Increased supplies from Russia to ensure required crop volume in Armenia until yearend

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 11:53,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Minister of Economy Arman Khojoyan submitted to the Eurasian Economic Commission Armenia’s 2022 demand for individual agricultural goods, the ministry of economy said in a press release.

As a result of discussions the EEU Council members approved the indicative balances of Armenia’s 2022 demand and supply of agricultural products, developed jointly with representatives of authorized bodies of member states.

According to predictions, the volume of wheat consumption in Armenia in 2022 will amount to 377 thousand tons. To ensure food security in the domestic market, the required amount of this crop will be supplemented at the expense of increasing the supplies from Russia up to 275 thousand tons by yearend. The same goes for barley and corn, 43 thousand and 60 thousand tons respectively.

The volume of sunflower oil demand is forecast around 27 thousand tons. The required amount until yearend will be entirely ensured by supplies from Russia.

Government allocates 10,8 mln drams for organization of Pan-Armenian Olympiad on Armenian Studies

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 12:32,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. The government of Armenia allocated 10,8 million drams for the organization of the Pan-Armenian Olympiad on Armenian Studies, the ministry of education, science, culture and sport said in a press release.

The Olympiad will take place in the first half of August and will be attended by around 90 delegates from Armenia, Artsakh and the Diaspora.

The Pan-Armenian Olympiads on Armenian Studies are taking place once in 2 years. They aim at promoting the knowledge of Armenian language, literature, history and culture among Armenian children living abroad, helping to recognize Armenia and strengthen ties with the homeland.

The first Olympiad was held in 2003.

14-18 aged students with respective knowledge participate in the Olympiad. However, students, who do not speak Armenian, but have sufficient knowledge of Armenian history and culture, could also participate.

The Olympiad lasts a week, during which, in addition to competitions, other events are also organized. Visits are organized to Armenia’s beautiful sites, as well as the participants have a chance to meet with famous figures of different spheres.

Armenia’s economic activity index grows 11.8% in six months

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 12:44,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s economic activity index increased by 11.8% in January-June 2022 compared to the same period of the previous year, the data released by the Statistical Committee says.

The industrial production volume grew 5.8% in January-June compared to the same period of the past year.

Gross domestic agricultural production volume declined by 5.5% compared to the same period of 2021.

Construction volume registered a 12.7% increase in January-June.

The increase in trade turnover comprised 10.7% in the first six months of this year.

The volume of services increased by 26.9%.

The growth in consumer price index is 8.1%, that in industrial production price index – 7.8%. Electricity production volume increased by 14.8%.

44% growth was registered in the external trade turnover volumes in January-June 2022 compared to January-June 2021. The export growth at this period comprised 36.3%, and the import growth – 48.7%.

The dram exchange rate against the US dollar comprised 468.24 in January-June 2022.

UK to host Eurovision 2023

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 16:16,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. The European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and the BBC have confirmed that the 2023 Eurovision Song Contest will be hosted in the United Kingdom on behalf of this year’s winning broadcaster, Ukraine’s UA:PBC, the Eurovision TV said.

This decision had been made following the exploration of hosting the Contest in Ukraine, and regrettably concluding that for safety and security reasons this was not possible. 

As a result of those discussions, the BBC, as runner up in the 2022 Contest, was invited by the EBU to act as Host Broadcaster for the 67th Eurovision Song Contest.

Ukraine, as the winning country in 2022, will automatically qualify for the Grand Final of the upcoming Contest.

“We’re exceptionally grateful that the BBC has accepted to stage the Eurovision Song Contest in the UK in 2023,”said Martin Österdahl, the Eurovision Song Contest’s Executive Supervisor.

Asbarez: Artsakh’s Martuni and Glendale to Become Sister Cities, Says Mayor Kassakhian

Glendale Mayor Ardashess Kassakhian


Glendale Mayor Ardashess Kassakhian has introduced a resolution in City Council to establish a Sister City relationship with Artsakh’s Martuni.

