Asbarez: Elen Asatryan Announces Bid for State Assembly District 44

GLENDALE— Elen Asatryan officially launched her campaign Monday for the California State Assembly’s 44th District. If elected, Asatryan would be the first Armenian-American immigrant woman to be elected to the California State Legislature in its 174 year history.

Asatryan, a lifelong democrat and community leader, currently serves as a Glendale City Councilwoman. 

“I’m excited for the opportunity to continue to serve my community in the California State Legislature,” stated Councilwoman Asatryan.

“I plan on building on my long history of advocacy and leadership at the local, state and federal levels and bring our fight for social justice, small businesses, women’s rights, environmental protections and working families to Sacramento. I’m honored to have the support of so many in our community who have encouraged me to take this step,” she added. 

Asatryan entered the race with the endorsement of local State Senator Anthony Portantino (D-Burbank), who said, “I am thrilled to support Elen Asatryan for State Assembly. As your State Senator, I know firsthand that we need representatives in Sacramento that are smart, hardworking and committed to serving our community – Elen brings all of that to the table and more. I’ve seen Elen dedicate herself to improving all our lives and she is a fierce fighter for our children, our local economy, our environment, and the diversity that makes our community so special. Elen is the best choice to represent us in Sacramento and am proud to endorse my good friend for the State Assembly.” 

At the early age of 10, Asatryan quickly discovered her drive and passion for community. After the historic collapse of the Soviet Union, like many Armenians, she and her family immigrated to the United States and immediately settled in Glendale. Asatryan and her family rebuilt their lives learning a new culture and language and used their entrepreneurial spirit to build new businesses to achieve the American dream. These early powerful experiences navigating new worlds and spaces forged her into the community leader she is today. 

Spanning over two decades, Asatryan spearheaded and led successful initiatives and campaigns on the local, state, and federal level, which include: ensuring equal access and representation in government; creating public policy fellowship and internship programs for high school, college students, and recent college graduates; establishing the Glendale Domestic Violence Task Force; expanding green space, and access to programs for low-income families and marginalized communities. 

The California State Assembly District 44 includes: North Glendale, Montrose, La Crescenta, Sunland-Tujunga, Shadow Hills, North Hollywood, Burbank, Toluca Lake, Studio City, Sherman Oaks, and Valley Village.

Asatryan is a graduate of local public schools: Columbus Elementary School, Toll Middle School, Herbert Hoover High School, and UCLA. Elen obtained a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science with concentrations in American Politics and International Relations. Elen resides in Glendale with her rescue dog, Buddy. 

For more info please visit ElectElen.com


AEF Hosts Armenian and English Language Writing Competition

The AEF's 3rd annual Armenian and English Language Writing Competition graphic


The Armenian Educational Foundation’s 3rd annual Armenian and English Language Writing Competition drew participants from Armenian high schools, immersion programs and middle schools across the country.

Students from four Armenian high schools and immersive programs and seven middle schools and immersive programs participated in the Armenian and English language writing competition. The participating schools included:

High Schools:

  • AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School;
  • Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School;
  • Armenian Mesrobian School;
  • Rose & Alex Pilibos Armenian School.

Middle Schools:

  • AGBU MDS;
  • Armenian Sisters’ Academy;
  • Vahan & Anoush Chamlian Armenian School;
  • Holy Martyrs Ferrahian Middle School;
  • C & E Merdinian Armenian Evangelical School Armenian Mesrobian School;
  • Woodrow Wilson Middle School, Armenian Immersion Program.

The topic for this year’s essays related to the use of Artificial Intelligence in today’s society. Students were asked to reflect on two industries they felt were most impacted by AI, and discuss the positive and negative impacts of AI on society.

The panel of judges encompassed scholars of the Armenian and English languages with a variety of professional experience, including journalists, advanced placement high school educators and graduate students.

First place winners received a $500 prize, second place received $250 and third place received $125.

Armenian Language High School Winners and Essays:

  • First Place: Daniella Agojian (11th grade), Armenian Mesrobian School. Daniella’s essay can be read online.
  • Second Place: Vincent Hovsepian (11th grade), Rose & Pilibos Armenian School. Vincent’s essay can be read online.
  • Third Place: Davit Gevorgyan (10th grade), AGBU MDS. Davit’s essay can be read online.

