Armenpress: Armenian FM to attend Eastern Partnership Foreign Ministers meeting in Luxembourg

Armenian FM to attend Eastern Partnership Foreign Ministers meeting in Luxembourg

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YEREVAN, OCTOBER 14, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Zohrab Mnatsakanyan will visit Luxembourg to participate in the October 15 EU Eastern Partnership Foreign Ministers meeting, the foreign ministry said.

The Eastern Partnership (EaP) ministerial meeting will bring together EU foreign ministers and their counterparts from the six Eastern Partnership countries (Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine), as well as key stakeholders involved in the region, the European Council said in a press release.

The High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Federica Mogherini will chair the meeting.

The meeting will provide an opportunity to resume the political dialogue between the EU and its Eastern partners.

Foreign ministers will also take stock of the implementation of the partnership’s commitments, including the priorities identified as the ’20 deliverables for 2020′.

The latter were adopted at the last Eastern Partnership Summit in November 2017 with a view to achieve stronger economy, governance, connectivity and society.

The meeting will also be the opportunity to discuss first ideas to mark the 10th anniversary of the Eastern Partnership due in May next year.

Ahead of this meeting, EU ministers exchanged views on the Eastern Partnership at the Foreign Affairs Council meeting in July 2018.

They reaffirmed the EU’s commitment to the region, to the reform agenda and to the priorities identified as the ’20 deliverables for 2020′. They confirmed the relevance of the tailored-made and differentiated approach and underlined the need to step up reforms in several areas. 

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan


Arto Tuncboyaciyan visits Hayastan All-Armenian Fund

News.am, Armenia
Oct 15 2018
Arto Tuncboyaciyan visits Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Arto Tuncboyaciyan visits Hayastan All-Armenian Fund

17:32, 15.10.2018
                  

YEREVAN. – Hayastan All-Armenian Fund welcomed American-Armenian musician Arto Tuncboyaciyan on Monday, October 15.

He considers himself a part of All-Armenian family and he is ready to become the envoy of the Fund, thus promoting the concept of national unification.

The executive director of the Fund Haykak Arshamyan introduced the scope of Fund’s activities, as well as the projects for Armenia and Artsakh to Tuncboyaciyan. He also assured the musician that the Fund’s open and effective functioning that will win the public’s trust.

The musician also suggested enrolling youngsters from Diaspora thus turning the Fund into a generator of innovative ideas as well as expanding the projects in eco-tourism, medicine and culture. He also emphasized the importance of opening Creation centers: the Fund will put a big emphasis on IT startups.  

During its 26 years of operation the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund has implemented more than $350 million US dollars’ worth of projects in Armenia and Artsakh, i.e. more than 1,100 big projects in two Armenian republics. The Fund has 700,000 donors and contributors from Armenia, Artsakh and Diaspora. 

Music: Tenor Mihran Aghajanyan to perform first time in Armenia with “Tosca” opera

Panorama, Armenia
Oct 13 2018
Culture 17:35 13/10/2018 Armenia

World known tenor, pianist and conductor Mihran Aghajanyan will perform first time in Armenia, playing his part in “Tosca” opera for the Armenian audience. As the press service at the Armenian National Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet reports, the renowned tenor will play Cavaradossi in Tosca on October 17 at the stage of Yerevan Opera Theatre.

Born into a family of musicians, Mihran Aghajanyan studied piano at the Rostov music school and took his first vocal training by the well-known Belarus tenor Vladimir Eknadiosov. He was awarded the Grand Prix in the 2010 All-Russian Vocal Competition in Saint Petersburg, the Audience Choice Award in the 2010 Grand-Prix of St. Petersburg Competition, and the first prize in the 2011 Elena Obraztsova Competition.

Mihran Aghajanyan is the founder and principal conductor of the Saint Petersburg Youth Symphony Orchestra. He has composed his own works, including the Armenian Ballade for Piano and Orchestra, and has successfully stepped in as stage director in various productions.

