Armenian cadastre to become fully automated

ARKA, Armenia
Nov 27 2018

   

YEREVAN, November 27. /ARKA/. In five years, Armenia will have a fully automated cadastre for official registration of ownership, boundaries and the value of real property, the head of the State Committee of Real Property Cadastre Sarkhat Petrosyan said at a press conference on Tuesday, adding that citizens will be able to fill in applications online and will not be required to visit its offices.

He said the Committee has two major tasks. The first is to improve the real estate registration system and the second is to create an integrated national cadastre. In his words, this will make the management of the system centralized and more efficient. -0-

“We” Alliance proposes building up Armenia army with additional contract servicemen

News.am, Armenia
Nov 27 2018
“We” Alliance proposes building up Armenia army with additional contract servicemen “We” Alliance proposes building up Armenia army with additional contract servicemen

15:39, 27.11.2018
                  

“We” (Menk) Alliance proposes building up the Armenian army with another 20,000 contract servicemen.

Meeting with voters in Tsaghkahovit village of Armenia’s Aragatsotn Province, Republic Party leader, MP and ex-PM Aram Sargsyan, an MP candidate from the aforesaid alliance, on Tuesday stated that if they win seats in the forthcoming snap parliamentary election, they will see to it that this proposal is brought to fruition.

“Twenty-thousand contract military servicemen are quite sufficient to draw the conscript military servicemen back from the most active points on our borders,” he said. “The conscripts should not stand at the border line. (…) the [conscript] soldier should be standing behind; he should learn the military affairs so as to work during the war.”

In the MP candidate’s words, as a result of this change, the people’s employment issue will also be resolved.

The electoral list of “We” alliance—which comprises the Republic and the Free Democrats Parties—is headed by Aram Sargsyan. Next on the list are Free Democrats Party Chairman and former MP Khachatur Kokobelyan and Vice-Chairperson Anzhela Khachatryan, respectively.

Campaign season for the upcoming snap National Assembly (NA) election has gotten underway Monday in Armenia.

The campaign season will conclude on December 7, whereas December 8 is election silence day, and December 9—election day

Eleven political forces—two alliances and nine parties—are running for parliament.

As a result of this election, the NA seats will be distributed proportionally among the political forces that have passed the respective minimum thresholds: 5% for parties, and 7% for alliances.

Aivazovsky’s ‘Venice at Sunset’ sells for £609,000 at auction

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 27 2018

‘Venice at Sunset’ by world-renowned seascape artist Hovhannes (Ivan) Aivazovsky has been sold for £609,000 ($780,000) at Christie's auction of the Russian Art held in London on 26 November, TASS reports.

‘Venice at Sunset’ was estimated at £400,000-600,000 ($522,800-$784,200) at the auction. It was created in 1873 and belongs to John Kluge’s private collection. The painting never appeared in the arts market over the past 20 years.

The auction, that brought together 250 participants from 29 countries, collected a total of £7,15 million.

All proceeds from the sales at Christie's will be donated to the Colombia University of New York.  

Aivazovsky (born July 29, 1817 – died May 5, 1900), also known as Haivazovskiy, was a Russian painter of Armenian descent, most famous for his seascapes, which constitute more than half of his paintings. Aivazovsky was born to a poor Armenian family in the city of Theodosia in the Crimea.

At the age of twenty, he graduates from the Art Academy of St. Petersburg with a gold medal. He goes to Italy to continue his studies and returns as an internationally acclaimed seascape painter. Neither financial security nor life in Palace interests him. He returns to his native land, builds a workplace on the seashore and, until the last days of his life, dedicates himself to the work that he loves. He participates in exhibitions all over the world.   

Leader of Karabakh Armenians touring OSCE countries – what does Azerbaijan have to say?

JAM News
Nov 27 2018

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry is protesting while experts are trying to figure out Sahakyan’s plan

The de-facto president of Nagorno Karabakh, Bako Sahakyan, has been traveling around the countries of the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – the main body responsible for finding a peaceful solution to the Karabakh conflict.

