Sports: Armenian athlete Spartak Voskanyan starts at Winter Youth Olympic Games

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 18 2020
Sport 14:08 18/01/2020 Armenia

The 3rd Winter Youth Olympic Games are underway held in Swiss Lausanne. On January 19, the representative of Armenia 16-year-old Spartak Voskanyan will perform at the Cross Country Skiing event sprint 1.5km and on January 21 at 10km classic skiing.

To note, the Youth Olympics kick off on Thursday with more than 1,800 athletes from 79 countries taking part. The Games will feature 8 sports and 16 disciplines to be performed in 81 events.

The Olympic Games will conclude on January 22.

Music: The Iranian Armenian is the first to receive a star on the Walk of Fame

The Media HQ
Jan 18 2020
By James Mumaw

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. – “Stand by me” in Farsi, with Bon Jovi?

This is just one of many creative collaborations in which Andy Madadian was able to share his culture with an American audience. Known for peace and determination, he is the first Iranian-Armenian American to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

“I came to America when there was a revolution in Iran. I came here to become an American rock star. And fate brought millions of Iranians and Armenians to this beautiful country called America, and I had the opportunity to record in Armenian and Iranian. And thank God they were hits and I became an Iranian Armenian singer, ”he said.

Madadian’s energetic music sparked a collaboration with Latoya Jackson, where the artist sang in Persian in her hit “Tehran”. But Tehran itself didn’t exactly greet Madadian.

The religious regime found its content too liberal and prohibited sales in Iran.

“My music was banned in Iran, so the source of income and the source of the royalties were never there. We basically made music for love. And we never had financial support from Iran, the main source of our fans base,” said Madadian.

“But hey, I’m not complaining, I’ve always had music. I had a great family, a great life in America, so life was fantastic, it was difficult, but I’m here and I think this is just the beginning . “

The beginning of a new era. Madadian releases new English music, especially a new song called “The Good Fight”.

His hope is to continue to share a spirit of peace and unity through his art.

“I think all of these war talks are nonsense. The people of Iran and America love each other. Governments should ease off and hopefully nothing drastic will happen,” said Madadian. “My greatest wish is that Iran and America be friends so that we can all come and go and live in both countries.”

To this day, Madadian and the many Persians who live in LA continue to worry about their loved ones who are still in Iran.

“I have many, many good friends I grew up with. They are in Iran. And we are always worried about them. And we always pray that someday the situation will be peaceful for people, and hopefully, Iran and America will live in peace, “he said. “Because both cultures value each other and we should put our differences aside and continue with life.”

His Hollywood Walk of Fame star, who uses the power of music to keep his communities both joyful and connected, is just a step forward in a peaceful direction.


Food: ‘The centre of everything’: Lavash is an exploration of Armenian cooking as it exists right now

National Post, Canada
Jan 15 2020
In Armenia, lavash provides the basis of virtually every meal.John Lee
by Laura Brehaut

Our cookbook of the week is Lavash: The bread that launched 1,000 meals, plus salads, stews, and other recipes from Armenia by food writer Kate Leahy, photojournalist John Lee and chef Ara Zada. To try a recipe from the book, check out: Lavash, lavash-wrapped trout and panrkhash (lavash and cheese bake).

Providing the basis of virtually every meal, sitting on the shoulders of newlyweds in a rite of fertility and prosperity, and acting as a swaddling blanket of sorts, lavash extends far past staple-food status in Armenia.

Commonly crafted by a small group of women, the flatbread cannot merely be defined by its brief assemblage of ingredients — flour, water and salt — or subterranean baking method. Much more than a culinary cornerstone, lavash belongs to a special category of symbolic foods permeating all aspects of life.

Lavash: The bread that launched 1,000 meals, plus salads, stews, and other recipes from Armenia by Kate Leahy, John Lee and Ara Zada. Chronicle Books

“You dance around with it at weddings and wrap babies in lavash,” says Los Angeles-based chef Ara Zada. “It’s the centre of everything.”

