New cross-stones erected in yard of Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul

New cross-stones erected in yard of Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul

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YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. New cross-stones from Armenia have been erected in the yard of the Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul, the Patriarchate said on Facebook, reports Armenpress.

The cross-stones were consecrated on January 9 by Archbishop Aram Ateshyan, Patriarchal Vicar of the Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul.

Philanthropist Christian Gelici provided assistance for making the cross-stones.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Food bought from street dangerous for health (video)

According to Georgy Avetisyan, head of the Food Safety Inspection Body, fish products, meat that are being sold in the streets can cause great problems.

“The meat that is stored in the refrigerator and is not sold is toxic to the person. It contains at least toxins of corpse in it. There are dust, car emissions on products sold outdoors.”

Head of the Food Safety Inspector urges you: “If you love your family, you should not buy food from the street.”

Aram I Urges Pashinyan to Keep Diaspora Ministry

His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia during an interview with Yerkir Media

YEREVAN—His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, in a letter to Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan praised the work carried out by the Diaspora Ministry, saying the “Diaspora needs a Diaspora Ministry.”

In his letter, Aram I also expressed hope that the Diaspora would be a priority for the new government.

“I think, given the strategic importance of the existence of the Diaspora ministry, and at the same time its symbolic meaning—because sometimes the symbolic meaning is much more vital than the strategic or political ones—it is important for the Diaspora to have a Diaspora ministry,” Aram I said in an interview with Yerkir Media’s Yerkirn Aysor program.

“Our approach to the Diaspora should be different because if we have nearly 3 million Armenians in Armenia, the remaining 8 million Armenians live in the Diaspora. During the past years the Diaspora ministry has carried out huge works, and we first of all should express our appreciation,” he said, adding that the closure of the ministry might impact Diaspora Armenians negatively.
On Thursday, Pashinyan commented on the proposed dissolution of the Diaspora Ministry saying that the new government’s aim is to make relations and partnership with the Diaspora more effective.

“I would like to especially touch on the case of the Diaspora Ministry, because I think there is a misunderstanding as if we want to [write-off] the Diaspora Ministry. In fact it is just the opposite,” said Pashinyan.

He explained that the proposed formulation would “make the relations and partnership of the government with the Diaspora more effective and in this context we have a certain model and proposal, that implies that the level of relations with the Diaspora will essentially be elevated, not reduced.”

“Our objective is to increase the level of productivity of relations in order to be satisfied with both the process and recorded results. We will proceed with coherent, firm and measured steps. I am sure that the solutions must prove their viability and of course must satisfy all those who are concerned with the efficiency of the state administration in Armenia,” added Pashinyan.

Անթիլիաս – ՎԵՀԱՓԱՌ ՀԱՅՐԱՊԵՏԸ ԸՆԴՈՒՆԵՑ ԲԱՆԱԿԻ ՊԱՏՈՒԻՐԱԿՈՒԹԻՒՆԸ

Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
PO Box : 70 317 Antelias – LEBANON
Tel: (+961-4) 410 001 / 3
Fax: (+961-4) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]

ՎԵՀԱՓԱՌ ՀԱՅՐԱՊԵՏԸ ԸՆԴՈՒՆԵՑ ԲԱՆԱԿԻ ՊԱՏՈՒԻՐԱԿՈՒԹԻՒՆԸ

 

Այս առաւօտ,
Ն.Ս.Օ.Տ.Տ. Արամ Ա. Կաթողիկոս
ընդունեց
Լիբանանի
բանակի
հրամանատարութիւնը
ներկայացնող
բարձրաստիճան
զինուորականներէ
բաղկացած
պատուիրակութիւն
մը:

 

Պատուիրակութիւնը
շնորհաւորեց
Լիբանանի
Հայ
համայնքը Ս. Ծննդեան տօնին կապակցութեամբ եւ փոխանցեց իր բարեմաղթութիւնները:
Հանդիպումը
առիթ
հանդիսացաւ
խորհրդակցելու
առաւելաբար
ապահովական
ու
բանակի
դերակատարութեան
առնչուած
հարցերու
շուրջ:

 

Նորին Սրբութիւնը
բարձր
գնահատեց
Լիբանանի
բանակի
դերը,
զայն
նկատելով
Լիբանանի
միութեան,
գերիշխանութեան
ու
արժանապատուութեան
պաշտպան:


Communication & Information Department

Exhibition: Toronto: Rouge Park’s photographer-in-residence trades the ‘office for a forest’

The Toronto Star, ON, Canada
January 9, 2019 Wednesday
Rouge Park’s photographer-in-residence trades the ‘office for a forest’

Ishkhan Ghazarian shares his office with white-tailed deer, Blanding’s turtles, ancient Carolinian forest, delicate flora, tumbling rivers and placid marshlands.

