Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting is not planned at FIFA World Cup grand opening, says spox

Categories
Politics
Region

A meeting with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev is not planned within the framework of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s upcoming visit to Russia, the PM’s spokesperson Armen Yeghoyan told ARMENPRESS.

“I can say from the agenda that the meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected. Nikol Pashinyan will attend the opening ceremony of the FIFA World Cup. A meeting with Ilham Aliyev is not planned,” he said.

Earlier it was reported that the 2018 FIFA World Cup opening ceremony will be where for the first time the new Armenian leader and Azerbaijan’s president will meet, as both have confirmed participation in the ceremony.

President appoints new judges

Category
Society

President Armen Sarkissian appointed Sergei Chichoyan to serve as judge in the court of first instance of general jurisdiction of Gegharkunik province, the president’s office said.

The president made two other similar appointments today – Grigori Vardanyan was appointed judge of the first instance court of general jurisdiction of Yerevan, and Mekhak Gevorgyan was appointed judge of first instance court of general jurisdiction of Kotayk province.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/11/2018

                                        Monday, 
Top Law-Enforcement Official Resigns
Armenia - Aghvan Hovsepian, head of the Investigative Committee, arrives for a 
meeting in Yerevan, 10 December 2014.
Aghvan Hovsepian, one of Armenia’s most powerful and controversial 
law-enforcement officials, resigned on Monday one month after the dramatic 
change of the country’s government.
Hovsepian, 65, has headed the Investigative Committee ever since its 
establishment in 2014. The law-enforcement agency comprises former police and 
Defense Ministry divisions conducting criminal investigations.
Hovsepian announced his resignation at a meeting with Investigative Committee 
officials. An official statement on the meeting did not quote him as giving any 
reason for his decision.
“I want to thank all those with whom I have worked in the law-enforcement 
system for 45 years,” he was reported to tell his subordinates. “I want to 
thank you. We have worked together for nearly four years.”
Hovsepian defended his track record, claiming that the Investigative Committee 
has become an independent body legally protected against undue influence from 
the government, prosecutors, courts and other state bodies. He expressed hope 
that his successor will maintain this “independence.”
Hovsepian also urged investigators to steer clear of “politics.” “But this 
doesn’t mean that you should stay away from public life,” he said.
The head of another Armenian law-enforcement agency, the Special Investigative 
Service (SIS), likewise stepped down on June 6. Vahram Shahinian cited the 
“existing circumstances” in a letter of resignation submitted to Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian. The SIS is primarily tasked with prosecuting state officials 
accused of abuse of power.
Also resigning last week was Arman Mkrtumian, head of the Court of Cassation, 
Armenia’s highest body of criminal and civil justice. Lawyers had for years 
accused him of restricting judicial independence.
Mkrtumian and Hovsepian were widely regarded as key pillars of the former 
ruling regime swept from power by a wave of mass protests led by Pashinian.
Hovsepian served as Armenia’s prosecutor-general from 1998-1999 and 2004-2013. 
He was appointed in 2014 to run the newly created Investigative Committee by 
then President Serzh Sarkisian.
Throughout his long tenure Hovsepian was dogged by allegations of serious human 
rights violations voiced by opposition and civic groups. As chief prosecutor, 
he also played a key role in government crackdowns on the opposition, notably 
the deadly suppression of 2008 post-election protests in Yerevan. Dozens of 
opposition members, including Pashinian, were jailed on controversial charges 
at the time.
Myanmar Activist Wins Prize Created In Memory Of Armenian Genocide
        • Artak Hambardzumian
Armenia - Ronhingya community lawyer Kyaw Hla Aung receives the 2018 Aurora 
Prize for Awakening Humanity at a ceremony in Yerevan, .
A veteran lawyer defending the rights of Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingya Muslim 
minority received at the weekend an international humanitarian award created in 
memory of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey.
Kyaw Hla Aung was declared the winner of the 2018 Aurora Prize for Awakening 
Humanity at a pre-dawn ceremony held near an ancient Armenian monastery, 
against the backdrop of Mount Ararat located just across Armenia’s border with 
Turkey. He received the prize carrying a $100,000 personal grant during another 
solemn event held in Yerevan on Sunday evening.
“The support of the Aurora Prize serves as important recognition for all of the 
Muslim victims of human rights violations,” he said.
The annual award was established in 2015 by three prominent Diaspora Armenians: 
philanthropists Ruben Vardanyan and Noubar Afeyan, and Vartan Gregorian, the 
president of the Carnegie Corporation of New York. It is designed to honor 
individuals around the world who risk their lives to help others.
The prize is named after Aurora Mardiganian, an Armenian genocide survivor who 
witnessed the massacre of relatives and told her story in a book and film.
Armenia - The main official ceremony of the 2018 Aurora Prize for Awakening 
Humanity in Yerevan, .
Kyaw Hla Aung was selected by an international committee from among 750 
nominations submitted from 115 countries. The selection committee comprises 
dignitaries such as Mexico’s former President Ernesto Zedillo, former French 
Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and former U.S. Ambassador to the United 
Nations Samantha Power.
Kyaw Hla Aung has for decades been trying to protect the Rohingya community 
against discrimination and grave human rights abuses committed by Myanmar 
authorities. He has spent a total of 12 years in prison as a result of his 
efforts.
Kyaw Hla Aung is based in Sittwe, the capital of Myanmar’s northwestern Rakhine 
state where more than one million Rohingya lived until a year ago. Myanmar’s 
armed forces launched last summer a brutal crackdown on them in response to 
armed attacks by Rohingya insurgents.
Nearly 700,000 Rohingya have fled to neighboring Bangladesh since August, 
creating one of the world’s largest refugee camps. The refugees have reported 
systematic killings, burnings, looting and rape committed by security forces.
The United Nations and the United States have described the crackdown as ethnic 
cleansing - an accusation which Myanmar denies.
BANGLADESH -- Rohingya refugee children struggle as they wait to receive food 
outside the distribution center at Palong Khali refugee camp near Cox's Bazar, 
Bangladesh, November 17, 2017.
“Kyaw Hla Aung’s work personifies the spirit of the Aurora Prize,” said Mary 
Robinson, a former UN high commissioner for human rights and another member of 
the selection committee.
Power, for her part, lamented what she called the international community’s 
inadequate response to the Rohingya refugee crisis. “An entire people has been 
systematically murdered, raped and deported from their country, and no contact 
group has been formed,” the former U.S. envoy said in Yerevan.
Vardanyan, who is an Armenian-born Russian businessman, drew parallels between 
the plight of Rohingya Muslims and Armenians deported and massacred by the 
Ottoman Turks during the First World War. “I think there was something symbolic 
[about the choice of the 2018 prize winner,]” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service. “But it was really not our decision.”
Like the previous two Aurora Prize winners, Kyaw Hla Aung was also awarded an 
additional $1 million to donate to organizations that inspired his work. He 
chose three charities providing medical and other relief aid to Rohingya 
refugees.
No Major Change In Armenian Policy On Karabakh, Says Official
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - Deputy Foreign Minister Ruben Rubinian speaks to RFE/RL in Yerevan, 
.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has not significantly changed Armenia’s position 
on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, a senior Armenian official insisted on Monday.
Deputy Foreign Minister Ruben Rubinian said there are “no big differences” 
between the new and former Armenian governments’ views on how to end the 
long-running dispute with Azerbaijan. In that regard, he downplayed Pashinian’s 
calls for Karabakh representatives’ direct involvement in Armenian-Azerbaijani 
peace talks.
Speaking in the Armenian parliament last week, the premier again said that he 
has no mandate to “negotiate on behalf of the Karabakh people.” The Armenian 
premier said at the same time that he is “ready to negotiate Azerbaijan’s 
President Ilham Aliyev.”
The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry denounced Pashinian’s remarks and reiterated 
that it will not directly negotiate with the Karabakh Armenians.
Rubinian, who is a senior member of Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, insisted 
that Yerevan is not setting any preconditions for renewed talks with Baku. 
“Pashinian did not say that he won’t be negotiating on behalf of 
Nagorno-Karabakh,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). “He simply 
made arguments in support of our view that in order to increase the 
effectiveness of negotiations Artsakh (Karabakh) needs to be involved in them.”
Rubinian stressed that Yerevan is keen to “maintain the dynamic” of the 
negotiation process. “Mr. Pashinian has repeatedly said that he is ready to 
meet and negotiate with [Azerbaijani President] Ilham Aliyev,” he said.
Both leaders have been invited by Russian President Vladimir Putin due to visit 
Moscow next week to watch matches of the 2018 football World Cup hosted by 
Russia. A spokesman for Putin said on Monday he will hold fresh talks with the 
Armenian leader.
Rubinian said that “as of now” there are no plans to organize Pashinian’s first 
meeting with Aliyev.
Pashinian has yet to publicly clarify his view on a framework Karabakh peace 
accord that has been advanced by U.S., Russian and French mediators for more 
than a decade. It calls for a phased settlement that would start with the 
liberation of virtually all seven districts around Karabakh which were fully or 
partly occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces during the 1991-1994 war. In 
return, Karabakh’s predominantly ethnic Armenian population would determine the 
territory’s internationally recognized status in a future referendum.
The former Armenian government headed by Serzh Sarkisian said all along that 
this peace formula is largely acceptable to it.
Pashinian, Dashnak Minister Spar Over Pension Reform
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian arrives for a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan, .
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian rebuked on Monday a member of his cabinet 
affiliated with the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) for 
objecting to an unpopular reform of Armenia’s pension system which he believes 
must be completed this year.
The new Western-backed system, which the former Armenian government started 
introducing in January 2014, is to cover 270,000 or so Armenian workers born 
after 1973. It requires them to earn most of their future pensions by 
contributing sums equivalent to at least 5 percent of their gross wages to 
private pension funds until their retirement.
The former government said that the previous mechanism for retirement benefits 
is not sustainable because of the country’s aging and shrinking population.
The reform met with fierce resistance from many affected workers mostly 
employed by private firms. Thousands of them demonstrated in Yerevan in early 
2014.
Armenia’s Constitutional Court effectively froze the reform in April 2014. In 
response, the government enacted a law that allowed people working for private 
entities to opt out of the new system until July 2018. Officials say some 
200,000 workers are already covered by it.
Pashinian raised questions about the future of the reform when he appointed one 
of the leaders of the 2014 protests, Mane Tandilian, as minister for labor and 
social affairs last month. Tandilian said later in May that the reform should 
remain optional for private sector employees for at least one more year.
Pashinian defended the reform, however, when he presented the new government’s 
policy program to the parliament last week. But he made a major concession to 
Armenians affected by it. A bill approved by his cabinet would cut the pension 
tax rate from 5 percent to 2.5 percent.
Armenia -- Nikol Pashinian (L) and Artsvik Minasian.
Minister for Economic Development Artsvik Minasian openly opposed the bill 
during a cabinet meeting in Yerevan. “I am against this mandatory pension 
system, while realizing that today’s solution is a forced one,” Minasian told 
Pashinian.
“I don’t want to criticize the decision which is being made,” he said at the 
same time.
A visibly irritated Pashinian responded by saying that all ministers must share 
“collective responsibility” for government decisions. “Those who don’t shoulder 
this responsibility are not with us,” he warned bluntly. “I want us to make 
this clear.”
Minasian assured the premier that he will comply with any decision approved by 
fellow ministers.
Pashinian remained unimpressed. “It could not be otherwise,” he told Minasian. 
“You are thereby not doing anyone a favor.”
Minasian is one of the two ministers representing Dashnaktsutyun in the new 
government. The party, which was also represented in former President Serzh 
Sarkisian’s government, cut an effective power-sharing deal with Pashinian 
after he swept to power in a nationwide wave of mass protests a month ago.
Karabakh Leader Vows To Quit In 2020
Nagorno-Karabakh -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Karabakh 
President Bako Sahakian emerge from a government building in Stepanakert, 9 May 
2018.
Bako Sahakian, Nagorno-Karabakh’s president, announced on Monday that he will 
not again seek reelection when his current term in office ends in 2020.
Sahakian controversially extended his decade-long rule after Karabakh enacted a 
new constitution in a referendum held in February 2017. The new constitution 
calls for the Armenian-populated region’s transition by 2020 to a fully 
presidential system of government.
The authorities in Stepanakert said that this change will put Karabakh in a 
better position to cope with the unresolved conflict with Azerbaijan. Their 
opponents insisted, however, that Sahakian is simply keen to hold on to power.
In July, the Karabakh parliament voted to allow Sahakian to remain in power 
during the three-year “transition period.” The Karabakh leader did not say 
until now whether he will run in the next presidential election due in 2020.
“I want to officially declare that I will not participate in those elections as 
a presidential candidate,” Sahakian told Armenia’s and Karabakh’s public 
televisions. Instead, he said in remarks cited by the Armenpress news agency, 
he will take “all necessary measures” to ensure that the vote is free and fair.
The announcement followed the resignations of several top Karabakh officials 
resulting from a June 1 violent dispute in Stepanakert between several officers 
of Karabakh’s National Security Service (NSS) and other local residents.
The brawl triggered angry demonstrations against what their participants see as 
impunity enjoyed by law-enforcement officials and their relatives. About 200 
people blocked Stepanakert’s main avenue for four days, demanding the 
resignation of the NSS and police chiefs.
Several individuals, including three NSS officers, were arrested and the 
Karabakh government pledged to ensure an objective criminal investigation. 
These assurances failed to satisfy the protesters. The protests ended only 
after a June 4 appeal from Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Two days later, the chiefs of the local police and NSS as well as the Karabakh 
state minister, Arayik Harutiunian, tendered their resignations.
Sahakian insisted on Monday that the protests did not cause a political crisis 
in Karabakh. He admitted, though, that they exposed public discontent with his 
administration and especially some of its officials. He said the authorities in 
Stepanakert will draw necessary “conclusions” from the unrest. In particular, 
he said, they will now appoint more competent individuals enjoying “the 
people’s trust” to key positions.
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

