AW: AYF Camp Haiastan travels to Canada

Kenar Charchaflian with the badanis of the Toronto community

TORONTO and MONTREAL, Canada — AYF Camp Haiastan spent quality time with the Armenian communities of Toronto and Montreal this past weekend, hosting informational meetings for AYF juniors and their families.

Executive Director Kenar Charchaflian addressed over 40 of the “Krisdapor Mikaelian” and “Rosdom” Toronto AYF juniors on Friday. The presentation was held in the library of the Armenian Community Center of Toronto. The audience was also filled with eager parents, who will hopefully send their children to camp this summer.

Kenar Charchaflian presenting at the Armenian Community Centre in Toronto, March 24

On Saturday, Charchaflian addressed the Montreal “Tro” and Laval “Kedashen” Junior Chapters. AYF members asked questions and participated in the discussion during which they received some free camp merchandise. Afterwards, a parent-specific Q&A session was held, which covered more of the logistics and safety protocols.

Kenar Charchaflian presenting at Sourp Hagop Armenian School, Montreal, March 25

“I want to thank the ARF Central Committees of the Eastern Region and Canada for helping to coordinate these events,” said Charchaflian. “It has been quite some time since Camp Haiastan has shown a presence in these communities, and I consider this past weekend the first stepping stone in strengthening our relations with the Canada-hye communities.”

During this off-season tour, AYF Camp Haiastan also visited Chicago and Detroit. More community visits will be announced soon.

Located in Franklin, Massachusetts, AYF Camp Haiastan, was founded in 1951 and is the oldest Armenian camp in the United States. The Camp prides itself on providing a healthy and safe experience to Armenian-American youth to help them foster their Armenian identity and establish lifelong friendships.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/28/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Russia, Armenia Discuss Defense Cooperation Amid Tensions


Armenia - Russian members of a Russian-Armenian commission on defense 
cooperation attend its session in Yerevan, .


A Russian-Armenian intergovernmental commission on bilateral defense cooperation 
began a regular session in Yerevan on Tuesday amid growing friction between 
Moscow and Yerevan.
The commission is specifically tasked with furthering “military-technical 
cooperation,” which mainly involves supplies of weapons and/or their joint 
manufacturing.

Opening the annual meeting, Armenian Deputy Defense Minister Karen Brutian 
stressed the importance of deepening Russian-Armenian relations in this area. 
Brutian expressed hope that the members of the joint task force will hold 
“productive discussions” over the next few days.

The Armenian Defense Ministry reported no other details of the meeting.

Russia has long been the principal supplier of weapons and other military 
equipment to Armenia.

In an apparent reference to Russia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian complained 
last September that “our allies” have failed to deliver weapons to Armenia 
despite contracts worth “hundreds of millions of dollars” signed in the last two 
years. He did not shed light on those contracts.

Pashinian responded to opposition claims that his government has done little to 
rebuild the Armenian armed forces after the 2020 war with Azerbaijan.

Brutian visited Moscow and met with his Russian counterpart Alexander Fomin in 
November. No concrete agreements between the Russian and Armenian militaries 
were announced as a result of that trip.

Russian-Armenian relations have deteriorated since then because of what the 
Armenian government sees as a lack of Russian support in the conflict with 
Azerbaijan.

Pashinian suggested in January that the close military ties with Russia may be 
putting Armenia’s security and territorial integrity at greater risk. The 
Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed the claim as “absurd.”

The unprecedented tensions between the two allied states rose further late last 
week after Armenia’s Constitutional Court gave the green light for parliamentary 
ratification of the International Criminal Court’s founding treaty. The ruling 
came one week after the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Russian President 
Vladimir Putin over war crimes allegedly committed by Russia in Ukraine.

Moscow warned on Monday that Yerevan’s recognition of The Hague tribunal’s 
jurisdiction would have “extremely negative” consequences for Russian-Armenian 
relations. The Armenian government did not publicly react to the stern warning 
as of Tuesday evening.

