neighbour Armenia
     
    Yerevan
     
    DPA POLITICS conflict Armenia Azerbaijan  Azerbaijan's leader incites ire
    with call to occupy neighbour Armenia Yerevan  
    Armenia hit back on Friday against Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev's claim that his countrymen should occupy
    Armenian land.
     
     
    Aliyev is the "Hitler of the 21st century," said the vice speaker of
    Armenia's parliament, Eduard Sharmazanov, referring to Nazi Germany's
    occupation of neighbouring countries during World War II.
     
    Aliyev has demonstrated that Azerbaijan is not prepared to peacefully
    resolve its conflict with Armenia, Sharmazanov told dpa.
     
    These two former Soviet republics in the southern Caucasus have
    clashed over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, with more than
    100 people reported killed in a flare-up in 2016.
     
    The region, which comprises about 4,500 square kilometres within
    predominantly Muslim Azerbaijan, is controlled by Christian Armenian
    separatists.
     
    Aliyev said at a campaign event on Thursday that Armenia's capital,
    Yerevan, is "our historical land," the Interfax news agency reported.
     
    "We Azerbaijanis must return to this land. This is our political and
    strategic goal," Aliyev was quoted as saying.
     

    Far from Baku and Yerevan’s political games: life goes on in the border villages

    OC Media
    Feb 9 2018

    (David Stepanyan/ OC Media)

    In the Armenian villages along the Azerbaijani border, sporadic violence intermingles with people’s daily lives. While people here try to build a future, they are aware that their livelihoods are often at the mercy of politicians from both sides.

    Several years ago, after machine gun fire shot through Mayranush Aleksanyan’s garden, the 58-year-old woman asked her husband to teach her how to shoot. Zakar Aleksanyan is a member of Armenia’s Union of hunters, so there are always registered guns in their house.

    Zakar has played a part in the defence of his village, Voskevan, since 1992. The village is just a kilometre away from the Azerbaijani border, in Armenia’s Tavush Province. Weapons were in short supply back when war broke out, which is why he and his friends went by truck to Leningrad (now St Petersburg) and brought back weapons and ammunition in diesel barrels.

    ‘All this was distributed to rural volunteers; this was how we defended ourselves. But the authorities now, for some reason, are not happy about us having these weapons, and over the last few years all the weapons have been taken away by police. They took them away, but let those in Yerevan always remember that we are here to protect not only ourselves, but also them’, Mayranush said.

    When police searched the Aleksanyan's house not long ago, they did not find anything. According to many residents, it was the weapons in their homes that let them sleep at night.

    Mayranush is confident that no ordinary villager wants war, especially mothers with young boys. Nevertheless, in the 23 years since the conclusion of the armistice agreement, for residents of Voskevan, the war has not ended.

    ‘No mother deserves this, and there is no difference between an Armenian or Azerbaijani mother in this. I wish that all those who sow tension at the border and prevent us from living in peace would live as we have been living for 25 years’, she says.

    Every time she hears her neighbours gloating about the deaths of Azerbaijani servicemen, she feels uncomfortable.

    ‘The war manifests itself in that we cannot cultivate our own land, it manifests itself in explosions of mines laid back in the 90's, and most importantly, the war is propagated by the authorities of our countries’, Mayranush says.

    Karen Mamikonyan (not his real name), a contract serviceman from a neighbouring village also blames politics for the conflict. He says it was used for political gains during the last parliamentary election campaign in Armenia.

    When Seyran Oganyan, one of the leaders of the opposition Oganyan–Raffi–Oskanyan bloc went to visit the border villages, he was forced to turn back.

    ‘We received an order from Yerevan, they said to start shooting at Azerbaijani positions. After the Azerbaijanis returned fire, including at the highway, Oganyan’s convoy turned back for security reasons’, Karen said.

    Mayranush Aleksanyan (David Stepanyan /OC Media)

    The village, like many in Armenia, suffers from the seasonal migration of men. With the coming of spring, about 80% of men between 20 and 50 travel for seasonal work, mainly to Russia.

    ‘This is our greatest pain. Most of the arable land is there’ — Mayranush points to the east — ‘and we cannot cultivate it, of course. But the fact that our men are not at home three out of four seasons prevents them from cultivating land outside the zone of shelling as well. We just don’t have enough hands.’

    [Read also at OC Media about labour migration in neighbouring Gegharkunik Province: The manless villages of Lake Sevan]

    Fortunately, Mayranush’s family — her husband, son, daughter-in-law, and grandchildren — are always with her.

