Armenian president dismisses Ambassador to Ukraine

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Official
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Armenian President Armen Sarkissian has dismissed Ambassador to Ukraine Andranik Manukyan.

“President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has signed an order of September 3 on recalling Armenia’s Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Ukraine Andranik Manukyan from his position,” Sarkissian’s office said in a statement.

Manukyan was serving as Ambassador to Ukraine since 2010.

Call to the meeting to all candidates for mayor of Yerevan

Call to the meeting to all candidates for mayor of Yerevan
Artak Avetisyan, “Reformists” party
Manuel Gasparyan, “Democratic Path” party
Anahit Tarkhanyan, “Yerevan Community” bloc
Artak Zeynalyan, “Luys” alliance
Naira Zohrabyan, “Prosperous Armenia” party
Ararat Zurabyan, “Yerevanites” alliance
Gevorg Hovsepyan, “Hayk” (Haykazunner) party
Mikael Manukyan, “Armenian Revolutionary Federation” party
Hayk Marutyan, “My step” alliance
Mher Shahgeldyan, “Land of Law” party
Gevorg Sandalyan, “Democratic Liberal Union of Armenia” party
Zaruhi Postanjyan, “Yerkir Tsirani” party
Dear friends,
We all hope that the upcoming elections of the Yerevan Council of Elders will be the freest, fairest and most transparent in the last quarter-century history of the Republic of Armenia. At the same time, it is very important for the elections to take place in a positive environment, in accordance with the spirit of the revolution of love and solidarity and the ideas of the citizens of Armenia, especially the residents of Yerevan, about the New Armenia.
I call on the persons leading the lists of all the forces participating in the elections of the Yerevan Council of Elders to meet this Wednesday, September 5, in the meeting hall of the Strategic and National Research Center (address: Yerznkyan 75, Yerevan) and publicly, in the presence of the press, discuss and make a general statement about the principles of holding the upcoming elections in a dignified atmosphere of equality, courtesy and mutual respect. 
If you agree, please respond by phone: (010-27-16-00) or (093)-66-80-30, or by e-mail. by mail: [email protected]
Let’s smile together with our fellow citizens. 
                                        
Raffi K.  Hovhannisyan, “Heritage”                                                                          
September 3, 2018             
Yerevan

The California Courier Online, September 6, 2018

The California Courier Online, September 6, 2018

1 –        Commentary

            Congress Must Investigate U.S. Loans

            To Secretive Azeri Silk Way Airlines

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-          In Van, Akhtamar Church Set to Reopen for Mass on September 9

3-         German city removes golden Erdogan statue

4 –        Turkish National Anti-Armenian Lobbyist Oksuz Arrested in Yerevan

5 –        Azerbaijan Issues Arrest Warrant for Dan Bilzerian

6 –        Grape Blessing Service Held at North County Correctional Facility

7 –        Makeup artist Robin Manoogian recalls her decade with Aretha Franklin

            By Melody Baetens

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1 –        Commentary

            Congress Must Investigate U.S. Loans

            To Secretive Azeri Silk Way Airlines

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

Last year, I wrote an article reporting that the Silk Way Airlines of
Azerbaijan made 350 secret flights to transport hundreds of tons of
weapons from Bulgaria to ISIS terrorists in Syria and other Middle
Eastern countries between 2014 and 2017. We now have a new surprising
revelation that Silk Way received $419.5 million of loans from the
U.S. Export-Import Bank (EXIM) to buy three 747-8 cargo planes from
Boeing to continue its sinister operations.

The disclosure was made by a reporter for the Organized Crime and
Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) by filing a Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) request with the U.S. government in 2016. It is
noteworthy that Silk Way, “owned by a company with past ties to
Azerbaijan’s Aliyev family, won some lucrative contracts from the U.S.
military,” according to FOIA documents. In fact, “Silk Way was given
contracts worth more than $400 million with the U.S. Defense
Department’s Transportation Command for more than decade,” according
to Devansh Mehta of OCCRP. Silk Way transported “ammunition and other
non-lethal materials” to Afghanistan as of 2005. “In addition to its
relationship with the U.S. government, Silk Way Airlines has also
worked as a subcontractor for the Canadian Department of National
Defense, the German armed forces, and the French army,” Mehta
revealed.

In April 2017, Silk Way increased its purchases from Boeing, signing a
$1 billion deal for 10 new 737 MAX passenger planes, according to
reporter Mehta. However, it is not known how the new acquisition was
financed. Last October, Silk Way announced plans to buy two more 747-8
cargo planes.

Mehta disclosed that “the airline is owned by Silk Way Group, which,
at least at one point, was closely associated with Azerbaijan’s ruling
Aliyev family (which has used its planes for private trips) and has
benefited from benevolent state deals. Information obtained through
FOIA shows that Silk Way Airlines took steps to conceal its owners’
identity, perhaps to improve its chances of winning the valuable U.S.
loan guarantees and military contracts.”

Mehta added that “Azerbaijan ranks 122nd out of 180 countries in
Transparency International’s corruption perception index, while
President Ilham Aliyev’s family owns luxury properties around the
world worth over $140 million. The Panama Papers and other leaks have
implicated the country’s first family as being involved in nearly all
sectors of the Azerbaijani economy, from luxury hotels to mining to
banking.”

