Armenia showcases SU-30SM jets to EU, NATO defense attachés

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 1 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The defense attachés of the EU and NATO member states accredited in Armenia on Thursday, March 31 visited one of the country’s airbases to make sure that all 4 of Armenia’s SU-30SM aircraft were in the home base.

Yerevan earlier denied reports from Turkey claiming that the Armenia has transferred four Su-30 jet to Russia for use in hostilities against Ukraine.

The commander of the airbase, Air Force Colonel Samvel Tavadyan presented the daily activities of the military unit to the foreign guests and answered the questions they were interested in,” the Defense Ministry said in a statement.

“Afterwards, the defense attachés visited the facilities in the military unit and had been introduced to the aviation equipment,” the statement said.

“The visiting personnel was most interested in SU 30-SM aircrafts. Expressing gratitude for the acceptance, the defense attachés noted that during the visit they were once again convinced that all 4 SU-30SM aircrafts were in the home base, and the information spread in the Azerbaijani and Turkish press, that the aircrafts were taking part in the hostilities in Ukraine, did not correspond to reality.

European Scientists Name New Species of Lichen in Honor of Arsen Gasparyan, Scientist at Takhtajyan Institute of Botany of NAS RA

Scientists from the University of Liege in Belgium Emmanuel Serusiaux, Nicolas Magain and Dutch scientist Peter van den Boom discovered a new species of lichen Ramalina and named it  Ramalina arsenii in honor of Arsen Gasparyan, Head of Research Group on Lichen Research and Preservation at Takhtajyan Institute of Botany of NAS RA.

The results of the research of European scientists are published in the scientific journal “The Lichenologist” published by the University of Cambridge: “Gasparyan & Sipman 2016 (This new species is named after our distinguished colleague Dr Arsen Gasparyan, who revised the taxonomy of the Ramalina pollinaria group (Gasparyan et al. 2017); he also published an interesting account of epiphytic lichens in Armenia (Gasparyan & Sipman 2016)”.

During his doctoral dissertation Arsen Gasparyan conducted extensive research on lichens in Armenia. “In 2011, when I was just starting my research, 422 species of lichens were known from all over Armenia. By the time my doctoral dissertation was published, that number had risen to 617. As a result of only a few years of intensive research, 195 new species of lichen were discovered in Armenia and 5 new species in the world,” Arsen Gasparyan said.

 
 

January 27, 2022 at 15:42

10 Grapes Worth Knowing Better

March 21 2022

For many reasons, these varieties have either been unfairly dismissed or are little known outside their home regions. But they make joyful wines.

Credit…Jason Raish

March 21, 2022

A few weeks ago I opened a bottle that caught my attention. It was a soulful, graceful, strikingly pure red from the Aveyron region of southwestern France made by Nicolas Carmarans, a vigneron who makes natural wines from grapes that have long grown in the area.

This particular grape was fer servadou, a variety that to my knowledge I had never tried.

As delightful as I found the wine, my encounter with an intriguing new grape was even more joyful. It was a reminder that no matter how well versed one might be in the intricacies of producers, regions and issues, wine always has more to reveal.

In that spirit, I’d like to suggest 10 grapes that are little-known in the United States but are worth getting to know better. You might not find all of these immediately, but keep your eyes open and try a few. You may be pleasantly surprised.

Grapes and their relative merits are one of the hoarier topics in wine. Some people believe that the hierarchy of grapes has long been set. To stray outside the anointed realm is, supposedly, a waste of time. The retired critic Robert M. Parker Jr. was one of these people, castigating those who would promote what he called “godforsaken grapes.”

I revisit this subject periodically because I believe that we still don’t understand the potential pleasures of hundreds of grapes around the world. So many have been wrongly dismissed because of their place of origin, or because the wines historically made with them were not to modern tastes.

Some of these assessments may have been correct. But not all. Often, it’s a matter of giving lesser-known grapes the same respect and tender care reserved for more esteemed varieties rather than consigning them to the worst vineyard sites and assuming, by way of conventional wisdom, that their potential is meager.

Wine, like food, is a hearty invitation to explore. It could simply be a new producer or an unknown region. Or it might be a completely unfamiliar grape, so all of these elements will be new. You could fall in love.

