Armenian, Moldovan PMs see need to develop trade-economic ties

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 16:36,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 31, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan met with Prime Minister of Moldova Ion Chicu in Almaty, Kazakhstan.

At the beginning of the meeting the Armenian PM congratulated Ion Chicu on assuming office.

“Of course, there are very good political relations between our countries. Our countries have a very rich history of humanitarian, cultural ties, but, unfortunately, we cannot be proud of our commercial ties. But, of course, there are objective and subjective explanations for that”, Pashinyan said.

Pashinyan emphasized that Armenia and Moldova should raise the level of economic relations, trade turnover, expressing his readiness to work on that path. “Why I especially emphasize the issue of commercial relations, because we do not have any problem in other matters and will not have”, he added.

The Moldovan PM said Armenia and Moldova have a great potential to develop the economic relations because both Armenia has some advantages in certain directions and Moldova has such advantages. “I think it’s necessary to restart the works of the inter-agency commission. It’s a good platform for discussing various issues and an opportunity to develop the cooperation”, the Moldovan PM said.

Ion Chicu invited PM Pashinyan to visit Moldova.

The session of the Eurasian Inter-Governmental Council was held today in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The session was also attended by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

The next session of the EAEU Inter-Governmental Council will take place in Minsk on April 9-10.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Welcome To The World’s Next Tech Hub: Armenia

Forbes
Jan 31 2020
 
 
 
 
Wade Shepard
Asia
 
 
As Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey join together and engage in major infrastructure projects, such as the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway, to revive their historic role as a land bridge between east and west, Armenia has been conspicuously left by the wayside. However, Armenia has taken a different path. Rather than diving head first into the promises of the New Silk Road or industrialization, they’re wagering their chips on a completely different table: technology.
 
Armenia is a landlocked country in the bowels of the Caucasus with scant natural resources. It doesn’t have any ports. It isn’t on the road to anywhere. You can’t even enter or exit Armenia from the east or west, where hostile relations with both Azerbaijan and Turkey have resulted in long closed borders. All the country has is human capital, which it’s doubling-down on as high-tech research and development has become a national priority—a do or die objective to connect and do business with the outside world and break the blockade that’s building up around it.
 
While Armenia has been making strides towards developing its high-tech sector for many years, it wasn’t until the Armenian Revolution of 2018 that momentum really started to build. Suddenly, the little, insignificant country hidden deep in the centerfold of the world map was full of hope and looking forward to a future that seemed unusually bright.
 
 
“The Armenian nation has never really been able to live for itself. It’s always had someone dominating it or ruling it or manipulating it,” explained the half-Armenian Reddit cofounder, Alexis Ohanian, as we sat together in Yerevan. “This could mark the start of the first time when this country and especially the young people—the ones who are the most hungry, the most driven, the most optimistic—to actually have a chance to determine for themselves the fate of the country and where it heads, and that is a part of the Armenian experiment that has not really ever happened.”
 
A new outlook was established, and the power of technology was one of its driving forces: IT, software development and high-tech startups would form the backbone of the newly reemergent nation.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Russian PM awards EEC Board Chairman Tigran Sargsyan with Stolypin Medal 1st Class

Russian PM awards EEC Board Chairman Tigran Sargsyan with Stolypin Medal 1st Class

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 16:38,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 23, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Russia Mikhail Mishustin signed an order on awarding Chairman of the Board of the Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC) Tigran Sargsyan with the Stolypin Medal 1st Class.

Tigran Sargsyan was awarded for his investment in the development and strengthening of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU).

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Government will use all its levers to expose circumstances of Kutoyan’s death – Pashinyan

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 18:42,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan guarantees that the Government will use all possible levers to expose all the circumstances of the death of former Director of the National Security Service of Armenia Georgi Kutoyan, ARMENPRESS reports Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan said during Cabinet-parliament Q&A session.

“It is a very sad incident. A criminal case has been filed at the Investigative Committee for inciting suicide. This means that the main version under investigation at the moment is inciting suicide. I think that the family of Mr. Kutoyan should be most interested in revealing the case and they should fully cooperate with the investigators in order to completely expose the truth. I guarantee that the Government will use all the possible levers in order to reveal this and the remaining cases until the final detail”, Pashinyan said.

Former National Security Service Director Georgy Kutoyan was found shot dead in a Yerevan apartment on Paruyr Sevak Street on January 17. The investigators are treating it as a possible suicide, but do not rule out other circumstances.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar’s ‘present’ vote on recognizing Armenian Genocide is distressing

Minneapolis Star Tribune
Oct 31 2019
 
 
U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar’s ‘present’ vote on recognizing Armenian Genocide is distressing
 
As leaders of the Armenian and Jewish communities, we regret her decision and the logical fallacy of the explanation of her vote.
 
