Armenia parliament majority: CC judges who are politically influenced will not approve reforms we are initiating

News.am, Armena

12:53, 11.03.2020
                  

Some of the judges of the Constitutional Court (CC) are obviously politically influenced by some political groups, parties, or individuals. Lilit Makunts, head of the majority My Step faction in the National Assembly of Armenia, stated this during the YES campaign—in the forthcoming referendum on constitutional amendments—in Goris town.

According to her, the CC judges do this openly and by voicing political texts. “They do it in spite of the fact that the judge has no right to engage in politics and has no right to voice political texts,” Makunts said. “Taking into account also that the Armenian government has initiated a large agenda for judicial reforms which implies that the judicial system [in the country] should be cleaned, changed, and its work should become effective, naturally, those CC judges who are politically influenced will not approve that reforms’ agenda we are initiating.”

She stressed that the judiciary in Armenia should be independent so that if any force tries to rig the elections in the future, the CC, which the people will change by saying “yes” in the forthcoming referendum, will not correct any fraud.

Nicolas Jaar’s Other People will curate part of Armenian festival Urvakan

Resident Advisor
March 5 2020
 
 
Nicolas Jaar’s Other People will curate part of Armenian festival Urvakan
 
Words / Steph Lee
Thu / 5 Mar 2020

More than 66 acts have also been added to the May festival, including SOPHIE, Juliana Huxtable, AYA and more.

Urvakan Festival has revealed a new curator and its second wave of acts.

The Armenian experimental event, running May 5th to 9th in Yerevan, will host more than 100 acts from around the globe, partially selected by guest curators. Nicolas Jaar‘s Other People is the latest to be announced, adding onto the previously outlined cast of curators, including Rabih Beaini and Club Chai.

Urvakan has also unveiled 66 new acts. Highlights include SOPHIE (who will perform live), Juliana Huxtable, AYA (FKA LOFT), Hieroglyphic Being, Rian Treanor, Zuli, Lucrecia Dalt, LYZZA and . They’ll join the existing lineup of Madteo, MSYLMA, Shackleton and many more.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/05/2020

