Leader of the Georgian-Armenian Diocese presented President of Germa

Leader of the Georgian-Armenian Diocese presented President of German
Bundestag program of events devoted to the Armenian Genocide
Centennial

16:05, 14 February, 2015

YEREVAN, 14 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. During the visit to Georgia, the
President of the Bundestag of the Federal Republic of Germany asked
about the programs devoted to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide. As the Georgian-Armenian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic
Church reports to “Armenpress”, at the initiative of German Ambassador
to Georgia Ortwin Hennig, President of the Bundestag, Dr. Norbert
Lammert met on February 13 high-ranking clergymen representing the
Georgian Orthodox, the Roman Catholic, the German Lutheran and the
Baptist-Evangelical Churches, the rabbi of the Jewish Community and
spiritual leaders of the Yezidi community, as well as leader of the
Georgian-Armenian Diocese, His Grace, Father, Bishop Vazgen
Mirzakhanyan.

The President of the German Bundestag asked about the situation
related to religious tolerance in Georgia, as well as the cooperation
between Christians, Muslims, Hebrews and other religious communities.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/794106/leader-of-the-georgian-armenian-diocese-presented-president-of-german-bundestag-program-of-events-devoted.html

Public discussion on Avetisyan family murder starts in Gyumri

Public discussion on Avetisyan family murder starts in Gyumri

16:11 14/02/2015 >> SOCIETY

The first public discussion on the recent murder of the seven-member
Avetisyan family kicked off in Armenia’s Gyumri city.

One of the organizers of the event, chairman of Asparez Journalists’
Club Levon Barseghyan, said that more than 200 people – human rights
activists, lawyers and concerned individuals – expressed a wish to
participate in the debate.

The participants will sum up the information on the tragic murder,
provided by journalists, lawyers and human rights activists, as well
as will develop and coordinate the actions aimed at solving the crime
and preventing similar crimes.

Six members of one family, including a two-year-old child, were shot
dead in their house in Gyumri on January 12. A six-month-old baby was
hospitalized with stab wounds. He died in hospital on January 12.
Valery Permyakov, a serviceman of the 102nd Russian military base
stationed in Gyumri, the main suspect in the murder, was detained by
Russian border guards while attempting to cross the Armenian-Turkish
border near Yerazgavors village in Armenia’s Shirak province.
Permyakov is held in custody at the Russian military base. He was
questioned and confessed to the crime. Permyakov is charged under
Article 105.2 and 338.2 of the Russian Criminal Code (murder and
desertion). Also, Armenian Investigative Committee brought a charge
against Permyakov under Article 104 part 2 point 1 (murder of two or
more persons) of the Armenian Criminal Code.

http://www.panorama.am/en/current_topics/2015/02/14/gyumri-barseghyan/

Ruling party ignores Armenia’s Constitution

Ruling party ignores Armenia’s Constitution

13:30 / 14.02.2015

Speaking at a news conference today Republican party MP Gagik Minasyan
said: “…Gagik Tsarukyan convened session of the PAP political Council
and stated about conduction of rallies. It really endangers our
national security…”

What does it mean? Does it mean that rallies will be banned? Does it
mean that you don’t care what Constitution says? What does it mean
rallies endanger our national security? Are we becoming North Korea?

http://nyut.am/archives/329575?lang=en

Armenian Army Captain Arrested for "Dereliction of Duty" in Soldier’

Armenian Army Captain Arrested for “Dereliction of Duty” in Soldier’s
Murder Case

11:13, February 14, 2015

Captain Artyom Avetisyan, an officer at the Vazgen Sarhgsyan Military
Institute has been arrested and charged with “dereliction of duty” in
the death of Haykaz Barseghyan, a private in the Armenian army whose
body was found on January 29 hanging from a rope attached to the
horizontal bar in the gym of a training unit in Yerevan he was
assigned to.

On February 2, four Armenian soldiers from the same unit were indicted
for the murder of Barseghyan.

The official charge levied by the military investigative department of
Armenia’s Investigative Committee against the four was “murder by a
group of people, or by an organized group, resulting from hooliganism”
(RA Criminal Code Article 104).

