Why should university’s rector’s maximum age of working is 70 years old and others’ working maximum age is 65? – Mikayel Melkumyan

During the question-and-answer session in the National Assembly today, the bill “On Higher Education” was discussed. Mikayel Melkumyan from the Tsarukyan bloc  mentioned that during the NA hearings, 23 speeches out of 24 expressed concerns about the law.

“We have agreed that you should form a scientific council where the chairman of the Academic Council should not be the rector of the university in order to create counterbalances. What happened during that time that the president of that council is expected to be the rector? Besides this, what does it mean that according to the Law on Higher Education, 70 is considered rector’s maximum age of working , but for other employees, the retirement age is the maximum age of working? Does the rector do something special that he should be seventy years old and the other be in retirement age” asked MP Mikayel Melkumyan from the Tsarukyan bloc to Levon Mkrtchyan.

Minister of Education and Science Levon Mkrtchyan mentioned the example of several countries where the maximum age of working is 65.

“Georgia, up to 65 years old, in Latvia and Croatia- 65, Poland- 65, Oxford- 65. However, I agree with you that we can equate the age of the rector with others,” said the Minister of Education and Science.

Abraham Khashmanyan’s presence does not save Alashkert from defeat (video)

In the 16th round of the Armenian Premier League championship, FC Shirak won to Alashkert with a score of 1: 0. The only goal was scored by Gyumri defender Igor Stanoevich with a penalty kick.

“We could not win a long time in the autumn section and the team had a confidence issue. It is good that we were able to maintain the advantage today. Central defenders Hrayr Mkoyan and Marko had a lack of gambling practice and were not ready for 90 minutes game, but their presence gave the team a lot of confidence. To fight for the championship we need at least one goal scorer attacker,” said Shirak coach Vardan Bichakhchyan after the match.

By the way, Alashkert head coach Abraham Khashmanyan, who was disqualified for 10 games in the previous match, was looking at the game of the team from the bench. It turned out that the club applied to the Football Federation of Armenia to mitigate the sentence and received a positive response.

Abraham Khashmanyan believes that self-confidence played a bad joke with the team.

“We are a strong team, but today we played badly. It is football. Maybe after this game the players will realize that it will not be easy in the second part of the championship games. Such a mentality should not be drawn to any meeting,” concluded Armenia’s double-champion coach.

ABA’s Amerian and Ashvanian Appointed to Judicial Bench

Michael Amerian and Amy Ashvanian

The Armenian Bar Association announced that two of its stalwart members—Michael Amerian and Amy Ashvanian– have been appointed as judges to the California Superior Court in Los Angeles. Their appointments were announced on , in a press release issued from Governor Brown’s office, which included Michael’s and Amy’s biographies below:

Michael R. Amerian, 43, of Los Angeles, served as a deputy city attorney in the Los Angeles City Attorney’s Office since 2003. He served as a law clerk for the Honorable Dickran M. Tevrizian, Jr. at the U.S. District Court, Central District of California, from 1999 to 2000. Amerian earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Southern California School of Law and a Bachelor of Science degree from Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. He fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge R. Carlton Seaver.

Armenui A. Ashvanian, 46, of Glendale, has been appointed to a judgeship in the Los Angeles County Superior Court. Ashvanian has served as a deputy district attorney at the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office since 2005 and has been an adjunct assistant professor at the Glendale University College of Law since 2014. She was an associate at Yeghiayan and Associates from 2004 to 2005. Ashvanian earned a Juris Doctor degree from the Glendale University College of Law and an Associate of Science degree from Glendale Community College. She fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Judge George Genesta.

In 2017, the Armenian Bar Association assembled a team of accomplished and highly-reputed trial attorneys from across California to serve as members of the organization’s Judicial Evaluation Committee (JEC). Newly-appointed Amy Ashvanian was the first applicant to matriculate through the Armenian Bar’s JEC. The committee’s mission is to evaluate applicants and potential appointees to the California judicial bench and to make recommendations to the Governor and the Appointments Secretary for those candidates who are deemed to be well-qualified. The organizing body recognized that to have an effective voice in the judicial appointment process, it would be necessary that the recommendations be made by those with proven talent and relevant experience as trial attorneys.

Sumgait Pogrom Plotters Have Not Been Punished, Says Nalbandian

Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian addresses at the 37th Session of the UN Human Rights Council

GENEVA—Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian, in remarks delivered Tuesday at the 37th Session of the UN Human Rights Council, said that those who plotted the savage Sumgait pogrom of Armenians 30 years ago have not been punished. He also said that Armenia will be presenting a resolution on the genocide prevention to mark the 70th anniversary of the adoption of UN Declaration on Human Rights and Genocide.

