Armenian programmers’ AI-based solution on display at HIMSS19

iTel.am, Armenia
Feb 14 2019

Armenia web developers are attending the international HIMSS19 Health IT Conference in Florida, USA. The event kicked off on February 11 and is due to close on February 15.

The conference gathers leading global companies that present tech innovations for the healthcare sector. The participants are healthcare, pharmaceutical enterprises and representatives of renowned medical universities, who offer innovative approaches and new technologies for healthcare.

A co-founder of National Health Operator of Armenia CJSC, Sylex SARL will have a separate booth at the conference to display its new e-health solutions including a diagnosis assistant based on artificial intelligence (AI).

The robot system developed by the Armenian experts can operate as an assistant to physician and help with precise diagnosing.

“Participation in HIMSS pursues two goals: present yourself and learn about innovations happening elsewhere in the world. As an IT company working in the healthcare sector, we follow general developments in the field. Our engineers also strive for new, bigger achievements. We attended HIMSS as guests every year, just to see the innovations. We are proud to participate this time, to have a booth next to the giants of the sector such as IBM and Oracle Corporation,” said Sylex SARL CEO Avet Manukyan.

According to him, healthcare sector has both huge interest and demand for AI-based solutions. Sylex SARL’s assistant can help physicians give more accurate diagnosis, avoid excessive tests and save the doctor’s time which can be spent on other patients.

“This solution is designed to serve as a tool for doctors. As soon as we prove its absolute efficiency through testing, we’ll be able to use our “doctor Lex” confidently. For now, we plan to test it in the universities. Senior students will try to compete with the AI-based solution,” said Sylex SARL Director of Business Development Garren Badalyan.

The company’s programmers worked on the robot assistance in cooperation with doctors and used The Merck Index and PubMed.

Azerbaijani Press: Pashinyan opposes the participation of the Azerbaijani community of Karabakh in the negotiations

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijani Opposition Press
Pashinyan opposes the participation of the Azerbaijani community of Karabakh in the negotiations

Baku / 12.02.19 / Turan: If Azerbaijan prepares its people for war, the reaction of Armenia should be equivalent, said the Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan on February 12, speaking in parliament.

He stressed that Azerbaijan is more inclined to resolve the issue in military way.

“The Armenian side sees the solution of the Karabakh conflict by peaceful means, but this does not mean that Armenia should not be ready for war,” the premier said. He believes that for a peaceful settlement of the problem it is necessary first to create an atmosphere of peace.

“Today, the atmosphere of peace in the region has not been created due to the aggressive rhetoric of Azerbaijan. If we expect that Azerbaijan will stop its rhetoric, naturally, for our part, we must fix our non-aggressive position,” Panarmenian website quotes Pashinyan.

According to him, Karabakh should take part in the negotiations to resolve the conflict. However, Azerbaijan is proposing this to include the Azerbaijani community of Karabakh in the talks.

According to Pashinyan, the interests of the Azerbaijani community are represented by the Azerbaijani authorities, and they always participated in the negotiations.

“Our government clearly states that it does not have the mandate and authority to represent the people of Karabakh for the simple reason that Karabakh did not give the Armenian authorities a mandate to do so. -02D-

Global competitiveness. RA has significantly improved its financial and banking indicators

  • 06.02.2019
  •  

  • Armenia:
  •  

1
 63

Armenia’s financial and banking indicators have significantly improved in the evaluations of Armenia’s global competitiveness. The Union of Banks of Armenia prepared a material about this.


We present the material below. “As it is known, the World Economic Forum regularly publishes the global competitiveness report of around 137 countries.


It should be noted that the aforementioned report is based on more than 100 indicators grouped in 12 main directions of the Global Competitiveness Index (GMI), within which a special place is given to the results of the development of the financial market.


The fact that in the global competitiveness index in 2017-2018 Among other areas of public life, Armenia has also improved its position in the “Development of the Financial Market” sector, moving from the 90th position in the previous report to the 78th position.


The improvement of this indicator has been contributed by the positive developments registered in a number of sub-directions, in particular, the position of our country in the “Access to Financial Services” sector has moved from the previous 99th position to the 96th position, in the “Availability of loans with only a business plan and without collateral” criterion, we have improved by 6 scales and instead of the previous 71st position, we have occupied the 65th position.


