The California Courier Online, April 11, 2019

The California Courier Online, April 11, 2019

1 –        Armenia’s Leaders Take Strong
            Positions Against US & Azerbaijan
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2-         Anna Hakobyan Visits Armenian Communities Throughout United States
3 –        Maestro Constantine Orbelian Dismissed
            by Culture Minister From Yerevan Opera
4-         Councilmember Ara Najarian selected as Glendale mayor
5-         Two Armenians Among Candidates Vying
            for LA City Council District 12 Seat
6-         Disagreeable Distinction: Arabs, Armenians, Iranians
            Considered White in US Census

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1 –        Armenia’s Leaders Take Strong
            Positions Against US & Azerbaijan
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

Haber Turk TV recently interviewed one of the thousands of Turkish
gravediggers who try to recover Armenian treasures leftover from the
genocide era of a century ago. It is not enough that 1.5 million
Armenians were killed and dispossessed of their properties and
homeland, now some Turks are ‘proudly’ rummaging for precious metals
by desecrating Armenian graves and other ancient Armenian sites such
as churches and homes.

Here is the text of the interview on Haber Turk:

“How can Armenian Gold be Stolen?”

Host: Oylum Talu

Guest: Ugur Kulac

Guest: An infidel does not show the place of the treasure to a Turk
because we are trying to find their money. We are looking for money of
Armenians or Greeks.

Host: So you are a professional treasure hunter?

Guest: Yes, I am.

Host: You are a very interesting person. First of all, your books are
amazing. I want to give these books to the people as a gift.

Guest: Thank you.

Host: Maps, explanation of maps. It is a very amazing book. What is a
treasure hunter?

Guest: The treasure hunter is a gold digger. The only thing the
treasure hunter thinks of is gold; nothing else. Of course, they are
destroying places where they dig carelessly. The treasure hunters know
many secret places which are even unknown to archaeologists. That is a
gold finder.

Host: Wow! So cool! Gold finder! How many treasure hunters are there in Turkey?

Guest: There are more than 500,000 treasure hunters who are registered
with my company.

Host: Really?

Guest: Yes!

Host: 500,000 treasure hunters?

Guest: I am in this field for about 18 years. I have been producing
these devices and selling them. Right now, I have sold them to 25,000
people. And now we are 130 companies in Turkey. We are serving in this
field for the people. For example, if the state would ask treasure
hunters to bring all historical materials, these materials would then
be more than the materials in the museums.

Host: Wow!

Guest: The treasure works in Turkey are in three types. In tons, pots
and kettles.

Host: What are you talking about? Pots, tons and kettles?

Guest: Yes.

Host: You mean, they put all the gold into the kettle, they covered
the top because there were no banks at that time. They escaped…

Guest: Of course.

Guest: The history of this work is approx. 100 years. At the time of
the deportation, some minorities were deported out of the country.
They could not take their belongings with them. They buried them in
different places, thinking that they would return. But most of them
could not find any way to return. But their children, at a certain
time of the year, are coming to Turkey where their ancestors lived.
And then they dig and take the money where their ancestors buried.
They have the maps. They stay as a guest of their ancestors’
neighbors. When the owner of the house falls asleep, they go out and
dig the ground, take the money and leave. Treasure hunting is divided
into two groups. The first group is near term — hunting of
minorities’ belongings. The second group is composed of those who are
looking for treasures of ancient civilizations. [The guest then
demonstrates how he finds treasures through his search device which
unfortunately does not work!]. If you get caught the first time by the
state, there is no penalty! The region of Izmit was the capital of the
Roman Empire and there are very nice buried treasures in there. Of
course, there are small buried treasures which belong to minorities of
the near past. Magic must be done over there. The treasure is given to
the genies for protection. We are looking for gold coins. Gold is very
important for treasure hunters. For example, statues made of gold or
anything else or gold coins. These are very valuable. They can be sold
everywhere. They melt them and sell them or directly sell to smugglers
or can be sold to the state. Let them give me permission, I will find
the money to repay the Turkish government’s debt to the International
Monetary Fund.

Host: Why is then this gold not coming out?

Guest: Because these countries do not want this gold to come out of
Turkey! Treasure hunters are not interested in ancient cities or
areas. The only interest for them is to find the grave, dig it, and
take the valuable things and leave.

Host: Why don’t archaeologists like you?

Guest: Because we break the historical materials.

