Armenia’s Velvet Revolution is yet to bring change for the country’s LGBT community

Open Democracy
 
 
 
Armenia’s Velvet Revolution is yet to bring change for the country’s LGBT community
 
Since Armenia’s 2018 Velvet Revolution, life has become easier for its citizens. But members of the country’s LGBT community have seen little improvement in their situation.
 
Ekaterina Fomina
 
Very few people live an open life in Armenia. There are always relatives and neighbours to keep a close eye on young men and women’s personal lives.
 
But where do lesbian and gay people go to meet one another in Armenia? As in other countries, people in Armenia use apps and online dating sites, but no one posts any photos there. If you manage to arrange a date, it’s usually presented as something casual, as though you’re two people just meeting for a beer. Acquaintances made like this sometimes end in blackmail and extortion over photos and messages. Going to the police carries risks, and there’s little point: Armenia’s Constitution may talk about gender equality, but there’s no guarantees of protection from discrimination on grounds of gender identity or orientation.
 
Despite Armenia’s approval of the UN Declaration on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in 2008, the country is one of the most homophobic in Europe. According to ILGA-Europe’s Rainbow Europe country ranking, Armenia occupies practically the penultimate place, 47th out of 49, in terms of respect for LGBT+ rights. And according to a survey by the Pew Research Centre, 95% of Armenians under the age of 35 disapprove of gay marriage.
 
In 2012, for example, the only gay club in Yerevan, DIY was burned down, and the arsonist, two Iranian-Armenian brothers, received a suspended sentence. The episode triggered an attack on the LGBT+ community by pro-government media, and a ruling Republican Party MP described the attack as “proper and justified”.
 
That same year, the LGBT+ community attempted to hold a Diversity March, but it was broken up by supporters of “traditional values”. In 2014, the popular Iravunk newspaper printed a list of 40 Facebook users which, it claimed, “serve the interest of the international homosexual lobby”. Since then, Armenia’s LGBT+ community has conducted no open events or activities.
 
At the same time, Armenia voted to join the Eurasian Economic Union, and continued to draw closer to Moscow. And since Russia passed what became known as its “Gay Propaganda Law” in 2013, incidents of homophobia-instigated violence in Armenia have been on the increase.
 
“There has been an escalation of homophobia since the ‘anti-gay propaganda’ protests in Moscow,” an Armenian politician, who prefers to remain anonymous, tells me. “People here watched what people were telling them on TV and did the same – Armenians have always followed Russia’s lead.”
 
These days, outbursts of everyday homophobia are common. The last known incident took place in February 2019, when gay activist Max Varzhapetyan was beaten up in the centre of Yerevan. His attacker said that Varzhapetyan had no right to call himself an Armenian and a man, he was, apparently, just a “sister”. According to Varzhapetyan, police officers told him that “Gays have no business being in our country – that’s why this happened to you.”
 
 
Sergo and Narek’s stories are identical. They are the same age, 24, and both are gay men living in Armenia. They grew up in very different families, but life has been equally difficult for them.
 
Narek’s family emigrated from the US to Armenia when he was six. “I was always an outsider, otar in Armenian: I didn’t speak the language well and was also rather ‘camp’ [manernyi, the only word Narek spoke in Russian during our entire conversation]. But I was unaware of this. I was a target of violence and cruelty at school nearly every day – just because I was different. I went to school in Yerevan, which had more of a village than a city atmosphere at the time. I realise why I got picked on: defending their nation from ‘outsiders’ is in Armenians’ blood.”
 
Sergo, unlike Narek, was born in Yerevan, but this didn’t mean he was accepted. The only reason he didn’t get beaten up too much was that he allowed his classmates to copy his work in class. Both young men recall how in the breaks at school the kids would discuss the latest local news, including the attacks on those who were suspected of being gay.
 
“At one point, the big story was how one guy had killed himself after being beaten up and raped,” says Sergo. “Nobody said anything out loud about what happened, but they didn’t need to. If a lad had got himself raped, he was obviously asking for it. At the time, I had no idea why it really got to me. The kids at school would spend their breaks looking at photos of naked women, but I wasn’t interested in that.”
 
Narek and Sergo, who were both involved in the 2018 revolution, are now planning to leave the country
 
“We were members of a computer club,” Narek tells me, “but do you know what went on there? We were supposedly playing computer games, but in fact everyone was quietly watching pornography. When I was in Year Seven [aged 14-15], I’d never even heard the word ‘gay’, and I looked up ‘sex between two men’ online. And when I saw the word, it made a big impression, set off a spark of awareness in me. I started looking into it further, researching the issue, studying the terminology – I was a curious child.”
 
Narek kept his revelation a secret for a long time, but after a few years he shared it with a girl classmate. The next day, the whole school knew about it, and his classmates tried to make him pay for it.
 
“It was very traumatic for me.”
 
When Sergo was 20, he came out to his mother. He wrote her a letter, saying: “I can’t carry this burden alone any longer. If I can’t accept myself as I am, I’ll just eat myself up inside and end up taking my own life.” He recalls how his mother burst into tears as she read it and started persuading her son that he was going through a “transitional phase” and just needed to “work on himself”.
 
“She asked me not to say anything to my dad. I showed her scientific articles, explained that it wasn’t just a whim, but my nature, but her Soviet upbringing and religious faith, not to mention Russian TV propaganda, all conspired to my failure to change her opinion. Her position was simple: if something was at variance with her ideas, it was Western propaganda. We still live together, the aggression has passed, but she is still worried that one of her neighbours or friends will find out, and that would bring shame on the family.”
 
Sergo and Narek are quiet young men who wouldn’t stand out in a crowd. During Armenia’s 2018 Velvet Revolution, they both went out on the streets – the protests were supported by a lot of LGBT+ people, although nobody raised a rainbow banner. They were fighting for a new Armenia – an Armenia for everyone – but it doesn’t look as though there is any place for them in it.
 
“Since the revolution, Armenians have felt that their voices can be heard, and that has created numerous nationalist movements,” Narek tells me. “Even Nikol Pashinyan’s slogan DUXOV [“With spirit” – ed.] is nationalist in spirit. The LGBT+ community has certainly not benefited from it.”
 
“I’m fed up,” says Narek. “I’m tired. I don’t want to fight any more. Twelve of my activist friends have left the country this year already. And that’s not counting ordinary members of the LGBT+ community.”
 
Sergo echoes his thoughts: “I don’t want to live a secret life all the time, I want to be normal. I want to go to Lovers’ Park and hold hands like everyone else. The new administration certainly includes gay and lesbian officials – and there will be change. But the change won’t happen during my youth.”
 
Narek and Sergo, who were both involved in the 2018 revolution, are now planning to leave the country. According to figures from the PINK Armenia human rights organisation, 5,891 people identifying as LGBT+ emigrated from Armenia in the three years between 2011-2013. No statistics have been available for the following years.
 
The human rights professor
 
A man in his forties with a chiselled profile is sitting on a bench in Yerevan’s Lovers’ Park, not far from Armenia’s Parliament building. An older woman and her grandson approach him hesitantly.
 
“Excuse me, are you Armenian?” she asks. The man nods. “And you’re gay? I recognise you.” Being openly gay in Armenia is depressing – few people are prepared to openly admit their orientation.
 