“Thirty years ago, during these very days in February 1988 anti-Armenian pogroms broke out in Azerbaijani city of Sumgait leaving numerous Armenians killed, maimed and deported. They were perpetrated by the authorities of Azerbaijan with the aim to punish Armenians for the peaceful aspirations of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh for self-determination. Those atrocities were the very reason why Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Andrei Sakharov wrote that ‘even if some doubted it before Sumgait, no one sees a moral opportunity to insist on territorial unity of Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan after this tragedy happened,’” said Nalbandian.

“Regrettably, the masterminds and perpetrators of this crime were not duly punished. As it happened many times in the human history, impunity opened the door for new atrocities, including Armenian massacres and ethnic cleansing in Baku, Kirovabad (Gandzak), Maragha and many other places,” added Nalbandian emphasizing that despite wide international condemnation at the time, the lack of action by world leaders led to impunity.

He said that Azerbaijan uses all efforts and means to deny and distort history by using “fabricated accusation” to concoct the scenario of what Baku calls the “Khojaly campaign.”

By all means Azerbaijan attempts to conceal these atrocities, to avoid responsibility and to shift attention from them through fabricated accusations, including by the so-called Khojaly campaign, trying to portray themselves as victims and discredit Armenians as alleged perpetrators of the violence.

“It is a part of Azerbaijan’s xenophobic anti-Armenian policy. The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, European Commission Against Racism and Intolerance and many other organizations in charge of human rights expressed concern at constant cases of hate speech in Azerbaijan used against Armenians by political leaders, educational institutions and media and that an entire generation of Azerbaijanis has grown up listening to this hateful rhetoric. It is this kind of anti-Armenian propaganda that has incited continuous atrocities against Armenians, including the gross violations of international humanitarian law committed by the armed forces of Azerbaijan in April 2016 in Nagorno-Karabakh – killing of children, women, elderly people, mutilation of the corpses, beheadings of captured soldiers in the style used by notorious terrorist organizations,” explained Nalbandian.

“It is perplexing that the perpetrators of such horrendous crimes are consulted for their consent on the engagement of international organizations and the provision of the humanitarian assistance. The people of Nagorno-Karabakh should not be deprived from cooperation with the human rights’ organizations due to the objection of Azerbaijan, a country notorious for the violations of the very human rights,” added Nalbandian.

“Belated reaction, delayed assessment of the situation, the absence of preventive measures – constitute gaps between proclaimed commitments and their implementation on the ground. Indeed, ‘a right delayed is a right denied,’” said Nalbandian.

Azeri Crimes Remain Unpunished After Thirty Years of Bloodshed – ANCC Statement on the 30th Anniversary of the Sumgait Masacre

Armenian
National Committee of Canada

Comité
National Arménien du Canada

 

Tel./Tél. (613) 235-2622

E-mail/Courriel:[email protected]

www.anccanada.org

 

-PRESS RELEASE-

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

                                                                           Contact: Sevag Belian (613) 235-2622

 

Azeri Crimes
Remain Unpunished After Thirty Years of Bloodshed

ANCC Statement on the 30th
Anniversary of the Sumgait Masacre

 

Ottawa — Thirty years ago, this week, Azerbaijani authorities organized
and systematically committed the mass pogroms and massacres against the peaceful
Armenian population of Sumgait. In what was seen as a response to the peaceful
manifestation of Artsakh Armenians for self-determination, dozens of Armenians
were brutally killed or detained, beaten and tortured.

The Sumgait massacre was the first ethnic cleansing campaign that Azeri
nationalists committed since the onset of the Karabakh movement which fueled
further bloody episodes of ethic cleansings perpetrated by Azeri authorities in
Kirovabad, Mingechaur, Baku and elsewhere around Azerbaijan.

“Instead of facing their history and repenting for their monstrous crimes,
Azerbaijani authorities spare no effort today to deny their past and shift the
international community’s attention in order to escape responsibility” said
Shahen Mirakian, president of the Armenian National Committee of Canada.

The massacre claimed the lives of over 36 innocent Armenian men, women
and children. Internationally renowned media sources including the New York
Times, Washington Post, and many others reported about these heinous crimes
committed by Azeri nationalists.

“The international community’s silence is what further encouraged Azeri
nationalists to perpetrate their crimes and instill hatred and discrimination
against Armenians in the region” said Shahen Mirakian.