Host: So you say that “we are looking for the money of the deported
minorities in the last 60 to 90 years?”

Guest: I have parliamentarians, doctors, businessmen, professors as
customers. Now Spring is coming, the treasure hunters liven up. They
have been patient for months. They will attack now. It is always like
that every year. The materials found in the digs made this year will
be sold abroad again. We are not materialistic. We believe in
spirituality too. Muslims must be rich and powerful. Why should we be
poor? We are a special country created by Allah!

Host: Thank you very much.

These thieves are not only stealing the treasures belonging to
Armenians and other minorities, but are also breaking Turkish laws. It
is incredible that such thieves are appearing on Turkish television
and recounting their criminal activities with such brazen arrogance.
Turkey has strict laws for treasure hunters whose permits are limited
to 30 days and an area of 100 square meters. There is a long list of
“cultural areas” such as religious sites and graves where even
licensed treasure hunters are not allowed to dig.

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2 –        Anna Hakobyan Visits Armenian Communities Throughout United States

WASHINGTON—Anna Hakobyan, the spouse of Prime Minister Nikol
Pashinyan, began her visit to the United States on Wednesday, April 3,
by visiting Capitol Hill for a reception hosted by members of
Congress.

The reception was organized by Armenian American Members of Congress
Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) and Rep. Jackie Speier (D-Calif.) and
attended by Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone
(D-Calif.) and Vice-Chair Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) as well as
Representatives Judy Chu (D-Calif.), Katherine Clark (D-Mass.), T.J.
Cox (D-Calif.), Jeff Fortenberry (R-Neb.), Raja Krishnamoorthi
(D-Ill.), Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), Doris Matsui (D-Calif.), Tom Suozzi
(D-N.Y.), and Rep. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.).

Hakobyan delivered remarks introducing Armenia’s achievements and
stating that the country is fully on the path to democracy and
ensuring real economic growth. She emphasized that any support by
Armenia’s friends to ensure success on this path is welcomed.

In her remarks, Speier stated that the Congress will take every step
to ensure economic and assistance to Armenia from the United States.

“We want to be sure that democracy in Armenia not only will be
maintained, but also will prosper, and the country will fully
develop,” said Speier.

In his remarks, Schiff praised Armenia-U.S. partnership saying, “We
need to raise the partnership of our countries to a new level in order
to help your wonderful government to succeed.”

Hakobyan also discussed her “Women for Peace” initiative through which
Armenian women call on all women around the world to raise their voice
for peace so that no soldiers are killed on the border.

Hakobyan’s visit to Washington started with a tour of the Library of
the Congress where she was acquainted with the exhibits on Armenian
literature.

She also met with members of the Armenian community, with who she
discussed the “My Step” Foundation that aims to advance the goals of
her husband’s political alliance, as well as the “City of Smile”
charity that she founded to combat pediatric cancer.

On April 5, Hakobyan visited Boston where she was greeted at St.
Stephen’s Armenian Elementary School accompanied by the Ambassador of
the Republic of Armenia, H. E. Varuzhan Nersesyan, as well as the
executive director of My Step Charitable Foundation, Hovannes
Ghazaryan and the Director of City of Smiles Foundation, Esther
Demirchian.

Hakobyan received a warm welcome by the students, teachers,
administration and the pastor of St. Stephen’s Church, Archpriest
Antranig Baljian. Two students greeted the First Lady with the
traditional bread and salt, wearing Armenian national costumes. The
rest of the students, with Armenian flags in hand, sang the Armenian
National Anthem.

In her welcoming remarks principal Houry Boyamian explained that St.
Stephen’s maintains high educational standards to encourage parents to
send their children to an Armenian school. She stated that in addition
to providing a quality education, the school passes onto each new
generation the Armenian language, culture and history, while
instilling a sense of identity and profound love for the Motherland.
For this reason, every year, in May, the school organizes the
Graduating Class Trip to Armenia. The Principal ended her remarks by
wishing Hakobyan success in all her charitable work.

The students presented a short program, then Hakobyan and her
delegation visited the classrooms and interacted with the students who
charmed them with their questions, poetry recitals and their fluency
in Armenian.

Hakobyan will visit Los Angeles, where on Saturday she will deliver a
keynote address and be honored at the Armenian American Medical
Society’s annual gala. On Sunday, she will preside over the 25th
anniversary celebration of Armenia’s Consulate General in Los Angeles.
On Monday, Hakobyan will speak at a public gathering at Glendale’s
Alex Theater.

