Armenian expert community made a statement on the legal settlement of Karabakh conflict

Arminfo, Armenia
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. Representatives of  Armenian public and political organizations, Armenian refugees from  Azerbaijan, the expert community made a joint statement regarding the  legal settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The statement was  disseminated following the results of the scientific-practical  conference “The Legality of the Formation of the Republic of Artsakh  from the Point of View of International Law”, and in which the goals  and objectives of Artsakh’s national liberation struggle for  independence from Azerbaijan are unconditionally supported.

“A just settlement of the Artsakh problem is of exceptional  importance for the Republic of Armenia and the Armenian people as a  whole, which also means the need to unite the efforts of the  civilized world to form a unified approach to the peaceful resolution  of the Artsakh problem. We are ready to support and justify the peace  project based on the principles and norms of international law  process and legal settlement of the Artsakh problem. Taking advantage  of the fact that the international community is not sufficiently  informed about the essence of the Artsakh problem, Azerbaijan is  trying to present Armenia as an “aggressor” and “occupant” of its  territories, including Artsakh, “forgetting” the indisputable fact  that Azerbaijan was in 1988-1992 at the state level, again resumed  the policy of genocide, ethnic cleansing and mass forced deportation,  under the threat of physical extermination, in relation to more than  500.000 peaceful citizens of Armenian nationality. The aggression  continued in the form of large-scale military actions unleashed by  Azerbaijan against the civilian population of Artsakh, in response to  the just and legitimate demands of the people of Artsakh – to live  safely and freely on their land, which is an integral part of the  ancestral home of the Armenian people, “said statement received by  ArmInfo.

Regarding the history of the issue, the conference participants  recalled the legal aspects of the Karabakh problem, which arose in  the beginning of the 20th century, as a result of the historical and  political events that took place then and afterwards.

The statement stresses that the legal aspects of the emergence of the  conflict prove the validity of the national liberation struggle of  the Armenians of Artsakh and the legal invulnerability of this  process.

“Thus, considering the Artsakh problem as a task of national  importance, we declare a single position: first, the Nagorno-Karabakh  Republic gained its independence from Azerbaijan, applying all the  necessary legal procedures, strictly following the legislation of the  USSR and international legal norms. Therefore, the only and a legal  basis for the peaceful settlement of the Karabakh problem, may be a  process under the rule of norms and provisions of international law,  which means that the problem must be resolved exclusively about legal  means.

Secondly, while noting the irreversible changes that have taken place  in the NKR (Republic of Artsakh) for 30 years, we consider  inadmissible such a negotiation process in which unreasonable  concessions can be imposed on the Armenian side. The Republic of  Artsakh, as a state entity, with its territory, population, state,  democratic institutions, economic and legal systems is an  accomplished reality. Therefore, it must be restored in the  negotiation process as a full party. Otherwise, the settlement of the  problem is impossible.  Thirdly, we will make all our efforts to  protect all the achievements of the national liberation struggle and  are determined to respond adequately to any encroachment on the  security of our people, “the statement says.

In conclusion, the participants of the conference appeal to the Prime  Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan to implement the proposal of the  “In Defense of the Artsakh Republic” organizing committee,  promulgated in 1996, to convene a congress of plenipotentiaries of  pan-Armenian structures at which the world community will be formed,  in which the world community will be formed, the united position of  the Armenian people on the peaceful settlement of the Artsakh problem  is presented to the UN member countries.

Cross-stone made by 12-14-year olds commemorates Artsakh war heroes

Panorama, Armenia
Society 11:27 23/04/2019 Armenia

Armenian army officer, Major Sargis Stepanyan, together with his fellow servicemen, on Monday took part in the inauguration of an Armenian khachkar (cross-stone) in the yard of Saint Sarkis Church in Noyemberyan community of Armenia’s Tavush Province.

The monument made by 12-14-year-old children of Arar Armenian Art Center pays tribute to fallen solders of the Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Liberation War.

“I am excited and proud…we are deeply grateful to Arsen Grigoryan, the head of the art center, for such an important, bright and invaluable initiative aimed at preservation of national values and centuries-old history,” Stepanyan said in a Facebook post.



More photos at


New album on Jugha’s cultural genocide published

Panorama, Armenia
Society 19:51 23/04/2019 Armenia

The “Service for the Protection of Historical-Cultural Museum-Reserves and Historical Environment” NCSO completed the publication of a new album n Jugha’s cultural genocide in four languages.

The album compiled by NCSO employees Ashot Movsesyan and Arshak Banuchyan includes Aram Vruyr’s photos of Jugha’s Armenian cemetery khachkars, scientific and historical materials. “Vandals of the 21st Century” documentary’s DVD about the demolition of Jugha’s khachkars is also included in the album.
The album is published in 500 copies yet the number is planned to increase in the future.

The official presentation of the publication will take place at Bookinist bookstore on 29 April, the NCSO reported in a press release. 

’s-cultural-genocide-published/2105066

The government should conduct a policy of high salaries. prime minister

  • 22.04.2019
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  • Armenia:
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The government should conduct a policy of high wages, one of the most important tools of which is the establishment of a flat income tax in the Tax Code, with the precondition that the income tax will be reduced to 20 percent in the coming years.  RA Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced this at a meeting with students and teaching staff of YSU Faculty of Economics and Management.


