Armenia Investigative Committee launches case against freedom fighter for statement targeted at PM

News.am, Armenia
Feb 9 2021

The Investigative Committee of Armenia has launched a criminal case against member of the Sasna Tsrer (Daredevils of Sassoun) armed group, freedom fighter Pavlik Manukyan for the statement he made yesterday, as reported the Prosecutor General’s Office.

The criminal case was launched for public calls for use of violence and for publicly justifying or advocating violence.

Pavlik Manukyan was among those holding a demonstration near the building of the Prosecutor General’s Office in support of former deputy of the National Assembly of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Vahan Badasyan. During the demonstration, he touched upon Badasyan’s statement on eliminating the Prime Minister of Armenia and said he is also ready to eliminate him.

Armenia parliament deputy speaker plans to place into circulation bill criminalizing fake reports and news

News.am, Armenia
Feb 9 2021

During today’s parliamentary session, Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan, who is a member of the ruling My Step bloc, declared that he intends to place into circulation a bill criminalizing fake reports and news.

According to him, the parliament will develop the bill and place it into circulation soon.

“Let’s see how our colleagues from the opposition camp will vote,” Simonyan added. 

Yerevan mayor on news about resignation and appointment as Armenia’s ambassador to Czech Republic

News.am, Armenia
Feb 9 2021

I’m not going to resign since I made promises to the people and am fulfilling them step-by-step. This is what Mayor of Yerevan Hayk Marutyan said during a question-and-answer session following today’s session of the Council of Elders of Yerevan. Touching upon the news about his appointment to the position of Armenia’s Ambassador to the Czech Republic, he said the following with irony: “Before that, I was appointed Ambassador to the United States and was preparing to accept the position of Ambassador to Japan.”

Member of the opposition Prosperous Armenia faction Marcos Harutyunyan asked Marutyan to find a way to dissolve the Council of Elders of Yerevan in case he is dismissed because none of the representatives of the Council of Elders deserves to hold the position of mayor of Yerevan.

Harutyunyan also called on the mayor to admit that, unlike him, the former municipal authorities built 10 new apartment buildings and solved the problem with 20-30 accident-prone buildings, while Marutyan is trying to avoid taking responsibility for solving the issues facing Yerevan.

MP: 3 of 5 Armenian POWs who returned from Azerbaijan are from Armenia’s Shirak Province

News.am, Armenia
Feb 9 2021

Deputy of the My Step faction of the National Assembly of Armenia Nazeli Baghdasaryan took to her Facebook to report that three of the five Armenian prisoners of war who returned from Azerbaijan are from Armenia’s Shirak Province.

Another group of Armenian prisoners of war returned to Armenia through the mediation of the Russian side.

Rustam Muradov: Russian peacekeepers transport 1 POW to Baku, return 5 to Yerevan

News.am, Armenia
Feb 9 2021

Commander of the Russian peacekeeping contingent, Lieutenant-General Rustam Muradov told reporters that Russian peacekeepers have transported one prisoner of war to Baku and returned five prisoners of war to Yerevan, TASS reported.

“Today there was another exchange of prisoners of war for the purpose of implementing the trilateral statement signed by the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia on November 9, 2020,” Muradov said, adding that the Russian peacekeepers will continue to help implement the trilateral agreement unwaveringly in the future as well.

Armenia closes its market to Turkish goods until end of the year


Feb 9 2021

CHRISTIAN FERNSBY
 ▼ | February 9, 2021

Turkish goods will remain banned in Armenia at least until the end of the year, and most likely, the embargo will be maintained until Armenian importers replace them with goods from other countries or establish domestic production, Armenian Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan said.
"I think we will extend the ban for another six months, unless, of course, the diplomatic or geopolitical environment makes it impossible. If possible, we will extend it. Our enterprises, which have already started the import substitution process, need time to create competitive goods," Sputnik Armenia cited him as saying.

Topics: ARMENIA TURKISH

Thus, Armenia chose to respond to the post-war process of unblocking the borders in the South Caucasus for the free movement of people and goods by closing the domestic market from producers from the neighboring country, despite the fact that during the years of the Karabakh war, Turkish goods were freely supplied to Armenian counters through Georgia.

In addition, Kerobyan clarified, commenting on reports that Turkish goods are still sold in Armenia, that anti-Turkish sanctions do not apply to raw materials for Armenian enterprises – they were introduced only against end products. The minister added that the list of the embargo includes elevators that Armenia also imported from Turkey – Yerevan intends to replace them with Belarusian-made elevators. 
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Proposal of early elections received no popular support – Deputy President of National Assembly

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 20:33, 8 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. ''My step'' bloc proposed to hold early parliamentary elections, but the opposition did not react to that proposal, ARMENPRESS reports Deputy President of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan told the reporters on February 8, referring to yesterday's press release issued by ''My step'' bloc, saying that there is no public demand for early elections.

''We made the proposal, but the opposition did not react. The opposition is making contradictory claims. Numerous meetings with the citizens of Armenia show the same thing, people say we have elected you, go and work’’, Alen Simonyan said, adding the meetings with the people show that the citizens of Armenia do not want early elections. ‘’People want something else. They say give up with the ‘’velvet’’ policy'', Simonyan said.