Fwd: The California Courier Online, June 14, 2018

The California Courier Online, June 14, 2018

1-         Commentary

            Unfortunate Coincidence: Turkish-American

            Attacks Bourdain on the Eve of his Suicide

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Despite Netanyahu, Knesset to vote on Armenian Genocide motion

3 –        Celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain, dead at 61

4 –        Trump Commutes Sentence after Kardashian Champions Alice Johnson

5 –        Corey Silverstrom: ‘A crash course in who he is’ playing for Armenia

6 –        My Namesake

            By Aram Maljanian

7-         Novelist Aris Janigian to Serve as Master of Ceremonies

            for Diocesan Debutante Ball

8-         Roslin Art Gallery in Glendale Celebrates ‘Queer-Armenian Art’

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

1 –        Commentary

            Unfortunate Coincidence: Turkish-American

            Attacks Bourdain on the Eve of his Death

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

A friend forwarded to me the copy of a lengthy email that was sent by
Ibrahim Kurtulus, a Turkish-American from New York City, to hundreds
of CNN employees harshly criticizing Anthony Bourdain, Chris Cuomo and
others for acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. The subject of
Kurtulus’ email is titled: “When CNN’s Chris Cuomo and ‘Especially’
Anthony Bourdain Legitimize RACISM.”

By an unfortunate coincidence, the Turkish email was sent on June 5,
2018, barely three days before Bourdain committed suicide. Given the
large number of Armenians and non-Armenians who have written in recent
days expressing their unfounded suspicion that Azerbaijan or Turkey
caused Bourdain’s death, I want to make it clear that I do not believe
in such conspiracies. Sadly, Bourdain, who had used drugs for many
years, was a heavy drinker and suffered from serious depression, is
reported to have committed suicide in his hotel room during a visit to
France last week.