A pink pastel sunrise might start his work day. A blazing orange sunset might end it.

People can use the walkway to stroll across the Rouge marsh, home to countless species of wildlife and plants. It’s also a feeding area for Great Blue Herons.  (ISHKHAN GHAZARIAN)

Between those dawns and dusks, Ghazarian — photographer-in-residence for Rouge National Urban Park for 2018 — lifts his camera to his eyes to capture the natural beauty carved between Toronto and Pickering and stretching from Lake Ontario to the Oak Ridges Moraine.

Some days, the 23-year-old will hike up to 10 kilometres along the many distinct trails in “the Rouge,” Canada’s first national park in an urban setting, to get that perfect shot.

“It’s a joy to be out there,” says Ghazarian, who graduated from OCAD University in April with a bachelor of fine arts in photography.

Article Continued Below

“When you trade in your office for a forest, you can’t go wrong.”

Sharing his art with the public is another bonus.

Photographer Ishkhan Ghazarian, the 2018 photographer-in-residence at Rouge National Urban Park, poses with his exhibition of work at OCAD University in December.  (Andrew Francis Wallace/Toronto Star)

Ghazarian was the park’s third photographer-in-residence, a paid position created from a partnership with Parks Canada and OCAD for a graduating photography student. Included in the job: A solo exhibition of landscapes.

Ghazarian’s show Memories of the Rouge ran Dec. 10 to 22 at OCAD U’s Ada Slaight Gallery. He selected nine different landscapes that encompassed three main Rouge themes: nature, culture and agriculture. He printed the photographs himself and blew them up — about half a metre by one metre.

“It’s a big thing for an artist to have the opportunity to show people their work, especially in print,” says Ghazarian, who used his Nikon D850 in the Rouge.

“I find having your photographs (displayed) online is great but when you print it into a physical form and put it on the wall and you can just stare at it in this large scale, there’s so much more emotion in that photograph that you can get than just looking at it online.”

At Rouge Beach, a gaggle of geese moves through the water as the sun sets over Lake Ontario. This is one of the images taken by Ishkhan Ghazarian, the photographer in residence at Rouge National Urban Park for 2018.  (Ishkhan Ghazarian)

Jeffrey Sinibaldi, acting external relations manager at Rouge National Urban Park, was part of the selection team that chose Ghazarian for the in-residence role. Sinibaldi says Ghazarian’s enthusiasm and the quality of his portfolio set him apart from other candidates.

Article Continued Below

“He’s done a lot of journalism and documentary work and was looking for an opportunity to do landscape photography; that was an area of his portfolio that he was lacking but something he was very interested in,” he says.

“How did he put it in the interview? ‘My goal is to get in National Geographic one day,’” Sinibaldi continued.

Ghazarian has already made strides in that direction. His photo of a baby Blanding’s turtle was published in the recent edition of Canadian Geographic.

“He produces great results,” Sinibaldi says.

The Monarch Trail is one of many scenic hiking paths in Rouge National Urban Park. It is Canada's first national park in an urban setting.  (Ishkhan Ghazarian)

Ghazarian’s passion for photography is rooted in his childhood.

Movses Basmajian, Ghazarian’s late maternal grandfather, was an avid picture taker who filled photo albums with snapshots taken during family visits to his Detroit home. He sparked his grandson’s interest; Ghazarian began experimenting with disposable cameras that came as gifts from his parents.

“It was like the one form of _expression_ that I could use to express myself,” Ghazarian says.

“Photography was a great medium for that (and) it kind of stuck with me throughout my childhood.”

His grandfather was also a Boy Scouts leader. That, too, inspired Ghazarian, who grew up in Scarborough and spent 12 years in Scouts Canada. He modestly conceded he earned enough badges for “two sides of a sash” and recalls using waterproof disposables at scouting events and camping trips.

