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Nearly 300 specialists from Diaspora applied to work in Armenia’s public sector

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 11:12,

YEREVAN, MAY 13, ARMENPRESS. iGorts 2022 cohort application has come to a close, the Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs told Armenpress.

“iGorts is a program for Armenian professionals from the Diaspora to work within Armenia’s public sector. This year, nearly 300 Diaspora Armenian professionals have sent applications from 31 countries, including Russia, the United States, Lebanon, Ukraine, Belgium, Iran, Canada, France, Germany, Belarus, Argentina, Switzerland, Norway, and Italy. In addition, applicants from the Netherlands, Jordan, Brazil, the United Arab Emirates, and New Zealand applied to the program for the first time.

The program provides an opportunity for specialists from the Diaspora to work in more than 25 departments in Armenia and Artsakh for a year, bringing their experience and knowledge, initiating new programs, and starting their careers in their Homeland. All applicants have a bachelor’s degree with at least five years of professional experience or a master’s degree (or higher) with three years of professional experience.

This year we have applicants who graduated from Harvard, Bradford University, MSU, Columbia University, and UCLA. This year the oldest applicant is 77 years old, and the average age of candidates for the program is 35 years. After the final round, 50 specialists from the Diaspora will begin their careers in Armenia in September of this year.

The government of the Republic of Armenia will offer a round-trip air ticket, a monthly stipend of 336.000 AMD AMD to cover living expenses, emergency medical insurance, and a one-year residency status fee for the participants. We would also like to mention that this will be the program’s third cohort.

Over the past two years, through the program, more than 100 specialists started their work in the public sector of Armenia and Artsakh. Fortunately, 70% of them decided to repatriate. iGorts is the only state program in the history of Armenia that invites Armenian specialists from the Diaspora to help change Armenia’s administration system using their skills”, the Office said in a statement.

37 foreign embassies resume work in Kiev, Ukraine

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 11:16,

YEREVAN, MAY 14, ARMENPRESS. Embassies of 37 countries resumed their operation in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky said on social media.

“37 foreign missions have already resumed their work in Kiev. I am grateful to all of them”, the Ukrainian President said, expressing confidence that other missions will be back in the capital city soon.

Armenian and Azerbaijani exclaves back on the agenda

Heydar Isayev, Ani Mejlumyan 

As negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan advance, the question of what will happen to their Soviet-vestige exclaves has again become a matter for dispute.

In recent days the issue has again become the subject of diplomatic jockeying. The two sides have for the most part repeated their previous, mutually incompatible positions on the issue, casting doubt on the prospects for delineation of the two countries’ border just as serious work is set to begin.

On May 5, as he was discussing Armenia’s new framework for negotiations for the first time in public, the Secretary of Armenia’s National Security Council, Armen Grigoryan brought up the issue of the exclaves, quirks of Soviet border-drawing along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border that will have to be settled along with the bigger, thornier issue of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“In general, the opposition is constantly making baseless statements, which have nothing to do with reality. The issue of exclaves has not been raised so far, as there is an exclave on both sides,” Grigoryan told reporters. “Those territories are almost equal. Neither side is saying anything on this issue, it has not been discussed yet!”

The fact that he brought up the issue during his brief on Armenia’s new six-point proposal, which has yet to be made public, led to suspicion that Grigoryan was protesting too much and that the exclaves may be part of that deal.

But his mention of the opposition appeared to be a reference to a recent protest march from one of the exclaves in question: Karki, which Armenians call Tigranashen.

Karki is one of a handful of parts of Soviet Azerbaijan that were effectively islands inside Soviet Armenia. There was one, larger corresponding exclave of Soviet Armenia, Artvashen, located inside the borders of Soviet Azerbaijan and which Azerbaijanis call Bashkand. Following the war between the two sides in the 1990s, each side occupied the exclaves that were surrounded by their territory, and the respective populations had to flee.

The views of the Armenians and Azerbaijanis displaced from the exclaves more or less mirrors that of their governments: while many Armenians from Artvashen are resigned to not going back home, many Azerbaijanis still harbor hopes of being able to return back to live in their villages.

Armenia’s political opposition has regularly accused the government of preparing to return the Azerbaijani exclaves – which happen to straddle the country’s strategic north-south highway – to Azerbaijan. In the new wave of protests that the opposition has launched against the government’s negotiations, one key event was the march to Yerevan from Karki/Tigranashen, highlighting what they claim is a government wish to hand the territory back to Azerbaijan.

