Russia MOD publicizes rare photos of Armenian marshals

News.am, Armenia


Russia MOD publicizes rare photos of Armenian marshals (PHOTOS) Russia MOD publicizes rare photos of Armenian marshals (PHOTOS)

12:13, 20.04.2019
                  

The Russian Ministry of Defense (MOD) has posted on its website the rare personal photos of the Soviet Union marshals and generals of the Great Patriotic War, and among whom there are Armenian marshals, too.

In particular, rare photos of the Hero of the Soviet Union, Marshal Hamazasp Babadzhanian, and of Double Hero of the Soviet Union, Marshal Ivan Bagramyan, were publicized in a respective article of the Russian MOD.




Armenian Genocide monument freeway sign downed in California

News.am, Armenia
Armenian Genocide monument freeway sign downed in California Armenian Genocide monument freeway sign downed in California

11:32, 20.04.2019
                  

Passersby on a California freeway on Friday alerted Asbarez about the sign directing drivers to the Montebello Armenian Genocide Martyrs Monument being downed.

Asbarez is working with the Armenian National Committee of America and law enforcement to determine the cause of this incident.

On commemoration of the 104th anniversary of Armenian Genocide, digital panels have been installed on the streets of various cities in California.

Karabakh teen kills 10-year-old brother under influence of computer game?

News.am, Armenia
Karabakh teen kills 10-year-old brother under influence of computer game? Karabakh teen kills 10-year-old brother under influence of computer game?

09:37, 20.04.2019
                  

Armenian News-NEWS.am has learned more about the murder of a 10-year-old in the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh Republic/NKR).

According to preliminary information, the child was killed by his 17-year-old brother, and with particular brutality.

As per their relatives, the teen had killed his brother in the woods by inflicting him numerous injuries with knife and fork, then buried him in a pit, and then returned home.

According to the preliminary theory, the teenager had committed the crime under the influence of computer games.

Earlier, the Artsakh Police had informed Armenian News-NEWS.am that V. G. (born in 2009), a resident of Shahumyan Region of Artsakh, was killed on April 12.

Within the framework of the criminal case that was launched, his brother, S. G. (born in 2001), was detained on April 13, on suspicion of V. G.’s murder.

Expertise studies have been ordered.

The preliminary investigation is still in progress.

Tourists visiting Artsakh to be granted free entry visa from April 29

Public Radio of Armenia
Tourists visiting Artsakh to be granted free entry visa from April 29

2019-04-20 10:41:51

On April 29, the law of the Republic of Artsakh ‘On Making Amendment to the NKR Law ‘On State Duty’, signed by President of the Republic of Artsakh Bako Sahakyan on April 12, 2019, will come into force.

On December 1, 2018, the Foreign Ministry came forward with a proposal to make an amendment to the law, which would provide for abolishing the state duty for the 21-day single tourist entry visa to the Republic of Artsakh. The introduced legislative amendment is aimed to promote tourism development in Artsakh by facilitating the issuance of entry visas to foreign citizens․

According to the new procedure, foreign citizens will be granted an entry visa at the passport control points upon entry to Artsakh, and at the Permanent Representation of the Republic of Artsakh to the Republic of Armenia (address: Yerevan, Nairi Zaryan St. 17a / 2).

Columnist Andrea Ayvazian: We will gather again, because we must

Daily Hampshire Gazette
 
 
Columnist Andrea Ayvazian: We will gather again, because we must
 
 
 
The Rev. Andrea Ayvazian, center, of Northampton, with her husband, Michael Klare, and her sister, Gina Ayvazian, gather in 2016 to recognize Armenian Martyrs’ Day, at Memorial Hall in Northampton. GAZETTE FILE PHOTO/JERREY ROBERTS

 
April 24th is coming around again. Once again, members of the Armenian community and our friends, colleagues, and allies will gather in downtown Northampton to mark Armenian Martyrs’ Day.
 
Once again, we will wear black, walk in a mournful procession from behind Thornes Marketplace to Memorial Hall.
 
Once again, holding our Armenian flags, we will walk side-by-side. Once again, some will weep as we walk, some will weep when the program begins, and some will weep the entire time.
 