Vahan Bournazian moved from California to Armenia 14 years ago, after homosexuality stopped being a criminal offence. He held a public coming-out ceremony and wrote a letter to the independent Hetq publication, saying that “to live an honest life, we have to be bold enough to admit to our true nature”.
 
Vahan relays the conversation to me: the woman said that she had seen a photo of him on the internet and asked whether he thought that he was turning young men gay. He answered her in Armenian, which he still speaks with an accent:
 
“No one can turn gay. I never wanted to be one. But I realised that I couldn’t deceive myself.”
 
 
The woman deluged the professor with questions. Her interest was evidently stronger than her prejudices. Vahan remembers how she would lower her voice to a whisper when one of the park wardens went past.
 
“She had invaded my personal space,” he said, “but at the same time protected me from other people, so that nobody could hear what we were talking about. It was like she was examining me. People need knowledge, but it’s nowhere to be found.”
 
Then the woman said to him: “I hope my children won’t have to go through what you went through. I realise now that you are a very sensitive individual, and that you had no other choice.”
 
Most Armenians believe that you can’t be an Armenian and a homosexual, but that’s nonsense. Vahan disproves the myth.
 
“I am proud to have adopted the identity of my forebears. My grandmother was a survivor of the 1915 genocide. That’s why I have made my home here, and teach human rights. And it’s why I’m openly gay.”
 
The nature of Armenian homophobia can be explained by the country’s history, says Bournazian. Armenia has had to fight long and hard to preserve its identity, and was always at risk of invasion. For centuries, it had no political unity. The main thing that held it together was its church and the values it held. The worst assault on Armenia’s existence was the genocide of 1915 and the subsequent forced annexation of the First Armenian Republic by the Soviet Union. Both of these events reawakened the country’s fear of losing its national identity, and the ongoing Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has fed and – still feeds this fear. And one administration after another frightened Armenians with the threat of “homosexuality that can destroy a nation”. Who would then fight? Who would give birth to new Armenians?
 
“Armenia is a nation of villages,” Vahan tells me. “It is a small population that lived for a long time without a state. Family relations are the main thing here; people still call each other ‘brother’, ‘sister’, ‘auntie’ and ‘uncle’. The public sphere is not yet developed in Armenia; people don’t trust wider social mechanisms. They prefer personal conversations – like the one that I had with that woman.”
 
The only way to put a stop to homophobia in Armenia is to speak openly about one’s sexual orientation, says Vahan
 
The only way to put a stop to homophobia in Armenia is to speak openly about one’s sexual orientation, says Vahan. Which is why he has got involved with a film, Listen to Me, about openly LGBT+ people. It’s première was due to take place during the 2017 Golden Apricot Festival, but was dropped a day before the opening without any explanation. And Bournazian didn’t have his contract with the American University in Armenia extended after he came out publicly; he now teaches a course in human rights at Yerevan State University.
 
“How should I describe you in my text?”
 
“Professor of human rights, gay man.”
 
“Sisters”
 
If Armenian society is intolerant towards gay men, many don’t even recognise the existence of lesbians.
 
“It’s easier for us to live in Armenia,” says Mariam. “Little girls traditionally walk hand in hand; they are sisters, best friends.”
 
Mariam is 26 and dressed in a severe style, with short hair, but she has a very childish face. She wasn’t a wanted child; her parents, like most Armenians, wanted a son. Having a son is seen as preferable for many reasons: he will be a soldier and will support his parents in their old age. Armenia occupies the third highest place in international tables for sex-selective abortions.
 
Mariam spent her first school years in Russia, but then moved to Armenia. More precisely, she moved to a small town in the Sevan valley, founded by Russian Molokans, members of an Orthodox religious sect. “It’s a very depressing place,” she says. “Very closed off, like some kind of Twin Peaks or something.”
 
Mariam’s appropriately conservative grandmother disapproved of even ordinary friendships with male classmates. Mariam tells me that this gave her a very twisted attitude towards the male sex. And bullying by her boy cousin didn’t help either.
 
“They still say: ‘You organised a revolution at school’. The boys were always falling in love with me and chasing me. All this attention got on my nerves”
 
She laughs:
 
“I was in love with one boy at school, and I got a black eye because of him – I fell while chasing him. That also helped: life made me a lesbian.”
 
Mariam was always a rebel. When she went back to Russia, she started wearing short skirts to school, which was unacceptable in Armenia.
 
“They still say: ‘You organised a revolution at school’. The boys were always falling in love with me and chasing me. All this attention got on my nerves.”
 
Then one day Mariam realised that the games weren’t children’s ones anymore and when the boys grabbed her – it wasn’t in play.
 
“Armenian boys make a clear distinction between girls: those you will create a strong patriarchal family with in the distant future and those you can spend time with now,” she tells me. “I wasn’t happy that I was seen as the second sort. I turned my glance away from men, because I was afraid of criticism. I realised that if I stayed in this town, I would be married off to someone chosen by my family. I started seeing young men as a threat, and now I find it hard to speak to a man, even if I need to at work.”
 
She cut her hair short and started wearing baggy clothes.
 
“A girl in Armenia is always under someone else’s control – her parents, other men. There’s an unspoken formula at my work: if a woman’s project is approved by three men, it’s a good one. I earn less than my male colleagues and find it hard to make ends meet.”
 
But at the same time, Mariam seems to condone this inequality: “The guys aren’t sexist on purpose. It’s just they’ve been told from childhood that girls need more attention because they are weak. They often really do want to help.”
 
Event organized by Pink Armenia, 2016 | Narek Aleksanyan
 
When Mariam was 16, she fell in love for the first time – with a friend of her older sister. She admits that she knew that lesbians existed, but for her they were some kind of aliens that didn’t exist on earth, let alone in Armenia. Few people know about her sexual orientation to this day. She lives quietly and doesn’t get involved in relationships. Life in Armenia for Mariam and other LGBT+ people is already an act of protest.
 
I ask Mariam what kind of life she would like.
 
“I don’t have any idea,” she says distractedly. “It’s been a long time since I lost my ability to dream, make plans for the future or think about what I would like. I don’t exist anymore.”
 
“Gilded youth”
 
Last summer, Zara was raped. She was 17. Her rapist was a male friend who had come to visit her. In Armenia it’s considered that if a man has sex with a lesbian, she will immediately fall in love with him and be “cured”. Zara wasn’t cured. They didn’t bother calling the police.
 
“Why traumatise her again?” asks Zara’s mother Narine. “They’ll just say she asked for it.”
 
Narine didn’t know how to support her daughter, so she shaved her temples and dyed her hair in a bright colour, like Zara’s. According to her mother, Zara always stood out among her contemporaries, glamorous young women who believed in colouring their hair and wearing identical clothing. So she got slagged off a lot at school. But it was the boy she trusted who cheated on her.
 
Finding out that her daughter was a lesbian was a real trial for Narine: she had already faced something similar. In the 1990s, she had met a boy she liked, but after a while he admitted that he had only done it to get closer to her brother. So the family discovered that Narine’s brother Ruben was gay – a real tragedy for the family. Their mother was so angry that she threatened to whack him with the frying pan for bringing such shame on the family.
 
