The first documentary book on the Armenian Genocide published in Spain

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 19:24,

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, ARMENPRESS. The first documentary book on the Armenian Genocide has been published in Spain. ARMENPRESS reports the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia in Spain informs that on this occasion on June 13 Ambassador Sos Avetisyan received the author of the book, lecturer at CEU San Pablo University of Madrid, political analyst, journalist Ricardo Ruiz de la Serna.

The Ambassador stressed the importance of the book in raising awareness about the Armenian Genocide in Spain.

The book is available in all bookstores in Spain.

The joint efforts of Armenia and Russia are aimed at revealing new promising areas of strategic cooperation – Deputy PM

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 21:10,

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Mher Grigoryan took part in the event organized by the Russian Embassy on the occasion of Russia Day. The Deputy Prime Minister delivered a congratulatory speech in which he noted that in the modern history of Russia this holiday is marked by fundamental changes in all spheres of life, based on the citizen, his interests and prosperity, pride in his millennial history, present and future.

“And Russia has passed this difficult path on its own, laying the foundation for a fundamentally new state-public order, clearly pointing out what Russia will be like in the 21st century. The peoples of Armenia and Russia are connected by many deep threads, which create a solid foundation on which the interstate relations of our countries are built, becoming exemplary in terms of bilateral cooperation.

The establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Russia opened a new page in the modern history of the centuries-old friendship of our peoples, on which it is written in capital letters the Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Assistance, the 25th anniversary of which we are marking this year.

The Armenian-Russian allied relations are distinguished by military-political cooperation, effective and close cooperation within the EEU, CSTO, CIS and other international organizations, successful bilateral cooperation in trade, economic, energy, transport and other important spheres.

Today our joint efforts are aimed at discovering new promising areas of strategic cooperation. I am confident that through joint efforts we will be able to expand allied relations, enrich it with new initiatives for the benefit of the citizens of Armenia and Russia, for economic and social progress, as well as for security and stability in the world and in the region”, ARMENPRESS reports, Mher Grigoryans aid in his speech.

Programs implemented under EU Economic-Investment Plan discussed at the Government

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 20:06,

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, ARMENPRESS. Chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan, with the participation of the Head of the EU Delegation, Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin, a discussion was held in the Government on the programs implemented under the EU Economic and Investment Plan. Representatives of both Armenian state bodies and European financial organizations were present at the discussion.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan, during the discussion a reference was made to the implementation process of the projects under EU Economic and Investment Plan. In this context, the Deputy Prime Minister highlighted the existing agreement on the SME support program and the speedy organization of its official signing. The sides attached importance to the program of construction of the North-South highway and the expert work carried out within its framework with European financial institutions.

The Deputy Prime Minister stressed the importance of the expected joint program with the COAF in Syunik region, expressing hope that the program will contribute to improving the quality of education in Syunik.

Reference was also made to the energy efficiency promotion program planned under the Yerevan Green City Action Plan, and the reconstruction of kindergartens and polyclinics in Yerevan within its framework.

The sides exchanged views on a number of key areas for the next possible package of programs under the EU Economic and Investment Plan.

At the end of the meeting, the sides emphasized the mutual readiness to ensure the implementation of the programs under the assistance package confirmed by the European Commission and announced by high-ranking EU officials in July, 2021.

Armenpress: Armenpress and Qatar News Agency sign MoU on exchange of information

Armenpress and Qatar News Agency sign MoU on exchange of information

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 21:44,

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, ARMENPRESS. Within the framework of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s official visit to Qatar, a Memorandum of Understanding on information exchange between “Armenpress” news agency and “Qatar News Agency” was signed.

Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Hambardzum Matevosyan signed the memorandum on behalf of Armenpress, and Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Qatar Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani on behalf of Qatar News Agency.