The unleavened bread, popular throughout the South Caucasus and Western Asia, is recognized as being so essential to Armenian cuisine it earned a place on the UNESCO intangible cultural heritage list in 2014. Just one year later, the seed of a unique cookbook was sown.

Lavash (Chronicle Books, 2019) — written by Zada, food writer Kate Leahy and photojournalist John Lee — started with an encounter with “earth-shattering lavash” wrapped around locally foraged herbs and homemade cheese in the Armenian village of Zovk. While teaching a food photography workshop to teenagers in the capital city of Yerevan in 2015, Lee had the opportunity to watch his student Inessa Karapetyan’s grandmother making lavash the traditional way, in a tonir (underground clay oven). He was hooked.

“It was this magical process of the way that she spins the dough super thin, puts it on this pillow-like thing (batat) and then plops it into this oven buried in the ground,” recalls Lee. “What came out 30 to 50 seconds later was this chewy but blistery and crisp and salty, really wonderful, thin bread that was slightly reminiscent of Neapolitan-style pizza crust but it wasn’t. It was just really beautiful.”

Inspired by Lee’s tale of life-changing lavash, the authors ultimately united over their shared interest in Armenian cuisine and set out to research the dishes being made in the small South Caucasus country today. Offering an overview of its history, including how the differences between Eastern and Western Armenian cooking came to be, the book is an exploration of not just a wealth of flatbreads but whole-grain stews, hearty soups, salads, pickles, feasting dishes and sweets.

Lavash-wrapped trout. John Lee

Zada emphasizes that they didn’t aim to write a book of traditional Armenian cookery, but a collection of dishes they happened upon during their travels, which took them into homes, bakeries and restaurants countrywide. “We’re not staking claim that these are the ancient, old Armenian dishes,” he says. “It’s dishes that are being cooked within the geographical borders of Armenia itself. So we have dishes in there like salat vinaigrette, which you’ll find anywhere in Armenia but it’s a Russian dish.”

In addition to a culinary snapshot, the authors also present a portrait of a country in transition. Lee underscores the relatively recent influx of Syrian-Armenians, who have transformed the Yerevan restaurant scene with Middle Eastern flavours, and a burgeoning wine industry “that did not exist a decade ago.” On their final research trip for the book, which they planned for April and May in order to mark Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day on April 24, and partake in spring foraging, they unexpectedly witnessed political change as well.

Lee, who is a former Chicago Tribune staff photographer, was shooting a march in Yerevan when he was hit by the first flash grenade police tossed at a crowd of protestors. Navigating his leg injuries and “a lot of stitches” made shooting the cookbook more challenging, not that you would guess it from the resulting photography, which is a highlight of the collection. “John’s the only person that got hurt in a peaceful revolution,” laughs Zada, referring to what became known as the Velvet Revolution of 2018.

“This cookbook was so unusual in so many different ways. Not only was it three authors from different backgrounds — a photojournalist, an Armenian-Egyptian chef, a food writer — we (experienced) a political revolution, and we were going into a country and asking for recipes from people that we didn’t know until these trips,” says Leahy with a laugh. “It could have been a complete disaster but instead I feel like we formed a community behind this book. It’s not our personal story. It’s the story of a broader perspective — of the people who helped us, of a country at a really pivotal moment in history — and that makes it a pretty crazy story when we look back at it.”



https://nationalpost.com/life/food/the-centre-of-everything-lavash-is-an-exploration-of-armenian-cooking-as-it-exists-right-now?fbclid=IwAR3IWFVrl9UVZvHNhSm_f-wYTdHp8BEtqnC2nExZe6sn-f3UIbiF7qXqWfo

Turkish Press: ‘Memory site’ captures heart, soul of slain Armenian-Turkish journalist

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Jan 18 2020
'Memory site' captures heart, soul of slain Armenian-Turkish journalist

Murat Paksoy, Handan Kazanci   | 18.01.2020


ISTANBUL 

Thirteen years since his assassination on the steps of an Istanbul-based newspaper he once ran, Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink's office has at long last been reopened to the public as a memorial.

Founder and editor of the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, Dink was gunned down in broad daylight in front of his Istanbul office in 2007 on Jan. 19.