Some Armenian opposition figures claimed that Pashinian engineered the 
Constitutional Court ruling to score points among the Western powers at 
loggerheads with Russia.




Karabakh Armenians Again Reject ‘Reintegration’ Talks In Baku

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Nagorno-Karabakh - President Arayik Harutiunian chairs a meeting in Stepanakert, 
..


Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership dismissed on Tuesday a fresh Azerbaijani offer to 
send its representatives to Baku for talks on the Armenian-populated region’s 
“reintegration” into Azerbaijan.

It reiterated that Azerbaijani and Karabakh officials should continue to meet at 
the Karabakh headquarters of Russian peacekeeping forces and discuss, first and 
foremost, humanitarian issues such as the reopening of the Lachin corridor 
blocked by Baku for more than three months.

A statement released by the Karabakh foreign ministry also insisted on an 
“internationally recognized negotiation format” for discussing with Baku a 
broader political settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s office made the offer on Monday two days 
after Azerbaijani troops seized a hill overlooking a dirt road that bypasses the 
blocked section of the Lachin corridor. The authorities in Stepanakert as well 
as the Russian peacekeepers accused Baku of violating the Russian-brokered 
ceasefire that stopped the 2020 war in Karabakh.

The Karabakh statement said the timing of Aliyev’s latest offer shows that Baku 
is keen to impose solutions on the Karabakh Armenians, rather than negotiate 
with them in good faith.

Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, held on Monday an emergency meeting 
with local officials and political leaders in Stepanakert. Harutiunian said the 
Karabakh leaders need to “soberly assess” the worsening security and 
humanitarian situation and “draw necessary conclusions.” The crisis can still be 
resolved through “prudent steps,” he said in his publicized remarks.

A senior Karabakh lawmaker, Artur Harutiunian, said on Tuesday that those steps 
depend on the outcome of the Russian peacekeepers’ continuing negotiations with 
the Azerbaijani side aimed at ensuring their withdrawal from the occupied hill.

“After the negotiations are over and their results clear we will have to decide 
our next steps,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Azerbaijani and Karabakh officials most recently met at the peacekeepers’ 
headquarters near Stepanakert on March 1. According to Karabakh’s leadership, 
they discussed the restoration of “unimpeded” traffic thorough the Lachin 
corridor and Armenia’s energy supplies to Karabakh.

An official Azerbaijani readout of the talks said, however, that they focused on 
the Karabakh Armenians’ “integration into Azerbaijan.”

Arayik Harutiunian insisted afterwards that his representatives refused to 
engage in such a discussion. He said Baku responded by threatening to take 
“tougher and more drastic steps.” The Karabakh leader linked that to the March 5 
shootout that left three Karabakh police officers and two Azerbaijani soldiers 
dead.




U.S. Concerned About Azeri ‘Military Movements’ In Karabakh


Armenia - U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs 
Karen Donfried speaks to RFE/RL in Yerevan, June 20, 2022.


The United States has expressed concern about Azerbaijan’s weekend “military 
movements” that further tightened its blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh’s land link 
with Armenia.

Azerbaijani troops seized on Saturday a hill overlooking a dirt road that 
bypasses a section of the Lachin corridor blocked by Baku for more than three 
months.

Karen Donfried, the outgoing U.S. assistant secretary of state for Europe and 
Eurasia, appeared to have discussed the development with Azerbaijani Foreign 
Minister Jeyhun Bayramov in a phone call on Monday. The U.S. State Department 
said she “expressed concern over Azerbaijani military movements.”

The Azerbaijani military claimed that it took “necessary measures” to stop 
Armenia’s arms supplies to Karabakh.

The Armenian government and Karabakh’s leadership have flatly denied such 
supplies repeatedly alleged by Baku in recent weeks. They say that the 
Azerbaijani advance in Karabakh constitutes a serious breach of the 
Russian-brokered that stopped the 2020 war.