It is noteworthy that in the presented section, a significant improvement was also recorded in the component of reliability towards the financial and banking system, according to which the position of our country in terms of the reliability of banks has changed from the previous 80th place to the 75th place, and in the field of securities circulation regulations, a transition was made from the 85th position to the 79th position.


Among the improvements in global competitiveness ratings, there is also one significant observation, according to which our country has taken an unprecedentedly favorable position in the index of legislative rights, instead of the previous 68th position, it is now 30th. And the logic of all analyzes suggests that there is interaction in the improvement of the indicators of the legislative field and the financial sector. “Legislative reforms, reduction of court disputes, increase in the efficiency of the legal sector, lead to an obvious increase in the competitiveness rating of the country’s financial and banking system.”

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/06/2019

                                        Wednesday, February 06, 2019
Former Army Chief Wants To Run For Karabakh President
February 06, 2019
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Samvel Babayan, a retired army general, is greeted by supporters in 
Yerevan after being released from prison, 15 June 2018.
Samvel Babayan, Nagorno-Karabakh’s former military leader, has expressed his 
desire to run in a presidential election that will be held in the 
Armenian-populated territory next year.
In an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian service, Babayan said he will start 
collecting next month signatures of local residents in a bid to circumvent a 
legal provision that bars him from running for Karabakh president.
“I realize that I still have a role to play there,” he said. “I’m not finished 
and will try to do everything to be of use [to Karabakh.]”
Babayan, 53, was the commander of Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army during and 
after the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan. He was widely regarded as the 
unrecognized republic’s most powerful man at that time.
Babayan was arrested in 2000 and subsequently sentenced to 14 years in prison 
for allegedly masterminding a botched attempt on the life of the then Karabakh 
president, Arkady Ghukasian. He was set free in 2004.
Babayan lived in Russia for five years before returning to Armenia in 2016. He 
was again arrested in Yerevan in March 2017 on charges of illegal arms 
acquisition and money laundering which he strongly denied.
The arrest came about two weeks before Armenian parliamentary elections. 
Babayan unofficially coordinated the election campaign of an opposition 
alliance challenging then Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian.
A Yerevan court sentenced the once powerful general to six years in prison in 
November 2017. Armenia’s Court of Cassation overturned the verdict in June 
2018, ordering Babayan’s release from prison. The decision came more than a 
month after Sarkisian was overthrown in a popular uprising led by Nikol 
Pashinian, the current Armenian prime minister.
Around the same time Bako Sahakian, Karabakh’s president, announced that he 
will not seek reelection when his current term in office ends in 2020. Sahakian 
has been in power since 2007.
Under Karabakh law, only those individuals who have resided in Karabakh for the 
past 10 years can participate in the 2020 presidential election. Babayan does 
not meet that requirement.
Citing another legal provision, the former strongman said that he can overcome 
that hurdle if his presidential candidacy is backed by thousands of Karabakh 
Armenians. “We will start the signature collection in March and then see if the 
authorities comply with or ignore what the constitution stipulates,” he said.
Asked whether he thinks the current Karabakh leadership will let him enter the 
presidential race, Babayan said: “At my penultimate meeting with Bako Sahakian, 
I said: ‘Let’s draw a line and forget everything: all the conflicts and 
problems.’ It seemed to me that they must realize that Armenia and Karabakh are 
now in such a difficult situation that it makes no sense to keep having 
grudges, settling scores or feuding with one or another person.”
Armenian Police Chief Objects To Amnesty For Radical Group
February 06, 2019
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Valeri Osipian (R), the chief of the Armenian police, arrives in a 
