”Step towards Home” brings 192 Diaspora-Armenian youngsters to Motherland

”Step towards Home” brings 192 Diaspora-Armenian youngsters to Motherland

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20:02,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 12, ARMENPRESS. The 2nd stage of the ”Step towards Home” project initiated by the Office of the  High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs kicked off in Tsakhadzor on August 12.  ARMENPRESS reports the Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs informs that 190 Diaspora-Armenian youngsters from 28 countries, including Thailand, Montenegro, Qatar and Brazil, have arrived in Armenia.

”Welcome home. During the upcoming two weeks you will visit the sights of Armenia, will discover your Motherland, but the most important thing is that you will establish friendly relations and will be filled with new love towards Armenia”, High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan said in his welcome remarks.

The partners of ”Step towards Home” project are ”Teach for Armenia”, ‘VisitArmenia” and ”World Vision” organizations.

200 participants from 300 countries participated in the 1st stage of the project.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




PM Pashinyan surprised at development pace of Kalavan community, Gegharkunik Province

PM Pashinyan surprised at development pace of Kalavan community, Gegharkunik Province 

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17:33,

YEREVAN, JULY 31, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, who is still on vacation, visited Kalavan community in Gegharkunik Province and got acquainted with its development process and strategies. ARMENPRESS reports the PM toured in the village accompanied by resident of the village Robert Ghukasyan who presented the works done during the last years and future plans.

Robert Ghukasyan informed that during the last years the flow of tourists to their village has increased so much that at the moment there are not enough guesthouses. He explained that the reason of the success is that the members of the community have preserved the nature and offer ecologically clean food.

In addition to eco-torisim, cattle breeding also develops in the village. Ghukasyan said that in the village that has population less than 200 people 3 farms are being constructed at the moment.

”Now we are in Kalavan community of Gegharkunik Province. Today we decided to visit Kalavan because I think that it’s one of the villages that has some ideological sense for new Armenia. I always speak about individual efforts and here we can say that individual effort leads to success”, Pashinyan said, hoping thatthe success of the village will be examplery for many other villages of Armenia. Pashinyan also expressed conviction that the community will have solved all its problems in a period of 5 years by its own efforts, including the condition of the roads roads. 

Robert Ghukasyan ephasized that each village of Armenia has some economic potential that has not been used yet, calling on people to rely on their own ideas and love towards the country and their community.

 

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Armenia in process of strengthening democratic institutions – Parliament Speaker

Armenia in process of strengthening democratic institutions – Parliament Speaker

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18:48,

YEREVAN, JULY 18, ARMENPRESS. President of the National Assembly of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan participated in the Leadership Forum Held in Washington, during which gave a speech.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press servic eof the parliament of Armenia, Mirzoyan particularly said,

The rise of the authoritarianism has been already noted in the early 2000s across the globe. At the same time, we all understand very well that this global challenge has multi-faceted explanations, but if one is to pinpoint the main reason for this negative development, it will be the failure of the traditional democratic mechanisms to remain connected with the citizenry.

Before reasserting the independence of the legislature, we should also reassess the role and the reason for the independent legislature. Three centuries ago, one of the forefathers of American Constitution James Madison in the Federalist Papers, delved into the concept of the “pure democracy” and the “Republic”. He warns as of the adverse effects of the factionalism unchecked by the republic. This wisdom shines even stronger today when democratic institutions have been in place for a long time.

The peaceful, democratic April Revolution of 2018 in Armenia was single yet important victory over the consolidating authoritarianism. This popular movement came to re-establish the connection between the citizenry and its government. In 2018, the Armenian citizens conquered their right to choose their representatives in a free and fair election, a right that was denied too long for them. This fact has been recognized not only by our international partners but also by all the political forces in Armenia.

While the free and fair elections are the necessary condition for democracy, there is a long work in establishing the Republic in the Madisonian sense. The institutionalization of the democracy and asserting the role of the legislature in this process is paramount in order not to allow “factionalism” to ruin the very fabric of the democratic polity. In Armenia, we are currently pursuing this through reforming and strengthening the democratic institutions, where reversal of the democratic breakthrough will be unattainable.

The independent legislature of women and men is the backbone of any democracy. Through asserting the independence of the legislature, we vaccinate our democratic polities from infection of the factionalism. The independent and representative legislature on the one hand allows all the necessary channels for airing diversity political beliefs of our societies and on the other hand through institutional mechanism maintains the public debate in the counters of the republic.

