ATP Shifts Gears to Present More Online Environmental Education Resources during Crisis

ARMENIA TREE PROJECT
400 W Cummings Park, Suite 3900
Woburn, MA 01801
Tel: (617) 926-TREE
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PRESS RELEASE
March 31, 2020
ATP Shifts Gears to Present More Online Environmental Education Resources during 
Crisis
By Jason Sohigian
Environmental education has been one of Armenia Tree Project's major programs 
for the past 15 years, so when schools closed and people began following the 
norms of social distancing to prevent the spread of the coronavirus outbreak, 
the organization changed gears quickly.
In Armenia and in the Diaspora, ATP had an ambitious agenda of programs and 
visits scheduled with students, including preparations for diasporan students 
who were planning to visit Armenia to plant trees with their peers this spring. 
Within a week, most programs had been cancelled or postponed, so ATP's educators 
went into action to present new material online. 
"Many schools introduced web-based distance learning programs during this period 
and some have struggled with this due to a shortage of resources, so once again 
ATP stepped in to fill a gap around environmental education," explains Executive 
Director Jeanmarie Papelian.
Impact on Education Programs in Armenia
The environmental education department had ambitious plans for spring in 
Armenia. This included strategy meetings with the youth Eco Clubs initiated by 
ATP around the country, to plan classes and field trips that would lead to green 
projects launched in their communities later in the year.
"Since the schools are closed and it's currently a challenge to plan these 
activities with school directors and relevant governmental and local bodies, we 
decided to use this time to update our existing educational materials," says 
Environmental Education Manager Kristine Hovsepyan. "Many of these lessons are 
connected with the Building Bridges youth newsletters on our website, and we 
began to share them with our partner teachers on a weekly basis."
The education team also began developing new lessons. "Our educators in Armenia 
and in the US sprang into action and are working to put informative and engaging 
resources in the hands of students and families who are looking for ways to keep 
kids learning even when the schools are closed," adds Papelian. "We still have a 
sense of urgency and commitment around these issues which are global and which 
will be affecting people and planet for years to come, even after the current 
crisis is under control." 
Building Bridges Program Engages Diaspora
The Building Bridges program was initiated to introduce ATP's environmental 
education resources to students in the Diaspora, and to help connect diasporans 
with Armenia around environmental topics. A series of illustrated newsletters 
were created, as well as a "Kids & Family" tab on the ATP website with resources 
including videos and lessons.
This spring, ATP had a series of visits planned in California and across the 
East Coast to introduce new Building Bridges material to students, and prepare 
some of the classes for their upcoming trips to Armenia. When the situation 
changed, ATP started putting the resources online using email, the website, and 
social media.
"We're going to miss seeing the students in person this spring," notes Community 
Outreach Manager Anahit Gharibyan. "I was planning to visit more than a dozen 
schools in California, and our Boston team was planning the same for schools on 
the East Coast. We thought the next best thing would be to put this material 
online and get it out to families directly." 
For the past few weeks, ATP has been sending out a weekly email to its list with 
educational resources, and these are shared on its Facebook and Instagram pages. 
These include links to worksheets, environmental facts from ATP's characters 
like Tchalo the gampr, and tips for coping with social distancing. 
"We know that everyone is facing the effects of the coronavirus crisis, but we 
are following through on our commitments to people and the planet," concludes 
Papelian. "This is why we also appealed to our supporters this spring, in order 
to keep this work going. As our founder Carolyn Mugar has said before, we are in 
this for the long-term. After the current crisis passes, we will still be 
working to reverse the environmental crisis."

Armenian ministry launches #HighTech online series of talks

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 11:18, 31 March, 2020

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s ministry of high technological industry is starting online #HighTechTalks with the view to introduce the field, discover the IT world, as well as to raise relevant issues and public awareness, the ministry told Armenpress.

The project will host successful businessmen and leading IT specialists who will hold talks introducing the field of high technologies.

Due to the spread of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) around the globe and Armenia as well, thousands of people need to get a new profession and have an opportunity to enter the IT sector, acquire new skills, knowledge and most importantly profession. #HighTechTalks are going to contribute to having a deeper knowledge on technologies for broad public circles.

#HighTechTalks will launch on March 31, at 21:00. The first guest of the project is PicsArt founder and CEO Hovhannes Avoyan who will join the talks from the United States and will run a talk on the topic of the IT world.

