Azerbaijani Press: Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry condemns visit of the mayor of Saint-Etienne to Karabakh

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijani Opposition Press
 Monday
Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry condemns visit of the mayor of
Saint-Etienne to Karabakh
Baku/22.10.18/Turan: The Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan strongly
condemned the visit of Gael Perdrio, the mayor of the French city of
Saint Etienne to the city of Shusha occupied by Armenians in
Nagorno-Karabakh.
According to the press service of the Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan,
this step of the local government of France is in flagrant violation
of the norms and principles of international law and the laws of
Azerbaijan, as well as the national legislation of France. All this
serves to encourage the separatist regime created in the territories
of Azerbaijan occupied by Armenia. During this visit, the mayor of
Saint Etienne is accompanied by the well-known lobbyist of Armenian
interests, Francois Roshbulan.
The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry recalls that the French Foreign
Minister stated in a statement dated May 24, 2018 that local
governments in France are prohibited from entering into any agreements
with separatist structures of unrecognized territories and carrying
out visits there, holding joint events. In this regard, the Foreign
Ministry of Azerbaijan indicated that the Declaration of Friendship,
signed during the visit, has no legal force.
Such illegal actions of local governments of France damage the
authority of this country, as a mediator in the settlement of the
Karabakh conflict and the efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group to resolve
the problem peacefully. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry calls on the
French government to take measures to prevent illegal actions on the
part of local governments of this country.
The mayor of Saint Etienne, Perdrio, will be included in the list of
undesirable persons by the Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan, as having
violated the laws of Azerbaijan and visited the occupied
Nagorno-Karabakh region. -06D-

Azerbaijani Press: Committee "Karabakh" is looking forward to democratic revolution

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijani Opposition Press
Wednesday
Committee “Karabakh” is looking forward to democratic revolutio


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan resigned, and remained to serve as prime minister. In the status of the head of the party, he intends to participate in December in early parliamentary elections in order to win them and return to the same post as the elected, legitimate head of the Armenian government.

“If on the eve of the elections, during the elections and immediately after, there is not be a coup in Armenia, and the parliamentary elections are successful for Pashinyan, then the sympathies of the international community in the Karabakh problem will shift towards the Armenians. Armenia will become a country of “democratic mentality”, “anti-corruption”, “pursuing an anti-Russian foreign policy”, “striving for civilizational values”, “an island of civilizational values in Eurasia and the South Caucasus”. Azerbaijan will remain a country “authoritarian, despotic, corrupt, alien to Western democratic values and the main conductor of Putin”s dangerous Eurasian geopolitical model. In the conditions of narrowing the field of influence of Russia and its readiness to compromise with the West, what is happening can become a legal recognition of the occupation of Karabakh,” former Prime Minister of Azerbaijan Panah Huseyn said about the opinion of the analytical group.

It is possible to prevent and compensate the scenario extremely undesirable for Azerbaijan by attempting a democratic revolution starting from the bottom or top, with fundamental democratic reforms, if only by imitating such a process. This is expected, believe the analysts of the Karabakh Committee, assuming that recent rumors indicate a possible decision by the authorities to go to extraordinary parliamentary elections, the formation of a “parliament with the participation of the opposition.”

Analyzing the events taking place, analysts should pay attention to the fact that under Pashinyan, and prior to the legitimization of his power through the December elections, a new Armenian policy was launched to disrupt negotiations with Azerbaijan and radicalize the Karabakh demands. New Armenia intends to build a third road from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia in the occupied Azerbaijani areas bordering Iran. Consequently, the return of these regions to Azerbaijan is not in the plans of Pashinyan.

The former US ambassador to this country, Richard Mills, who completed the diplomatic mission in Armenia, made a sensational statement that Yerevan is not even discussing the return of part of the occupied regions to Azerbaijan in order to achieve peace.

In an interview with the EVN Report, Mills stated that resolving the Karabakh problem without “returning certain occupied territories” is impossible.

“I was surprised when I first came here and found out that the majority of Armenians I met were against the return of the occupied territories as part of the negotiation process. I am surprised by the fact that there is practically no discussion in Armenia regarding acceptable solutions and compromises. For many years, in the views of my government, these territories were seized in order to be used later according to the formula “status in exchange for territories”. I was really amazed that this option no longer enjoys support,” said Richard Mills.