courtroom in Yerevan, February 6, 2019.
The chief of the Armenian police, Valeri Osipian, on Wednesday spoke out 
against pardoning members of a radical group who stormed a police base in 
Yerevan and held him and several other officers hostage in 2016.
The three dozen gunmen demanded that then President Serzh Sarkisian free the 
jailed leader of their Founding Parliament movement, Zhirayr Sefilian, and step 
down. They laid down their weapons after a two-week standoff with security 
forces which left three police officers dead.
Shortly after Sarkisian resigned in April 2018 amid peaceful mass protests, all 
but two members of the group calling itself Sasna Tsrer were set free pending 
the outcome of their trials. The two defendants remaining behind bars stand 
accused of murdering Colonel Artur Vanoyan and Warrant Officers Gagik Mkrtchian 
and Yuri Tepanosian.
Last fall the new Armenian authorities declared a general amnesty applying to 
hundreds of convicts and criminal suspects, including the Sasna Tsrer members. 
A relevant law passed by the Armenian parliament made clear, however, that the 
latter can be pardoned only with the consent of their former hostages and other 
victims of the deadly attack.
Osipian made clear that he is not giving his consent to the amnesty for Sasna 
Tsrer as he testified at an ongoing trial of the group’s members. “I lost 
comrades,” he told the presiding judge. “Had I not lost comrades my position 
may have been different. I think that everyone must be subjected to a 
punishment defined by the law.”
“There was a crime and everyone involved in it must bear responsibility,” 
Osipian insisted when he spoke to reporters in the courtroom.
Armenia - The funeral in Yerevan of Yuri Tepanosian, an Armenian police officer 
killed in a standoff between security forces and opposition gunmen, 1Aug2016.
Osipian was a deputy chief of Yerevan’s police department when the police base 
located in the city’s southern Erebuni district was seized by Sasna Tsrer in 
July 2016. He went into the sprawling compound shortly after the pre-dawn 
attack. He and the other policemen taken hostage there were released a few days 
later.
In his court testimony, Osipian said that he was beaten up by several gunmen 
while being captured by them. He claimed that they also threatened to kill him 
if he refused to tell police forces to join Sasna Tsrer.
Together with Sefilian, the freed leaders and members of the armed formed last 
year a political party also called Sasna Tsrer. It was one of the 11 groups 
that ran in parliamentary elections held in Armenia on December 9. According to 
the official election results, Sasna Tsrer won only 1.8 percent of the vote and 
thus failed to win any seats in the new parliament.
Armenian Government Unveils Economic Growth Targets
February 06, 2019
Armenia - Workers at a tech company based in the Engineering City just outside 
Yerevan, August 22, 2018.
Armenia’s economy should grow by at least 5 percent annually and thereby 
“substantially” cut poverty in the country, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
government said in its five-year policy program unveiled on Wednesday.
The 70-page program laying out the government’s priorities and policies was 
made public two months after Pashinian’s My Step alliance won snap 
parliamentary elections by a landslide. Speaking at a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan, the premier said it will undergo minor “editorial” changes before 
being submitted to the Armenian parliament by the end of this week.
The document’s almost certain approval by the National Assembly will amount to 
a vote of confidence in the government. My Step holds a two-thirds majority in 
the parliament.
The program declares the government’s commitment to a “competitive and 
inclusive economy” primarily driven by hi-tech industries. It says the 
government will strive for this by significantly improving tax administration, 
easing business regulations, guaranteeing fair competition, attracting foreign 
investment and stimulating exports and innovation.
This, the document adds, should translate into an average GDP growth rate of at 
least 5 percent in 2019-2023. “At the same time, a considerably larger number 
of citizens should participate in economic development, and economic output 
created as a result of their work should be distributed more evenly,” it says.
Armenia’s former government set practically the same growth targets in its last 
five-year program drawn up in 2017. It pledged to reduce the official poverty 
rate, which stands at around 30 percent, by 12 percentage points by 2022.
