Los Angeles to host Innovate Armenia 2017

PanArmenian, Armenia

Aug 18 2017

PanARMENIAN.Net – The USC Institute of Armenian Studies in Los Angeles will on September 23 host Innovate Armenia 2017, a day of discovery, technology, music, food, wine, chess and lively conversation headlined by a pair of celebrity-journalist brothers and two 2016 Pulitzer Prize winners, Asbarez reports.

The brothers are Washington Post columnist David Ignatius and Harvard Business Review editor Adi Ignatius.

The Pulitzer Prize winners are poet Peter Balakian, of Colgate University, and novelist Viet Thanh Nguyen, a USC professor of English and American studies.

“We take global Armenian questions and explore them as part of big world issues,” says director Salpi Ghazarian. “INNOVATE ARMENIA is the platform where we make the best of scholarship accessible.”

The Armenian diaspora experience has lessons for everyone, according to David Kang, a featured speaker at Innovate Armenia 2016. A professor of international relations, business and East Asian languages, Kang heads USC’s Korean Studies Institute. His presentation last year focused on the fluidity of hybrid identities. “Armenians are going through very similar issues that Koreans have,” he said in his talk.

Last year’s festival, which focused on digital humanities, drew 3,000 attendees and 20,000 more watched online. This year’s program — with a focus on rethinking, relearning and reimagining identity, language, history and technology —is expected to draw even larger crowds.


Russian Ambassador participated in festive events dedicated to Oshakan Battle victory`s 190th anniversary

ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia
August 17, 2017 Thursday
Russian Ambassador participated in festive events dedicated to Oshakan
Battle victory`s 190th anniversary
Yerevan August 17
Marianna Mkrtchyan. Russian Ambassador to Armenia Ivan Volynkin took
part in festive events dedicated to the 190th anniversary of victory
in the Oshakan battle.
"Remembering those who died in the unequal battle, today we are
following the road that General Krasovsky went to Echmiadzin, where so
many undefeated Russians and Armenians lay down. We are going to solve
the global problems of the 21st century, including the fight against
international terrorism, we are going to prevent a new split of the
world," Volynkin said during his welcome speech.
The event was attended by the governor of Armavir region, the mayor of
the city of Echmiadzin, the first deputy minister of defense of
Armenia, the deputy minister of culture, veterans, servicemen of the
102nd Russian MB and the Border Guard of the Russian FSB in Armenia,
compatriots, residents of the region.
The participants of the event laid wreaths and flowers to the Monument
to the Heroes of Oshakan, the representatives of the clergy who
attended the funeral service for the fallen soldiers by the rite of
the Armenian Apostolic and Russian Orthodox Churches.
The Oshakan battle, also known as the Ashtarak battle, was a battle
that took place on August 17 (29), 1827, during the Russo-Persian war
of 1826-1828 between the army of the heir of the Persian throne, Abbas
Mirza, and the Russian detachment of Lieutenant-General Afanasy
Krasovsky. At the beginning of August 1827 the Persian army invaded
Eastern Armenia and, uniting with the troops of the Erivan serdar
Hussein Khan Qajar, besieged the Etchmiadzin Monastery. Located 37 km
from Echmiadzin, the Russian army detachment of General Krasovsky,
along with the Armenian and Georgian volunteers who joined him, came
to the aid of the besieged monastery and, despite the tenfold
numerical superiority of the Persian army, managed to break through
the enemy cordon, after which the same night the siege was withdrawn.
During the battle, the Russian detachment suffered heavy losses. This
was the greatest loss of the Russian army for all the wars with
Persia.
In 1833-1834, on the initiative of Catholicos Yeprem I Zoragekhtsi and
Archbishop Nerses Ashtaraketsi, a commemorative obelisk was erected on
the means of the monastery and local residents in honor of the battle.
On April 19, 2011, the solemn opening of the Oshakan Memorial Complex
took place "to the Russian soldiers-saviors of the Mother See of
Etchmiadzin, who died in the Oshakan battle of 1827".

