A1+: 10 days before the election: I promise to cut two ears of governor of Syunik province (video)

10 days are left before the December 9 election.

Who was promising to cut the ears of Syunik governor 10 days before the 2017?

How did Gagik Tsarukyan comment his return to politics?

Which political party’s posters were torn down 10 days before the 2017 election?

Who encouraged voters to be duxov (courageous) 10 days before the 2017 election?

Why did Heritage have given its seats in some precincts to RPA 10 days before the 2012 election?

Why was Gagik Tsarukyan unhappy 10 days before the 2007 election?

How many people have withdrawn 10 days before the 2003 election?

What was Paruyr Hayrikyan’s dissatisfaction with 10 days before the 1999 election?

During the years of Robert Kocharyan’s rule, what kind of a fact did Mikayel Kotanyan, who was later killed in the October 27 terrorist attack, present ten days before the 1999 election?

On which part of a issue referring to the voting did CEC make decision 10 days before the 1995 election?

Answers to all questions are presented in the video:

Let’s refresh our memory by trying to answer the quiz questions correctly.

Calendar of Events – 11/29/2018

                        GROONG's Calendar of events
                        (All times local to events)

                =========================================
What:           "Eyewitness Account About Armenia's Healthcare"
                a lecture is given by Mike Sarian
When:           Dec 16 2018 1pm
                Following Church Divine Liturgy which starts at 10:30am
Where:          Armenian Apostolic Church of Crescenta Valley
                Western Prelacy's Hall, 6252 Honolulu Ave., La Crescenta, CA
Misc:           This presentation will focus on showing a new understanding of
                healthcare and hospital services including revolutionary
                improvements in medical services as required in Armenia and
                Artsakh. Mike Sarian met both the prime minister of Armenia,
                Nigol Pashinian, and president of Artsakh, Pago Sahakian, on
                October 2018, discussing various healthcare projects that have
                been planned and are to be implemented.
                Mike Sarian is President of Hospital Operations for Prime
                Healthcare Services covering 46 hospitals in 15 states. Mr.
                Sarian has more than 25 years of executive management
                experience in healthcare. He is also active in various
                community, charity and civic organizations. In 2017,
                Mr. Sarian was recognized by Modern Healthcare magazine as one
                of the "Top 25 Chief Operating Officers in Healthcare."
                The event is free to the public.
Online Contact: [email protected]
Tel:            818-244-9645

***************************************************************************

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a) Armenian News's administrators have final say on what may be included in
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Armenian oligarchs to ‘gift’ millions of dollars to treasury

JAM News
Nov 29 2018

Though they do so ‘voluntarily’, their donations were preceded by pressure from the state and revolutionary leader Nikol Pashinyan

Alexander Sargsyan, the brother of former President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, is ready to return a sum of 30 million dollars to the state treasury from one of his bank accounts.

Following suit, the former head of the State Customs Committee of Armenia, Armen Avetisyan, who is suspected of money laundering, wants to transfer ownership of his hotel in Tsaghkadzor to the state.

The conversation about Alexander Sargsyan’s 30 million dollars began several months ago. Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan spoke about it first in September, during the election campaign for the Council of Elders of Yerevan elections (the capital’s parliament):

“Serzh Sargsyan’s brother Sashik [Alexander] Sargsyan has 30 million dollars in one Armenian bank alone, and all this money has been seized. I demand that Sashik Sargsyan publicly undertake within a week to voluntarily return the 30 million dollars to the state trasury.”

In response, Alexander Sargsyan accused the prime minister of disclosing personal financial information and called for the freeze on his accounts to be lifted. He argued that all his income had been legally obtained:

“Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan understands well that I did not obtain these amounts illegally, that they cannot be confiscated by legal means. But because of the negative attitude towards me, [and the use of] my official position and power against me, I am being threatened to hand over money that I own to the treasury. I am sure that the prime minister and law enforcement agencies are well aware of how these actions of the prime minister of Armenia may be assessed from a legal point of view.”

Alexander Sargsyan stated that between 1985-1995 he was engaged in business in Russia and returned to Armenia with a large amount of money. He also noted that he was engaged in business at home.

Later it became known that the investigative department of the National Security Service imposed a freeze on all his accounts. There is no specific information about the preliminary investigation, nor has a criminal case against Alexander Sargsyan been launched.

