Lord Darzi named chairman of Aurora Prize selection panel

Belfast Telegraph
Oct 19 2019
 
 
Lord Darzi named chairman of Aurora Prize selection panel
 
Speaking in Yerevan, Armenia, the peer said the appointment is a ‘great honour’.
 
 
By Nina Massey, PA, in Yerevan, Armenia
 
4:45 PM
 
A member of the House of Lords has been appointed chairman of an international humanitarian award committee, taking over from George Clooney.
 
Independent peer Lord Darzi was named chair of the Aurora Prize Selection Committee in Yerevan, Armenia.
 
Academy-award winning actor and director Clooney will stay on as its honorary co-chairman, sharing the position with peace and human rights activist Benjamin Ferencz.
 
These amazing people celebrated by the Aurora Prize don’t do what they do for recognition. They risk their lives helping others because that’s the way they are Lord Darzi
 
Lord Darzi joined the Aurora Prize Selection Committee in September 2017, and is director of the Institute of Global Health Innovation at Imperial College London.
 
The annual 1.1 million US dollar (£840,000) prize is granted to a person carrying out humanitarian work by the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, on behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide and in gratitude to their saviours.
 
Speaking at the Aurora Forum, Lord Darzi said: “Being appointed chair of Aurora Prize Selection Committee is a great honour and responsibility.
 
“I’m grateful and excited to continue working with my fellow members of the selection committee in this new capacity.

“Our selection committee is comprised of a select group of outstanding humanitarians, human rights activists and former heads of state.

“Aurora greatly benefits from their experience and knowledge.

“Aurora celebrates the champions, those who risk their lives helping others in a time of crises, at a time of war, at a time of all the major challenges facing us on earth.

“These amazing people, celebrated by the Aurora Prize, don’t do what they do for recognition. They risk their lives helping others because that’s the way they are.”

Other members of the committee include Nobel laureates Oscar Arias, Shirin Ebadi and Leymah Gbowee, and former president of Ireland Mary Robinson.

In July, former health minister Lord Darzi resigned the Labour whip, saying that as an Armenian descendant of a survivor of the Armenian genocide, he has zero-tolerance for anti-Semitism.

PA


2019 Aurora Prize awarded to Yezidi activist Mirza Dinnayi

Rudaw, Kurdistan Province, Iraq
Oct 20 2019
 
     
 
2019 Aurora Prize awarded to Yezidi activist Mirza Dinnayi
 
Sarkawt Mohammed

ERBIL, Kurdistan regionThe fourth annual Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity was awarded to Mirza Dinnayi in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on . Dinnayi is the Co-Founder and Director of Luftbrücke Irak (Air Bridge Iraq), an organization committed to helping survivors of ISIS atrocities. 

Granted by the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative on behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide, Dinnayi “embodies the power of compassion, of personal commitment and a burning desire to save lives,” according to Vartan Gregorian, co-founder of the Aurora Prize and member of the selection committee. 

The Yezidi activist, who fled to Germany in 1994, has become a prominent figure in the community, aiding survivors of the genocide started in August 2014 and spearheading a program to bring survivors, including Sakharov Prize recipient Lamiya Bashar, to Germany. He also worked as an adviser to Iraqi Former President Jalal Talabani on minority rights, and met the first group of Yezidi survivors to escape ISIS. 

As the 2019 Aurora Prize Laureate, Dinnayi will receive a $1,000,000 grant which he has donated to charity. The beneficiaries of this year’s prize money, Luftbrucke Irak, SEED Foundation and the Shai Fund all work with survivors of the genocide, in which more than 6,000 were kidnapped and 300,000 displaced. 

Working on behalf of the Yezidi community, Mirza Dinnayi has dedicated his whole life to saving Iraqi victims of terror, evacuating women and children from territories controlled by ISIS and providing those tortured and violated with rehabilitation and support.

Tom Catena, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative Chair and 2017 Aurora Prize Laureate, praised Dinnayi as an “outstanding human being” who never wavered while facing “an unspeakable evil.” Injured in a helicopter crash while delivering aid to Yezidis stranded on Mount Sinjar in August 2014, the incident catalyzed his desire to aid his community.

