Danny Tarkanian says he is not anti-immigrant, cites Armenian heritage

PanArmenian, Armenia
Aug 17 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Congressional candidate Danny Tarkanian has said at a reader panel that he is not anti-immigrant, citing his Armenian heritage, Las Vegas Review-Journal reports.

While he supports beefing up border security, Tarkanian said he is not anti-immigrant: His grandmother escaped the Armenian Genocide in 1917.

“She took advantage of the American dream, worked her tail off and created an opportunity for her son to become the greatest basketball coach in NCAA history,” he said.

Tarkanian told the panelists he supports President Donald Trump’s “America-first policies” including the president’s stance on repealing the Affordable Care Act, national security, tax reform, immigration and border security.

Tarkanian was quick to draw a line between Trump’s policies and his sharp tongue, saying he doesn’t support the president’s offensive comments and tweets.

Tarkanian and Democrat Susie Lee have captured their parties’ nominations in southern Nevada’s 3rd District.

Armenia’s ex-president says charges against him are politically motivated

ARKA, Armenia
Aug 17 2018

YEREVAN, August 17, /ARKA/. Armenia’s former president Robert Kocharyan announced his return to active politics on Thursday saying in an interview with the Yerkir Media TV channel that the charges brought against him were politically motivated.

Kocharyan was released from pre-trial custody on August 13 after being accused of violating  Armenia constitutional order in March 2008, when in a post-election standoff eight civilians and two police officers were killed. The polls were declared to have been won by then prime minister Serzh Sargsyan. The decision angered the opposition, led by the first Armenian president Levon Ter-Petrosyan, who set off 10 days of nonstop protests that led to the crackdown on March 1, in which 10 people were killed and more than 200 injured.

Kocharyan  was released from custody on August 13 after Armenia’s Court of Appeals ruled that he could not be prosecuted for the post-election violence.  The ruling was backed by Article 140 of the Armenian Constitution, which says that during the term of his or her powers and thereafter, the President of the Republic may not be prosecuted and subjected to liability for actions deriving from his or her status.

 The ruling of the Court of Appeals was denounced by the Special Investigative Service, which described it as illegal, saying that the Court of Appeals “overstepped the bounds of its authority.”  It said also that it will ask the Prosecutor General to  appeal the decision at  the Court of Cassation. 

In the interview Kocharyan said he could be arrested again, but argued that the case against him, if taken to the European Court of Human Rights, would  clear him of any wrongdoing.

Kocharyan also accused the government of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan of having no economic strategy, saying that its anti-corruption campaign can not replace economic management of the country
“I have seen no action or a document which would tell us what this government is going to do to develop  the economy,’ he said.

Kocharian also claimed that during his tenure in power, there was not a clearly structured corruption pyramid, otherwise it would not have been possible to demonstrate high rates of economic growth.
“Fuel was supplied by 16-17 companies. Supplies of gas and electricity generation are natural monopolies, and nothing can be done about it. In other sectors, monopolies never existed, and no one had monopoly rights,” he said. -0-


Kocharyan ready to discuss Karabakh conflict issues with Nikol Pashinyan

ARKA, Armenia
Aug 17 2018

YEREVAN, August 17. /ARKA/. In an interview with the Yerkir Media TV channel on August 16  former Armenian president Robert Kocharian said he was willing to discuss a set of issues related to the settlement of the Karabakh conflict with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

 “I have never avoided negotiations. An important function of the opposition is to give a clue to the authorities, to voice a different opinion. If you want to learn something, you must also communicate with people who have a different opinion. If people who think alike gather in the same place, they will learn nothing from each other. One needs to listen to a different opinion as well,» he said.

In comments on Pashinyan’s words that Armenia should not conduct negotiations on behalf of Karabakh, which must become a direct participant in the negotiation process, Kocharyan noted that the first person of Armenia can not step aside and say that he is washing his hands.

He said such statements stem from inexperience as the members of the new government do not quite imagine what it means to refuse the negotiation process and the possible consequences of it.

 During a  May 9 visit to Nagorno-Karabakh  Pashinian said that the Karabakh conflict can not be solved without direct participation in the negotiations of its authorities, saying that only its  authorities have the right to speak on behalf of Karabakh people.

