Development of allied relations with Russia among key priorities of Armenian government

Development of allied relations with Russia among key priorities of Armenian government

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14:55, 6 February, 2019

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 6, ARMENPRESS. Armenia will actively work on ensuring its active and initiating participation in the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) by contributing to further raising the effectiveness of these structures, the government’s draft Action Plan, that was released today, says, reports Armenpress.

According to the draft, the actions on developing the strategic-allied relations with Russia are among the top priorities of Armenia.

“The Armenia-Russia relations are based on friendship, equality and the readiness to solve the issues with joint efforts. The government views Armenia’s strategic partnership with Russia as a key component on ensuring Armenia’s security system”, the draft says.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Azerbaijani press: ICRC discloses number of released hostages taken during Karabakh conflict

7 February 2019 14:42 (UTC+04:00)

Baku, Azerbaijan, Feb. 7

By Samir Ali – Trend:

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has announced the number of released hostages taken during the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

About 700 people taken hostage since 1992 up till now have been returned to the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides.

Not only servicemen, but also civilians are among those released.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts.


168: Priority of Armenian presidency at EEU is elimination of obstacles, says Pashinyan

Category
Politics

Armenia, by assuming the presidency at the EEU (Eurasian Economic Union) bodies, is planning to work actively, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said in an interview with the Russian RBK TV.

“Presidency at the EEU supreme bodies enables to work more actively in the organization and to attempt to boost the general work. This is exactly what we are set to do. I have already talked about priorities, but I would like to emphasize that I find the elimination of obstacles that exist at the EEU to be the main [one]. It has been calculated and presented that 80 obstacles exist in the Eurasian Union territory, concerning a number of sectors. Here I must note that in addition to “de jure” obstacles there are also “de facto” obstacles. Our main goal will be eliminating some part of them. If we succeed [to do so] in entirety, then it will be very good,” Pashinyan said.

Sports: Armenian figure skater through to European C’ships final

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 24 2019
Sport 14:06 24/01/2019 Armenia

Armenian athlete Anastasiya Galustyan has qualified for the finals of the 2019 ISU European Figure Skating Championships.   

She scored 48,38 points in the short program to take the 21st place among 36 athletes, the National Olympic Committee said.

The 24 strongest athletes will compete for medals at the final of the championship to be held on Friday, January 25. 

Armenia’s second representative Slavik Hayrapetyan will compete today in the short program.   

Sports: Armenian boxers prepare for 2019 competitions

MediaMax, Armenia
Jan 10 2019

Photo: Mediamax

The Head Coach of the team Davit Torosyan told Mediamax Sport that the trainings will be held in Yerevan, and then a training camp will be organized in Tsaghkadzor.

“This is very important year for us before the Olympics. We have already decided which tournaments we will take part in to understand the final composition of the team,” Torosyan said.

The coach also noted that the European Games in Minsk will be followed by the World Championship, which will be a qualifying competition for the Tokyo 2020. He expressed hope that his athletes will be able to perform successfully and achieve their goals.

Yerevan’s four districts and Ararat province to have their water supply cut off for 22 hours

ARKA, Armenia
Jan 8 2019

YEREVAN, January 8. /ARKA/. Residents of Yerevan’s Nubarashen, Erebuni, Kentron and Shengavit districts as well as Ararat province will do without water supply on January 9 and 10, Veolia Jur, the company supplying water in Armenia, reported on Tuesday.  

In Kentron district, Ostrovsli, Tsaturyan and Zavaryan streets with their lanes as well as 1, 4/2, 17 Alek Manukyan Street, 1-40 Nar Dos, 1-15 Kristapor, 1-65 Tsakhotagortsneri, 28-231 Khorenatsi and 12-80 Tigran Mets with lanes will have their water supply cut off.  

The Yerevan Police Department, the Armenian National Security Service and the Yerevan State University will be cut off water for 22 hours. 

Residents of Bardzrashen, Ditak, Jrashen and Nor Harberd villages in Ararat province will do without water as well.

The company apologizes to its clients for the inconvenience caused and thanks them beforehand for understanding. -0— 

Montreal: At 21, this aerospace engineering student, former refugee has created her first invention

The Globe & Mail, Canada
Jan 4 2019
 
 
At 21, this aerospace engineering student, former refugee has created her first invention
 
LES PERREAUX
 
Shoushi Bakarian, an aerospace engineering student at Concordia University, poses for a photograph with a ventilation device that she redesigned for Cessna Aircraft, at Stratos Aviation in Montreal on Oct. 30, 2018. Bakarian arrived from Syria in 2016.
 
 
This is part of Stepping Up, a series introducing Canadians to their country’s new sources of inspiration and leadership.
 
The distance from Aleppo to the lab at Montreal’s Trudeau airport where a young engineer-in-training is perfecting her first invention is 8,580 kilometres, but Shoushi Bakarian’s trajectory might better be measured in light speed.
 
Three years ago, Ms. Bakarian was sitting in Lebanon, part of a family of four Syrian refugees facing an uncertain future with hope of making a new start in Canada. Fast-forward those 36 months: Ms. Bakarian is in her third year of aerospace engineering at Montreal’s Concordia University. She has learned her fourth language, French – in addition to English, Arabic and Armenian. She’s got two part-time jobs with promising prospects in her field: one in the parts department at Bombardier Aerospace and another at Stratos Aviation, a small aviation and flight simulation firm. There, she’s co-created her first invention in the lab she’s building. Oh, and she leads a Scout troop where she hopes to influence her young charges.
 
She’s 21. “I want to reach girls and tell them they don’t have to limit themselves to traditional jobs, like teachers. Especially for girls from my community, they have a very limited idea of what’s out there,” Ms. Bakarian says. “I want to become an example.”
 
On a recent late fall day, Ms. Bakarian tinkers with the tiny generator fan blades of her latest accomplishment: The Ventus, a 5-volt accessory charger for Cessna airplanes that runs off the aircraft’s air vents and as an added bonus cools the air by compressing it. The simple blue tube prototype seems likely to become a must-have accessory for pilots who rely on tablets and smartphones for aviation computation but fly aircraft that were mostly built long before the smartphone era.
 
“I like clean energy, solar power, wind power, so we developed it further to add on the charger idea,” she says. “I spent my summer designing, drawing and testing until it worked.”
 
Naor Cohen, the owner of Stratos Aviation, hired Ms. Bakarian within days of meeting her during an outreach program for women in aviation about a year ago. Ms. Bakarian started out as an instructor on the company’s flight simulators. One day he shared an idea he had to improve cooling small Cessna cabins by using a Venturi tube to compress and cool the air. He invited her to set up a lab with computers and 3-D printers and she ran with it.
 
“I guess she must sleep very little,” Mr. Cohen says. “We’ve never seen her as an employee, and more as a partner in the team. She’s free to come whenever stuff needs to be done. Right now, she’s concentrating mainly on the lab. We want to put that imagination and creativity to work more.”
 
Ms. Bakarian arrived in Canada on Christmas Eve, 2015, with her father, Antaranik, her mother, Ani, and her now-24-year-old sister, Meghri. The daughters had high school diplomas earned during the Syrian civil war with rockets flying overhead and bombs bursting not far from their Armenian school in Aleppo.
 
Small details come back to Ms. Bakarian as she remembers the time. “Our school was in the firing line, so we had to study in a kindergarten in these tiny little chairs,” she recalls. “I always make jokes about it, but it’s not funny.”
 
By 2015, the battle for Aleppo had settled into a stalemate and her family was stuck. “In Grade 10, the big bombs started, by Grade 11, we were without electricity or running water or internet. Some people started to leave but we didn’t know how to get out of Aleppo. We didn’t know who was on the road waiting to kidnap us. … Once the missiles started falling, we didn’t know where they were coming from or where they’d land.”
 
A turning point came when her mother needed surgery that had to be performed in Lebanon. The medical issue combined with mounting violence forced the family to make a move. They spent a year in Lebanon while she recovered. Her parents concluded the family would have limited education and work opportunities in that country. That’s when Canada opened the doors to Syrian refugees.
 
In those early Canadian winter days, the family enrolled in French classes while all four of them set about finding work. Ms. Bakarian got hired at McDonald’s, a job she kept as she enrolled at Concordia, which helped her family survive while her parents found work in the garment industry. It was a step down from her father’s previous job managing a tools warehouse. Meghri, meanwhile, is specializing in child studies at Concordia.
 
Ms. Bakarian is grateful for the sacrifices her parents made, but she made some, too. She was almost crushed by workload as a first-year university student who was working 30 hours a week at her fast food job. “I was physically, emotionally and mentally exhausted,” she says. “But now I’m making up for it. My family is okay now, and it’s easier.”
 
Arpi Hamalian, an education professor emerita at Concordia University, took the younger Bakarian women under her wing when they showed up at an orientation in early 2016. “They were looking a little lost,” Dr. Hamalian recalls now, but it didn’t take long for them to get on track. “Shoushi, well both girls really, know exactly who they are and where they are going. They are unbelievably talented, focused and team-oriented. There aren’t many like them.”
 

Court hearing on Kocharyan’s bail request underway

Court hearing on Kocharyan’s bail request underway

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17:20, 28 December, 2018

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. A Yerevan court of general jurisdiction is currently examining former President Robert Kocharyan’s motion on granting him bail.

2nd President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan, who ruled the country from 1998 to 2008, spent two weeks in jail in summer 2018, but was eventually freed. But on December 7, a higher court overruled the release and ordered him to be remanded into custody pending trial again.

At the time the court announced the verdict, Kocharyan turned himself in to authorities by going to a Yerevan jail.

Kocharyan is charged for ‘overthrowing constitutional order’ during the 2008 post-election unrest, when clashes between security forces and protesters left 10 people dead during his final days as president.

He vehemently denies wrongdoing.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Calendar of Events – 01/3/2019

                        Armenian News's Calendar of events
                        (All times local to events)
                =========================================
What:           "The Armenian Community of Ethiopia - Past and Present"
                a lecture is given by Asbed Pogarian
When:           Jan 20 2019 1pm
                Following Church Divine Liturgy which starts at 10:30am
Where:          Prelacy's Hall, 6252 Honolulu Ave., La Crescenta, CA
Misc:           Individual Armenians have settled in Ethiopia as traders and
                advisors, but it was only in the late 1800s and early 1900
                that a community was formed.
                In 1924, the future Emperor Haile Selassie "adopted" 40
                orphans from the Armenian orphanage in Jerusalem and brought
                them to Ethiopia, making them his official Imperial Marching
                Band. Their leader, Kevork Nalbandian, composed the national
                anthem of Ethiopia in 1930, which played until the Communist
                Revolution of 1974, when it was discontinued.
                Asbed Pogarian is a third generation Ethiopian-Armenian. His
                paternal grandfather arrived in Ethiopia in 1899 after
                surviving the Hamidian massacres of 1895-96. Both his parents
                were born in Addis Ababa. He left Ethiopia in 1975 and
                attended the Melkonian Educational Institute in Cyprus. In
                1985, he spent a year in Yerevan researching the relationship
                between Ethiopians and Armenians throughout history. Last
                January, after an absence of 43 years, he returned to Ethiopia
                for the first time and documented his travel in the film, Dear
                Ethiopia: A Love Letter.
                The event is free to the public. There will be a reception
                with Sample of Ethiopian Food.
Online Contact: [email protected]
Tel:            818-244-9639
                =========================================
What:           The Zeytun Gospels "Missing Pages: The Modern Life of a
                Medieval Manuscript from Genocide to Justice"
                a lecture is given by Prof. Heghnar Zeitlian
When:           Feb 24 2019 1pm
                Following Church Divine Liturgy which starts at 10:30am
Where:          Armenian Apostolic Church of Crescenta Valley
                Western Prelacy's Hall, 6252 Honolulu Ave., La Crescenta, CA
Misc:           In 2010, the world's wealthiest art institution, the J. Paul
                Getty Museum, found itself confronted by a century-old
                genocide. The Armenian Church was suing for the return of
                eight pages from the Zeytun Gospels, a manuscript illuminated
                by the greatest medieval Armenian artist, Toros Roslin.
                The Missing Pages is the biography of a manuscript that is at
                once art, sacred object, and cultural heritage. Its tale
                mirrors the story of its scattered community as Armenians have
                struggled to redefine themselves after genocide and in the
                absence of a homeland. Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh follows in
                the manuscript's footsteps through seven centuries, from
                medieval Armenia to the killing fields of 1915 Anatolia, the
                refugee camps of Aleppo, Ellis Island, and Soviet Armenia, and
                ultimately to a Los Angeles courtroom.
                Heghnar Zeitlian Watenpaugh is Professor of Art History at the
                University of California, Davis. She is the award-winning
                author of The Image of an Ottoman City: Architecture in Aleppo
                (2004). Her writing has also appeared in the Huffington Post
                and the Los Angeles Times. As a board member of the US
                nonprofit Project 2015, she helped organize the historic
                Armenian Genocide Centennial Commemorations in Istanbul where
                she also delivered a speech in Armenian and Turkish
                The event is free to the public.
Online Contact: [email protected]
Tel:            818-244-9639
***************************************************************************
Armenian News's calendar of events is collected and updated mostly from
announcements posted on this list, and submissions to Armenian [email protected].
To submit, send to Armenian [email protected], and please note the following
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