Armenians Debate Sargsyan Charges

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Jan 22 2020
 
 
 
The criminal case against the ex-head of state remains a highly partisan issue.
By Arshaluys Mgdesyan
 
 
 
Corruption charges finally laid against former Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan have bitterly divided allies and critics over whether or not the case was politically motivated or not.
 
Proceedings were launched against him in December, nearly two years after the so-called Velvet Revolution that brought current president Nikol Pashinyan to power.
 
Sargsyan was accused of embezzling of more than a million US dollars worth of state funds through a 2013 public tender to supply rural farmers with subsidized diesel fuel.
 
Pashinyan’s main election pledge was to bring those responsible for corruption to justice, and many Armenian experts and politicians had anticipated charges against Sargsyan.
 
Legal action has already been taken against his former colleagues including Hrayr Tovmasyan, a chairman of the country’s constitutional court, the former parliamentary speaker Ara Babloyan and Gagik Khachatryan, an ex-head of the state revenue committee.
 
In addition, Armenia’s second president Robert Kocharyan was indicted in 2018 on charges related to March 2008 protests in Yerevan.
 
Kocharyan was charged with bribe-taking and “overthrowing the constitutional order” by the use of military forces during the political crisis that followed the presidential election of February 2008. He remains in custody.  
 
Allies of Sargsyan argue that the allegations against the former president were a purely populist measure by the new government.
 
According to Sargsyan’s lawyer Amram Makinyan, law enforcement officers had been determined to charge his client at whatever cost.
 
“He was summoned by the Special Investigation Service and interrogated on various cases from time to time. Eventually, they found a reason, which is ridiculous,” Makinyan told IWPR, adding that Sargsyan had rejected all charges.
 
Makinyan also argued that launching criminal proceedings against a former head of state was a violation of Article 140 of the Constitution of Armenia, under which the president was entitled to immunity both during and after his term of office and could not be held accountable for actions initiated due to his status.
 
“Serzh Sargsyan is charged with alleged actions which according to the decision which led the investigating agency to the indictment of ex-president, were directly derived from his position,” the lawyer continued, adding that the criminal case against his client had been opened following just one person’s testimony.
 
Although Makinyan did not name this person due to confidentiality issues, the Armenian media has widely identified him as former minister of agriculture Sergo Karapetyan.
 
Other supporters see the legal action as related to wider geopolitical issues. Armen Ashotyan, the vice-chairman of Sargsyan’s Republican Party of Armenia, told IWPR that he believed the legal actions were an attempt to influence the future course of action over Nagorny-Karabakh. Pashinyan and Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev have held half-a-dozen talks over the last year.
 
“At first, they indicted former president Robert Kocharyan and put him in jail. Now they came after ex-president Serzh Sargsyan,” he said. “These are the people who made an enormous contribution to the victory in the Karabakh war.
 
“We see it as an attempt to forcibly oust from politics the people who could raise their voices against any possible concessions made by the authorities on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We have doubts about Pashinyan’s vague agreements with Aliyev. Therefore, we believe that it is not just a simple legal case and it is linked to the policy of new government on the Karabakh issue,” he concluded.
 
Those on the other side of the political divide dismiss such accusations.
 
“The accusation against Serzh Sargsyan completely fits into the process of combating corruption. This is an entirely legal process,” says Lilit Makunts, a lawmaker from the ruling My Step party.
 
Representatives of Bright Armenia also see no signs of political persecution in Sargsyan’s case. One of its leading lawmakers, Edmon Marukyan, said that the Republican Party was trying to politicise the criminal process.
 
“They do not talk about the charges or the facts proving that everything Serzh Sargsyan is accused of did not take place. Instead, they talk about political persecution or authoritarianism. Where is political persecution here? There is not a single sign of authoritarianism. Serzh Sarsgyan is free to be engaged in political activity and so are his associates,” Marukyan told IWPR.
 
Armenian National Congress deputy chairman Levon Zurabyan said he believed that the alleged million-dollar theft was just the start of potential transgressions.
 
“This is only a minor episode in his corruption schemes. There are larger cases that we frequently spoke about before, he continued, noting allegations around a 300 million dollar debt accrued to Russian energy giant Gazprom he claimed were connected to election interference. Zurabyan told IWPR that Sargsyan should prepare to spend the rest of his life in prison.
 
Analysts note that legal action against former political leaders was not unusual in such circumstances, but warned that a delicate balance had to be maintained to avoid politicising the issue.
 
Director of the Caucasus Institute Alexander Iskandaryan said that the prosecution was part of an expected transition.
 
“This is a political process that follows revolutions. The punishment of former government officials is very popular. It’s hard to imagine that the investigators themselves decided to initiate legal proceedings against the ex-presidents,” Iskandaryan told IWPR.
 
However, others argued for caution when it came to legal cases concerning a former president.
 
