Armenia lawmaker: Ambassador should not be appointed if he can’t prove eligibility to MPs

News.am, Armenia
Feb 11 2019
Armenia lawmaker: Ambassador should not be appointed if he can’t prove eligibility to MPs Armenia lawmaker: Ambassador should not be appointed if he can’t prove eligibility to MPs

14:40, 11.02.2019

YEREVAN. – Ruben Rubinyan, Chairman of the Standing Committee on Foreign Relations of the National Assembly of Armenia, is not against a candidate meeting with MPs, before being appointed an ambassador.

Rubinyan on Monday told about the above-said to reporters in parliament. He noted this commenting on the remark that the Bright Armenia faction in the NA has launched an initiative whereby it will carry out parliamentary oversight regarding Armenia’s diplomats who have not yet been appointed ambassadors.

“I don’t see a problem [here],” he added, in particular. “[But] my only concern is that the draft conforms to the constitution (…), as well as several technical circumstances (…) should be taken into account.”

Ruben Rubinyan stated that if an ambassadorial candidate will not be able to prove his respective eligibility to the MPs, he should not be appointed to this post.

“There is no principal issue [here],” he added, in part.

"Snasna Tsrer": Association with Russia in Syria is a threat to the security of Armenia

Arminfo, Armenia
Feb 8 2019
Tatevik Shahunyan

ArmInfo. Associations with Russia in Syria are a threat to the security of Armenia and  contradict the national interests of the republic. This is stated in the statement of the “Sasna Tsrer” party in connection with the sending of the Armenian mission to Syria.

The party recalls that the Armenian authorities had previously warned  about these threats when the decision to send a mission was only  announced.

“The Armenian authorities continue the policy of their predecessors,  putting Armenia in colonial dependence on Russia. If the new  authorities continue this policy, then Armenia will lose its  sovereignty in the international arena,” the statement reads. On  February 8, a group of Armenian specialists in humanitarian demining,  medical personnel and ensuring the safety of the specialists  themselves, in a total of 83 people, arrived in the city of Aleppo of  the Syrian Arab Republic to provide humanitarian specialized  assistance to the Syrian people.

According to the press service of the Ministry of Defense of Armenia,  the Armenian specialists will carry out humanitarian activities  related to humanitarian demining, mine awareness of the population,  the provision of medical assistance in Aleppo, exclusively outside  the zone of combat operations.

Armenian Deputy Minister of Defense Gabriel Balayan assured in an  interview Radio Liberty, that the initiative to send the Armenian  mission to Syria belongs exclusively to Yerevan. According to him,  Russia has provided only logical assistance in this matter.  Meanwhile, earlier, RA Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that  Armenia and Russia are carrying out an important joint humanitarian  mission, after which a decision was announced to send a mission to  Syria.

In response to the remark that, in the opinion of many experts,  sending a mission to Syria will have a negative impact on Armenia’s  relations with the West and some Arab countries, the Deputy Minister  stressed: “In making the decision, all the pros and cons were taken  into account.” Meanwhile, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu at a meeting  with his Armenian counterpart Davit Tonoyan in Moscow thanked the  latter for the humanitarian assistance to Syria, stressing that it  was Armenia that was the first to respond to the call to support  peaceful citizens of the Arab Republic. 

‘President is fulfilling his well-known pledge’ – French foreign ministry on declaring National Day of Armenian Genocide Commemoration

‘President is fulfilling his well-known pledge’ – French foreign ministry on declaring National Day of Armenian Genocide Commemoration

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15:17, 7 February, 2019

PARIS, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS. The French foreign ministry has responded to the Turkish reaction on President Macron’s recent decision to declare April 24th the National Day for Armenian Genocide Commemoration.

The French foreign ministry was asked at a daily press briefing on February 6 “did Turkey respond to France after President Macron’s decision to establish a day to commemorate the Armenian genocide?”

“In establishing this day of commemoration, the President is fulfilling his well-known pledge to honor French citizens of Armenian descent.

We have had several opportunities to exchange views with the Turkish authorities on this issue. They have been informed of our positions just as we have been informed of theirs”, the French foreign ministry responded.

