Armenpress: Any violation of Armenia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity would lead to serious consequences, says U.S.

 10:10, 2 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. The United States has reaffirmed its resolute support to Armenia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, the Voice of America Armenian service reported citing the U.S. State Department.

The Voice of America Armenian service asked the State Department to comment on the Lemkin Institute’s latest Red Flag alert for genocide due to the alarming potential for an invasion of Armenia by Azerbaijan in the coming days and weeks.

In response, the U.S. State Department told VOA that ‘any violation of Armenia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity would lead to serious consequences.’

“The United States resolutely supports Armenia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. We’ve stressed that any violation of this sovereignty and territorial integrity would lead to serious consequences. We regularly stress our expectations, such as the call against the use of force, and we continuously follow the situation. Armenia is a close partner and friend to the United States, and we expect to work with the Armenian authorities to strengthen Armenia’s political and economic security,” the State Department said.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 24-10-23

 16:58, 24 October 2023

YEREVAN, 24 OCTOBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 24 October, USD exchange rate up by 0.15 drams to 402.36 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 0.97 drams to 427.47 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.05 drams to 4.30 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 2.47 drams to 491.36 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 190.92 drams to 25523.07 drams. Silver price down by 0.27 drams to 299.93 drams.

New Armenian Orthodox Bishop ordained in Erbil

Rudaw, Kurdistan Region, Iraq
Oct 30 2023
yesterday at 05:02
Farhad Dolamari
ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Less than a week after he was ordained in Baghdad as a new bishop of the Armenian Orthodox community, Archimandrite Oshagan Gulgulian visited Erbil on Saturday where he was also ordained before Armenians living in the Kurdistan Region. 
 
"It is very important and it gave me strength and support," Gulgulian said about his ordination in Erbil.  

Gulgulian is the first head of the Armenian Orthodox Church in Iraq in over four decades.

Speaking also to Rudaw after his ordination in Baghdad last week, Gulgulian stressed his commitment to the Armenian Orthodox community's spiritual principles and values while calling for peace among all Iraqi religious and ethnic groups.

“After 42 years, it was the first time that an election took place, … because Iraq was facing some difficulties and there were not many candidates as well,” the bishop said last week.

The new bishop of Armenian Lebanese origin was elected among three other candidates to lead Iraq’s Armenian Orthodox community.

Until 2004, Basra was home to around 350 Armenian families. Today, fewer than 150 families still live there. Similarly, only three of the 120 families who used to live in Mosul remain in the city today, and the number of Armenians in Baghdad has plummeted from 6,000 to 500. This is all due to successive wars, instability, and violence against the ethnic minority group.

Armenians consider themselves as being prevented from exercising their rights and they have repeatedly called on the ruling authorities of Iraq to assign them a seat in parliament, like other minority groups already have.

Unlike other parts of Iraq, the Kurdistan Region has become a safe haven for Armenians and other minority groups who have fled displacement and violence in other parts of the country.

The constitution of the Kurdistan Region recognizes Armenians as an ethnic component, provides the right to mother-tongue education in the Armenian language, and reserves one seat in parliament for Armenians.

There are six Armenian churches in the Kurdistan Region – four in Duhok province, one in Erbil, and one in Kirkuk.


Government to aim for 7% growth in 2024

 13:15,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government will aim at ensuring 7% economic growth in 2024, Finance Minister Vahe Hovhannisyan told lawmakers Monday.

“Regarding the predictions of economic growth, given the latest developments we believe that in 2023 we will ensure at least 7,2% economic growth. The budget originally forecast 7%. And for 2024 we continue to target 7% economic growth,” Hovhannisyan said.

The services sector will be the moving force of the growth.

Armenian Economy Minister, British counterpart discuss the possibility of organizing Armenia-Britain direct flights

 19:31,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS.  Minister of Economy of the Republic of Armenia, Vahan Kerobyan, had a meeting with Minister of State in the Department for Business and Trade, Timothy Minto, in London.

Kerobyan informed on his Facebook page, adding that issues related to trade, services, and investments were discussed during the meeting.

"We have also discussed the possibility of organizing direct flights between Armenia and Great Britain," wrote Kerobyan.

Asbarez: ANCA-WR to Salute Prof. Richard G. Hovannisian with Posthumous ‘Legacy Award’


BY KATY SIMONIAN

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region will salute Dr. Richard G. Hovannisian with the 2023 Legacy Award. 

In recognition of his extraordinary contributions to the Armenian community and studies of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 which continue to make a global impact, the Legacy Award will be presented posthumously, after Dr, Hovannisian passed away this year at the age of 90. 