Russian President personally involved in solving the problem of POWs – Russian Ambassador

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 19:39, 8 February, 2021

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 8, ARMENPRESS. Ambassador of Russia to Armenia Sergey Kopirkin announced that Russian President Vladimir Putin is personally involved in the issue of returning the Armenians taken hostage by Azerbaijan during Nagorno Karabakh war, ARMENPRESS reports Kopirkin told the reporters.

The Ambassador noted that the return of the Armenian POWs is among the priorities of the November 9 trilateral agreement. ''I do not exaggerate. This is the issue for the solution of which the President, Foreign and Defense Ministers of our country are making efforts. The solution of this issue may last longer than was initially expected, but be sure, everything possible is being done and I am confident it will be solved'', the Russian Ambassador said.

Turkish press: On organic abstraction: A group show at Öktem Aykut

The dust of a new installation had not yet settled in the air of the spare, modest interior of Öktem Aykut. In between its concrete walls, a photographer opened the legs of his tripod and stood in front of a pair of sculptural works by Koray Ariş, one of which sprouted with a symmetrical impression akin to palm fronds, colored in a subdued tawny yellow, over a murky, green pedestal that extended down to the floor like an isosceles triangle.

Beside the arboreal conception was a semicircular shape, its rounded line hollowed and incomplete, standing with two legs, grounded. The rustic, cerulean hue of its surface bore a resemblance to the dry, warehouse-like effect of the space in which it demanded attention. The photographer was not looking at the sculptures, however, but through the doorway to the street.

On his right is another circular work, painted with a ruddy, whitish hue – an empty, circular object laying on the body of its curved line. Ariş appears to have tested the definitions of dimensionality by manufacturing otherwise abstract, theoretical figures as physical, even aesthetic fabrications. The widening base of the circle turns upward to a crick, in which it also conveys the equally supernatural abstraction of the right angle.

Koray Ariş, untitled, 2020, wood, 87 by 85 by 35 centimeters. (Courtesy of Öktem Aykut)

There are works mounted on the wall that surrounds the centerpiece exhibition of abstract sculpture by Ariş, who worked in Rome in the early 1970s under the auspices of a state scholarship. He was groomed to be a proud representative of Turkish modern art, yet, when he returned to Turkey to work as a professor, his creative and professional affinities veered sidelong. For decades, he has remained generally antisocial and obscure.

The gallerist Tankut Aykut, who along with partner Doğa Öktem is one of a pair of young, upward-looking founder directors at their eponymous gallery, Öktem Aykut, has a personal investment in the life and works of Ariş, whom he has known throughout his career. Long represented by Galeri Nev, one of Turkey’s oldest contemporary art galleries, Ariş is a staple of reference along the lines of potential variations on where Turkish art could have gone.

His contemporaries, such as fellow abstract sculptor Seyhun Topuz, also at Galeri Nev, are arguably overshadowed by their immediate predecessor, Ayşe Erkmen, whose early works in abstract sculptures, since 1969, were on display at the prestigious reopening of Arter as Turkey’s flagship contemporary art museum. Erkmen, however, traversed an alternative path which further distances Ariş from the center of critical and commercial admiration.

An installation view from "Trunkless" at Öktem Aykut shows works by Camila Rocha. (Courtesy of Öktem Aykut)

Öktem Aykut, however, under the passionate curatorial initiative of Aykut, for their current group show, “Trunkless,” has contextualized the works of Ariş anew, as persistently and internationally relevant as ever. In a retrospective catalogue book published by Galeri Nev, Italian art writer Antonio Del Guercio reflected on his meeting with Ariş, whom he later curated in Rome. Guercio defended the effect of Italy on Ariş, comparing his work to late Roman reliefs.

He wrote: “Koray’s works constitute concrete evidence of the possibility of materializing an artistic creation which is modern … And I want to emphasize once again that these gifts or qualities have their very roots in a ‘historical memory’ not superficially exhibited but inherited from the ancient ‘know-how’ of thousands and thousands of anonymous people who worked on those lands from the times of Constantine to the Byzantine era and up to the Ottomans.”

There is an oil on canvas in between the two sculptures that stand, side by side, in the main, ground floor hall of Öktem Aykut. The swaying contours of its pink body meander out of the frame of the canvas like an aurora borealis in intimate opposition to the more earthly, anthropocentric fixtures of Ariş. The painter, Aret Gıcır, is an Istanbul-born Armenian artist.

Gıcır contributed a compact work of oil on paper, figuring the head of a black dog, reclining and stretching over a bleary, purplish-red background. It is a dizzying, dark portrayal of animal life. The piece, “Dog” (2016), is curated next to a few delicate specimens of embroidery on fabric by Emel Kurhan, careful studies of feathers against blank beige, chairs in clouds and a leaf encompassed by two subtle shades of textile.