This is one of the many areas in which restoration is taking place at Rouge National Urban Park. The park's photographer in residence for 2018, Ishkhan Ghazarian, took this image from a helicopter.  (Ishkhan Ghazarian)

Ghazarian graduated from disposables to using his dad’s old Canon, first as a hobby then to volunteer for a Montreal-based Armenian newspaper called Horizon Weekly. (His father, Sako Ghazarian, had volunteered for years as a writer and an editor — it’s printed in English, French and Armenian — and his son wanted to continue the family’s contribution).

In late 2009, tragedy struck. Sako died from heart-related issues. As a young teen mourning his father’s death, Ghazarian says working with his camera provided a distraction during that difficult time.

“It was a way to keep busy and a way to get lost within the art and escape reality,” he says.

“The following year I had started to find myself dedicating more and more time to it.”

Ghazarian saved up to buy his first “real camera” in 2010 — a high-end Canon point and shoot with manual controls. Ghazarian, who attended an Armenian private school, experienced a creative turning point during a two-week class excursion to Armenia in 2011.

“After I came back, I was ‘in it’ — I’d found my passion,” he says. “I knew what I wanted to do.”

He purchased his first professional quality camera, a Nikon D7000, lenses and a flash for about $4,000 in 2012 — “It was an investment I would not regret,” Ghazarian says — and started his own business, ishkhanghazarian.com. Last year, he upgraded his gear to the Nikon D850, which cost about $5,000, as his “everyday tool for the job now.”

Though he grew up in Scarborough and lived relatively close to the Rouge, he doesn’t recall spending time in the park before being hired as photographer in residence. Then, he made the most of it — from solitary shoots to the “teamwork” with National Parks staffers and volunteers.

“When we’re hiking, you meet so many great people along the trails,” he says.

“We have wonderful volunteers that (lead) hikes every Wednesday … a lot of them have been coming before the park was established (as a national park) so it’s great to see their devotion to it.”

Ghazarian says his time as photographer-in-residence has helped him improve as an artist. The value of patience — like watching a setting sun until it bursts into full glory, a moment that might last only a split-second — was just one of his take-aways.

“It’s a lot of waiting but if you’re patient, you can get this moment of awe and sometimes you forget to take the picture because you’re struck by this beautiful landscape in front of you; there are all these emotions and everything’s just perfectly painted in front of you — then it’s ‘Oh, right, gotta take the picture,’” he says.

After a day of shooting, it’s back to the brick-and-mortar Parks Canada office, near Markham Rd. and Eglinton Ave. Working with Parks Canada colleagues, Ghazarian edits and archives the digital images for future use. He says the thrill of seeing a perfect shot during editing never wanes.

“You’re like, ‘Yes, this is the one!’” he says.

Ghazarian’s residence ended Dec. 31, but he will continue to work on contract with Parks Canada at Rouge National Urban Park this year.

Ghazarian says he was given a tremendous opportunity to “show the Rouge in my own eyes” and hopes more up-and-coming grads will apply for the position.

“If you love nature and you can make that into a job, isn’t that the dream?” he says.

“Everyone has their own Rouge, whether it’s the actual Rouge or some other thing that they love.”

Four detained in Sevres in Armenian College attack

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 10 2019


Four detained in Sevres in Armenian College attack

2019-01-10 19:03:33 
                           

Samuel Moorat Armenian College in Sevres, France was attacked by an organized gang on january 2nd. Four suspects have been detained in the case, Haroutiun Vartabed Bezdikian told Public Radio of Armenia.

The gang broke into the three central buildings of the college and smashed the doors and windows of the 24 rooms of the building with metal rods and stones.

The activities of the school that functions under the auspices of the Mekhitarist Congregation had temporarily been halted because of renovation works.

Not apart with complications: How Russia will build relations with its closest neighbors in 2019

DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
January 9, 2019 Wednesday
NOT APART WITH COMPLICATIONS: How Russia will build relations with its closest neighbors in 2019
 
by Vladimir Solovyov
Source: Kommersant, N1, January 9, 2019, pp. 1, 4  
 
Armenia. Idol to your home
 
"Velvet Revolution", arranged by Nikol Pashinyan, made the whole world search for this country on the map and figure out what is happening there.
 
Bloodless change of power was highly appreciated in the West, while the Russian authorities cautiously watched the Armenian revolution and its leader. And almost for the first time in modern history, the official reaction of Moscow, which has always been negative towards any protest movement, whether in their territory or on their neighbors', was definitely neutral, if not benevolent.
 