                                        Thursday, 
Armenian Parliament Approves Asset Seizures
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and members of his cabinet at a 
parliament session in Yerevan, December 4, 2019.
Armenia’s parliament passed in the first reading on Thursday a government bill 
allowing authorities to confiscate private properties and other assets deemed to 
have been acquired illegally.
Under the package of legal amendments drafted by the Armenian government late 
last year, prosecutors will be able to investigate individuals in case of having 
“sufficient grounds to suspect” that the market value of their assets exceeds 
their “legal incomes” by more than 25 million drams ($52,400).
Should the prosecutors find such discrepancies they can ask courts to 
nationalize those assets even if their owners are not found guilty of corruption 
or other criminal offenses. The latter will have to prove the legality of their 
holdings if they are to retain them.
During a parliament debate on Wednesday, Justice Minister Rustam Badasian 
insisted that corruption suspects, notably current and former state officials, 
are the main targets of the the bill portrayed by the government as a major 
anti-corruption measure. The authorities will also use it against crime figures 
and carriers of “criminal subculture,” he said.
“Nobody beyond this circle can fall under the jurisdiction of this law except in 
cases where assets were artificially registered in a particular person’s name,” 
Badasian told lawmakers.
The minister thus sought to allay fears that many well-to-do Armenians will now 
risk losing their properties. He specifically ruled out the confiscation of 
assets acquired with remittances received from abroad.
The bill was tentatively backed by 100 members of the 132-seat National 
Assembly. They included deputies from the ruling My Step bloc and the opposition 
Bright Armenia Party (LHK).
Still, LHK leader Edmon Marukian voiced some misgivings about the effectiveness 
of the measure. He said that corrupt officials who registered their wealh in 
their relatives’ name may well be let off the hook. Marukian said his party will 
propose a number of amendments when the bill is debated in the second reading.
The opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) also said that it will propose 
changes to the bill. BHK deputies abstained in Thursday’s parliament vote.
Other critics of the government have challenged the legality of the government 
plans for asset seizures. They also claim that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian is 
intent on a far-reaching “redistribution of property” in the country.
Pashinian has denied having such plans. He insisted in December that the planned 
asset forfeiture is essential for rooting out corruption and will not be 
arbitrary.
Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian openly objected to the bill at the time, 
however. Speaking at a cabinet meeting, the former banker said he is worried 
that it could scare away investors and lead to capital flight from Armenia.
Pashinian’s Party Hires ‘Former Regime Backers’ For Referendum
        • Astghik Bedevian
Armenia -- Campaign banners urging Armenians to vote for constitutional changes 
sought by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, March 5, 2020.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party has been criticized by 
some of its political allies for hiring several hundred people previously linked 
to Armenia’s former authorities to conduct the upcoming referendum on 
controversial constitutional amendments sought by it.
Under Armenian law, the two rival camps campaigning for and against the draft 
amendments are each allowed to name two of the seven members of some 2,000 
precinct election commissions that will handle the April 5 referendum in polling 
stations across the country. They both practically filled these quotas by last 
weekend’s legal deadline.
It emerged that more than 500 commission members appointed by Civil Contract, 
which leads the “Yes” campaign, had already been chosen by the former ruling 
Republican Party (HHK) and its former coalition partners to sit on election 
commissions formed for December 2018 parliamentary elections. Critics claim that 
at least some of these individuals were involved in vote irregularities that had 
marred previous Armenian elections.
Vahagn Hovakimian, a leading Civil Contract member, dismissed the criticism on 
Thursday. He said that the “Yes” campaign has carried out background checks on 
those commission members and found that only one of them was implicated in 
electoral fraud. That person has been disqualified from the referendum process 
as a result, he said.
Hovakimian also argued that the 2018 elections, held six months after the 
Pashinian-led “Velvet Revolution,” were widely recognized as free and fair.
A senior representative of former President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian 
National Congress (HAK) party dismissed this explanation, insisting that 
Pashinian’s political team has recruited people notorious for a “very dubious 
behavior.”
“People who were tainted during [past] electoral processes must never again deal 
with [new] electoral processes,” Armen Khachatrian told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service. “The authorities should have been very careful.”
Khachatrian complained in this regard that only 180 of some 1,200 people 
nominated by the HAK have been appointed to the referendum commissions by the 
“Yes” campaign.
Hovakimian countered that Civil Contract could not have picked more HAK nominees 
because of the limited number of commission seats. Also, he said, there are far 
fewer commission members representing other parties supporting the proposed 
constitutional changes.
The amendments call for ending the powers of the chairman and six other judges 
of Armenia’s seven-member Constitutional Court who had been installed by former 
governments. Pashinian has repeatedly accused them of maintaining links to the 
“corrupt former regime” and obstructing judicial reforms.
Pashinian’s political opponents and other critics say that he is simply seeking 
to fill the country’s highest court with his loyalists. They have also denounced 
the referendum as unconstitutional.
Tsarukian-Backed Mayor Denies Charges
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Abovian Mayor Vahagn Gevorgian speaks to reporters, March 5, 2020.
A town mayor linked to businessman Gagik Tsarukian’s opposition Prosperous 
Armenia Party (BHK) on Thursday strongly denied criminal charges brought against 
him earlier this week.
Mayor Vahagn Gevorgian of Abovian, a town 15 kilometers north of Yerevan, was 
charged with criminal negligence. Prosecutors said that he deliberately failed 
to stop a private company from “seizing” municipal land in Abovian and illegally 
constructing apartment blocks there.
Gevorgian admitted that the company, which is part of Tsarukian’s Multi Group 
conglomerate, occupied a 2,000-square-meter plot of land and lacked other 
permits to build a residential complex in his community. But he argued that the 
Abovian municipality twice fined it and suspended the construction last year.
Speaking to journalists at the construction site, Gevorgian said the 
municipality did not move to tear down the incomplete buildings because Multi 
Group formally asked it to legalize them in accordance with an Armenian law. He 
also stressed that Tsarukian’s company plans to build around 1,000 apartments in 
what would be the first affordable housing project implemented in Abovian since 
Soviet times.
A spokesman for Armenia’s Office of the Prosecutor-General, Gor Abrahamian, 
insisted, however, that Gevorgian was obliged to take tougher measures against 
the real estate developer.
Another law-enforcement agency, the Investigative Committee, formally indicted 
Gevorgian on Monday despite the fact that the Armenian police investigated the 
redevelopment project and cleared the mayor of any wrongdoing last year.
The police inquiry was ordered by prosecutors in July 2019 one month after 
Gevorgian narrowly won reelection in a tightly contested mayoral vote. His main 
challenger was a candidate of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract 
party.
Pashinian personally campaigned for the pro-government candidate.Tensions 
between the prime minister’s political team and Tsarukian’s BHK, which is 
Armenia’s largest parliamentary opposition force, ran high during the mayoral 
race.
Gevorgian said he does not yet see political motives behind the charges leveled 
against him. “I think this is the result of a misunderstanding and everything 
will be sorted out,” said the Abovian mayor.
Abovian has long been a political and economic stronghold of Tsarukian.
Three Senior Members Quit Armenia’s Former Ruling Party
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - The ruling Republican Party of Armenia holds a congress in Yerevan, 
26Nov2016.
Three senior members of the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) have 
decided to leave it, citing disagreements with the HHK’s top leader, former 
President Serzh Sarkisian.
One of them, Lernik Aleksanian, on Thursday accused Sarkisian of turning the 
party into a “trade union” for “criminal-oligarchic” elements and practices.
“The party was invaded by many, many individuals who have nothing to do with the 
party’s ideology,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian. “They gained major positions 
within the party.”
Aleksanian is a former parliamentarian, while the two other dissenters, Razmik 
Martirosian and Firdus Zakarian, used to hold senior government posts. All three 
men have been members of the HHK’s decision-making Council.
In Aleksanian’s words, they terminated their membership in the HHK on January 13 
after trying unsuccessfully to trigger an internal debate on “mistakes” 
committed by the party. Sarkisian and his inner circle systematically obstructed 
such a debate despite acknowledging those mistakes, claimed Aleksanian.
He said they have specifically delayed the holding of what would be the first 
party congress since the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that toppled Sarkisian.
Armenia - Parliament deputy Lernik Aleksanian speaks to RFE/RL in Yerevan, 
23Feb2017.
“Good riddance,” HHK spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov said when asked to comment on 
the resignations and Aleksanian’s remarks. He refused to comment further.
Sarkisian provoked the revolution nearly two years ago with his attempt to 
extend his decade-long rule after transforming Armenia into a parliamentary 
republic. Massive street protests across the country that broke out in April 
2018 were fuelled by widespread popular disaffection with government corruption 
and cronyism.
Sarkisian as well as some of his relatives and associates were prosecuted on 
corruption charges after the dramatic regime change. The ex-president went on 
trial last week. He rejects the accusations leveled against him as politically 
motivated.
The HHK narrowly failed to clear the 5 percent vote threshold to enter the 
current Armenian parliament in snap general elections held in December 2018. It 
remains highly critical of Armenia’s current leadership and Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian in particular.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