The final result of Dink's murder case has long been awaited, with his family and friends continuing on the quest for justice. A total of 76 suspects are on trial as part of the case.

Every year on Jan. 19, thousands gather in front of the building, where Dink was killed to commemorate the slain journalist.

Due to the "symbolic significance of the site and its place in the collective memory," the Hrant Dink Foundation — founded after his assassination — turned the building into the 23.5 Hrant Dink Site of Memory, named after an article penned by Dink in Agos on April 23, 1996.

Agos continues to circulate in Turkey in both languages, albeit from a different location where it moved in 2015.

"We gave this name [to the site] inspired by Hrant's article, in which he talked about April 23 and 24 and said: 'I wish we could combine these two days and promise a future encouraging hope at the end of these two days'," Sibel Asna, a board member at Hrant Dink Foundation, told Anadolu Agency.


"April 23 is a holiday for sovereignty and April 24 is a tragedy for us all," Asna said, adding: "The site was opened between these two days, and is called 23.5, which promises hope and kindness."

April 24 is the international day of mourning of the events of 1915.

The year 1915 saw mass relocations, which then-Prime Minister and current President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed condolences for in 2014.

An important figure in the Armenian community in Turkey, Dink had sought to kickstart public discussion on the issue and was an advocate of democratization and human rights.

He was repeatedly prosecuted for "denigrating Turkish-ness" over articles he wrote about Armenian identity and mass deportations of Armenians in 1915.

A plaque that reads: "Hrant Dink was murdered here, January 19, 2007, at 15:05" was embedded in the sidewalk in front of the building where Dink was killed, serving as a stark reminder for visitors and passers-by alike in Istanbul's teeming Sisli district. 

Hrant's story

Nayat Karakose, a program coordinator at the site, told Anadolu Agency that Hrant Dink himself was given voice to impart his story on to visitors at the memory site.

"Those who come here learn the whole story from his own peaceful and dialogue-based language," Karakose said, adding that guests could "explore all the rooms through his story." 

Noting that Dink's room was preserved as it was on the day of his murder, Karakose said: "In many museums, such rooms are protected by red cordons, we have not done so. We wanted the people coming here to feel good, and touch [the objects]," she added.

Among the venue's many parts, it features the tirttava room, which focuses on the discrimination Dink faced during his military service; the Atlantis civilization room, highlighting Dink's childhood years in Camp Armen Armenian orphanage in Istanbul; and the quest for justice room, which features videos, documents and first-hand accounts shedding light on the ongoing Hrant Dink murder trial.

There is also a piece of artwork titled, Establishing an Embassy Project, by German artists Horst Hoheisel and Andreas Knitz, which draws attention to the short-lived normalization of relations between Turkey and Armenia.

There are also several screens running videos of Dink's past speeches. Karakose underlined that each video at the site began with a question and that the answers were given by Dink himself.

"We are not only shedding light on Hrant Dink's life. We are also trying to raise awareness on universal values such as democracy, peace, human rights, justice and equality that he was advocating," she added. 

Hrant's hope

The idea of a memorial to honor Dink emerged in 2008 and it "was not easy" to achieve it Asna said. She added: "We had to prepare a site hopeful for the future, not worrying […] over a murder that tears everyone's heart out.

The site was opened after long preparations, she added.

"We describe the trauma of the Republic of Turkey through the life of Hrant," Asna said.

"This place needed to reflect Hrant's view of hope, future — his discourse and his belief in justice, humanity and love."

People from all walks of life contributed to the funding of the site's preparation, Asna said, highlighting that designers, architects and researchers had voluntarily helped in setting the venue up.

Those who visit will see how this murder was conducted, the process experienced thus far and what Turkey has gone through over Hrant's life, she said.

It weighs heavily on the conscience to witness a murder through a memory site, some visitors leave in tears and others lost in thought, Asna added.

The venue is trilingual — Turkish, Armenian and English — and is open for visitors throughout every day of the week except Monday.