 In an article published by The Independent in August 2019, Dinnayi lamented the lack of domestic support available for female survivors, especially in terms of mental health. “There is a striking disparity between how local and international communities focus on property assimilating genocide survivors,” he wrote. ‘We must empower survivors of the Yazidi genocide to successfully rebuild themselves and their communities so that their generation is not forgotten and lost.”

Home to a sizeable Yazidi community who are the country’s largest minority group, Dinnayi referenced Armenia’s Yezidi connections in his acceptance speech, and expressed appreciation for the country’s recognition of his people’s plight. He also spoke of the silence surrounding their historic persecution: “As a survivor of the Yezidi genocide, I should tell you 73 genocides have passed and nobody heard." His grandfather escaped fled the Armenian genocide to Iraq. “Three million people were killed at that time. Nobody spoke about that.”

The 2019 Aurora Prize Ceremony was part of the Aurora Forum, held in Armenia on October 14–21, 2019 which convenes leaders and change-makers from across the world to share knowledge, perspective and ideas. 

Armenian NSS statement: CC head Tovmasyan did not answer NSS staff calls

News.am, Armenia
Oct 19 2019
Armenian NSS statement: CC head Tovmasyan did not answer NSS staff calls Armenian NSS statement: CC head Tovmasyan did not answer NSS staff calls

11:15, 19.10.2019
                  

The NSS released a statement saying why notices have been sent to family members of the CC head Hrayr Tovmasyan.

According to the statement, they have an attempts to contact the CC President personally but he did not respond to calls and was out of touch. After that, notices were sent as prescribed.

As NSS said in a statement, Tovmasyan’s father has been offered to give explanation in his own home, and he was visited by a NSS employee for that purpose, but he, instead of changing his position, preferred to give an explanation at the NSS administrative building in the presence of his own lawyers.

As reported earlier, based ona report which independent MP Arman Babajanyan had submitted to the Prosecutor General, the Special Investigation Service (SIS) on Thursday launched a criminal case against CC chief judge Hrayr Tovmasyan and some other officials on usurpation of official power. 

SIS conducted investigations at the CC and the headquarters of the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia.

Some of Tovmasyan’s close family members were called to the NSS. Meanwhile, Arman Babajanyan claims Hrayr Tovmasyan has usurped the office of Constitutional Court President by using criminal schemes.

Reps. Schiff and Bilirakis’ call for passage of Armenian Genocide Resolution

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 19 2019

Dedication of Tujunga intersection to Armenian American author sparks controversy

Los Angeles Times
Oct 19 2019
Dedication of Tujunga intersection to Armenian American author sparks controversy

The dedication of a square in Tujunga to Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Saroyan is scheduled for Saturday.
(File photo)

The dedication Saturday of an intersection in Tujunga to Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Saroyan, who wrote extensively about the Armenian immigrant experience in California, has sparked controversy between some who in the community claim it will overshadow the corner’s existing historical significance and others who believe the opposition is grounded in discrimination.

After the Los Angeles City Council voted earlier this month to designate William Saroyan Square with a plaque at the crossing of Commerce Avenue and Valmont Street, the local neighborhood council shot back with a statement calling the placement inappropriate. The dedication is set for 4 p.m. Saturday.

The designated area is adjacent to Bolton Hall, a historic stone building erected in 1913 that was originally used as a community center for a local utopian community. It has since been used as an American Legion hall, a public library, Tujunga City Hall and a jail and is now a local history museum.

“It’s the location, that is what people are opposed to,” said Liliana Sanchez, president of the Sunland-Tujunga Neighborhood Council. “It’s the historical significance of that intersection. No signage should be placed there.”

It is also an intersection that has hosted several Armenian cultural events, according to Los Angeles City Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez, who spearheaded the initiative.

Saturday’s dedication ceremony was scheduled to coincide with the annual Sunland-Tujunga Armenian Cultural Festival, which is held along Commerce Avenue.

Born in Fresno in 1908, the Armenian American novelist, playwright and short story writer won the Pulitzer in 1940 for his play “The Time of Your Life,” and in 1940 won an Academy Award for the film adaption of his novel “The Human Comedy.”

“I consider myself an Armenian writer,” Saroyan once said. “The words I use are in English, the surroundings I write about are American, but the soul, which makes me write, is Armenian.”