Aghajanyan d is currently devoted to building his singing career. He mastered his skills with Renata Scotto and Giuseppe Sabatini at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia Opera Studio and was invited by Placido Domingo to join LA Opera’s Domingo-Colburn-Stein Young Artist Program. He made his operatic debut in 2012 with the Mariinsky Theatre in Saint Petersburg as Moralès in Carmen.

Azerbaijan violated ceasefire regime 150 times last week

Categories
Artsakh
Official
Region

The Azerbaijani side violated the ceasefire regime nearly 150 times in Artsakh-Azerbaijan contact line during the period of September 30-October 6 firing over 1000 different caliber bullets in the direction of Armenian border guards.

The press service of the Defense Ministry of Artsakh informed that Defense Army front line units continue to confidently carry out combat duty, strictly respecting the ceasefire regime.

Armenian MFA: Blame-shifting by an aggressor is unacceptable

MediaMax, Armenia
Sept 28 2018
Armenian MFA: Blame-shifting by an aggressor is unacceptable
Yerevan/Mediamax/. Azerbaijan is refusing to settle the Karabakh
conflict peacefully and conducts regular military actions at the
border with Armenia and on the Line of Contact with Artsakh, Head of
International Organizations Department at Armenian MFA Vahram Kazhoyan
said at the UN General Assembly session in response to the speech by
the head of Azerbaijani delegation.
“It is unacceptable when an aggressor is shifting the blame onto
others to play the victim,” said Kazhoyan.
He emphasized that “the only threat to regional security is
Azerbaijan, whose citizens traveled to Middle East in large numbers to
join terrorist organizations”.
“Those people now announce they return to fight against Artsakh. It
happened in April 2016, when Azerbaijan realized a large-scale attack
on the civilian population of Artsakh,” added Vahram Kazhoyan.

Music: Postcard from Yerevan

STRAD
Sept 17 2018

Cellists from around the world descended on the Armenian capital in June for the Khachaturian International Competition. Tom Stewart reports from its thought-provoking final round

Jonathan Swensen

Its streets of pink stone thronged with vines and shaded by trees, Yerevan sits at the foot of Mount Ararat, an extinct volcano more than 5,000 metres tall and the supposed resting place of Noah’s Ark. Although the mountain was lost to Turkey shortly after the infamous genocide of 1918, Ararat’s distinctive shape is depicted on the stamp added to travellers’ passports at the border. Armenia is a country proud of its powerful national symbols and – along with Ararat, apricots, the world’s oldest Christian tradition and a unique 39-character alphabet – composer Aram Khachaturian (1903–78) ranks highly among them.

Beyond the ubiquitous Sabre Dance and the Adagio (both from his ballet Gayane) that features on the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, much of Khachaturian’s output remains obscure to most outside the former USSR. Soviet audiences and censors alike appreciated its synthesis of Armenian folk elements and muscular Socialist realism, but others dismissed the composer as a puppet apologist for Stalinist cultural policy. His conservatism has been reassessed in recent years, however, with the composer likened to a kind of Vaughan Williams of the Caucasus.

Now in its 14th year, the Khachaturian International Competition is a celebration of the composer’s work, open to violinists, cellists, pianists, singers and conductors on a rotating five-year schedule. The four finalists in this year’s competition – for cello – had been selected from sixteen in the first round (reduced to eight in the second) and played either Khachaturian’s Cello Concerto or his single-movement Concerto-Rhapsody in Yerevan’s aptly named Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall. Sergey Smbatyan conducted the  Armenian State Symphony Orchestra, a group that evolved just over a decade ago from the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia and which now acts as an ambassador across Europe for the country’s unjustly overlooked classical music culture.

