Armenia bars Belarus from selling multiple rocket launchers to Azerbaijan

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Region

Armenia hasn’t allowed CSTO-member Belarus to sell Polonez multiple rocket launchers to Azerbaijan, Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper reported. Armenia and Belarus are both members of the CSTO – the Collective Security Treaty Organization.

“We wanted to sell Polonez [launchers] to Azerbaijan. But Armenia, our colleague in CSTO, opposed this. The deal didn’t take place”, Belarus military analyst Alexander Alesin said.

He also added that with most probability Belarus will begin selling non-lethal weapons to Armenia soon.

California Courier Online, Feb. 8, 2018

The California Courier Online, February 8, 2018
 
1 –    Commentary
        Mikoyan’s Surprising Comments to Nixon
        In 1959 About Armenian Rights in Turkey
        By Harut Sassounian
        Publisher,
The California
Courier
        www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2    Babachanian
Elected
        2018
Glendale Bar
        Association
President
3 –    Architect Dr. Marco Brambilla Will Lecture
        Feb. 11 Heritage of Salmast Region in
History
4 –    Commentary
        Turkey Still
Refuses its ‘Forgotten’ Genocide
        By Robert M. Morgenthau
        Wall Street Journal
5 –    Turkey’s MP Garo Paylan Meets With
         French President
Macron at CCAF Gala
6    Prof. Vahan Agopyan Sworn-in as
        President
of University of São Paulo
7-     Greater
L.A. Area
Honors Volunteers, Celebrates State
        Resolution
for 210 Freeway Signs for Genocide Memorial
8 –    Intensive
Summer Course of Armenian Language
        And
Culture To be Held August 2018 in Venice
9-     AIWA
Announces 2018 Hasmik Mgerdichian
        Scholarship
Awards Application Now Available
10-   Armenian-American Who Helped Stop French Train
        Attack Stars as Himself in Clint
Eastwood Film
******************************************
1 –    Commentary
        Mikoyan’s Surprising Comments to Nixon
        In 1959 About Armenian Rights in Turkey
        By Harut Sassounian
        Publisher, The California Courier
        www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
 Recently
I came across a document from the U.S.
archives that describes the fascinating conversation between Anastas Mikoyan,
First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union, and Vice
President Richard Nixon on July 25, 1959 during the latter’s visit to Moscow. The two had met
earlier during Mikoyan’s historic visit to the United States.
The
discussion between the two rival leaders at the height of the Cold War was
polite, but animated. Nixon praised Mikoyan “who had left in the United States
many friends who admire him for his stamina and agility in expressing his
views.” Nixon also stated that “Mikoyan’s visit to the U.S. had broken the ice not only
officially but also privately, regarding the respective points of view of the
two countries.” The archival document noted that Mikoyan “returned the Vice
President’s compliments in kind and added that the Vice President is a great
debater who never leaves anyone in his debt.”
The
conversation quickly turned political when Mikoyan complained about the
inappropriateness of a recent congressional resolution on captive nations —
states subjugated to Communist rule, including Armenia. Mikoyan felt that the
resolution was intended to undermine Nixon’s visit to the Soviet
Union. Nixon gave the excuse that the U.S. Congress is an
independent body and not even the President can control its decisions! Vice
President Nixon went on to explain: “there are in our population elements,
whether Mr. Mikoyan believes they are wrong or not, who feel that governments
in their former homelands should be changed. Our Congress often passes
resolutions representing the views of those elements, who include such
nationalities as Polish, Hungarian, etc. The resolution, and particularly the
proclamation of the President, had made a point that it was only an _expression_
of the opinion of American people and the American Government and that they are
not attempting to engage in so-called subversive activities.”
Surprisingly,
Mikoyan, one of the highest ranking Soviet officials, then brought up his
Armenian heritage by telling Nixon that “he was an Armenian, and that although
he is not active in the Government of Armenia proper, he knows some 30 Supreme
Soviet Deputies of that Republic and all of them have been wondering who gave the
American Government the authority to act in their behalf and why the American
Government is not doing something for the liberation of really oppressed
peoples, such as the Armenian minority in Turkey.”
Mikoyan’s
statement was surprising because he was speaking with Vice President Nixon as a
Soviet leader, not as an Armenian. Furthermore, Mikoyan was not known as an
Armenian nationalist. In fact, he had been blamed for the deaths of many
Armenians during the infamous purges under Communist rule. Mikoyan also had not
supported the reunion of Karabagh (Artsakh) with Soviet Armenia. These are some
of the reasons Armenians were unhappy with the recent decision of the Yerevan
City Council to erect Mikoyan’s monument in Yerevan.
 A
further indication of Mikoyan’s anti-nationalist views is his statement of
December 1919, during the short existence of the first independent Republic of Armenia (1918-1920): “Armenian
chauvinists relying on the allies of imperialism push forward a criminal idea
— the creation of a ‘Great Armenia’ on the borders of Historic Armenia. The
absence of Armenians and the presence of an absolute Muslim population there
does not concern them…our [Communist] party cannot support the idea of either
a ‘Great’ or ‘Small’ Turkish Armenia.” The reality is that the Soviet Union did
not defend the rights of the Armenians in Turkey.
However,
Mikoyan rightly pointed out that the United
States is against “the liberation of oppressed peoples”
when “the peoples in question are oppressed by its friends and allies,” such as
Turkey,
and many others.
Mikoyan
also questioned whether the Soviet leaders should pay attention to the positive
gestures of the White House or the more hostile reactions of the State
Department. Mikoyan “wondered whether the Soviet Union
should believe the pronouncements by the President or the Vice President or
whether it should regard this statement by the State Department as a direct
_expression_ of American policy.” Mikoyan explained that “the President had
instructed the Department of State to work out measures for the development of
foreign trade [with the Soviet Union]. In view
of the actions taken by the State Department it appears that the President
wants one thing and the Department of State another.”
Mikoyan’s
meeting concluded on a conciliatory note with Vice President Nixon promising
that “upon his return to the United
States he would work on the problem of
trade, but that one must realize that difficulties cannot be resolved by a
stroke of pen.”
The
above conversation shows that Mikoyan was in fact as “wily” as described by
Western officials. He had survived for several decades at the highest echelons
of the Soviet Union, ending up as Chairman of
the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, the nominal Head of State, from 1964 until
his forced retirement in 1965.
 
