Prominent Soviet Armenian actor Yervand Manaryan turns 95 today

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 10 2019
Culture 11:16 10/08/2019 Armenia

Merited Soviet Armenian actor, director, screenwriter and People’s Artist of Armenia Yervand Manaryan celebrates his 95th birthday on Saturday, 10 August.

Manaryan was born in 1924, in Arak, Iran. He attended the Haykazian School, later the American and Persian Colleges in Tehran. In 1946, his family repatriated to Soviet Armenia along with thousands of other Iranian Armenians. He graduated from the directing department of Yerevan State Institute of Theatre and Fine Arts in 1952.

He worked as an actor and a director at Hakob Paronyan Musical Comedy Theatre and Gabriel Sundukyan State Academic Theatre. From 1957 to 1959, he served as the general director of Yerevan State Puppet Theatre after Hovhannes Tumanyan. Manaryan became the artistic director of Argus Puppet Theatre in 1988. He also served as one of the chief directors of Yerevan State Puppet Theatre.

Manaryan wrote the script for “Tzhvzhik” (‘Fried Liver’), a famous Soviet Armenian short film. He is best known for his roles in such films as “Karine”, “Morgan’s Relative” and “A Bride from the North”.

Paylan to treasure hunters: If only you knew the real treasure is the church itself

Panorama, Armenia
Aug 10 2019
Society 17:34 10/08/2019 Armenia

Istanbul-Armenian MP Garo Paylan, representing the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), took to Twitter to comment on the attack against the historic Armenian church in Germush District of Urfa, Turkey by treasure hunters.

The MP shared the photos of the damaged church where treasure seekers have dug deep holes for gold and jewels, Ermenihaber reports.

“If only you knew that the real treasure is the church itself … Thousands of churches in the country have been destroyed and continue to be destroyed by thieves and vandals,” Paylan said. 


Solar panels installed on apartment buildings in Yerevan

JAM News
Aug 10 2019

Yerevan City Hall and the European Union are implementing a renewable energy programme with a budget exceeding one million euros

Yerevan Municipality and the European Union are implementing a joint renewable energy programme called the European Union for Yerevan. Solar community.

The aim of the project is to reduce energy consumption and, accordingly, greenhouse gas emissions – by about 850 tonnes per year. The total budget of the joint programme is 1,250,000 euros.

Widespread electricity blackouts hit Armenian grid

Armenian nuclear power station made safer – International Atomic Energy Agency

The following will take place during the project:

• installation of solar panels on 90 high-rise residential buildings in Yerevan,

• replacement of all lights in the courtyards of the city with energy-saving lighting systems,

• providing socially disadvantaged families with energy-saving bulbs

Earlier, in 2017, thanks to cooperation with the EU, public transport stops appeared on Yerevan, on which solar panels were installed.

With their help, you can charge mobile phones, tablets and other devices. After installing solar panels, one of the stops was visited by the head of the EU delegation to Armenia, Ambassador Petr Svitalsky. He called it the “EU solar stop.”

“Armenia is rich in sun, and we need to use this natural advantage. The energy sector is a priority in Armenia, therefore the European Union provides it with long-term assistance for the development of energy efficiency at the local, community and state levels.”

The government believes that Armenia has great potential in solar and wind energy and the authorities intend to increase the share of renewable energy.

To this end, five industrial solar stations with a capacity of up to 120 mW will be built in the country.

Now in Armenia there are ten solar stations of different capacities.

Significant investments in renewable energy in Armenia may come from the United Arab Emirates.

The “State Interest Fund” of Armenia and “Masdar” company signed an investment memorandum, according to which the initial investment volume may amount to $500 million.

According to the Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran Avinyan, Masdar intends to build solar and wind station in Armenia, the total capacity of which will reach 500 MW. The government considers these investments to be a major contribution to Armenia’s energy security.

Currently the share of renewable energy in Armenia does not exceed one percent of the total energy produced in the country.

The energy system itself is quite diversified and consists of nuclear, thermal and hydropower sources.

The Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant operates in the country, which produces about 40 percent of electricity. Another 40 percent is accounted for by two large thermal power plants.

Hydropower provides 20 percent of the country’s electricity. These are mainly small hydropower plants, the number of which, according to 2018, was 184.

Armenia was also interested in implementing a joint project with Iran to build a hydroelectric station in Meghri, which would be the largest in the region, but so far it has not been possible to switch to the active phase of implementation.

Experts spoke out again about energy security in Armenia after a major energy accident that happened in July this year, when large-scale problems with electricity supply were registered throughout Armenia.

Metro passengers had to be evacuated in Yerevan after metro cars got stuck in tunnels.

Due to fluctuations in the energy network, there were failures in the work of mobile and Internet connection operators as well.

This situation arose due to problems at the Yerevan TPP and at the fifth power unit of the Hrazdan TPP.


Book: Perfumed Jasmine In The Nave

Outlook India Magazine
Aug 10 2019

VIVIAN FERNANDES07 AUGUST 2019

THE CHURCHES OF INDIA
BY JOANNE TAYLOR
NIYOGI BOOKS | PAGES: 284 | RS. 1,494


Joanne Taylor’s is a breezy, illus­trated look at Indian churches. With 310 photographs, it is infor­mative, but not fact-bound. The selection of 57 churc­hes from Ker­­ala, Goa, Chennai, Bangal­ore, Calcutta, Mumbai, Delhi, Pondiche­rry and Chandannagar conv­eys the geo­graphical spread, the historical evolution, denominational variety and architectural diversity of Ind­ian churches. Of these, 31 are Roman Cat­holic, nine Ang­lican, six Protest­ant, four Syro-Mal­abar Catholic, two each Presbyterian and Orthodox Syrian, and one each Armenian Orthodox, Church of North India and Church of South India.

Taylor begins with the arrival of the apostle St. Thomas at the ancient port of Muziris, near Kodungallur, in A.D. 51. He is believed to have built churches at seven locations. From 4 to 6 century AD, there were waves of Christians fleeing persecution in Persia. Isolated over time from their native country, the Nazranis or followers of Jesus of Naz­a­reth built churches to resemble the three-tiered gabled temples of Kerala.   

The early churches began in the 9th cen­­tury. They were built of perishable materials and do not exist.  Later ones were made of laterite stone and wood. Like temples, they were enclosed within compound walls with arched entrances.  

Traditional Syrian Christian churches were built east to west. They have three elevations: for the altar area, the choir, and the worshippers. According to a sch­olar, Kerala’s churches are “Christian in religion, Hindu in culture and Syro-Ori­ental in worship.”

The Portuguese built churches to imp­ress. The Church of St. Francis at Fort Kochi (1503) was their first in India. As power changed hands among colonial powers, so did the church. The Portuguese started inserting European facades betw­een the porch and nave of old Kerala churches to give them a ‘Christian’ look.

Goa’s Se cathedral of Santa Catarina is the largest church in Asia. St. Xavier initiated the Inquisition here. Its ‘golden bell’ sounded the burning of heretics at the stake.

Unlike the British, the Portuguese did not keep trading and religion apart. Ent­h­usiastic church-builders, they lav­is­hed them with funds. The churches built bet­ween 1510 and 1550 in Goa com­bined Gothic architecture with lavish ornamentation. Motifs like ropes, anchors, sailing ships, shells and waves symbolised that period of maritime exploration. The chu­r­­ches that followed were built in Baroque style, though less ornate than Portugal’s.  Local craftsmen, over time, gave Indian looks to the saints and angels.

Taylor throws in interesting factoids. The Se Cathedral of Santa Catarina is the largest church in Asia. It is 76 metre long and 55 metre wide.  (Though elsewhere she says the Sumi Baptist Church of Nagaland is the largest). St. Xavier, who is Goa’s revered saint, initiated the Inqui­sition there. Its ‘golden bell ’sounded the burning of heretics. A crucifix dating back to that terrible era is in the Chapel of St. Sebastian. It has the hanging Jesus looking up, not down, with eyes open, not shut. The Lady of Dolours Basilica, Thrissur, according to Taylor, is the tallest in Asia.  This Syro-Malabar Catholic church is an enormous Gothic structure with an area of 2,300 sq. m.

In Calcutta, the oldest church is the Holy Nazareth, built in 1724 by Arm­enian Orthodox Christians who had fled persecution from the Turks and the Per­s­ians. It has whitewashed walls and Isl­amic-style arches between enormous columns.

The British churches were cruciform (cross-like) in shape, unlike the rectangular basilica plan of the Portuguese. This design can accommodate a larger congregation. St. Paul’s Cathedral in Calcutta and the Cathedral Church of the Holy Red­emption in New Delhi are among the best-known British churches. Their first in India was at Fort St. George in Chennai. Skinner’s Church or St. James’s Church in Old Delhi is unique for its octagonal dome. But the most striking is St. Martin’s Garrison Church in Delhi Cantonment. It’s built like a fortress.  

Among the modern churches is Our Lady of Salvation Church at Dadar. Origi­nally built by Portuguese Francis­cans it was rebuilt in 1977. Charles Correa des­igned it. Taylor says its moul­ded concrete interiors and low light invoke a sil­ent ret­reat. In Varanasi, St Mary’s Cathedral designed by A.G.K. Menon and built in 1993, incorporates the mandala plan from which a multi-layered vertical form rises, like a Hindu shikhara.

It would have been interesting to have a section on churches in the Northeast, especially Nagaland, which according to Taylor is known as ‘the most Baptist state in the world.’ According to Taylor, its egg-shaped Sumi Baptist Church can seat 8,500 people. There are also new denominations that are attracting followers, often from the mainstream churches: Pentecostals, Jehovah’s Wit­nesses, New Life and so on. Their chur­ches are often functional prayer halls. But some of them might be distinct. A mention would have added to the book’s flavor.


Criminal case against Armenia’s ex-president lands in European court

dpa-AFX International ProFeed
August 9, 2019 Friday 8:16 PM GMT
Criminal case against Armenia's ex-president lands in European court
 
 
PARIS (dpa-AFX) – Armenia's Constitutional Court is seeking advice from the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) about a law under which former president Robert Kocharyan is facing trial. The Strasbourg court announced on Friday that it had received a request from the Armenian court for an advisory opinion about a criminal code article dealing with the overthrow of the constitutional order. Kocharyan is accused of overthrowing the constitutional order by authorizing a violent 2008 crackdown on protests against his protege Serzh Sargsyan's disputed victory in presidential polls. The ECHR said the Armenian Constitutional Court was considering two cases about the constitutionality of the article, one brought by Kocharyan himself and the other by a court in the capital Yerevan. The former president surrendered himself to a Yerevan jail in June after a court ordered him remanded pending trial. Armenia's current Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan rose to power in April last year as he led protests in opposition to the appointment of Sargsyan to the prime ministerial post at the time. Sargsyan, who had just reached his term limit as president after serving a decade, was prime minister for only a week before he decided to resign amid the protests. The case is the second where a national court has requested an advisory opinion from the ECHR under a protocol to the European Convention on Human Rights that came into effect last year. In the first such case, the court ruled in April that French authorities did not have to register the intended mother of a child born abroad to a surrogate mother as the child's mother on its birth certificate, as long as it was possible to establish the legal parental relationship of the intended mother by other means.

Russia’s stance on determining Nagorno-Karabakh status through negotiations unchanged

ITAR-TASS
Friday 1:56 PM GMT
Russia’s stance on determining Nagorno-Karabakh status through negotiations unchanged
 
 SOLNECHNOGORSK /Moscow Region/ August 9
 
Russia’s stance on determining the ultimate status of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and resolving the crisis through negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan has remained unchanged, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said at a briefing held at the Territory of Meanings National Education Youth Forum on Friday.
  
SOLNECHNOGORSK /Moscow Region/, August 9. /TASS/. Russia’s stance on determining the ultimate status of the Nagorno-Karabakh region and resolving the crisis through negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan has remained unchanged, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said at a briefing held at the Territory of Meanings National Education Youth Forum on Friday.
 
"Russia proceeds from the assumption that the ultimate status of Nagorno-Karabakh should be determined through negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia. You know our position, it has remained unchanged," she said.
 
Zakharova noted that Moscow would continue to provide assistance in resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh crisis by peaceful means. "For our part, as a Minsk Group co-chair and, considering Moscow’s close relations with Baku and Yerevan, we remain committed to providing assistance in promoting the peace process," she said.
 
The diplomat pointed out that Moscow was concerned about mutual accusations between Azerbaijan and Armenia. "This rhetoric is not in the interests of creating favorable conditions for the negotiation process and, accordingly, searching for compromise options for resolving the conflict," she explained.
 
Talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement have been going on since 1992. Russia, the US and France are the co-chairs of the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) that acts as a mediator in resolving the crisis.
 
An agreement on a ceasefire in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone was reached between Baku and Yerevan on May 12, 1994.
 
The situation along the contact line in Nagorno-Karabakh deteriorated in April 2016. The parties reaffirmed their commitment to normalizing the situation in a trilateral statement approved on June 20, 2016, following meeting between the Russian, Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents in St. Petersburg.

PM Pashinyan attends cultural event in the sidelines of Eurasian Intergovernmental Council session

PM Pashinyan attends cultural event in the sidelines of Eurasian Intergovernmental Council session

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19:53, 9 August, 2019

YEREVAN, AUGUST 9, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia NIkol Pashinyan is in Kyrgyzstan, Cholpon Ata city on a working visit.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan attended a cultural event following the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council session.

Together with the Heads of Government of the EAEU member states and the Board Chairman of the Eurasian Economic Commission Pashinyan attended “Tengri-2019”” international musical festival.

PM Pashinyan’s visit to the Republic of Kyrgyzstan is over. Today Pashinyan will return to Armenia with his delegation.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




22 U.S. Senators join 89 Representatives to reverse Trump attempt to De-Fund Artsakh Aid

22 U.S. Senators join 89 Representatives to reverse Trump attempt to De-Fund Artsakh Aid

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20:56, 9 August, 2019

YEREVAN, AUGUST 9, ARMENPRESS. Congressional opposition to the Trump Administration attempts to cut U.S. aid for the Artsakh de-mining continues to grow with 22 Senators from 16 states representing 143 million Americans co-signing a letter defending this life-saving program. The Senate initiative was led by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Ranking Democrat Bob Menendez (D-NJ), ARMENPRESS was informed from the official website of the Armenian National Committee of America.

Earlier, on August 5, the U.S. House of Representatives sent a swift and powerful rebuke to the Trump Administration’s efforts to cut U.S. aid for Artsakh de-mining efforts, with 89 Members of Congress – many chairing key House committees – co-signing a letter, led by senior House Foreign Affairs Committee member Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Congressman TJ Cox (D-CA), defending this life-saving program.

The Sherman-Cox letter, an initiative supported by the ANCA, encourages USAID Administrator Mark Green to reverse course and continue U.S. funding for the Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) de-mining program. Administrator Green testified before the Foreign Affairs Committee on April 9th of this year that USAID was committed to completing the clearance of landmines and unexploded ordnances within the traditional boundaries of Nagorno Karabakh.

“Within a week, during a Congressional recess, eighty-nine U.S. Representatives from 24 states – including 10 full Committee chairs – joined with the ANCA in openly challenging the Trump Administration’s misguided attempt to end U.S. aid to Artsakh – a powerful response that speaks volumes about the scope and depth of American support for this life-saving program,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We thank Representatives Sherman and Cox for leading this effort on the House side, are actively supporting the efforts of Senator Menendez on the Senate side, and will continue our work to make Artsakh mine-free and expand the U.S. aid program to include vital rehabilitation services,” continued Hamparian.

Members of Congress received thousands of letters and calls from constituents through the ANCA Rapid Responder system and March to Justice platforms in support of continued aid to Artsakh, with the ANCA Leo Sarkisian and Maral Melkonian Avetisyan summer fellows meeting with hundreds of Capitol Hill staffers in support of the initiative. 

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan




A1+: Karen Demirchyan’s statue to be placed in front of sport and concert complex (video)


August 8, 2019

RA Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Suren Papikyan presented today a draft law for the installation of Karen Demirchyan's statue in front of K. Demirchyan Sports and Concert Complex.

Introducing the project, the minister noted that 3 million 281 thousand drams will be required for this project.

"The issue has been discussed with the family and they have proposed to place the statue there," the minister said.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said there had been a decision to install Demirchyan's statue long ago. and when he asked about the deadlines, Suren Papikyan did not specify when the monument would be placed.

The decision was confirmed.


A1+: Improvements are made in the university – Minister of Education (video)


AUgust 8, 2019

Minister of Education Arayik Harutyunyan does not see any unhealthy moral-psychological atmosphere in the Armenian State University of Economics.

"There are normal processes in the university, the improvements are made in the university, which, of course, should raise some resistance, but if the lecturers raise specific questions, the ministry will definitely address those specific issues," he said.

Speaking to reporters after the cabinet meeting, Arayik Harutyunyan said he had no information that about 200 lecturers at the university would no longer work.

"I have information that a competition has taken place for the lecturers and a new order has been set. Accordingly, the best lecturers will continue to teach. In general, we also have exaggerated systems in universities,” the minister said.