English Language High School Winners:

  • First Place: Keghon Kasparian (12th grade), Rose & Alex Pilibos Armenian School. Keghon’s essay can be read online.
  • Second Place: Alana Papazian (11th grade), Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School. Alana’s essay can be read online.
  • Third Place: Narod Ekmekjian (10th grade), Armenian Mesrobian School. Narod’s essay can be read online.

Armenian Language Middle School Winners:

  • First Place: Elen Harutyunyan (7th grade), Woodrow Wilson Middle School. Elen’s essay can be read online.
  • Second Place: Anna Aghajanyan (7th grade), AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School. Anna’s essay can be read online.
  • Third Place: Mary Hovakimyan (8th grade), Vahan & Anoush Chamlian Armenian School. Mary’s essay can be read online.

English Language Middle School Winners:

  • First Place: Lia Kargodorian (8th grade), Vahan & Anoush Chamlian Armenian School. Lia’s essay can be read online.
  • Second Place: Ashley Keshishian (6th grade), Armenian Sisters’ Academy. Ashley’s essay can be found online.
  • Third Place: Stephanie Mazmanian (8th grade), Armenian Mesrobian School. Stephanie’s essay can be read online.

AEF’s purpose in hosting the Writing Competition is to promote writing skills for students with the hope of encouraging and shaping a future generation of leaders, motivators and influencers who can become a positive force and promote progress within their community.

For more information on the Armenian Educational Foundation or to donate online, visit the AEF website.

Asbarez: Baroness Cox Urges Artsakh to Endure and Not Accept ‘False Promise of Peace’

Baroness Cox was one of the first people to visit Artsakh after the 2020 war


Caroline Cox, a member of the British House of Lords, has addressed a letter to the people of Artsakh offering them her support for their endurance and urging them continue to fight, rather than accept the “false promise of peace.”

Below is the text of Baroness Cox’s letter: 

To the people of the Republic of Artsakh, for whom I have profound  affection and deep respect.  I write to you today because 120,000 innocent civilians face an existential crisis. 

Conditions are now present for genocide against the Armenian Christians of  Artsakh.  

Your people have suffered, and continue to suffer, the most serious international  crimes. I have personally witnessed the results of massacres, atrocities and forced  displacement. Yet the world has chosen to turn a deaf ear to your suffering. Even  your closest international allies have either not paid attention to, or ignored, the  warning signs of genocide.  

During this darkest hour, I stand in solidarity with the Armenians of Artsakh. I  have great confidence in your ability to overcome this crisis with courage,  fortitude, sacrifice and love – not only will you survive but you will create beauty  from the ashes of destruction.  I am told that I have visited the Republic of Artsakh 88 times since 1990. I have  been privileged to experience the love of your history and your rich culture of  music, dance and art – all within the context of the breathtaking beauty of your  land’s rugged mountains, thick forests, fertile valleys and crystal rivers. I have  been blessed to meet a host of wonderful people, many the direct descendants of  victims of the Great Genocide in Anatolia, or themselves victims of anti  Armenian pogroms in Sumgait and Baku, and ethnic-religious cleansing in  Artsakh. I am struck by the unanimity with which they share a simple common  goal: it is to live in peace, dignity and security in their own historic land. This longing continues to fill my heart. 
 
I always carry with me the memory of a young woman I met in a hospital in  Martakert in 1992, after I had visited the village of Maragha, which had just been  subjected to a massacre inflicted by Azerbaijan. Whilst in the remains of the  village, I saw corpses of civilians decapitated by Azerbaijani militants; vertebrae  still on the ground; people’s blood still smeared on walls; homes that had been  set alight were still smoldering. The day I met this woman, she was in agony over  the deaths of her son and fourteen of her relatives who had been killed in the  1  massacre in Maragha. I wept with her. There are no words for a time like that.  But when she stopped weeping, I asked her if she had a message she would like  to share with the world. She replied, “All I want to say is thank you to those  people who have not forgotten us in these terrible days.” 

I do not think “thank you” are the words that would have come to my mind on  the day I had seen so many of my family killed in such horrific circumstances.  That is the dignity of the Armenian people. If I could speak to this woman today,  I would tell her: “We love you and we have not forgotten you, even as the dark  cloud of the Armenian Genocide, once again, looms over the mountains of your  land.” 