To conclude, this bipartisan format of the House of Representatives sets an important example for other legislatures across the globe, to revisit and realize the concept that Madison has left to us. The independent legislative as a political institution remains the firm and yet agile shield that provides enough resolute to withstand the attacks of authoritarianism but also entails sufficient flexibility not to break under the internal pressure,” the Head of the Parliament noted.

Calendar of Events – 07/11/2019

                        Armenian News's Calendar of events
                        (All times local to events)
                =========================================
What:           Women in Economics Workshop
When:           Jul 12 2019 1-5PM
Where:          American University of Armenia,
                Manoogian Simone College of Business and Economics
Misc:           Featuring a cast of all women economists, the Workshop brings
                academics and researchers from Armenia, Australia, Czechia,
                Georgia, and the United States to discuss their latest research
                in demography, labor economics, and macroeconomics
Online Contact: conferences.aea [at] gmail.com
Web:            
                =========================================
What:           "Armenia Tree Project - Celebrating 25 Years" a lecture in 
English
                by Anahit Gharibyan & Sarah Hayes
When:           Jul 14 2019 1pm
                Following Church Divine Liturgy which starts at 10:30am
Where:          Armenian Apostolic Church of Crescenta Valley
                Western Prelacy's Hall, 6252 Honolulu Ave., La Crescenta, CA
Misc:           Armenia Tree Project (ATP), is based in Woburn and Yerevan,
                conducts environmental projects in Armenia's impoverished and
                deforested zones and seeks support in advancing its
                reforestation mission. More than 5,700,000 trees have been
                planted and restored, and hundreds of new jobs have been
                created for Armenians in seasonal tree-related programs. ATP
                works to enhance Armenia's economic and social development by
                mobilizing resources to fund reforestation. These new trees
                provide vitally needed food, wood, environmental benefits, and
                opportunities for economic growth. Our goal is to assist the
                Armenian people through the use of trees that will improve
                their standard of living and protect the global environment.
                Anahit Gharibyan has been with Armenia Tree Project since its
                establishment in 1994. For 16 years she was the manager of
                ATP's Community Tree Planting (CTP) program. Because of her
                efforts, ATP's CTP program has planted and rejuvenated
                1,026,857 trees at 842 sites all over Armenia and Artsakh. In
                2010 Anahit moved to the United States to continue her work for
                ATP as Western Region Community Outreach Manager. She also
                promotes ATP through Building Bridges program connecting
                Diaspora Armenian students with their environmental heritage in
                more than 70 California schools.
                Sarah Hayes found her connection to Armenia when she served as
                an Environmental Education U.S. Peace Corps Volunteer in Sisian
                from 2005-2007. During her service, she secured a grant through
                United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to
                plant trees with students. After her two year Peace Corps
                service, Sarah relocated to Boston where she began working with
                Armenia Tree Project and is now ATP's West Coast Operations
                Manager in Los Angeles.
                The event is free of charge to the public
Tel:            818-244-9639
***************************************************************************
Armenian News's calendar of events is collected and updated mostly from
announcements posted on this list, and submissions to Armenian [email protected].
To submit, send to Armenian [email protected], and please note the following
important points:
a) Armenian News's administrators have final say on what may be included in
        Armenian News's calendar of events.
b) Posting time will is on Thursdays, 06:00 US Pacific time, to squeeze in
        a final reminder before weekend activities kick in.
c) Calendar items are short, functional, and edited to fit a template.
d) There is no guarantee or promise that an item will be published on time.
e) Calendar information is believed to be from reliable sources. However,
        no responsibility by the List's Administation or by USC is assumed
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        up-to-date.
f) No commercial events will be accepted.
        (Dinners, dances, forget it. This is not an ad-space.)
g) Armenian News is a non-commercial, non-partisan, pan-Armenian outlet.
*******************************************************************
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6 die in a car crash in Armenia – UPDATED

6 die in a car crash in Armenia – UPDATED

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16:55, 6 July, 2019

YEREVAN, JULY 6, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s Emergency Service received an alarm call at 15:15 on July 6 about a traffic accident in Ararat Province of Armenia. 3 cars have collided, killing 5 and injuring 9.

Extra information will be provided.

The photo provided by the Emergency Ministry of Armenia shows that one of the cars burned out as a result of the collision.

Update – 18:03. Head of Information and Public Relations Department of Investigative Committee of Armenia Naira Harutyunyan informed on her Facebook page that the number of victims has reached 6. The bodies of all of them have been burned. 