By Alejandro Baer , Tadeos Barseghyan and Steve Hunegs
                                                                                                                                   
— 5:45pm
 
As leaders of Minnesota’s Armenian and Jewish communities, joined by the director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota, we applaud the U.S. House for this week overwhelmingly approving H.R. 296 affirming that it should be the policy of the U.S. to “commemorate the Armenian Genocide through official recognition and remembrance.”
 
We are grateful to Rep. Betty McCollum for co-sponsoring this resolution, and for the support of every other member of Minnesota’s delegation — other than Rep. Ilhan Omar, who inexplicably voted “present.”
 
As far back as 2007, both our local Armenian and Jewish communities have supported passage of this resolution.
 
Praising the vote, Gov. Tim Walz rightly tweeted that “the #ArmenianGenocide is historical fact, and the denial of that fact is a continuation of the genocide. As a member of Congress, I sponsored this legislation. The memory of the victims and the commitment to the survivors demands that history acknowledge the lives lost.”
 
Armenians first came to St. Paul in the 1890s, as Jews had done in the 1840s. The Armenian and Jewish communities share a love of family and education. We are committed to our respective churches and synagogues and dedicated to the greater community. We are diaspora communities who are loyal Americans and care deeply about events abroad.
 
We also share in the suffering from terrible atrocities of the 20th century. That said, whether it is the Armenian Genocide or the Holocaust, genocide does not define us peoples. It does, however, provide us parallel and intersecting responsibilities to teach our histories so that the horrors of the past are not repeated.
 
Even the term “genocide” binds us together, as it was coined by Jewish Holocaust survivor Raphael Lemkin in part to describe what had happened to Armenians in 1915 and in part as a response to the murder of his own family at the hands of Nazi Germany.
 
This is why our communities, along with the center, partner to remember our tragedies, as well as to support each other at our times of need. For example, our local Armenian community’s traveling exhibit “Treasures of Memory and Hope,” which features ordinary belongings of survivors of the Armenian Genocide who resettled in Minnesota, was inspired by the Jewish Community Relations Council’s “Transfer of Memory” project, a touring exhibit of portraits and stories of Holocaust survivors who rebuilt their lives here.
 
We’ve partnered to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in 2015 at St. Sahag Armenian Church in St. Paul and through programming organized by the center.
 
In sharp contrast to this reaffirming work and the broad bipartisan consensus in Congress and our Minnesota delegation, stands Omar’s explanation for her vote. In a statement released on Twitter, which failed to explicitly mention Turkish responsibility even once, Omar stated, in part, that “accountability and recognition of genocide should not be used as a cudgel in a political fight. It should be done based on academic consensus outside the push and pull of geopolitics.”
 
Such comments echo a century of Turkish denialism.
 
The facts are beyond dispute. Broad academic consensus regarding the Armenian Genocide already exists and has long been recognized by the International Association of Genocide Scholars. Forty-nine U.S. states, including Minnesota, have officially recognized the Armenian Genocide by legislative resolution or gubernatorial proclamation. The Armenian Genocide is thoroughly documented in the U.S. and international archives, including statewide news coverage that documented the Armenian Genocide as it was happening. Minnesota citizens, both Armenian and non-Armenian, played an active role in assisting Armenian Genocide survivors through the congressionally mandated Near East Foundation from 1915 to 1930.
 
Minnesota Historical Society archives reveal that in 1919 Charles Evans Hughes warned Minnesota Gov. J.A.A. Burnquist that “Armenia is threatened with the imminent danger of extermination.”
 
The Republican nominee for president in 1916, Hughes wrote in his capacity as the honorary chair of the American Committee for the Independence of Armenia. Hughes would later serve as secretary of state, then rejoin the U.S. Supreme Court as chief justice.
 
Rep. Omar pointed to the “transatlantic slave trade and Native American genocide” as reasons why she couldn’t vote to recognize the Armenian Genocide. The logical fallacy is that somehow recognition of the Armenian Genocide precludes recognition of other heinous misdeeds. Global awareness of the Holocaust proves exactly the contrary.
 
The eminent Holocaust historian Deborah Lipstadt ruefully observed that “never again has meant again and again.” The first and most important step in ensuring that the most painful chapters of our history do not repeat themselves is to honestly acknowledge the past.
 
 
 
Alejandro Baer is director of the Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota. The Rev. Tadeos Barseghyan is pastor at St. Sahag Armenian Church in St. Paul. Steve Hunegs is executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas.
 