During the previous war, I met an Armenian man who had seen the body of a  five-year-old Armenian girl, cut in two, hanging from the branch of a tree. He  wept with horror and vowed revenge. Later, when his section of the Karabakh  army captured villages, he could not bring himself to harm an Azerbaijani child.  When this story was told at a dinner – in the Armenian style of making speeches  – a journalist commended the man for his humanity and dignity. To which he  replied: “Dignity is a crown of thorns.” The people of Artsakh have been wearing  your crown of thorns with inspirational courage and dignity.  I have never been as concerned about Artsakh’s future as I am today. Azerbaijan’s  conquest and ethnic-religious cleansing of two thirds of Artsakh in 2020, with the  direct assistance of Turkey and its allied jihadist militias; its detention, torture  and killing of Armenian hostages; its subsequent military incursions and  occupation of territory belonging to the Republic of Armenia; its current blockade  of Artsakh; and its territorial claims on the whole of Armenia all bear witness to  this grim reality. 

Conditions are present for genocide against the Armenian Christians of Artsakh. 

However, signatories to the Genocide Convention – including the United States,  France and my own Government in the United Kingdom – have refused their legal obligation to prevent the worst from happening, to provide protection to  those who need it, and to punish those who are responsible for atrocities. Not one  nation appears willing to prevent, provide or protect.  I am deeply disturbed by reports that the Republic of Armenia is being pressured  by international powers to contemplate sacrificing your homeland of Artsakh to  the Republic of Azerbaijan in return for a so-called peace treaty. If reports are to  be believed, those involved in the negotiation process say that the treaty will  secure the borders of the Republic of Armenia and allow trade to open up with  the Turkish world.  2  My dear friends, as you are aware, these promises of peace and prosperity come  at a price. If the treaty is signed in its current form, you would be expected to  surrender your international right of self-determination. You would be expected  to concede control over your lives, liberty and land. To use a recent phrase from  the Armenian Supreme Spiritual Council: By “recognizing the Republic of  Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan, the Armenian authorities will inevitably confront  our brothers and sisters in Artsakh with a new genocide and depatriation.” 

If a peace treaty is signed and later broken by Azerbaijan, history has shown that international powers would not be willing to respond. During the Russian brokered ceasefire in November 2020, Azerbaijan promised to ‘stop at their  current positions’ yet its armed forces have since advanced into new positions with impunity. Azerbaijan promised ‘the exchange of prisoners of war’, yet  dozens of Armenian military and civilian personnel remain in Azerbaijani  custody, many of whom have undergone speedy criminal trials. Azerbaijan has  not been held to account for breaking the 2020 ceasefire. One can only suspect  that an agreement that results from present-day negotiations, in their current form, will not guarantee peace for the Armenians of Artsakh.  

One of my great fears is the annihilation of all Armenian churches, monuments  and other cultural and spiritual treasures, which would fall under Azerbaijan’s  control. Many Armenian sites have already been targeted and badly damaged  since 2020, including the world-famous Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shushi, an  archaeological camp near Tigranakert, and a memorial dedicated to the victims  of the previous war. We must not forget the systematic erasure of centuries-old  Armenian religious sites in Nakhchivan, including the attack on the Armenian  Djulfa cemetery, where Azerbaijani soldiers, armed with sledgehammers and  cranes, destroyed hundreds of hand-carved cross-stones. Under Azerbaijan’s  control, there are strong grounds for belief that another ‘Nakhichevan’ would be  imposed in Artsakh – a priceless part of humanity’s common cultural heritage  will be destroyed.   I keep in mind a lesson from the Bible. In the last days of the kingdom of Judah,  the Prophet Jeremiah lamented that his countrymen were saying, “‘Peace, peace,’  when there is no peace.” In that case, the consequence of the nation accepting a  false sense of peace was the loss of its homeland and exile in a foreign country. 
 
When I was a young child, my own country was isolated and facing its darkest  hour. Great Britain was existentially threatened by an ultra-nationalistic,  genocidal dictatorship. Our then Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, promised  the nation “peace in our time”, but there was no peace. His successor, Winston  Churchill assumed the post of Prime Minister promising the nation nothing more  3  than “blood, toil, sweat and tears”. But the indescribable price of ‘blood, toil,  sweat and tears’ resulted in the privilege we now enjoy of living in freedom.  

