What happened to Ara Martirosyan? Tributes pour in as popular Armenian singer dies aged 46

Dec 16 2023
Karishma Rao

Popular Armenian singer Ara Martirosyan passed away on , at the age of 46. News of the singer's death was confirmed by fellow singer Lilit Galstyan's manager. Ara Martirosyan reportedly suffered from cardiac arrest and was taken to the hospital. Netizens have since flooded social media with tributary messages.

As mentioned earlier, the Arevik singer was just 46 years old at the time of his passing. Cardiac arrests occur when the heart unexpectedly stops pumping blood, leading to a lack of blood circulation toward the brain and other vital organs.

News reports revealed that Ara was found unresponsive by his wife before being taken to the hospital. His funeral was held on December 18, 2023, at the St. Mary Armenian Apostolic Church. He was reportedly buried at the Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills, California.


According to News Unzip, the renowned singer was born on June 3, 1976, in the Armenian capital of Yerevan. After expressing a keen interest in music by learning how to play the piano and guitar at a young age, he went on to join the choir at an Armenian Apostolic Church. He graduated from the Yerevan State Conservatory with a degree in music theory and composition.

The singer entered the music industry in 1998 when he joined the musical group Song State Theatre. In 1999, he released his first single Arevik which went on to become a hit track in the country. Since then, he has released several popular tracks with Nerir being his most popular album, which helped him get multiple awards.

A few of Ara Martirosyan's other popular tracks include Hayastan, Siro Ashun, Du Es, Yes U Do, and Imn Es amongst others. Apart from being a sensational artist, he has also composed songs for singers like Anush Petrosyan, Arsen Safaryan, and Nune Yesayan. The musician has also been credited for working in the music department of the film The Fiancé From Circus which was released in 2011.

The musician won the Golden Lyre Award for the Best Male Singer in Armenia in 2001, 2003, and 2005. He has also won several other awards including the Armenian Music Awards’ Best Pop Album and Best Pop Song.

Ara Martirosyan married Mercedes Khachatryan in 2002 and the couple have two children together, a son, Arman, and a daughter Ani. They lived in Yerevan before settling in Los Angeles, California.

According to Idol Networth, the Armenian singer boasts a net-worth ranging between $100K to $1M.

Internet users were incredibly saddened by the unexpected loss and took to social media to share their tributary messages.

Ara Martirosyan has amassed over 145K followers on Instagram. At the time of writing this article, no statements about his passing made it on his social media page. His last social media upload was five weeks ago, where he had written in the caption – “MAM Jan Tox Astvac Hogid Lusavori!!!”

https://www.sportskeeda.com/pop-culture/news-what-happened-ara-martirosyan-tributes-pour-popular-armenian-singer-dies-aged-46

Greek Security Minister Holds Productive Meeting with Armenian Counterpart, Strengthening Bilateral Relations

Dec 16 2023

During the meeting, Minister Dendias highlighted the strong bond and friendship between Greece and Armenia, which is based on shared tragic experiences and the presence of significant Armenian communities in Greece.

Minister Dendias acknowledged the regional instability in the Caucasus region, Ukraine, and the Middle East, and Greece expressed its support for dialogue based on UN Charter principles and international law.

Greece stands for the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all states and opposes any violent changes to borders. Dendias briefed the Armenian Defense Minister on recent developments between Greece and Turkey, emphasizing that complex issues require more than a single meeting to resolve.

The ministers also discussed a military-technical agreement between Armenia and Greece, which is seen as important for fostering innovation and strengthening Greece’s defense industry. Greece expressed its willingness to collaborate with allied countries like Armenia to enhance mutual cooperation.

The Armenian Defense Minister expressed gratitude for the invitation and highlighted the longstanding defense cooperation between Armenia and Greece. The military-technical agreement was seen as a strong legal framework for further improving bilateral relations in this area.

The meeting focused on the outcomes and future prospects of bilateral defense cooperation. Both countries believe in the high quality of their cooperation, which covers various capabilities such as training, exercises, and education across their respective armed forces.

https://greekcitytimes.com/2023/12/16/greek-security-minister-holds-productive-meeting-with-armenian-counterpart-strengthening-bilateral-relations/

Turkish Press: Seven investigations, three lawsuits launched on Diyarbakır Bar for Armenian Genocide Remembrance in last six years

 duvaR.english 
Turkey – Dec 15 2023
Friday 08:43 pm

Turkish prosecutors have launched seven investigations and filed three lawsuits against the Diyarbakır Bar Association administration since 2017 for Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK), “Insulting the Turkish nation, state, government, Parliament, and its judicial bodiesi” for statements made during Armenian Genocide Remembrance Events.

