Monday,
Six Killed In Armenian Road Crash
• Naira Nalbandian
Armenia - The scene of a deadly road accident in the Ararat province, July 6,
2019.
Law-enforcement authorities in Armenia were investigating on Monday a weekend
road accident which left six people dead and eleven others seriously injured.
A commuter minibus reportedly burst into flames after colliding with two cars
on a highway bridge 54 kilometers south of Yerevan on Saturday. A photograph
released by the Armenian Ministry of Emergency Situations showed all three
vehicles engulfed by fire after what was one of the country’s deadliest road
crashes in years.
The Investigative Committee said the victims were the driver and five female
passengers of the minibus. A statement released by the law-enforcement agency
suggested that they burned alive inside the vehicle that carried mostly
residents of nearby villages. All but one of the charred bodies were identified
by Monday morning, according to it.
The statement said seven other passengers suffered serious burns and required
hospitalization. Three of them remain in a critical condition, it added.
The Investigative Committee reported later in the day that it has arrested one
of the two car drivers on suspicion of causing the crash. The 63-year-old
suspect, Soghomon Hakobian, was also seriously injured. A spokeswoman for the
committee told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that Hakobian is intensive care at a
hospital in Yerevan.
The earlier Investigative Committee statement said blood tests showed that
neither Hakobian nor the other car driver was drunk. It said that investigators
have questioned some of the injured individuals and eyewitnesses and will
conduct forensic tests as part of their probe.
“The investigation is continuing,” read the statement. “All investigative
actions are being taken to ascertain the circumstances of the accident and
verify circumstances mentioned in testimonies.”
Most cars and other vehicles in Armenia are powered by pressurized natural gas
which is considerably cheaper than petrol.
Armenia’s Post-Soviet Ills Cured, Says Pashinian
• Karlen Aslanian
Singapore -- Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong welcomes his visiting
Armenian counterpart Nikol Pashinian, Singapore, July 8, 2019.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Monday that his government has
successfully tackled corruption and Armenia’s other chronic problems
“characteristic of many post-Soviet countries” since taking office just over a
year ago.
“In the course of the past year the government of Armenia has taken steps that
have radically transformed the country’s business environment,” Pashinian said
during an official visit to Singapore. “It has strengthened the rule of law,
created a level playing field for all economic actors and foreign investors in
particular. Corruption has declined sharply.”
“We no longer suffer from symptoms characteristic of many post-Soviet
countries,” he declared at a dinner hosted by Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee
Hsien Loong. “The new Armenia opens up new opportunities for investing and
engaging in economic activities.”
Pashinian and other government officials have repeatedly said that these
improvements are laying the groundwork or an “economic revolution” that will
significantly boost living standards in Armenia. Their political opponents and
other critics dismiss these statements, saying that the new government’s
policies have not translated into faster economic growth or greater foreign
investment.
During visits abroad and Singapore in particular, Pashinian has touted his
administration’s stated achievements in an effort to attract such investment.
Economic issues dominated his talks with Lee held earlier in the day. The talks
were followed by the signing of an agreement on the avoidance of double
taxation of each other’s businesses.
“We want to spur increased trade and mutual investments between our countries,”
the Armenian leader said at the ensuing dinner.
Armenia’s trade with Singapore stood at a meager $2.2 million last year.
Pashinian said a free-trade deal currently negotiated by the wealthy
island-state and the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) could also boost
it.
Lee voiced support for that deal and said he hopes it will be signed “as soon
as possible.” He also paid tribute to Singapore’s historic Armenian community
that emerged nearly two centuries ago.
“We are proud of Armenians who continue to contribute to the development of our
country,” added Lee.
For his part, Pashinian spoke of his admiration for Singapore’s “economic
miracle.” “Your unique experience is of great interest to us and we would be
grateful for your advice,” he said in his speech, adding that his government
seeks to emulate Singapore’s “meritocracy, pragmatism and integrity.”
Lawyers Again Seek Bail For Kocharian
• Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian speaks during his trial in
Yerevan, May 16, 2019.
Two weeks after he was arrested again, the lawyers for former President Robert
Kocharian on Monday asked a district court judge in Yerevan to release him on
bail.
The judge presiding over Kocharian’s trial, Davit Grigorian, already ordered
him freed from custody pending a verdict in the case on May 18. Grigorian also
decided to suspend the trial, saying that a coup charge brought against the
ex-president may be unconstitutional. He requested a clarification from
Armenia’s Constitutional Court.
The Court of Appeals overturned on June 25 Grigorian’s decisions strongly
condemned by political allies and supporters of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Kocharian reported to a prison in downtown Yerevan a few hours later.
The high-profile trial has still not resumed, however, because Armen Danielian,
a Court of Appeals judge, has still not sent materials of the case back to the
lower court. The latter will not be able to consider the bail request as long
as the trial remains on hold.
Kocharian’s lawyers on Monday again accused Danielian of deliberately dragging
out the judicial process to make sure that Kocharian remains under arrest as
long as possible. One of them, Hayk Alumian, charged that Danielian is acting
on government orders. He insisted that under Armenian law the documents should
have been sent back to the district immediately after Danielian’s ruling was
made public.
Danielian’s office refused to give reasons for the apparent delay or say when
he will enable the court of first instance to resume the trial.
Seda Safarian, a lawyer representing relatives of opposition protesters killed
in Yerevan in March 2008, defended Danielian. She suggested that the Court of
Appeals judge anticipates that Kocharian will challenge his decision in the
Court of Cassation. In that case, he would send the materials directly to the
higher court.
Safarian also predicted that the trial of Kocharian as well as his former chief
of staff, Armen Gevorgian, and retired Generals Yuri Khachaturov and Seyran
Ohanian will not resume before this fall.
The four men stand accused of illegally using Armenian army units against
opposition supporters that demanded the rerun of a disputed presidential
election held in February 2008. Kocharian ordered troops into Yerevan as
opposition protesters clashed with riot police late on March 1, 2008. Eight
protesters and two police servicemen died in those clashes.
Earlier this year, Kocharian was also charged with bribe-taking. He denies all
accusations leveled against him as politically motivated.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
Author: Maral Chavushian
We are not slaves – Protest in Gyumri’s "SASSTEX" LLC(video)
Sports: Arsenal, Chelsea return unsold Europa League final tickets
Music: Armenian duduk in Game of Thrones
American fantasy TV series Game of Thrones is nearing its end with episode six, the ultimate instalment, scheduled for release on Sunday, 19 May, however the film’s attractive characters and music will long remain in the memory of its fans.
As Panorama.am has revealed, the musical moments of Game of Thrones also feature an Armenian duduk.
Game of Thrones composer Ramin Djawadi says the biggest challenge was to find the right tone for the show that when you hear the score you know that is Game of Thrones.
“From the beginning we knew we wanted themes, but we also knew we couldn’t have too many themes right away, because there are obviously a lot of characters, a lot of houses, a lot of plots,” he said in a video, playing Arya’s theme in the film.
The composer says different types of instruments have been used in each season of Game of Thrones. An Armenian duduk (ethnic wood wind instrument) has been used for the Dothrakis.
Djawadi says piano was used for the first time in Game of Thrones history in season six, during Cersei’s trial.
The German-Iranian composer’s works can be heard in blockbusters like Iron Man and Pacific Rim, as well as the TV series Prison Break and Westworld.
Djawadi got his start working with composing legend Hans Zimmer, contributing music to films like Batman Begins and Pirates of the Caribbean, before going solo.
Dates not clarified yet: Armenian FM on his next meeting with Azerbaijani foreign minister
Dates not clarified yet: Armenian FM on his next meeting with Azerbaijani foreign minister
16:53,
YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. The dates of the next meeting of Armenian foreign minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan and foreign minister of Azerbaijan Elmar Mammadyarov are not clarified yet, the Armenian FM told reporters today.
“We had several discussions, outlined how we are going to implement the next step, how it will be, where it will take place and etc. But the hosting side will decide and determine the dates and location of the meeting, and when the hosting side invites us, we will be able to announce in an agreed upon way that time”, he said.
The last meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani FMs took place on April 15 in the Russian capital of Moscow.
Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan
Asbarez: Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein Addresses ABA Public Servants Dinner
Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein
NEW YORK—The Armenian Bar Association held a Public Servants Dinner on Thursday, April 25 at the Yale Club in New York. During the event, the organization honored United States Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, and Robert H. Tembeckjian who is an administrator and counsel of the New York Commission on Judicial Conduct.
Rosenstein, who has played a key role in the Robert Mueller investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 elections, addressed the participants of the event. Below is his presentation, as posted on the Justice Department website.
“Peri yerego.” Good evening.
Rick, I am grateful for your friendship and for your 20 years of exceptional service to the Department of Justice — including seven years as the United States Attorney for Northern New York.
I am pleased to see several U.S. Attorneys here tonight: Geoff Berman from Southern New York, Richard Donoghue from Eastern New York, Grant Jaquith from Northern New York, and Craig Carpenito from New Jersey; as well as eight former U.S. Attorneys, and many other current and former government employees.