According to him, thus the government encourages not only high salary policy, but also education, highly qualified specialists. And by saying a highly qualified specialist, the prime minister does not mean only the technological sector, but also hopes that the stock exchange system will develop significantly in Armenia in the near future.  And in that direction, he assured, the government is working.


“We are trying to find state-owned companies in Armenia, whose securities can be put on the market, as well as try to encourage private companies with certain regulations so that they go that way.  The banking system in Armenia is well established, a certain system of services is also established, where we can also say that there is a potential to attract highly qualified specialists,” the Prime Minister noted.


At the same time, Pashinyan said that they are well aware that a certain stratification is inevitable, but it is in terms of serving the problems brought by that stratification that the government, as a priority, has defined the agricultural sector, which it considers to be related to technologies. The tourism sector was not neglected either.

Theater Review: ‘A Journey of Angels’

BY ALIQUE KELECHIAN

GLENDALE—The cast of A Journey of Angels presented an astonishing musical about the Armenian Genocide that left viewers speechless. The musical, which was performed on Thursday, April 18, explored many different aspects of the genocide, as well as the Armenian people’s struggle to survive. The play depicted the genocide through multiple perspectives: a parent, a child, a sister, a husband, and a grandmother.

A Journey of Angels focused mainly on one young girl’s journey, as she realizes she must turn to her faith in times of trouble. As fourteen year old Flora is forced out of her home and away from her loved ones, she learns that as long as she keeps the memory of her family alive in her heart, they will always be with her.

Based on Dr. Kay Mouradian’s documentary, “My Mother’s Voice,” the musical was written by Brent Beerman, directed by Kay Cole, and the soundtrack was written by Kathy Chaplar. The documentary reflected Dr. Mouradian’s great-grandmother’s survival of the genocide as a young woman.

“The message of the play is a simple one of strength and courage,” said Eric Kursinski, an actor of the play who played the roles of Reverend Eskijian, Captain Khounshid, and Captain of the Turkish troops. “The play expresses that one can make it through the lowest parts of their life as long as they hold on to hope.”

Amy Earhart, playing the role of Flora’s mother, Arpi, believed the message to be that, “there is still love in failure, it does not mean that she [Arpi] didn’t try to save her family, or die trying… and there’s a lot of value in that.”

The musical started as a small idea which eventually grew into a local High School play. It finally reached Preparations for the play are near completion, and is anticipated to be staged on April 24th, 2020.

Alique Kelechian is a sophomore at Crescenta Valley High School.




Erdogan Doubles Down At Sheridan Circle

Turkish American Steering Committee supporters taunting peaceful Armenian protesters at the annual April 24th rally for justice in 2016. This year, they have been permitted to occupy a portion of Sheridan Circle, site of the May, 2017, Erdogan-ordered attack on peaceful protesters.

WASHINGTON—Washington, DC-based allies of Turkish President Erdogan are doubling down on his May, 2017, attack at Sheridan Circle, attempting, once again, to prevent Americans from exercising their Constitutional right to freedom of _expression_.

The Turkish American Steering Committee (TASC) – taking a page from the playbook of the Westboro Baptist Church and neo-Nazi marchers in Charlottesville – is gaming America’s First Amendment, not to express its own views, but rather to obstruct the free _expression_ of U.S. citizens set to gather this April 24th at 4:30 pm in Washington, DC’s Sheridan Circle to protest Ankara’s denial of the Armenian Genocide.

TASC has a track record of using loud dance music, songs, shouting, and even air-horns to drown out speakers at annual April 24th demonstrations. This year they have, for the first time, secured the approval of the U.S. National Park Service to engage in their disruptive activities from an area adjacent to the Armenian Genocide protest, within the actual confines of Sheridan Circle. This traffic circle, across the street from the Turkish Ambassador’s residence, is infamous internationally as the site where, less than two years ago, Turkish President Erdogan’s bodyguards brutally beat peaceful American protesters. TASC Co-Chairman Gunay Evinch is among the lawyers hired by the Turkish Government to defend it in a lawsuit brought by victims of this attack.

The organizer of the Armenian Genocide protest – the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) Ani Chapter – was joined by the Armenian National Committee of America in arguing vigorously against the Park Service granting a permit for a counter-protest at Sheridan Circle, on Constitutional and public safety grounds. Over these strenuous objections, the Park Service has permitted TASC to occupy roughly a third of Sheridan Circle.

The AYF is expecting a strong turn-out from the local Armenian, Greek and Assyrian/Aramean/Syriac communities – all of whom remain undeterred in raising their voices for justice on April 24th in the nation’s capital. To support the peaceful protest, join them from 4:30pm to 6:30pm at Sheridan Circle, located at Massachusetts Ave. NW and 23rd St NW. Buses are available from Soorp Khatch Armenian Apostolic Church (4906 Flint Drive, Bethesda MD) at 3:15pm. For more information, email [email protected] or [email protected]

The ANCA will be live-streaming portions of the protest on its Facebook page.