The program will be broadcast live on the Facebook page of Armenia’s minister of high-tech industry Hakob Arshakyan (https://www.facebook.com/hakobarshakyanpage/), and after the completion it will also be posted on the ministry’s YouTube account (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8cP-gVqC9z4rjJeAqyBjrQ).

The future guests of the #HighTechTalks will talk about the pros and cons of information and communication technologies, the role of technologies and how they change our life, how they affect the human welfare and security, etc.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Azerbaijani press: Romania says so-called “elections” in Nagorno-Karabakh lack legitimacy

Wed 01 Apr 2020 12:37 GMT | 16:37 Local Time

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Romani considers that the so-called “presidential and legislative” elections held on March 31 in the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh lack legitimacy, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“The Romanian Foreign Ministry expresses its trust in the fact that the poll will not adversely affect the process of identifying a viable and negotiated solution for the conflict in the Nagorno-Karabakh region,” said the statement.

The Romanian Foreign Ministry reiterated its support for the activity of the OSCE Minsk Group, the only entitled format that can facilitate the peaceful and durable regulation of the conflict in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, and encourages the sides to manifest the political will which is necessary in this process.

ADB lowers growth estimates for Armenia to 2.2% in 2020

Panorama, Armenia
April 3 2020

Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Friday estimated Armenia’s economic growth to slow down to 2,2 per cent in the current fiscal (2020-21). “In Armenia, COVID-19 will slash growth from the unusually high rate of 7.6% achieved in 2019 to 2.2% in 2020, but the realization of structural reform promises to revive expansion to 4.5% in 2021,” according to the Asian Development Outlook (ADO) 2020, the Asian Development Bank’s (ADB) annual flagship economic publication.

According to the new report, regional economic growth in developing Asia will decline sharply in 2020 due to the effects of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, before recovering in 2021.

The report forecasts regional growth of 2.2% in 2020, a downward revision of 3.3 percentage points relative to the 5.5% ADB had forecast in September 2019. Growth is expected to rebound to 6.2% in 2021, assuming that the outbreak ends and activity normalizes.

“The evolution of the global pandemic—and thus the outlook for the global and regional economy—is highly uncertain. Growth could turn out lower, and the recovery slower, than we are currently forecasting. For this reason, strong and coordinated efforts are needed to contain the COVID-19 pandemic and minimize its economic impact, especially on the most vulnerable,” said ADB Chief Economist Yasuyuki Sawada.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 03-04-20

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 17:52, 3 April, 2020

YEREVAN, 3 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 3 April, USD exchange rate down by 1.53 drams to 502.97 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 7.76 drams to 543.86 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.13 drams to 6.56 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 10.16 drams to 618.25 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 573.33 drams to 26145.05 drams. Silver price up by 1.90 drams to 229.22 drams. Platinum price up by 175.09 drams to 11756.21 drams.

Armenia MFA issues statement on military incident at Armenian-Azerbaijani border

News.am, Armenia

23:37, 30.03.2020
                  

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia has issued a statement on the military incident at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. The statement reads as follows:

“We strongly condemn the attempts of Azerbaijan to escalate the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, which resulted in the wounding of a 14 years old resident of Voskevan community of Tavush region. At the same time, two servicemen of the Armed Forces of Armenia have been wounded while preventing the infiltration attempt of the Azerbaijani side towards the Armenian positions in the same direction.

This unprovoked ceasefire violation has no justification, especially today, when all countries of the world mobilize their medical resources in the fight against COVID19. By such actions, Azerbaijan disregards the calls of the international community, particularly the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs and the UN Secretary General to strictly adhere to the ceasefire and refrain from provocative actions during this period. 

This military incident demonstrates that either the Azerbaijani side has no control over the actions of its military units on the border or deliberately escalates the situation thus bearing full responsibility for its consequences. 

We wish speedy recovery to our injured citizens.”

Coronavirus: Armenian government develops respective mechanisms to assist tourism

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 16:50,

YEREVAN, MARCH 30, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government has developed respective mechanisms for supporting the private sector operating in tourism field during the current state of emergency declared in the country due to the spread of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), Chairwoman of the Tourism Committee Susanna Safaryan said at a press conference.

