Month: September 2020
Armenians and Race: A Personal Response to an Impossible Question
Graphic via stylist.co.uk
September 6, 2020
Ani Arzoumanian is a junior from Ridgewood, NJ concentrating in neuroscience with a minor in creative writing. She volunteers as a firefighter/EMT with…
“Media Advocate” initiative urges opposition lawmakers to oppose defamation law amendments
Vice-Speaker of the National Assembly Alen Simonyan presented a legislative initiative according to which the amount of compensation for insult and defamation published in social networks and the media, should be exceeded from 1 million drams (around 2,000 USD), to 5 million drams (around 10,000 USD) in case of insult, and from 2 million (around 4,500 USD) to 10 million drams (around 20,500 USD) in case of defamation. “Media Advocate” Initiative condemns this legislative initiative, which is essentially aimed at restricting freedom of speech. The concepts of “defamation” and “insult” are not defined by law in Armenia.
As the Initiative said in a press statement, with subjective judgement this or any other publication can be presented in the form of defamation, and become an instrument in the hands of the authorities to press the people and silence the press. It is necessary to exclude any tendency to use the law in one’s own interests.
“Media Advocate” Initiative is against defamation and insult, at the same time it condemns this draft which is aimed against freedom of speech. We urge opposition fractions of the National Assembly to take a stand against this proposal and not to allow the adoption of similar initiatives," the media watchdog said.
Sports: UEFA Nations League: Armenia beat Estonia 2-0
Armenia beat Estonia 2-0 in a home match within the framework of teh UEFA Nations League.
Alexandre Karapetyan opened the score in the 43rd minute with a left-footed shot from the center of the box to the bottom right corner
Wbeymar Angulo Mosquera sealed the victory 20 minutes into the second half with a right-footed shot from outside the box to the center of the goal.
Armenia thus scored the first victory under head coach Joaquín Caparrós.
With three points, Armenia currently sits third in the group, which also features North Macedonia, Georgia and Estonia.
Sports: UEFA Nations League: Armenia beats Estonia 2-0
The Armenia national football team scored its first victory in the second group of League C of the UEFA Nations League.
In the second round, the Armenian team played with the Estonian team and beat the latter 2-0 at Republican Stadium after Vazgen Sargsyan in Yerevan. This was the first victory of renowned Spanish football manager Joaquin Caparros as the head coach of the Armenia national football team.
Compared to the previous match against the Macedonians, Joaquin Caparros made three changes in the starting lineup.
The first part of the match was tough, and there were no goals. The Armenian team was trying to score goals more often, but the opponent was good at defense. There was a more or less dangerous moment at the 34th minute when the Russian Khimki’s midfielder Arshak Koryan moved forward through the center and struck the ball from the area near the penalty square, but it was crooked. It seemed as though the teams would go for a break with a tie (0-0), but Alexandre Karapetyan tended to differ. At the 44th minute, Tambov’s forward Arshak Koryan’s successful actions and transfer helped open the score, and the teams went for a break with the score 1-0.
The Armenian team could have doubled the score in the beginning of the second half, but the Belarusian Neman’s midfielder Gegham Kadimyan hesitated and missed the moment to strike. At the 64th minute, 21-yaer-old midfielder of Slovakia’s Zhilina Vahan Bichakhchyan came out to the field and could have immediately celebrated his entry into the Armenia national football team with a goal, but he missed the moment for a real goal just seconds after he came out to the field. Nevertheless, after a short while, FC Gandzasar-Kapan’s midfielder Vbeymar Angulo scored the second goal of the Armenian national team.
The next match of the Armenia national football team in the UEFA Nations League will be against the Georgia national football team on October 8.
UEFA Nations League, second round
League C, second group
Armenia-Estonia: 2-0
Alexandre Karapetyan, 44, Vbeymar Angulo, 65
Armenia: David Yurchenko, Hovhannes Hambardzumyan, Varazdat Haroyan, Andre Kalisir (Taron Voskanyan, 46), Arman Hovhannisyan, Artak Grigoryan, Vbeymar Angulo, Gegham Kadimyan (Khoren Bayramyan, 73), Arshak Koryan (Vahan Bichakhchyan, 64), Tigran Barseghyan, Alexandre Karapetyan.