In addition, those who propagate such conspiracies are damaging
Armenian interests. Anthony Bourdain, who had the popular TV travel
and food show “Parts Unknown” on CNN, was blacklisted by Azerbaijan
for having gone to Artsakh after visiting Armenia late last year. The
show aired on CNN last month to the great delight of Armenians
worldwide and dismay of Azeris and Turks. By alleging that Azerbaijan
killed Bourdain, Armenians are simply discouraging non-Armenians from
visiting Artsakh.

Kurtulus also attacked Chris Cuomo of CNN for interviewing on his show
Cong. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.). Kurtulus described Schiff as “a racist”
for championing the recognition of the Armenian Genocide and compared
him with David Duke of the Ku Klux Klan. Kurtulus then picked on
Congresswoman Nanci Pelosi (D-Calif.) for acknowledging the Armenian
Genocide in her 2016 statement. Kurtulus ridiculously claimed that
Armenians may have died of “old age” rather than being murdered during
the Genocide.

Kurtulus also blasted Amy Goodman, host of the award-winning
‘Democracy Now!’—a TV/Radio news program that airs on 900 public
broadcast stations in North America—for acknowledging the Armenian
Genocide in her show.

Kurtulus not only denied the occurrence of the Armenian Genocide by
calling it a ‘hoax,” but turned around and blamed Armenians for
committing an “extermination campaign against Turks.” He also falsely
claimed that “a systematic extermination campaign against Armenians
would have been not only unlikely, but out of the question.”

Kurtulus then criticized Anthony Bourdain for accompanying Serj
Tankian on his trip to Armenia and Artsakh. Kurtulus described Tankian
as “a member of an Armenian-American heavy metal band (System of a
Down), a major insidious purpose of which has been to brainwash
worldwide youthful fans into acceptance of an ‘Armenian genocide.’”
Kurtulus went on to accuse Bourdain of repeating “all of the hateful
propaganda in his episode (
?v=A3oEJjTbDpo).”

After comparing Bourdain to white ‘supremacists’ in Charlottville,
Virginia, Kurtulus asked: “what is the difference?” Regrettably,
Kurtulus defamed anyone who has supported the veracity of the Armenian
Genocide. It is no one else’s fault that the Ottoman Turkish
government organized the extermination of the Armenian people. If, as
a result, the Turkish nation has had a horrible reputation, it is
wrong to blame it on the Armenian victims. Kurtulus’ argument is the
equivalent of condemning anyone who speaks about the Jewish Holocaust
because that may tarnish the reputation of Germans.

Kurtulus then disparaged all of the scholars who have written on the
Armenian Genocide, in addition to Amb. Henry Morgenthau who had
written an eyewitness account in his book, The Murder of a Nation.
Instead, Kurtulus praised so-called ‘scholars’ who are genocide
denialists funded by the Turkish government.

Kurtulus ended his email with more insults directed at Bourdain: “If I
lived in a less racist society, Anthony Bourdain would be losing his
job in a moment. Yet the problem does not only rest with hateful
bigots such as Anthony Bourdain; why did [CNN] President Jeff Zucker,
who has also been receiving our communications, allow for Bourdain’s
vicious racism?”

Kurtulus also blamed other CNN employees for not protesting “Anthony
Bourdain’s irresponsibility, hatefulness and corruption of the facts.
…How could CNN journalists exercise any tolerance over Anthony
Bourdain’s prejudices, as well as his twisting of the facts?”

Rather than countering the many lies and distortions of Kurtulus, I
will simply quote from Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the Turkish
Republic, who during an interview published by the Los Angeles
Examiner on August 1, 1926, confessed: “These leftovers from the
former Young Turk Party, who should have been made to account for the
lives of millions of our Christian subjects who were ruthlessly driven
en masse from their homes and massacred, have been restive under the
Republican rule. They have hitherto lived on plunder, robbery and
bribery, and become inimical to any idea or suggestion to enlist in
useful labor and earn their living by the honest sweat of their brow.”

 Since I have received a copy of the Kurtulus email along with the
complete list of hundreds of email addresses at CNN where he
dispatched his email, I will send my article to the same email
addresses so CNN journalists will not be deceived by Kurtulus.

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

2-         Despite Netanyahu, Knesset to vote on Armenian Genocide motion

On June 6, it was reported that the Knesset will hold debates on the
motion calling to recognize the Armenian Genocide, Arutz Sheva
reported quoting Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation.

According to the Corporation, Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein intends
to hold a vote next week on a motion by Meretz Chairwoman Tamar
Zandberg. Last week, Edelstein postponed a debate and vote on the
bills, because a majority of the Knesset would not have voted to
support the recognition. Two weeks ago, the Knesset approved a request
by the left-wing Meretz party to hold a Knesset debate and a vote on
the issue.

Approval of the resolution would be despite the position of the
Foreign Ministry, which announced earlier this week that it opposes
advancing the proposed law on the subject, the website says.

On June 4, Haaretz reported that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu delayed the vote until after the Turkish election so as not
to aid Erdogan’s campaign.

Netanyahu postponed the committee’s discussion of the proposed laws
until after the Turkish general election scheduled for June 24, said
officials. Israeli officials recommended not raising the issue of the
Armenian genocide before the elections for parliament and president
because it would serve Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in his
reelection campaign and help him unite Turkey behind his party.

Israel partially recognizes the Armenian genocide: The Knesset
Education Committee has recognized it and debated bills on the issue,
and the Knesset has been marking the Armenian genocide every year
since 2012, but proposals of the sort are usually blocked because of
the special relationship with Azerbaijan, which is involved in an
ongoing military conflict with neighboring Armenia, as well as the
effect it would have on Israel’s tense relations with Turkey.

Over the past few weeks, Knesset members have been trying to outdo
each other in coming up with ways to take revenge on the Turkish
government for ordering the Israeli ambassador out of the country and
recalling the Turkish ambassador in response to the deaths along the
border fence with the Gaza Strip last month, as well as the move of
the

A Likud minister said that the decision on recognizing the Armenian
genocide must be made in isolation from the present conflict with
Turkey. “We must conduct a principled discussion on the question of
whether Israel needs to officially recognize the Armenian genocide.
Such a step must not be taken as revenge against Erdogan’s
statements,” said the minister.

Two weeks ago, Education Minister Naftali Bennett, the chairman of
Habayit Hayehudi, called for the recognition of the Armenian genocide
and of the rights of the Kurdish minority in Syria.Bennett also
announced he had formulated a comprehensive “plan of action” for the
Knesset, the government and the public, which he shared on social
networks. “I ask you, the public, to cancel your trips to Turkey.
Immediately,” he wrote. “Take your vacation in the Galilee and the
Golan. You also have a role to play,” he added. In one of many such
attempts, in February the Knesset voted down a bill to recognize the
Armenian genocide sponsored by MK Yair Lapid (Yesh Atid). Two weeks,
ago two MKs, Amir Ohana (Likud) and Itzik Shmuli (Zionist Union)
submitted a similar bill, one of the three under consideration, and
are seeking to push it through in expedited fashion in response to
Erdogan’s actions and remarks. “Netanyahu and his ministers roar like
lions but fall like flies every time Erdogan threatens,” said Shmuli.

“The day on which the prime minister of the state of the Jewish people
agrees to be a collaborator with the denial of the genocide of another
people, who were slaughtered in concentration camps and on death
marches, this is a black day and a deep moral stain on all of us. What
would we have said if the world had refused to recognize the Holocaust
because of diplomatic unpleasantness and economic interests? If we
become partners in the denial of the tragedies in history we will
never succeed in preventing those that may come in the future. I call
on the government to set aside political considerations and do the
necessary historic justice,” said Shmuli.

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

3 –        Celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain, dead at 61

PARIS (AP) — Anthony Bourdain, the celebrity chef and citizen of the
world who inspired millions to share his delight in food and the bonds
it created, was found dead in his hotel room Friday, June 8, in France
while working on his CNN series on culinary traditions. He was 61.