Emel Kurhan, untitled, 2016, embroidery on fabric, 62 by 55 centimeters. (Courtesy of Öktem Aykut)

The art of Kurhan has a special resonance with that of postmodern naturalist drawings by Rocha, who spent much of her earlier artist career in the field of abstraction, and now, from her home in Brazil, has crafted works that might easily be confused with anachronisms out of the notebook of a 19th-century herbalist. Yet, her poise has an air of experimentation and curiosity that charms its thinkers beyond historical criticism.

Rocha followed a path as an artist that could be seen as diametrically juxtaposed with that of Ariş, with the latter pursuing figurative naturalism to organic abstraction, while the former did just the opposite. Rocha also made a personal mark on Turkish art history through her marriage to the late artist Hüseyin Alptekin. Yet, Rocha is a formidable creative intellectual in her own right, as is lucid in her watercolors of Peruvian cacti, orchids and untitled flora.

The abstract, sculptural works of Stijn Ank are a vocal addition to “Trunkless,” as such pieces as “14.2015” conjure a flowering mold across the room from Rocha’s realist precision. Yet, it might appear that there are multiple narratives of production and appreciation from artist to artist, and that their correlation requires a quite venturesome leap. The taste for abstraction in northern Europe is perhaps distinct from that of Turkey.

As a Belgian artist who has also worked in Rome and Berlin, Ank developed nonfigurative abstract works that can be enjoyed as flat streaks of color – pigmented plaster over a metal structure surface. But their aesthetic is not altogether divergent from that which Gıcır affected with his more traditionally employed oil on canvas. From the perspective of passing eyes, the presence of Ank’s works makes for a peripheral curiosity.

An installation view from "Trunkless" at Öktem Aykut shows works by Hasan Deniz and Stijn Ank. (Courtesy of Öktem Aykut)

In abstraction, the sense of representational ambiguity flirts with the temptations of formalism and the risks of vagueness. Ank, in such works as “07.2018,” may have created a scene interpretable as a landscape my those select minds prepared to make the effort to do their own imagining, but to the more blunt observer, the faded smears are as unidentifiable as they are indigestible.

In his official biography, Ank is said to navigate the relationship between matter and void, as between the sculpture and its surrounding space. With that reference in hand, it is apt to describe such a contemporary art exhibition, in the midst of local and global concerns, according to the title of the Öktem Aykut curation: “Trunkless.” While pointing upward to a beautiful horizon of creative futures rooted in history, the heart and weight of the matter are lost.

Asbarez: ATP Welcomes U.S.’s Renewed Priority on Climate Change

February 8,  2021

Planting in ATP’s Ashtarak Park with the US Embassy’s Green Team

BOSTON, Mass.—Armenia Tree Project welcomes the Biden administration’s renewed commitment to join the Paris Accords.

The Paris climate accord is a landmark international agreement signed in 2015 by 189 countries to limit global warming. Under the agreement, countries commit to decreasing greenhouse gas emissions every five years. The U.S. had initially joined the accord under the Obama administration, and had pledged to cut its emissions by 26 to 28 percent by 2025. The Trump administration had abandoned the agreement late last year.

In his campaign, President Biden set an ambitious goal of ensuring that the U.S. achieves net-zero emissions by 2050. The administration’s urgency to contribute in combating global climate change comes after record-breaking atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations seen in 2020.

The importance of Armenia’s contribution to these global commitments are discussed in an article titled “Armenia’s Environmental Security,” co-authored by the former Minister of Environment and Nature Protection of Armenia, Erik Grigoryan, and the former Deputy Minister of Environment of the Republic of Armenia, Irina Ghaplanyan: “While Armenia, together with many other small developing nations, relies on the biggest polluters of the world to make the right commitments and curb emissions, it must also do its own ‘homework’ and not only mitigate its own emissions (which are only 0.02 percent of the global total) but also adapt to the changing climate…”

For the past 26 years, ATP’s mission has been to utilize tree-planting initiatives to help curb carbon emissions. Simply put, trees help slow down climate change by removing carbon dioxide from the air, storing carbon in the trees and soil, and releasing oxygen into the atmosphere. In 2019, Armenia committed to doubling its forest cover by 2050, a task ATP has spearheaded with its years of experience and native seedlings.

Significantly, ATP’s programs have had a substantial economic impact by empowering community members, primarily rural villagers in Armenia. As a result of the Artsakh war and global pandemic, labor migrants were unable to travel outside of Armenia for work, and many resorted to illegal logging, fishing, and hunting to sustain themselves. In 2020, ATP provided over 150 seasonal jobs to rural villagers to help limit these actions and provide critical socio-economic aid to the most vulnerable groups.

“ATP welcomes the Biden Administration’s willingness to tackle environmental issues,” said ATP Executive Director, Jeanmarie Papelian. “The US has always been at the forefront of innovation and we are eager to see new and creative approaches to tackling climate change. In the meantime, our organization will continue to provide its expertise, skill, and knowledge to our homeland, so that our small country can continue to contribute in the global battle against climate change.”

Armenia Tree Project, established in 1994, is a non-profit organization that revitalizes Armenia’s and Artsakh’s most vulnerable communities through tree-planting initiatives, and provides socio-economic support and growth. It is based in Yerevan, Armenia and has an office in Woburn, Massachusetts. For more information, please visit the website.