It is my hope and prayer that the long-suffering Armenian nation will continue to  strive for the opportunity to live in peace and dignity in your own land. This is  the blessing that my family and I, along with all Britons, enjoy. For that great  privilege I am deeply indebted to those in my nation who, over eighty years ago,  chose to endure a great sacrifice, rather than accepting a false promise of peace.  Please be assured of my continued daily prayers, and of my continued advocacy  on your behalf. Every one of you means much to me and to many others around  the world.  I pray for God’s blessing on you all and that you will long live in a free Armenia  and free Artsakh.

International Community Should Pressure Baku to Stop Genocidal Threats Against Armenia, Artsakh

The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention


The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention issued a statement calling on the international community to apply strong pressure on Baku to stop its genocidal threats against Armenia and Artsakh.

The group also voiced concern regarding what it called the international negotiators’ “blind spots” as they mediate the Armenia-Azerbaijan talks, sounding the alarm that by ignoring the right to self-determination of Artsakh, they are essentially “giving the fox the entire henhouse in reward for his predatory behavior.”

Below is the text of the statement issued on May 30.

The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention registers its deep concern over the glaring blind spots of international negotiators involved in the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace negotiations. We implore international actors, particularly US President Biden, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, Russian President Vladimir Putin, and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, to recognize the threat of genocide faced by Armenians in the South Caucasus. We further implore them to fully consider the implications of ignoring existing early warning systems and genocide prevention protocols by rewarding Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev for his threats against Armenia. Rewarding a dictator who has publicly threatened genocide will have long-term catastrophic implications not only for Armenians, but also for international peace and security.

This spring we have seen an internationally-brokered intensification of efforts to finalize a peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The details of these negotiations have been unclear, though they do clearly include enormous concessions by Armenia to Azerbaijan – such as giving up the historically Armenian territory of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) – with little offered to Armenia in exchange, other than paper guarantees of Armenia’s already-existing legal rights: Azerbaijan’s respect for Armenia’s sovereignty, the return of Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) from the 2020 conflict who are still illegally being held by Azerbaijan, and the sharing of information about the whereabouts of the disappeared. The Lemkin Institute is concerned that the major powers are cynically using threats to Armenia’s continued existence as a stick to force it to agree to very lopsided agreements. We fear that Armenia is being told that either it signs this agreement or it will face Azeri and Turkish aggression alone. The apparent international assumption that Azeri and Turkish threats will end once Armenia gives up all claims to Artsakh are baffling. Just last week President Aliyev demanded that the Armenians of Artsakh give up their representative institutions and that the leaders of Artsakh “turn themselves in” to the Azerbaijani authorities, warning them that “ [e]veryone knows that we have the necessary capabilities to launch any type of operation in this region.”

Of particular concern to the Lemkin Institute is the very real threat of genocide that is going unaddressed: Ilham Aliyev has repeatedly threatened the sovereign Republic of Armenia (even suggesting that its capital, Yerevan, is historic Azeri land) and pushing — with its ally Türkiye — for an illegal so-called “Zangezur Corridor” through Armenia’s Syunik province, which would effectively constitute an occupation of Armenian land and would cut Armenia off from direct land access to its important southern trade partner, Iran. Because of these threats — which have been coupled with the Baku regime’s endorsement of horrific and genocidal atrocities against Armenian soldiers, POWs, and civilians during the 2016 and 2020 wars — there is no reason to believe that Azerbaijan will abide by any treaty or that its expansionist ambitions will stop with Artsakh. Azerbaijan’s disrespect for international norms is blatant and consistent, as shown by its repeated breach of the 2020 Tripartite Ceasefire Agreement that ended the 2020 war.

It is imperative that the great powers negotiating this peace view their work within the context of an on-going genocidal threat to Armenian life that has existed in the region since the 19th century and particularly since the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923. Due to Türkiye’s active and well-funded denial of the genocide, as well as its powerful geostrategic position and the coordinated pressure that it has placed on governments, research institutions, the United Nations, NATO and NGOs, this genocidal threat has never been accounted for and the transitional justice mechanisms that could transform the current genocidal power dynamics in the region have not been implemented. Given that Türkiye actively supports Azerbaijan militarily, diplomatically, politically, and economically, and that Azerbaijan has pursued similar techniques of denial, including notorious bribery schemes as part of its “caviar diplomacy,” these peace negotiations are setting the stage for disaster.

