California Courier Online, June 1, 2026

California
Courier Online, June 1, 2026

1- Russia, the U.S., and the EU Should

Keep Out of Armenia’s Domestic Affairs

By Harut
Sassounian

TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2- Israeli Desecrates Armenian Monastery in Jerusalem

3- How Armenia Lost Its Strategic Compass
4- Cher at 80: The Armenian Christian roots behind the woman rumored to never age
5- Millions of Dollars Paid in Bonuses to Armenia’s Provincial Governors and Staffers
6- Forbes included Eurnekian, Karapetyan, Vardanyan, and Kardashian in the ranking of the world’s richest people
7- Senate Candidate Graham Platner Questioned

the Armenian Genocide in Now-Deleted Post

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1- Russia, the U.S., and the EU Should

Keep Out of Armenia’s Domestic Affairs

By Harut Sassounian
TheCaliforniaCourier.com

No foreign country should meddle in the internal affairs of Armenia — a sovereign and independent country. Its people are the only ones entitled to choose their government leaders and determine their policies.

Ironically, those Armenians who have been screaming day and night about Russian intervention remain completely silent when Western countries (the European Union and the United States) blatantly intervene in Armenia’s domestic affairs. Those who think that Western interference, as opposed to Russia’s, is harmless and acceptable, are either ignorant of, or naïve about, international affairs.

Foreign leaders (whether from the East, West, North or South) do not offer anything to Armenia out of the goodness of their hearts. They are simply pursuing their self-interests.

The problem is that Armenia’s leaders, throughout history, have not distinguished themselves by their knowledge of international relations. Armenians ignore, to their detriment, developments around the world that may affect their lives or their very survival. When you are a small and weak country, you cannot afford to be oblivious to events taking place around you. Otherwise, you become vulnerable to external threats. What you need to do is strengthen yourself as much as possible and then, using skillful diplomacy, seek to minimize those threats.

Armenians, justifiably, have a very negative view of Turkey and its leaders. However, we must admit that Turkish leaders, like their Ottoman predecessors, are very skillful in international politics. For centuries, Ottoman sultans were able to pit major foreign powers against each other and repeatedly switched sides to protect their empire’s interests. Pres. Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s actions are a continuation of that traditional tightrope walk. Erdogan has exceptional skills in maneuvering in troubled international waters. Armenia does not have now, and rarely had in the past, a leader with similar skills.

The second problem is that Armenians approach foreign relations emotionally — based on who they like and who they dislike. International relations cannot be compared to personal relationships. You can interact even with your enemies if doing so benefits your country.

The third problem is that Armenians, throughout their history, have always expected a foreign power to come and rescue them from their enemies. Armenians may have had such unrealistic expectations at the beginning of their history. However, after thousands of years of being subjected to invasions, mass killings, and even genocide, one would think that they would finally wake up and, having seen that no foreign power has ever come to their rescue, conclude that no one is going to help them.

Regrettably, Armenians have never learned the necessary lessons from their tragic history. Even today, they are expecting some foreign country to defend them. In recent decades, Armenians vainly hoped that Russia would protect them, as if it were obligated to do so. All countries only protect their own interests, not those of others. Being utterly disappointed by Russia’s lack of action during the 2020 Artsakh War, and even more so during Azerbaijan’s invasion and occupation of parts of the Republic of Armenia’s territory in 2021 and 2022, most Armenians started looking elsewhere in vain for their country’s protection. Their disappointment was based on the fact that Armenia and Russia, along with several other former Soviet republics, had signed a mutual defense treaty — the CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organization). That treaty was supposed to protect the Republic of Armenia. However, Armenians forget that treaties are often considered just pieces of paper. All countries place their national interests ahead of any treaty obligations they may have.

After being understandably disappointed by Russia, one would have thought that Armenians would conclude that no one is going to come to Armenia’s rescue, and stop searching for a new savior. Instead, they continued their eternal search. They are now hoping that France, the European Union, or the United States will be their new saviors. However, if Armenia comes under attack, neither the EU nor the United States will come to its rescue. It is naïve to expect that these foreign countries would risk their soldiers’ lives to defend Armenia’s borders. That is the obligation of Armenia’s leaders.

Rather than vacillating between East and West, it is in Armenia’s interest to establish mutually beneficial relations with all countries in the world, without expecting any of them to come to its rescue. However, to accomplish such an important task, Armenia needs competent leadership.