“As the mayor of Glendale, I decided to establish a symbolic connection between Glendale and the city of Martuni in the Republic of Artsakh. When I assumed the position of mayor in April, I received a letter in which the mayor of Martuni proposed to establish the sister city relation,” Kassakhian told Asbarez’s Nane Avagyan in an exclusive interview. “I presented the proposal at a City Council session, and I hope that it will be approved by October.”

He said that the city of Martuni of the Republic of Artsakh has a special significance, taking into account what the population of Artsakh has gone through and is still going through. “A week doesn’t pass without news that Azerbaijani forces are attacking the peaceful population of Artsakh,” said Kassakhian.

“Just as during the war, when we follow developments from far away, we feel helpless—unable to provide tangible assistance,” said Kassakhian explaining that Glendale Armenians allocated financial assistance during the war and gathered and provided much-needed items. There were also people who traveled to Armenia and Artsakh at the time. 

“Several doctors from Glendale were on the frontlines during the war and provided medical assistance to to our soldiers,” Kassakhian said.

He added that, as mayor, he has decided to help Artsakh by establishing a sister city relationship between Glendale and Martuni.

“This effort demonstrates that not only do we have such [sister city] relations with municipalities located with Armenia proper, but also with Artsakh, which I consider to be part of Armenia—our ancestral lands and their heritage,” said Kassakhian.

“The fact that Artsakh is Armenian is beyond doubt. Martuni is an Armenian city that had, has, and should have an Armenian population. By conferring a sister cities status, Glendale, the most Armenian-populated city in America, lights a candle of hope in Artsakh, Glendale, and I also hope in Armenia so that Martuni continues to be an Armenian-populated city,” added Kassakhian.

He assured that after the approval of sister city measure, practical steps will follow, specifically by advancing relations within the education sector by having exchange programs between the two cities.

Avagyan’s exclusive interview with the Glendale Mayor will appear in the Armenian section of Asbarez in the coming days.

Armenpress: PM Pashinyan sends congratulatory message to President of Egypt on 70th anniversary of Revolution

PM Pashinyan sends congratulatory message to President of Egypt on 70th anniversary of Revolution

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 11:17,

YEREVAN, JULY 23, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to the President of the Arab Republic of Egypt, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, on the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the Revolution.

"Honorable Mr. President,

I warmly congratulate you on the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the Revolution.

We can proudly state that the relations between Armenia and Egypt are distinguished by friendship based on close historical interactions and great potential for development. I am confident that due to joint work, we will raise Armenian-Egyptian relations to a new level, expanding the agenda of bilateral and multilateral cooperation.

Armenia is greatly interested in the stability of the Middle East and highly appreciates Egypt's positive role in strengthening the region's security and fighting against terrorism.

I wish you health and new successes, and peace and prosperity to the friendly people of Egypt.

Please accept, Your Excellency, the assurance of my highest consideration”.

UCI – Leading with language: For six UCI alumni, learning a new language launched their careers

UCI School of Humanities
July 15 2022


For six UCI alumni, learning a new language launched their careers



OFFICE of the Dean
Armenian Studies
Arabic
German
Japanese Language & Literature
Korean Literature & Culture

By Lilibeth Garcia

An entertainment entrepreneur. A field representative for a California State Assembly Member. A writer for one of the top healthcare websites. These are just a few of the career paths made possible for UCI alumni by studying languages other than English.

At UCI’s School of Humanities, students can take courses in 14 languages other than English, and major or minor in several languages.

Fluency in languages other than English has enabled our students and alumni to study and travel abroad, launch careers domestically and overseas, and deepen their connection to their own cultures and that of others.

These are the stories of six multilingual alumni.

Christopher Khachadour grew up speaking Western Armenian, an endangered language with only 200,000 native speakers and about a million second-language speakers.

Between 1915 and 1923, the Ottoman Empire systematically killed over a million Armenians in what is known as the Armenian Genocide. Khachadour’s great-grandparents were orphaned because of the war. His ancestors escaped to various parts of the Middle East and later to Los Angeles.

A hundred years have passed since the Genocide ended, but the Western Armenian language is still in peril. Western Armenian is rarely taught intergenerationally, with fewer descendants of genocide survivors who live outside of Armenia learning the language.

After three generations of expulsion due to violence, Khachadour’s family fought to keep the language alive. His parents enrolled him and his sister in an Armenian private school where he learned how to read and write Western Armenian.

“For me, the Armenian language is a treasure, almost like a family heirloom passed down over generations,” Khachadour says. “While we cannot return to our ancestral homes in modern-day Turkey, we have this unbroken bond via the language.”

His early education ignited a passion that he continued to nourish at UCI, where he enrolled in all courses related to Armenian history and language. He took classes with Houri Berberian, professor of history & Meghrouni Family Presidential Chair in Armenian Studies, who founded UCI’s Center for Armenian Studies and has led the development of Armenian language instruction. He also studied under Talar Chahinian, who currently serves as interim director of the center.

“Armenian history and language courses took me back to my childhood years in Armenian school,” he says. “Many of us in the program had previously attended Armenian school, and Dr. Chahinian would give us advanced coursework to accommodate our capabilities and keep us engaged. She was a great teacher. Dr. Berberian always found a way to look at the greater picture and tie Armenian history to world history, reminding us that we did not develop in a vacuum of history.”

While a student, Khachadour served as the Armenian Students Association’s liaison to UCI’s Armenian Studies Program, where he encouraged his peers to enroll in Armenian courses and attend lectures organized by the program. He also worked as a tour guide, providing campus tours to Armenian middle and high school students in Southern California. His fluency in Armenian even enabled him to catalog a collection of about a thousand Armenian books at the UCI Libraries.

Khachadour double majored in history and political science, with a focus on the Middle East. While at UCI, he spent four years as a board member of the Olive Tree Initiative, through which he planned and led trips to Armenia, Turkey and Georgia in 2017 and to Boston, New York City and Washington D.C. in 2018 and 2019. There, he met with local Armenian and Turkish lobbying groups as well as journalists, NGOs, religious leaders, former ambassadors, the United Nation’s representatives and the State Department.

After graduation, he spent six months volunteering in Armenia with various organizations that required in-depth knowledge of the Western Armenian language and the region’s history, including the Eurasia Partnership Foundation, the Armenian United Nations Association and RepatArmenia.

Since returning from Armenia, he has worked part-time at USC’s Institute for Armenian Studies and full-time as a field representative for California State Assembly Member Laura Friedman, who represents the 43rd district, encompassing the cities of Glendale, Burbank and La Cañada Flintridge; the unincorporated communities of La Crescenta and Montrose; and a portion of Los Angeles, including Little Armenia and East Hollywood.

The 43rd district represents the largest Armenian constituency in the country. Khachadour, who works with 150,000 ethnic Armenian constituents, is the sole Armenian staffer.

“Having the ability to study Armenian is a privilege, as it’s not offered at many institutions. It is an ancient and unique language. I encourage everyone to study a second language, if not a third. And for those interested in engaging with the influential Armenian community of Southern California, I’d strongly recommend it.”

The School of Humanities offers a minor in Armenian studies and two years of Western Armenian language courses.

To read the five other stories, click at the link below

https://www.humanities.uci.edu/news/leading-language

Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers meet in Tbilisi

July 18 2022
 18 July 2022

The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan have met in Tbilisi — the first meeting of its kind since the end of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. Neither delegation announced updates on a potential peace agreement or the delimitation of borders between the two countries.

The Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov touched on a number of issues related to the normalisation of relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the 16 July meeting, which was mediated by Georgia’s own Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ilia Darchiashvili.

They also discussed the implementation of mutual commitments and exchanged views on possible future steps regarding the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Bayramov noted that all efforts should be aimed at achieving progress in the regulation of interstate relations based on ‘post-conflict realities’ following the war. 

The Azerbaijani minister also emphasised the need to implement the provisions of the ceasefire and the ‘withdrawal of Armenian forces from the territory of Azerbaijan’, referring to Nagorno-Karabakh.

Bayramov also requested clarification on the fate of nearly 4,000 Azerbaijanis who remain missing, mostly from the First Nagorno-Karabakh War.

Similarly, the Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan emphasised the importance of addressing humanitarian issues, including the release and repatriation of Armenian POWs.

Mirzoyan also stressed the importance of reaching a political settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict through the OSCE Minsk Group, the status of which has become controversial.

Details about a peace agreement and the delimitation of the borders were not mentioned in either statement released by the two ministries.

Antony Blinken, the US Secretary of State, commended the meeting, saying that ‘direct dialogue is the surest path to resolving Azerbaijani and Armenian differences’.

Since the end of the war, Armenia and Azerbaijan have repeatedly accused each other of violating the ceasefire agreement.

However, in recent months, both countries have taken several steps toward more active negotiations on the resolution of the conflict and the demarcation of borders.

Despite meetings mediated by Russia and the EU, however, the sides were unable to reach agreements regarding a peace treaty, demarcation, or opening transport links.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev welcomed the meeting in Tbilisi, at the same time demanding the withdrawal of all Armenian troops from Nagorno-Karabakh. He claimed that a senior official from Russia’s Ministry of Defence had promised him that Armenia would withdraw its troops by June, but that they did not ‘keep their word’.

‘If Armenia does not want to withdraw its armed forces from the territory of Azerbaijan, then let us know this clearly, and we will know what to do next’, Aliyev said.

‘What will be our answer? Perhaps it is inappropriate to say it now.’

A day prior to the meeting in Tbilisi, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced plans to station border guards from the National Security Service across all of Armenia’s borders.

Currently, only the borders with Georgia and Iran have border guards stationed on them, while Russian troops observe the border with Turkey, and the Armenian army the border with Azerbaijan.


Opposition MP reacts to former Armenian army chief’s ‘remarkable statements’ on 2020 war

Panorama
Armenia – July 18 2022

MP Tigran Abrahamyan of the opposition Pativ Unem faction has called the latest statements of Tiran Khachatryan, a former chief of the Armenian military’s General Staff, on the 2020 Artsakh war “remarkable”.

“Former Deputy Chief of the General Staff Tiran Khachatryan has made quite remarkable statements, which reveal new details about the 44-day war, confirming the existing suspicions,” he wrote on Facebook on Monday.

The lawmaker highlighted that General Khachatryan held a top position during the war, thus possessing military information which a “small number of people” had access to.

“In an interview with 168.am, the latter has confirmed that former General Staff Chief Onik Gasparyan ordered the army corps and the Artsakh Defense Army to go on the defensive, but there were some personnel who was not fully prepared for the enemy attacks, hinting at the Defense Army,” Abrahamyan said.

“Moreover, Khachatryan claims that before the war there was an order from the Chief of the General Staff to be at the defense points, but former Defense Army Commander Jalal Harutyunyan was not there when the war broke out.

“The main reason of our defeat in the war was that despite reliable data on the outbreak of hostilities (they say that the intelligence had even revealed the exact day of the war outbreak), the armed forces, particularly the Defense Army, were not fully deployed, carrying out only certain reinforcements, which in such circumstances was extremely inadequate.

“Moreover, the intelligence reportedly made it clear that the main target of the offensive would be Artsakh, thus the Armenian army corps not only took appropriate measures to put troops on high alert, but also had time to redeploy the ammunition bases, which was not the case with the Defense Army, the bases of which were hit by Azerbaijani forces immediately after the start of the war,” the MP said.