“This process will definitely acquire a political shade or resonance,” said Avetik Ishkhanyan, chairman of the Helsinki Committee of Armenia. “Politicians of this rank have their supporters who, for obvious reasons, will politicise the process, even if this process is purely legal.”
 
He said that apparent pressure laid by some politicians and their supporters on the judicial figures who took decisions on Kocharyan’s pre-trial detention were of particular concern.
 
“A criminal case has been opened against Judge David Grigoryan, who decided to release Kocharyan, but those judges who rejected his lawyers’ plea for changing the preventive measure were praised by supporters of the authorities. This is an alarming sign of pressure exerted on the judiciary,” Ishkhanyan concluded.
 
Noting the allegation that the Sargsyan case had been opened on the basis of a single testimony, Ishkhanyan underlined that the Armenian public wanted former officials to be investigated, but stressed that fair process needed to be followed.
 
 “People accuse them of corruption, but what should become the ground for initiating criminal investigation – facts and evidence or our assumptions?” he asked.
 
 
 

Court sends back Armenia Justice Minister’s lawsuit against activist

News.am, Armenia
Jan 22 2020
Court sends back Armenia Justice Minister's lawsuit against activist Court sends back Armenia Justice Minister's lawsuit against activist

15:42, 22.01.2020
                  

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s Justice Minister Rustam Badasyan has filed a lawsuit against activist Narek Malyan, but it was sent back by the court for being flawed. Armenian News-NEWS.am has learned about this from the judicial information system.

Badasyan filed a lawsuit against Malyan seeking compensation for damages caused to his honor, dignity, and business reputation.

The Yerevan court of general jurisdiction, however, has decided to return the claim.

The respective statement released in the judicial information system notes, in particular, that the court found that the requirements for the form, content, and attachments of this lawsuit were not complied with.

"The deficiencies in the lawsuit can be eliminated and presented to the court within three days," the statement also reads.

Sports: Armenian athletes make it to UWW strongest wrestlers’ rankings

PanArmenian, Armenia
Jan 21 2020
– 14:34 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The United World Wrestling (UWW) has recently updated their world rankings, and Armenian wrestler, Olympic champion Artur Aleksanyan is the second in men's 97 kg category of Greco-Roman wrestling.

Aleksanyan was the top performer in his category in 2018.

Maksim Manukyan, another Armenian Greco-Roman wrestler and a top performer, has now slipped to the 11th spot.

Also included in the list of best Greco-Roman wrestlers are Slavik Galstyan (63kg, 4th spot), Malkhas Amoyan (72kg, 7th spot) and Karapet Chalyan (77kg, 5th spot).

In freestyle wrestling, Grigor Grigoryan (79 kg) is on the 7th spot.

Music: Pianist Eva Gevorgyan to perform in Yerevan

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 21 2020
Culture 20:32 21/01/2020 Armenia

15-year-old Russian-Armenian pianist Eva Gevorgyan will perform a joint concert with  pianists Armen Babakhanian and Poom Prommachart (Thailand, Canada) on January 30 at Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall. The concert, entitled “Armenian Piano Music Part 3” will feature works of Armenian composers,  Aram Khachaturian, Arno Babajanyan, Haro Stepanyan, Komitas, Sayat-Nova, Sheram and Jivani among them. The event is organized by TM Production

To note, Eva is studying at the music school under the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory. She has been playing piano since 3 years of age. Eva has been  participant of numerous competitions and festivals, a laureate of world famous competitions, received the second prize at the 2019 Cliburn International Junior Piano Competition held in Dallas last year.

Eva was granted Armenian citizenship in 2019.

Food: Watch: Marcus Samuelsson Explores LA’s Multifaceted Armenian Food Scene

Eater Magazine
Jan 20 2020

Making dolma, lule kebab, basturma, and more in the epicenter of California’s huge Armenian population

by Eater Staff Jan 20, 2020



In the second episode of No Passport Required Season 2, host Marcus Samuelsson heads to Los Angeles to eat with and learn from the city’s large and diasporic Armenian community.

Samuelsson arrives in sunny Los Angeles to meet with Armenians influencing the city’s food scene. Armenian food is diaspora food — the community is widespread, building homes in countries such as Turkey and Syria following the Armenian genocide. Watch as Marcus gets to know the people preserving and growing Armenian food culture in LA and neighboring city Glendale. He tries traditional favorites like manti, ponchiki, and lule kebab, as well as next-generation takes including barbecue and even shawarma tacos.

Additional episodes: Each hour-long episode focuses on a different immigrant community in a new city: In addition to Los Angeles, the series travels to Seattle, where Marcus cooks with a Filipino community eager to preserve its food traditions while using key ingredients like ube and vinegar to create new ones; Houston (January 27), home to one of the highest numbers of West African expatriates of any U.S. city; and Philadelphia (February 3), where Italian Americans have thrived for generations. Other episodes focus on the Chinese-American community in Las Vegas (February 10), which has grown tremendously over the last 20 years, and Boston (February 17), where Marcus explores Portuguese-speaking cultures and cuisines from three different locales: Brazil, Cape Verde, and Portugal. The episodes air weekly on PBS, and all are available for streaming.