Şahan Arzruni Celebrates his 75th Birthday with a Solo Piano Concert

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Website: www.agbu.org
PRESS RELEASE
Monday, 
ŞAHAN ARZRUNI CELEBRATES HIS 75TH BIRTHDAY WITH A SOLO PIANO CONCERT
The sound of thunderous applause emanated from the French Institute Alliance 
Française's Florence Gould Hall on April 5, 2019 as a sold-out crowd of music 
lovers, admirers and friends gathered for the Şahan Arzruni 75th Anniversary 
Concert, organized with the cooperation of multiple organizations of the 
Greater New York area, including AGBU, The Armenian Apostolic Church of America 
(Eastern Prelacy),  Armenian Radio Hour of New Jersey, Eastern Diocese of the 
Armenian Church of America, Direct Help for Armenian People, and the Fund for 
Armenian Relief.
The renowned pianist, composer, ethnomusicologist, teacher, and scholar 
performed on the occasion of his milestone birthday, captivating the audience 
with original compositions, as well as works by musical giants Aram 
Khachaturian, Alan Hovhaness, and Edvard Mirzoyan. His varied repertoire was 
interspersed with anecdotes about some of the composers whose work he 
performed, such as longtime friends and role models Hovhannes and Mirzoyan.
Arzruni has enjoyed widespread acclaim from across the classical music 
landscape, performing on international stages worldwide. He has been recognized 
in various capacities for his impassioned dedication to Armenian music and 
heritage. A recipient of the Movses Khorenatsi Medal for exceptional 
achievement in cultural development, Arzruni was appointed the full-fledged 
representative of Armenia's Ministry of Culture in the Diaspora for the Aram 
Khachaturian Centennial in 2003. He has also been honored with both an 
encyclical and the Sts. Sahak and Mesrob Medallion by His Holiness Karekin I of 
blessed memory. 
In his program message, the Very Reverend Father Daniel Findikyan, Primate of 
the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America, expressed how Arzruni 
"is truly peerless in his championing of the Armenian musical inheritance; both 
its great figures like Khachaturian, Hovhaness, and the immortal Komitas, as 
well as our lesser known, but hardly less distinguished, names like Mirzoyan, 
Mansuryan, Babadjanyan, Arutiunuan, Zakaryan and others." Making Armenian music 
accessible to the rest of the world, Arzruni was lauded throughout the night as 
an artist of striking versatility and an ambassador for the rich Armenian 
heritage he has worked tirelessly to promote and preserve. "The music abounds 
in subtlety and rhythmic surprise, and Mr. Arzruni created vivid, eloquent 
atmospheres," the New York Concert Review raved. 
The concert was followed by a private reception at the AGBU Central Office in 
New York- a fitting venue, given Arzruni's involvement with AGBU since 1964, 
receiving an AGBU scholarship in 1966 to pursue his musical studies. "Şahan is 
an icon," AGBU President Berge Setrakian observed. "We are always trying to 
inspire the next generation and giving them role models to be proud of is how 
we do that-Şahan is just that."
The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) is the world's largest non-profit 
organization devoted to upholding the Armenian heritage through educational, 
cultural and humanitarian programs. Each year, AGBU is committed to making a 
difference in the lives of 500,000 people across Armenia, Artsakh and the 
Armenian diaspora. Since 1906, AGBU has remained true to one overarching goal: 
to create a foundation for the prosperity of all Armenians. To learn more visit 
www.agbu.org.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/22/2019