Davit Yeghiazaryan
COVID-19: Artsakh reports 3 new cases
12:17, 7 September, 2020
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. 3 new cases of COVID-19 were registered in Artsakh over the past 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 315, the Artsakh Healthcare Ministry said.
270 people have recovered from the disease so far.
The number of active cases as of September 7, 11:00 stood at 43.
Artsakh doesn’t have COVID-19-related deaths so far, although two people infected with the virus had died, but their deaths were caused by other pre-existing conditions, according to authorities.
Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
President Sarkissian felicitates Brazil’s Bolsonaro on Independence Day
11:54, 7 September, 2020
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. Armenian President Armen Sarkissian congratulated President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro on the Brazilian Independence Day.
In a telegram to Bolsonaro, the Armenian President expressed certainty that through joint efforts it will be possible to boost the mutually beneficial Armenian-Brazilian partnership for the benefit of the two nations.
“President Sarkissian wished robust health and good luck to President Bolsonaro and peace and prosperity to the friendly people of Brazil,” the Armenian President’s Office said in a readout of the cable.
Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
COVID-19: Ukraine lists Armenia as “green”
12:25, 7 September, 2020
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. Given the declining numbers of COVID-19 infections in Armenia, the Ukrainian authorities have for the first time listed Armenia in the list of green countries, meaning Armenian travelers arriving in Ukraine won’t have to undergo a mandatory testing or self-quarantine.
The rule covers arriving Armenians only if they have been in Armenia or another green country in the last 14 days.
“At the same time, the mandatory requirement on having insurance covering COVID-19 remains in force,” the Armenian Embassy in Ukraine said in a statement.
Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
Families of 2008 unrest victims boycott ‘farce’ trial
13:56, 7 September, 2020
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. The families of the 2008 March 1 victims have announced that they are boycotting the court proceedings which were re-opened in 2018 after the revolution.
Tigran Yegoryan, the attorney representing the next of kins of the victims, lambasted the trial at a news conference on September 7.
“Now, when the preliminary probe is basically halted in the main March 1 case, and the trial has turned into an expensive waste of time and a farce, with arbitrariness and connivance happening outside the courthouse and inside the court room aimed against the constitutionally declared values and rights and is being highly tolerated, while the presiding judge is seemingly able to only exercise his authority against the victims’ next of kins, we are suspending our physical participation in this empty event,” Yegoryan said in a statement.
He claimed that their decision won’t anyhow contribute to any given course of the proceedings.
The March 1 case is an ongoing investigation and court proceeding into the deadly 2008 post election unrest in Yerevan. 10 people, including two police officers, were killed in the clashes between security forces and protesters. Then-outgoing President Robert Kocharyan is charged with “overthrowing Constitutional order” in the case. Several other officials, notably Yuri Khachaturov – a then-high ranking military commander and Armen Gevorgyan, a former chief of the Security Council and Kocharyan’s Chief of Staff are also facing criminal charges. They all deny wrongdoing.
Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan
50 children were provided with computers in the frames of “The power of 1 dram” initiative
14:30, 7 September, 2020
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. Everything has started from one dram: and Idram have summed up the first phase of the initiative “The power of 1 dram”.
As announced, during the period between June 5 and August 23, the companies have been transferring 1 dram to the initiative from their own funds for each payment, made through Idram app and website, ing.am online platform, via Bank and Idram terminals.
As a result, AMD 5 million 34 thousand 750 was gathered, which made possible getting computers for distance learning for the pupils of the villages of frontier and high mountainous districts. Herewith, has allocated an additional amount, which gave an opportunity to purchase 50 computers in accordance with the standards of the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport.
On International charity day representatives of the company handed over a part of the computers to the Ministry of Education in order to provide them to the children of frontier villages of Tavush.
As Artashes Torosyan, general education department expert of the Ministry of Education said, this is a big investment in the future: “Each investment in general education returns with big results, so maybe you help a pupil who will do a great job in the Armenian banking system” – mentioned Artashes Torosyan.