Khachaturian’s conservatism has been reassessed in recent years

First among the finalists was 30-year-old Russian Fedor Amosov. After the 23-minute Concerto-Rhapsody’s orchestral introduction – a serpentine melody that emerges from a haze of horn calls and staccato cymbal crashes – comes a long solo passage for the cello, with its opening octave leap lent an operatic élan by Amosov’s arresting portamento. In the feverish passagework that followed, the cello sounded like a Heldentenor in the midst of a particularly fraught mad scene. Although a little gloominess or introspection of tone might have helped sustain the drama as Amosov hurtled towards the bottom of his C string, the disparate nature of Khachaturian’s phrases here makes stitching them into  a compelling narrative hard work. Amosov gave an especially tight and stylish account of the long and lavishly ornamented melody that twists its way through the work’s central and most obviously folk-inspired section. Alongside its ferocious technical demands, the Concerto-Rhapsody’s most challenging aspect is its rather patchwork nature, with abrupt jumps between different ideas. Amosov would have benefited from forming these sentences into paragraphs, even if the finished message still remained elusive. Making the piece sound coherent and satisfying requires a certain pig-headedness from the soloist, and while Amosov’s account was sophisticated and often thrilling, he perhaps allowed himself to become lost among the composer’s obfuscations.

French–Russian Rustem Khamidullin, 29, was the only finalist to choose Khachaturian’s better-known Cello Concerto over the Concerto-Rhapsody showpiece. While the bravura flashiness of the latter must be hard to resist, the former is a more considered and imaginative work that, across its three movements, offers the soloist far greater resources from which to construct a persuasive interpretation. It is worth noting that the Cello Concerto was written just two years before the publication by the Communist Party of the 1948 Zhdanov Decree, in which Khachaturian was denounced alongside Shostakovich, Prokofiev, Myaskovsky and others for writing ‘anti-popular’ music of ‘excessive individualism’. Shortly afterwards, Khachaturian issued an apology: ‘I want to warn those comrades,’ he wrote, ‘who, like myself, hoped that their music, which is not understood by the people today, would be understood by future generations tomorrow. This is a fatal theory.’

Happily, Khamidullin’s performance embraced the broad arc of the 33-minute Concerto and, in its pacing, demonstrated a mature understanding of the underlying architecture. His sound, for the most part suitably rugged, brightened during pacey, purposeful passages of bariolage in the first movement before recovering its brawn in a descending series of bold multiple-stops. All three movements feature long sections in which a particular pitch is repeated and embellished in the manner of a monodic folk song. These provided opportunities for bold characterisation and transformations of tone that were sometimes missed, especially in the slow second movement. Khamidullin’s elastic detaché and tightly clipped acciaccaturas made for a bounding finale, however, which culminated in a dramatic and impressively well-tuned passage of octaves.

Jury chairman Suren Bagratuni (left) with Chae Won Hong (centre) and Rustem Khamidullin (right)

The following evening, South Korean–American Chae Won Hong’s rendition of the Concerto-Rhapsody’s opening cadenza only underlined Khachaturian’s occasional structural idiosyncrasies and the challenges they pose for a lucid performance. That said, while Hong, 27, played with a beautifully stentorian sound in the ornamented strains of ‘Armenian’ melody, detail in the faster passages was often scrappy. And with shaky intonation and a handful of wrong notes, speed here  came very much at the expense of clarity (a recording of the piece by Rostropovich conducted by the composer falls at times into a similar trap). Flashes of deeply thoughtful or strikingly dramatic playing suggested Hong’s technique was, on this occasion at least, getting in her way. Frenetic syncopations in the Concerto-Rhapsody’s final minutes help wrest both soloist and orchestra from any previous dead ends, but Hong struggled to recover sufficiently from her previous lapses of persuasiveness to take full advantage of this reprieve.

Last came Danish 21-year-old Jonathan Swensen. Although his first entry came without the theatre of Amosov’s, the bars that followed signalled an outstanding ability to shift convincingly between the disparate elements that make the opening so challenging. Swensen played with the  same muscular open-heartedness throughout the section, his performance alone making sense of it for the audience. Expertly placed fingers and a supple right arm ensured a smooth transition between sustained lines and passages of explosive spiccato, while Swensen’s obvious rapport with the orchestra and conductor was a testament to the clarity of his ideas and his skill in communicating them. It might just have been because this was its third performance of the piece in two days, but the orchestra sounded by turns more brooding and more brilliant than it had done before. A pizzicato countermelody just before the climax was discreet and polite under Hong’s fingers, whereas Swensen’s strings snapped against his fingerboard and propelled him headlong into the blaring horns.