                                        Monday, 
Indicted Former Official ‘Detained In Russia’
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia -- Mihran Poghosyan, head of the Service for Mandatory Execution of 
Judicial Acts, at a press conference in Yerevan, January 26, 2016.
A former senior Armenian official wanted by law-enforcement authorities in 
Yerevan on corruption charges was reportedly detained in Russia over the 
weekend.
Armenian prosecutors said on Monday that they will ask their Russian 
counterparts to extradite Mihran Poghosian, who headed a state agency enforcing 
court rulings from 2008-2016 and was linked to Armenia’s former leadership.
Earlier this month, the Special Investigative Service (SIS) moved to arrest 
Poghosian after accusing him of abusing his powers to enrich himself. Security 
officers searched his Yerevan villa and offices on April 18.
Poghosian denies the charges as politically motivated. He said through his 
office last week that he currently resides in Moscow. But he did not clarify 
whether he is planning to return to Armenia.
An SIS spokeswoman, Marina Ohanjanian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Sunday 
that Poghosian was taken into custody in the northwestern Russian region of 
Karelia. She said investigators will request his extradition to Armenia. The 
Office of the Prosecutor-General said it is already putting together a package 
of relevant documents that will be sent to Russia.
Russian law-enforcement authorities did not publicly confirm and comment on 
Poghosian’s reported arrest as of Monday afternoon.
The SIS claims that the 42-year-old Poghosian embezzled, through individuals 
and companies linked to him, at least 64.2 million drams ($132,000) in public 
funds. It also accuses him of giving privileged treatment to a real estate 
valuation firm that was contracted by the Service for the Mandatory Execution 
of Judicial Acts (SMEJA) in 2014.
The firm was allegedly a subsidiary of shadowy companies set up by Poghosian in 
Panama in 2011. Citing leaked documents widely known as the Panama Papers, an 
Armenian investigative website reported in April 2016 that Poghosian controls 
three such companies registered in the Central American state.
Poghosian dismissed the report. Nevertheless, he resigned as SMEJA chief 
shortly afterwards, despite continuing to deny any wrongdoing. A year later, he 
was elected to the former Armenian parliament on the ticket of ex-President 
Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party.
Pashinian Defends Corruption Case Against Prominent Ally
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) introduces Davit Sanasarian, the 
newly appointed head of the State Oversight Service (SOS), to SOS staff, 
Yerevan, May 29, 2018.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has defended investigators that brought 
corruption charges against a senior Armenian government official and lambasted 
civic activists questioning the credibility of the high-profile probe.
In a weekend Facebook post, Pashinian said Davit Sanasarian, the suspended head 
of the State Oversight Service (SOS), cannot be immune to prosecution despite 
having played a major role in last year’s “velvet revolution” that brought him 
to power.
The National Security Service (NSS) indicted Sanasarian on Thursday as part of 
its ongoing investigation into allegedly corrupt practices in government-funded 
supplies of medical equipment to hospitals. It arrested two senior SOS 
officials in late February, saying that they attempted to cash in on those 
supplies.
According to the NSS, Sanasarian abused his powers to help his subordinates 
enrich themselves and a private company linked to them.
Sanasarian was quick to reject the charges as “fabricated.” Many of his 
supporters, among them leaders of some Western-funded non-governmental 
organizations, have defended him on social media, turning on the NSS and its 
influential director, Artur Vanetsian, in particular.
Pashinian hit back at the critics, saying that they place their personal 
relationships with Sanasarian above the rule of law.
“The ‘brotherly’ mindset has much deeper rules in Armenia than oligarchy and 
crime,” he wrote. “Even for civic activists and politicians, ‘brotherhood’ 
remains the main formula of worldview. They don’t give a damn about the truth 
…about the revolution and its values.”
“Davit is my friend too, but be aware that there are no untouchable persons in 
Armenia, whether they are in government or in opposition, revolutionaries or 
counterrevolutionaries,” he said.
Pashinian stressed that the law will be enforced “twice as strictly” against 
those who had spoken out against corruption but eventually “betrayed the 
people.” “Let a normal investigation be conducted,” he warned. “If you don’t, I 
will ensure that.”
Daniel Ioannisian, one of the activists critical of the corruption case, 
insisted that he and other sympathizers of Sanasarian do not have any personal 
motives. “We just see problems with the course of the investigation,” he said, 
adding that it is not objective.
Ioannisian said the probe was launched after Sanasarian’s agency tried to 
address a suspicious lack of competition in the choice of medical supplies.
Sanasarian’s lawyer, Inessa Petrosian, claimed, for her part, that the criminal 
case against the 34-year-old official and former activist is based on “false 
testimony” given to the NSS by his subordinates. Petrosian said her client is 
prosecuted because he combatted corrupt practices in the healthcare sector.
The NSS claimed earlier that the arrested SOS officials arbitrarily forced 
medical institutions to rig rules for the choice of companies supplying 
expensive equipment for hemodialysis, a treatment of kidney failure. It said 
they wanted to make sure that a company controlled by them wins tenders for 
such supplies.
Health Minister Arsen Torosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on February 26 
that he asked the NSS to investigate “external interference” in 
dialysis-related procurements because the new tender rules threatened to 
disrupt the vital medical services provided to around a thousand patients 
across the country.
The dialysis equipment tenders were until then won by a handful of private 
firms. Earlier in February, one of their owners accused Sanasarian of driving 
his Frezen company out of business. Sanasarian dismissed the allegations, 
saying that the SOS has simply broken up Frezen’s “monopoly” on supplies to one 
of the hospitals.
Armenian Court Validates ‘Counterrevolutionary’ Bill
        • Naira Nalbandian
ARMENIA -- Supporters of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian protest outside the 
parliament building in Yerevan, October 2, 2018.
The Constitutional Court has upheld the legality of a controversial bill which 
led Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to stage an angry demonstration outside 
Armenia’s parliament and allege a “counterrevolutionary” conspiracy against his 
government in October.
The bill hastily passed by the former National Assembly called into question 
the success of Pashinian’s plans to force snap general elections in December, 
over six months after the country’s “velvet revolution.” It was drafted by 
former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party (HHK) and backed by 
Pashinian’s junior coalition partners: the Prosperous Armenia (BHK) and 
Dashnaktsutyun parties.
The prime minister accused the three parliamentary forces of a “conspiracy 
against the Armenian people” before sacking his ministers affiliated with the 
BHK and Dashnaktsutyun. Responding to his appeal, thousands of his supporters 
rallied outside the parliament building in Yerevan and blocked the entrances to 
it late on October 2.
ARMENIA -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses supporters during a rally 
outside the parliament building in Yerevan early, October 3, 2018
The parliamentary leaders assured Pashinian during overnight negotiations that 
they will not impede the parliament’s early dissolution sought by him. The 
elections were held on December 8. Pashinian’s My Step alliance won them by a 
landslide.
Later in October, President Armen Sarkissian refused to sign the bill into law, 
citing “apparent legal-constitutional problems” emanating from it. Sarkissian 
asked the Constitutional Court to pass judgment on it.
In a ruling announced over the weekend, the court concluded that the bill 
conforms to the Armenian constitution.
Ararat Mirzoyan, the current parliament speaker and a key Pashinian ally, said 
on Monday that he respects the ruling. “As a politician, I can find it good or 
bad,” he told journalists. “But as president of the National Assembly, I will 
not challenge the Constitutional Court ruling.”
Armenia -- A Constitutional Court hearing in Yerevan, April 25, 2017.
Mirzoyan insisted at the same time that the country’s highest court did not 
prove Pashinian wrong. “The HHK was not right in any way,” he said.
The former ruling party, which failed to win any seats in the current 
legislature, did not immediately react to the court’s decision. Arpine 
Hovannisian, a senior HHK figure and a co-author of the bill, promised to make 
a detailed statement next week.
Some HHK supporters and other critics of the current government earlier accused 
Pashinian of illegally blockading and pressuring the parliament in October.
The BHK, which is now in opposition to Pashinian’s government, reacted 
cautiously to the development. “Whatever happened, happened,” Mikael Melkumian, 
a senior BHK lawmaker, said when asked whether the Constitutional Court ruling 
means Pashinian’s furious reaction was unfounded.
Jailed General To Go On Trial
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia - General Manvel Grigorian attends an event organized by the Yerkrapah 
Union, 5 March 2018.
Manvel Grigorian, a retired Armenian army general arrested in June, will go on 
trial soon on a string of criminal charges denied by him.
A court in Yerevan confirmed this when it again refused to free Grigorian on 
bail on Monday. The judge who made the decision, Marine Melkonian, argued that 
the criminal case has already been sent to another judge, who will preside over 
the trial.
Grigorian’s lawyer, Arsen Mkrtchian, accepted the explanation. “Since the 
arrest of Manvel Grigorian this is probably Marine Melkonian’s or [another 
judge] Arsen Nikoghosian’s first substantiated decision conforming to the law,” 
said Mkrtchian, who has repeatedly submitted such petitions before, citing his 
client’s poor health.
Grigorian, who reportedly suffers from serious illnesses, was transferred to a 
civilian hospital in March just days after appealing to the European Court of 
Human Rights (ECHR).
Grigorian, who had served as deputy defense minister from 2000-2008, was 
arrested when security forces raided his properties in and around the town of 
Echmiadzin. They found many weapons, ammunition, medication and field rations 
for soldiers provided by the Armenian Defense Ministry. They also discovered 
canned food and several vehicles donated by Armenians at one of Grigorian’s 
mansions.
Grigorian was also charged with tax evasion and extortion in February. He 
denies all the accusations leveled against him.
The 62-year-old will stand trial together with his wife, Nazik Amirian, who is 
facing some of the charges leveled against him. Unlike her husband, Amirian has 
not been held in pre-trial detention.
No date of the start of their trial has been announced so far. Judicial 
authorities have said only that the high-profile case has been assigned to 
Mnatsakan Martirosian, a veteran judge known for his controversial guilty 
verdicts against opposition figures arrested by former Armenian authorities.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2019 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