According to the terms of the Export-Import Bank’s $419.5 million loan
to Silk Way, in case of default the loss would be repaid by the
state-owned International Bank of Azerbaijan (IBA). The problem is
that IBA has been “implicated in the Azerbaijani Laundromat, a massive
scheme that pumped nearly $3 billion out of the country through
various shell companies,” Mehta wrote. Furthermore, IBA is not in a
position to guarantee the Silk Way loan, as the IBA itself declared
bankruptcy in 2015, unable to pay its $3.3 billion debt!

Nate Schenkkan, project director of the Nations in Transit report at
Freedom House, a US-based nonprofit that monitors democracy and human
rights around the world, questioned the wisdom of EXIM Bank’s loan to
Silk Way: “In Azerbaijan, where one family dominates economically and
politically, and is then using state institutions to back its economic
projects, there’s an obvious conflict of interest.”

Arzu Aliyeva, Pres. Aliyev’s 21-year-old daughter in 2010, was one of
the three owners of Silk Way Bank, the financial arm of Silk Way
Holding. Since 2017, her name is no longer mentioned as an owner.
“Silk Way Holding, also referred to as Silk Way Group (SW Group) on
its website, is a conglomerate that has currently listed 11 companies
in its portfolio, including the airline,” according to Mehta. Silk Way
Holding dominated Azerbaijan’s aviation sector after the state carrier
AZAL airlines was privatized in a highly secretive manner without any
bids and tenders. Mehta wrote that “a similar privatization of the
telecom sector ended up with the [Aliyev] family earning about $1
billion in bribes in cash and share value, according to an earlier
OCCRP story. The investigation also found that the money was funneled
to the first family through various secret offshore companies. These
companies have enabled the Aliyevs to control stakes in gold mines,
telecommunications and construction businesses in Azerbaijan.”

According to a filing in 2006, Silk Way Airlines was owned by IHC
(International Handling Company), an offshore entity based in the
British Virgin Islands. In a 2017 filing, Silk Way Airlines stated
that 40% of the company was owned by IHC, while 60% was owned by SW
Holding, “effectively controlled” by Zaur Akhundov, an Azerbaijani
citizen. Mehta stated that “IHC is linked to the Aliyev family through
its director Jaouad Dbila who reportedly served as a proxy for the
first family’s business interests in the past.”

In 2011, a Russian-born manager, Grigory Yurkov, was given power of
attorney for both Silk Way Holding and IHC, according to Luxembourg’s
official gazette. This appointment was used as a means to conceal the
true owners of IHC.

Meanwhile, Zaur Akhundov had mysteriously become the 100% owner of the
entire Silk Way Group in 2014. By that time, the firm and its many
holdings were already worth billions of dollars, Mehta declared, based
on the company’s loan guarantee application. Akhundov, 50, had held
several official positions in Azerbaijan. “It is unclear how Akhundov
became the owner of a billion-dollar conglomerate with more than 10
aircrafts, an insurance company, a construction company and an
aircraft maintenance company, to name a few of the enterprises in the
Silk Way Group,” Mehta wondered.

 According Schenkkan of Freedom House, “Azerbaijan can be described as
a centralized, vertical pyramid where the benefits go to one family
that collects rents throughout the economy. This includes all sorts of
transactions, not only official state transactions that might involve
taxes and public funds, but also things that involve what we normally
consider the private sector: import-export, consumer goods,
transport—any area of the economy, the family has a stake in it and
receives a cut on what takes place.”

 The U.S. Congress should hold a hearing to investigate the
appropriateness of EXIM Bank’s $419.5 million loan guarantee to Silk
Way Airlines, its arms shipments to terrorist groups in the Middle
East, and its hidden ownership by the ruling Aliyev family. After all,
why should Azerbaijan, a country with billions of petrodollars, be
given a U.S. loan?

**************************************************************************************************

2-         In Van, Akhtamar Church Set to Reopen for Mass on September 9

VAN—Four years after an annual religious service was cancelled, the
iconic Armenian church on an island in Lake Van will host a mass on
September 9, reported the Daily Sabah newspaper.

The Holy Cross Church on Akhtamar Island in Lake Van in eastern
Turkey, is usually open to public as a museum. The Armenian
Patriarchate in Istanbul is organizing the event, which is expected to
attract hundreds of Christians from around Turkey and the world.
Turkey Culture and Tourism Ministry and local authorities gave the
green light for the event.

According to the source, travel agencies and hotels in the Van
province where the lake is located have seen a substantial increase in
bookings while local businesses are counting on faith tourism dollars.

Added to the UNESCO Tentative List of World Heritage in 2015, the
church was built between 915 and 921 A.D. by architect Bishop Manuel,
under the supervision of Gagik I Artsruni, an Armenian king.

Believed to be constructed to house a piece of the “True Cross,” which
was used in the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, the church was restored
in 2005 and opened in 2007.

The church has been hosting annual international religious ceremonies
organized by the Armenian Patriarchate of Istanbul once a year since
2010.

*********************************************************************************************

3 –        German city removes golden Erdogan statue

(Panorama)—The German city of Wiesbaden removed on Wednesday, Aug 29 a
temporary statue of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan set up in a
town square by artists, after it sparked confrontations between his
supporters and opponents, AFP reports.