Sometimes, what seems little-known or obscure becomes well loved. In 2010, I named a dozen grapes that I thought were worth seeking out.

Some of those varieties, like assyrtiko, frappato, mencía and trousseau, have been embraced, though not exactly at a chardonnay level.

It’s important to note that while I have used terms like “obscure” and “little known,” I really mean in American and English-speaking wine cultures. All of these grapes are known and loved by those who farm the vines and make the wine. The rest of us are just catching up.

Here are the 10 grapes, in alphabetical order. Some may be completely unknown to you, others you may have been fortunate enough to have encountered.

The Savoie region of France and its neighbors have quite a few little-known grapes that make beautiful wines. Mondeuse, persan and gringet are three. But in my exploration of Savoie whites last year, I fell in love with wines made with altesse. They are fragrant and floral, and rich yet refreshing because of the variety’s bracing acidity. Wines labeled Roussette de Savoie will be 100 percent altesse. Those from other Savoie appellations like Apremont will be mostly jacquère with altesse sometimes blended in, a combination that can also be lovely.

Armenia and Georgia sit next to each other on a wide isthmus between the Caspian and Black seas. This area is the Caucasus, thought by many to be one of the points where wine originated. The two countries have dozens of grapes worth getting to know better, but I want to highlight areni from Armenia, a red grape that I have had only a few times, but each time it was startlingly good — lightly tannic yet fresh with stony flavors of red fruits and great finesse. I don’t have a ready source for Armenian wines, I seem to find them by chance. But I’m looking forward to the next encounter.

This is the leading red grape of the Bairrada region of Portugal. It long had a reputation for making tough, tannic wines, and you can still find examples. These bottles may need years of aging for the tannins to relax. But many growers have recently found that by macerating the juice and the skins of the grapes for shorter periods, they can make fresher, more elegant wines that are vibrant and lively. Filipa Pato & William Wouters make excellent baga wines, as do Sidónio de Sousa, Casa de Saima and Dirk Niepoort.

Here is a perfect example of a grape not getting a chance to show its stuff. For centuries it’s been one of the leading grapes of southeastern Spain, though it went ordinarily into nondescript bulk wines. But recently, producers have worked to demonstrate the potential of bobal when farmed conscientiously in the right soils. I’ve found two in particular, Ponce and Mustiguillo, who have shown that bobal can be complex, nuanced, transparent and energetic in the right hands. I have also had an excellent natural bobal from Partida Creus in Catalonia.

I confess that I have not often been moved by brachetto, so I cannot speak unabashedly of its promise. Most brachettos are sparkling and sweet, and I haven’t found them particularly interesting, though they are popular in the Piedmont region of Italy. But I did recently drink a still, dry brachetto from Matteo Correggia that was fragrant and easygoing. I would not argue that it was profound or complex, but it was so delightfully delicious that I wanted to find more.

As with brachetto, I cannot claim deep experience with fer servadou, which is often called fer. In fact, the Nicolas Carmarans wine, Maximus, from a biodynamic vineyard on granite soils, is the only one I’ve had, and few other producers who make fer wines are available in the United States. (It is apparently also known as braucol in Gaillac, a region not far from Aveyon.) Regardless, I’m going to try to find more. Meanwhile, fer can take its place next to mauzac, négrette and prunelard, other indigenous grapes of southwestern France intriguing enough to research further.

Hybrid grapes rarely get any respect. Yet here’s a grape that’s a blend of Vitis vinifera, the species that accounts for almost all the best-loved European wine grapes, Vitis labrusca, a species that is native to America, and at least six additional species. Nobody has done more persuasive work on hybrids than Deirdre Heekin and Caleb Barber of La Garagista in Vermont, whose wines are luminous examples of their potential. One of my favorite Garagista wines, Loups-Garoux, is made entirely of Frontenac. I recently opened a 2017 that was fresh and alive, with wild, exotic fruit flavors and stony undertones. I wonder how it will be in another five years. Luckily, I have a few more bottles.

Greece offers many red grapes that are little known outside their growing regions. One exception is xinomavro, which is the Greek red most likely to make long-lived, complex wines. But others are well worth further attention, like limniona, mavrotragano and mavrodaphne. But I want to mention mandilaria here, which has often been dismissed, even in Greece, as all dark color and tannins with little character. But what if it were made differently? Last years I drank Great Mother red from Stilianou on Crete, which, like the Bairrada producers and baga, treats mandilaria with the lightest of hands. The result was a fascinating pale red, or dark rosé, that was earthy and lightly fruity.

This is one of Italy’s great success stories. According to Ian D’Agata’s excellent “Native Wine Grapes of Italy,” this white grape, which had largely disappeared in the mid-20th century, was resurrected by a couple of producers who were looking for better alternatives among indigenous grapes to the more popular but mediocre varieties that had been planted for their productivity. Now grown primarily in the Marche and Abruzzo, pecorino is sharp, energetic and herbal, beautiful with dishes like linguine in clam sauce. Better producers include Antica Tenuta Pietramore, Tiberio and Cataldi Madonna from Abruzzo.

If trebbiano d’Abruzzese sounds familiar, it’s because “trebbiano” is a name applied to several different Italian white grapes. Most are common but mundane, but not trebbiano d’Abruzzese, a grape that is lively, richly textured, floral and saline. Producers in Abruzzo will tell you that trebbiano d’Abruzzese is in fact rare. Particularly confusing is that the wine, Trebbiano d’Abruzzo, can be made either with trebbiano Toscano, a lesser grape, or the genuine article, trebbiano d’Abruzzese. The key is to seek out reliable producers like Tiberio, Francesco Cirelli, Amorotti and, if you can afford them, Valentini and Emidio Pepe.


 

Czech Аmbassador refrains from assessing ceasefire violations in Artsakh, citing lack of information

Save

Share

 19:31,

YEREVAN, 25 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The general approach of the Czech Republic to the Nagorno Karabakh issue is supporting the policy and position of the European Union, Ambassador of the Czech Republic to Armenia Bedrich Kopetsky told Armenpress, emphasizing that the European Union makes great efforts to promote a comprehensive settlement.

The Czech Ambassador, however, refrained from commenting on the ceasefire violations in Artsakh since yesterday and the military actions taken by the Azerbaijani armed forces, saying that he does not have a full picture of the situation.

“First of all, it is necessary to have a clear picture of the situation, which I do not have. So I have to examine first. But as you know, we do not have a presence there, we do not have the opportunity to get the information we need to get a complete picture. We do not have the opportunity to observe the situation, and it is wrong to give an assessment without having complete information on the table. This is a very important fact. I understand what you mean, but this is a very sensitive question, I must be very careful in making assessments. The Russian peacekeepers have the best picture of the situation, so my question is what they are doing,” the Czech Ambassador told ARMENPRESS.

 

On March 24, the units of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces, in gross violation of the trilateral declaration of November 9, 2020, invaded the area of responsibility of the peacekeeping troops of the Russian Federation in the Artsakh Republic, took control of the village of Parukh in the Askeran region and adjacent positions, and then tried to advance on the eastern border of the Artsakh Republic.

On March 25, the Azerbaijani armed forces continued their aggressive operations, in addition to firearms using also drones, including “Bayraktars”, as a result of which two Armenian servicemen were killed and several others were wounded. According to the information verified at the moment, 14 people have received various degrees of injuries. The condition of 10 of them is assessed by doctors as mild, one as moderate, one as severe, the condition of two servicemen is extremely serious.




Yerevan proposes withdrawal of troops at Yeraskh section to Baku

ARMINFO
Naira Badalian

ArmInfo.Yerevan is awaiting a response to the proposal for a reciprocal withdrawal of troops at the Yeraskh section, Armenia’s Premier Nikol Pashinyan stated at a  Cabinet meeting on Thursday.  

In the context of the global and international tensions, he said: “We  are responsible for defusing these tensions and finding fundamental  solutions. In this context, we believe that Armenian-Azerbaijani  peace talks must be started as soon as possible. We should point out  a need to speed up the border demarcation and delimitation and steps  to enhance border security and stability,” Mr Pashinyan said. 

He recalled the proposal for reciprocal withdrawal of troops based on  the de jure borderline between Soviet Armenia and Azerbaijan. 

“Besides, we also proposed local withdrawal and are now waiting for  Azerbaijan’s answer. Specifically, at the Yeraskh section we proposed  reciprocal withdrawal from several positions. Thus, we will resolve  the problem of the hottest spots in the last year and a half. As I  have said, we are waiting for Azerbaijan’s response,” Mr Pashinyan  said.  After a number of recent events, Yerevan cannot understand if  Baku wants unblocking of regional communications. 

“If so, our proposal hold good and we are ready to put them into  practice at any moment. I have on several occasions spoken of the  Armenian Crossroads project, but I do not see a need to go into  details now,” Mr Pashinyan said. 

On March 17, the invitation of pre-qualifying tenders for the  construction of the Sisian-Kajaran section of the North-South  motorway was announced. 

Mr Pashinyan stated that discussions on unblocking regional  communications resulted in the North-South project being reorganized  into the North-South-East-West project. Armenia’s premier hopes the  project will be implemented in a short period.

“It means that one of the byways of the North-South-East-West  motorway, or the Armenian Crossroads, will connect Armenia with Iran,  another byway will connect Armenia with Azerbaijan and, later,  Nakhichevan with Turkey. We hope to find a construction company by  the end of this year. The design stage of East-West project has not  yet been completed, but we will promptly complete it under political  agreements,” Mr Pashinyan said.

Asbarez: ANC Australia Urges Government to Reconsider Aid to Armenians in Light of Assistance to Ukraine

CANBERRA, Australia—The Armenian National Committee of Australia has written to the country’s Foreign Minister, Marise Payne, urging the government to reconsider the Armenian-Australian community’s request for emergency humanitarian assistance to tens of thousands of Armenians still suffering the consequences of Azerbaijan’s unprovoked attacks against Armenians in 2020.

This follows the Australian Government’s announcement on March 1, to provide a total of $105 million to help meet the urgent needs of the Ukrainian people––$75 million in military assistance and $35 million in emergency humanitarian support.

The ANC-AU first appealed to Australia’s Foreign Affairs Minister for emergency humanitarian aid in February 2021, requesting financial support to assist the displaced inhabitants of the Republic of Artsakh, and injured and captured Armenians from the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh war.

The peak Armenian-Australian public affairs body’s request for aid through humanitarian organisations on the ground in Armenia received support from a long list of Federal parliamentarians, as well as the New South Wales Australia-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group in a letter co-signed by the Chair, Jonathan O’Dea and Vice-Chair Walt Secord.

In light of Australia’s exemplary support to the Ukrainian people, the ANC-AU has elaborated on the ongoing humanitarian crisis in the region and the urgent need for assistance to alleviate the stress on Armenians in their letter.

“Whilst our community praises Australia’s generosity and support for Ukraine, Lebanon and India, we feel neglected and forgotten when considering our Government’s lack of action and failure to provide humanitarian aid to our Armenian brothers and sisters,” said ANC-AU Executive Director Haig Kayserian.

“We have explained to Foreign Minister Marise Payne that Azerbaijan’s policy of ethnically cleansing the Armenian Republic of Artsakh continues unabated, with the dictatorship recently cutting off gas supply in increasingly freezing temperatures for the region’s indigenous Armenians.”

“In addition, we elaborated that Armenians still require immediate emergency assistance from nations worldwide to address the ongoing humanitarian crisis, including the internal displacement of refugees that have lost their homes to war and the after-effects of Azerbaijan’s aggression and the ongoing captivity of Armenian prisoners of war by Baku,” Kayserian added.

“The Armenian National Committee of Australia has urged the Australian Government to reassess its formal decision not to provide humanitarian assistance to the tens of thousands of Armenian men, women and children currently facing ongoing threats in terms of health, safety and well-being following the precedents that have been set during the Ukraine conflict.”

Armenia’s first father’s blog

  • Grigor Harutyunyan
  • Yerevan

Armenian journalist Grigor Harutyunyan started his father’s blog a few months ago. In this video blog, he explains why he decided to create it.

“I saw that there are mom bloggers. They talk about their children, their upbringing and give very little space in their blogs to fathers. One gets the impression that fathers do not participate in the upbringing of children, do not care about them. In fact, this is not the case”, says Grigor Harutyunyan.

Watch video at 

Moscow informed of grave situation in Artsakh, official states

ARMINFO
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. Moscow is informed of the grave humanitarian situation as a result of the damage of the gas main, and Russia is in contact with Armenia and Azerbaijan, to  resolve the problem, Maria Zakharova, Spokesperson for Russia’s  foreign office, told a news briefing on March 17.  

“We are concerned over the situation in the region. Regular ceasefire  violations have been reported since early March. The Russian  peacekeepers are taking necessary measures to ensure stability and  control the situation. And due to the efforts no armed encounters  have been reported since March 13,” she said.   

Mrs Zakharova pointed out the advisability of expeditious border  delimitation and formation of a bilateral commission.

ART: Cafesjian Center for the Arts to host ‘Leo Leo Vardanyan: Traces’ exhibition

panorama.am
Armenia – March 2 2022


The Cafesjian Center for the Arts announces the opening of the exhibition, Leo Leo Vardanyan: Traces on March 4 in Gallery One of the Center, for the first time presenting a significant series from the artist’s recent oeuvre.

Leo Leo Vardanyan is an abstractionist artist working with varied techniques and media, sometimes applying multimedia approach as well. In his recent works the artist has examined the relation of varied physical dimensions, gravitations and vibrations of different layers (this is how the artist calls it himself).

In the Traces series this relation with varied surfaces is taken to another level, where the creation of the image is more free and seemingly uncontrolled; the author’s impact on the process is minimized to an extent that it seems entirely spontaneous.

The artist created special conditions and environment for the Traces series, when fire flames and jets swallowed the canvas on the stretcher attached to the fiberboard, thus leaving abstract images and traces on the latter. Initially created for a video art piece, it has developed into a separate series, becoming derivative to the mentioned video artwork.

With this exhibition CCA also launches the project Tabula Rasa. The aim is to use the clear and blank wall of Gallery One, realizing different exhibitions and experimental projects. Tabula Rasa (Latin translation: “blank slate”) is a term that derives from Greek Philosophy: in epistemological and psychological context, the theory offers that individuals are born without built-in mental content like a blank slate/board, and therefore all knowledge comes from experience or perception. In this context, it is indeed symbolic to start the project with Leo Leo Vardanyan’s Traces, where real blank boards are literally charged with new layers and meanings.

“Using flame, air and substance from the elements of nature (without which there is no burning), the artist renders fire not only as a means of destruction, but also purification, a new beginning”,- states Vahagn Marabyan, the Acting Executive Director of the Cafesjian Center for the Arts.

Leo Leo Vardanyan: Traces exhibition will last from March 4 to May 29, 2022. The entrance is free of charge.

Armenpress: Karabakh Movement was a turning point for the future history of the Armenian people – PM Pashinyan

Karabakh Movement was a turning point for the future history of the Armenian people – PM Pashinyan

Save

Share

 14:12, 20 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia NIkol Pashinyan issued a message on the occasion of the 34th anniversary of the Karabakh Movement. As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister, the message runs as follows,

“34 years ago, these days, the Karabakh Movement started, which was a turning point for the future history of the Armenian people. The nationwide movement in Armenia and Artsakh was exceptional in its power, was deeply national and democratic.

Through this popular movement, our people once again showed their unity, the ability to unite and act resolutely as one united fist for the realization of national goals.

The movement was the first step in restoring our statehood, through which we rediscovered our determination to live freely and independently, to shape our destiny and to manage our future.

Today we remember, we bow our heads to the memory of all our martyrs who sacrificed their lives for the Motherland in the first and second wars of Karabakh, in the last three decades.

Today Artsakh, though wounded, is still standing. Today our steps are aimed not only at solving the socio-economic problems of the Armenians of Artsakh, overcoming security challenges, but also at the protection of the rights of the Armenians of Artsakh, the international documentation of those rights.

I am convinced that the Armenian people will soon heal the wounds of the past war, and will take even more decisive and firm steps towards the future for the realization of our dreams and aspirations. Only in this way will we be able to keep alive the memory of all our heroes. The opening of an era of peaceful development for their generations, for our Motherland in general, will be the greatest tribute to their memory, which will guarantee the longevity of our state, the international recognition and implementation of the rights of Artsakh. Achieving these goals requires consistent, prudent, honest work, and we must be unwavering in this work”.