“All the relatives put pressure on Ruben to marry, and he tried to meet up with women. He changed immediately, became coarse – it was obvious that he felt out of place. We once argued about it all, and I said: ‘I love you for the fact that you are gay. Because you’re only real that way.’”
 
Ruben stood out from other Armenian men – he was ruggedly handsome and had tattoos. He was beaten on the streets and once raped like Zara, but Narine won’t talk about it – it’s too painful. He left Armenia five years ago, made a career abroad and hasn’t returned home since. And naturally Narine fears that the same thing may happen with Zara.
 
“I call them my gilded youth,” says Narine. “They have a higher IQ than us. But I don’t think someone would become so gilded by choice. It’s a hard road, full of thorns. These children have traumatised souls. It wasn’t up to them.”
 
Narine’s house has become a refuge for Zara’s friends.
 
“I’ve had so many young people living in my house,” she tells me. “They’ve run away from home, their mothers and fathers beat them and treat them like dirt. I’m tired of them treating my house like a hotel, but I’m really sorry for these kids – they are defending themselves as best they can.”
 
At the instigation of Narine and other mothers, the PINK Armenia organisation, which has been engaged in defending LGBT+ rights for 12 years now, has started running counselling sessions for the parents of LGBT+ young people. You might still feel ashamed to tell a friend or relative that your son or daughter is gay – it’s much easier to open up to a stranger who’s in the same position.
 
Narine has broken all ties with her relatives. Or, to be exact, they broke off their ties with her when they realised that Zara wasn’t a typical Armenian girl who could be married off to the son of friends of friends and start a family straight away.
 
“Many gay men and lesbians get subjected to ‘cures’: they’re sent to psychiatric hospitals or taken to church, to be returned to a ‘normal’ life”
 
“Zara and I were on holiday in Spain and a transgender person got on the bus. No one batted an eyelid – and that’s how it should be: nobody should give a damn,” she says.
 
Not every family can accept that they have a gay child, says Ruzanna Aslikyan, a psychologist who works with the parents of LGBT+ children.
 
“Many gay men and lesbians get subjected to ‘cures’: they’re sent to psychiatric hospitals or taken to church, to be returned to a ‘normal’ life. Parents are driven by impeccable motives: they want their children to have a family. Some can be convinced that their sons and daughters aren’t ‘ill’. But they are still afraid of what people will say. They tell the neighbours that their son has gone off to university or work: they don’t want anyone to know that he left because there would be no life for him here.”
 
Ruzanna has been working with PINK Armenia for two years and has noticed some slight progress:
 
“Parents have begun to accept their children; there are fewer cases of young people being thrown out of the family home. And the subject is beginning to be discussed in public. But politicians aren’t speaking out yet – they’re afraid they’ll lose votes. But that can’t go on much longer.”
 
Ruzanna believes that you can beat homophobia if you talk about LGBT+ issues openly, including discussing it on TV.
 
“People have been indoctrinated to believe that being gay is a sin. The church has a lot to answer for in this respect: clerics keep saying that gays should be burned alive, but plenty of them are gay. Everyone knows who’s who in Armenia – it’s a small country.”
 
Coffee in Paris
 
In the year that he has been in power, Armenia’s post-revolutionary prime minister Nikol Pashinyan has raised the LGBT+ issue a number of times. Last November, for example, an LGBT+ forum organised by “LGBT+ Christians of Eastern Europe and Central Asia” was due to take place in Yerevan, but Armenian MPs decided that this event “would present a serious threat to the Armenian state and national interests” and passed the responsibility over to Pashinyan.
 
“I can say that for me personally the family and its Armenian model represent the highest values,” said Pashinyan at the time. “I have always said and will go on saying this. There is no doubt in my mind.”
 
But Pashinyan made it clear that in Armenia, as in every other country, there are “people with a non-traditional sexual orientation” – and that this is a headache for the government. As an example, he told the story of a young Armenian man whom he met during a diplomatic visit to France. The young man brought coffee to Pashinyan’s room and, in response to the Armenian premier’s questions about his life in France, told him that he had fled Armenia because of its homophobia.
 
“If you are a gay man in Armenia, you have no rights,” says Musho, the young man in question. “And if you are gay and HIV-positive, you aren’t even allowed into the country.” The young waiter’s contract forbids him from discussing interactions with the hotel’s visitors and he asked for his name to be changed: “If you want to have a family, you have to make sure no one finds you out.”
 
Musho has a good life in France now. In Paris, he still has friends among other Armenians who, like him, have fled the country. He has even helped some of them do it.
 
“One guy arrived from Armenia more dead than alive, and was whisked off to hospital straight away in an ambulance: he had HIV, but in Armenia he was being treated for TB and it nearly killed him. He’s happy now – he’s well, has a job. He survived.”
 
HIV is a taboo subject in Armenia, says Musho. He is proud that he grew up in an educated family and he remembers how his parents explained the death of Queen frontman Freddy Mercury to him. But despite this relative free thinking, Musho’s family still could not accept him.
 
Musho got married in Paris a few years ago. He phoned his parents in Armenia to tell them the news. His father said nothing and has never raised the subject, and his mother just said: “Please don’t tell our relatives. I don’t have the nerve to explain it to them.”
 
During his speech to parliament, Nikol Pashinyan said he wouldn’t reveal Musho’s home region “so as not to hurt the feelings of the local people”.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Angela Gulbenkian Made Her Name as a High-Flying Art Heiress. Now, a Warrant Is Out for Her Arrest

Art Net News
 
 
 
Angela Gulbenkian Made Her Name as a High-Flying Art Heiress. Now, a Warrant Is Out for Her Arrest
 
Angela Gulbenkian, who married into one of Europe’s wealthiest, most renowned art collecting families, faces two charges of theft in London.
 
Sarah Cascone,
 
Angela Gulbenkian, a German woman who married into one of Europe’s wealthiest and most renowned art collecting families, faces two charges of theft in London for art deals gone awry—and now, a warrant is out for her arrest. She stands accused of stealing £1.1 million ($1.4 million), most of which relates to the sale of one of Yayoi Kusama‘s famous polkadot yellow pumpkin sculptures.
 
Hong Kong-based art advisor Mathieu Ticolat alleges that his firm, Art Incorporated, paid Gulbenkian—who was claiming to represent an anonymous seller—$1.38 million for the 179-pound pumpkin. The deal went into contract in April 2017, but the pricey artwork, he contends, never arrived.
 
“There are a number of people with claims against Angela,” Christopher Marinello of Art Recovery International told artnet News. He has been working with Ticolat since late 2017 to get the money back. “We’re going to be relentless—she’s a serial fraudster.” (Gulbenkian told Bloomberg she had offered to arrange the delivery of the Kusama before legal proceedings were initiated; Marinello denies this.)
 
Yayoi Kusama, PUMPKIN (2018). A similar work by the artist was part of a failed deal arranged by Angela Gulbenkian. She now faces charges of theft, and a warrant for her arrest has been issued in Germany. Courtesy Ota Fine Arts, Tokyo/Singapore/Shanghai and Victoria Miro, London/Venice. © Yayoi Kusama.
 