Karabakh conflict among Russia’s foreign policy priorities: Zakharova

PanArmenian, Armenia

Aug 18 2017

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Nagorno Karabakh conflict is among Russia‘s foreign policy priorities, foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a briefing on Thursday, August 17, adding that at the moment the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs are working on the preparation of the next summit on the issue.

“To this end, they held talks in Brussels with the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in July,” Zakharova reminded.

“Consultations will continue on the sidelines of the next session of the UN General Assembly in New York in the second half of September. Based on the results, a corresponding statement will be issued.”

According to her, Russia has always supported measures aimed at reducing tension in the conflict zone.

Foreign ministry representatives from both Armenia and Azerbaijan have earlier said that a meeting will be held in September. No exact date has been mentioned though.


Syria: Armenian family that fled Raqqa describe years of living under IS

Panorama, Armenia

Aug 18 2017


An Armenian family shared their experience of living under the control of self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) in Syria before they managed to flee, speaking from their new home in Ayn Abiad village in the northern countryside of Raqqa, Wednesday, EBL News reports.

The family said they paid IS-imposed tax known as Jezyah in order to “be protected” as well as obeying orders to avoid punishment.

“During the time of ISIS, you had to dress up and behave in certain ways, if you didn’t fulfil the orders you would be punished according to your offence,” according to members of the family, who said that their religious rituals were banned under IS authorities.

Months later, however, the family found themselves in the situation when they could no longer afford food and water, while having to deal with regular power shortages.

“There was no water left, no bread or electricity. The missiles were over us, all windows and doors were broken, we could not have tea, breakfast or lunch; we used to hide in the cellar.”

At last, the family managed to escape to the territory liberated by the Syrian Democratic Forces in Raqqa where they started a new life in a small village outside the city.
  

Erdogan tells Turks in Germany to vote against Merkel

Panorama, Armenia

Aug 18 2017


Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on Friday said German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats were enemies of Turkey and called on Turks in Germany to vote against major parties in next month’s elections, Reuters reports.

“I am calling on all my countrymen in Germany: the Christian Democrats, SDP, the Green Party are all enemies of Turkey. Support those political parties who are not enemies of Turkey,” he said in comments after Friday prayers in Istanbul.

“I call on them not to vote for those parties who have been engaged in such aggressive, disrespectful attitudes against Turkey, and I invite them to teach a lesson to those political parties at the ballot box,” he said.

The comments are some of Erdogan’s harshest yet against Merkel and her Christian Democrats, illustrating the widening divide between the NATO allies and major trade partners.

Ties between Ankara and Berlin have been strained in the aftermath of last year’s failed coup as Turkish authorities have sacked or suspended 150,000 people and detained more than 50,000 people, including German nationals.

Germany has voiced concern that Erdogan is using the coup as a pretext to quash dissent. Erdogan, an authoritarian leader whose roots are in political Islam, has accused Germany of anti-Turkish and anti-Muslim sentiment.
  




President holds meeting to discuss preparations for Sixth Armenia-Diaspora Forum and establishment of Pan-Armenian Council

Panorama, Armenia

Aug 18 2017

Today President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan held a meeting to discuss the preparations for the forthcoming Sixth Armenia-Diaspora Forum and launching the Pan-Armenian Council, the press service of the President’s Office reports.

The Chairman of the Constitutional Court Gagik Harutyunyan, who inter alia has earlier been nominated to coordinate the works of the Organising Committee, reported on the main approaches regarding the formation and working mechanisms of the Pan-Armenian Council. These issues will be discussed in the frameworks of the Sixth Armenia-Diaspora Forum to be held in Yerevan on September 18-20.

Taking note of earlier discussions on the establishment of a new Pan-Armenian body in the past years, President Sargsyan commissioned to prepare drafts on the aims and objectives, membership criteria as well as draft agenda and rules of procedure of the first session of the new Council to be held in 2018 through discussions with all relevant parties, including Diaspora organisations and structures.

The decision to start preparations for launching the Pan-Armenian Council has unanimously been adopted on September 26, 2015 at the Sixth session of the State Commission on coordination of the events dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.