CNN confirmed the death, saying that Bourdain was found unresponsive
Friday morning by friend and chef Eric Ripert in the French city of
Haut-Rhin. It called his death a suicide. Bourdain’s assistant Laurie
Woolever would not comment when reached by The Associated Press.

Widely loved and rarely afraid to speak his mind, he mixed a
coarseness and whimsical sense of adventurousness, true to the rock
‘n’ roll music he loved. Bourdain’s ‘‘Parts Unknown’’ seemed like an
odd choice for CNN when it started in 2013—part travelogue, part
history lesson, part love letter to exotic foods. Each trip was an
adventure. There had been nothing quite like it on the staid news
network, and it became an immediate hit.

CNN is currently airing the 11th season of ‘‘Parts Unknown,’’ and
Bourdain was in France shooting an episode for the 12th season. CNN
said it has not made a decision yet on whether it will proceed with
the current season

Bourdain filmed an episode of “Parts Unknown” in Armenia, which aired
on CNN on May 20. In his Field Notes on the CNN website, Bourdain
wrote, “For years there’s been a steady drumbeat of inquiries from
Armenian-American fans of the show: ‘When will you visit Armenia?’
‘Why haven’t you been to my country?’ They were very legitimate and
increasingly troublesome questions. I wanted to go. I had every
intention of going. But I had yet to figure out how or—more
accurately—through whose eyes, through what perspective I’d look at
this very old and very complicated country.”

Bourdain accepted the invitation to visit Armenia by System of a Down
singer Serj Tankian, writing that he appreciated how Tankian was
trying to reconnect with his roots after having lived in the Diaspora.
Bourdain affirmed the Diaspora existed because of the Armenian
Genocide.

“Those who escaped or were pushed out by what can and should only be
called a genocide. It should be noted that Turkey continues to deny a
genocide ever took place. But I have no problem using that word. I am
both proud to use it and baffled by the world’s continued reluctance
to call the Turks’ carefully planned and executed murder in 1915 of an
estimated 1.5 million ethnic Armenians—and the displacement of
millions more—anything but what it was. Those horrendous events and
Turkey’s refusal to acknowledge them remain central to any discussion
of Armenia—a fundamental, unifying factor in defining what it means to
be Armenian.”

Bourdain knew that his words would create a ripple effect. “It is
unlikely I will be welcome in Turkey after this show. Because I filmed
in the disputed territory of Artsakh, I was informed that I have been
PNG’d (declared officially “persona non grata”) in Azerbaijan.”

Bourdain was deeply impacted by his visit to Armenia and Artsakh. “The
connection, the collective yearning, and the flow of money, resources,
and people from the Armenian diaspora back into the homeland are
powerful and important—as you will see. They are also vital to the
nation’s survival. An astonishing amount of money is returning home
from abroad—for schools, hospitals, and institutions—to help the
country grow. And an ever larger number of overseas Armenians are
returning, to see where they came from, to enjoy the food, and to
reconnect—if they still can—with family, tradition, a way of life.”

Colleagues, friends and admirers shared their grief Friday. CNN chief
executive Jeff Zucker sent a company letter calling Bourdain “an
exceptional talent. A storyteller. A gifted writer. A world traveler.
An adventurer.”

Bourdain was twice divorced, from his first wife Nancy Putkoski; and
from his second wife, Ottavia Busia, with whom he has a daughter,
11-year-old Ariane Bourdain.

He had been dating Italian actress Asia Argento since 2017; the couple
met while Bourdain was filming “Parts Unknown” in Rome.

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

4 –    Trump Commutes Sentence after Kardashian Champions Alice Johnson

(ABC News)—Alice Johnson, a 63-year-old grandmother serving a life
sentence on drug charges, had an emotional reunion with her family
Wednesday after her sentence was commuted by President Donald Trump.

The cause to release Johnson was championed by reality TV star Kim
Kardashian West, a White House official told ABC News.

Kardashian West was the one who broke the news to Johnson that she was
going to be released, Johnson told reporters outside of the prison in
Aliceville, Alabama, where she was being held. Johnson said she heard
her name called over the intercom for her to report to her case
manager when she heard Kardashian West’s voice.

“I was free,” Johnson said Kardashian West told her. “I was going to
rejoin my family.”

Johnson said she wanted to thank the president for giving her “another
chance” at life. “I feel like my life is starting over again,” she
said. “It’s a miracle day.”

When asked what it was like to see her family for the first time since
she was freed, Johnson rejoiced that she wasn’t wearing handcuffs.

“I’m free to hug my family,” she said. “I’m free to live life. I’m
free to start over. This is the greatest day of my life. My heart is
just bursting with gratitude.”

Kardashian West shared Johnson’s enthusiasm.

“Best News Ever!!” Kardashian tweeted of the news and later added
additional thanks to the administration for its efforts.

Kardashian West lawyer Shawn Holley told ABC News: “I just got off the
most wonderful, emotional and amazing phone call with Alice, Kim and
Alice’s lawyers. Kim was the one to tell Alice that she was being
released. It was a moment I will never forget. Once Alice’s family
joined the call, the tears never stopped flowing.”

A lawyer for Johnson did not immediately respond to ABC News’ requests
for comment.

“Ms. Johnson has accepted responsibility for her past behavior and has
been a model prisoner over the past two decades. Despite receiving a
life sentence, Alice worked hard to rehabilitate herself in prison,
and act as a mentor to her fellow inmates,” the White House said in a
statement announcing the commutation of her sentence.

“While this Administration will always be very tough on crime, it
believes that those who have paid their debt to society and worked
hard to better themselves while in prison deserve a second chance,”
the White House said in a statement.

Kardashian West personally advocated for a presidential pardon who, as
a first-time offender, was given a mandatory life sentence plus 25
years in 1997 for her role in a cocaine distribution ring.

In a tweet last week, the president said he and Kardashian West talked
about “prison reform and sentencing” during their recent visit in the
Oval Office of the White House. Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and
advisor also met with West to discuss his efforts on prison reform.

Kardashian West, in an interview with Mic following that visit last
week, said she felt the president listened to her concerns.

“I think that he really spent the time to listen to our case that we
were making for Alice,” Kardashian West told Mic in an interview of
her conversation with the president. “He really understood, and I am
very hopeful that this will turn out really positively.”

“Alice Marie Johnson was convicted of a nonviolent drug offense in
1996 and received a sentence far too severe for the crime: life
without the possibility of parole,” said Jennifer Turner of the ACLU
in a statement. “I’m grateful to the president for allowing Alice to
go home after 21.5 years in prison and to Kim Kardashian for her
advocacy on Alice’s behalf.”

In a recent Skype interview, Tretessa Johnson told ABC News she was
grateful that Kardashian West took an interest in her mother’s case.

“She could have just seen the video or read an article or whatever and
just said ‘oh that’s a shame’ or ‘whatever’ and went on with her life,
but she didn’t, she chose to get involved in a major way,” Johnson
said of Kardashian.

The Johnson gathered letters of recommendations from her warden and
members of Congress in their initial effort to seek clemency from
President Barack Obama.

Trump is currently considering nearly a dozen appeals for clemency on
top of the five formal pardons he has issued so far, White House
officials tell ABC News.

Administration officials say the president is not only contemplating
possible pardons – which wipes out a conviction – but also
commutations, which leave the conviction intact and on the person’s
record while reducing the punishment.

As clemency petitions work their way through the system, the president
routinely denies the “vast majority” of requests, a White House
official said.

Recently the administration notified a group of 180 petitioners that
they would not be granted presidential clemency, according to the
Justice Department.

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

5 –        Corey Silverstrom: ‘A crash course in who he is’ playing for Armenia

By Robert Kuwada

(The Fresno Bee)—Corey Silverstrom is Armenian on his mother’s side,
the family roots in Harpoot.