He said he understood that the April 2016 war exacerbated these perceptions. “But the cruel reality is that settlement is impossible without the return of certain occupied territories,” said the US ambassador, who is completing his mandate.

In Yerevan”s Lragir website, close to Pashinyan, the ex-ambassador”s statement was cited with displeasure, leaving the alarming message of the diplomat aside, the editorial board issued a statement to Mills as an American statement that it was impossible to return any territories to Azerbaijan. Part of this publication, dangerous for Baku, was the mention of Trump”s policy, expressed in the “keep it as it is” formula, according to which the West, according to the Pashinyan media, is ready to recognize Armenia“s right to occupy Azerbaijani territories.

Considering the analysis of the “Karabakh” committee in this perspective, it becomes clear that the analysts’ warning was overdue. Armenia launched the process of legitimizing territorial seizure, not waiting for Pashinyan”s victory in the elections, and Baku is not going to oppose anything to it. Judging by the new arrests of objectionable politicians (Nemat Panahli, Azad Hasanov) there are no signs of an offensive in the country, even if there is no preparation for a real or imitative democratic revolution.

Photo: Dozens of presidential aircraft parked at Zvartnots airport as Yerevan transformed into Francophonie global capital October 11-12

Category
Society

Civil Aviation Committee chairperson Tatevik Revazyan has released a photo taken at Armenia’s Zvartnots airport showing a number of presidential and governmental aircraft parked side by side.

Nearly 40 heads of state and government were in Armenia October 11-12 for the XVII Summit of La Francophonie.

Delegations from a total of 84 countries took part in the summit.

“All presidential aircraft are nicely parked in the airport,” she wrote on Facebook.

Art: Iranian-Armenian Painter Combines Western Art, Eastern Mysticism

IFP News
Oct 12 2018


Combining western arts with eastern mysticism is one of the leading features of the paintings of Iranian-Armenian artist Sonia Balassanian.

These days, Homa Gallery in Tehran is hosting a warmly-received exhibition of Sonia’s paintings, which is a combination of poetry and geometrics.

Inspired by the oriental culture, Sonia creates artworks with western themes. The artist’s exhibition displays a collection of works from the different stages of her artistic development.

Some of Sonia’s paintings include some irregularly interconnected lines resembling some repeated words. This gives the audience a sense of facing a piece of writing. The artist has used only cold and dark colours to convey the special themes in her mind.

In some of her works on display in Homa Gallery, the artist deals with some architectural elements from the east and uses geometric forms, fabrics and layouts as main themes of her abstract paintings. For example, in one piece, she has used white bricks within a barrel vault to portray the image of Iranian markets.

In her minimalist pieces, Sonia uses a combination of ochre color with blue, grey and white reminding the audience of the classic Persian architecture.

She takes advantages of her homeland’s art to recreate the monotonous rhythm of brick buildings in an innovative form.

Sonia is an Iranian-Armenian artist who left Iran in 1965 for New York, and has since been living there. She holds a BFA from the joint program of Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and the University of Pennsylvania, as well as an MFA from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. She is also an alumnus of the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program. Her numerous works have been exhibited internationally.

Sonia has won several prestigious awards from Philadelphia and New York’s museums and universities.  Her works are now held in Tehran Museum of Contemporary Arts, Armenia’s Contemporary Arts Center and personal collections in various parts of the world. They have also been put up for auction at Christie’s and Tehran auctions, among others.

She is one of the most influential artists in Iran’s modern art, and has created some leading artworks.

Sonia’s works will be on display in Homa Gallery until October 16.

What follows are photos of her works retrieved from Honar Online:

United States Announces Assistance Increase for Armenia

Categories
Politics
World

Today, U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Richard M. Mills, Jr., was pleased to announce an increase in U.S. assistance funding for Armenia.

The United States recently provided more than $14 million in additional foreign assistance resources for initiatives in Armenia following the political transition, and in the coming year the U.S. government intends to provide more than $26 million in FY 2018 foreign assistance funds, an increase of approximately $20 million above what had been requested for Armenia.