I suggest that Armenians ignore the frivolous endorsements of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan by President Donald Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio — a blatant example of foreign interference in Armenia’s domestic elections. I hope their endorsements meet the same fate as Vance’s personal visit to Budapest, Hungary, on the eve of the elections in April to support Prime Minister Viktor Orban, who suffered an overwhelming defeat.

What Armenians need is action, not empty words. Trump, Vance, and Rubio did not lift a finger to obtain the release of Artsakh leaders illegally detained in Baku since 2023. Nor did they condemn Pashinyan’s persecution of the Armenian Apostolic Church. This shows that their multiple declarations about protecting Christians around the world are nothing but hot air.

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2- Israeli Desecrates Armenian Monastery in Jerusalem

International Middle East Media Center

A video recorded days earlier shows an Israeli pooping in the parking lot of the Armenian Patriarchate, thus desecrating the site. This act was condemned by the Jerusalem Governorate as part of a growing and documented pattern of attacks targeting Christian clergy, churches, and religious symbols across the city.

The Jerusalem Governorate said Monday that a video filmed four days earlier near the Armenian Monastery in the Old City of Jerusalem captures an Israeli violating the sanctity of the site, provoking widespread anger among Christian residents and church institutions.

The footage shows the Israeli engaging in behavior described as a direct insult to one of Jerusalem’s most significant Christian landmarks.

In its statement, the Governorate said the act constitutes a deliberate provocation against the Christian community and an assault on a historic religious institution that has stood in the Armenian Quarter for centuries.

It added that the incident reflects a broader escalation in attacks carried out by Israelis against Christian clergy, churches, and religious symbols in Jerusalem.

Christian clergy and local residents have repeatedly reported a surge in harassment, including spitting attacks, verbal abuse, vandalism of church property, and attempts to intimidate priests and monks.

Armenian and Greek Orthodox clergy have documented dozens of such incidents in recent months, many occurring within meters of Israeli police stations that fail to intervene or act promptly.

The Governorate stressed that the absence of accountability encourages further violations, noting that Israelis often act with full confidence that they will not be arrested or prosecuted.

Christian institutions, including the Armenian Patriarchate, have warned that these attacks are becoming routine, increasingly aggressive, and aimed at pressuring Christian communities in the city.

This latest desecration is not an isolated case. In recent weeks, Israelis have assaulted clergy, vandalized churches, disrupted religious ceremonies, and spat at Christian processions.

Similar attacks have been documented in the Armenian Quarter, the Christian Quarter, and around the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.

Human rights groups and local journalists have repeatedly stated that Israeli authorities are enabling these violations by failing to enforce the law or protect Christian clergy and institutions.

The Governorate called for immediate measures to halt these attacks, hold perpetrators accountable, and implement effective protections for Jerusalem’s religious heritage.

It urged international bodies to intervene to safeguard the Christian presence in the city and ensure respect for its diverse historical and religious character.

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3- How Armenia Lost Its Strategic Compass

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4- Cher at 80: The Armenian Christian roots behind the woman
rumored to never age

Jemimah Wright explores the extraordinary life of Cher as
the superstar celebrates her 80th birthday — from Hollywood fame and endless
reinvention to the ancient Christian faith woven through her Armenian roots.