Shortly after President of France Emmanuel Macron announced the national day honoring the Armenian Genocide victims, Turkey unsurprisingly “strongly condemned” the move. 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Rightwing Turkish politician calls for expulsion of Armenian migrants

Eurasianet.org
Feb 8 2019


Ayla Jean Yackley Feb 8, 2019

A far-right Turkish politician wants his government to expel tens of thousands of Armenian nationals residing in Turkey in retaliation against France for declaring a remembrance day for victims of the World War I-era genocide of Armenians.

President Emmanuel Macron said this week France would mark April 24 as a “national day of commemoration of the Armenian genocide.” Turkey’s government, which denies the killings amounted to a genocide, has vigorously condemned the decision.

Researchers estimate between 10,000 and 30,000 Armenian nationals are in Turkey, many of whom have overstayed tourist visas after finding work there. They often face greater scrutiny when foreign governments pressure Turkey to formally recognize the genocide.

“There are 100,000 Armenians here who came from Armenia and are illegally filling their stomachs. I’m saying we should expel them. Why are we letting them stay? While they lobby against Turkey, we continue to feed them,” Mustafa Destici, who leads the small Great Unity Party (BBP), said at a campaign rally on February 7.

It was not clear where Destici came up with a figure of 100,000 nor what “lobbying” efforts Armenian labor migrants living in Turkey could have conducted to persuade Macron. It is not the first time Destici has used the number, or threatened to expel Armenian citizens from Turkey; he made a similar demand in 2015. In 2017, he called on Russia to abandon its military alliance with Armenia. 

Destici’s hardline party only receives a few hundred thousand votes in Turkish elections but retains an outsized influence at a time of heightened nationalism in Turkey. In June, the BBP joined President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s electoral alliance, along with a larger right-wing group, in parliamentary and presidential polls, earning one seat in parliament.

Erdogan has in the past suggested kicking out undocumented Armenian nationals in response to moves by other nations to recognize the genocide. In 2015, he said Turkey could “deport” them if it wished, evoking the Ottoman Empire’s deportation of hundreds of thousands of Armenians to the Syrian desert during World War I.

But Erdogan has also taken unprecedented steps toward acknowledging the pain of the descendants of the killings. Each April 24, he offers his condolences to the 60,000 or so Turkish citizens of Armenian descent who remain in Turkey.

The day after his original statement, Destici issued another statement clarifying that he had no quibble with Turkey’s Armenian citizens, for whom he had “endless respect,” he said.

Ibrahim Kalin, Erdogan’s spokesman, said in a statement this week he “violently condemned” France’s decision to commemorate April 24, saying the allegations of genocide lack a legal basis. France legally recognized the killings as genocide in 2001, and another two dozen nations have done so as well.

Turkey argues that both Turks and Armenians died during internecine warfare amid the chaos of World War I and the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. However, most Western scholars agree that around 1.5 million Armenians perished in a systematic genocide that began in 1915.

Destici’s remarks were unlikely to spur any concrete action, but illustrate rising nationalist sentiment during a severe economic downturn in Turkey, which also hosts four million Syrian and Iraqi refugees, as well as hundreds of thousands of migrants from Africa, the Middle East and beyond.

Armenians make up a tiny proportion of migrants in Turkey. Many are low-skilled workers and female, forced to look for work outside of Armenia, where the per-capita income is $4,200 compared to $10,500 across the border in Turkey.

Turkey has no diplomatic relations with Armenia, cutting ties in 1993 in protest of the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

Ayla Jean Yackley is a journalist based in Istanbul. Sign up for Eurasianet’s free weekly newsletter.

“Arrogant”, “Uninformed” – Turkey slams Macron with appalling statement for April 24th announcement

“Arrogant”, “Uninformed” – Turkey slams Macron with appalling statement for April 24th announcement

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16:39, 7 February, 2019

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS. The Turkish foreign ministry has also weighed in on French President Emmanuel Macron’s announcement on declaring April 24th a National Day of Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

Turkish foreign ministry spokesperson Hami Aksoy slammed Macron for the announcement and accused the French president of seeking “receiving the votes of French electorate of Armenian origin”.

He also called Macron arrogant and uninformed in a statement released on the foreign ministry website. 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s spokesperson also criticized Macron for the move earlier.

