Sports: Mubadala World Tennis Championship: Karen Khachanov becomes 3rd-place prize winner

News.am, Armenia
Dec 30 2018

Russia’s No. 1-ranked tennis player Karen Khachanov has won the third-place prize at the Mubadala World Tennis Championship in Abu Dhabi, the capital city of the United Arab Emirates.

The 22-year-old Muscovite Armenian athlete defeated Dominic Thiem (Austria) in three sets, in the champion’s tiebreak.

In the final of the Mubadala World Tennis Championship, World No. 1 Novak Djokovic (Serbia) beat Kevin Anderson (South Africa) in three sets and became the winner of this tournament.

Grigor Hovhannissian, Artak Apitonian appointed Armenia deputy FMs

News.am, Armenia
Dec 30 2018
Grigor Hovhannissian, Artak Apitonian appointed Armenia deputy FMs Grigor Hovhannissian, Artak Apitonian appointed Armenia deputy FMs

11:26, 30.12.2018
                  

By the decision of Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Ashot Hovakimian, who earlier was appointed the Ambassador of Armenia to the Czech Republic, has been dismissed from office of Deputy Foreign Minister.

In accordance with another decision by the acting PM, Garen Nazarian, who recently was appointed the Ambassador of Armenia to the Holy See, also has been relieved of his duties as Deputy FM.

In line with another decision by Pashinyan, Grigor Hovhannissian and Artak Apitonian have been appointed deputy FMs.

Apitonian on Saturday was recalled from the office of the Ambassador of Armenia to Sweden, whereas Hovhannissian was earlier dismissed from his duties as the Ambassador of Armenia to the US.

Russian-Armenian gas talks underway under time pressure, says presidential spokesman

ITAR-TASS, Russia
Saturday 2:31 PM GMT
Russian-Armenian gas talks underway under time pressure, says presidential spokesman
 
 MOSCOW December 29
 
Russia and Armenia continue the talks on gas issues under time pressure, the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Saturday.
 
 
 
MOSCOW, December 29. /TASS/. Russia and Armenia continue the talks on gas issues under time pressure, the Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Saturday.
 
"They (talks) continue under time pressure, the Armenian colleagues are in contact with Gazprom," he said.
 
The issue of gas supplies was dwelled upon at the meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and acting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Moscow on December 27. Earlier Peskov said that "it was agreed to intensify the conversation on gas."
 
The Armenian authorities have repeatedly said earlier that they were negotiating a gas price reduction with the Russian side. In 2018, Armenia received gas on the border with Russia at the price of $150 per 1,000 cubic meters, which had been lowered to that level from $165 per 1,000 in 2016. Meanwhile, the fuel price for consumers was $290.

Letter to the Editor of the Lowell Sun (MA):Turkey: An unreliable ally

Lowell Sun (Massachusetts)
Saturday
Turkey: An unreliable ally
 
 LETTER TO THE EDITOR; Editorials
  
The revelations from the indictment of Michael Flynn's Turkish business partners expose what has been hidden from the general public — that the autocratic government of Turkey has long been illegally meddling in American domestic politics.
 
Flynn has now admitted that before he was appointed national security advisor, he was secretly lobbying for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, one of the world's leading violators of human rights. Turkey plotted with Flynn to kidnap cleric Fethullah Gulen from Pennsylvania despite the fact that for years Erdogan and Gulen were allies conspiring to continue the unacceptable and unjust denial of Turkey's perpetration of the genocide against its Armenian citizens during World War I.
 
Turkey's protests over the despicable murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi are a smokescreen to cover the fact that Turkish jails hold more journalists than any other country on earth. In Syria, Turkey repeatedly undermined the battle to defeat ISIS by bombarding and assaulting America's most dependable ally in the country, the Syrian Democratic Forces, because for Erdogan it is more important to eliminate U.S. allied Kurdish forces than ISIS radicals.
 
It is well past time for Washington to speak out against the pernicious influence of a Turkish government that has warped policies in Congress, the Pentagon, and the State Department by posing as a reliable ally.
 
ARA A. JEKNAVORIAN
 Chelmsford,
 Co-chair,
 Armenian National Committee, Merrimack Valley

Azerbaijani Press: In 2019 Baku may present ultimatum to Armenia, political scientist

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijani Opposition Press
Dec 30 2018
 
 
In 2019 Baku may present ultimatum to Armenia, political scientist
 
2018 December 30 ( Sunday )  00:38:47
"Russia will not forcibly dismiss Pashinyan"
 
The hopes for a solution to the Karabakh problem do not come true for years. However, the events of 2018 show that the next year may be decisive in the Karabakh settlement – this is the main conclusion of the lengthy analytical report of the Atlas Research Center, which is annually prepared by political scientist Elkhan Shainoglu.
 
For this, the necessary changes were implemented in Azerbaijan: permanent army exercises, movement of the front line in the Nakhchivan direction towards the enemy, withdrawal of the army unit from the border with Armenia for the possible direction of this military unit to the Karabakh front, cardinal personnel replacement in the Azerbaijani community of Karabakh, relative calm in fronts provided by Azerbaijan for the unhindered displacement of Pashinyan by his predecessor Sargsyan and others. Pashinyan, who did not take personal part in the occupation of the Azerbaijani territories, is more preferable to Azerbaijan than the previous rulers of Armenia, representing the Karabakh clan.
 
In 2019, Baku should perform the following tasks: the new leadership of the Azerbaijani community of Karabakh should intensify work in international organizations, the chairman of the community Tural Ganjaliyev will hold talks in European capitals, it is necessary to bring to the world no alternative to returning Azerbaijani refugees to their homes. It is necessary to achieve direct contacts between the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities of Karabakh to discuss the conditions for the preservation of this territory within Azerbaijan.
 
In 2019, several meetings are possible between I. Aliyev and Pashinyan, but before that Pashinyan must abandon the idea of bringing Karabakh separatists to the negotiations. So far, Pashinyan has not made statements indicating his intention to sign peace with Azerbaijan on terms that suits us. It is not excluded that Pashinyan will decide to continue the policy of the Karabakh clan, and then Aliyev can declare an ultimatum to Armenia, because geopolitical realities are favorable for us to solve the problem – the coldness in the Russian-Armenian relations and the warning statements of Lavrov demanding Armenians to give up their intentions get closer to NATO and the EU, sign an obligation on impossibility of the stay of foreign servicemen in Armenia, etc.
 
"Official Baku will wait for Pashinyan"s favorable attitude towards the problem throughout the first half of the year. If Yerevan doesn"t show practical intentions to solve the problem on the basis of international law, then the Azerbaijani army activates, and official Baku can put forward an ultimatum to Yerevan with something like this: "The Armenian army must liberate the territories around Nagorno-Karabakh in the next three months. Otherwise, Azerbaijan will take compulsory measures ", considers E. Shainoglu.
 
Baku"s determination will lead to toughening the demands of other countries to Armenia, who do not want a new war in the Caucasus, he added.
 
The Karabakh separatists are preventing Pashinyan's constructivism. The actual ruler of Nagorno Karabakh (NK), Bako Sahakyan, is against Pashinyan, but pretends to submit to him, at the same time without leaving the sphere of influence of Sargsyan and Kocharyan. Under such circumstances, Pashinyan will not make peace with Azerbaijan, trying to preserve the status quo. Visiting Khankendi, meeting there with local leaders and discussing the future budget of Armenia with the budget of NK involved in it, Pashinyan shows that he continues the policy of his predecessors. And this will certainly increase the military pressure of Azerbaijan on Armenia. "Pashinyan is afraid of war," the political scientist believes that Azerbaijan should use this factor in the Karabakh policy.
 
Not a single Armenian president or prime minister will voluntarily sign a peace treaty with Azerbaijan, this will not allow the internal situation in his country to be made. Therefore, Azerbaijan should force Armenia to peace. We will continue military pressure on the occupier and will acquire new weapons in various countries, the political scientist said.
 
E. Shainoglu highly appreciated Ankara"s last statement, which gave tough answer to Pashinyan"s proposal to establish the Armenian-Turkish good relations without preconditions. Turkey repeated that the normalization of relations is impossible without the liberation of the regions around NK, which means that Pashinyan will not be able to relieve the tension on the border with Turkey.
 
Touching on the Armenian-Russian relations, E. Shainoglu is confident that the Kremlin will continue close cooperation with Armenia, despite the fact that Putin did not congratulate Pashinyan because of Kocharyan"s arrest. But Moscow will not remove the Prime Minister from his post, because people support Pashinyan, and the Russian Federation does not want a civil war in Armenia to prevent Azerbaijan from taking advantage of it.
 

Planète Géo. Le Haut-Karabakh, jardin noir du Caucase

Franceinfo
30 dec 2018
 
 
Planète Géo. Le Haut-Karabakh, jardin noir du Caucase
 

franceinfo
Sandrine MarcyRadio France
C'est une région du sud Caucase dont on parle peu : le Haut-Karabakh. Ce petit territoire autonome, peuplé majoritairement d’Arméniens, veut s'ouvrir au tourisme.
 
Le Haut-Karabakh a proclamé son indépendance en 1991 mais il n'est pas reconnu par la communauté internationale. Haut Karabakh signifie littéralement « le jardin noir » du Caucase. Pour s’y rendre, il faut partir d’Erevan, la capitale de l’Arménie et suivre l’une des deux routes qui vous mènent dans cette contrée enclavée en Azerbaïdjan.  
 
Coincé entre l'Arménie et l'Azerbaïdjan
 
 Dans le magazine Géo, Patrick BOITET nous raconte son périple à travers ce territoire pas plus grand qu'une région comme l'Ile de France mais qui ne compte que 150.000 habitants.
 
Pour y aller, il faut partir d'Erevan, la capitale d'Arménie : deux routes servent de lignes de vie à cette région enchâssée dans les sommets du Caucase.
 
La route par le Nord inaugurée en 2017, passe par la ville arménienne de Varde­nis. Après avoir longé le lac Sevan. "Passage au col Amour, après trois heures de route depuis Erevan, on atteint l’une des frontières les plus épi­neuses de cette partie du monde… pour atteindre Stepanakert, petite capitale de 50.000 habitants".
 
 
Une terre de résistance
 
Sous son aspect bucolique avec ses montagnes, ses vergers et ses monastères, la région enclavée du Caucase du Sud autrefois soviétique, lutte pour son indépendance depuis 27 ans.
 
Cette région peuplée majoritairement d’Arméniens, chrétiens, appartient toujours à l’Azerbaïdjan, pays à majorité turcophone et chiite.
 
Le Haut-Karabakh était une "région autonome" au sein de la République socialiste soviétique d’Azerbaïdjan  Autoproclamée indépendante à la chute de l’URSS en 1991, elle n’est pas, à ce jour, reconnue par la communauté internationale.
 
Un cessez-le-feu a été signé en mai 1994 entre l’Azerbaïdjan, l’Arménie et le Haut-Karabakh mais, à ce jour, aucun règlement politique n’a été trouvé. Depuis le cessez-le-feu de 1994, elle est toujours sur le qui-vive le long de la frontière avec l’Azerbaïdjan. en 2017, le Haut-Karabakh s’est rebaptisé république d’Artsakh, nom qui désignait jadis la dixième province du royaume d’Arménie. Volonté de cet Etat de s’arrimer à la "mère patrie" et chargé d’histoire, le coeur de la résistance nationale.
 
Des paysages bucoliques
 
"Des montagnes veinées de rivières, qui font du Haut-Karabakh un jardin, c’est vrai, fertile et ensoleillé, où tout pousse en abon­dance, avec des produits meil­leurs qu’en Arménie car ici ils sont bio.
 
Chaque village des environs possède son tonir, un four en terre cuite, souvent enterré.
 
Avec ses monastères, la région est aussi un lieu de pèlerinage .
 
S'ouvrir sur le monde
 
Aujourd’hui, ce morceau d’Arménie veut donner l’image d’un pays accueillant et développer le tourisme… mais surtout pas le tourisme de masse, avis aux amateur de trekking !
 
  L’autre idée, c’est de miser sur l’apprentissage du numérique parmi les jeunes ; l’école Tumo installée dans la capitale du Haut-Karabakh  dispense une formation numérique gratuite, pour tous les jeunes.
 
"La dias­pora arménienne a largement soutenu la reconstruction pendant les années qui ont suivi la guerre, et investit activement dans l’éco­nomie locale. Exemple avec le centre Tumo créé en 2011 à l’initiative de grosses fortunes de la diaspora ; il est dédié à la création numérique pour les 12-18 ans. On vient de loin pour étudier ce modèle (la maire de Paris Anne Hidalgo a inauguré un centre Tumo à Paris)".
 
La fierté pour cette région autonome : un taux de croissance annuel moyen de 10% au cours de la dernière décennie.
 
En attendant, le conflit avec l’Azerbaïdjan n’est toujours pas réglé, des accrochages se produisent encore sur la ligne de front séparant ce territoire particulier de l'Azerbaïjan, le blocus économique est de rigueur.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Dans les pas de l’histoire en Arménie

Trek Magazine
29 déc. 2018
 
Dans les pas de l'histoire en Arménie
 
Asie > Arménie
 
Partez avec Terres d'Aventures
Thème
Randonnée et balade, Trekking
 
 
Situé au cœur d'une région fortement perturbée par le cours de l'histoire, l'Arménie a été le théâtre de nombreux chocs de civilisations. Pour autant elle en a hérité une richesse culturelle, architecturale et humaine sans nulle autre pareil. Le randonneur qui se rend sur les pentes du Petit Caucase prend rendez-vous avec l'histoire et avec des paysages très contrastés. Néanmoins, ce petit pays enclavé entre les géants russes, turques et iraniens n'en est qu'aux prémices de son activité touristique. Au cours de ce périple Terres d'Aventure prend le pari de vous amener à la découverte des futurs grands sites d'Arménie au travers de randonnées originales. Nous nous rendons par exemple dans le village de Khot à l'architecture "superposée" et dans celui de Kalavan, pionnier dans le tourisme rural en Arménie. Notre itinérance est ponctuée de plusieurs randonnées dont une itinérante entre les lacs Sevan et Parz pour une expérience de tourisme rural avec des nuits chez l'habitant, car l'hospitalité des Arméniens est peut-être leur plus belle richesse. Enfin, nous ne manquons pas de nous arrêter sur quelques-uns des sites majeurs du pays, comme les monastères de Khor Virap, Tatev, Sanahin ou Guegharde, ainsi que sur les volcans Armaghan et Aragats, sommet du pays. Randonnées hors sentiers battus, rencontres sincères, voyage dans le temps et diversité des paysages sont les maîtres mots de ce périple.
 
Niveau : soutenu
Temps d'activité : 17 jours
Programme : Plus d'informations sur le programme de ce voyage sur le site Terres d'Aventure
 
En savoir plus sur la destination Asie > Arménie
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Book Review: Mr Five Per Cent: The Many Lives of Calouste Gulbenkian, the World’s Richest Man

The Times, UK
December 29, 2018 Saturday 12:01 AM GMT

Review: Mr Five Per Cent: The Many Lives of Calouste Gulbenkian, the World's Richest Man 

The oil tycoon's ruthless pursuit of wealth is a lesson in the pathology of greed, says Gerard DeGroot


by Gerard DeGroot

Sometime in the summer of 1918 Calouste Gulbenkian was writing to his son, Nubar, from the Ritz in Paris. The Germans were shelling the city from 75 miles away. Boom! Gulbenkian told his son about a new oilfield in Borneo. Boom! Momentarily distracted when the room shook, he resumed his letter. "One shouldn't allow oneself to be put off by those barbarians and idiots," he wrote. Boom!

That moment at the Ritz perfectly encapsulates Gulbenkian. Nothing distracted him from making money. He was, writes Jonathan Conlin, an "inscrutable force of nature", loyal only to himself. Although he had a British passport, he was, in truth, a citizen of nowhere.

Financial reasons alone caused him to be in France during the First World War. The French, he realised, needed petrol. In 1914 their army had 316 petrol-driven vehicles. Four years later they had nearly 98,000. Thirsty engines caused an acute oil shortage. Gulbenkian sought "to profit from the current situation" and, at the same time, ingratiate himself with the French. From that same suite at the Ritz he also, it seems, provided financial advice to the Turks, France's enemy. That was Gulbenkian.

When he died in 1955 Gulbenkian was the richest man in the world, worth about £5 billion in today's money. His was not, however, a rags-to-riches story. The Gulbenkians, a wealthy Armenian family living in Istanbul, were traders. Calouste, born in 1869, was groomed to take over the family firm, but he had grander ambitions. A few years after his father's death in 1894, he cut his ties with his younger brothers. They went bankrupt as he grew steadily richer.

Gulbenkian's timing was impeccable. In 1897 he made a fortune financing London-based mining syndicates. He dealt briefly with the notorious fraudsters Horatio Bottomley and Whitaker Wright, cutting his ties with them just before the market collapsed and the police arrived. As cars began to appear on European streets, he entered the oil business. His strength, writes Conlin, lay in his "skill at negotiation and his nose for promising deals". He turned his lack of loyalty – to person or country – into an asset. "[His] talent for evading attribution to this or that side would underpin much of his . . . success as a deal-maker."

Gulbenkian wasn't interested in oil, other than in what it could bring. He saw an oilfield only once, at age 19. Despite having business interests in Venezuela, Mexico, the United States and the Far East, he never visited those places, nor did he travel to Iraq, Saudi Arabia or any of the Gulf States, from whose oil production he drew 5 per cent. That dividend came from brokering an agreement in 1928 between the big oil companies to co-operate under the umbrella of his Turkish Petroleum Company to exploit Middle Eastern reserves without wasteful competition. Oil experts at first thought the 5 per cent was simply a broker's commission, but he had cleverly negotiated a permanent share. As one business associate remarked, his calm, dignified method of dealing meant that "he could slip a camel through the eye of a needle".

All that wealth made Gulbenkian a celebrity, although a frustratingly mysterious one. "I should like to know what he really thinks," wrote a society columnist, "whether he has a home; whether he plays golf or has any other interest outside money-making." Gulbenkian provided few clues; he dressed modestly to disguise his wealth. He didn't play golf. He owned palatial homes in Paris and London, but didn't live in them, preferring luxury hotel suites. He was, writes Conlin, a "back room fixer of no fixed abode".

His only interest outside money-making was his art collection. He bought widely – Italian Renaissance, Old Masters, impressionists – but not always wisely. When the Soviet authorities tried to raise revenue by selling off paintings from the Hermitage in Leningrad in the 1920s, one museum official noticed how Gulbenkian seemed possessed by his need to buy. "[He's] the greatest obsessive of them all . . . he kept telling me, 'For God's sake, sell me a painting.' He wanted to buy all our junk." When he was reunited with his collection after hiding it away during the Second World War, he didn't recognise some of his pieces and assumed his minions had sold off the good stuff.

Paintings took on human qualities; he fell in and out of love. One painting "flirted", they mated, then "divorced". His wife, Nevarte, should perhaps have been jealous, but she had her own interests, deriving much more real enjoyment from wealth than he ever did. Their paths hardly crossed. As to her husband's frequent infidelities, she was fatalistic. "This is the way things are . . . we love each other sincerely and if we each close our eyes to the other's faults then . . . we will be very happy." She was probably right; he had no interest in the beautiful women he bedded. His physician had advised that frequent sex with young women was a rejuvenating tonic, so he obediently followed doctor's orders.

Mr Five Per Cent

is a remarkable book, if only because Gulbenkian is not an easy subject. His single-mindedness – in the pursuit of art treasures, sex or money – renders him rather dull. Yet Conlin somehow constructs an engaging tale about this one-dimensional man. Every page is packed with figures, but there are also delightful details that provide welcome contrast to all those labyrinthine deals. An uncharacteristically foolhardy transaction with the Russians, for instance, left Gulbenkian with two tons of caviar and no buyers. He gave the stuff away. Gulbenkian fascinates not because he's particularly interesting in and of himself, but rather because of the shady deals, broken friendships and family turmoil that littered his life.

Gulbenkian, writes Conlin, became "so fixated on protecting his fortune . . . that he seemed uninterested in the purposes for which it was being preserved". That's another way of saying that he worshipped money for itself rather than for what it could do. Other than that brief moment of reflection, Conlin refrains from criticism. Yet this book still provides an important moral lesson about the pathology of greed. We tend to revere those, such as Gulbenkian, who amass huge fortunes. In the process, we overlook their abundant flaws and their lack of ordinary humanity. If Gulbenkian's obsessiveness had been directed towards something other than simply amassing wealth, we might judge him mentally ill.

Gulbenkian's memorial service in 1955 was sparsely attended. At his company headquarters, there was no moment of silence, no condolences extended, no tears shed. That's not surprising. Since he cared about no one, in the end few cared about him.

Mr Five Per Cent: The Many Lives of Calouste Gulbenkian, the World's Richest Man Mr Five Per Cent: The Many Lives of Calouste Gulbenkian, the World's Richest Man

by Jonathan Conlin, Profile, 402pp; £25

Expert: Armenia acting PM not going to weaken his power

News.am, Armenia
Dec 29 2018
Expert: Armenia acting PM not going to weaken his power Expert: Armenia acting PM not going to weaken his power

14:51, 29.12.2018
                  

YEREVAN. – Armenian Acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is not going to weaken his power, Armen Badalyan, a political consultant, told Armenian News- NEWS.am.

According to him, being an opposition leader, hecriticized the institution of super-premiership, but today he is not taking steps that would weaken him.

The expert referred to the results of the so-called optimization, as Nikol Pashinyan did not want the Police to become the part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, since it would also be accountable to the National Assembly and will weaken the system of super-premiership. 

“The project presented by the Government cannot be called an optimization project. Optimization implies a conceptual approach to solving the problem. While there is neither a conceptual approach, nor logic in the presented project. The government conducts a mechanical reduction and unification of the ministries,” Badalyan said.

Asked to comment on the consequences of closing the Diaspora Ministry, the expert noted that such a decision would actually lead to the loss of a very important resource. 

“The Armenian diaspora, which in quantitative terms is larger than the population living in Armenia, is a quality resource. With proper use of it, the serious development of the state could be ensured,” the expert said.

According to Armen Badalyan, it will be necessary to reconsider the decision of new ministries.

“Many specialists will emigrate, and there will be a problem with personnel training. Training new staff will require financial resources and time,” the expert concluded.

Thirty years ago veteran NI firefighter Paul Burns was battling to find survivors of Armenia’s earthquake in temperatures of minus 25

Belfast Telegraph, UK
Dec 29 2018
<img src=”"https://cdn-02.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/life/features/article37663615.ece/cd26c/AUTOCROP/w620h342/2018-12-29_lif_46828880_I4.JPG"” alt="Retired Firefighter Paul Burns who has returned to Groomsport having spent 55 years working in England" title="Retired Firefighter Paul Burns who has returned to Groomsport having spent 55 years working in England" width="620" height="342" /> 44Retired Firefighter Paul Burns who has returned to Groomsport having spent 55 years working in England

On December 7, 1988 a devastating earthquake hit the then-USSR state of Armenia, killing more than 25,000 people. Five days later, Belfast firefighter Paul Burns found himself in the Armenian city of Spitak as one of the first western aid volunteers to arrive behind the Iron Curtain as the Cold War drew to a close.

It was the era of Mikhail Gorbachev, glasnost and perestroika, and for the first time the Soviet Union reached out to the rest of the world for help.

At the time, Paul was divisional officer with the Lancashire Fire Service, and he spent two weeks in the devastated country leading the UK response.

During his career Paul was called on to fly out to crisis zones all around the globe; his first was a major earthquake in Italy in 1980, and he was also working amid the aftermath of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing in the USA which killed 168 people.

Now back home in Northern Ireland – he lives in Groomsport – and reflecting on his career, he says that it was the Armenian earthquake that made the most lasting impression. Indeed, earlier this month Paul felt compelled to return to Spitak and see what changes the intervening 30 years had wrought on the city.

"I'm an old man now but I promised myself I would go back," he says. "The earthquake had obliterated the place. The people found it quite extraordinary that we would come from the West into Soviet territory to give aid. They just couldn't comprehend that. We were, they were told, the enemy. But that drove us forward. We were doing something extraordinary at the end of the Cold War.

"Politically, it was important. This was our meagre contribution.

"When I arrived in the city of Spitak there were no buildings left, just rubble as far as the eye could see. There was the beauty of the mountains, the sun glinting on the snow, but when you cast your eyes down you'd see this horrible picture of fires and smoke rising, some people picking around here and there to find memorabilia from families and homes, a sense of aimlessness. There seemed no future."

In a city swelled by 10,000 refugees amid civil unrest rife across the Soviet Union to more 35,000 inhabitants, more than half the residents were killed in the earthquake.

Paul recalls: "Women and men would regularly come up to me and produce photographs of their family. They would tug at my uniform and I knew they wanted me to come. They would bring me to somewhere that was absolutely flat and point to where their family was. A lot of the time there was simply nothing that could be done.

"You were praying for the retrieval of someone alive, not for the glory of it but simply because of what a miracle would do for a family somewhere. But it was a recovery operation. In those temperatures you would freeze to death. From a practical point of view all we could do was retrieve bodies."

One incident in particular has stayed with Paul.

"There was a man who'd been working in his butcher's shop," he recalls. "We found him entombed in very heavy concrete columns. The family were insistent, no matter what, that we were to recover as much of the remains as possible. I gave orders that the man was to be retrieved in as dignified a manner as possible, but in the end that wasn't possible. His remains had to be removed in large parts and that's an extraordinary thing to have to do. I'd never done it in my career before and never have since. The job of removing that man was horrific."

That gruesome task fell to fellow firefighter Reggie Berry (now 69) who accompanied Paul back to Spitak on the 30th anniversary.

Mr Berry told a BBC Radio 4 documentary: "I remember what I did and excuse me for speaking bluntly, we simply couldn't get his lower body out. I cut him in half at the waist with a shovel. His relatives were extremely grateful as all they wanted was to give him a Christian burial. People were coming over and shaking our hands, thanking us. But all I could think was I've just cut your grandfather in half with a shovel."

Paul continues: "We were all agreed that, particularly as it was Christmas time, if we could simply return a loved one there could be no finer work than that."

But the conditions Paul was working in during his two weeks in Spitak were almost impossible.

"I'd already been to an earthquake in Italy and was one of the few officers in the UK with experience. It's something I'd always taken a great interest in. So when I got a call from the leader of Lancashire Council, now Dame Louise Ellman MP, I said yes. I've always lived my life thinking the chance of adventure was not something to turn away from. It was a very quick response, particularly to go the 10,000 miles into the Soviet Union at that time."

Paul started his firefighting life in Lisburn as a raw recruit in 1961, moving on to Chichester Street in Belfast where he spent five years. His family were originally from the Falls Road area of Belfast but had relocated to Lurgan after the Blitz during the Second World War. Paul was one of only a handful of Catholic boys in the Fire Service when he joined.

"That was never something that bothered me," he says. "There are much more important things in life than where you're from. Humanity was my focus, and rescuing humanity became my skill.

"Some might remember my family, they ran a shipping fleet and brought tug boats to Belfast long before the Titanic."

After marrying a Lancastrian girl, sadly now passed away, he headed off to the north of England where he brought up his family – a son now living in Florida and a daughter in the RAF; he takes great pride in being a grandfather of five – and rapidly rose through the ranks of the service. But nothing had prepared him for what awaited in Armenia.