The California Courier Online, April 25, 2019

The California Courier Online, April 25, 2019

1 –        By Denying the Armenian Genocide,
            Turkish Leaders Publicize it Even More
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2-         Armenian Billionaire donating money for Notre Dame
3 –        The Kardashian Clan Is Backing UCLA’s Newest Medical Center
4-         Armenia becomes the first partner in St. Jude’s global
pediatric cancer fight
5-         Course examines truth of medieval history depicted in hit
series Game of Thrones

*****************************************
******************************************

1 –        By Denying the Armenian Genocide,
            Turkish Leaders Publicize it Even More
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

More than a century after the mass crime of Genocide against
Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks, most Turks still feel self-conscious
as April 24 approaches and whenever someone refers to their Crime
Against Humanity.

Many Turkish officials and journalists feel compelled to defend their
country’s tarnished reputation by trying to cover up the Genocide
committed by their ancestors. By doing so, they automatically
associate themselves with the guilt of their forefathers and in turn
become guilty themselves for denying one of the most heinous crimes in
the history of mankind.

Why would Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, on April 15,
2019, falsely claim that Turkey “has not committed any genocide” in
its history? How many leaders of other countries have made such a
statement? Cavusoglu knows well that the Ottoman Turks did commit
Genocide as he is desperately trying to conceal their crimes.
Cavusoglu and his fellow denialists do not seem to realize that the
more they proclaim their innocence, the more they affiliate themselves
with the Genocide and become accessories to that barbaric crime.

Each time Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan or his underlings
talk about the Genocide, even in a dismissive manner, they are
actually publicizing worldwide the facts of the Genocide and informing
everyone that Turks are accused of committing Genocide.

