Krekorian Blasts Azerbaijan’s Attempt to Prevent Pashinyan’s L.A. Speech

L.A. City Councilman Paul Krekorian

LOS ANGELES—Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Krekorian has condemned an effort by the Los Angeles Consulate General of Azerbaijan to prevent Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan from speaking at a massive rally in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday, September 22.

In a letter addressed to LA Mayor Eric Garcetti, the consul general, Nasimi Aghayev, urged the City “not to allow the misuse of the Grand Park by the Government of Armenia.”

Krekorian responded with his own letter to the consul general this week that excoriated the attempt to enlist LA City leaders, including Mayor Garcetti, in this effort.

“(Your) letter urges the elected leaders of Los Angeles to violate the United States Constitution by censoring free _expression_,” wrote Krekorian. “Our country is founded on the idea that the free exchange of ideas makes us stronger and in fact is necessary to make our democratic government possible.”

“Please allow me to be as clear as I can be,” proclaimed Krekorian, “Prime Minister Pashinyan absolutely will be my guest in Los Angeles City Hall, he absolutely will address the public in Grand Park, and he absolutely will be welcome to say anything about any topic he chooses to speak about, without limitation.”

The rally is scheduled to begin at 2 p.m., with the prime minister speaking around 4 p.m.

ACNIS reView

Pass of the week    
 
SEPTEMBER 14, 2019   

 

M:On September 7, the legal team of Robert Kocharyan, the accused in the case of Art. 1, the second president of Armenia, submitted a petition to the Yerevan Court of Common Jurisdiction to immediately remove Kocharyan’s preventive detention and stop the criminal prosecution. Apart from that, the defenders, in a letter addressed to the president of the court, requested to ensure that the submitted motions are handed over and examined immediately. They relied on the decision published by the Constitutional Court on September 4, according to which the High Court recognized as unconstitutional one of the two articles contested in the former president’s application, Article 35 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which deals with the circumstances excluding the proceedings or prosecution of a criminal case.

…The decision of the Constitutional Court caused a great public response. These days, there is no shortage of those who criticize and oppose the decision in the press and social networks: lawyers, private citizens, political-social structures and others. Later put his authoritative word into circulation also Thatthe countynoting that S:D decision by force Robert Kocharyan towards initiated criminal the pursuit to stopto him free to release grounds there are noneTo Kocharyan’s supporters this sleeveless nodid n:they believe that their client is innocent ohand should be released immediately based on the decision of the High Court, and: the criminal prosecution should be stopped. “Continuation of detention after this decision is illegal… The decision means that a crime there is nonebecauseand: of the president actions they are not can criminal of trial in the framework of discussion object to become», – completeKocharyan’s lawyer Aram Orbelyan said in a conversation with writers։ According to him: if times contested in the law changes be done, all the same from that after and:s: Kocharyan no can obeyw:come out responsibility. Opponent arm representativenaturally, they also have their justifications, according to which the Constitutional Court’s decision in question is illegal, because the examination of the given problem is beyond the scope of his powers: Lawyer Tigran Yegoryan testifies S:D: 2010 in the year accepted number 918 someanda, in which it is saidof court impartiality and impartiality regarding doubtin availability conditions heldgiven judicial the act no match of the Constitution fixed principles and: no can be implemented: “Only this the basis enough isin order to exactly the same Constitutional of court by accepted the decision not happen»,- of freedom with in the conversation clarify is Yegoryan. By: his Kocharyan the application examined՝ CC: the members already and hasin:n: prejudiced attitudehow many that before «March: 1»-in: to the case related to different decisions regarding firstson authorities positions side I wasn: vote:

And indeed Kocharyan from the application ahead Constitutional of court judge Wahe Grigoryanthe mediation was submitted that CC: president Bye Tovmasyanuh, members Do?and:ik Petrosyanehand Hrant: Nazaryan they are not can unbiased and unbiased to examine this the caseGrigoryan with facts justify was the latter participation «March: 1»-in: related to to affairsHowever CC:n:without this the mediation to examinepassed isr: Kocharyan application to the exam: In parallel, Kocharyan’s “fakes” in the media and hired protesters demanding Kocharyan’s release began to intensify their “brainwashing” activities on the street.

Whether the main accused of “March 1” will be released from custody or not will be seen in the near future. One thing, however, is already clear. as evidenced by the latest developments related to the case and, especially, by the decision made by the Supreme Court on September 4, artificially generated a situation that is difficult to cope with. A situation that gives both interested parties equal opportunities to evade, to depart from the same legal norms in their own way, to get entangled in fruitless disputes on both sides. wide opportunity. Clearly, a miscalculation was made. Farewell to Tovmasyan and other representatives of the second president’s team (covert or overt?) successfully created eand for a special purpose to the public deliver such don’t a puzzle around which «from swinging swords» until internal division only is one step. Hey, beware of this.