I am thankful to Armenian Bar Association Chair Gerard Kassabian, and Vice Chairs Kathryn Ossian and Lucy Varpetian.
My wife served on your board of governors from 1993 to 2002. I got to know many of the members, particularly the group that traveled with us to Armenia in 1994 to celebrate the 75th anniversary of the University of Yerevan.
When I met Lisa in 1988, some of her relatives viewed me as “odar,” an outsider to the culture. But recently a friend introduced me as “Armenian by Choice.” After tonight, I have an even stronger claim to be an honorary Armenian.
“Shot Shenorhagal em.” Thank you very much.
Our wedding featured an Armenian opera singer who is in the audience tonight, Maro Partamian. One of my favorite songs was “Lerner Hyreni,” or “Mountains of Armenia.” We hired the “Dark Eyes” band to play at the reception, which was great except that I chose a country song called “I Swear” by John Michael Montgomery for the first dance. It did not sound quite right with an Armenian accent.
One of Lisa’s relatives was raised in Syria, where government service was not highly valued. Before he approved of the marriage, he wanted to know when I planned to get a real job, in the private sector.
Unfortunately, many native-born Americans also are skeptical about government service. My Uncle Harold was a self-employed carpet installer. One beautiful spring afternoon in 1994, I called him from an office in the Department of Justice headquarters building. It was a Saturday. And when I told him that I was working through the weekend, he said, “I’m sorry to hear that.”
And I said, “You don’t understand. There is no place that I would rather be.”
I first walked into that building as a federal prosecutor on December 3, 1990, at age 25. I remember how honored I felt to represent the people of the United States. I will still feel the same way when I walk out for the last time next month.
I joined the Department of Justice because I believe in the mission. I stayed because I believe in the people who carry out the mission.
Our agents, analysts, and attorneys demonstrate great intellect and integrity. They possess superb academic credentials and exceptional character. They pass rigorous screening interviews and face thorough background checks every few years. They are ethical, honorable, and admirable people.
No organization with 115,000 employees is error-free. But we have serious, professional, nonpartisan internal watchdogs. We investigate credible misconduct allegations. We correct mistakes and punish wrongdoers.
I have served under five Presidents and nine Senate-confirmed Attorneys General — ten, if you count Bill Barr twice. I served mostly outside the D.C. beltway, but I worked at Department of Justice headquarters three times — four years in the early 1990s as a career prosecutor, four years in the early 2000s as a supervisor, and two years in my current job.
Our headquarters is a beautiful Depression-era building. I frequently speak about the inspiration that I draw from three aspects of the building – the art it contains; the people it employs; and the principles it represents.
There are reminders of heroes, mentors, and friends on every floor. They taught me that our Department stands for the principle that every American deserves the protection of the rule of law.
We use the term “rule of law” to describe our obligation to follow neutral principles. As President Trump pointed out, “we govern ourselves in accordance with the rule of law rather [than] … the whims of an elite few or the dictates of collective will.”
Justice Anthony Kennedy explained it this way: in a rule of law system, when you apply to a government clerk for a permit and you satisfy the objective criteria, you are not asking for a favor. You are entitled to the permit, and it is the clerk’s duty to give it to you.
The idea that the government works for the people is relatively novel. In some countries, that concept of a government bound by law to serve the people does not exist.
When I visited Armenia in 1994, the nation was emerging from seven decades of Soviet domination. Gyumri and other northern cities were not yet rebuilt after the 1988 earthquake. The six-year war with Azerbaijan was halted by a recent ceasefire, but the blockade over Nagorno-Karabakh crippled the economy.
We flew on Air Armenia, which used a shabby old Russian jet. Our plane needed to stop for fuel in Bulgaria, and we heard that the pilots paid with cash.
Armenia faced many challenges in 1994. Many skilled and educated people had left the country. When we hired a taxi to visit Lake Sevan, the driver turned off the engine at every downhill stretch to conserve gasoline.
We stayed at a nice hotel near Republic Square, but some mornings there was no water to flush the toilets, and some evenings there was no electricity to cook the food.
I gave a lecture at the University of Yerevan about public corruption. When I finished, a student raised his hand. He asked, “If you can’t pay bribes in America, then how do you get electricity?”
I repeat that question in many speeches. It usually elicits laughter. But the point is profound.
The question illustrates how that young man understood Soviet society. Corruption undermines law. It stifles innovation, creates inefficiency, and inculcates distrust.
The question explains why I devoted my career to law enforcement: because the rule of law is the foundation of human liberty. The rule of law secures our freedom. It will secure our children’s freedom. And we can only achieve it if people who enforce the law set aside partisanship, because the rule of law requires a fair and independent process; a process where all citizens are equal in the eyes of the government.
I do not care how police officers, prosecutors, and judges vote, just as I do not care how soldiers and sailors vote. That is none of my business. I only care whether they understand that when they are on duty, their job is about law and not politics.
There is not Republican justice and Democrat justice. There is only justice and injustice.
In the courtyard of the Department of Justice headquarters, there is an inscription that reads, in Latin: “Privilegium Obligatio.” It means that when you accept a privilege, you incur an obligation. Working for Justice is a privilege.
Our commensurate obligations are established by our oath to well and faithfully execute the duties of the office. To honor that oath, you need to know your office’s unique duties. At our Department, our job is to seek the truth, apply the law, follow the Department’s policies, and respect its principles.
The rule of law is our most important principle. Patriots must always defend the rule of law. Even when it is not in their personal interest, it is always in the national interest. If you find yourself asking, “What will this decision mean for me?” then you probably are not complying with your oath of office.
At my confirmation hearing in March 2017, a Republican Senator asked me to make a commitment. He said: “You’re going to be in charge of this [Russia] investigation. I want you to look me in the eye and tell me that you’ll do it right, that you’ll take it to its conclusion and you’ll report [your results] to the American people.”
I did pledge to do it right and take it to the appropriate conclusion. I did not promise to report all results to the public, because grand jury investigations are ex parte proceedings. It is not our job to render conclusive factual findings. We just decide whether it is appropriate to file criminal charges.
Some critical decisions about the Russia investigation were made before I got there. The previous Administration chose not to publicize the full story about Russian computer hackers and social media trolls, and how they relate to a broader strategy to undermine America.
The FBI disclosed classified evidence about the investigation to ranking legislators and their staffers. Someone selectively leaked details to the news media. The FBI Director announced at a congressional hearing that there was a counterintelligence investigation that might result in criminal charges. Then the former FBI Director alleged that the President pressured him to close the investigation, and the President denied that the conversation occurred.
So that happened.
There is a story about firefighters who found a man on a burning bed. When they asked how the fire started, he replied, “I don’t know. It was on fire when I lay down on it.” I know the feeling.
But the bottom line is, there was overwhelming evidence that Russian operatives hacked American computers and defrauded American citizens, and that is only the tip of the iceberg of a comprehensive Russian strategy to influence elections, promote social discord, and undermine America, just like they do in many other countries.
In 1941, as Hitler sought to enslave Europe and Japan’s emperor prepared to attack America, Attorney General Robert Jackson admonished federal prosecutors about their role in protecting national security.
He said: “Defense is not only a matter of battleships and tanks, of guns and [soldiers]…. It is raw materials, machines and [people who] work in factories. It is public morale. It is a law abiding population and a nation free from internal disorder . . . the ramparts we watch are not only those on the outer borders which are largely the concern of the military services. There are also the inner ramparts of our society — the Constitution, its guarantees, our freedoms and the supremacy of law. These are yours to guard and their protection is your defense program.”
As acting Attorney General, it was my responsibility to make sure that the Department of Justice would do what the American people pay us to do: conduct an independent investigation; complete it expeditiously; hold perpetrators accountable if warranted; and work with partner agencies to counter foreign agents and deter crimes.
Today, our nation is safer, elections are more secure, and citizens are better informed about covert foreign influence schemes.
But not everybody was happy with my decision, in case you did not notice.
It is important to keep a sense of humor in Washington. You just need to accept that politicians need to evaluate everything in terms of the immediate political impact.
Then there are the mercenary critics, who get paid to express passionate opinions about any topic, often with little or no information. They do not just express disagreement. They launch ad hominem attacks unrestricted by truth or morality. They make threats, spread fake stories, and even attack your relatives. I saw one of the professional provocateurs at a holiday party. He said, “I’m sorry that I’m making your life miserable.” And I said, “You do your job, and I’ll do mine.”
His job is to entertain and motivate partisans, so he can keep making money. My job is to enforce the law in a non-partisan way; that is the whole point of the oath of office.
In our Department, we disregard the mercenary critics and focus on the things that matter. As Goethe said, “Things that matter most must never be at the mercy of things that matter least.” A republic that endures is not governed by the news cycle. Some of the nonsense that passes for breaking news today would not be worth the paper was printed on, if anybody bothered to print it. It quickly fades away. The principles are what abide.
America’s founders understood that the rule of law is not partisan. In 1770, five American colonists died after British soldiers fired on a crowd in the Boston Massacre. The soldiers were charged with murder. Many people believed that they deserved the death penalty.