“In agreement with state police, Mayor Sven Gerich decided to have the
statue removed as security could no longer be guaranteed,” the city’s
government said on Twitter.

Firefighters arrived shortly after midnight with a crane to lift the
four-metre tall golden effigy of Erdogan from the central German Unity
Square, where it had been placed on Monday as part of Wiesbaden’s
Biennale art festival. Organisers had hoped the statue would provoke
public debate relevant to this year’s theme of “bad news”. The statue,
which had been posed to point boldly into the distance, was quickly
defaced with insults like “Turkish Hitler”.

Since a failed 2016 coup attempt in Ankara, Erdogan’s crackdown on
political opponents and journalists—including some German
nationals—has been closely followed in Germany, home to a sizeable
Turkish minority. A “slightly aggressive atmosphere” developed, said a
police spokesman, while city councillor Oliver Franz told the
Wiesbadener Kurier newspaper that verbal confrontations had escalated
into scuffles and “bladed weapons were spotted”.

“We put up the statue to discuss Erdogan,” Wiesbaden city theatre
chief Eric Laufenberg told DPA.

“In a democracy, we have to put up with all kinds of opinions”.

But Emil Saenze, a local representative of far-right, anti-immigrant
party Alternative for Germany (AfD) blamed the outcry on “stupidity”
by the organizers, who had “given a stage to a despot who spends his
time humiliating Germans.”

***************************************************************************************************

4 –        Turkish National Anti-Armenian Lobbyist Oksuz Arrested in Yerevan

YEREVAN—Police in Armenia, in cooperation with Interpol, detained on
Wednesday, August 26, Turkish national Kevin Oksuz wanted by the U.S.
law enforcement bodies.

Oksuz registered a business in Armenia in September 2017, records
obtained by Armenpress indicated. On Friday, August 28, prosecutors
filed a motion to remand him.

In 2017, the State Registry of Armenia registered The Sena Group,
listing Oksuz as its director. According to the company’s website, the
business is a full-service tourism company providing tours, organizing
conference and special events in Armenia.

Police spokesperson Ashot Aharonyan told Armenpress on Friday that
Oksuz is still in Armenia, but did not release any other details,
including whether he will be extradited to the United States, where he
is deemed a fugitive and wanted for perjury and falsifying documents.

“The Armenian Diaspora is powerful and it is doing a very good job.
The Azerbaijani Diaspora is nothing. They only waste money on
lobbying, but they fail to achieve anything. When a resolution on
recognizing the Armenian Genocide reached the U.S. Congress, the Turks
begin working against it. They call and organize meetings. I too have
done a similar thing, because I didn’t believe [in the genocide],”
Oksuz reportedly told Yerevan police during his interrogation.

Before appearing in Armenia, Oksuz, a Turkish-born U.S. citizen, was
engaged in lobbying for Turkey and Azerbaijan, most notoriously
planning a 2013 visit for American lawmakers to Azerbaijan and Turkey,
in partnership with the state-run SOCAR oil company, which secretly
funneled $750,000 to a non-profit group allegedly run by Oksuz. He
submitted false documents to the Ethics Committee, noting that the
organization never received financing from any source either directly
or indirectly.

However, it has now been revealed that the organization actually
didn’t pay for all expenses and received additional financing,
including from SOCAR Oil Company belonging to the Azerbaijani
government.

“The State Oil Company of the Azerbaijan Republic, known as SOCAR,
allegedly funneled $750,000 through nonprofit corporations based in
the United States to conceal the source of the funding for the
conference,” reported the Washington Post in 2015, citing a 70-page
report by the Office of Congressional Ethics (OCE), an independent
investigative arm of the US House of Representatives.

The “Vision for the Future” event in Baku was attended by ten members
of U.S. Congress, their spouses, state legislators from 42 states and
32 staffers. Nine Members of Congress and 32 staff members received
gifts worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.

In reporting the arrest, the Turkish press said Oksuz’s brother, Adil,
is linked to Fethullah Gulen, the Islamic cleric who is accused by
Turkey for masterminding the 2016 coup.

“Armenian Police and Interpol cooperation to help the United States
bring Mr. Oksuz to justice is a welcome development,” said ANCA
Communications Director Elizabeth Chouldjian. “Exhaustive
investigations by the Office of Congressional Ethics— released in 2015
following ANCA grassroots pressure and public calls by watchdog
groups—revealed that non-profits led by Mr. Oksuz had funneled over
$750,000 in State Oil Company of Azerbaijan (SOCAR) funds to illegally
pay for Congressional junkets to Baku. We look forward to Mr. Oksuz
and his patrons in the Azerbaijani government to be held accountable
for the full extent of their foreign manipulation of the U.S.
political system.”

*****************************************************************************************************

5-         Azerbaijan Issues Arrest Warrant for Dan Bilzerian

            By Steve Helling

(People Magazine)—The country of Azerbaijan has issued an arrest
warrant for Dan Bilzerian, the social media celebrity with the lavish
lifestyle known as the “King of Instagram.”

People confirms that the Investigative Department of the Prosecutor
General’s Office of Azerbaijan has initiated a criminal case against
Bilzerian, alleging he illegally visited Nagorno Karabakh, a region
that is the subject of a conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia.
Authorities allege that Bilzerian illegally acquired grenades and
firearms before “demonstratively” opening fire at a shooting range.
The exact charges Bilzerian faces were not immediately clear.