 

S:On September 11, in defense of Amulsar, a march was called by the Armenian Environmental Front, which was joined by a number of activists, political forces and citizens. Pavlik Manukyan, Garegin Chugaszyan, Gevorg Safaryan, Andreas Ghukasyan, Karen Antashyan were among them. The participants of the march marched from the National Assembly building to the Opera House, chanting the slogan “No mine, as many as we exist”. As a result of Amulsar’s action, Mashtots Avenue was paralyzed, and the participants of the march called passers-by and drivers to join them. The drivers signaled their support to the activists.

… The public tension around Amulsar is not easing in any way. And people’s concern is understandable. Amulsar is not a peripheral Kajara, Alaverdi or Teghut, it is domineeringly spread right in the center of the water resources of the republic. The government and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan himself are trying to convince the environmentalists, the residents of the villages near the mine and the public and political figures and representatives of the intelligentsia interested in the problem, that the right thing is to exploit the mine. According to the government’s argument, it will promote the development of the economy, bring investments, cheap money, jobs, etc. The Union of Industrialists and Businessmen developed the same idea in its statement recently. And the Prime Minister?yesterday, when urging the residents of Termuk to open the roads leading to the mine, he assured that as of today there is no legal justification for banning the operation of the Amulsar mine.

Among the participants of the above-mentioned march bNationalist Ani Khachatryan retorts that Pashinyan “deliberately does not take into account many risks and claims that there are none”, despite the fact that he promised that even if there was a 0.01% risk, the mine would not be put into operation. According to Khachatryan, the prime minister performs a patronage function. Pashinyan’s “change of mind” also caused the surprise of Levon Barseghyan, head of the “Asparez” club of journalists. On his Facebook page, he gives several justifications for rejecting the Amulsar exploitation project within the framework of legality, citing the opinions of high-ranking experts in the field. At the end of the post, Barseghyan notes: “Now, questions. Where did Nikol’s intelligence and ingenuity go? Why does he insist on a rejected and harmful idea? Who influenced or scared that Armenia will suffer great losses? Why is he gradually separating from the public, what are they blackmailing him with, maybe… I can’t imagine, I don’t know.”

It would not be fair to say that the Government is “sleeping” the problem. Only recently, the executive with Amulsar’s agenda open and closed convened meetings, in order to discuss the situation, he met several times with representatives of “Lidian”, environmentalists, Jermuk and nearby communities residents, professionals, there were discussions, clarifications, debates. “Lydian Armenia” assures that the operation of the mine is 100 percent safe: “not a liter of water will be polluted either on the ground or underground, not a gram of dust, the pastures will even remain clean.” The other side, however, does not believe in such assurances and continues to insist that the operation of the mine is fraught with disastrous consequences, it should be closed immediately. And so consensus cannot be reached.

Meanwhile, the problem urgently requires a solution. Moreover, a solution based on the popular principle of “Measure seven, cut one”. That’s exactly what it seems to be doing. We will live and see.

 

Gevorg Lalayan commented

 

Ahead of the presidential and parliamentary elections of 2020, local self-government elections were held in Artsakh last Sunday. In 228 communities, 415 candidates for the head of the community and 2573 candidates for the member of the council of elders were nominated. The number of voters is 103 thousand 10. There were also elections in the capital Stepanakert, where a non-partisan Davit Sargsyan, founding director of “CONSULT FINANCE GROUP” JSC, president of Artsakh Kick-Boxing Federation, was elected mayor from 5 nominated candidates. In this election, unlike the previous ones, Armenian non-governmental organizations also carried out an observation mission, for which the RA government provided more than 33 million drams. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan congratulated the heroic people of Artsakh on the occasion of free, fair and competitive elections of local government bodies.

As part of the criminal case investigated by the Investigative Committee regarding the cases of apparent abuses allowed during the construction process of the “North-South” highway, charges were brought against Serzh Sargsyan’s brother Lyova Sargsyan, as well as the owners of the project’s subcontractor company, Suren and Gevorg Vardanyan. As a result of large-scale investigative and judicial actions, data was obtained that a clearly implemented criminal scheme was operating in the selection of subcontractor organizations during the implementation of the project. Sargsyan was charged with money laundering and using real or perceived influence for profit. A search warrant was announced against him and a petition was filed to choose detention as a preventive measure.

On September 12, the trial of Kocharyan and three other former high-ranking officials, former Minister of Defense Seyran Ohanyan, former Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces Yuri Khachaturov and former Secretary of the Security Council Armen Gevorgyan, began in the Yerevan Court of Common Jurisdiction on September 12. Kocharyan’s defenders submitted a petition, asking the court to immediately stop the criminal prosecution and release Robert Kocharyan from custody, based on the well-known decision of the Supreme Court. In front of the Shengavit court building, where the court session was scheduled, Kocharyan’s supporters and opponents held actions. The court went to the conference room to issue a judicial act, and upon returning, judge Anna Danibekyan announced that the act will be published on September 17, at 1:00 p.m.

