PM’s spouse Anna Hakobyan visited Lori province


The visit started in Vanadzor town, particularly in the Vanadzor medical center where Anna Hakobyan was welcomed by the Governor of Lori, the acting mayor of Vanadzor and the director of the hospital.

Anna Hakobyan visited the maternity hospital in the town. Meeting with the parents of new-born babies, Anna Hakobyan said that the future of children depends on their parents, expressing hope that they will pay great attention to the health and education of their children.

Anna Hakobyan was also introduced on the new physiotherapy department at the medical center. The center is operating since February this year and has been renovated with the support of the Aznavour Foundation. The department serves as a rehabilitation center for the war participants, however, it also provides services to civilians. The department is equipped with the latest equipment meeting the highest European standards. According to the head of the department Artur Mkhitaryan, the center is the second in Armenia with its capacities, after the Soldier’s House rehabilitation center.

The next station was Darpas village where Anna Hakobyan met with the family of serviceman Karen Avetyan fallen at the 2020 Artsakh war. Karen’s mother welcomed Anna Hakobyan and accompanied her to her son’s bedroom. Karen Avetyan was the only child of the family.

 




Armenian Vice Speaker of Parliament receives delegation led by President of Venice Commission

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 16:30, 8 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. Vice Speaker of Parliament of Armenia Ruben Rubinyan, who is also the head of the Armenian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, received today the delegation led by President of the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission Claire Bazy Malaurie, the Parliament’s press service said.

During the meeting Ruben Rubinyan highlighted the visit of Ms Claire Bazy Malaurie to Armenia and appreciated the productive cooperation with the Venice Commission.

Ruben Rubinyan said that the authorities of Armenia remain committed to the process of democratic reforms that launched after the Velvet Revolution. In this respect the Vice Speaker of Parliament emphasized the necessity for the support of the Commission.

The activities of the new Council on constitutional reforms were also touched upon.

The President of the Venice Commission highlighted the productive cooperation with Armenia.

The meeting was also attended by the member of the delegation of the National Assembly to the PACE Arusyak Julhakyan and the Director/Secretary of the CoE Venice Commission Simona Granata-Menghini.

Russian FM arrives in Yerevan

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 17:08, 8 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov arrived in Armenia, TASS reports from the site.

The minister has arrived in the Armenian capital from Ankara, where he held talks with Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu.

On June 9, the Russian FM is scheduled for talks with Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, as well as with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Vahagn Khachaturyan of Armenia.

On June 10, Lavrov will take part in a meeting of the Collective Security Treaty Organization’s Council of Foreign Ministers.

[see video]

Armenian PM receives President of CoE Venice Commission

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 17:15, 8 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan received today President of the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission Claire Bazy Malaurie, the PM’s Office said.

During the meeting the Prime Minister praised the fact that the government of Armenia is actively cooperating with the Council of Europe and the Venice Commission aimed at constantly improving the quality of legislative field necessary for the strengthening of democracy, protection of human rights and development of independent judiciary. Pashinyan assessed the partnership with PACE effective, the recent resolution of which records the normal and positive course of democratic reforms in Armenia, as well as the fact that the page of falsifying elections has been closed. In the context of the cooperation between the government of Armenia and the European structures, the PM recalled also the consistent work with the ECHR in the direction of the return of Armenian prisoners of war, hostages and other persons who are still held in Azerbaijan after the 44-day war.

The President of the Venice Commission thanked for the appreciation and reaffirmed the readiness to support Armenia’s democracy agenda so that the legal regulations in the country will be as firm as possible.

The sides exchanged views on the agenda of the bilateral partnership. PM Pashinyan said the reform of the judiciary – as an important institutional reform, remains one of the priorities of the government, and in this context the constant efforts for forming trust towards the justice quality, the judiciary, as well as for ensuring social guarantees for judges are important. Claire Bazy Malaurie said she shares the view of the Armenian PM, adding that the Venice Commission will support the Armenian government, the Constitutional Court in this process with all its tools.

Issues relating to the cooperation between the Commission on constitutional reforms and the Venice Commission were discussed at the meeting.

Both sides emphasized the importance of civil society engagement into the reforms process.

Nikol Pashinyan said that the government is determined in implementing the agenda of reforms and highlights on this path the support of the Council of Europe and the European structures.

CivilNet: Fewer Armenians now say 2018 revolution met their expectations

CIVILNET.AM

08 Jun, 2022 10:06

  • A significantly lower percentage of Armenians now say their expectations of the 2018 revolution have been met, according to a new survey by the Caucasus Research Resource Center.
  • Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov arrived in Yerevan, where he is set to hold talks with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and other high-level officials.
  • Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan met with U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy to discuss ongoing efforts to settle the Karabakh conflict.
  • The Armenian dram continues to depreciate in value against the U.S. dollar.

Prayers Offered for ABMDR Patients and Families at Western Diocese

Archbishop Hovnan Derderian with representatives and supporters of the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry and family members at the Western Diocese. Photo courtesy of the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry


LOS ANGELES—Prayers for patients of the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry and their families were offered on June 5 at Saint Leon Cathedral of the Western Diocese, in Burbank, California. The occasion was led by Western Primate Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, who officiated the Mass at the cathedral.

In keeping with a longstanding tradition of providing ABMDR patients and families with spiritual support, various Western Diocese churches offer prayers for them on a designated Sunday every year.

In his sermon, Archbishop Derderian prayed for the speedy recovery of ABMDR patients suffering from life-threatening illnesses, including 13-year-old Alex Darbinyan. In order to survive their illnesses, the Primate explained, these patients urgently need to undergo bone marrow stem cell transplants, which would be possible only if matched bone marrow donors are found among the Armenian community.

Archbishop Hovnan Derderian during Mass at Saint Leon Cathedral. To his left is Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, Catholicos Karekin II’s pontifical envoy-at-large. Photo courtesy of the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry

Archbishop Derderian praised the thousands of supporters who registered as potential bone marrow donors at a series of donor recruitments in April, organized by the ABMDR. These events, which were held in Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Watertown, Yerevan, and Gyumri, sought to find donor matches for young Alex as well as many other cancer patients. Archbishop Derderian also prayed for strength and forbearance for the families of patients.   

As he spoke of ABMDR’s mission of saving lives, Archbishop Derderian expressed admiration for the dedication of the pan-Armenian organization’s volunteers, supporters, and bone marrow donors. The Primate went on to reaffirm the Western Diocese’s strong advocacy of ABMDR’s outreach efforts, in the diaspora and the homeland alike, and urged congregants to support the organization by joining its ranks as potential bone marrow donors, for a chance to save someone’s life.

Among the congregants at St. Leon Cathedral were members of the ABMDR Board and volunteers, including Dr. Frieda Jordan, president of the organization. Following the church service, Dr. Jordan said, “It’s extremely gratifying to see our work being supported by our churches and communities. In this respect, I’d like to convey our deep gratitude to Archbishop Derderian, for his leadership and exemplary efforts in raising public awareness of our life-saving mission.”

Established in 1999, ABMDR, a nonprofit organization, helps Armenians and non-Armenians worldwide survive life-threatening blood-related illnesses by recruiting and matching donors to those requiring bone marrow stem cell transplants. To date, the registry has recruited over 32,000 donors in 44 countries across four continents, identified over 9,000 patients, and facilitated 38 bone marrow transplants. For more information, call (323) 663-3609 or visit the ABMDR website.

Eshgian Family to Sponsor Souvenirs for Muron Blessing

The Eshgian family with Western Prelate Bishop Torkom DonoyanAram I, the Catholicos of the Holy See of Cilicia will conduct the blessing of Holy Water (Muron) at the St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral in Antelias, Lebanon on July 1.

Prior to the blessing, which is an occasion for spiritual comfort and an _expression_ of piety; the Western Prelacy benefactors show their support at various levels.

The Western Prelacy announced on Wednesday Prelacy benefactors Mr. & Mrs. Garo and Sosse Eshgian and their children Nareh and Koko, who heeded the wishes of Prelate Bishop Torkom Donoyan, will sponsor all the souvenir expenses for the blessing of Muron.

From this inspiring gesture, the Prelate conveyed his high appreciation to the Eshgian family, while urging everyone not to miss out on their charitable contributions to the betterment of the Catholicosate and its mission.


Asbarez: Moscow, Ankara Advance ‘3+3’ Caucasus Cooperation Platform

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (left) with his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu during a joint press briefing in Ankara


Russian Foreign Minister Arrives in Yerevan

The foreign ministers of Russia and Turkey announced on Wednesday that a meeting of representatives to create a South Caucasus cooperation forum will take place in the near future.

The project, known as the “3+3” initiative is an Ankara-proposed scheme—supported by Azerbaijan—that envisions Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Russia, Iran and Turkey will come together to form a regional economic and geopolitical alliance.

While Georgia has refused to take part in the so-called platform, due to its long-time enmity with Russia, representatives from the other five countries held a meeting earlier this year in Moscow to discuss the process. These discussions are taking place in tandem with talks between Yerevan and Ankara to normalize relations between Armenia and Turkey, as well as separate talks between Yerevan and Baku in hopes of achieving a “peace treaty.”

Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who was visiting Ankara on Wednesday, made the announcement about a potential meeting at a joint press conference with his Turkish counterpart, Mevlut Cavusoglu.

“We agreed on how to continue the work in the South Caucasus. You know about the 3+3 format created at the initiative of Turkey. We held the first meeting in Moscow, the Georgian colleagues could not participate, but we emphasize that we will always be happy to see them there. The next meeting is being planned in the near future,” Lavrov said, according to the TASS news agency.

Lavrov left Ankara on Wednesday evening and arrived in Yerevan, where he was greeted by Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan.

Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan (right) welcomes Sergei Lavrov to Yerevan on June 8

Lavrov and Mirzoyan are scheduled to meet on Thursday. The top Russian diplomat is also scheduled to meet with Armenia’s prime minister and president. Lavrov is in Yerevan to attend the foreign ministers’ summit of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, known as the CSTO.

“Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will hold a detailed exchange of views with the Armenian leadership in Yerevan on the course of implementation of the agreements reached between the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia on November 9, 2020, January 11 and November 26, 2020,” Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova announced during a press briefing on Wednesday.

She added that matters related to “bilateral allied relations, the expansion of cooperation between Moscow and Yerevan within the EEU, CSTO and CIS shared integration unions, as well as the strengthening of coordination on international platforms will be discussed.”

“Moscow emphasizes, with satisfaction, that taking into account the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Russia and Armenia, which is being celebrated this year, the bilateral contacts stand out with high intensity. (…). There is a dialogue every day along the lines of Russian institutions abroad. On June 10, Sergey Lavrov will attend in Yerevan the meeting of the CSTO Council of Foreign Ministers,” Zakharova said.

She said that after this meeting, the 2022-2024 plan of consultations on foreign policy, defense, and security of the CSTO member states in will be signed.

AW: Alzheimer’s Care Armenia awarded grant to launch innovative early detection program for Alzheimer’s

YEREVAN – Alzheimer’s Care Armenia has launched the Brain Health Armenia Project. The grant comes from the Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative (DAC), the organization leading an unprecedented global response to Alzheimer’s disease. Alzheimer’s Care Armenia will join a global network of 12 grant projects, all part of the DAC Healthcare System Preparedness project, which aims to advance how healthcare systems worldwide detect, diagnose, treat and care for people with or at risk for Alzheimer’s. The early detection grants total $4.5 million from eight countries.  

Alzheimer’s Care Armenia is honored to be selected as one of 12 select recipients of the Inaugural Global Davos Alzheimer’s Collaborative Grant Program for Healthcare System Preparedness. In 2021, Dr. Jane Mahakian, gerontologist and founder of Alzheimer’s Care Armenia, developed a US-based healthcare committee consisting of experts in elder care to help develop this specialized program. The committee includes: Dr. Armen Moughamian, MD, PhD neurologist; Sona Hovsepian, LCSW; Nancy Barsamian BSN, RN; Dr. Herag Hamoboyan, MD, geriatrician and Lara Markarian, BS.  

The Brain Health Armenia Project is a country-wide mobile memory screening and Alzheimer’s disease training program in Armenia. The project will collaborate with the Armenian EyeCare Project to provide memory screening throughout Armenia and is endorsed by the Republic of Armenia Ministry of Health. The Brain Health Armenia Project’s multidisciplinary team of specially trained experts includes primary care physicians, nurses, psychologists and social workers and will also provide didactic and hands-on training to healthcare professionals and family caregivers to improve the care of the person with dementia in Armenia. The Project experts include Dr. Samson Khachatryan, MD, chairman of neurology at the National Institute of Health, Armenia and Dr. Gevorg Pashikyan, MD, geriatric psychiatrist. This project will make a sustainable impact by training and educating healthcare professionals and increase visibility and awareness about Alzheimer’s disease. 

“We are thrilled to have the opportunity to develop this groundbreaking and sustainable project that will improve the care of people with dementia with the intent of incorporating cognitive screenings as a standard of medical care throughout Armenia,” said Dr. Mahakian. Alzheimer’s disease is on the rise in Armenia and Alzheimer’s Care Armenia is leading the way to make systemic changes that will improve the care of the person with dementia and support for their families. The key is early detection of Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias along with a standard of care for all people. 

About Alzheimer’s Care Armenia

Alzheimer’s Care Armenia (ACA) was founded in 2017 by gerontologist Dr. Jane Mahakian with the purpose of raising awareness and developing sustainable programs and services for people with Alzheimer’s disease and their families in Armenia. ACA is located in San Clemente, California. It is a registered 501 (c)(3) nonprofit organization in the State of California and is an NGO in Armenia. Dr. Mahakian is a pioneer in bringing elder care programs and increasing awareness of Alzheimer’s disease in Armenia. She is author of “I hear you” a practical guide for people caring for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease that promotes purposeful living and preserves independence.




Using Armenian Professionally

Dr. Kristi Rendahl, Belmont, Mass., May 28, 2022 (Photo: Lalai Manjikian)

Sometimes we’re asked a question and only later do we wish we had paused and been more thoughtful in our response. And so it was when a participant at the Hamazkayin Cultural Retreat in Boston in May asked if Armenian has served me professionally, at once wondering how they could make the case for young people to prioritize learning Armenian. 

At face value, the answer would be that I don’t use Armenian on a daily basis in my job, but the question – and especially the driving sentiment – deserves more consideration than that. 

What does it even mean to be a professional and when have we arrived? Armenians ask “inch masnaget es,” and I’ve never had a simple answer. I studied music and communication in undergraduate university. I moved to Armenia; studying music and communication helped me communicate with Armenians. Armenians helped me grow into myself which, long story short, led me to where I am today.  

When I lived in Armenia 25 years ago, everywhere I looked the Armenian language was an entrance to something new, foundational, essential. 

My friend Gayane patiently spoke Armenian with me as I clumsily responded, occasionally surprising her with a new word: xraxusel impressed her one day. My friend Tom knew Armenian so well he followed the laws of the newly independent Armenia as fast as they were drafted. Hagop and Anahit taught me songs in Armenian with melodies that helped me understand pain and loss better than any history book or conversation ever could. 

Armenians spoke of love and pain in ways unfamiliar to me as someone from a stoic culture that spoke of neither. Armenian invited me to be me in new ways.

On a basic level, Armenian is just an extension of the vocabulary I learned before the age of 21. Another participant at the Hamazkayin event noted that children do not distinguish between languages until grownups tell them to do so. Children simply know to use this word with this person and that word with that person.

Words are building blocks, and if you ask most any kid, they’ll tell you that more blocks are better. Armenian, as a flexible language in many respects, is ideal for the person who wants to build cool things, including ideas, stories and ways of being.

As an odar (and I know that there is some negative connotation with that word but I use it with no such baggage attached), Armenian differentiates me. It sounds like nothing else, it looks like nothing else, it makes me feel like nothing else. 

I hadn’t spoken much Armenian the past couple of years, so for two weeks before the event, which was conducted in a mixture of Eastern and Western Armenian, I sat on my couch and read Kristine Sargsyan’s book out loud each morning with a cup of coffee. My mouth and ears and mind reoriented to another way of communicating.

And it’s a language, sure, or an extension of a vocabulary, however you wish to see it, but it’s also a powerful statement about survival. I’d say resilience, but I’m sort of bored of that word; I know plenty of people who wish they weren’t so remarkably resilient and that life were just more peaceful. 

It is possible that speaking Armenian is in fact revolutionary.

Survival is something else. A scar is beautiful, why? Because it’s evidence that you survived. A language, however many or few words remain in collective memory, is indicative that people have made it through, identity intact, one generation conveying to the next the stories they deem most valuable, or at least readily accessible in their mind. It is possible that speaking Armenian is in fact revolutionary.

The Armenian language is not only about oppression, genocide and transgenerational trauma though. It is also one that expresses the mundane and points guests to the best nearby coffee shop and wrestles with complex social issues of right now and relates to complicated societies around the world in deeply empathetic ways. It is a framework for understanding this moment in time and one that is as relevant as any other framework.

The language, whether Eastern or Western, is more than syllables and a reluctant accommodation for more commonly used languages. I have spoken Armenian in Ethiopia, Mexico, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Canada, England, Turkey, Greece, the United States, Artsakh and elsewhere. This is notable because it requires effort to provide the world with such tangible evidence of your presence. Doing so would seem to suggest that much more is possible, too. 

You could say that Armenian as a second, third or fourth language is impractical and superficially of little value, but this is not a zero-sum game. There is room for a much bigger vocabulary: one that includes words that we call Arabic, words that we call French, words that we call Spanish. 

To leave out words that we call Armenian is, in a way, casting doubt on people’s capacity for building. And if I’ve learned anything about Armenians, it’s that no one should second guess their capacity to learn, create and contribute. Were it not for this truth, I wouldn’t speak Armenian.

Kristi Rendahl is associate professor and director of the nonprofit leadership program at Minnesota State University, Mankato. Prior to starting with MSU in 2017, she worked for over 20 years with nongovernmental organizations on several continents, including living in Armenia from 1997-2002. She speaks Armenian and Spanish.