The California Courier Online, March 5, 2020

1 –        Remnants of an Old

            Armenian Village Near Ankara

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         To Prevent Spread of Coronavirus, Armenia Partly Closes Iran Border

3 –        Expert Inspections Confirm Armenian Legacy

            of 8th Century ‘Jeweled Gun Of Sultan Mahmud I’

4-         Attorney Seepan Parseghian Files Supreme Court Amicus Brief

            to Recover Picasso Painting Sold during Holocaust

5-         Renowned researcher, historian, architectural expert

            Samvel Karapetyan passes away at 58

*****************************************

******************************************

1 –        Remnants of an Old

            Armenian Village Near Ankara

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

Argun Konuk, a 24-year-old Turkish travel and history enthusiast,
published a recent article about the Armenian village of Stanoz
located near Ankara.

Konuk reported that Stanoz was “once a prosperous Armenian village in
the Ottoman era, now, nothing but ruins and tombstones…. Old Armenian
manuscripts reveal that the first inhabitants of the village of Stanoz
came from Cilicia in the 15th century. As records show, the population
of Stanoz before World War I was 3142 people (668 families) and
consisted of Armenians only. Up until its abandonment, Stanoz remained
an Armenian-speaking settlement.”

The residents of the village of Stanoz were skilled in carpet weaving,
embroidery and leather processing. Furthermore, they produced fabric
from goat hair which was in high demand in Europe. The villagers were
also knowledgeable about agriculture, cattle-breeding and
construction.

Konuk also reported that unfortunately the only things that remain in
Stanoz now are the graveyard, a stone bridge, and ruins of an Armenian
Church. The damage was mostly caused by Turkish gravediggers or
treasure hunters. The size of the graveyard keeps shrinking as the
Turkish neighbors have been encroaching on the property.

Stanoz was mentioned in the journals of many travelers for centuries.
An 18th Century British military officer, Frederick Burnaby, reported
that during his visit to Stanoz, one of the Armenian priests told him
that Armenians of Stanoz live in peace with people who practice Islam
and Judaism.

Konuk also reported that “the well-known Turkish traveler Evliya
Celebi shared remarkable anecdotes in his journal about this village
after his visit in 1643. He spoke of Stanoz as a wealthy town with
impressive productivity. Furthermore, he shared that Stanoz had a
thousand dwellings, a big bazaar, a fully functioning Turkish bath and
even a laundromat.”

