PM Pashinyan rules out keeping blind eye to corruption manifestation

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 17:28,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan assures that the Government will never keep a blind eye to any corruption manifestation, ARMENPRESS reports Pashinyan said during Parliament-Cabinet Q&A session.

MP Karen Simonyan representing “Luminous Armenia” Party noted that 4 laboratories in Armenia are tasked to carry out the tests of the food imported to Armenia, but one of the laboratories has a dominant position. According to the MP, he has information that the laboratory gained the dominance due to some personal links.

“If there are personal links I promise that the people standing behind that will be severely punished”, the PM said, urging the MP to submit his information to law enforcement bodies.

“I assure that it’s ruled out that we keep a blind eye to any corruption manifestation in any situation”, the PM said.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

‘Rolls-Royce’ designed by Armenian businessman to be auctioned off

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 4 2020

Senator Wilk Announces Scholarship Contests to Raise Awareness of the Armenian Genocide

SCV News
Feb 3 2020
Wilk Announces Scholarship Contests to Raise Awareness of the Armenian Genocide

Press Release | Monday, Feb 3, 2020
   
Armenian people are marched to a nearby prison in Mezireh by armed Ottoman soldiers. Kharpert, Ottoman Empire, April 1915. | Photo: Public Domain.

Sacramento – The California Armenian Legislative Caucus is holding two scholarship contests for the 2020 commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, Senator Scott Wilk (R-Santa Clarita), who represents the state’s 21st Senate District, announced Monday.

California high school students in 9th through 12th grades are invited to participate in an essay contest and/or a visual arts contest to increase greater awareness of the Armenian Genocide on its anniversary.

The California Armenian Legislative Caucus will contact winners directly and announce their names to media on Friday, April 16, 2020.

In addition to the scholarships, the winners will also receive a trip to Sacramento for a press conference where they will be acknowledged by the California Armenian Legislative Caucus during the Caucus’ annual Armenian Advocacy Day on April 27, 2020.

Original artwork will be requested from visual arts applicants if they are selected as a finalist, for display in the California State Capitol.

Submission Deadline for both contests is Monday, April 6, 2020.

Criteria for each contest can be found here.

Essay Scholarship Awards:
* First Place: $1,000
* Second Place: $750
* Third Place: $500

Visual Art Scholarship Awards:
* First Place: $1,000
* Second Place: $750
* Third Place: $500

The Armenian Genocide (also known as the Armenian Holocaust) was the systematic mass murder and expulsion of 1.5 million ethnic Armenians within the Ottoman Empire (most of whom were citizens) by the Ottoman government from approximately 1914 to 1923, notes Wikipedia.

The starting date is conventionally held to be 24 April 1915, the day that Ottoman authorities rounded up, arrested, and deported from Constantinople (now Istanbul) to the region of Angora (Ankara), 235 to 270 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders, the majority of whom were eventually murdered.

The genocide was carried out during and after World War I and implemented in two phases—the wholesale killing of the able-bodied male population through massacre and subjection of army conscripts to forced labour, followed by the deportation of women, children, the elderly, and the infirm on death marches leading to the Syrian Desert.

Read more about the Armenian Genocide here.

Armenia MFA: Armenian citizen from China’s Wuhan wanted to be evacuated and was moved to Kazakhstan

News.am, Armenia
Feb 2 2020
Armenia MFA: Armenian citizen from China’s Wuhan wanted to be evacuated and was moved to Kazakhstan Armenia MFA: Armenian citizen from China’s Wuhan wanted to be evacuated and was moved to Kazakhstan

14:05, 02.02.2020
                  

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia reports that on February 2, citizen of Armenia Susanna Aghajanyan, who is located in the Chinese city of Wuhan and had expressed the desire to be evacuated, was evacuated and moved to Kazakhstan through cooperation with the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. This is what Spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Anna Naghdalyan wrote on her Facebook page.

“The Embassy of Armenia is constantly in contact with the Armenian citizen and is taking actions to bring her back to Armenia as soon as possible.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia expresses deep gratitude to its colleagues in Kazakhstan for their rapid response to Armenia’s request and the support,” she stated.

Greek MEP rips Turkish flag during EP session

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 21:07,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 30, ARMENPRESS. Greek Member of the European Parliament (MEP) Ioannis Lagos ripped the Turkish flag during the plenary debate on migrants, ARMENPRESS reports Ermenihaber informs.

The Greek MEP referred to the situation of the migrants who have found shelter at the Greek islands, adding that Turkey is able to do what it wants to do.