    The family is trying to lead a normal life despite the constant tension on the border. For over five years, the Aleksanyans have been participating in a programme to develop local organic products supported by the European Union.

    The programme gave the Aleksanyans and 20 other Voskevan families a stable income, the opportunity to continue living in their native village, and most importantly, a belief in a better future.

    ‘Today we grow things in our own gardens, forage in the forests, and dry everything that grows in our village: fruits, vegetables, herbal teas, and medicines’, Mayranush says, proudly displaying a package of dried fruits on the table with the label ‘Made in Voskevan’.

    According to her, the main problem the villagers have faced has always been the remoteness of Voskevan: 177 kilometres from Yerevan and 44 kilometres from the regional centre of Ijevan.

    The programme has managed to overcome this, with the Centre for Agricultural Assistance, a local NGO, exporting all the produce to France. At the very beginning of the programme, the French partners invited the beneficiaries to France to familiarise themselves with the technology of drying and harvesting fruits, vegetables, and herbs.

    Mayranush Aleksanyan demonstrating a device for drying fruit (David Stepanyan /OC Media)

    ‘For us, residents of a border village, such support is truly priceless. It’s very important that we were helped not only to establish correct production techniques, but also to open the way to the market where we can sell our products. However, our cooperation is mutually beneficial, all our products are environmentally friendly and, accordingly, are in great demand in Europe. This, of course, we are proud of’, Mayranush said.

    Once a week, Zakar sits behind the wheel of a minibus connecting Voskevan with Vanadzor — the regional centre of the neighbouring Lori Province. Zakar knows all the villagers, and often takes the needy free of charge, earning him a reputation as a local hero.

    ‘Uncle Zakar is often compared to Seyran Oganyan’, says Artur, a neighbour’s boy. The mention of the former Minister of Defence encourages other neighbours to start talking about him. According to them, Oganyan frequently helped the Tavush people while in office.

    ‘One of our guys has been lying in coma for 10 years because of an Azerbaijani bullet. And all these 10 years his family has always been cared for by the Ministry of Defence. You can talk about our minister for a long time, but is it worth it? The main thing is that we do not forget him today, when he is no longer in office. Our doors are always open to him’, Mayranush says.

    But Voskevan’s residents don’t have open doors only to benefactors. Aleksanyan’s family greet all guests with hospitality: from Armenia, from Russia, from France. The head of the family, Zakar, says he hopes to one day, as in the good old days, welcome guests from Azerbaijan.

    This article is published as part of International Alert’s work on the Nagorny Karabakh conflict, which is part of the European Partnership for the Peaceful Settlement of the Conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh (EPNK), a European Union Initiative. All opinions expressed are the author’s alone, and may not necessarily reflect the views of International Alert or its donors.

    Food: Tracing true origins of baklava, a flaky pastry

    Gulf Times
    February 9, 2018 Friday
    
    
    Tracing true origins of baklava, a flaky pastry
    
    
    
    RICH: The origin of this scrumptious delicacy is quite controversial
    and undocumented. Photo by author
    
    The origin of this scrumptious delicacy is quite controversial and
    undocumented with several ethnic groups claims it. Greek, Turkish and
    Middle Easterners claim baklava as their own and prepare it in their
    own ways. Assyrians had been preparing this sweet pastry as early as
    8th century BC by layering unleavened flat bread with chopped nuts in
    between, drenching it in honey and then baking it in primitive wood
    burning ovens. The modern day baklava went through a number of
    transitions as the history of the area kept on changing. Middle East,
    East Mediterranean, Balkans, Turks, Arabs, Jews, Greeks, Armenians,
    Bulgarians of today who introduce baklava as their national dessert
    were all part of the Ottoman empire once.
    
    
    Just like there is difference of opinion over baklava origins, the
    source of the word baklava is also disputed. The word baklava entered
    the English language in 1650, a borrowing from Ottoman Turkish.
    Turkish historians claim of its Turkish origin whereas some say
    “baklava” may come from the Mongolian word “bayla” meaning to tie or
    wrap up. According to another source “The Armenians even insist that
    the word itself–baklava—reveals its Armenian origins as the word
    appears to be related to the Armenian word for bakh (Lent) and halvah
    (sweet).” The name baklava is used in many languages with minor
    phonetic and spelling variations. In the Arab world Baqlawa/ baklawa
    is used, whereas, the Greeks call it baklava.
    