The Media and Legal Studies Organization (MLSA) documented the Turkish state’s legal battle with the Bar Association of the southeastern Diyarbakır province over its stance on the Armenian genocide. 

A Diyarbakır prosecutor’s office most recently launched an investigation into chair Nahit Eren and ten executive board members of the Diyarbakır Bar Association regarding the statement “Confrontation and reconciliation must begin from 24 April 1915” published on the Bar Association website. 

The investigations for the TCK 301 require approval by the Justice Ministry. The ministry found that the remarks “Hundreds of thousands of Armenians were torn from their lands and were killed or left to die through the relocation supported and controlled by the Committee of Union and Progress,” warranted an investigation. 

The ministry however looked over the 2014 remarks by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan included in the statement: “We wish that the Armenians who died due to conditions of the early 20th century rest in peace, and extend our condolences to their grandchildren.” 

The Bar Association interpreted the President’s remarks as “an important step to confront this dark history,” in their statement that is now subject to an investigation.

Diyarbakır Chief Public Prosecutor's Office called in the Bar Association executives for defense statements. The 11 bar officials rejected to give defenses and claimed that their statement fell under freedom of _expression_.

Deputy head of the Diyarbakır Bar Association Mehdi Özdemir said that the Justice Ministry allowed six investigations so far, four of which turned into lawsuits. The various Bar Association executives were acquitted in two of these cases. One case and two investigations are still ongoing. Özdemir stated another application to investigate the Bar Association’s 2023 Armenian Genocide statement had reached the Justice Ministry. 

Özdemir stated that the Penal Code Article 301 was infamously used to threaten everyone who voiced an opinion opposite to the official ideology of the government. He added, “We believe the enforced disappearances beginning with the 1915 Armenian Genocide and continuing with the 1937-38 Dersim Massacre are realities Turkey needs to face.”

“Unless we confront the truth, we cannot talk of real justice. We will continue defending this struggle for human rights as we honor our values and historical legacy,” said Özdemir.  

Mass exodus from the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan: Two stories of flight from Nagorno-Karabakh

Dec 16 2023
ELISA BERNAL / ACCIÓN CONTRA EL HAMBRE
DEC 16, 2023 – 18:48 CET

Over 100,000 ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh were forced to flee their homes last September, following the rapidly escalating conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over control of this Caucasus region. After three decades of hostilities that have left some 40,000 people dead, the authorities of the self-proclaimed republic agreed to dissolve its government and armed forces. That decision was made 24 hours after the start of Azerbaijan’s bombing of Nagorno Karabakh when they realized that they did not have any international support.

Most of the population of Nagorno Karabakh moved to the Armenian border province of Syunik. It was a long and exhausting journey, especially since the military offensive was preceded by a nine-month blockade of the Lachin corridor, during which virtually no supplies or humanitarian aid entered, leaving many families without resources. There was only one way out of Nagorno Karabakh: a winding mountain road. After three days of travel by car with very little food and water, the mass exodus exacerbated diseases and caused malnutrition; some even had to make the trek on foot.

“These refugees had nothing when they arrived,” explains Marcella Maxfield, Action Against Hunger’s Regional Director for the South Caucasus. “Facing an uncertain future, they now desperately need emergency aid, both for urgent needs such as food and water, and for necessities like bedding, medicine, mental health care and psychosocial support.”

Below are two stories of the exodus from Nagorno Karabakh.

On September 25, Nora —who does not want to reveal her identity— fled the conflict with her entire family: her grandmother, aunt, niece, newborn cousin, mother, father, husband, sisters and brother. Three days later, they arrived in Goris, Armenia. On the last two days of the journey, they had nothing to eat. They were forced to drink water from lakes and rivers in the surrounding mountains. “We couldn’t even sleep for an hour,” Nora says.

During the blockade, Nora was pregnant, but she miscarried due to acute stress and malnutrition. Access to health services was limited and it took more than an hour and a half to walk to work. They relied mainly on the potatoes they grew themselves. She now lives with some of her family in a town called Parakar in Armenia. Their apartment lacks electricity, gas and water. They have a small amount of savings to buy food, but it is already running low. Nora is especially worried about her seven-year-old brother. “He needs psychological support,” she says. “He can’t sleep because he still hears the bombing.”

Nora has only one wish: to return home. “I want to go back to Nagorno Karabakh,” she says.

In the image on the left, Nora’s younger sister poses in her current apartment in Parakar, Armenia, to show a photograph she took before fleeing. It shows the bread the family baked to take with them on their way to Syunik, the Armenian province closest to the border crossing. The journey took three days, but there was only enough bread to eat on the first day. They also brought medicine for their grandmother. In the picture on the right, the cell phone photo shows their last meal, a few boiled potatoes the family prepared before leaving Nagorno-Karabakh.