Commenting on the signing of the memorandum, director of ARMENPRESS news agency Narine Nazaryan said, “ARMENPRESS is expanding the geography of cooperation. We appreciate the signing of the Memorandum of Understanding with Qatar News Agency. The publications in 6 foreign languages, including Arabic, will allow our partners to get more comprehensive information about Armenia, the Armenian world, as well as international events. The Memorandum of Understanding signed with Qatar News Agency will provide an opportunity to exchange information and photos on a daily basis and more operatively. The cooperation of ARMENPRESS and Qatar News Agency will bring the two countries closer. I would like to remind you that a few days ago ARMENPRESS signed a cooperation agreement with Télam news agency of Argentina. This means that ARMENPRESS has a wide geography of partners, from Asia to Latin America, from Europe to the Middle East, and the Persian Gulf countries. We seek to make information available to our readers from around the world through this form of cooperation.”

Asbarez: Board of Regents Deplores Attacks on Armenian Schools’ Integrity, Commitment to Homeland

Board of Regents of Prelacy Armenian Schools

The Board of Regents of Prelacy Armenian schools issued an announcement on Monday deploring recent attacks on different Armenian schools and their administration by individuals who are questioning the schools’ commitment to the homeland and the Armenian Cause.

Below is the text of the announcement.

The Armenian nation has been in crisis for the past year, especially after the end of the 44-day Artsakh war.

We are disappointed that the commitment of Prelacy Armenian Schools and Preschools to our homeland and our cause are being questioned, during a time when our nation is facing so many challenges.

The Prelacy Armenian Schools and Preschools have not veered from our mission to serve our homeland and will always stand with the people of Armenia and Artsakh. We condemn any attempt in fabricating and distorting the facts about our past and present commitment to our national goals.

Since 1964, this institution has wholeheartedly served the educational needs of our children and our community. Through its service and with the commitment and sacrifice of so many teachers and administrators, the Prelacy Armenian Schools and Preschools have been able to serve Armenia and Artsakh, while preserving our culture, history, heritage and language.

We want to reassure our community that the Prelacy Armenian Schools, to this day, continue to support and assist Artsakh. In April 2022, in order for us to show solidarity with our brothers and sisters in Artsakh and Armenia, we advised all Prelacy Armenian Schools and Preschools to raise the flag of the Republic of Artsakh on our campuses and called on all our administrators to continue their support of the people of Artsakh to make sure we all do our part in their struggle for self-determination and independence. Furthermore, our latest initiative has been to partner with Schools in Artsakh who are in dire need of resources and assistance. Over the past few months, we have been in constant contact and have held virtual meetings with School administrators in Artsakh to provide any assistance needed to ensure that they are able to serve the educational needs of the young generations in Artsakh.

We call upon all those questioning our commitment to our homeland to cease from spreading misinformation to our youth and community, which only causes unnecessary conflicts. The Prelacy Armenian Schools and Preschools is an educational institution that has gone above and beyond to preserve the core values of national identity.

Our record and dedication to our homeland, Artsakh and our cause are well-established and the Board of Regents will not allow futile conflicts to slither their way into the Prelacy Armenian Schools and Preschools. Our schools have a sacred mission which must be valued and collectively protected.

We urge our administrators, teachers and staff to continue selflessly serving our noble mission and we thank all our parents for believing in our mission and entrusting their children’s education to the Prelacy Armenian Schools and Preschools.

Board of Regents
Prelacy Armenian Schools


Shahumian’s De-Occupation Remains a Priority for Artsakh

Artsakh’s occupied Shahumyan district


On June 12, 1992—30 years ago—the Azerbaijani armed forces occupied the Shahumian region of the Republic of Artsakh.

“This ancient region of Artsakh, which played an important role in the history of the Armenian statehood and National-Liberation Struggle and was one of the founding pillars of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, was occupied by the enemy that subjected the population to genocidal actions. As a result of the aggression, we suffered significant losses,” Artsakh’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Sunday.

Due to the occupation of the Shahumyan region, most of the population was forced to flee their historical homeland and find refuge abroad.

“The pain of losing one’s homeland has not been healed in the hearts of either the residents of Shahumian, or the Armenians of Artsakh and around the world. We will never accept the loss of the Shahumian region. The issue of de-occupation of Shahumian continues to remain on the foreign policy agenda of the Republic of Artsakh,” said the statement.

“Shahumian was, is and will always remain an integral part of Artsakh,” the Artsakh foreign ministry added.