An investigation into the killing of Haykaz Barseghyan is ongoing.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/58533/armenian-army-captain-arrested-for-dereliction-of-duty-in-soldiers-murder-case.html

Azerbaijan violates ceasefire over 1000 times in past week

Azerbaijan violates ceasefire over 1000 times in past week

On February 8-14, the Azerbaijani side violated the ceasefire over
1,000 times on the Line of Contact with the armed forces of Nagorno
Karabakh, according to the press service of Defense Ministry of the
Nagorno Karabakh Republic. Over 15,000 shots were fired at Armenian
frontline positions by Azerbaijani troops from various types of small
arms.

14.02.15, 14:48

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2015/02/14/Azerbaijan-violates-ceasefire-over-1000-times-in-past-week/907046

Azerbaijani media give corpses of Armenians killed in 1905 in Baku f

Azerbaijani media give corpses of Armenians killed in 1905 in Baku for
‘Azerbaijanis killed in 1918 in Shamakhi’

17:05 14/02/2015 >> SOCIETY

Azerbaijani website “1news.az” attached faked photographs to the
article about fictitious “genocide in Shamakhi” allegedly committed by
the Armenian Dashnaks and Bolsheviks.

In the article the corpses of Armenians killed during the pogroms in
Baku in 1905 and gathered in the courtyard of the Armenian Church for
the funeral are presented as victims of “Armenian aggression”. On the
other photos from this series, but from other angles Armenian priest
is clearly visible. Moreover, the actual circumstances in which the
photo was taken cannot be denied at least because it was published in
French edition of “Le Grand Illustre” in an article published on
February 19, 1905 which was descriping the pogroms of Armenians in
Baku, naturally long before the events taken place in 1918 in
Shamakhi.

Most apparently, photographs with the corpses of Armenians killed in
Baku in 1905 and presented as Azerbaijanis, allegedly killed in 1918
in Shamakhi, have been taken by the Azerbaijani media from the book of
the Azerbaijani historian Solmaz Rustamov-Togidi titled “1918.
Massacre in Azerbaijan in photos and documents” in the annotation of
which was stated that in the book “rare photographs of the tragic fate
of tens of thousands Azerbaijanis killed in Baku and Shamakh are
reflected.”

The book of Rustamov-Togidi presents the same photo of the victims of
the Armenian pogroms noted as taken in Baku; however the victims are
resubmitted as the Azerbaijanis. The annotation to the photo reads:
“Armenian atrocities in Baku” which gives the readers wrong
impression.

Note that this is not the first attempt of the Azerbaijanis of using
falsified photos in propaganda purposes. A number of such attempts has
been documented and exposed on the website “Xocali.net” project.

http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/02/14/rmenian-massacre-baku/
http://baku.am/top-content-1
http://baku.am/world-press

Komitas Conservatory Instructor: Young Composers are Basically Force

Komitas Conservatory Instructor: Young Composers are Basically Forced
to Leave Armenia

Mаry Mamyan
14:21, February 14, 2015

Hetq talks to Artur Avanesov, a pianist and instructor at Yerevan’s
Komitas State Conservatory, regarding teh challenges faced by young
composers in Armenia.

We have young composers who mainly perform overseas rather than here
in Armenia. Is this a result of the general tendency to leave the
country or are there other reasons?

I fully agree that we have very good composers. Of course, most live
abroad. The question is whether or not we call them `our’ composers?

Yes, the link is maintained and their music is periodically performed
here. Let’s specify what expectations we have from such composers. For
me, it’s enough that they are professionals and that their music is
interesting.

The fact that the music of composers living abroad is rarely performed
here in Armenia is normal because the playing fields in Armenia and
overseas aren’t comparable. I am glad that this music is performed to
a greater degree outside Armenia. If their music were to be performed
more in Armenia than overseas, that would start one to worry.

And there is another question in this regard. If we are talking about
the recognition level of a composer, we must reconcile ourselves with
the fact that the recognition level of a contemporary compose will be
limited anyway.

The nature of contemporary music is such that it rules out wide
popularity in most cases as a rule. Even Tigran Mansourian, whom
everyone knows in Armenia, wouldn’t have been recognized by as many
people if not for his film soundtracks. I assure you that his academic
works, which make up the bulk of his pieces, wouldn’t have garnered
such popularity by themselves.

The same holds true for other composers. In any case, I wouldn’t
expect any composer, Armenian or otherwise, to garner the same level
of international recognition as, for example, pop stars.

