Chess: Armenia’s Aronian to take part in London Chess Classic

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 22 2018
Sport 16:40 22/11/2018 Armenia

Leading Armenian chess players will take part in a number of international tournaments in December.

GM Levon Aronian will participate at London Chess Classic to be played from 11 to 17 December, Panorama.am reports, citing the Chess Federation official website.

Armenian GM Hrant Melkumyan, WIM Siranush Ghukasyan and FM Davit Mirzoyan are set to perform at the FIDE Open tournament held on the sidelines of London Chess Classic.

Meantime, three other Armenian players will compete at the Rome international chess championship on 2-9 December and later in another prestigious tournament in Sitges, Spain.

Armenian champion, GM Haik Martirosyan will take part in Zurich open tournament on 26-30 December, while GMs Zaven Andriasian and Samvel Ter-Sahakyan will join an international tournament scheduled for 27-31 December in Montebello, Italy. 

Davit Tonoyan visits Armenian peacekeepers in Mazar-e Sharif

MediaMax, Armenia
Nov 21 2018
 
 
Davit Tonoyan visits Armenian peacekeepers in Mazar-e Sharif
 
 
 
Yerevan/Mediamax/. Acting Defense Minister of Armenia Davit Tonoyan, currently on a working visit to Afghanistan, has visited the town of Mazar-e Sharif where Armenian peacekeepers serve under German command.
 
Tonoyan had a meeting with the command staff of the Camp Marmal military base and General Gerhard Klaffus introduced him to the specifics and challenges of service in the northern command zone.
 
Davit Tonoyan had a look at the accommodation and military duty facilities of the Armenian peacekeepers and learned about the conditions of their service.
 
The acting Defense Minister met with the peacekeepers as well. He briefed them about the domestic political situation and reforms in the army and stressed the importance of international cooperation and peacekeeping missions.

Film: ‘Yeva’ wins Best Film at Armenia’s Rolan Fimlfest.

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Nov 18 2018

TEHRAN, Nov. 18 (MNA) – Iranian feature ‘Yeva’ by Anahid Abad has won the Best Film award at the 14th Rolan – International Film Festival for Children and Youth in Armenia.

‘Yeva’ managed to snatch the Best Film award at the 14th Rolan – International Film Festival for Children and Youth, held on 6-10 November 2018 in Yerevan, Armenia.

Written and directed by Iranian-Armenian Anahid Abad, ‘Yeva’ is the story of a young woman who is forced to flee Yerevan with her daughter Nareh. She would have to stand trial there because she allegedly killed her husband. Uncle Ruben and the remote village in Nagorno-Karabakh are her last chance to go into hiding. But the villagers recognize her from the days of war when she had cared for the wounded as a doctor at the front.

‘Yeva’ has recently received three nominations (best feature, best script and best director award) at the 21st Arpa International Film Festival (AIFF) in the United States. The festival will announce winners after it wraps up on November 21.

MS/4461263

Operative communication between Armenia and Azerbaijan functions uninterruptedly – acting defense minister

Categories
Artsakh
Region

The operative communication established between Armenia and Azerbaijan is functioning uninterruptedly, respective officials are appointed for that, acting defense minister of Armenia Davit Tonoyan told reporters on November 12.

“Respective officials both in Armenia and Azerbaijan have been appointed for that operative communication: that communication is being carried out by these officials. They receive information from the armed forces. This communication operates uninterruptedly as of now”, the acting defense minister said.

Tonoyan added that the Armenian side is also raising the issue of creating a similar communication between the direct commanders.

“We are raising the issue of establishing an operative communication between the direct commanders. This is a way of reducing the incidents. We are raising this issue among the Co-Chairs”, he added.

Europe, Middle East map redrawn by World War I By AFP 13 hours ago

Rudaw, Kurdistan Province of Iraq
Nov 11 2018
 
 
Europe, Middle East map redrawn by World War I
 
By AFP
 
PARIS, France — Empires would fall, regions reconfigure, new countries form: the end of World War I overhauled the global balance of power and redrew the maps of Europe and the Middle East.
 
Here is an overview.
 
Revolution in Russia
  
The war rang the death knell for a Russian empire already in bad shape.
 