"We are committed to the continuation of joint work on strengthening and developing multifaceted mutually beneficial Russian-Armenian cooperation and allied cooperation in the interests of the peoples of both countries," the Russian Foreign Ministry said.
 
Belorussia. Bridal ceremony
 
In the Belarusian direction, nothing unexpected has happened. Pre-New Year quarrels in Minsk and Moscow became a tradition that was not violated this time either. However, the degree of confrontation between the countries has increased.
 
Georgia. We do not expect changes
 
In Georgia, 2018 was marked by a sad anniversary for Tbilisi – ten years ago in August 2008, the country lost the war with Russia. Its result was Moscow's recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. In both partially recognized republics, the Russian military are deployed, and the chances that this status quo will change are zero.
 
Although the diplomatic relations between Moscow and Tbilisi are severed, the parties are engaged in sluggish negotiations on trade and customs issues.
 
Moldavia. The pro-Kremlin star is shining
 
For Moldova, 2018 was a pre-election year. February 2, the country will elect a new parliament. In the country whose population is roughly equally divided into those who sympathize with Russia and those who want to get to Europe, any elections in recent years fit into a simple scenario. The parties that call themselves pro-European declared the vote to be a decisive battle of the enlightened West with the darkness coming from the East. Pro-Russian politicians did the same, – however, according to their version, Russia sows sane, good seeds, while Brussels and Washington send hostile vortexes, bringing corruption, cosmopolitanism and homosexuality.
 
The first scenario is worked out by the ruling Democratic Party, headed by the extremely unpopular oligarch Vladimir Plahotniuc. During each election campaign, the Democrats announce the hunting season for "agents of the Kremlin."
 
In order to become declared a "hand of Moscow," it is enough to speak out with criticism of the Democratic Party or Mr. Plahotniuc.
 
The Socialist Party and its leader – Moldovan President Igor Dodon, – are working out the second option, .
 
Ukraine. A bloody dispute
 
Ukraine also lives in the pre-election regime: there, they will elect president in March. Petro Poroshenko is unpopular, but he is still in control of the situation and he is tearing up one by one agreements with Russia, which he considers the enemy. In September, he signed a decree on the termination of the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Partnership with the Russian Federation. The head of the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, Pavel Klimkin, has counted that Kiev had already broken 48 agreements with Moscow and intended to do the same with another four dozen treaties.
 
The post-Soviet space is a source of constant problems for Russia. In 2018, Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine were the leaders. The Kremlin has conflicts of varying degrees of severity with each country, and it does not matter whether the latter is in an alliance with Moscow like Minsk, or is its open opponent like Kiev. Relations with the above five states will obviously generate new scandals in 2019.

Armenia and UAE to sign memorandum on protection and reproduction of wild animals

Arminfo, Armenia
Jan 10 2019
Alexandr Avanesov

ArmInfo.A memorandum on the protection and reproduction of wild animals will be signed between Armenia and the UAE next Wednesday, Acting Minister of Nature  Protection Erik Grigoryan informed today at the meeting of the RA  Government, answering the question of the Acting Prime Minister Nikol  Pashinyan on measures to restore the Caucasian leopard population.

According to Grigorian, representatives of the environmental  departments of the two states have already done some work in this  direction.

Representatives of the UAE have gained considerable experience in the  protection and reproduction of wild animals, and their knowledge and  experience can be useful for Armenia. The Acting Minister stressed  that the presence of a Caucasian leopard population in the Khosrov  Reserve testifies to fairly well-formed ecosystem. It is especially  important, Grigoryan continued, to restore the Caucasian leopard  population, since it is the last major representative of the cat  family in the region.  In turn, Nikol Pashinyan called for more  control over the habitat of the animal. He drew the attention of the  head of the RA Police Valery Osipyan to the need to intensify the  fight against poaching.

To recall, the Armenian government announced the 2019 as the Year of  the Caucasian Leopard. "It is planned to hold a series of events – to  issue a postage stamp on the theme of the Caucasian leopard, to  organize an international conference, to make a documentary film on  biodiversity, to organize an exhibition," the acting minister said at  the end of December at a cabinet meeting. Last year, for the first  time, the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) filmed on the territory of  the Khosrov Forest Reserve a rare Caucasian (Asian) Leopard, which is  included in the Red Book of Armenia and the Red List of the  International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.  This species is under threat of destruction.  Currently, 7-9 leopards  are recorded in the Ararat, Vayots Dzor and Syunik regions of  Armenia. Since 2002, the Ministry of Nature Protection of the  Republic of Armenia has been implementing a program for the  protection of this species, its task is to preserve the range, to  increase the population of animals, including by preserving the  species that the leopard hunts – bezoar goats and Armenian moufflon. 