At 80 years old, having celebrated the milestone birthday
on May 20, 2026, Cher remains one of the most recognizable women on the planet.
With her glossy black hair, razor-sharp wit and seemingly ageless appearance,
she has become a cultural phenomenon as much as a singer or actress.
Born Cherilyn Sarkisian in California in 1946, Cher is
proudly of Armenian heritage through her father, John Sarkisian, whose family
roots trace back to Armenia. That heritage carries a remarkable spiritual
history. Armenia is widely recognized as the first nation to adopt Christianity
as its state religion, doing so in AD 301, centuries before much of the Western
world embraced the faith.
I have a special love for Armenia, having taken youth
groups out for a few years running to help on Christian camps for children in
the town of Zorovan. It was there we learned that the Armenian Church became
central not only to the nation’s worship but to its survival, preserving
identity through centuries of persecution, displacement and suffering.
That suffering reached its darkest point during the
Armenian genocide of 1915, when an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed
under the Ottoman Empire, forcing many survivors to flee across the world. Like
countless Armenian families, Cher’s ancestors were part of a diaspora shaped by
trauma, resilience and faith. The Armenian Christian story also continued in
America through figures such as Demos Shakarian, whose family escaped
persecution before he later founded the Full Gospel Business Men’s Fellowship
International in California – an organization I know well, as my Dad was the
European director at one point. It was, and is, a movement where Christian
businessmen shared their testimonies at dinners – inviting their friends and
colleagues to have a meal and hear the good news of Jesus.
Though Cher has never publicly embraced Christianity in a
clear or traditional sense, she has spoken openly about God and spirituality
over the years. “I only answer to two people, myself and God,” she apparently
once said. Elsewhere, she admitted her discomfort with exclusivist religion,
saying: “I have a problem with religion that makes it so, like, ‘We are the
chosen ones.’” In later life she has also expressed interest in Buddhism and
meditation, appearing more spiritually curious than doctrinally committed. Yet
the Christian heritage of Armenia still forms part of the backdrop to her story
— a faith carried through exile, persecution and survival.
Her rise to fame began in the 1960s alongside
then-husband Sonny Bono. As Sonny and Cher, the pair became famous for hits
such as I Got You Babe, with Cher’s distinctive contralto voice setting her
apart from the sweeter pop vocals of the era. What followed was a career that
constantly defied expectations. While many artists fade after one successful
decade, Cher reinvented herself repeatedly, conquering music, television, film
and even dance music across six decades.
She won an Academy Award for Moonstruck, released global
hits such as Believe, and became a fashion icon in the process. Each
reinvention seemed to arrive just as critics were ready to dismiss her. In many
ways, Cher’s enduring youthfulness has less to do with her appearance and more
to do with her refusal to become stuck in the past.
Perhaps, then, the most meaningful thing Christians could
pray for Cher as she enters her ninth decade is not simply health or continued
success, but that she would come to deeply know the faith of her forefathers,
the ancient Christian hope that sustained generations of Armenians through
suffering, exile and survival. Beneath the glamor, fame and mythology
surrounding her life is a woman made in the image of God, still deeply loved by
Him. And unlike earthly youth, that love never fades.

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5- Millions of Dollars Paid in Bonuses to Armenia’s Provincial Governors and Staffers

By Grisha Balasanyan
HETQ.am
Over the past five years, employees of Armenia’s eight provincial administrations have been paid bonuses exceeding $11.7 million. Some of them refused to tell Hetq exactly how much money high-ranking officials received as bonuses, while others urged us to examine the officials’ income declarations to be published this May.
Hetq sent a written request to all ten provincial administrations, asking them to provide information on the number of employees who received bonuses in 2021-2025 and the amounts. We also asked them to specify information about the governors and their deputies. The $11.7 million mentioned above does not include bonuses for employees of the provincial administrations of Vayots Dzor and Syunik. These two governors did not provide complete information on the employees who received bonuses and the bonus amounts. The governors of Armavir and Shirak did not report how many employees received bonuses.
Vayots Dzor Governor Vahagn Arsenyan noted in his written response to Hetq that the funds allocated to the governor’s staff, including the bonus amounts, are reflected in the law on the state budget of Armenia for each year. “I also report that the governor, deputy governors, advisors and assistants are declarant officials,” Governor Arsenyan’s response states. He, in fact, avoided providing information.
The information provided by the Secretary General of the Syunik Governor’s Office is not complete and dependable. In his response, he noted, for example, that in 2025, all employees of the provincial administration were awarded $313, in 2024, $361, etc. There is no information on how many employees were awarded annually or how much money was allocated for this purpose. Were department heads, technical workers, and the regional governor paid the same amount?
In response to the question about the bonuses received by the provincial governor and his deputies for the year, reference was made to their financial disclosures that are compulsory. These disclosures, published once a year, do not separate salaries from bonuses.
Both the governor and the deputies submit annual declarations during their term of office by May 31 of the year following the given year. That is, the declarations for 2025 will be submitted by May 31, 2026, which means that it is theoretically impossible to obtain information on bonuses before that.
The Armavir and Shirak administrations also did not report how many employees received bonuses annually, therefore it is not possible to average the data.
Compared to 2024, the total amount of bonuses in 2025 was reduced only in Gegharkunik, Aragatzotn, Lori, and Kotayk (we are talking about eight provinces, excluding Syunik and Vayots Dzor). In Gegharkunik, the total amount of bonuses in 2024 was $490,000 for 106 employees, while in 2025, 102 employees received $378,000.
The total amount of bonuses in the provincial administrations of Ararat, Armavir, Tavush, and Shirak has increased. For example, in 2024, Armavir employees received $118,000 in bonuses, rising to $283,000 in 2025. In Shirak, they received $251,000 in 2024, and $283,000.
Referring to the six provincial administrations that provided complete information on bonus payments, in 2025. employees of the Tavush provincial administration were awarded the largest amount of bonus – an average of $3,801. Aragatzotn and Gegharkunik provincial administration staffers received, on average, bonuses of $3,709, and $3,701, respectively. On average, the Ararat administration employees received the smallest bonuses – $2,220.
The data presented does not mean that all provincial administration employees received the same bonus payments. Those holding high positions were re-warded more, which is why, based on the average data of the total number of employees, the amount per person increases.
For example, in 2025, the governor of Kotayk and his two deputies received a total of $69,041 in bonuses, and the administration’s eighty one employees together received $211,000. It turns out that the governor and his deputies received an average of $23,014 in bonuses, and each employee received $2,603.
Compared to 2024, the bonuses of Kotayk Governor Aharon Sahakyan and his two deputies increased sharply, while those of the employees decreased. In 2024, the governor and his deputies received $48,913 in bonuses, and the eighty four employees received $364,130.
Of the six provinces, the largest number of employees awarded bonuses was in Gegharkunik – 639 people in five years, followed by the Lori – 577 people. The smallest number of employees awarded was in Tavush – 366.
The public in Armenia remains uninformed as to why government staffers are awarded these considerable bonuses. For what result?