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3 –        Maestro Constantine Orbelian Dismissed

            by Culture Minister From Yerevan Opera

            By Polina Lyapustina

Grammy nominee maestro Constantine Orbelian was dismissed from the
post of the National Opera theatre director by the acting Armenian
Culture Minister Nazeni Gharibyan. Gharibyan justified her decision by
noting that the director cannot be engaged in other paid activities
except scientific, pedagogical, and creative work; Orbelian served as
the general director in addition to the position of the artistic
director. Gharibyan clarified that maintaining the two posts
simultaneously was unlawful since position of artistic director was
managerial, not creative.

The Actors and staff of Armenian National Opera have openly opposed
this decision and protests against the Ministry of Culture’s actions
are scheduled for April 1, 2019.

There’s also a petition to the Prime Minister of Republic Armenia
Nicol Pashinian, which was signed by more than 2,500 people as of this
writing. Lithuanian-Armenian soprano Asmik Grigorian said to
OperaWire, “I can’t believe it could happen. I know how much
Constantine (Orbelian) did for the theatre, and it finally started to
work and live the way it should. They never gave a chance to my father
(Gegham Grigoryan) to bring his ideas to life there, but Constantine
has got the ball rolling. And the biggest fear is that there’s
literally no one to replace him.”

The Grammy-nominated Orbelian became the Director and Artistic
Director of the State Academic Opera and Ballet Theater in 2017. He is
also the chief conductor of the Kaunas City Symphony Orchestra in
Lithuania since 2013.

Artists at Opera and Ballet Theater were set to protest Orbelian’s
dismissal, on Saturday, April 6, against what they describe as
arbitrary decision of the acting culture minister and to express
solidarity with maestro Orbelian. “There will be continuous protest
actions to make the culture ministry consider the concerns of the
proud citizens of Armenia and in this case, the fair cause of the
artists representing the high art,” reads the message posted on Opera
theatre Facebook page.
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4-         Councilmember Ara Najarian selected as Glendale mayor

GLENDALE—On Tuesday, April 2, Glendale City Council Member Ara
Najarian was selected as the City’s mayor by fellow council members.
Najarian takes over the position from outgoing Mayor Zareh Sinanyan.
This is Najarian’s fourth time serving in the position of mayor.

Najarian was first elected to office in April 2005. During his tenure,
he has served as Chair of the Glendale Housing Authority, and the
former Glendale Redevelopment Agency.

“I’m truly grateful for the opportunity to serve as Mayor,” said
Najarian. “I look forward to working closely with my Council
colleagues and staff to keep Glendale the special place that it is.”

In addition to serving on the City Council, Najarian is past chair and
a current member of the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority
(MTA) Board of Directors, and a vice-chair of the Southern California
Regional Rail Authority (Metrolink) Board of Directors. He is also
past chair and a member of the San Fernando Valley Council of
Governments and serves as a member of the Southern California
Association of Governments Transportation Committee. Najarian
previously served as a member of the Glendale Community College Board
of Trustees from 2003-2005. He is an attorney and has a bachelor’s
degree in economics from Occidental College and Juris Doctor degree
from USC. He is married to Palmira Perez-Najarian, and has two adult
children, Alexander and Christopher.
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5-         Two Armenians Among Candidates Vying

            for LA City Council District 12 Seat

            By Jessica P. Ogilvie and

            Mary Plummer

When Mitch Englander resigned his L.A. City Council seat last October,
District 12—which includes Chatsworth, North Hills, Northridge,
Granada Hills, Porter Ranch, Reseda, Sherwood Forest and West
Hills—was left with temporary representation (Greig Smith, his former
chief of staff, stepped into the role) Now, a special election will be
held to find his replacement. The primary election will be held June
4. If no candidate receives 50 percent plus one of the vote, a general
election will be held August 13.

Englander was the lone Republican on the 15-member council. Even
though the body is officially nonpartisan, a win for a Democrat would
signal a significant shift for the council which has had Republican
representation for many decades.

“This may well be a historic first if it happens,” said Jaime
Regalado, emeritus professor of political science at Cal State, L.A.

Regalado said the opposite has been true: before the mid to late
1950s, the city was politically conservative, and at times was
controlled by an all Republican council.

Englander’s departure from the council is the second in the last few years.

