California Assembly Speaker Kevin Mullin joins Armenian Legislative Caucus

Public Radio of Armenia
      
– Public Radio of Armenia

Massis Post —The California Armenian Legislative Caucus added new member: Assembly Speaker pro Tempore Kevin Mullin to the Caucus which already includes: Senate President pro Tempore Toni G. Atkins, Senate Majority Leader Bob Herzberg, Senate Minority Leader Scott Wilk, Senator Bob Archuleta, Senator Andreas Borgeas, Senator Brian Dahle, Senator María Elena Durazo,Senator Anthony Portantino, Assembly Majority Leader Eloise Gómez Reyes, Assemblymember Lisa Calderon, Assemblymember Laura Friedman, Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel, Assemblymember Mike Gipson, Assemblymember Chris Holden, Assemblymember Tom Lackey, Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian, Assemblymember Luz Rivas, Assemblymember Blanca Rubio, and Assemblymember Suzette Valladares.

“The Armenian genocide that killed 1.5 million Armenians over 100 years ago resulted in immeasurable pain and suffering. As a new member of the California Armenian Legislative Caucus, I am one more voice for the global Armenian community as they continue to heal from this brutal atrocity. We must make every effort to make sure that history does not repeat itself and stand up against violence and hatred of any kind,” Assembly Speaker pro Tempore Kevin Mullin said.

The California Armenian Legislative Caucus serves as a forum for members from the California Senate and Assembly to identify key issues affecting Armenian Americans and develop and empower the Armenian American community throughout California. The Caucus encourages advocacy and participation in cultural, educational, governmental, and community efforts in California. Through advocacy, the Caucus strives to ensure that California Armenian American’s voices are heard and given a platform.

‘I wish my grandparents were alive to see this day’ U.S. officially recognizes Armenian Genocide

May 6 2021
Posted at 3:57 PM, May 06, 2021

 

and last updated 12:57 AM,

MAGIC VALLEY — Just recently President Joe Biden became the first U.S. president to officially recognize the killings of Armenians during World War I as a genocide.

No U.S. president in the past has acknowledged the killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as a genocide for fear of losing relations with Turkey.

But for one Armenian refugee in the Magic Valley, the news was bittersweet.

Armenian National Institute

“It was bittersweet not only because I wish my grandparents were alive to see this day and not only because of the life-long work that not only myself but many advocates have done to see that the U.S. has recognized the Armenian genocide,” Liyah Babayan, Idaho chair of the Armenian National Committee, said.

For Liyah and her family, they thought this moment would never come. Her family resettled in Idaho after having to flee Armenia because of the ongoing conflict with Azerbaijan.

“So it does matter to resettlement communities when the atrocities that we have survived are recognized by the communities that are resettling us,” Babayan said.

“Armenians are happy that someone is acknowledging it. Some Armenians are not happy; they feel like the U.S. could go further that we could do something about it. Let’s find a way that we can show that the U.S. is backing this in different programs,” JustinVipperman, Historian at The College of Southern Idaho, said.

The Gem State also did its part with Governor Little signing a proclamation recognizing April 24, 2021, as a remembrance day for the Armenian genocide.

Armenian National Institute

“What we see with Idaho doing this and Governor little pushing this is that it is on people’s minds people are starting to look at it as a genocide,” Vipperman said.

Babayan says for Idaho this moment is full circle since the Gem State resettled Armenians during the 1915 genocide.

“After the 1915 genocide, Idaho resettled and adopted over 1,000 orphans through Christian groups and missionary groups and so for the governor to issue a proclamation it’s very meaningful and it’s very full circle for Idaho,” Babayan said.

She says the Armenian genocide being recognized is vital and sends a positive message to resettlement communities in Idaho and throughout the nation.

“So it does matter to resettlement communities when the atrocities that we have survived are recognized by the communities that are resettling us. It lets us know that we are sharing something and that it does matter to our new community to our new country those events and those tragedies,” Babayan said.

 

Armenian Foreign Ministry salutes declaration of Latvia’s parliament recognizing Armenian Genocide

Armenian Foreign Ministry salutes declaration of Latvia’s parliament recognizing Armenian Genocide

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 20:43, 6 May, 2021

YEREVAN, MAY 6, ARMENPRESS. Universal recognition of the Armenian Genocide is one of the key security guarantees for the Armenian people, ARMENPRESS reports, reads the statement of the Foreign Ministry of Armenia saluting the declaration recognizing the Armenian Genocide by the Latvian parliament.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry assessed the declaration recognizing the Armenian Genocide a step towards the universal recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide.