‘A Matter of Conscience’: An Interview with Genocide Scholar and Anti-Genocide Activist Samuel Totten

The Armenian Weekly

Aug 18 2017

An Interview with Genocide Scholar and Anti-Genocide Activist Samuel Totten

Special to the Armenian Weekly

American academic Samuel Totten is probably best known for his scholarship on genocide. Most people, however, are not aware of his anti-genocide activism on the ground.

Totten with the children of the Nuba Mountains in April 2015 (Photo courtesy of Samuel Totten)

“The Darfur Genocide impacted me in a way that was up close and personal,” Totten told the Armenian Weekly in a recent interview. During the summer of 2004, Totten served as one of the 24 investigators with the United States Atrocities Documentation Project, the purpose of which was to interview survivors about their experiences during attacks carried out by the Sudanese government troops and the Janjaweed (hired militia) against the black Africans of Darfur.

Four years later, during a short stop in Nairobi, a chance meeting led to him visiting the Nuba Mountains for the first time. There, he began to meet people who had survived the so-called “genocide by attrition” of the Nuba Mountains people in the 1990s.

After his first visit, Totten made more trips back to the region to interview survivors. Then, after war broke out between the government of Sudan and Nuba rebels (Sudan People’s Liberation Movement—North) in July 2011, Totten’s missions to the Nuba Mountains took a drastic turn, changing from conducting interviews to running humanitarian operations.

“I began, in 2012, to truck food up to those Nuba civilians who had been bombed off their farms and were in desperate need of food,” Totten explained.

Totten’s missions to the Nuba Mountains are ongoing. “Neither the UN or any of its agencies nor nongovernmental organizations are providing any relief, protection, virtually nothing,” he said. “I feel compelled to maintain a focus on the Nuba Mountains. To not do so is to leave the Nuba people bereft.”

Aram Harumi recently sat down with Totten to find out more about his work in the Nuba Mountains, in this exclusive interview for the Armenian Weekly. Below is the interview in its entirety.

 

***

 

Aram Harumi: Why did you get interested in genocide studies to begin with?

Samuel Totten: This is a very long story, actually, which I’ve delineated, at least in part, in two different essays in two different books: Pioneers of Genocide Studies, edited by Samuel Totten and Steven Jacobs (Transaction Publishers, 2002), and Advancing Genocide Studies (Transaction Publishers, 2015). The titles of the essays are “A Matter of Conscience” and “A Matter of Conscience: Part II.”

The cover of Pioneers of Genocide Studies (Photo: Transaction Publishers)

Succinctly stated, my initial interest arose out of my work on the behalf of prisoners of conscience with Amnesty International (AI). What sparked my interest was an article by Ms. Rose Styron, a noted human rights activist, and the wife of the late novelist William Styron (author of such fictional works as The Confessions of Nat Turner and Sophie’s Choice, among many others). Rose Styron’s piece was simply titled “Torture in Chile.” As a recent university graduate who considered himself at least somewhat well-informed, I was taken aback and astonished that (a) torture such as she described was a matter of fact in many parts of the world—indeed, so ubiquitous; (b) aghast at the horrific nature of the torture and what some governments subjected their own citizens and so-called enemies to in the name of national security; and (c) ashamed that I was so ignorant of what went on in the world. That article, essentially, launched my dedication to and my career in the fields of human rights and genocide studies.

The cover of Advancing Genocide Studies (Photo: Transaction Publishers)

After serving for two years (1976-1978) in different capacities with AI in Australia and engaging with AI volunteers in Nepal, Israel, and the United States over a several-year period, I serendipitously became good friends with Dr. Israel W. Charny, a professor of psychology at Tel Aviv University and a man who is now considered one of the doyens of genocide studies. At the time, I was an English teacher at the Walworth Barbour American International School in Israel. His son attended the school, and a colleague of mine who taught Charny’s son mentioned to Charny that I was an avid human rights activist. At the time, Charny was working on his first book on genocide, and for the rest of the year I was in Israel we engaged in talk about genocide.