There were three religious buildings in Stanoz: Sourp Prgich Church,
Karasoun Manoug Church, and a Protestant Church. There were two
Armenian schools: Sourp Ghevontyan School with 140 male and 40 female
students and Lusignan School with 50 male and 35 female students.

Due to the Genocide and deportation of Armenians by Ottoman Turkey,
many Stanoz residents were either killed or fled the area leaving the
village as a ghost town.

The writer found that currently only three Armenians live in Stanoz.
Kevork Balabian, who was born in Stanoz, told Konuk: “Stanoz had 1200
households and a population of 7-8 thousand. Ottomans valued Stanoz a
lot. At the time, the Armenian population of Stanoz migrated to modern
cities such as Istanbul, Marseille and Beirut. Only my wife and I, who
came from Hatay, and our daughter live in the region. I go there often
as I have a farm and a vineyard. Some treasure hunters come there in
hopes of pillaging and finding some valuable artifacts but they are
afraid of me so they mostly leave. We have graves there and I still
look after them”

An old Turk told Kunuk: “We all grew up with Armenians, went to the
same schools. Back then if you were hungry, you could easily knock on
an Armenian’s door and ask for food and it was the same for them. We
did many things together. There was an Armenian doctor whose name was
Mihran Kiremitchi. Every single child who was born in this region owes
him so much as he cared for everyone and cured everyone’s child
regardless of ethnicity and social class. We never saw him asking for
money from anyone. And again, weddings, funerals, everything else, we
did together with the Armenians. We even celebrated religious holidays
together. They used to paint eggs and we used to sacrifice animals. We
miss them.”

An Armenian by the name of M. Suryan wrote in Aravod newspaper on
April 28, 1919: “Some of the houses of Armenian residents who were
exiled during World War I were looted and robbed. A considerable part
of Albanians and Bosnians resettled in these abandoned homes. The new
residents demolished many of the structures and provided firewood by
removing wooden pillars, floor-ceiling boards of many homes. Moreover,
instead of acquiring wood from the forest, they cut the fruit trees in
the gardens to warm up. The aftermath was appalling as this notable
village became dilapidated ruins. Gradz Kar, a small Armenian village,
which consisted of twenty houses, located an hour away from Stanoz,
also suffered the same fate.”

Konuk is highly offended that Turkish gravediggers have violated the
sanctity of the Armenian graves: “The graveyard is particularly in
such an abject condition that human bones are scattered around the
graves that are pillaged by the treasure hunters and many of the
tombstones are damaged. The tombstones are priceless. Each of them
represent historical importance, however, their current state is
heartbreaking. Even now after devastating centuries, there are still
many artifacts and historical objects lying around. For me the most
appalling thing was to see some human bones scattered around the
graves. In hopes of finding gold or other valuable goods, treasure
hunters dig the graves illegally and throw around the bones of the
Armenians who are resting there eternally. Undeniably, this is an
extreme case of disrespect.”

Konuk concluded his report with the following heart-warming words: “We
Turks lived with Armenians in peace for centuries and I believe this
place should carry the same importance as other Turkish cemeteries.
Regardless of ethnicity and religion, the Turkish state should have
taken measures to protect the memory of this village. Unfortunately,
the future of Stanoz seems bleak. It is quite sad to see that this old
and notable settlement completely vanished…. After five months of my
first visit, I decided to go there again and it shocked me to see that
many tombstones were missing! The Armenians of Stanoz were our kin.
Who knows what stories and secrets this settlement has to tell us.
Unfortunately we will never learn them.”

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2-         To Prevent Spread of Coronavirus, Armenia Partly Closes Iran Border

YEREVAN (Combined Sources)— Iran’s Deputy Health Minister Iraj
Harirchi said on Monday, February 24 that 12 people have died and up
to 61 have been infected with coronavirus in the country. Most of the
cases in Iran have been in Qom, a Shi’ite Muslim holy city 120
kilometers south of the capital Tehran.

On Tuesday, February 25, Harirchi announced that he had contracted
coronavirus and placed himself in isolation. Harirchi posted a video
on social media on Tuesday acknowledging he had caught the virus. The
news underscored widespread fears that the outbreak may have passed a
tipping point, before authorities had been able to gauge its full
extent.

Images of one of the country’s most senior public health officials
appearing sweaty and pale and acknowledging he had contracted the
disease left many Iranians deeply troubled and are likely to further
paralyze a county reeling from its rapid onset. In the short video,
Hirachi acknowledged that “many may get infected” echoing concerns
that have taken root in the rest of the Middle East, which is home to
millions of people living in densely packed refugee camps.

