Travel blogger David Hoffmann shares impressions from Artsakh visit

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 5 2020

State funds’ theft by Yerevan Municipality, administrative districts’ officials uncovered

News.am, Armenia
Feb 5 2020

11:53, 05.02.2020
                  

The National Security Service (NSS) of Armenia has revealed a case of large theft.

The NSS informed Armenian News-NEWS.am that fact were ascertained that some officials of the Yerevan Municipality and administrative districts did not properly supervise the activities of Davars company’s contract-based duty of residential building refuse service, construction waste removal, and river-bed cleaning.

These officials ignored this company’s regular breach of contract clauses, signed exaggerated enforcement acts by company employees, as well as records of acceptance and delivery of works and services.

As a result, about 450,000,000 drams of state funds have been stolen.

The NSS has initiated a criminal case.

An investigation is underway.


Bountiful attempted-murder convict loses appeal based on claims of faulty Armenian interpretations

Standard Examiner, UTAH
Feb 4 2020
 
 
 
By MARK SHENEFELT Standard-Examiner
 

SALT LAKE CITY — Stepan Badikiyan said he was failed by his first Armenian interpreter and did not fully understand the “critical elements” of the attempted-murder charge he pleaded guilty to five years ago in the stabbing of his estranged wife.

But the Utah Supreme Court, in a ruling Thursday, refused to overturn the conviction of the 55-year-old, who sought to withdraw his guilty plea, which resulted from a plea bargain with Davis County prosecutors.

Badikyan’s wife told him May 29, 2014, in their Centerville apartment that she wanted a divorce, according to police and prosecutors at the time.

He punched her and stabbed her with a box cutter, then told her he would take her to the hospital, court records said. But while driving to the hospital he told her they were “both going to die” that day, according to the documents.

She jumped out near a convenience store in Bountiful and he tried to run her down with the car, prosecutors said.

Witnesses told officers Badikyan got out of the car, tackled the woman and stabbed her in the neck and side, again with the box cutter. Bystanders stopped Badikyan and held him down until police arrived.

Badikyan

At a hearing where he pleaded guilty, Badikyan was assisted by an Armenian interpreter because he could not read English or speak it well.

Before sentencing, a handwritten note Badikyan sent to the court earned him another hearing. At that evidentiary hearing, Badikyan said his former interpreter “mistranslated” the plea agreement.

But 2nd District Judge David Connors refused to allow a new plea, saying “there were no specific instances given or particular inaccuracies of translation” that influenced the guilty plea. Connors also ruled Badikyan’s public defender did not oversell the plea bargain and clearly communicated its potential immigration consequences to the Armenia native.

Badikyan next appealed to the Utah Court of Appeals, which upheld the decisions by Connors.

In that appeal, Badikyan argued for the first time “that he did not understand the critical elements of attempted murder.”

The court of appeals ruled that, under Utah’s Plea Withdrawal Statute, it lacked jurisdiction to consider Badikyan’s critical-elements challenge, because that challenge was not first “preserved” by it being appealed to the district court.

“So we take this opportunity to clarify that the Plea Withdrawal Statute’s preservation rule applies to all plea challenges made after sentencing, even where a defendant has made an otherwise timely plea-withdrawal request,” the Supreme Court opinion said.

Badikyan, it said, should have presented his critical-elements challenge to the district court in order to give that court an opportunity to rule on it prior to appeal.

“The plain language of the Plea Withdrawal Statute prohibits appellate courts from hearing any claim raised for the first time on appeal of the denial of a plea-withdrawal request — even if the defendant made the request before sentencing,” the high court said.

In November 2017, Connors sentenced Badikyan to three years to life in prison. According to the Utah Department of Corrections, Badikyan remained incarcerated as of Tuesday.

Animals die at Yerevan Zoo

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 5 2020

One of the two camels kept at the Yerevan Zoo has died, EcoNews.am reported. The exact cause of the animal’s death is still unknown.

The two Bactrian camels (Camelus bactrianus) are one of the oldest “residents” of the zoo. Currently, the Bactrian camel is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species and is restricted to two Asian countries – China and Mongolia. A few of them can be found in Russia as well.

Over the past two months, several other animals and birds, including pigs, a pheasant and a lizard, also died at the Yerevan Zoo, but no respective information is available on the official website of the zoo.  