The Russian Defense Ministry also accused Azerbaijan of violating the ceasefire. 
It said later on Saturday that Russian peacekeepers demanded that the 
Azerbaijani troops return to “their previously occupied positions.” Baku has 
ignored the demand so far.

A State Department spokesman, Vedant Patel, said Donfried also reaffirmed 
Washington’s “commitment to Armenia-Azerbaijan peace negotiations” and called 
for “direct dialogue” between the conflicting parties.

“There is not a military solution to this conflict,” Patel told a news briefing 
in Washington.

According to the Azerbaijani readout of the phone call, Bayramov accused Armenia 
of adopting an “unconstructive position” in ongoing negotiations on an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty.

The United States has repeatedly called on the Azerbaijani side to lift the 
blockade that has caused a serious humanitarian crisis in Karabakh. The U.S. 
ambassador to Armenia, Kristina Kvien, made a point of visiting an Armenian 
border checkpoint leading to the Lachin corridor earlier this month. Another 
senior U.S. diplomat made clear, however, that Washington is not considering 
imposing sanctions on Baku because of the blockade.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

CivilNet: Trauma has shaped me to commit to doing something useful: Noubar Afeyan

CIVILNET.AM

28 Mar, 2023 07:03

Noubar Afeyan sat down with Lara Tcholakian to share his historical narratives and the role that his great aunt Armenouhi had on him and his brothers as children. The Armenian genocide has helped him better understand his place in the world and shaped the degree to which he has become committed to doing something useful for the world. To that effect, Afeyan explained the role that the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative has had over the past eight years, and the reasons why the initiative will continue to expand worldwide. Afeyan shared his views on why it’s important to think and build toward the future, and the attributes required to be destination-oriented, to reach goals, and to drive transformation, whether nationally or in a corporate setting. As the founder of Flagship Pioneering, he also discussed the ways in which he and his team work to make breakthrough companies through breakthrough innovations, including the creation of the COVID-19 vaccine. Finally, the discussion turned to the role of collective healing, education, the meaning in life, and the connection between Armenian spiritual rituals and life in general.

About Dr. Noubar Afeyan

Noubar Afeyan is founder and CEO of Flagship Pioneering. As part of the spinoffs of Flagship Pioneering, he co-founded Moderna the pioneering messenger RNA medicines company, for which he is Board Chairman. He is also co-founder and Board Chairman of Omega Therapeutics, Generate Biomedicines, Tessera Therapeutics, Alltrna, Apriori Bio, and ProFound Therapeutics. Throughout his career, Afeyan has cofounded and helped build over 70 life science and technology startups. Born in Beirut, he completed his undergraduate degree at McGill University in Montreal and his PhD in biochemical engineering at MIT. He has written numerous scientific publications and is the inventor of over 100 patents. He was a senior lecturer at MIT’s Sloan School of Management and a lecturer at Harvard Business School. Together with his partners, he has launched philanthropic projects including the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, FAST Foundation, and the UWC Dilijan School. Afeyan is a member of the Corporation of MIT (the Institute’s governing body) and a member of the board of trustees for the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Afeyan was awarded a Great Immigrant honor from the Carnegie Corporation in 2016, received a Technology Pioneer award from the World Economic Forum in 2012, and was presented with the Ellis Island Medal of Honor in 2008. In 2022, Noubar was elected to the National Academy of Engineering.

Program overview

In a new, open setting, Lara deconstructs inherited cultural and historical narratives, memories, life lessons and experiences from change catalysts. Her guests reflect on the stories, people, events and mindsets that have shaped their professional and personal lives, enabling them to create a more mindful life.

CivilNet: Stepanakert calls for dialogue, Baku insists on ‘reintegration’ agenda

CIVILNET.AM

28 Mar, 2023 10:03

  • An unnamed source in Russia’s Foreign Ministry told the Russian state-run news agency TASS that Moscow has warned Yerevan of “extremely severe” consequences if Armenia becomes a member of the International Criminal Court.
  • The authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have responded to Azerbaijan’s proposal for “reintegration talks.”
  • U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Karen Donfried expressed concern over Azerbaijan’s recent military advances in Nagorno-Karabakh in a phone conversation with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov.