Repeated defeats, crippling military spending, famines, popular anger at the World War I bloodbath: all came together in the Marxist Bolshevik Revolution of 1917.
 
In March that year a first revolution lead to the abdication of Nicholas II, Russia's last tsar, and the formation of a new government that proved unable to assert control.
 
In November the Bolsheviks seized power in a second revolution. They immediately sought an exit from the devastating war, in which Russia had sided with the Allies against the Central Powers coalition of Germany, Austria-Hungary and others.
 
By December Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin had agreed an armistice to end combat; in March he agreed to a peace treaty with Germany and its allies that saw Russia give up large swathes of territory at the cost of 30 percent of its population.
 
Four states were created from territory once held by Russia: Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Lithuania.
 
Demise of old Austria-Hungary
  
At the outbreak of war in 1914, the Habsburg dynasty's Austro-Hungarian empire — which had dominated central Europe for five centuries — stretched from Switzerland to Ukraine, grouping within it a dozen nationalities and more than 52 million people.
 
By the end of the conflict, the empire had exploded into several new countries, amid a nationalist fervour for autonomy.
 
Czechoslovakia was the first to be created, proclaimed in October 1918, and followed immediately by Yugoslavia, made up of Slavs in the southernmost parts of the empire.
 
Austria-Hungary's break-up was sealed in November with its signing of an armistice with the victorious Allied powers led by Britain, France and the United States.
 
The Paris Conference of 1919, where the final post-war peace treaty was reached, recognised the new countries and also resulted in the birth of Poland, previously divided between Austria and Russia.
 
Hungary lost two-thirds of its land, with Italy getting a section of the Alps region of Tyrol. And "the rest is Austria", as the French prime minister, Georges Clemenceau, famously put it.
 
The separated Austria and Hungary that remained were reduced to small, landlocked countries.
 
Ottoman fallout
  
When Ottoman sultan Mehmed V proclaimed the "holy war" against France, Britain and Russia in November 1914, siding with the Central Powers, his empire had already lost most of its European possessions.
 
The setbacks it went on to suffer on the Russian front from 1915 served as a pretext to turn on its Armenian minority, labelled as traitors and suspected of harbouring nationalist sentiment.
 
Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their people were killed during the war, and almost 30 countries have recognised the killings as genocide. Turkey refuses the term but accepts that massacres took place that, along with a famine, resulted in the deaths of 300,000-500,000 Armenians and as many Turks.
 
The Ottoman defeat in World War I led to the final break-up of the once-mighty empire.
 
A first treaty signed with the victors in Sevres, France, in 1920 chopped off enormous parts of its territory, including Arab lands, and provided for an independent Armenia and autonomous Kurdistan and ceding other areas to Greece.
 
It was rejected by Turkish nationalists, led by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, who went on to topple the sultan and establish a Turkish republic.
 
They imposed a new treaty that was signed in Lausanne in 1923 and in which the republic retained Anatolia and areas around the Bosphorus Strait.
 
Arab raw deal
 
 The British were able to triumph over the Ottoman empire thanks to the revolt of the Arab tribes in Mesopotamia and Palestine, for whom they held out the promise of independence.
 
But Britain was also in secret talks with France to share out the Middle East between them, as set out in the Sykes-Picot Agreement signed in May 1916.
 
They decided that Lebanon and Syria were to go to France, and Jordan and Iraq to Britain.
 
The partition would feed Arab frustration. This mounted with the 1917 Balfour Declaration that led to the establishment within Palestine of "a national home for the Jewish people".
 
The state of Israel was created 30 years later, its troubled foundations causing a conflict that continues to disrupt the region today.
 

Sanahin’s locomotive depot machine drivers announce strike (video)

Sanahin’s locomotive depot machine drivers of the South Caucasian Railways company has announced a strike. They have joined their colleagues from Gyumri and Sevan. Since yesterday, the railway has been closed, passenger transportation and cargo transportation have been stopped.

Sanahin locomotive depot employees say that their salaries are reduced by 30-50,000 drams if they do not get a bonus, and this is not a small sum.

At the same time, they do not get bonuses always. Management always finds a reason not to give them.