    There is no denying the fact that the dessert that we delectably
    consume today was perfected during the Ottoman Empire in the 15th
    century after invading Constantinople (present day Istanbul). And for
    over five hundred years the kitchens of the Imperial Ottoman Palace in
    Constantinople became the ultimate culinary hub of the empire. The
    oldest reports about baklava are present in Topkapi Palace kitchen
    notebooks from that period. According to this report baklava was baked
    in the Palace in 1473. Baklava elaborated from a simple pastry into a
    dessert which needed skill in order to please the dignitaries and the
    rich people.
    
    Till the 19th century baklava was thought-of as a luxury; which only
    the very wealthy could afford. To this day, it is a very common
    expression in Turkey that “I am not rich enough to eat baklava every
    day”. People would bake baklava only on special occasions, and
    religious events or wedding. However, the times have changed so much
    now that giving a baklava gift basket or baklava business gifting is
    just a click away and you can buy baklava online anytime. Although the
    exact baklava origins remain uncertain it is an undeniable certainty
    that baklava was enhanced every time there was wind of change in The
    Middle East or Near East. The region has seen many of the world’s
    oldest cultures and civilisations come and go, with each of them
    modifying the baklava to their preference.
    
    Whenever food crosses boundaries it is modified and the recipe is
    changed according to the people’s food preference and eating habits.
    The same thing happened with baklava when it started to get popular
    and crossed boundaries different cultures influenced its preparation
    and modified the recipe.
    
    The Greek seamen and merchants travelling to Mesopotamia soon
    discovered the delights of baklava. It mesmerised their taste buds.
    They brought the recipe to Athens. The Greeks’ major contribution to
    the development of this pastry is the creation of a dough technique
    that made it possible to roll it as thin as a leaf, compared to the
    rough, bread-like texture of the Assyrian dough. In fact, the name
    “Phyllo” was coined by Greeks, which means “leaf” in the Greek
    language. The Armenian Influence – When the baklava was discovered by
    the Armenian merchants on the eastern border of the Ottoman Empire
    located on spice and silk routes they integrated cinnamon and cloves
    into the texture of baklava.
    
    Further east the Arabs introduced the rose-water and orange blossom
    water. The taste changed in subtle nuances as the recipe started
    crossing borders. Of all the countries in the Middle East, Lebanon is
    notably credited with contributing the most to baklava.
    
    In Persia, the renowned pastry is cooked since antiquity, invented the
    diamond-shaped baklava which contained a nut stuffing perfumed with
    jasmine.
    As the Ottomans invaded Constantinople to the west, they also expanded
    their eastern territories to cover most of ancient Assyrian lands and
    the entire Armenian kingdom. Cooks and pastry chefs who worked in the
    Ottoman palaces contributed enormously to the interaction and to the
    refinement of the art of cooking and pastry-making of an empire that
    covered a vast region. Towards the end of 19th century, small
    pastry-shops started to appear in Constantinople and in major
    provincial capitals to cater for the middle class.
    
    Baklava
    
    Ingredients
    Phyllo pastry 1 pkt
    Unsalted butter 1 1/4 cup
    Walnuts, chopped 400 gm
    Cinnamon powder 1 tsp
    Castor sugar 1 cup
    Lemon juice 2 tbsp
    
    Water 3/4 cup
    Honey 1/2 cup
    
    To garnish
    Chocolate chips to garnish
    Walnuts, chopped to garnish
    
    Method
    Thaw phyllo pastry overnight in refrigerator and then leave it at room
    temperature for about an hour
    
    
    Trim phyllo pastry to fit your baking dish, keep covered with damp
    towel prevent it from drying
    Butter the bottom and sides of the baking dish
    
    
    In a medium sauce pan, combine 1 cup sugar, 1/2 cup honey, 2 tbsp
    lemon juice and 3/4 cup water
    Bring to boil over medium heat, stirring until sugar is dissolved
    Remove from heat and let syrup cool down while you prepare baklava
    Chop walnuts in a mixer until coarsely chopped
    In a medium bowl combine chopped walnuts and cinnamon powder
    Place 10 phyllo sheets into baking pan one at a time, brush each sheet
    with clarified butter once it is in pan
    Spread 1/5 of nut mixture over phyllo dough
    Add 5 buttered sheets of phyllo then another later of walnuts
    Repeat it 4 times and finish off with 10 layers of butter phyla sheets
    Brush the top with butter, cut pastry into 1 1/2 wide strips then cut
    diagonally to form diamond ships
    Bake in a preheated oven at 325 Degree Fahrenheit for 1 hour and 15
    minute, until tops are golden brown
    Remove from oven and immediately spoon cooled syrup evenly over the hot baklava
    Let baklava cool completely uncovered at room temperature for 4-5
    hours so that the sugar syrup penetrates the baklava and sweetens it.
    