Shortly after President of France Emmanuel Macron announced the national day honoring the Armenian Genocide victims, Turkey unsurprisingly “strongly condemned” the move. 

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




AEF Awards $1,000 Prize to Oratorical Contest Winners

2019 AEF Oratorical Contestants

The Armenian Educational Foundation’s Third Annual Oratorical Contest drew in over 120 supporters on February 2, at the Chevy Chase Country Club in Glendale. The newly remodeled hall was generously donated for the event by the country club owners, Nick Agakanian, Vatche Kouyoumdjian and Esteban Nazarian.

Representatives from all five local Armenian high schools attended and competed in the Armenian and English language speech competition. The participating schools included:

  • A.G.B.U. Manoogian-Demirdjian High School
  • Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School
  • Armenian Mesrobian High School
  • Rose & Alex Pilibos Armenian High School
  • A.G.B.U. Vatche & Tamar Manoukian High School

The topic for the Armenian segment related to the preservation of the Armenian language and the English competition topic addressed the Velvet Revolution and its affects in Armenia and globally. The judging criteria were based on the American Legion National Oratorical Contest guidelines.

The professional experience of the panel of judges encompassed a variety of backgrounds, including, education, politics, medicine, international relations and journalism. The distinguished judges were:

  • Dr. Armen Baibourtian (Consul General of Armenia in Los Angeles)
  • Dr. Richard Hovannisian (Former Holder AEF Chair in Modern Armenian History, UCLA)
  • Dr. Shushan Karapetian (Professor Department of Near Eastern Languages & Cultures, UCLA)
  • Paul Krekorian (Los Angeles City Councilmember)
  • Aida Rechdouni Jooharian, M.D., (AEF Board Member and Medical Director of Franklin Diagnostics Laboratories)
  • Harut Sassounian (Publisher of the California Courier)

Alice Petrossian, with her vast experience in speech contests and a model orator, acted as Mistress of Ceremonies.

The winners of the 2019 AEF Oratorical contest were Narek Poghosyan (11th grade) from Rose & Alex Pilibos Armenian High School for the Armenian contest, Vahe Demirdjian (12th grade) representing A.G.B.U. Vatche & Tamar Manoukian High School for the English language competition. Each winner was awarded with a $1,000 prize.

Dr. Shushan Karapetian remarked, “I was impressed with the professionalism in the conception, organization, and execution of the contest as well as the high quality of the participants’ content and performance. The sophistication and caliber of the students’ speeches left me inspired and hopeful about the next generation of our community’s leadership.”
AEF’s purpose in hosting the Oratorical contest is to promote public speaking in Armenian youth, with the hope of encouraging and shaping a future generation of leaders, motivators and influencers who can become a positive force and promote progress within their community.

Music: Oscar-winning French-Armenian composer Michel Legrand dies aged 87

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 26 2019
11:44 26/01/2019

Famous composer and pianist Michel Legrand has dies at the age of 87, Ria Novosti agency reported. Michel Legrand was a musical composer, jazz and classical pianist and an accomplished arranger and conductor who performed with orchestras all over the world.

Legrand was born in the Bécon les Bruyères district of Courbevoie, a suburb of Paris, France in 1932. His father Raymond Legrand was a conductor and composer renowned for hits such as Irma la douce, and his mother was Marcelle Der Mikaëlian (sister of conductor Jacques Hélian), who married Legrand Senior in 1929. His maternal grandfather was of Armenian descent.

Legrand has composed more than two hundred film and television scores and several musicals and has made well over a hundred albums. He has won three Oscars (out of 13 nominations) and five Grammys and has been nominated for an Emmy. He was twenty-two when his first album, I Love Paris, became one of the best-selling instrumental albums ever released.

Pashinyan: All citizens of Armenia have government formed by free, fair elections

News.am, Armenia
Jan 26 2019
Pashinyan: All citizens of Armenia have government formed by free, fair elections Pashinyan: All citizens of Armenia have government formed by free, fair elections

20:33, 26.01.2019
               

YEREVAN.- All citizens of Armenia have a government formed by  free, fair, democratic and legitimate elections and one of the government’s responsibilities is to ensure normal life in the country and ensure the rights and freedoms of the people. His remarks came during enlarged session of the Armenian Police.