On the same occasion, the office of the Human Rights Defender of Artsakh also issued a statement, warning that Shahumian’s destiny is a harbinger of an Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan.

“Thirty years ago, as a result of repressions, attacks and criminal actions of Azerbaijan, 20,000 residents of the Shahumian region of the Republic of Artsakh were evicted and deported. More than 700 people were killed or disappeared, historical Armenian settlements were devastated and plundered, Armenian spiritual-cultural values of the region were vandalized and destroyed, the report of the Office of the Ombudsman of the Nagorno-Karabakh reads.

“Armenian houses were divided, and the “new owners” of Azerbaijan wrote their names on the gates with oil paint. The church was desecrated and turned into a sheep pen. The cross was broken, the bell was smashed with a rifle shot, and the shards were scattered back and forth,” eyewitnesses say.

The crimes committed against the Shahumians were an act of “punishment” for the exercise of their right to free will and independent and dignified life in their homeland.

The issue of restoring justice and the violated rights of the Shahumians, who were deprived of their homeland along ethnic and religious lines, was not clearly stated on the negotiating agenda and the Azerbaijani authorities were not held accountable for the crimes committed against them. Moreover, this impunity continues to generate new crimes, which we witnessed in April 2016, during the Azerbaijani aggression unleashed against the people of Artsakh in September 2020, and continues to manifest itself after the trilateral ceasefire statement of 9 November.

The international community continues to be reprehensibly indifferent to what is happening, which is not derived from the principle of universal protection of human rights,” the statement reads.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/13/2022