For years, and in a tight-knit community in Fresno, that was just part
of the equation for Silverstrom. It was basketball, mostly, and more
basketball, and as a senior at Bullard High in 2013 he was the Bee’s
co-Player of the Year along with teammate Chris Russell after leading
the Knights to a third consecutive Division I title and a No. 12
ranking in the state.

At no time did Silverstrom ever think basketball and his Armenian
heritage would intersect

But after finishing his career at Chico State, they did—and in a few
days Silverstrom will be off to Yerevan, the Armenian capital, to play
with the Armenian National Team. There is a training camp, then a
tournament in Lebanon, then a game against Denmark in a pre-qualifying
game for FIBA Eurobasket 2021.

It is a chance to continue playing basketball, obviously, and could
lead to pro opportunities overseas or in the NBA G-League.

But, also, it is much more.

“I take a lot of pride in the Armenian culture,” Silverstrom said.
“Just being able to play in front of my culture, my heritage, it’s
something special.

“It’s something that I really take a lot of pride in and it has me
even more excited to play for them and get to experience where it all
started for me. My family background, getting to experience that, it’s
something I’m really looking forward to.”

Silverstrom at this point knows only the half of it, said Aragad
Abramian, who grew up in Los Angeles, played college basketball at
Saint Katherine’s College and the University of Antelope Valley, and
is on the Armenian team.

It will hit him, deeper than he knows.

“It’s a prideful thing, because you’re representing the country and
not a team,” Abramian said. “For me, it actually hit me after the
game. When I got there, it was straight business. But once you’re
playing, you see the fans and the excitement that you’re bringing to
the city after the game, the day after the game. I’d go out and people
would just be happy. You brought excitement to the whole city, the
whole country.”

In a victory over Albania in a Eurobasket 2021 pre-qualifying game in
February, Abramian scored 15 points and had 10 rebounds and five
assists. Another Armenian American, A.J. Hess, led the Armenian team
with 21 points.

“I stepped into a taxi and then the taxi driver was telling me how
happy his family was just to see us win,” Abramian said. “That was one
of the best things.”

Silverstom will get that, Abramian said, when the two do connect. He
departs Tuesday for Yerevan; a long way from his couch in Chico, where
he was lounging one afternoon when his phone rang and his basketball
career took a turn.

“I got a call from my old assistant coach at Bullard (Hovig Torigian)
and the first thing he said is, ‘Hey, how’s it going? Do you want to
play for the Armenian National Team?’

“I was like, ‘Do I want to play for the National Team? What type of
question is that?’ “

That answer, Torigian said, came quickly.

“I’ve known Corey since he was in the fifth grade,” he said. “I’ve
known his family. Mom is Armenian. Dad is American. I’m sure growing
up he got a little Armenian heritage, knowing the family dynamics. The
opportunity for him to go play over there and see the homeland where
his mom’s side of the family came from, the culture, is a good thing
for him. It’s a crash course in who he is and where his people came
from.

“But as for the basketball aspect of it, that was a no-brainer. Any
time you have chance to play for a national team that’s only going to
boost your stock in continuing basketball after college. A lot of
people know, the jump from high school to college is slim and after
college it’s even slimmer, so for him to be able to go do that, it
says a lot for him.”

Silverstrom said he didn’t know how serious the offer was after that
first call. But then there was another and another. The Armenian coach
watched tape of his games at Chico State, where as a senior he
averaged 14.6 points, 3.0 rebounds and 1.9 assists. He hit the
Internet, searching for all things Armenian Basketball. He reached out
to Abramian; along with Hess, Luke Fischer (Marquette) and Ryan
Boatright (Connecticut) also have played for the Armenian National
Team.

George Tarkanian, son of former Fresno State coach Jerry Tarkanian, is
the coach of the Armenian Under-18 team.

“It all just kind of happened,” Silverstrom said. “It’s a dream. I
look at it as an opportunity. I feel like I’ve been underrated my
whole life, so getting a chance to play against another country’s top
players and being able to do what I do to show that I belong on a big
stage is something I’ve always thought about.

“I’m just happy to have the opportunity and really blessed with it.”

This article appeared in The Fresno Bee on June 8, 2018.

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

6 –        My Namesake

            By Aram Maljanian

The following is a creative writing assignment written by the author,
based on his mother’s recollections about the oral history of her
grandfather Aram Prudian. The passport (pictured, right) was issued by
the Republic of Armenia on Oct. 11, 1924, when Prudian was 18—granting
him permission to travel from Paris to Mexico City, where Prudian
lived until he moved his family to Los Angeles.

It was difficult to swallow the gold coins. The large disks clanked
against my teeth, and their metallic flavor was unpleasant. The rough
edges cut the roof of my mouth before I forcibly gulped them down with
the torn morsels of bread my mother offered. Our parents had urgently
handed the gold to my brother and me. My nine-year-old self, delighted
with the sudden gift, nearly ran off before my big brother, Vartan,
grabbed me.

We were never allowed to stick our fingers into the jars where the
coins were hidden. Vartan and I would only hear the tinkling of the
coins as they fell against the clay. Whirling around, I watched in
confusion as he and my parents, bread in one hand and gold in another,
hurriedly shared a final meal. I had no idea of what was coming: the
murder of my father, the endless marching and the coming years of
uncertainty.

Choking down the coins, my brother and I cried while my parents clung
to us in a desperate embrace. They were acting so strangely. Their
trembling faces were so quiet and so serious. I couldn’t hear their
voices above my sniffling, though I did snatch one of their whispers
which was “hokees” (my beloved).

We were crouching in the very back of our cellar when we heard the
pounding on the door. The battering fists sent palpable vibrations
throughout our home. That memory I can still feel in my feet.

The door crashed to the floor. We were separated in a flurry of dark
men who wrenched our family apart. I remember how the fiercest Turk I
had ever seen clasped my father’s shoulder, sneering insults at him.
His boot buckled my father’s knees, violently sending him to the
ground. It happened right in front of me. After the saber flashed, he
never stood again. From then on, my mind was disconnected, and I
recall little of leaving our home.

The Gendarmes forced us to march. At first, the column of sobbing
women and children wound its way among familiar buildings and streets,
but those gradually gave way to the farmland. Our province of Erzurum
was a patchwork of orchards, vineyards, and cotton fields. The
colorful spring spectacle we so enjoyed brought me no joy on that day.

No men accompanied us, except for the Gendarmes. No fathers to comfort
us, no grandfathers to protect us, no uncles to walk alongside us.
None. Trudging westward, more women and children joined us. After
every village our numbers grew with the very young and the very old
and all ages in between, but still no men. The brutal sun beat down
endlessly, singeing our unprotected skin. The nights held their own
terrors.

What we didn’t know was that the marches were meant to kill off as
many Armenians as possible. My father and mother never told me about
the series of massacres the Turks inflicted on the Armenian population
from the late 1800s, but we became part of the sequel to the Turkish
hate.

The Gendarmes forced us to march in a southwestern direction along the
Western Euphrates. This was the first time since leaving Erzurum days
ago that we could drink from the shining water. It brought life and
death to our column because many of the weakest were forcibly drowned
by the Turks. It was here that Vartan and I had to leave our mother.

At some point after the river, the Gendarmes had abandoned us to the
elements. We continued to walk for lack of knowing what else to do.

Like a mirage, a town of white tents materialized on the horizon.
White arms welcomed our shrunken band with food, water, and medicine.
We exchanged our tattered rags for clothes and our blistered feet were
shod with sandals.

I remember a truck. I remember a train. I remember a boat. These
vehicles carried my brother and me to Italy where we were separated. I
was placed in an orphanage in Milan, and Vartan was cared for by the
priests on the island of San Lazzaro in Venice.

Years of poverty and loneliness followed as I drifted through Europe,
making my way to Mexico where Vartan and I were reunited.

I recorded this account so that our family would know my story.
Because the Lord delivered me from this calamity, I hope you have a
greater purpose in your life than survival.