In the picture on the left, Nora’s younger sister shows a photograph she took after the September 2023 bombings. She explains that, before fleeing to Armenia, one of her relatives threw away a cupboard full of cans of food out of anger over the conflict and being forced to flee. In the image on the right, the photograph on the cell phone shows the moment when the family bolted the door of their apartment in Nagorno Karabakh just before fleeing to Armenia.

In the picture on the left, Nora’s younger sister shows the family’s garden in their apartment in Nagorno Karabakh. The image on the right shows a photograph she took with her cell phone during the nine-month blockade of Lachin. The image shows two neighbors riding the horse that Nora’s family also used to travel to health centers 20 to 40 kilometers (12.4 to 25 miles) away. Many families had to travel on foot or on horseback because of the lack of fuel due to the blockade of the corridor.

In the image on the left, Nora poses in her bedroom in Parakar. The image on the right shows the stove with which Nora’s family cooks their food, as they have no electricity.

Armine and Sasun, 44, who prefer to remain anonymous, have supported each other for over two decades. They knew each other in childhood. They grew up as neighbors and even went to the same kindergarten. They have been together for 23 years and have a son and a daughter.

In 2009, they met a woman living in the Armenian town of Goris, and over the years they forged a close friendship with her. She was the one who offered them a house when the family was forced to flee Nagorno Karabakh on September 26. The apartment where they lived was destroyed.

In the months prior to the conflict, Armine and Sasun had already been living on meager food rations as a result of the blockade of the Lachin corridor. The authorities gave them vouchers to buy food, but the quantities were barely sufficient: three kilos of vegetables, two kilos of fruit, two kilos of potatoes and a small amount of bread. Armine and Sasun had to divide this ration among the whole family. If they didn’t use the vouchers to buy food within two weeks, they lost the opportunity, and there was no telling when the next batch of vouchers would arrive. Buying food was very expensive: a single cabbage could cost around €15 euros ($16.35).

Armine explains that they took care of “each other.” She says that her son once went to the nearest bakery, several kilometers away, and had to wait in line until five in the morning. On the way home, he gave the bread to a disabled man he encountered who was in a very bad way.

In the picture on the left, Sasun holds the pink ration card they were given in Nagorno Karabakh with which they were allowed to buy two kilos of fruit between February 23 and March 7. Armine and Sasun explain that a cabbage costs about 6,500 drams (about €15/$16.35) and an egg cost 1,000 drams (about €3/ $3.27). All four members of the family (Armine, Sasun, their son and daughter) were working, but Sasun explains that they saw many others starving: “People helped each other as much as possible, but we saw many cases of pregnant women who lost their babies due to malnutrition,” Armine adds. In the picture on the right, Sasun holds the green ration card they were given in Nagorno Karabakh, which allowed them to buy three kilos of vegetables between March 8 and 22.

In the picture on the left, Sasun holds the white ration card they were given in Nagorno Karabakh that allowed them to buy two kilos of potatoes. In the image on the right, Armine holds up her cell phone showing a photograph of the apartment where they lived in Stepanakert, Nagorno Karabakh.

For all photos, click on the link below


Opposition MP: Armenian authorities now ‘secretly commemorate’ Armenian Genocide

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 16 2023

Opposition MP Gegham Manukyan has accused the Armenian leaders of “secretly commemorating" the Armenian Genocide in line with preconditions put forward by Turkey.

In a social media post on Saturday, the MP said on December 9 designated by the UN as International Day of Commemoration and Dignity of the Victims of the Crime of Genocide and of the Prevention of this Crime, Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Paruyr Hovhannisyan and Secretary General Boris Sahakyan visited the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex to pay tribute to the Armenian Genocide victims.

Meanwhile, the Foreign Ministry did not report the visit, refrained from using the words “Armenian Genocide” and “Tsitsernakaberd”, as well as made no mention of the genocide perpetrator, Ottoman Turkey, it its December 9 statement.

"Back in 2022, I warned that the term "Armenian Genocide" was being smoothly removed from official discourse. Now they are even trying to keep quiet about our diplomatic achievements so as not to anger Ankara," stated Manukyan, who represents the opposition Hayastan faction.

“It’s worth noting that after the launch of talks between [Armenian and Turkish envoys] Ruben Rubinyan and Serdar Kilic and assurances about the absence of preconditions, the opposition argued that the Armenian authorities were going to make concessions although no preconditions were in place. It’s best evidenced by the secret “commemoration” on December 9,” the MP added.

Armenian citizens take loyalty oaths at new Armenian Embassy in UK

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 16 2023

The Oath ceremony of citizens of the Republic of Armenia took place at the new Embassy of Armenia in the UK on Friday.