“We don’t hear anybody talk about the situation of Greek citizens. Everybody talks about migrants. What about the rights of the Greek citizens?”  the MEP said.

Lagos said that 70% of Greek citizens are against illegal migration and that they are being attacked by the migrants.

“On the one hand, there is Turkey, which is doing whatever it wants to do,” Lagos said, ripping a piece of paper with the Turkish flag printed on it. He said they need to put an end to the migrant flow.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

‘Knowledge is the best investment’: Today is the International Day of Education

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 10:58,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. The United Nations General Assembly has proclaimed 24 January as International Day of Education, in celebration of the role of education for peace and development.

On the occasion of this day Armenia’s minister of education, science, culture and sport Arayik Harutyunyan said on Facebook that “education is the best investment we can have for our success”.

“We will do everything for Armenia’s education system to be able to ensure the best future of the talented individuals of our country years later. We have launched systematic reforms at various levels – preschool education, general education and higher education”, the minister said, adding that now it is necessary to use the existing opportunities to learn something new every day.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenian Diocese of Baltic states established by Patriarchal Epistle

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 20:10,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Diocese of Baltic States was established by the Patriarchal Epistle of the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II. The Diocese of the Armenian religious communities of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia was established by their separation from the Armenian Diocese of Russia and New Nakhichevan.

His Holiness Bishop Vardan Navasardyan has been appointed the Primate of the newly established Diocese.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

Armenians Debate Sargsyan Charges

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Jan 22 2020
 
 
 
The criminal case against the ex-head of state remains a highly partisan issue.
By Arshaluys Mgdesyan
 
 
 
Corruption charges finally laid against former Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan have bitterly divided allies and critics over whether or not the case was politically motivated or not.
 
Proceedings were launched against him in December, nearly two years after the so-called Velvet Revolution that brought current president Nikol Pashinyan to power.
 
Sargsyan was accused of embezzling of more than a million US dollars worth of state funds through a 2013 public tender to supply rural farmers with subsidized diesel fuel.
 
Pashinyan’s main election pledge was to bring those responsible for corruption to justice, and many Armenian experts and politicians had anticipated charges against Sargsyan.
 
Legal action has already been taken against his former colleagues including Hrayr Tovmasyan, a chairman of the country’s constitutional court, the former parliamentary speaker Ara Babloyan and Gagik Khachatryan, an ex-head of the state revenue committee.
 
In addition, Armenia’s second president Robert Kocharyan was indicted in 2018 on charges related to March 2008 protests in Yerevan.
 
Kocharyan was charged with bribe-taking and “overthrowing the constitutional order” by the use of military forces during the political crisis that followed the presidential election of February 2008. He remains in custody.  
 
Allies of Sargsyan argue that the allegations against the former president were a purely populist measure by the new government.
 
According to Sargsyan’s lawyer Amram Makinyan, law enforcement officers had been determined to charge his client at whatever cost.
 
“He was summoned by the Special Investigation Service and interrogated on various cases from time to time. Eventually, they found a reason, which is ridiculous,” Makinyan told IWPR, adding that Sargsyan had rejected all charges.
 
Makinyan also argued that launching criminal proceedings against a former head of state was a violation of Article 140 of the Constitution of Armenia, under which the president was entitled to immunity both during and after his term of office and could not be held accountable for actions initiated due to his status.
 
“Serzh Sargsyan is charged with alleged actions which according to the decision which led the investigating agency to the indictment of ex-president, were directly derived from his position,” the lawyer continued, adding that the criminal case against his client had been opened following just one person’s testimony.
 
Although Makinyan did not name this person due to confidentiality issues, the Armenian media has widely identified him as former minister of agriculture Sergo Karapetyan.
 
Other supporters see the legal action as related to wider geopolitical issues. Armen Ashotyan, the vice-chairman of Sargsyan’s Republican Party of Armenia, told IWPR that he believed the legal actions were an attempt to influence the future course of action over Nagorny-Karabakh. Pashinyan and Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev have held half-a-dozen talks over the last year.
 
“At first, they indicted former president Robert Kocharyan and put him in jail. Now they came after ex-president Serzh Sargsyan,” he said. “These are the people who made an enormous contribution to the victory in the Karabakh war.
 
“We see it as an attempt to forcibly oust from politics the people who could raise their voices against any possible concessions made by the authorities on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. We have doubts about Pashinyan’s vague agreements with Aliyev. Therefore, we believe that it is not just a simple legal case and it is linked to the policy of new government on the Karabakh issue,” he concluded.
 