    * Chef Tarun Kapoor, Culinary Mastermind, USA. He may be contacted at
    [email protected]
    
    

    Chess: Levon Aronian tops strong field to triumph at Tradewise Gibraltar

    The Guardian(London), UK
    February 9, 2018 Friday 6:08 PM GMT
    Chess: Levon Aronian tops strong field to triumph at Tradewise Gibraltar
    The 35-year-old Armenian showed why he is the favourite to challenge Magnus Carlsen for the world title in London in November
     
    Leonard Barden
     
     
    Tradewise Gibraltar is widely reckoned the best open event in the world and its 2018 edition did not disappoint. The Rock's attractions include elite grandmasters from the global top, rising talents, the highest prize fund for women in a mixed event, a large high-class hotel venue, active support from government and a full social programme between games. Even a raging afternoon gale at the start of round seven failed to ruffle the organisers, who simply extended the default time by one hour.
     
    A trio from the world top 10 fought out the £25,000 first prize in a speed play-off, which Levon Aronian won from Maxime Vachier-Lagrave and Hikaru Nakamura. The 35-year-old Armenian is the bookmakers favourite to challenge for Magnus Carlsen's world crown in London in November but he struggled to draw a pawn down in round one against the Hungarian woman GM Anita Gara. It seemed that Nakamura, winner of the last three Gibraltars, would make it four when he started with 5-0, downing Poland's best young talent in this week's puzzle, but the American then slowed with five draws.
     
    Related: Chess: Magnus Carlsen storms back into form with Wijk aan Zee victory
     
    At the end there was a seven-way tie but only the four with the best performance ratings were eligible for the play-off. The eliminated trio included the England No 1, Michael Adams, as the 46-year-old Cornishman caught up only by winning his final two games to reach 7.5/10. Adams will not complain, as the sextet earned around £10,000 while a large group half a point behind received barely one-tenth of that. This is quite normal for a large Swiss System event.
     
    Nigel Short faded after losing to Aronian but David Howell was arguably unlucky on 7/10 as he shared the lead with Nakamura in the middle rounds and met an unusually strong field. Only arguably, though, because Howell has become notorious for mishandling his clock time. The most bizarre instance came in round seven when he took a total of 55 minutes, half his available time for 40 moves, for just 15 Bd2-c3 and 19 also Bd2-c3. In his post-game interview he said he had made a new year resolution to be "more practical".
     
    Howell may well become the England No 1 when Adams and Short age further, yet it is hard to avoid the conclusion that in a higher sense he is a wasted talent. As an under-10 he was of similar strength to his contemporaries Carlsen, Sergey Karjakin, Vachier-Lagrave and Ian Nepomniachtchi, but they have all gone on to reach the world top 20 or better while the Sussex GM is barely in the top 50.
     
    The Poisoned Pawn Sicilian, an echo of the era of Mihhail Tal and Bobby Fischer, makes a rare comeback here and includes a remarkable move. White must have thought hew was winning after 21 Rxb7?! since if Bxb7? 22 Rxe6+ Kf7 23 Qd7+ Kg6 24 f7+ wins. Instead 21…Rg1+!! enables the black queen to stop a white check at d4 and, even subtler, creates a bolt hole for the black king at g8.
     
    Related: Learning through play is plane easy | Letters
     
    Alan Pichot v Ivan Cheparinov, Tradewise Gibraltar 2018.
     
    1 e4 c5 2 Nf3 d6 3 d4 cxd4 4 Nxd4 Nf6 5 Nc3 a6 6 Bg5 e6 7 f4 hl 8 Bhl Qb6 9 Qd2 Qxb2 10  Rb1 Qa3 11 e5 dxe5 12 fxe5 g5 13 exf6 gxhl 14  Be2 Qa5 15 O-O hl 16 Bf3 Nd7 17 Khl Ne5 18 Rfe1 Nxf3 19 gxf3 Rg8 20 Nxe6 fxe6 21 Rxb7?! Rg1+!! 22 Kxg1 Qc5+! 23 Khl Bxb7 24 Rxe6+ Kf7 25 Qd7+ Kg8! 26 f7+ Kg7 27 Qd3 Qg5 28  Qd4+ Kxf70-1
     
    3553 1…f2! 2 Bxf2 Re7! diverted the guarding queen and led to 3 Qxe7 Qxc3+ 4 Ka3 Qa5 mate.

    Chess: Armenia in the first place again: FIDE President on newly-opened Chess Scientific-Research Institute

    Armenpress News Agency, Armenia
    February 9, 2018 Friday
    
    
    Armenia in the first place again: FIDE President on newly-opened Chess
    Scientific-Research Institute
    
    
    
    YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 9, ARMENPRESS. By the establishment of the Chess
    Scientific-Research Institute in Armenia, which is the first across
    the world, a turning point starts in the world chess movement, FIDE
    President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov told reporters in Yerevan, reports
    Armenpress.
    
    “I have already told the country’s President, perhaps not everyone
    understands the importance of the newly-opened Institute in Yerevan.
    In this century in this ancient game it seems we have reached
    everything, many also understood the importance of teaching the chess
    in schools. By opening this Scientific-Research Institute we move a
    step ahead to future, this is a great step in terms of educational,
    pedagogical thinking development”, the FIDE President said.
    
    He said the research conducted by the Institute will help to
    understand how chess affects the human brain, intelligence. “The chess
    is the only way during which a child develops both cerebral
    hemispheres while playing. The results to be developed at the
    Institute will have their impact on the world chess development”, the
    FIDE president said.
    
    On February 9 the Chess Scientific-Research Institute opened in the
    Armenian State Pedagogical University after Khachatur Abovyan. The
    Institute will operate within the ASPU as a separate division. It will
    conduct research on psychological, sociological, educational and other
    issues of the chess.
    
    

    Sports: Aubameyang arrival has Mkhitaryan dreaming big at Arsenal

    Agence France Presse
    February 9, 2018 Friday 12:42 PM GMT
    
    
    Aubameyang arrival has Mkhitaryan dreaming big at Arsenal
    
    London, Feb 9 2018
    
    Henrikh Mkhitaryan is living a dream at Arsenal after being reunited
    with close friend and "the best team-mate" he's shared a dressing room
    with in Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.
    
    Mkhitaryan bagged three assists on his home debut -- including the
    pass to tee up Aubameyang for his first Arsenal goal -- as the Gunners
    thrashed Everton 5-1 last weekend to breath a fresh air of optimism
    into an often frustrated Emirates crowd.
    
    Aubameyang and Mkhitaryan formed a lethal partnership in three years
    together at Borussia Dortmund before the Armenian left for an unhappy
    18-month spell at Manchester United.
    
    However, the arrival of another former Dortmund connection in
    Arsenal's new head of recruitment Sven Mislintat helped bring the pair
    together again as Alexis Sanchez's move to United saw Mkhitaryan head
    in the other direction, whilst Arsenal splashed a club record £56
    million ($78 million) on Aubameyang on the final day of the January
    transfer window.
    
    "I think it could only be in a dream that we could join another club
    other than Dortmund but I am very happy for that," said Mkhitaryan.
    
    "I have known him very well, he is one of my best friends and the best
    team-mate I have ever had. I am very happy to have him here and I
    think all the fans are happy to see him in an Arsenal shirt.
    
    "What can I say? I love playing with him. I can understand him from
    one step and hopefully for the next games we are going to achieve
    more."
    
    Arsene Wenger needs his newly-formed front line, including Mesut Ozil,
    to continue to shine if Arsenal are to maintain hopes of a top-four
    finish when they face local rivals Tottenham Hotspur in the North
    London derby on Saturday (1230 GMT).
    
    Sixth-placed Arsenal sit five points off the Champions League places,
    but Mkhitaryan insists the club's ambitions must be to win trophies.
    
    "First of all we have to win lots of games. Secondly, we have to think
    that we have to win titles because at the end of your football career
    only the titles mean something," he added.
    
    "I think if you play football, it doesn't matter for which club, you
    have to achieve the maximum and you have to win titles because if you
    are playing just to play football it is better to stop playing it."
    
    United manager Jose Mourinho's lack of trust in Mkhitaryan has been
    blamed for the latter's failure to make a lasting impression at Old
    Trafford, but he insisted he has nothing to prove in the Premier
    League.
    
    "I don't want to find excuses," he said.
    
    "I don't want to blame anyone... I am starting a new chapter in my
    life, in my football career and I am very happy to be here.
    
    "I will be pleased to achieve more than I have done in Manchester, of
    course. I don't have anything to prove to anyone."