These funds will support priority programs in the political processes, anti-corruption, civil society, and independent media sectors. Funds will also advance the Administration’s foreign policy priorities to increase business and trade opportunities for American and Armenian companies including by supporting energy reforms as well as Armenia’s fast-growing information technology industry.

U.S. assistance to Armenia supports many areas of bilateral cooperation, including governance, transparency and accountability, political inclusion, legislative strengthening, and local governance reforms. To support Armenia’s political transition, programs will help rebuild multiparty political systems and support free and fair elections. Assistance will also strengthen civil society and improve access to independent media.

In the economic growth area, programs will seek to generate sustained and broad-based economic growth by supporting sectors that have high growth potential, enhancing workforce skills, and facilitating innovation. Assistance will also support energy market liberalization reforms and promote cross-border trade and integration.

Travel: Armenia’s ancient city on the brink of change

BBC Travel, UK
Oct 8 2018
 
 
Armenia’s ancient city on the brink of change
 
A months-long peaceful protest movement in Armenia has brought new hope and booming business to its capital, Yerevan.
 

Though a small country of just three million people, Armenia made global waves last spring with its Velvet Revolution – a months-long peaceful protest movement that eventually resulted in the resignation of the long-standing prime minister Serzh Sargsyan and election of Nikol Pashinyan, a former journalist who led the protests with his passionate speeches and civil disobedience campaign.

Armenia is often overlooked but I think it is now the country’s time to shine

The peaceful transition of power has already begun to transform the nation’s capital, Yerevan, as residents have started new businesses, former residents are returning and travellers have begun visiting in higher numbers.

“It has given Yerevan a new optimism like never before,” said Aram Vardanyan, a Yerevan native who is starting tourism business Absolute Armenia. “Armenia is often overlooked but I think it is now the country’s time to shine. Other entrepreneurs are starting to see this time of optimism and change as the perfect time for innovation. The energy in Yerevan is really palpable.”

The peaceful transition of power following the Velvet Revolution has already begun to transform Yerevan, Armenia’s capital (Credit: Ana Flašker/Alamy)

You may also be interested in:
• Why Armenians love strangers
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As the city embarks on its 2,800th year – making it older than Rome – residents are eager to reflect on the city’s rapid changes and promising future.

Why do people love it?

People here tend to be extremely social and tight-knit, while still always being welcoming to new faces. “Armenians love to have coffee and chat. You will see familiar faces every day, greet each other and stop for small-talk on the way to work,” said Ani Andree who moved from Berlin a year ago and is starting a business in rural tourism. “People take their time to talk with people, whether it’s the taxi driver, the neighbour, the co-worker.”

Relationships with people here are durable

And these same people watch out for each other, leading to a feeling of security even among expats. “I know that people would notice immediately if I don’t show up as usual. They would ask, they would call or text,” Andree said. “Relationships with people here are durable. Even if you cross paths months later, the person would still stop for small talk and get sincerely excited about seeing you and be really interested in how you have been.”

Many see the culture as inclusive – here, another person joining a group or community is perceived as a positive – and the Armenian nimbleness with various languages can help amplify this feeling of belonging among newcomers. “We are good at learning languages and many tourists are surprised when they can easily communicate with people in Yerevan on the streets,” Vardanyan said. Typical languages spoken include English, Russian, French, Spanish and even Persian, said Sirarpi Sahakyan, an Armenian native who lives in Yerevan and works at digital marketing company Incredo.

Yerevan is celebrating its 2,800th anniversary this year (Credit: Ana Flašker/Alamy)

The rich culture here is treasured and well preserved, especially when compared to other former Soviet Union countries, due in large part to its ancient history of being influenced by multiple empires, including Assyria, Macedonia, Persia and Ottoman-era Turkey. “Traditions and rituals are still part of culture here and create a nice atmosphere,” Andree said. “For example, people like to give flowers whenever there is an occasion.”