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6- Forbes included Eurnekian, Karapetyan, Vardanyan, and Kardashian in the ranking of the world’s richest people

YEREVAN /ARKA/ — Forbes published its 40th annual ranking of the world’s richest people for 2026. It includes a record number of billionaires—3,428—with a combined net worth of $20.1 trillion.
The ranking includes several billionaires of Armenian descent from various countries.

Forbes lists Albert Avdolyan as the 557th richest person in the world for 2026, with a net worth of $7.1 billion. He is known as an investor, with interests in coal and energy assets, among other things. His net worth was estimated at $5 billion last year.

Argentine-Armenian entrepreneur Eduardo Eurnekian ranked 891st on the Forbes 2026 list, with a net worth of $4.6 billion. He is the owner of the diversified group Corporación América, which manages airport and energy assets. In 2025, his net worth was reported at $3.4 billion.

Samvel Karapetyan ranks 1044th on the Forbes 2026 list, with a net worth of $4.1 billion. His Forbes profile describes him as the owner of Tashir Holding, a commercial real estate development group. In 2025, his net worth was estimated at $3.2 billion.

Andrey Andreyev (Ogadzhanyants) ranked 1611th, also made the Forbes 2026 list, with a net worth of $2.6 billion. He is known as the creator of dating services and apps, including Mamba, Badoo, Bumble, Chappy, and Lumen.

Kim Kardashian is ranked 2177th Kim Kardashian. Her net worth is $1.9 billion is primarily derived from the Skims brand and other business holdings.

Noubar Afeyan is also included on the Forbes 2026 list, ranked 2177th with a net worth of $1.9 billion. He is known as the founder of Flagship Pioneering and co-founder of Moderna. In 2025, Afeyan appeared on the list with a net worth of $1.2 billion.

Artem Khachatryan, co-founder of the Fix Price chain, ranked 2274th on the Forbes 2026 list ($1.8 billion). In 2025, his net worth was estimated at $1.6 billion.

Ruben Vardanyan and his family ranked 2858th on the Forbes 2026 list ($1.3 billion). In 2025, Vardanyan and his family’s net worth was estimated at $1.2 billion. Known as the founder of the Russian stock market, Vardanyan co-founded the investment company Troika Dialog in the early 1990s. In 2013, Vardanyan and his managers sold Troika Dialog to state-owned Sberbank for $1.4 billion. In 2014, Vardanyan founded the investment boutique Vardanyan, Broitman & Partners, which serves ultra-high-net-worth individuals. In 2021, he received Armenian citizenship, later renounced his Russian citizenship, and moved to Armenia. In November 2022, Vardanyan was appointed State Minister of Artsakh. He transferred his business assets to a family trust. In February 2023, he resigned as State Minister. He has been under arrest in Azerbaijan since September 2023.

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7- Senate Candidate Graham Platner Questioned

the Armenian Genocide in Now-Deleted Post

‘I don’t think he’s going to do very well with Armenian voters in Maine,’ an Armenian human rights activist in the state said.
Left-wing Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner—who’s repeatedly accused Israel of genocide—publicly questioned the Armenian genocide in a now-deleted internet post, the Washington Free Beacon can reveal.
In a June 2016 posting to Reddit, Platner responded to a thread about Germany formally recognizing the Armenian genocide, suggesting the widely accepted mass slaughter of Armenians during World War I was more complicated.
“The problem with your statement is that Turkey fully admits the Incident happened, the issue is whether it was in fact genocide or if it was mass killing/displacement,” Platner opined.
“I’m no fan of Turkey, but it’s important to get the facts straight.”
In a later post on the same topic, Platner tried to wiggle out of his past comment by clarifying that “I do in fact believe it should be termed a genocide.” But then he dug himself deeper into a hole by claiming that “while I’m no fan of the Turks, to say the actions of the Ottomans in relation to the Armenian population is the same [as Nazi Germany] is downright incorrect … To say Turks need to bury themselves in the national shame as the Germans have is just emotional pandering.”
The Armenians, who for years have been locked in a bitter diplomatic battle with Turkey over Turkey’s longtime refusal to take responsibility for the slaughter, might disagree with Platner that the Turks don’t need to feel shame.
Up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed in the genocide in 1915 and 1916, when the Ottoman Empire carried out systematic mass murder and deportation of the Armenian people. In recent decades, the Turkish government has furiously denied the genocide and used diplomatic pressure in attempts to rewrite history and keep other countries from acknowledging the atrocities.
Platner’s post prompted criticism from an Armenian human rights activist in Maine, Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte, who called Platner “anti-Armenian” and said his stance on the genocide would hurt him with Armenian-Americans in the state.
“There has been denial of the Armenian genocide for over 100 years … He’s not getting my vote,” Turcotte told the Free Beacon. “I don’t think he’s going to do very well with Armenian voters in Maine.”
Platner’s nuanced approach to the Armenian “incident” contrasts sharply with his repeated and claims that Israel is committing a genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza.
“I said on the day of our campaign’s launch that the genocide in Gaza is the moral test of our time,” Platner offered in a statement on the two-year anniversary of Hamas’s Oct. 7 terrorist attacks in Israel which left more than 1,200 dead. Platner had additionally called the United States “complicit” in the “genocide” and has condemned U.S. military assistance to Israel.
Historians have cited the Turks’ skillful 1920s and ’30s erasure and denial of the Armenian genocide as paving the way for the Nazi extermination of the Jews.
“Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?” Adolf Hitler said in 1939 as Germany’s mass murders of Jews were beginning to accelerate—in a quote which now hangs in the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C.
In addition to Platner’s Reddit post, Turcotte criticized his January rally with Deqa Dhalac, a far-left Somali-born state representative tied to a nonprofit under congressional investigation for allegedly defrauding the state of millions of dollars in Medicaid payments. Dhalac has been criticized for her close ties to Tarlan Ahmadov, an Azerbaijani-born former Maine state official who resigned following allegations that he harbored anti-Armenian sentiment. Dhalac went on a junket organized by Ahmadov to Nagorno-Karabakh, a contested part of Azerbaijan whose original Armenian Christian population has long been brutalized by Azerbaijani Muslims.
Raising awareness of the genocide has long been a major issue for the United States’ small but influential Armenian community. In August 2019 Kim and Kourtney Kardashian and their families visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan, Armenia, and have remained consistently outspoken on the issue. In 2021 President Joe Biden became the first U.S. leader to recognize the Armenian genocide, infuriating Turkey.

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Disclaimer: This article was contributed and translated into English by Kalantarian Kevo. While we strive for quality, the views and accuracy of the content remain the responsibility of the contributor. Please verify all facts independently before reposting or citing.

Direct link to this article: https://www.armenianclub.com/2026/06/02/california-courier-online-june-1-2026/

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