Upon my return to the U.S., Charny asked me to contribute a chapter to what turned out to be Volume One of Genocide: A Critical Bibliographic Series. My contribution ended up being so detailed and so long that Charny, instead of rejecting it as many editors would have done—or, at the least, insisted that I cut the piece by three-quarters—urged me to revise it and in doing so to forge three chapters out of the one.

By then I had earned my doctorate at Columbia University and was about to enter academia. Concomitantly, my thinking at the time was, “Thousands and thousands of people across the globe are addressing the problem of major human rights violations of all kinds, but, ironically, very, very few are addressing the issue of genocide.” That realization prompted me to, essentially, begin work on my first book about genocide, and in the process to become an autodidact in regard to genocide theory, the history of genocide, individual cases of genocide, issues of the prevention and intervention of genocide, etc. That was in 1987.

 

A.H.: How did the Darfur Genocide impact you?

S.T.: The Darfur Genocide impacted me in a way that was up close and personal. During the summer of 2004, I served as one of the 24 investigators with the United States’ Atrocities Documentation Project, whose express purpose was to interview survivors about their experiences during the scorched-earth attacks carried out by government of Sudan troops and the Janjaweed (hired militia) against the black Africans of Darfur.

Totten interviewing a survivor in Darfur (Photo courtesy of Samuel Totten)

My partner in the field, a lawyer with the U.S. Justice Department, and I interviewed 49 survivors. Each interview was an hour-and-a-half to two hours each, and they went into every ghastly detail of the attacks: the brutal gang rapes against the black African girls and women (some as young as eight years old); the impaling and killing of black African babies in front of their mothers; the burning alive of elderly black Africans who could not manage to flee from their tukuls (homes) before they were torched; the shootings, beatings, and torture of the black Africans as they attempted to flee from the onslaught. Eight hours a day, seven days a week, we conducted those interviews. There were not a few times when I literally had to bite my lip as hard as I could to keep from emoting in front of the interviewees/survivors. My rage was such that I personally wished I could go after the perpetrators myself.

I took that rage and poured it into ceaseless work (conducting field work in the refugee camps along the Chad/Darfur, Sudan border, and, more recently (since 2010), in the Nuba Mountains in Sudan; writing and publishing over 50 guest commentaries for newspapers across the globe; writing and publishing of five books, two on Darfur and three on the Nuba Mountains; giving talks about the plight of the people of Darfur and the Nuba Mountains, all across the U.S. and Europe; and, more recently (since 2012), hauling food up to those people suffering the most from severe malnutrition and starvation in the Nuba Mountains).

 

A.H.: Specifically, what got you informed and interested in the issues of the Nuba Mountains?

S.T.: In the aftermath of my work with the Atrocities Documentation Project, in July and August 2004, I had a keen desire to head into Darfur itself to interview survivors of the Darfur genocide. For six long years I tried every which way to obtain permission to enter Darfur, all to no avail. (I think that was due to the fact that the government of Sudan (GoS) was well aware of my publications castigating the GoS for its actions in Darfur.)

The Nuba Mountains (Photo: Andreas31)

Long story short, in 2008 I was serving as a Fulbright Fellow at the National University of Rwanda, and I had to fly to the University of Chicago to give a talk on Darfur. During a stop in Nairobi, a couple of guys got on and sat down next to me who were returning to the States for R&R from their work in Sudan. I shared with them how I ached to get into Sudan but had had no luck in my attempt to do so. One fellow informed me that survivors of the Darfur Genocide actually resided in an internally displaced persons (IDP) camp not far from where he lived in the Nuba Mountains, and said he believed that he could arrange to get me into the Nuba Mountains without the GoS’s knowledge of my presence (and thus I would not need to apply for a visa), and not only that but on a free flight on a cargo plane owned by his organization.

Several months later I flew from Nairobi to Kauda in the Nuba Mountains to interview the survivors in the aforementioned IDP camp. Throughout my first stay, and then my second stay in the Nuba Mountains, I began to meet people who had survived the so-called “genocide by attrition” of the Nuba Mountains people in the 1990s. Figuring that I had ready access to such individuals, I ended up making several more trips back to the region to interview them. Then, after war broke out between the GoS and Nuba rebels (Sudan People’s Liberation Movement—North) in July 2011, I began, in 2012, to truck food up to those Nuba civilians who had been bombed off their farms and were in desperate need of food.