Former Councilmember Felipe Fuentes left abruptly in 2016. Both
Fuentes and Englander left for job’s in the private sector. Fuentes
took a job as a lobbyist and Englander took a job as executive vice
president for government affairs at Oak View, an entertainment and
sports facilities company founded by AEG’s former chief executive.

Among the 15 candidates, two Armenian-Americans are vying for Englander’s seat.

Jack Kayajian (Democrat) is an administrator at City Attorney Mike
Feuer’s office. Previously, Kayajian worked as a Valley area
representative for former L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. His
platform includes reducing overcrowding in classrooms, improving
public safety officers’ response times and supporting small
businesses.

Stella Maloyan (Democrat) is an executive at the Los Angeles Alliance
for a New Economy and a commissioner on the city’s Tourism and
Convention Board. Maloyan is a resident of Porter Ranch, having
immigrated to the area from Iran at age 15. Her past work includes
advocating for gender equity and equal pay, working to secure
resources for the city’s middle class and pushing City Hall to develop
affordable housing.

LAist has confirmed each of their party affiliations. Other details
regarding platforms, stances on issues and personal or professional
life, were gathered from candidates’ official websites and are
publicly available.

This article appeared in LAist on April 1, 2019.
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6-         Disagreeable Distinction: Arabs, Armenians, Iranians

            Considered White in US Census

            By Sarah Parvini and

            Ellis Simani

Samira Damavandi knows that when she fills out her 2020 census form,
she will be counted. But it pains her that, in some way, she will also
be forgotten.

When asked to mark her race, Damavandi will encounter options for
white, black, Asian, American Indian and Native Hawaiian — but nothing
that she believes represents her family’s Iranian heritage. She will
either have to choose white, or identify as “some other race.”

“It erases the community,” she said.

Roughly 3 million people of Southwest Asian, Middle Eastern or North
African descent live in the United States, according to a Los Angeles
Times analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data. No county is home to more
of these communities than Los Angeles, where more than 350,000 people
can trace their roots to a region that stretches from Mauritania to
the mountains of Afghanistan.

In past census surveys, more than 80 percent in this group have called
themselves white, The Times analysis found.Arab and Iranian
communities for years have lobbied the bureau to create a separate
category for people of Middle Eastern or North African descent.

Over the last decade, it seemed the tide would turn — the Obama
administration was considering proposals to ask questions about race
and ethnicity in a different way, shifting not only how the government
would count the Middle Eastern community, but the Latino population as
well.

In 2018, however, the bureau announced that it would not include a
“MENA” category. Instead, the next survey will ask participants who
check “white” or “black” to write in their “origins” for the first
time. Lebanese and Egyptian are among the suggestions under white.

For many, a write-in doesn’t go far enough because they identify as
people of color. The bureau’s move was seen as a blow to a group
already grappling with feelings of invisibility. Advocates say the
category goes beyond issues of self-identity and has real-life
implications for Arab and Middle Eastern communities, including the
allocation of local resources.

“We are our own community,” said Rashad Al-Dabbagh, executive director
of the Arab American Civic Council in Anaheim. “It’s as if we don’t
count.”

At stake in the decennial count is nearly $800 billion in federal tax
dollars and the number of seats each state receives in the U.S. House
of Representatives. Many of the services people rely on are tied to
funds and programs determined by the census.

In addition to those resources, advocates argue, the “white” label
could hurt universities and companies that use the information to
promote diversity and could result in the gathering of little or no
statistical data on important issues, such as health trends in the
community.

Maya Berry, executive director of the Arab American Institute, said
this lack of proper representation has “deprived our community of
access to basic services and rights,” such as language assistance at
polling places and educational grants.

“I think it’s a big disappointment to people because there was a real
effort made from the last census to create that category,” said Persis
Karim, director of the Center for Iranian Diaspora Studies at San
Francisco State University. “It’s another erasure of both Middle
Eastern and North African people.”

Those communities have struggled to become visible for decades, Karim
said, especially in the post 9-11 period.

In 2015, the census bureau tested creating new categories — including
MENA. Government research showed that Middle Eastern and North African
people would check the MENA box if given the option. Without it, they
would opt for white or “some other race.”

“The results of this research indicate that it is optimal to use a
dedicated ‘Middle Eastern or North African’ response category,” a 2017
census report said. Still, census officials have said they need more
research before committing to a change, citing feedback suggesting
MENA should be treated as an option for ethnicity, not race —
something the bureau has not researched.

Sarah Shabbar grew up in Santa Barbara feeling underrepresented. In
school, she was counted among the white students and wondered why she
had to “conform to something I don’t agree with.”

“It was such a weird thing to grow up and be told, ‘You should be
proud to be Jordanian. You should be proud of where you come from,’”
said Shabbar, now a graduate student at Cal State Northridge. “None of
these forms are allowing me to feel proud of it, because I’m just
white according to them.”

Her parents would tell her to choose “white” if that’s how Middle
Eastern people were classified by the government, she said. There
wasn’t a discussion about identity, or what it would mean to properly
classify the community.

“It’s like, khalas, just put it,” said Shabbar, using the Arabic word
for “enough.” “For them it doesn’t matter. Until you apply for college
… then it’s like, there’s no money for Arabs?” the 25-year-old said
with a laugh.

Experts say that generational divide is a common split within the
Middle Eastern and North African community. For some, it stems from
the notion of being from the Caucasus region — and therefore,
literally Caucasian — and for others, identifying as white became a
means of survival in a new country.

“Our parents came as immigrants and worked with this idea of
aspirational whiteness, that if you work hard and put your head down
you’ll be successful,” said Khaled Beydoun, who teaches law at the
University of Arkansas. “But for young people, with 9/11 and now with
Trump, whiteness means something specific.”

Some worry that in the current political climate, it may be dangerous
to create a separate category.

Beydoun, who is Egyptian and Lebanese, served on a committee of field
experts that provided the Census Bureau with feedback on the idea of a
MENA box on the 2020 census. He supported adding the classification,
he said, but also worried that the information could be used to track
where Arabs or Iranians live or be used against the community “during
times of crisis.”

Prior to the 2010 census, the Arab and Iranian communities in Southern
California teamed up to spread a message: “Check it right, you ain’t
white!”

The tongue-in-cheek campaign encouraged people to choose “some other
race” and sought to combat the notion that Arabs and Iranians are
white — an idea that experts say has roots in a legal battle from the
early 1900s. Arab immigrants from modern-day Syria and Lebanon, who
were considered Asian, successfully fought to be classified as white
and thus eligible for citizenship.

That classification was cemented in the late 1970s when the Office of
Management and Budget listed all Middle Easterners as white.

“In the Arab community, there are varying degrees of assimilation,”
said Omar Masry, who was part of the 2010 census movement. “They are
categorized as white, but they aren’t treated the same as the white
guy in front of them in line when they are in an immigration line
coming back from a trip.”

For David Shams, the census question codifies a feeling he’s known all
his life: a sense of straddling two worlds, both fully American and
intensely proud of his Iranian heritage.  The 36-year-old remembers a
conversation he had with an administrator about the lack of inclusion
of Middle Easterners in diversity scholarships when he was a student
at Murray State University in Kentucky. The school official told him
Iranians weren’t considered for diversity scholarships because they
were white, and minorities needed help more than “you all do.” All the
talk did was push “the misconception that we’re white,” Shams said.

“Having the federal government label us as white, while our social
status is anything but, further stigmatizes our position in society,”
said Shams. “We have no recourse. We have no way to talk about
diversity or discrimination because if we’re white, we can’t be
discriminated against based on race. And so we’re left in this gray
area.”That wasn’t a topic Shams had delved into with his father until
two years ago. The two were sitting at a beer garden in Washington,
D.C., during the Persian New Year when they started discussing Trump’s
administration and the rise of white nationalism. The elder Shams
emigrated from Iran in 1964, more than a decade before the Islamic
Revolution.

“They hate brown people,” Shams told his father as he sipped his
favorite lager. “But we’re white,” his father replied. “I’m white.
You’re white.” “Stand up on this bench right here and say that,” Shams
said. “Nobody in this bar would agree with you.”

This article appeared in Los Angeles Times on March 28, 2019.
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RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/08/2019