In one case, the reason is the decline in passenger transportation and cargo transportation, in another case, it is the violation discovered in the railway infrastructure.

Post-Soviet security bloc to discuss appointment of new secretary general at Astana summit

TASS, Russia
Nov 2 2018
Post-Soviet security bloc to discuss appointment of new secretary general at Astana summit

YEREVAN November 2

HIGHLIGHT: The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) will discuss the appointment of a new secretary general at the Astana summit scheduled to be held on November 8, the Armenian prime minister’s spokesman Arman Yegoyan told TASS.


YEREVAN, November 2. /TASS/. The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) will discuss the appointment of a new secretary general at the Astana summit scheduled to be held on November 8, the Armenian prime minister’s spokesman Arman Yegoyan told TASS.

"I can only say that the appointment of a new CSTO secretary general will be discussed at the Astana summit," Yegoyan said when asked whether Armenia would nominate anyone to the position.

Earlier on Friday, the CSTO Collective Security Council relieved Armenia’s Yuri Khachaturov of his duties as the organization’s secretary general. The move had been initiated by Yerevan.

On July 26, Armenia’s Special Investigative Service accused Khachaturov of overthrowing the constitutional order in 2008 and requested his arrest. Khachaturov, who was the Commander of the Armenian Armed Forces’ Yerevan Garrison back in 2008, pleaded not guilty. On July 28, the Yerevan City Court of General Jurisdiction released him on his own recognizance and a bail of about $10,000.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/30/2018

                                        Tuesday, 

Pashinian Again Named For PM To Force Snap Elections

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian during a rally of his supporters in 
Yerevan, May 8, 2018

Armenia’s acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has again been nominated as a 
candidate for the top government post in a tactical move designed to lead to 
the dissolution of parliament and holding of snap general elections, Yelk 
faction leader Lena Nazarian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) on 
Tuesday.

The nomination came from two parliamentary factions, including Yelk, and some 
individual lawmakers, she added.

The pro-government Yelk faction nominated Pashinian as a candidate also a week 
ago and then the acting prime minister’s candidacy was voted down in accordance 
with an apparent political agreement.

Under Armenia’s constitution, snap elections can be called only if the National 
Assembly fails to elect a prime minister twice within two weeks after the prime 
minister’s resignation. Pashinian resigned for tactical reasons on October 16.

For nominations for the second round of voting, however, the signatures of one 
third of lawmakers are required. Yelk has only nine seats in the 105-member 
National Assembly, but the Tsarukian Bloc, which has 31 lawmakers and signed a 
memorandum with Pashinian earlier this month to back his push for fresh 
elections, as well as four lawmakers who earlier quit the former ruling 
Republican Party’s faction, provided the necessary signatures for the 
nomination several hours before the deadline.

Like it was a week ago Pashinian’s candidacy is again expected to be voted down 
in a ballot scheduled for November 1.

If that happens the parliament will be dissolved by virtue of law and new 
general elections will be held in the first half of December.

Pashinian, who came to power on the wave of anti-government protests last 
spring and whose political team is tipped to win the likely early parliamentary 
polls by a landslide, will continue to perform his prime-ministerial duties in 
the interim.



Former Ruling Party Signals No Obstacles To Pashinian Plans

        • Astghik Bedevian

Deputy speaker of parliament and spokesperson for the former ruling Republican 
Party of Armenia Eduard Sharmazanov, 1Oct, 2018

The former ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), which still has the 
largest faction in the National Assembly, has confirmed that it will not vote 
for Nikol Pashinian in a prime-ministerial election scheduled in parliament 
later this week, thus clearing the way for the acting prime minister’s plans to 
force snap general elections.

Pashinian is the sole candidate in the November 1 election after two factions, 
including his allies, Yelk, and some individual lawmakers formerly affiliated 
with the HHK, nominated him for the second round of voting.

Under Armenia’s constitution, snap elections can be called only if the National 
Assembly fails to elect a prime minister twice within two weeks after the prime 
minister’s resignation, which Pashinian submitted for tactical reasons on 
October 16.

Lawmakers already failed to elect Pashinian once during a ballot taken on 
October 24.