Born Angela Ischwang, Gulbenkian, age 37, is married to Duarte Gulbenkian, great-grandnephew to Calouste Gulbenkian, the British-Armenian art collector and oil baron. But despite her famous surname, Gulbenkian is affiliated with neither the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum nor the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, the family’s official institutions in Portugal, which are said to be worth a collective $3.6 billion, according to Bloomberg.
 
Ticolat filed a criminal complaint against Gulbankien in January 2018. Gulbenkian was notified to appear at Westminster Magistrates Court on May 21, the BBC reports. The court date was postponed until yesterday. Gulbenkian did not appear, citing her recovery from a surgical procedure.
 
But Bench chairwoman Claire Harris felt “substantial concern” about Gulbenkian’s doctor’s letter “and the ambiguity of the document,” according Sutton & Croydon Guardian. The court denied her request for a second adjournment, issuing a warrant for Gulbenkian’s arrest in Germany.
 
Marinello echoed Harris’s skepticism about the letter, written in German. “In fact, we have information that she’s been seen at various art fairs around the world,” he said.
 
Angela Gulbenkian and her former business partner, Florentine Rosemeyer. Photo by Angela Gulbenkian, via Instagram.
 
Gulbenkian’s online presence still presents her as a high-flying art collector. Her Instagram account, @pantaraxia, identifies her as “Fine Art Collector | Gulbenkian Private Art Collection” and, at one point, according to Marinello, an associate was conducting correspondence via an @gulbenkian.foundation email address. She previously ran the London company FAPS-Net with art adviser Florentine Rosemeyer until spring 2018. Rosemeyer subsequently hired Gulbenkian at her new Munich venture, Rosemeyer Art Advisors, but the company’s website currently makes no mention of Gulbenkian.
 
As of press time, Gulbenkian’s lawyers had not responded to inquiries from artnet News.
 
Angela Gulbenkian’s former business partner, Florentine Rosemeyer subsequently hired Gulbenkian at her new Munich venture, Rosemeyer Art Advisors. This screenshot of the company website was taken on May 31, 2018.
 
The court proceedings also include a second criminal charge against Gulbenkian over money allegedly stolen from her client Jacqui Ball. Marinello says he has also heard from other parties who are seeking to recover money from Gulbenkian, including London interior design firm Percy Bass Ltd., which redid her bedroom in the style of a Kusama pumpkin.
 
“Percy Bass was told Angela was part of the Gulbenkian Foundation of Portugal. Percy Bass started work on the flat as they were told funds for a deposit were coming from Portugal. They received a forged bank transfer notification from the Millennium BCP bank in Portugal from the Gulbenkian Foundation,” Patricia Maher, a firm employee, wrote in an email provided to artnet News by Marinello. “No payment was ever received.”
 
Separate from the new criminal case, Ticolat filed a High Court civil suit against Gulbenkian in June 2018. That month, a Singaporean company, Artseen—either the pumpkin’s owner or an intermediary in the transaction—informed Ticolat that it had never received his payment, and that the work had subsequently sold to a third party.
 
Ai Weiwei with Angela Gulbenkian. Photo via Instagram.
 
Last summer, a judge agreed to freeze Gulbenkian’s assets, and gave her until August 20, 2018 to pay Ticolat back in full, at which point the case would be dropped. Gulbenkian ignored the ultimatum, and failed to file a defense, leading to a default judgment against her from the court in November.
 
“We will pursue Angela and anyone who has handled these funds anywhere in the world until they are returned in full,” Marinello insisted, adding that he is considering pressing criminal charges against some of Angela’s family members. “We know where some of the money has gone of course. Angela spent a great deal of it on private jets, lingerie, travel, a masseuse, interior design work, paid part of her rent…”
 
He is frustrated by how slowly the case has been moving through the British judicial system. “Look at Anna Delvey,” Marinello said, referring to the woman who lived as a high-flying German heiress in New York before she ended up in court and sentenced to up to 12 years in prison. “She’s sitting in jail right now for a $200,000 unpaid hotel bill, whereas this lady stole $1.5 million and is still getting sympathy from the courts—up until yesterday!”
 
 
 
 
 
 

Armenian Assembly Kicks Off 2019 Summer Internship Program

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PROGRAM IN WASHINGTON, D.C.

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Armenian Assembly of
America’s (Assembly) Terjenian-Thomas Internship Program in Washington, D.C.
kicked off this past month. Educational workshops, lectures, meetings, and
activities are planned for the participants throughout the summer. This year’s
internship class hails from across the United States, representing Arizona,
California, Colorado, Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, Texas, Virginia, and Utah.

 

Founded in 1977, the Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program
is the first internship program offered by an Armenian organization in our
nation’s capital, and has over 1,000 intern alumni. For eight weeks each
summer, the Assembly gives college students of Armenian descent an opportunity
to learn about the policy-making process by interacting with government
officials, policymakers, and local leaders.

 

The Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program class of 2019
includes 17 college students:

  • Lillian Avedian from
    Woodland Hills, CA attends the University of California, Berkeley and is
    interning with the United States Agency for Global Media’s Voice of
    America (VOA) Armenian Service. Last year, she participated in the Armenian Assembly’s summer internship program in Armenia where
    she interned with Hetq news agency as an investigative
    journalist.
  • Gayane Baghdasaryan
    from Yerevan, Armenia and recent graduate of Texas A&M University’s
    Bush School of Government Graduate School is interning with the Eurasia
    Foundation. She earned her Master’s Degree through the United States
    Fulbright Student Scholarship, and is part of the U.S. Department of
    State’s Edmund S. Muskie Internship Program.
  • Lucine Beylerian from
    Upper Saddle River, NJ attends the University of Southern California and
    is interning with Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Co-Chair
    Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ).
  • Dikran Damar from
    Istanbul, Turkey attends Istanbul University and is interning with the
    Armenian National Institute (ANI).
  • Serena Hajjar from
    Lexington, MA attends the University of Pennsylvania and is interning with
    the Armenian National Institute (ANI).
  • Isabelle Kapoian from
    Bedford, NH attends the University of New Hampshire and is interning with
    Lowenstein Sandler LLP law firm.
  • Armen Kaprelian from
    Scottsdale, AZ attends George Mason University’s Graduate School and is
    interning with the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) Permanent
    Mission to the United States and Canada.
  • Samuel Karabashian
    from Ventnor, NJ is a recent graduate of Biola University in La Mirada, CA
    and is interning with the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia to the United
    States.
  • Brooke Kersten from
    Oxford, MI attends Michigan State University and is interning with the
    United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
  • Victoria Khederian
    from Bloomfield Township, MI attends the University of Michigan (Ann
    Arbor) and is interning with the Republican National Committee (RNC).
  • Mihran Markarian from
    Fountain Valley, CA is transferring from Irvine Valley College to the
    University of California, Santa Barbara. He is interning with the Center
    for Immigration Studies (CIS) think tank.
  • Ani Matevosyan from
    Van Nuys, CA is transferring from the California State University,
    Northridge to the University of Southern California. She is interning with
    the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia to the United States.
  • Michael Melkonian from
    Glendale, CA attends Glendale Community College and is interning with the
    National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC).
  • Alec Muradliyan from
    Newport Beach, CA attends Chapman University and is interning with House
    Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA).
  • Alexander Nargizian
    from Franklin Lakes, NJ attends Fairfield University and is interning with
    the Armenian National Institute (ANI).
  • Aram Sahakyan from
    Rockville, MD attends Colorado State University and is interning with In
    Defense of Christians (IDC), the nation’s leading advocacy organization
    for Christians and religious minorities in the Middle East.
  • Olivia Zorayan from
    Irvine, CA is a recent graduate of the University of California, Irvine.
    She is interning with Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Co-Chair
    Congresswoman Jackie Speier (D-CA).