Pashinyan says that the brother of the ex-president is now ready to transfer the 30 million dollars voluntarily to the treasury. The reason why, however, is unclear.

The brother of the former president in Armenia is called Sashik. During the presidency of Serzh Sargsyan, it was said that many businessmen were forced to give 50 per cent of their income to Sashik. After the change of power in Armenia, calls were made to return these funds to the treasury.

The former head of the State Customs Committee of Armenia, Armen Avetisyan, wants to transfer his hotel in Tsaghkadzor to the state. He is currently facing a criminal case:

“I was informed that Armen Avetisyan’s family appealed to the State Property Management Department a few days ago and said that it will donate the Golden Palace Hotel in Tsaghkadzor to the state. A criminal case has been launched, but apparently, in the hope of changing attitudes in society, they decided to take such a step.”

Pashinyan said that if the transfer procedure is carried out, the hotel will be put up for public auction. According to the estimates of the acting prime minister, it is valued at about $20 million.

Armen Avetisyan headed the State Customs Committee during the presidency of Robert Kocharian.

To change the system from within or without — the dilemma for feminists in ‘New Armenia’

OC Media
Nov 29 2018


Maria Kara­petyan (Anahit of Erebuni)

As more and more women choose to enter politics in rev­o­lu­tion­ary ‘New Armenia’, a debate is raging within the country’s feminist circles: how best to transform Armenia's patri­ar­chal systems — from within or without.

‘It was the methods of the Velvet Rev­o­lu­tion, i.e. de-cen­tral­i­sa­tion, hor­i­zon­tal­i­ty, that allowed women to par­tic­i­pate. You didn’t have to push women to take a political action — it happened naturally. Because the street was not hier­ar­chic, if not anarchic.’ This is how feminist Maria Kara­petyan, one of the organ­is­ers of the ‘Reject Serzh’ movement that toppled decades of Repub­li­can Party rule sums up the role of women in the rev­o­lu­tion.

While many women and girls still get goose­bumps from Karapetyan’s famous ‘Long live sisters’ speech in Yerevan’s Republic Square on 18 April, she has taken the decision — she says a hard one — to join the Civil Contract Party and run for par­lia­ment.

Kara­petyan is not the only woman who thinks the Velvet Rev­o­lu­tion must continue inside state insti­tu­tions and local gov­ern­ments. The first post-rev­o­lu­tion­ary elections in the country, 23 September’s mayoral and council elections in Yerevan, saw swathes of women activists joining the My Step alliance backed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Winning a landslide victory of 81% of votes, My Step took 57 of 65 council seats, out of which 15 were women.

On 10 October, Diana Gasparyan won mayoral elections in Vaghar­sha­p­at (Ejmazin), a city just west of Yerevan, becoming the country’s first woman mayor. Par­lia­men­tary elections due in December will see even more women as can­di­dates.

This will bring fem­i­ni­sa­tion in decision-making bodies of the country, but some have ques­tioned whether it will bring more pro­tec­tion of women’s rights.

A certain subset of radical feminists in Armenia see working with the state as con­tra­dic­to­ry to the goals of feminism — women’s lib­er­a­tion. According to them, the state is the protector of private property and the family (property belongs to men, and family is the foremost place of women’s exploita­tion).

They argue instead that the fight for the women as a ‘sex class’ must come via empow­er­ing women’s com­mu­ni­ties, creating coop­er­a­tive models of social relations, and not via indi­vid­ual success stories of girls who managed to break the glass ceiling.

The New Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has been artic­u­late on his views on gender equality. Empha­sis­ing women’s role in his speech on 8 May, the day he was appointed, Pashinyan said that ‘women’s massive par­tic­i­pa­tion is a factor that allowed us to call what happened a rev­o­lu­tion of “Love and sol­i­dar­i­ty” ’.

Women protest­ing in Yerevan during the velvet rev­o­lu­tion. (Mari Nikuradze/OC Media)

But then he added something that made feminists through­out the country wince. ‘The rev­o­lu­tion proved that women’s active par­tic­i­pa­tion [in politics] is com­pat­i­ble with our national identity, our national per­cep­tion of the family’.