                                        Monday, 
Armenia’s Civil Aviation Chief Resigns
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenia - Tatevik Revazian, head of Armenia's Civil Aviation Committee, speaks 
at an official ceremony at Zvartnots airport, June 10, 2022.
The head of Armenia’s Civil Aviation Committee, Tatevik Revazian, resigned on 
Monday after four years in office.
Revazian gave no clear reason for her resignation which she announced on her 
Facebook page just days after returning to work from maternity leave.
“I have decided to return to the world of business,” she wrote without 
elaborating.
Revazian suggested that her resignation will give rise to “fake news and 
gossips.” “I am resigning from office with positive emotions and do not have 
interpersonal differences with anyone,” she said.
Revazian, 34, was named to run the government agency in 2018 shortly after the 
“velvet revolution” that brought Nikol Pashinian to power. She lived in Denmark 
until then. Her family had migrated to the northern European country in the 
1990s.
Revazian did not say whether she will stay in Armenia. She could not be reached 
for comment on Monday.
The government did not immediately appoint a new head of its Civil Aviation 
Committee. The agency was run by Revazian’s deputy Mihran Khachatrian during her 
parental leave.
Armenia - A passenger jet at Yerevan's Zvartnots international airport, 
10Apr2017.
Revazian’s four-year tenure was marred by the European Union’s decision in June 
2020 to ban airlines registered in Armenia from carrying out regular flights to 
EU member states. The EU’s executive European Commission said that they do not 
meet international safety standards.
The ban sparked bitter recriminations between the Armenian government and its 
political opponents. The latter accused the government and Revazian in 
particular of incompetence. Pashinian put the blame on the country’s former 
leadership.
“It wasn’t [Revazian’s] fault,” said Shahen Petrosian, who had headed the civil 
aviation authority in the early 1990s. “She was just wrong not to have been 
consistent enough to sort out what had happened in the past.”
Revazian actively encouraged Western budget airlines to start flying to Armenia. 
Two such carriers, Ryanair and Wizz Air, launched first-ever flights between 
Yerevan and several European cities in early 2020 only to end them weeks later 
due to the onset of the coronavirus pandemic.
Top Security Official Avoids Prosecution For Violence
        • Robert Zargarian
Armenia - Security forces disperse opposition protesters blocking a street in 
Yerevan, May 2, 2022.
Armenian law-enforcement authorities have refused to prosecute the head of Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s security detail who reportedly assaulted two 
journalists during a recent opposition demonstration in Yerevan.
Sargis Hovannisian, who runs the State Protection Service (SPS), was approached 
by a cameraman and a reporter for the news website Mediahub.am on May 2 as he 
apparently issued orders to security forces confronting opposition protesters at 
a major street intersection.
Videos circulated online showed Hovannisian shouting at the female reporter, 
Nare Gevorgian, before hitting her microphone. Gevorgian said he also kicked the 
cameraman, Arman Gharajian, during the incident strongly condemned by Armenian 
media groups.
Responding to the uproar, prosecutors ordered the Investigative Committee to 
look into the incident and determine whether Hovannisian broke the law.
In a statement issued late last week, the committee cleared Hovannisian of any 
wrongdoing. It put the blame on the journalists, saying that they interfered 
with the high-ranking officer’s work and ignored his legitimate orders to stop 
filming him and asking him questions.
Gevorgian on Monday denounced the Investigative Committee’s decision as 
“ridiculous” and said she will challenge it in court.
“Our live stream and footage represent complete evidence of a crime,” the 
journalist told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
Armenia - Journalist Nare Gevorgian speaks to RFE/RL, .
Hovannisian, whose agency provides bodyguards to Pashinian and other senior 
state officials, was already caught on camera kicking an opposition protester in 
Yerevan last year. He was not prosecuted or subjected to disciplinary action.
Opposition leaders have questioned the legality of Hovannisian’s presence at 
anti-government demonstrations, arguing that the SPS’s powers do not include 
crowd control. Some of them have accused the SPS chief of ordering riot police 
to beat up opposition supporters demanding Pashinian’s resignation.
Videos posted on social media in recent weeks showed some police officers 
kicking and punching protesters arrested by their colleagues. None of those 
officers is facing criminal proceedings.
Law-enforcement authorities have instead arrested and pressed assault charges 
against more than three dozen participants of the Armenian opposition’s “civil 
disobedience” campaign launched on May 1.
Armenian Authorities To Decriminalize Insults
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - The main government building in Yerevan, March 6, 2021.
After months of criticism from domestic and international civil rights groups, 
the Armenian authorities have decided to scrap controversial legislation that 
made it a crime to insult government officials and public figures.
Government-backed amendments to the Criminal Code passed by Armenia’s parliament 
last summer made “grave insults” directed at individuals because of their 
“public activities” an offense punishable with hefty fines or prison sentences 
of up to three months.
More than 50 Armenians have been charged with defamation and hundreds of others 
investigated on the same grounds since the amendments took effect in September. 
At least six of them have already been found guilty by courts.
Many of those individuals have been prosecuted for insulting Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian.
Opposition and human rights groups have strongly criticized the criminalization 
of insults. Western watchdogs such as Freedom House and Amnesty International 
have added their voice to the criticism.
Pashinian’s political allies have repeatedly dismissed calls for a repeal of the 
legislation, insisting that it does not constitute an infringement of free 
speech.
In a surprise announcement, Justice Minister Karen Andreasian said over the 
weekend that the punitive measure will be excluded from a new Criminal Code that 
will come into force next month. Pashinian and other government officials now 
believe that its enforcement is no longer “expedient,” he wrote on Facebook.
Andreasian defended the authorities’ earlier decision to criminalize insults, 
saying that it was necessary to “rein in the shameful and unacceptable behavior 
of certain groups and individuals.”
Armenian press freedom groups welcomed the move while questioning the reason for 
it given by the minister. They said that the authorities simply bowed to the 
domestic and Western pressure.
“I think that this law has never been necessary and it has not had any positive 
impact,” said Ashot Melikian of the Yerevan-based Committee to Protect Free 
Speech.
Melikian said that the Armenian Civil Code, which sets fines for insults, must 
be the sole legal instrument for dealing with slanderous public statements. The 
authorities tripled the maximum amount of those fines to 3 million drams 
($6,800) last year.
All forms of slander and defamation had already been decriminalized in Armenia 
in 2010 during former President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

The California Courier Online, June 16, 2022

1-         Azerbaijan Donated to Queen of England

            A ‘Karabagh’ Horse: An Obvious Bribe!