 

Following the success of the past two years’ week-long high school
internship pilot program, Tioné Hoeckner from Salt Lake City, UT and Elena
Martinez from Boynton Beach, FL will be interning in the Armenian Assembly of
America’s office and joining the university-age summer interns at
Assembly-organized meetings and events.

 

“Since I participated in the Armenian Assembly’s summer
internship program last year, I know how educational and valuable the summer
will be for this internship class. I am impressed by how enthusiastic
and intellectually curious the 2019 interns are, and look forward to
a very productive program,” stated this summer’s internship coordinator,
Arianna Cruickshank. Arianna participated in last summer’s Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program,
where she interned with Congressman Pallone. Originally from Edgewater, NJ, she
is a senior at Ramapo College in Mawah, NJ.

 

Through the Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program,
participants are offered extensive educational opportunities via the Capital
Ideas program, which provides interns a forum to ask questions to elected
officials about current topics, national and international in scope.

 

Since the start of this year’s Program, the internship group has
already met with House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Chairman
Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA), the office of Senator Debbie Stabenow (D-MI),
U.S. Homeland Security Program Manager Noris Balabanian, and Armenian Church of
America (Eastern) Diocesan Legate Archbishop Vicken Aykazian who participated
in the signing ceremony at the White House regarding the Iraq and Syria
Genocide Emergency Relief and Accountability Act, with many more meetings
planned throughout the summer.


The program participants attended a lecture on Administrative
Law at The George Washington University Law School taught by Visiting Associate
Professor of Law Aram Gavoor, Armenian Assembly of America Board Member and
Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program alumnus. Professor Gavoor’s
administrative law scholarship was cited by the Supreme Court this week in
Department of Commerce v. New York. The program participants also enjoyed a
picnic on the National Mall organized by the Congressional Armenian Staff
Association (CASA).

 

Interns also participated in a presentation by Armenian American
author Michael Bobelian on his latest book, Battle for the Marble
Palace: Abe Fortas, Earl Warren, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon and the Forging
of the Modern Supreme Court
. Bobelian is the author of Children of
Armenia: A Forgotten Genocide and the Century-Long Struggle for Justice
 in
which he discusses the Armenian Assembly of America and its work with former
Senator Robert Dole (R-KS) on the Armenian Genocide resolution.

 

The Armenian Assembly of America Summer Internship Program has
been celebrated and strongly supported by the Armenian community with major
gifts from the Richard Tufenkian Memorial Fund, the John Hanessian Scholarship
Fund, the Armen Astarjian Scholarship Fund, the Ohanian Memorial Fund, Ann
Hintlian, Ann Nahigian, James and Connie Melikian, the Knights of Vartan, the
Estate of Haig J. Boyadjian, and the Estate of George Judge Karabedian (George
Kay), as well as generous contributions in memory of former Assembly Board
Members Dr. Lionel Galstaun, Peter Kezirian, and John O’Connor. In 2003, the
Armenian Assembly’s Summer Internship Program was renamed in honor of Aram and
Florence Terjenian and Annie Thomas after the announcement of their
pace-setting $1 million donation to the program.

 

To find out more about the 2019 summer interns’ journey in
Washington, D.C., follow the Assembly’s Intern Blog, Facebook, Instagram, and
Twitter. Stay tuned for updates on the Armenian Assembly’s Summer Internship Program
in Armenia.

 

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the
largest Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public understanding
and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a non-partisan, 501(c)(3)
tax-exempt membership organization.

 

###

 

NR#: 2019-023

 

 

 

Photo Caption 1: Armenian Assembly Executive Director Bryan
Ardouny and Congressional Relations Director Mariam Khaloyan with the 2019
internship class after a presentation on advocacy

Photo Caption 2: 2019 Terjenian-Thomas Assembly interns at the
Congressional Armenian Staffers Association picnic on the National Mall

Photo Caption 3: 2019 Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program
participants attended a lecture at The George Washington University Law School
taught by Visiting Associate Professor of Law Aram Gavoor

Photo Caption 4: 2019 Terjenian-Thomas Assembly Internship Program
participants with House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Chairman Congressman
Adam Schiff (D-CA)


Available online: 



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Gavoor.jpg

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Asbarez: Homenetmen’s 44th Navasartian Games Weekend Fast Approaching

VAN NUYS, Calif.,—With Garo and Sosse Eshgian as its Honorary Presidents, Homenetmen’s 44th Navasartian Games’ final games and festival weekend is fast approaching. This includes its Victory Banquet, opening and closing ceremonies, and four-day festival.

The much-anticipated Victory Banquet will be held on Sunday, June 30 at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. During this event, Garo and Sosse Eshgian will formally accept their role as Honorary Presidents of the 44th Navasartian Games. The Eshgian’s will continue this role beyond the Navasartian Games, and throughout the upcoming year, with their insights and guidance, supporting the organization in various ways. During the event, the 2019 Exemplary Homenetmen Member, Vartkes Shekherdemian, will also be recognized.

The Victory Banquet also serves as the prime occasion to gather Homenetmen members spanning generations, who will collectively celebrate the victories of the Navasartian Games.

The four-day festival of the Navasartian Games will officially open on Wednesday, July 3 at Birmingham High School. The high school is located at 17000 Haynes St., Van Nuys, CA 91406. A flag ceremony, performed by Homenetmen scouts, will be led by the Homenetmen Regional Marching Band. Well-known singer Varand will sing the anthems.

During the course of the festival’s four days, entertainment will be provided by well-known singers in the community. The first night’s program will include patriotic Armenian songs by Karnig Sarkissian, followed by fireworks.

The grounds of the festival will include numerous booths with items for sale by various vendors. Food will be available for purchase through various Homenetmen chapters’ booths, with members preparing and serving a variety of foods.

A children’s arts & crafts booth will be open for youth of all ages and, on each evening between the hours of 6:30 – 7:30 p.m., there will be a performance by the children’s singer Maggie.

Athletic games will continue in the gyms and field of Birmingham High School, including basketball, volleyball, and soccer. Individual sports will also be held, as follows:

  • Chess, ping-pong, and tennis tournaments will be held on Thursday, July 4 starting at 9 a.m.
  • Track and field competitions will be held on Friday, July 5 starting at 8 a.m.
  • Swimming competitions will be held on Saturday, July 6 starting at 8 a.m.

For the second year in a row, the Homenetmen Hrashq program athletes, comprised of youth with disabilities, will also be participating in the Navasartian Games. Alongside their participation in track and field competitions, Hrashq athletes will also participate in soccer games as well this year.

The Navasartian closing ceremony will be held on Saturday, July 6, at 6 p.m. on the field of Birmingham High School. As spectators gather for the closing ceremony, a half hour program will include entertainment by the Homenetmen marching band, a performance by the children’s singer Maggie, and a number of songs dedicated to Homenetmen will be sung by Varand.

The closing ceremony will begin with a flag ceremony by Homenetmen scouts, led by the Homenetmen marching band. After remarks are delivered, the parade of scouts and athletes will take place, after which trophies will be distributed in the various sports.

Following the closing ceremony, the festival will continue until midnight. Concurrently, the women’s and men’s basketball championship games will be held in the main gym. Tickets for these games are $20 per person, which can be purchased online.

The festival’s daily admission for adults is $10 per person and $7 for children. A daily parking pass is $5 per vehicle. The price for preferred parking is $10 per vehicle.

The Homenetmen Regional Executive looks forward to the attendance of community members on July 3 – 6 at Birmingham High School, as the 44th Navasartian Games conclude.

Additional information regarding the Homenetmen 44th Navasartian Games can be obtained by following articles published in Asbarez Newspaper, visiting the Homenetmen website, watching the HTV program, as well as contacting the Homenetmen Regional Office at (323) 344-4300.

The following is the entertainment schedule for the July 3 – 6 festival:

Wednesday, July 3
A special opening ceremony will be held during which Homenetmen scouts will perform a flag ceremony led by the Homenetmen Regional Marching Band. Well-known singer and Homenetmen member Varand will perform the anthems. Entertainment will follow, as such:

Anto Teghararian: 7:45 – 8:35 p.m.
Anoush Petrosyan: 8:35 – 9:05 p.m.
Karnig Sarkissian & Fireworks: 9:15 p.m. – Midnight

Thursday, July 4
Hagop Hovsepian: 7 – 8 p.m.
Artin Bedrossian: 8 – 8:30 p.m.
Arsham Babelian: 8:30 – 9:15 p.m.
Lia (Bamboo): 9:15 – 10 p.m.
Suro: 10 – 10:30 p.m.
Narek Magaryan: 10:30 – 11 p.m.
Tigran Asatryan: 11 p.m. – Midnight

Friday, July 5
Garen Dakessian: 7 – 8 p.m.
Sako Tashjian (Canada): 8 – 9 p.m.
David Lousakian (France): 9 – 10 p.m.
Suro: 10 – 10:30 p.m.
Vartan Tahmazian: 10:30 – 11:30 p.m.
Sako Tashjian: 11:30 p.m. – Midnight

Saturday, July 6
Arno: 8 – 9 p.m.
Mer Hovo: 9 – 9:30 p.m.
Varand & Fireworks: 9:30 – 10 p.m.
David Lousakian: 10 p.m. – 11 p.m.
Ararad Amadyan: 11 p.m. – Midnight

ANCA-WR Hosts Meetings About Updated L.A. County Election System

Residents in the North Hollywood area gather at the ACF Community Center of the Eastern San Fernando Valley to learn about the upcoming changes

Voters from North Hollywood, Burbank, Pasadena, and across Los Angeles County came out for Vote Center Community Meetings. Those in attendance learned more about the updated countywide voting system, set to be implemented for the 2020 Elections. These meetings were hosted by the Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region and its three local chapters: Crescenta Valley, East San Fernando Valley, and Pasadena.

The ANCA is one of several community organizations asked to help in partnership with L.A. County’s Voting Solutions for All People, or VSAP initiative. Dozens of voters attended these community meetings that were organized at the ACF Community Center of the Eastern San Fernando Valley, the Burbank Public Library, and the Pasadena Convention Center on May 18, May 29, and June 4 respectively. All the meetings were organized with the support and cooperation of the local City Clerk’s Office Elections’ Division.

ANCA-WR Government Relations Coordinator Serob Abrahamian facilitating the Community Meeting at the Burbank Public Library

“The ANCA Pasadena Chapter was proud to collaborate with the City of Pasadena and, in particular, the City Clerk’s office led by City Clerk, Mark Jomsky, as well as partner up with LA County to educate and inform local residents about the important upcoming changes to the voting system. It’s essential that we work with the county in providing election services in a fair, accessible and transparent manner,” remarked ANCA-Pasadena Chapter Board Member Donig Donabedian.

These Community Meetings allowed attendees to learn about the new innovative and accessible voting experience, and the implementation of vote centers that will provide convenient locations for voting anywhere in the County over an 11-day voting period. An ANCA representative at each meeting facilitated the meeting and delivered a slideshow presentation detailing the new ballot marking system, which features a touch screen device with a port for headphones and will provide voters with a digital ballot. The presentation also included a short tutorial on how the ballot marking devices will work, as well as a short documentary, called “Democracy by Design,” about VSAP and its collaboration with IDEO, a Silicon Valley design firm helping to build the ballot marking devices.

Residents in Pasadena came together at the Pasadena Convention Center to learn about the changes coming to the voting process in 2020

L.A. County will test the new voting system with a mock election on September 28 – 29 at 50 vote centers. Demo centers will simulate the new process for voters to see and test during weekdays and weekends throughout the county between October and January. The new system will be in use by March 3, 2020, the day of the 2020 California Primary Election.

This service was provided to facilitate information in Armenian in an effort to better serve our community and encourage civic engagement through the ANCA-WR HyeVotes initiative to make our collective voice heard in the electoral process. Additional information and resources on VSAP and its components can be found online.

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region is the largest and most influential nonpartisan Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues in pursuit of the Armenian Cause.

GCC President Supports Bill to Offset April 24 Campus Closure Costs

Senator Portantino (right) and GCC President David Viar’s testimony on behalf of SB 568 during a higher education assembly

SACRAMENTO–California State Senate bill 568, authored by Senator Anthony J. Portantino passed the Assembly Higher Education Committee on Tuesday. Glendale Community College’s Superintendent and President David Viar flew to Sacramento to offer testimony in support of the bill. SB 568 would help the college offset revenue losses associated with closing on April 24. This date is important worldwide to the Armenian Community as it commemorates the Armenian Genocide.

“When I was first approached by several GCC Board Members with this unfair situation, I promised that I would do my best to correct it. GCC should not be penalized by California for closing on April 24. It is my hope that SB 568 will pass the legislature, garner the Governor’s signature, and change state law to allow GCC the same flexibility that education code gives to the GUSD,” commented Senator Portantino.

Senator Portantino, who has a long and positive relationship with the Armenian American Community and Glendale Community College, has participated in negotiations with the Chancellor’s Office for the last two years to solve this issue. SB 568 is the culmination of those discussions. Under current law, K – 12 school districts like the GUSD have the ability to close and not lose funding. Currently, community colleges do not have the same flexibility, causing GCC the loss of an estimated $500,000 for closing on April 24.

“As educators, we teach history to ensure tragedies like the Armenian Genocide never happen again. The value of our college being able to declare a Day of Remembrance is an important part of that education beyond the classroom. We appreciate Senator Portantino’ s leadership in designing a solution that allows our students to participate in remembering the past without loss of state funding to the college as our students pursue their educational goals,” stated GCC President, Viar.

Podcast, Podcast: Hear All About It

Salpi Ghazarian (left), director of the USC Institute of Armenian Studies, talks to Dr. Lilit Keshishyan on an episode of Unpacking Armenian Studies

BY SAREEN HABESHIAN

Podcasts have been around for over a decade, and for those who live in cities where traffic is a way of life, they are a lifesaver.