 

A.H.: During your trip did you feel you were in critical danger at any time?

S.T.: Not during my first two trips to the Nuba Mountains, in 2010 and 2011, but definitely during my last five trips to the Nuba Mountains in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016, all of the latter of which was during the ongoing war between the Nuba and the GoS.

Countless times—while in people’s compounds, in suqs (open market places), and while traveling—Antonov bombers flew overhead on their way to a bombing mission. No one, of course, ever knows exactly where the Antonovs will drop their bombs, and thus each and every time an Antonov flies overhead just about everyone makes a run for it—either to one of the eight-foot holes people have dug all around their compounds and suqs, or out into the desert in search of a deep rut one can hunker down in or a large rock or huge tree one can hide behind to protect oneself from shrapnel flying off of the bombs. The shrapnel are large pieces of twisted metal that fly through the air and are capable, literally, of turning a body into mush or something approaching ground hamburger. The shrapnel is also capable of, again literally, sheering off a person’s head, arm, or leg. I have seen dozens of people in the Nuba who have lost legs and arms due to being hit by shrapnel.

On one trip to the Nuba in 2015, various Antonovs flew overhead five different times in the course of an hour. Each and every time, everyone in the suq took off racing for cover, and later, while we were in our vehicle, everyone jumped out and ran for their lives.

Tukuls (homes) in the Nuba Mountains (Photo courtesy of Samuel Totten)

Each and every time an Antonov flies overhead, at least this was so for me, one does not know if this is his or her last day of life on earth.

Certainly the spookiest experience I had in the Nuba was also in 2015, but on a different trip. My team and I (that is, my driver and interpreter and myself) had just driven through a small town called Heiban on our way across the desert. Some 15-20 minutes after we passed through the town, a Suhkoi fighter jet flew in and shot a missile at three teenagers who were running for one of the holes I’ve mentioned. The missile literally tore one of the boys in half. The next day his father carried both halves of his son to his grave and set them down to be buried. I am all but absolutely positive that if we, with a white Land Cruiser, had been driving through Heiban when the Suhkoi attacked, we would have been the target—the perfect target, really—and if it had hit our vehicle with a missile, we would have been incinerated. Not only did we have a full tank of petrol, but we were carrying extra jerry cans of petrol, as there are no such things as gas stations in the Nuba Mountains.

 

A.H.: It is easier to raise money and just give the people working at these relief stations money. What made you take matters into your own hands and actually go to this area and hand out food?

S.T.: Yes, you’re correct, it would certainly be a quantum leap easier to simply raise money and send it to one organization or another working on the behalf of the Nuba Mountains people (though, unfortunately, there are very few doing so).

From the very beginning my intent in raising funds, purchasing food, and then trucking up to the Nuba Mountains was to get food to the most desperate people in the Nuba Mountains—to those people who, for whatever reason, either did not have ready access to food or were not receiving food from local relief agencies in the Nuba Mountains. I felt and believed that that was what I could contribute to the effort to help the Nuba. And as a result of that, each and every time I head back to the Nuba Mountains I make a point of speaking with people in the know (NRRDO, a local Nuba relief agency, leaders of the SPLM-N, and citizen journalists, among others) which groups of people in the Nuba were in most desperate need, and that is where I head to deliver the food.

SPLM-N rebels (Photo courtesy of Samuel Totten)

Ultimately, it was, as the titles of the two chapters I mentioned at the outset of this interview suggested, a matter of conscience.

 

A.H.: Have you looked at similar issues in different parts of the world as well?

S.T.: I have, but thus far I have solely focused on the plight of the people of the Nuba Mountains. The three other places that I have seriously considered heading to in order to provide whatever type of assistance is needed by various peoples are Burundi, the Central African Republic, and Burma (Myanmar).