OSCE Minsk Group made 176 statements on Karabakh conflict in 25 years

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 5 2020

The OSCE Minsk Group dealing with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has made a total of 176 statements in 25 years – from 1995 to date, the infographic of statements posted by blogger, journalist Sedrak Mkrtchyan on Twitter revealed.

According to the infographic, the statements reached their peak in 2008. The Minsk Group released a total of 17 statements throughout the year. 

Analyst: Armenian authorities have no respect towards own public

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 5 2020

The Geneva meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers came to dismiss the claims that there are no negotiations or any document on the Artsakh conflict, political analyst Karen Bekaryan told a panel discussion on Wednesday.

“The Geneva meeting showed this, without leaving any room for maneuvers, as the joint statement of five sides has also been signed by the Armenian foreign minister, whereas the statement contains a direct reference to the political process in addition to various settlement mechanisms when talking about principles and elements,” the analyst said.

He noted that the words “principles and elements” were repeatedly used when talking about the Madrid document or its variants.

“In other words, there is a document and a political process, there is even the signature of the foreign minister under it. This clearly shows that the previous statements were nothing more than an attempt to mislead its own society,” Bekaryan said.

He called attention to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s statements at the Kapan new conference before the Geneva meeting, describing it absurd when the head of state cites the media when making the information on the negotiations public.

“There is a complete absence of respect toward their own public,” the analyst said, stressing the sooner people realize it, the sooner it will be possible to understand the current challenges and the ways to handle them.  

Sports: Armenian weightlifter Simon Martirosyan wins silver at Fajr Cup

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 5 2020

Sport 16:10 05/02/2020Armenia

Leading Armenian weightlifter Simon Martirosyan has won a silver medal at the International Fajr Cup 2020 in Rasht, Iran.

The athlete lifted a total of 410 kg in the heavy weight class, the National Olympic Committee reported.

Martirosyan lifted 180kg in snatch and 230 kg – in clean and jerk.

Ruben Aleksanyan was also set to compete in the same weight class, but the weightlifter had to withdraw due to his injury. 

Music: Rock Aid Armenia: how the ultimate version of Smoke On The Water was recorded

Louder
Feb 5 2020

By Dave Everley (Classic Rock) 10 hours ago

What happened when members of Queen, Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath, Iron Maiden, Rainbow, Yes and more came together to record a Deep Purple classic

(Image credit: Michael Putland / Getty Images)

The 1980s was the decade of the charity single. In the wake of Band Aid’s world-beating 1985 hit Do They Know It’s Christmas, you couldn’t turn on the TV without seeing a bunch of pop stars putting on their serious faces and churning out a song to raise money for a worthy cause.

Heavy metal did its bit. In 1986, Hear N’ Aid weighed in with Stars, a charity single featuring Ronnie James Dio, Dee Snider and Ted Nugent raising money to combat world hunger via the medium of 80s rock. Three years later, another group of A-list musicians released a money-raising cover of a classic anthem. The song was Smoke On The Water, the all-star band was Rock Aid Armenia.

The brainchild of charity campaigner John Dee, the project – initially called Live Aid Armenia – was conceived in the wake of the 1988 Armenian Earthquake, which killed over 25,000 people and devastated the country‘s infrastructure.

“I felt I had to do something, after helping with the immediate fundraising that was taking place in the UK, I decided to launch a fundraising push that would gather together people I know in the rock business,” Dee later said.

Smoke On The Water wasn’t the first Rock Aid Armenia single. Members of Aswad, Culture Club and Haircut 100 had released a cover of Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On? earlier in 1989. But it would be the guitar-centric follow-up that provided the project’s most enduring moment.

The first person Dee called was Dave Gilmour, just off tour with the reconstituted Pink Floyd. Others swiftly fell in line behind him, including Queen guitarist Brian May, who in turn called Black Sabbath’s Tony Iommi and ex-Free/Bad Company singer Paul Rodgers. Deep Purple frontman Ian Gillan had seen the aftermath first hand after playing a show in the Armenian capital Yerevan a year after the quake hit, and signed up.

“I took a trip to [the city of] Spitak and saw the devastation,” Gillan recalled. “There were so many vivid images. The Mayor Of Spitak told me that all music had stopped in the city: on the radio, in the church, even the birds had stopped singing.”

With Gillan onboard – and Deep Purple manager Phil Banfield involved in the organisation – Purple’s 1971 signature song Smoke On The Water was a shoe-in for this million-dollar collective to cover. “It’ll probably be a horrendous racket,” joked Brian May during one of the five sessions that took place at Metropolis Studios between July and September 1989.