“Podcasts are like your own private radio station. You can just click and listen to conversations that interest you,” said Salpi Ghazarian, director of the Institute of Armenian Studies.

The USC Institute of Armenian Studies has three podcast series already, and has plans for several more.

“Our purpose is to make scholarship accessible, to present and benefit from the scholarship that addresses national and global challenges. So, now, everyone can listen to scholarly content in their car, or while they get ready for the day, or make dinner,” added Ghazarian.

“I listen to many podcasts on my commutes and runs/hikes. I am so happy that this podcast series is made. It helps me learn so much about my country through the different guests they have!” Rmughnet commented on iTunes.

The current three series are Unpacking Armenian Studies, The Quake (about the 1988 Spitak earthquake) and the Innovate Series.

Ghazarian hosts Unpacking Armenian Studies— a series of conversations that seek to humanize Armenian Studies, make it more accessible, and show it for the broad, varied field that it has become.

The podcast is home to interviews with academics, journalists and policymakers in the field of, and on the fringes of, Armenian Studies. It seeks to understand, and make accessible, conversations about who these scholars are, what they do, and why it matters.

The podcasts currently available online include: The Quake, Unpacking Armenian Studies, the Innovate Series, and New Roads

From the Deputy Foreign Minister of Karabakh, Armine Aleksanyan, whose work depends on the breadth and scope of Armenian Studies to Rober Koptas, head of Aras publishing in Turkey, whose work contributes directly to Armenian Studies by publishing works in Turkish, the Unpacking Armenian Studies show hosts unique and diverse guests.

“Finally there is a good podcast on Armenian Studies!” commented Sarmen Boghos on iTunes.

In The Quake, the Institute’s Chitjian Research Archivist Gegham Mughnetsyan relives the days immediately following the powerful Spitak earthquake that devastated the Northern region of Armenia and his hometown of Gyumri on December 7, 1988. Mughnetsyan was a child at the time, and recounts the shock and its consequences both personal and global. He delves into the challenges that complicated the region’s recovery process, that became the focus of geopolitical tensions, and that buried the future and promise of an entire generation.

“I enjoy listening to this on my way to work, interesting for anyone interested in Armenia and Armenian studies,” wrote NarbehtheCat on iTunes.

The Institute’s newest podcast is the Innovate Series, where listeners can hear selections from talks presented at Innovate Armenia over the years. Innovate Armenia, the festival of ideas and action, is where scholars and thought-leaders from around the world challenge assumptions and offer new perspectives, too good to miss.

“Love your podcasts!!! They are very educating and, inevitably, quite practical!!!” Julieta Harutyunyan posted on Facebook.

Find the Institute’s New Roads channel on iTunes and on USC’s website.

Established in 2005, the USC Institute of Armenian Studies supports multidisciplinary scholarship to re-define, explore and study the complex issues that make up the contemporary Armenian experience—from post-genocide to the developing Republic of Armenia to the evolving diaspora. The institute encourages research, publications and public service, and promotes links among the global academic and Armenian communities.

AEF Scholarship Interviews Inspire a First-Time Panelist

From l to r: Mimi Zarookian, Flora Wiegers, Seda Davidian, Sela Khachikyan, Armine Haroyan

Armenian Educational Foundation’s scholarship program started with 21 scholarships in 2007. This year, AEF has granted $320,000 in scholarships to 317 students in Armenia, Artsakh and Javakhk, including 124 new students. AEF’s Yerevan Office received 700 qualified scholarship applications and the Scholarship Committee has now completed its difficult task of screening, interviewing, and selecting the recipients. AEF encourages members and sponsors to participate in the interview process when in Armenia, to play a role in the decisions shaping its future.

Sela Khachikyan, a UCLA graduate and Birthright volunteer, continuing her studies in medicine at Pace University in New York this fall, was traveling throughout Armenia when she chose to take part in the interview process. She participated as a panelist, where she was able to directly witness the bright and vibrant future of Armenia.

BY SELA KHACHIKYAN

It was an absolute honor to be a part of the interview panel for the AEF scholarship interviews and an experience I’ll never forget. Each day, we would listen to a variety of university students share stories about themselves and their families. They would tell us where they saw themselves in the future and how they planned on contributing to the future of Armenia after graduating. I was honestly surprised and amazed at the wealth of talent, knowledge and resilience these students demonstrated throughout their interviews. The interviews were a definite confirmation that the future of Armenia looks bright. I understood that investing in their future is an integral part of securing a positive future for Armenia.

When we asked one medical student where she saw herself in five to ten years, she explained how she wanted to go back to her village to provide medical care there. She could have very easily said she wanted to leave the country, or work in Yerevan, where conditions and pay are much better. However, she pointed out the struggles and shortcomings that need to be fixed. She was a leader who was ready to work with others in order to improve healthcare in Armenia.

Sela Khachikyan (left) and Executive Director of AEF Armenia Armine Haroyan interview a student

A student from Javakhk told us about her poor living conditions, and how she did everything she could to get accepted to her school of choice without paying. She knew how difficult it would be for her family to come up with the money needed for her to attend a university, and it was inspiring to hear about how she achieved her goals. Her story demonstrated hard work, dedication, and resilience. Seeing these qualities in our youth was inspiring, because we know how difficult life is for some of them.

Another student that stood out to me was a young girl who taught herself Chinese, without taking any language classes. She spoke multiple languages and had recently started working with Chinese students online. It was amazing to see how the current youth is taking advantage of all the resources available to them.

Overall, the interviews were a confirmation that AEF is empowering a new generation of young leaders who will be shaping the future of Armenia. AEF is doing an honorable job, and I cannot wait to become a sponsor once I finish school myself.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/26/2019