 
 
 
 
   

Adoption of Armenian Genocide resolution by US House a step towards historical justice – deputy FM

Adoption of Armenian Genocide resolution by US House a step towards historical justice – deputy FM

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 20:31,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 30, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Grigor Hovhannisyan on October 30 received Cheryl Fernandes, US Department of State Director of the Office of Caucasus Affairs and Regional Conflicts and the delegation of the US Embassy in Armenia, the Armenian MFA told Armenpress.

Welcoming the guests, the deputy FM touched upon yesterday’s adoption of the Armenian Genocide recognition resolution by the US House of Representatives, stating that it is a strong step towards historical justice and truth.

At the meeting the participants discussed the results of the recent session of the Armenian-American Strategic Dialogue in Yerevan and the implementation process of the agreements reached. The sides agreed to continue the works on a number of issues of the bilateral agenda aimed at expanding the Armenia-US cooperation.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




The Literary Armenian News – 10/27/2019

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    My song will be in a completely different melody
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NJ, a M. Ed.  Counseling Psychology, from WilliamPaterson University,
Wayne, NJ, and CPA requirements completed at Pace University, NYC.
Kevork resides in NY and likes to paint and write. Some of his poems
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www.poetry.com.
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168: Sochi agreement on Syria also relates to Armenian community’s security, says PM

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Society

Armenia continues to follow the developments in Syria and continues its humanitarian mission, Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan said on Facebook in the context of the agreements which have been reached about Syria in Sochi.

“I am happy to note that the agreements reached in Sochi over Syria also touch upon the issues which relate to the security issues of the Armenian community in Syria about which I’ve had discussions with President of Russia Vladimir Putin. This emphasizes the strategic-allied nature of the Armenian-Russian relations. We continue following the developments in Syria, we continue our humanitarian mission and our support to the civilian population,” Pashinyan said.

Earlier Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin met in Sochi and reached an agreement about the situation in Syria.

2019 Aurora Prize awarded to Yezidi activist Mirza Dinnayi

Rudaw, Kurdistan Province, Iraq
Oct 20 2019
 
     
 
2019 Aurora Prize awarded to Yezidi activist Mirza Dinnayi
 
Sarkawt Mohammed

ERBIL, Kurdistan regionThe fourth annual Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity was awarded to Mirza Dinnayi in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on . Dinnayi is the Co-Founder and Director of Luftbrücke Irak (Air Bridge Iraq), an organization committed to helping survivors of ISIS atrocities. 

Granted by the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative on behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide, Dinnayi “embodies the power of compassion, of personal commitment and a burning desire to save lives,” according to Vartan Gregorian, co-founder of the Aurora Prize and member of the selection committee. 

The Yezidi activist, who fled to Germany in 1994, has become a prominent figure in the community, aiding survivors of the genocide started in August 2014 and spearheading a program to bring survivors, including Sakharov Prize recipient Lamiya Bashar, to Germany. He also worked as an adviser to Iraqi Former President Jalal Talabani on minority rights, and met the first group of Yezidi survivors to escape ISIS. 

As the 2019 Aurora Prize Laureate, Dinnayi will receive a $1,000,000 grant which he has donated to charity. The beneficiaries of this year’s prize money, Luftbrucke Irak, SEED Foundation and the Shai Fund all work with survivors of the genocide, in which more than 6,000 were kidnapped and 300,000 displaced. 

Working on behalf of the Yezidi community, Mirza Dinnayi has dedicated his whole life to saving Iraqi victims of terror, evacuating women and children from territories controlled by ISIS and providing those tortured and violated with rehabilitation and support.

Tom Catena, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative Chair and 2017 Aurora Prize Laureate, praised Dinnayi as an “outstanding human being” who never wavered while facing “an unspeakable evil.” Injured in a helicopter crash while delivering aid to Yezidis stranded on Mount Sinjar in August 2014, the incident catalyzed his desire to aid his community.

 In an article published by The Independent in August 2019, Dinnayi lamented the lack of domestic support available for female survivors, especially in terms of mental health. “There is a striking disparity between how local and international communities focus on property assimilating genocide survivors,” he wrote. ‘We must empower survivors of the Yazidi genocide to successfully rebuild themselves and their communities so that their generation is not forgotten and lost.”

Home to a sizeable Yazidi community who are the country’s largest minority group, Dinnayi referenced Armenia’s Yezidi connections in his acceptance speech, and expressed appreciation for the country’s recognition of his people’s plight. He also spoke of the silence surrounding their historic persecution: “As a survivor of the Yezidi genocide, I should tell you 73 genocides have passed and nobody heard.” His grandfather escaped fled the Armenian genocide to Iraq. “Three million people were killed at that time. Nobody spoke about that.”

The 2019 Aurora Prize Ceremony was part of the Aurora Forum, held in Armenia on October 14–21, 2019 which convenes leaders and change-makers from across the world to share knowledge, perspective and ideas.