We gather to mark April 24, 1915, the beginning of the genocide in Turkey that lasted years and took the lives of 1.5 million Armenians. The genocide that Hitler used as a blueprint for the Holocaust.
 
My sister Gina and I have been organizing this gathering for 24 years. Our grandparents, Haig and Shenorig Ayvazian, and our father, L. Fred Ayvazian, were survivors of the genocide. Our parents used to be part of the annual commemoration in Northampton — sitting in the circle in lawn chairs. Our father would cry while he spoke of the “massacres,” as he called them; our mother, Gloria Ayvazian, also Armenian, sat stoically holding his hand.
 
April 24th is coming around again. We will gather again — we will never stop marking Martyrs’ Day as long as there is life in our bodies. We will always gather to remember a genocide that Turkey denies, and the U.S. refuses to acknowledge, even though many other countries have done so.
 
We will gather again to experience the strength of the Armenian community. We will gather to pray, cry, sing, and stare in each other’s large dark eyes. We will gather to lift our voices, share our words, and make our witness. And to hug each other — hugs that are too tight and last too long. We will gather again.
 
“I was born at the intersection of East and West, life and death, hope and despair,” Marian Mesrobian MacCurdy writes in the introduction of her book “Sacred Justice: The Voices and Legacy of the Armenian Operation Nemesis.”
 
“My grandparents’ job was to survive, my parents’ to anchor us all into another universe, and my generation’s job to remember,” Mesrobian MacCurdy continues. “Parts of us survived, even thrived; parts did not. Much of us is anchored to our adopted home; other parts are floating bodiless, without tether in the ether between Turkish Armenia and American, between the will to thrive and the guilt for doing so, of never being able to do enough to fix what cannot be fixed.”
 
This year when we gather, Marian Mesrobian MacCurdy, who lives in the Valley, will be our guest speaker. She will bring her wise words and open heart to our commemoration and will share thoughts about Armenian life today and how we move forward.
 
Every page of Mesrobian MacCurdy’s book is remarkable. I was late for meetings and stayed up into the night reading the book. Her meticulous research is stunning and her ability to weave a story with gripping detail is deeply moving.
 
Her discussion of intergenerational trauma — something I have studied for years — gave me pause. Mesrobian MacCurdy describes the children of survivors of the genocide with remarkable, almost disturbing, accuracy. We are traumatized, all of us who are in any way related to the genocide. We reverberate with the horrific stories, we carry the grief, and we cling to the hope that our history will be told, recognized, and validated someday. Someday.
 
And so we gather. Because we must. Although we live with the wounds each day, our awareness of the genocide is heightened on April 24th and we have a gnawing need to see one another. The Armenian diaspora is scattered around the globe.
 
But in this green Valley, the Armenians who come together on April 24 do so with a longing that hangs in the air throughout the commemoration. We need the prayers, the songs, the words, the tears shed, and the time together. We need to stand in our sorrow and strength and say: we remember.
 
“We are still attempting to survive, to anchor, and to remember,” Mesrobian MacCurdy writes in “Sacred Justice.”
 
It is true. We are still struggling. Still attempting to survive, to anchor, to remember, to be recognized, to be acknowledged, to be seen, to heal, and to be made whole. We stand each year to remember those who died in the genocide, and those who survived the genocide, but never lived to see the massacres they endured acknowledged by their adopted country, the United States of America.
 
April 24th is coming around again. And we will mark the day. We will walk, hug, speak, and pray while weeping.
 
Armenian Martyrs’ Day Commemoration begins at 5:30 behind Thornes Marketplace.
 
The Rev. Dr. Andrea Ayvazian, of Northampton, is an associate pastor at Alden Baptist Church in Springfield. She is also the Founder and Director of the Sojourner Truth School for Social Change Leadership which offers free movement-building classes from Greenfield to Springfield.

‘I keep silent and put up with it’: Surviving domestic violence in Armenia

Global Voices

A progressive new law has remained an abstract concept

“We got married at the end of 2017. The wedding was not luxurious, but our love was strong,” Sona (not her real name) says.

Just a week after the small wedding feast, Sona’s husband attacked her for the first time, demanding that she tell him about her “dark past.”