Pashinian’s government is likewise promising “substantial” reductions in the 
poverty and unemployment rates. But it has set no specific targets.
Also, both the current and former government programs describe a steady and 
rapid increase in Armenian exports as the main engine of faster GDP growth.
Ever since he swept to power in May 2018, Pashinian has repeatedly promised to 
carry out an “economic revolution” that will significantly improve the lives of 
ordinary Armenians. He has said his government has already succeeded in 
practically eradicating corruption and breaking up economic monopolies that 
have long hampered the country’s development.
According to official statistics, Armenian economy grew by 7.5 percent in 2017. 
It was on course to expand by roughly 5.3 percent in 2018.
According to the latest World Bank projections, Armenian growth will slow to 
4.3 percent in 2019 and accelerate slightly in the following years.
April 24 Declared Commemoration Day Of Armenian Genocide In France
February 06, 2019
France - French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during the Co-ordination 
Council of Armenian Organisations of France (CCAF) annual dinner in Paris, 
February 5, 2019.
French President Emmanuel Macron has declared April 24 as a day for the 
commemoration in France of the 1915 genocide of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey.
Macron announced the move late on Tuesday at an annual dinner of the 
Coordination Council of Armenian Organizations in France (CCAF). The Reuters 
news agency quoted him as saying that France was among the first nations to 
denounce “the murderous hunt of the Armenian people in the Ottoman Empire.”
“France is, first and foremost, a country that knows how to look history in the 
face,” he said, according to the France24 TV channel.
France officially recognized the World War One-era slaughter of some 1.5 
million Armenians as genocide with a law passed by its parliament 2001. It is 
home to an estimated 500,000 ethnic Armenians, most of them descendants of 
survivors of the genocide.
Macron spoke of his “admiration” for the French-Armenian community and visited 
the Armenian genocide memorial in Paris when he ran for president in 2017. The 
CCAF, which is an umbrella structure uniting the leading French-Armenian 
organizations, endorsed his presidential candidacy.
Turkey strongly condemned Macron’s decision on Wednesday. According to the 
Associated Press, a spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said 
Macron tried to "save the day" and make political gains in the face of 
"political problems in his own country.”
Press Review
February 06, 2019
“Zhoghovurd” says all eyes are now on a policy program of Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s government that will be unveiled this week. The paper says this is 
so because public expectations from the government are much greater than from 
the previous Armenian cabinets. It claims that the latter came up with nicely 
written programs that were rarely put into practice. “Pashinian’s government 
came to power as a result of a popular movement,” says the paper sympathetic to 
it. “The people’s expectations and requirements from the government are 
therefore great.”
“Zhamanak” says that Nagorno-Karabakh’s former military leader, Samvel Babayan, 
has effectively announced his return to active politics and, in particular, his 
intention to run in next year’s Karabakh presidential election. “It is clear to 
everyone that Armenia’s and Karabakh’s internal political realities are 
interconnected,” comments the paper. “It just could not have been otherwise. In 
essence, it’s impossible to return to active Karabakh politics without also 
becoming active in Armenia’s political domain as well.” It says that Babayan’s 
political comeback will have important implications for both Karabakh and 
Armenia.
“Aravot” seems skeptical about a recent series of high-level 
Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations that have fuelled renewed speculation about 
progress towards the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. “The Armenian 
prime minister has made important and correct emphases: the lands-for-status 
formula will not be discussed,” writes the paper. “We need to take the next 
step and say what the Armenian side thinks should be discussed: Karabakh’s 
internationally recognized independence and reunification with Armenia. We 
should counter [Azerbaijani] maximalism with our own maximalism.”
(Lilit Harutiunian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