In this regard, Kocharyan stressed that the worst negotiations are better than the war, calling it a simple truth. “If you refuse to negotiate, then war is the only solution,” he added. Kocharyan said one of the reasons prompting his political comeback is the foreign policy of Nikol Pashinyan’s government.

 ‘Look at the map – where Armenia is, what kind of relations it has with its neighbors and what is happening at all. Today, Russian-American relations are at the lowest level after the end of the cold war. Washington has slapped  new sanctions against Russia, withdrew from the nuclear deal with Iran, ” Kocharyan said.

He put a special emphasis on how Turkey has changed over the past 10 years. “It was another country, it sought EU membership, and that limited its aggression and interference in the internal affairs of its neighbors. It had to show that it was a democratic country with freedom of speech. Today Turkey is completely a different country,” he said.  -0-


Letter to the Editor of the Washington Post: The Armenian genocide was genocide

Washington Post
Aug 17 2018
Letters to the Editor
  

I was initially heartened to read the Aug. 12 obituary for Arsène Tchakarian, “Fought for French resistance in WWII,” which described a heroic historical story that few of us had heard. But then I reached the part that noted that Tchakarian was a survivor of the Armenian genocide. The obituary put quotes around the word “genocide” and gave equal time to Turkish denialism. Three of my four grandparents narrowly escaped being killed and lost most of their families and all their property during the Armenian genocide. I have read The Post for many years, and I have noticed that on the occasions when the Armenian genocide comes up, The Post almost always frames it as a matter of debate rather than the historical fact that it is. It’s deeply insulting and, given the context of the obituary, ironic, because one of the most famous quotes about the Armenian genocide is the remark attributed to Adolf Hitler, “Who remembers now the extermination of the Armenians?”

Karine Jegalian, Garrett Park

Film: Distant Constellation review – intimate portraits of old age

The Guardian(London), UK
Thursday 10:00 AM GMT
Distant Constellation review – intimate portraits of old age
Shevaun Mizrahi’s dream-like documentary, shot in an Istanbul retirement home, beautifully captures the residents’ musings on life
 
by Cath Clarke
Star Rating: 3 stars
 
‘Old age isn’t a battle; old age is a massacre.” So wrote Philip Roth, a line much quoted in recent obituaries. But, for those of us not yet there, it’s hard to picture ourselves at 90, exiled in the land of the elderly. So the great power of this one-woman, no-budget documentary shot on the frontline of an Istanbul retirement home is its intimacy. American-Turkish director Shevaun Mizrahi has been filming at the home for years, since volunteering as a student, and she trains a sensitive gaze on the decline of old age without horror or shock. But the film’s unprobing stream-of-consciousness interviews with residents left me a little frustrated.
 
It’s a film that will inevitably be described as meditative – meaning it is slow and a bit random – but you can’t deny the painterly beauty of Mizrahi’s portraits. An elderly woman talks of the Turkish genocide of Armenians in 1915; her mother and grandmother converted to Islam, changing their names to avoid deportation, or worse.
 
In a studiously Beckettian sequence, two gents pass the time travelling up and down in a lift, musing on everything from life on Mars to how many telephone calls it is reasonable to expect from a daughter. Another chap of 75 proposes to Mizrahi with narcissistic entitlement: “I need somebody in my life. My life is empty now.” Mizrahi edits in fly-on-the-wall footage of unskilled labourers working on a building site opposite the home – young men at the start of their lives, looking ahead to the future.
 
It’s a thoughtful, dream-like film, but, in the end, I’m not sure what Distant Constellation is saying about age or memory. And I certainly didn’t feel I had earned the right to watch a man on what must surely be his deathbed, mouth moving around words that weren’t there any more.
 
 

Sports: Hrachya Chandiryan: Hard work helped us win European Championship medal

MediaMax, Armenia
Aug 17 2018
Hrachya Chandiryan: Hard work helped us win European Championship medal

Head Coach of Armenia national diving team Hrachya Chandiryan said that hard work and dedication helped them win bronze medal in the European Championship. 


Chandiryan summed up the results of his athletes’ performances in an interview to Mediamax Sport reporter. 

