Why are flights from Yerevan to Europe carried out at night? clarification

  • 06.08.2018
  •  

  • Armenia:
  •  

1
 89

The Civil Aviation Committee will from time to time address aviation matters of greatest public interest.


This is stated on the Facebook page of the Civil Aviation Committee. One of the most frequently asked questions is why flights from Yerevan to Europe are carried out mainly at night.


The comment of the Civil Aviation Committee says: “The reason is not the misconception that night flights are affordable, but rather the fact that airlines provide convenient connecting times for transit passengers so that onward passengers do not have to wait long for the continuation of the flight.


And in those destinations where the demand for point-to-point transportation is high, airlines have the opportunity to operate the flight during the day.”

A press conference was held at the Ministry of Diaspora dedicated to the “Walk to Home” program

Please find the attached press release of the Ministry of Diaspora.
Sincerely,
Media and PR Department:
( 374 10) 585601, internal 805
----------------------
Sincerely
Department of Press and Public Relations
( 374 10) 585601, extension 805


230. The press conference about the "Step to Home" program took place. docx

application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document



JPEG image


IMG_4047.JPG

JPEG image


IMG_4088.JPG

JPEG image

Greens call on Parliament to recognise WWI deaths of Armenians in Turkey as genocide

TV NZ
Aug 6 2018
Greens call on Parliament to recognise WWI deaths of Armenians in Turkey as genocide
by Emily Cooper

The Green Party is calling on New Zealand’s Parliament to officially recognise the deaths of Armenians in Turkey during World War One as genocide. 

But the issue is contentious. Some estimates put the number of deaths as high as 1.5 million

Turkey denies it was genocide and says the victims were war casualties. It says there was no systematic attempt to destroy the Christian Armenian people. 

But Armenian Kiwis say it’s time for New Zealand to take a strong stance. 

“We’ve seen history repeat itself on many occasions and this will continue if we don’t recognise our past,” Hoory Yeldizian, chairperson of the Armenian National Committee of New Zealand said.  

Several countries have labelled it a genocide, including Holland, Germany and some Australian States. New Zealand hasn’t.

But Green MP Gareth Huges plans to put forward a motion in Parliament to change that.

“I’m asking all of Parliament to support it. It has a link to our history,” he told 1 NEWS.

At her post-Cabinet press conference today, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said New Zealand has always acknowledged a significant loss of life. 

“When it comes to those issues around terminology and so on, those are issues that we have left for a reconciliation process for those parties that are involved,” she said.

Historians put down the first round-up of Armenians as beginning on April 24 1915; the day before the Gallipoli landings. 

Experts say that historic link is exactly why New Zealand should call it a genocide.

“New Zealand soldiers recorded the genocide in their memoirs and in their diaries and then brought those stories back home with them,” historian James Robins said. 

A documentary, Intent to Destroy, will be screened in the New Zealand Parliament theatrette tonight and visiting experts and Armenian Community members will hold discussions following the screening.

Video at link:

Putin’s thorny issues of Armenia and Moldova

Asia News, Italy
Aug 6 2018
 
 
Putin’s thorny issues of Armenia and Moldova
 
by Vladimir Rozanskij
 
In Yerevan the former pro-Russian president, Robert Kocharian, is accused of “reversal of the constitutional order and usurpation of power”, together with Gen. Jurij Khachaturov, pupil of Moscow. In 2008 they stifled the street demonstrations with violence. Moldova seeks to detach itself from submission to Russia, to move towards the European Union.
 
 
 
Moscow (AsiaNews) – In recent days, some choices of two countries bordering the Russian Federation have provoked very negative reactions in Moscow which sees its control over the “ex-Soviet” Russian world slipping.
 
On July 28 in Armenia the former president Robert Kocharian was arrested (right in the picture), for many years the guarantor of loyalty to Russia, together with his close collaborator, General Jurij Khachaturov. The accusation is that he used violence against the demonstrations in 2008, after the elections that brought the Moscow candidate to the presidency.
 