Nevertheless, the very real existential threats being faced by Armenians are being completely ignored by peace negotiators and the press. Charles Michel, President of the European Council who hosted talks between Aliyev and Armenian President Nikol Pashinyan on May 14, affirmed afterwards that the contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh will be recognized as part of Azerbaijan. He further “encouraged Azerbaijan to engage in developing a positive agenda with the aim of guaranteeing the rights and security of this population, in close cooperation with the international community” and added that he views a “need for a transparent and constructive dialogue between Baku and this population [Armenians in Artsakh].” The Lemkin Institute wonders how it is possible for the elected government of Artsakh, much less the 120,000 people who have been illegally blockaded in the territory for over five months by the Baku regime, to negotiate with a man and a government who have made anti-Armenianism and genocidal hate speech a core policy of their dictatorship.

We remind these powerful actors that their support for Baku’s claims to historic Armenian land can amount to complicity in genocide, as they are effectively acting as accomplices to the current regime in Baku, which has overseen genocidal atrocities against Armenian POWs and civilians, routinely flouts the 2020 ceasefire agreement that ended the 44-day war, still holds hostage Armenian POWs in violation of international law, has illegally blockaded the population of Artsakh for five months now, and regularly launches incursions into the territory of the Republic of Armenia. Ignoring the genocidal threats from the Aliyev regime, and its ally Türkiye, is a dangerous move and a betrayal of humanity. It will most likely set the stage for a second Armenian Genocide and spell the end of post-1945 genocide prevention efforts, which the United States in particular has made an important part of its foreign policy. Geostretegic interests must be understood within a genocide prevention framework if the world is ever to have a chance for peace and security.

The Lemkin Institute believes that, given the circumstances, the self-determination of the people of Artsakh is a form of genocide prevention in addition to a right recognized by the Charter of the United Nations and several human rights treaties and declarations, which has become part of international jus cogens. Self-determination is further a recognized right of all peoples under oppressive colonial regimes. International law implies the responsibility of third party states to promote the realization of and respect for this right. Beyond this, the people of Artsakh have a strong case for self-determination. The land and the people of Artsakh – an historic Armenian territory granted to Azerbaijan by the Soviet Union – has never before been under the governance of the state of Azerbaijan. Under the Soviets it had the status of an autonomous oblast; in the 1980s it sought separation from Azerbaijan according to the constitution of the Soviet Union; and in the 1990s it fought a painful war for its independence after an Azerbaijani invasion. From 1994 to 2020 Artsakh was governed as a semi-independent and democratic nation within a buffer zone of formerly Azerbaijani territory occupied by Artsakh Armenian forces. After the 44-day war in 2020, Azerbaijani forces gained control of the territories in this buffer zone as well as parts of Artsakh itself. Since December 12, 2022 Azerbaijan has been illegally blockading the people of Artsakh, who are over 99 percent Armenian.

The international community, rather than exploiting Armenia’s weakness (itself a long-term consequence of the 1915-1923 genocide), should be placing strong pressure on the Baku regime to cease its genocidal threats to Armenia and Armenians. Such pressure must include a recognition that placing Artsakh Armenians under the control of genocidal dictator Ilham Aliyev is akin to giving the fox the entire henhouse in reward for his predatory behavior. Instead of offering Aliyev a green light for genocide, international actors should be issuing targeted sanctions and using other mechanisms to contain Azerbaijan’s aggression and guarantee Armenians security in the region. Self-determination for Artsakh should be adjudicated immediately through proper international mechanisms. In the long run an independent investigatory commission into Armenian and Azeri grievances and a transitional justice process will be necessary to craft an enduring peace in the South Caucasus. But the immediate priority must be the prevention of genocide against Armenians.

Nagorno Karabakh presidency responds to Aliyev’s latest demands

 14:25, 29 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 29, ARMENPRESS. The Artsakh/Nagorno Karabakh presidency has responded to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s latest statement demanding the elected officials of Nagorno Karabakh to surrender.

Presidential spokesperson Lusine Avanesyan issued a statement in response to Aliyev’s speech.

“Just a few days ago, the President of the Artsakh Republic called on the people and authorities of Azerbaijan to end the hatred and genocidal policy towards the people of Artsakh, to truly accept the principle of equality of people established by international law, the title and rights of the indigenous Armenian people to Artsakh.

At the same time, President Harutyunyan expressed his willingness to start a dialogue in an international format, based on the norms and principles of international law, especially on the principles of equality and self-determination of people, non-use of force and threat of force, peaceful settlement of disputes and principles of territorial integrity.