“People can express their opinions. There can be no talk about restricting the freedom of rallies, marches, and protest actions in Armenia but this does not mean that everyone who has problems should block roads and customs points,” the Prime Minister stressed.

In this context, the head of government touched upon the stereotype formed on democratic governance.

“It seems to many people that democracy is when everyone does what they want and when they want. Democracy is the system with the most rigorous legal system, because the rule of law is one of the key conditions for democracy, ”he said.

No Armenians among H1N1 patients, fatalities in Georgia – official

No Armenians among H1N1 patients, fatalities in Georgia – official

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16:02,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 11, ARMENPRESS. No Armenian have been infected or killed by the H1N1 virus outbreak in Georgia, according to Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson Anna Naghdalyan.

“The Armenian embassy in Georgia informed that there are no Armenians among those infected or killed by H1N1,” she said.

According to latest reports, more than a dozen people have died in Georgia from H1N1-related complications.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Exhibition: Toronto: Rouge Park’s photographer-in-residence trades the ‘office for a forest’

The Toronto Star, ON, Canada
January 9, 2019 Wednesday
Rouge Park’s photographer-in-residence trades the ‘office for a forest’

Ishkhan Ghazarian shares his office with white-tailed deer, Blanding’s turtles, ancient Carolinian forest, delicate flora, tumbling rivers and placid marshlands.

A pink pastel sunrise might start his work day. A blazing orange sunset might end it.

People can use the walkway to stroll across the Rouge marsh, home to countless species of wildlife and plants. It’s also a feeding area for Great Blue Herons.  (ISHKHAN GHAZARIAN)

Between those dawns and dusks, Ghazarian — photographer-in-residence for Rouge National Urban Park for 2018 — lifts his camera to his eyes to capture the natural beauty carved between Toronto and Pickering and stretching from Lake Ontario to the Oak Ridges Moraine.

Some days, the 23-year-old will hike up to 10 kilometres along the many distinct trails in “the Rouge,” Canada’s first national park in an urban setting, to get that perfect shot.

“It’s a joy to be out there,” says Ghazarian, who graduated from OCAD University in April with a bachelor of fine arts in photography.

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“When you trade in your office for a forest, you can’t go wrong.”

Sharing his art with the public is another bonus.

Photographer Ishkhan Ghazarian, the 2018 photographer-in-residence at Rouge National Urban Park, poses with his exhibition of work at OCAD University in December.  (Andrew Francis Wallace/Toronto Star)

Ghazarian was the park’s third photographer-in-residence, a paid position created from a partnership with Parks Canada and OCAD for a graduating photography student. Included in the job: A solo exhibition of landscapes.

Ghazarian’s show Memories of the Rouge ran Dec. 10 to 22 at OCAD U’s Ada Slaight Gallery. He selected nine different landscapes that encompassed three main Rouge themes: nature, culture and agriculture. He printed the photographs himself and blew them up — about half a metre by one metre.

“It’s a big thing for an artist to have the opportunity to show people their work, especially in print,” says Ghazarian, who used his Nikon D850 in the Rouge.

“I find having your photographs (displayed) online is great but when you print it into a physical form and put it on the wall and you can just stare at it in this large scale, there’s so much more emotion in that photograph that you can get than just looking at it online.”

At Rouge Beach, a gaggle of geese moves through the water as the sun sets over Lake Ontario. This is one of the images taken by Ishkhan Ghazarian, the photographer in residence at Rouge National Urban Park for 2018.  (Ishkhan Ghazarian)

Jeffrey Sinibaldi, acting external relations manager at Rouge National Urban Park, was part of the selection team that chose Ghazarian for the in-residence role. Sinibaldi says Ghazarian’s enthusiasm and the quality of his portfolio set him apart from other candidates.

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“He’s done a lot of journalism and documentary work and was looking for an opportunity to do landscape photography; that was an area of his portfolio that he was lacking but something he was very interested in,” he says.

“How did he put it in the interview? ‘My goal is to get in National Geographic one day,’” Sinibaldi continued.

Ghazarian has already made strides in that direction. His photo of a baby Blanding’s turtle was published in the recent edition of Canadian Geographic.