‘’This declaration is important not only from the perspective of justice and truth, but also for the prevention of similar crimes in the future. The universal recognition of the Armenian Genocide is one of the key security guarantees for the Armenian people’’, reads the statement.

Artsakh records 3 new cases of COVID-19 over past day

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 11:55,

STEPANAKERT, APRIL 29, ARMENPRESS. 3 new cases of coronavirus (COVID-19) have been confirmed in the Republic of Artsakh in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 2,664.

70 coronavirus tests have been carried out on April 28, the ministry of healthcare of Artsakh said.

A death case from coronavirus, the first in the past 6 months, has been registered.

Currently, 28 infected patients receive treatment in hospitals.

On April 19 the vaccinations against COVID-19 have launched in Artsakh.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian President sends letter to UN Secretary-General over POW issue

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 14:39,

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has addressed a letter to UN Secretary-General António Guterres, the President’s Office told Armenpress.

The letter reads:

“The year 2020 has been challenging and difficult for us all. However, for Armenia, 2020 was even more difficult due to the war unleashed by Azerbaijan against Artsakh on September 27, with the active support and direct participation of Turkey.

Despite your call for a global ceasefire under the conditions of COVID-19 pandemic, and the statement condemning the continuing escalation of violence in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone, despite repeated appeals from the international community to immediately stop the war, Azerbaijan’s military-political leadership massively and deliberately targeted the civilian population and infrastructures, blatantly violating the human rights and international humanitarian right norms. This resulted in the loss of thousands of young lives, thousands of disabled people, displacement of population, and destruction of Armenian cultural and historical heritage.

During the war and after it, Armenian military servicemen and civilians became captives who suffer torture and inhuman mistreatment by Azerbaijan.

In conformity with the the trilateral statement on ceasefire of November 9, 2020, the Republic of Armenia has transferred to Azerbaijan all prisoners of war. However, of utmost importance is the fulfillment of the “all for all” principle on exchange of all prisoners of war and civilians taken captive, which is being disregarded by Azerbaijan.

In a gross violation of human rights and international humanitarian commitments, Azerbaijan currently rejects and hampers the return of civilians and prisoners of war, taken hostage.

Armenia expects support from international partners in the issue of the quickest return of all the captives.

I appeal to you and the United Nations to undertake all necessary measures to ensure immediate release and safe return of prisoners of war in conformity with the international humanitarian law”.

Turkey Threatens US Ahead of Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day

The MediaLine
April 21 2021

Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu on Tuesday commented on the latest projections about a possible official recognition of the Armenian genocide by US President Joe Biden on the upcoming annual remembrance day of April 24. “Statements that have no legal binding will have no benefit, but they will harm ties,” Çavuşoğlu warned. “If the US wants to worsen relations, the decision is theirs,” he said, imploring Washington to “respect international law.” Biden has in recent days faced mounting bipartisan pressure to become the first president to call the mass murder and systematic ethnic cleansing of over 1 million Armenians at the hands of the Ottomans during World War I a genocide. Biden promised to do so on the campaign trail, similar to previous presidents, yet none of his predecessors followed through on their pledge after taking office, fearing diplomatic repercussions from Ankara, which rejects the Armenian accusations. In 2019, the US Senate passed a historic nonbinding resolution recognizing the genocide, infuriating Turkey’s government. President Biden and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan have yet to speak since the January 20 inauguration.

PRESS RELEASE – Groundbreaking Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program to Be Launched

The upcoming Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) program at the American University of Armenia (AUA) is a groundbreaking development in not only Armenia, but in the region. Internationally, the professional consensus suggests that in the current complex healthcare environment, baccalaureate education should be the entry-level requirement for professional nursing practice. However, almost no universities in post-Soviet nations currently offer a bachelor’s nursing program. 

The innovative RN-to-BSN (registered nurse to BSN) program will be offered at the Gerald and Patricia Turpanjian School of Public Health (SPH), made possible by the generosity of the Turpanjian family, whose commitment to AUA has pioneered significant advancements toward the development and future of Armenia. The Republic of Armenia (RA) Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports and Ministry of Health are collaborating with the University to develop the BSN program. Its launch will advance the School of Public Health into a college and will revolutionize opportunities for present and future nurses in the post-Soviet region.