How one entrepreneur used a byproduct to satisfy growing consumer demand for plant-based protein

NutraIngredients-USA.com
January 9, 2019 Wednesday 4:00 PM GMT+1
How one entrepreneur used a byproduct to satisfy growing consumer demand for plant-based protein
 
by Adi Menayang, Adi
 
California-based entrepreneur and mother of two, Sarine Sahatjian, celebrates her Armenian heritage with Noosh brands.
 
Noosh is one way to transliterate the Armenian word for almond.
 
Noosh sounded like a fun word that also had a deep meaning for me, Sahatjian, founder and CEO of Noosh , told NutraIngredients-USA.
 
She was born and raised in Lebanon her family descendants of Armenians who moved to the Levant following the Ottoman Empire s Armenian Genocide in 1915. The Lebanese Civil War then prompted Sahatjian s family to immigrate to the US in the 1970s.
 
Nuts, almonds in particular, play an integral role in the cuisines of both Armenia and Lebanon.
 
We use nuts like almonds and pistachios a lot in entertaining and cooking , she said. So they ve always been a part of growing up. We always had them around, especially on holidays we would always have dried fruits and nuts.
 
It was natural that Sahatjian, a mother of two, first thought of almonds as the flagship ingredient for a new snack brand she wanted to start.
 
As a mom of two young boys, I m always on the hunt for healthy snacks that tasted good and were good for you. So I decided to create a line of almond butters that were healthier than what I saw on the market place, she said.
 
Sahatjian started Nut Butter Concepts, a manufacturing company specializing in tree-nuts that also offers product development and concept consulting. It is the parent company and manufacturer of Noosh, which she launched in the summer of 2016 with a line of single-serve almond butters.
 
From butter to oil to protein powder
 
Noosh started with almond butters, but its founder always knew that it would be more than just an almond butter brand. That s why we didn t call it Noosh Almond Butter, we called it Noosh Brands, she said.
 
The butters could be used in recipes to make cookies or a protein bar, so she wanted the next product launch to be something equally versatile. The company launched almond oil, one plain and one flavored with roasted garlic.
 
What we found was that when you press the almond to get the oil, you also get powder. When that powder is micronized and de-fatted, it becomes a protein powder, she said.
 
It was the perfect business opportunity plant protein powders have been on the rise in the past few years , in terms of both consumer demand as well as product development, and it shows no signs of ceasing growth anytime soon.
 
The company s in-house food scientists found that the resulting powder had a protein concentrate of 59% of total dry weight. We thought this was amazing it s plant based, it s vegan, she said.
 
A point of differentiation from other popular plant-protein sources, she added, was taste. If you tasted pea protein, you might find that the taste might not be as pleasant as you might want it to be. For ours, it has a little bit of nuttiness, but it is really smooth and you can t really taste it.
 
The powders launched in May 2018, and then inked its first bricks-and-mortar distribution deal last month nationwide with Vitamin Shoppe .
 
Just like the two product lines that launched before the powder, Sahatjian wanted to bring something to market that was versatile.
 
In a press release announcing its deal with the Vitamin Shoppe, the company said that the powders were developed to appeal to the nutrition and culinary needs of consumers' everyday routines unlike most protein powders that are marketed specifically as a supplement for workout recovery.
 
Using only California whole almonds
 
Sahatjian s background is in law, but her father-in-law s family has been in the agricultural sector since the 1920s. My husband s connections in the farming community helped with the purchasing of the nuts that go into making our almond products, she said. The relationships helped launch us into this arena.
 
Purchasing is another area in which Noosh strives to stand out from the plant-based crowd. The nut s breed is proprietary, but Sahatjian only uses almonds grown in California, and she makes sure that they re whole before processing.
 
Most of our competitors use cheaper broken pieces and halves. We find that if you used those types of almonds that have already been cut, the almond starts oxidizing, so you don t have fresh product, she explained.
 
So when you use a whole California almond, you get the best quality almond that s also the freshest almond.