Armenia’s holidays also showcase its ancient traditions. Celebrated 98 days after Easter, Vardavar is a favourite holiday for its playful custom of sprinkling water on each other, a celebration of the transfiguration of Jesus Christ, but a tradition that stretches back to pre-Christian times. Trndez, celebrated 40 days after Christmas, typically commences with bonfires throughout the city, and is especially important to newlyweds who sometimes jump over the fire together, in what was once a long-standing symbol of fertility and purification. 

Armenian holidays like Vardavar, during which people fling water at one another, showcase the country’s ancient traditions (Credit: Xinhua/Alamy)

Armenia has known incredible pain and hardship, not least in the form of mass killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War One. Dozens of US states and 20-plus countries have recognised this as an act of genocide by the Ottoman Empire. Today’s Turkish state denies the description. 

However, even with their centuries of difficult history and respect for tradition, many Yerevan residents remain open-minded to new ideas and ways of thinking. “One of the best things about Armenians is their willingness to learn and that knowledge is power,” Vardanyan said.

What is it like living here?

Yerevan is a small capital compared to many other European cities, which means people from all walks of life co-exist within a small space. “In 20 minutes, you can walk from one end [of the city] to the other,” Andree said. Almost all activity happens in the district Kentron, (literally ‘centre’) where people socialise at the many roadside cafes.

Thanks to its unique resources, the city is also sometimes known as ‘The Pink City’. “Most buildings are designed with tuff– a pink volcanic stone that has become symbolic of Yerevan,” said Sahakyan. “At dawn and dusk, it even gives the entire city a pink glow.”

Almost all activity in Yerevan happens in Kentron, the city’s central district (Credit: Tim E White/Alamy)

The revolution has dramatically changed the city in a short period, as Armenians who left generations ago return to call the city home again. “The Eastern and Western influences are starting to mesh together to create a very international and unique experience in Yerevan,” Vardanyan said.

Sahakyan agrees that returning citizens are transforming the city for the better. “After Syrian-Armenians came back because of the [recent] war, Yerevan got a new mentality and new cuisine, which we love. Now, especially after the revolution, everyone can open a business if they like,” she said. The embrace of the entrepreneurial spirit has been more a mental shift than a policy shift, with many residents viewing the revolution as unlocking a bright and promising economic future.

Yerevan also recently adopted ‘Smart City’ concepts, which focus on improving the technology infrastructure to better connect the city and make life more efficient. These improvements include building community communication systems for everything from announcements to voting, and the creation of collaborative spaces where new ideas can be exchanged.

Most of Yerevan’s buildings were designed with a pink volcanic stone known as tuff, which gives the city a pink glow (Credit: Michel & Gabrielle Therin-Weise/Alamy)

What else do I need to know?

As with any growing city, maintaining a flexible mindset makes living here go more smoothly. Traffic and limited public transportation make getting around the city challenging, even with its small size. A lack of regulation around air pollution and noise also frustrates residents like Anfree. She also wishes there was more green space. “The parks in Yerevan are small,” she said. “You really don’t know where to take your dog for a walk.”

But as with everything here, changes are coming swiftly. “Since the revolution, the people are starting to have more of a say in what happens,” Vardanyan said. “I think this will help take care of the problems that people have in the city more so than before.”

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Representatives of Venice Commission to visit Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Oct 5 2018
Representatives of Venice Commission to visit Armenia Representatives of Venice Commission to visit Armenia

17:37, 05.10.2018
                  

YEREVAN.— Representatives of the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe will soon arrive in Armenia to take part in the work on Electoral Code reform, said Daniel Ioannisyan, the secretary of the commission dealing with the reform of the electoral legislation.

His remark came on Friday during the discussion of the Electoral Code reform.

A controversial situation will arise if the National Assembly does not accept the amendments, since in this case elections will be held with the bad rules, he said.

Ionnisyan added that the threshold is higher, and many parties will not be able of entering the parliament after the elections.

Charles Aznavour obituary; Singer, songwriter and actor, best known for She, who personified French culture to the world

The Guardian(London)
October 1, 2018 Monday 4:24 PM GMT
Charles Aznavour obituary; Singer, songwriter and actor, best known for She, who personified French culture to the world
Aznavour’s 10 best songs
 
by Michael Freedland
 
 
The singer, songwriter and actor Charles Aznavour, who has died aged 94, was one of France’s best-loved entertainers and its most potent show-business export since Maurice Chevalier. Edith Piaf was one of those who encouraged his early career, and in many ways Aznavour could be seen as the male Piaf; his slight frame disguised a similarly huge talent. He was as important a composer and songwriter as he was a singer – and he could be a great actor even without singing a note on screen.
 