       
**************************************************************************************************
2-     Babachanian
Elected
        2018
Glendale Bar
        Association
President
GLENDALE, CA – Glendale
attorney Sarkis Jacob Babachanian has assumed office as the 70th president of
the Glendale Bar Association, succeeding Arbella Azizian.
Babachanian
was sworn in by Burbank Superior Court Judge William D. Stewart at the
Association’s January 10 Installation Dinner at the Oakmont Country Club. Also
installed were attorneys Arpa Stepanian as vice president, Michael J. Zuckerman
as treasurer and Armine Bazikyan as secretary.
Founded in 1949, the Glendale Bar Association
serves Glendale, the third largest city in Los Angeles County,
as well as La Crescenta, La Cañada-Flintridge, Burbank, Pasadena and neighboring communities. It
offers enjoyable networking and career development opportunities, insightful
continuing legal education sessions, an arbitration service to settle
attorney-client fee disputes and community service including the Association’s
signature Law Day program in which local judges and attorneys lecture hundreds.
Babachanian is an experienced California lawyer with broad and deep
experience in criminal defense, personal injury claims, attorney malpractice
cases, police misconduct actions, business litigation, business transactions
and dispute resolution including mediation. Reach Sark
at 818-500-0678 or email [email protected].
Practice areas, includes: Criminal Law; Domestic
Violence; DUI & DWI; Personal Injury; ; Nursing Home Abuse & Neglect;
Legal Malpractice; White Collar Crime; Civil Rights.
***************************************************************************************************
3 –    Architect Dr. Marco Brambilla Will Lecture
        Feb. 11 Heritage of Salmast Region in
History
CRESCENTA VALLEY,
Ca – On February 11, the Educational Committee of the Armenian Apostolic Church
of Crescenta Valley will host a lecture on the “The Heritage of the Salmast
Region in Art, Culture and History” presented by Dr. Marco Brambilla, with the
participation of Salmast Heritage Association. The lecture will begin
at 1:00 p.m., after the conclusion of Divine Liturgy, at the Prelacy
“Dikran and Zarouhie Der Ghazarian” Hall, 6250 Honolulu Ave, La Crescenta, CA.

This presentation will try to provide a global image of the history of
the region of Salmast from the early ages to date, particularly emphasizing the
importance of the region, its development and its architectural heritage.

From the early historical ages, the region of Salmast has been a cradle of
civilization. For Armenians in particular it has been home for over three
Millennia. The Empire of Urartu was dominantly active in this region. It was a
part of the Armenian Empire of Tigran the Great, and was an integral part of
historic Vaspurakan, and Armenians populated the region from the conception of
the Armenian nation.

During various periods in time, it was considered one of the most important
cities worldwide, because of its location on major travel paths of North
Western Iran. Arabic, European and Iranian Cartographers have mentioned the
city of Salmast
in over 800 different maps. It had a pivotal location during the Arab
invasions, and was a prospering city during the Mongol dominion of Iran.
It had the unfortunate destiny of being involved in the Ottoman / Safavid wars
of 16th-18th century and eventually became a center of emigration when many of
its residents left for first Tsarist Armenia, then the Soviet Armenia.

It has a specific architectural heritage that is unique in Armenian
architecture, and was a cultural region with theaters, schools and active
commercial ties from all over the world. Yet it is relatively unknown.

Dr. Marco G. Brambilla is a practicing architect and an architectural historian
specializing in the history of Islamic and Armenian architecture. He has taught
and lectured extensively in major schools of architecture worldwide.

As a specialist in preservation of historic monuments, he has taught
architectural conservation and its adaptive reuse in Italy,
the United States and Iran.
As the chair of the Department of Preservation of Historic Monuments, at the
National University of Iran, he was the project architect of several major
restoration projects in Iran
and in cooperation with the University
of Milan, Dr. Brambilla organized and
identified over 230 unknown Armenian churches in the northern
provinces of Iran.

Since 2016, in cooperation with UCLA and Salmast
Heritage Association
, he has started a major research program about the
cultural heritage of the Salmast Region. This will  also be the topic of
an academic course at UCLA in the spring of 2018. As part of this research
program, a major publication about the architecture and archeology of the
Salmast Region is planned with the cooperation of scholars from the United States, Italy,
Armenia and Iran.

We invite our parishioners and the greater
community to attend Divine Liturgy and the presentation to follow. The event is
free of charge to the public.

*********************************************************************************************
4 –    Commentary
Turkey
Still Refuses its ‘Forgotten’ Genocide
By
Robert M. Morgenthau
Wall
Street Journal
As Hitler launched his invasion of Poland
in 1939, he instructed his commanders “to send to death mercilessly and without
compassion, men, women and children of Polish derivation and language.” He
assured his staff the world would raise little objection: “Who, after all,
speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?” That was a reference to the
systematic destruction of the Armenian population by the Ottoman Turks
beginning in 1915. World powers had offered little resistance to the slaughter
as it occurred. Later, Turkey’s
insistent denials made it the “forgotten genocide.” Turkey, ostensibly an American
ally, still refuses to confront its history.
The U.S. government also has failed to
give the annihilation of the Armenians its due. American administrations have
bowed to Turkish pressure and failed to affirm consistently a simple fact: The
slaughter of the Armenians was not a mere misfortune of history but a
systematic genocide. Such reticence wasn’t necessarily surprising, given
diplomats’ cautious and equivocating nature. But President Trump, in
recognizing Jerusalem as the capital of Israel,
seems to be signaling a new age. In 1995, Congress enacted legislation
directing the State Department to recognize Jerusalem
as the capital of Israel
and move the U.S. Embassy there. Candidates Bill Clinton and George W. Bush
promised to move the embassy, and Barack Obama said in 2008 that “Jerusalem will be the capital of Israel.” Once elected president,
all three reneged on their pledges. Now, at last, America’s
Jerusalem
policy is consistent with its principles and with historical fact. That makes
me optimistic that America
may similarly acknowledge the historical truth of the Armenian genocide. The
facts are compelling. For millennia, Armenians lived in the shadow of Mount
Ararat, in what is now eastern Turkey.
For much of its history, this Christian minority lived in peace with its Muslim
neighbors.
But as the Ottoman Empire
began to disintegrate in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Armenians
became targets of oppression. As World War I loomed, the Turks saw the
opportunity to settle their “Armenian question.” First they arrested and
executed community leaders and intellectuals. Then they drove the remaining
civilians out of their homes in long “death marches” to the Syrian
desert. As many as 1.5 million Armenians were murdered. For me,
this chronicle is not confined to history books. My paternal grandfather, Henry
Morgenthau, was President Wilson’s ambassador to the Ottoman
Empire as the horror began to unfold. He quickly understood that
this was slaughter on a scale the modern world had never seen. He protested to
Turkish leaders, who replied that the Armenians were not American citizens and
thus none of the ambassador’s concern. Besides, they said, Ambassador
Morgenthau was Jewish, and the Armenians were Christian.
The Turks even threatened to pressure Washington to recall
him. My grandfather’s reply was eloquent: “I could think of no greater honor
than to be recalled because I, a Jew, have done everything in my power to save
the lives of hundreds of thousands of Christians.” The Turks refused to relent,
and my grandfather turned to his own government. He sent Washington a diplomatic cable reading: “A
campaign of race extermination is in progress.” The State Department, then
preoccupied with World War I, responded with indifference. Ultimately my
grandfather decided to appeal to the world’s conscience through a series of
speeches. Eventually a massive aid campaign helped resettle the scattered
survivors. But the genocide had exacted an unfathomable toll on the Armenian
people—and on my grandfather’s spirits. He returned to the U.S. determined to spend his days helping the
survivors, sometimes appearing at Ellis Island
as “Uncle Henry” to sponsor refugees who had no one to meet them. And he did
something else. He taught his children and his grandchildren the history he had
witnessed. The lesson he drew was clear: When principle succumbs to expediency,
the inevitable result is tragedy. That prophecy was realized when Hitler
invaded Poland,
emboldened by the world’s amnesia about the Armenians.
It is high time for America to emerge from that
amnesia. Every April, the president issues a proclamation recognizing the
atrocity that was inflicted on the Armenian people. But bowing to Turkish
pressure, that proclamation has never contained the word “genocide.” That must
change. I do not underestimate the concerns of those who say the wrath of Turkey may work against U.S. interests—as I do not dismiss those who say
moving the embassy to Jerusalem
may complicate peace negotiations. But a just and lasting world order cannot be
built on falsehoods and equivocations. Let President Trump demonstrate that
commitment once more by declaring the truth of the Armenian genocide. This
would send clear message to the thugs in power around the world: Your criminal
acts will not go unnoticed.
Mr.
Morgenthau, a former Manhattan
district attorney (1975-2009), is of counsel at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz.
***************************************************************************************************
5 –    Turkey’s MP Garo Paylan Meets With
         French President
Macron at CCAF Gala
PARIS (Armenews) – For
its fifth edition, the CCAF dinner is more than ever a meeting point for the
Armenian community in France … and even beyond: this year, Turkey’s MP Garo
Paylan made the trip to discuss with French President Emmanuel Macron, and
receive the Vermeil medal from the hands of the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo.
An award well deserved
for the courageous politician of opposition, long and several times applauded
by the 500 people present in the room of reception of the hotel of the
Collector on January 30.
” There is one that is in immense danger today
in Turkey.
And he’s here tonight, with us! I want to talk about Garo Paylan, “said CCAF Co-chair Mourad Papazian, in the preamble. Your
life is in danger every day. You are a hero of democracy, of human rights “:
“By giving the
highest distinction of the capital, Mayor Anne
Hidalgo wanted to prove that whenever you need us, the Armenians will be there,
and Paris will
be there,” Papazian said. “ A thank you widely
shared by all those present who have flocked to his side to say a few words and
support him in its indispensable action in the democratic opposition of the
Turkish Parliament.
At his side at
the head table, on the one hand the film
director Costa-Gavras, sensitive to the Armenian cause, but
also Serge and Beate Klasfeld who received the medal of the courage of the CCAF
from the hands of the co-president Ara Toranian , for their fight, a fight of
justice and memory.
We have always
been with the Armenian people,” said Serge. And we are also campaigning for Israel to do
its best for recognition. We also hope that the law repressing the denial of
the Armenian genocide will be voted in France, as well as the one that protects
the Jewish community. “
The President of the Republic, Emmanuel Macron,
also spoke about this law in his speech of about thirty minutes: ” We must
fight against negationism (…) It is essential that the national representation
recovers in the coming months of this subject “. A necessity all the more
urgent as, as pointed out by the MC André
Manoukian relying on the writings of Paul Ricœur ( Memory, History, Forgetting ), “ We Armenians, if we want to apply the principle
of forgiveness, there would be no one to forgive because Turkey always denies
“.
Toranian insisted on the importance of such a
penalization law, ” as is the official inscription in the Republican calendar
of commemorations of April 24th or the teaching of genocide in school curricula
according to the terms advocated by the mission of Vincent Duclert “. On this
first point too, President Macron commented, “ For
the duty of the memoir, we support the Republican calendar the inscription of a
day of commemoration of the genocide . This is a commitment I made when I was a
candidate, and I confirm it tonight . “
[Previous President] ” Francois Hollande has
done a remarkable job for the Armenian cause. We are counting on you to pick up
his arrow and launch it even further, “said Manoukian. In particular, he paid homage to his grandmother, to whom I doubtless owe my immoderate love for the
mountains. She was a hiking champion. She made Amasya / Deir ez-Zor, 1000
kilometers on foot, with her sisters, whose face she smeared with mud so that
they would not get kidnapped … But these stories you know them all “, because
they are those of every Armenian present in the room.
In the room, we
can note the presence of two ambassadors, Viguen Tchitetchian and Jonathan
Lacote, elected officials of Armenian origin (the mayor of Lyon Georges
Képénékian, Patrick Devedjian, deputies Danièle Cazarian and Jacques
Marilossian ” happy to be there, for my first CCAF dinner, which has a great
importance “, …) or not (Luc Carvounas, Valérie Boyer, René Rouquet,
François-Michel Lambert, many new members of En Marche, …), religious figures,
journalists (Laurent Joffrin, Daniel Bilalian, Audrey Pulvar, Georges Malbrunot,
Valerie Toranian, …) or artists (Levon Sayan, Alain Terzian, Matthew Madenian,
Robert Kechichian, …).
All the fights
we are waging with you are not purely retrospective ,” continued Maron, a forget-me-not pinned to his jacket. By your
action, you force us to face our present, and open our eyes to the tragedies of
our time “, speaking in particular of Burma, Libya, Syria, in particular face
Patrick Karam, president of the Chredo, and Elise Boghossian, both present in
the room. ” As yesterday it welcomed the Armenians fleeing the genocide, it is
the honor of France to
welcome the refugees today “, assured 
Macron, coming to the dialogue he has engaged
with Turkey:
We need Turkey
.”
What Toranian has
nuanced:, “
We are told that we need Turkey. Without a doubt. But in any
case not a Turkey that threatens its neighbors , which occupies Cyprus, a
member state of the European Union, which throws its journalists in prison,
which today has 55,000 political prisoners, who dismissed 160,000 civil
servants for offense of opinion and waging war on Kurds inside and outside its
borders, including those fighting Daesh on the ground. What Emmanuel Macron,
who received Erdogan at the Elysee less than a year
ago, has persisted.
” I assume the choice to continue to speak, to say
things, to get the results. I assume this imbalance, this choice more
difficult, less glorious than big statements but more useful.
Another subject that crystallized the
discussions last night: Artsakh and its security.Tonight
I want to take you somewhere else. Come with me to Karabakh, “said Mourad
Papazian to President Macron, who rebounded on
these words in his own speech:”
I will not
accompany you (…) I think your fight is essential. But I also think of the role
of France,
which is to build the necessary compromise. I hope to come the day we will have
to settle all that, because the status quo is not an option.
*****************************************************************************************************
6 –    Prof.
Vahan Agopyan Sworn-in as
        President
of University of São Paulo
SÃO PAULO, Brazil (Panorama.am) – Professor Vahan Agopyan
took over as new president of the University
of Sao Paulo. The solemn
ceremony of the university council took place on January 29 at the Bandeirantes Palace, the seat of state government.

As the foreign ministry reported in a release, Sao Paulo
governor Geraldo Alckmin, present at the ceremony, expressed confidence the
university led by Agopyan will continue recording new achievements for the sake
of the city and Brazil. 

In his speech, Professor Agopyan stressed his Armenian origin and acclaimed the
Armenian Ambassador of Brazil
and representatives of the Armenian community present at the event.

Prof. Agopyan is an engineer and a full professor at the Polytechnic
School (Poli/USP) and holds a
doctorate from King's College, London.
He formerly directed Poli/USP and the São Paulo Institute for Technological
Research (IPT). He served as chair of the Board of Trustees of the Nuclear and
Energy Research Institute (IPEN) and was a member of São Paolo Research
Foundation's  Board of Trustees.
Professor Agopyan previously served as deputy president of the university

*************************************************************************************************
7-     Greater L.A. Area Honors Volunteers, Celebrates State
        Resolution
for 210 Freeway Signs for Genocide Memorial

PASADENA, CA –
On January 25, nearly 300 community leaders, supporters, and organizations from
the Greater Los Angeles area gathered at Geragos Hall of the St. Gregory
Armenian Apostolic Church in Pasadena
to celebrate the volunteers who dedicated time and professional resources to
the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial project.

The event was organized by the PAGMC in light of
the State of California
adopting a resolution to install “Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial” freeway
signs on the 210 freeway.
The State resolution was introduced in the State
Senate by former PAGMC board member and current State Senator Anthony
Portantino. David George Gevorkyan, PAGMC Treasurer and Chair of the Organizing
Committee, explained that the communities of the San
Gabriel Valley, the San Fernando Valley, and the Greater Los Angeles area
celebrate another victory of bringing awareness to the Armenian, Greek, and
Syrian Genocide, the Jewish Holocaust, and all genocides that followed. “I am
proud we are working together to bring attention to history and prevent future
atrocities. Department of Transportation statistics report an average of
304,000 cars pass on the 210 Freeway each day. Serving as more than a
way-finder, over 110 million people will see the Armenian Genocide freeway
signs annually,” Gevorkyan stated.
Notable guests included 27th District
Congresswoman Judy Chu, guest speakers California State Senator Anthony
Portantino and Pasadena Mayor Terry Tornek, State Assemblymember Chris Holden,
Pasadena Councilmembers Gene Masuda and Tyron Hampton, Gardena Councilmember
Art Kaskanian, South Pasadena Mayor Pro Tempore Dr. Marina Khubesrian, South
Pasadena Unified School District Board Clerk Dr. Suzie Abajian, Glendale
Unified School District Board Clerk Jennifer Freemon, Glendale Community
College Board Trustee Yvette Vartanian Davis, 5th District County Supervisor
Kathryn Barger’s Chief of Staff Anna Mouradian, Glendale Interim Police Chief
Carl Povilaitis and Captain Tim Feeley, County Sheriff’s Deputies including
Chief Eric Parra and Commander Kevin Hebert, Armenia's first Consul General in
Los Angeles Dr. Armen Baibourtian, and Armenian’s current Deputy Consul Valery
Mkrtumyan.
The opening ceremony was performed by Homenetmen
Pasadena "Azadamard" Chapter’s Scouts and the invocation was given by
members of the clergy representing the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church
and the Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America.
Assemblymember Chris Holden led the pledge of allegiance and delivered opening
remarks and Congresswoman Judy Chu spoke about the federal government and the
Armenian Genocide.
Mayor Terry Tornek reflected on his 2017
Pasadena Sister-Cities Committee 2017 mayoral visit to Vanadzor, and the
historic significance of the Pasadena Armenian community. “It was a privilege
to participate in the event acknowledging those who worked so hard to plan and
build the Armenian Genocide Memorial.  The opportunity to educate our
residents, particularly our children, about this terrible episode in the
world’s history is invaluable.  Further, I believe that this memorial will
become one of Pasadena’s
most cherished sites,” said Mayor Tornek.
Senator Portantino discussed the State
resolution efforts of approving the Armenian Genocide freeway signs and issues
of interest to the Armenian-American community. “I am proud to be a part of
this historic moment and to pay tribute to the victims of the Armenian Genocide
with an appropriate memorial in Pasadena,”
Portantino said. “The Memorial and the directional signs will help our
community raise awareness while serving as a constant reminder that we must
continue to fight crimes against humanity,” he concluded. As MC David Gevorkyan
stated “We are thankful to Senator Portantino for his incredible leadership in
the State Senate and greatly value Mayor Tornek’s deep commitment to the
residents of Pasadena.”
Community organizations joining the celebration
included the Pasadena Armenian Cultural Foundation and Pasadena ACF Chair Arman Baghdoian, the ANCA-WR Pasadena Chapter,
the Armenian Assembly of America represented by Western Region Director Mihran
Toumajan, the American Hellenic Council represented by Executive Director
Ioannis Fidanakis, Organization for Istanbul Armenians and its President Mark
Kosker, the Pasadena Recreations & Parks Commission, the Pasadena
Sister-Cities Committee (PSSC), and others.
Among the partner organizations being honored
included the Pasadena ArtCenter College of Design. The institution played a
central role in the design and development of the Pasadena Armenian Genocide
Memorial, designed by then ArtCenter student Catherine Menard, which was
unveiled during the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. ArtCenter
President Lorne Buchman voiced the college’s commitment to impacting global
society through art and design and the significance of the Armenian Genocide
Memorial project for the ArtCenter College of Design.
The Community Foundation of the Verdugos (CFV),
managing over $15 million in various community and scholarship funds, including
the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Fund, serves as the project’s fiduciary
agent. CFV Board Member Lee Wochner stated that the CFVwas proud to partner
with the community remained deeply committed to its success.
The event included youth performances from the Hayastan Cultural Center
with a duduk solo, a dhol ensemble, and vocal performance of Armenian folk song
“Kilikia” by Nektarine Chilyan. All proceeds from the event will be dedicated
to the CalTrans manufacturing and installation of the freeway signs scheduled
to be unveiled for the 103rd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
************************************************************************************************
8 –    Intensive
Summer Course of Armenian Language
        And
Culture To be Held August 2018 in Venice
VENICE,
ITALY – The
33rd edition of the Summer Course of Armenian Language and Culture organized by
the Association “Padus-Araxes” will take place July 30 to August 14. Exams are
set for August 14.
July 29 (check-in). August 15 and 16 (check-out)
To apply, please fill in the application form in
our website:
www.padus-araxes.com/SummerCourse/ApplicationForm.
Applications must be submitted in written form. Applications will be accepted
up to the deadline of June 30. Age limit: at least of 18 years of age
(exceptions should be submitted to the Director of the Course).
Lesson Schedule: 65 hours spanned from Monday to
Saturday in the mornings. Attendance is compulsory.
Extra-curricular activities (not compulsory):
courses of Armenian dance, doudouk, and Armenian dishes. Tours
to the Mekhitarist Monastery of St. Lazarus and to the Armenian vestiges in Venice; Holy Mass in the ancient Armenian Church of the St. Cross (14th c.) and in the Monastery of St. Lazarus.
Lectures issues concerning Armenian History, Linguistics and extra tours to the
main Venetian cities as Verona,
Padova, Asolo (to be planned with the staff).
Tuition fee is: 800 € (including 65 hours of
lessons spanned on 13 days, leisure and cultural excursions, cultural
activities, extra-curricular courses, didactical material and tutorship, examination
certificate). When candidate's enrolment accepted, he/she is required to send
500 € as enrolment fee up to Feb. 28 (up to June 30, € 550). The remnant of the
tuition fee must be paid by bank transfer or on arrival day as basic condition
for access to the lodgings. Once paid money will not e refunded for any reason.
Please contact Mrs. Daniela (
[email protected]) in order
to get Association's bank details for transfer. All bank charges are at the
expenses of the applicant. A 10% discount is applied to those who have already
attended the course at least twice, with a good result, as well as to any close
relatives
Scholarships
and grants: a limited amount of full and partial grants are awarded by the
Cultural Association Padus Araxes. Please send your CV, motivation letter and
one endorsement letter to the attention of Prof. Boghos Levon Zekiyan (
[email protected]) and Dr. Benedetta Contin ([email protected]). For full or partial grants you can also
apply to the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (Armenian community department).
For further information, send an e-mail to <[email protected]> and [email protected]
*****************************************************************************************************
9 –    AIWA
Announces 2018 Hasmik Mgerdichian
        Scholarship
Awards Application Now Available
LOS ANGELES –The Los Angeles Affiliate of the
Armenian International Women’s Association (AIWA) announceS that applications
are now being accepted for the Hasmik Mgrdichian Scholarships, which were
established in 2011 to annually award scholarships to university students.  Thanks to the continued generosity of
Mgrdichian each year $5,000 are awarded to five students.
Applications are now available on line and are
open to all California
women residents of Armenian descent who are applying for education in an
accredited college or university. 
Applications are also accepted from students applying for graduate or
undergraduate programs.  The scholarship
awards are based on both financial need and merit.
AIWA-LA President Nicole Nishanian stated:  “Our scholarship program was created by
Hasmik Mgrdichian, one of the founders of the Los Angeles Affiliate.  We take great pride in her legacy to
recognize and assist in the education of young Armenian women.   It is gratifying each year to receive their
applications and to learn of their scholastic achievements and goals for the
future.”
The Scholarship Committee, chaired by Lily
Balian and with committee members Hermine Janoyan, Cindy Norian, Diane
Cabraloff, Diana Hekimian, Houry Aposhian and Lysa Gregorian, granddaughter of
Hasmik Mgrdichian.  They are committed to
reaching out to all California
universities and colleges to inform women students of the opportunity to submit
application for scholarship awards. 
Flyers and notices are being sent to Armenian schools, organizations and
churches. 
In addition to the Mgrdichian Scholarship Awards
from the Los Angeles Affiliate, other scholarships are available through the
AIWA International Board in Watertown,
MA.  Applications are available in all fields
ranging from mathematics and architecture to government, public administration,
psychology, art and design, diplomacy and in the sciences. 
Applications for all AIWA scholarships for the
2018-2019 academic year can be downloaded from the AIWA website (
www.aiwainternational.org) or
through the Los Angeles Affiliate website:
www.aiwaLA.org.   Young women are urged to apply for both
scholarships. 
The deadline for applications this year is April
20, 2018.  Winners will be announced in
late May or early June.
***************************************************************************************************
10-   Armenian-American Who Helped Stop French Train
        Attack Stars as Himself in Clint
Eastwood Film
WATERTOWN, (Armenian Weekly) -Armenian-American
professor Mark Moogalian, the first passenger to tackle a gunman during a
terrorist attack on a high-speed train traveling to Paris from Amsterdam in
2015, will play himself in Clint Eastwood’s upcoming film “The 15:17 to Paris.”
According to sources, the film also stars
Moogalian’s wife, Isabelle Risacher Moogalian, who was also on board that day.
During the high-speed train ride on Aug. 21,
2015, Moogalian 
tackled gunman
El-Khazzani, who was armed with an AK-47 assault rifle. It was reported that
Moogalian instinctively acted to protect his wife Isabella and managed to take
the assault rifle away from El-Khazzani. The assailant managed to then draw
another gun and shoot Moogalian in the neck.
Moogalian, who is from Midlothian,
Va. and teaches English at Paris-Sorbonne University,
was quickly rushed to a hospital where he was rehabilitated and eventually made
a full recovery from his injuries.
Written by Dorothy Blyskal, “The 15:17 to Paris” is based on the autobiography “The 15:17
to Paris: The
True Story of a Terrorist, a Train, and Three American Soldiers
 by Jeffrey E. Stern, Spencer
Stone, Anthony Sadler, and Alek Skarlatos. Stone, Sadler, and Skarlatos—the
American passengers who helped stop the attack by tackling the attacker—also
star in the film as themselves.
The film is scheduled to be released on Feb. 9
by Warner Bros. Pictures.
*********************************************************************************************
******************************************************************************************************
California Courier Online provides viewers of
the Armenian News News Service with a few of the articles in this week's issue of The
California Courier.  Letters to the
editor are encouraged through our e-mail address, [email protected]. However,
authors are requested to provide their names, addresses, and/or telephone
numbers to verify identity, if any question arises. California Courier
subscribers are requested not to use this service to change, or modify mailing
addresses. Those changes can be made through our e-mail,
, or by
phone, (81
8) 409-0949.
******************************************************************************************************
 
 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/05/2018

                                        Monday, February 5, 2017

Dashnaks Call For Faster Poverty Reduction In Armenia


 . Nane Sahakian


Armenia - Leaders of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation meet in
Yerevan, 1 February 2018.

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), President
Serzh Sarkisian's junior coalition partner, has said that it remains
dissatisfied with the socioeconomic situation in Armenia despite
"unprecedented" GDP growth achieved last year.

The pan-Armenian party's worldwide Bureau and decision-making body in
Armenia reviewed the government's economic and other policies at a
special joint meeting held in Yerevan late last week. A Dashnaktsutyun
statement released over the weekend said they praised the government
for expediting the country's transition to the parliamentary system,
pursuing a "complementary" foreign policy, embarking on defense
reforms and speeding up economic growth in 2017.

But it also said: "Public distrust in the reforms has not yet been
overcome and the pace of the country's development does not satisfy
us." The government, it said, should, among other things, do more to
reduce poverty, spur job creation, and "ease income polarization,"
take tougher anti-trust measures, and "revise" its social programs.

"The number one problem # is that we did not have inclusive growth,
which is different from [normal] economic growth" Suren Parsian, a
representative of Dashnaktsutyun's economic research office, said on
Monday. He argued that poverty in Armenia did not decline noticeably
in 2017 despite a nearly 7 percent growth rate reported by the
authorities.

"The government must not confine itself to just simplifying and
improving tax and customs administration," Parsian told reporters. "It
needs to implement concrete policies so that new economic entities
emerge in some sectors."

The Dashnaktsutyun representative specifically made a case for
liberalizing the Armenian fuel market that has long been effectively
monopolized by a handful of fuel-importing companies owned by
government-linked individuals.

Parsian made clear at the same time that his party believes Prime
Minister Karen Karapetian's cabinet is on the right track.

Dashnaktsutyun, which is particularly influential in the worldwide
Armenian Diaspora, is represented in the government by three ministers
in line with a power-sharing agreement reached with Sarkisian two
years ago. It won 7 seats in the country's 105-member parliament
elected in April 2017.



U.S. Mission Alarmed By Death Threats Against Armenian Editor


 . Karlen Aslanian


Armenia -- Medialab.am editor Marianna Grigorian speaks in Yerevan,
2Feb2018.

The U.S. Embassy in Yerevan expressed concern on Sunday at death
threats that have been made against the editor of an Armenian media
outlet critical of the government.

"Attacks on the media, such as those advocating harm to the director
of MediaLab recently, are an anathema to a free press that is vital to
democracy," the embassy wrote on its Twitter page.

The editor, Marianna Grigorian, received the threats on Facebook after
her MediaLab.am publication posted on January 28 a cartoon that mocked
Defense Minister Vigen Sargsian in connection with a recent
large-scale purchase of flowers for the Armenian Defense Ministry.

"Don't you think that you've gone over the top?" a Facebook user
commented on Grigorian's page before warning the MediaLab staff to
avoid the fate of the French satirical weekly "Charlie Hebdo" that was
attacked by Islamist gunmen in January 2015. The terrorist attack left
12 people dead and 11 others wounded.

According to Grigorian, the user using the name "Hayk Berman Ohanyan"
continued to threaten her with private messages sent in the following
days. In of those messages, he hinted that her young daughter's safety
is also at risk. Grigorian stopped sending the girl to school as a
result.

The editor was summoned and questioned by the Yerevan police on Friday
after lodging a complaint with Armenia's Office of the
Prosecutor-General. A police spokesman told RFE/RL's Armenian service
(Azatutyun.am) on Monday that law-enforcement authorities are
conducting an investigation but refused to give any details. It was
not clear whether they have identified the person who made the death
threats.

Grigorian insisted, meanwhile, that "Ordyan" is not a fake user and
that the police should be able to track him down. She said she has
managed to find the man's phone number.



Opposition Bloc Holds Another Rally Against Price Hikes


 . Karlen Aslanian


Armenia - The opposition Yelk alliance holds a demonstration in
Yerevan, 5 February 2018.

Hundreds of people rallied in Yerevan on Monday as the opposition Yelk
alliance continued to campaign for major tax cuts which it says are
needed for reversing recent increases in the prices of fuel and some
foodstuffs.

Addressing the protesters, Yelk leaders again blamed the price hikes
on government-drafted legislation that raised excise taxes collected
from fuel, tobacco and alcohol. The fuel prices rose by over 10
percent immediately after it went into force on January 1.

The new Tax Code also raised income taxes for Armenians earning well
above the average wage in the country. Yelk wants to have this
scrapped as well, saying that the authorities should boost their tax
revenue by cracking down on tax evasion and corruption instead.

"We demand that the tax rates be brought back to the pre-January
levels," one of the bloc's leaders, Nikol Pashinian, said through a
megaphone as the crowd marched through downtown Yerevan.

He and other Yelk leaders announced that they have drafted
corresponding amendments to the Tax Code which they hope will be
debated at an emergency session of the Armenian parliament. They said
they will start collecting signatures for that purpose in the National
Assembly on Tuesday.

Yelk, which controls 9 of the 105 parliament seats, needs the backing
of at least 27 lawmakers in order to force such a parliament
debate. It remains to be seen whether it will be backed by the
Tsarukian Bloc, the other opposition group represented in the
parliament.

"We hope that we will collect the necessary 27 signatures and the
extraordinary session will take place next week," Pashinian told the
protesters after the march. He did not say what Yelk will do if it
fails to collect them. Nor did he announce a date for the next
anti-government rally.

Yelk staged its first protest against the price hikes on January 19,
attracting only several hundred protesters. Monday's demonstration was
hardly bigger. Its organizers repeatedly urged more Armenians to join
the campaign.

"The authorities must see that they are in trouble if they are to take
real steps," said Pashinian. "Prices hikes will continue until the
authorities see that Armenia's citizens say no to them in a tangible
and visible way."

Another Yelk leader, Edmon Marukian, downplayed the relatively poor
attendance at the rally, saying that the opposition alliance will also
use the parliament "platform" to keep the government under
pressure. "We are taking multifaceted actions," he told RFE/RL's
Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).

The ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) has a comfortable
majority in the parliament and can easily block any opposition bill.

Prime Minister Karen Karapetian downplayed last month the
socioeconomic impact of the higher prices of fuel and products such as
meat, butter and potatoes, saying that inflation in Armenia remains
low. Karapetian also defended the higher income tax rates, saying that
the government needs more revenue to boost its expenditures.

Other government officials have said that the more progressive tax
will put a heavier financial burden only on high-income
individuals. They argue that 90 percent of working Armenians will not
have any additional sums deducted from their wages.



Press Review



(Saturday, February 3)

"Zhoghovurd" claims that the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(Dashnaktsutyun) is trying to "blackmail" President Serzh Sarkisian
into giving it more government posts. The paper points to a statement
released after a February 1 meeting in Yerevan of Dashnaktsutyun's
leadership. It says that Dashnaktsutyun will "forget" demands
contained in the statement if it does manage to get more ministerial
or other positions.

Interviewed by "Aravot," Vartan Harutiunian, a human rights activist,
says that Serzh Sarkisian's choice of next Armenian president, Armen
Sarkissian, is "detached from and alien to" the Armenian political
environment because he has lived and worked in Britain for almost 30
years. Besides, he says, the next president "will not really be a
president and nothing will depend on him." He says that Armenia will
have instead a "super prime minister" who will be far more powerful
than any other state official in the country.

Charles Tannock, a British member of the European Parliament, tells
"168 Zham" that the European Union's legislative body and member
states will not take too long to ratify the Comprehensive and Enhanced
Partnership Agreement (CEPA) with Armenia signed in November. "I think
that everything will be done in due course," he is quoted as
saying. Tannock argues that the CEPA was signed in Brussels only four
years after Yerevan effectively killed a planned Association Agreement
with the EU.

"Zhamanak" says that authorities in South Ossetia have declared that
Russia and Georgia cannot open any transport corridors passing through
the breakaway territory without their involvement and consent. The
paper speculates that Moscow is behind that statement which it says
precludes the implementation of a Russian-Georgian transport agreement
strongly supported by Armenia.

(Tatev Danielian)



Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Sports: Henrikh Mkhitaryan’s verve gives Arsène Wenger positive buzz

The Guardian(London)
February 4, 2018 Sunday 10:30 PM GMT


Henrikh Mkhitaryan's verve gives Arsène Wenger positive buzz

In his first Arsenal home game, the new signing's partnership with
Mesut Özil created a feelgood factor that lifted the team

by Amy Lawrence at the Emirates Stadium



When Mino Raiola mischievously suggested "Sánchez is part of the Mikhi
deal, not the other way round", the general consensus was to raise
eyebrows at the brash machinations of the agents' world. It is fair to
say most people felt the Alexis Sánchez-Henrikh Mkhitaryan swap was
weighted more favourably for Manchester United.

The way Mkhitaryan introduced himself to thousands of new admirers
with eye-catching elan in the north London downpour did make you
wonder, though. The equality of the swap suddenly felt like a much
more interesting and nuanced question. Arsenal's new No 7 added such
value to the team, not only in the hat-trick of assists and generally
impressive mixture of deft touches with determined attitude, but also
in the way he opens up the path to play differently, based around a
double creative pivot with Mesut Özil.

Related: Arsenal's Aaron Ramsey goes on hat-trick rampage against Everton

A blur of one-touch passing and free-form movement, with the front
players switching positions fairly effortlessly, bludgeoned Everton's
gameplan. For all the excitement to see the record signing
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang show flashes of speed and dink a debut goal,
Mkhitaryan left a deep impression on the game, which suggests Arsenal
have recruited the Dortmund version, full of verve and instinct,
rather than the Manchester United version, who by the end looked like
a man in need of a pick-me-up.

What Arsène Wenger describes as the "positive swing" of a big transfer
looks like it is working both ways. Arsenal responded to the feelgood
factor of two exciting new faces. The winter signings look energised
by their new challenge and environment. Aubameyang had only two
45-minute sessions, so will hope to become more dominant. Mkhitaryan
clicked so readily into it he looks instantly like an important team
component.

He had the freedom to pop up in all sorts of positions and there was
something about his presence that reminded Wenger of the much-missed
Santi Cazorla. "There are similarities there. I wish. Santi was an
exceptional football player. But he for sure has the technical level
to play in our team."

If there was a lack of trust shown to him by José Mourinho, Wenger is
only too delighted to give Mkhitaryan plenty of it: express yourself,
enjoy yourself, be yourself, show how much you love football. By way
of explanation, Wenger tried to put across the essence of Mkhitaryan's
footballing charisma: "I met Mkhitaryan before he came here because I
liked always his game. He's a player completely focused on football,
dedicated totally to the game, and comes from a country, Armenia,
where you need special character to become a great football player.
That's why he looks happy to play football because he just loves it."

Wenger seemed a little rueful that he did not sign Mkhitaryan when
they were close to a deal 18 months ago, to team up with the man he
would replace at Arsenal. "We could have had both, maybe," he said.

Arsenal's new attacking foursome quickly turned into a five as Aaron
Ramsey sprinted forward in search of goals - but it is a risky policy.
Against more dangerous opponents than a vapid Everton team who were so
easily bamboozled, spaces in midfield and defensive shakes are still
there to be exposed. Everton were not really in a fit state to test
Arsenal too much, although they did improve when the younger
substitutes came on.

While the 5-1 win ensured it was a day for Arsenal to celebrate new
signings, Everton were not able to emulate that positive swing at all.
Sam Allardyce does not feel Cenk Tosun is ready to start difficult
games and felt it best to put his arm around Theo Walcott. "I
protected him in the end," he said. "We weren't going to come back and
get a result and the last thing I want him to do is fatigue and pull a
muscle. I put the younger lads on, who actually did better than the
older lads. I thought Tom Davies and Dominic [Calvert-Lewin] did a lot
better than the 11 lads who were on the pitch before them."

A day to forget for Everton. The start of a new cycle for Arsenal?
"Let's not predict too far ahead," Wenger said, mindful of the north
London derby on Saturday. "Let's see how we go into the next game.
It's a better test. If I tell you the same, I have a positive mood
after the next game, we'll say yes, and be positive until the end of
the season."

Sports: Wenger salute for single-minded Henrikh Mkhitaryan as Arsenal eye bright future

Belfast Telegraph Online
February 4, 2018 Sunday 10:30 PM GMT


Wenger salute for single-minded Henrikh Mkhitaryan as Arsenal eye bright future


Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang also starred alongside hat-trick hero Aaron Ramsey.



Arsene Wenger was delighted to finally see Henrikh Mkhitaryan in an
Arsenal shirt as the Armenia international lit up the Emirates
Stadium.

Mkhitaryan set up three goals as he arguably even outshone hat-trick
hero Aaron Ramsey with the Gunners running riot against Everton with a
5-1 victory.

The former Manchester United man, who joined in January in a swap deal
for Alexis Sanchez, set up Ramsey in the opening six minutes before
teeing up debutant Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and later laying on a
pass for Ramsey to sweep home for his treble.

Wenger salute for single-minded Henrikh Mkhitaryan as Arsenal eye
bright future twitter 1

Laurent Koscielny also scored in Saturday's emphatic response from
Wenger's side following their shock defeat at Swansea four days
earlier.

Ramsey, Aubameyang, Mesut Ozil and Mkhitaryan all looked sharp and
Wenger savoured the all-round display of his new-look attack.

He said: "When you have new players it gives always a little positive
swing, and it wakes everybody up as well, because there's suddenly
competition so they have to live with that as well.

"Overall, I think as well we have a game based on team spirit so that
kind of acceptance is very important and when they show on a football
field that they accept our game, they are even easier to integrate
into the team.

"I've been such a long time in football, but one part as well is just
purely a football lover. Your main target is just to get the players
to enjoy the game they play, to share it with the fans, so when you
have that positive experience it's great for you.

"Yes, pure enjoyment, I love that the team plays, and my regret is
that it doesn't last for 90 minutes unfortunately."

Wenger salute for single-minded Henrikh Mkhitaryan as Arsenal eye
bright future twitter 2

Mkhitaryan was singled out for praise by Wenger, who finally landed
the man he attempted to sign from Borussia Dortmund before he opted to
join United.

"I met Mkhitaryan before, before he came here, because I always liked
his game but he's a player completely focused on football, dedicated
totally to the game," Wenger said.

"He comes from a country where you need special character to become a
great football player, so you have to really to love it, and that's
why he looks happy to play football because he just loves it."

Arsenal fans were also in good spirits after Ozil signed a new
contract, ending speculation over his future.

The Germany World Cup winner had been linked with a move away from the
club as his previous contract was due to expire this summer.

His commitment was welcomed inside the Emirates Stadium on Saturday
but defender Hector Bellerin always expected Ozil to remain.

Wenger salute for single-minded Henrikh Mkhitaryan as Arsenal eye
bright future twitter 3

"Everyone in the training ground, everyone in the team, knew he was
going to stay," Bellerin said.

"He is a guy that loves London, loves Arsenal and he always gets
really angry when things don't go well, so you know how much it means
for him to win or lose for this club.

"It is as exciting as a new signing. To have a player with his
qualities and all he brings to the team to sign for a few more years,
it is really exciting for Arsenal and for the fans."

Sports: Football: Friends reunited as Wenger salutes Arsenal new boys

Agence France Presse
February 4, 2018 Sunday 12:35 AM GMT


Football: Friends reunited as Wenger salutes Arsenal new boys

 London, Feb 4 2018

Arsene Wenger says the instinctive understanding between old friends
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Henrikh Mkhitaryan can transform
Arsenal's turbulent season.

Aubameyang marked his Arsenal debut with a goal in Saturday's 5-1
demolition of Everton, while Mkhitaryan provided three assists in his
first start for the Gunners.

The swaggering show from the former Borussia Dortmund team-mates was a
much-needed boost for Arsenal boss Wenger after a difficult January
that saw Alexis Sanchez force through a move to Manchester United,
while the north Londoners struggled on the pitch.

Gabon striker Aubameyang joined from Dortmund on deadline day for a
club record £56 million, reuniting with Armenia midfielder
Mkhitaryan, who arrived earlier in the window from United in a swap
deal for Sanchez.

While Aaron Ramsey scored his first career hat-trick against Everton,
it was the promising partnership between Aubameyang and Mkhitaryan
that stole the show.

"Overall, the two players integrated well into our game and they
looked as if they had played for us forever," said Wenger.

"They have similar qualities to what our game is about. Technically,
they are good. They are quick and overall it was a first convincing
performance."

Aubameyang was a constant menace with his pace and energy and, while
his goal was fortunate given he was offside when he ran onto
Mkhitaryan's pass, there was enough quality on display to suggest he
may keep the misfiring Alexandre Lacazette on the bench for the
foreseeable future.

"The quality of his movement and finishing was excellent. He gives
problems to defenders with his movement, he is always looking to go
into spaces that are difficult to cover," Wenger said.

"When he gets ahead it is hard to catch him. When we understand him
better we can make more of that.

"He is not at his best physically and still has some work to do on
that, but the price is reasonable I think, overall for that quality of
striker in today's market."

Mkhitaryan struggled to make an impact at United, but he looked
revitalised at the Emirates Stadium, linking with Aubameyang and Mesut
Ozil to devastating effect as Arsenal tore Everton to pieces with four
goals in the first half.

"He is a good link player and he works very hard as well," Wenger said.

"Overall, I think he looked well-accepted by the rest of the team and
was understanding very well how we want to play. I can say is that it
was a convincing debut."

- Ice-cool Ramsey -

Wenger also reserved praise for Ramsey as the Wales midfielder finally
took his manager's advice to stay cool in front of goal.

"I felt always -- when I watched the games after on the video -- you
think always that he is there in a good position in the box and I felt
always that he had between 10 and 15 goals at least in his locker,"
Wenger said.

"He didn't do it until now because I think he rushed, sometimes, with
his finishing. He looks much calmer."

Everton boss Sam Allardyce was furious with his side's display as they
tarnished his 500th match as a Premier League manager.

"I'm angry because accepting an instruction is the players'
responsibility at this level of football," he said.

"We tried to give those instructions. There was a very good
performance by Swansea on Tuesday against Arsenal and we based our
plan on that.

"We set out to play like that, unfortunately Swansea played at the top
of their game and we played at the bottom.

"That is why we were tumbling goals left, right and centre with our
pathetic performance. None of it was any good. All the team played
crap."

Sports: Wenger lauds Henrikh Mkhitaryan’s positive impact at Arsenal

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 5 2018
11:01, 05 Feb 2018

Arsenal new boy Henrikh Mkhitaryan was singled out for praise by Arsene Wenger after a virtuoso display agaisnt Everton on Saturday night.
Arsene Wenger said that the arrival of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Henrikh Mkhitaryan have sparked a new sense of purpose within the dressing room.

He said that the 29-year-old’s performance  reminded him of Santi Cazorla, a player whose absence has most coincided with Arsenal’s dips over recent years.

“There are similarities there,” said Wenger. “Santi was an exceptional football player. I met Mkhitaryan before (he joined Manchester United) and I have always liked his game.

“He’s a player dedicated totally. He comes from a country, Armenia, where you need special character to become a great football player. He looks happy to play football simply because he just loves it.”

“Your main target is to get the players to enjoy the game they play and to share it with the fans,” said Wenger.

“When you have new players it always gives a little positive swing, and it wakes everybody up as well, because there’s suddenly competition.”

Sports: Arsène Wenger: In Armenia, you need special character to become great footballer

News.am, Armenia
Feb 5 2018

Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger has made a comparison between Armenia national squad captain and midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Spain midfielder Santi Cazorla, and he also spoke about Armenia.

“There are similarities there [between Mkhitaryan and Cazorla],” The Telegraph newspaper of the UK quoted the French football specialist as saying. “Santi was an exceptional football player. I met Mkhitaryan before [he joined Manchester United] and I always liked his game. He’s a player dedicated totally. He comes from a country, Armenia, where you need special character to become a great football player. He looks happy to play football because he just loves it.”

In Arsenal’s English Premier League 5-1 thrashing of Everton, Mkhitaryan started for the Gunners for the first time, played the full game and made three assists, and Whoscored.com named him Man of the Match.

Sports: Henrikh Mkhitaryan was abused at Manchester United: Garth Crooks

Pan Armenian
Feb 5 2018

PanARMENIAN.NetArsenal star Henrikh Mkhitaryan was used and abused at Manchester United, according to BBC Sport pundit and former Tottenham striker Garth Crooks.

Mkhitaryan impressed on his Gunners debut against Everton in a 5-1 win on Saturday evening, setting up three goals in his first Emirates outing.

All three of the chances created by Henrikh Mkhitaryan for Arsenal have been converted. He became the first Arsenal player to record three assists in a Premier League game since Santi Cazorla set up four against Wigan in May 2013

And Crooks says Mkhitaryan will shine under Arsene Wenger, especially alongside his former Borussia Dortmund team-mate Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

"I liked Henrikh Mkhitaryan at Borussia Dortmund, I liked him at Manchester United and I adored what he did for Arsenal against Everton," Crooks says in an article.

"Mkhitaryan was used and abused at United but, under more of an 'artistic director', the Armenia captain looks as if going to be a big hit for the Gunners.

"It is now patently obvious that Mkhitaryan and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, his former Dortmund team-mate, were having their own discussions to make sure that both would arrive at the Arsenal at the same time. One move clearly influenced the other."

Azerbaijani press: Anti-Azerbaijan provocation prevented during scientific seminar in Moscow

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An anti-Azerbaijan provocation has been prevented during a scientific seminar at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations.

 

At the 27th meeting of the seminar entitled "Caucasus in the past and now (society and politics, economy and culture)" held at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), a report (“Шамхорская трагедия 1918 г.: предьстория, ход и последствия”) by Vadim Mukhanov, pro-Armenian senior research fellow at the MGIMO Centre for problems of the Caucasus and Regional Security, was heard, APA’s Moscow correspondent reported.

 

Azerbaijani scientists were not allowed to join the event. Although Azerbaijani historians were finally allowed to take part in the event, the organizers did not provide allow Azerbaijani journalists to join for the fact that the event was not intended for the media.

 

 In his report, Mukhanov noted that during the Shamkir events Azerbaijanis killed Russian soldiers who had returned from the First World War. According to the author, these acts of Azerbaijanis at that time triggered a civil war in the Caucasus. The pro-Armenian author also insulted the Azerbaijani people in his monograph, calling the Azerbaijanis a “Muslim gang".

 

Following the event, leading research fellow at ANAS, doctor of historical sciences, professor Solmaz Rustamova-Tohidi told APA that Mukhanov Mukhanov is well known by Azerbaijan’s scientific community.

 

"We do know his stance in regard to Azerbaijan. It is no coincidence that this book has been published and this report has been heard on the eve of the 100th anniversary of the establishment of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. I said during the seminar that the author’s statements in the monograph is regarded as biased in Azerbaijan. What happened at the Shamkir station from January 8 to 12, in 1918 was a military operation. Russian military units, which had been released on the request of the Transcaucasian Commissariat, had to deliver their weapons while leaving the South Caucasus, but the Russian troops did not want to hand over their weapons. Some of the military echelons going north via Azerbaijan and Georgia were giving their weapons to the Bolshevik-Dashnak forces headed by Stepan Shaumyan in Baku. I asked how the author determined the status of those military units. Mukhanov calls them Russian soldiers in the monograph. He could not answer my question. My second question was, what did he mean by civil war? In the book, Azerbaijanis and Georgians are accused of rejecting Bolshevik rule. The book deals with the Transcaucasian countries, but Armenian activities are not mentioned. Mukhanov evaded by giving answering the questions in general terms,” she said.

 

Rustamova-Tohidi also noted that the Armenian scientists tried to prevent her from giving speaking. She said that it is sad that such an anti-Azerbaijan event was held at MGIMO.

 

Speaking at the event, Candidate of Historical Sciences in Eldar Abbasov said that Mukhanov did not refer to any historical sources in the monograph: "That’s what my question was about. Mukhanov failed to mention a historical source because his views were not based on any.”

 

Oleg Kuznetsov, a Russian historian-scientist who did not have the chance to speak at the event and who is the author of numerous monographs exposing the lies about the Armenian history, said that the MGIMO hosts events on Caucasus on a regular basis.

 

"This event was academic on the one hand academic and formal on the other hand. This type of events aims to discuss and give recommendations on publishing. The main purpose of the event was to publish this monograph by Vadim Mukhanov in April, on the eve of the 100th anniversary of the establishment of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. These efforts are aimed at casting shadow on the events to be held in connection with the 100th anniversary of the the Azerbaijani people having gained independence,” he said. 

http://en.apa.az/nagorno_karabakh/anti-azerbaijan-provocation-prevented-during-scientific-seminar-in-moscow.html