The alleged incident occurred after a trip that Bilzerian, 37, made to
the neighboring country of Armenia.

Bilzerian, who is of Armenian descent, arrived in the capital city of
Yerevan on Monday, August 27. He and his brother took part in a
naturalization ceremony where they became Armenian citizens. Per the
laws of the country, he also registered for military service.

Bilzerian tells People that after the ceremony, he traveled to
Karabakh with a group of other people—though of that group, only
Bilzerian has been charged with a crime.

A source in the Azerbaijan government told Armenian Public Radio that
“Interpol will search for the criminal.”

The Azerbaijani Prosecutor General’s Office said in a message on Aug.
30 that Bilzerian, “illegally crossed the territory of Armenia as part
of an organized group and arrived in Khankendi city and other occupied
settlements of Azerbaijan,” and that the “Investigation Department of
the Azerbaijani Prosecutor General’s Office on Heinous Crimes launched
criminal case under articles 228.3 (Illegal acquisition, transfer,
sale, storage, transportation or carrying of firearms, component parts
to it, ammunition, explosives or explosive devices) and 318.2
(Crossing of Azerbaijan’s protected state border without established
documents or outside the state border checkpoint).”

Bilzerian is the CEO of Ignite, a producer of cannabis products that
are sold in licensed dispensaries in states where its sale is legal.

He tells People he thinks the arrest warrant was politically motivated.

“They only issued the warrant for my arrest, and nobody else on the
trip,” he says. “I think it’s because I am a public figure and they
want to try to make an example out of me.”

It appears that the country of Armenia is supporting Bilzerian.

People confirms with the Consulate General of Armenia that the nation
has contacted Interpol and urged them to dismiss Azerbaijan’s
prosecution of Bilzerian as political.

Bilzerian vows to fight the charges, but says he’s focused on his work
at Ignite. (He recently unveiled a search for spokesmodels for his new
business, paying $1 million to models he hires.)

He tells People that he has “no interest in ever going to Azerbaijan.”
**********************************************************************************************************************************************

6-         Grape Blessing Service Held at North County Correctional Facility

In celebration of the Feast of the Assumption of the Holy Mother of
God, and under the auspices of H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian,
on August 25, the blessing of grapes was conducted for Armenian
inmates at North County Correctional Facility and on August 27 at a
rehab center for recovering addicts. The service at NCCF was conducted
by H.G. Bishop Torkom Donoyan, Vicar General, assisted by Rev. Fr.
Boghos Baltayan, and Chaplain Rafi Garabedian. Deacons and members of
St. Sarkis Church of Pasadena participated in the service. Chaplain
Rafi conveyed the greetings and blessings of the Prelate, after which
the Vicar General delivered his message. Inmates received Holy
Communion, and prayer books from the Prelacy. Monday’s service at the
rehab facility was conducted by Rev. Fr. Ghevont Kirazian, assisted by
Chaplain Rafi Garabedian. Fr. Ghevont conducted the grape-blessing
service and delivered the sermon.
**********************************************************************************************************************************************

7 –        Makeup artist Robin Manoogian recalls her decade with Aretha Franklin

            By Melody Baetens

 (The Detroit News)—Back in 1999, beauty expert Robin Manoogian was in
the Hamptons doing makeup for a client when she got the call that
another client, Aretha Franklin, was going to be opening for the Three
Tenors at Tiger Stadium in Detroit and she needed Manoogian’s
artistry.

The concert was the next day.

“I took a bike, a ferry boat, a bus, a cab and a plane, and I made it
to her home,” said Manoogian, who was Franklin’s makeup artist from
1994-2004. Manoogian returned to the Hamptons the following day. That
kind of dedication was all part of the job when your canvas was the
face of the Queen of Soul.  “Those things give you such a boost of
confidence that you rise to the occasion, face the challenges, and
when you’re able to pull it off and just kind of release a big ‘phew’
and on to the next thing,” she said.

Manoogian, who has her own line of cosmetics, has owned her salon,
About Face, in Royal Oak for 26 years. She’s worked with on-air
personalities at WXYZ-TV (Channel 7), dating back to 1985 when she
would get Marilyn Turner and John Kelly ready for the camera.

Because of her work in local television, Manoogian was hired to do
makeup at the Auto Show Charity Preview in 1994 where Franklin was
performing.

Manoogian said she wasn’t even halfway finished with Franklin’s makeup
when the singer asked if she was available to do her face for the
Grammys that March. “She was receiving a lifetime achievement award,”
Manoogian said. “And that was just a big thrill, absolutely. That was
the beginning of a 10-year career with her. Ultimately, I had a great
team to back me up, because I had responsibilities of the live
newscasts.”

Before the 1994 Grammys, just 10 days after meeting Franklin for the
first time at the Charity Preview, Manoogian got a call asking her if
she could drop everything and do Franklin’s makeup at a secret event
in Chicago the following day. It was Oprah’s surprise 40th birthday
show.

“It was all Oprah’s favorite people,” she said. “Just being backstage
and around all the excitement. I’ve always loved the pulse of live TV,
as a kid I always loved television, and to actually be around it was
definitely enough that it motivated me and put a smile on my face
throughout.”

Through working with Franklin and WXYZ, Manoogian has also brushed the
faces of some of the most high-profile people of the 1990s and 2000s,
including Bill and Hillary Clinton. She did then-presidential
candidate Bill Clinton’s makeup for the cover of Newsweek photo shoot.
The headline read, “Can He Beat Bush?” Clinton autographed the
magazine cover for her, writing “to Robin, thanks for making me look
better.”

Manoogian said her life has been so fast-paced that she’s hardly had
an opportunity to sit back and think on it all.

She accompanied Franklin everywhere, from the White House—”Bill
Clinton was a big fan of hers”—to the Kennedy Center Honors to
“Saturday Night Live,” where she remembers Mike Myers and Dana Carvey
running around at rehearsals.

True to Franklin’s style, Manoogian said she always looked in the
opposite direction of trends. In the 1990s, when neutral tones and
matte makeup was in style, Franklin wanted glitter. Later, at a
fundraising event on Valentine’s Day, instead of red or pink, she
chose to wear yellow and turquoise.

“You get a sense that she knew who she was, what she was about, what
she wanted to do, and you just played along,” Manoogian said. “The
only way I knew I was doing the right thing is, most often, she would
tell me about the next upcoming date.”

This article appeared in The Detroit News on August 25, 2018.

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RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/03/2018

                                        Monday, 
Pashinian Sees No Rifts In Armenian-Russian Relations
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) meets with Russian President 
Vladimir Putin in Sochi, Russia, May 14, 2018
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has downplayed problems in Yerevan’s 
relations with Moscow, describing them as a “work process in its natural 
course.”
Answering questions from citizens in a live Facebook broadcast late on Sunday, 
Pashinian also announced his upcoming visit to Moscow during which he will meet 
with Russian President Vladimir Putin. He gave no indications of the date of 
the planned meeting, but said it will take place soon.
“This will be our third meeting, and I am convinced that we will discuss 
numerous issues that are on the agenda of our relations and will find solutions 
to numerous problems,” said the head of the Armenian government, stressing that 
contacts with the Russian side take place at different levels.
“Of course, I don’t mean to insist that all possible problems will be solved, 
but I can surely say that our natural cooperation continues. And I am convinced 
that it will be continued in its natural way.”
Some analysts have recently suggested that Russia was irked by several moves by 
the new Armenian government that included the prosecution of former president 
Robert Kocharian and several other senior former officials on charges related 
to the deadly post-election crackdown on the opposition in 2008. Among those 
charged with ‘overthrowing constitutional order’ is also Yuri Khachaturov, a 
former deputy defense minister of Armenia who currently chairs the Russian-led 
Collective Security Treaty Organization.
In July, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov denounced the prosecutions, 
arguing that they run counter to the new Armenian leadership’s earlier pledges 
not to “persecute its predecessors for political motives.” Lavrov repeated his 
concern over “investigation in Armenia of events that happened 10 years ago”, 
but added that he considered it to be Yerevan’s “internal affair.”
Pashinian, who played a key role in the 2008 protests as an oppositionist, 
downplayed the Russian criticism on August 10. He said Moscow should “adapt” to 
the new political realities of Armenia.
Speculation about souring Armenian-Russian relations increased last week when, 
according to the Kremlin’s official website, Russian President Putin telephoned 
Kocharian on August 31 to congratulate him on his 64th birthday anniversary.
The Kremlin reported no other details in its official readout of the phone call 
that came two weeks after Kocharian pledged to return to active politics and 
challenge the current Armenian government.
In another development the Russian Interfax news agency reported on Friday that 
Moscow had refused to extradite another former Armenian defense minister Mikael 
Harutiunian, who is thought to live in Russia, to Armenia on the grounds that 
he is also a Russian citizen. A spokesman for Armenian prosecutors effectively 
denied the report, however, saying that they are unaware of the whereabouts of 
Harutiunian, who is wanted in Armenia on charges stemming from his alleged role 
in the 2008 post-election crackdown.
Armenia ‘Willing’ To Take Part In Syria Rebuilding
Armenian Parliament Speaker Ara Babloyan (R) meets with Syrian ambassador 
Mohammed Haj Ibrahim, Yerevan,03Sep,2018
Armenia is willing to take part in the reconstruction of friendly Syria, 
Armenian Parliament Speaker Ara Babloyan said on Monday during a meeting with 
Syrian ambassador in Yerevan Mohamed Haj Ibrahim.
Aided by the Russian military the Syrian government forces have managed to 
restore control over much of the territory of the Middle Eastern country torn 
by years of war and internal strife, but economic recovery and reconstruction 
still appear to remain a vital concern for the authorities in Damascus.
Russia has recently sought a greater Western involvement in the rebuilding of 
Syria. The United States and its allies, meanwhile, believe that reconstruction 
assistance should be tied to a process that includes U.N.-supervised elections 
and a political transition in Syria. Washington blames the regime of Bashar 
al-Assad for Syria’s devastation.
Since the start of the conflict in Syria in 2011 hostilities have also affected 
a sizable ethnic Armenian conflict in Syria. Tens of thousands of Syrian 
Armenians fled their homes, with many of them given refuge in Armenia during 
recent years.
During the meeting with the Syrian ambassador Babloyan expressed hope that 
“peace, internal political stability and public solidarity will soon be 
established in Syria.”
He also expressed his gratitude to the Syrian legislature for its activities 
towards the recognition of the Ottoman-era massacres of Armenians as genocide.
Many of the Syrian Armenians are descendants of survivors of the 1915 massacres 
who found refuge in Aleppo and other Syrian cities and towns.
Ambassador Haj Ibrahim attached importance to the role of the Syrian-Armenian 
community, which he described as “an integral part of the Syrian society that 
has vastly contributed to the country’s development.”
“What the Syrian people have seen during these recent years is like what 
Armenians saw in Western Armenia [the part of historical Armenia, which is now 
in Turkey],” the Syrian diplomat said, according to the Armenian parliament’s 
official website.
Retired Armenian General Denies Embezzlement Charges
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Artur Aghabekian (archive photograph)
Retired general Artur Aghabekian, who once served as Armenia’s deputy defense 
minister and currently advises the ethnic Armenian leader of Nagorno-Karabakh, 
denies charges of large-scale embezzlement from the fund where he has served as 
chairman of the board of trustees.
The charges were pressed against Aghabekian over the weekend as part of a 
criminal case initiated still in July.
The retired general is accused of misappropriating over $110,000 from the 
Martik (Worrier) Foundation, which was set up for training and retraining of 
officers of the armed forces of Armenia, assisting military science, providing 
scholarships to talented students and some other education-related activities.
According to the Investigation Committee of Armenia, in separate cases Martik 
directed funding for programs not related to the goals of the foundation. “In 
particular, large sums of money were spent on organizing hospitality parties at 
restaurants and hotels for individuals, purchasing premium-grade gasoline for 
vehicles having nothing to do with the foundation, purchasing valuable presents 
for different persons,” the Committee said. “Sufficient data were obtained to 
show that some of the money were spent on the organization of hospitality 
parties at restaurants in recreational zones where Aghabekian owns 40 percent 
of shares.”
Investigators allowed Aghabekian to remain free, but confined him to country 
limits pending investigation.
The retired general insisted on Monday that he has acted within the framework 
of the charter of the foundation. “I think that during further investigative 
actions the bodies conducting the investigation will also come to this 
conclusion,” he said. “I myself wrote the charter [of the foundation] in 2002 
and in doing so I realized what kind of programs I would be carrying out in the 
future.”
Aghabekian’s is the latest in a series of prosecutions against senior former 
officials launched after anticorruption campaigner Nikol Pashinian came to 
power as prime minister on the wave of street protests in April-May. Pashinian 
has vowed to root out corruption and carry out reforms in the South Caucasus 
country.
Armenia, Japan See Potential For Stepping Up Cooperation
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian receives visiting Japanese Foreign 
Minister Taro Kono, 3 September 2018
Armenia and Japan have real opportunities to bring their bilateral relations at 
a new level, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Monday as he 
received visiting Japanese Foreign Minister Taro Kono.
Kono arrived in Yerevan on Sunday on an official three-day visit during which 
he also met with his Armenian counterpart Zohrab Mnatsakanian and President 
Armen Sarkissian.
Pashinian described the diplomatic relations between the two countries as 
“efficient and dynamically growing.” At the same time, he pointed out the 
existing potential particularly for stimulating economic ties.
According to the Armenian prime minister’s official website, Pashinian spoke 
about the new political and economic situation in Armenia and the reforms that 
are being carried out in the country, in particular, the anti-corruption 
campaign, efforts to improve the environment for investments and 
entrepreneurship.
Minister Kono reportedly welcomed the democratic changes taking place in 
Armenia and expressed readiness to assist the government in that process. The 
top Japanese diplomat agreed about the presence of a great potential for 
developing and deepening relations between Japan and Armenia in different 
areas. He said he visited the Tumo center for creative technologies in Yerevan 
and was “impressed by Armenia’s education model for the field of technologies.”
“Tumo is one of the places where we can also work together. We are ready to 
discuss prospects of deepening our cooperation in the economic sphere,” he said.
Within the context of developing economic ties the two officials attached 
importance to the signing and ratification of an agreement between the Armenian 
and Japanese governments on liberalization, encouragement and protection of 
investments. Among possible fields where Yerevan and Tokyo can develop their 
cooperation Pashinian singled out information technologies and hi-tech, 
tourism, infrastructure and innovations.
The Japanese foreign minister welcomed the offer of the Armenian prime 
minister, expressing willingness to discuss steps in this direction. Both 
officials stressed the need to hold culture days of the two countries in 
Armenia and Japan and also attached importance to the development of 
inter-parliamentary relations. The two agreed to form a joint agenda and 
actively work to realize it.
Prime Minister Pashinian and Minister Kono also exchanged views on current 
regional and international issues. The head of the Armenian government said he 
highly appreciated Japan’s “balanced position in the issue of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.”
During an earlier joint press conference today Japanese Foreign Minister Kono 
and his Armenian counterpart Zohrab Mnatsakanian also said that the two 
countries will, in particular, seek to cooperate in the fields of innovations 
and information technologies.
Press Review
(Saturday, September 1)
“Haykakan Zhamanak” lambastes former president Robert Kocharian, who is being 
prosecuted on coup charges in Armenia, over his ‘provincialism’ revealed in his 
purported attempt to seek political support from Moscow. The paper, in 
particular, refers to Kocharian’s August 31 telephone conversation with Russian 
President Vladimir Putin reported by the Kremlin in which the latter extended 
his congratulations to the former Armenian leader on his 64th birthday. 
“Kocharian, naturally, doesn’t care that such messages create some problems for 
the sovereignty of Armenia, to some extent provoke more anti-Russian sentiments 
and fuel unnecessary tensions within the Armenian society,” it writes.
“Hraparak” notes that a brief readout on the Kremlin’s official website about 
Putin’s phone conversation with Kocharian has stirred a ‘big storm’ within the 
Armenian society. “Some took it as a slap in Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
face, others remembered that Putin sent such public congratulations to 
Kocharian only during the latter’s presidency, still others noted that only two 
months ago it was [another ex-president] Serzh Sarkisian’s birthday, but Putin 
did not congratulate him at the time when he, perhaps, needed that support 
most.”
“Zhamanak” suggests that Russia’s possible refusal to extradite Mikael 
Harutiunian, a former Armenian defense minister wanted on charges related to 
the 2008 post-election unrest, to Armenia on the grounds that he is also a 
Russian citizen may trigger tensions in Armenian-Russian relations similar to 
the ones that existed when in 2015 Moscow effectively refused to transfer a 
Russian soldier charged with murdering a seven-member Armenian family in Gyumri 
to Armenian jurisdiction. On August 31, the Interfax news agency, citing a 
diplomatic source in Russia, reported that such refusal will be Moscow’s 
response to the request received from the Armenian side. “The cases of [the 
Russian soldier Valery] Permyakov and Harutiunian may not be comparable, but as 
far as extradition is concerned, history may be repeated,” the paper comments.
The editor of “Aravot” believes Kocharian’s intention to participate in 
expected early parliamentary elections can only be welcomed: “This is going to 
be a good test that will enable the second president to check his real rating. 
In the upcoming elections he will not possess any administrative levers, he 
will not be able to threaten or pressure anyone, he will not be able to ban 
media and buy votes. Consequently, the votes that Kocharian will receive will 
truly be his ‘hard earned’ votes, the votes that he really deserves.”
(Tigran Avetisian)
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