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




Meet Stephany Sanossian, the artist bringing Hollywood to the Arab world

Arab News, Saudi Arabia
Wednesday
Meet Stephany Sanossian, the artist bringing Hollywood to the Arab world
 
by Denise Marray
 
 
1 / 5 Kim, Kanye and kids on the streets of Syria. (Stephany Sannosian)
 
2 / 5 From Sanossian’s “Met Gala” series. (Stephany Sannosian)
3 / 5 From Sanossian’s “Met Gala” series. (Stephany Sannosian)
 
4 / 5 From Sanossian’s “Met Gala” series. (Stephany Sannosian)
 
5 / 5 Stephany Sannosian. (Supplied)
 
LONDON: Newsflash! Kim, Kendall and Kylie, those doyens of social media, have been spotted in Damascus and Aleppo — looking amazing, of course — soaking up the street life and attending exclusive private parties in magnificent Syrian mansions.
 
And the Kardashians/Jenners were not alone. Turns out, Syria is quite the celebrity hot spot these days. Also spotted in the war-torn country recently were Anna Wintour, editor-in-chief of Vogue; international songbird Celine Dion and the American stage performer Billy Porter — all having a whale of a time in the bazaars.
 
But this wasn’t some kind of fashion-inspired UN peace mission. On closer inspection, those pictures did seem kind of fishy. For a start, the outfits the celebrities were sporting were identical to the ones they were wearing at the Met Gala in New York on May 6. And we all know Kim, Kendall and Kylie aren’t going to be photographed in the same dress twice.
 
Turns out the scenes were the product of the wild imagination of Syrian-Armenian artist Stephany Sanossian, who simply transposed the celebrities into locations of her choice within her beloved country.
 
The pictures may be humorous, but Sanossian’s motivation for creating them is serious. She is using celebrities to draw attention to Syria — to remind people of what her homeland once was — before the deadly civil war erupted — and what it is today.
 
“When you mention Syria, everyone talks about the war,” Sanossian told Arab News. “No one talks about our rich culture. I want to change that.”
 
Sanossian, who currently works as a freelance graphic designer, has a Master’s in Research for Design and Innovation from Elisava, a prestigious design school in Barcelono affiliated with Pompeu Fabra University. The part of the course she most enjoyed dealt with trends and their global impact.
 
“For me this was amazing,” she said. “We looked at all kinds of trends — not just fashion, but artistic, political and economic.”
 
Last summer she held a joint exhibition, “Perspective 101,” in Denmark. She is also the co-founder of “Live Love Armenia,” based in Yerevan, Armenia, which showcases the authentic face and beauty of the country. “The mission is to display Armenian talent to connect the Armenian diaspora with the motherland,” she said.
 
There is something a bit wistful about Sanossian. She was born and raised in Aleppo — leaving Syria in 2010 to be educated in Lebanon. She admits she is strongly affected by nostalgia for the scenes of her childhood and longs to show the world the country she knows and loves without the ugly scars of war, suffering and devastation.
 
So while on some level there is something quite humorous about her fake images, there is also something poignant. In a world that has become numbed to suffering, does it take a celebrity to make the world take notice? Perhaps it does. If so, she has succeeded in making her point as the world’s media is knocking on her door for interviews.
 
The ‘celebrities in Syria’ shots aren’t her first mixed-media images. She did a brilliant job last year of creating an ‘Aleppo Fashion Week,’ blending catwalk images of famous models with historic sites.
 
The intention was the same: To use images that everyone wants to see to draw attention to places that people have forgotten or overlooked.
 
“Each image I create triggers a joyful memory for me and creating this kind of art far away from destruction and war brings me happiness,” she said.
 
It’s a great concept — and one with endless possibilities. But what about the reaction of the celebrities — or indeed the photographers — whose images have been used? So far, none of them have been in touch. But perhaps that will change as the story gains momentum. To date, Sanossian has around 5,000 followers on Instagram, but that number will likely grow fast as media attention increases.
 
Asked where she gets her ideas from, she said: “My inspiration comes from everywhere — it might be walking down the street, a memory, or something happening around me on a daily basis.”
 
She is keen to raise the profile of Middle Eastern artists in the West, as she believes that there is too much focus on Western art in general.
 
“People in America and Europe only seem to know the Middle East in the context of war and destruction and nothing else,” she said. “They don’t seem to have much knowledge, for example, about the Middle East art scene.”
 