On August 2 it was the parliament of Moldova that displeased its former Soviet masters, proposing a change to the Constitution that includes the so-called “European pillar”, that is the fundamental orientation of the country to foster its relationship with the European Union, which led to unrest and internal conflict in Ukraine. Moldova, always divided between attraction to the great Romanian homeland and the submission to powerful Russia, risks in turn re-proposing the geopolitical dilemma that has isolated Putin’s Russia with respect to Europe and America in recent years.
 
Armenia’s recent “velvet revolution” brought Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to government  who experienced the repressions of 2008 first hand. He was then a member of the presidential candidate Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s electoral staff, who was defeated by the designated successor of Kocharian, Serž Sargsyan who was overthrown by Pashinian himself. The current prime minister was arrested and sentenced to seven years, and was released in 2011.
 
The arrest of the historic pro-Russian ex-president was the culmination of a vast campaign to fight corruption and widespread crime in Armenia, which even led to requests for  the resignation of the Katolikos of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Karekin II, in office since 1999 and accused by many parts of connivance with the corrupt power of the last 20 years. After the arrest of some deputies, Kocharian will now be tried for “reversal of the constitutional order and usurpation of power”. He would be the first head of state remaining in command after the end of the USSR to be condemned.
 
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has been extremely critical of the Armenian leadership for the arrest of Kocharian and Khachaturov. The Moscow protégé did not manage to take refuge in the arms of his allies, as did former Ukrainian President Viktor Janukovich in 2014. Instead General Kachaturov’s lawyer asked and obtained the opportunity to go to Moscow “while remaining at the disposal of the Yerevan investigation”.
 
The alliance between Armenia and Russia is at stake, which mainly thanks to the management of Kocharian actually controls the neighbor’s economy. The same stakes are affecting politics in Moldova, another former Soviet republic on the border between Western and Eastern influences. The reform approved by the Chişinău parliament is a signal launched in Brussels, and a slap in the face to Moscow, in a country deeply divided between pro-Russian and pro-European.
 
Moldova, like Armenia, is also preparing the parliamentary elections and expects the showdown in February 2019. The favorites would be the socialists, who try to put together the two souls of the country, but it’s too early to make predictions about the winners . Democrats are currently in power, who need an alliance with the two groups of liberals and liberal democrats to confirm the approval of the reform on the “European pillar” in autumn, along with another much-discussed measure: replacement of the official language of the country, from the Moldovan (very influenced by the Slavic) to the Romanian, the Latin definitely more “European” language.
 

New Zealand Should Recognise the Armenian Genocide

Scoop.co.nz, New Zealand
Aug 7 2018


New Zealand Should Recognise the Armenian Genocide
by Matt Hayes

Near the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan lies a grove of fir trees of various sizes. Beneath each tree is a plaque, indicating the name of the person who planted it. Jacques Chirac, it seems, has shovelled this soil – and so, a little further on, has Pope John Paul II. Hundreds of other foreign dignitaries from all over the world have laid wreaths at the memorial’s eternal flame, or planted their own firs on the sun-scorched hillside overlooking Armenia’s capital city. But no New Zealand dignitaries are among them – and shamefully, New Zealand remains one of the few western countries that has not explicitly recognised the genocide for what it was.

The events of Meds Yeghern (‘Great Crime’ in Armenian) began in earnest on April 24, 1915 – just one day before the ANZAC landings at Gallipoli. The timing was no coincidence. For decades prior to World War One, the Ottoman authorities had been treating their empire’s large Armenian population with a suspicious hostility that often spilled over into violence or outright massacres. But it was not until the fog of war had descended, and the Russians were pressing at Turkey’s eastern border, and ANZAC troops were steaming towards the Dardanelles, that the so-called Young Turk regime decided to systematically exterminate what it perceived to be an enemy within its own borders.

Armenian officers and soldiers within the Ottoman army – notwithstanding the services they had rendered the empire – were among the first to be rounded up in early 1915, sent to labour camps, and killed. They were followed, on April 24, by around 250 of the most prominent members of the Armenian community in Constantinople. Stripped of their fighting men and their leaders, the hundreds of Armenian towns and villages in the region formerly known as Western Armenia were almost powerless to resist the deportations and mass executions that followed. Over the next few years, around 1.5 million Armenians were slaughtered.

No matter how much one might wish to downplay the atrocities, there is no arguing with the harrowing photographs displayed at the genocide museum adjacent to the memorial. When you enter the main room, you first absorb the pre-1915 snapshots: respectable Armenian families, happy wedding days, and smiling schoolgirls assembled for class portraits. As you walk further, the smiles of these girls give way to beaming Turkish soldiers posing with bedraggled, emaciated prisoners. Before this abrupt transition has fully sunk in, you realise that the soldiers are now smugly cradling human skulls.

Turkey continues to deny that the events constituted a genocide, and its increasingly dictatorial president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, bullies anyone who dares to claim otherwise. When Germany’s parliament voted to formally recognise the genocide in 2016, Turkey immediately recalled its ambassador, and Erdoğan escalated his anti-German rhetoric. Orhan Pamuk, a prominent Turkish novelist and Nobel laureate, was prosecuted in 2005 for bringing attention to Turkey’s role in the atrocities. Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian journalist, was gunned down by a Turkish nationalist in 2007 after receiving numerous threats for statements he made about them.

Why, you may ask, is it so important to call events which took place a century ago by their right name? Why do certain individuals within Turkey routinely risk their lives to do so? And what difference would it make if New Zealand added its name to the list of countries that have acknowledged the truth?

George Santayana’s famous aphorism about ‘those who cannot remember the past’ comes to mind. If we do not acknowledge the true nature of historical crimes, how can we expect to prevent the same crimes from happening again? Or to be more precise: if we continue to accept Turkey’s official explanation for the mysterious drop in its Armenian population in the years 1915 and 1916 (that in the confusion of war there were regrettable clashes between various ethnic groups), it becomes all too easy to turn a blind eye to future atrocities.

That recognition matters to the Armenians goes without saying. Millions alive today not only lost their ancestors in the massacres; they also lost a huge part of their national heritage. Centuries-old churches, libraries, villages, and family records were all deliberately erased by the perpetrators, with the object of eliminating the Armenian footprint from what was to become safely Turkish soil. Imagine the sting of knowing that your relatives and your monuments were destroyed by a government whose successors continue to claim that this destruction never happened. And imagine the gratitude you would feel every time a foreign government at least grants you the simple acknowledgement that it did happen, and that your national trauma is not imaginary.

It’s also worth considering Turkey’s current condition, teetering on the edge of regressive dictatorship. Many thousands of Armenians, and about fourteen million Kurds, still reside in Turkey. For these groups, and for the sizeable population of liberal-minded Turks – all of them bravely engaged in an existential struggle with the forces of totalitarianism and intolerance – the push for genocide recognition reflects their hopes for what the country may yet become. A democratic, secular state, that treats all its minorities as first-class citizens, would not be afraid to face the unpleasant facts of its past.

New Zealand seems prepared to overlook this sensitive topic in order to protect trade with Turkey and ensure its citizens’ access to the dawn service at Gallipoli. Yet we are said to live in a country that neither submits to bullies nor shies away from making sacrifices in order to stand up for our principles. If we aspire to be a serious moral player in international affairs, we should be throwing our support behind the liberal, progressive elements in Turkey – and this begins with a proper acknowledgement of historical truth.

I look forward to the day when, in the fir grove near the genocide memorial, a sapling is planted on behalf of New Zealand – and when the words ‘we will remember them,’ which we repeat on April 25 every year, include within their scope those millions who began to lose their lives on Turkish soil just one day earlier.

Tenth Anniversary of the War That Wounded Georgia and Derailed Russia

The Jamestown Foundation
Aug 6 2018
 
 
 
Tenth Anniversary of the War That Wounded Georgia and Derailed Russia
 
Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 15 Issue: 117
 
By: Pavel K. Baev
 
August 6, 2018 05:36 PM Age:
 
(Source: agora.ge)
 

In the first week of August 2008, escalating tensions between Georgia and Russia exploded in a messy battle for Tskhinvali, South Ossetia. The resulting “Five Day War” culminated in the advance of Russian tanks to the suburbs of Tbilisi. A ceasefire was negotiated by then-president of France, Nicolas Sarkozy, acting on behalf of the European Union. But the resonance of that war proved to be heavy and lasting. Less than a decade later, Russian tanks similarly rolled over the fields of Donbas, in eastern Ukraine, and Russian planes are still dropping bombs on Syrian towns. Many of the same generals within the Russian General Staff who were involved in the Georgian invasion are today working on plans for new interventions. Collectively, the West effectively opted to treat the 2008 Russian-Georgian war as a minor conflict in the chronically unstable Caucasus. And that failure to deliver an adequate response to Moscow’s breach of international norms paved the way for further conflicts that have damaged the European security system, possibly beyond repair. Russia was energized by the easy victory and intoxicated by its newfound “Great Power” ambitions (Vedomosti, August 2).
 
Georgia overcame the shock of defeat and continued to push ahead—in fits and starts—with democratic consolidation and economic reforms. The government in Tbilisi still insists on its desire to join both the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the EU. Part of the hard work to implement this choice was again undertaken last week (August 1), with the launch of the annual NATO exercise Noble Partner 2018 (which will conclude on August 15), on Georgian soil. More than a thousand United States military personnel and five M1A2 Abrams tanks are involved this year (Kommersant, August 1). Moscow responded with larger exercises, which spread into the quasi-independent but de facto Russian-occupied Abkhazia (RIA Novosti, July 27). Russian propaganda has focused on the “lessons” the 2008 war allegedly taught the “misbehaving” South Caucasus neighbor. At the same time, the media narrative has sought to obscure the ongoing deprivation of Russia’s “protectorates” of Abkhazia and South Ossetia (Rossiiskaya Gazeta, August 2). New threats of an import ban on Georgian wine are again being invoked, perhaps as a kind of asymmetric response to the sanctions on Russia contemplated by the US Congress (Nezavisimaya Gazeta, July 22).
 
Georgia remains an irritant for the Russian leadership. But greater ire is presently focused on Armenia, which has energetically undertaken new reforms following the peaceful “Velvet Revolution” in May (Novaya Gazeta, August 3; see EDM, April 24, May 3, June 25). President Vladimir Putin has positioned himself as a champion in the struggle against the chaos of revolutions, but he took Armenia for granted and mistook the street protests in Yerevan for an insignificant commotion; he then had to pretend that the new Armenian leadership answers Russia’s interests just fine (Moscow Echo, May 31). But as this leadership launched a fierce campaign against corruption, centered on former president Robert Kocharyan, the attitude in Moscow hardened (Carnegie.ru, August 2). Specifically, the Kremlin expressed displeasure with the investigation against Yuri Khachaturov, Armenia’s former chief of the General Staff. Khachaturov presently serves as the secretary general of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), an institution that grants Russia the role of security manager in the post-Soviet space (Rossiiskaya Gazeta, July 31). The firm dominance Moscow seemingly established by punishing Georgia ten years ago is beginning to look ineffectual as Armenia tries to democratize.
 
The August 2008 war convinced Putin that military force would remain Moscow’s most efficient and directly applicable instrument of policy, so he set Russia on a course of militarization and rearmament. Presiding over the St. Petersburg Naval Parade, on July 29 (see EDM, August 2), he clearly admired the show of rebuilt military might, even if the economic costs of the newly approved 2027 State Armament program are becoming unaffordable (Ezhednevny Zhurnal, July 30). “Wonder missiles” come with a price, and the Russian economy teeters on the brink of sliding from stagnation to a sudden crisis, as occurred soon after the war with Georgia (Kommersant, August 2). Many of the billionaires in Putin’s court are unhappy about the redistribution of resources in favor of the defense-industrial complex, which generates no profits and produces weapon systems, like the domestically lauded Armata main battle tank, at such expense that the military command is routinely forced to cancel orders (Rossiiskaya Gazeta, July 30). Some of Putin’s oligarchs own yachts much larger than the newly-built Admiral Makarov frigate, which was the star of the naval parade in St. Petersburg; but they cannot sail them into the marinas of Nice or Valetta because of sanctions (Forbes.ru, July 5).
 