France declares April 24 "Day of Remembrance for Armenian Genocide’ – Links

Armenian News note: To avoid repetition, we  list below the links to reports about France’ declaration of April 24 “Day of Remembrance for Armenian Genocide”
 
 
France declares April 24 “Day of Remembrance for Armenian Genocide’
 
 
France’s Macron announces national day marking Armenian genocide
 
 
France to have national day marking Armenian genocide
 
 
France’s Macron Declares April 24 Commemoration Day Of Armenian Genocide
 
 
Turkey slams Macron’s Armenian genocide commemoration day declaration
 https://www.france24.com/en/20190206-france-turkey-slams-macron-armenian-genocide-commemoration-day?fbclid=IwAR0lhK-HKkIL5vL2s9ynm8DuVcvAP37uI6V_wnvpYRhmWKokktLYAMy46MM&ref=fb
 
 
Macron declares April 24 day of commemoration of so-called ‘Armenian genocide’
 
 
Macron Declares April 24 National Day of Armenian Genocide Commemoration in France
 
 
Turkey Condemns Macron Plan for National Day Marking ‘Armenian Genocide’
 
 
 Macron draws ire with move to defame Turkey over Armenian ‘genocide’
 
 
France to Declare Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day on April 24 – Macron
 
 
Macron declares April 24 commemoration day of Armenian genocide in France
 
 
Turkey Slams France Over Armenian-Genocide-Commemoration Day
 
 
Turkey condemns Macron’s Armenian Genocide commemoration day declaration
 
 
Unsurprisingly, Turkey lambastes Macron for declaring April 24 Armenian Genocide Commemoration Day
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

War kills childhood – spotlighting a Baku Pogroms survivor’s story

War kills childhood – spotlighting a Baku Pogroms survivor’s story

Save

Share

10:16, 6 February, 2019

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 6, ARMENPRESS. Idaho-based Armenian Liyah Babayan is one of the thousands who witnessed the aggressive xenophobia towards Armenians living in Baku in 1988-90. These scenes had a strong impact on her and shaped her personality – later empowering her to bring justice for her family and the future generations.

Although Liyah was just seven years old when her family fled to Armenia surviving the pogroms, she clearly remembers the details of their journey – the harassments towards her family members at work and the brutal killings of her neighbors in the tension point of Karabakh conflict. As she says, being an Armenian in Baku in 1990, was a death sentence.

The mobs had no mercy for babies, children or the elderly and even the dead – their tombstones were vandalized, defaced and destroyed in the Baku Armenian cemetery. Even in her childhood perspectives, this was the most immoral, shameful criminal act a society could commit.

In the 6th chapter of her book, she tells us a story about her aunt Lola, who was murdered on January 13, 1990, by the mobs of Azerbaijani men. Her grandmother got a death certificate only after the pogroms in January in order to take Lola’s body out of Azerbaijan. With the help of the KGB, she obtained official government documents, accounting the injuries, and the evidence of the torture Lola suffered and died from. Aunt Lola’s murder haunted Liyah even in her sleep, replaying in her mind. The challenges for the family didn’t stop at only losing relatives and being at the scene of the terrifying events. Their only mission was to simply stay alive. The Babayans arrived in Armenia after the Earthquake of Spitak and had to live in a school shelter room for almost four years, with no money, electricity, in a state of hunger, as most people in Armenia.

In 1992, with the help of the College of Southern Idaho Refugee Program, her family was able to settle in the US. She started journaling her story not only as a survivor of Baku Pogroms but also as a refugee living in a completely different society in America. Later, her grandmother encouraged her to write a book based on the journal entries about the organized genocide that her family and thousands of Armenians survived in Baku.

Liminal is a refugee memoir, documenting her family’s escape from ethnic cleansing of Armenians in Baku, taking the reader into her childhood’s outlook of war and her personal space along with her struggle with identity and survivor’s guilt, conveyed through her emotional reflections about life after the genocide. It is also a glimpse into Armenian Anne Frank’s experience in America as a refugee.

“War kills childhood, everything else can be rebuilt” is a quote from her book and journal. “This violence killed our childhood,” she says. Emotional, mental, psychological and many other traumas became physical disorders for her family members later in life. Liminal is also the journey of empowerment, embracement, appreciation for life after violence and chaos for a girl longing for her childhood and life’s lack in breaking the human spirit.

The beatings, sadistic tortures, rapes, and murders in Baku terrorized all of the survivors mentally, psychologically and spiritually – leaving them physically homeless and emotionally deformed. Despite this, Liyah’s victim story was later converted into a victor story – a journey dedicated to rising awareness of the crimes committed against humanity in Baku. In her perspectives, the organized killings, fabrication of death certificates and dates, confiscation of property, expulsion of a population are considered as crimes against the humanity and Ilham Aliyev is as guilty for covering up the facts of genocide as his father, for planning and operating the movement. 

**
We had a great honor to talk to Liyah Babayan and get a broad understanding of her survivor story from her perspective.

-Thank you Liyah for sharing your story with us, can you tell us where is your family originally from?

-My father Martin Babayan’s parents are from Shushi, Karabakh, they migrated to Baku for work. His father Sarkis Babayan was a political secretary in Baku during WWII and re-enlisted to fight during the war, he never returned from war and was declared Missing in Action. My mother Tamara Ter-Simonyan grandparent’s escaped the 1915 Armenian Genocide of Turkey and escaped to Cyprus, then Uzbekistan and to Baku. My parents, brother and I were all born in Baku.