Another failure will trigger the dissolution of parliament and holding of fresh 
elections in the first half of December, with Pashinian and his political team 
confident of winning an outright majority in the next legislature.

Talking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am) on Tuesday, HHK 
spokesperson and deputy speaker of the outgoing parliament Eduard Sharmazanov 
confirmed that the former ruling party will not raise obstacles to the 
dissolution of parliament by fielding its own candidate or voting for Pashinian.

“All political statements of the HHK are clear, straightforward and logical,” 
Sharmazanov said.“Being against hasty elections in December, nevertheless, we 
are not going to vote for Pashinian’s candidacy.”

At the same time, the senior HHK member continued his criticism of the current 
government and its acting head. “It has become clear during the past six months 
that Pashinian is an eloquent speaker, but a poor prime minister,” Sharmazanov 
said.

With all the rest parliamentary factions vowing not to support Pashinian’s 
candidacy, the HHK statement makes the parliament’s dissolution and early 
elections a foregone conclusion.

Pashinian, who came to power on the wave of antigovernment protests ousting HHK 
leader Serzh Sarkisian as prime minister last spring, did not have to be 
nominated to ensure the dissolution of parliament. Under the country’s 
constitution, the parliament would have to be disbanded even if no one was 
nominated for the second round of voting. But the popular leader said he chose 
the way of nomination to use the occasion to address a number of political and 
economic issues from the parliament tribune.




Press Review



“Zhamanak” suggests that the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) 
is effectively responsible for the second narrow defeat of a key election bill 
in parliament on Monday. “The absence of two lawmakers of this party’s faction 
proved decisive in the outcome of the ballot in which the bill was just one 
vote short of approval. It is, indeed, difficult to say whether Dashnaktsutyun 
had designed that mathematical move or it also came as a surprise to the party. 
It was only clear that the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia would 
boycott the vote. But in that case the risk of absentees should also have been 
clear to Dashnaktsutyun,” the paper writes.

“Zhoghovurd” writes: “Former president Robert Kocharian also accepts that the 
government of Nikol Pashinian enjoys popular support and that all this very 
soon will be reflected in election results. Kocharian also accepts that a 
considerable part of society today is not ready to listen to him. Therefore, in 
a situation like that declaring about his responsibility to assume the role of 
the opposition leader means going against the opinion of a considerable part of 
society… Kocharian hopes that the euphoria among the people will one day 
subside and people will start to complain about the current government. But 
will the society accept Kocharian as an opposition leader even in that case?”

Lragir.am writes: “Former defense minister Vigen Sargsian has expressed his 
surprise at U.S. national security advisor John Bolton’s statement that Armenia 
should exercise full sovereignty and be independent in its foreign policies. He 
thinks that this is a hint at the need for Armenia to revise its relations with 
Russia. Sargsian says he does not remember a case when U.S. partners would 
question the strategic alliance between Armenia and Russia. It turns out that 
Armenia’s sovereignty and independence is opposed to allied relations with 
Russia. In other words, Armenia’s former defense minister admits that in 
conditions of a strategic alliance with Russia one can speak about Armenia’s 
sovereignty only with reservations.”

(Lilit Harutiunian)


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org


Armenian inspectors and referees appointed in Europe

As the FFA Roundup and Inspection department informs, Armenian inspectors and referees have received a number of appointments in Europe. FFA Refereeing and Inspection Division Head Karen Nalbandian has been appointed Inspector for Referees of the 7th Grade European Championship qualifying round. The tournament, which will be attended by teams from Poland, Luxemburg, Finland and France will be held in Poland from October 25 to 31.
FFA Coordinator Gevorg Hovhannisyan has been appointed as Referee Officer at the Europa League F Group “Milan” (Italy) – “Real Betis” (Spain).

Aznavour’s masterpieces will continue to have a long life – French President addresses condolence message

Category
Society

French President Emmanuel Macron has made a condolence post on his twitter microblog,  Macron wrote that Aznavour’s masterpieces will continue to have a long life.

“Deeply French, viscerally attached to his Armenian roots, recognized throughout the world, Charles Aznavour has accompanied the joys and sorrows of three generations. His masterpieces, his timbre, his unique shine will continue to have a long life”, Macron wrote.