“This groundbreaking educational opportunity for nurses will not only significantly improve the quality of nursing education in Armenia, but will also emphasize the importance of nursing, bringing respect and recognition to the profession,” remarks Dr. Vahram Dumanyan, RA Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sports.

The RN-to-BSN program is currently working on curriculum development. In order to develop the program, SPH and the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing conducted a large-scale and comprehensive national assessment of nursing education, practice, and policy in Armenia and held multiple stakeholder meetings. An international group of leaders in nursing met in Yerevan to suggest solutions on improving nursing education and practice, including faculty from nursing schools of the University of Pennsylvania; the University of California, San Francisco; Johns Hopkins University; the American University of Beirut Hariri School of Nursing; and others as part of the AUA Nursing Project. The project was made possible with financial support provided by Edele Hovnanian, a University of Pennsylvania alumna and trustee of the Hirair and Anna Hovnanian Foundation.

The global driving forces for the development of the BSN program are the growing complexity of healthcare, need for cost-effectiveness, increasing prevalence of chronic diseases, aging population, increasing environmental threats, and lifestyle choices and habits. In this challenging time for Armenia, it is more important than ever to pioneer advancements in healthcare. Currently, vocational institutions in Armenia provide an associate nursing degree. Nurses with an associate degree will have the chance to receive a higher education through the upcoming BSN program, which will broaden their capacities and career-growth opportunities.

The program will result in much-needed specializations currently unavailable in Armenia. Opportunity for higher education in the nursing field will transform AUA into a faculty production hub for nursing colleges. Nurse managers with competencies in data science will become champions of E-Health and quality care implementation in Armenia. Furthermore, an increase of qualified gerontology and nutritionist nurses will service the Armenian population, 25% of which will be above 65 years old in 2050. Finally, multilingual nurse managers can contribute to the Armenian health tourism sector. 

Overall, the upcoming BSN program will spearhead national and regional advancements in the nursing field, improving the capabilities and perception of nurses. With an increase in quality of education and career-growth opportunities in nursing, more will be incentivized to pursue the field, advancing Armenia as a pioneer of healthcare in the region.

AUA thanks the Turpanjian Family Educational Foundation, whose generous support made it possible to offer the RN-to-BSN undergraduate program at AUA. 

The AUA Turpanjian School of Public Health works actively to improve the health of the populace and health services in Armenia and the region through interdisciplinary education and development of public health professionals and others to be leaders in public health, health services research and evaluation, and health care delivery and management.

Kind Regards,

Margarit Hovhannisyan | Communications Manager

Margarit Hovhannisyan|: Communication manager

+374 60 612 514,  

mhovhannisyan  

__________________________________________

American University of Armenia

Republic of Armenia, 0019, Yerevan, Marshal Baghramyan Ave. 40:00

40 Baghramyan Avenue, Yerevan 0019, Republic of Armenia


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Armenian POW Issue Discussed in Europe’s Parliamentary Assembly



One of the five Armenian prisoners of war is being escorted off a plane that landed at Erebuni Airport on Jan. 28

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe on Tuesday took up the discussion of Armenian prisoners of war and other captives being held by Azerbaijan.

Stefan Schennach, who it the PACE co-rapporteur for Azerbaijan, called on Baku to return POWs.

“We must use this forum for solving conflicts and reaching peace. There are people in Azerbaijan, who are considered missing, there are many servicemen who are still kept in Azerbaijan as POWs. This issue must be clearly and seriously addressed,’’ said Schennach, who said he was speaking in his capacity as a member of parliament and not his role as co-rapporteur for Azerbaijan.

He added that numerous civilians have been killed during the war, and it is important to respect the adversary and strive for peace.

“I ask, I call on Azerbaijan, let’s not trade over the issue if the servicemen were taken captive before or after the war. They must be returned home’’ added Schennach.

However, it was the representatives of Armenia at the PACE session on Tuesday who made strong statement, often times criticizing the forum and European foreign policy, which they said is ignoring the plight of Armenians.

Lawmaker Naira Zohrabyan, who is a member of Armenia’s PACE delegations called on the Assembly to take a position of Azerbaijan’s Armenophobic policy and use all its levers for the release of the Armenian captives.