Interestingly, Cavusoglu warned that “the Turkish government will not
stay silent against some countries trying to lecture Turkey on
history.” This is exactly what Armenians want him to do. The more he
talks about the Genocide, the more he exposes the Turkish crime to the
world. Cavusoglu and other Turkish denialists find themselves in the
ironic situation of “damned if you do, and damned if you don’t.” In
other words, if they remain silent against the accusations of
Genocide, they would be acknowledging it, and if they deny it, they
would be spreading the news about their historic crime. There is no
positive outcome for them. They are caught in the horns of a serious
dilemma.

In early April, at a NATO meeting in Antalya, Turkey, Cavusoglu
criticized French President Emmanuel Macron for declaring April 24 as
a National Day in France for the commemoration of the Armenian
Genocide. By lashing out at Pres. Macron, the Turkish Foreign Minister
made the situation even worse for his own country. In protest, a
French Parliamentarian walked out of the NATO meeting, which was
covered by the worldwide media, further publicizing the Armenian
Genocide.

This incident caused some hateful Turks to threaten the life of the
French Parliamentarian, which further disseminated the true facts of
the Armenian Genocide.

Another example of Turkish self-consciousness is the article by
commentator Ozan Ceyhun in the Daily Sabah newspaper. He correctly
wrote that “April 24 is used as a day for ‘getting even,’ by those who
do not wish to see Turkey as an EU member due to various reasons,
those who do not wish to see it become stronger in the region, or
countries like the U.S. that want to see Turkey as a dependent state.”
My response is that no one wants to see a brutal and unrepentant
country as a member of international military and economic alliances.
Turkish leaders are the ones forcing themselves out of such alliances
by behaving in an uncivilized and undemocratic manner. They have no
one else to blame but themselves.

Ceyhun wonders why no one cares about the opinions of “Armenians
living in Turkey.” The answer is very simple. Armenians in Turkey,
having survived the Genocide and many other repressions since then,
know all too well that if they dared to say anything negative about
Turkey’s oppressive regime, they will be locked up, if not killed.

The Turkish commentator then shamelessly mentions Armenian journalist
Hrant Dink who was assassinated by a Turk for expressing himself on
Turkish-Armenian relations. Ceyhun selectively quotes from Dink as
stating that outsiders should not meddle in the “events” that happened
in the past and that this issue should be resolved between Armenians
and Turks. Dink had made many statements which were often
contradictory depending on whether he made them while he was inside or
outside Turkey.

It suits Turkish denialists to quote statements that third parties
should not meddle in the Armenian-Turkish issue. If it were not for
the Armenian Diaspora lobbying the international community for
decades, the Armenian Genocide would have been forgotten long ago.
Furthermore, Ceyhun prefers that outsiders listen to the views of
Turkish Armenians who are suppressed and are unable to express their
honest opinions on the Armenian Genocide. As immediate descendants of
the Genocide, they know exactly what happened to their ancestors, but
they cannot talk about it openly, fearing for their lives.

Just as irritating are the Azerbaijani denials of the Armenian
Genocide. Fortunately, it is easier to deal with the Azeris as they
are not as powerful as Turkey and Armenians have already shown their
power by recovering their historic territory of Artsakh from
Azerbaijan. If Azeris do not behave and continue to insult Armenians
by their denials of the Armenian Genocide, Armenia’s leaders may halt
the negotiations with Azerbaijan and incorporate Artsakh in the
Republic of Armenia.

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2-         Armenian Billionaire donating money for Notre Dame

(PanArmenian.net)—Russian billionaire of Armenian descent Andrey
Andreev (Andrei Vagnerovich Ogandjanyants), founder of the social
discovery and dating network Badoo, will give part of the company’s
revenues to the restoration of Notre Dame Cathedral after the
devastating fire in Paris.

The fire that engulfed the Notre Dame, the 850-year-old Unesco world
heritage landmark in Paris, was brought under control on the morning
of April 16, while the Cathedral’s main structure as well as its two
towers were saved.

“In light of the terrible tragedy that befell the Cathedral of Notre
Dame, I allocate a significant donation for its restoration. I pledge
to transfer 100 percent of the revenue that Badoo will receive from
its 22 million users in April to France. My heart goes to the people
of France,” he said.

Andreev said he learnt about the tragedy in Paris from social networks
and immediately turned on the TV.

“This whole situation was a huge shock to me,” Forbes cited him as saying.

The businessman did not specify the amount of money he is going to
donate to the cause.

Notre Dame was set to host a liturgy for Armenian Genocide victims on April 22.

France marked April 24 as a commemoration day of the Armenian
Genocide, with the relevant decree signed by President Emmanuel Macron
on April 10.

According to the document, a ceremony paying tribute to the genocide
victims will be held in Paris on this day every year. Similar events
may also be held in every city at the initiative of the local
governments.

Macron announced his decision to make April 24 as a national day of
commemoration of the Armenian Genocide at the Coordinating Council of
Armenian Organizations (CCAF) gala in Paris on February 5.

The French leader’s move drew strong criticism from Turkey, which
accused Paris of “manipulating history.”

Representatives of the Armenian community in France and French
politicians visit the Komitas Monument and Armenian Genocide Memorial
in Paris on 24 April every year to pay homage to the Armenian Genocide
victims.