– Your book is based on your memories of the Baku Pogroms. Could you speak about massacres of Armenians in Baku? What did actually happen there?

It was a very terrifying time in my childhood. The adults around us were very scared, and as children we could feel that something was very wrong. I watched the demonstrations of thousands of people outside our apartment. Our building had 16 floors, we lived on the 12th floor and could see out into the public square near the Karl Marx statue the mobs of men gathered chanting to cleanse Baku of Armenians!! My mother put her hand around my mouth and took me inside from the balcony because I was singing Armenian songs. This was a tension point of Karabakh conflict.

My parents were harassed at work, and told to not come to work. Then the attacks and violence began, we escaped October 1989, was the last time I was in Baku. We were living in complete fear those days, because we were being hunted. To be Armenian in Baku in 1990 was a death sentence. I remember hearing about neighbors killed and relatives escaping. It was very a scary time for us children. “War kills childhood, everything else can be rebuilt.” this is a quote from my journal and book. This violence killed our childhood.

My aunt Lola, I write about in chapter 6 of my book, did not survive. The mobs of men entered my grandparents’ house and murdered her on January 13, 1990. My grandmother went back to Baku after the pogroms in January, under a different identity with a KGB escorting her at the airport. She went back to her house after the killing of my aunt. She also retrieved a death certificate with the help of the KGB official and attempted to take Lola’s body out of Azerbaijan. I write about what happened in my book.

-Would you tell us about how your family escaped the Baku Pogroms in 1990? When did you move to the USA?

My family survived the Baku Pogroms, I was 7 when we escaped to Armenia. I remember seeing the demonstrations and the Soviet tanks in October 1989 outside our apartment on Prospect Lenin, this was the last time I was in Baku. My parents put my brother and I on a bus leaving Baku to Yerevan and our relatives met us at the station in Yerevan. My parents and I went back to Baku again after that and that was our last time. My aunt Lola was killed that January 1990 during the pogroms.

We lived in Yerevan with my aunt and then in Yeghvard, in a school storage room (School #1) for almost 4 years before we left to United States as refugees. We were homeless and this was our only shelter for almost 4 years. I started 1st grade in that same school in Yeghvard and my brother. It was after the Earthquake. Those were very difficult years for my family, with no money, no kerosene, no electricity and hunger in Armenia, people were struggling to stay alive. We arrived to America September 4, 1992 to New York, then to Twin Falls Idaho through the College of Southern Idaho Refugee Program.

I went back to Armenia in 2005, I went back to Yeghvard and saw our old shelter in that school. It brought me many tears to relive those memories. I wanted to have a time of closure so I could have the mature emotions to finish my book. It was very painful to relive the past and difficult to write my book. I wish to come to Armenia again and again visit the school in Yeghvard.

-What has made you commit yourself to speaking about humanitarian values, justice and compassion?

I felt the injustice my family survived and the cold murder of my aunt Lola in my heart all my life. As a child I had a very difficult time healing and coping with my aunt Lola’s murder. It haunted me in my sleep, her being killed in Baku. My family was very wounded and shattered by the violence we survived in Baku. Even after we moved to America, we never talked about it because it was too painful to remember. I was encouraged by a teacher to start journaling when I started to learn English in 4th grade.

To write about my emotions and what our family survived, and about how it was to live as a refugee in U.S. – so since 1994, I kept journaling and one day I shared it with my grandmother. She encouraged me to write a book about what happened to our family, how we came to America. She made me promise I would write about pogroms and how this injustice we survived. I promised my grandmother I would.
I feel it is my duty to tell what happened, the organized genocide that my family and thousands of Armenians survived in Baku. This was a criminal act against humanity by a government, it was an organized ethnic cleansing campaign. The Azerbaijan dictatorship family, has blood on its hands. Father, Heydar and now the son Ilham Aliyev, is just as guilty of covering up this genocide. First the father, now the son. The destroying of Armenian Cemetery, this is an international crime against humanity. The organized killings, fabrication of death certificates and dates, confiscation of property, expulsion of a population – all this is crimes against humanity by international law. They continue to manufacture anti-Armenian sentiment in Azerbaijan and hostility towards Karabakh.

