White House Green Lights Turkey Attack on Kurds in Syria

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with President Donal Trump

WASHINGTON (Associated Press)— The White House said Sunday that U.S. forces in northeast Syria will move aside and clear the way for an expected Turkish assault, essentially abandoning Kurdish fighters who fought alongside American forces in the yearslong battle to defeat Islamic State militants.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has threatened for months to launch the military operation across the border. He views the Kurdish forces as a threat to his country. Republicans and Democrats have warned that allowing the Turkish attack could lead to a massacre of the Kurds and send a troubling message to American allies across the globe.

U.S. troops “will not support or be involved in the operation” and “will no longer be in the immediate area,” in northern Syria, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham said in an unusual late-Sunday statement that was silent on the fate of the Kurds. There are about 1,000 U.S. troops in northern Syria, and a senior U.S. official said they will pull back from the area — and potentially depart the country entirely should widespread fighting break out between Turkish and Kurdish forces.

The announcement followed a call between President Donald Trump and Erdogan, the White House said.

The decision is a stark illustration of Trump’s focus on ending American overseas entanglements — one of his key campaign promises. But his goal of swift withdrawals in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan have been stymied by concerns from U.S. officials and American allies about the dangerous voids that would remain. As he faces an impeachment inquiry at home, Trump has appeared more focused on making good on his political pledges, even at the risk of sending a troubling signal to American allies abroad.

Key Republican leaders in Congress appeared taken aback by the move.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., said Monday in an appearance on “Fox & Friends” that he had not spoken with Trump about the decision and had concerns.

“I want to make sure we keep our word for those who fight with us and help us,” he said, adding that, “If you make a commitment and somebody is fighting with you. America should keep their word.”

One of the show’s hosts, Brian Kilmeade, asked McCarthy to try to intervene and “call the president before it’s too late.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., one of Trump’s most vocal backers, also weighed in via tweet, saying that, “If press reports are accurate this is a disaster in the making.”

Trump, meanwhile, tweeted a lengthy defense Monday morning, writing in all-caps that, “WE WILL FIGHT WHERE IT IS TO OUR BENEFIT, AND ONLY FIGHT TO WIN.”

In December, Trump announced he was withdrawing American troops from Syria but was met with widespread condemnation for abandoning Kurdish allies to the Turkish assault. The announcement prompted the resignation in protest of then-Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, and a coordinated effort by then-national security adviser John Bolton to try to protect the Kurds.

Since January, U.S. officials have tried to broker the creation of a “safe zone” in northern Syria to provide a security buffer between the Turkish military and Kurdish forces, but Turkey has repeatedly objected to its slow implementation.

The White House announcement Sunday came a day after Erdogan offered the strongest warning yet of a unilateral military operation into northeastern Syria, as the Turkish military has been dispatching units and defense equipment to its border with the area.

In Phone Conversation, Pashinyan and Putin Discuss Relations

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Vladimir Putin of Russia

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Vladimir Putin of Russia on Monday held a phone conversation during which Pashinyan reportedly extended birthday greetings to the Russian leader and discussed implementation of agreements reached last week during the Eurasian Economic Union summit in Yerevan.

Pashinyan, who had already extended birthday wishes to Putin, publicized through his press office said he was happy to host Putin in Armenia, adding that, “The agreements reached during our meeting in Yerevan came to reaffirm the high level of mutual understanding and friendship inherent in the allied relations between our two countries and peoples.”

He also expressed gratitude for the invitation to pay an official visit to Russia.

“I am confident that through joint efforts, we will find new ways of further strengthening the strategic partnership between our countries in line with modern standards and in response to the changes taking place in the world,” added Pashinyan.

Pashinyan and Putin met last week on the margins of the EEU summit and then later that day at Zvartnots Airport as Putin was departing Armenia. Similarly, Pashinyan, who took to Facebook to announce the second—90-minute meeting—hailed the positive course of Moscow-Yerevan ties.

168: The Union of Journalists of Armenia strictly condemns today’s attack on “Heyeli” Press Club

Category
Society

The Union of Journalists of Armenia (UJA) strictly condemns today’s attack on “Hayeli” Press Club, assessing the occurrence as trespassing against freedom of _expression_.
Similar activities are a result of the atmosphere, rhetoric, hate speech, existing in our country for a lasting period, against press, media workers and freedom of _expression_.
The occurrence is a logical after-effect of speeches with impermissible content addressed to media outlets and journalists from time to time by country’s leadership, different representatives of political powers.

The Union of Journalists of Armenia (UJA) demands from the law enforcement to urgently reflect to the occurrence and undertake steps toward punishing the guilty, also ensure the security of the media outlet employees.

Union of Journalists of Armenia (UJA)




168: Armenian PM’s spouse, First Lady of Belize visit Hematology Center in Yerevan (photos)

Category
Society

Anna Hakobyan, spouse of the Armenian Prime Minister, Chairwoman of the Board of Trustees of My Step and City of Smile charitable foundations, and the First Lady of Belize Kim Simplis Barrow, who is in Armenia on the sidelines of the 23rd World Congress on Information Technology (WCIT), visited on October 7 the Hematology Center after Prof. R. Yolyan.

Реклама 21

Director of the Center Samvel Danielyan and executive director of the City of Smile charity foundation Ester Demirchyan accompanied Mrs. Anna Hakobyan and Mrs. Kim Simplis Barrow. The two ladies toured the center, talked to the children suffering cancer and their parents.

16-year-old Astghik Loretsyan from Gyumri handed over his work made of gobelin to Mrs. Kim Simplis Barrow. The child has been treated in the Hematology Center by the support of the City of Smile foundation.

After the tour the two ladies introduced the activities of the foundations led by them. Kim Simplis Barrow invited Anna Hakobyan to visit Belize.

Kim Simplis Barrow is one of the most influential women in Central America, is an advocate of protecting the rights of children and women. She personally overcame cancer and has initiated different global programs for the treatment of children suffering cancer. She is also the founder of the Lifeline Foundation of Belize.