Asbarez: Ferrahian Students Learn About Importance of Census

Ferrahian alumnus Berj Chorlian discusses the importance of writing in “Armenian” on the census form

BY SOSE HOVANNISIAN

Census Bureau member Berj Chorlian, a Ferrahian alumnus, returned to his alma mater to discuss the importance of the upcoming nationwide census for Diasporan Armenians. His visit took place on Monday, On January 13.

Speaking to the entire high school student body, Mr. Chorlian, who has a Bachelor’s degree in Philosophy from the University of California, Los Angeles and a Master’s in Humanities from the University of Chicago, explained, “In order for our community to receive the proper funding, influence, and to fully attain our rights, it is crucial that we, Armenian Americans, get an accurate count in the upcoming Census.” He added, “Working for the census was a natural fit for me. Growing up at an Armenian school and church, the importance and privilege of serving my community were instilled in me early on.”

Mr. Chorlian also addressed the principal objectives of the Armenian American Complete Count Committee. According to its website, the AACCC strives to “raise awareness within the Armenian community of Los Angeles County about the upcoming 2020 US Census, encourage Armenian residents to designate themselves as ‘Armenian-American,’ and engender trust about the census process.” Mr. Chorlian emphasized the significance of having each Armenian American to write in “Armenian” on the census form rather than designating the “white” or “other” categories. Doing so not only provides a more accurate estimate of the number of American Armenians, but will demonstrate the potential strength in these numbers.

Berj Chorlian

Indeed, with a more defined and representative community, Armenian Americans will have a stronger voice in local and national affairs, and will facilitate broader representation in government. All this starts with a simple write-in: “Armenian.”

Sose Hovannisian is a sophomore at Ferrahian High School.




Asbarez: ARS Now Accepting Undergraduate, Lazarian Graduate Scholarship Applications

January  17, 2020

The ARS 2020 scholarship applications must be submitted by April 1

The Armenian Relief Society Eastern USA Board of Directors are pleased to announce that the organization’s annual Undergraduate and Lazarian Graduate Scholarships Application Process for 2020 is now open. The application deadline is April 1.

Scholarships are awarded based on a combination of financial need, merit, and involvement in the Armenian community. All three areas should be addressed in the application. Each application is only valid for one year, but students who have received a scholarship may apply for a second one. Applications are not automatically renewed and an individual may only be granted a maximum of two scholarships.

Requirements for eligibility require the applicant be of Armenian descent and must have already completed at least one college semester at an accredited institution in the United States. The application form must be accompanied by financial aid information, an official transcript, and letters of recommendation.

For complete details, please visit the “About” tab, and the “Scholarship” section of the website.

For further questions please email the Regional Office [email protected]

Asbarez: City Council Hopefuls Face Off at Capacity ANCA Glendale Candidate Forum

January  17, 2020

A capacity crowd attended the ANCA Glendale Candidate Forum

“Feedback from the community is extremely vital for ANCA Glendale because we want to ensure that our endorsed candidates are candidates that will be most responsive to the city’s residents,” said ANCA Glendale Chairperson Lucy Petrosian. “We were able to gain insight on which candidates will be truly committed to improving the lives of every Glendale resident.”

“This forum allowed me to have more clarity about all eight Glendale City Council candidates,” said Suzie Burushyan, an attendee. “It was truly useful because it will help me make informative choices on the ballot on Election Day.”

The forum was organized as the last stage of ANCA Glendale’s endorsement consideration process. The initial stages included an extensive questionnaire where interested candidates submitted detailed responses regarding issues that our community cares about. It also involved an in-person session, where each interested candidate met with the ANCA Glendale Board to discuss their campaign more comprehensively. The organization is currently working to release endorsements for the open seats in Glendale City Council in the coming days.

View the entire event. www.facebook.com/watch/?v=586949875185172

ANCA Glendale advocates for the social, economic, cultural, and political rights of the city’s Armenian American community and promotes increased civic participation at the grassroots and public policy levels.

Asbarez: AMAA Celebrates Christmas with Over 11,000 Children in Armenia, Artsakh


The Armenian Missionary Association of America’s Center on Baghramyan Street in Yerevan was crowded with children and their parents who gathered for special New Year’s and Christmas programs. The programs were held on January 14 and 15, and took place four times each day. They included visits from Santa Claus, cheerful songs, dances, Christmas presents, as well as a Christmas message, which was conveyed from the stage: Share God’s Love with One Another and Give Unselfish Joy to Others.