“I don’t know how the idea came into his head that I had had boyfriends in the past, that I had been in an intimate relationship, but he had no substantiated evidence of that. He was the first man in my life, but the doubt gnawed at his soul.”

“He beat me very harshly. He said he would kill me if I didn’t tell him who I was in an intimate relationship with, but I had nothing to say.”

Sona eventually left her husband.

“I went to my parents, but my husband immediately came after me. He apologised, begged me to go back, promising never to drink even a sip of alcohol…But I didn’t go.”

“A few weeks later, it turned out I was pregnant. This changed my life. I told him about the pregnancy, and again he asked me to go back to him, and I decided not to leave my child fatherless.”

Shortly after returning to him, Sona and her husband moved to Russia. He wanted them to move so that he could forget about her “dark past” in Armenia.

“Of course, I didn’t understand what past he wanted to forget about, but I went with him anyway. I wish I hadn’t gone… In Armenia, my parents-in-law protected me, but in Russia, I was completely alone. There was not a single day he didn’t drink. He would throw me against the walls like a ball.”

“During one beating, my hand was broken. They put a cast on it; I was eight months pregnant. He sent me to Armenia to give birth. After giving birth, I had surgery on my hand, but because my cast was put on incorrectly, there were some problems.”

Sona stayed in Armenia after giving birth, while her husband continued to live in Russia. Though the baby is already two years old, she has not found the will to divorce her husband.

“Everyday of my life is a subsequent denial of my own principles. I know my rights very well, but I don’t protect them. I keep silent and put up with the situation. I don’t want my child to grow up fatherless. He is a bastard as a husband but he is a good father,” Sona says.

In December 2017, Armenia adopted a new law meant to tackle domestic violence, which entered into force in July 2018.

The law enshrined a legal and institutional basis for preventing domestic violence and protecting victims. It was to provide the necessary psychological, legal, social support to those subjected to violence, as well as, where appropriate, temporary financial support.

After the adoption of the law, many were convinced that it would provide protection for persecuted women.

But Marina Yeghiazaryan, a clinical psychologist at Armenia’s Women’s Rights Centre, says that she has not seen a decline in the number of women subjected to domestic violence.

“We continue to receive thousands of calls. The violence continues,” Yeghiazaryan says.

“Even today, many women are not informed; they cannot protect their rights. Many people also avoid resorting to going to a human rights centre, preferring instead to keep silent and not talk about their problems,” she says.

Gayane says that problems in her family began after the birth of their child.

“He was agitated about everything: while I walked, the sound of my footsteps; while I did the dishes, the sound from the water tap; while I did my hair, the sound of the hairdryer. He was the most infuriated when our newborn baby was crying. He was always saying: “Shut her up, I need to rest,” ’ Gayane says.

She says that while in normal families, the birth of a child warms couples, brings them closer, in her case, the opposite happened, and that her husband turned from a quiet man into a beast.

“It was a mystery to me what happened to him. When he slapped me for the first time, I was shocked, not from the pain, but from his attitude. He had never hit me before.”

“Once, when the baby was crying at night again, he threatened to kill both of us if I did not silence the baby very quickly. Later, the instances did not end with threats. He was attacking my baby.”

“I would cover my baby with my body so that the kicking could not reach her. He beat us like this for a month. One day, when he was at work, I took our clothes and ran away.”

The Women’s Support Centre runs the only shelter in Armenia for victims of domestic violence. The centre also offers psychological and legal support.

“In our shelter, we can accept a total of seven women and their children. The location of the house is confidential. It has all the conditions to make a person feel safe; she is provided with all necessary living conditions,” says the centre’s director, Hasmik Gevorgyan.

At present, five women are living in the shelter. Residents can stay for up to three months, though the period of their stay can be extended on a case by case basis.

According to Hovhannisyan, there are not enough resources to serve the number of women facing domestic violence.

When Gayane left her husband, she had almost no relatives in Armenia; all of them were abroad. Fortunately, the family of a close friend provided her with a place to stay.

“A victim of domestic violence should appeal to the police station, but at this point, problems can arise, if suddenly the victim needs a refuge from their abuser. The state has adopted the law, but it hasn’t created shelters for victims,” she says.