Militarism does not address the interests and lifestyles of the majority of Russian elites. And the general public, harmed by falling incomes, is also growing tired of it (Moscow Echo, August 3). A recent poll shows 68 percent support for expanding ties with the West, with 42 percent of respondents expressing a positive attitude toward the US (Levada.ru, August 2). This could be a short-term swing, caused by the positive coverage of the Helsinki summit between Putin and US President Donald Trump. But Russians’ similarly positive attitude toward Georgia has long been an established trend. Triumphalism over the 2008 victory has largely evaporated. And even the most celebrated achievement of annexing Crimea offers ever-decreasing joy as mundane matters, such as the increase in the retirement age, dominate public attention (Moscow Echo, August 2). The Kremlin needs to find a way to counter the growing perception that the country is hurtling in the wrong direction. The disgruntled oligarchs have little to suggest, but the top brass have plans ready for new exercises in projecting power and “patriotic mobilization” (Republic, August 3).
 
Despite gleeful reflections in the Russian media on the August 2008 war, easy victories are, in fact, usually quite costly and can result in protracted engagements in places of little material value. Rational choice is, however, a rare exception in Moscow’s decision-making mechanisms, which are closely attuned to the whims of the Kremlin boss. Putin can hardly enjoy a nice summer break: his agenda for developing dialogue with Trump has gone nowhere after Helsinki (see EDM, July 23, 30), while Syria generates new risks and the Caucasus produces endless irritants. The economic mandarins in the government, with their sad forecasts and boring data, can hardly expect to have Putin’s ear in the coming weeks; but the generals might find good opportunities for their proactive propositions. August often brings bad luck for Russia. But ten years ago, Moscow made its own misfortune, from which it still has not escaped.
 

Wim Wenders doc “with” Pope Francis ends with Armenian canticle (video)

PanArmenian, Armenia
Aug 6 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Writer and director Wim Wenders has made a new documentary, “Pope Francis – A Man of His Word”, which chronicles Francis’ life as the leader of the worldwide Catholic Church and concludes with an Armenian canticle, Religión en Libertad says in an article.

According to Wenders, the film is both “about” and “with” the pope. In the movie, Francis discusses a series of topics, while Wenders is the narrator and illustrator. The Pope does not talk to Wenders, he talks to the viewers.

According to the article, the prefect of the Secretariat for Communication of the Vatican, Dario Viganó, asked Wenders at the end of 2013 to “make a film with Pope Francis and not about Pope Francis”.

The filmmaker collaborated with Francis himself, and had unrestricted access to the vast archive of TV footage and other materials of the Holy See.

“Not even in the best of my dreams would I imagine making a film about Pope Francis. […] It was a unique opportunity,” Wenders said recently.

The words of the Pope, he says, are powerful because they are based on the truth, affirms the filmmaker. And when you get to the end of the documentary, you hear the beautiful, supernatural sounds of Psalm 53, sung to the Pope during his trip to Armenia: “The fool says in his heart, “There is no God.” God looks down from heaven on all mankind to see if there are any who understand, any who seek God.”

“In a documentary without masses and sacraments or scenes of the Pope confessing young people, this overwhelming song is the closest thing to a recognition of the liturgy and the Mystery of the Church. Wenders wants to express that the Church is great, mysterious, traditional,” the article says.

Arrest of former Armenian president jars Russia

Emerging Europe
Aug 6 2018


Mr Kocharyan (pictured above) has denied the charges, claiming that they are politically motivated, instrumented by Armenia’s new prime minister Nikol Pashinyan.

“These charges are fiction, fabricated, unjustified and have a political implication,” he said. “I am prepared to go to prison.”