Whole Aliyev family is corruption, manipulation of facts and rewriting of history. Look what’s going on there now, they lock up in prison anyone who speaks freely against their corruption, political prisoners, authors, any opposition to their false narrative. Their own people accuse them of this corruption, this oppression of free thought and speech. This family has built their empire off their talent of corruption.

-How did you come up with the idea of writing this book?

-My memoir is a combination of my journal writings from (age 10-18 years of age) also included my memories of our life in Baku, escaping pogroms, life in Armenia and coming to America. I promised my grandmother I would write it, and it was very important for me to keep my promise to my grandmother. She is no longer alive, but I feel we wrote this book together, with her help and information. My entire family was involved in the process of this book, very supportive and this gave us opportunity to talk about what we survived.

When I tried to think of a word that described how it felt losing our home, our identity our whole life – and becoming refugees, it was difficult to describe this emotional and mental state. How it feels to come to America and not be American, and slowly become part of a new country, how that change feels every day. The psychology of refugees and the way our identity is shattered, fragmented and how we have to piece our identity and life back together – this is how I found the word LIMINAL. It best described my emotion about myself, our family identity and our refugee family trauma. Our life was always in the air, changing and out of our control. Especially after we came to U.S. we did not understand this new society, culture or what to expect about life ahead. Was a space of constant changing and unknown.

That is why I call my book Liminal, a refugee memoir – it is about how traumatic events change our identity and what becomes of us after this. I was young when I wrote about this 16, 17, 18 – but my thoughts searched for a word to understand my own experience as a refugee child and teenager growing up in America. There was a lot I had to process about my past, and what my family endured before I could understand who I was in this new country. It was liberating to write about the difficult thoughts and feelings I had as a child, my own way of coping.

It is important for my children the truth about how we came to America, they will their lives knowing their Armenian roots.

-Is there a desire to translate it into Armenian and present it to the Armenian public?

-This is my dream, to meet someone who would be passionate about translating it into Armenian and Russian. Especially in Armenian, I studied and learned Armenian when I went to school in Yeghvard, but now I can read and write a lot less. I feel it is important to have my book in my mother tongue, to honor my ancestors in the language they preserved. I hope I have an opportunity to translate the book and share with our people in Armenia.

I am pleased to announce, a U.S. Veteran man age 86, purchased 100 copies of my book to donate to schools, universities and libraries throughout the U.S. He wanted people to know what happened in Baku to Armenians.

-It is known that thousands of Armenians had to leave Baku without any documents and money, leaving everything behind. You have been studying this issue for quite a long time. What steps have been taken to file private lawsuits against Azerbaijan and demand compensation for lost property, as well as moral damages? Many of the survivors have settled in the US after the pogroms. Are you in touch with other witnesses? Have you tried to work together with those people and launch joint projects in the US to raise the awareness of the massacres in Baku?

It was crucial for me to solidify the research first, gather information and documents. I have been working on this book for 15 years, especially the emotional strength to relive the past and feel the trauma over again. Connecting with geo-political professors, historians, genocide studies programs, these are the foundation of my memoir. Understanding the effects of genocide on the psychology of survivors, from Holocaust, Cambodia, Bosnia and other genocides, the Post Traumatic effects on survivors and life after genocide. My family lost everything in Baku, our home (that was issued by the government to my WWII Veteran grandfather Sarkis.) My family suffered long after the pogroms, emotionally, mentally, psychologically and many of the traumas became physical ailments in my parents and grandparents later in life. Our personal possessions, family heirlooms, photographs, the historical and sentimental documentation of our family’s history was destroyed and stolen from us. The vandalism, desecration, destruction and paving over of our loved ones in the Armenian Cemetery in Baku – that is the most immoral, shameful and criminal act any society can commit. Desecration of secretarial graves is an act of genocide and criminal according to international law. Azerbaijan is guilty of this crime.

When I visited Armenian and Yeghvard again in 2005, this sparked my spirit to be strong about telling the world what happened to my family. Before there was too much pain, an open wound – now there a desire for justice where the wound was before. For my aunt Lola, for the Armenians killed in Baku, there is a desire for truth and accountability for their murder. If there is not justice by international law, there is justice by international awareness. We, Armenian refugees, are victors not victims of our past. I dedicate my life to making sure the international community is well aware of the crimes against humanity committed in Baku.

This book helped my family connect with old friends who we lost contact with, friends who lived in the same building as us in Baku. With social media, the book has reached people all over the world. Hundreds of Baku survivors, from all over the world have contacted me to share about their own family’s escape. I will be working towards a lawsuit through the international human rights court. Connecting with a knowledgeable legal team, who understand the gravity of such injustice on future generations and holding those who commit crimes against humanity to an international law, is crucial to this case.

I have dedicated my life to bring justice to the crimes against my family, the truth cannot suppress by Azerbaijan’s government outside of Azerbaijan. The international community knows of the pogroms of 1990, it is reaffirmed by academia and online archives of history. It is clearly available for anyone to learn about through journalist, intentional government statements and eye witness contributors on Wikipedia. The government of Azerbaijan has zero credibility in the global community – it is a swamp of corruption. Even the people of Azerbaijan know they are held hostage by their own corrupt leadership, and are right now fighting for the dignity and freedom of basic human rights.
*
You can purchase Liyah Babayan’s ‘Liminal: A Refugee Memoir’ book on Amazon.

Lusine Poghosyan



https://armenpress.am/eng/news/963236.html?fbclid=IwAR0HZXtSoy6ooiXGPG1ewFIo7q56urcOGCWzdUiPUkpY3–4dH9Lq0KImIs

Teacher’s hour is not for the spiritual preaching – Arayik Harutyunyan (video)

“The history of the Church will remain to be included as a subject in school,” Arayik Harutyunyan, RA Minister of Education and Science, told reporters after the government session.

“I attach importance to all the items related to Armenia, and all these and other subjects will be reconsidered and we will have a whole new subjects list until 2023.”

According to the minister, parents are mostly complaining about the overloading the children.

“Regarding the mismatch of the programs, there are repetitions in the subjects such as history of the church, the Armenian history, military science programs, even in the songbook.”

The Minister also presented the details of the incident with a spiritual pastor in one of the schools in Ararat province.

“That priest was not there at all. There was David in that village, and when I visited that school, the clergyman came there. I asked the director what the clergyman did at school. The director said that he was usually invited to attend classes during the teacher’s hours. The conversation was related to his presence at the teacher’s hours, which is a big problem. Teacher’s hours are for organizational problems, not a spiritual preaching. ”

Arayik Harutyunyan mentioned about the fact that the priests are waiting for the minister to apologize after the incident.

“I expect that the priests who have nothing to do with the incident at all should apologize.”

Congratulations, Armenian Army! – FFA

The Armenian Football Federation (FFA) and some of the top Armenian football clubs have congratulated the Armenian Army Day.

The Football Federation of Armenia has written on its Facebook page: “Congratulations, Armenian Army!”

Also, Yerevan’s champion Alashkert, newcomers Ararat-Armenia and Artsakh FA congratulated the Armenian Army.

Sports: Henrikh Mkhitaryan: Coming back soon full of strength and energy

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 22 2019
Sport 17:56 22/01/2019

The Armenian national football team and Arsenal midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan has thanked the club for the birthday message.

“Coming back soon full of strength and energy,” the Armenian wrote on his Instagram account.

Arsenal earlier congratulated Mkhitaryan on its official Twitter account. “HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MICKI ! @HenrikhMkh turns 30 today – we hope you have a good one and we’re looking forward to seeing you back on the pitch soon,” the club said.

To remind, the Armenian was out of action since December 19 because of a foot injury and was expected to return to full training in six weeks. Mkhitaryan fractured the metatarsal in his right foot in Carabao Cup defeat by Tottenham and was replaced at half-time.

Armenpress: Parliament staff returns 404 million drams to state budget

Parliament staff returns 404 million drams to state budget

Save

Share

10:29,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. The staff of the Parliament of Armenia has saved 404 million AMD during 2018, deputy chief of staff of the Parliament Arsen Babayan said on Facebook, reports Armenpress.

“This saving is a result of effective management and right regulation of expenditures. The 404 million drams saved have been returned to the state budget”, he said.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan