‘I am excited to be in Aznavour’s homeland’, Zaz says ahead of Yerevan concert

Panorama
Armenia –

Famous French pop singer Zaz is in Armenia and is ready for her first solo concert in Yerevan, which will be held at Hrazdan Stadium on Saturday evening as part of the Haya Music Festival.

The singer shared her feelings about the Armenia trip at a news conference ahead of the concert on Friday.

“I’m super excited to be in Armenia, because this is Charles Aznavour’s homeland,” she said. “I feel great responsibility to perform in his homeland.”

Remembering the legendary French-Armenian chansonnier, Zaz said that Aznavour gave her many good pieces of advice.

“One of them was to learn English, which I never did,” the singer said.

Speaking about her three-year career break, Zaz said she took it to take care of her personal life.

“Last time I was in Armenia was years ago on the sidelines of the Francophonie. I did not spend much time in Yerevan, but I immediately felt the warmth of the people,” she said, adding she loves the Armenian duduk.

Zaz promised the Armenian audience a good time at Saturday’s concert.

“I want to make it a great holiday for the Armenian audience so that everyone is full of positive energy at the end of the concert,” said the French singer.

Number of FLYONE Armenia passengers crosses 100,000

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 11:43,

YEREVAN, JUNE 23, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian airline FLYONE Armenia has announced today that it has already transported 100,000 passengers 6 months after entering the aviation market.

The airline said it confidently fulfills the mission of providing available aviation services to passengers.

FLYONE Armenia operated its first flight on December 18, 2021. The airline is already operating flights to the cities of Europe, Russia and Middle East, particularly Moscow, Sochi, Lyon, Paris, Istanbul, Beirut, Tbilisi and Chișinău.

The company is planning to increase the number of its planes and expand the map of its destinations, by providing services in accordance with the international standards.

About FLYONE Armenia

FLYONE Armenia (www.flyone.am) started its operations in 2021. On 27 October 2021, the Civil Aviation Authority of Armenia offered us the 

Irvine mayor’s efforts to repair relations with Armenian community could lead to memorial, school curriculum

Irvine Mayor Farrah Khan hosts a group of local mayors outside City Hall on Monday, November 15, 2021 for a press conference about how the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act will have a positive impact on communities. (Photo by Mindy Schauer, Orange County Register/SCNG)

PUBLISHED:  at 11:54 a.m. | UPDATED:  at 11:55 a.m.

When a video surfaced in March of Irvine Mayor Farrah Khan joking and laughing during a meeting in 2020 with representatives of local Turkish groups, it sparked a furor among some community members who noted among the party a man who has been outspoken in denying the Armenian Genocide.

Residents penned letters and turned up at City Council meetings to voice their outrage. An Armenian group denounced the county Democratic Party for its early endorsement in Khan’s 2022 mayoral race.

In demand letters penned to the public and Khan, an immediate apology from the mayor was requested, along with a pledge to distance herself from anyone who has denied the genocide and for her support for teaching public school students about the history of the carnage.

Khan and Armenian community members have since met and it could mean an Armenian Genocide memorial is constructed in Irvine – Khan said she will support finding a place in the city. She’s also agreed to approach the Irvine Unified school board about coordinating training for educators on teaching about the genocide. And, at an April City Council meeting, she said she donated $1,500 to the Genocide Education Project.

Khan was quick to post recorded statements to social media apologizing, but has also said the video wasn’t an accurate representation of what was discussed during that meeting – she’s having a company look into its editing.

The video’s captions had an “incorrect translation” of the conversation between her and Turkish community members, she said, suspecting its out-of-context release now was “politically intended,” timed for two weeks before the Democratic Party of Orange County planned to announced its early endorsements.

The mayor remains steadfast that discussions at the meeting, which she said was one of many held with community members after her 2020 mayoral win, did not touch on the Armenian Genocide, as some have said.

She promised to cut ties with anyone critical that the genocide occurred.

“I think it’s a little disheartening,” Khan said of the response to the video. “I think I’ve been in the middle of conflicts before – from India and Pakistan, from Palestine and Israel – and I’ve never had the community react this way to me. I have never had this type of experience. It’s always been like, ‘We’re upset, let’s have a meeting. Let’s talk. Let’s have an understanding.’”

In the released video, Khan is accepting congratulations for her mayoral win, she said. When she is presented a box of Turkish Delights, captions appear depicting the conversation between Khan and a community member identified later as Ergun Kirlikovali. They read that he says on “Armenians’ occasions,” Khan could eat the candies and they would “disappear.”  Khan responds, “I’ll make sure I eat it in front of them.”

Some said they believe Khan and Kirlikovali were referring to Armenians disappearing. But the mayor said there was “no mention of Armenian Genocide.”

“As a person of faith, as a person who has worked in interfaith for so many years, has 17 years of community building behind me, I would never make fun of anybody,” Khan said in an interview. “That’s not who I am. That’s not what I would do.”

She said she has a company looking into the authenticity of the video with captions, and “preliminary findings from them is that this is a chopped up, kind-of sliced up video. It’s not what I said. It’s not what I was discussing at the time.”

Khan said the company, which she declined to name or provide further details on, is preparing a final report on its review, which she will present publicly when it’s completed.

“I’m really hoping for that professional report to come out to kind of put to rest the idea that people are calling me a racist and that I’m denying the genocide or saying that Armenians should disappear,” Khan said.

Violet Bulujian, chair of the Orange County chapter of the Armenian National Committee of America, said seeing the video was a gut-punch.

“To say that we were outraged is an understatement,” said Bulujian, who added that she represents the area’s Armenian community.

“If you imagine the Democratic mayor attending a meeting that was hosted by Holocaust deniers, and that mayor says, ‘I pledged to stand with you no matter what,’ and then laughs along with them, that would not be tolerated, under no circumstances,” Bulujian said.

As many as 1.2 million Armenians died during the genocide that began in 1915 in the Ottoman Empire, according to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. While most historians agree the deaths and massacres that occurred constitute genocide, the Turkish government has resisted calling it such, saying that while tragedies took place during World War I, no coordinated genocide happened.

Khan ultimately was given the Democratic Party of Orange County’s early endorsement at a meeting in March.

In response to a request for a recording of discussions during that meeting, Executive Director Ajay Mohan provided an emailed statement from Party Chair Ada Briceño, who said the group’s “Central Committee voted overwhelmingly, by a vote of more than 2/3, to endorse Mayor Farrah Khan for re-election. We look forward to supporting Mayor Khan in 2022.”

A couple weeks later, members of the Southern California Armenian Democrats began circulating a petition calling on the party to rescind the endorsement.

Led by UCI professor of Physics and Astronomy Kev Abazajian, the group wrote that Khan’s response to the community “has been as reprehensible as the original hate speech,” and the endorsement should be taken back “until which point she properly acknowledges the extent of the harm of her actions and takes concrete steps to reconcile with the Armenian community.”

The Democrats of Greater Irvine, a group also chaired by Abazajian, a 2018 City Council contender who lost out to Khan and Councilman Anthony Kuo, voted to censure the mayor at a meeting in April for “her participation in hate speech, supporting and promoting Armenian Genocide denialists and continued denial of the years-long relationship with Armenian Genocide denialists.”

There is an existing rift among Democrats in Irvine, Khan said, between those who support her and those who side with Councilman Larry Agran. A longtime figure in Irvine politics, Agran has held a seat on the City Council for the better part of three decades. He was first elected in 1978 and has served off and on, including times as mayor, to today.

The Democrats of Greater Irvine on March 20 – prior to the video surfacing – had already voted 37-11 to oppose giving Khan their early endorsement for mayor. In their letter to the Central Committee, the Democrats of Greater Irvine listed a number of reasons for opposing Khan, including her resistance to moving to district-based elections, her failure to second more than a dozen agenda items proposed by Agran and her promotion of Republicans in Irvine, among other issues.

The group urged the Central Committee to “support our local Democratic club members’ positions as they are the ones who will be organizing and volunteering, on the ground, when it comes election time.”

Khan contends that group isn’t representative of the broader base of Democratic voters in the city. She also said she “wouldn’t be surprised” if Abazajian was behind the public release of the video to disparage her politically leading up to the endorsement vote.

“I don’t know what the truth is behind it, but I can only assume that it is to help Larry Agran,” Khan said.

Abazajian balked at the notion that he had anything to do with the video or that the outrage over its release was about political infighting, saying the response from the community had “nothing to do with other members of the council.”

“This has to do with her supporting genocidal regimes for years. And associating with genocide deniers for years,” he said.

Abazajian said the issue is “way bigger than Irvine,” recalling that he and others were outraged in 2021 when Khan lauded the country of Azerbaijan as a “secular democracy” during an Azerbaijani Consulate event celebrating its Republic Day. The ANCA Western Region, which represents all of California, in a letter to the Central Committee asking the group not to award Khan its annual “Truth Award,” calling Azerbaijan “one of the most authoritarian regimes on earth, ranking amongst the worst offenders when it comes to democratic rights, press freedom and fundamental human rights.”

Khan said at the time she “did not realize there is a conflict going on,” between Azerbaijan and Armenia and she later sat down with the ANCA group to apologize, but she felt singled out because the criticism came as she was being considered for the Central Committee award. Other elected officials who were part of that Azerbaijani event didn’t receive the same pushback, she said.

Bulujian’s organization, the ANCA, has also noted that Kirlikovali was among a group that Khan announced in 2021 as her mayoral advisory committee. Khan said the residents weren’t appointed as part of an official committee, instead the group was formed out of an “open call to community members that I should be interacting with, to come on and share with me what they’d like to see more of in the city,” she said.

Agran called it “just ludicrous” to imply that he or his supporters were involved in this controversy, saying that Khan shouldn’t be focused on a resident or local politics. “Her problem is with the Armenian community, and as I understand it throughout Southern California and maybe even nationally,” Agran said.

Kirlikovali also said the conversation during the meeting with Khan in 2020 was about Turkish desserts and not about Armenians disappearing.

After sitting down with Bulujian and other community members in May, Khan said she hoped for an opportunity to move forward and “build a relationship with the community, especially here in Irvine, and go forward from there.”

Bulujian isn’t quite ready to call it a relationship mended. She said Khan agreed to what community members are asking of her, including the memorial and initiating training of district teachers on the Genocide Education Project.

“I don’t know about saying reconciliation. I wouldn’t call it that,” Bulujian said. But her hope as a result of the community’s response is for the mayor “to be more aware of who her constituents are and who she’s representing.”

Armenpress: Maria Zakharova comments on the death of an Armenian soldier in Vardenis on June 19

Maria Zakharova comments on the death of an Armenian soldier in Vardenis on June 19

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 20:38,

YEREVAN, JUNE 22, ARMENPRESS. Regular incidents in certain border section between Armenia and Azerbaijan confirm the need for coordinated, regular work of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border delimitation commission, ARMENPRESS reports official representative of the Russian MFA Maria Zakharova said in a weekly briefing, commenting on the death of an Armenian serviceman in Vardenis on June 19. 

She also stressed the importance of taking steps to improve border stability and security, as documented in the November 26, 2021 statement of the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia in Sochi.

St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary School celebrates 38th commencement

WATERTOWN, Mass.St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary School (SSAES) successfully completed its 38th academic year, thanks to a highly competent and dedicated teaching staff, individualized instruction, specialist teachers, updated teaching materials and curriculum, use of technology, after school enrichment programs and a comprehensive assessment program.  

The graduation ceremonies were held on June 16 (kindergarten) and June 17 (elementary). Both kindergarten and fifth grade students presented poems, songs and an Armenian dance. In addition, the fifth graders read their farewells.  

SSAES 2022 graduates

In her remarks, SSAES principal Houry Boyamian announced that in addition to completing the curriculum in each grade, the school was able to conduct many extra-curricular activities. She stated that the pandemic did not stop the school from celebrating or commemorating traditional holidays, including Armenian Cultural Day, Vartanantz, May 28, a commemoration of the Armenian Genocide, talent shows, a visit to the Armenian Museum of America, and a two-week trip to Armenia for fifth graders. She concluded her remarks by expressing her profound gratitude to the teaching and administrative staff, to the SSAES board, the education, health and technology committees, as well as to Rev. Archpriest Antranig Baljian and the St. Stephen’s Church Board of Trustees. She thanked the parents for their encouragement and unwavering support in another challenging year with the pandemic.  

During the kindergarten ceremony, Fr. Baljian and Mrs. Boyamian honored Nora Hackett for her 21 years of dedicated service as assistant treasurer of the school, with a Certificate of Appreciation awarded by His Eminence Archbishop Anoushavan Tanielian, Prelate of the Eastern Prelacy. Hackett will retire at the end of June after being part of the SSAES family from the day the school opened its doors. Her father Yervant Krafian was one of the founding members of the school. Hackett has been a volunteer, a PTO chair, and assistant treasurer for 21 years. All three of her children are SSAES alumni.

Nora Hackett honored for her 21 years at SSAES

In his remarks, Fr. Baljian expressed his appreciation to the administration and faculty for their dedication and effort in providing an excellent education to all students. Then, Fr. Baljian and Mrs. Boyamian presented the diplomas and the awards to the graduates.  

The following students graduated from SSAES’ kindergarten program: Arek Babb-Mikaelian, Dalita Bell, Dante Carbunari, Khoren Dennigan, Brayden Duhanyan, Aren Ekmekji, Eva Giragosian, Arev Hacobian, Sevag Karagozian, Ani Kechichian, Lara Kirejian, Alexander Krikorian, Levon Luarasi, Andrew Manguikian, Nicholas Ntasios, Emma Orchanian, Diana Ohannesian, Sylvie Said, Anya Savo, Sanahin Arzoumanian Schwartz and Lucine Zurabyan.

SSAES Kindergarten Class of 2022

On June 17, the following 10 students graduated from SSAES, bringing the number of graduates to 358: Siran Arakelian, Aiki Arzoumanian, Olivia Dimopoulos, Lori Garbedian, Leanna Iskenderian, Josephine Keumurian, Eva Khalarian, Arda Mahserejian, Aline Mikaelian and Giselle Tarabelsi.

SSAES Class of 2022

I-Prelacy Award for Excellence in Armenian (silver coin of Levon the 1st): Siran Arakelian, Aiki Arzoumanian, Aline Mikaelian, Eva Khalarian, Leanna Iskenderian

II- Armenian Relief Society Award: Lori Garabedian (Excellence for Oral _expression_)

III- President’s Education Awards– Grade 5
Presidential Award for Educational Excellence: This award recognizes the academic success of students who have excelled in their studies and earned high scores in standardized tests.
Presidential Award for Educational Achievement: This award recognizes students who work hard and give their best effort in school.

-Presidential Award for Academic Excellence: Siran Arakelian and Aiki Arzoumanian
-Presidential Award for Outstanding Academic Achievement: Aline Mikaelian, Eva Khalarian and Leanna Iskenderian 

IV-Certificate of Recognition for Special Strength (All Subjects)

Siran Arakelian: Class historian
Aiki Arzoumanian: Most inquisitive about space
Olivia Dimopoulos: Always willing to try new things
Lori Garabedian: Inventive in math connections, history and science explanations
Leanna Iskenderian: Excited to learn everyday
Josephine Keumurian: Eager to learn
Eva Khalarian: Leadership, helping others
Arda Mahserejian: A kind friend and helps others to feel included
Aline Mikaelian: Understands graphs
Giselle Tarabelsi: She works hard to do the right thing

V-Certificate of Recognition for their Special Strength (Armenian Studies)

Olivia Dimopoulos, Arda Mahserejian, Giselle Tarabelsi: Hard worker
Josephine Keumurian: Eager to learn 

Established in 1984, St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary School is dedicated to educational excellence in an environment rich in Armenian culture. Serving students from pre-kindergarten through fifth grade, it is the only Armenian day school in New England and is accredited by the Association of Independent Schools in New England (AISNE). Accreditation by AISNE provides quality assurance that a school is meeting rigorous standards in all aspects of its operations and that it is operating in alignment with its mission.


PM Pashinyan: “Any alternative to peace will be disastrous – both for NK and Armenia”


June 16 2022


  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Pashinyan’s address to the Armenian Parliament

“According to the negotiation logic we inherited, Nagorno-Karabakh could not get a status outside of Azerbaijan without the consent of Azerbaijan. It was this “legacy” that became the basis and reason for starting the war”, the Prime Minister of Armenia said, speaking in parliament.

Nikol Pashinyan believes that the only guarantee of the state’s security is “comprehensive peace”, that is, the “peace agenda” that his government is implementing.

“Any alternative will be disastrous – both for Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia. And, of course, we cannot allow this to happen”, he said.


  • Armenian PM Pashinyan says Yerevan aims to balance between Russia and the West
  • Opinion: “International community should recognise direct Artsakh-Azerbaijan conversation”
  • Moscow or Brussels? Why Armenian PM Pashinyan has been stamped as a pro-Western politician

Pashinyan stressed that the opposition has been declaring for the past year that:

  • the government of Armenia ignored the issue of NK,
  • the Armenian authorities should have pursued the “Artsakh will never be part of Azerbaijan” policy, and the refusal to accept this approach is a betrayal on the Karabakh issue.

According to the Armenian prime minister, the first thesis is refuted by the budget indicators. In 2021, Armenia’s assistance to Nagorno-Karabakh increased by 122% compared to 2019.

As for the second question, according to Pashinyan, the current opposition itself was not guided by the principle “Artsakh will never be part of Azerbaijan” when it was in power. The prime minister claims that both former presidents of Armenia, who are now leaders of the radical Armenian opposition, recognized NK as part of Azerbaijan.

In his speech, he responded at length to the accusations of the opposition and gave reasons for his claims.

Statement of the Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia: “Any tension on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border has a negative impact on all processes”

According to Nikol Pashinyan, in 2021-22, the budget support for the unrecognized NKR from the Armenian government was unprecedented:

“Armenia’s support for Artsakh in 2021 increased by 122%, the budget of Artsakh as a whole increased by 48%”.

The prime minister said that last year Artsakh’s budget was the largest in its history. 73% of the budget was allocated by the Armenian government:

“In 2021, financial injections from the Armenian government into the budget of Artsakh were larger than the entire budget of Artsakh for 2019”.

Nikol Pashinyan also recalled the provision of salaries to NK civil servants, the payment of pensions and benefits to the population, reimbursement of utility bills, already implemented and ongoing programs, including housing construction.

The prime minister stressed that the government does not see the need to “scream” about it – his government just did their job:

“The Armenian government was, is and will be close to Artsakh, even if some circles do not notice it”.

Constitutional reforms in NKR to facilitate a transition from a presidential to a semi-presidential system of governance. But will it help ensure the safety of the local population?

According to Pashinyan, the oppositionists, who themselves were in power in 1998-2018, are now simply trying to sow discord between NK and Armenia. The former leaders insist that, unlike the current government, they were guided by the principle “Artsakh will never be part of Azerbaijan”:

“These statements are absolute lies, because throughout the entire negotiation process, both Robert Kocharyan and Serzh Sargsyan, and their political satellite in the form of the Dashnaktsutyun party, recognized Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan.

Pashinyan gave the following justifications for his statements:

  1. On November 25, 1998, the Armenian authorities, headed by Robert Kocharyan, agreed to accept the proposal on a “common state” presented by the co-chairs as the basis for negotiations. It stated in particular:
  • “Nagorno-Karabakh is a state-territorial formation of a republican type and, together with Azerbaijan, forms a common state within its internationally recognized borders”.
  • “Citizens of Nagorno-Karabakh will have an Azerbaijani passport with a special mark – Nagorno-Karabakh as an identity card”.
  1. The proposal for a “common state” was followed by a package of proposals for the exchange of territories, which assumed: “Armenia transfers the Meghri region to Azerbaijan, and in return receives NK.”

According to the Prime Minister, having accepted the mentioned proposals as a basis for negotiations, the former Armenian authorities “recognized Artsakh as a part of Azerbaijan” or at least “did not rule out that Artsakh could be a part of Azerbaijan”.

  1. Pashinyan repeated his statement about another proposal for the settlement of the Karabakh conflict, the so-called Madrid principles. He claims that by accepting them, the current authorities “ruled out any practical possibility of Artsakh being outside the borders of Azerbaijan”.

“According to the negotiation logic inherited by us, Nagorno-Karabakh could not get a status outside of Azerbaijan without the consent of Azerbaijan, including an intermediate one”, the prime minister said.

He added that it was this “legacy” that became the basis and reason for the outbreak of the 2020 war.

The third Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting in Brussels took place – here’s what we know so far and how Armenian and Azerbaijani experts assess it

Pashinyan said that all this information about how the negotiation process took place at one time is not a conversation about the past, but about the future. He assured that his government does not intend to lie just to stay in power, because his team must tell people the truth.

In this regard, the prime minister intends to level “the gap between the content of the negotiations and the content of the conversation with the public”.

Pashinyan believes that conclusions should be drawn from past, and the current government has already come to them.

Accordingly, the current concept of the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is based on the guarantees and security rights of the Armenians living in this territory, from which the determination of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh follows.

That is, the status of NK is considered not as a goal, but as a means of ensuring the security, rights and freedoms of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“This wording is understandable to the international community, it makes our goals and the essence of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict more understandable. There is another important point that needs to be fixed: any status that really guarantees the security, rights and freedoms of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh should be considered an [acceptable] solution for us”, Pashinyan stressed.

According to the Prime Minister, in the current geopolitical situation, there are no guarantees for the preservation of either large or small states. The only guarantee of the existence of the state, its security, he considers “comprehensive peace”.

And this, according to Nikol Pashinyan, is a situation where issues with neighbors have been resolved, delimitation and demarcation of borders have been carried out, peace has been secured de jure.

“We are trying to follow this path now. Can we succeed? No one can guarantee that, because peace is not a one-way street, but the result of cooperation.

We have no illusions, we see that the number of those who want to destroy us is greater than could be expected. The peace agenda is an attempt to control and neutralize these desires to destroy us”, he said.

The Prime Minister assures that his government has the will and determination to follow this path. He argues that “the other way is unacceptable” because it will lead to the destruction of both Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Talk of "corridor" unacceptable for Armenia – PM

PanArmenian
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net – Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said that the wording involving the provision of a “corridor” to Azerbaijan is unacceptable for Armenia.

The Azerbaijani side has on multiple occasions raised the question about a “corridor” through the southern Armenian province of Syunik that would connect Nakhijevan to the rest of Azerbaijan. The Armenian side, however, has repeatedly denied being involved in negotiations for the provision of a corridor to Azerbaijan, stressing that they have only agreed to unblock transport communications in the region.

“You know, the wording, the narrative about the so-called corridor is unacceptable for us, it is a red line for us, because in our region, according to the trilateral statement I mentioned at the beginning of our conversation, we have one corridor, it is the Lachin corridor that connects Nagorno Karabakh to Armenia,” Pashinyan told Al Jazeera.

“But we have another provision in our trilateral statement, which is about opening communications. I mean railways, roads, and we are ready, in fact we are already discussing the issue of opening regional communications based on the principle of mutual respect for sovereignty and the inviolability of borders.”

https://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/300888/Talk_of_corridor_unacceptable_for_Armenia_%E2%80%93_PM

David Babayan: Artsakh, Armenia are in difficult situation

NEWS.am
Armenia –

For small countries, especially those surrounded by hostile neighbors, the key geopolitical task is to maintain their status of geopolitical actor and factor. Without this, they are doomed. Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Foreign Minister David Babayan wrote this Tuesday on Facebook.

“Among the most important components of being geopolitical actor and factor is adherence to principles. The absence of principles and value components deprives the state and people of geopolitical autonomy and specificity. Such a state becomes a geopolitical ‘snack’ for neighbors, especially the principled and ambitious ones.

“Artsakh and Armenia are in a difficult situation, which makes the imperative of maintaining the status of geopolitical actor and factor and adherence to principles even more relevant,” Babayan added.

Armenia has a special place among our friends and allies, says Russian Ambassador

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 12:39,

YEREVAN, JUNE 14, ARMENPRESS. Thanks to historically brotherly and allied relations, Armenia has a special place among our friends and allies, Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergei Kopyrkin said during the state reception organized on the Russia Day.

“This year we celebrate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations and the 25th anniversary of the signing of the Treaty on Friendship, Cooperation and Mutual Help. During these decades the cooperation between our countries has been distinguished by intensive, reliable high-level political dialogue and active cooperation between different ministries and agencies. The economic ties have consistently developed and continue developing. According to the results of 2021, the trade turnover exceeded the pre-pandemic figures, comprising around 2,6 billion dollars. Russia keeps the positions of being Armenia’s main and reliable economic and investment partner. Our cultural, educational and humanitarian cooperation is expanding. The bilateral effective cooperation in the security sector, both regional and international, is of vital importance. Our countries are actively cooperating in international platforms and within the frames of integration unions – EAEU, CSTO and CIS”, the Russian Ambassador said.

The diplomat said Russia is actively supporting and will support what contributes to creating ground for the peaceful and secure development of the South Caucasus region. According to him, Russia, in close cooperation with partners, is working hard to solve the regional issues directed to opening the transportation and economic ties, improving the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations and establishing normal, full relations between Armenia and Turkey.

Armenpress: Oscar winning director Terry George to be president of Golden Apricot 19th Yerevan IFF jury

Oscar winning director Terry George to be president of Golden Apricot 19th Yerevan IFF jury

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 09:47, 8 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. Irish screenwriter, director Terry George will be president of the Golden Apricot 19th Yerevan IFF International Feature Film competition jury, the Golden Apricot said in a statement.

“He was nominated for two Oscars: Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium (1993; In the Name of the Father), and Best Writing, Original Screenplay (2004; Hotel Rwanda). In 2012, he received an Academy Award in the live-action short film category for The Shore.

Famous works include The Boxer, Some Mother’s Son, and In the Name of the Father, Hotel Rwanda, other movies.

Terry George’s films featured world movie stars such as Helen Mirren, Daniel Day-Lewis, Bruce Willis, Colin Farrell, Joaquin Phoenix and others.

In 2016, George directed the film “Promise” about the Armenian Genocide, starring Oscar Isaac, Charlotte Le Bon, James Cromwell, Christian Bale, Angela Sarafyan and other actors”, the statement says.

The 19th Golden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival will take place on July 10-17 this year. As always, this year, the International Film Festival will present to the public films from different countries of the world in the competition sections, as well as films from the most prestigious film festivals.