 

Vladimir Harutyunyan and Lev Sargsyan won the first European Championship medal in the history of independent Armenia. The medal was achieved in 10m platform diving. We registered success thanks to our hard work, and God was with us too.  

 

We fell behind the leaders by 15 points after the 1st and 2nd dives, but I knew that we would become medalists if the penultimate jump was a success. It turned out just as I previewed, they succeeded in the 5th most difficult dive and improved their positions. My athletes scored only 3 points less than the British athletes, who took the second place. 

 

Armenia doesn’t offer opportunities to train for synchronized diving, we synchronize the elements and do exercises only in the hall. The athletes trained in water for two times only and in the competition place. Everyone approached me and asked how we did all those incredible things. 

 

I was happy only for a few seconds after the medal, while this is a result of years of hard work in our conditions. We will see how the attention towards our sport changes. We will hope that it will increase and we will have good swimming pools, diving platforms and springboards to prepare for the Olympic Games. 

 

I am also satisfied with other performances of the Armenian team. Vladimir and Azat were in the 8th position in 3m springboard diving, which is their maximum at this moment. Vardan Bayanduryan got food poisoning and wasn’t able to participate in the competition. This is the reason why he didn’t succeed in the qualification. Lev started confidently in 10m platform diving and was among the 3 best, but he failed the 3rd and 4th jumps and appeared in the 7th position. 

 

The athletes will have some break and then they will continue trainings. 

Sports: Where has it all gone wrong for Henrikh Mkhitaryan in the Premier League?

FourFourTwo
 
 
Where has it all gone wrong for Henrikh Mkhitaryan in the Premier League?
 
by Alex Hess
 
 
Just two years ago, he was voted the best player in the Bundesliga yet the Arsenal midfielder is in danger of sinking without a trace in England, writes Alex Hess
 
 
Arsenal’s decade-long slide to the periphery of the elite was encapsulated neatly on Sunday as they were swept aside by the reigning champions, and two formerly pivotal playmakers were rendered peripheral figures.
 
Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Mesut Ozil made their names as string-pulling central No.10s but neither could escape the game’s fringes against Manchester City. As they ambled around in tandem, the two resembled a pair of creative geniuses stricken by writer’s block, endlessly mooching about in the kitchen rather than knuckling down at the typewriter.
 
The importance of endeavour is often overstated in English football but here City’s attackers, all frenzied energy and edgy hunger for the ball, bent the game to their will while Arsenal’s looked on listlessly.
 
But while Ozil and Mkhitaryan put in similar performances, they are two very different cases. After all, Ozil has never been one for heavy exertion, and most fans have long since gotten used to the fact that his Cheech-and-Chong levels of unhurriedness represent the flip-side of a nonchalant and potentially match-winning artistry.
 
An explosive presence
 
Mkhitaryan, however, made his mark at the top level as part of Jurgen Klopp’s ferocious Borussia Dortmund side, whose relentless running and bloodthirsty pressing ushered in a whole new tactical era. He then went on to improve even further as an explosive deep-lying attacker under the more versatile Thomas Tuchel.
 
It’s fair to say that there’s been little explosiveness on show of late. While it may be tempting to explain this away as a function of late Wenger-era Arsenal, casting him as yet another victim of the contagious stasis at the club’s core, the truth is that Mkhitaryan’s alarming regression precedes his arrival in London. In fact, his move to the capital in January 2018 was supposed to provide him with some much-needed rejuvenation after a season-and-a-half of shackled-up stagnation under Jose Mourinho.
 
The Armenian was largely handed a free pass for a desperately underwhelming 18 months at Manchester United. His coach’s conservatism was generally presented as the reason behind the sharp nosedive taken by a player who notched the frankly absurd tally of 55 combined goals and assists during his final season at Dortmund.
 
 
Mourinho vs Mkhitaryan
 
Certainly there is truth to the idea that Mourinho’s management elicited next to no decent football from Mkhitaryan: a two-month exodus early on appeared to splinter the forward’s confidence, and after that his United career was a middling affair. The 29-year-old’s remarkably productive run in the 2016/17 Europa League campaign proved an exception to the forgettable norm.
 
Upon his departure, Mkhitaryan himself cited differences in “footballing philosophy” between himself and Mourinho, and the hope was that Wenger’s less tentative tactics might release the handbrake on an attacking midfielder capable of full-throttle brilliance.
 