There were times in Aznavour’s career when he was as popular outside France as he was in his own country. His recording of She, a sweet, soulful number composed by Aznavour and Herbert Kretzmer, topped the British charts for several weeks in 1974. Aznavour’s songs were in the great dramatic tradition of the chanson, storytelling to music, rather than mere verse sung in the way of the conventional pop song. Even when he performed in English, his songs sounded as though they had first been minted in Montmartre. He was often called the French Frank Sinatra and the comparison was apt. When he sang The Old Fashioned Way or Yesterday When I Was Young, listeners somehow caught his nostalgia kick and remembered those days, too.
 
In films, he was a character actor who was always the most interesting figure on the screen. His lead role as a musician clashing with criminals in François Truffaut ‘s 1960 drama Tirez sur le Pianiste (Shoot the Piano Player) established him internationally.
 
Aznavour, however, was always self-deprecating. He would refer people to a crumpled piece of paper on which, as a very young man, he had written his weaknesses. They were, he said: “My voice, my height, my gestures, my lack of culture and education, my frankness and my lack of personality.”
 
No one doubted his frankness, but his personality was one of his greatest characteristics, and he seemed to personify French culture to the English-speaking world. His height (5ft 3in) was the only thing that he could do nothing about, but it was one of those great trademarks that help to mark out a show-business personality – that and his gravelly voice, and the facial features that got craggier as he got older. Aznavour recalled: “They used to say, ‘When you are as ugly as that and when you have a voice like that, you do not sing.’ But Piaf used to tell me, ‘You will be the greatest.'”
 
Aznavour’s family were Armenian and went to France in the wake of the Turkish massacres of their people. His parents, Mischa and Knar Aznavourian, were living in Paris at the time of their son’s birth, in a poor part of the Latin quarter, where his father worked as a cook and his mother as a seamstress. His father was also a part-time singer and his mother a sometime actor, but neither made a living at what they wanted to do most.
 
Encouraged by them, he danced, played the violin, sang and aspired to act. He got work as a film extra from the 1930s onwards and in 1941 joined the Jean Dasté dramatic troupe. During the second world war, having adopted Charles Aznavour as his stage name, he joined the singer-composer Pierre Roche in a nightclub act and gained experience writing lyrics and in cabaret. In the postwar years they went on tour with Piaf around France and in the US, but split up when Roche married.
 
Aznavour wrote songs for artists including Piaf, Gilbert Bécaud and Juliette Gréco, and in the 1950s began to have some success in his own right, first in France and then internationally. By the early 1960s he was able to sell out Carnegie Hall in New York. He appeared in films such as Les Dragueurs (Young Have No Morals, 1959) and La Tête Contre les Murs (The Keepers, 1959). By the time he made Le Testament d’Orphée (Testament of Orpheus, 1960), he was enough of a star to be featured in a cameo role as himself. After his acclaimed performance in Shoot the Piano Player, he starred in US and British films including Candy (1968) and And Then There Were None (1974), an Agatha Christie adaptation, and in the Oscar-winning German drama The Tin Drum (1979).
 
In 2002 he appeared in Atom Egoyan’s drama about the Armenian genocide, Ararat. Aznavour retained close ties to his family’s homeland. When an earthquake hit Armenia in 1988, killing more than 20,000 people, he formed the charity Aznavour for Armenia and wrote Pour Toi Arménie, which he recorded with a lineup of well-known French singers, to help support those affected by the disaster. In 2004 he was made a National Hero of Armenia, and a few years later an Aznavour museum was opened in the capital, Yerevan. He was appointed Armenia’s ambassador to Unesco and in 2009 Armenian ambassador to Switzerland.
 
Across his eight-decade career, he wrote more than 1,000 songs and was said to have sold more than 180m records. He continued to record popular albums, including Duos (2008), a collection of duets with, among others, Elton John, Carole King, Liza Minnelli and Plácido Domingo. In 2011 he held a month-long residency at the Olympia music hall in Paris.
 
Aznavour was married three times and had six children. “I know my life is a flop,” he said once. “A flop as a father, a flop as a man. You must make a choice: a successful life as a man, or show business. Now it is too late even to make a choice. I belong to the public or to my pride. My only salvation is to become a greater artist.” A legion would say he achieved that salvation.
 
He is survived by his third wife, Ulla (nee Thorsel), whom he married in 1967, and their children Katia, Mischa and Nicolas; and by Seda and Charles, the children of his first marriage, to Micheline Rugel. A son, Patrick, from his second marriage, to Evelyne Plessis, predeceased him.
 
· Charles Aznavour (Shahnour Varenagh Aznavourian), singer, songwriter and actor, born 22 May 1924; died 1 October 2018

Nor Keghi Celebrates Renovation of Kindergarten Auditorium

On July 6, 2018 The Paros Foundation’s staff and SERVICE Armenia 2018 participants joined the mayor, staff, parents and children of Nor Keghi in Kotayk province to celebrate the opening of the newly renovated kindergarten auditorium. 

 

The Arakelyan Kindergarten facilitates the early education of more than 85 children.  The renovation of the multipurpose room, stage, ready room, adjacent hallway and stairwell was made possible by the generosity of the Detroit based Nor Keghi Association which sponsored the project.   The Paros Foundation had previously renovated two bathrooms at the kindergarten as part of its 100 for 100 Projects for Prosperity initiative in 2015 with the support of the Nigoghosianfamily. 

 

“We were able to help Nor Keghi’skindergarten solve another important issue with the help of the Nor Keghi Association and its fundraising efforts,” said Peter Abajian, Executive Director of The Paros Foundation. “The village population is increasing, and the kindergarten principal has requested we help them expand by renovating additional rooms.” 

 

For the auditorium project, The Paros Foundation team installed new doors and windows, resurfaced the existing wood parquet floors, installed laminate flooring in the ready room and stage area, added new electrical and lighting throughout and repaired and painted the walls and ceiling.  The team also worked with the mayor to bring proper heating to the facility.  Following the renovation, 80 high quality stackable chairs were delivered to outfit the multipurpose room. A plaque will be installed in the auditorium acknowledging sponsorship of the project by the descendants of Keghi through the Nor Keghi Association in association with The Paros Foundation.  

 

“It is so heartwarming to see pictures of the renovated multipurpose room of the Arakelyan Kindergarten,” said Nor Keghi Association President, Richard Norsigian. “When my son, Shant and I entered the room in person last September, we were devastated – it looked like a tornado had hit it!  It was unusable.  We were deeply saddened to think our little Armenian kindergartners did not have an indoor facility for activities.  The pictures of the now completely renovated multipurpose room brought tears of joy to my eyes.  To our generous Keghetzis and friends who made the renovation possible, I say vartzkernees gadarand God willing, we have only just begun!”

EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1, 2018
ADDRESS CHANGE
The Paros Foundation
2217 5th Street
-2216

Investigative Committee: Former Armenian top judge named victim in house assault case

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 30 2018

Armenia’s Investigative Committee continues conducting a large-scale probe as part of the criminal case launched into the armed attack on the house of a former Armenian top judge by three gunmen.

As reported earlier, three masked attackers armed with assault rifles burst into the mansion belonging to Arman Mkrtumyan, former Chairman of Armenia’s Court of Cassation, located in Dzoraghbyur, a village outside capital Yerevan. Due to the resistance shown by Mkrtumyan and his 30-year-old son, one of the assailants was neutralized, while the two others fled the scene, opening sporadic gunfire.

The subdued attacker, identified as Hovannes Ryzhenko, a 45-year-old resident of Armenia’s second largest city of Gyumri, has been detained. Ammo cases and an assault rifle with bullets have been discovered and confiscated from the scene.

The ex-judge has suffered gunshot wounds due to the incident, the committee said, adding he has been recognized as a victim.

All necessary measures are being taken to track down the other attackers and fully uncover the case.