Southern California is home to the largest Armenian community outside of Armenia. More than 200,000 people of Armenian descent live in Los Angeles County, with the largest concentration in the Glendale, Burbank, Sunland and Tujunga areas, according to U.S. census data.

Rodriguez, who represents the Tujunga area along with neighborhoods including La Tuna Canyon, Sylmar, Pacoima and North Hills, said she was disappointed by the opposition to the Saroyan dedication.

“It’s unfortunate that more people aren’t taking this opportunity to embrace the diversity of our community,” she said.

One longtime resident, Robin Jodi, said she opposed the dedication because Saroyan does not have a connection to the area. It was a sentiment echoed by others in their written public comments.

But Rodriguez and others noted that Bolton Hall was named after an Ireland-born author and activist who also had no connection to the immediate area.

“[Saroyan] is a true Californian, the son of immigrants and an inspiration to us all,” Vic Aghakhanian, another longtime resident, wrote in a public comment. “I believe it is time for our community to embrace multiculturalism and appreciation of our diversity.”

Jodi defended her stance.

“It’s a welcoming community. It’s a diverse community,” she said, but Saroyan “never visited here. He has nothing to do with here.”

A similar debate unfolded in Glendale last year, when the City Council voted to change the name of a two-block portion of Maryland Avenue downtown to Artsakh Street, after the Republic of Artsakh, a disputed territory between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Some opponents of the name change said the contested area had nothing to do with Glendale’s history. Several business owners argued that the renaming could hurt them economically.

Supporters argued that it was long overdue for Glendale to have a street named to honor the city’s large Armenian American community.

Sanchez and Jodi both said they felt community input about the Saroyan dedication was limited.

“We weren’t given a voice,” Sanchez said.

Members of the public were invited to submit written comments after the motion was introduced on Sept. 11, Rodriguez said. Residents were also allowed to speak when the item was considered during a public works meeting on Sept. 18.

It’s the same procedure Rodriguez said she has followed for the three other dedications she’s initiated within her district. Sanchez said she took issue with the fact that additional oral comments were not permitted during the regular L.A. City Council meeting when the dedication was approved unanimously.

By the time the motion was voted on, about 240 public comments had been submitted — more than for any other issue the council has worked on during Rodriguez’s two-year tenure, as far as she can remember.

The majority were in support of the dedication, she said. “Among all the issues that I’m working on, homelessness and everything else, [additional community meetings] would be excessive,” Rodriguez said.

Seidman writes for Times Community News

Armenia’s NSS releases a statement over necessity to interrogate Hrayr Tovmasyan’s family members

Aysor, Armenia
Oct 19 2019

Armenia’s National Security Service released a statement relating to Hrayr Tovmasyan, explaining the necessity of summoning the CC chairman's father and daughters to the establishment.

In the statement the NSS reported that while preparing the necessary materials the investigators tried to establish contacts with the Constitutional Court chairman Hrayr Tovmasyan but the later did not answer the phone calls and did not establish contacts after which notifications were sent to him.

Yesterday the NSS released another press release, informing about the actions carried out with the family members of the CC chairman.

The NSS reported that the need to get explanations from Hrayr Tovmasyan’s family members was agreed with the necessity to clarify information about the declaration of property beloning to an official and his family members.

William Saroyan Square in Tujunga to be dedicated Saturday to Armenian-American author

LA Daily News, California
Oct 19 2019
 
 
William Saroyan Square in Tujunga to be dedicated Saturday to Armenian-American author
 

The city of Los Angeles is dedicating the intersection of Commerce Avenue and Valmont Street in Tujunga as William Saroyan Square on Saturday, Oct. 19, 2019, in honor of the Armenian-American author. The dedication coincides with the fourth annual Sunland-Tujunga Armenian Arts and Cultural Festival, which is held along Commerce Avenue. (Google Street View)

By CITY NEWS SERVICE | [email protected] |
 
TUJUNGA — The intersection of Commerce Avenue and Valmont Street in Tujunga will be dedicated Saturday as William Saroyan Square, honoring the prolific Armenian-American writer of plays, short stories and novels.
 