Yet Mkhitaryan succeeded only in replicating his Old Trafford form for a new audience. In both cases, the very occasional glimpse of genius – a scorpion-kick goal here, a three-assist display against Everton there – has punctuated protracted spells of mind-numbing mundanity.
 
image: has lived in six countries, speaks seven languages and comes from a family steeped in football. His father was a striker who played for his country, his mother has worked for the Armenian FA and his sister is a UEFA translator. He is a keen chess player, he studied economics at the St Petersburg Institute and at his best, his game is defined by an instinctive intelligence; the ability to create space under severe pressure. He is clearly no fool and will not need telling that the need for improvement is critical after failing to impress under both Mourinho and Wenger.
 
An argument – and a pretty generous one – could be made that Mkhitaryan has struggled in two dysfunctional teams, under two ailing managers. The rejoinder would be that the common denominator is not the club or the coach, but the player.
 
Now or never
 
The early signs are that Unai Emery will look to implement a more frenetic playing style, one far more akin to what Mkhitaryan flourished under at Dortmund. But any teething problems had better be resolved quickly, because Mkhitaryan is not someone who can afford another season of drift.
 
If his heroics at Dortmund weren’t enough proof that he is a player for the here and now, then his age – he turns 30 in January – certainly is. Time is not on his side, even if at times on Sunday he played with all the urgency of a honeymooner uncorking a beachfront bottle of chardonnay.
 
 
In mitigation, Manchester City are likely to be the toughest opponents Mkhitaryan faces this season, and he was hardly helped by the painful limitations of certain team-mates. But equally, the Armenian is a senior player of elite-level pedigree, voted by his peers just two years ago as the Bundesliga’s best player. It is not unreasonable to expect him to affect the biggest games.
 
Or indeed any game. Since arriving in England in 2016, there have been 16 goals altogether, a meagre seven in the league. And this from a supposed specialist in obvious output. Unlike Ozil, whose influence can be belied by the stats, Mkhitaryan forged his reputation with cold hard numbers: 44 goals in three seasons for Shakhtar, 41 in three years at Dortmund.
 
If the frustration of Ozil is a propensity to decorate rather than dominate, Mkhitaryan’s is that he currently does neither. A man who once wowed the crowd with moments of magic is in danger of becoming renowned only for his disappearing acts.
 
 

Sports: Football: Armenia’s Alashkert, Pyunik out of Europa League qualifying

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 17 2018

Armenian football clubs Alashkert and Pyunik have been left out of the Europa League third qualifying round after suffering second-leg defeats on Thursday.

FC Alashkert lost to Romania’s Cluj 0-5 in the return march, the Football Federation of Armenia told Panorama.am. 

Alashkert had also lost the home match against Cluj 0-2 in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital.

Drawing the first clash, FC Pyunik also suffered a 1-2 defeat at the hands of Maccabi Tel Aviv in the second leg of the Europa League third qualifying round in Israel. 

Press conference of Robert Kocharyan’s lawyer Hayk Alumyan (video)

According to Robert Kocharyan’s lawyer Hayk Alumyan, the SIS speaks on behalf of Armenia, the judicial act on behalf of the Republic of Armenia is considered illegal, such statements are the illegal ones.

According to the Defender, when they attack their side, they also attack the judge.

“This is brutal pressure on the judge, I’m afraid we will not turn our youth into Gevorik from the Pan-Armenian National Movement.”

According to Hayk Alumyan, such actions of failure of the Kocharyan press conference make justice impossible.

Hayk Alumyan said except from Kocharyan’s immunity, there are two more grounds for the decision of the Court of Appeal.

“I cannot refer one of them from the legal point of view, the other is that there is a provision in the charge, which reads: Kocharyan’s decree was illegal. But there is no such thing.”

He said: “There is no point in using force in that order.”

Yerevan TV tower lights to be temporarily shut down

The Armenian Television and Radio Broadcasting Company informs that from August 16 to September 30, the work of the TV tower lighting system will be partially limited and will be almost completely disconnected at the end of the term to implement the restoration and painting of anti-horizontal protective layer of metal constructions of Yerevan TV tower.