“I wanted to tell you that I got corona,” said Harirchi. “I had a
fever yesterday. The tests came back positive last night. I isolated
myself. Just a few moments ago, I was told that the final test came.
I’ll start taking medicine. Generally, I feel fine. I just felt a bit
tired, I had a fever, and it will drop.

“Be sure with the effort of the medical staff and ministry of health
headed by the [health minister] and with your support and the state
and military within the coming weeks, we’ll be victorious against this
virus.

“We’ll defeat corona. Be assured. I’m saying this deep from my heart.
This virus is democratic, and it doesn’t distinguish between poor and
rich or statesman and an ordinary citizen.

“Many might get infected, but we have enough effective medicine, take
care of yourselves. Take care of the nurses and doctors who work
heroically.”

Iran has become the regional focal point of fears surrounding
coronavirus. Neighboring states have largely shut their borders and
suspended pilgrimage routes. Schools and universities in many parts of
the country have been closed.

Armenia had partly closed its border with Iran and suspended flights
between the two neighboring states for two weeks on Monday, February
24 citing the need to guard against coronavirus.

Armenia closed its land border with Iran in the southern region of
Syunik and also suspending all air traffic between the two countries.

Furthermore, on February 24, Pashinyan convened a special meeting with
Armenia’s Commission for the Prevention of coronavirus to discuss the
preventative measures that the government had implemented thus far.

Pashinyan made clear that only passenger traffic would be affected by
the closure of the Armenian-Iranian border, cargo transportation would
continue as usual. However, the PM added that a “special control
regime over drivers,” would be implemented. Moreover, Armenian
citizens currently in Iran who want to return to Armenia are also
exempt from the travel restrictions.

Armenia reported its first coronavirus infection on Sunday, March 1 in
a citizen returning from Iran on a special flight, Pashinyan said in a
post on Facebook.

The 29-year-old man went to a doctor because he was not feeling well,
the prime minister added. “He is now in good condition,” Pashinyan
said, noting that his wife tested negative for coronavirus.
Authorities quarantined those who had been in contact with the man at
the defunct Golden Palace Hotel in Tsakhkadzor.

On March 1, hundreds of thousands of people were set to march in the
streets of Yerevan led by Pashinyan to commemorate the 12th
anniversary of the demonstrations on March 1, 2008 during which 8
citizens and two policemen were killed. The planned march was canceled
due to the growing concerns about the spread of coronavirus.

The Armenian government introduced a weeklong closure of all
kindergartens, schools, universities, and other educational
institutions in an attempt to prevent the further spread of the virus.
The schools will be closed from March 2 to March 8.

Last week, 36 people were hospitalized at entry points into Armenia,
to ensure that any spread of the Coronavirus is stopped at the border.

“Thirty-six people have been hospitalized at border checkpoints; most
of them at Yerevan’s Zvartnots Airport but also at the
Armenian-Georgian border,” said Hakob Avagyan, head of the Health and
Labor Inspectorate.

Avagyan made the remarks in an interview with Shant TV, where he also
spoke about the work afoot to prevent the spread of coronavirus in
Armenia.

“Now, we are not only checking peoples temperature when they arrive.
Apart from thermometry instruments, a thorough examination is carried
out,” said Avagyan.

According to Avagyan, further measures will be taken.

“We are cooperating with the National Security Service and the Foreign
Ministry when we know we will have passengers arriving from affected
countries. Address cards are filled in advance, and we have already
filled 1,271 of them since January 24,” said Avagyan.

************************************************************************************************************************************************

3 –        Expert Inspections Confirm Armenian Legacy

            of 8th Century ‘Jeweled Gun Of Sultan Mahmud I’

BALTIMORE—The National Museum of Armenian Ethnography and the History
of the Liberation Struggle (Araks, Armenia) announced on February 25
that the 18th Century “Jeweled Gun of Sultan Mahmud I”—a stunning
artifact held in the collection of the Walters Art Museum (Baltimore,
Maryland)—was recently given a new label that now attributes its
remarkable jewelling to the Armenian Christian, Hovhannes Agha Duzian.

“The Walters is incredibly fortunate to have this stunning and
historic object as one of the highlights of our collection,” said
Julia Marciari-Alexander, who is the Andrea B. and John H. Laporte
Director of the Walters Art Museum.

The 55 inch-long (139.7 cm) gun—crafted in 1733 and bejeweled with
countless diamonds, rubies, emeralds and other gemstones—has garnered
international scholarly interest and as a result has been the subject
of ongoing research. During a week-long exploration of the piece and
an intensive study of its archival history, the crucial Armenian
contribution to the gun’s manufacture took center stage.