Those on the other side of the political divide dismiss such accusations.
 
“The accusation against Serzh Sargsyan completely fits into the process of combating corruption. This is an entirely legal process,” says Lilit Makunts, a lawmaker from the ruling My Step party.
 
Representatives of Bright Armenia also see no signs of political persecution in Sargsyan’s case. One of its leading lawmakers, Edmon Marukyan, said that the Republican Party was trying to politicise the criminal process.
 
“They do not talk about the charges or the facts proving that everything Serzh Sargsyan is accused of did not take place. Instead, they talk about political persecution or authoritarianism. Where is political persecution here? There is not a single sign of authoritarianism. Serzh Sarsgyan is free to be engaged in political activity and so are his associates,” Marukyan told IWPR.
 
Armenian National Congress deputy chairman Levon Zurabyan said he believed that the alleged million-dollar theft was just the start of potential transgressions.
 
“This is only a minor episode in his corruption schemes. There are larger cases that we frequently spoke about before, he continued, noting allegations around a 300 million dollar debt accrued to Russian energy giant Gazprom he claimed were connected to election interference. Zurabyan told IWPR that Sargsyan should prepare to spend the rest of his life in prison.
 
Analysts note that legal action against former political leaders was not unusual in such circumstances, but warned that a delicate balance had to be maintained to avoid politicising the issue.
 
Director of the Caucasus Institute Alexander Iskandaryan said that the prosecution was part of an expected transition.
 
“This is a political process that follows revolutions. The punishment of former government officials is very popular. It’s hard to imagine that the investigators themselves decided to initiate legal proceedings against the ex-presidents,” Iskandaryan told IWPR.
 
However, others argued for caution when it came to legal cases concerning a former president.
 
“This process will definitely acquire a political shade or resonance,” said Avetik Ishkhanyan, chairman of the Helsinki Committee of Armenia. “Politicians of this rank have their supporters who, for obvious reasons, will politicise the process, even if this process is purely legal.”
 
He said that apparent pressure laid by some politicians and their supporters on the judicial figures who took decisions on Kocharyan’s pre-trial detention were of particular concern.
 
“A criminal case has been opened against Judge David Grigoryan, who decided to release Kocharyan, but those judges who rejected his lawyers’ plea for changing the preventive measure were praised by supporters of the authorities. This is an alarming sign of pressure exerted on the judiciary,” Ishkhanyan concluded.
 
Noting the allegation that the Sargsyan case had been opened on the basis of a single testimony, Ishkhanyan underlined that the Armenian public wanted former officials to be investigated, but stressed that fair process needed to be followed.
 
 “People accuse them of corruption, but what should become the ground for initiating criminal investigation – facts and evidence or our assumptions?” he asked.
 
 
 

Armenia Wine’s 2019 achievements and 2020 priorities

Armenia Wine’s 2019 achievements and 2020 priorities

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 13:22,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS. The Armenia Wine Company, which started in 2006, has become a symbol of modern Armenian winemaking thanks to its award-winning wines, exemplary vineyards and state-of-the-art technologies. Summing up the exciting results achieved in 2019, the company is embarking on a new investment project in 2020.

21st Century Vineyards and Organic Viticulture

Armenia Wine Company began cultivating organic viticulture in 2017, emphasizing the importance of environmental protection, as well as honesty towards consumers and employees.

As part of a plan to expand its own vineyards, in 2019 the company planted another 14 hectares of organic vineyards in the village of Sasunik in Aragatsotn marz (province), thus bringing the overall area of its vineyards to 74 hectares.

Armenia Wine products are made from Armenian and European grape varieties purchased from four regions of the country. In 2019, two more varieties were added to the 15 varieties already cultivated – organic Siran and Petit Verdaux. In 2019, the company procured more than 7,000 metric tons of grapes from some 600 suppliers. 

Wins and partners in the international market

The best presentation of Armenian wines in the international market has been one of Armenia Wine’s most important missions since the very first day of its establishment. It cooperates with companies in more than 26 countries showcasing the delicate aroma of Armenian terroir in the Russian, Belarusian, Czech, American, Canadian, French and other markets.

Being one of the largest wine exporters, in 2019 the company obtained six new partners and increased total export volumes by 25%. Last year, the company participated in 5 international exhibitions, winning 27 medals for its high-quality wines – 5 gold, 6 silver and 16 bronze. 

Achievements in the local market

Since its inception 11 years ago, Armenia Wine has become one of the most recognized and beloved wine brands  in Armenia. In 2019, the company’s products were on sale in over 7,000 sales and service centers across Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, with sales volume surging by over 35%.

Wine tourism center

In 2019 the winery hosted more than 7,000 tourists from 15 countries, positioning itself as one of the wine tourism centers in Armenia.

Visitors to the winery were not only shown the products of Armenia Wine, but also were told the history and culture of Armenian winemaking and the art of wine tasting.  The Hazarashen wine store in the winery offers visitors  Armenia Wine products at factory prices.

The year of 2019 was also marked for the company by the reopening of the Nazani national restaurant, along with interesting approaches in  the tasting and  professional halls.

Throughout the past year, the company organized a number of educational programs in the field of wine-making, designed to train local specialists.

Upcoming programs

Armenia Wine, as the first winery to have introduced innovative and modern technologies is now entering a new phase of development.

Promoting the development of organic agriculture in Armenia, the company introduces modern agricultural technologies and cultural formats that are used today in the most developed countries. In 2020, the winery will expand the process of planting new vineyards, paying particular attention to the Armenian and European varieties already under cultivation by adding Armenian native varieties.

Continuing its specialized education programs and the exchange of practical knowledge with the involvement of the best international experts, in 2020 Armenia Wine will continue cooperation with rural economies to obtain high quality grapes.

The company will also continue to invest in gastrotourism. A unique wine museum will be created, where visitors from Armenia and abroad will have the opportunity to get acquainted with the 6,000 year-old history of Armenian wines. 

In 2020, Armenia Wine will unveil a new and unique product, Port wine, and will present to the local and international markets a brand new French-style manufactured Armenian cognac with the flavor of Armenian terroir.

The company takes pride in announcing its success in the world markets. Armenia Wine’s products have their worthy place among the highest quality wines with the most demanding buyers in the world.

Elizabeth Stanton, Actress and Television Host, Travels to Armenia for “Impact Humanity Television and Film Festival”

EIN News
Nov 2 2019

Elizabeth Stanton, Actress and TV Host

“Volunteering in different parts of the world has grounded me and helps me appreciate how fortunate I am to be able to travel and give back.” –Elizabeth Stanton

LOS ANGELES, CA, UNITED STATES, November 2, 2019 /EINPresswire.com/ — Elizabeth Stanton, Actress and Television Host, has certainly had a productive year so far. After travelling throughout Europe on a talent scouting tour for CW’s “The Big Stage,” the starlet recently flew to Yerevan, Armenia October 14th-18th to take part in the “Impact Humanity Television and Film Festival.” Stanton was asked to a part of the film festival involving human rights, and she traveled to Armenia with co-founders Dean Cain and Montel Williams to present awards.

“Volunteering in different parts of the world has really grounded me and helps me appreciate how fortunate I am to be able to travel and give back,” explains Stanton, “After volunteering in Armenia this year, I learned about the genocide, which opened my eyes to other atrocities around the world that continue to this day. I was honored to be on the committee whose mission is solely to promote human rights.”

During the festival, Stanton spoke with Armenia’s Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, and also met with the President of Armenia, Armen Sarkissian. Both of these meetings were regarding the importance of human rights, the importance of the film festival, and how to use production and films like the ones featured in the festival to show human rights violations around the world and what people can do to help.

This trip was nothing out of the ordinary for Stanton. She has always had a curiosity for new cultures and a passion for making a difference in people’s lives. At age 12, she was feeding children in the slums of Nairobi; at age 13 she was helping give hearing aids to children in Vietnam; at age 15 she was bringing propane stoves to families in Nicaragua with co-presenters Dean Cain and Montel Williams, their first of many humanitarian trips together. Since then, she’s been a huge advocate of promoting human rights. She has gone back to different parts of Africa to feed children, she has been a spokesperson for recognizing the Armenian Genocide, and has called attention to the worldwide crisis of anti-Semitism. Her 16th birthday was a fundraiser for “The Marine Toys for Tots” and she has since been a spokesperson for them. The “Impact Humanity Television and Film Festival” supports all the things that she believes in and is so proud to be a part of, bringing to the forefront so many humanitarian issues that face us today.

“I have been so lucky to have had travel be such a significant part of my life,” concludes Stanton, “Travelling helps me learn lessons I will never forget, and also adds value to the journey of my every-day life. These lessons are priceless in the bigger picture of my life.”

Aurora DeRose
Michael Levine Media
+1 310-396-6090