  

Armenia’s foreign debt records decrease tendency, says PM

Armenia’s foreign debt records decrease tendency, says PM

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 10:14,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS. For the first time since 2015, a tendency of decrease of the foreign debt has been recorded in Armenia in August 2019, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Facebook.

“Of course, the decrease of the state debt is not an end in itself, but this is the result of our concrete task to spend the state funds effectively.

This, of course, somehow slows down the pace of capital expenditures because the system is used to working with other, famous rules.

But this is definitely a right path: not to allow to waste state funds on low-quality constructions and kickbacks”, the PM said.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Priotix Advances Armenia’s Competitiveness in Global IT Market

The Priotix team

Priotix Software Development Company is one of the many ventures that are advancing Armenia’s burgeoning IT sector and advancing the country’s goals of becoming a regional hub for advanced technologies and innovation.

The company’s chief executive office Lusine Vardanyan said that Priotix has been developing and maintaining both enterprise software solutions as well as web and native mobile applications with global clients for several years. She also discussed the growth in IT and how technology is strengthening Armenia’s future. Below is her interview with Asbarez.

Asbarez: Lusine, how would you describe the IT market’s development in Armenia?

Lusine Vardanyan: Armenia has been one of the great innovation hubs for centuries, one that many have unfortunately never heard of. That is why many global tech companies are surprised by the quality results they achieve through opening development offices in Armenia.

As a strategic economic cluster for the country, the government tries to boost the IT sector by providing tax breaks and investments in education, which remains behind in its desired benchmarks.

Nationwide, there are about 800 IT companies. In the past ten years, the industry has been growing by an average of 23%, and a number of experts in and around the space have agreed that this growth will continue. You may also have seen an article, titled “Yerevan – Silicon Mountains,” in which Yerevan is ranked fourth among the top 10 startup capitals.

Asbarez: How else is that growth being encouraged and fostered?

L.V.: Promoting young talent is a priority in the Armenian IT sector. By 2018, around 19,550 people were employed by the industry, with the government’s target being to employ around 40,000 IT professionals by 2025.

The industry is also comparatively feminine. Almost 30% of Armenian IT professionals are women, though I still face predominantly male executives at industry events as one of the few female CEOs in the Armenian tech industry.

Lusine Vardanyan Priotix CTO Felix Khachatryan

Asbarez: What is the main focus of Priotix?

L.V.: Priotix, which was previously known as Sourcio, is a full-service custom software partner with an incredibly experienced senior development team based in Armenia. The team has been developing and maintaining both enterprise software solutions as well as web and native mobile applications with our global clients for several years.

Asbarez: How do you differentiate yourself from competitors in the domestic software development market?

L.V.: Our team prides itself on engineering maturity, quality and scalability of our delivered solutions, and our ability to meet time-to-market requirements. This is what makes the company different, and it’s how we’ve been able to secure a client return rate of more than 95% and a satisfaction rate close to 100%.

We are one of the very few software partners in Armenia securing high quality scalable cloud architecture and deployment, CI/CD, automated workflows, and testing environments, as well as automated monitoring and alerting.

Another differentiator of Priotix is that we usually don’t commit to short-term and one-time projects. Our strategic business model is partnering with global clients who are looking for long-term dedicated teams that fully substitute their IT departments.

We commit to those long-term software development projects which bring with them exciting end products and business propositions, as we usually negotiate equity partnerships for both the company and the dedicated team on top of signing a service contract. Partnership is our cornerstone business model both with the team and clients.

Asbarez: What are your company’s future plans, both in the near future and in the long term?

L.V.: One of our mid-term goals is developing a new service of big data engineering, trying to leverage the expertise of our certified engineers to assist both current and new clients with their ever-growing big data engineering needs.

Our company’s growth is very dynamic, so, in the long term, we plan to expand by bringing more like-minded experienced software developers, data engineers, DevOps, QAs, and other professionals to our great team.

Priotix team members

Asbarez: Can you tell us about some of the flagship products developed by Priotix?

L.V.: One such flagship product that we’ve partnered with is a Minnesota-based startup with an Armenian founder focusing on competitive video games and the esports industry.

We have developed an unparalleled web platform called WIN.gg that is a content hub covering such popular games as Dota 2, Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, League of Legends, Overwatch, Fortnite, and more.

It’s a venue through which gamers, enthusiasts, bettors, and any other industry stakeholders may benefit from individually customized news content, statistics, tournament standings, and more. In the near future they will also be able to access dynamic rankings and AI-powered match projections.

WIN also has its own CS:GO competitive league targeting up-and-coming teams looking to launch their careers forward. Winners League 3rd season starts from October 2019. And we’ve recently launched mobile apps for iOS and Android that can be downloaded from App Store and Google’s marketplace.