At the request of counsel to the National Museum, Karnig Kerkonian of
Kerkonian Dajani LLC, and upon the invitation of Marciari-Alexander,
experts Dr. Ashley Dimmig, the Wieler-Mellon Postdoctoral Curatorial
Fellow in Islamic Art at the Walters, and Prof. Dr. Levon Chookaszian,
the Chair of Armenian Art History and Theory at Yerevan State
University, joined Walters’ museum curators and archivists for a
meticulous, week-long inspection of the treasured gun on location in
Baltimore.

At the conclusion of this collaborative exploration, it was determined
that the label of the artifact should be revised to reflect the
valuable contribution of the Armenian Christian, Hovhannes Agha
Duzian.

Duzian served as the Chief Goldsmith under Sultan Mahmud’s
predecessor, Ahmed III, and continued to work in that esteemed
position for Mahmud I. It was while serving as the Chief Goldsmith to
the Ottoman court that Duzian created the gun’s most striking feature:
its astonishingly ornate jeweling.

Prof. Dr. Chookaszian remarked that “the artifact itself constitutes a
valuable component of the rich and storied history of Armenian art
and, indeed, of Armenian civilization” and commended this
collaborative undertaking with the Walters “as an example of a
sophisticated, exemplary approach to understanding and uncovering the
depth and breadth of the Armenian contribution to the art of the era.”

Marciari-Alexander added that “our staff is honored to have had the
opportunity to work closely with Prof. Dr. Chookaszian to restore the
attribution of the gun’s remarkable jeweling to Hovhannes Agha
Duzian.”

The two museums have also expressed an interest in further
collaboration and exchanges.

The new label and a full description of the “Jeweled Gun of Sultan
Mahmud I” may be found on the Walters Art Museum website
www.art.thewalters.org

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4-         Attorney Seepan Parseghian Files Supreme Court Amicus Brief

            to Recover Picasso Painting Sold during Holocaust

Beck Redden LLP announced that Associate Seepan V. Parseghian filed an
amicus brief in the United States Supreme Court on February 24 in
support of a petition for writ of certiorari related to the ownership
of prized Pablo Picasso painting The Actor. Considered one of
Picasso’s masterworks, the painting was owned by the Leffmann family,
who sold it under duress for a mere $12,000 while fleeing persecution
in Nazi Germany on account of their Jewish heritage. Now displayed in
The Metropolitan Museum of New York, the painting is valued at over
$100 million.

The Leffmann estate sued the Met to recover possession of the painting
under the 2016 HEAR Act, but the Second Circuit Court of Appeals
dismissed the suit on laches grounds.  Representing amici the Armenian
Bar Association and Armenian Legal Center for Justice and Human
Rights, Parseghian—with assistance from associates Owen McGovern and
Mary Kate Raffetto—urged the Court to grant review, arguing that the
Second Circuit’s ruling failed to consider the complex obstacles
facing genocide victims and their families in recovering lost art and
other property.

 Parseghian further noted that the propriety of the Second Circuit’s
ruling is an issue of nationwide importance, which impacts the ability
of victims of not only the Holocaust, but also the Armenian Genocide
and other atrocities to seek legal recourse in recovering lost
property and taking steps towards restorative justice.

As an associate for Beck Redden, Parseghian focuses his practice in
commercial litigation and intellectual property disputes. He has
successfully handled several multi-million dollar and bet-the-company
cases for both plaintiffs and defendants in federal and state courts
and arbitral forums nationwide. Presently based in Texas, Parseghian
maintains leadership positions in the Houston community. He serves as
the Vice Chair/Chair-Elect of the International Law Section of the
Houston Bar Association and is the President of the Stanford Alumni
Club of Houston. Parseghian is also on the Board of the Baker
Institute of Public Policy Roundtable Young Professionals, and is a
Fellow of the Houston Young Lawyers Foundation and Texas Bar
Foundation. Beyond Houston, Parseghian was appointed by the U.S.
Department of Defense as a legal observer to the 9/11 Military
Commission in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

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5-         Renowned researcher, historian, architectural expert

            Samvel Karapetyan passes away at 58

Historian, researcher and author Samvel Karapetyan passed away on February 27.

Karapetyan, who headed the Yerevan branch of the Research on Armenian
Architecture NGO, was 58.

Over the course of three decades, Karapetyan surveyed and catalogued
thousands of items of Armenian history and architecture in the
Republic of Armenia and throughout historic Armenia.

Born in 1961, Samvel Karapetyan was an expert of medieval
architecture, specializing in the study of the historical monuments of
Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh and neighboring countries.

Karapetyan was also known as an outspoken critic of the treatment of
Armenian monuments in Turkey, Georgia and Azerbaijan․

He presented his findings to US Congress in 2007 and to the European
Court of Human Rights in 2008․

In 2007 he won the Armenian Presidential Humanitarian Sciences Prize
for his work in literature.

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California Courier Online provides viewers of the Armenian News News Service
with a few of the articles in this week’s issue of The California
Courier.  Letters to the editor are encouraged through our e-mail
address, However, authors are
requested to provide their names, addresses, and/or telephone numbers
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Ijevan city military police chief beaten

News.am, Armenia
March 1 2020

21:52, 01.03.2020
                  

According to Armenian News-NEWS.am, recently, head of the military police unit of the Ministry of Defense of Armenia in Ijevan, Colonel Mesrop Hovhannisyan was involved in an incident. According to rumors in Ijevan, the colonel, who wasn’t sober, got into a dispute with a group of residents of Ijevan, made improper statements, after which he was beaten. However, the colonel didn’t go to the hospital in order to avoid a scandal. According to our information, the Ministry of Defense is currently considering Hovhannisyan’s dismissal.

As reported the Police to Armenian News-NEWS.am, the Police didn’t receive an alarm about this incident, and the Ministry of Defense refused to comment on the information regarding Hovhannisyan’s possible dismissal. As a matter of fact, Mesrop Hovhannisyan has close ties with acting Chief of the Military Police Aleksandr Aghajanyan, and this is probably the reason why the Police didn’t receive an alarm.

On February 19, by the decree of President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian, Artur Baghdasaryan was dismissed from the post of military police chief. This came after the Prime Minister’s consultation regarding the deaths in the armed forces, after which Nikol Pashinyan wrote that there had been several major decisions, including decisions regarding personnel changes.

Asbarez: Armenian Genocide Education Awards Luncheon to Honor 7 Educators


A list of the educators to be honored at the annual Armenian Genocide Education Luncheon

LOS ANGELES—The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region’s Education Committee announced that it will be recognizing seven educators, from various public schools and universities in the Western U.S., who have uniquely provided instruction and education about the Armenian Genocide in public schools of the Western Region.

The following extraordinary educators will be recognized at the 4th Annual ANCA-WR Armenian Genocide Education Luncheon. This year, the luncheon will take place on March 7 at 11 a.m., at De Luxe Banquet Hall, located at 237 E Olive Ave, Burbank, CA 91502.

The following seven educators will be honored at the luncheon:

  • Dr. Richard G. Hovannisian, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles, will receive the Armenian Genocide Education Legacy Award;
  • Dr. Maria Armoudian, University of Auckland, New Zealand, will receive the Armenian Genocide Higher Education Award;
  • Jennifer Davis, Anderson W. Clark Magnet High School, Glendale Unified School District, will receive the Armenian Genocide Education Award;
  • Dr. Michelle Herczog, Los Angeles County of Education, will receive the Armenian Genocide Education Award;
  • Susan Quintana, Pojoaque Valley High School, Jaconita, New Mexico, will receive the Armenian Genocide Education Award;
  • Saakanoush Markarian, R.D. White Elementary School, Glendale Unified School District, will receive the Zaruhy “Sara” Chitjian Armenian Heritage Award;
  • Nancy Nazarian, Curtiss Magnet Middle School, Los Angeles Unified School District, will receive the Zaruhy “Sara” Chitjian Armenian Heritage Award.

“The Armenian Genocide Education Award Luncheon continuously reminds us of the important value that history has in our everyday lives. It allows the opportunity to acknowledge educators who have gone beyond the minimum requirements to provide opportunities for students to recognize the impacts of hate, intolerance, and violence. We truly appreciate the nominations of these educators and look forward to this event,” remarked Alice Petrossian, ANCA-WR Education Committee Chair.

This year, the Luncheon will feature a special keynote by Ani Hovannisian-Kevorkian, daughter of Dr. Richard G. Hovannisian. Hovannisian-Kevorkian has produced and directed hundreds of inspiring true stories for television and other international audiences. Her most recent project, “The Hidden Map” captures her journey with a solitary Scottish explorer, as they dig deep beneath the surface of modern-day Turkey, discovering the lonely relics, silenced voices and stories of an ominous past… unearthing buried secrets and the hidden map. Hovannisian-Kevorkian along with members of the ANCA-WR Education Committee will lead the program of the day to celebrate and acknowledge the contributions of these esteemed educators for the next generation.

The Armenian Genocide Education Awards Luncheon is open to all who want to show their appreciation and honor educators for their dedication to teaching about the Armenian Genocide. Tickets and sponsorship opportunities are available online.

For additional information, visit the website or call 818.500.1918.