Most feminists concede that the new gov­ern­ment is not quite educated on what the women’s movements are about. But many have been forgiving, at least for now, in the belief that combating the risk of counter-rev­o­lu­tion is a priority.

‘In pre-rev­o­lu­tion­ary times, we had to break in to par­tic­i­pate, for example, in a dis­cus­sion of the domestic violence law in the Ministry of Justice’, says Lara Aharonyan, co-founder of Women’s Resource Centre in Yerevan.

‘Yes — members of the new gov­ern­ment are products of the same patri­ar­chal society. They are patri­ar­chal people, too. The dif­fer­ence is, they are ready to listen, to educate them­selves, to col­lab­o­rate with civil society, unlike their pre­de­ces­sors’.

Aharonyan thinks for women to par­tic­i­pate, the state must first make certain steps forward. One such step, she says, would be raising electoral gender quotas to improve the dis­pro­por­tion­ate gender balance in par­lia­ment. In the current par­lia­ment, which was dissolved on 1 November, just 18% of MPs were women.

‘Women have to be present to talk about their needs. And if more than half of the pop­u­la­tion are women, for justice and for equal rep­re­sen­ta­tion, women should make up 50% of par­lia­ment’, Aharonyan argues.

MP Lena Nazaryan greeting pro­tes­tors gathered in front of the Par­lia­ment building, 2 October 2018. (/Ruben Arevshatyan)

As a long-time party member of the Armenian Rev­o­lu­tion­ary Fed­er­a­tion, Sevan Petrosyan agrees that the party system is a com­pro­mise for staunch feminists.

‘As Simone de Beauvoir said as a woman in the French Communist Party, she had to fight on two fronts; within the party and outside of it. That’s the only solution. I had no illusions that this rev­o­lu­tion would bring women to politics with full force. It was not the priority. Unlike many other feminists, I was not dis­ap­point­ed when Pashinyan appointed only two women as ministers in his cabinet, because I didn’t have high expec­ta­tions in the first place.’

‘My problem was that this was not a movement of the poor. It was a movement to get rid of the Repub­li­can Party, of cor­rup­tion, a lack of trans­paren­cy — that was it. Yes, the state came closer to me, I can write a quick question to my friend, who is now a deputy minister. But the state hasn’t come closer to a villager from a marzh’, says Petrosyan.

Long before the Velvet Rev­o­lu­tion, a key ally of Pashinyan’s, Lena Nazaryan, was one of the first woman to trade in activism for party politics. As an outspoken envi­ron­men­tal activist and critical jour­nal­ist for many years, Nazaryan was one of the co-founders of Pashinyan’s Civil Contract Party back in 2015.

Nazaryan has now climbed the party-political ladder to head the Way Out faction in Par­lia­ment. As a role model to many young women, she is often harried for selfies by teenage girls.

‘I don’t like it when women are presented as weak, as if they need to be pushed to be active. No, they should be present because women are needed. And when they are, they should prove it in their work’, says Nazaryan.

‘I per­son­al­ly prefer col­lab­o­rat­ing with women, if I have the choice, because women are better team-players, they are inter­est­ed in getting the work done, not in competing’.

Most radical feminists in Armenia who refuse to com­pro­mise with the state do so without con­demn­ing other women’s decisions to do so.

‘I don't say women should not engage in politics, I’m saying their par­tic­i­pa­tion should not be the end in and of itself’, says feminist activist Anna Shah­nazaryan.

‘If a woman enters par­lia­ment, she should question the way decisions are made there. If a woman enters an insti­tu­tion to dismantle it from within, to make the insti­tu­tion more demo­c­ra­t­ic and human-centered, I encourage that’.

‘Per­son­al­ly I don't care whether the mayor of Ejmazin is a woman if she doesn’t represent her gender […] The minister of work and social affairs is a woman, Mane Tandilyan, but for me its a problem that she doesn't speak up about women doing unpaid work as house­wives.’

Shah­nazaryan and her colleague Arpine Galfayan have been involved in activism on many fronts, including helping to set up col­lec­tive resis­tance movements in com­mu­ni­ties to fight mining projects such as in Teghut, Amulsar.

Galfayan warns against falling into the ‘trap’ of being used as token women in politics.

‘Women are being used to fill quotas, to give false hope that it’s getting better’, she says.

‘I believe that insti­tu­tions of rep­re­sen­ta­tive democracy have the logic of keeping full control and not sharing power with others’, Galfayan argues.

Protest during Velvet Rev­o­lu­tion (Mari Nikuradze/OC Media)

She says that globally, the system is ‘promoting the interests of the wealth­i­est and most inhumane corporate elites. It is ulti­mate­ly hier­ar­chi­cal; men (espe­cial­ly wealthy het­ero­sex­u­al men), have had priv­i­leged positions in these hier­ar­chies for ages, and therefore women have a very hard time becoming part of the “club”. Finally, even those few women who do get to the top still have to serve the interests of this hier­ar­chi­cal, unfair system.’

‘I prefer to work towards dis­man­tling this system rather than making it look nicer. I prefer to support and strength­en systems which I believe are ulti­mate­ly fair and lib­er­at­ing’, Galfayan says.

Shah­nazaryan claims the important thing to ask is whether a woman is aware of the sub­or­di­na­tion she faces because of her gender.

‘To be political a woman doesn't have to be in par­lia­ment. If a housewife protects her female neighbour, inter­fer­ing and pre­vent­ing domestic violence, she is taking a political action.’

However, most feminists in Armenia agree that there is no dichotomy to ‘be reformer or a radical feminist’, and that change has always come with both forces in action together. They point to the Suf­fragettes movement in early 19th century Britain, in which militant women’s movements worked in parallel with con­ser­v­a­tive feminist groups.

Few polit­i­cal­ly active women in Armenia would disagree that the rev­o­lu­tion should be continued, and that the famous feminist slogan — personal is political — still rings true. Some focus on ‘the personal’ of the phrase; working hard on them­selves to win in an unequal battle with priv­i­leged men, while fight to transform the existing social relations.

Come to senses and do your job, Pashinyan tells Karabakh leadership

News.am, Armenia
Nov 29 2018
Come to senses and do your job, Pashinyan tells Karabakh leadership Come to senses and do your job, Pashinyan tells Karabakh leadership

18:40, 29.11.2018
                 

YEREVAN. – Acting PM Nikol Pashinyan once again touched upon the accusations of his attempts “to sell Karabakh” during a meeting with voters in Gegharkunik province of Armenia.

He reminded of his earlier statements that he is the first leader of Armenia whose son is serving in Karabakh. However, Pashinyan argued that when he was reading messages on social media he was surprised to see “speculations”, “how can he say so” phrases.

Pashinyan said he could not understand the reason for activeness of some representatives of the leadership in Karabakh.

“Why did they become more active and why are they trying in some way to intervene and demonstrate their presence in the campaign for the upcoming parliamentary elections in Armenia? I have a lot of questions in this regard, and I will definitely discuss them with the NKR President Bako Sahakyan. And before that, Mr. Bako Sahakyan, I urge you to call  the representatives of your cabinet of ministers to order and send them to work,” he said. “Once in two days the spokesperson for the Karabakh president has to comment on the words I've said, doesn't he? Could you imagine that my press secretary started commenting on any events in Karabakh? Can you imagine the consequences and results of all this? Come to senses and do your job. Of course, I will discuss with you everything that I mentioned, but after the elections.”

It’s time to solve the issue – Armenian President answers the question of an Azerbaijani student

News.am, Armenia
Nov 29 2018
It’s time to solve the issue – Armenian President answers the question of an Azerbaijani student It’s time to solve the issue – Armenian President answers the question of an Azerbaijani student

21:13, 29.11.2018
                  

From the viewpoint of mankind it was a tragedy what happened in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Karabakh. I don’t wish to go back to historical details, Armenian president Armen Sarkissian answered the question of an Azerbaijani student referring to the Karabakh conflict during his meeting with the professors and students of Otto von Guericke University in German Saxony-Anhalt State.

"What happened in Armenia may create an environment where the conflict can be resolved. Armenia has a new Government and new Constitution. I am the Head of State, but I am not the Head of the Government. Now Armenia is like Germany. According to the Constitution, the Head of the Government has to negotiate with Ilham Aliyev. My role can be limited by offering advice.

I want to emphasize a very important point. People have dies not only in Azerbaijan, but also in Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia. I think we should spare no efforts to create a fair and peaceful atmosphere for finding a solution to the issue. Will it be easy? No. But we have to try to do it today, otherwise your and our children will have to ask the same question after years.

Therefore, it’s time to solve the issue”.

Armenian Genocide exhibition opens at Swedish Parliament

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 29 2018


Armenian Genocide exhibition opens at Swedish Parliament

2018-11-29 15:49:23 

                           

An exhibition “Armenian Genocide and Scandinavian Response” was inaugurated at the Swedish Riksdag. The temporary exhibition was prepared by the “Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute” foundation in 2011 and then provided to the Union of Armenian Associations in Sweden.

The Riksdag exhibition is dedicated to the International Day of Commemoration and Dignity of the Victims of the Crime of Genocide and of the Prevention of this Crime and to the 70th anniversary of the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide to be marked on December 9. 

Parliamentarians, ambassadors and diplomats accredited in Stockholm, Swedish public figures, representatives of mass media were present at the inauguration of the exhibition.

The exhibition will run until 20th of December 2018.

Acting PM: There shall not be hunger-stricken man in Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Nov 29 2018
Acting PM: There shall not be hunger-stricken man in Armenia Acting PM: There shall not be hunger-stricken man in Armenia

16:34, 29.11.2018
                  

I don’t know from where the [former ruling] RPA [Republican Party of Armenia] has decided that our government has decided to tax those heading for work abroad, and then it decided that, as a result of its demands, the government waived that idea.

Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Thursday stated the aforesaid during his talk with the residents of Martuni town, and within the framework of the My Step alliance’s campaign rallies for the upcoming snap parliamentary election in Armenia.

In his words, no decision can be taken without the Prime Minister.

Also, he called on the Martuni residents who are working abroad.

“We pin hopes also on you in making an economic revolution [in Armenia],” Pashinyan said. “Come [to Martuni], make investments, create jobs so that people don’t emigrate [from Armenia], [so] that we uproot poverty in Armenia.

“The working people have no right to be poor. There shall not be a hunger-stricken man in Armenia.”

No entrepreneur in Armenia will be forced to give part of their business to someone else

ARKA, Armenia
Nov 29 2018

YEREVAN, November 29. /ARKA/. Addressing the residents of the town of Martuni in Gegharkunik province today, the acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said no entrepreneur in Armenia will be forced to give part of their businesses to someone else.

During a September 11 rally in Yerevan, Pashinyan demanded that ex-president Robert Kocharyan and all the oligarchs return the assets they stole from the people. In particular, he set a deadline for Alexander Sargsyan, the brother of another former president Serzh Sargsyan, to withdraw $30 million from a local bank and return it to the state budget, saying this is the money he had extorted from local business people for which he was nicknamed “Sashik 50%”. Yesterday, Pashinyan announced that Alexander Sargsyan was ready to return the $30 million to the state budget.

"I want to ask all our compatriots working abroad to return to the country and invest not only in building houses, but also in the creation of enterprises. I guarantee that no one else in Armenia will dare to seize part or parts of their businesses,’ Pashinyan said in Martuni today. He said he believes that in the next five years Armenia will be able to make an economic revolution.

“We are sure that you can work and also get rich. And our main business is to create conditions for citizens to work effectively. And as we made a political revolution in Armenia 7 months ago, we must now make an economic revolution together in the next five years,” declared Pashinyan.

Pashinyan is visiting Armenian regions to campaign for his My Step alliance for December 9 early parliamentary elections. He resigned October 16 to clear way for the dissolution of the parliament and holding early parliamentary elections. Under the Armenian Constitution, early elections are held if lawmakers fail twice within 14 days to appoint a prime minister. 

Pashinyan was elected as PM by the country's National Assembly after former president turned-prime minister Serzh Sargsyan resigned on April 23 under immense public pressure provided by weeks of nationwide protest against Sargsyan and his Republican Party. 

Nine political parties and 2 blocs will be contesting the polls. They  are My Step bloc, the Prosperous Armenia Party, the National Progress Party, the Christian-National Revival, the Sasna Tsrer All-Armenian Party, the Orinats Yerkir Party, the We  bloc, the ARF Dashnaktsutyun Party, the Bright Armenia bloc, the Republican Party of Armenia, the Social Democratic Party and the Decision of Citizen party. -0-