You are my namesake, Aram.

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

7-   Novelist Aris Janigian to Serve as Master of Ceremonies for
Diocesan Debutante Ball

LOS ANGELES—The Ladies Auxiliary of the Western Diocese of the
Armenian Church of North America has announced that Aris Janigian,
critically acclaimed Armenian-American novelist, will serve as the
Master of Ceremonies for the 45th Annual Debutante Ball on Sunday,
June 24.

“The year 2018 has been dedicated to our youth. The youth, a central
focus of the community, is a large family of the faithful of Christ
whose life is defined by God’s divine love. May this evening serve as
a calling for our youth to devote themselves to the faith of our
forefathers, to rekindle in their hearts the love for their ancestral
homeland and to lead lives as noble citizens of the blessed country of
the United States of America,” said His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan
Derderian, Primate of the Western Diocese.

Aris Janigian is internationally known for three of his highly
acclaimed novels, “Bloodvine,” “Riverbig,” and “This Angelic Land,”
which uses the Armenian experience of exile, memory and assimilation
as a lens through which to explore the broader American experience.
His 2016 novel, “Waiting for Lipchitz at Chateau Marmont,” about a
screen writer who goes from riches to rags, spent 17 weeks on the Los
Angeles Times best-seller list.

Holding a PhD in psychology, from 1993 to 2005, Janigian was senior
professor of humanities at the Southern Institute of Architecture. He
has published in genres as diverse as poetry, social psychology, and
design criticism. Janigian has written extensively to advance Armenian
causes and most noteworthy were a series of letters he exchanged with
the Los Angeles Times in 2002 and with the New York Times in 2004,
that proved instrumental in getting both newspapers to quit using the
word “alleged” in reference to the Armenian Genocide.

Janigian was a contributing writer to West, the Los Angeles Times
Sunday magazine; a finalist for the William Saroyan Fiction Prize, and
the recipient of the Anahid Literary Award from Columbia University.
He was born and raised in Fresno, where he now lives with In Sun, his
wife, daughter Maria (graduating from high school in 2019) and
daughter Valentine, a Freshman at Stanford University.

“We are delighted that our guests will have the opportunity to
recognize one of the most important Armenian-American writers of his
generation,” said Ladies Auxiliary chair Cindy Norian.

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

8-         Roslin Art Gallery in Glendale Celebrates ‘Queer-Armenian Art’

By Siran Babayan

In April, a teenage boy was stabbed in Yerevan, by a man who suspected
he was gay. A few months earlier, a transgender woman was beaten, her
apartment set on fire. In both cases, the attackers were released.
These are just two of the many hate crimes that have targeted LGBTQ
Armenians in recent years in Armenia, which didn’t decriminalize
homosexuality until 2003.

Coincidentally, in March, Glendale’s Roslin Art Gallery and WeHo-based
Gay and Lesbian Armenian Society (GALAS) announced they would co-host
“The Many Faces of Armenians: A Celebration of Queer-Armenian Art,” a
small but significant group show that’s the first of its kind in the
United States.

The local Armenian community, the largest of the diaspora, is home to
many Armenian artists and several Armenian galleries, not to mention
the soon-to-be-built Armenian American Museum in Glendale, slated to
open in 2022. So a show of this nature only seems fitting.

But exhibit organizers, including GALAS board member Lousine
Shamamian, admit they initially struggled to attract submissions from
queer Armenian artists, who battle the stigma of homosexuality and
pressure from their family, culture and the Armenian Orthodox Church,
the oldest Christian church in existence.

“I thought we would get bombarded by art,” says Arno Yeretzian, owner
of Roslin, which is housed inside Abril Bookstore, his 40-year-old,
family-owned business. “Based on our history, we should understand how
it feels to be the other, to be outcasts and to be oppressed. But
Armenia is pretty intolerant, and some immigrant communities outside
are even more conservative. There’s still this fear of coming out. Not
everyone is public about it.”

So the gallery expanded its criteria to include both queer and
queer-friendly artists who celebrate “notions of queerness and
otherness.” “Things came trickling in, so I got excited,” Yeretzian
says.

The show received some two dozen submissions. Among the nearly 20
participating artists, most are L.A.-based and some identify as queer.
Their mixed-media work incorporates Armenian history and iconic
symbols—the Armenian Genocide, Mount Ararat, pomegranates, etc.—that
defiantly confront not only the duality of two cultures but of being a
gay immigrant, a minority within a minority. The exhibit features
local as well as artists from abroad who have likewise embraced
queerness and otherness in their featured work such as Kamee
Abrahamian, Tarek Apelian, Mariam Arzuyan, Lisa Baroutgian, Rouzanna
Berberian, Kristine Anahit Cass, Vatche Demirdjian, Sophia Gasparyan,
Anna Kostanian, Ani (Alik) Lusparyan, Levon Mardikyan, Mari
Mansourian, Salpy Semerdjian, Gagik Vardanyan, and Seeroon Yeretzian.

Sophia Gasparian, 46, a mother of two who was born in Yerevan and
lives in Silver Lake. Gasparian’s paintings and street-style collages
often integrate images of children; her “Explain This to Your God”
features two boys holding hands with muted rainbow colors hanging
above.

“To be honest, I don’t care what the community thinks,” Gasparian
says. “What matters to me is that my children grew up open-minded. I’m
very confident with who I am. The church doesn’t decide what’s moral
for me.”

Also in the show is Levon Mardikyan, 61, who’s from Turkey, where his
family dates back centuries. Mardikyan’s prints display vintage
photographs and artifacts from Turkey alongside modern pieces, such as
“Yin Yang Yan,” which includes the announcement of his wedding to his
partner of 33 years and even their cake toppers.

“It’s symbolic of male camaraderie,” says Mardikyan, who lives in Northridge.

At 19, Ani (Alik) Lusparyan, a Cal State Los Angeles student from
Glendale, is the show’s youngest artist. Lusparyan looks not only at
the clash of being Armenian and queer but at body-image issues,
especially in “Coming Home,” a semi self-portrait of a nude woman
standing in front of the famous Mount Ararat with a forget-me-not
flower— a symbol used to commemorate the centennial of the 1915
Armenian Genocide—placed between her thighs.

“The work that I do is very intertwined with cultural, sexual and
gender-identity affirmations,” Lusparyan says. “They’re a sense of
self-love and belonging, that my ancestors created this body and I
should be proud. They show that Armenia is my home and this is my
culture and yet I can be queer and exist within these boundaries.”

Throughout the exhibit’s run, the gallery will host related events. On
Friday, June 15, there will be a film preview and fundraiser for the
in-progress cut of the science-fiction short film “Transmission”,
followed by a discussion with filmmakers Anahid Yahjian, Emily
Mkrtichian, Kamee Abrahamian, and lee williams boudakian. On Tuesday,
June 19, there will be a panel discussion titled, “Self-_expression_ in
the Armenian LGBTQ Community” featuring author/performer Nancy
Agabian, author Christopher Atamian, and GALAS president Haig
Boyadjian, moderated by Rosie Vartyter Aroush, Ph.D. On Thursday, June
21, Equality Armenia will sponsor an evening with New York-based
author Christopher Atamian, presenting his recently published book, A
Poet in Washington Heights. On Saturday, June 23, author/performer
from New York, Nancy Agabian will present a solo performance about
domestic violence exploring the power dynamics among genders titled,
“Family Returning Blows.” The exhibit will close on Thursday, June 28,
along with a talk by Rosie Vartyter Aroush, Ph.D. titled, “A Life of
Otherness: The intersection of Queerness and Armenianness within
familial and communal networks.”

“The Many Faces of Armenians: A Celebration of Queer-Armenian Art,”
runs through June 28 at Roslin Art Gallery, 415 E. Broadway, Suite
100, Glendale. For more information, call (818) 243-4112.

This article appeared in the L.A. Weekly on June 7, 2018.