For now, WIN’s main markets are North America and Europ, with strategic goals of expanding to China and other Asian markets in the future.

Asbarez: What drew you to work on this particular project?

L.V.: You likely know that video gaming is booming in the United States and around the world, with 22.3 percent annual growth rate in the industry. 1 out of 4 millennials are playing at least one competitive game on a daily basis. The annual growth rates for both revenue and audience have been higher than for traditional sports for several years now.

With all of this being considered, we think WIN.gg has incredible potential.

WINN.gg  founder and CEO Serge Vardanyan

Asbarez: Can you tell us more about WIN.gg?

L.V.: Pre-seed and Seed investors of the startup company share our belief in the industry’s future and in the product’s potential, as the founder and CEO Serge Vardanyan has already raised several million dollars from local angel investors.

Serge has always had a passion for competitive gaming, as well as a dream of creating his own successful company. He was born in Armenia and moved to the U.S. in 2015 upon accepting a job offer from a leading international gaming technology and service provider to manage operations in the Americas.

He decided to leave that company and pursue his dream. He was fortunate enough to find like-minded peers with whom he could start building an ambitious product that would eventually better any potential competitor in the market. With that ambitious goal in mind, he turned to Armenia and contracted Priotix in early 2018 for web and mobile development services, and WIN.gg has been our flagship partner since.

Armenian government’s plan to close down boarding schools is fraught with serious violations of children’s rights

ARKA, Armenia
Sept 2 2019

YEREVAN, September 2. /ARKA/. The Armenian government’s plan to close down boarding schools is fraught with serious violations of children’s rights, the head of the National Pedagogical and Psychological Center Armine Davtyan stated at a press conference today.

She said the closure of boarding schools and handing the children down to the full custody of their families should be carried out in stages. ‘If the process is forced, the children may find themselves in difficult social conditions, which will also affect their psyche. The promised monitoring of the families cannot guarantee their safety and care in families which suffer from social and other problems,” she said.

She said although the rights of the child to the family are enshrined in the Constitution, there are no guarantees that the child will  receive care in the family, and the money the government gives the family  for it will be spent as intended.

“After classes in boarding schools the child is under guardianship, but if the schools are liquidated, the child may end up on the street or in conditions that would injure their psyche. It will be especially difficult for children with physical disabilities if they are not accepted in their own family,” said Davtyan.
According to Armine Davtyan, difficulties in the family can lead to increased child vagrancy, as well as increased crime among children and serious mental disorders.

She said special boarding schools must be preserved for those children whose residence in their own families is completely impossible. According to her, the state should develop new criteria for admission to boarding schools, based on the observance of children’s rights, especially guarantees of their safety, education and care.

“It is clear that the actions of the government should be aimed at maintaining a healthy and strong family, but in cases where the safety of children and their rights are violated, strict measures must be taken,” Davtyan said. –0-

168: Apart from democracy

Category
BUSINESS & ECONOMY

How come that, the global political thought has been stubbornly stuck in place throughout a certain era of human existence?
Isn’t it possible to think up, justify, and come up with something else, a new idea? How much they can bend, curve, branch, attach and graft this, which has been called “democracy”?

Is it not clear that in this technological crazy acceleration of the world in the 21st century, more or less real (at least perceived by the former world) democracy has remained deep in the past?

Is it not clear that what is called “public opinion”, the pillar of democracy, has been a result of purely information manipulations for a long time ago, distorted and detached from the truth and reality, an effective way to “transpor” and keep the society in “alternative” reality, with its all consequences?
Is it not clear, that in a truly developed democracy, in the countries with tens of millions or hundreds of millions of populations (even mentioning the smaller ones is unnecessary), it would be impossible to nominate and elect pure populists and even clowns by profession?

Is it not clear, that the widespread usage of information technologies in the electoral process has irrevocably alienated societies from the most important and critical chance given by democracy: from the right to elect leaders through the fair elections?
For more than a hundred years we have : social democracy, but in fact, dictatorship and fascism; democratic centralism, but in reality, one-party totalitarian dictatorship; liberal democracy, but in reality, perversion and chaos, etc., etc.
The whole of humanity seems to be in the shape of a squirrel in a circle called “democracy”.

Political scientists, Please, think of something new …

Apply to anthropologists, psychologists, physicists, astronomers, do what you want to do, and think of something new !

All the social sciences, particularly Law, and History, in some part also Economics get into trouble with this crumbling democracy.
Do something !

A very general observation, purely from a professional standpoint:
The countries with monarchs perhaps manage to ensure relatively stable positive economic indicators and the preservation of national values , but the real, nobleones, not dictatorial monarchs or something like that. Tyrants have also made short-lived successes at times, if being smartand patriotic, although they largely lost most of the wars in the final end.

There is no example of a successful country when there is anarchy and chaos,.
Think something, dear Political scientists, otherwise we should be obliged to turn to the philosophers again, and that will not take us to better place: they will “bury” all in the contradictory theories of rational vs irrational, materia vs idea, and etc.

Karen Chshmarityan




Sarkissian appoints protocol chief to serve as advisor

Sarkissian appoints protocol chief to serve as advisor

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16:00, 21 August, 2019

YEREVAN, AUGUST 21, ARMENPRESS. President Armen Sarkissian has appointed his protocol chief Armen Gichyan to serve as his advisor, the Sarkissian Administration said in a news release.

It wasn’t immediately clear who will succeed Gichyan as head of the protocol service of the presidential administration.

Gichyan is a longtime protocol executive and served in the same position even during the Serzh Sargsyan Administration.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

Film: An Overlooked Filmmaker’s Monumental Contributions to Diasporic Cinema

Hyperallergic
Aug 23 2019

Gariné Torossian has much to teach viewers about the experience of dwelling in displacement.

August 23, 2019

A telephone call structures Gariné Torossian’s 1993 film Girl From Moush: a diasporan woman speaks to an operator in a fictive homeland. She asks to be connected to Armenia, but doesn’t specify to whom. Presumably, to anyone in a place which is not this one.

She addresses the operator first in her native language, then in English. “Ur vor etam, yes Hye em … I’d like to be connected to Armenia.” Like telephony, diasporic memory tries to travel impossible distances, to arrive at a place that no longer exists at the time of arrival.

This is what historian James Clifford would call an attempt to “(maintain, revive, invent) a connection with a prior home” — to make a connection that could resist the forces of cultural erasure and effects of involuntary migration. Hamid Naficy explains that the telephone figures prominently in movies made by diasporic and displaced directors — what he calls “accented cinema” — because a phone call offers the illusion of being there, of finding place amid displacement. The caller in Torossian’s film rejects her absence from the place she is dialing.

I watched Girl From Moush at a retrospective of Torossian’s work hosted by the Los Angeles Filmforum at the Egyptian Theatre in July. It was the first retrospective program of her films in Los Angeles — a staggering fact given her monumental contributions to feminist diasporic cinema over the past quarter-century. Roughly 25 years on, Girl From Moush has much to teach viewers about the experience of dwelling in displacement.

Torossian’s own trajectory unfolds along a migratory route. Born in Beirut of Armenian descent, she spent her childhood in Bourj Hammoud before her family fled the Lebanese Civil War in 1978 — first to a camp in Cyprus, then to Toronto. They spoke no English when they arrived in Canada. At 17 years old, she met the filmmaker Atom Egoyan at the Armenian Community Center. He would later supply images for Girl From Moush, culled from his 1993 film about a diasporan photographer who travels to Armenia to document churches for a commercial calendar. Its plainspoken title, Calendar, suggests what queer theorist Elizabeth Freeman calls a “chrononormative” regulation of time — time dictated by the clock and forward march of capitalist productivity. At the same time, the title also refers to a printed document where the then and there is separated from the here and now only by the width of a single sheet of paper.

Gariné Torossian, Girl From Moush (1993) (image courtesy Los Angeles Filmforum and the artist)

Girl From Moush reformats an archive of photographs into the flicker of moving images. Its title cites an eponymous folk song set in the ancient Armenian city of Moush — located in Turkish territory in the present day — where Indigenous Armenian communities were eradicated by the Ottoman government during the 1915 Genocide. Torossian hypnotically animates Egoyan’s visuals of churches in the Kotayk province, adding mountain vistas, family mementos, and illuminated manuscripts. The artist takes a pair of scissors to these traces of memory, cutting them up and layering them in unlikely arrangements that mirror the fragmentary transmission of collective memory across global networks of migration. Speeding along a vertical scroll of celluloid in nonlinear and nonnarrative arrangements, the images don’t linger. They never rest in place, but scatter across multiple spatial and temporal coordinates.

Girl From Moush stages an experience hauntingly familiar to many diasporans: discovering a still photograph from the past, embalmed in time, and recognizing that it’s lodged in a thereness that can’t be accessed. For me, these are always images of my mother in Yerevan in the 1980s, smiling and radiant. A photograph like this conjures a response that’s something like amateur telekinesis. You will the picture’s constituent parts into motion, enlarged to life-size proportions, lifelike enough to inhabit. You will the photograph to expand, to become a place that would accommodate your body. In Girl From Moush, Torossian superimposes her face over the accelerated images via transparencies. She inserts herself into the film’s geographies as though into the “terrain of belonging” denied to the dispossessed.

Portraits of Sergei Parajanov also appear — the Georgian-Armenian filmmaker responsible for the iconic and dreamlike Color of Pomegranates. Torossian describes Girl From Moush as an homage to him: “The only filmmaker who represents the Armenia I long to see … He photographed the real Armenia, the Armenia in my mind.” In lieu of imagining a stable place of origin or site of return, Torossian offers up diasporic memory untethered from fixed territories and nation states: “After making the film I realized this is just a dream, a fantasy about a country I could never visit. No one could.”

Gariné Torossian, An Inventory of Some Strictly Visible Things (2017) (image courtesy the artist)

The penultimate piece in the Los Angeles Filmforum showcase was a digital video created roughly 25 years after Girl From Moush, after the artist’s repatriation to Armenia, An Inventory of Some Strictly Visible Things (2017). An Inventory also begins with a telephone: a shot of a smartphone with the weather app loaded, indicating that it’s 20 degrees Celsius and sunny in Yerevan. The artist writes the date in her notebook: September 21, 2017. She catalogues all the objects within her line of sight, from quotidian rocks, lamps, and Armenian alphabet blocks to a woman in a floor-length red ballgown making a surreal daytime appearance on the stairway of the Yerevan Cascade.

Some seven months after An Inventory was shot, the streets depicted in the video would swell with over 100,000 demonstrators gathered to protest the economic violence of an autocratic state. The success of their Velvet Revolution would secure the possibility of Armenian self-determination for the first time in a century. Which is to say, the Yerevan brilliantly indexed in An Inventory bears little resemblance to the hallucinatory Armenia of Girl From Moush. An Inventory’s crisply shot and starkly lit digital renderings belong to the here and now rather than there and then. Watching the two works in succession presents an object lesson in displacement and return: the geographies conjured in diasporic memory are irrecoverable even after repatriation. Torossian’s films call up places that were never bound to fixed cartographic territories — they dial sites that remain beyond reach.

A retrospective of Gariné Torossian’s work was hosted by the Los Angeles Filmforum in July. 

Editor’s note: An Inventory of Some Strictly Visible Things (2017) was commissioned for an exhibition curated by Hyperallergic’s Editor-in-Chief Hrag Vartanian. He was not involved in the editing of this review.


https://hyperallergic.com/514292/garine-torossian-girl-from-moush/




No serious injuries reported in military transportation truck crash

No serious injuries reported in military transportation truck crash

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10:26, 23 August, 2019

YEREVAN, AUGUST 23, ARMENPRESS. A military transportation vehicle has crashed early Friday morning near the village of Baghanis in the Province of Tavush in what appears to be a single-vehicle accident.

Ministry of Defense spokesperson Artsrun Hovhannisyan said the soldiers who were being transported did not suffer serious injuries.

Other details weren’t immediately clear.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/22/2019

                                        Thursday, 
Armenian Government Funds Election Monitoring In Karabakh
        • Gayane Saribekian
Nagorno-Karabakh -- A football pitch for children and an Armenian church in 
Shushi (Shusha), September 6, 2018.
Armenia’s government allocated on Thursday 33.7 million drams ($70,000) in 
funding to two civil society groups for monitoring upcoming local elections in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.
Voters there will elect on September 8 the mayors of the capital Stepanakert 
and other Karabakh towns and villages as well as local councils.
The mayoral race in Stepanakert is expected to be particularly tight, with five 
candidates participating in it. The city’s incumbent mayor, Suren Grigorian, is 
not seeking reelection.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian stressed the importance of the funding provided 
by his government to the Stepanakert office of the Yerevan-based Union of 
Informed Citizens (UIC) and Transparency International’s affiliate organization 
in Armenia. Both groups will use the money for organizing election monitoring 
missions in Karabakh.
“As I said [recently,] the government of Armenia and I personally believe that 
Armenia must help to create additional safeguards in order to guarantee the 
free expression of the Artsakh people’s will,” Pashinian said at a cabinet 
meeting in Yerevan. “This action is part of those measures, which is 
unprecedented, if I’m not mistaken.”
Vahram Tokmajian, the head of the UIC’s Karabakh branch, expects the upcoming 
polls to be watched by a record-high number of local monitors.
“I think that this is very good, for Artsakh (Karabakh) in the first instance,” 
Tokmajian said of the government’s decision. “We will have monitors in around 
40 polling stations, while our partner organization will deploy them in 40 
other polling stations.”
“We will also have mobile groups that will tour various precincts. On top of 
that, we will hold courses for local monitors,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service.
Karabakh is also scheduled to hold presidential and parliamentary elections 
early next year. The region’s incumbent president, Bako Sahakian, is not 
eligible for another term in office. He has been in power since 2007.
Neither Sahakian nor Pashinian has endorsed any potential presidential 
candidates so far. Speaking at an August 5 rally in Stepanakert, Pashinian said 
the Armenian government will act as a “guarantor” of the freedom and fairness 
of next year’s Karabakh elections.
European Body ‘Ready’ To Advise Armenian Court On Kocharian Case
Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian talks to his lawyers during a 
Court of Appeals hearing, Yerevan, June 14, 2019.
Armenia’s Constitutional Court said on Thursday that the Council Europe’s 
Venice Commission has agreed to advise it on the legality of coup charges 
brought against former President Robert Kocharian.
Kocharian was charged last year under Article 300.1of the Armenian Criminal 
Code dealing with violent seizure of power. The accusation stems from the 2008 
post-election street clashes in Yerevan which left ten people dead.
In separate appeals, Kocharian and a district court judge in Yerevan asked the 
Constitutional Court earlier this year to determine whether the Criminal Code 
clause conforms to the Armenian constitution. The high court agreed to hold 
hearings and rule on the appeals.
The court decided in July to ask the Venice Commission and the European Court 
of Human Rights (ECHR) for an “advisory opinion” on the issue. It therefore 
suspended the consideration of the appeals pending formal responses from the 
two Strasbourg-based bodies.
In a short statement, the Constitutional Court said that the Venice 
Commission’s secretary, Thomas Markert, has notified its chairman, Hrayr 
Tovmasian, that the Council of Europe body is “prepared to provide an advisory 
opinion.”
It is not yet clear when the commission’s recommendations could be sent to 
Yerevan. The ECHR has also not indicated any dates for the possible release of 
its opinion on the Kocharian case.
The Constitutional Court’s decision to appeal to Strasbourg was announced one 
day after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian launched a scathing attack on 
Tovmasian. In an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian service, Pashinian accused 
him of cutting political deals with former President Serzh Sarkisian to 
“privatize” Armenia’s highest court. Tovmasian rebutted the attack, warning the 
government against trying to force him and his colleagues to resign.
Press Freedom Groups Object To Armenian Government Bill
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia -- The main government building in Yerevan, March 29, 2018.
Armenian media freedom groups expressed concern on Thursday about a government 
bill that would make it a crime to publicly call for or justify violence in the 
country.
Under the bill involving amendments to the Armenian Criminal Code drafted by 
the Justice Ministry, such statements would be punishable by fines and up to 
three years in prison. The ministry called for a public debate on the proposed 
amendments when it publicized them last week.
In their written objections submitted to the ministry, civic groups dealing 
with mass media said the bill is too vague and could place unjustified 
restrictions on the freedom of expression.
Shushan Doydoyan, who leads one of those organizations, the Center for Freedom 
of Information, said the Justice Ministry should have specifically defined and 
criminalized instead “hate speech” targeting ethnic, religious and sexual 
minorities and other categories of the population.
“Criminal liability is a very exceptional restriction of the right to freely 
express oneself and it must therefore be applied only in exceptional 
circumstances,” Doydoyan told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “In our view, the 
exceptional circumstances are only hate speech against which the state can take 
action. But that intervention must have clearly defined grounds.”
Yeghishe Kirakosian, a senior legal aide to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, 
insisted earlier that the bill is aimed at doing just that. “This bill is aimed 
at preventing hate speech and any propaganda of violence,” he said.
The bill appears to stem from angry remarks made by Pashinian at a June 6 
cabinet meeting in Yerevan. The prime minister ordered law-enforcement 
authorities to clamp down on groups which he said are advocating political 
violence as part of a “hybrid war” waged against his government.
Pashinian did not name those groups or individuals linked to them. He only 
spoke of “forces directly or indirectly connected to the former corrupt 
system.” The remarks prompted sarcastic reactions from several prominent 
members of the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) and other bitter 
critics of the current government.
Minister Urges Trust In Expert Opinion On Amulsar Project
        • Naira Nalbandian
        • Karine Simonian
Armenia - Finance Minister Atom Janjughazian is about to present the 
government's draft budget for 2019 to parliament deputies in Yerevan, 13 
November 2018
Expert opinion must be decisive for the future of a large-scale gold mining 
project in Armenia that was disrupted by protesters last year, Finance Minister 
Atom Janjughazian said on Thursday.
“I believe that one must rely on specialists and the results of audits and be 
guided by that,” Janjughazian told reporters when asked whether he believes the 
Armenian government should allow the Anglo-American company Lydian 
International to develop the Amulsar gold deposit.
“A one-sided evaluation of any issue carries risks. No issue can be examined in 
a one-sided manner because there can always be a disadvantage alongside an 
advantage,” he said without elaborating.
The minister did not explicitly mention a recent environmental audit of the 
Amulsar project which was commissioned by the Armenian government and conducted 
by a Lebanese consulting firm, ELARD. In its final report publicized last week, 
ELARD essentially concluded that the project will not pose serious 
environmental risks if handled properly. In particular, it said that gold 
mining and smelting operations are very unlikely to contaminate mineral water 
sources in the nearby spa resort of Jermuk or rivers and canals feeding 
Armenia’s ecologically vital Lake Sevan.
Citing the findings of the ELARD audit, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
indicated on Monday his government’s intention to enable Lydian to complete the 
construction of the Amulsar mine and produce gold there.
The construction was halted in June 2018 when several dozen protesters began 
blocking all roads leading to Amulsar, saying that mining operations there 
would inflict serious damage on the environment. Lydian, which claims to have 
already invested more than $350 million in the project, dismisses these 
concerns, saying that it will use modern and safe technology.
Janjughazian commented cautiously on the economic impact of Lydian’s renewed 
operations. “Both the functioning and non-functioning of any economic entity 
cannot fail to have an impact,” he said. “In case of its functioning, any 
positive movement generates positive expectations and thereby increases the 
[economic] potential. Conversely, there are negative expectations in the event 
of non-functioning.”
“So not only the direct but also indirect impact is important here,” added 
Janjughazian.
Deputy Economy Minister Avag Avanesian said on Tuesday that mining at Amulsar 
would speed up economic growth in Armenia, boost the country’s tax revenue and 
result in thousands of new jobs.
Other officials, notably Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinian, have warned that 
the Armenian government will be taken to an international court of arbitration 
and risk huge financial penalties if it pulls the plug on the project without 
strong legal grounds.
Nevertheless, environment protection activists and some opposition politicians 
remain strongly opposed to the U.S.-backed project. Some parliament deputies 
representing Pashinian’s My Step alliance have also spoken out against it.
But other pro-government lawmakers support the government’s apparent 
Amulsar-related plans. One of them, Babken Tunian, the chairman of the Armenian 
parliament committee on economic issues, on Thursday dismissed calls for a 
referendum on Amulsar made by senior members of the opposition Prosperous 
Armenia and Dashnaktsutyun parties.
“Sometimes voters can be mistaken over a concrete issue because of not having 
sufficient knowledge of or information about it,” Tunian wrote on his Facebook 
page.
Also backing Lydian’s renewed activities was Hanrapetutyun, a pro-Western party 
that was allied to Pashinian until last year. “It’s not every day that $400 
million is invested in the Armenian economy, and failure to take advantage of 
that would definitely have severe consequences,” said the Hanrapetutyun leader, 
Aram Sarkisian.
Meanwhile, the mayor of Jermuk and nearby villages making up a single 
administrative unit spoke of a “very difficult situation” existing in the 
community. “Jermuk has never been in such a situation before,” Vartan 
Hovannisian told RFE/RL’s Armenian. He said he wants to see more government 
guarantees that gold mining will not harm Jermuk’s tourism industry.
Hovannisian said he maintains regular contacts with both the protesters 
blocking the Amulsar roads and Lydian executives. “I’m between the devil and 
the deep sea,” he complained. “The issue has started having very bad 
manifestations.
“These [protesters] have vowed not to open the roads. But the prime minister 
has said that they can’t fail to open them. This is creating a problem.”
The mayor also said that Pashinian is planning to visit Jermuk and speak to 
local residents concerned about the Amulsar project in the coming days or weeks.
Press Review
“If people had the right to block streets to ‘reject Serzh’ then they have the 
same rights when rejecting the exploitation of the Amulsar mine,” writes 
“Aravot.” In this regard, the paper criticizes authorities for not allowing 
activists protesting against the gold mine to enter a public park located 
inside the parliament compound in Yerevan. It says that the activities of 
Armenian environment protection groups “deserve respect” and must not be 
hampered. The paper says at the same time that opponents of the Amulsar project 
must not attempt to “muzzle” and “blackmail” those who support it. “The Amulsar 
issue is not only an ecological but also legal, political and economic one,” it 
says.
“Haykakan Zhamanak” notes that “many members of the ruling team have gone 
underground and are not uttering a word regarding Amulsar.” “Since when has 
silence become a sign of being principled?” asks the paper linked to Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian. “The real reason [for their silence] is simple fear. 
Those who are in favor of the mine’s exploitation are afraid of making that 
clear in public lest they be branded ‘traitors’ on Facebook, while those who 
are against the project fear the authorities’ ire. If they are scared of 
Facebook reactions how will they behave over more serious issues that could 
emerge later?”
“Zhamanak” wonders if the Amulsar controversy will lead to the breakup of 
Pashinian’s My Step alliance. The paper notes that some parliament deputies 
representing My Step have spoken out against the government’s apparent plans to 
allow a Western mining company to restart the project disrupted over a year 
ago. “My Step’s parliamentary group is a multi-layered team formed by the 
[2018] revolution for which the Amulsar issue is only the first political 
test,” it says. “Many, many other [contentious] issues are going to arise soon. 
This is not an apocalyptic prediction but the inevitable reality of governing a 
state that is located in a tough region and has serious security challenges.”
(Lilit Harutiunian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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