Single mother forced to travel 100 miles with newborn baby to sign on with Home Office

The Independent – Daily Edition
January 9, 2019 Wednesday
Mother has to travel nearly 100 miles with newborn to sign on with Home Office
 
by MAY BULMAN SOCIAL AFFAIRS CORRESPONDENT
 
 
An asylum seeker woman has been forced to travel nearly 100 miles every month with her newborn baby in order to attend a routine meeting with the Home Office or face losing her allowance.
 
In a case that has been branded a "disgraceful" consequence of the hostile environment, the single mother from Armenia was at one point forced to breastfeed her child while crouched down on a crowded platform at Manchester Piccadilly station, according to a volunteer who accompanied her on the trip last month.
 
The woman, who has not been named to protect her identity, had been travelling from her asylum accommodation in Stoke-on-Trent to Dallas Courtin Salford in order to comply with immigration rules after her local reporting centre was closed last October.
 
She is one of hundreds of asylum seekers in Britain who are having to take long journeys to attend sign-on meetings after the Home Office closed a number of reporting centres in a bid to "effectively manage the reporting population" – in what was branded an expansion of the hostile environment policy.
 
The Independent revealed in November that asylum seekers in Stoke-on-Trent were having to spend up to three-quarters of their £37.75 weekly allowance on travelling to the reporting centre in Salford after the local immigration service closed. Immigration minister Caroline Nokes said there was no upper limit to the distance a person may be required to travel in order to attend their nearest reporting location.
 
Chris Lawler, who volunteers for Stoke-based refugee charity Sanctus St Mark's, said he was "mortified and shamed" to accompany the Armenian mother on the round trip -which entailed two trains and a bus each way, at a cost of £32.80, which the charity paid for.
 
"The journey was very stressful indeed and very poignant, too. At one point she had to breastfeed her child on the crowded platform at Manchester Piccadilly," he said. "There were no facilities whatsoever. I asked but was told waiting rooms had been removed. In the end, she had to crouch down and feed her baby like that. It was upsetting to see this young woman struggle with her baby, struggle with the cold and with the crowds looking on. How mean, how brutal and how humiliating? I was, appalled, frankly but I could do nothing to alleviate the situation."
 
Responding to the young woman's experience, shadow home secretary Diane Abbott said: "This is disgraceful and shows just how inhumane the Tories' hostile environment is. The creation of these barriers are clearly causing distress and hardship to already vulnerable people trying to do the right thing."
 
Reverend Sally Smith, who runs Sanctus St Mark's, said that at the charity's weekly drop-in providing assistance to asylum seekers, one of the most common worries for people was how they would afford to travel to their reporting sessions. While there is purportedly a reimbursement scheme, she said that most asylum seekers did not receive travel cost refunds, and that some were even instead told to save money out of their food allowance.
 
"The lack of concern for vulnerable individuals and families demonstrated by the Home Office is shocking and should not be tolerated in any civilised society," she added. "The journey itself is difficult for people who have no English and are not familiar with the public transport changes. Once they arrive, queueing to get in can take several hours without shelter from the weather."
 
Reverend Smith said a particularly shocking aspect of the young woman's case was the fact that she was being forced to sign on with a five-week-old child, despite the fact that according to Home Office guidelines, women should not be required to sign for six weeks after giving birth. "Despite efforts to get her appointment changed, the Home Office insisted that she had to go on that day, and their reason was that they stipulate a six-week break from the due date rather than the actual delivery date," she said.
 
Gareth Snell, Labour and Co-operative MP for Stoke-on-Trent Central, who has contacted the Home Office about the woman's situation, said: "This case demonstrates everything that I feared was the case when this first came up as an issue. Clearly the decision to move the reporting centre from Stoke is ridiculous. I can't understand why anyone would look at this new system and not notice that it deliberately and by design makes registering at the points where you're asked to register more onerous and more expensive, and ask what is the possible benefit of adding all those extra hurdles into the system if not to dissuade people from doing it?"
 
Jude Hawes, manager of Stoke's Citizens Advice Bureau, who has raised concerns about the long journeys before, said she was "horrified" that a vulnerable young woman and her baby were put at such risk. "This is one of many instances where people who are vulnerable, physically disabled or severely mentally unwell have been forced to try to make a journey which puts them at physical risk or pushes them into severe financial hardship," she added. "Despite Home Office claims, it is crystal clear that no proper examination of the risks or impact on individuals was undertaken before the unwise and irrational decision to close the local reporting centre was made."
 
The Home Office has been approached for comment.