Missed Season 1? Stream full episodes from the entire first season now, or check out recaps and more intel on No Passport Required here.

Online and on social: Tag @eater, @pbs, and #NoPassRequiredPBS if you share clips, pictures, or quotes from the show. Check back on Eater LA tomorrow to see a map of the restaurants featured in the episode, and head to PBS to learn more about the show, find character bios, and get recipes to cook at home.


No Passport Required is produced for PBS by Eater and Vox Media Studios, part of Vox Media. Stream full episodes on Eater and PBS, or check local listings. Get more information on the show at pbs.org/nopassrequired.


Music: Today marks Armenian composer Arno Babajanyan’s 99th birth anniversary

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 21 2020
Culture 11:29 21/01/2020Armenia

Today, 21 January marks the 99th birth anniversary of Arno Babajanyan, a renowned Armenian composer and pianist of the Soviet era.

The composer was born in Yerevan on the day when Lenin died. Because of that, his father changed his birth date to January 22.

By age 5, Babajanyan's extraordinary musical talent was clearly apparent, and composer Aram Khachaturian suggested that the boy be given proper music training. Two years later, in 1928 at the age of 7, Babajanyan entered the Yerevan State Musical Conservatory, the Music of Armenia reported.

In 1938, he continued his studies in Moscow with Vissarion Shebalin. He later returned to Yerevan, where from 1950–1956 he taught at the Yerevan State conservatory. It was during this period that he wrote the Piano Trio in f# sharp minor. It received immediate acclaim and was regarded as a masterpiece from the time of its premiere.

Subsequently, he undertook concert tours throughout the Soviet Union and Europe. In 1971, he was named a People’s Artist of the Soviet Union. As a composer, Babajanyan was active in most genres and even wrote many popular songs in collaboration with the leading poets such as Yevgeny Yevtushenko and Robert Rozhdestvensky among others.

Much of Babajanyan’s music is rooted in Armenian folk music and folklore. But generally, the way in which he uses Armenian folk music is in the virtuosic style of Rachmaninov and Khachaturian. His later works were influenced by Prokofiev and Bartok. Praised by Dmitri Shostakovich as a "brilliant piano teacher", Babajanyan was also a noted pianist and often performed his own works in concerts.

He received the Stalin Prize of 1950 for his Heroic Ballad for Piano and Orchestra and the Order of the Red Banner of Labour. He was People's Artist of the Armenian SSR (1956) and Soviet Union (1971). He was a laureate of two Stalin State Prizes of the USSR (1951, 1953) and two Armenian SSR State Prizes (1967, 1983).

Arno Babajanyan died on November 11, 1983, in Moscow and is buried at Komitas Pantheon in Yerevan. 

Artsakh’s general elections to take place on March 31, 2020

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 19:02,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. Presidential and parliamentary elections of Artsakh will take place on March 31, 2020, ARMENPRESS reports Central Electoral Committee of Artsakh informs.

According to the Constitution of Artsakh, presidential elections take place 50 days before the end of powers of the President, while parliamentary elections take place on the same day with the presidential election.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

President Sarkissian meets with members of Swiss-Armenian Chamber of Commerce and businessmen

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 20:51,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. As part of his working visit to Switzerland, the President of the Republic of Armenia Armen Sarkissian met the members of the Switzerland-Armenia Chamber of Commerce and Swiss businessmen, including Swiss-Armenian businessmen during a working dinner in Zurich. It was organized by the Swiss-Armenian Chamber of Commerce with the support of the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia to Switzerland.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the President’s Office, the President of the Swiss-Armenian Chamber of Commerce and Industry Mike Baronian congratulated the President and the Armenian people for the achievements of 2019 and noted that the presence of President Sarkisian at the event is of great importance for the community and members and the Chamber of Commerce.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/20/2020

                                        Monday, 

Former Armenian Security Chief ‘Died In Apparent Suicide’

        • Robert Zargarian
        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- The funeral of former National Security Service Director Georgi 
Kutoyan, Yerevan, .

Georgi Kutoyan, a former head of Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) who 
was found shot dead on Friday, most probably committed suicide, 
Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian said over the weekend.

Davtian told reporters that investigators have found “quite a bit of information 
testifying to a suicide” as he attended a requiem service for Kutoyan held on 
Saturday. He cautioned, though, that they are continuing to consider other 
theories of the 38-year-old’s shock death, including murder.

Kutoyan’s body was discovered at a Yerevan apartment belonging to his family. 
According to the Investigative Committee, he had a gunshot wound to his head.

A spokeswoman for the law-enforcement agency, Naira Harutiunian, said on Monday 
that investigators have found no “traces of violence” on the body. She also told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service that they are awaiting the results of several forensic 
tests that could shed more light on Kutoyan’s death.

A deputy head of the Investigative Committee, Artur Melikian, said on Friday 
that his officers found dozens of bullets and spent cartridge cases in the 
apartment.

In a written statement released on Saturday, the Investigative Committee said it 
has established that Kutoyan fired 35 gunshots at an apartment wall after 
“consuming alcohol” there in late December. He was killed by a bullet fired from 
the same pistol legally owned by him, said the statement.


Armenia -- Police officers cordon off an apartment building in Yerevan where 
former National Security Service Director Georgi Kutoyan was found dead, January 
17, 2020.

Kutoyan and his family did not live in the apartment in question. According to 
the Investigative Committee, the former NSS chief went there the day before his 
death after telling his loved ones that he wants to “rest there for two or three 
days.” The committee statement also said that Kutoyan, who reportedly studied in 
Britain, “returned” to Armenia on December 9.

A lawyer by education, Kutoyan had worked as an assistant to President Serzh 
Sarkisian from 2011 until his surprise appointment as director of Armenia’s most 
powerful security agency in February 2016. He was sacked by newly elected Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian in May 2018 immediately after the “Velvet Revolution” 
that toppled Sarkisian.

Sarkisian was reportedly shocked by the unexpected death of his former aide. The 
65-year-old ex-president attended the requiem service and Kutoyan’s funeral on 
Monday as did most of his top loyalists. He refused to talk reporters.

Kutoyan is the second former senior security official found shot to death in the 
last four months. Hayk Harutiunian, a former chief of the Armenian police, was 
found dead in his country house in September. Investigators suggested that he 
committed suicide.



Government Won’t Rule Out Gas Price Rise

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia -- Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian, speaks to journalists, Octobe 
9, 2019.

Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian on Monday did not rule out the possibility 
of an increase in the prices of Russian natural gas supplied to Armenian 
households and corporate consumers.

Armenia’s national gas distribution company owned by Russia’s Gazprom giant said 
last week that it may ask public utility regulators soon to allow it to raise 
its retail prices.

They have remained unchanged since Gazprom raised the wholesale gas price for 
Armenia from $150 to $165 per thousand cubic meters in January 2019. The Russian 
gas monopoly said last month that the tariff will not rise further before the 
end of 2020.

In this regard, Grigorian reiterated his earlier assurances that Armenian 
households will not pay more for gas at least until April 1. “As for a change of 
the price of gas supplied to our homes, we should also wait until April 1,” he 
told reporters. “We will have clearer ideas then.”

Grigorian insisted that the Armenian government and Gazprom have not reached a 
confidential deal on a price rise that would take effect later this year. But he 
noted at the same time that Gazprom’s Armenian subsidiary needs additional 
revenues to make capital investments in the country’s gas distribution network.

“Regarding investment plans, I won’t make secret of the fact that there are 
desires to make some investments because we have to bear in mind that it’s a 
matter of safety, efficiency and proper maintenance of the [gas] 
infrastructure,” he said.

Grigorian was also confident that a possible higher gas price would not reflect 
negatively on continued economic growth in Armenia.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Russian President Vladimir Putin 
discussed the issue when they met in Yerevan in October. “We talked about a gas 
price for Armenia that will not break Armenia’s economic dynamics,” Pashinian 
said afterwards.



Farmers Protest Government Ban On Home Butchery

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia -- Cattle farmers protest outside the prime minister's office in 
Yerevan, .

More than a hundred farmers and meat traders again rallied outside the prime 
minister’s office in Yerevan on Monday to protest against a ban on home 
slaughter of livestock imposed by an Armenian government agency.

The ban effective from January 15 means that cattle and other farm animals can 
be slaughtered only at 24 abattoirs currently operating in Armenia. Shops and 
market stalls are now obliged to have documents certifying that meat sold by 
them is supplied from those slaughterhouses.

The State Food Safety Inspectorate says that this will help to prevent the sale 
of unhealthy or contaminated meat and thus protect consumers.

Some of the affected farmers, who have traditionally slaughtered their livestock 
on their farms and courtyards, strongly oppose the new requirement, saying that 
it places a heavy financial burden on them.

They say they are already struggling to make ends meet and cannot afford the 
extra costs of transporting their animals to the abattoirs and paying for their 
slaughter. Disaffected meat vendors in Yerevan make similar arguments.

“Forcing a villager who has two or three animals to take them to an abattoir is 
the same thing as telling him to stop raising cattle because the villager will 
have to pay 20,000 to 30,000 drams ($42-$62) to take each animal to the 
abattoir,” said one of the farmers protesting outside Armenia’s main government 
building.

“We can’t give the abattoir 10,000 drams and pay another 12,000 drams for the 
medical paper,” said another protester.

The angry crowd demanded a meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. It 
briefly blocked an adjacent street after none of the officials from Pashinian’s 
staff emerged from the building to talk to them.

The protesters said they will step up the pressure on the government by blocking 
highways leading to Yerevan.

The State Food Safety Inspectorate strongly defended the ban on home butchery 
after the first protest staged by the farmers and vendors late last week.

“There will be no step backwards because I don’t want our country to be stuck in 
the Middle Ages,” a senior official from the government agency, Artur 
Shatvorian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service at the weekend.

Shatvorian claimed that there are no farmers among the demonstrators and that 
Yerevan-based meat traders are strongly opposed to the ban because it will put 
an end to tax evasion among them.

“We are all farmers, we are all from the Ararat province,” countered one of the 
participants of Monday’s rally. He and other protesters also denied the 
inspectorate’s assertion that the private abattoirs have agreed to provide free 
livestock transportation to farmers living in nearby communities and selling at 
least three animals at a time.



Opposition Parties Join Constitutional Reform Panel

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia -- Deputies from the opposition Bright Armenia Party attend a parliament 
session in Yerevan, .

The two opposition parties represented in Armenia’s parliament have named their 
representatives to an ad hoc commission tasked with drafting constitutional 
changes planned by the government.

Under an executive order signed by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian earlier this 
month, the commission will consist of 15 members, including Justice Minister 
Rustam Badasian, the government’s representative to the European Court of Human 
Rights, human rights ombudsman Arman Tatoyan and a representative of the 
country’s judges.

It will also comprise six legal scholars, who will be chosen by the Justice 
Ministry on a supposedly competitive basis, two civil society members and 
representatives of the three political forces represented in the Armenian 
parliament.

The opposition Bright Armenia (LHK) and Prosperous Armenia (BHK) parties will be 
represented in the commission by their senior lawmakers: Taron Sahakian and 
Gevorg Petrosian respectively. Vladimir Vartanian, the pro-government chairman 
of the parliament committee on legal affairs, will represent Pashinian’s My Step 
alliance.

The government officially announced plans to amend the constitution in October 
as part of its strategy of reforming the national judicial and electoral 
systems. The strategy calls for constitutional changes relating to the work of 
judicial bodies and conduct of elections.

There is also lingering speculation that Pashinian is considering restoring the 
presidential system of government in the country, even though he has made no 
public statements to that effect so far. My Step’s parliamentary leader, Lilit 
Makunts, said on Monday that she sees no need for such a radical change. But she 
also said that it is up to the commission to recommend whether Armenia should 
remain a parliamentary republic.

The BHK, which boasts the second largest group in the National Assembly, has yet 
to decide what kind of amendments to the Armenian constitution it should press 
for. The party’s leader, Gagik Tsarukian, noted on Monday that in 2015 he was 
forced to temporarily leave the political arena because of opposing the switch 
to the parliamentary system of government initiated by then President Serzh 
Sarkisian.

For its part, the LHK has been campaigning for constitutional curbs on sweeping 
powers enjoyed by the prime minister. Sahakian, its nominee for the commission, 
said the planned constitutional changes should end the “overconcentration of 
power in the executive branch” while preserving the parliamentary system.

Makunts claimed in this regard that the existing system cannot be described 
“super prime-ministerial” because elections held in Armenia are no longer rigged 
and the parliamentary opposition is now in a better position to hold the 
government in check.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


The California Courier Online, January 23, 2020

1 -        Newly-Elected Patriarch of Turkey

            Lashes Back at his Armenian Critics

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         New Armenian Patriarch Sahak II Enthroned in Istanbul

3 -        Catholicos Aram I Declares 2020 Year of Armenians with Special Needs

4-         Danagoulian, MIT colleagues voted 2019 Arms Control Persons
of the Year

5-         ARS Issues Emergency Appeal for Lebanese-Armenian Community

6-         L.A.’s Little Armenia Cuisine Kicks Off January 20 on PBS

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

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

1 -        Newly-Elected Patriarch of Turkey

            Lashes Back at his Armenian Critics

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

After giving a series of interviews to the Turkish press since his
election on December 11, 2019, the new Armenian Patriarch of Turkey,
Sahak II Mashalyan, responded to his Armenian critics on January 15,
2020, by issuing an official “Clarification” to Turkish-Armenian
newspapers.

It is important to point out that the Patriarch’s critics were not
simply those who live outside Turkey, unjustly accused of being
unaware of the repressive treatment of Istanbul Armenians by the
Turkish government. In addition to criticisms from Armenians in
Armenia and the Diaspora, the Patriarch was attacked by Armenians
living in Turkey as well as the Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos.

The Patriarch’s interview to the Turkish newspaper Aksham generated
the most controversy as he not only distanced Istanbul Armenians from
Diaspora Armenians, but also belittled the massive tragedy of the
Armenian Genocide. His Beatitude complained that a few of the
sentences in his interview with Aksham, drawing the most negative
interpretations and exceeding the limits of understanding, reached a
campaign of tarnishing his name.

The Patriarch made the excuse that in his 40-minute interview, he “had
provided lengthy explanations and details which naturally were not
included in the article. The words appearing in the newspaper were
filtered from those explanations which were given as answers for a
particular question. That style was the choice of the editor. Without
considering the questions, when only answers are provided, a change in
the meaning takes place, which is placed successively, one after
another. In this case, they become unclear expressions and failed
statements, which make the transmitted idea meaningless.”

The Patriarch then stated that he had given the following answer to
the question about Turkish Armenians: “Armenians of Turkey, unlike
Armenians in the Diaspora and Armenia, form a third segment. From the
point of view of administration and economy, the Armenian Diaspora has
no ties with us; we are self-sufficient.”

When his Beatitude was asked about the irreconcilable attitude of
Diaspora Armenians toward Turkey and the reasons for its negative
position, he claimed that the given answer does not belong to him, but
is a simple sociological correction—familiar to all—expressed as such:
‘One hundred years ago, the people who left these lands with a great
tragedy have transmitted the trauma they lived to future generations
and realized that for the Armenian identity and its preservation it is
beneficial and necessary to form a consciousness of the Genocide. They
continued to live for more than a hundred years in a status quo away
from Turkey and Turks. But, we—Armenians who have remained in
Turkey—continued to share our lives with Turks in these lands and
gained the experience of living together. In that sense, we are
distinct Armenians in the Armenian world.”

The Patriarch continued: “In such super sensitive subjects, the
priority of the people has been that they listen to what they want,
and not what the Patriarchs of Turkish Armenians say and under what
conditions. The fate of the Armenian Patriarchs of Turkey is like the
captain of a ship that is being crushed between two non-melting
icebergs. In that circumstance, it is not always possible to secure
harmony and errors appear to occur according to one of the sides.
Sahak Patriarch too, like his predecessors, has tried to give answers
regarding Armenian issues that are satisfactory to all sides. It is
never acceptable to any of the sides to take a rejectionist and
disregarding position. Each person must first understand correctly,
what in reality has been expressed in the uttered words and then
criticize.”

Some in the Diaspora may agree with the Patriarch’s words, emphasizing
the dire conditions that he and the Turkish community are in. Any
Armenian who is familiar with those repressive conditions can be
somewhat sympathetic to the Patriarch’s situation.

Our intent was never to urge the Patriarch to antagonize the
authorities in Turkey. After all, he is responsible for the safety of
his community. All we ask from the Patriarch is to be cautious in his
words, not to alienate his followers in Turkey and not insult the
memory of 1.5 million Armenian martyrs by engaging in outright
denialism. Whenever possible, the Patriarch should avoid giving
interviews to the Turkish press. He should appoint a press spokesman
who is capable of avoiding difficult and sensitive questions,
particularly on political issues. If the spokesman makes a mistake, it
is less consequential than if the Patriarch himself makes a mistake.
Spokesmen can be fired, but the Patriarch’s position is life-long.

Finally, it is unacceptable for the Patriarch to blame the Turkish
newspaper for allegedly misinterpreting his words. First of all, we do
not know what exactly the Patriarch told the Turkish newspaper and if
it was really misinterpreted. For example, in his above
“Clarification,” the Patriarch claims that he had used the word
“Genocide” in his interview with the Turkish newspaper. This is not
credible!

Secondly, the Patriarch is someone who is born and raised in Istanbul.
He knows the Turkish media well. He should have known that the Turkish
press often distorts the words of those they interview. Therefore,
giving an interview to the Turkish press and then complaining that his
words were distorted is not sincere. The Patriarch should have known
that in advance. Complaining about Turkish media distortions after the
interview is published is foolish!

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

2-         New Armenian Patriarch Sahak II Enthroned in Istanbul

ISTANBUL—Sahak Maşalyan (Mashalian), the 85th Patriarch of Turkey’s
Armenians, was enthroned as Sahak II in a ceremony held at the Surp
Asdvadzadzin Patriarchate Church in Istanbul on Jan 11.

Born in 1962 in Istanbul with the Turkish name Şahin Maşalı, he was
ordained a priest in 1992, receiving the name Sahak.

On Dec. 11, Sahak II won the election held among Armenian Gregorian
churches across the country after receiving 102 votes out of 119
against his rival Aram Ateşyan, who had served as acting patriarch
during the absence of Mesrob II, the previous patriarch who suffered
from Alzheimer’s disease from 2008 until his demise on March 8, 2019.

The congregation included Fener Greek Patriarch Bartholomew, the
spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians, representatives of other
Christian denominations in Turkey and foreign diplomatic missions in
Istanbul.

Turkish Deputy Interior Minister Muhterem İnce and Chief Rabbi of
Turkey Rav Isak Haleva also took part in the ceremony.

Turkey’s President received Sahak II on January 14, Anadolu Agency
reports. The meeting was closed to the press.

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3 -        Catholicos Aram I Declares 2020 Year of Armenians with Special Needs

The Monastery of Antelias of the Great House of Cilicia has declared
2020 as the Year of Armenians with Special Needs.

The pontifical statement explains that persons with special needs are
those “who are congenitally handicapped with physical, intellectual or
emotional inabilities, those with total or partial incapacity, who are
either born that way or have become so as a result of ulterior
incidents.” The statement goes on to note that the importance of
shifting societal views towards those who are “differently abled” and
that it “modern society emphasizes the principle of equality. In other
words, persons with special needs must have equal rights and
obligations in all spheres of life and at all levels of society.”

From a Christian standpoint, the statement explains that the Bible is
“full of similar expressions and definitions, events and figures,
which in different manners and with varying emphasis prove not only
the presence of persons with physical or mental inabilities in
society, but also about the careful treatment they received from the
prophets in the Old Testament as well as from the Son of God and the
Apostles in the New Testament.” The statement goes on to note that
“The Bible does not consider the physical incapacity a divine
punishment, but a trait of earthly life. God, as Heavenly Father,
treats persons exposed to that situation with special love.”

In considering the Armenian community, the pontifical statement notes
“that we should not approach people who need special care and
attention with a discriminatory spirit or ignoring them, but as
persons with equal rights and obligations. They have to feel that
their difficult conditions cannot become a cause for them to be
ignored or removed from our collective life, and we have to be aware
of that.”

The statement emphasizes that “We have to carry out consistent work
and create indispensable means to include them as a permanent and
active presence in our community life. We have to inspire their trust
with our approach, showing them that they do not have to be
marginalized from our life. On the contrary, they belong in the
mainstream and are an integral part of our community life. It is
imperative to include them in our organizations, structures and
committees, showing them respect and confidence in them and giving
them responsibilities. They are in charge of the highest offices in
several countries. What counts are the emotional and intellectual
virtues and abilities and the will to serve the nation. We must create
the specialized and material means for children and teenagers with
congenital and curable impairments for their definitive healing.”

The statement says it is “the sacred duty of every Armenian and the
entire Armenian nation to assist by all possible means… the members of
 our nation who suffer from such condition.”

The Patriarchal Proclamation closed with a prayer: “Dispel the pain
and heal the sickness of thy people, Lord our God, and grant to all
perfect health by the sign of thine all-conquering cross through which
thou removed the weakness of mankind and condemned the enemy of our
life and salvation. Thou art our life and salvation, beneficent and
all merciful God, who alone can forgive us our sins and remove
diseases and sickness from us, to whom are known our needs and
necessities. Bestower of gifts, grant thy bounteous mercy to thy
creatures according to their individual needs, through whom thy Holy
Trinity is always glorified and praised, now and always and forever
and ever. Amen.”

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4-         Danagoulian, MIT colleagues voted 2019 Arms Control Persons
of the Year

Professor Areg Danagoulian and colleagues at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) were selected as the 2019 Arms Control
Persons of the Year through an online poll that drew participants from
over 100 countries. The annual contest is organized by the
independent, nongovernmental Arms Control Association.

Prof. Danagoulian and his team were nominated for their work
developing an innovative new nuclear disarmament verification process
using neutron beams. This process addresses the fact that parties to
arms control treaties more often destroy delivery systems than
warheads (e.g., the U.S. dismantling B-52 bombers for compliance with
START).

This leaves large stockpiles of surplus nuclear weapons, increasing
risks of nuclear proliferation and nuclear terrorism. Instead, the
neutron beam test authenticates the warheads’ isotopic composition
without revealing it, enabling a verified dismantlement of nuclear
warheads.

Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association
remarked, “This innovation paves the way for more effective arms
control agreements, inspections, and enforcement.  Professor
Danagoulian’s MIT team has brought the best science to arms control
and provided a creative solution that can reduce nuclear threats and
enhance security.”

This year, 10 individuals and groups were nominated by the Arms
Control Association staff and board of directors. All of the nominees
demonstrated extraordinary leadership in advancing effective arms
control solutions for the threats posed by mass casualty weapons
during the course of 2019.

This contest is a reminder of the diverse and creative ways that
dedicated individuals and organizations from around the globe can
contribute to meeting the difficult arms control challenges of today
and the coming decades.

Danagoulian is an Assistant Professor of Nuclear Science and
Engineering at MIT. He received his S.B. degree in physics from MIT.
He did his PhD research in Experimental Nuclear Physics at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His PhD thesis focused on
experiments which used real Compton scattering on the proton at 2-6
GeV, allowing to probe the proton's internal structure and how it
couples to external excitations.

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5-         ARS Issues Emergency Appeal for Lebanese-Armenian Community

The economic crisis and the political instability in Lebanon have
taken an evident toll on the Lebanese-Armenian community.

The Armenian Relief Society’s Central Executive Board has closely
monitored the circumstances and, in November of 2019, already sent
$5,000 in order to help the Armenian Relief Cross of Lebanon to ensure
the provided services remain uninterrupted.

However, the situation has gotten progressively worse, and the number
of Armenians asking for support from the Armenian Relief Cross of
Lebanon has exponentially increased. Therefore, the Central Executive
Board during its first Plenary Meeting (January 3 to 7) sent an
addition $10,000 and decided to initiate a campaign to collect
donations as part of an Emergency Appeal for Lebanon.

Through this project, entities and donors can sponsor the following
programs, projects:

The Hot Meal Program is distributed to 150 community members in need.
Although this program has been operating for many years (offered twice
a week), under these financial circumstances, the entity had to reduce
it to only one day per week. The Central Executive Board has deemed
this service a priority and it has reinstated the Hot Meal Program to
twice a week. With funding, the entity will continue to serve meals
twice a week. Donation: $500/per day for 150 people ($1,000 for both
days per week).

The Care Support project ($150) offers imminent aid such as
medication, one-month worth of groceries, and other basic needs will
be provided to individuals (who already rely on the entity for their
medication and nutrition) in order to help with the well-being of all
community members. The Hope Package ($150) provides families in need
with a box of groceries with a supply of food that can last them a
month.

As usual, any donation, regardless of how large it may be, can greatly
contribute to the cause. General donations will be distributed by the
Central Executive Board and the Armenian Relief Cross of Lebanon,
wherever it is most needed.

Donations can be made to your local ARS entity or on https://ars1910.org/give/

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6-         L.A.’s Little Armenia Cuisine Kicks Off January 20 on PBS

By Michele Stueven

No Passport Required with Marcus Samuelsson, which explores the food
and communities of America’s immigrant neighborhoods, kicks off season
2 on PBS January 20 with the premiere episode featuring L.A.’s
Armenian community and cuisine.

The Ethiopian-born chef raised in Sweden journeys from East Hollywood
to Glendale, visiting Phoenicia Restaurant, Mideast Tacos, Papillon
International Bakery, Sahag’s Basturma among others meeting Armenians
from Russia, Lebanon, Syria, Ethiopia and Egypt. From lule kabob to
ghapama (pumpkin stuffed with apricots, rice and Aleppo peppers,)
Samuelsson explores the rich Armenian history passed down from
generations in L.A.’s foothills in the series co-produced with Eater.

“I discovered how extremely diverse the community is, whether it’s
Persian Armenian or Turkish Armenian,” the New York-based Samuelsson
tells L.A. Weekly. “It has so many geographically different entry
points – which also means bringing a lot of different traditions
together and says a lot about the strength of the community and their
commitment to holding on to these traditions. I had some of the most
delicious food and best conversations and saw how deeply proud these
people are to be both Angelenos and Armenian.”

The premiere highlights the combination of younger chefs born in Los
Angeles, blending new ingredients and techniques with traditional
Armenian rituals passed down to them by their grandparents.

“You have the young caterer who is walking a walk between traditional
Armenian food and ingredients you might find in French restaurants,
balancing between rituals and spices and traditions,” says Samuelsson.
“Some are using foie gras in their sausage, for example.  Then you see
things like how pumpkin is used, yogurt and different dairy products
combined with spice blends that have been used for hundreds of years.
There’s a fine line between holding on to your rituals which started
as cab driver food and create new versions of that for the Smorgasburg
crowd.

An immigrant himself, Samuelsson’s inspiration for the series came
from Jonathan Gold opening our eyes and our minds to immigrant
communities.  Los Angeles offers what his adopted hometown of New York
doesn’t — it is vast and big and it’s not one thing.

“Restaurants are not the only way to express being a food town, and
L.A. is an incredible food city,” he says. “It can be food trucks or
markets. And especially in the Armenian community, which keeps it in
the home as a meeting point for people young and old to get together
to hold on to traditions. Restaurants might not be where all the food
is. Some of the best meals are kept at home. You find that a lot in
immigrant communities, rituals being kept. And that’s what we really
dive into in this episode — great food, tradition and conversation.”

Other upcoming episodes will journey to Houston for West African food,
the Italian American community in Philadelphia and the Chinese
community of Las Vegas. Samuelsson will also venture to the greater
Boston area to learn more about the Portuguese, Brazilian, and Cape
Verdean diasporas.

“Americans in general are always curious about their neighbors in
their cities and communities and eager to learn,” says the James Beard
Award-winning Top Chef Master. “The best way to learn about culture is
through food and I’m proud that this show highlights that.”

This article appeared in LA Weekly on January 8, 2020.
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