Attorney Mark Geragos Sues L.A. Times For Libel Over Armenian Genocide Settlement Reports

The defense attorney has filed a complaint over stories he says included false statements about his role in the disbursement of funds to victims’ families

Defense attorney Mark Geragos filed a lawsuit against The Los Angeles Times and three of its Pulitzer-prize-winning investigative reporters on Friday for libel, “false light” invasion of privacy and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

Geragos alleges that a series of stories published in 2022 falsely imply that 15 years ago, he and his then-co-counsel were involved in the already-established fraud involving the disbursement of settlement funds to a small subset of the victims of the Armenian genocide and related charities. In a 45-page complaint, Geragos contends that he and his co-counsel had actually helped to uncover and prosecute the fraud and worked to deepen the investigation, and the Times reporters ignored those facts.

“I’m a big boy,” Geragos tells LAMag“I’ve been doing this for 40 years, I understand reporters have their job and I have great respect for the role of journalism and reporters.” (Disclosure: In December, Geragos co-founded Engine Vision Media, which owns Los Angeles magazine.)

The Times story at the heart of the libel accusation looks back at a series of lawsuits brought against New York Life and then French insurance giant AXA in 1999 and 2002, respectively, filed by Armenian-American lawyer Vartkes Yeghiayan over life insurance policies held by victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide that were not honored by the companies. 

Kabateck, and then Geragos, joined the case in 2001; in addition to obtaining funds for victims’ families, the case is widely seen as having served as a means to force the judicial branch of the U.S. government to acknowledge the Armenian genocide occurred at all.

The cases ended with New York Life settling for $20 million in 2004. AXA, the French company,  settled for $17.5 million the following year. In addition to paying legal fees and court costs, the settlement funds were to be distributed to families of victims who could prove their ancestors had taken out life insurance policies from those companies before the genocide. The remainder was agreed to be delivered to Armenian diaspora charities and churches.

By all accounts, the disbursement of funds from the New York Life settlement—overseen by a claims administrator recommended by Yeghiayan, who reported to a board appointed by the California State Insurance Commission—ran smoothly. And by all accounts, the disbursement of funds from the AXA Settlement, overseen by the same claims administrator in Los Angeles reporting to a three-member board of prominent French Armenians in France, did not.

The claims administrator, Parsegh Kartalian, was reported to the courts by Geragos and Kabateck for fraud, for diverting $2.5 million to an account only he controlled. Local lawyer Berj Boyajian was discovered to have diverted nearly $600,000 to accounts under his sole control and was prosecuted for false statements to the State Bar of California; he lost his law license and returned most of the funds after the fraud was revealed to the court). Yeghiayan and his wife, Rita Mahdessian, were brought up on State Bar of California charges for allegedly diverting money from the settlement fund; Yeghiayan died in 2017 before the charges could be heard and Mahdessian’s case was thrown out after she told the Bar it was her husband’s doing. 

The Times reporting on the subject has implied that Geragos played a role in the malfeasance and mismanagement that accompanied the disbursement of the French funds. Geragos strongly disputes this implication, pointing out that three State Bar of California investigations into the case before 2022 absolved him and Kabateck of any wrongdoing.

“This case is the single most investigated case by every single agency up and down the state,” Geragos tells LAMag. “I referred it to the D.A.’s office. Brian was the one who referred it to the State Bar. Brian and I wrote a letter to the Attorney General. I had not only State Bar investigators, but D.A. investigators looking into it; I gave them full, unfettered access to all of these documents. The people who the Times tried to lionize… all invoked the Fifth Amendment; I cooperated with every agency.”