The Armenian community will honor Dr. Hovannisian’s achievements as a true trailblazer of Armenian Studies in American Academia, at the 2023 Awards Banquet which will take place on Sunday, November 12 at The Omni Hotel.

Following nearly ten months of Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade of Artsakh and its military onslaught which resulted in the forced depopulation of Artsakh, the ANCA-WR Board seriously considered canceling this year’s Awards Gala. However, remembering the inspiring words of Artsakh Foreign Minister and last year’s Freedom Award honoree David Babayan, who is currently unlawfully imprisoned in Baku, the ANCA-WR Board decided that it must not cower in the face of Azeri aggression and that it must forge ahead in a show of unity and resilience against the injustices inflicted on our people, pledging to donate a portion of the proceeds toward humanitarian assistance for Artsakh genocide survivors.

“Dr. Richard Hovannisian’s life and work continue to inspire generations of Armenians,” said ANCA-WR Chair Nora Hovsepian, Esq. “Though he is physically no longer with us, he has left an indelible mark on the Armenian experience, and his legacy will continue through the people who knew and respected him and the millions who can and will access his work to learn from him at this pivotal moment in our history,” she added.

Professor. Historian. Pioneer. The son of Armenian Genocide survivors who became a titan of Armenian Studies and American Academia, Dr. Richard Hovannisian is himself an integral part of Armenian History in the sheer volume of work he contributed to a field he helped to create.

As the author of more than 30 books and hundreds of articles, most notably Armenia on the Road to Independence and The Republic of Armenia, which was published in four volumes, in Armenian, Russian and Farsi translations, Dr. Hovannisian’s depth of research is matched only by the grace, passion and elegance with which he shared stories of history that continues to illuminate the complexities of the Armenian people and beauty of Armenia’s culture, with six volumes on the Armenian Genocide and fifteen volumes on the provinces and cities of Historic Armenia, seized by the Ottoman Empire.

A monolith of education in the United States and around the world, Dr. Hovannisian’s work as a public intellectual continues to break ground, as he remains indisputably one of the most fascinating figures of the 20th century, emerging as a Professor with the unique ability to connect Armenian students and people from all walks of life to the history he so eloquently shared across generations of students.

Born in Fresno in 1932 and raised in Tulare, California, his family immigrated to the United States as Armenian Genocide survivors. His father, Kaspar Gavroian, was born in 1901 in the village of Bazmashen, near Kharpert in Western Armenia. His mother Siroon would often welcome Armenian families who lived in the area, many of whom were from the same villages in Armenia, filling their home with stories of survival, capturing the closeness of the Armenian community.

Stories of faces, names, happy days and moments of struggle became organic to his childhood. With their shared experiences, his mother and father would raise a son, who would go on to immortalize the history of the Armenian people with his work, and along with his siblings, young Richard would carry on carving out new spaces of acknowledgment of those who came before him. Making a commitment to documenting Armenian history created the groundwork for modern Armenian Genocide Education programs. It is poignant to know that years later, Dr. Hovannisian would serve as a consultant to the California State Board of Education, most famously authoring the chapter on the Armenian Genocide in the State’s Social Studies Model Curriculum on Human Rights and Genocide.

A Guggenheim Fellow, Dr. Hovannisian received many honors for his scholarship, civic activities, and advancement of Armenian Studies in America and around the world. As a founder and six-time president of the Society for Armenian Studies, he served on the editorial boards of five journals and on the Boards of Directors of ten scholarly and civic organizations up until this past year, maintaining his spirit of giving through research, teaching and scholarship. During his career, he gave hundreds of lectures and participated in numerous international forums and in the media on Armenian issues. Dr. Hovannisian represented the State of California on the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education (WICHE) from 1978 to 1994, ahead of his work to shape the curriculum of Armenian Genocide Studies in schools.

As a proud Armenian native of California, Dr. Hovannisian became Professor Emeritus of Armenian and Near Eastern History and was the past Holder of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at UCLA and Presidential Fellow at Chapman University. He received his B.A. and M.A. in history from the University of California, Berkeley, and Ph.D. in history from UCLA. A member of the UCLA faculty since the 1960s, he organized both the undergraduate and graduate programs in Armenian History and served as the Associate Director of UCLA’s Center for Near Eastern Studies from 1978 to 1995. He has also served as a distinguished visiting professor at the University of California, Berkeley, California State University, Fresno, Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts, University of California, Irvine, Chapman University, and University of Southern California.