The rest of the computers were provided to the children of the mountainous villages of Lori province.
Rafael Harutyunyan, the head of the education, culture, sport department of the regional administration of Lori province emphasized the fact that in the frames of “The power of 1 dram” initiative the computers will be provided to the children who will start the year remotely. “We have conducted a needs assessment and found out that 37 children from the mountainous villages will not go to school but they do not have appropriate equipment to participate in distance learning. Now through the schools the equipment will be provided to the beneficiary children and this will ensure the continuity of their education” – said Rafael Harutyunyan.
As Gor Amiryan, the head of the Marketing department of Idram mentioned, they are especially happy that the computers got the children who needed them most. “In fact, this way we were able to provide the continuity of the education for these children. This is a result reached by an initiative of two companies and thanks to the good will of thousands of clients, and we really appreciate it” – said Gor Amiryan.
The head of the Communication unit of , Tatevik Vardevanyan mentioned, the initiative of “The power of 1 dram” goes on. “The first program is already a reality, and we had an opportunity to make sure that one dram which seems symbolic, can actually solve a real problem. Our next program is also inspiring as it has an environmental focus: considering the fact that this year there was a fire in the park near Tsitsernakaberd, causing great damage to the environment, the amount of “one drams” gathered in the period from August 24 to September 30 will be aimed at planting trees specifically around the memorial complex of Tsitsernakaberd” – mentioned Tatevik Vardevanyan.
Companies urge to continue making payments through Idram application, ing.am platform, Idram.am website, and Idram terminals and remind that everything starts from one dram.
COMPANIES ARE CONTROLLED BY CBA
https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1026891.html?fbclid=IwAR0oDVkZ8CXsg5_1sjcnelKiNIfn2Mwq0Y3jHxciadZx3JQnfZUFzaWoDxQ
As discussions of race and racial injustice escalated in the U.S. early this summer, my Twitter feed was full of arguments about Armenians and race. Are Armenians BIPOC or white? Are we Middle Eastern? Are we West Asian? Is there even a way to go about answering these questions? As an Armenian living in the US, these discussions immediately caught my attention and forced me to think about myself and the way I identify.
Armenia is a small land-locked country located in the Caucasus region of Western Asia and the “Middle East,” according to the current definitions of both regions. It is bordered by the countries of Turkey, Georgia, Iran and Azerbaijan. There exists much disagreement among Armenians and non-Armenians alike about what racial category we really belong to.
Here is my personal response to this impossible question:
There is sufficient historical, biological, and anthropological evidence to conclude that race is an entirely made-up social construct, created to divide humans for the purpose of oppression.
While I don’t support this baseless division of people, I do understand that we live in a world where race not only exists, but actively shapes and controls our lives. It is a staggering truth that a concept invented in the 1600s has such a tight grip on the world today.
We live in a society where life and death can be dictated by the way one is perceived for the color of their skin. There is overwhelming evidence in the medical field that shows how racial bias can result in lower birth weights, increased malpractice and negligent care on the part of physicians. There is overwhelming evidence connecting race with socioeconomic status, education, disproportionate incarceration and police brutality.
According to a multitude of genomic studies, races do not differ genetically. Yet the concept of race has penetrated every facet of society in such a way that it is impossible to be unaffected by it.
Race, just like gender, class, religion and sexual orientation, has become a big factor in personal identity. Many Armenians feel passionately one way or another in this world of racial categorization and labelling. So, what are we? Where do we fit?
Allow me to take one step away from the blunt analytical perspective and tell you about myself. Growing up as an Armenian in the U.S., I learned more and more about the tragic history of my people, including the Armenian Genocide and the continuing cultural erasure. I was raised to speak, read and write Armenian. My family and I spend all of our summers living in Armenia. While my personal identity when it comes to “race” is a bit complicated, undoubtedly my ethnicity and culture is Armenian.
I was raised to think of myself as a member of an oppressed minority group. Armenians are scarce, both in my area but also globally. Growing up with stories about how my family survived a brutal genocide under the Ottoman Empire and now seeing the suffering of Armenians in the Azeri-Armenian conflict has only perpetuated that ideology. At the same time, I grew up in a wealthy white suburb in the U.S., and have always checked “white” as my demographic on school and medical forms.
I have never felt very comfortable calling myself white, Middle Eastern or Asian, but often we are forced to define ourselves on a list of irrelevant categories.
I come from a white-passing family, but I myself am pretty dark skinned and ethnically ambiguous. I am constantly approached by Spanish speakers who assume I am Hispanic. I’ve been asked how I identify racially and ethnically more times than I can even remember. The first time I ever heard someone say the words “person of color” was my first year in college, and it was in reference to me. I was shocked. Am I POC? Was this the answer to my racial identity issues? Perhaps I could call myself BIPOC rather than continue to exist as a raceless body in a world of labels and categories.
It would be easy to call myself indigenous because, historically speaking, Armenians are the indigenous peoples of the Armenian highlands. The label fits, too, since indigenous peoples around the world have been, and continue to be, oppressed and systematically murdered, just like the Armenians. That being said, I think it’s important to reflect on the implications of calling myself BIPOC in the U.S.
An important facet of this discussion I’ve yet to mention is the fact that I, and many other Armenians, have white privilege.
I know it can be difficult to think about and accept, especially if the concept of white privilege is new to you. I am not disqualifying the difficulties Armenians have had to face in this country. Many Armenians grow up poor, many feel like outsiders due to their cultural identity, and many have foreign names that seem odd and are impossible to pronounce in the U.S. Some, including my own family, survived such horrors as the Armenian Genocide, the Lebanese civil war, the Syrian refugee crisis, life under the USSR, the movement for the liberation of Artsakh and much more.
When I say we have white privilege, I do not mean Armenians have ever really existed as a powerful global force, or that our lives and the lives of our parents and grandparents were easy and without significant struggle. When contemplating my privileges in the current state of the world, I often compare myself with the lives of BIPOC in this country rather than the lives of European or other white people in the U.S.
I have never felt unsafe around the police. I have never feared I would be at a disadvantage in school or for a job application due to the color of my skin or the texture of my hair. I have never had my immigration status questioned, nor been told to “go back to my country.” When involved with or witnessing the use of drugs and alcohol, I have never considered incarceration a legitimate possibility for me. I’ve never been assaulted or arrested for peaceful protest. I’ve never been told I have an accent speaking English, nor been expected to fail in an academic setting. I’ve never had a physician dismiss my pain or symptoms. I recognize the privilege of being treated as an equal human being at first glance. It is a privilege I have always had when many others have not.
If I’ve learned anything from my experiences, it is that one does not have to identify as white to inherit white privilege.
I understand I may be raising more questions than I am answering. I have realized it is impossible, and pointless, to define Armenians as members of any one established race. What is possible, however, is an analysis of the implications our identity choices can have in the U.S. today.
I know that I am one of few Armenians to identify the way I do. I understand that while I may feel uncomfortable labeling myself as white, BIPOC, or Middle Eastern, many Armenians do not.
We must be careful with our words.
When Armenians claim to be BIPOC, even when we bring up valid historical points, we fail to truly recognize and understand the burdens that come from being non-white in the U.S. The simple truth is that even though many of us are dark-skinned or grew up with various disadvantages, Armenians have not been systematically held back by U.S. society and policy the way other BIPOC have.
While I do believe that Armenians are the indigenous people of Eastern Anatolia and the Armenian Highlands, it is important to understand that calling yourself indigenous while living on conquered Native American lands and staying silent about policies which continue to harm indigenous communities is contradictory and immoral to the highest degree.
I understand that many Armenians hesitate to call themselves white. I am one of those Armenians. Yet I firmly believe that we, for the most part, are white-passing and therefore have white privilege. It doesn’t hurt that the vast majority of Armenians are Christian, too.
Armenians can, and will, self-identify however they feel comfortable. I only ask that we keep in mind the implications of how we present ourselves to the world, particularly in the U.S. amid the Black Lives Matter movement.