                                        Wednesday, 
Kocharian Not Political Prisoner, Says Parliamentary Opposition
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Supporters of former President Robert Kocharian demosntrate outside 
a prison in Yerevan, .
The two opposition parties represented in Armenia’s parliament said on 
Wednesday that they see no political reasons for the latest arrest of former 
President Robert Kocharian.
Armenia’s Court of Appeals allowed investigators to arrest Kocharian on Tuesday 
more than one month after he was freed by a lower court pending the outcome of 
his trial. The ex-president and the decision as politically motivated.
“We see no elements of political persecution,” said Ani Samsonian, a senior 
parliamentarian from the opposition Bright Armenia Party (LHK). “For us, this 
case is a purely legal process.”
Iveta Tonoyan, a lawmaker representing the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), 
similarly said that the arrest and broader criminal proceedings against 
Kocharian should be “viewed on the legal plane.”
Still, speaking at a joint news conference, both Tonoyan and another senior BHK 
figure, deputy parliament speaker Vahe Enfiajian, declined to comment on 
Kocharian’s latest claim that “there is neither law nor order” in Armenia. 
Asked whether the BHK agrees with the claim, Enfiajian said: “I agree with the 
supremacy of the law.”
By contrast, Kocharian’s prosecution has been repeatedly condemned by the 
former ruling Republican Party (HHK) and other opposition groups not 
represented in the current National Assembly. HHK spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov 
on Tuesday described Kocharian as a political prisoner.
In a separate statement, the HHK’s governing body said the Court of Appeals 
made a “purely political decision.” “This process has nothing to do with 
democracy, the rule of law and judicial independence,” it said.
Parliament deputies from the ruling My Step alliance continued to deny, 
however, any political motives behind Kocharian’s prosecution. One of them, 
Anna Karapetian, said law-enforcement authorities are simply seeking to hold 
accountable those responsible for the 2008 post-election crackdown on 
opposition protesters in Yerevan.
Lawyers To Appeal Against Kocharian’s Arrest
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia -- A Court of Appeals judge, Armen Danielian, reads out his decision to 
allow investigators to again arrest former President Robert Kocarian, Yerevan, 
.
Lawyers for former President Robert Kocharian said on Wednesday that they will 
appeal against an Armenian court’s decision to allow his renewed arrest.
The Court of Appeals on Tuesday overturned a lower court’s May 18 decision to 
free Kocharian from prison pending the outcome of his trial.
The ex-president’s lawyers told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that they will 
challenge that decision in the Court of Cassation, the country’s highest body 
of criminal justice. One of them, Aram Orbelian, said they will lodge the 
appeal after receiving and examining the full text of the decision made by a 
Court of Appeals judge, Armen Danielian.
Kocharian and his legal team decided to boycott the announcement of Danielian’s 
ruling after the judge cut short the court hearings on the matter June 20. They 
said that they were illegally prevented from presenting detailed arguments 
against their client’s arrest.
Another defense lawyer, Hovannes Khudoyan, on Wednesday also questioned the 
legality of what was Kocharian’s third arrest in less than a year. Khudoyan 
argued that Armenia’s Constitutional Court agreed last week to hold hearings 
and rule on two appeals lodged by him and his colleagues.
In those appeals, they suggested that Kocharian was arrested last year and 
charged with usurping power in the wake of a 2008 presidential election in 
breach of the Armenian constitution. The Constitutional Court scheduled the 
first hearing on the matter for August.
“The Constitutional Court has thus voiced a suspicion that there is a problem 
with the constitutionality [of Kocharian’s prosecution,]” claimed Khudoyan.
Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian talks to reporters outside a 
prison in Yerevan, .
The Court of Cassation already dealt with the high-profile case after another 
Court of Appeals judge freed Kocharian from custody in August 2018. Acting on 
prosecutors’ appeal, the high court ordered the Court of Appeals in November to 
examine the case anew. The latter allowed law-enforcement authorities to press 
charges against Kocharian and again arrest him in December.
Kocharian stands accused of having illegally used army units against opposition 
protesters less than two months before completing his second and final 
presidential term in April 2008. He denies the accusation as politically 
motivated.
Eight protesters and two police officers were killed in street clashes that 
broke out in central Yerevan late on March 1, 2008. Citing the deadly violence, 
Kocharian declared a state of emergency and ordered army units into the capital 
on that night.
The same coup charges were also leveled against Kocharian’s former chief of 
staff Armen Gevorgian and two retired top army generals, Seyran Ohanian and 
Yuri Khachaturov. The three men, who have not been held in pre-trial detention, 
deny them.
Earlier this year, Kocharian and Gevorgian were also charged with bribe-taking. 
They reject this accusation as well.
EU Envoy Encouraged By Armenian-Azeri Talks
        • Harry Tamrazian
Armenia -- Toivo Klaar (R), the EU special representative for the South 
Caucasus, meets with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, June 26, 
2019.
A senior European Union diplomat on Thursday praised Armenian-Azerbaijani 
negotiations held in recent months and expressed hope for progress towards the 
resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
“It is very good that there is a consistent process of meetings that seems to 
be going on,” Toivo Klaar, the EU’s special representative for the South 
Caucasus, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service in Yerevan.
“Of course, it’s not easy,” said Klaar. “This is a conflict that has very deep 
roots and we cannot expect solutions from one day to the next. But the 
important thing is that there are meetings, there are substantial discussions, 
and of course the EU is there to support this.”
“I personally hope that this process is a somehow a self-reinforcing mechanism 
and … that despite the difficulties of the last month we will actually see a 
sort of progress in the general situation,” he added.
The Karabakh conflict was high on the agenda of Klaar’s talks with Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian and Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian held earlier 
in the day. According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Mnatsakanian briefed 
the EU envoy on his latest meeting with Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar 
Mammadyarov that took place in Washington on June 20.
The meeting mediated by the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE 
Minsk Group followed an upsurge in ceasefire violations along the Karabakh 
“line of contact” which came after several months of relative calm on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani frontlines. The mediators said they urged the parties to 
“observe the ceasefire strictly and refrain from any provocative action.”
Klaar said he discussed the escalation with Pashinian and Mnatsakanian. “Even 
though there are these lines of communication [between Armenian and Azerbaijani 
leaders,] of course in fragile situations such incidents can happen, such 
deaths can occur, and that means more needs to be done in terms of building 
confidence between the sides and reducing tensions even further,” he said. “I 
hope that the Washington meeting contributed to that.”
Klaar also reaffirmed the EU’s pledges to support financially a possible 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accord. “When we get to that point, to larger 
agreements where financial support is needed to implement them, I am sure that 
the EU will be there to support them,” he said.
Asked whether the two warring sides are still far from reaching that point, the 
envoy replied: “I honestly don’t know.”
Press Review
“Zhamanak” reports that supporters of former President Robert Kocharian 
demonstrated in Yerevan on Tuesday after Armenia’s Court of Appeals allowed 
investigators to arrest him again. “This is certainly not a new phenomenon, 
Robert Kocharian has used that tool as part of his legal defense tactic for 
some time,” writes the paper very critical of the ex-president. “The question 
is whether the former president will try to switch to a tougher and more 
radical use of that tool and to create problems for the authorities. That would 
not be prudent because Kocharian lacks the most important factor possessed by 
the authorities: strong public support.”
According to “Zhoghovurd,” the head of the Armenian government’s Committee for 
the Management of State Property, Narek Babayan, continues to demand that a 
military high school of the Armenian Defense Ministry vacate its expensive 
premises located in the resort town of Dilijan. The property had been supposed 
to serve as a resort complex for employees of the State Revenue Committee. The 
paper says former Defense Minister Vigen Sargsian was right to have it 
transferred to the military school because in a country remaining in a de facto 
state of war “it is extremely important that people have incentives to become 
military officers.” “And given all this, it is weird, to say the least, that 
Narek Babayan continues to insist that those luxurious conditions are too much 
for our military and that they can receive military education in more modest 
conditions.”
“Aravot” says that Kocharian behaves arrogantly during court hearings and his 
conversations with journalists. “He also frequently lies, in particular about 
transforming Armenia’s ‘hell’ into ‘paradise’ from 1998 to 2008,” editorializes 
the paper’s editor, Aram Abrahamian. “But sometimes life is turned into hell by 
those vicious leaders whose bodyguards kill people for ‘wrongly’ greeting them. 
“I feel more secure when that person is in jail. But if we put aside emotions, 
we need to understand in the purely legal sense what the point of arresting the 
former president is. Kocharian is not the kind of person who would like to flee 
[the country.] Will he influence the probe of the [March 2008] case? Of course 
he will. A figure possessing serious financial and media resources has the 
ample capacity to do.” But Kocharian will also be in a position to exert such 
influence even from prison, concludes the paper.
(Lilit Harutiunian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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