In the initial investigative piece and subsequent articles, however, the Times repeatedly invokes Geragos’ and Kabateck’s names. All of the 2022 reports further accuse the two of somehow improperly funding “pet charities”—including the Loyola School of Law’s Center for the Study of Law and Genocide and a local Armenian church; it also repeats claims that some charitable organizations said they never received the money. Geragos says he provided the Times reporters with bank statements and other records showing the churches did receive that money more than a decade prior, but the reporters refused to accept the records as a refutation of the claims. (Geragos’s lawsuit also contains a long memo from Kabateck’s lawyer refuting many of the claims point-by-point.)

Hillary Manning, a spokesperson for the L.A. Times, denied Geragos’ allegations and defended the reporting. 

“We performed a public service by publishing this story,” she said in a statement to LAMag. “We encourage people to read the reporting for themselves to get a better understanding of the difficulties that Armenian people encountered when trying to access settlement money related to the Armenian genocide. We will vigorously defend the Los Angeles Times and our journalists against this baseless litigation.”

In an interview with LAMag on Sept. 27, Geragos also took issue with the Times calling the Center for the Study of Law and Genocide at Loyola—his alma mater— a pet charity.

“Can you imagine you’re a Jewish lawyer and they call the Lowenstein Center at Fordham a ‘pet charity’?” he asked LAMag in September. “It smacks of racism.”

In the lawsuit, Geragos notes that subsequent reporting—even on stories unrelated to the Armenian settlement—repeated claims about the case. Geragos’ and Kabateck’s pictures and boilerplate copy about the investigation accompanied multiple stories, including articles about convicted lawyer Tom Girardi and the Bar’s tendency to crack down harder on Black lawyers than white ones.

Geragos also claims the paper appeared to be attempting to pressure the State Bar of California to open a fourth investigation into the case. The Bar did ultimately open an investigation in September, despite an email provided in the lawsuit that suggests the body knew there was no new information in the Times story and the case had been fully investigated before it was published.

“At a certain point, it was what I considered to be the most outrageous breach of journalism–I don’t even call it ethics,” he says. “Combined with this kind of malicious campaign to try to take me down and try to get the State Bar to investigate, and everything else, it’s beyond the pale. That’s not journalism. That’s something else. That’s more of what more people would say is the opposition research in a political campaign.”

In the lawsuit, Geragos also alleges that his relationship with the reporters deteriorated after his clients—one of whom was at the center of the paper’s news-breaking 2017 story about the drug-fueled escapades of then-USC Medical School Dean Carmen Puliafito—withdrew their cooperation in the wake of a settlement he negotiated with Puliafito and the university on their behalf.

That settlement became the subject of a September 2021 Times story that implies Geragos and his clients destroyed potential evidence in an ongoing criminal investigation. 

“This whole idea that somehow evidence was destroyed: Evidence was not destroyed,” he said. “It is a very common practice to have the plaintiff—as distinguished from the lawyers—turn over everything that they have. That doesn’t mean that the lawyer doesn’t maintain it. It doesn’t mean that law enforcement doesn’t get access to it.”

Both law enforcement and the reporters had a copy of the evidence in question at the time of the settlement in 2018, Geragos notes. The Times’s own reporting indicates that the D.A. declined to press charges in the case before the settlement was finalized and his clients destroyed their personal electronic records.

He said he believes that the bad blood generated by the Puliafito story, as well as an apparent desire to find another “Tom Girardi story” after being scooped led to the reporters pursuing stories about him in bad faith—and ones in which their own reporting did not justify the explicit and implicit allegations against him.

“They had an agenda. They had conclusions. They weren’t going to be deterred by the facts,” he says. “The one thing that they’re going to be deterred by is a lawsuit.”

But he’s not looking for a payout.

“I want the Times to acknowledge that what they did was wrong, and I want the record corrected, and I’ll go on my merry way,” he says. “If I don’t do it—if I don’t take a stand as a lawyer who fortunately has the resources to pursue something like this—then who’s going to?”

[Editor’s note: Mark Geragos is a co-founder of Engine Vision Media, which owns Los Angeles as well as other properties. The company’s owners play no part in our journalism. We first reported on this story in September 2022, months prior to the magazine’s sale to Engine.]


Food: Food truck offers flavors of DavAni Armenian BBQ in Carmel Drive parking lot

 

Armen Abrahamyan and Seda Arzumanyan are co-owners of DavAni Armenian BBQ. (Photo courtesy of Seda Arzumanyan)

Gariy Ambartsumyan said he was thrilled when he learned an Armenian BBQ food truck was opening for business not far from his Noblesville home.

“It’s not like you can go just anywhere and get Armenian,” said Ambartsumyan, a 45-year-old truck driver of Armenian descent.

Ambartsumyan has become a regular at DavAni Armenian BBQ, open for takeout or delivery in a parking lot at 105 W. Carmel Dr. and laying claim to being the only takeout restaurant specializing in Armenian cuisine in the state. Armen Abrahamyan, a native of Armenia, opened the business in October and is the head chef. He operates the food truck, with a business model that more closely resembles a takeout restaurant, with help from his family, including his wife Seda Arzumanyan.

Customers have been receptive to DavAni’s distinctive offerings.

“So far, we’ve received a lot of positive feedback about our Armenian BBQ,” Arzumanyan said. “Many people are not familiar with Armenian cuisine and culture, but as they try our food, they fall in love with the flavors and unique tastes.”

Abrahamyan learned to prepare Armenian dishes at a young age. When he moved to Indiana six years ago, he noticed there was a scarcity of Armenian cuisine offered locally. He catered for small events and gatherings before opening DavAni – which offers hefty portions of pork, lamb, chicken and beef kebabs and wraps, along with sides including grilled vegetable salad, tahini sauce and hummus – in the fall.

“For Armen, cooking Armenian BBQ and kebab is more than just a job. It’s a passion that he loves to share with the people of Indiana,” Arzumanyan said.

Cuisine in Armenia, a nation of less than 3 million people in the mountainous Caucasus region between Asia and Europe, is defined by a blend of flavors and ingredients that reflect the country’s rich history and cultural influences.

The meat, often cut into large chunks, is marinated in a mixture of herbs and spices for several hours before Armen cooks it to just the right tenderness in the truck, sometimes chatting with customers as he does his work. Visitors to DavAni are liable to catch a whiff of the aroma of barbecued meats even before noticing the food truck’s bright red paint scheme.

DavAni is open Tuesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. and from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturdays. Wraps start at $9.50, BBQ kebabs start at $11.50, and plates including sides range from $16 to $20. Customers can order at the window, utilize DoorDash or UberEats, or order ahead online for takeout at davanibbq.com. 

Ambartsumyan and his wife, Elena, get food from DavAni most Saturdays, usually through DoorDash, though sometimes Gariy parks his big rig in a nearby parking lot to pick up his meals in-person. His favorite is the beef lula kebab, and he raves about Abrahamyan’s way of preparing DavAni’s meats.

“No one can make it the way Armen does,” Ambartsumyan said. “He knows how to make it right. Everything’s perfect.” 

https://www.youarecurrent.com/2023/03/27/food-truck-offers-flavors-of-davani-armenian-bbq-in-carmel-drive-parking-lot/

Armenia: EU-funded contest on human rights announces its winners


An awards ceremony has been held for the ‘Social Innovation to Restart Human Rights’ contest, organised as part of the EU-funded project on accountable Institutions and human rights protection in Armenia.

The contest aimed to raise awareness about human rights through innovative ideas, solving problems in the field. Out of 38 applications, six teams were selected and went through the mentoring stage with specialists in the fields of human rights, marketing and communication.

All participants received certificates. The winners also received the following awards:

● 1st place: Safe Childhood – 1,000,000 AMD;

● 2nd place: Kanani Podcast – 650,000 AMD;

● 3rd place: Diana Apcar AR Visualization – 300,000 AMD.