I have remained focused on the Nuba and not headed to the aforementioned places due to three primary reasons. First, since neither the UN or any of its agencies nor nongovernmental organizations are providing any relief, protection, virtually nothing, I feel compelled to maintain a focus on the Nuba Mountains. To not do so is to leave the Nuba people bereft. Second, it takes a good amount of time to figure out what the situation on the ground is in different nations, what is needed in the way of assistance, and how to go about making the connections one needs in order to carry out a mission in a satisfactory manner. Also, each of the aforementioned nations poses its own dangers to outsiders and one needs to be as fully informed as possible about such dangers and how to avoid them if at all possible—or, at least, how to handle them so that one does not end up maimed or killed.

 

A.H.: How big an issue is there of nonrecognition by the Government of Sudan about how the people in the Nuba Mountains are not being fed sufficiently?

S.T.: Bombing civilian farms, forcing people off their farms and out of their villages and away from their sources of food is the modus operandi of the GoS. So, I imagine the GoS does not waste any time at all worrying about the plight and fate of the people of the Nuba Mountains. In fact, I firmly believe that by denying the Nuba ready access to food, the GoS is hoping to force the Nuba from the Nuba Mountains and over the border to another country and/or into refugee camps. In other words, it is a ploy to cleanse the area of the Nuba—a classic case of ethnic cleansing.

An unexploded bomb photographed by Totten (Photo courtesy of Samuel Totten)

 

A.H.: Was there a certain part of the trip that had a strong effect on you?

S.T.: Yes, three in particular. First, the close calls when the Antonov bombers flew over. Second, the relatively close call when the Sukhoi fighter jet attacked Heiban. Third, I came across a young boy who had accidentally set off a piece of unexploded ordnance, and I raced across the desert in an attempt to get him to the only hospital in the entire region, but he ended up dying. Not only had one of his legs been nearly ripped off with bones sticking out of his skin (a compound fracture) but he had a large, deep wound on his lower abdomen that had made mush of many of his organs. To this day, I have great, great difficulty when recalling the death of that young boy, who, by the way, had walked well over 10 miles from his parents’ home in search of mangos. I am a tough sonofabitch, but whenever I think of that poor, innocent kid, I have to fight off crying. Finally, the last time I was in the Nuba, I came across a group of people who were eking out an existence in a makeshift IDP camp, and therein I came across many babies who were so weak from a lack of food that they literally could not lift their heads up; that is, their little heads were lolling to the side, as if they were rag dolls. That rips your guts out.


A.H.:
Is there a message you want people to know about your time in the Nuba Mountains?

S.T.: That the civilians in the Nuba Mountains are completely isolated. No one, but no one, other than individuals such as myself, is attempting to help them. Not the UN. Not the World Food Program. Not Oxfam. Not Doctors Without Borders. Not a single aid agency is in the Nuba Mountains—out of fear of being attacked and killed by the GoS.

In fact, Sudanese President Omar al Bashir has stated that anyone who crosses the border into Sudan without express permission from the GoS shall have his/her throat slit. I imagine that is not an idle threat, for at the outbreak of the war in July 2011, GoS soldiers went door to door in various towns and villages, knocked on doors, and if the person who answered was affiliated in anyway with the Nuba, their necks were slit open from ear to ear and they bled out and died on the very spot where they dropped to the ground.



A.H.:
Is there a way people can help you raise money for the people in the Nuba Mountains?

S.T.: Yes, thank you for asking. Individuals can send me a check designated for the purchase of food and/or medicine for the Nuba people. My home address is 18967 Melanie Road, Springdale, Ark. 72764. Not a single dollar goes to anything other than food—not travel costs, not the cost to hire a vehicle and driver, not the cost to hire an interpreter, etc.

I should note that each trip to the Nuba to haul in food costs approximately $8,000. To purchase the food for the Nuba ranges from $3,000 to $4,000. Then I have to cover the cost my round-trip airline ticket to Nairobi, Kenya, and back; another airline ticket to get to Juba in South Sudan, and back; and a third ticket to get to the Yida Refugee Camp, along the South Sudan/Sudan border, and back; the rental of a Land Cruiser and payment for the driver; payment for an interpreter; etc.

Armenian church to be restored into cultural center in Turkey

PanArmenian, Armenia

Aug 18 2017

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Armenian church in the Turkish town of Aksehir, Konya will be restored, while the priest’s house behind the church will serve as a boutique hotel, Agos reports.

To be restored in the framework of the World Humor Village Project, the church will start operating as a cultural center.

Aksehir Mayor Dr. Salih Akkaya said repair projects will be prepared for the Armenian bath in the village of Mizah and that restoration works will be completed in the coming years.

Adibekyan Family Foundation for Advancement will send 100 000 EUR for the elimination of the consequences of a fire in the Khosrov Forest

ARMINFO News Agency, Armenia
 Thursday
Adibekyan Family Foundation for Advancement will send 100 000 EUR for
the elimination of the consequences of a fire in the Khosrov Forest
 Yerevan August 17
Marianna Mkrtchyan. The charitable organization Adibekyan Family
Foundation for Advancement of philanthropist Gagik Adibekyan will send
100,000 EUR to eliminate the consequences of the fire in the state
reserve "Khosrov Forest". The press service of the fund told ArmInfo.
"Today, when the fate of the unique nature reserve "Khosrov Forest"
and the ecology of the whole region is under threat, we can not stay
away. Restoration of forests after a fire requires a long time, a lot
of work and considerable funds. I believe that only by acting
together, we can shorten the period of restoration of this unique
nature reserve," said the founder of the Adybekyan foundation.
On August 12 at 12:30 in the Rescue Service of the Ministry of
Emergency Situations of the Republic of Armenia there was a signal
that a meadow burned in the state reserve "Khosrov Forest" in 20 km
from the village of Urtsadzor (Ararat region). The area of the fire
was about 200 to 250 hectares. Armenian forces of the Ministry of
Emergency Situations failed to extinguish the fire by their own
efforts and turned to their Russian counterparts for help. On August
14, the Russian side sent an IL-76 special plane to help Armenia. On
August 15, at 08.50, the IL-76 plane of the Ministry of Emergencies of
Russia carried out its first flight into the fire zone. The night
before it was possible to extinguish the main fires in the reserve.
According to the preliminary data of the Ministry of Emergency
Situations of Armenia, on the territory of the state reserve "Khosrov
Forest" as a whole, vegetation perimeter was 16 km thick, of which 360
hectares of forest. The forest fire destroyed grass coverings with a
perimeter of about 15 km, 320 hectares of which - forest.
The charitable organization Adibekyan Family Foundation for
Advancement was founded in Luxembourg by a businessman and
philanthropist Gagik Adibekyan. The Foundation initiates charitable
projects in Armenia, Russia, Luxembourg and other countries aimed at
developing and strengthening cultural and business ties between people
and countries and supporting projects in social, sports and
educational spheres, preserving the cultural and historical heritage
and developing small towns and territories Armenia.

Wine and brandy production in Armenia grows to pre-crisis level

ARKA, Armenia

Aug 18 2017

YEREVAN, August 18. /ARKA/. Production of wine and brandy in Armenia has grown to pre-crisis level, the head of the National Wine Center Avag Harutyunyan told journalists on Friday. He said production of wine in the first half of 2017 increased by 1.5 times compared to the first half of 2013,  production of brandy rose by 7%, while production of vodka dropped by 10%.

According to him, wine production in the first half of 2017 increased by 30% compared to the same period in 2016; that of brandy  GREW by 61% while production of vodka dropped  by 35%.

“Russia is the main consumer of Armenian wine products. Since 2013 the Russian ruble devalued twice, while prices increased by only 20%. The indicators were affected also by a complex socio-economic situation, as a result of which many consumers can not afford more expensive drinks,” said Harutyunyan.

“The potential of Armenia’s export is 10 million bottles given a steady crop of grapes  in the next 5-10 years. In such conditions,  exports to Russia can double in comparison with the current indicators and reach 4-5 million bottles a year,” said Harutyunyan.

According to Armenia’s National Statistical Service, wine production in Armenia in the first half of 2017 increased by 29.8% compared to the same period in 2016 to 3.8 million liters, that of brandy grew  by 60.9%  to 14 million liters, while  production of vodka decreased by 36%  to 2.44 million liters. -0-