In the final restatement of the theme, Swensen’s high notes were taut and full of menace, and brought the work to an exhilarating close. No one who had heard all four performances could have been surprised when honorary jury chairman and celebrated Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki announced that Swensen had won the $15,000 first prize. Second prize, worth $10,000, went to Amosov, with the $5,000 third prize shared between Hong and Khamidullin. After a reprise performance of the Concerto-Rhapsody, Swensen was whisked off to dinner with the competition’s jury and trustees, as well as its patron Nouneh Sarkissian, who sat between the cellist and her husband Armen, the president of Armenia. ‘This is a small country,’ he said, turning to Swenson and raising his glass of apricot vodka, ‘but one that has created many great artists. You will always be welcome in Armenia, as if it were your second home.’

ALL PHOTOS: KHACHATURIAN INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION

The cases of overthrowing the constitutional order and 10 victims were joined. Chief of the SIS

  • 30.08.2018
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  • Armenia:
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The head of the Special Investigation Service of Armenia, Sasun Khachatryan, responded to the proposal of the second president of the Republic of Armenia, Robert Kocharyan, regarding the removal of the secrecy of the preliminary investigation in the March 1 criminal case. In a conversation with journalists after the government session, Sasun Khachatryan emphasized that there is no procedure for declassifying the preliminary investigation. 


“Can you imagine what will happen if the secrecy of the preliminary investigation is revealed in its entirety? There are people who cooperate with the preliminary investigation, provide operative data. “Can you imagine what will happen if all this is revealed,” Khachatryan emphasized, Armenpress reports.


He clarified that this confidentiality refers only to the preliminary investigation stage. “During the trial stage, the case is examined in court in the open, if it does not contain a state secret, on the basis of which the trial can be limited to a certain extent. And the confidentiality of the preliminary investigation comes from the interests of the case and the interests of the persons involved in the case, that’s why I don’t think it’s realistic to make such a demand,” said the head of the CSI.


“The cases (overthrow of the constitutional order and 10 victims – ed.) have been joined, the proceedings are one. I did not listen to Kocharyan’s speech, where he says that the murders are not revealed, I don’t know where he got such information. Everything is being done, it will be done, I fully hope that the case, including those who committed murders, will be revealed,” he said.


When asked if there are new documents in the “March 1” case, he answered: “Yes, there are new documents, but I cannot make them public.”

Azerbaijan seeks to arrest Instagram playboy Dan Bilzerian through Interpol for Artsakh visit

Category
Society

A day after internet personality and entrepreneur Dan Bilzerian departed from Armenia, Azerbaijan ‘s authorities launched a criminal case against the playboy millionaire known as the King of Instagram.

Azerbaijan launched the criminal proceedings against Bilzerian for visiting Artsakh, the country’s prosecutor’s office said.

Dan Bilzerian arrived to Armenia on August 27 with his brother Adam and his father Paul.

The entrepreneur, who is also an actor, was granted Armenian citizenship and then signed up for the military as required by law.

During the trip, the Armenian-American internet personality and professional poker player, who is known as the King of Instagram, visited Artsakh. Bilzerian, a gun enthusiast, fired various large caliber weapons, including an RPG, at a local shooting range. After arriving back to Yerevan he visited the Armenian Genocide memorial and then left the country.

Azerbaijan has requested Interpol to declare Bilzerian internationally wanted.

However, this move contradicts an earlier statement from the foreign ministry of Azerbaijan.

Hikmat Hajiyev, the Azeri foreign ministry spokesperson, has earlier said that he refuses to comment on Bilzerian’s visit, dismissing it as “unserious”.