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

Armenia’s production potential being restored – PM

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 11:23,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. According to the results of 2019, the processing industry grew by 12% in Armenia and is the first in the GDP structure among all sectors of the economy since 2008, by ensuring a 12.1% share, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Facebook.

“This means that our country’s production potential is being restored and developed. The fastest growth in the economy of Armenia was recorded by the services field in accommodation and public food areas – 27.2%, which is a result of high growth in tourism sector. The second high growth has been registered by financial and insurance services – 22%, which gives hopes for further decrease of loan interest rates”, the PM said.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




It’s been 16 years since murder of Armenian officer by Azeri lieutenant

PanArmenian, Armenia
Feb 19 2020

PanARMENIAN.Net – February 19 marks the 16th anniversary of the murder of Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan by Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov in Hungary.

A Lieutenant of the Armenian Armed Forces, Margaryan, then 26, was hacked to death, while asleep, by a fellow Azerbaijani participant, lieutenant Safarov, in Budapest during a three-month English language course in the framework of a NATO-sponsored Partnership for Peace program.

On April 13, 2006, Budapest District Court sentenced Safarov to life in prison for murdering Margaryan. On February 22, 2007, Budapest Court rejected Azerbaijani military officer’s appeal against the verdict, precluding possibility of pardon for the initial 30 years.

By a decree of then President of Armenia Robert Kocharian officer Margaryan was awarded with a posthumous Medal for Courage on February 19, 2005.

In 2012, Safarov was extradited to Azerbaijan and pardoned by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

Official Yerevan reacted by suspending diplomatic ties with Hungary. Hungary, however, stated that it had sent Safarov back to Azerbaijan after receiving assurances from the Azerbaijani Justice Ministry that Safarov’s sentence, which included the possibility of parole after 25 years, would be enforced.

Hungary’s Prime Minister Victor Orban first stated that he transferred the prisoner to Azerbaijan on the understanding that he would serve out the rest of his life sentence in his home country. In later statements, Orban admitted that he not only signed the extradition agreement himself, but that he had repeatedly been warned that if Safarov were extradited to Azerbaijan, he would be pardoned and even celebrated by Ilham Aliyev’s dictatorial regime. According to some reports, Safarov was extradited to Azerbaijan in exchange for Azeri purchase of Hungarian securities worth Euro 2-3 billion, information that official Budapest denies.

Catholicos addresses letter to Syrian President after parliament’s passage of Armenian Genocide res.

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 17:25,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 14, ARMENPRESS. Catholicos Garegin II has sent a letter to President of Syria Bashar al-Assad on February 14 to express gratitude on behalf of the Armenian people on the occasion of the Syrian parliament’s unanimous passage of the resolution recognizing and condemning the Armenian Genocide, the Mother See of Holy Etchmiatsin said in a news release.

“The condemnation and rejection of denial of crimes against humanity is the firm guarantee by which it is possible to prevent new genocides and crimes based on religious and national discrimination and to build a world of peace and solidarity”, the leader of the Armenian Church said, in part.

“The construction of the Armenian Genocide Memorial Church in the desert of  Deir ez-Zor during the presidency of your late father Hafez al-Assad was yet another record of the Syrian government’s adopted attitude in the Armenian Genocide issue,” the Catholicos said, praising the Syrian authorities’ “emphasized care and attention” for the Armenian people in Syria.

Garegin II, expressing support to the good people of Syria, offered wishes of peace and calm to the brotherly nation.

 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

High level Armenian-German talks take place in Berlin

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 20:32,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 13, ARMENPRESS. The meeting between Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and German Chancellor Angela Merkel took place in Berlin.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime MInistye rof Armenia, welcoming Armenian Prime Minister’s visit, the German Chancellor emphasized its importance as she was confident that the visit came as an opportunity to discuss issues on the bilateral agenda. Mrs. Merkel went on to assure that her government will continue to back the Armenian side in an effort to push ahead with the ongoing democratic reforms.

Coming to economic developments, Prime Minister Pashinyan noted that high growth rates had been recorded in various sectors of the economy. The Premier said his government eager to see broader involvement of German capital in Armenia’s economy, and invited German companies to take part in investment projects in Armenia.

The parties discussed a broad range of issues, including cooperation in the fields of industry, infrastructure, tourism, information technology, education, etc. Prime Minister Pashinyan referred to the upcoming April 5 referendum on constitutional changes in Armenia. He pointed out that the Government is going to invite international observers to monitor the referendum.

On behalf of her government, Angela Merkel expressed support for Armenia’s judicial reform. She emphasized the importance of those steps taken by the Armenian government to develop democratic institutions.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan