Armenian expert sounding alarm about Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises

News.am, Armenia
Sept 2 2019
Armenian expert sounding alarm about Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises Armenian expert sounding alarm about Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises

16:16, 02.09.2019
                  

Azerbaijan is hosting regular joint military exercises. This is what military expert Van Hambardzumyan told journalists today.

According to him, these exercises are the fourth military exercises this year and pose a serious risk for Armenia. “In essence, they are the military exercises of military air forces, and Turkey is represented with its own armaments,” the expert noted, adding that Ankara is using various types of aerial and terrestrial weapons.

Hambardzumyan believes if Turkey starts concentrating its troops in the territory of Azerbaijan, Baku will most likely want to create a new military base in its territory. He reminded that 3,000 Turkish soldiers remained in Nakhichevan after the previous military exercises. “They have created a military base there and are currently there. Based on my estimates, there should be more soldiers now. Azerbaijan is very excited about this since a NATO member state with the second largest army will deploy its military bases in Azerbaijan,” the expert said.

Political scientist: New Armenian authorities have made no progress in terms of Karabakh issue

News.am, Armenia
Sept 2 2019
Political scientist: New Armenian authorities have made no progress in terms of Karabakh issue Political scientist: New Armenian authorities have made no progress in terms of Karabakh issue

16:03, 02.09.2019

Armenia’s new authorities haven’t made any progress in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, at least in the process of negotiations. This is what political scientist Aghasi Yenokyan told journalists today.

“They set forth the major goal to have Artsakh become a party to the negotiations, but they failed to achieve that goal. What’s more, they still don’t have a clear plan to return Artsakh to the negotiating table. Instead, the major achievements that Armenia made, particularly the agreements on monitoring mechanisms reached in 2016, are no longer on the agenda,” he stated.

Yenokyan attached importance to the monitoring mechanisms and insisted that they are important in terms of preventing a war. “Many think this is merely a matter of technique, but it is a major mechanism that can prevent military operations,” he said.

Armenia appellate court dismisses attorney general’s office appeal of Kocharyan presumption of innocence case

News.am, Armenia
Sept 2 2019
Armenia appellate court dismisses attorney general’s office appeal of Kocharyan presumption of innocence case Armenia appellate court dismisses attorney general’s office appeal of Kocharyan presumption of innocence case

15:31, 02.09.2019
                  

YEREVAN. – The Criminal Court of Appeal of Armenia has dismissed the appeal of the Prosecutor General’s Office against the ruling of a first instance court into the case on the Special Investigation Service (SIS) chief’s violation of the presumption of innocence of second President Robert Kocharyan, his attorney Hayk Alumyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

During the investigation, Kocharyan’s lawyers had argued that SIS chief Sasun Khachatryan had made several statements in violation of the presumption of innocence of the second President.

Alumyan had petitioned to a court of first instance to rule that Robert Kocharyan’s rights had been violated because of these statements. And in February, this court had granted the attorney’s motion, but the attorney general’s office had appealed this decision.

Second President Robert Kocharyan is charged with overthrowing the constitutional order in Armenia in connection with the tragic events that occurred in capital city Yerevan in March 2008, and taking a particularly large bribe.

On March 1 and 2, 2008 the then authorities of Armenia used force against the opposition members who were rallying in downtown Yerevan, and against the results of the presidential election on February 19, 2008. Eight demonstrators as well as two servicemen of the internal troops were killed in the clashes.

The second President has been arrested three times.

Kocharyan was taken into custody for the third time on June 25, when the Criminal Court of Appeal ruled to once again arrest him—who had earlier been released on the personal pledge by the former and incumbent Presidents of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), overturned the first instance court ruling to suspend the proceedings of the case against Kocharyan and several other former senior officials—in connection with the aforesaid events in Yerevan, and sent the case for a new examination.

Official investigation launched against head of Amulsar investigation team

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2019

An official investigation has been launched against Yura Ivanyan, the head of the investigation team dealing with the Amulsar gold mine project, Investigative Committee spokesperson Naira Harutyunyan told Panorama.am.

The official said the investigation is set to check the accuracy of the information about Harutyunyan’s alleged partiality in the case.

Yura Ivanyan heads the Department of Investigation of Corruption-Related Crimes, Crimes against Property and Cybercrimes at the Investigative Committee.

The move comes after an article published on the Infocom information platform that pointed to a kinship between the top investigator and former Minister of Ecology Aramayis Grigoryan, who initially approved the gold mine operator Lydian’s Environmental Impact Assessment evaluation.

The Investigative Committee confirmed the information but dismissed as ‘unreasonable’ the claims that this fact could have affected the objectivity of the investigation into the gold mine project. 

New kindergarten in Armenian border village opens its doors

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2019

A newly-built kindergarten in the border village of Baghanis in Armenia’s Tavush Province opened its doors to children on Monday.

Speaking to a Panorama.am correspondent, Baghanis Mayor Narek Sahakyan said the kindergarten has been constructed in a safe area far from the border with Azerbaijan.

“And from now on, the children of Baghanis will attend a safe and comfortable kindergarten,” he said, adding that the new building is located along a riverbank and has a heating system, an outdoor playground and a summer theater.

The construction of the kindergarten was made possible due to US-based Paros Foundation. The construction works started in September 2018 and completed in June this year.

The mayor says the kindergarten was inaugurated in June but didn’t function during the holidays.

Narek Sahakyan says Baghanis had no kindergarten from 1991 to 2013. Following the constant Azerbaijani shelling, the building of the Soviet-era kindergarten was severely damaged and left in a precarious condition. In 2013 a first-floor room of the municipality building was renovated to serve as a kindergarten for six years.  

Photos from Narek Sahakyan’s Facebook page

UK Foreign Office criticised for supporting controversial gold mine in Armenia

Open Democracy
Sept 2 2019

In a fierce dispute between mine owners and local people in Armenia, the UK has weighed in – on the side of the international mining company.

Thomas Rowley
2 September 2019
Entrance to Amulsar mining site, July 2018

|

Image: Peter Liakhov

  • In 2018, Armenia underwent its “Velvet Revolution”, which saw a mass protest movement force a kleptocratic regime out of power
  • Armenia’s revolution has had other effects, such as blockades over a flagship $400 million gold mining project run by mining company Lydian International
  • New documents released under Freedom of Information laws show the UK Foreign Office’s private engagement in support of Lydian International

The UK Foreign Office has been criticised by a British MP and international campaigners for its support of a controversial mining company in Armenia, openDemocracy reports today.

New information released under the Freedom of Information Act shows frequent contacts between the UK Foreign Office and Lydian International, the company behind the flagship Amulsar gold mining project in the South Caucasus state. These releases shine a light on campaigners’ concerns about the ties between the mining company and the British embassy in Armenia.

The records, obtained by openDemocracy, reveal how British embassy staff in the Armenian capital Yerevan, including ambassadors, were in regular contact with Lydian International about its Amulsar gold mine from 2013 to 2018. They arranged presentations, seminars, meetings, working groups and project updates. For example, the records list 55 contacts between January and July 2018 between Lydian International and the embassy.

An index of internal communications for 2018, also obtained by openDemocracy, shows how the embassy has followed Amulsar since Armenia’s ‘Velvet Revolution’ put the $400 million mine at the forefront of the country’s politics.

The list details document titles such as “Lydian updates draft”, “Questions for the Ambassador”, “Meeting with Acting PM Pashinyan key points” and “Readout of meeting with Lydian”, recording, for example, seven internal embassy documents relating to Lydian produced in September 2018. That month, the Armenian government ordered an assessment of the effect the gold mining operation would have on the country’s water resources, as well as an independent review of Lydian’s environmental impact assessment.

Armenian environmental campaigners have raised concerns about this relationship, writing open letters about ambassadors’ conduct to the UK Foreign Office in 2013 and 2019.


It is concerning that British government representatives in Armenia have been supporting the construction of this remarkably controversial mine, one which could have a deleterious effect on the environment, as well as the associated health and wellbeing of rural communities,” says Labour MP Lloyd Russell-Moyle. “These documents raise questions about why the UK government would take such a political risk.”

A Foreign Office spokesperson said: “British embassies play a positive role in helping to grow business around the world for UK companies. As such, the British embassy in Yerevan engages with British businesses active in the Armenian market.”

Lydian International did not respond to requests for comment.

Located in the southern Armenian province of Vayots Dzor, the Amulsar gold mine, owned by Jersey-incorporated Lydian International, has been in development for over a decade. In 2013, UK ambassador Katherine Leach called it “potentially the largest British investment in Armenia”. Lydian states it will provide $488 million to the Armenian state budget in tax and royalty contributions through the ten-year operation of the mine, as well as provide 770 jobs.

But after a mass protest movement pushed Armenia’s Republican Party out of power in April and May last year, the mine has become the site of a major stand-off between the Armenian government, protesters and the mining company.

In June 2018, local residents and activists started blockading roads to the mine, preventing the company from finishing construction and starting the full-scale extraction of gold. As a leader of a protest outside Lydian’s office put it last year: “If we managed to make Serzh Sargsyan [Armenian leader forced to resign in 2018] go away, we can make Lydian go away too.”

With the blockades remaining at Amulsar, in March 2019 Lydian notified Armenia of a potential dispute under bilateral investment treaties with the UK and Canada. The Armenian press has reported potential compensation figures up to $2 billion.

“Lydian is a company whose threat of international ‘corporate courts’ arbitration appears to have bullied the Armenian government into submission over the dangerous Amulsar mine, forcing the Armenian government to betray its own people,” comments James Angel, policy and campaign manager at Global Justice Now, which is leading a UK campaign against the mine.

“Why is the UK Embassy working so closely with this toxic company who are riding roughshod over democracy in Armenia? Instead, it should be doing all it can to support the Armenian people’s struggle for clean water and decent, sustainable jobs.”

Lydian calls Amulsar an “example of responsible mining in Armenia”. Successive UK ambassadors and Foreign Office officials have publicly backed the project since 2013, saying that it meets high international standards and had engaged well with local stakeholders, as well as meeting with Armenian officials concerning the project.

That year, the Save Teghut civic initiative wrote an open letter to the UK Foreign Office, calling on it to investigate UK ambassadors’ support for the Amulsar project.

“It is incomprehensible that the Ambassadors of the UK defend the private interests of a company registered in an offshore zone”

In the letter, leading environmental lawyer Artur Grigoryan claimed that UK ambassadors Katherine Leach and Jonathan Aves “continuously exert pressure on the Government of Armenia” in support of Lydian International, citing UK diplomatic staff’s meetings with Armenia’s Ministry of Nature Protection and their public statements.

“It is incomprehensible that the Ambassadors of the UK defend the private interests of a company registered in an offshore zone,” the letter stated.

Responding to Save Teghut, the Foreign Office said that the ambassadors’ actions were “strictly in accordance with appropriate international practice and agreements” and that it was “standard and accepted practice for the British Government and its diplomatic missions to encourage trade and investment opportunities overseas.”

At a groundbreaking ceremony in 2016, the UK ambassador at the time, Judith Farnworth, lauded Lydian International’s dialogue with project stakeholders, including “most crucially, with the local communities”.

This dialogue does not seem to have convinced residents of the villages and town near the mine. In Gndevaz, the village closest to the Amulsar mine, 210 residents made an official complaint to the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a financial sponsor, in 2014. They claimed that the company was “employing any possible tool to deceive” village residents over the mine. A similar complaint was made to the European Bank of Reconstruction and Development, another project sponsor.

An investigation by the IFC’s compliance advisor ombudsman reported “shortcomings in the IFC’s supervision of the assessment of impacts” in Gndevaz, although increased IFC engagement with the project led to an “international standard Environmental and Social Impact Assessment”. In 2017, the IFC stopped its funding of the project.

Jermuk | CC BY-NC 2.0: Raffi Youredjan / Flickr. Some rights reserved.

The town of Jermuk, a nearby tourist centre noted for its hot springs, was not initially included in what Lydian considered the ‘area of influence’ for the mine, and residents were not consulted over environmental and social impact assessments in 2015 and 2016. The IFC ombudsman’s investigation in 2017 found that the “potential impacts on Jermuk’s brand as a tourist center” had not been assessed and mitigated. In late 2018, locals collected 3,000 signatures in support of banning metal mining operations in the area, and to develop a green economy for Jermuk – a position later approved unanimously by the town council.

Locals believe that the mine is already affecting local life, according to a survey of 35 households conducted by the Community Mutual Assistance NGO in October 2018.

As part of this survey of households in Gndevaz, Kechout and Jermuk, 85.7% of respondents reported illness, such as increasing asthmatic attacks, lung diseases and dry skin. As a result of construction operations and explosions, 71.4% of respondents said they had suffered nervous breakdowns, headaches and insomnia. Respondents welcomed the contribution by the company to community infrastructure and household incomes, yet 80% of them were pessimistic about their employment prospects in ten years’ time, when the mine is projected to close.

“There is a strongly held and widely shared belief that despite any short-term economic benefits, this mine will have long-term negative consequences for the environment and for people’s health and wellbeing”

More broadly, local people, environmental activists and their international allies are protesting against the damage they believe the gold mine will do to the environment, biodiversity and human health in the area. There is particular concern about the mine’s heap leach facility, which uses cyanide to separate gold from ore, as the mine is close to a reservoir that connects to Armenia’s main source of fresh water, Lake Sevan.

“There is a strongly held and widely shared belief that despite any short-term economic benefits, this mine will have long-term negative consequences for the environment and for people’s health and wellbeing,” says Armine Ishkanian, associate professor in social policy at the London School of Economics.

“There is a great deal of public skepticism in Lydian’s claims, recently repeated by Armenian government officials, that the mine poses minimal risks,” Ishkanian says.

Lydian states that Amulsar “will show the benefit of transparent and effective investment to world class standards” in Armenia and “bring tangible, direct and lasting economic benefits to the country”.

To protect its reputation, Lydian has brought defamation suits against activists in Armenia campaigning against the project. The International Federation on Human Rights has criticised the company’s “worrying systematic judicial harassment and defamation campaigns aiming to silence critical journalists and human rights defenders, particularly women”.

Earlier this year, 41 international environmental NGOs co-signed a letter to Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan, which reported that Armenian human rights defenders believe Lydian’s “PR strategy is to humiliate and discredit [them] through real and fake users in social media, online media and television”.

In response to one of these claims of social media harassment, Lydian stated that this was “another example of clear disinformation”.

Hayk Aloyan, head of Lydian Armenia, meets British ambassador Judith Farnworth in June 2018 at the Queen’s birthday party event at the UK Embassy in Yerevan | Source: UK Embassy Yerevan / Facebook

The UK Foreign Office’s support for Amulsar has drawn criticism from Armenian civil society.

In June 2018, Armenian human rights and civic activists boycotted the annual Queen’s birthday event at the UK embassy in Yerevan because it was co-sponsored by Lydian International.

Womens’ rights activist Lara Aharonian wrote that she was unable to attend because Lydian International was “exploiting our country’s resources to enrich local corrupt officials and multinationals”. Those concerns did not deter dignitaries, including Armenian president Armen Sarkissian, from attending. Sarkissian acted as a board member of Lydian International in 2013.

“It is standard practice for British embassies to invite commercial organisations with a UK connection to sponsor the Queen’s Birthday Party each year in order to deliver a high-quality celebration whilst limiting public expenditure,” a Foreign Office spokesperson said.

The Amulsar project has now been at a standstill for over a year due to local blockades. In July 2018, Lydian filed a complaint in support of a criminal investigation against activists at the blockades, which was later upheld in court.

That same month, a criminal investigation was opened into whether Armenian public officials had withheld information regarding potential environmental damage at Amulsar. The Armenian authorities allocated nearly $400,000 for an independent review of the project’s environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA) as part of this investigation. Although Lydian has complied with the review, the company “does not accept the need or legal basis” for it, since the Armenian government has already confirmed its compliance with environmental legislation.

“This isn’t simply about the mine. It is about the nature of governance and the future of democracy in Armenia”

This independent review was published earlier this month, and on this basis Prime Minister Pashinyan appeared to decide to permit the mine to go ahead despite protests in Jermuk and Yerevan. “The Audit Report substantiated Lydian’s prudential approach to environmental stewardship,” said Lydian CEO Edward Sellers in response.

The International Federation on Human Rights responded to the new report by pointing to the serious criticisms of Lydian’s ESIA process, such as land acquisition and public consultations, contained within. The organisation emphasised that the report contained “a number of worrying conclusions on the environmental assessment and monitoring plans”, as well as highlighting the report’s conclusion: “The ESIA/EIA [environmental and social impact assessment] assessments are deficient and corresponding conclusions are unreliable. Accordingly, the question of whether exploitation of the ore deposit can conclusively be considered safe cannot be answered.”

Days later, however, Pashinyan requested that Armenia’s Ministry of Environment decide whether a further environmental impact assessment (EIA) was required for the Amulsar project. Lydian called the news “disappointing”, stating that the company “had been subject to three environmental audits over the past year during which there was no suggestion that any additional EIA process would be required”.

24 August 2019, protest march against Amulsar mine, Yerevan | Source: News AM / YouTube

Representatives of Armenian civil society recently called on the UK, US and Swedish embassies to withdraw their support for Amulsar. Addressing the ambassadors, the open letter cited long-standing local opposition to the mine, as well as the new review of the ESIA, which it described as “staggering in its implications”.

“Would any license to operate an open pit mine, in your backyard, ever be granted on the basis of incomplete, inaccurate and fraudulent ESIA? We know the answer to this is ‘no’ and ask that this standard be applied to the citizens of Armenia,” the letter said.

“The Amulsar case has become a test case for Nikol Pashinyan’s government,” comments Armine Ishkanian. “Many civil society activists, who were Pashinyan’s earliest and most active supporters during the protests in the spring of 2018, are very disappointed in his handling of the issue.

“This isn’t simply about the mine. It is about the nature of governance and the future of democracy in Armenia.”

See
Contacts between UK Foreign Office and Lydian International, January 2013 – July 2018 by openDemocracy on Scribd
List of UK Foreign Office documents relating to Lydian International’s Amulsar mine, 2018 by openDemocracy on Scribd

https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/odr/uk-foreign-office-criticised-over-controversial-gold-mine-armenia-amulsar/

Cultural NGO, Artissimo, stakes its claim as a champion of Armenian youth but viability doubts remain

Grit Daily
Sept 2 2019
 
 
 
Cultural NGO, Artissimo, stakes its claim as a champion of Armenian youth but viability doubts remain
 
By Jackie Abramian | Sep 1, 2019
 
How does an opera singer, performing with renowned opera houses and theaters throughout Eurasia, curtail her career to establish a children’s arts and healing program in rural Armenia?
 
With no regrets–lots of love, smiles, and contentment.
 
Changing Lives; Being Changed
 
Professional opera singer Eka Horstka is changing hundreds of children’s lives and transforming herself through her self-styled “cultural NGO,” Artissimo. Horstka is part Ukrainian, part Armenian and has a contagious fervor when she discusses her NGO’s work with   the children.
 
“If you are walking and smiling today, you realize that someone in this world needs your smile to sustain their life. This has nothing to do with money. It has everything to do with being able to love and to give of yourself. You can have all the wealth in the world, but not able to give and smile,” says Horstka in her fast-paced talk.
 
Created in 2017, Artissimo (Art + issimo superlative form) uses art’s “curative, constructive, developing, and educational superpower” to help artistically talented children succeed. It also opens new horizons of acceptance for disabled children. With grants and donations, Horstka has built a safe space for children to gather, interact, create and “build value and transform through art.”
 
But funds are drying up.
  
During the 2015 100th anniversary observance of the Armenian Genocide, Horstka was the artistic director of the Naregatsi Art Institute. She set out to find 100 musical talents ages 5-15.  Her mission: form a children’s musical ensemble to celebrate the survival of the “talent gene” among genocide descendants.  In 1915, the Ottoman Turks massacred 1.5 million Armenians in an attempted annihilation and ethnic cleansing campaign. Horstka proved the genocide did not eradicate the Armenian talent gene. And that it is alive and thriving in present-day republic of Armenia.
 
Horstka selected 150 musically talented children, calling them the 100 Beacons. The ensemble performed at the 100th anniversary commemorative events. They lit the commemoration with “talent and art.” Among the 150 were children with various disabilities.
 
Children Without Borders
 
In 2018, as part of “kids for kids” campaign, the Beacons children’s ensemble traveled to Istanbul, Turkey. In a symbolic gesture, they joined their Armenian counterparts in Turkey — purportedly historic Armenian territory — oppressed of their cultural traditions. At the Kinaliada Island summer camp, the Beacons performed and provided music lessons to campers. By the end of the two weeks, the Armenian children in Turkey were fluent in ancient Armenian tunes and songs.
 
“We awakened the talented Armenian children of Istanbul through the children-for-children concerts and knowledge share,” explains Horstka excitedly. “And at the 25th anniversary of the establishment of Free, Independent Republic of Armenia, 25 talented children, born in post-Soviet, free Armenia performed at the celebrations,” she added.
 
Artissimo continues to support the musically talented children to widen their artistic horizons. For Horstka the children are master musicians of ancient Armenian musical instruments who will pass on their knowledge to the next generations.
 
Artissimo Expands into Gemstone
 
When Horstka learned of Armenia’s eastern Martuni region’s large population of disabled children, she decided to change the statistics. In 2017, Horstka opened the Voskeporik (gemstone) Aesthetic Development Center – the first rehabilitation center in the region.  With support from United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR, Armenia), Horstka created Art Opens Doors program integrating art projects with other services for the disabled children.
 
“UMCOR was the first organization to believe in us. They understand the importance of our program in Martuni–and the value of integrating disabled children into the greater society,” says Horstka. “Their support has made it possible for our program to thrive in the region.”
 
In the conservative rural region, disability is a major taboo. Parents often hide their disabled children away. They are shunned by the community, don’t take part in public events or attend local schools.
 
Among many challenges facing the rural economy is the lack of employment opportunities. To provide for their families, most men seek jobs abroad–mostly in Russia. Absent fathers and various other environmental issues result in premature births and children with various disabilities. With absentee fathers, mothers are primary caretakers of the disabled children.
 
Today, Voskeporik center serves 300 registered children and 90 are disabled children. The center offers classes and workshops in music, fine arts, theater, journalism, cinema, ethnic dance and music, healthy lifestyle, and environmental protection. Often Horstka invites professionals to give interactive workshops.
 
Project Continuous Love
 
This February to better serve the disabled children and their families, the Voskeporik center created Continuous Love Project. With support from Martuni Mayor’s office, U.S. Peace Corps, and individual benefactors, 90 disabled children in the region receive free services. For the first time, professionals address the plight of the region’s disabled children and their families–and children are integrated into the community.
 
Papier mâché Peace Angels, made by the disabled children, encourage hand movements and are sold to generate funds for Artissimo NGO.
 
Public awareness for disabled children’s care and nurture are drastically heightened. Integrating music and art projects with professional physical therapy helps children relax and stimulate muscle movement. Therapists also train mothers to improve childcare with more compassion.
 
However, lack of proper transport in the region keeps many families and their children deprived of the services. Horstka hopes to raise funds to purchase vans to transport and accommodate wheelchairs and other special needs children.
 
Mind Shift Among Parents of the Disabled
 
The Armenian government has ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities to “ensure and promote the full realization of all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all persons with disabilities.”  In November 2017, Armenia joined UNICEF’s global Children Takeover campaign dedicated to World Children’s Day. Yet, amongst the most marginalized groups in Armenia are children with disabilities.
 
Most disabled children are kept at home or put away in orphanages. Girls with disabilities are more likely to be in orphanages. And children in orphanages are not integrated into the local communities or public education system.
 
“One of the most important things happening as a result of this center is the mentality shift,” says Peace Corps volunteer, Kelsey Rowe, who worked with Horstka in Martuni for a year. “Parents are now proud of their disabled children. They put aside the shame they felt. Parents are also more interactive with other parents–creating a much-needed social network for women.”
 
Rowe wrote and got a Peace Corps grant which various local community organizations and individual donors matched. Using the funds, Horstka set up a three-room physical therapy area with proper equipment and hired a full-time physical therapist.  From art therapy to horseback riding, to speech therapy the free services provide the children with much-needed stimulation.  Mothers spend more time with their children observing the therapists and take an active role in their child’s care.
 
Funds Are Drying Up
 
“We are people who value, share, and spread ideas and messages of human creativity, promoting the realization of universal human values,” says Horstka proudly. “I have a great army working with me to make all this possible.  The children, their parents, our dedicated volunteers and staff and specialists who give their whole self to ensure we continue to change the disabled children’s lives – and their parents.”
 
With an annual operating budget of $32,000, Horstka is determined to continue the center’s services, providing care for the disabled children and their families. Several children are candidates for corrective surgeries to improve their mobility. With commitments from various foundations to underwrite the surgeries, transportation remains a challenge.  The desperate poverty levels make it nearly impossible for families to travel to major city hospitals.  More importantly for critical post-surgery therapy.
 
“We need funds to purchase a special van to transport parents with children in wheelchairs. If we can raise the funds for the van, the regional government has agreed to provide the petrol,” explains Horstka.
 
For now, Horstka devotes herself full time to her NGO — putting her operatic career on hold. All the regrets wipe away, she says, “When I hug a child–the therapy is as much for me as for the children. Love has no borders or limits.”
 
Horstka has enough funds to last through the year. She has no funds to continue her services in 2020. “I’m confident we will continue our work because the parents trust us with their children. And that’s a treasure chest. It’s the greatest resource,” says Horstka as tears well in her eyes.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Armenian university students protest interim rector’s resignation

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 2 2019

A group of students of the Armenian State University of Economics have been staging a protest outside the university building since Monday morning demanding the return of resigned interim rector Ruben Hayrapetyan to office.

Hayrapetyan stepped down in late August after being accused of plagiarism in his PhD dissertation by some lectures of the university. Diana Galoyan is set to perform the interim rector’s duties after his resignation.

The students on the strike claim that the discrimination against the former university head and calls for his resignation ‘undermine’ a whole system of reforms launched by Hayrapetyan.

Several lecturers of the university also joined the protesting students, with one of them hailing the reforms initiated by the dismissed rector as a ‘necessity’ for the university. 


  

Karabakh problem can’t be solved only by diplomatic or military means – Pashinyan

ARKA, Armenia
Sept 2 2019

YEREVAN, September 2. /ARKA/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, in an interview with Nouvelle d’Arménie magazine, pointed out the Karabakh problem as one of threats to Armenia’s security. The Armenian translation of the interview is available on the Armenian premier’s website.  

“As long as the Karabakh problem remains unsolved it is still early to speak about elimination of these threats,” he said. “We have a conflict, and it is not settled. If we are people with strategic thinking, and I am convinced that this is so, then we can’t give very quick solutions to our problems.”
In his words, this problems needs consolidation of the national potential, and therefore the Armenia’s society and economy should be competitive, inclusive and constantly developing.

“We should ensure a very serious economic progress,” he said. “The Karabakh problem can’t be solved only by diplomatic or military means. A stronger and more competitive economy, a powerful society and advanced technologies are needed.”

Nikol Pashinyan said that potential enemies should understand that Armenia is highly united and that it is senseless to fight against it.

“There is no need to calm each other – we should understand that we have a problem,” the premier said in his interview. “Of course, the necessity to find a solution to this problem is the government and the prime minister’s top-priority objective.”

  He also connects Amnesia’s security with the export and industry diversification. -0—

Armenian government’s plan to close down boarding schools is fraught with serious violations of children’s rights

ARKA, Armenia
Sept 2 2019

YEREVAN, September 2. /ARKA/. The Armenian government’s plan to close down boarding schools is fraught with serious violations of children’s rights, the head of the National Pedagogical and Psychological Center Armine Davtyan stated at a press conference today.

She said the closure of boarding schools and handing the children down to the full custody of their families should be carried out in stages. ‘If the process is forced, the children may find themselves in difficult social conditions, which will also affect their psyche. The promised monitoring of the families cannot guarantee their safety and care in families which suffer from social and other problems,” she said.

She said although the rights of the child to the family are enshrined in the Constitution, there are no guarantees that the child will  receive care in the family, and the money the government gives the family  for it will be spent as intended.

“After classes in boarding schools the child is under guardianship, but if the schools are liquidated, the child may end up on the street or in conditions that would injure their psyche. It will be especially difficult for children with physical disabilities if they are not accepted in their own family,” said Davtyan.
According to Armine Davtyan, difficulties in the family can lead to increased child vagrancy, as well as increased crime among children and serious mental disorders.

She said special boarding schools must be preserved for those children whose residence in their own families is completely impossible. According to her, the state should develop new criteria for admission to boarding schools, based on the observance of children’s rights, especially guarantees of their safety, education and care.

“It is clear that the actions of the government should be aimed at maintaining a healthy and strong family, but in cases where the safety of children and their rights are violated, strict measures must be taken,” Davtyan said. –0-