Through this year’s Christmas play “Three Baskets,” presented by AMAA-Armenia’s “Hayasa” theatrical group, the young actors successfully brought Divine Love to the audience. In the play, written by Director/Screenwriter Nune Abrahamyan, schoolchildren relayed their cherished dreams on Christmas Eve and emphasized that even material dreams can come true if there is a desire and willingness to help others with endless compassion. At the conclusion of the play, the children hugged one another and the most important Christmas message echoed: “Because I came that they might have life and have more.” (John 10:10)

Before each presentation, the Evangelical Church of Armenia’s Christian Education Director Rev. Avetik Khachatryan and AMAA Armenia Representative Harout Nercessian greeted the audience and welcomed them to the program.

AMAA Armenia and the Evangelical Church of Armenia jointly organized these festive Christmas and New Year’s events in 45 towns and villages in Armenia and Artsakh. Over 11,000 children received not only Christmas Joy Packages and visits from Santa, but heard about God’s Divine Love and giving unselfish joy to others.

Thank you to all who supported the children in Armenia and Artsakh by donating to the Christmas Joy Program.

168: The government’s measures tantamount to expropriation in the media industry

On , the Prime Minister of Armenia has launched attack on television companies in Armenia labelling them as “the corruptioners’ TV networks”. He went further saying that those TV channels must use “corruption” logos when they broadcast. Interestingly, the Government also discussed the need for transparency in business, including in the media industry, especially in relation to ownership and tax requirements (ultimate beneficial ownership). Furthermore, the Chairman of the Competition Commission surprisingly declared that the abuse of dominant position is available in the media industry.

It is apparent that the various state institutions have conspired together to attempt to silence critical media voices which are the threats to the independence of the media sector. The Government’s intent is to make the press serve those in power rather than the public. It is apparent the Government has no an evidence-based policy at all which would enable to assess the risks and implement the reforms.

Apart from the threats to media freedom, the Government intends to undertake regulatory measures which would be tantamount to expropriation which represents the most serious infringement of private property rights. The authorities must realize that at its essence, an expropriation is the taking of private property by a government acting in its sovereign capacity. If the Government decides to expropriate those television companies, it has two options: “lawful” and “unlawful” expropriations.

A “lawful” expropriation must be, at a minimum, for a public purpose, non-discriminatory and accompanied by a prompt, adequate and effective compensation. The principles of Armenian legislation recognize a similar standard and generally include the further requirement that expropriation be conducted according to due process of law. However, if it is an “unlawful”, the Government would open a floodgate for claims in courts and international arbitrations where the standard of compensation would be different and extremely high.

It is important to note that the authorities have already taken measures in the medial industry which have risen to a substantial deprivation (indirect expropriation) by arresting the owner of TV 5, Armen Tavadyan.

It is to be noted that the Government is already facing expropriation cases in international arbitration which have a negative impact on the country’s investment environment. The Government has failed to provide the minimum standards of protection – Lydian and Sanitek are likely to bring their arbitration claims against Armenia.

Furthermore, if the Government decides to revoke the TV licenses, it may result in an interference with the rights under Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 of the European Convention of Human Rights which guarantees the right to property. Any such interference with the rights protected by Article 1 would fail to meet the requirement of lawfulness. It is the first and most important requirement and It must be compatible with the rule of law which includes freedom from arbitrariness. If there is an alleged violation, Armenia is required to compensate for expropriation. In addition, those TV companies can argue in the Strasbourg Court that there is a violation under Article 14 in conjunction with Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 i.e., the applicant has been denied all or part of a particular asset on a discriminatory ground and it was a politically-motivated deprivation under Article 18 of the Convention.

Concluding, the Government’s duty must be to ensure the sustainability of independent media in Armenia and ensure that its actions do not amount to a deprivation of property.

 GPARTNERS LAW FIRM

Sargis Grigoryan, Partner




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/17/2020

                                        Friday, 

Former Armenian Security Chief Found Shot Dead (UPDATED)

        • Marine Khachatrian
        • Tatevik Lazarian

Armenia - Georgi Kutoyan, the former director of the National Security Service.

Georgi Kutoyan, who headed Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) in the 
final years of former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule, was found shot to death 
in Yerevan on Friday.

A spokeswoman for the Investigative Committee, Naira Harutiunian, reported in 
the afternoon that Kutoyan’s body had a gunshot wound then it was discovered by 
his wife at his Yerevan apartment “a short while ago.”

Forensic experts and other officers of the law-enforcement agency are already 
“working at the scene,” Harutiunian wrote on Facebook.

A high-ranking Investigative Committee official, Artur Melikian, said later in 
the day that preliminary indications are that Kutoyan, 38, was killed by a 
gunshot fired at his head. But investigators also found dozens of bullets in the 
apartment and forensic experts will determine whether those were fired from the 
same pistol, he told reporters outside the apartment building cordoned off by 
police.

Melikian said that premeditated murder is therefore one of the theories of 
Kutoyan’s death considered by the investigators.

“We don’t yet have information that anyone heard gunshots,” he said, adding that 
more residents of the apartment block will be questioned in the coming days.

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

Kutoyan has made no public statements since then. He also kept a low profile 
during his tenure.


Armenia -- President Serzh Sarkisian talks to the newly appointed National 
Service Chief Georgi Kutoyan, 12Feb2016

Sarkisian offered condolences to Kutoyan’s family and said he is “deeply 
shocked” by the death of the former NSS chief whom described as a highly 
competent and “decent” individual. In a statement, the ex-president also called 
for public scrutiny of the unfolding probe of his death.

Armen Ashotian, the deputy chairman of Sarkisian’s Republican Party of Armenia 
(HHK), also expressed shock at the “murder” of Kutoyan. “This tragic incident is 
very strange and raises many questions,” he wrote, demanding a “transparent and 
comprehensive” investigation from law-enforcement authorities.

Edmon Marukian, the leader of another opposition party, Bright Armenia, likewise 
demanded that relevant authorities find “clear answers to many questions” 
resulting from the fatal shooting.

“This is an unexpected and shocking development which we need to seriously 
analyze and understand … what caused it,” Alen Simonian, a senior lawmaker 
representing the ruling My Step bloc, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.

Simonian suggested vaguely that Kutoyan’s death is one of the “echoes of the 
past which we are still hearing.” He declined to elaborate.

Kutoyan is the second former senior security official found shot dead in the 
last four months. Hayk Harutiunian, a former chief of the Armenian police, was 
found dead in his country house in September.

Harutiunian reportedly had a gunshot wound to his head. Investigators suggested 
that he committed suicide.

In the months leading up to his death, Harutiunian was repeatedly interrogated 
in an ongoing criminal investigation into the 2008 post-election violence in 
Yerevan. The Special Investigative Service, which is conducting that inquiry, 
told the Armenpress news agency that it never questioned Kutoyan as a witness or 
suspect.

The Investigative Committee and the NSS did not investigate or interrogate 
Kutoyan either, according to the committee spokeswoman.



Armenian Gas Operator May Seek Price Rise

        • Robert Zargarian

Armenia - The Gazprom Armenia headquarters in Yerevan, October 31, 2014.

Armenia’s national gas distribution company owned by Russia’s Gazprom giant 
confirmed on Friday that it may ask public utility regulators to raise its 
retail prices set for households and corporate consumers.

“The company is discussing the issue of revising the tariffs,” said a spokesman 
for the Gazprom Armenia network. He did not specify the scale of the possible 
price rise.

The retail prices are set by the Public Services Regulatory Commission (PRSC). 
Its chairman, Garegin Baghramian, did not comment on the likelihood of their 
increase when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian service. He said only that the two 
sides are continuing their discussions on “long-term pricing.”