As a result of lack of monitoring and international pressure, to this
day, Azerbaijan remains committed to its campaign of aggression against
Armenians by constantly violating the current ceasefire regime and by making
outrageous threats of attacking Armenia proper itself.

“It is the international community’s
responsibility to put an end to Aliyev’s bellicose war-mongering and aggression
that not only is threatening the political stability of the region, but also
causing serious consequences for global peace and security” concluded
Mirakian.

 

 

-30-

 

******

 

 

The ANCC is the largest and the most influential
Armenian-Canadian grassroots human rights organization. Working in coordination
with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and
affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCC actively advances the
concerns of the Armenian-Canadian community on a broad range of issues and
works to eliminate abuses of human rights throughout Canada and the world.

Sevag Belian – Executive Director
Armenian National Committee of Canada
T: (613) 235-2622 | C: (905) 329-8526
E:

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/27/2018

                                        Tuesday, 
Appeals Court Upholds Guilty Verdict Against Babayan
 . Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Samvel Babayan, a retired army general critical of the
government, attends an appeals court hearing in Yerevan, 26 February
2018.
Armenia's Court of Appeals on Tuesday upheld a six-year prison
sentence handed down to Samvel Babayan, a retired army general
prosecuted on charges of illegal arms acquisition and money laundering
which he strongly denies.
It also rejected the appeals of two other suspects in the high-profile
case who were sentenced by a district court in Yerevan to three and
two years in prison in November.
Babayan was arrested in March 2017 after Armenia's National Security
Service (NSS) claimed to have confiscated a surface-to-air rocket
system. The arrest came about two weeks before Armenia's last
parliamentary elections. Babayan was unofficially affiliated with the
ORO alliance led by former Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian and two
other opposition politicians. ORO condemned the criminal case as
politically motivated.
Babayan has since repeatedly denied prosecutors' claims that he
promised to pay other defendants, notably his longtime associate
Sanasar Gabrielian, $50,000 for the delivery of the shoulder-fired
Igla rocket.
Gabrielian, who received the three-year prison sentence, insisted
during their trial that it was he who commissioned the confiscated
Igla. He claimed that he wanted to donate it to Nagorno-Karabakh's
army.
Both defendants appealed against the guilty verdict handed down by the
lower court. They and the third suspect, Armen Poghosian, said they
must be acquitted on all counts.
Armenia - The Court of Appeals hands down a verdict on the appeals of
Samvel Babayan and two other men accused of illegal arms acquisition,
.
"This is a fabricated case," Babayan told the Court of Appeals on
Monday. He reiterated that he only advised Gabrielian to hoard the
sophisticated weapon in a remote Karabakh village and then
confidentially tip off a military official in Stepanakert.
A trial prosecutor insisted, for his part, that the investigators have
substantiated their accusations levelled against Babayan and the other
defendants. Purported evidence presented by them includes a short
segment of a wiretapped telephone conversation between Babayan and
Gabrielian.
Babayan said that his secretly recorded remarks were "taken out of
context." He earlier petitioned the court to have the prosecutors
publicize full audio of the phone call. The court refused to do that.
Babayan, 52, led Karabakh's Armenian-backed army from 1993-1999 and
was widely regarded as the unrecognized republic's most powerful man
at that time. He was arrested in 2000 and subsequently sentenced to 14
years in prison for allegedly masterminding a botched attempt on the
life of the then Karabakh president, Arkady Ghukasian. He was set free
in 2004.
Babayan criticized the current authorities in Yerevan and Stepanakert
after returning to Armenia in May 2016 from Russia where he lived for
five years.
Armenian Parliament To Debate 2008 Crackdown On Opposition
 . Tatevik Lazarian
Armenia - A man walks past burned cars on a street in Yerevan where
security forces clashed with opposition protesters, 2 March 2008.
The National Assembly agreed on Tuesday to debate an
opposition-drafted resolution condemning the use of lethal force
against opposition protesters in Yerevan in the wake of Armenia's
disputed 2008 presidential election.
The parliamentary resolution put forward by the opposition Yelk says
that supporters of opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian protested
against "the falsification" of the results of the election that
formalized the handover of power from outgoing President Robert
Kocharian to Serzh Sarkisian.
It describes as "crude and illegal" the forcible dispersal of those
