Armenpress: Gas tariff will not increase for Armenian consumers – Pashinyan

Gas tariff will not increase for Armenian consumers – Pashinyan

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13:14, 31 December, 2018

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 31, ARMENPRESS.  There will be no change in the tariff of the gas imported to Armenia from Russia, ARMENPRESS reports acting Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan said in a Facebook live broadcast.

“I had a phone conversation with the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin twice yesterday during which we discussed the gas tariff imported to Armenia and we can say we reached a solution, at least for the upcoming visible future. There are two rings of gas supply – one is Russian company Gazprom and the gas supplied by that company to Gazprom Armenia, and the other is the gas supply by Gazprom Armenia to our consumers in Armenia.

In fact, it has happened so that Gazprom Armenia and Gazprom Companies have to revise gas tariff. Some changes will take place in the tariff, and some increase of the prize will take place. But thank to our domestic regulations there will be no change of the tariff for Armenian consumers”, Pashinyan said, emphasizing that the issue of gas tariff will always be on the table of negotiations. “Anyway, we do everything to prevent any additional problems for consumers”, he said.

The acting PM emphasized that during the two phone conversations with Putin they discussed no other issues but gas tariff.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Turkish press: From top articles to worst mistakes: an evaluation of 2018 for the Daily Sabah

SINAN ÖZTÜRK@sinan_ozturk
ISTANBUL
Published19 hours ago

At the Daily Sabah, our primary mission is to bring stories from Turkey and transmit a Turkish perspective on global affairs before a global audience as defined in our slogan: "local perspective, global vision." Although our brand and publishing policy cover a wide range of issues, our priority has always been to explain events and their future outcomes for a foreign audience. In that sense, it wouldn't be unfair to say 2018 was a relatively calm year for Turkey, especially for the editors of the Daily Sabah, despite a general election, a cross-border operation into Syria, a national switch to an executive presidency for the first time and economic concerns. One should think about earlier years, especially between 2015 and 2017, when Turkey faced serious security threats, terror attacks, a coup attempt and political instability. It was without a doubt a tough period for Turkey, and for a group of young editors who were trying to understand what was going on in their country, concerned about the well-being of their families and loved ones, while doing their best to keep up with objective and fast reporting, the task was not easy. In that sense, I think my colleagues at the Daily Sabah, which will celebrate its fifth anniversary this February, would agree that this year was better than its predecessors.

For the Daily Sabah itself, 2018 was a year of change. Experienced journalists which have played essential roles in the establishment of this brand, our former editor-in-chief Serdar Karagöz and managing editor Nejat Başar, Ankara representative Ali Ünal and Washington D.C. representative Ragıp Soylu have left to pursue their careers elsewhere. Our longtime reader's representative Ibrahim Altay has taken over Mr. Karagöz' helm, while our politics editor Mehmet Çelik, a former member of the Daily Sabah digital team, has taken over for Mr. Başar. Another experienced journalist, Nur Özkan Erbay, joined the Daily Sabah to run the Ankara office. For the digital side, our experienced editors Zeyneb Varol and Meltem Tezir left the team, while we welcomed Can Kazancıoğlu on board. In addition, we had a couple of other editors and correspondents leaving or joining the Daily Sabah's digital and print editions, as well as colleagues who were promoted to new positions. We wish all our former colleagues and new team members a successful career.

For the Turkish media in general, 2018 was a year of changes and challenges. The rise in the price of printing paper, which relies heavily on imports amid the 40 percent loss in Turkish lira against the U.S. dollar, forced some important newspapers to shut down or go entirely digital. Many others were forced to reduce the number of pages in their print editions, while others merged their weekend editions to a single copy. In addition to changes in reader habits and economic challenges, this trend was also the result of Turkish media outlets' heavy reliance on content provided by news agencies, lack of in-depth articles, failure to adopt digital publishing and columns on issues that don't touch the everyday lives of the public. Since its launch, the Daily Sabah has tried to maintain a hybrid newsroom that would help efficiency in costs and produce unique content needed and appreciated by our audience. In that regard, the digital team of the Daily Sabah heavily relies on the content from the print edition, and 2019 will be a key year for Daily Sabah in taking steps to become a pioneering newsroom in Turkish media to achieve a digital newsroom.

Here, before mentioning standout articles that grabbed the attention of our audience, we should mention two categories regularly followed by our visitors. The 'Business' category was the top category in 2018 amongst our visitors, and this was mainly due to the state of the Turkish economy during the year – the slump of the lira, high unemployment and inflation, U.S. sanctions accompanying the tensions in diplomatic relations on one hand, and the government's efforts to curb the negative effects of these developments while trying to carry out structural reforms and establish the economic administration model of the newly-introduced executive presidency on the other. However, all these important developments should not cast a shadow on the efforts of our Business editor Elif Erşen and correspondent Alen Lepan from print, who tried to produce unique and rich content on the Turkish economy supported by visual material along with web-friendly titles. Business remains one of the most well-balanced categories on dailysabah.com in terms of featuring both local and global content, and this was surely appreciated by our readers. The second most-visited category was Turkey, which features a wide range of issues from heart-warming local stories to head-busting investigation and lawsuits, aided by the fact that Daily Sabah is one of the key publications providing an insight into the country. The efforts of our experienced print editor Yusuf Ziya Durmuş, who relentlessly addresses complicated legal processes dragging on several fronts, were also crucial for this category.

As far as 2018 is concerned, the issues followed by our readers the most can be summed up under four different titles: Turkey's June 24 presidential and parliamentary elections, journalist Jamal Khashoggi's murder at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, the rising Islamophobia and xenophobia trend in Europe aided by the rise of the far-right, and the first year of Donald Trump's presidency.

Before assessing the most-read content on our website one by one, I'd like to wish all of our readers a peaceful, healthy and prosperous 2019 on behalf of my esteemed colleagues at dailysabah.com.

Here are the 10 most read articles on dailysabah.com in 2018:

1) Footage shows Saudis burning documents day after Khashoggi's disappearance - Emre Başaran

This article featuring footage initially published by Turkish broadcaster A Haber, a news channel of Daily Sabah's parent Turkuvaz Media Group, claimed the top spot in 2018. The footage, captured in the aftermath of Saudi dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi's brutal murder on Oct. 2, shows officials burning documents at the consulate premises on Oct. 3. It also became available at a time when the murder was making headlines throughout the world, and our web editor Emre Başaran managed to obtain the video right before its publication, quickly sharing it with the Daily Sabah's international audience.

2) Man commits suicide inside Grand Mosque of Mecca next to Kaaba - Sinan Öztürk

This article features a viral, short and low-quality video showing a man's suicide in the Kaaba, the holiest place in Islam, which helped it claim the runner-up spot. However, it also received a fair amount of criticism from our audience for showing the act itself at a holy place and encouraging it.

3) Insulting Prophet Muhammad not 'free speech,' ECtHR rules - Yasemin Sakay

This article reporting a ruling by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), which finalized that insulting Prophet Muhammad cannot be considered within the context of free speech, came at a time when Muslims in Europe were suffering from increasing discriminative acts and attacks.

4) Astronomers find the first and only known galaxy without dark matter - Yasemin Sakay

This astronomy article on the discovery of the first galaxy without dark matter quickly went viral and attracted readers from Reddit.

5) US President Trump tops terrorism as Germans' greatest fear, survey says - Meltem Tezir

Following the surprise outcome of the elections in November 2017, 2018 was the first year of Donald Trump's presidency, which created more complications for the U.S.' allies than its rivals. A survey in Germany, which came at a time when the U.S. and Europe were involved in an undeclared trade war and Trump was stepping up his rhetoric against European allies claiming that they should contribute more to the continent's defense, placed Mr. Trump at the top of the list of Germans' greatest fears.

6) Trump colors US national flag wrong during visit to Ohio children's hospital - Yasemin Sakay

In addition to changes in international politics and internal political strife, the Trump administration also received significant interest thanks to unusual methods of communication, never-ending resignations and subsequent appointments, and of course, gaffes. President Trump's wrong coloring of the U.S. flag was the sixth most-read article on dailysabah.com.

7) 11 killed after private Turkish jet carrying bride and friends from bachelorette party in Dubai crashes in Iran - Zeyneb Varol

This article featuring the tragic plane crash that killed bride-to-be Mina Başaran, the heir of one of Turkey's leading companies, and seven of her friends accompanying her for a bachelorette party in Dubai and three crew members of Başaran's private jet, was one of the most read stories from Turkey in 2018.

8) Calls for France to end xenophobia, Islamophobia as migrant, Muslim players clinch World Cup win - Gabriela Garver

France was not left untouched by the rise of the far-right in Europe in the last decade, with the ultranationalist National Front (FN) positioning itself as the main opposition against conventional center-right and center-left parties. The French victory in July in the 2018 World Cup in Russia with a squad overwhelmingly made up of players with Central African, North African or French overseas backgrounds was an important opportunity to bring up issues of racism and discrimination not only in football but also on the continent.

9) Khashoggi was beaten to death in front of Saudi consul general, then dismembered: sources - Can Kazancıoğlu

This article, published before Saudi authorities had admitted their guilt in the murder of Khashoggi, features some gruesome details regarding the killing that made headlines in 2018.

10) Ship crashes into waterfront mansion in Istanbul's Bosporus after rudder gets stuck - Web Team

In another example showing the significance of visual content in today's media, the documented crash of a ship into a waterfront mansion in Istanbul's Bosporus, one of the most strategic and busiest waterways in the world, became of one the most-read articles in 2018.

Honorable mentions:

1) Khashoggi murder one step closer to resolution with striking new findings - Şeyma Nazlı Gürbüz

This latecomer published on Dec. 29 managed to reach to the brink of the top 10 articles in 2018 despite only three days in publication. Compiled by the print edition's Politics correspondent Şeyma Nazlı Gürbüz, the article summarizes important details on Khashoggi's murder featured in the book "Diplomatic Atrocity: The dark secrets of the Khashoggi murder" written by Ferhat Ünlü, Abdurrahman Şimşek and Nazif Karaman from the Daily Sabah's sister publication the Sabah newspaper and published by Turkuvaz Books on the same day.

2) Old man in tears hugs beloved cat as his house burns down - Meltem Tezir

This article once again proves the power of photographs in media. Albeit a very local story from Turkey's northwestern Bolu province, the plight of 83-year-old Ali Meşe and his cat after a fire burned down their modest house in Jan. 17, 2018 quickly garnered international attention. The photo quickly became a sensation on social media, prompting calls from not only Turkey but from throughout the world to help Meşe and the cat. Captured by Ilhami Çetin, this photograph was recently chosen as the winner of Anadolu Agency's Photos of the Year contest in the 'Life' category.

3) Legendary Turkish photographer Ara Güler loses battle for life at 90 - Emre Başaran

The passing of Turkish-Armenian doyen photographer Ara Güler at the age of 90 was without a doubt an irreplaceable loss for Turkey, Turkish media and photography circles and the international photography scene. Hence, the article reporting his death was among the most-read articles of 2018.

4) Elections webpage & coverage

The Daily Sabah elections webpage for the June 24 presidential and parliamentary elections and our coverage throughout the election day was by far the most detailed English source for the event. Despite being online only for the last five years, the Daily Sabah, in line with Turkey's tumultuous political scene during that period, has covered two presidential and three parliamentary elections in addition to a crucial referendum on the switch to an executive presidency. We will try our best to convey this experience in the 2019 local elections slated for March 31.

Worst mistakes:

At the Daily Sabah, I am happy and proud to say that I am working with a team that cares about fact-based reporting, genuinely dislikes click-baits and carefully evaluates all feedback given by its audience. Having said this, we also make mistakes and the feedback we receive from our audience — how sophisticated or crude it might be — helps us improve ourselves and not repeat these mistakes in the future. Here are two examples of such incidents:

1) Report after Çorlu train crash

On July 24, a train bound from Istanbul's Halkalı station to Edirne's Uzunköprü district derailed in the Çorlu district of northwestern Tekirdağ province, which killed 24 passengers and injured more than 300 others. The incident was no doubt a string of mistakes on behalf of the Turkish State Railways (TCDD) as an institution since the train derailed while passing through tracks on a culvert bent as the earth filling was washed away during heavy rainfall. To make matters worse for the TCDD, such a grave problem on the tracks went unnoticed as the TCDD had been facing a decrease in inspection staff for its network and failed to implement electronic signalization systems. The latter proved right once again months later in the heart of capital Ankara when a high-speed train was involved in a head-on crash with a controller locomotive on Dec. 13, 2018, killing three engineers and six passengers and injuring nearly 50 others. An early investigation into the incident showed that the two vehicles were being operated on commands transmitted to engineers through radio and their cellphones. In both incidents, dailysabah.com tried to inform its audience as fast and objectively as it could.

However, soon after the Çorlu incident, our website featured an article on recent train crashes in Europe. Given its timing and content, and the gravity of the incident, I must admit that the article was unnecessary, rude and was indeed objected by thestaff. It was not surprising that we soon faced the heaviest-ever criticism by our audience and retracted the story. It also pointed at the hazards of the increasing habit of shifting the blame in Turkish media and politics. This case was also thoroughly assessed in the Reader's Corner article titled "Daily Sabah's coverage of train crash sparks criticism."

2) Failure in fact-checking alleged video of Israelis cheering Palestinian deaths in border protests

Mirroring the overall public opinion and political spectrum in Turkey, it would be fair to say that the Daily Sabah is indeed a pro-Palestinian but definitely not an anti-Israeli publication. We support the Palestinian people in their cause for freedom in line with international law, and draw a clear distinction between the people of Israel and their well-being with the country's aggressive policies violating international law and stripping millions of their basic rights, forcing them to live in poverty. We altogether reject anti-Semitism, both in the region as well as in other parts of the world, and we try our best to cover terrorist and far-right attacks targeting Israeli civilians and Jewish people. Our policy is a clear reflection of these values.

Unfortunately, 2018 saw the worst increase in violence in the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis sparked by the ongoing blockade of the Gaza Strip over a decade, and the Trump administration's decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel's capital and move the U.S. embassy there in a blatant violation of international law. Nearly 200 Palestinians were killed and more than 15,000 were injured due to the excessive use of force by the Israeli military to counter the mainly peaceful border protests in Gaza before the eyes of the international community.

During that unfortunate period on April 7, we failed to confirm the authenticity of a video, allegedly showing Israeli civilians cheering as Israeli forces used live fire on Palestinian protesters, before publishing it. This mistake came at a time when another video of Israeli soldiers cheering the shooting of a Palestinian man went viral and prompted a probe by the Israeli military. Our readers and staff later warned us that the video was not related to the protests, but before we retracted the story, it became one of the top-read articles on our website.

Turkish press: CHP’s candidate to use ‘universal rhetoric’ to appeal to Kurdish voters

Ekrem İmamoğlu praised Zakarya Mildanoğlu, an Armenian-Turkish architect, as being among one of the key figures who shaped his perspective on cities. “It is thanks to him that I started walking with my head up, looking at buildings and becoming curious about the fate of buildings from the past,” İmamoğlu, the main opposition party’s mayoral candidate for Istanbul Municipality, has said.

He also mentioned Halil İbrahim Şanlı, another architect with whom he worked together. Şanlı, whose motto is “an architect is not one who designs a house but a lifestyle,” has left a mark on him, too.

İmamoğlu comes from the construction sector, a field the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has nearly come to identify with in the course of the past two decades. Born in Trabzon, he comes from the Black Sea region, like the founder of the ruling party and current President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

The main opposition Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) candidate is the son of a businessman who worked in the 1980’s as the provincial head of ANAP, a liberal right-wing party. As a pious student praying five times a day and, just like Erdoğan, a fan of football, he came to Istanbul with his family in the mid 1980s.

The similarities with Erdoğan probably end there. Thanks to his two years in university in North Cyprus, he started leaning towards social democracy. His acquaintance with Beylikdüzü, of which he is currently the mayor, started in 1990 as his job took him to this newly developing neighborhood near the western part of the city. At that time Beylikdüzü’s population was around 2,000-3,000. Currently, the population is around 350,000. He says he witnessed first-hand the making of a big province. In 2008 he became the head of the CHP’s provincial branch in Beylikdüzü, and after five years, won the municipality back from the AK Party in the 2014 local elections.

His plans were to run again from Beylikdüzü and then put forth his candidacy for Istanbul in 2024. “That appeared to me as the right process. But Turkish politics has a different rhythm,” he yesterday told a group of journalists who were convinced that he was obliged to half-heartedly accept the CHP leader’s proposal to run for Istanbul — a proposal which came rather late in the race. The time factor is crucial since he is not known to millions in Istanbul and will be running against Binali Yıldırım, the former prime minister and the most known political figure in Turkey after Erdoğan.

He relies on the success story he believes he has written in Beylikdüzü. The province had six square meters of green area per person; it now has 9.5 square meters per person and he has plans to increase it to 16.5 by 2030. It is known as the greenest province in Istanbul.

While the AK Party has been running on a ticket of “big infrastructure projects,” İmamoğlusaid he was not fond of this concept. He rather talked about the need to address 1.17 million children aged between 0 and 4. “Nearly 70 percent of them are from poor families. Add to that the children between 4 to 9, that makes up 2.5 million. We will serve their needs,” he said. One way will be to open daycare centers and another will be to take their mothers out from their houses since they are lacking any skills because they live confined in their houses.

In this sense İmamoğlu looks set to prioritize underprivileged women and children as their education and future remain a concerning preoccupation to many voters. This might appear odd for a local election agenda. “In the polls traffic/transportation appears to be number one problem of the voters. But when they go home, their daily concerns takes priority,” said İmamoğlu.

His team is also aware that ideology and identity politics have also become defining factors of the local elections. Personalities and projects which factored in more during localelections started to matter less especially during the last decade which has seen a tremendous rise in polarization in the society.

The CHP has been losing to the AKP with a small margin in the big cities. While it will remain highly difficult to attract voters from the AKP and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), İmamoğlu admitted that Kurdish voters will play a defining role. But as seen in the past, many CHP members believe messages directly targeting Kurdish votes can scare away potential votes from conservative swing voters, especially as the ruling party has often accused the opposition party of siding with “terrorists.”

İmamoğlu said he will not address any group by its ethnic affiliation. “I will use a universal language,” said İmamoğlu, adding that Kurdish voters are highly politicized and difficult to manipulate.

İmamoğlu trusts his as well as the CHP’s local organizations door-to-door campaign. An active use of social media will be the two communication strategies to compensate for their weak presence in traditional mainstream media, where the ruling party enjoys an overwhelming advantage.

Meeting with journalists at the office of Gülseren Onanç, a female nominee who wants to run for Beşiktaş municipality, İmamoğlu said he wants to work with as many women as possible if elected.

Ekrem İmamoğlu, Turkey elections 2019, local polls

Calendar of Events – 01/3/2019

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

                =========================================
What:           "The Armenian Community of Ethiopia - Past and Present"
                a lecture is given by Asbed Pogarian
When:           Jan 20 2019 1pm
                Following Church Divine Liturgy which starts at 10:30am
Where:          Prelacy's Hall, 6252 Honolulu Ave., La Crescenta, CA
Misc:           Individual Armenians have settled in Ethiopia as traders and
                advisors, but it was only in the late 1800s and early 1900
                that a community was formed.
                In 1924, the future Emperor Haile Selassie "adopted" 40
                orphans from the Armenian orphanage in Jerusalem and brought
                them to Ethiopia, making them his official Imperial Marching
                Band. Their leader, Kevork Nalbandian, composed the national
                anthem of Ethiopia in 1930, which played until the Communist
                Revolution of 1974, when it was discontinued.
                Asbed Pogarian is a third generation Ethiopian-Armenian. His
                paternal grandfather arrived in Ethiopia in 1899 after
                surviving the Hamidian massacres of 1895-96. Both his parents
                were born in Addis Ababa. He left Ethiopia in 1975 and
                attended the Melkonian Educational Institute in Cyprus. In
                1985, he spent a year in Yerevan researching the relationship
                between Ethiopians and Armenians throughout history. Last
                January, after an absence of 43 years, he returned to Ethiopia
                for the first time and documented his travel in the film, Dear
                Ethiopia: A Love Letter.
                The event is free to the public. There will be a reception
                with Sample of Ethiopian Food.
Online Contact: [email protected]
Tel:            818-244-9639

                =========================================
What:           The Zeytun Gospels "Missing Pages: The Modern Life of a
                Medieval Manuscript from Genocide to Justice"
                a lecture is given by Prof. Heghnar Zeitlian
When:           Feb 24 2019 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:           In 2010, the world's wealthiest art institution, the J. Paul
                Getty Museum, found itself confronted by a century-old
                genocide. The Armenian Church was suing for the return of
                eight pages from the Zeytun Gospels, a manuscript illuminated
                by the greatest medieval Armenian artist, Toros Roslin.
                The Missing Pages is the biography of a manuscript that is at
                once art, sacred object, and cultural heritage. Its tale
                mirrors the story of its scattered community as Armenians have
                struggled to redefine themselves after genocide and in the
                absence of a homeland. Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh follows in
                the manuscript's footsteps through seven centuries, from
                medieval Armenia to the killing fields of 1915 Anatolia, the
                refugee camps of Aleppo, Ellis Island, and Soviet Armenia, and
                ultimately to a Los Angeles courtroom.
                Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh is Professor of Art History at the
                University of California, Davis. She is the award-winning
                author of The Image of an Ottoman City: Architecture in Aleppo
                (2004). Her writing has also appeared in the Huffington Post
                and the Los Angeles Times. As a board member of the US
                nonprofit Project 2015, she helped organize the historic
                Armenian Genocide Centennial Commemorations in Istanbul where
                she also delivered a speech in Armenian and Turkish
                The event is free to the public.
Online Contact: [email protected]
Tel:            818-244-9639

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

Armenian News's calendar of events is collected and updated mostly from
announcements posted on this list, and submissions to [email protected].

To submit, send to Armenian [email protected], and please note the following
important points:

a) Armenian News's administrators have final say on what may be included in
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b) Posting time will is on Thursdays, 06:00 US Pacific time, to squeeze in
        a final reminder before weekend activities kick in.
c) Calendar items are short, functional, and edited to fit a template.
d) There is no guarantee or promise that an item will be published on time.
e) Calendar information is believed to be from reliable sources. However,
        no responsibility by the List's Administation or by USC is assumed
        for inaccuracies and there is no guarantee that the information is
        up-to-date.
f) No commercial events will be accepted.
        (Dinners, dances, forget it. This is not an ad-space.)
g) Armenian News is a non-commercial, non-partisan, pan-Armenian outlet.


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Los Angeles, CA     / USA

Senate Confirms by Voice Vote Ambassadorial Nominees for Armenia and Azerbaijan

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Date: January 3, 2019

Contact: Danielle Saroyan

Telephone: (202) 393-3434

Web: www.aaainc.org

 

SENATE CONFIRMS BY VOICE
VOTE AMBASSADORIAL NOMINEES FOR ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN

 

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Ranking Member Robert Menendez Reiterates
Key Concerns

 

WASHINGTON,
D.C.
– Yesterday, the United States Senate confirmed by a voice vote
Ambassadorial nominees Lynne M. Tracy and Earle D. Litzenberger to represent
the United States in Armenia and Azerbaijan, respectively, reported the
Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly).

 

Last month, during the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee (SFRC) business meeting on the nomination, Ranking Member Robert
Menendez (D-NJ) explained his support for both candidates, as well as the
importance of strong U.S.-Armenia relations.

 

"Armenia and the Caucasus region will continue
to be vital to regional and global security. According to the OSCE, Armenia's
elections over the weekend met international standards. I look forward to
supporting the government's efforts to build strong democratic institutions, a
vibrant Armenian economy, and oppose any efforts to violate Armenia's sovereignty,"
Ranking Member Menendez said.

 

During Ambassador-designate Tracy's nomination
hearing she promised to support Armenia's "remarkable" democratic
reforms. As to questions at the hearing by SFRC Ranking Member Menendez and
Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) on the Armenian Genocide, she agreed that "1.5
million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their death in the
final years of the Ottoman Empire" in 1915, but fell short of properly
categorizing the killings as a genocide.

 

"Throughout my time in the Senate, I have
advocated for an honest accounting of the Armenian genocide.  I believe we have a moral imperative to
recognize the atrocities that were committed against the Armenian people. Ms.
Tracy's experience in Russia and Central Asia positions her to help navigate
U.S. policy in this critical time. I support this nomination, but expect to
work closely with Ms. Tracy on how she will encourage an honest acknowledgement
of the Armenian Genocide, support Armenia's ongoing efforts to ensure accountable,
citizen-responsive governance, and support efforts to reach a peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict," he added.

 

During the SFRC business meeting, Senator Menendez
also noted the importance of safety in Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), and his
expectations for the U.S. Ambassador selected to be the representative in
Azerbaijan.

 

"I support Mr. Litzenberger's nomination and
expect to have close and continuing dialogue with him on how he will urge the
Azeris to step back from any threatening behavior that could disrupt the line
of contact in Nagorno Karabakh, support respect for human rights, and support
efforts to reach a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict,"
Senator Menendez said.

 

The hearing for Ambassador-designate Litzenberger
occurred in October, wherein he restated the U.S. position condemning violence
along the line of contact, which undermines the peace process and violates the
1994 cease-fire agreement.

 

"We appreciate the important issues raised by
Senators Robert Menendez and Ed Markey during the confirmation process.  We look forward to working with the new
Congress to ensure robust assistance to further Armenia's democratic
development," Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny said.

 

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America
is the largest Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public
understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a non-partisan,
501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

 

###

 

NR#
2019-001

 

Available
online:  
https://armenian-assembly.org/2019/01/03/senate-confirms-by-voice-vote-ambassadorial-nominees-for-armenia-and-azerbaijan/

 

Photo
Caption: Ambassador-designates Lynne M. Tracy (left) and Earle D. Litzenberger
(right)



JPEG image

Book Review: The extraordinary life of Calouste Gulbenkian

The Economist, UK
Jan 3 2019
 
 
The extraordinary life of Calouste Gulbenkian
 
War and ethnic hatred were a distraction from the real business of oil
 
 Print edition | Books and arts
 
Jan 3rd 2019
 
Mr Five Per Cent. By Jonathan Conlin. Profile Books. 416 pages; £25.
 
The end of the Ottoman era is generally described in one of two ways. In the first, a moribund empire that had oppressed its Christian subjects began to annihilate them. In the other version, the Christians colluded with foreigners to dismember an Islamic realm in which they had lived quite safely. The life of Calouste Gulbenkian, a tycoon and philanthropist who helped to shape today’s oil industry, offers a nuanced third perspective.
 
An Armenian with deep roots in central Anatolia, Gulbenkian emerged from the heart of the Ottoman Christian world. As Jonathan Conlin shows in his meticulous biography, he epitomised one of the striking features of late Ottoman history: a final burst of economic expansion that was made possible by the capital and expertise of prominent Christians, from Greek bankers to globe-trotting Armenian traders. An easy interlocutor with European grandees, he also had an insider’s understanding of the region then called the Near East. His chameleonic empathy made him a superb broker of many-sided deals that seemed to satisfy all parties, including himself.
 
Gulbenkian was born in 1869 to a father with growing oil interests in the Caucasus and Mesopotamia, attending French lycées and King’s College London. After Ottoman Armenians had suffered a wave of killing, he returned to London in 1897; soon he was building connections in the world of finance. In 1907 he helped to bring together the two companies that formed Royal Dutch Shell.
 
But he plunged back into Ottoman affairs when a window opened to serve the empire. Right up to 1914, he advised the Young Turks who had seized the reins of Ottoman power as they pushed back against their European economic overlords, artfully playing one against another. Working closely with Cavid, the finance minister, Gulbenkian founded both a new National Bank of Turkey and the Turkish Petroleum Company (tpc), which had a careful balance of Western shareholders.
 
The window soon snapped shut. Starting in 1915, as this book somewhat laconically notes, “between a third and a half of the world’s Armenians died on forced marches,” from “exhaustion, starvation or disease” or by the bullets of Ottoman soldiers and their Kurdish accomplices. Although Gulbenkian drafted a will which provided for the relief of Armenian orphans, his people’s tragedy does not seem to have been a preoccupation at that time; instead he was busy managing a somewhat turbulent relationship with Henri Deterding, a fellow oil magnate. He might easily have played a part in lobbying for an Armenian homeland after the Ottoman defeat, but he kept aloof.
 
The first world war put an end to Turkish control over the oilfields of present-day Iraq, but not to the tpc. In 1928 the company—whose many shareholders included Gulbenkian himself—struck a deal to extract those deposits. His 5% stake made him fabulously wealthy, and a great collector of art at his Parisian residence, though Mr Conlin presents him as a man driven more by the thrill of commerce itself than by Mammon.
 
During the second world war Gulbenkian was an envoy of the Iranian government to the collaborationist French regime, and was duly proclaimed an enemy alien by Britain. But his establishment friends chimed in to see that he was forgiven after 1945, although he lived the rest of his life in Lisbon (where he endowed a well-known philanthropic foundation). It might almost be said that Gulbenkian treated outbreaks of ethnic hatred and war as a kind of nuisance to be pragmatically overcome while building commercial alliances and orchestrating oil supplies.
 
As well as compellingly tracing his professional dealings, Mr Conlin’s book evokes Gulbenkian’s dysfunctional family. Among the memorable revelations is that in middle age he was told by an Armenian doctor to have sex with multiple young women, advice that was followed and apparently tolerated by his long-suffering wife. Yet for all the rich detail, quite what he made of the violent collapse of the empire in which he was born remains something of a mystery.
 
This article appeared in the Books and arts section of the print edition under the headline "Fire sales"

Senate confirms Trump’s nominee to serve as U.S. ambassador to Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 3 2019
Politics 19:00 03/01/2019 Armenia

The United States Senate has confirmed President Donald Trump's nominee Lynne Tracy to serve as the country’s ambassador to Armenia, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) said on Facebook.

“I support this nomination, but expect to work closely with Ms. Tracy on how she will encourage an honest acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide,” ANCA quoted Senator Bob Menendez as saying.

In a statement before the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs earlier in December, Lynne Tracy stressed the key purpose of the U.S. policies in Armenia is to strengthen the country’s independent statehood.

“The overall goal of our Armenia policy remains an independent, democratic, and prosperous Armenia, at peace with its neighbors. Situated astride a geographic and cultural crossroads, Armenia has always balanced competing interests, and we continue to affirm our commitment to a sovereign Armenia, free to choose its own partners,” she said.

U.S. ambassadors are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Tracy, who has 24 years of experience in public administration, earlier served as Senior Advisor for Russia Affairs at the U.S. Department of State. 

Situation stable on Artsakh frontline during holidays, top official says

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 3 2019
Politics 17:13 03/01/2019 NKR

The situation on the Artsakh-Azerbaijan Line of Contact is generally stable during the New Year holidays, David Babayan, a senior Artsakh official, told Panorama.am.

He says however some minor ceasefire breaches are reported on these days.

“Naturally, those violations have never fully stopped, but are relatively fewer. In general, the situation is stable,” the official said.

According to Babayan, who heads the Central Information Department of the Artsakh presidential office, the frontline situation is calmer against the same period last year.

He says the servicemen are in an alternative mood during the New Year celebrations. “They are, of course, in a festive mood, meantime maintaining strong vigilance. Naturally, vigilance should be high every day, every hour, every minute, but it doubles and triples during holidays,” he said.

“As a matter of fact, the adversary always makes violations during festivities, national and religious holidays, even during international holidays, further boosting its terrorist policies,” the official explained. 

Artsakh reports around 10,000 Azerbaijani ceasefire violations in 2018

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 3 2019

The situation on the Line of Contact between Artsakh and Azerbaijan was relatively stable over the past year, the Artsakh Defense Ministry said in a statement, summing up the frontline developments in 2018.

According to the statement, as a result of the large-scale engineering and border strengthening measures as well as the installation of video surveillance devices along the contact line, the possibility of sabotage infiltration attempts by Azerbaijan has almost completely disappeared. 

“The only exception was the January 25 incident, when the Defense Army frontline units detected and thwarted an Azerbaijani infiltration attempt at a military outpost in the southeastern section of the contact line, near Kuropatkino village,” the ministry said. “The adversary didn’t take similar steps throughout the year.”

The relative calm was further enhanced after the September 28 meeting of Armenia’s Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev in Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, on the sidelines of the CIS heads of state summit, when the parties agreed on reducing contact line tensions and establishing operational communication.

“Thus, the Azerbaijani military breached the ceasefire on the contact line applying, besides firearms, various types of grenade launchers from March to August, whereas they only applied firearms during the period that followed,” the statement says.

Overall, Azerbaijan violated the ceasefire on the contact line nearly 10,000 times in 2018, firing more than 97,000 shots towards the Armenian defense positions from firearms of different calibers and various types of grenade launchers (25 shots).

“In 2018, the Defense Army’s frontline troops confidently controlled the situation along the entire contact line and fulfilled their mission with honor, ensuring the inviolability of the Artsakh borders and maintaining peace for the people,” the statement concludes. 

FINCA Impact Finance subsidiary in Armenia issues $2.8 million bond offering

PRNewswire (press release)
Jan 3 2019


Bond issuance in local currency to support on-lending to small businesses


News provided by

FINCA Impact Finance

Jan 03, 2019, 09:00 ET

YEREVAN, Armenia and WASHINGTON, Jan. 3, 2019 /PRNewswire/ – FINCA Armenia announced the issuance of AMD 1.4 billion (USD 2.8 million) in nominal, non-documentary coupon bonds, further diversifying its funding base. Each three-year coupon bond has a nominal value of AMD 10,000 and a semi-annual coupon rate of 10.5%. The issuance is the first of three tranches the institution plans to issue over the next year, with a total value of USD 10 million.

The new issuance was listed on the NASDAQ OMX Armenia secondary list of bonds (Bbond). As in previous issuances by FINCA Armenia on the NASDAQ OMX, the bond offering was oversubscribed, with the purchasers being local banks, pension funds and individual investors. The funding will support on-lending to small businesses throughout the country.

FINCA Armenia, one of 20 banks and microfinance institutions that make up the FINCA Impact Finance (FIF) network, has been operating since 1999 and is one of the country's leading microfinance institutions. It serves more than 35,000 clients through both traditional and branchless banking channels, including online banking. The issuance is the third by the FIF subsidiary in the past two years, following the issuance of tranches worth USD 4 million and AMD 1.5 billion, respectively, in 2017.

"The success of this bond offering is a testament to FINCA Impact Finance having earned the confidence of local investors in the markets where we operate," said Roman Hingorani, FIF CFO. "We are shifting from a heavy reliance on international borrowing to more local funding sources. This helps mitigate foreign exchange and geographic risks and strengthens our relationships with local investors."

FIF's bond offerings are attracting growing interest from the investment community, including issuances by subsidiaries in Pakistan and Nicaragua. FIF, which provides responsible finance to low-income people in 20 countries, is diversifying its sources of funding and using the proceeds from bond issuances to broaden its offering of financial products and services.

About FINCA Impact Finance

FINCA Impact Finance is a network of 20 microfinance institutions and banks that provides socially responsible financial services to enable low-income individuals and communities to invest in their futures. For more information, visit www.FINCAImpact.com and follow on Twitter @Fincaimpact.

SOURCE FINCA Impact Finance

http://www.fincaimpact.com