If we are talking about contemporary composers, most people randomly
asked on the street would give the name of Tigran Mansourian and a few
others. We do not know many other names. Is there a new generation of
composers appearing on the scene?

At least here in Armenia we ask this question. I cannot imagine
someone in Germany, for example, asking passersby in the street to
name some composers.

>From a musical cultural perspective, Germany is perhaps the leading
country. I don’t think the issue of a new generation of composers is
ever raised. Only a few names would be cited. It would be rare indeed
for anyone to mention the names of composers after Stockhausen.

But our problems are different from those in Germany. It’s hard to
compare the two countries.

Which is our problem?

To start, Armenian is a small country and a segment of the population
is always leaving. We have a problem reminding ourselves that we
exist. Thus, we want to see proof that we have talent and a
reputation.

True. But I believe this is a vicious circle. People are leaving
Armenia because the country has problems. In turn, the fact that
people are leaving is another problem in itself.

I see how people are fleeing like birds. And it’s not because greater
success is waiting for them outside, but because at least they can
receive a better education there.

Let’s come clean. The Komitas Conservatory doesn’t afford such an
education. Working at the conservatory I can attest to this and
explain why.

Let’s say a young composer graduates the conservatory and has a degree
of knowledge and a will to get ahead. What must someone like this do?
Join the youth section of the union of composers? (He laughs). I
recently found out that a person stays in the youth section until the
age of 36.

Maybe this age is derived from the number of years that Mozart lived.
If so, such rational is the height of cynicism.

It becomes immediately apparent that young composers are shown their
place. They are told to sit, say quiet, and to heed their elders. They
would have also told Mozart and Schubert the same.

The question for me is whether our leaders want people to get up and
leave Armenia or not. My conclusion is that they want people to leave.
But I do not know why.

In that case, what is the function of the conservatory?

The function is to provide an education in some manner.

But you’ve noted that the conservatory doesn’t provide an adequate education.

The conservatory cannot because the methods used are lacking. The
conservatory administration has never gathered instructors in one
place to see what we are teaching and what the final aim of that
instruction is.

There is no unified program. For example, we have three instructors
teaching contemporary music. The administration has never asked any of
us to explain what exactly we are teaching or what we regard as
contemporary music.

As a result, we are teaching three different understandings of
contemporary music that occasionally overlap. The class on the history
of music is divided into three parts which have no relation to the
others.

Can this situation be changed?

It is possible. But the inference is that someone at the top doesn’t
want it to change.

So, this situation must continue as is? I’m sure that there are
students who really want to learn and that the conservatory in Yerevan
is their only option.

There are some great kids at the school. But there are no criteria for
evaluating them. Students get high marks because of who they are. The
rationale is, `That’s my student. I want him to receive a grade a 20.’
And he does.

Grading is a true embarrassment. There’s no way of sorting between the
good and bad.

Perhaps things can change by appointing young instructors.

But where are they. The next youngest instructor in my department is
over sixty year old.

So, there is no new cadre of composers?

In Armenia it’s impossible. The argument is made that there are so
many employees it’s difficult to decide who to dismiss in order to
hire someone new.

Perhaps they are waiting for all of us to die of old age.

http://hetq.am/eng/news/58538/komitas-conservatory-instructor-young-composers-are-basically-forced-to-leave-armenia.html

Armenian Genocide reminder of evil and call to vigilance: expert

Armenian Genocide reminder of evil and call to vigilance: expert

February 14, 2015 – 18:00 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – The genocide of Armenian Christians almost exactly
100 years ago provides a graphic reminder of evil and a call to
vigilance, since Christians across the Middle East still suffer
persecution, an expert on the atrocity told Dallas Baptist University
audiences, the Baptist Standard reports.

Artyom Tonoyan, the grandson of Armenian Genocide survivors, described
the massacre of his people and current implications during the annual
T.B. Maston Lectures at DBU earlier this week.

Armenians, who populated part of modern Turkey, originated as a
political entity between 3,000 and 4,000 years ago, noted Tonoyan, a
lecturer at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities’ Institute for
Global Studies and a research associate at East View Information
Services in Minneapolis. He is a graduate of DBU and Baylor
University.