“He produces great results,” Sinibaldi says.

The Monarch Trail is one of many scenic hiking paths in Rouge National Urban Park. It is Canada’s first national park in an urban setting.  (Ishkhan Ghazarian)

Ghazarian’s passion for photography is rooted in his childhood.

Movses Basmajian, Ghazarian’s late maternal grandfather, was an avid picture taker who filled photo albums with snapshots taken during family visits to his Detroit home. He sparked his grandson’s interest; Ghazarian began experimenting with disposable cameras that came as gifts from his parents.

“It was like the one form of _expression_ that I could use to express myself,” Ghazarian says.

“Photography was a great medium for that (and) it kind of stuck with me throughout my childhood.”

His grandfather was also a Boy Scouts leader. That, too, inspired Ghazarian, who grew up in Scarborough and spent 12 years in Scouts Canada. He modestly conceded he earned enough badges for “two sides of a sash” and recalls using waterproof disposables at scouting events and camping trips.

This is one of the many areas in which restoration is taking place at Rouge National Urban Park. The park’s photographer in residence for 2018, Ishkhan Ghazarian, took this image from a helicopter.  (Ishkhan Ghazarian)

Ghazarian graduated from disposables to using his dad’s old Canon, first as a hobby then to volunteer for a Montreal-based Armenian newspaper called Horizon Weekly. (His father, Sako Ghazarian, had volunteered for years as a writer and an editor — it’s printed in English, French and Armenian — and his son wanted to continue the family’s contribution).

In late 2009, tragedy struck. Sako died from heart-related issues. As a young teen mourning his father’s death, Ghazarian says working with his camera provided a distraction during that difficult time.

“It was a way to keep busy and a way to get lost within the art and escape reality,” he says.

“The following year I had started to find myself dedicating more and more time to it.”

Ghazarian saved up to buy his first “real camera” in 2010 — a high-end Canon point and shoot with manual controls. Ghazarian, who attended an Armenian private school, experienced a creative turning point during a two-week class excursion to Armenia in 2011.

“After I came back, I was ‘in it’ — I’d found my passion,” he says. “I knew what I wanted to do.”

He purchased his first professional quality camera, a Nikon D7000, lenses and a flash for about $4,000 in 2012 — “It was an investment I would not regret,” Ghazarian says — and started his own business, ishkhanghazarian.com. Last year, he upgraded his gear to the Nikon D850, which cost about $5,000, as his “everyday tool for the job now.”

Though he grew up in Scarborough and lived relatively close to the Rouge, he doesn’t recall spending time in the park before being hired as photographer in residence. Then, he made the most of it — from solitary shoots to the “teamwork” with National Parks staffers and volunteers.

“When we’re hiking, you meet so many great people along the trails,” he says.

“We have wonderful volunteers that (lead) hikes every Wednesday … a lot of them have been coming before the park was established (as a national park) so it’s great to see their devotion to it.”

Ghazarian says his time as photographer-in-residence has helped him improve as an artist. The value of patience — like watching a setting sun until it bursts into full glory, a moment that might last only a split-second — was just one of his take-aways.

“It’s a lot of waiting but if you’re patient, you can get this moment of awe and sometimes you forget to take the picture because you’re struck by this beautiful landscape in front of you; there are all these emotions and everything’s just perfectly painted in front of you — then it’s ‘Oh, right, gotta take the picture,’” he says.

After a day of shooting, it’s back to the brick-and-mortar Parks Canada office, near Markham Rd. and Eglinton Ave. Working with Parks Canada colleagues, Ghazarian edits and archives the digital images for future use. He says the thrill of seeing a perfect shot during editing never wanes.

“You’re like, ‘Yes, this is the one!’” he says.

Ghazarian’s residence ended Dec. 31, but he will continue to work on contract with Parks Canada at Rouge National Urban Park this year.

Ghazarian says he was given a tremendous opportunity to “show the Rouge in my own eyes” and hopes more up-and-coming grads will apply for the position.

“If you love nature and you can make that into a job, isn’t that the dream?” he says.

“Everyone has their own Rouge, whether it’s the actual Rouge or some other thing that they love.”