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

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Remembering the ‘Iron Duke’: Former Gov. George Deukmejian lauded as aleader who ‘viewed himself as ordinary but did extraordinary things’

Orange County Register (California)
Sunday
Remembering the ‘Iron Duke’: Former Gov. George Deukmejian lauded as aleader who ‘viewed himself as ordinary but did extraordinary things’
 
By Chris Haire
 
 Read by Mark F. on 6/9 Deukmejian died May 8 at age 89. He was known as a tight-fisted, tough-on-crime governor who had a calming influence on California politics in the 1980s.
 
 
 
It was not an elegy, but an ode to a life well-lived.
 
Gov. George Deukmejian, who died last month, was remembered in a series of affectionate eulogies Saturday afternoon during a public memorial service in Long Beach, his adopted hometown.
 
Hundreds sat in the wood-paneled Terrace Theater for the “celebration of life,” as Deukmejian’s political colleagues and proteges, as well as his son, lauded the two-term Republican governor, describing him as a self-effacing but dynamic leader who reshaped California’s judicial system and reined in spending.
 
But those tasked with summing up Deukmejian’s 89-year life also spoke about a man who cherished moments of calm while away from the political fray, who held to his beliefs but was unafraid to change his mind, and who acted on what was moral, rather than what was politically expedient, even if it meant standing against his political allies.
 
“He was a good, decent, humble man,” said former Long Beach Mayor Bob Foster, “who viewed himself as ordinary, but who did extraordinary things.”
 
Deukmejian, born in upstate New York, built a 29-year career in California politics, and was highly regarded by Republicans and Democrats alike for his bipartisanship and integrity. He served as governor from 1983 to 1991. But in Long Beach, he was equally known for his decadeslong love affair with the city as for his political accomplishments.
 
During Saturday’s memorial, Foster and four other speakers led the audience through the highlights of the governor’s political career and the less well-known anecdotes of his personal life, including:
 
• The time he held firm against the gun lobby to sign a bill banning assault weapons, his actions stoked by the slaughter of children in a Stockton schoolyard.
 
• His penchant for strolling down Belmont Shore’s Second Street in search of his beloved ice cream.
 
• His determination to crack down on crime and appoint tough-willed, conservative justices.
 
• The moment when the “Iron Duke” momentarily went “soft on crime,” slapping his knee, rather than spanking one of his daughters as his wife, Gloria, had urged after the child misbehaved.
 
The soft on crime moment came, jokingly, from George Deukmejian Jr., who offered a glimpse into his father’s personal side that the public rarely saw, someone who easily blended in as the average lawn-mowing American family man.
 
“His face was familiar, but he was often misidentified,” his son said, recounting the time a museum tour guide discussed how unpronounceable she found the name Deukmejian with the governor standing in front of her.
 
There was also the time Deukmejian video recorded his son, 1 year old at the time, sitting under a Christmas tree with an electrical cord in his mouth (though the filming suddenly halted when Deukmejian realized the child aimed to bite the live wire).
 
Or the time that same troublesome son performed a splash-happy cannon ball into the pool as the governor snoozed on a raft.
 
“People say my dad never cursed,” Deukmejian Jr. said, reminiscing about how his bratty behavior often derailed his dad’s frequent longing for peace and quiet. “But he called me the offspring of a female house pet.”
 
The audience erupted, laughing and applauding.
 
The other speakers were:
 
• Marv Baxter, a retired California Supreme Court justice who recalled that Deukmejian set his sites on the governor’s job “because the attorney general doesn’t appoint judges, the governor does.”
 
• Ken Khachigan, Deukmejian’s senior campaign strategist and a family friend, who portrayed how revered the governor became in the Armenian community.
 
• Steve Merksamer, the governor’s chief of staff from 1983 to 1987, who detailed the tough choices his boss and mentor made as the state’s chief executive.
 
The trio, as well as Foster, rattled off Deukmejian’s political accomplishments: appointing more than 1,000 justices, boosting the assault-weapons ban, balancing the state budget without raising taxes and persuading the University of California Board of Regents to divest from companies in then-racially segregated South Africa. Nelson Mandela himself acknowledged that California’s policy shifts helped bring an end to apartheid.
 
“He was a wonderful man,” Baxter said. “And a great governor.”
 
Merksamer, who once worked in the state attorney general’s office, remembered meeting with Deukmejian during his campaign to become California’s chief prosecutor in 1978. Deukmejian wanted to meet with Merksamer and another colleague to learn more about the attorney general’s office and how it operated.
 
“He didn’t ask for contributions, didn’t talk about himself at all,” Merksamer said. “He just wanted to know how the system could be made better. And he picked up the check, too.”
 
The speakers spoke kindly of Gloria, who at one point received a standing ovation, for her ability to endure the scrutiny of the public eye as the state’s first lady and raise her and Deukmejian’s children largely out of the limelight.
 
The couple’s son described her as someone who mourned for her husband but didn’t wear her heart on her sleeve and was strong for her family.
 
“Clearly, she’s running the family now,” he said.
 
And Foster said of Deukmejian: “He married well.”
 
But the eulogies were not the only moments that provided insight into the governor’s personality.
 
The Long Beach Symphony Players performed a medley of George Gershwin compositions from “An American in Paris.” The up-tempo brass-band tunes were some of Deukmejian’s favorites, said Donna Lucas, a former Deukmejian staffer who emceed the memorial.
 
And there were two videos — “a life in pictures” montages — one of career highlights, the other of the family man.
 
The former showed pictures of Deukmejian with President Ronald Reagan and Bob Hope, sound bites and videos from speeches, and him dancing with Gloria at his inaugural ball.
 
The latter montage showed photos of Deukmejian with Santa Claus, at his children’s weddings and spending time at home.
 
The final photo showed Deukmejian’s back as he sat on a bench, on the pier, looking out at the ocean.
 
It looked as if the governor, so used to the clamor of Sacramento, was at last enjoying a little of that peace and quiet he so coveted.

Aurora Prize winner urges Suu Kyi to recognize Rohingya community

Press Association Mediapoint
Sunday 9:51 AM BST
AURORA PRIZE WINNER URGES SUU KYI TO RECOGNISE ROHINGYA COMMUNITY
 
by Nina Massey, Press Association, in Yerevan, Armenia
 
 
A Rohingya lawyer has called on Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyi to recognise his community as human beings.
 
Kyaw Hla Aung was talking after being awarded this year’s 1.1 million dollar (£820,000) Aurora Prize in Yerevan, Armenia.
 
The activist was recognised for his lifelong fight for equality, education and human rights for the Rohingya in Burma, in the face of persecution, harassment and oppression.
 
Speaking after a sunrise ceremony at the foot of Mount Ararat, Mr Aung said: “I have a message that Aung San Suu Kyi should recognise our work and our community as human beings and as an ethnic group in Myanmar (Burma).”
 
Ms Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who lived under house arrest for years for her pro-democracy activism, faces allegations that she has failed to speak out over violence against the Rohingya.
 
In May, the Commons International Development Committee said said ministers must recognise that Ms Suu Kyi was becoming part of the problem.
 
The MPs said the main Department for International Development (DfID) aid programmes were drawn up at a time of “high optimism” after Ms Suu Kyi became the de facto president in 2016.
 
“Since then there has been ethnic cleansing, the breaking of ceasefires, a closing of civil society space, including restrictions on media freedoms and the persecution of journalists, and a reduction in religious freedom.
 
“The situation has now dramatically changed and as a result we need to see dramatic change in our engagement with Burma.”
 
Mr Aung was presented the the prize, granted by the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, on behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide and in gratitude to their saviours.
 
Vartan Gregorian, co-founder of the Aurora Prize and a member of the selection committee, said: “As we remember the horrors and violence experienced by Armenians – especially women and children – on the deportation route during the genocide, it is with a great sense of responsibility that we stand ready to support Kyaw Hla Aung’s advocacy work that will hopefully lead one day to the enactment of national and international policies to protect and defend the vulnerable.
 