“Today the most important thing is fighting against these Turkish-subject authorities and saving the homeland,” one participant in the march, Hripsimeh Arshakyan, told reporters. “Nothing is scarier than losing a homeland.”

The government denies any plan to hand over the exclaves inside Armenia; it says that it is negotiating to allow each side to keep the exclaves that they now control.

“Our hope is that the possible solution is that the exclave of Armenia is left to Azerbaijan, the exclaves of Azerbaijan, which are in the territory of Armenia, are left to Armenia,” Grigoryan said.

Grigoryan’s comments occasioned a rebuttal from Azerbaijan Deputy Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Khalaf Khalafov, who on May 10 reiterated Azerbaijan’s position that it wants back control of its exclaves. “These territories are part of Azerbaijan. The return of these lands to Azerbaijan will be considered within the delimitation process. These issues will be resolved after discussions,” he told journalists.

Responding to Khalafov’s comments, Armenian ambassador-at-large Edmon Marukyan rolled out a new bargaining position: that Armenia has a stronger claim to Artvashen than Azerbaijan does to its exclaves.

“We’ve stated numerous times that delimitation and demarcation processes should be based on facts and documents of de jure significance. At this moment, we don’t possess any legal substantiation that any de jure Azerbaijani enclave has ever existed in the territory of Armenia,” Marukyan told reporters. “On the contrary, there are legal grounds for the village of Artsvashen belonging to Armenia. … These issues must certainly be discussed and resolved in the delimitation and demarcation process.”

A joint commission to work on delimiting the border between the two countries, which was agreed at an April meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders, will hold its first meeting in Moscow May 16-17, Armenia Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Heydar Isayev is a journalist from Baku.

https://eurasianet.org/armenian-and-azerbaijani-exclaves-back-on-the-agenda

Speaker of Parliament describes police actions at protests as “appropriate”

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 12:01, 3 May, 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 3, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan commented on the actions of the police during the opposition civil disobedience campaigns in Yerevan, describing the law enforcement agency’s conduct as appropriate.

Simonyan thanked the police officers for protecting the rights of citizens.

“I once again express gratitude that they are protecting the rights of the other citizens and are not allowing the various small activities that are taking place to disturb the rights of other citizens. But at the same time, I say this again, I am treating with respect all those citizens who are exercising their right to freely demonstrate and I think that their rights must be protected as well,” Speaker Simonyan said.

Simonyan said that the opposition itself has noted that police are helping and supporting whenever any incidents take place.

Karen Giloyan receives the Secretary General of the Serbian Chess Federation

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 16:35, 5 May, 2022

YEREVAN, MAY 5, ARMENPRESS.  Deputy Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of Armenia Karen Giloyan received Secretary General of the Serbian Chess Federation Andrija Jorgic on May 5.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the Ministry, the Serbian delegation consisted of Biljana Obradović, President of the Armenian national community of Serbia, Darko Obradovic, Program Manager of the Center for Strategic Analysis of Serbia, and Liliana Stojanovic, Editor of Borba newspaper.

The meeting was also attended by Arkady Papoyan, Head of the Department of Foreign Relations and Diaspora of the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport.

Welcoming the guests, Deputy Minister Karen Giloyan expressed readiness to strengthen the Armenian-Serbian sports relations within his powers.

The Secretary General of the Serbian Chess Federation Andrija Jorgic, thanking for the reception, noted that this is his first visit to Armenia, he has great impressions, and he arrived in our country with a special mission.

“We know that chess is taught in Armenian schools, and we would like to apply that practice in our country. Armenia is a country with a great chess history and traditions, and we will be very happy to cooperate with you. My mission is to study the methodology of teaching chess in Armenia, try to apply that experience in Serbia.”

Stating that we are ready to share our experience with friends, Karen Giloyan noted, “Teaching chess in secondary schools has undoubtedly had a positive effect on the popularization of the sport. We can give your specialists the opportunity to get training here, to study our experience. We can also provide specialists to conduct master classes in Serbia.”

Darko Obradovic, Program Manager of the Center for Strategic Analysis of Serbia, and the other guests also emphasized the need to raise the Armenian-Serbian relations to a new level, to create cultural, sports and educational bridges between the two countries.

The Secretary General of the Serbian Chess Federation will visit the Chess Academy of Armenia on May 5 and will meet with the founder-president of the academy Smbat Lputyan.

Armenia reports 10 daily COVID-19 cases

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 11:20, 26 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, ARMENPRESS. 10 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 422,838, the ministry of healthcare said.

2644 tests were conducted on April 25.

The daily recoveries rose by 17 (410,588 total recoveries).

No death case has been registered. The death toll stands at 8622.