protests on March 1-2 2008 which left ten people dead. The statement
demands that law-enforcement authorities at last identify and
prosecute those responsible for the killings.
The parliament unanimously voted to include the draft resolution on
its agenda even though its standing committee on legal affairs gave a
formal negative assessment of the document last week. Gevorg
Kostanian, the incoming committee chairman affiliated with the ruling
Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), criticized the Yelk motion.
Armenia - Opposition leader Nikol Pashinian addresses protesters that
barricaded themselves in central Yerevan, 1 March 2008.
Addressing fellow lawmakers before Tuesday's vote, Yelk's
parliamentary leader, Nikol Pashinian, again blamed the authorities
for what was the worst street violence in Armenia's history. "Ten
years ago the police illegally used force against citizens fighting
protesting against the falsification of the presidential elections, as
a result of which ten people were killed in the center of Yerevan," he
said.
"Serzh Sarkisian managed to seize power only thanks to those
killings," charged the outspoken politician who played a major role in
Ter-Petrosian's 2007-2008 opposition movement.
HHK lawmakers rejected such claims during parliamentary hearings on
the unrest that were chaired by Pashinian earlier this
week. Significantly, one of those lawmakers, Samvel Nikoyan, blamed
not only Ter-Petrosian but also Kocharian for the bloodshed. Nikoyan
disputed Kocharian's March 2008 claim that some of the protesters shot
at security forces.
Armenia - Armenian army soldiers are deployed on a street in Yerevan
where security forces clashed with opposition protesters, 2 March
2008.
Ter-Petrosian, who had served as Armenia's first president from
1991-1998, was the main opposition candidate in the February 2008
presidential ballot. He rejected as fraudulent official vote results
that gave victory to Sarkisian.
Many Ter-Petrosian supporters took to the streets to demand a re-run
of the vote. Thousands of them barricaded themselves in downtown
Yerevan on March 1, 2008 after riot police broke up nonstop
demonstrations organized by Ter-Petrosian and his allies in the city's
Liberty Square.
Eight protesters and two police servicemen were killed as security
forces tried to forcibly end that protest as well. Ter-Petrosian urged
his supporters to disperse early on March 2, 2008 shortly after
Kocharian declared a state of emergency and ordered Armenian army
units into the capital.
Dozens of opposition figures, including Pashinian, were subsequently
arrested and prosecuted. The parliamentary statement proposed by Yelk
also demands that Armenian prosecutors review those "fabricated"
criminal cases.
New Body To Oversee Armenian Judiciary
 . Astghik Bedevian
Armenia - A district court building in Yerevan, 27Jun2017.
The Armenian parliament will elect on Wednesday five of the ten
members of a new and powerful body tasked with overseeing Armenia's
courts.
The remaining members of the Supreme Judicial Council will be chosen
by the country's judges who took the bench at least ten years ago.
The council is being set up in accordance with sweeping constitutional
changes enacted in 2015. According to one of those amendments, its
main mission is to "guarantee the independence of the courts and the
judges."
The council will nominate virtually all new judges that will be
appointed by the Armenian president and the National Assembly. It is
also empowered to take disciplinary action against judges or have them
terminated altogether.
The parliament discussed on Tuesday the five members of the council
proposed by the ruling Republican Party (HHK) and its junior coalition
partner, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
(Dashnaktsutyun). Lawmakers will vote for or against them in secret
ballot.
The candidates, among them Gagik Harutiunian, the outgoing chairman of
Armenia's Constitutional Court, will have to be backed by at least 63
members of the 105-seat parliament in order to get elected to the
judicial body. The HHK and Dashnaktsutyun control 65 parliament seats.
The two other political groups represented in the legislature chose
not to nominate any candidates. Instead, deputies representing the
opposition Yelk bloc put tough questions to the five candidates on the
parliament floor. In particular, Harutiunian was asked about the
existence of political prisoners and opposition allegations of
electoral fraud that have always been dismissed by the Constitutional
Court.
"I won't confirm or deny [the existence of political prisoners] for
the following reason: I have not looked into any criminal case of this
kind," said Harutiunian.
Yelk's parliamentary leader, Nikol Pashinian, hit out at the
long-serving Constitutional Court chief after the question-and-answer
session. "The guy was vice-president, prime minister and
Constitutional Court chairman # but doesn't know if there have been
political prisoners in Armenia," he said. "This is his relationship to
the truth."
Pashinian also attacked another candidate, former Justice Minister
Gevorg Danielian. He said that Armenian jails were "full of political
prisoners" during Danielian's tenure.
HHK parliamentarians rejected the criticism. "Nobody can call into
question their [professional] qualities that are needed for their
tenure at the Supreme Judicial Council," one of them, former
Prosecutor-General Gevorg Kostanian, said during the debate.
Incidentally, another candidate nominated by the ruling party, Liparit
Melikjanian, ran for the parliament on the Yelk ticket as recently as
one year ago. He accused the Armenian authorities of pursuing
"anti-national policies" during the election campaign.
"I may sympathize with the Yelk bloc in terms of political views but I
think that my political career is over now," Melikjanian said on
Tuesday.
Armenian courts have long been notorious for their lack of
independence from the executive branch. They are still mistrusted by
many citizens despite having undergone frequent structural changes in
the last two decades. Corruption among judges is thought to be another
serious problem.
Sarkisian Encouraged By Faster Economic Growth
Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian meets with Prime Minister Karen
Karapetian and other senior officials in Yerevan, .
President Serzh Sarkisian hailed on Tuesday robust economic growth
recorded in Armenia last year, while acknowledging that it did not
have a serious impact on living standards.
Sarkisian said the Armenian economy expanded by at least 7.4 percent
in 2017 as het met with Prime Minister Karen Karapetian and other
senior officials to discuss the socioeconomic situation in the
country.
"This is certainly a good indicator," he said. "But we must also bear
in mind that one year of strong economic growth cannot have an impact
on broad sections of our society."
The rapid growth, the president went on, should continue unabated for
two or three more years before its positive effects can be felt by
most Armenians. He noted in that regard that the Armenian government
achieved "good economic indicators" in January as well.
The Finance Ministry made a more modest growth projection last month:
6.7 percent. It had originally forecast a 3.2 percent growth rate. It
revised that target upwards to 4.3 percent in September.
Armenia's National Statistical Service (NSS) has yet to report an
official growth figure for 2017. So far it has released only detailed
separate data on the performance of different sectors of the
economy. In particular, Armenian industrial output rose by over 12
percent, according to the NSS.
In its five-year policy program approved by the parliament last June,
Karapetian's cabinet pledged to ensure that the domestic economy grows
by around 5 percent annually. Sarkisian announced on Tuesday that his
administration will finalize "within several weeks" a 12-year
"strategy for Armenia's socioeconomic development." A statement on the
meeting released by the presidential press service gave no details of
that strategy.
Sarkisian will complete his second and final presidential term on
April 9. He is widely expected to become prime minister and thus
extend his decade-long rule.
Press Review
"Zhoghovurd" reports that the Armenian government is determined to
complete a controversial reform of the national pension system that
triggered street demonstrations in Yerevan in 2014. It will become
mandatory in July for all Armenian workers self-employed individuals
born after 1973. The paper is critical of the new pension system,
saying that it should not be introduced in Armenia because average
wages there are quite low. It says that a higher pension tax envisaged
by the reform will only cut those wages in real terms.
"Zhamanak" says that hardly anyone was surprised by Gagik Tsarukian's
decision to endorse President Serzh Sarkisian's pick for the next head
of state, former Prime Minister Armen Sarkissian. The paper links this
decision to what it sees as a "profound transformation of the
government system in Armenia." Tsarukian is keen to adapt to this
ongoing change, it says.
"Building a party and making it a success in Armenia is a very
difficult task," writes "Hraparak." "Especially if that party does not
make use of government resources its chances of electoral success
become slim # and the likelihood of splits within it greatly
increases. That explains why the history of non-governing parties in
Armenia has been one of volatility and upheavals. Such parties fail to
achieve important results because financial resources and public
platforms mainly serve pro-government forces."
Karapet Rubinian, an opposition figure who has served as deputy
speaker of the Armenian parliament in the past, tells "Aravot" that
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev's latest statements on "historic
Azerbaijani lands" in Armenia may be a prelude to renewed fighting in
Nagorno-Karabakh. Rubinian also speculates that Aliyev's decision to
bring Azerbaijan's next presidential election forward by six months is
apparently connected with the ongoing political transition in Armenia.
(Tigran Avetisian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