Armenian society and culture rose and fell several times across the
centuries, Tonoyan said. Their pilgrimage to Christianity began in the
first century B.C., when the apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus
traveled to Asia Minor and told them about Jesus. They became the
first to embrace Christianity as a state religion in 301 B.C., more
than a decade before Rome.

But with the rise of Islam, “Armenian civilization underwent an
existential crisis,” he added. “Armenians were forced to islamize.”

The Ottoman Empire, which fully embraced Islam and dominated the
region for most of the second millennia, discriminated against the
Armenian Christians, he said. For example, Armenians could not own
firearms and were barred from representation in court. They were not
allowed to own horses or build a home taller than their Muslim
neighbors’ houses.

During the final throes of the Ottoman Empire in the 18th and early
19th centuries, “Armenians were singled out as cancerous” and a
“parasitic entity,” he said. Young Turkish leaders found the Armenians
offensive because, despite political discrimination, the Armenians
prospered financially and controlled the Ottoman economy.

Shortly after the Ottoman Empire entered World War I, on April 24,
1915, the empire launched a horrendous siege against its Armenian
residents.

Authorities rounded up practically every Armenian leader–“poets,
doctors, professors, composers, teachers”–in a purge that predated the
Jewish Holocaust by decades.

About 400,000 Armenian men were killed almost immediately. Elderly
men, women and children were rounded up, their property confiscated,
and forced on a “death march” into the same desert where the Islamic
State dominates today, Tonoyan said. The marches pushed them to the
geographical and political edges of the empire.

Five thousand Armenian villages were destroyed, he said. Hundreds of
churches were confiscated and converted to mosques, stables and
restaurants.

“Our own family was cut down,” Tonoyan said. Ottomans forced his
grandfather, then a boy, to watch the rape of his own mother and
sister. The last image Tonoyan’s great-grandfather saw before his
murder was the rape of his wife and daughter.

Even though the Armenian Genocide occurred a century ago, Christians
around the world, and particularly in the Middle East, are being
persecuted today, he said. Some of the persecuting countries, such as
Saudi Arabia, are strong U.S. allies.

“This is the greatest ethical dilemma facing the American Christian
church,” he said. “What are we to do as Christians? Sit back and
relax, … or do something? Christians are dying for their faith by the
hundreds and thousands. I cannot keep silent.”

U.S. Christians should start by praying for their persecuted fellow
Christians in hostile regions of the world, Tonoyan urged. He also
called on Christians to insist their senators and representatives pay
attention to persecution and demand change.

“Please, whatever you do, do not remain silent,” he pleaded. “Your
brothers and sisters need you.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/188291/
https://www.baptiststandard.com/news/texas/17478-resist-religious-persecution-grandson-of-armenian-genocide-survivors-pleads

Armenia PM orders to clarify reports on Tsarukyan’s unpaid taxes

Armenia PM orders to clarify reports on Tsarukyan’s unpaid taxes

17:22, 14.02.2015

YEREVAN. – Armenia’s Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan instructed to
clarify the reports on unpaid taxes and charity activities of
Prosperous Armenia leader Gagik Tsarukyan.

In response to Armenian News-NEWS.am inquiry whether PM took any steps
after President Sargsyan’s speech, spokesperson for the PM Gohar
Poghosyan said Government Chief of Staff-Minister Davit Harutyunyan
had sent a relevant letter to Finance Minister Gagik Khachatryan.

In his strong-worded speech slamming Gagik Tsarykyan, President
Sargsyan instructed PM to clarify unconfirmed reports about unpaid
taxes amonting to several billions and hidden under the guise of
charity.

http://news.am/eng/news/252730.html

Tsarukyan relieved of post as chairman of Physical Culture Institute

Tsarukyan relieved of post as chairman of Physical Culture Institute Board

By a decision of Armenian Prime Minister Hovik Abrahamyan, the leader
of Prosperous Armenia Party Gagik Tsarukyan has been relieved of his
post as chairman of the Board of the Armenian State Institute of
Physical Culture.

Armenian Deputy Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs Arsen Karamyan was
appointed to that post.

Gohar Poghosyan, spokeswoman for Armenian prime minister, confirmed
this information during a talk with Aysor.am.

14.02.15, 18:02

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2015/02/14/Tsarukyan-relieved-of-post-as-chairman-of-Physical-Culture-Institute-Board/907126