“Kyaw Hla Aung is doing tremendous work, at great risk to himself, and exemplifies the far-reaching impact one person can have to galvanise a movement, and to help individuals transform their lives.”
 
Mr Aung said: “I am very happy. It encourages me to work more and more for humanity and to fight against discrimination.
 
“I am very proud of this prize because it is defending my work and also myself – because we are in a very dangerous country. So it will protect me from this kind of danger.”
 
Mr Aung said he would put his portion of the prize towards education and healthcare in Sittwe, the capital of Rakhine state in Burma.
 
As the 2018 Aurora Prize laureate, he receives a 100,000 dollar (£74,500) grant and the opportunity to continue the cycle of giving by donating the remaining million dollars (£745,000) to organisations of his choice.
 
He will split the award between three international organisations – Medecins Sans Frontieres, Malaysian Medical Relief – MERCY Malaysia, and the International Catholic Migration Commission.
 
Mr Aung has worked for decades using his legal expertise to appeal for basic human rights for the stateless Rohingya.
 
Receiving his award, he said he hoped it would encourage the other two Aurora Prize humanitarians for this year to continue their work.
 
They are Sunitha Krishnan, women’s rights advocate and co-founder of Prajwala, India, and Father Tomas Gonzalez Castillo, founder of La 72, a centre that supports Central American migrants in Mexico.

10 Spectacular mountain monasteries

The Traveller
Sunday
10 Spectacular mountain monasteries
by  Brian Johnston
 

Monks always had an eye for remote places and fabulous scenery, and this ninth-century monastery is the perfect example, lodged on a basalt shelf above a gorge in southeast Armenia with views to snowy mountains. The cable-car ride is magnificent. For centuries, it was an important religious, political and trading centre, and in the Middle Ages housed a university. It’s now history and earthquake ravaged, but still impressive. See armenia.travel

This Tibetan Buddhist monastery rises from a rock in the Spiti Valley at over 4000 metres in the Himalayas, above the tightly clustered village of Kibar. It’s part monastery, part fortress, with the current labyrinth of tiny prayer rooms and staircases dating from the 14th century. Lovely Buddhist murals line the walls. Some 350 very welcoming monks live, chant and often play pipe music here. See himachaltourism.gov.in

The country’s most important Orthodox destination inhabits two big caves with an exterior facade that clings to a cliff face some 900 metres above the Zeta Valley. It’s a hugely popular pilgrim destination that houses the bones of St Basil of Ostrog. The view is superb. In the valley below, a lower monastic complex has colourful frescoes and accommodation for pilgrims, plus a purportedly cure-all natural spring. See montenegro.travel

Lodged on a cliff side in the Paro Valley, the Paro Taktsang complex is an important sacred site devoted to Padmasambhava, who is said to have meditated in a cave here and introduced Buddhism to Bhutan in the eighth century. Getting to the huddle of temples, icon-crammed chambers and rock crevices involves a two-hour climb up some thousand-odd steps and across a bridge at a waterfall. Breathtaking, literally. See bhutan.travel

See also: Bhutan, the ultimate bragging-rights destination

This hilltop extravaganza south of Rome is a pilgrim destination, since it houses the relics of sixth-century St Benedict, the founder of Christian monasticism. He perhaps never envisaged vast buildings embellished with mosaics, paintings and stucco. Views get ever better as you ascend the switchback road to the summit. The well-defended outcrop is also notable as the site of a key World War II battle in 1944; the abbey was rebuilt after bombing. See abbaziamontecassino.org

No prizes for the architecture here, the main drawcard being the 12th-century Black Madonna, patron saint of Catalonia, enthroned above the altar, plus top artworks in the monastery’s museum. The location, 48 kilometres west of Barcelona and accessible by rack railway, is also magnificent, since the monastery is wedged 300 metres below the summit of Montserrat, with plunging views extending to the coast. See montserratvisita.com

Dodge aggressive monkeys and clamber up 777 poop-slick steps and your reward is a petite, golden-spired monastery where marble Buddhas smile and strange, mischievous spirits called nats are appeased by locals with offerings of fruit. Mt Popa sits atop an astonishing basalt outcrop some 50 kilometres southeast of Bagan with views over lush fields and distant mountain ridges. Seen from a distance, it looks like an improbable, golden sci-fi fantasy. See myanmartourism.org

This fabulous medieval concoction isn’t exactly a mountain, more a huge rock sitting on a bay in Normandy. Watch out on the sands, as tides are notoriously tricky. The conical outcrop rises like an illumination from a book of prayers, with a great Gothic abbey topping a village of houses and churches. Visit the abbey’s interior – where steps are worn by centuries of shuffling monks and tourists – to admire stupendous foundations and sea-gazing outlooks. See ot-montsaintmichel.com

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Emperors once favoured the Heng Mountains of Shanxi Province for Daoist retreats. The Hanging Temple is lodged halfway up a cliff above a frothing river, with wooden facades fronting scooped-out caves linked by rickety wooden walkways. It looks like the set of a kung-fu fantasy movie. The temple unites Daoist, Buddhist and Confucian elements and has been clinging on here, in one form or another, since the fifth century. See shanxichina.gov.cn

The improbably located, gravity-defying World Heritage monasteries in northern Greece sit atop grey rock pinnacles, some soaring 300 metres above the Pinos Valley, and surrounded by sometimes snow-capped mountains. Orthodox monks have lived here since the 11th century and were once hauled up in baskets. Six monasteries are open to visitors. The oldest and most elaborate is Grand Meteora, featuring a 12-domed church hung with icons and adjacent monastic complex. See visitmeteora.travel

Brian Johnston travelled both as a guest of tourism offices and at his own expense.

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Sports: Mkhitaryan names his top three favorites to win the 2018 World Cup

Panorama, Armenia

Armenian national team captain and Arsenal attacking midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan says Spain, France, and Argentina are the top favorites that are able to win the 2018 World Cup to be held in Russia.
Mkhitaryan shared his opinion when answering the users’ questions during a live interview on Vkontake social media, organized by Alpha Bank.

Asked about the chances of Russia which is the host country of the World Cup, Mkhitaryan said: ”No need to put pressure on them. They have good chances to overcome the group stage. Russia has done great job and for sure I will back them.”

To remind, Russia will host the FIFA World Cup from June 14 to July 15. The fixtures will be played at 12 stadiums across 11 cities, with the host nation facing Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Uruguay in Group A.

Music: Cello finalists named in Khachaturian Competition in Armenia

The Strad


Event in Yerevan, Armenia, is down to last four competing for $15,000 first prize and place alongside successful former winners

Jonathan Swensen
Photo: Artyom Gevorgyan

The Khachaturian International Competition, which this year is focusing on the cello, has reached its final stage.

The finalists are:

  • Fedor Amosov (Russia)
  • Rustem Khamidullin (Russia)
  • Chae-Won Hong (South Korea)
  • Jonathan Swensen (Denmark)

The finals will take place on 12 and 13 June with a gala concert and awards ceremony on Thursday 14 June at the Aram Khachaturian Concert Hall in Yerevan, Armenia.

The competition began in 2003 on the 100th anniversary of Aram Khachaturian’s birth and rotates annually through piano, violin, cello, conducting and voice categories. 

It’s previous cello editions were won by Narek Hakhnazaryan (2006) and Andrei Ioniță (2013).

Sports: Wrestler Mkhitaryan brings Armenia a second medal in U23 European Championship

MediaMax, Armenia
Wrestler Mkhitaryan brings Armenia a second medal in U23 European Championship

Armenia representative Hovhannes Mkhitaryan (86kg) beat Patrik Szurovszki (Hungary) in the repechage and won the bronze medal on the last day of the tournament by beating Mihai Nicolae Palaghia (Romania) 10-0.

The first bronze medal was brought to Armenia’s freestyle team by Gevorg Mkheyan (70kg).