“Tourism is one of the most affected sectors due to the coronavirus. We can say that at the moment the number of tourism visits in Armenia and all over the world reaches 0, therefore, this sector is considered more vulnerable than the others. The private sector representatives involved in providing tourism services, such as the hotels, the guesthouses, tourism subjects, whose main consumer was the tourism, are currently facing damages. For this situation many discussions were held recently with various tourism subjects, including with incoming, outgoing tour-operators, tour-guides, hotel, guest-house representatives and others who faced damages due to the spread of coronavirus”, she said, adding that various mechanisms for assisting tourism sector were discussed recently.

She said the first measure is co-lending or re-lending, meaning that the private sector representatives can apply for lending to receive 50% support from the state. Susanna Safaryan said these sums can be used for paying the salaries of their employees, state or community budget payments, paying for fees or mandatory payments, as well as paying for utilities. Safaryan said this assistance can a little bit mitigate the losses the representatives of this sector are currently facing.

According to the third measure, lending support is envisaged to the small and medium enterprises operating in the tourism sector. This measure supposes lending to those subjects whose turnover is within 24-500 million drams. “I don’t rule out that there will be subjects that may be excluded from these assistance funds, but we are discussing various measures to meet also their needs”, she said.  

Armenia has declared a state of emergency on March 16 to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19). The state of emergency is effective until April 14. According to the latest data, number of people infected with the new coronavirus in Armenia is 482.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Number of asylum seekers from Armenia drastically drops following the revolution

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 19:41,

YEREVAN, MARCH 30, ARMENPRESS. By the decision of State Secretary for Migration at the Ministry of Justice and Security of the Netherlands Armenia is placed in the list of ‘’safe country of origin’’, ARMENPRESS reports the Embassy of Armenia in the Netherlands informs.

‘’State Secretary for Migration at the Ministry of Justice and Security of the Netherlands Ankie Broekers-Knol informed in her letter addressed to the House of Representatives on March 27 that the changes in Armenia following March 2018 have fostered the establishment of rule of law in the country, the number of asylum seekers from Armenia has drastically dropped and a number of other indexes place Armenia in the list of ‘’safe country of origin’’, reads the statement of te Embassy of Armenia in the Netherlands.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

Does Armenia Need a Truth Commission?

Institute for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR), UK
March 13 2020
Opinions divided over possible mechanism to restore “systematically violated rights”.
By Arshaluys Mgdesyan

A proposed transitional justice strategy to review human rights violations in Armenia since the collapse of the Soviet Union has received a mixed reception.

The plan, part of a four-year judicial reform strategy developed by the ministry of justice late last year, has now been released for public discussion.

According to the document, a special fact-finding commission, similar to the truth and reconciliation commissions created in many countries after major political crises, will be formed in Armenia to restore citizens’ “systematically violated rights”.

The commission will gather information about human rights violations that occurred after 1991 – when Armenia gained independence – until 2018, when public protests led to the resignation of President Serzh Sargsyan.

Current prime minister Nikol Pashinyan has set high expectations for anti-corruption processes and action to restore faith in the justice system.

The Centre for the Development of Legislation and Legal Research at the ministry of justice prepared the judicial reform strategy, within the framework of which transitional justice mechanisms will be introduced, including the fact-finding commission.

Its director Tigran Dadunts said that the commission would focus on election violations and political persecutions since 1991 as well as illegal property confiscations and the deaths of military personnel in non-combat circumstances. No specific events or issues have been identified.

The commission will have a two-year mandate and consist of up to 20 members representing various fields of society.

“The commission is an out-of-court structure, completely apolitical, autonomous,” Dadunts explained. “It will not make any decisions. It will only study the facts. The decision, based on these findings will be made by the competent state bodies – the government and parliament. In this regard, the members of the commission must be apolitical and not affiliated with any political party.”

When it concludes its investigations, the commission will issue a report with recommendations on restoring violated human rights.

“The task of the commission is to learn what exactly happened in the past and present the objective picture and most importantly, provide recommendations on how to restore violated human rights and how to prevent possible violations in the future,” Dadunts concluded.

While some human rights groups see this potential commission as a positive move, others – including those now in the opposition – see this as a politicised move.  And some of those who believe their rights have been violated in the past have little faith this commission will provide them with justice.