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3 –        The Kardashian Clan Is Backing UCLA’s Newest Medical Center

            By Brittany Martin

Robert G. Kardashian—the prominent L.A. attorney who defended O.J.
Simpson and sired Kim, Khloé, Kim, and Rob—died of esophageal cancer
in 2003, just two months after being diagnosed with the illness. Now,
to honor his memory and help prevent the cancer that killed him from
claiming more lives, the Kardashian-Jenner family has partnered with
UCLA to establish the Robert G. Kardashian Center for Esophageal
Health.

The new center, part of the university’s David Geffen School of
Medicine, will treat patients with an integrative approach that
combines cutting-edge cancer treatments with preventive care including
nutrition and wellness-based approaches. Recently, the number of
people diagnosed with esophageal cancer each year has risen, according
to a statement by UCLA announcing the new center. Cases may be
triggered by diet, lifestyle, or gastroesophageal reflux disease; many
patients don’t even notice symptoms during the early stages when the
cancer can most effectively be treated.

“Our family is proud to pay tribute to our father by partnering with
UCLA Health to establish the Robert G. Kardashian Center for
Esophageal Health,” Kim Kardashian West said at a ceremony on Tuesday.
“We hope to save lives and help the community for many years to come
in honor of our father.”

In addition to lending the Kardashian name to the center, the family
will be leading on-going fundraising efforts to support the
initiative. Kardashian West is also honoring her father’s legacy in
another way of late, with the recent announcement that she’ll be
following in his footsteps pursuing a new career as an attorney.

This article appeared in Los Angeles Magazine on April 17, 2019.

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4-         Armenia becomes the first partner in St. Jude’s global
pediatric cancer fight

            By Michelle Corbet

Camera shutters rapidly clicked Friday morning as the First Lady of
Armenia picked up a pen to formalize a memorandum of understanding
between the former Soviet nation and St. Jude Children’s Research
Hospital.

Armenia became the first country to join the St. Jude Global Alliance,
a multimillion-dollar effort launched last year to improve treatment
for children with cancer in low- and middle-income countries by 30
percent over the next decade.

One year ago this month, Anna Hakobyan was leading a political
revolution with husband Nikol Pashinyan, whose peaceful protests
forced then Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan to step down. The people of
Armenia elected Pashinyan prime minister a few days later.

Before the protests that led to Pashinyan being elected, Hakobyan was
a journalist and editor-in-chief of the Armenian Times.

“I was not involved in the health care, rather more in politics,” the
now First Lady said, who served an active role in the revolution.

“After the revolution, we had a big crisis in our country with the
hospital that treated children with cancer because the previous
foundations that helped raise money for the children stopped,”
Hakobyan said. “I had no choice but to answer to this work and try to
find solutions. “

Shortly after the election, Hakobyan founded City of Smile, a
foundation to support the development of pediatric oncology and
hematology in Armenia. Similar to ALSAC, the fundraising and awareness
organization for St. Jude, the City of Smile fully covers the cost of
care of pediatric cancer patients and their families. To date, City of
Smile has raised enough funding to fully support the care of 120
children.

“Childhood cancer is quite expensive. Support from the foundations is
really essential,” said Dr. Gevorg Tamamyan, a pediatric
hematologist/oncologist at the Pediatric Cancer and Blood Disorders
Center of Armenia. “These foundations are trying to help the kids
receive appropriate care regardless of their ability to pay, so every
child receives appropriate care and no one is left out if they don’t
have the resources.”

As a middle-income country, Armenia has limited resources for treating
pediatric cancer.

“When you work in a limited-resource setting, you have a lot of
challenges you need to overcome — the drugs, the personnel, the
research capacity, education opportunities, lack of awareness and so
on,” Tamamyan said.

By joining the St. Jude Global Alliance, Armenia will join other
countries all working to solve the challenges of treating pediatric
oncology and make treatment and diagnosis available to all children,
regardless of nationality or geographic location.

“It’s a way to develop our capacity, improve our results, to learn and
to exchange our ideas and to make more kids healthier,” Tamamyan said.

Armenia is a critical region for St. Jude’s global effort, including
the eastern Mediterranean and Eurasian regions.

“They have been critical in helping organize and provide support,”
said Dr. Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo, chair of St. Jude’s Department of
Global Pediatric Medicine.

Neighboring Georgia and Azerbaijan are anticipated to follow Armenia’s
lead to join the St. Jude Global Alliance, as well as many other
regions not only in the caucuses, but in the former Soviet Republic
areas.

Rodriguez-Galindo classified the 2018 Armenian revolution as critical
to the success of the partnership.

“Whenever you see the will of the people to create a better country, a
better world, a better life for every one of their citizens, things
start changing, and that’s what happened in Armenia,” he said.

Tamamyan was among the St. Jude national outreach participants who
came to St. Jude in 2012. Since that time, he has been closely
collaborating with St. Jude, which in February resulted in the opening
of the Pediatric Cancer and Blood Disorders Center of Armenia.

In the U.S., the cure rate for children with cancer is 80 percent, but
that is not the reality for the rest of the world.

“More than 400,000 children develop cancer each year. Less than 30
percent are cured, and most die without diagnosis. They die in agony
and pain and most are forgotten,” Rodriguez-Galindo said.

Taking care of not only America’s children, but every single child in
the world is the second chapter of founder Danny Thomas’ vision “that
no child should die in the dawn of life,” Rodriguez-Galindo said.

This article appeared in The Daily Memphian on April 12, 2019.

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5-         Course examines truth of medieval history depicted in hit
series Game of Thrones

By Manisha Aggarwal-Schifellite

When the much-anticipated final season of “Game of Thrones” premieres
Sunday on HBO, fans around the world will see some resolutions to the
themes of war, romance, and family loyalty that have marked the hit
show for the past eight years.

The epic battle for Winterfell, a reunion of the surviving Stark
children, and the fallout from the union of Jon Snow and Daenerys
Targaryen and subsequent discoveries about their lineage will be at
the top of the minds of many viewers, including Racha Kirakosian, an
associate professor of German and the study of religion.

For Kirakosian, this last season of “Game of Thrones” is an
opportunity for both entertainment and scholarship. She has been
teaching “The Real ‘Game of Thrones’: Culture, Society, and Religion
in the Middle Ages” since 2017, using “Thrones” and other famous works
of fantasy to engage students’ love of the genre while dispelling
myths about medieval life and its depiction in popular culture.

“‘Game of Thrones’ takes tremendous inspiration from the medieval
world,” Kirakosian said, pointing to J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit” as
one of the first books to make medieval Europe the default world of
fantasy storytelling. “It’s important to understand how that fantasy
creation got so entangled with the history of medieval Europe, and in
order to get there we need to know something about medieval Europe.”

In one class, on the theme of “Learning and Philosophy,” students
watch a clip from the show illustrating the lack of literacy and
access to knowledge in Westeros, especially for women.

Using the clip as a guide, Kirakosian explains the realities of
literacy and education for medieval men and women and highlights the
advent of the university system during the medieval period — a
departure from the world of knowledge depicted in “Game of Thrones.”

“Students are able to see something they know from the show and then
look at the actual historical sources that we have from medieval
Europe,” said Kirakosian. “They can then realize how complex the image
actually is and get a sense for historical depth and analysis.”

Ingrid Goetz ‘19 credited Kirakosian and the course with helping her
challenge her assumptions about the Middle Ages.

“The course readings were well thought-out and encouraged me to look
at both the world of fantasy and the environment around us in a new
light,” said Goetz, who is concentrating in the history of art and
architecture. Learning about the developments in architecture and
civic society in medieval Europe “definitely encouraged me to look
deeper and examine how modern life works.”

At the same time that students learn about the medieval history that
informs the fictional world of Westeros, they also learn how to
dissect the themes and tropes of “Game of Thrones” and view them in
the context of the fantasy genre over the centuries.

To do this, Kirakosian focused the latter portion of the course on the
humanist and romantic traditions of the 18th and 19th centuries,
during which nationalism, Orientalism, and patriarchy became ingrained
in popular interpretations of medieval life.

“This period was a time of reimagining a past infused with magic,
together with an imagining of ‘the East’ in contrast to forming
Western nations,” said Kirakosian. Understanding how these themes
developed and how they continue to manifest in current pop culture is
necessary, she added, if we are to become “reflective consumers” of
popular culture.

“There is such a cultural mythology built up around the Middle Ages,
from chivalry and the knights in shining armor tropes to the idea of
the ‘Dark Ages’ as a time of plague and suffering,” said Goetz. “How
can these exist at the same time? I’ve always wanted to interrogate
and investigate that.”

While students are anticipating a climactic end for “Game of Thrones,”
Kirakosian hopes that more of them channel their curiosity about
fantasy stories into study about the medieval period.

“One reason I teach this class is to bring the Middle Ages alive, and
I want to show that terms like the ‘Dark Ages’ are pejorative and
incorrect,” said Kirakosian, who will teach the course in fall 2020 as
part of the new General Education program. “There is an ongoing
relevance of the study of the past for our ability to understand our
world today, to understand ourselves and how we position ourselves to
what we see happening around us and to us.”

This article appeared in The Harvard Daily Gazette on April 11, 2019.

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Libyan interim government adopts resolution recognizing Armenian Genocide

News.am, Armenia
Libyan interim government adopts resolution recognizing Armenian Genocide Libyan interim government adopts resolution recognizing Armenian Genocide

18:48, 20.04.2019
                  

The Libyan interim government officially adopted in March a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide, addresslibya.com reported.

According to the country’s Foreign Ministry , the interim government announced on Thursday that the country will commemorate the Armenian Genocide, committed by the Imperial Government of Turkey’s Ottoman Empire.

Addresslibya.com noted that in 24 April 1915, Ottoman authorities rounded up, arrested, and deported from Constantinople (now Istanbul) to the region of Ankara, 235 to 270 Armenian intellectuals and community leaders, the majority of whom were eventually murdered. This was followed by the deportation of women, children, the elderly, and the infirm on death marches leading to the Syrian Desert. Driven forward by military escorts, the deportees were deprived of food and water and subjected to periodic robbery, rape, and massacre. The final death toll of the genocide is reported to be 1.5 million.