As of April 26, the number of active cases is 1945.

Azerbaijani press: FM: Conditions to start Azerbaijan-Armenia border commission work in place

By Sabina Mammadli

There are conditions for the Azerbaijan-Armenia joint border commission to begin work on border delimitation and demarcation in the near future, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov has said.

Bayramov made the remarks at a joint briefing with his Georgian counterpart Ilia Darchiashvili in Baku, on April 27.

The minister noted that the main goal of Azerbaijan is to ensure peace in the South Caucasus region.

“I informed my Georgian colleague about this in detail. Azerbaijan provided detailed information on the principles of the peace agreement. I had two telephone conversations with the Armenian foreign minister. There is an agreement on the parameters of the joint commission on demarcation and delimitation of the border. There are also conditions for the start of work of this commission in near future,” Bayramov stated.

According to him, following the principles of international law, Armenia can take its place in regional cooperation.

During the briefing, the minister stated that Azerbaijan-Georgia cooperation in the South Caucasus is an example and can be used as a successful model for neighboring countries.

Expressing high appreciation for the first official visit of Darchiashvili to Azerbaijan after his appointment as Georgian foreign minister, Bayramov noted strong friendly relations between the countries.

He said that Azerbaijan assesses the Georgian foreign minister’s visit to Baku as a clear example of a strategic partnership between the two countries.

“Azerbaijan and Georgia are conducting a policy of good neighborliness and cooperation, and their relations are developing in many areas. Both countries support each other’s territorial integrity,” he stressed.

Further, Bayramov pointed out that a total of 113 agreements have been signed between Georgia and Azerbaijan to date.

He noted that the signing of 19 more documents is currently being considered by the two countries.

“In the near future, we are likely to witness the signing of these documents,” he added.

For his part, the Georgian minister that Azerbaijani-Georgian strategic relations will continue to develop in the interests of the two countries’ peoples.

“Economic and trade projects are being successfully implemented between our countries. Such joint projects as the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline and the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway have been implemented. These projects increase the attractiveness of our countries. Trade and economic relations between Azerbaijan and Georgia are at the highest level,” Darchiashvili said.

Azerbaijan and Georgia are collaborating in a variety of economic fields. Azerbaijan and Georgia signed a number of cooperation agreements in 2021 as part of a meeting of the joint intergovernmental commission on economic cooperation.

Simultaneously, as part of the trilateral business forum held in Baku in December 2021, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey signed five memorandums and agreements on cooperation.

In 2021, the two countries’ trade turnover totaled $763.6 million, with exports accounting for $661 million and imports accounting for $102.6 million.

Oral history project collects tales from the Armenian diaspora using a converted food truck

April 28 2022

My Armenian Story, a program of the USC Dornsife Institute of Armenian Studies, encourages Armenians from Southern California and around the world to record their memories.

The Institute of Armenian Studies transformed an old food truck into a mobile recording studio to collect oral histories from Armenians in the Los Angeles area. (Photos: Mike Glier.)

In brief:

  • The USC Dornsife Institute of Armenian Studies is creating a repository for recorded interviews and narratives by Armenians around the world.
  • More than 100 oral histories have already been collected.
  • Interviewees have spoken on topics ranging from life in Ethiopia to religion to interracial dating.
  • For Armenian History Month, the institute drove a food truck converted into a mobile recording studio to various spots in Glendale and Los Angeles to interview community members.

When 97-year-old Marsbed Hablanian was a young man, he spent weeks hiding in a shelter in his hometown of Kiev, in what was then the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, trying to keep from being discovered by the Nazi forces attacking and bombing the city. Kiev (now Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital) ultimately fell, and Hablanian and many other Armenians were transported to Germany as forced labor. After the war, they lived at a displaced persons camp before coming to the United States.

Eighty years later, in a 2018 interview with staff of the Institute of Armenian Studies (IAS) at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences, Hablanian recalled that horrific time, one having eerie parallels with the atrocities occurring during the current Russian invasion of his home country.

Hablanian’s tale is one of the first 100 oral histories collected by IAS for its My Armenian Story program, which gathers stories from Armenians around the world, of all ages, to preserve for future generations and for researchers.

People can either submit their story through the project’s website or tell it in person to one of the institute’s staff members.

For Armenian History Month in April, IAS transformed a former taco truck into a mobile recording studio, taking it around neighborhoods in Southern California and recording interviews with local residents.

“A lot of stories that come up in these interviews have never been shared before, so in a way, we become witnesses to these lives. And by recording it, preserving it and designating it as an archival collection, we become stewards of these stories, which, collectively, become a history of a people,” says IAS archivist Gegham Mughnetsyan. 