Los Angeles City Councilwoman Monica Rodriguez, who authored the motion to designate the intersection in Saroyan’s honor, and Los Angeles Police Department Chief Michel Moore are set to speak at the 4 p.m. ceremony at the intersection, which coincides with the fourth annual Sunland-Tujunga Armenian Arts and Cultural Festival, which is held along Commerce Avenue.
 
Saroyan was born Aug. 31, 1908, in Fresno, lived with his brother and two sisters in an Oakland orphanage for several years after his father died, dropped out of high school and worked a series of low-paying, short-lived jobs before finding success as a writer.
 
Armenian-American author William Saroyan is seen in a 1940 photo. (Public domain image courtesy of the Library of Congress)
 
Saroyan’s first book, “The Daring Young Man on the Flying Trapeze, and Other Stories” was published by Random House in October 1934 and became a best-seller.
 
Saroyan wrote more than 4,000 works, including the play “The Time of Your Life,” set in a run-down bar in San Francisco that attracted an eccentric clientele.
 
“The Time of Your Life” won the Pulitzer Prize for drama in 1940, but he rejected it, declaring “I do not believe in prizes or award in the realm of art and have always been particularly opposed to material or official patronage of the arts by government, organization or individual, a naive and innocent style of behavior which nevertheless, I believe, vitiates and embarrasses art at its source.”
 
In 1944, Saroyan won an Oscar in the since-discontinued category of best story for the film “The Human Comedy,” about the effects of World War II on the home front over a year in the life of a teenager (Mickey Rooney) in a California town based on Fresno.
 
  
Saroyan’s other works included “The Bicycle Rider in Beverly Hills,” in which he first reveals his orphanage years and “Obituaries,” which brought him a nomination for an American Book Award in 1980, the year before he died at age 72 from cancer.
 
 

Report: Violations revealed at High Voltage Electric Networks of Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Oct 19 2019
Report: Violations revealed at High Voltage Electric Networks of Armenia Report: Violations revealed at High Voltage Electric Networks of Armenia

17:01, 17.10.2019
                  

As a result of the audit, a document evidencing the presence of actual violations was found in the 'High Voltage Electric Networks of Armenia' company, said the representative of the Audit Chamber Karen Arustamyan on Thursday.

According to him, the document, which caused certain doubts among the auditors, was sent for study to the prosecutor's office. Discrepancies between High-Voltage Electric Networks of Armenia and international contractors were revealed. As a result, the reconstruction of the Charentsavan substation has been suspended since 2017, allegedly due to changes in the requirements for the power system.

"There was a program, and subsequently its implementation decided that it was not practical. And this is the case when the contractor has already been paid 1.2 million dollars in advance," he said.

He noted that until the last day of the audit, program performance indicators ranged from 21 to 44%. It was also noted that the contractor company had not properly fulfilled its obligations.

Mirza Dinnayi: I am happy to be awarded by Armenians, grandchildren of genocide survivors

News.am, Armenia
Oct 19 2019
Mirza Dinnayi: I am happy to be awarded by Armenians, grandchildren of genocide survivors Mirza Dinnayi: I am happy to be awarded by Armenians, grandchildren of genocide survivors

22:20, 19.10.2019
                  

YEREVAN. – The most important thing in the Aurora Prize is recognition of genocide, Aurora Prize 2019 winner Mirza Dinnayi said during a press conference in Yerevan.

Dinnayi, Founder and Director of Luftbrücke Irak, emphasized that this is the first time that the Yazidi genocide was recognized, and he is really happy that it was done by the Armenians – grandchildren of genocide survivors.

“I would like to thank the land of holy Ararat, the land of holy of Garni, the land of coexistence and peace,” he said.

Trough establishment of this prize Armenia has become one of the greatest nations because the Armenians express solidary with the victims of genocide, he added.

Speaking about his humanitarian efforts, Mirza Dinnayi said once you become a member of humanitarian family you cannot stop.

“This platform can be one of the most important platforms for building peace and humanity, and I am proud to be a part of your family,” he added.

Dinnayi named three organizations that he will support after receiving the Prize. They are Air Bridge Iraq, SEED Foundation and Shai Fund.

The dedication of the Tujunga Crossing to the Armenian-American author provokes controversy

ASUME TECH
Oct 19 2019