Dr. Hovannisian was the recipient of encyclicals and medals from the Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin I and Karekin II and from the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, Karekin II and Aram I. In 1990, he became the first social scientist living abroad to be elected to the Armenian National Academy of Sciences.

He received honorary doctorates from Yerevan State University and Artsakh State University and was also awarded the Movses Khorenatsi Medal by the Republic of Armenia and the Henry Morgenthau Medal by the Armenian Genocide Museum and Institute.

For his impactful career and commitment to community service, he was honored by the Armenian Educational Foundation, Armenian National Academy of Science, Facing History and Ourselves Foundation, Jewish World Watch, Hamazkayin, Tekeyan, and Nor Serount Cultural Associations, the Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region, Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, California State University, UCLA Friends of the Narekatsi Chair, Armenian Bar Association, National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, Society for Armenian Studies, and Armenian Professional Society, among many other organizations.

As a man regarded as a philosopher of history and Armenian Studies, Hovannisian received commendations from the U.S. Congress, California State Legislature, Los Angeles City Council, Fresno City Council, and Fresno County Board of Supervisors for his achievements during more than fifty years of teaching, research, writing, and lecturing worldwide about Armenian History, culture, and current matters of importance to the Armenian people.

In 2019 he was honored by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, and in 2020 he received the Legacy Award from the ANCA-WR Education Committee.

One of the most admirable aspects of his legacy is the fact that as a scholar, he dedicated his life to chronicling the 1915 Armenian Genocide, as he amassed and donated more than 1,000 survivor and witness testimonies to the USC Shoah Foundation which were accumulated from the Oral History Project he created.

One of his most endearing honors came in 2011, when he was named “Most Inspiring Teacher” by the UCLA Alumni Association. In 2018, he was honored by the City of Lyon, France, and received the title of “Prince of Cilicia” from His Holiness Aram I.

For more information about the wonderful life and legacy of the incomparable Dr. Richard Hovannisian, and to purchase tickets for the 2023 ANCA-Western Region Awards Gala, please click here.

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

Katy Simonian is a member of the 2023 ANCA-Western Region Awards Gala Committee.




Victims of Azerbaijani Attack on Artsakh were Tortured, Human Rights Defender Says

Armenia's Rights Defender Anahit Manasyan with CoE Rights Commissioner Dunja Mijatović in Koyak on Oct. 18


Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Anahit Manasyan said Thursday that signs of torture and mutilation were observed on the remains of Artsakh Armenians killed during Azerbaijan’s large-scale attack there in September.

She said that her preliminary report on the ill-treatment and torture was used by attorneys representing Armenia during last week’s hearing at the International Court of Justice.

The report found torture and mutilations on numerous bodies that were evacuated from Artsakh to Armenia, including bodies of civilians, including women and children.

Speaking about the former Artsakh officials who are now jailed in Azerbaijan, the Human Rights Defender said that the rights of the Artsakh Armenians are being restricted with explicit violations of international legal standards.

“First of all the presumption of innocence of these persons is violated on all levels in Azerbaijan, because they are branded as criminals from the very beginning, both on the state level and by specific individuals,” Manasyan said, adding that it is impossible to guarantee due process in Azerbaijan given the state-sanctioned Armenophobia there.

On Wednesday, Manasyan and the Human Rights Commissioner of the Council of Europe Dunja Mijatović to visited the Kotayk province and met with displaced Artsakh resident temporarily being housed there.

Around 105 forcibly displaced persons, including 40 children, are currently living Tsaghkadzor’s winter retreat.

”Private interviews were held with forcibly displaced persons. They presented the deprivations they suffered and the problems caused by the forced displacement to the Defender and the Human Rights Commissioner of the Council of Europe,” Armenia’s Human Rights Defender’s office said in a statement.

“Special attention was paid to issues related to ensuring the rights of children and persons with disabilities,” the statement said.

Manasyan also visited the temporary accommodation of displaced persons located in the University hotel of Yerevan State University located in Tsaghkadzor, where 167 forcibly displaced persons, including 44 children, are currently staying.

During the meeting their conditions, needs assessment, medical aid and service, food, as well as personal hygiene items provision processes were examined. 

As a result of the visit, the problems recorded by rights defender will be summarized and the proposals aimed at solving them will be presented to the competent authorities together with the appropriate analysis.

CPP’s Armenian community horrified by mass exodus of Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, following Azerbaijani military attack

Oct 17 2023


By Monday, Oct. 2, nearly all of Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population abandoned their home after Azerbaijani forces attacked and ordered the region’s militants to disarm, according to the Armenian government.   