She plans to leave Barcelona soon (a tough decision — “I love Spain so much,” she said) and head either Lebanon or Dubai. She still has family in Syria, but her close family are all in Lebanon.
 
Regardless of where she ends up, Sanossian will continue to make thought-provoking artwork. “I want to keep doing what I am doing and raise awareness of the true nature of places like Syria and Armenia,” she said. “Let’s be proud of our heritage and culture.”

Naira Zohrabyan: No arms found among supporters of Abovyan mayor

News.am, Armenia
June 9 2019
 
 
Naira Zohrabyan: No arms found among supporters of Abovyan mayor
21:39, 09.06.2019
 
The supporters of Abovyan mayor Vahagn Gevorgyan, who were driven several hours ago, have no weapons, Prosperous Armenia Party MP Naira Zohrabyan told Armenian News – NEWS.am on Sunday.
 
“No illegal weapons and ammunition were found on those subjected to the drive,” the MP said.
 
As reported earlier, several supporters of Gevorgyan were brought under suspicion of illegal possession of weapons. Prosperous Armenia’s deputies arrived in Abovyan’s police to find out the reasons for their detention. The supporters were searched and released.
 
 

Culture: Mystery Trains: Urvakan Festival Reviewed

The Quietus


Three Songs No Flash

Nikita Velichko travels to Yerevan to investigate the ghostly sites of a children’s railway a photobook library and all of the Armenian bands and producers who are playing at a festival there. Photographs by Anna Krtchyan, Danial Hadvai, Kira Kachalina and Jimmy Gyan

“The impression is that history had no beginning in Armenia—it has always existed. In the course of its eternity, it has hallowed every stone, every foot of ground. There is probably no village that was not, in days of old, the capital of an ancient state, no hill around which a decisive battle has not raged, no stone not moistened with blood, and no man to whom this is a matter of indifference.”

This passage from Andrei Bitov’s A Captive Of The Caucasus, written in 1962, still serves as one of the key points to learn for anyone travelling to Armenia. Yerevan, its capital, is one of the most ancient cities in the world, founded around the fortress of Erebuni that dates back to 782 BC. At the same time, although Armenians feel proud of their heritage, it is being destroyed before their very eyes, tells me the organiser of Urvakan festival Nairi Simonyan.

“You go to such places as Dilijan Composers’ Creativity House [Dmitri Shostakovich and Benjamin Britten had once stayed there], or Yerevan Children’s Railway—and you see ghosts, you see life that was there and that’s not there anymore”, says Nairi while we’re talking during the last day of the festival. Held for the first time this year, Urvakan is an attempt to draw attention to the state of such places. That’s where the name—”ghost” in Armenian—comes from.

Another Urvakan’s mission is to give space to musicians who play raw, oppositionally experimental music, usually performing in friends’ flats or small venues. Nairi calls them “bastard musicians” and thinks they can give birth to something new. There are specifically lots of Russian acts—that’s because Nairi has been living in Moscow, organising there a festival of “inventive music and music inventions” called Synthposium. Also, he tells me it’s important for him that such festivals create new job opportunities in the regions.

Spirits Of The Future

The ghost theme adds some mythological dimension to my trip. Are these dogs, running and barking at my early morning taxi from the airport, gornapshtikners, i.e. evil spirits in forms of animals scaring passerby and returning to graves by dawn? Or maybe they are aralezes—flying dogs licking the wounds of dead heroes, so they could relive or resurrect? In this case, a war took place, and I should’ve already been dead.

Right before the opening concert in the architecturally impressive Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall some Armenian-speaking men in front of me start singing in quiet Russian: “A rifle means festivity, and everything is fucked!”. That’s a refrain from ‘Vintovka Eto Prazdnik!’, a song by a legendary Russian punk band Grazhdanskaya Oborona. Its leader’s Yegor Letov’s brother, Sergey Letov, is one of the performers in a play Topography Of Phantom Cities, prepared specifically for the festival. Musicians are using the graphic notation based on Yerevan’s general plan, as it’s represented on architect’s Alexander Tamanian monument.

Led by Hmot, who is standing in front of the stage with a mixing console, this half-improvisational piece has lots of beautiful beginnings, e.g. when Lusia Kazaryan-Topchyan and Vardan Harutyunyan, responsible for electronics, interrupt Letov’s saxophone with beats, or when Letov and tar player Miqayel Voskanyan are toying with the same melodies. But all in all it fails to deliver something solid, in the worst moments collapsing into simple mush, when performers are seemingly not sure what to do. Sote, who’s next, on the contrary, exudes confidence. He’s here with his Sacred Horror In Design program, performed alongside santoor player Arash Bolouri, Behrouz Pashaei on setar and Tarik Barri’s visuals. Blissful solos are met by applause, Sote’s electronics can provoke associations with pouring lava, and although the program was premiered in 2017, the Persian ghosts it revitalises are still likely to be coming from the future.