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Protesters Disrupt Zareh Sinanyan’s Speech in North Hollywood

3-         Homenetmen Embraces the Young Heroes of Hrashq

4-         Hovnanian, Hovsepian Stage Installations at Venice Art Biennale

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

************************************************************************************************************************************************

1-         Azerbaijan Donated to Queen of England

            A ‘Karabagh’ Horse: An Obvious Bribe!

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

A delegation led by President of the Equestrian Federation of
Azerbaijan, Elchin Gulliyev, presented on May 16 ‘a rare Karabagh
horse’ named ‘Shohrat’ (glory) to the Queen of England as ‘a gift’
from President Ilham Aliyev.

Azerbaijan was invited to perform at Her Majesty’s Platinum Jubilee
celebrations. Among the participants in the May 12-15 Windsor Royal
Horse Show were Azerbaijan’s cavalry detachment and in national
costume the Border Guard Service’s dance ensemble who performed a
program called ‘Land of Fire.’ Azerbaijan has been participating in
this Show since 2012.

Queen Elizabeth II, 96, holding a walking cane due to her mobility
issues, waited in the courtyard of Windsor Castle to personally
receive Azerbaijan’s ‘gift.’ The Monarch, who has a lifelong love of
horses, said it was a “very kind, very generous” gesture. A similar
horse was recently sold at an auction for $17,000. The Queen was also
gifted two sculptures of horses, made by Azerbaijani sculptor Faiq
Hajiyev. Interestingly, Nikita Khrushchev, the First Secretary of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union, during his visit to the UK in
1956, had also presented to Queen Elizabeth II ‘a Karabagh horse’
named ‘Zaman.’

Making no secret of the propaganda value of the Azeri ‘gift’ to the
Queen, the press center of Azerbaijan’s State Border Service
explicitly stated, with an obvious distortion of the historical facts,
that the UK Horse Show “has become an extremely important platform for
promoting the ancient and unique Azerbaijani culture.”

However, the Azeri propaganda backfired when Phil Miller, chief
reporter of ‘Declassified UK’ wrote a highly critical article titled:
“Anger as Queen Bags ‘Generous’ Gift from Dictator.” The article
started with: “As the Queen celebrates her Platinum Jubilee, she is
facing calls to return a horse she recently received from a repressive
regime—the third autocracy from which she has accepted such a gift.”

Miller reported: “Republic, a group that wants to abolish the monarchy
and replace it with an elected head of state, slammed the Queen for
having a ‘cozy relationship where she receives horses from
dictatorships.’ Republic spokesman Graham Smith told Declassified: ‘It
doesn’t look good for a British head of state to be having these kinds
of relationships with people who have very questionable records in
office and who are repressing their own people. I think it is
distasteful and something that a different head of state might have
chosen not to do. I’m surprised the government hasn’t advised her to
refuse these sorts of gifts but I assume that it’s something she’s
very invested in—horse racing. I think the best thing she could do is
return the gifts and ask them not to offer her any more in the
future.’”

Miller added: “The Aliyev family network is widely accused of
embezzling state funds and acquiring more than $500 million worth of
property in London, one of which was sold to the Queen’s crown estate
in an $82 million deal.”

Miller quoted dissident Azeri journalist in exile Arzu Geybullayeva:
“President Ilham Aliyev is not only notorious for his authoritarian
leadership, but he has also successfully managed to corrupt the whole
governing system — [putting] cronies, oligarchs, and family members
in high government positions.”

On June 2nd, the Armenian National Committees of Australia, Canada,
New Zealand and United Kingdom, all four British Commonwealth
countries, issued a joint statement titled: “Your Majesty, Beware of
Dictators Bearing Gifts!” The ANCs stated that Azerbaijan was
attempting to “gift their way to whitewashing an appalling human
rights record.” The ANCs called the gift “the latest in a series of
cynical attempts by the authoritarian regime of Azerbaijan to color
their shortcomings in a positive light.” The joint statement also
highlighted that “human rights organizations have consistently exposed
Azerbaijan’s use of Caviar Diplomacy in several corruption scandals,
where they were found to pay their way to enhancing the country’s
image amongst the international community.”

The four ANCs reminded that “in 2012, President Aliyev became the
inaugural winner of the Organized Crime and Corruption Person of the
Year award bestowed by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting
Project (OCCRP).” The ANCs alerted the Queen that “Freedom House has
summarized Azerbaijan’s human rights record as follows: ‘Power in
Azerbaijan’s authoritarian regime remains heavily concentrated in the
hands of Ilham Aliyev, who has served as president since 2003, and his
extended family. Corruption is rampant, and the formal political
opposition has been weakened by years of persecution. The authorities
have carried out an extensive crackdown on civil liberties in recent
years, leaving little room for independent _expression_ or activism.’”

ANC-UK Chairperson Annette Moskofian stated: “There is no doubt in our
minds that the gift is a deliberate and targeted act by the
Azerbaijani regime to glorify its war crimes and cause psychological
harm to Armenians in the Commonwealth countries, as well as in their
ancestral homeland of Artsakh, who are facing an existential threat
and who have witnessed parts of their ancestral homeland be occupied
and ethnically cleansed by a foreign dictatorship.”

Sevag Belian, Armenian National Committee’s Executive Director in
Canada, added: “We are confident that, upon being fully apprised of
the above, Her Majesty should rightly reconsider acceptance of this
‘gift’ and reject Azerbaijan’s blatant and nefarious caviar
diplomacy.”

There is little chance that the Queen will return the Azeri horse,
unless the British public pressure their government that this ‘gift’
is nothing more than a crude bribe to whitewash the Aliyev regime’s
crimes against the people of Azerbaijan as well as Artsakh and
Armenia.

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         Protesters Disrupt Zareh Sinanyan’s Speech in North Hollywood

LOS ANGELES (Oragark)—On June 7, Zareh Sinanyan, Armenia’s Diaspora
High Commissioner attempted to gather supporters for a meeting at the
“La Reve” restaurant in North Hollywood, California. The restaurant
was filled near its capacity with attendees. However, the vast
majority of attendees were not there to hear or support Sinanyan in
defense of the Pashinyan regime, but rather to protest both his
presence in Los Angeles and his ongoing role in Pashinyan’s
government.

The capacity crowd greeted Sinanyan with boos, along with chants of
“Sinanyan Traitor” and “Nikol Traitor”. Sinanyan was visibly shaken.
He has been visiting the United States and had thus far managed to
avert large crowds, opting instead to hold small, controlled meetings.
On June 7, however, Sinanyan was unable to avoid coming face to face
with a large crowd.

Armenian Youth Federation held up “Zareh Sinanyan Traitor” signs at
the event. Similar signs had also been posted in multiple locations in
Los Angeles, including freeway bridges and the Armenian Consulate.

Last month, Sinanyan had outraged the Diaspora by stating that those
who are against Pashinyan’s policies regarding Artsakh and his
government’s propositions are “traitors.”

The organizers of the event, upon realizing that the crowd was
gathered to protest Sinanyan, became visibly hostile and began to hurl
insults and threats against the demonstrators. According to video
evidence, there were several instances where organizers tried to grab
signs away from protesters as well as to pull them off the venue’s
stage. Sinanyan, who also was visibly irritated, started yelling at
the crowd and was rushed out by the organizers.

The owners of the restaurant then notified the crowd that the event
was being cancelled.  The large group of protesters exited the venue,
but later discovered that Sinanyan had re-entered via the back door
and was trying to meet with the remaining dozen or so people,
including the organizers, who remained inside. About one hundred
demonstrators continued their protest outside the venue.

An hour into the protest, the Los Angeles Police Department arrived at
the scene and inquired about the ongoings. The police had apparently
been called by Sinanyan’s organizers.

It was explained to the police that the demonstrators had gathered to
protest Sinanyan, whose policies they disagreed with, and the police
left shortly thereafter.

The demonstrators concluded their protest by singing Armenian
patriotic songs “Zartir Lao” and “Gini Lits”, along with the Armenian
National Anthem.

************************************************************************************************************************************************
3-         Homenetmen Embraces the Young Heroes of Hrashq

By Katy Simonian

“You are stars and the world is watching you. By your presence you
send a message to every village, every city, every nation. A message
of hope. A message of victory.” Eunice Kennedy Shriver’s words echo
through eternity and continue to create a ripple effect for families
in America and across the world. As the founder of the Special
Olympics, she shared her vision of inclusion with the world, opening
hearts and minds to the powerful gifts of a community that had long
been kept in the shadow.

Homenetmen Western US Region established Hrashq, a program for
athletes with special needs. With a unique coaching system tailored
for the needs of each child, Hrashq builds skills and confidence in
young athletes, providing them with socialization and inclusion
opportunities, while combating the stigma often associated with
disabilities.

For members, Hrashq (which means “Miracle”) is an opportunity to
create a resource of support for parents and children alike, as they
meet the challenges of life.

The story of Hrashq began back in 2018, when Founding Member Dr. Nanor
Kabakian joined a group of parents who sought to create an avenue for
their children to participate in athletic activities and be part of an
Armenian organization. Kabakian has long served as the facilitator of
the Armenian Parents Support Group of the Lanterman Regional Center,
which offers parents of children with special needs presentations and
resources to enable them to advocate for their rights.

She approached Homenetmen’s leaders with the prospect of having a
booth at the Games. Their conversation led to a transformative
idea—having athletes with special needs participate in the 43rd
Navasartian Games on the occasion of the Homenetmen Centennial.
Homenetmen’s Western Regional Executive Board gave the concept the
green light, forming a committee whose mission it was to plan Hrashq’s
inaugural participation in Navasartian Games. Their goal was to
provide the athletes with the accommodations needed to make their
historic debut a success. Indeed, Hrashq athletes participated in
competitions and the Parade of Champions, a highlight of the annual
Navasartian Closing Ceremonies.

The program quickly went from 20 athletes to 50, and has benefited
from the leadership of an Adaptive Physical Education Teacher, Dave
Beard, who has created specific lesson plans for each individual
student. Athletes receive one-on-one support from volunteers,
including parents, speech and language pathologists, occupational
therapists, Homenetmen members, and AYF Sardarabad Pyunic Basketball
Committee members.

One of the most influential figures to support Hrashq’s noble mission
is State Senator Anthony J. Portantino, who secured a grant of
$100,000 to support Homenetmen’s many programs including Hrashq.

**********************************************************************************************************************************************
4-         Hovnanian, Hovsepian Stage Installations at Venice Art Biennale

VENICE (Combined Sources)— For the past 127 years, the Venice Biennale
International Art Exhibition has been dominated by male curators and
artists. But the 59th iteration of the show—which opens this week and
borrows its title, The Milk of Dreams, from a text by the surrealist
Leonora Carrington—primarily features women artists. Among them are
the Sheree Hovsepian and Rachel Lee Hovnanian.

Angel iconography is universal, but there’s something truly arresting
in the seven cherubs created by Rachel Lee Hovnanian, cast in white
bronze and silenced by two sculpted, crossed pieces of tape over their
mouths.

The artist’s immersive installation, “Angels Listening,” which is will
be on view at the Venice Biennale until Nov. 27, has the angels staged
around a silver confessional, dubbed the “Cathartic Box.” The artist
invites viewers to write on a ribbon their most personal thoughts,
whether repressed due to fear of judgment or out of an inability to
speak them.

Visitors will be able to place the ribbons into the box while ringing
an awakening bell that symbolizes the role of the angels as mute
listeners.

At the end of each day, the messages will be taken out of the box and
ironed on prayer-like mats in the garden, and made permanent. “The
performers become the listeners,” Hovnanian explain.

“‘Angels Listening’ offers a space that transforms hundreds of
silenced voices into a chorus of confessions, allowing to reflect on
issues related to identity and relationships, and on the role of art
in this unprecedented moment in history,” says Hovnanian.

The messages at the installation will also contribute to a sense of
freedom as “you can’t be traced through a global platform.”

