High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs: Armenia not bringing Lebanese-Armenians, they are coming

News.am, Armenia
Aug 28 2020

20:56, 28.08.2020
                         

Armenia isn’t bringing the Lebanese-Armenians to the country. They are the ones who are coming. If Armenia brought them, repatriation would be at the state level. This is what High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs of Armenia Zareh Sinanyan told reporters in parliament today.

“Currently, there are some Lebanese-Armenians who prefer to come and settle in their historic homeland,” he said.

When told that there was a time when Syrian-Armenians also came to Armenia, but left Armenia for Europe, Sinanyan said the following: “Of course, the practice of the Syrian-Armenians was rather problematic. Armenia suffered losses since the government wasn’t prepared, but even in the best cases, for instance, in the case of Israel, not all the Jews who left for Israel after the collapse of the former USSR stayed in Israel, and many of them left for Canada, the US and other countries.”

ANN/Armenian News – The Literary Armenian News – 08/29/2020

MATURITY

Grish Davtian
Now that I understand the pain
I understand
Devotion and holiness,
And I do not despair.
Because
The stars of my feelings
That my eyes shine with light
In the sky
They light the way
As I walk in love
Drunk with emotions
Built with reliability.
What kind of shores will I settle in…
No love is shadowless
And it does not darken the hearts
Shattered from edge to edge,
From horizon to horizon…
I remember that dark-skinned boy
Which tree sparrows was he hunting?
With Chigglani.
was hunting
He did not condemn anything else
Or killing.
Life and death were no game
Other prizes were
That arched the edges
And the horizons
With the soaring of the stars,
Shining with the light of my eyes
With clusters of stars.
Nights in dreams
I embrace my dark complexion
To fall asleep in my warm arms,
calm down
I am thus strengthened by his fatigues,
Grown up, matured,
Feeling the pain
Understanding
Devotion and sanctity.
Life is sweetened with maturity,
Reaching for dignity
As effort and labor
A prosperous harvest and good luck,
Product.
Fertility of won days.

Grish Davtian has published three books of his poetries in Armenian, and one book in English.
He is the president of the Armenian Writers Association of California, and founding and former
editor of The Literary Armenian News. https://Armenian News.org/tlg/
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Newspaper: “Hot” political autumn expected in Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Aug 29 2020

09:15, 29.08.2020
                  

Media Advocate initiative: Yerevan mayor remains one of most criticized politicians in Armenia

News.am, Armenia
Aug 17 2020

14:16, 17.08.2020
                  

Questions raised in Armenia over reopening of schools

RFE/RL – Azatutyun
Aug 20 2020
August 20, 2020

An empty classroom at one of schools in Armenia (file photo)

Parents and education experts in Armenia are questioning the wisdom of the latest decision of the government to reopen schools in September with a number of coronavirus-related safety measures put in place to avoid major outbreaks of the disease.

Shushan Doydoyan, a mother of four school-age children, considers the re-opening of schools with restrictions imposed by the Ministry of Education ineffective.

In all schools re-opening on September 15 students will have to wear face masks during classes, schools will have to provide disinfectants, and classrooms will need to be disinfected every day before and after classes. Instead of five days, lessons will be held six days a week to reduce class hours. There will be a maximum of 20 students in classrooms and classes will be held in two shifts. Less time spent by children at schools will also help keep school canteens closed, authorities say.

“A decision that is detached from the needs of the public has been made. No one has asked the opinion of parents or teachers. The public has not been involved in the making of these decisions at all,” Doydoyan complained.

She believes that proper control over the safety measures at schools is impossible. “In any case, they are children. Without parental supervision and with one teacher for more than 10 children, it is simply impossible to properly monitor how correctly and safely they wear masks, because a mask protects only if worn correctly and safely. If you constantly touch it with dirty hands, if you drop it on the floor and then put it back on your face, it is fraught with unpredictable health problems,” Dodoyan said.

Samvel Martirosian, a teacher at the Aregnazan educational complex attended by about 400 students, expects “chaos” to reign in schools after September 15.

“The educational process will be very difficult for teachers considering that they will have to go to work also on Saturdays. There is a big question about whether it is a wise decision. I believe that in a month or two teachers will simply start running out of steam. I think that the situation will descend into chaos unless mistakes are addressed and new solutions are found along the way,” Martirosian said.

Education specialist Serob Khachatrian believes that the introduction of a six-day school week increases the risks for those students and parents who use public transport. He suggests that schools be reopened for only students in grades 1-6, while students of higher grades should continue to study online.

“If the duration of the lesson is shortened, say, to 25-30 minutes, then in this case the question will again arise: which is better – to go to school for a 25-minute lesson or conduct a 45-minute lesson remotely?” he said.

The specialist also thinks that intervals between lessons should be made at different times for different classrooms so that children could leave classrooms. “A lot of aggression may accumulate in children if they are kept in classrooms during class breaks,” Khachatrian said.

Pediatrician Mari Darakchian said that children attending schools should have their body temperature measured properly, schools must have a certain supply of masks and teachers must have special training to work with children in such conditions.

“If correct psychological work is carried out with children, they will wear masks with great pleasure. In the lower grades it can be done through play, for older children, of course, it should be done through explanatory work,” Darakchian said.

Earlier this week Education Minister Arayik Harutiunian stressed that wearing face masks is the best way to prevent the spread of infection in schools and the more properly masks are worn, the more likely it is that these restrictions will be removed in the near future.

Armenia has recorded more than 42,000 coronavirus cases and 833 deaths since the start of the epidemic. In recent weeks, however, the country’s heath authorities have been reporting a decreasing number of new COVID-19 cases and fatalities.

The current state of emergency in Armenia that was first introduced in March and led to the closure of all schools ends on September 11. The government has indicated that it will not seek its extension unless the coronavirus situation takes a turn for the worse.



Azerbaijani press: Hikmat Hajiyev: Armenia’s National Security Strategy – like fake history textbook

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Aug. 12

Trend:

Armenia has recently announced its new National Security Strategy to the public, Assistant to Azerbaijan’s President – Head of the Foreign Affairs Policy Department of the Presidential Administration of Azerbaijan Hikmet Hajiyev said, Trend reports.

“In the notes written as a preface to the strategy, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan broadly refers to the history of Armenia, touches upon the Armenian highlands, Hayk, King Artashes, Arshakids, the Kingdom of Van as well as to ‘genocide’ and other similar historical moments of a mythical nature, which is not entirely compatible with such documents in terms of format,” Hajiyev said.

“Generally, the National Security Strategy of Armenia is like a fake history textbook. Typically, such documents do not make so many references to the history. It is felt that Armenia still remains a hostage of the past, and its inferiority complex has been manifested itself in this document too,” he added.

Armenia considering ways to help compatriots in Syria amid Covid-19 outbreak

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 14 2020

Tribute to Avetis Aharonian, who signed the Treaty of Sèvres on behalf of Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 10 2020

Armenia reports 8 deaths from COVID-19 in last 24 hours

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 11:07, 3 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 3, ARMENPRESS. 52 new COVID-19 cases have been diagnosed in Armenia in the last 24 hours, the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention said.

Only 394 tests were carried out in the past day, and 111 people have recovered.

8 patients have died from coronavirus-related complications. All of them had underlying health conditions, health authorities said.

Since the outbreak began in Armenia, a total of 39102 COVID-19 cases have been recorded, with 29861 recoveries.

The number of active cases as of August 3 stood at 8251.

762 people have died from COVID-19 in Armenia. This figure doesn’t include the deaths of 228 other people who were diagnosed with the virus but died from other pre-existing conditions, according to authorities.

A total of 167095 tests were carried out in Armenia so far.

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan




CivilNet: How to ensure rapid development in the IT sector? EU4Digital highlights women as the key to growth

CIVILNET.AM

3 August, 2020 10:38

Information and Communications Technology (ICT) is one of the fastest growing sectors in Armenia. In 2018, Software and Services and Internet Service Providers accounted for 7.4% of Armenia’s GDP of $12.4 billion, up from 3.6% of GDP in 2013.

As one of the most effective engines of the economy, Armenia’s increasingly significant IT agenda receives strong support from the European Union. The harmonisation of digital markets is one of the EU’s key policies in the region, channelled through the EU4Digital initiative, which brings together priority actions and programmes in the digital field.

EU4Digital aims to extend the European Union’s Digital Single Market to the Eastern Partner states, developing the potential of the digital economy and society. One of the key thematic areas of EU4Digital is ICT innovation, supporting reforms and actions to favour the development of ICT research, start-ups & innovation ecosystems across the region, drawing from EU experience and best practices.

But while the ICT sector is growing in Armenia, it remains overwhelmingly male: according to the Enterprise Incubator Foundation’s latest IT Industry Report (2018), 19,522 employees were registered in Armenia’s Information and Communication Technologies sector, 27% more than the previous year. However, the vast majority of professionals in the industry – 68% – remain male, a figure that has barely changed since 2013, when it stood at 69%, and a shocking imbalance that highlights the unexploited opportunities and potential for growth in the sector.

Speaking to CivilNet, Anna Pobol, an EU4Digital ICT innovation expert, explains why the increase of women’s involvement in the industry is so important.

“Increasing women’s participation in the ICT sector has the potential to further stimulate the economy, not only through a simple increase of female participation as workforce (by reducing barriers to their employment), but also because women bring new skills to the workplace, that are complementary to those of men,” says Pobol.

Citing a recent study by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), she says the increased participation of women will lead to greater productivity, adding that the presence of women does not replace but complements that of men in the production process. In other words, an increase in the number of women in the workforce may bring more economic benefits than an addition of the same number of male employees.

But women in the region face specific challenges: “The distribution of responsibilities between women and men throughout the Eastern Partnership region is still unequal compared to EU countries. On top of their working hours (often overtime), women spend more time on household chores, and are also responsible for childcare and nutrition,” says Pobol.

It is therefore particularly important to develop special programmes to support women in the field of ICT innovations, with a focus on raising awareness of opportunities, promotion of digital skills and education, and support as well as guidance of women who have decided to start their own business.

“The EU4Digital programme seeks to involve women in all its ongoing activities and takes a special approach to targeting the needs of women in networking and training,” said Anna Pobol.

In recent years, special attention has been paid to the issue of gender ratio in the ICT sector in Armenia. Zhenya Azizyan, Project Manager at the Enterprise Incubator Foundation in Yerevan, says that promoting women’s involvement in the sector is a priority.

The Enterprise Incubator Foundation is one of the largest technology business incubators and consulting companies in the region. “We implement multilateral programmes aimed at the development and promotion of the sector, particularly educational and business orientation,” Azizyan explains. “And we target the involvement of many different layers of society in these programmes. In recent years, some of our programmes are aimed especially at promoting women’s involvement not only in the IT sector per se, but also by using technological and innovative solutions, to operate in other areas, and thereby, to increase competitiveness.”

According to Azizyan, more than 70% of the content team of the Enterprise Incubator Foundation’s staff is made up of women, including in the regional centres․ “This ratio has almost always been the same (never less than 50%): over the years, along with a tenfold increase in our total team, the number of female employees has proportionally increased.”

Azizyan came to the IT sector, because it was very natural for a “genetic mathematician”, she says. She studied at the Faculty of Mathematics of Yerevan State University, where boys predominated.

“At first, it may have been really difficult for a woman to be immersed in a developing sector that was dominated by men, especially in the managerial ranks. But, I never had such complexes. At the same time, the mentality of the IT community is also special, which contributes to gender equality: the sector is very open to talent, wherever it comes from,” says Azizyan.

Yeva Hyusyan, an economist by profession with years of experience in the IT sector, says the stereotypes are gradually being broken down. 

In 2013, Hyusyan founded Solo Learn, a company that provides IT education through mobile applications. At the time, people weren’t used to working through mobile, but the company broke through and Hyusyan succeeded.

Just as she has seen attitudes to technology changing since 2013, so too the attitude towards women. “When I was working at the Microsoft Innovation Centre in Armenia, we were in a very active phase of cooperation with the government. It was very interesting when you entered male government circles. I realised they didn’t know how to treat women; they didn’t treat you badly, they just weren’t used to dealing with a woman,” says Hyusyan.

According to her, the gender imbalance in ICT is due to traditional thinking about so-called ‘male’ and ‘female’ professions.

“People used to think that if you are a woman, you can’t be a good programmer. However, I think that mentality has changed very quickly in the last few years,” says Hyusyan, adding: “Yes, there are many boys in the sector, but there are also many girls, as they are educated with all the possibilities.”

In the past, girls were expected to get married, have children and be satisfied with that. But Hyusyan says the world is changing: “It should never be the only purpose of life, unless it is a personal choice.” Increasingly, girls can express themselves and show off their ideas without fear of being rejected. By joining the digital revolution, women are not only achieving greater equality, they are contributing their talents in a way that will benefit not only the sector, but the country as a whole.