During all three days the night program takes place at Mirzoyan Photobook Library where concerts and parties happen regularly. Gost Zvuk label’s musicians are in charge of the Gallery stage. For the umpteenth time I witness Vtgnike being not only a great producer but also a masterful DJ. People are very fondly responding to African vocal samples in tracks like Cos-Ber-Zam’s ‘Ne Noya (Daphni Mix)’.

The Flood

Children’s railways were built in the USSR as the real functioning narrow-gauge railroads, where kids could try out such jobs as dispatchers, conductors and operators. The Yerevan Children’s Railway, the main festival location, was open in 1937. Its initiator was allegedly murdered, and its main architect was sent into exile. That surely didn’t happen because something was wrong with their work—it was just the time of The Great Purge. In the 1980s the railway became disused because of another tough period in the country’s history. Restored just a few years ago, now it’s operating more as an attraction and a place to stroll around.

Getting here for the first time, I can’t enjoy the experience in full because of the endless rain. Fortunately, there’s a place to hide under the roof of 360° Kayaran stage that occupies the Airenik station. Armenian experimentator nystagmus’s thudding beat makes it impossible not to start imagining some phantom train, although when he starts emphasising bass there are no thoughts left—the sound is so intense I feel my eyesight being refracted. It is good that the station’s stained-glass windows survive.

Other festival goers use graffiti-splattered passenger cars as their shelters from ruthless nature, listening to the Razdan river’s loud flow. Sinking in mud, I’m watching two duos on Dambaran stage—Jrimurmur, the locals, and Leto v Gorode from Rostov-on-Don. Both bands’ genres can be characterised as synthwave, but the Armenian women explore its dark side, while the Russian men give much warmer feeling. Then I decide to come back to the hotel to change socks. As I return, I visit the most picturesque stage called Tunel. It’s literally a prop tunnel with a train glowing in distance thanks to the light installation. Margenrot’s dark ambient darting off in the noise direction feels strangely movable—seems this train is ready to leave any moment.

Ukranian John Object is fiercely deconstructing everything, from club music to Beyoncé. After such a heavy day some good dance is vital. Zuli’s DJ set, based on jungle, hip hop and footwork, is received with enthusiasm. The play of light reflects dancers’ figures on trees—after sunset everyone turns to shadows.

Spooky Belgians

The weirdest thing is the timetable. It’s clear that the shower rain messes up the schedule—regardless, there are a lot of other unannounced last-minute changes. Only a few days after the festival I learn from the organisers that Pavel Milyakov’s live, that was supposed to happen in Mirzoyan library during the second day’s night program, was cancelled because of his illness. On the third day which is luckily sunny lots of things also go unplanned.

Perhaps time just goes differently for Urvakan. All these shifts give some charmingly anarchic feeling to the festival. One mad-eyed visitor runs up to me asking when Elektricheskaya Sobaka is going to play. I hope he gets to see them in time, as their jazz noise improvisation is totally worth getting lost in.

The same goes for Vardan Harutyunyan. I often find musicians who take part at experimental festivals working more like scientists—they seek some really interesting solutions, but can’t hold the full attention of the audience during the show, so it gets boring after about twenty minutes. On Urvakan, many artists’ techniques are not that spectacular, but if you yourself immerse into performances, you generally feel rewarded. I don’t know if there were some special thematic programs prepared, but I can definitely hear the wheel of the train in Harutunyan’s minimal hypnotic beats, as well the smoke pouring out. In our railway trip, I’d call him The Railroad Stoker.

KP Transmission‘s concert seems to be more connected with the tunnel itself. Dub and trip hop rhythms are punctuated as the abrasive noise, gentle dubstep motif breaks down with humming bass. After checking out what’s going on the other stages I return to Tunel right in time for the unexpected culmination of the festival.

Why The Eye? are an anonymous four-piece from Brussels. In rare interviews, they say things like, “No one in our band has an earlobe”. Hiding behind the masks, they appear with their self-made instruments (for instance, they bicycle frames into mbiras) in the middle of the crowd. Their only self-titled album doesn’t transmit the feeling one gets from their tribal concert, especially refreshing after a weekend of minimalistic electronic sets. They interact with the audience not just asking people to light their instruments with phones’ flashlights, but also passing the microphone to someone who immediately starts singing in Armenian. Everyone jumps like crazy, but at 12:25am the soundsystem suddenly drops out. Someone says: “Police!”—the reaction of the audience is a mixture of dismay and joyfulness. For the next five minutes, in a moment of unity everyone’s clapping in time with the band knocking on their instruments.

Epilogue: Клуб’s showcase

Urvakan has many faces. You always have to choose during festivals, and I miss lots of reportedly amazing electroacoustic/experimental gigs on Kayaran stage, as well as danceable DJ sets on Vagon Stage and Dambaran Stage. Checking the latter, I catch glimpses of Tommy Cash (“Pussy, money, weed, pussy, money, weed / My reality is sweet, better than your dream”) and Simple Symmetry’s Voodoo Your Ex—this Moscow duo always knows how to make you move, as well as Lipelis who’s playing after them.

One of the best places for partying on Urvakan is Underground Stage in Mirzoyan library. Such gloomy, fittingly claustrophobic basements are designed for hard electronic music being played there. During the first night, Manfredas from Lithuania starts his set with some perfect EBM/synthwave. Triglau’s polyrhythmic techno makes the place sweaty on the second night. After them Cast Coverts, who played at Boiler Room Yerevan as well as Unsound Yerevan, stuns dancers with the cascade of beats.

If anything can make you dance after three almost sober festival days, then it must be fast. Club’s showcase starts with Chronic Preview’s trippy Middle Eastern-influenced set, then Lisa Smirnova entertains the audience with a variety of beats and genres. At 3am Sasha Tsereteli, Клуб’s owner, appears in the booth in club’s T-shirt, giving the dancefloor a second breath with the tracks like Schacke’s’Trained To The Floor’ and Dynamo City’s ’One Night In Hackney’. At 4:30, he asks the audio engineer, “Is that all? May I play one more track?” I leave at 5:30, and he’s still behind the decks.

“Perhaps it is time to open the windows and clear away the soupy staleness with a ventilating blast of otherness and newness. A gust of youthful energy to chase away the ghosts for good.” That’s how Simon Reynolds ends his reviews on albums by Baron Mordant and The Caretaker in this month’s The Wire. Indisputable, but perhaps this energy can be still found in ghosts from some musically undiscovered parts of the world? Although the first Urvakan feels more like a draft, it definitely helps certain kind of artists to present themselves to the audience in an absolutely astonishing setting—and then to keep on looking for something truly otherworldly.







The threats against Bako Sahakyan are being checked. has been detained

  • 26.05.2019
  •  

  • Armenia:
  •  

     

 47

The police are investigating the threats of violence against the NKR President Bako Sahakyan, the participants of the May 25 meeting in “Azatutyan” square.


«Ազատության» հրապարակում մայիսի 25-ին տեղի ունեցած հավաքի ժամանակ մասնակիցների կողմից հնչեցվել են սպառնալիքներ պարունակող արտահայտություններ, ասված է Ոստիկանության հարղորդագրության մեջ: In order to find out the features of the crime in the committed act, the police conducts an inspection with criminal proceedings.


Today, one person was brought to the central police department on suspicion of threats made by the participants during that gathering. 


To remind, yesterday a group of citizens organized a gathering in “Freedom” Square for the sake of Armenia’s independent judicial system and in defense of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, but the political force formed by the Prime Minister, the NA “My Step” faction announced that “My Step” has nothing to do with the action.

Eurovision 2019 semi-final – LIVE: Armenia and Ireland are first to perform in Tel Aviv

The Independent, UK
  • Roisin O’Connor Music Correspondent

The second Eurovision semi-final of 2019 is taking place in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Contestants from 18 countries will perform their songs in the hope of making it through to the final this weekend (18 May). 

Of the 41 countries participating in the 2019 Eurovision Song Contest, 17 took the stage for the first semi-final on 14 May but just 10 made it through to Saturday’s competition: Greece, Belarus, Serbia, Cyprus, Estonia, Czech Republic, Australia, Iceland, San Marino and Slovenia.

Follow our liveblog for all the latest updates, comment, video and photos below, as the second semi-final gets underway:
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/eurovision-2019-semi-final-live-updates-netherlands-sweden-norway-israel-latest-a8917471.html