The cost of Russian gas supplied to Armenian consumers remained unchanged after 
Gazprom raised its wholesale price for Armenia from $150 to $165 per thousand 
cubic meters in January 2019. This translated into additional major expenses for 
Gazprom Armenia, which already reported growing financial losses in the course 
of 2018. Armenian officials have said until now that the gas network can offset 
those losses through cost-cutting.

In a statement issued on New Year’s Eve, Gazprom announced that it will not 
raise further the price of gas supplied to its Armenian subsidiary at least 
before the end of 2020.

The announcement came after months of negotiations between Armenian and Russian 
government officials and Gazprom executives. 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.

One of Pashinian’s deputies, Mher Grigorian, expressed confidence in November 
that the domestic gas tariffs will not rise before April 2020.

Armenian households currently pay 139 drams (30 U.S. cents) per cubic meter of 
Russian gas.



Parliament Attack Ringleader Appeals To Pashinian

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - A screenshot of TV footage of gunmen opening fire in the Armenian 
parliament on 27 October, 1999.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s office on Friday confirmed reports that he has 
received a letter from the jailed man who led a deadly attack on the Armenian 
parliament in 1999.

The office declined to disclose the content of the letter sent by Nairi Hunanian.

An obscure former journalist, Hunanian led an armed group that burst into the 
National Assembly and sprayed it with bullets on October 27, 1999. Then Prime 
Minister Vazgen Sarkisian, parliament speaker Karen Demirchian and six other 
officials were killed in the shooting spree that thrust Armenia’s government 
into turmoil.

Hunanian accused the government of corruption and misrule and called for regime 
change as he held dozens of parliament deputies and government officials hostage 
following the killings. He and the four other gunmen, including his brother 
Karen and uncle Vram Galstian, surrendered to police after overnight 
negotiations with then President Robert Kocharian. The gunmen were subsequently 
tried and sentenced to life in prison.

Hunanian became eligible for parole in October last year because of having spent 
20 years in prison. He asked appropriate authorities to set him free. The 
application was rejected.

The jailed ringleader, who turned 54 recently, appears to have written to 
Pashinian shortly after law-enforcement authorities decided late last month 
resume a criminal investigation into the 1999 killings. They will presumably try 
to establish whether Hunanian’s armed group had powerful sponsors outside the 
parliament building.

Some relatives and supporters of the assassinated officials still suspect former 
Kocharian and his successor President Serzh Sarkisian (no relation to Vazgen), 
who was Armenia’s national security minister in October 1999, of masterminding 
the killings to eliminate powerful rivals. Both men repeatedly dismissed such 
suggestions during and after a serious political crisis caused by the killings.

Throughout his and his henchmen’s marathon trial Hunanian insisted that he 
himself had decided to seize the parliament without anybody's orders.



Press Review


“Chorrord Ishkhanutyun” accuses Armenia’s former rulers of plotting to overthrow 
the current government and alleges that members of the Constitutional Court are 
part of this creeping “coup.” “At any moment they may decide to declare Nikol 
Pashinian’s government illegal,” claims the paper. It says that they are not 
only spreading fake news but also trying to form “some counterweight against the 
authorities.”

“Haykakan Zhamanak” complains that most Armenians still feel that people 
demonstrating against various government decisions or policies are definitely 
right. “The reasons for this sentiment are understandable,” writes the paper. 
“With a handful of exceptions, this has for decades been the case in Armenia. In 
hopes of solving their problems, victims of one or another injustice simply 
organized protests, having no other means of communication with the authorities 
… We now have a situation where everyone is by and large in favor of changes and 
believes that Armenia must become a more modern state. But everyone thinks that 
everything except the ‘traditional’ practices of their sphere must change.” The 
paper says that this sentiment is fanned and exploited by the country’s former 
leaders.

“Aravot” comments on Armenian reactions to Human Rights Watch’s latest annual 
report on human rights practices around the world, including Armenia. The paper 
says pro-government and opposition forces cherry-picked different parts of the 
report fitting their conflicting political agendas. “The authorities maintain 
that Human Rights Watch glorified Armenia’s post-revolution achievements while 
the oppositions are convinced that the organization voiced devastating criticism 
of the state of human rights in Armenia,” it says.

(Lilit Harutiunian)


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