Nana Muradyan’s son, Valery Muradyan, died on March 15, 2010 at the Aikaz military unit in Nagorno-Karabakh. According to an official investigation he committed suicide, but his mother believes that her son was strangled and then hanged.

As a mother of a soldier who died in a non-combat situation, she is sceptical about how effectively the commission will work to restore justice.

“In the ten years since, the investigation did only one thing – it covered up the murder and brought the case to a deadlock,” she said. “Even after the “velvet revolution” there has been no progress in the case. I hardly believe that this commission will change anything until truly systemic changes take place. The investigators and prosecutors who hid the truth as well as their superiors all remain in their positions. So how can they uncover a crime that they themselves concealed?” Muradyan asked.

Arpine Hovhannisyan, a former minister of justice and now an opposition politician, said that the authorities were too focused on digging into the past instead of looking to the future.

“They will be investigating the last two years, focus all public attention on this, and not on what needs to be done for the development of the country,” she said. “In support of the proposed document on establishing the fact-finding commission in Armenia, they provided the example of Argentina, where a military junta ruled and people were drowned in the sea.

“They talked about the example of Peru, which went through a civil war and lost 70,000 lives in it. They also refer to South Africa, where apartheid governed. And, here comes a question – is the situation in Armenia similar enough to these examples that they want to create a fact-finding commission?” Hovhannisyan asked.

However, those now in government claim that there had been a huge amount of political persecutions and rights violations in Armenia’s past.

“In this regard, finding the truth and restoring justice is very important,” said Maria Karapetyan, a lawmaker from the ruling My Step faction.

 “I assume that as a result of the Commission’s work, a multi-volume archive and a large amount of video materials will be compiled, based on which the Commission will be able to write a ten to 15-page report with recommendations, which we will adopt during a parliamentary meeting,” Karapetyan added.

Hovhannisyan questioned how the mechanisms for implementing justice would work.

“If it suddenly becomes clear that, let’s say in the 1996 presidential elections, it was not Levon Ter-Petrosyan [the first president of Armenia] who won, but opposition leader Vazgen Manukyan, and the election results were fabricated, what should the commission or the current authorities do? Should they cancel the election results and recognize Vazgen Manukyan as president?” Hovhannisyan asked.

Karapetyan said that this kind of scenario would not be in the commission’s remit.

“Based on the results of its work, the commission may recommend various ways to restore the violated rights of citizens, whether that be compensation, rehabilitation or any other means of assistance,” she said. “This might even be a reinstatement of employment, if possible.”

This publication was prepared under the “Giving Voice, Driving Change – from the Borderland to the Steppes Project” implemented with the financial support of the Foreign Ministry of Norway.

Music: PostClassical Charts ‘An Armenian Odyssey’ – The Georgetowner

Georgetowner
By Richard Selden


PostClassical Ensemble’s presentation of “An Armenian Odyssey” at Washington National Cathedral on March 4. Photo by Neshan H. Naltchayan. Courtesy PostClassical.

PostClassical Ensemble was lucky. “An Armenian Odyssey: The Color of Pomegranates,” the chamber orchestra’s major spring production, preceded — barely — the ban on public gatherings intended to slow the spread of COVID-19.

Apart from any then-unknown health risks, which we hope were minimal, the audience of two or three thousand, including a large subset of D.C.’s Armenian American community, was lucky too. Because the concert, presented on March 4 at Washington National Cathedral, was a powerful, moving and musically exquisite experience.

Overseen by executive director Joseph Horowitz and music director Angel Gil-Ordóñez, who co-founded the “experimental orchestral laboratory” in 2003, the event was part of a mini-festival of music and film marking the 100th anniversary of Armenian-American diplomatic relations. As such, it opened with brief remarks by Ambassador Varuzhan Nesesyan of the Republic of Armenia and Marie Royce, assistant U.S. secretary of state for educational and cultural affairs.

The 90-minute musical program, without intermission, consisted of a single piece, a world-premiere commission by Armenian composer Vache Sharafyan, who has been an official composer for Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Project since 2001.

The two dozen PostClassical regulars were supplemented by Zulal, an Armenian American vocal trio; 31-year-old Armenian cellist Narek Hakhnazarian, a gold medal winner at the 2011 International Tchaikovsky Competition; and two Armenian masters of the duduk, an ancient double-reed instrument made of apricot wood: Jivan Gasparyan, aged 91, and Jivan Gasparyan Jr.

PostClassical is known not only for thematic, cross-cultural programming but for performances incorporating other media. For “An Armenian Odyssey,” a large screen was suspended over the musicians. On it (and on smaller screens placed along the tremendous nave on both sides), images created by Armenian-Syrian artist Kevork Mourad to correspond to the music were projected. There were also projections of colored light and patterned slides on the columns, arches and ceiling of the nave.

“An Armenian Odyssey” was in two parts: “Homage to Sayat-Nova” and “Diaspora and Rebirth.” The second part, featuring Hakhnazarian, was Sharafyan’s Second Cello Concerto, written in 2013.

Sayat-Nova (1712-1795) is Armenia’s national bard. Born in Tbilisi, now the capital of the Republic of Georgia, he wrote, composed and sang in Armenian, Persian, Georgian and Azeri. Unfortunately, none of his lyrics was shared in English at the event. Here is the opening of a poem or song, as translated by Alice Stone Blackwell: “I beheld my love this morning, in the garden paths she strayed,/All brocaded was the ground with prints her golden pattens made.”

Audience members unfamiliar with Sayat-Nova were introduced to him, at least in outline (pun intended). As depicted in Mourad’s drawings, the bard fell in love with a princess, was banished from the Georgian court, became a priest, settled at Haghbad Monastery and, in his 80s, was beheaded for refusing to convert to Islam.

The music began with a father-and-son duduk duet lasting several minutes. The nave of the cathedral, where PostClassical is ensemble-in-residence, is not acoustically ideal for some musical genres, but for this instrument — a cross between an oboe and, when played in tandem, bagpipes — it was perfect: haunting, timeless and vaguely Eastern (also a Eurocentric term, but preferred to Oriental).

This mood continued, heightened by the use of cymbals, drums, bells and gong, the precise and pleasing vocalists of Zulal — who sang with and without words and later played ocarinas — and the always excellent orchestra under Gil- Ordóñez’s fluid conducting.

Armenian American vocal trio Zulal switches to ocarinas. Photo by Neshan H. Naltchayan. Courtesy PostClassical.

Solos by concertmaster Netanel Draiblate, oboist Fatma Daglar and trumpeter Chris Gekker, among the area’s top instrumentalists, frequently caught the ear as the music progressed. Though he was not positioned at the front of the stage, Hakhnazarian, on a raised platform at center during the second half, made his cello sing out, especially in the many passages written in a high register.

How to describe Mourad’s illustrations, which he refers to as “live and pre-animated drawing”? At different times, they remind one of Javanese shadow puppets, of children’s book illustrations, of Edward Gorey’s line-drawings, of South African artist William Kentridge’s animations. That they paired with the music so seamlessly was remarkable. While absorbing the music, one’s attention was fixed on the images. Backgrounds evolved, figures shifted, scenes changed as if a camera was panning. Most striking were the segments of live drawing, when the huge, blurred hand of the artist appeared on the screen.

A few moments (as best I can recall and interpret them) to give you an idea: In “Homage to Sayat-Nova,” the puppet-like figure of the bard “walks” across a courtyard and kneels before the princess, a blue figure in an upper window, and the courtyard fills with townspeople. Later, an orange fire burns in a fireplace as the lovers dance and a window curtain flutters in the breeze. In the “Diaspora and Rebirth” section, the genocide is depicted with a blue wash of massacred figures and smoke rises in a black sky from burning churches. Depicting the “Velvet Revolution” of 2018, in a large plaza with a golden statue in the center, dozens of arms are raised under a yellow-orange sky.

Next spring, there will be another opportunity to see a collaboration between PostClassical Ensemble and Mourad in D.C., when Manuel de Falla’s “Master Peter’s Puppet Show” will be presented with his visuals, a production seen earlier in New York, where Mourad now lives.

PostClassical’s “Cultural Fusion: The Gamelan Experience,” in which two gamelan orchestras participated — demonstrating the influence of the Indonesian genre on European and American composers — was named the best classical music event of 2019 by Washington Classical Review. Though that performance was truly a unique spectacle, “An Armenian Odyssey” matched it as an audience-pleasing _expression_ of the ensemble’s commitment to its brainy, innovative and labor-intensive path.