Now, feelings of shock and disbelief pour over Cal Poly Pomona’s Armenian Students Association as students ask for the university to acknowledge the conflict in a statement of condemnation toward Azerbaijan.  

During their third club meeting of the semester, ASA members created signs, flyers and posters Sept. 26 to help spread awareness about the loss of Artsakh’s Armenian population. Students dipped the palms of their hands in red, blue and orange splotches of paint and pressed them against posters, replicating Armenia’s national flag.  

The multicolored handprints were then paired with messages, such as, Genocide Denied, Is Genocide Repeated, Artsakh: War, Is & Will Remain Armenian, and Justice for Artsakh.   

The ASA followed up their last club meeting with a student protest, held during UHour Tuesday, Oct, 10 in front of the University Library. During the one-hour protest, more than a hundred individuals passed by the demonstrating students on their way to their next destination — receiving pamphlets with a QR code for the Armenian National Committee of America that lists how to contact local legislators, in order to send emergency aid to Artsakh.    

“I’d love to see Cal Poly Pomona make a statement of condemnation for the ethnic cleansing that has been going on in Artsakh,” said computer science student and ASA member Sarkis Gafafyan. “They released a statement during the 44-day war, and I believe a statement is appropriate now for students to be aware of the situation.” 

Gafafyan is one of 80 students in the ASA, a community of Cal Poly Pomona students who host various social, cultural and educational events to promote student appreciation of Armenian culture. 

Azeri forces entered Nagorno-Karabakh Sept. 19 for a military offensive against outnumbered Armenian forces, forcing Armenian withdrawal within 24 hours 

Following the offensive, a fuel depot explosion shook the mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh Monday, Sept. 25, wounding more than 200 people in the blast. The explosion occurred as ethnic Armenians rushed to leave the region, lining up at the depot to refuel their cars and escape the military offensive.  

An estimated 100,514 of the region’s 120,000 population have crossed into Armenia by bus, completing a weeklong exodus of ethnic Armenians into the Republic of Armenia.  

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan condemned the exodus as an act of ethnic cleansing and separating people from their homeland. The prime minister is tasked to provide the displaced population with housing, medical care and jobs amid financial and logistical issues in Armenia.  

“Many people don’t even know what is going on, many people don’t even know that the country of Armenia exists, despite it having a rich history and being one of the oldest countries on the planet,” said architecture student and ASA member Hagop Kevorkian. “Armenians want to live in peace and just not have to succumb to external forces that hate us beyond belief, for no other reason than the fact that we’re Armenian.” 

Following Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict in 2020, Cal Poly Pomona’s ASI Board of Directors approved a senate resolution drafted by the ASA, prompting university administration to release a statement in support of Armenians in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.   

In light of Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of Armenians in Artsakh, the 1915-1920 Armenian  

Genocide is a haunting reminder for CPP’s Armenian community to never forget their history.    

 CPP finance Professor and ASA Advisor Roman Gulagian reveals a photo of his grandfather, a genocide survivor who walked from the modern city of Kayseri to Aleppo in a 400-mile march, at 10-years-old. 

“It’s something that we can’t forget, people that have their ancestors as genocide survivors,” said Gulagian. “It’s super special to us, because we have a connection with it, and we don’t want it to happen again.” 

 The mass exodus of Artsakh’s ethnic Armenians from their ancestral lands, is a migration paved in historic violence from Azerbaijan, leaving Armenians to pick up the pieces. 

“I don’t think that Azerbaijan has learned that Armenia has survived thousands of years of history, said Gafafyan. “You can take land from us, you can take our homes and cattle away, but you’ll never be able to take our knowledge away you’ll never take our culture.”  

To donate to Artsakh’s refugees, visit the Armenia fund. 

https://thepolypost.com/news/2023/10/17/cpps-armenian-community-horrified-by-mass-exodus-of-nagorno-karabakh-enclave-following-azerbaijani-military-attack/

If you thinking of revenge, remember what we’ve done: Azerbaijan President Aliyev

Turkey – Oct 16 2023
Politics  

2023-10-16 11:46:44 | Son Güncelleme : 2023-10-16 12:27:46

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev visited the regions liberated from occupation in Nagorno-Karabakh. Aliyev made a speech after raising the Azerbaijani flag in the city of Khankendi, which the occupying regime in Karabakh once considered as the "capital".