John Adams agreed to represent the soldiers. His political beliefs were firmly against them. But Adams felt obligated to protect their rights under the law.
Defending British soldiers was a very unpopular cause, to put it mildly. Adams faced a serious risk, in his words, of “infamy,” or even “death.” In a diary entry about the trial, he wrote as follows: “In the evening I expressed to Mrs. Adams all my apprehensions: That excellent Lady, who has always encouraged me, burst into…Tears….[S]he was very sensible of all the danger to her and to our children as well as to me, but she thought I had done as I ought, [and] she was…willing to share in all that was to come and place her trust in Providence.”
The rhetoric mirrors an earlier letter that Adams wrote to explain his preference for integrity over acclaim. Adams wrote that in theaters “the applause of the audience is of more importance to the actors than their own approbation. But upon the stage of life, while conscience claps, let the world hiss.”
Adams endured harsh criticism in the court of public opinion. But in the court of law, he secured the acquittal of the British captain and six soldiers.
At the trial, Adams delivered a timeless tribute to the rule of law. He said that “[f]acts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
Adams’ words remind us that people who seek the truth need to avoid confirmation bias. Truth is about solid evidence, not strong opinions. A 19th century Philadelphia doctor remarked that “sincerity of belief is not the test of truth.” Many people passionately believe things that are not true.
I spent most of my career prosecuting cases in federal courthouses. My past trials in courts of law contrast with my recent tribulations in the halls of Congress, the channels of cable television, and the pages of the internet.
The difference is in the standard of proof. In my business, we need to prove facts with credible evidence, prove them beyond any reasonable doubt, and prove them to the unanimous satisfaction of a neutral judge and an unbiased jury of 12 random citizens.
Pursuing truth requires keeping an open mind, avoiding confirmation bias, and always yielding to credible evidence. Truth may not match our preconceptions. Truth may not satisfy our hopes. But truth is the foundation of the rule of law.
If lawyers cannot prove our case in court, then what we believe is irrelevant.
But in politics, belief is the whole ball game. In politics – as in journalism – the rules of evidence do not apply. That is not a critique. It is just an observation.
Last year, a congressman explained why he decided not to run for reelection. He said, “I like … job[s] where facts matter. I like jobs where fairness matters. I like jobs where, frankly, … the process matters.”
He was describing an American courtroom. “I like the art of persuasion,” he said. “I like finding 12 people who have not already made up their minds and … may [let] the facts prevail. That’s not where we are in politics.”
That congressman spoke the truth. It may never be where we are in politics. But it must always be where we are in law.
Attorney General Jackson spoke about the fiduciary duty of government lawyers, the obligation to serve as a trustee for the public interest. He contrasted the special duties of government lawyers with what he called “the volatile values of politics.” That was in 1940.
Jackson understood that “lawyers must at times risk ourselves and our records to defend our legal processes from discredit, and to maintain a dispassionate, disinterested, and impartial enforcement of the law.”
“We must have the courage to face any temporary criticism,” Jackson urged, because “the moral authority of our legal process” depends on the commitment of government lawyers to act impartially.
Jackson also spoke about the role of lawyers in preserving liberty. He used a parable about three stonecutters asked to describe what they are doing. The first stonecutter focuses on how the job benefits him. He says, “I am earning a living.” The second narrowly describes his personal task: “I am cutting stone.” The third man has a very different perspective. His face lights up as he explains what the work means to others: “I am helping to build a cathedral.”
“[W]hether we are aware of it or not,” Jackson explained, lawyers “do more than earn [a] living[]; we do more than [litigate] [individual] cases. We are building the legal structure that will protect … human liberty” for centuries to come.
As my time in public service comes to an end, I encourage each of you to remember the cathedral. You are always building a legacy. You set an example for your colleagues, and you lay a foundation for your successors.
Time flies when you get to work with good and honorable people. In the words of an Eagles song: “I’d do it all again; If I could somehow; But I must be leaving soon; It’s your world now… Use well your time; Be part of something good; Leave something good behind; … It’s your world now.”
Ladies and gentlemen, this evening means a great deal to Lisa and me.
“Shot Shenorhagal-em yev Pari Keesher.” Thank you, and good night.
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Su-30SM Fighters To Replace MiG-29s At Russia’s Airbase In Armenia
The Su-SM 4+ generation (modernized serial) is designed to dominate fights in the air and to attack ground targets using high-precision modern weapons under both clear and challenging weather conditions.
Armenia currently has 4 units of the Russian jets. In February of this year, there were reports that the country was looking to purchase additional Su-30SM multi-role fighters from Russia.