“It is a fact that in recent years the Council of Europe and our Assembly are undergoing very strange transformations in outlining their priorities. For me, it is at least perplexing that the Council of Europe, which has seemingly transformed into an anti-Russian club, is choosing the issue of the Russian opposition activist Alexey Navalny as the number one subject in all its recent agendas,” said Zohrabyan, who added that what was happening in some Council of Europe member-states was “horrifying.”

“A few days ago a museum— unprecedented with its wretchedness—opened in Baku, exhibiting military trophies seized from the Armenian side during the latest Artsakh war, and you should’ve seen how Aliyev was proudly walking through the helmets of killed Armenian soldiers, you should’ve seen how Azerbaijani children were playing by choking the mannequins of Armenian soldiers,” Zohrabyan said.

“The issue of this very fascist exhibition in Baku today should have become one of the priority issues. It was horrifying to see how Azerbaijanis were standing in a kilometers-long queue to see that exhibition of disrespect. They had brought their children with them, who were saying that Armenians are their genetic enemies,” added Zohrabyan.

“Six month after the war we have hundreds of prisoners of war held in Azerbaijani prisons and Azerbaijan not only refuses to provide clear information about them to the European Court of Human Rights, but is also cynically stating that they aren’t prisoners of war. By the way, one of the prisoners of war was laid to rest by his family few days ago. I want to understand why the Council of Europe Human Rights Commissioner hasn’t yet visited the Baku prisons to see the inhumane conditions in which Armenian prisoners of war are held,” Zohrabyan said, challenging her PACE colleagues.

“Dear colleagues, when in our neighborhood Council of Europe-members Azerbaijan and Turkey are transgressing human rights in the most abhorrent manner, when Aliyev is stating that they won this war, because they raised an entire generation of Azerbaijani youth with hatred for the enemy, it is this kind of racist and Armenophobic statements which should become the subject of discussions of our organization, otherwise with fake agendas we are ignoring the fundamental values of our organization,” said Zohrabyan.

Another PACE delegate from Armenia, Mikayel Melkumyan, expressed his frustration with PACE member states for not taking a more decisive position.

“What would you do if those POWs were French or German nationals? I want to see concrete measures, the parents of our POWs want to see concrete measures,’’ Melkumyan said, emphasizing that the war incited by Azerbaijan and Turkey was the continuation of the genocide.

“I would like to state that this organization was created to prevent any other horrors of the Second World War. This organization has been created to be watchdog for the protection of human rights, for the securing of rule of law and for respecting democracy. This organization was created to say never again to the Holocaust, crimes against humanity and all the other wrongdoings,” Armenia PACE delegate Vladimir Vardanyan, who is the chairman of the standing committee on state-legal affairs of Armenia’s National Assembly.

“More than 200 Armenian prisoners of war are under Azerbaijani custody. We have reasonable grounds to believe that their lives are in dangers, that they may be a subject for torture. It’s not a political issue, it’s an issue of human tights, an issue of democracy, and their rights should be respected,” said Vardanyan.

President Sarkissian will not sign law on amendments of the electoral code

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 17:12,

YEREVAN, APRIL 17, ARMENPRESS. The Administration of the President of Armenia issued a statement over the law on ‘’making amendments in the Constitutional law of the electoral code of the Republic of Armenia.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the President’s Office, the law was submitted for the President’s signing on April 2, 2021.

The President discussed it with the heads of a number of parties, political figures, representative of the Central Electoral Commission, listened to their positions and remarks.

The examinations of the law by the President’s administration have brought to the conclusion that the law is not problematic in terms of constitutionality. But the President has his own observations over the law – it has been passed by the voting of only the political majority of the National Assembly.

President Sarkissian has stated numerous times that early parliamentary elections aimed at the overcoming of the crisis should take place following the procedure of comprehensive amendments of the Constitution and the Electoral Code, which demands reasonable time and according to the democratic principles, should be implemented listening to and considering the opinions shaped as a result of broad public and political debates.

According to the Venice Commission, amendments in the electoral legislation should take place at least one year before the elections. The Venice Commission has also stated its position that the stability of the electoral system is one of the most important principles, and that it is important to have enough time to hold in-depth public discussions on amendments to the Electoral Code with the participation of all stakeholders.

The law replaces one type of proportional electoral system with another.

Given the above-mentioned, the President of the Republic will not sign the law, but will not apply to the Constitutional Court for deciding its compliance with the Constitution.