Following the 2008 vote the opposition held protest rallies, contesting the results of the election and claiming that their candidate, Levon Ter-Petrosyan had won. The protests were violently dispersed by security forces, and 10 people were killed in clashes with police. Armenia’s Constitutional Court upheld the election results.

Mr Kocharyan has repeatedly defended the post-election crackdown in 2008, saying that it prevented a violent of seizure of power by the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition. Earlier this year, he blamed Pashinyan for the bloodshed.

The arrest of the former president has caused a great deal of controversy, not confined to within Armenia’s borders.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says Moscow is “concerned” that Armenia’s new leadership is making what he called politically motivated moves against former leaders who have been targeted in an anti-corruption campaign.

“The events of the last few days…contradict the recent declarations of the new Armenian leadership that it was not planning to pursue its predecessors on political grounds,” said Mr Lavrov.

Mr Pashinyan was swept into office on earlier this year following weeks of mass protests against corruption and cronyism.

Turkish Press: Ancient city of Ani helps link Turkey, Georgia: Envoy

Anadolu Agency (AA), Turkey
August 5, 2018 Sunday
Ancient city of Ani helps link Turkey, Georgia: Envoy
 
 
‘I’m here to discover what we can do to introduce Ani to Georgia,’ says Turkish Ambassador Fatma Ceren Yazgan
 
By Cuneyt Celik
KARS, Turkey
 
Eastern Turkey’s ancient city of Ani is a link in healthy ties between Ankara and Tbilisi, said Turkey’s ambassador to Georgia on Sunday.
 
“History is part of improving cultural relations between Turkey and Georgia. Ani is part of Turkish-Georgian relations, as well as regional relations,” Fatma Ceren Yazgan told Anadolu Agency during her tour of the ruins of Ani in the eastern Kars province.
 
Also called the World City, the City of 1,001 Churches, the Cradle of Civilizations, and the City with 40 Doors, the ancient city was added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 2016.
 
“Ani has a well-known status in UNESCO. I’m here to discover what we can do to introduce Ani to Georgia,” whose border is nearby, she said.
 
Interest in the site from both Turkish and foreign tourists grew when it joined UNECSO’s World Heritage List, Yazgan added.
 
Located along Turkey’s border with Armenia, the site, including Islamic architectural work from the 11th and 12th centuries, was the capital of Armenian emperors from 961 to 1045 A.D. at the time of the Pakradouni Dynasty.
 
The first settlement in Ani dates back to 3,000 B.C, and in its history was home to nearly two dozen civilizations.
 
Tourists show great interest in the Mosque of Abul Manuchihr, the first Turkish mosque, the Amenaprgic Church, and the Ani Cathedral.
 
Yaren Zeynep Saglam, a visitor, expressed her admiration for the archeological site.
 
“There are great works here, the architecture is perfect. I’m really impressed,” she said.

Chaley – Kyma Hakobyan, participera à l’émission "Prodiges"

La Voix de l’Ain
5 août 2018


Chaley – Kyma Hakobyan, participera à l’émission “Prodiges”

  • Dans Bugey
La jeune chanteuse lyrique Kyma Hakobyan

Kyma Hakobyan aura 16 ans le 28 décembre prochain, et elle arrive d’Arménie. Elle fera ses débuts sur France 2 dans l’émission “Prodiges”.

De l’émotion et des frissons durant ce beau concert que donnait l’association “Ain cœur d’Art”. Kyma a enchanté le public venu nombreux ce dimanche dans l’église de Chaley.

Elle est arrivée tout droit d’Arménie, en novembre 2016, à Hauteville-Lompnes. Depuis ses deux ans, Kyma chante tout le temps. Ses parents, Anahit et Saro la soutiennent, et son professeur de chant est Sophie Millet-Savarin.

Kyma s’exprime : “En septembre prochain, j’intégrerai une seconde. Mon rêve est d’être chanteuse. J’aime donner des émotions et faire partager ma passion avec le public au travers de mes chants.

Actuellement, je suis soprano et je serai mezzo-soprano. En novembre prochain, je participerai à l’émission Prodiges sur France 2“.