The citizens swore to be loyal to the Republic of Armenia, to uphold the Constitution and laws, to protect the independence and territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia, and to respect the state language, national culture and customs of the country, the Armenian Embassy reported.

Ambassador Varuzhan Nersesyan congratulated the participants of the ceremony, stressed the importance of holding Armenian citizenship with dignity and wished them best of luck.

Armenian Symphony Orchestra, violinist Sergey Khachatryan team up for charity concert

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 16 2023

Yerevan’s Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall will host a charity concert by the Armenian State Symphony Orchestra and violin virtuoso Sergey Khachatryan under the baton of conductor Sergey Smbatyan.

The concert is scheduled for December 19.

All proceeds from the ticket sales will go to UNICEF to meet the primary needs of refugee children from Artsakh, organizers said.

The program features Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's “Christmas Eve” and Alexander Glazunov's “Violin Concerto”.

Armenpress: Prime Minister meets with the relatives of the prisoners of war who recently returned to Armenia

 21:29,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 15, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his wife Anna Hakobyan on Friday had a meeting with relatives of prisoners of war from Shirak region who returned to Armenia recently, the Prime Minister's Office said.

In his speech, the Head of the Government noted that during these three years, everything possible was done for the return of prisoners. "While it's clear that we were all anxious to see them back as soon as possible, I want to thank you for your patience because it was very important. As a human being, I highly appreciate your patience," said the Prime Minister and added that everything should be done so that our brothers can return to normal life.

The relatives of the prisoners thanked the Prime Minister and the government for their efforts.

Asbarez: ANCA-WR Releases 2022-2023 Impact Report

LOS ANGELES—The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region released its 2022-2023 Impact Report, which chronicles the organization’s vigorous political grassroots advocacy efforts at the local, state, and federal levels, augmented by key community-building initiatives and wide-ranging outreach campaigns geared towards the advancement of Hye Tahd (the Armenian Cause) in the past two years. 

A critical series of aggressions by Azerbaijan shaped the trajectory of ANCA-WR’s response during this timeframe, primarily Azerbaijan’s invasion of the sovereign territories of the Republic of Armenia in September 2022, which saw the killing of more than 135 Armenians and the internal displacement of over 7,500 others. Three months later, Azerbaijan initiated an illegal blockade of the Lachin Corridor, the sole conduit connecting the Republic of Artsakh to the outside world via Armenia, depriving thousands of civilians of essential goods and services. Azerbaijan’s genocidal campaign escalated into a full-frontal assault on Artsakh in September 2023, directly leading to the ethnic cleansing and genocide of indigenous Armenians and resulting in a severe refugee crisis as over 100,000 displaced Artsakh Armenians sought refuge in the Republic of Armenia.

“The world is an unjust place, as geopolitical interests routinely trounce noble aspirations of human rights, freedom, and justice. Tyrannical regimes act with impunity as they take advantage of rampant indifference and refusal of the international community to act to protect humanity,” said ANCA-WR Board of Directors Chair Nora Hovsepian, Esq. in her message to ANCA WR Supporters. “But as we meet the daunting challenges and existential threats that face us, we must remind ourselves that the Armenian Nation throughout history has repeatedly risen from the ashes of the worst calamities, resilient and resolute; that from adversity comes strength and clarity of purpose.” 

The 50-page report highlights ANCA WR’s efforts to promote the Sister-State Relationship between California and Syunik; Artsakh Foreign Minister David Babayan’s tour of the United States in September of 2022 organized by ANCA WR; the 2022 Grassroots Conference featuring international human rights and humanitarian law experts; the 2022 and 2023 Annual Awards Banquets; Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade and genocide of Artsakh; advocacy efforts at the local, state, and federal levels; the Education Committees efforts to integrate Armenian Genocide resources in school curricula; the HyeVotes and HyeCount initiatives fostering civic engagement and ensuring Armenian representation on the 2023 Census Questionnaire; the relentless activism of ANCA WR’s local chapters, serving as the cornerstone of the organization’s advocacy efforts; the organization’s investment in the next generation of Armenian leaders through its internship, fellowship, youth committee and professional network; as well as collaborations with coalition partners and Armenian community organizations in the implementation of various initiatives, conferences, projects, and programs.

The 2022-2023 Impact Report is a testament to ANCA-WR’s unwavering dedication and impactful work, setting a strong foundation for future endeavors in the advancement of the Armenian cause.

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region is the largest and most influential nonpartisan Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues in pursuit of the Armenian Cause.

To join our network of dedicated donors and supporters, or to volunteer for our grassroots efforts, please contact the ANCA-WR office at 818-500-1918 or go to our website to learn how you can become an advocate or click here to donate. To read ANCA WR’s previous annual reports, visit: Annual Reports – ANCA Western Region.