The contest was organised within the framework of the EU-funded ‘Accountable Institutions and Human Rights Protection in Armenia’ project, implemented by UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, and OSCE.

Find out more

Press release

Digital leaders at "Doing Digital Forum", Yerevan

ИНФОРМАЦИЯ ПРЕДОСТАВЛЕНА

SPRING PR 

28 мар, 2023, 07:00 BST

YEREVAN, Armenia /PRNewswire/ — An inaugural event of Armenian SPRING PR, co-organized by Ameriabank, The Doing Digital Forum (DDF), is set to unite industry leaders to explore the latest trends and best experiences in digital transformation. Forum features Chris Skinner, a renowned global expert in fintech and digital transformation, as a keynote speaker. The event attracts senior executives and decision makers from government, finance and technology ecosystem, other enterprises, and the press. DDF takes place April 5, 2023, in Yerevan, Armenia. For details www.doingdigital.am 

DDF Founder, SPRING PR Co-Founder Tatevik Simonyan emphasized the need for constant communication between all players of digital ecosystem to ensure a smooth and seamless transformation process. "We are following the global trends and creating the Doing Digital platform to facilitate discussions about the trends, business dynamics, challenges and opportunities that all actors involved in digitalization process face today."

"As a pioneer in digital transformation in the Armenian finance sector, we have started an exciting journey of re-inventing ourselves creating trusted financial and technological space by improving the quality of life. Namely, standing in the roots of this event and jointly inviting Chris to Armenia is yet another testament of Ameria's commitment to catalyze the mindset shift and empower digital transformation in Armenia", Armine Ghazaryan, Chief People and Services Officer, Ameriabank.

Twenty top industry leaders from Singapore University of Social Sciences, McKinsey, Forbes, Visa, Hexens, FAST Foundation, Revytech, Fastex, ICDT Global, Apricot Capital, Beta FT, as well as Armenian Government and Central Bank, SPRING PR, Ameriabank, will share their insights on digital business and technology through keynote and visionary speeches and panel discussions.

"We are proud to become an innovation partner of the DDF in Armenia. As Visa continues supporting the development of digital transformation in the country, we are delighted to share our international expertise with a broader audience. We would like to thank the organizers for creating a discussion platform and wish a successful session to all participants", Diana Kiguradze, Visa Regional Manager for the Caucasus region said.

DDF is the best way of networking and exploring new ideas and technologies.

"Digital tech is transforming investments and creating new opportunities for investing in innovative ideas. The Doing Digital Forum is expected to provide a platform for local and foreign specialists to exchange ideas and foster an investment culture", mentioned Vardan Amaryan, the co-founder of Apricot Capital.

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/2041130/The_Doing_Digital_Forum.jpg

Art: Armenian artist Jean Boghossian’s works take over Monte Carlo to highlight ocean pollution

UAE –
Armenian artist Jean Boghossian's work in Monte Carlo's Jardins des Boulingrins. Photo: Studio Jean Boghossian

When you think of Monaco, the azure Mediterranean Sea might be the first thing that comes to mind — sparkling along the French Riviera, with its glamorous holiday hotspots with sandy beaches, yacht-filled marinas and fresh sea air.

This year, the Monte Carlo Societe des Bains de Mer, which operates Monaco’s most distinctive cultural outlets, is seeking to raise awareness about climate change and marine conservation with The Sea is Green, a series of artistic initiatives to highlight the need to protect our seas.

The programme was launched earlier this month by giving Armenian artist Jean Boghossian free reign to fill Monte Carlo with several public art installations, all with a nautical flair — from detailed ceramic seashells to recycled sail cloth adorned with paintings.

Boghossian spent his childhood years living in Lebanon, then in Belgium, where he took a step back from his family’s jewellery-making business to study art at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels. He recently moved to Monaco, and having now lived by the sea in three different countries, the sight of it has become intrinsic to his daily life.

“I know the Mediterranean in Beirut, where all the plastics are polluting the water. People don't respect it,” Boghossian tells The National. “And, of course, I have seen the sea in Belgium. In Belgium, the sea is brown, so we are very lucky to have the Mediterranean where the sea is blue, like in Monaco.

“I love the climate here, and I also love the fact that they are very drawn towards the ecology, to making the world a better place and to taking care that our garbage doesn’t end up in the sea,” he adds. “It so happens that my work is a kind of recycling, whether it is the sails I bought [to paint on], or the ceramics I’m showing here.”

From his balcony in Monaco, Boghossian would watch sailboats go out to sea three times a week. This became the inspiration for his first installation, combined with his trademark practice of working with paint, smoke and blowtorches — a remnant from his jewellery-designing days.

At the Jardins des Boulingrins, recycled galvanised steel plates from the Atomium in Brussels — a monument built for the 1958 World's Fair — have been repurposed to form a regatta. The 30 triangular metal sheets, resembling sailboats, have been painted and burned, causing the paint to bubble and take on new forms and colours.

“It represents various periods of my artwork. I work with fire, so a lot of it has to do with flame and smoke pigment, as well as mixed media: liquids, paints, brushes and various techniques,” Boghossian says. “I received them as a gift in 2010 from Diane Hennebert, who at the time was the director of the Atomium, before taking over the Boghossian Foundation, which I created with my father and brother.

“At first I didn’t really know what to do with them, but since they were in my studio, I started painting them over the year,” he adds. “I already had about 12 of them, and when I told the Societe des Bains de Mer about the idea, I wanted to do more and make a whole regatta.”

A short walk away lies the Hotel Hermitage Monte Carlo — an Art Deco grandiosity with seashell motifs hidden in the ceiling plasterwork and mosaic floors, making it a fitting backdrop for Boghossian’s Shellfish series.

The sculptures feature ceramic sea snakes, bright coral — both real and ceramic — the remains of sea urchins and pastel-hued shells, like imagined reefs teeming with marine life.

Spread through the hotel, 30 ceramics evocative of seashells, waves and marine life can be seen. The works were inspired by the collection of the Seashell Museum in the nearby town of Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, which Boghossian bought in 2016 — when the museum closed — to preserve it.

“I bought that collection in from the owner as he was leaving to go to Madagascar. The museum is small, but the mayor was so happy that now we decided to make the museum a bigger one, and to find some donors to reopen it this year,” Boghossian says. “Before [the museum owner's] departure he invited me to his apartment. One of the rooms was full of cases of rocks, shells and various things of the sea, but also books about shells.

“He gave me all of it as it was too costly to ship and I saw so many beautiful shells that are not in the museum, which I have now used in my sculptures,” he adds. “I used to go to the museum and I saw that shells are like precious stones; they are the beauties of the seas, while precious stones are the beauties of the earth. And they interact together very well, so I places some semi-precious stones on my sculptures too.”

The third element of Boghossian's public installations takes viewers to the promenade behind the Monte Carlo Casino, where 18 painted flags fly five-metres-high along the corniche.

As the installations are all about ecology, the use of recycled materials was at the forefront of Boghossian’s mind. The flags are made of declassified sail cloth, reused as a canvas for his artworks and made using natural pigments, soot, smoke, ink and water to create rippling shapes and merging colour.

A similar technique can be seen up close on some displayed works on paper the Hotel Hermitage Monte Carlo.

“When the sails get old and develop holes, there are controls in place that decide that they are no longer valid for use,” he says. “They are made of plastic and various materials which they don't know how to throw away, so I bought some to paint on them.”

Boghossian hopes that, as visitors flock to Monte Carlo for various touristic events such as the Monaco Grand Prix or the Monte Carlo Masters tennis tournament in the coming months, they’ll take a moment to peruse his public artworks and think about how they can help to preserve the Mediterranean Sea.

Boghossian's public installations will be on display in Monte Carlo until May 10

https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/art-design/2023/03/28/armenian-artist-jean-boghossians-works-take-over-monte-carlo-to-highlight-ocean-pollution/