This is a very personal installation, reflecting Hovnanian’s own
struggles to speak up as a victim of sexual harassment and, as a
child, growing up with a father whose issues with alcohol drove her to
silence, thinking that “maybe nobody will want to be friends” with her
if others knew what was happening at home. The artist has explored the
image of a silenced angel before, illustrating the suppression of
truth and the _expression_ “be an angel and keep your mouth shut.”

The Venice Biennale’s epic proportions tend to lure artists into
blowing up their own scale of choice to meet the show’s expectations
but Sheree Hovsepian stuck to her guns, making her contributions to
the show some of the most intimate viewing available in the Giardini’s
main pavilion. “Sometimes asking a viewer to come close is actually
asking them to come with you. You are demanding more but through that
process you become more connected,” Hovsepian explains,. “I often
refer to my practice as a kind of exquisite corpse process,” the
artist explains. “Using all these materials, the ceramic, the string,
the wood—I’m putting together limbs and making the body whole again.”
These anecdotal references to the body, sometimes literal and
sometimes more abstract, accumulate within Hovsepian collages—building
towards a larger more inclusive body that can reflect back on all its
disparate parts. “I often refer to my practice as a kind of exquisite
corpse process,” the artist explains. “Using all these materials, the
ceramic, the string, the wood—I’m putting together limbs and making
the body whole again.” The Venice Biennale’s epic proportions tend to
lure artists into blowing up their own scale of choice to meet the
show’s expectations but Sheree Hovsepian stuck to her guns, making her
contributions to the show some of the most intimate viewing available
in the Giardini’s main pavilion. “Sometimes asking a viewer to come
close is actually asking them to come with you. You are demanding more
but through that process you become more connected,” Hovsepian
explains, Hovsepian will be showing seven new works she created
especially for her debut at the exhibition, which are composed from
silver gelatin prints and tactile materials.
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5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

More than 2.2 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine have been
administered in Armenia since commencing the vaccination program a
year ago, authorities said on Monday, June 13. For the first week, no
new caes or deaths were reported. Armenia has recorded 423,006
coronavirus cases. Armenia has recorded 8,629 deaths; 412,661 have
recovered. ***************************************************************************************************************************

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CivilNet: Armenia’s climbing inflation rate may rise further, says Central Bank chief

CIVILNET.AM

13 Jun, 2022 10:06

  • Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has held talks with Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad al Thani in Doha.
  • Tatevik Revazian, the head of the Civil Aviation Committee of Armenia, has stepped down from her post.
  • If the Central Bank artificially devalues the Armenian dram currency, Armenia will face a new wave of inflation, said Central Bank head Martin Galstyan.

Historic Church Service in Turkey Marred By Attack on Assyrian Family

A service was held in Mor Gevargis Church, Brahîmîye village for the first time in nearly a century. (  Süryaniler)A Christian family were attacked in a village in Mardin province, south-eastern Turkey, shortly before a church service on Sunday, June 5.

The service in Mor Gevargis Assyrian Church, Brahîmîye village, was the first held in the building in almost 100 years, after renovation work which began in 2015.

The Yilmaz family — the only Assyrian family who live in the village — were attacked at their home by a group of around 50 Muslims. The family were at the time entertaining visiting clergy who had come to officiate at the service.

Dispute Over Land

The mob attacked the home with stones, sticks and other weapons. They then set fire to wheat being grown by the Yilmaz family. None of the family were injured, and the fire was eventually extinguished after witnesses alerted the police.

Some members of the Muslim family were arrested in connection with the incident.

“They threatened us,” said Cengiz Yilmaz, “saying that they would not let us live in the village … But we are not afraid. We will continue to stay here.” He accused the attackers of specifically choosing the day of the church ceremony to re-open the land dispute.

The tiny remnant Christian community in Turkey is mainly historic Christian ethnic groups such as Assyrians (like the Yilmaz family) and Armenians; they still bear the trauma of the Armenian, Assyrian, Syriac and Greek genocides of the early twentieth century. During these genocides, at least 3.75 million believers were killed by Ottoman Turks, with many attacks occurring in south-eastern Turkey.

There are also a small number of Turkish converts from Islam.

In August 2021 an Assyrian Christian village in northern Syria was bombed by the Turkish air force in a campaign against Kurdish militants.