“My friend and her husband saved our lives. A couple of times, my husband tried to enter the house, and we threatened to call the police. Only his brother somehow managed to calm him, and he asked me not to leave my husband.”

“I couldn’t forgive him and I wasn’t sure that one day, during my absence, he wouldn’t harm our baby.”

“Half a year has passed since those hellish days,” says Gayane, reflecting on her ordeal. “Now I’m thinking more soberly and I regret not leaving him sooner.”

Newspaper: Armenia authorities have major problems in relations with Russia

News.am, Armenia
Newspaper: Armenia authorities have major problems in relations with Russia Newspaper: Armenia authorities have major problems in relations with Russia

10:22, 20.04.2019
                  

YEREVAN. – Several days ago, representatives of the United Russia party and of seven other political parties from other countries of the Eurasian Economic Union took part in the Eurasian Conference held in Yerevan at the invitation of Prosperous Armenia Party leader Gagik Tsarukyan, 168hours reported.

“[But] the noteworthy thing is that no representative from the ruling Civil Contract (CC) Party, or from the parliamentary [majority] My Step faction [of Armenia] was invited to that conference.

“This is essentially an important message because [political] party ties have always been used for promoting state ties, forming relations, and the fact that the interaction—in both official and informal formats—with [Armenian] Prime Minister [Nikol] Pashinyan’s party was actually absent by the Russians, once again proves that no matter how much the new [Armenian] authorities are ‘drumming’ about the opposite, nonetheless, there are very major problems, to put it mildly, in [their] relations with the Russians,” 168hours wrote.

Davit Sanasaryan is my friend but there are no immune people in Armenia: Armenia’s PM on charges against SCS head

Aysor, Armenia

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan referred in his Facebook post to the charges brought against head of State Control Service Davit Sanasaryan.

Pashinyan stressed that today he finally managed to get familiarized with the discussions over SCS head Davit Sanasaryan and came to the conclusion that the “brotherly” mentality has deeper roots in Armenia than oligarchy and criminal.

“Even for civil activists and politicians “brotherly” relations stay as the main formula of worldview. They do not care less about truth, the revolution and its values. Davit is my friend too, but you should know that there are no immune people in Armenia. Be he an opposition, authority, revolutionary or counter-revolutionary,” he wrote stressing that the law will be double strict toward those who stood in front of people and spoke of legality and justice, inadmissibility of permissiveness and sponsorship.

He stressed that they will not only be punished by Criminal Code but will be accused of bertrayal of people.

“I say this without violating the presumption of innocence. Let normal investigation pass. If you do not allow it I will ensure it within the framework of authorities given me by the law,” he wrote.

Number of beggar and street children up in Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Society 11:40 20/04/2019 Armenia

4 beggar and homeless children were registered in Armenian as of the end of 2018, up by 2 from the previous year’s numbers, according to the report of the Armenian Police.

The figures released by the National Statistical Service (NSS) of Armenia show that the three street children are 14-15 years old and the forth is 16-18 years old. Two of them are registered in capital Yerevan, while the other two are found to be residents of Kotayk  and Lori regions.

The number of child beggars and street children has sharply declined to compare with the findings of previous years, when 13 such children were registered in Armenia in 2016 and 8 children – in 2015. 

Organizational issues of Armenian-Russian military exercises discussed in Moscow

Panorama, Armenia
Politics 15:42 20/04/2019 Armenia

The Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Artak Davtyan, who is paying working visit to Russia, met on Saturday with the Commander of Russia’s Southern Military District Alexandr Dvornikov, the ministry of defense reported in a press release.

Major General Tigran Parvanyan, the Commander of the Armenian-Russian Joint Troops was present at the meeting,  the source said.

The parties discussed organizational issues of joint actions as part of the military preparadness.

Colonel-General Alexandr Dvornikov acclaimed the battalion tactical exercises of the Armenian-Russian joint troops, held from April 1- 12 at the Baghramyan Training Ground. To remind, during the large-scale exercise, drones, various weapons, artillery systems, heavy equipment and aviation were used. Over 1,500 troops were involved.