A converted food truck collects more stories

Mughnetsyan says that because the interviews come from people ages 18 to 97, they cover a wide swath of history and touch on subjects like interracial dating, social unrest, marriage, religion and old (and new) stereotypes about their communities.

IAS Associate Director Silva Sevlian explains that IAS originally started an oral history initiative in 2018, when staff started conducting filmed interviews with community leaders. Then in March 2020, the institute ramped up efforts to get wider participation by creating the My Armenian Story website, which gives users guidelines on how to film an interview and submit the recording from anywhere in the world.

To convince more people to participate, IAS staff contacted Vahe Karapetian, a food truck entrepreneur and IAS donor, about converting a truck into a mobile recording studio and bringing the idea and process of interviewing to the community.

Since April 1, the truck has been to Glendale Central Library, L.A. City Hall and other popular spots.

Silva Sevlian, right, interviews a member of L.A.’s Armenian community in the My Armenian Story truck.

Meanwhile, the My Armenian Story website has been garnering interest from people in other countries, Mughnetsyan says. Members of Armenian communities in Lebanon, France, Russia and even Armenia itself have expressed gratitude for the project guidelines and suggested questions. 

He notes that stories like Hablanian’s, regarding the invasion of Kyiv in World War II, are important as both testimonials of the past and cautionary tales.

“What Hablanian witnessed, I thought, was from a bygone era, but now I am witnessing the same thing with Russia on live television. So, in a way, these oral histories have influenced my outlook on the world and how I perceive events happening around me, with the eye of somebody who should look at things and remember them for the sake of documenting them, for the sake of being witness to history,” he says.

Nothing brings as much joy to a person as the feeling of the reward of a desirable scientific result

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 10:44,

YEREVAN, APRIL 20, ARMENPRESS. Coincidentally, Ani Paloyan, who happened to study in the Faculty of Biology at Yerevan State University, fulfilled her childhood dream to become a doctor when she had already earned her PhD degree in Biology. Ani managed to work as a microbiologist during the Covid-19 outbreak. Currently, she is a senior researcher in the ArmBioTechnology center of scientific production in the National Academy of Sciences in RA. Also, Ani is enrolled in the ADVANCE grant program by the Foundation for Armenian Science and Technology (FAST). Most importantly, her main engagement at the moment is to take care of her newborn son.

 

How did your career path as a scientist begin?

I’d been dreaming of the career of a doctor since early childhood, that’s why I was practicing physics and biology for entrance exams. I first applied to Medical University but was granted a scholarship in the Faculty of Biology at Yerevan State University, where I decided to carry on with my higher education. I didn’t do well in the first year as I kept considering the career of a doctor. Anyway, in the second year already, when I came to realize the faculty could meet my interests, I started to study well and ended up being an excellent student. I’d been studying microbiology while doing my Bachelor’s degree, later in my Master’s as well. Research and experiments necessary for my thesis paper were carried out in the Laboratory of protein technologies in the ArmBioTechnology center of scientific production in the National Academy of Sciences in RA, where I further started work. At first, I was a junior researcher, then I got gradual promotions and now I am a senior researcher. Back in 2013, I earned my PhD degree, though I was unable to get over my wish to become a doctor. Having completed my candidacy paper in 2014-2015, I also did postgraduate training (residency) at Medical University, getting qualified as a doctor-microbiologist. I managed to implement this profession of mine, though for a short period of time, during the Covid-19 outbreak, when PCR tests were done in the National Center of Infectious Diseases. 

 

Did you have people around you or family members who encouraged you to embark on this career path? Or was it mostly your own decision?

I entered Yerevan State University quite coincidentally. I might have studied at Medical University which would have affected my professional activity. Truth be told, I’ve never dreamed of becoming a scientist, it was just meant to be. As for the people who contributed to this resolution to a certain extent, I would definitely highlight my scientific supervisor Artur Hambardzumyan who’s an ideal role model of a scientist for me. He was my thesis paper supervisor as well. I was constantly learning from him over that period (and still continue to do so) and I couldn’t wait for the new day to come to rush to the laboratory in order to observe the results of my experiments. He gives us the freedom to create and never imposes his views; even if we are mistaken, he patiently listens first and only then explains why it won’t work.

 

What motivates you to get up in the morning?

A lot has changed after my son’s birth for sure. I don’t have to wake up, I rather do that with great love to be able to take proper care of him. Broadly speaking, gaining new knowledge, perfecting yourself and enjoying that all is what motivates us to get up in the morning.