Azerbaijan is not happy about this.

“The tour of the head of the illegal formation [Karabakh] to the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair countries may lead to an unexpected development of the situation around the conflict. If this happens, the entire responsibility will fall on the Armenian side,” the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

• Azerbaijani government protests against French delegation’s visit to Nagorno-Karabakh

• My Karabakh – Part III: Summer of 1988, Yerevan demands Karabakh be returned

• How the game of war is played in Armenia and Azerbaijan

Sahakyan is on a working visit to Moscow. Azerbaijan has lodged a complaint with the Russian authorities, saying that in receiving Sahakyan, Moscow is “violating the friendship, cooperation and mutual security agreement between Russia and Azerbaijan”.

Azerbaijan says that the two countries have an agreement for “the parties not to support separatist movements, and also prohibit and suppress the activities of individuals against state sovereignty, independence and the territorial integrity of the other party”.

Prior to that, Sahakyan visited France and the USA. France received a letter of protest from Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry, while the United States and Russia only received statements.

The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is an unrecognised republic in the South Caucasus, populated by ethnic Armenians. Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding areas came under Armenian control as a result of hostilities in 1991-1994. The conflict is considered “frozen”, though shootings and flareups frequently break out along the line of contact which result in casualties on both sides.

The OSCE Minsk Group is a group of member countries leading the search for a peaceful resolution to the Karabakh conflict.

Sahakyan’s visit to Moscow was made public on 24 November by his press service. No details regarding his visit have been reported.

Azerbaijani pundits say that Sahakyan’s visits indicate an intention to have the Karabakh Armenians as a party in the negotiations on the Karabakh conflict.

JAMnews’ political commentator Shahin Rzayev:

“There is nothing new in the visits of the leader of the Karabakh Armenians to the countries of Europe and Russia. This has been their practice since the beginning of the conflict in the 90s.

“The main purpose of these visits is not political, but rather humanitarian. Their voices have already been heard, because the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group regularly visits Khankendi [ed. Stepanakert, the de-facto capital of Karabakh]. During these visits, the leaders of the Karabakh Armenians meet with various charitable foundations and agree on donations to ease the already difficult life in the self-proclaimed republic.

“Why has Azerbaijan’s reaction been stronger than before? Probably because of the change in power in Armenia, The new leader, Nikol Pashinyan, has also proposed to accept the Karabakh Armenians as a party to the conflict and to negotiate with them directly. This annoys Baku.

“France came first as Sahakyan began his tour in Paris. Then he went to Washington and Moscow, and the reaction softened a bit. One can only guess the reasons, but the US and Russia are probably more respected by our government and are far more afraid of them than they are of France.”

Armenian PM intends to take relations with Russia to new level

TASS, Russia
Nov 27 2018
World

November 27, 13:36 UTC+3 YEREVAN

              

© Tatyana Zenkovich/pool photo via AP

YEREVAN, November 27. /TASS/. Armenia’s government will work to take relations with Russia to a new level, the country’s Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Tuesday, addressing an electoral rally in the town of Vanadzor, which was broadcast live by local news outlets.

"We should continue work to strengthen relations with our strategic partner, Russia," he said. "Relations need to be taken to a totally new level within the CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organization] and the EAEU [Eurasian Economic Union], as well as on the bilateral track," Pashinyan stressed.

Armenia’s acting prime minister has on numerous occasions reaffirmed the country’s commitment to allied relations with Russia at every level. Pashinyan also said that following the May 8, 2018, change of power, relations between Armenia and Russia had reached an unprecedented high.

Armenian Church appoints new representative to the Holy See

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 27 2018
Armenian Church appoints new representative to the Holy See
          
2018-11-27 14:48:37

His Eminence Archbishop Khajak Parsamyan has been appointed as representative of the Catholicos of All Armenians to the Vatican.

 

“By the Pontifical Order of His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians; His Eminence Archbishop Khajak Parsamyan, member of the Brotherhood of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, has been appointed to serve as Patriarchal Delegate of Western Europe and representative of the Catholicos of All Armenians in Vatican (residence in Rome),” the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin said.

“Savior from the Planet Ijevan”: One man documents Pashinyan’s rising cult of personality

EurasiaNet.org
Nov 27 2018
 
 
“Savior from the Planet Ijevan”: One man documents Pashinyan’s rising cult of personality
 
The wildly popular prime minister has been depicted as a Christian saint and Roman emperor, and his image graces vodka and nail extensions.
 
Grigor Atanesian Nov 27, 2018
A man with an image of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan shaved into the back of his head. The image is part of the Facebook collection of Ruben Muradyan, who is documenting what he calls a nascent cult of personality around the premier.
 
Since taking power in May, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has become wildly popular in Armenia; both for uprooting the deeply hated regime that had ruled Armenia for a decade and for doing it in his dynamic, media-savvy style, unprecedented in Armenian politics.
 
That approach to governing has captured the imagination of Armenians: a poll conducted by the International Republican Institute and published in October showed that his government enjoyed a stratospheric 82-percent approval rating. In casual conversations, Armenians refer to “our beloved prime minister.”
 
That adoration also has spawned what some have identified as a nascent cult of personality. Pashinyan’s image now graces T-shirts, cakes, candles, iPhone cases, and other mass-produced memorabilia sold across Yerevan. A pop song titled “Nikol Pashinyan” and calling the prime minister “a national hero” has over 7 million views on YouTube.
 
With Pashinyan’s avowed agenda of rejecting the authoritarianism of the past and moving toward liberal democracy, a worry has arisen about the future of the country where so much hope is placed in a single man. In private conversations, some Armenians are increasingly expressing deep embarrassment about the over-the-top expressions of Pashinyanmania.
 
And one man, Yerevan-based cyber security expert Ruben Muradyan, is documenting it all, collecting various representations of this popular adoration and publishing them on his Facebook page, in an album he titled “Revolutionary Art.”
 
“When it all started in April-May, I looked at the folk art glorifying Pashinyan with curiosity,” Muradyan told Eurasianet. In July, though, he saw footage from a kindergarten event where a little boy, dressed in Pashinyan’s signature baseball cap, camouflage t-shirt, and backpack, marched with a group of “supporters” and sang revolutionary songs.
 
“That was a turning point for me,” Muradyan said. “I started looking into what’s going on with all these expressions of popular love.” That’s when he started his Facebook chronicle.
 
“I'm 41 years old, and I was fourteen in 1991,” Muradyan said. “I've never seen anything like this in the history of Armenian politics. Kids had never sung songs about Levon Ter-Petrossian,” the first president of independent Armenia who for a time also enjoyed very high approval ratings.
 
Some of the highlights from Muradyan’s collection include:
 
A coin depicting Pashinyan as a Roman emperor:
 
… and as a Christian saint:
 
An interview with a citizen who claims that Pashinyan is Jesus himself:
 
Nail extensions in the form of Pashinyan’s head:
 
An adaptation of the pop song Despacito, rewritten as a paean to Nikol Pashinyan. “Only Nikol is worthy of being our Prime Minister,” the lyrics say.
 
Pashinyan-branded vodka:
 
Muradyan says that his long-time interest in the history of Stalin’s rule in the USSR has informed his sensibility toward the phenomenon. And while many of the popular manifestations of enthusiasm are funny, he is concerned by signs of official support of the cult of personality.  
 
He cited the example of a book about Pashinyan, titled “Savior from the Planet Ijevan” (the prime minister’s hometown) and published with the support of the Ijevan municipal government. After a public backlash, all mentions of the books were deleted from the municipality website and social media accounts.
 
The national government, too, has joined in. In July, Armenia’s Culture Minister announced an exhibition dedicated to the Velvet Revolution. The exhibit was supposed to be held at the National History Museum on Yerevan’s main square, though it hasn’t yet opened. “The irony is not lost on me: in Soviet Moscow, the Museum of Revolution was situated on Red Square,” Muradyan said.
 
And in October, Armenia’s pavilion at the Frankfurt Book Fair in Germany — set up by the Ministry of Culture — featured a large poster promoting a book written by Pashinyan. The fact was made public through a photo posted by a deputy minister of culture. The photo drew criticism from Facebook users and was then deleted.
 
Muradyan admits that he doesn’t have easy answers. “I don’t know what has to be done. Should Pashinyan make fun of this? Should he discourage it? I don't know,” he said. “I think we need to collect the artifacts. And when this cult of personality blooms, nobody will be able to say that we didn’t see it coming.”
 
Grigor Atanesian is a freelance journalist who covers Armenia.
 
 

Renowned Istanbul Armenian photographer, the late Ara Güler’s works to be exhibited in 5 countries

News.am, Armenia
Nov 27 2018
Renowned Istanbul Armenian photographer, the late Ara Güler’s works to be exhibited in 5 countries Renowned Istanbul Armenian photographer, the late Ara Güler’s works to be exhibited in 5 countries

14:30, 27.11.2018
                  

The works of famous Istanbul Armenian photographer, the late Ara Güler, will be exhibited at the best showrooms in five countries.

By order of the president, Turkish authorities are carrying out activities toward having Güler’s photos exhibited in New York, London, Paris, Rome, Munich and Berlin, Milliyet newspaper reported. 

Ara Güler was born on August 16, 1928 in Istanbul.

Güler, who was recognized as “Photographer of the Century” and was also known as the “Eye of Istanbul,” had begun his photojournalism career in 1950.

Ara Güler had photographed numerous world-renowned personalities, and he had received many Turkish and international awards and titles.

Güler passed away on October 17, aged 90.

Armenian captive in Azerbaijan addresses letter to Pashinyan: Azerbaijani media

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 27 2018
Read Aysor.am inTelegram

Armenian captive in Azerbaijan convicted to 15 years imprisonment Arsen Baghdasaryan has addressed a letter to Armenia’s acting PM Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijani mass media reports.

According to the Azerbaijani media the letter is sent in the context of “all for all” exchange principle as if offered by the Azerbaijani side.

In the letter which Baghdasryan is reported to have passed to the Azerbaijani state commission dealing with the issues of captives and war prisoners, the Armenian captive asks to solve his issue within the framework of humanity.

In the letter dating back to November 6 Baghdasaryan asks to undertake serious steps for freeing and saving them irrespective of absence of diplomatic relations between the countries.

Baghdasaryan appeared in Azerbaijan in December 2014. In Azerbaijan he was presented as a saboteur and convicted to 15 years imprisonment.

Armenian police never been as weak and humiliated as now: Davit Shahnazaryan

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 27 2018
Read Aysor.am inTelegram

The Armenian police have never been so weak and humiliated as it is now by current authorities, Republican party candidate Davit Shahnazaryan told the reporters today.

“Today’s chief of the police must think about it. It is a matter of dignity and one of the most important issues,” he said, adding that they are going to restore the statehood weakened by today’s authorities.

Speaking about the wiretapped conversation between the chief of the Special Investigation Service and National Security Service director, Shahnazaryan said the statements of Nikol Pashinyan voiced after the leakage covered the issue.

“He instructed to lay to asphalts, plaster to walls, these were all aimed at silencing,” Shahnazaryan stated.

Another such step, according to Shahnazaryan was done for covering the situation in CSTO.

“When after the CSTO session it became clear that Armenia is losing the post, at the meeting with the Armenian community Pashinyan stated that there are 800,000 sluggish in Armenia,” Shahnazaryan said, adding that even the country’s enemies have not given such assessments to the Armenian people.