While May was present for the very first session on July 5, he was little more than an onlooker due to a broken arm. “I had an argument with the kerb on a skateboard,” he explained. He’d recovered enough by the second session to lay down the immortal Smoke On The Water riff with Dave Gilmour, the latter cutting loose on a trés 80s Steinberger headless guitar. 

(Image credit: Michael Putland / Getty Images)

May wasn’t the only representative from Queen. Bandmate Roger Taylor was roped in to play drums, though it transpired he was second choice. John Dee had originally wanted Rush’s Neil Peart to play on the track, but a shift in dates scuppered the plan.

Peart’s absence barely dented the Fantasy Football-levels of star quality on display. The prog wing put in a show of strength: Yes bassist Chris Squire flew in from LA, while his sometime bandmate Geoff Downes shared keyboard duties with Keith Emerson. The latter insisted on including a snippet of ELP’s Fanfare For The Common Man in the song. “I wanted it to be a musical contribution,” he said. “If it was anything less than that, I would have just sent the money in,” he added churlishly.

The guitar frontline was no less impressive. Tony Iommi pitched in with his own take on the greatest riff he never wrote, though even the Sabbath guitarist was overshadowed by the presence of the song’s original architect, Ritchie Blackmore. “Ritchie has yet to put his piece on, so he’ll probably rub everyone else off,” said Brian May wryly before the Man In Black arrived for the second session.

For some participants, it was an opportunity to fanboy out. Iron Maiden frontman and Purple devotee Bruce Dickinson enthusiastically admitted that he had been “playing this in pubs when I was 17.” Paul Rodgers was more serious. “This kind of thing is great because all of the politics that separate various people and their various things can be thrown out of the window,” he said.

The all-star version of Smoke On The Water was released in November 1989 – virtually the last charity single of the decade. It was far from the “horrendous racket” Brian May predicted. That iconic riff was bigger than any of the guitarists playing it, Ritchie Blackmore included. Gillan, Dickinson and Rodgers took a verse each, with the Purple man belting out the chorus with help from Bryan Adams, who had coincidentally dropped by the studio, only to find himself roped into providing back vocals.

The single peaked at a disappointing No.39 in the UK singles chart, though it marked the start of an enduring relationship with the country of Armenia for both Ian Gillan and Tony Iommi. The pair re-teamed in 2012 to release a single under the name WhoCare, with proceeds going to rebuilding a school in the Armenian town of Gyumri, which had been destroyed in the original earthquake. Bizarrely, Iommi went even further, writing the Armenian entry in the 2013 Eurovision song contest, the power ballad Lonely Planet, performed by Dorians. 

Rock Aid Armenia’s Smoke On The Water might not have troubled Do They Know It’s Christmas for title of Most Successful Charity Single Ever, but the people involved can hold their heads high. “I am very proud of my participation in that project,” Brian May recalled. For Ian Gillan, there was another reason to look back fondly: “It was more fun than some of the sessions we had in Purple.”

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David Babayan to run for Artsakh president

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 5 2020

Spokesman for the Artsakh Republic president, leader of the Conservative Party of Artsakh David Babayan will be running for president in 2020, he said in a Facebook post on Wednesday.

“Today an extraordinary congress and a board meeting of the Conservative Party of Artsakh (CPA) took place in capital Stepanakert.

According to congressional and board meeting decisions, the Conservative Party of Artsakh will be running in the 2020 parliamentary and presidential elections under the leadership of CPA Chairman David Babayan.

I will present the details during my live stream on Facebook today at 9:30pm,” he wrote. 

Eurovision: Entries of “Toward Eurovision” song contest released

Panorama, Armenia
Feb 5 2020

Public TV Company of Armenia has released the entries of the “Toward Eurovision” contest, the national selection for the Eurovision 2020. The songs are available at the Public TV YouTube channel .
 
As reported earlier, 12 best acts were picked to compete during the national final, where the winner will get a chance to sing for Armenia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2020.
 
The list includes Athena Manoukian, TOKIONINE, ERNA, Miriam Baghdasaryan, Agop, Karina EVN, Vladimir Arzumanyan, Hayk Music, Arthur Aleq, Gabriel Jeeg, EVA Rida, Sergey & Nikolay Arutyunov.
The competing songs will be published next week on “Toward Eurovision” official YouTube channel. It is noted that the national contest will take place on February 15 at 19:00 CET live on Channel One and www.1tv.am.