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‘Declaration of Independence laid foundation of Artsakh’s state-building’ – Armenian President extends congrats on 27th anniversary

ArmenPress, Armenia
Sept 2 2018
‘Declaration of Independence laid foundation of Artsakh’s state-building’ – Armenian President extends congrats on 27th anniversary



YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has congratulated Artsakh’s 27th anniversary of Independence, Sarkissian’s office said.

“Dear countrymen,

The Nagorno Karabakh Republic was proclaimed with the historic document adopted in 1991. The past more than quarter century was a period full of trials, victories and state-building. During this entire period the will power to live free, struggle and triumph has always kept and inspired you, which turned the Pan-Armenian dream into reality.

The declaration of independence laid the foundation for Artsakh’s state-building. In today’s festive atmosphere, we once again remember those who developed it, those who forged the statehood, those who sacrificed their lives and health for it.

By thinking about them, paying homage to them, honoring them, we feel the message from within time to today’s citizens of Artsakh, today’s soldiers, to our entire people: to defend and empower the country, the state, to be a united Armenia, Artsakh and Diaspora.

The best proof of this unity is the present-day independent republic of Artsakh, which is confidently advancing on the path of freedom and democracy by having continuous successes in the process of state-building.

By extending congratulations on the Pan-Armenian holiday, the 27th anniversary of Artsakh’s declaration of independence, I am wishing you peace, welfare and resolute faith for the future,” Sarkissian said in the address, in part.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

Artsakh, Armenians around the globe celebrate 27th Independence Day

ArmenPress, Armenia
Sept 2 2018
Artsakh, Armenians around the globe celebrate 27th Independence Day


YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. Today, September 2, 2018, marks the 27th anniversary of the declaration of independence of Artsakh, formerly known as the Nagorno Karabakh Republic.

On this day in 1991, a joint sitting of lawmakers from the Nagorno Karabakh provincial council and the Shahumyan regional council proclaimed the Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR) within the borders of the former NKAO and Shahumyan region. The move was in line with the then-active legislation, particularly the April 3, 1990 law which entitled national autonomies to determine their status on their own.

On December 10, 1991, a few days before the official collapse of the Soviet Union, Nagorno Karabakh held a referendum, where the overwhelming majority, 99,89%, of the population voted in favor of complete independence from Azerbaijan. After this, Azerbaijan totally blockaded NKR and launched military aggressions.

The Artsakh Liberation War began when for the first time in September of 1991 Azerbaijan bombarded Stepanakert with Alazan rockets from Shushi. In 1994, at the request of Azerbaijan a trilateral (Azerbaijan, NKR, Armenia) ceasefire agreement was signed on May 12.

15 years after independence, in 2006, the people of Artsakh adopted the country’s Constitution through a referendum, again on September 2.

Celebrations are held annually on this day in Artsakh.