"They should not forget the 2nd Karabakh War, the anti-terrorist operation. If any power in Armenia still thinks about revenge, it should take a good look at today's images," Aliyev noted.

Stating that less than three years have passed since the Second Karabakh War.

"Today we are here in the center of Khankendi under the coat of arms and flag of Azerbaijan. This is a great happiness and a historical event. Maybe it would not be right to talk about this history now. Because we lived this history, we wrote this history. The Azerbaijani people won such a victory that this victory will be with us forever. Today the souls of the Great Leader Heydar Aliyev and all the deceased who could not see this day are honoured. Of course, my presence here at the time when we are celebrating the 100th anniversary of Heydar Aliyev (his birth) has a great symbolic meaning," Aliyev emphasized.

"Our flag is there. That should teach them a lesson. They thought that what I said was just a word. No, I did what I said, everyone knows it, including Armenia, and they should not forget. They should not forget the Homeland War. They should not forget the anti-terrorist operation. Nevertheless, if some forces in Armenia are thinking of revenge, they should take a good look at these frames," Aliyev noted.

Aliyev also reaffirms the presence of the Azerbaijani flag in Khankendi, stating that he has followed through on his promises. He warns against thoughts of revenge in Armenia, referencing the Homeland War and anti-terrorist operation. The statement blends historical reflection, patriotism, and a stern message to potential challengers of Azerbaijan's territorial integrity.

The State Department of Highways of Azerbaijan announced that 2 employees of the institution lost their lives as a result of the detonation of an anti-tank mine during the passage of a vehicle belonging to the State Department of Highways carrying out work on the Ahmadbeyli-Fuzuli-Shusha highway at around 03.45 local time on September 19.

After this incident, a mine exploded during the passage of the police vehicle traveling to the scene. It was stated that 4 police officers lost their lives as a result of the explosion. After the terrorist attack, Azerbaijan announced the launch of an "anti-terrorist" operation in Nagorno-Karabakh. Terrorists raised the white flag and surrendered their weapons exactly 24 hours later.  Then the Armenians living in the region left Karabakh.

Source: Anadolu Agency


CEO of AJR Trucking Elected as New President of the National Star Route Mail Contractors Association (NSRMCA)

PRESS RELEASE
AJR Trucking Inc
435 E Weber Ave,
Compton, CA 90222
Contact: Siranush Zakaryan
Tel: 213-952-5800
Fax: 562-989-9525
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: https://www.ajrtrucking.com

CEO of AJR Trucking Elected as New President of the National Star Route Mail Contractors Association (NSRMCA)

The National Star Route Mail Contractors Association (NSRMCA) elected Jack Khudikyan, CEO of AJR Trucking, as its new President. For the first time in 11 years, NSRMCA has a new president, who was elected by delegates to NSRMCA’s 84th annual National Convention that took place on August 6-9 in Washington D.C. 

Many of the United States Postal Service leaders attended the National Convention, including Governor Ronald A. Stroman, Member of the USPS Board of Governors, Kelly Abney, USPS Chief Logistics Officer and Executive Vice President, Robert Cintron, USPS Vice President of Logistics, and Peter Routsolias, USPS Vice President of Transportation Strategy.

The election of the new president is expected to set the wheel of change in motion in the Association, especially in pursuit of its strategic goals. Since 1935, the NSRMCA has represented and advocated for the interests of transportation companies that contract with the United States Postal Service. These transportation companies are the backbone of the U.S. Postal Service’s surface transportation network, enabling efficient delivery to 161 million locations.

Jack Khudikyan has been in the transportation and logistics industry for nearly two decades. He is known for his resilient leadership, creativity, fostering a culture of innovation, effective negotiation skills, bold style of decision-making, and advocacy for sustainable business practices. His company - AJR Trucking - was established in 1984 (incorporated in 1990) and has been providing transportation services to the USPS for over 30 years. It’s a California-based company having operations nationwide. The company is a three-time recipient of the “Eagle Spirit Award” from the USPS for “Outstanding Management of Time Sensitive Transportation”. The Heavy Duty Trucking (HDT) magazine acknowledged AJR Trucking as one of “HDT’s 2022 Top Green Fleets” leading the green revolution in the U.S. trucking industry. AJR Trucking was honored with two USPS top awards at the National Postal Forum (NPF) in May 2023: 2022 Supplier Excellence Award and 2023 Transportation Partner of the Year Award.

Regards, 
Siranush
 

www.YourTeam.marketing
T. 747.272.0707


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CEO of AJR Trucking Elected as New President of the National Star Route Mail Contractors Associatio.pdf