“City of Smile” Foundation was created to support people with oncological and hematological diseases. Its mission is to stand by their side and help them and their families in their challenging journey of conquering cancer.

https://en.168.am/2019/10/08/34592.html?fbclid=IwAR2lrzof6Q_hs6FwysknLdReeqJuS3GdBhTrO1PCLv77Epm08mO72HnNoc4

168: PM sacks chief advisor Valery Osipyan

Category
Politics

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has sacked his chief advisor Valery Osipyan.

The decision on relieving Osipyan posted online at e-gov.am did not indicate a reason for the dismissal.

Osipyan was Police Chief of Armenia from May 2018 until September 2019.

He was fired on September 18th, and on the same day was appointed Chief Advisor to the Prime Minister.

The California Courier Online, October 10, 2019

The California Courier Online, October 10, 2019

1 -        Jerusalem Armenian Patriarchate’s Lawsuit
            Advances Through Turkish Courts
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2-         Governor Newsom Signs Turkish Divestment Bonds Act into Law
3 -        CSUN Receives $2.1M Anonymous Gift to Support Armenian Studies
4-         Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan Addresses UN General Assembly
5-         Sculptor Arto Chakmakjian Passes Away
6-         Bob Jones University Honors Prof. Ed Panosian, Commemorates Genocide

*****************************************
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1 -        Jerusalem Armenian Patriarchate’s Lawsuit
            Advances Through Turkish Courts
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

While the lawsuit filed by the Catholicosate of Cilicia based in
Antelias, Lebanon, for the recovery of its former headquarters in Sis,
Turkey, has received wide publicity, another just as important lawsuit
against Turkey, is hardly known by the Armenian and international
community.

This relatively unknown lawsuit was filed by the Armenian Patriarchate
of Jerusalem seven years ago. During the last few years, the only news
published by an Armenian newspaper in Istanbul has been about the
various visits of Jerusalem Patriarch Nourhan Manougian to Turkey
regarding claims filed for the Patriarchate’s properties in that
country. There have been no announcements by the Jerusalem
Patriarchate and no interviews published in any Armenian media on this
important lawsuit.

The first major news was published by the Turkish newspaper Hurriyet
on October 2, 2019, regarding the Jerusalem Patriarchate’s lawsuit in
Turkey. Hurriyet reported that the Constitutional Court (the highest
court in Turkey) ruled on September 12, 2019, that the lower Turkish
court had violated the rights of the Armenian Patriarchate by denying
proper access to the court to pursue its lawsuit (Article 36 of the
Constitution). The Constitutional Court stated that the lower court
had not sufficiently investigated the claims of the Armenian lawsuit.

The Armenian Apostolic See of St. James in Jerusalem had filed a
lawsuit in an Ankara court on August 26, 2016, seeking the recovery of
its properties in Turkey. The Turkish documents refer to the St. James
Congregation of the Jerusalem Patriarchate as Mar Yakoub which is the
Turkish translation of Saint James or Sourp Hagop. The two different
names had caused confusion in the court as to the true identity of the
ownership of these properties.

The Constitutional Court sent the lawsuit back to the Ankara court
demanding that the lower court review the matter by conducting further
investigations. If the lower court reconsiders its earlier rejection,
it would open the door for the pursuit of the lawsuit through the
Turkish court system.

I had the honor of speaking by telephone with Patriarch Nourhan
Manougian last week regarding the status of the lawsuit. To my
knowledge, this was the first interview that his Eminence has granted
to a member of the media on this subject. He informed me that the
Armenian Patriarchate in Jerusalem owned around 1,200 properties in
Istanbul alone. The Patriarchate also owned dozens of other properties
throughout Turkey which were confiscated by the government during the
period of the Armenian Genocide in 1915. Patriarch Manougian mentioned
that a very large and valuable property owned by the Jerusalem
Patriarchate in Yalova, Turkey, was sold by a Turkish-Armenian in the
1950s to a Turk and then fled to the United States. The Patriarch said
he is interested in filing a lawsuit against the heirs of that
Turkish-Armenian.

On August 7, 1973, the Turkish General Directorate of Foundations
initially included the Jerusalem properties on its list. When the
decision was made to exclude these properties from the General
Directorate of Foundations, the Jerusalem Patriarchate filed a lawsuit
on July, 19, 2012. However, the Turkish court dismissed the lawsuit.
Even though the Patriarchate won the appeal, the court rejected the
decision.

The Constitutional Court stated that at this point there was no need
to examine the right of ownership of the properties claimed by the
Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem.

The Constitutional Court further ruled that “before the documents and
records, particularly the administrative examinations of the legal
matter are presented to the court, it should have been possible to
clarify if there was a second Foundation or not. Without clarifying
all these issues and without realizing all these necessary
examinations, the rejection of the lawsuit has caused a great
inconvenience to the applicant [the Patriarchate], and the
interference in its right to apply to the court has been
disproportionate. With this rejection, the 36th Article of the
Constitutional Court is violated—defending one’s rights through
trial.”

This is a critical lawsuit not only for the Armenian Patriarchate of
Jerusalem but also for the entire Armenian nation. The sheer number of
the 1,200 properties demanded by the lawsuit makes it highly valuable,
particularly given their location in Istanbul, the most prominent
Turkish city.

While it is too early to speculate about the final outcome of this
lawsuit, it is probable that should the Patriarchate regain the
possession of some, if not all, of the 1,200 properties, the Turkish
government may not allow the sale of these properties and the taking
of the income out of Turkey, permitting only the use of the properties
or their lease to others. The generated income could then be used to
support the Armenian schools and churches in Turkey.

However, should the lower court and the Constitutional Court rule
against the Armenian Patriarchate, it can then file a lawsuit in the
European Court of Human Rights.

The Catholicosate of Cilicia is in the process of following the same
scheme, after its lawsuit with the European Court of Human Rights was
rejected because it had gone directly to the Constitutional Court of
Turkey, sidestepping the lower Turkish court. The Catholicosate is now
refiling its lawsuit with the lower court in Turkey.

The decision of the Turkish courts on these two lawsuits, followed by
the European Court of Human Rights, if necessary, will reshape the
agenda of the legal pursuit of the Armenian demands from Turkey,
beyond its simple recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

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2-         Governor Newsom Signs Turkish Divestment Bonds Act into Law

SACRAMENTO—Governor Gavin Newsom on Thursday signed the Divestment
from Turkish Bonds Act, into law.

“California stands on the side of justice and remembers the 1.5
million souls lost during the Armenian Genocide,” stated Governor
Gavin Newsom. “Today and every day, let us recommit ourselves to
making certain that we never forget and that we always speak out
against hatred and atrocities anywhere they occur. I am proud to stand
with friends and sign AB 1320 into law.”

“California, the 5th largest economy in the world, just told Turkey to
end its deceitful campaign of genocide denial,” stated Assemblymember
Adrin Nazarian. “I want to thank my colleagues, Governor Newsom, and
all those who have fought with me on this long path to recognizing the
1.5 million Armenian souls lost to genocide.”

“This is a significant victory for the Armenian Cause after a long and
hard-fought battle, but the war is not over by any means. We are
exceedingly grateful to Governor Gavin Newsom for remaining steadfast
in his commitment for justice for the Armenian Cause by keeping his
promise to sign the Divest Turkey bill into law once he assumed office
after publicly voicing his support during his term as Lt. Governor and
after our meeting with him in August,” said Armenian National
Committee of America-Western Region chairperson Nora Hovsepian, Esq.

“The persistence and perseverance of Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian and
the unflinching support of his colleagues in the State Assembly and
State Senate in working with us to advance this agenda have been
immeasurable, and we greatly appreciate the hard work it took to
achieve this result,” added Hovspeian.

“After this movement was initiated by the Armenian Youth Federation
and the All-Armenian Students’ Association on college campuses
throughout California, the ANCA-WR worked hard to bring it to the
legislative floor. This was truly a team effort, and the result speaks
for itself. We will continue to spread the message of Divest Turkey to
other entities, now being able to use this newly-enacted law as an
example of how the State can align its human rights policies with its
fiscal policies.” explained Hovsepian.

California has a long history of divesting from countries that violate
human rights, such as South Africa (apartheid policy), Sudan (Darfur
genocide), and Iran (international terrorism, human rights
violations). Threatening to divest from Turkish bonds over its denial
of the Armenian Genocide would end the continued funding of a campaign
of genocide denial. This bill sends a strong message internationally
that California demands justice for the murder of 1.5 million
Armenians.

AB 1320 prohibits the boards of the California Public Retirement
System (CalPERS) and California State Teachers’ Retirement System
(CalSTRS) from making additional or new investments, or renewing
existing investments issued or owned by the government of Turkey after
federal sanctions are imposed on Turkey.

The boards shall liquidate investments only upon action taken by the
federal government. More specifically, CalPERS and CalSTRS must
liquidate any of the investments described above within eighteen
months of the passage of federal sanctions on Turkey.

This bill also requires the boards of CalPERS and CalSTRS to submit
reports to the Legislature and the Governor, within a year of when the
federal government issues sanctions against Turkey. The report will
detail a list of investments that they have already liquidated and a
list of investments that potentially can be liquidated. CalPERS,
estimated that the exposure to the fund from Turkish investment
vehicles ranges between $77 million up to $350 million as of December
31, 2018.

From its July analysis, CalSTRS estimates the holdings of debt
securities issued by the government of Turkey is approximately $3.2
million. Global equities and currency investments subject to possible
divestment have a potential combined market value of up to $8.3
million.

“I want to thank the Armenian Assembly, the Armenian National
Committee of America – Western Region, Armenian Youth Federation and
Armenian Student Associations throughout the UC and Cal State system
and all the other college campuses for helping advocate for AB 1320,”
stated Assemblymember Nazarian.

California is home to the largest Armenian-American population in the
United States and one of the largest Armenian Diaspora communities in
the world. Annually, the Los Angeles Armenian Diaspora organizes a
march and protest on April 24th, to the Turkish Consulate to condemn
Turkey’s denial of their history of human rights violations and
targeted murder of the Armenian people in 1915. AB 1320 sets precedent
that we will not support Turkey, as it continues to savagely violate
human rights today as it did over a century ago.

Assemblymember Nazarian added: “I am not finished fighting for justice
and reparations. My next fight is federal recognition of the Armenian
Genocide.”

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3 -        CSUN Receives $2.1M Anonymous Gift to Support Armenian Studies

California State University, Northridge has received an anonymous $2.1
million gift to support its Armenian Studies Program and special
collection holdings.

The gift establishes an endowed directorship in Armenian Studies in
the Department of Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures in
CSUN’s College of Humanities, as well as supports the efforts of the
special collections and archives unit of the Oviatt Library to
maintain the archives and artifacts of the collection accompanying the
generous contribution.

“While the donor chooses to remain anonymous, the impact of a generous
gift like this will not be unnoticed,” said CSUN President Dianne F.
Harrison. “The gift will touch so many lives. CSUN educates more
Armenian students than any other university in the world outside of
Yerevan, Armenia. This gift will strengthen an already strong program
that provides a foundation of knowledge about Armenian culture and the
impact Armenians and Armenian Americans have, not just in California,
but throughout the world.”

Vahram Shemmassian, head of CSUN’s Armenia Studies Program, hailed the
gift “as a true treasure that will enrich young minds and spark
further interest in collective Armenian life, particularly in the last
100 years that have witnessed unimaginable tribulations, as well as
revival like a phoenix rising from the ashes.”

CSUN’s Vice President for Advancement Robert Gunsalus called the
anonymous gift a “generous confirmation of the important role CSUN
plays in the community at large and in the Armenian community
specifically.”

“CSUN students graduate with an education that empowers them to become
change makers, not just in their communities, but in California, the
nation and the world,” he said.

CSUN’s Armenian Studies Program, established in 1983, promotes the
study of the language and culture of Armenia and Armenians, and helps
prepare the next generation of scholars in the field. The program
offers students support, workshops, public lectures and outreach
programs. Through their work, faculty, staff and students in the
program strive to contribute to the scholarly analysis and
understanding of the challenges the Armenian people have faced at
home, in the Near East and the Caucasus, and in the Diaspora.

Additionally, the program has launched, in partnership with the
Liberal Studies Program’s Integrated Teacher Education Program, an
effort to prepare future public and private school educators who have
the skills to teach Armenian culture and language.

Among the holdings of the Oviatt Library’s special collections are
archives of Armenian families that date back to the pre-World War I
Ottoman period, including letters, books, artifacts, clothes, and
jewelry. A number of the archival materials chronicle the Armenian
Genocide and the Armenian immigrant experience in Los Angeles. Once
the archives are processed and ready for viewing, they will be
available to the public.

Shemmassian said the anonymous gift ensures that future generations
will learn about the Armenian Genocide, and the role of Armenian
Americans in Los Angeles and the Southland played in establishing the
second largest Armenian community in the diaspora, after that of
Russia.

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4-         Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan
Addresses UN General Assembly

NEW YORK — Speaking at the UN General Assembly session on September 25
in New York, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan addressed
democratic advancement in Armenia, the Karabakh conflict resolution,
relations with Turkey and regional issues.

PM Pashinyan said Azerbaijan was unwilling to resolve the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. He said the peaceful settlement of the
conflict is of key importance to the stability and security of the
region.

“From the very first day of my tenure I have been taking steps in this
context. For this purpose, I made a statement that any settlement of
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict should be acceptable to the peoples of
Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan,” Pashinyan said. He said he
was the first Armenian leader to express a similar position.

“I was severely criticized in my country for such a proposal, which
equals the three parties to the conflict. Nevertheless, I believe that
this is the key to a peaceful resolution of the conflict, as it
suggests an opportunity for compromise, mutual respect and balance,”
said Pashinyan.

“To move forward, I expected a similar statement from Azerbaijan.
However, the Azerbaijani authorities adhere to their own position,
striving for such a solution to the Karabakh conflict that would be
acceptable only to the people of Azerbaijan. This means that the
Azerbaijani authorities do not intend to resolve this conflict,” said
Pashinyan.

On Turkey, Pashinyan said it remains a serious threat to Armenia’s
security. “By refusing to establish diplomatic relations and overtly
assisting Azerbaijan against Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, Turkey
remains a serious threat to Armenia and the Armenian people, who
experienced the deep tragedy of genocide and continue of the 20th
century and continue to face the denial of truth and justice,” he
said.

Pashinyan said that the various degrees of tension existing in the
relations among Armenia’s neighbors and strategic partners put the
country in a very challenging position.

“Russia is our key strategic partner and ally. Georgia and Iran are
our strategic neighbors. We have a strategically significant agenda
and partnership with the United States, the European Union and its
member states. We observe with concern sets of disagreement among our
friends, strategic partners and allies,” Pashinyan stated.

He noted that “these realities put significant challenges to us,
because we face a persistent risk of not being correctly understood by
some of our friends or, even worse, all of them.”

“We are doing our best to remain a reliable partner and a good friend
for all of them without damaging our relations with any of them
without developing relations with one of them at the expense of
others,” Pashinyan continued.

He pledged that Armenia will spare no efforts to make the region’s
geopolitical environment safer.

Addressing domestic issues, Pashinyan accused Armenia’s former rulers
of trying to obstruct his anti-corruption efforts and spreading “fake
news.”

“Our democratic transformation and zero tolerance policy against
corruption are not without resistance from former corrupted elites,”
Pashinyan said. “Their vast financial resources are directed at
escaping justice. Our government has not pursued a single case of
redistribution of property. At the same time our resolve to press with
reforms and justice is unwavering.”

“Our mass media is completely free from government control or
interference,” he went on. “However, some of them are not free from
meddling and control from the same old circles of former government,
fabricating fake news and spreading mistrust in the public about the
origins and purposes of the Velvet Revolution.”

Pashinyan also said that his government is committed to “advance
democracy and reforms” but needs greater international assistance in
that endeavor.

“We need to have access to international best practices to save time
and resources,” he said. “We need to avoid the mistakes previously
made by other democracies to make our democratic reforms more fruitful
and efficient.”

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5-         Sculptor Arto Chakmakjian Passes Away

World-renowned sculptor Arto Chakmakjian passed away on September 30.
From Toronto to Yerevan, Detroit to Paris, his sculptures decorate
city landscapes and museums across the globe. Chakmakjian was born in
Egypt in 1933. His father owned a bookstore and his grandfather was a
sculptor. At the age of 12, he started experimenting with clay, which
would later help define his work. In 1948, the family moved to Soviet
Armenia where he enrolled at the Terlemezian Art Institute to study
sculpting and painting. He went on to become a researcher at the
Academy of Arts and Sciences while consistently creating sculptures
that won international recognition. Chakmakjian was one of the first
Armenian artists to try and break through rigid ideological concepts
of social realism and tried to introduce news styles in sculpting. For
this, he was persecuted by Soviet authorities. In 1975, the sculptor,
heartbroken moved with his family to Montreal, where he spent the rest
of his life. He would occasionally visit Armenia.

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6-         Bob Jones University Honors Prof. Ed Panosian, Commemorates
Genocide Panosian and the Providence of His Story: a one-of-a-kind
multimedia concert experience tells a tale of remembrance, resilience,
and redemption in the lives of two families affected by the Armenian
Genocide (1915–1920).

Dr. Ed Panosian, beloved history professor at Bob Jones Univesrity
(BJU) for over five decades, and singer/songwriter Mariam Matossian
together share an unforgettably heart-warming story of perseverance in
persecution, divine protection, and the fragile but flourishing
culture of a people preserved.

Mariam Matossian will be accompanied by a small band of musicians
playing Armenian folk instruments as well as the BJU Symphony
Orchestra for portions of the concert. Woven between the musical
selections will be video elements and storytelling.

The October 10 concert will also be webcast.

In February, the university hosted a reception debuting the recently
published biography of Panosian “Panosian: A Story of God’s Gracious
Providence” written by BJU alumnus Chris Anderson.

As a BJU student in the ‘90s, Anderson only knew one side of Panosian:
iconic history teacher with a booming voice. Twenty years later,
Anderson met Panosian’s private side: incredible product of
providence. His discovery led to the writing of the stirring
biography. In 2017, Anderson invited Panosian to portray historical
accounts of the Reformation at the church near Atlanta where he serves
as lead pastor. During their drive back to Greenville, Anderson asked
Panosian about his family and the floodgates opened.

“I wish I had had a recorder,” says Anderson.

For the next two hours, Panosian told him of his family’s escape from
the Armenian genocide and their lives in America. By the time they
arrived at their destination, Anderson knew “somebody had to capture
the story while [Panosian was] still living to tell it.” It didn’t
take long for him to ask Panosian if he could capture his journey in a
biography. Panosian agreed, and the yearlong process began.

Anderson is a self-proclaimed “word guy.” He has written beautiful
hymns, a devotional series and a study on John 4. But, according to
Anderson, writing his past projects was “basically like preaching.” He
playfully says he can “turn any sermon into a publication.”

“If it rhymes it will be a hymn,” says Anderson, “if it doesn’t rhyme
it will be a Gospel meditation.”

But this project was quite different. It had a storytelling angle that
both unnerved and intrigued him. Panosian was a challenge, but
Anderson was able to borrow aspects from his sermon writing as a
guide. The gathering of information and presenting it in a logical and
progressive manner were well-known to Anderson.

The foundation of the Panosian family story is built around the
Armenian genocide between 1895 and 1915. Writing and researching the
subject for six months was Anderson’s biggest emotional obstacle. He
says maintaining his all-consuming job as a pastor while reading about
the genocide was “a heavy process.”

Finding a balance in the book between the brutality of the history and
readability was especially hard. Anderson wanted to accurately depict
the pain the Armenians went through without shocking the reader too
much. Thankfully, the providential work of God in the Panosians’ life
helped level the tone of the story.

Because there were some gaps from Panosian’s parents’ past that they
could not fill, Anderson first approached the story with a fictional
spin. But, after revising the first draft, it “became very clear that
this is history.”

“As they read the book, people shouldn’t have to wonder if certain
parts are embellishments,” Anderson said.

After scraping off all fictional aspects, he began a more thorough
research process.

Anderson read several books and articles on World War I and the events
the Armenian people experienced before and during this time.
Throughout the process, he was recommended several pieces, but two
impacted him the most. Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story—a memoir of the
1913–16 American ambassador to Turkey—served as an unbiased
eye-witness account of the Armenian genocide. Peter Balakian’s The
Burning Tigris offered rare documents and narratives of the genocide.

Though the process was difficult, the outcome is great. Anderson is
glad to know that “the book signing and the entire book process
introduces [Panosian] to a generation of students that doesn’t know
him.” It also provided an inside scoop to those who thought they did
already know Dr. Panosian.”

For information, visit
https://www.bju.edu/events/fine-arts/concert-opera-drama/providence/

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California Courier Online provides viewers of the Armenian News News Service
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requested to provide their names, addresses, and/or telephone numbers
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RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/07/2019

                                        Monday, 

Global IT Forum Starts In Armenia

        • Emil Danielyan

Armenia -- A panel discussion is held during the World Congress on Information 
Technology in Yerevan, October 7, 2019.

More than 2,000 technology professionals, business executives and government 
officials from around the world are taking part in the latest World Congress on 
Information Technology (WCIT) that began its work in Yerevan on Monday.

The three-day forum is held under the aegis of World Information Technology and 
Services Alliance, a global consortium of national IT associations. It will 
feature more than a dozen keynote speakers and over 80 prominent panelists.

The participants include senior executives of tech giants like Google, Siemens 
and Ericsson as well as Armenian-American celebrities such as reality TV star 
Kim Kardashian, the Reddit social media platform’s co-founder Alexis Ohanian 
and rock musician Serj Tankian.


Armenia -- A sign at the entrance to the main venue of the World Congress on 
Information Technology in Yerevan, October 7, 2019.

Kardashian arrived in Yerevan early on Monday together with her children and 
sister Kourtney. Organizers have said that she will speak, both as a “special 
keynote speaker” and panelist, about “how decentralized technologies have 
democratized the worlds of entertainment, media, and journalism.”

Armenia is using the WCIT conference to promote its burgeoning IT industry that 
employs some 15,000 engineers and generates more than 6 percent of the 
country’s Gross Domestic Product.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian touted the industry’s achievements and tax 
breaks granted to it by the current and former Armenian governments in his 
speech at the opening session of the conference. “As a result, the IT sector 
grew nearly fivefold over the past seven years, boasting a sustained 20-25 
percent annual growth,” he said.

“Hosting such a major event is a great honor and pleasure for us, because it is 
a great opportunity to talk to you and to the international community about our 
strategy to make Armenia a high-tech country,” declared Pashinian.


Armenia -- An exhibition is held as part of the World Congress on Information 
Technology in Yerevan, October 7, 2019.
“I hope that this truly memorable event will change a lot in the technology 
world’s relations with the Republic of Armenia,” he added.

The Armenian tech sector is dominated by local subsidiaries of U.S. 
corporations as well as a growing number of homegrown firms. Some of them, 
notably the U.S. software giant VMware, are among the sponsors of the 2019 WCIT.

VMware’s chief operating officer, Rajiv Ramaswami, met with Pashinian later in 
the day. He noted that the number of IT engineers working at his company’s 
Armenian branch has increased more than tenfold, to 200, since it was opened in 
2010.

“We are very happy to invest in human talent which is available in Armenia,” 
Pashinian’s press office quoted Ramaswami as saying. “We have only one request 
to you: please increase human talent, invest in technology education.”


Armenia -- The Armenian branch of the U.S. software firm VMware takes part in 
the annual Digitec Expo in Yerevan, October 6, 2018.
A shortage of skilled personnel is widely seen as the main challenge facing the 
local IT sector. Industry executives have long complained about the inadequate 
quality of education at IT departments of Armenian universities. Many of their 
students require additional training after graduation.

In a bid to alleviate the problem, an Armenian organizer of the WCIT, the Union 
of Advanced Technology Enterprises (UATE), has opened over the past decade over 
284 engineering labs in schools across the country. They offer schoolchildren 
extracurricular robotics and computer programming courses mostly financed by 
the government. The Armenian Education Ministry announced last week a sharp 
rise in government funding for the UATE which will be used for doubling the 
number of those labs by the end of this year.




Global IT Forum Starts In Armenia

        • Emil Danielyan

Armenia -- A panel discussion is held during the World Congress on Information 
Technology in Yerevan, October 7, 2019.

More than 2,000 technology professionals, business executives and government 
officials from around the world are taking part in the latest World Congress on 
Information Technology (WCIT) that began its work in Yerevan on Monday.

The three-day forum is held under the aegis of World Information Technology and 
Services Alliance, a global consortium of national IT associations. It will 
feature more than a dozen keynote speakers and over 80 prominent panelists.

The participants include senior executives of tech giants like Google, Siemens 
and Ericsson as well as Armenian-American celebrities such as reality TV star 
Kim Kardashian, the Reddit social media platform’s co-founder Alexis Ohanian 
and rock musician Serj Tankian.


Armenia -- A sign at the entrance to the main venue of the World Congress on 
Information Technology in Yerevan, October 7, 2019.
Kardashian arrived in Yerevan early on Monday together with her children and 
sister Kourtney. Organizers have said that she will speak, both as a “special 
keynote speaker” and panelist, about “how decentralized technologies have 
democratized the worlds of entertainment, media, and journalism.”

Armenia is using the WCIT conference to promote its burgeoning IT industry that 
employs some 15,000 engineers and generates more than 6 percent of the 
country’s Gross Domestic Product.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian touted the industry’s achievements and tax 
breaks granted to it by the current and former Armenian governments in his 
speech at the opening session of the conference. “As a result, the IT sector 
grew nearly fivefold over the past seven years, boasting a sustained 20-25 
percent annual growth,” he said.

“Hosting such a major event is a great honor and pleasure for us, because it is 
a great opportunity to talk to you and to the international community about our 
strategy to make Armenia a high-tech country,” declared Pashinian.


Armenia -- An exhibition is held as part of the World Congress on Information 
Technology in Yerevan, October 7, 2019.

“I hope that this truly memorable event will change a lot in the technology 
world’s relations with the Republic of Armenia,” he added.

The Armenian tech sector is dominated by local subsidiaries of U.S. 
corporations as well as a growing number of homegrown firms. Some of them, 
notably the U.S. software giant VMware, are among the sponsors of the 2019 WCIT.

VMware’s chief operating officer, Rajiv Ramaswami, met with Pashinian later in 
the day. He noted that the number of IT engineers working at his company’s 
Armenian branch has increased more than tenfold, to 200, since it was opened in 
2010.

“We are very happy to invest in human talent which is available in Armenia,” 
Pashinian’s press office quoted Ramaswami as saying. “We have only one request 
to you: please increase human talent, invest in technology education.”


Armenia -- The Armenian branch of the U.S. software firm VMware takes part in 
the annual Digitec Expo in Yerevan, October 6, 2018.
A shortage of skilled personnel is widely seen as the main challenge facing the 
local IT sector. Industry executives have long complained about the inadequate 
quality of education at IT departments of Armenian universities. Many of their 
students require additional training after graduation.

In a bid to alleviate the problem, an Armenian organizer of the WCIT, the Union 
of Advanced Technology Enterprises (UATE), has opened over the past decade over 
284 engineering labs in schools across the country. They offer schoolchildren 
extracurricular robotics and computer programming courses mostly financed by 
the government. The Armenian Education Ministry announced last week a sharp 
rise in government funding for the UATE which will be used for doubling the 
number of those labs by the end of this year.




Trial Judge Denies Bias Against Kocharian

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- Judge Anna Danibekian presides over the trial of former President 
Robert Kocharian and three other former officials, Yerevan, October 7, 2019.

The judge presiding over the trial of Robert Kocharian dismissed on Monday his 
lawyers’ claims that she is biased against the Armenia’s arrested former 
president and must therefore recuse herself from the case.

The lawyers voiced the demands after the district court judge, Anna Danibekian, 
twice refused to release Kocharian from custody last month.

Danibekian took over the trial from another judge, Davit Grigorian, who ordered 
Kocharian’s release in May. Grigorian was controversially charged with forgery 
and suspended in July.

The lawyers petitioned Danibekian to free Kocharian and drop coup charges 
brought against him after Armenia’s Constitutional Court declared 
unconstitutional on September 4 a legal provision used by investigators against 
their client. Danibekian ruled on September 17 that the Constitutional Court’s 
decision does not apply to the former president. Three days later she also 
refused to grant him bail.

“You have a negative biased attitude towards Kocharian,” one of the defense 
lawyers, Hayk Alumian, told Danibekian on Monday.


Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian (R) talks to his lawyer Hayk 
Alumian during his trial, Yerevan, October 7, 2019.

Alumian accused her of deliberately and illegally delaying decisions on 
petitions submitted by Kocharian’s legal team in August. He also alleged 
serious procedural violations in judicial authorities’ decision to assign the 
case to Danibekian. They knew that she will not rule in the ex-president’s 
favor, claimed Alumian and other defense lawyers.

The trial prosecutors defended the judge, saying that she is impartial and did 
not breach any laws or legal procedures. After a short deliberation, Danibekian 
rejected the lawyers’ latest demands.

The coup charges leveled against Kocharian and three other former senior 
Armenian officials stem from the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan which 
left eight opposition protesters and two police personnel dead. The prosecutors 
say that Kocharian illegally used Armenian army units against protesters 
demanding the rerun of a disputed presidential election. They also accuse him 
of large-scale bribery.

Kocharian, who ruled Armenia from 1998-2008, rejects the accusations as 
politically motivated. The three other defendants also deny any wrongdoing.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org



[Press] From U.S. Embassy

NEWS  RELEASE
7 հոկտեմբերի, 2019թ.
ԱՄՆ պետքարտուղարությունը հայտարարում է խաղարկային վիզաների 2021թ. ծրագրով 
հայտերի ընդունման մեկնարկը

Երևան, Հայաստան – ԱՄՆ պետքարտուղարությունը հայտարարում է խաղարկային վիզաների 
կամ գրին քարտի խաղարկության 2021թ. ծրագրով հայտերի ընդունման մեկնարկը: Գրանցման 
նոր շրջանը կսկսի 2019թ. հոկտեմբերի 2-ի կեսօրին՝ արևելյան ամառային ժամանակով և 
կավարտվի 2019թ. նոյեմբերի 5-ի կեսօրին՝ արևելյան ստանդարտ ժամանակով:
Դիմորդները կարող են հայտը լրացնել էլեկտրոնային եղանակով՝ խաղարկային վիզաների 
ծրագրի պաշտոնական կայքում, հասցեն՝ dvlottery.state.gov:
Խաղարկային վիզաների ամենամյա ծրագրով ներգաղթային վիզա ստանալու հնարավորություն 
են ստանում բոլոր նրանք, ովքեր համապատասխանում են հստակ ու պարզ չափանիշների: 
Համակարգչային պատահական ընտրությամբ կատարվող վիճակահանությամբ առանձնացվում են 
մասնակիցներ: Ծրագրի պահանջն այն է, որ հիմնական հայտատուն ավարտած լինի ավագ 
դպրոցը կամ դրան համարժեք կրթական հաստատություն կամ ունենա ԱՄՆ օրենքների 
համաձայն ծրագրին մասնակցության իրավունք տվող երկու տարվա աշխատանքային փորձ՝ 
վերջին 5 տարվա կտրվածքով: Մասնակիցները կարող են հայտերը լրացնել անձամբ կամ այլ 
անձի օգնությամբ: Անկախ այն հանգամանքից անձամբ եք լրացնում, թե այլ անձի միջոցով, 
յուրաքանչյուր անձի անունով կարող է ներկայացվել միայն մեկ հայտ՝ գրանցման համար 
սահմանված ժամկետներում: Տեղեկատվության ճշգրտության ու ամբողջականության համար 
պատասխանատու է մասնակիցը:
          Գրանցումն անվճար է: Խորհուրդ է տրվում հայտը լրացնել անձամբ, առանց 
միջնորդների ու խորհրդատուների, ովքեր իրենց ծառայությունների համար վճար են 
պահանջում: Եթե, այնուամենայնիվ, ինչ-որ մեկն օգնում է հայտը լրացնելիս, ապա պետք 
է ներկա լինել հայտի լրացման ժամանակ, որպեսզի ապահովվի ճշգրիտ տեղեկատվություն: 
Պետք է պահպանել գրանցման հաստատման թերթիկը և եզակի համարանիշով հաստատման համարը:
         Զգուշացեք խաբեությունից. խաղարկային վիզաների ծրագրի հետ կապված 
շրջանառվում են փոստային ու էլեկտրոնային կեղծ նամակներ: Պետքարտուղարության 
վիզաների ծառայության գրասենյակը հայտնում է հանրությանը կեղծ նամակների մասին, 
որոնց հեղինակները, ներկայանալով որպես ԱՄՆ կառավարություն, փորձում են վճարումներ 
կորզել խաղարկային վիզայի ծրագրի մասնակիցներից:   Խորհուրդ ենք տալիս 
մասնակիցներին կարդալ Խաղարկային վիզաների ծրագրի հրահանգներն ու ընթացակարգերը, 
որպեսզի տեղյակ լինեք գործընթացի քայլերից, իմանաք՝ երբ և ինչ պետք է սպասել և 
ումից:  ԱՄՆ կառավարությունը խաղարկության մասնակիցներին երբեք էլեկտրոնային 
նամակով չի հայտնում շահելու մասին լուրը: Փոխարենը, մասնակիցները կարող են պարզել 
իրենց դիմումի կարգավիճակը ծրագրի պաշտոնական կայքում՝օգտագործելով գրանցման 
ժամանակ տրված եզակի համարանիշը: Ներգաղթային վիզաների հարցազրույցի մասին 
տեղեկությունը ևս կներկայացվի կարգավիճակի ստուգման բաժնում:
Կարևոր է հիշել, որ վիճակախաղում շահելը դեռևս ներգաղթային վիզա ստանալու երաշխիք 
չէ: Շահողները պետք է մասնակցեն հարցազրույցին և որակավորված լինեն վիզա ստանալու 
համար:
          Գրանցման հետ կապված հավելյալ տեղեկություններ, ինչպես նաև հետաքրքրող 
հարցերի պատասխանները կարող եք գտնել Խաղարկային վիզաների DV-2021-ի 
հրահանգներում, որոնք զետեղված են 
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__travel.state.gov_content_travel_en_us-2Dvisas_immigrate_diversity-2Dvisa-2Dprogram-2Dentry_diversity-2Dvisa-2Dinstructions.html&d=DwIGaQ&c=clK7kQUTWtAVEOVIgvi0NU5BOUHhpN0H8p7CSfnc_gI&r=LVw5zH6C4LHpVQcGEdVcrQ&m=N5kR5maig0uRusvdgsBY0GaC_yJv5tM2WYNMCabCcGQ&s=ljzWhAxJs8x59G_1-olG1q-TltobD3l7v1isNJ7I31g&e=
  էջում:

###



NEWS  RELEASE
October 7, 2019
U.S. Department of State Announces Opening of the Registration Period
for 2021 Diversity Visa “Green Card” Lottery

Yerevan, Armenia - The U.S. Department of State announces the opening of the 
registration period for the 2021 Diversity Visa (DV) lottery, also known as the 
“Green Card Lottery.” The new registration period for DV-2021 opened for 
electronic entries at noon, Eastern Daylight Time, Wednesday, October 2, 2019, 
and closes at noon, Eastern Standard Time, Tuesday, November 5, 2019.

Applicants can access the electronic DV entry form (E-DV) at the official E-DV 
website, dvlottery.state.gov, during the registration period.

The annual DV program makes immigrant visas available to persons meeting 
simple, but strict, eligibility requirements. A computer-generated, random 
lottery drawing chooses selectees for visa interviews. The Diversity Visa 
Program requires the principal applicant to have a high school education, or 
its equivalent, or two years of qualifying work experience within the past five 
years as defined under provisions of U.S. law. Entrants may prepare and submit 
their own entries or have someone submit the entry for them.  Regardless of 
whether an entry is submitted by the individual directly or with assistance, 
only one entry may be submitted in the name of each individual during the new 
registration period. The person entering the DV lottery is responsible for 
ensuring that the information provided is correct and complete.  There is no 
cost or fee to register for the DV Program. You are strongly encouraged to 
complete the entry form yourself, without a “Visa Consultant,” “Visa Agent,” or 
other facilitator who offers to help for a fee. If somebody else helps you, you 
should be present when your entry is prepared so that you can provide the 
correct information. You should retain the confirmation page and your unique 
confirmation number.

Fraud Warning: Diversity Visa Program Scammers Sending Fraudulent Emails and 
Letters

The Department of State, Office of Visa Services advises the public of 
fraudulent emails and letters from scammers posing as the U.S. government in an 
attempt to extract payment from DV applicants. Applicants are encouraged to 
review the rules and procedures for the DV program so that you know what to 
expect, when to expect it, and from whom.  DV applicants will not receive a 
notification letter or email informing them that they are a successful DV 
entrant. Instead, entrants will use their confirmation number to check their 
status online. The Department also will confirm visa interview appointments 
through the Entrant Status Check online.



It is important to note that winning the lottery is not a guarantee that you 
will receive a visa - winners must be interviewed and qualify for a visa.

For detailed information about entry requirements, along with frequently asked 
questions about the DV lottery, please see the instructions for the DV-2021 DV 
lottery 
here<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__travel.state.gov_content_travel_en_us-2Dvisas_immigrate_diversity-2Dvisa-2Dprogram-2Dentry_diversity-2Dvisa-2Dinstructions.html&d=DwIGaQ&c=clK7kQUTWtAVEOVIgvi0NU5BOUHhpN0H8p7CSfnc_gI&r=LVw5zH6C4LHpVQcGEdVcrQ&m=N5kR5maig0uRusvdgsBY0GaC_yJv5tM2WYNMCabCcGQ&s=ljzWhAxJs8x59G_1-olG1q-TltobD3l7v1isNJ7I31g&e=
.




UNCLASSIFIED


Press Release - DV edited.doc

Press Release – DV edited.doc

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WCIT 2019 kicks off in Yerevan

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 7 2019

The grand opening of the World Congress on Information Technology (WCIT 2019) took place at Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concerts Complex in Yerevan on Monday, October 7, to run through October 9.

Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan delivered opening remarks at WCIT 2019 alongside World Information Technology and Services Alliance (WITSA) Chair Yvonne Chiu and WCIT 2019 Organizing Committee President and Union of Advanced Technology Enterprises (UATE) Chair Alexander Yesayan.

This year, WCIT will address "The Power of Decentralization: Promise and Peril" and explore how information and communications technology is transforming our lives for better and for worse, and its impact on profits and prosperity, safety and security, democracy and humanity.

The conversation that begins at WCIT 2019 will continue beyond the close of the conference in an ongoing series of discussions called The Yerevan Talks.

WCIT 2019 is expected to attract more than 2,500 participants from more than 70 countries, including the leaders of the IT industry, CEOs, investors, distinguished speakers, policy makers, government officials, scientists and technologists.

The congress is hosted by Armenia with the support and under the high patronage of the country's government. WCIT was established by the World Information Technology and Services Alliance. Its main organizing body is the Union of Advanced Technology Enterprises. 

UAE-based Mubadala investment company looking into setting up venture funds in Armenia

ARKA, Armenia
Oct 7 2019

YEREVAN, October 7. /ARKA/. The UAE-based Mubadala Investment Company is looking into the possibility of setting up venture funds in Armenia, Khomein Al Shimmari, the head of the Aviation and Engineering Services Division at Mubadala Investment, said today at a meeting with the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, in Yerevan.

"We have good impressions of the technological sector of Armenia and we are interested in cooperation, in particular, in the formation of venture capital funds," the press service of the Armenian government quoted Al Shimmari as saying.

It said the sides exchanged thoughts on the prospects of partnership in the IT sphere. Pashinyan was said to have spoken about political changes in the country, noting that serious steps are being taken to overcome systemic corruption with the aim of raising the investment attractiveness of the Armenian economy.

"Our strategy is to develop the technological sphere, which has huge potential. The IT sector in our country is developing dynamically, we have created the Ministry of High Technology Industry and the possible cooperation with your company is interesting to us," Pashinyan noted.

Representatives of Mubadala Investment Company are in Armenia to attend the World Congress on Information Technology (WCIT-2019), which is being held in Yerevan on October 6-9.

In Armenia, in April 2019, an agreement was signed between the United Nations Development Program and Granatus Ventures on the establishment of the Granatus Tech4SDG venture capital fund. –0-