 

How would you describe a scientist?

A scientist needs to be unconditional and selfless in the first place, as, when a person pursues a certain interest in doing some work, it might deviate them from the true path. The scientist I envision is committed to working and is extremely patient since not at all times do the expected and real results satisfy us. Besides, one needs to keep creating, and changing certain parameters, but never give up on achieving the ultimate goal, however long the process might take.

 

Would you recall any turning point throughout the formation process of your career?

I would probably mention meeting my scientific supervisor. My former supervisor died all of a sudden and I had to look for a new one, whom I met in the ArmBioTechnology center of scientific production. But for him, I would have hardly become a scientist because, as I mentioned previously, he is a role model of an exemplary scientist for me.

 

What has been the discovery which impressed you the most within the scope of your scientific interests?

I’d like to tell a story that happened to me. I haven’t found any explanation for it so far. I was conducting an experiment in our lab, which had been successfully performed by thousands of scientists before. There is a definite protocol for its implementation, but, no matter how hard I tried, I failed to conduct it successfully and get the desirable results for some 6-7 months. I thought the only solution was to look for foreign collaboration to conduct the experiment abroad. After a long period of searching, professor John from Newcastle University agreed to accept me. In order to sort out the reason for my failures, I took all the materials I used in my laboratory with me and left. I got a positive result from the very first experiment. The only thing I hadn’t taken with me was distilled water we use during experiments. I thought it might be the reason, but later on, numerous similar experiments were conducted with distilled water from our laboratory, and genes were cloned, thus the problem was not in distilled water. Sometimes I believe it was a question of fate for me to appear there and establish connections with my foreign colleagues.

 

Are there any scientists whose work guided and inspired you?

Surely, there are scientists both from abroad and in Armenia, as well as those who work in our center, but I’d like to mention professor Andranikyan who is an honorable professor at the Hamburg University of Technology. Such a motivated scientist can rarely be met. At present, he is leading our team within the ADVANCED grant program. Each and every meeting with him is full of positive vibes and immense information.

 

Could you please share the experience of your participation in ADVANCE?

Scientists of diverse interests are included in the scientific team but the program has united us all around a common project aimed at the implementation of the idea of circular bioeconomy. Our team studies the opportunity to have production waste recycled and put into circulation as useful materials. Our team leader has a huge experience in that field. Currently, we’re working on recycling cheese, wine and beer production waste. We’ve started with the processing of cheese whey so as to utilize it as an environment for the cultivation of microorganisms. I can claim that we’ve got interesting results, which we intend to publish in an article we’re working on at the moment. Also, we’re considering a patent application. Our results can be practically applied to recycle whey in cheesemaking.

 

What would you tell a child who wants to become a scientist?

I’d say he or she has made the right decision as nothing brings as much joy to a person as the feeling of the reward of a desirable scientific result. Children need to be part of scientific activity from an early age to stimulate their curiosity. My niece grows up in a family of doctors and, as usually happens, wants to become a doctor herself. She was once invited to our laboratory where she could do various experiments with solutions to get colors, gases and bubbles. Afterwards, when asked what she wanted to become, she would answer ‘a scientist doctor. Laboratories abroad have at least one glass window to enable school children to watch experiments proceed while on excursions. Their excitement toward it all is extremely impressive. I’d like the same practice to be applied in our country and science will definitely appeal to children.

 

What is your aspiration as a scientist?

My dream or rather the aim is to have a laboratory as well-equipped as the ones I’ve seen in a number of developed countries- England, Germany, Italy and others. I’d like to form a team both technically and scientifically capable of working on a common goal with joint efforts and of implementing orders the state might need. As a result, we’ll have a group of ferments which will contribute to our state, so that we won’t have to import them any longer.

 

Previous interviews of the “10 questions to a scientist” series are below:

The story of Anoxybacillus karvacharensis found in the geothermal spring of Artsakh as a source of inspiration. Diana Ghevondyan

 

In an American lab 20 years ago I felt like in a Hollywood movie. Anna Poladyan

 

Science excelled all jobs because it is perspective: Sargis Aghayan

 

The easiest way to change the world is to do science: Sona Hunanyan

U.S. city of Southfield proclaims April 24 Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day

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 16:05,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. The City of Southfield of the U.S. state of Michigan proclaimed April 24th as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, the Armenian National Committee of Michigan reported.

“The cycle of the genocide will continue unless we bring the perpetrators to justice,” the Armenian National Committee of Michigan said.

The proclamation was signed by Mayor Kenson J. Siver.