It is not the first time that Azerbaijan has spoken threateningly to the people of Artsakh after the Tripartite Declaration of a ceasefire, we have seen and continue to see manifestations of aggression in the form of local combat operations, blockade, energy and other pressures. This time, the President of Azerbaijan has added illegal demands to the elected authorities of the people of Artsakh.

The President and the National Assembly hold the primary mandate of the people of Artsakh, elected on democratic principles and on the basis of the Constitution of the Artsakh Republic. And the president of Azerbaijan is well aware that the main source of the subjectivity of Artsakh is those state institutions, and, in fact, with such demands, he recognizes the legitimacy and importance of those institutions.

Along with the active international efforts aimed at ensuring lasting peace in the South Caucasus, the repeated threats of the Azerbaijani President to the people and statehood of Artsakh are aimed at undermining the perspective of the effectiveness of these efforts. Emphasizing once again that Azerbaijan does not respect any international principles and obligations, President Harutyunyan reaffirms the provisions of his May 23 message addressed to the parties of the Tripartite Declaration and the UN Security Council," Avanesyan said.

250 persons under investigation for online drug trafficking

 15:39, 29 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 29, ARMENPRESS. Investigators have carried out serious work as part of a criminal case on drug trafficking via Telegram channels and the details will be announced soon, Minister of Internal Affairs Vahe Ghazaryan has said.

A division designed to combat specifically online drug trafficking has been active in the General Department of Criminal Police since 2021, Minister of Internal Affairs Vahe Ghazaryan told lawmakers at a joint committee debate on the 2022 budget.

Ghazaryan said there is an active criminal case instituted by the Investigative Committee on online drug trafficking via Telegram. Ghazaryan said this type of drug trafficking is the most difficult and problematic type for authorities.

“We have carried out serious work over this. And you will hear about this soon,” Ghazaryan said, adding that 250 persons are being investigated as part of the case.

Top brass visits servicemembers of peacekeeping brigade

 15:21, 29 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 29, ARMENPRESS. Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Armenia, First Deputy Defense Minister Major-general Edward Asryan, together with Defense Ministry and military officials, visited on Monday the Peacekeeping Brigade on the occasion of the International Day of Peacekeepers.

Addressing the peacekeeping troops, the Major-general extended congratulations on behalf of Defense Minister Suren Papikyan and thanked them for fulfilling their service and mission duly, the Defense Ministry said in a press release.

Praising the readiness level of the peacekeepers, Major-general Asryan underscored that the Armenian servicemembers – knowing very well the price of peace – are carrying out their objectives with honor and are having an important contribution in international security and peace.

A number of servicemembers of the brigade were awarded during the ceremony.

GLOBSEC 2023 Bratislava Forum:Armenia top security official to participate in panel discussion with Azerbaijan’s Hajiyev

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 16:23, 29 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 29, ARMENPRESS. The AC Milan Junior Camp is holding an International Camp in Yerevan, with 160 boys and girls aged 11-15 from various provinces of Armenia in attendance.

Photos by Gevorg Perkuperkyan

The Milan Junior Camp is held at the Football Academy in Avan, Yerevan.

The camp offers the opportunity for all participants to share a unique experience where they will meet new friends, have fun and play lots of football in complete safety under the supervision of the highly qualified AC Milan staff led by Milan International Academy Head Coach Claudio Zola.

AL2 Sport founder Luca Amadessi, coordinator and organizer of the Milan Junior Camp, praised the venue.

“I can say that the academy and fields are high standard. Our main goal is to give participants the opportunity to play, to learn and make new friends,” Amadessi said.

“Given my experience of many years, I can say that you have wonderful fields and academy. Our goal is to convey AC Milan’s approaches and methodology to the young people. We really enjoy working with them,” Claudio Zola said.

The Milan Academy Junior Camp is a charity initiative by Ameriabank, together with Team Telecom Armenia, Zangezur Copper Molybdenum Combine and Tashir Group of Companies.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 29-05-23

 16:50, 29 May 2023

YEREVAN, 29 MAY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 29 May, USD exchange rate down by 0.35 drams to 386.17 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 1.46 drams to 413.78 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.01 drams to 4.82 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 1.71 drams to 476.69 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 26.27 drams to 24184.45 drams. Silver price up by 1.48 drams to 287.36 drams.