This year, President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has departed for Artsakh to attend the events.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

The first dad of NSW: Premier Gladys Berejiklian’s special bond with dad

The Daily Telegraph (Australia)
September 2, 2018 Sunday
The first dad of NSW
 
by  MIRANDA WOOD, SENIOR WRITER; EXCLUSIVE
 
Father’s Day 2018: Premier Gladys Berejiklian’s special bond with dad
KRIKOR Berejiklian takes his role as First Dad of NSW very seriously. The 86-year-old was watching the dismantling of Tent City at Martin Place on TV when he decided to head to the homeless camp and provide his eldest daughter with a first-hand -report.
 
“If there’s something on the news, like anywhere there’s a bit of a -problem, he’ll actually catch the bus and go and check it out and ring me,” NSW Premier Gladys Berejik-lian said.
 
“My dad loves catching public transport, especially when I was Transport Minister.
 
“Even now he’ll ring me and he’ll go ‘Glad, I’m in Gosford” and I say ‘What are you doing in Gosford’.
 
“He goes ‘I just caught the train up here and the Opal machine is not working and you’re losing a lot of money so you better get it fixed’.” During her 15 years in public life, the doting dad of three daughters – Gladys, Rita and Mary – has learnt not to take political attacks on Ms Berejiklian personally.
 
The Premier has also trained her father and 79-year-old mother Arsha to follow one simple rule.
 
“Unless they hear from me, it’s not true,” Ms Berejiklian, 47, said. “Even on the day I was becoming Premier, all their friends were ringing and saying ‘congratulations’ and my mother said ‘I’m sorry, we can’t confirm that until Gladys rings us’.
 
“So my sisters rang me and said ‘Can you please ring Mum and Dad because everyone is congratulating them and you haven’t told them’.” When she did finally tell them, Ms Berejiklian said her father was “trying to be cool about it”.
 
“He pretended like it was no shock,” she said.
 
“He was obviously proud but still had that level of concern as well – they do worry about me.” Her parents, who will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary next year, have a drawer at their home, full of scrapbooks on Ms Berejiklian’s rise to the top job in NSW.
 
The couple were married in the late 1960s after they migrated separately to Australia.
 
More than 40 of the Premier’s relatives were victims of the 1915 Armenian genocide, leaving her four grandparents orphaned.
 
Born in Aleppo, Syria, Mr Berejiklian and his wife, who was from Jerusalem, spoke Armenian at home and when the Premier started school, she couldn’t understand English.
 
Ms Berejiklian said her dad “settled down later in life because he kind of did his bucket list before he got married. He wanted to see Pele play in Brazil, so he spent six months living in Brazil, and then he wanted to chase Bridget Bardot in France, so he went to Paris.” During The Sunday Telegraph’s photo shoot with the Premier to mark Father’s Day, Mr Berejiklian beamed with pride.
 
“First of all I am proud that I am with my daughter right now walking in front of the Opera House,” he said. “I am particularly proud to be with her now because I worked on the Opera House as a boilermaker and welder a long, long time ago, just a few years before it was completed.” Ms Berejiklian later said her -father told her: “Glad, this is one of the happiest days of my life.” The father and daughter still converse in Armenian and, over the years, Ms Berejiklian said their relationship has “deepened”.
 
“It’s more a friendship than anything else, and a respect,” she said. “During our teenage years, he was strict but, mind you, he needed to be stricter with my sisters than with me – I didn’t break any rules.” The Premier said she regularly talks to her father and he has recently -started sending her text messages – via his wife.
 
And every Saturday, she schedules time to visit her -parents. “I feel guilty,” she said. “I spend once a week with him.
 
“He’s been timing it lately, saying ‘Glad, you’re only staying for 45 minutes today’.” Today she plans to spend a little longer with him at her uncle’s house, fulfilling Mr -Berejiklian’s Father’s Day wish “to be with my family and spend time with my relatives”.
 
Ms Berejiklian said she and her sisters were “lucky” their parents were still alive and active in the -community.
 
“We feel blessed to have them -because not everybody has parents living to that age,” she said.
 
“No matter what happens in life, my Dad has always had a really -positive attitude and I think that’s rubbed off a bit on me because he’s always very can-do and no matter what the situation is, he’ll always find a silver lining.”HAPPY FATHER’S DAY

Documentary on maestro Loris Tjeknavorian released

Tehran Times, Iran
September 2, 2018 Sunday
Documentary on maestro Loris Tjeknavorian released
 
 
TEHRAN – “October 13, 1937”, a documentary on Iranian-Armenian maestro Loris Tjeknavorian, has been released by Hashure, an Iranian video streaming website for documentary films.
 
The website premiered “October 13, 1937” directed by Baktash Abtin at the Film Museum of Iran on Saturday.
 
“When I was told they were going to make a film about me I was afraid, since we are all making changes every day,” Tjeknavorian said in a brief speech made after the premiere of the documentary.
 
“I never thought about the replies to the questions in this film and gave the responses immediately. I am still a child and I never want to leave this childhood of mine because that world would have no pleasure for me,” he noted.
 
He said that “October 13, 1937” is about a mad person and added, “I have always said that the mad people make the world and the wise ruin it.”
 
Director Abtin also said that the documentary tries to portray the maestro as he is, kind and sincere.
 
“I really enjoyed working with him since he is a musician who has no difference with his inner side,” Abtin said.
 
The documentary will be available online until September 14.
 
Photo: Maestro Loris Tjeknavorian attends the premiere of “October 13, 1937” at the Film Museum of Iran September 11, 2018.
 
RM/MMS/YAW