Special presentation by Armenian author, former Minister of Rumania, Dr. Varujan Vosganian

Dear Friends,

Please attend (if you are in the LA area) the very special presentation by the famous Rumanian Armenian author, former Minister of Rumania, Dr. Varujan Vosganian. He will speak about his popular book the “Book of Whispers”, which is a fantastic depiction of post Genocide Armenian life. It will be held on Sunday, March 4, at 4:30 pm in Merdinian (13330 Riverside Dr., SH Oaks). Please see the flier below for details. For more references from well known journals, magazines and authors, please see the attached.
Also, please keep in mind our next Joint ARPA Institute and Armenian American Mental Health Association Presentation “Women in Contemporary Armenian Society: Cultural and Socioeconomic Predicaments, and Opportunities for Empowerment”Monday, March 12, 2018 @ 7:30 PM 
in the Aram and Anahis D. Boolghoorjian Hall of the Merdinian School: 13330 Riverside Dr. Sherman Oaks, CA 91403

Please view the videos of the Joint ARPA Institute-UCLA  Presentations on 1)….Activities of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, 2) …. Armenian Political Activism in Iran, 3) …Portraits of Het‘um II, 4) … Paleography and Handwritten Armenian

1) https://youtu.be/SPt5XMvAr0U ; 2) https://youtu.be/68Q-Cbz8OnI3) https://youtu.be/6x2UTPLyImA ; 4) 
Please also view the ARPA Institute 25th Anniversary Celebration Conference on “Armenia in the 21st Century: Strategy for Long-term Development”. You will enjoy it. Here are the Youtube links: 1. Part I: https://youtu.be/5cEpNtiW1os ; 2. Part II: 
In addition you can view the presentations on: 1) Armenian DNA: 

And 2) “ Railway Politics: The Effect of Recently Inaugurated Baku-Tibilisi-Kars Railway“:    
And 3) “Armenian preservation and the need for Armenian schools in the Diaspora“: 



ARPAPresentation-3418-Vosganian-1.pdf

Dublin: Southsider joins hearing aid mission to Armenia

Dublin People, Ireland
Feb 27 2018
Tuesday, 27th February, 2018 1:00pm

Ailbhe Lennon pictured during her mission to Armenia.

A SOUTHSIDE graduate has told how she was able to help give people in Armenia the gift of hearing thanks to a special mission to the country.

Ailbhe Lennon (26), who attended Jesus and Mary College, Our Lady’s Grove in Goatstown, was the only Irish volunteer on the project, which fitted 1,806 Armenians with free hearing aids in just three days.

According to the World Health Organisation, more than 360 million people have disabling hearing loss.

Unfortunately, less than three per cent of these individuals can afford hearing aids or even have access to the care they need.

The Starkey Hearing Foundation is working to change this by building partnerships, empowering local teams and expanding their three-phase Community-Based Hearing HealthCare model around the world.

Ailbhe graduated with a Diploma in Higher Education in Hearing Aid Audiology from Queen Margaret University (QMU) in Edinburgh in 2017.

She said: “Being part of the Starkey Hearing Founda-tion mission to Armenia was truly a once in a lifetime experience.

“The most incredible feeling in the world is giving the gift of hearing. 

“One of the highlights of the mission was being able to fit an entire family with hearing aids, including a six-year-old boy, his mother, father and grandmother.

“The whole family had significant hearing loss and did not use any speech. They all used sign language to communicate.

“All Starkey Hearing Foundation volunteers like me are focused on one goal – to strive to ensure that the people we help have the support they need to reach their full potential, reconnect back to life and become self-determinant citizens of our world.”

Commenting on how she developed her interest in audiology and her studies at QMU, Ailbhe added: “Since I was a child, I always wanted to be a midwife.

“I did my Leaving Certificate, but I didn’t get the points I needed to advance into a midwifery course.

“Shortly after the Leaving Certificate, I got a job as a receptionist for a private hearing aid company. This is where my love for audiology began.

“I realised how crucial hearing aids are to people with hearing loss,” she added.

“I’m a people person and I loved being able to help the clients in any way possible.”

Sports: Armenian boxer wins silver in superheavyweight division at Strandzha Cup

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
 Monday
Armenian boxer wins silver in superheavyweight division at Strandzha Cup
YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s superheavyweight boxer
Gurgen Hovhannisyan has won the silver medal at the StrandzhaCup, an
international amateur boxing tournament held in Sofia, Bulgaria.
Hovhannisyan defeated Bulgarian boxer Piotr Belberov in the
superheavyweight final.
Armenia was represented by seven athletes at the event.
Light flyweight Arthur Hovhannisyan, Flyweight Vahe Badalyan,
Bantamweight Zhirayr Sargsyan, Lightweight Hrayr Shahverdyan,
Welterweight Gurgen Madoyan, Middleweight Hambardzum Hakobyan and
superheavyweight Gurgen Hovhannisyan departed to Bulgaria under the
leadership of coach Vahan Adilkhanyan.
English –translator/editor: Stepan Kocharyan