"I learnt a lot of the craft in Belfast during those early years from guys who deserve a lot more credit for the role they fulfilled. I'd always been interested in rapid response and I had my experience in Italy but the Soviet Union was something entirely different.

"It was astounding. There had been four colossal quakes within a minute of each other and you can still see the uplift of the land, about a metre and a half. That's an astonishing amount. The buildings had simply toppled into one another, then there'd been liquification of the earth – that's when the quake is so violent it releases the moisture in the soil and causes landslides.

"As it happened during daylight hours, I knew everyone would have been out and about and knew where people would most likely have been. That's important when locating potential survivors. But we arrived five days later, too late for too many.

"I remember walking down towards the town centre in two feet of snow. It was -25C. I paused for a moment in the early morning. There was a beautiful red blush of sunrise on the mountains around me. But below there was rubble. The snow was brown as storage tanks of molasses had burst across the town. It was a horrific scene. Way beyond anything Hollywood movies had created.

"A cardinal rule for rescue services is that you don't become a casualty yourself, but we were working in an unstable landscape. There were more than 200 after-quakes. The Soviet army were all around us and for the first few days we were stopped everywhere we went and asked to show our papers. Eventually they got to know us and we were free to go about our jobs, but it was a scary place to be.

"You really don't know until much later what the impact on the individual is. There's a real mental and emotional exhaustion that sets in. You can see it in a person. I saw it in many I worked with and that's why I made the decision to head home for Christmas Day. I knew some of the people returning with me would never be the same after the brutality they witnessed, but we were there to provide some human warmth and that's what mattered."

Paul was back in Spitak 18 months later on another humanitarian mission – this time to deliver and build three new homes which had been bought by the Armenian community of Manchester, and he made further trips in the 1990s, until his retirement in 1997.

On returning this month Paul was greeted by Armenian President Armen Sarkissian, who told him: "The United Kingdom provided great assistance by sending rescuers. These are actions which Armenia will never forget."

President Sarkissian also presented Paul with an Armenian memorial coin and added: "What he did for Armenia during those difficult days will never be forgotten."

Paul says: "I look around now and I see new buildings, low-rise residential places, none of them more than five floors. Lessons have been learned, but the town is a lot smaller than it was."

Though many of the buildings may be new, Paul was amazed to see the temporary homes that he had built 28 years ago were still standing.

"They were flat pack timber homes, completely glazed, sectionalised and kitted out inside," he explains. "They were advanced for the time and were built in 14 days back in 1989, but they were only supposed to be temporary.

"The community in Spitak presented them to three school teachers as they value education so highly, but today 500 families are still essentially homeless in the town. On the one hand you're happy that what you created is still standing, but on the other you'd like to see that the town and the community have moved on.

"The spectre of the earthquake is never far away. The town hasn't changed as much as I would have liked to have seen it do so. People are still struggling in the post-Soviet era 30 years down the line."

Despite the disappointment, Paul's visit gifted him an uplifting moment in the shape of resident Hamlet Dilbaryan (80). The former school worker, who lives in a metal ship container, and has done since the 1988 earthquake, came out to give Paul a warm greeting.

Clearly moved by the encounter, Paul says: "He lost his mother, wife, daughter and son in the earthquake. From his metal box he looks out through barred windows over the last remaining pile of rubble, the site of the old school where 14 children were killed that day. But he told me there are many other families worse off than him, families looking after the disabled with nowhere to live who deserve a house before him. After 30 years, there's a man who has the dignity to say that he doesn't want to ask for assistance; he is an extraordinary, courageous man.

"We came here as human beings, 10,000 miles at short notice to a people we could hardly identify with. They needed assistance from the world and the world sent the likes of me. That was the greatest privilege."

Belfast Telegraph

https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/life/features/thirty-years-ago-veteran-ni-firefighter-paul-burns-was-battling-to-find-survivors-of-armenias-earthquake-in-temperatures-of-minus-25-now-hes-made-an-emotional-return-visit-to-the-scene-of-a-disaster-hell-never-forget-37663616.html