Armenia’s Defense Minister discusses regional security issues with US Ambassador

Aysor, Armenia
Aug 20 2018
Read Aysor.am inTelegram

Armenia’s Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan received today US Ambassador to Armenia Richard Mills and newly appointed US Military Attaché, Colonel James Thomson, Ministry’s press service reports.

During the meeting issues on Armenian-American cooperation in defense sphere were discussed. The parties attached special importance to the conduction of events in the sidelines of 15th anniversary of Kansas-Armenia National Guard Partnership in September this year.

The sides also referred to other issues of Armenian-American cooperation in the sphere of defense and issues on regional security.

At the request of the US side, the defense minister presented the current situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani state border.

Asbarez: Arach Arajamugh, Vaghuh Van

The ribbon-cutting ceremony in the Arajamugh village

BY VAN DER-MEGERDICHIAN

Upon returning from our journey to Artsakh, news of another soldier falling in defense of our country reached us.

With initial sentiments of sorrow, we continued to traverse down Mt. Mrav thinking of the sacrifices made by our fallen heroes, the likes of Garod Megerdichian, Garo Kahkejian, and many others. While the efforts of yesterday’s martyrs in their painstaking efforts and ultimate devotion to our cause should never be understated or trivialized, we must not overlook those in the front lines today whose relentless efforts serve a constant notice that the struggle for our lands is incessant and unfortunately bourgeoning the ranks of those losing their lives for our homeland.

Day after day, week after week, month after month, the news of a new soldier dying at the front lines in Artsakh has made headlines. And day after day, week after week, month after month, our reaction has been the same – virtually non-existent as we have become desensitized to the fact that Armenians are dying while life goes on for the rest of us.

However, once again, it is the Armenian Revolutionary Federation that continues to reaffirm its pledge to stay true to its goals. It prioritizes and spearheads the long battle that we, as Armenians, must continue to undertake and the ARF Eastern Region’s initiative in Arajamugh is a testament to that and ensures that lives are not being lost in vain. The project aims to repopulate the village of Arajamugh, which lies on the border of Artsakh, Azerbaijan, and Iran. While the village is small, the magnitude of such an initiative is anything but.

AYF Eastern US interns with the benefactors at the entrance of Arajamugh

Arajamugh reaffirms the ARF’s determination to remain committed to its ideals. War crimes and human rights violations continue to go unnoticed in the area, in fact are state-sponsored and encouraged by the family-run oil-dictatorship. The international community does not care, the OSCE Minsk group does not care, the corrupt dictatorship of Azerbaijan does not care.

Therefore, it is up to us to care. If we do not fend for ourselves, no one will. Representing a tiny country located in the South Caucasus, with more people living outside the state than in it, it is our duty to care. We must rely on our strengths and only our strengths since it is evident that the same ideals that the international community champions are not acknowledged in Talish or in Mataghis. Arajamugh shows not only Azerbaijan, but the international community that we are here to stay and that Artsakh is a country, and not a conflict. By investing in the land itself and its people, we will prove to the world that Artsakh is a long-term investment and that Artsakh is Armenian.

Our goal, aside from our irredentist ideals includes establishing a prosperous Armenia. Arajamugh and the efforts surrounding it teaches the world that justice will prevail. It is to teach Azerbaijan that retaliation, retribution, and redemption is not only best served by recouping Shahumian and Fizuli, but also by developing and reinforcing our interior. Arajamugh is one small taste of material and tangible revenge. It is revenge for the soldiers that struggled to liberate our lands. It is to avenge our fallen, those who have fought and died and continue to fight and die for every centimeter of soil that we will toil upon and use to cultivate our state, the state we call Artsakh.

There is work to be done and Arajamugh is a start. It is a reaction we can be proud of. By using this initiative as the cornerstone, new Arajamughs can be built, cultivated, and reinforced so that we can continue to prove to the world that Artsakh is not a land of rich history, but a rich future. Such efforts, under the leadership of the ARF, revisit and revitalize the visions of Njdeh and Andranik before us. It is only through our effort, our victory, and our triumph that Artsakh will see peace, prominence, and prosperity.