                                        Monday, 
Armenian Businessman Arrested Amid Protests
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia -- Riot police clash in Yerevan with employees of the Spayka company 
protesting against the arrest of its chief executive, Davit Ghazarian, April 4, 
2019.
Riot police clashed with scores of employees of Armenia’s leading food 
producing and exporting company on Monday after its official owner, Davit 
Ghazarian, was arrested on tax evasion charges strongly denied by him.
The State Revenue Committee (SRC) said on Friday that the Spayka company evaded 
over 7 billion drams ($14.4 million) in taxes in 2015-2016. Ghazarian, who is 
also Spayka’s chief executive, was quick to reject the claims as baseless, 
saying the SRC moved to arrest him after he refused to pay the alleged back 
taxes.
A district court in Yerevan allowed the SRC to arrest Ghazarian pending 
investigation as several hundred Spayka workers demonstrated outside the court 
building. They said they fear losing their jobs as a result of the criminal 
proceedings.
The angry protesters responded to the court decision by blocking an adjacent 
street in the city center. They then surrounded a car carrying a handcuffed 
Ghazarian that emerged from the court compound.
Riot police pushed back the crowd to allow the car to transport the businessman 
to a detention center. One protester was detained in the scuffle, the Armenian 
police said afterwards.
Armenia -- Davit Ghazarian, the official owner of the Spayka company, talks to 
reporters moments after being arrested in a courtroom in Yerevan, April 8, 2019.
Although the busy street was unblocked about an hour later, the rally led by 
another senior Spayka executive, Karen Baghdasarian, continued outside the 
court building. In an emotional speech, Baghdasarian accused the SRC of 
“destroying” what he described as one of Armenia’s most successful and rapidly 
expanding businesses. He claimed that Ghazarian’s arrest will not only hurt 
Spayka and its more than 1,200 workers but also thousands of farmers whose 
agricultural produce is purchased by the company.
The protesters chanting “Spayka!” and “Freedom to Davit!” then marched to the 
main government building in Yerevan to demand a meeting with Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian. The latter declined such a meeting, sending instead one of his 
aides to talk to them.
The official, Nairi Sargsian, told the protesters that Pashinian will not 
“intervene” in this or any other criminal case. Baghdasarian insisted, however, 
that the prime minister must give the court a “personal guarantee” that would 
pave the way for Ghazarian’s release.
At a news conference held on Friday, Ghazarian claimed that Pashinian had a 
hand in the tax evasion charges brought against him.
Meanwhile, the businessman’s lawyers said that they have already asked the 
court to free him on bail. One of the lawyers, Karen Sardarian, told reporters 
that the tax fraud case against his client is based on a mere “expert 
assessment” cited by the SRC. He said the tax agency should conduct a fresh and 
more thorough inquiry with Spayka’s representatives. The company would accept 
its findings, he said.
Armenia -- Employees of the Spayka company protest outside a court in Yerevan 
against the arrest of its chief executive, Davit Ghazarian, April 8, 2019.
In an April 5 statement, the SRC said that the accusations stem from large 
quantities of cheese and other foodstuffs which were imported to Armenia by 
another company, Greenproduct, in 2015 and 2016. It claimed that Greenproduct 
is controlled by Spayka and that the latter rigged its customs documents to pay 
fewer taxes from those imports. Ghazarian said that Spayka is not connected to 
Greenproduct and has only carried out cargo shipments for it.
Spayka was set up in 2001 and has since become Armenia’s largest producer and 
exporter of agricultural products grown at its own greenhouses or purchased 
from farmers in about 80 communities across the country. It also owns hundreds 
of heavy trucks exporting those products to Russia and other countries.
In March 2018, the company borrowed $30 million from the Manila-based Asian 
Development Bank to build more climate-controlled greenhouses equipped with 
drip irrigation systems.
As recently as on March 26, Spayka inaugurated a newly built dairy factory in 
Yerevan at a ceremony attended by Pashinian. It claimed to be planning to 
expand further with a $100 million investment project which will be mostly 
financed by the Kazakhstan-based Eurasian Development Bank.
Ownership of Spayka has long been a subject of Armenian media speculation. Some 
media outlets have linked it to the family of former President Robert Kocharian 
and then to his successor Serzh Sarkisian’s son-in-law, Mikael Minasian. 
Ghazarian has maintained that he is the company’s sole real owner.
Armenian War Veterans Pick New Pro-Government Leader
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and Sasun Mikaelian attend a 
congress of the Yerkrapah Union in Yerevan, April 7, 2019.
The Yerkrapah Union, a once powerful organization uniting thousands of Armenian 
veterans of the Nagorno-Karabakh war, has elected a close associate of Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian as its new leader.
Yerkrapah members unanimously voted for Sasun Mikaelian , a prominent war 
veteran and the nominal chairman of Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, at a 
weekend congress in Yerevan.
Mikaelian, 61, pledged to resign from the party leadership in May. But he gave 
no indications that he will also terminate his membership in Civil Contract.
Yerkrapah was established by the late Defense Minister Vazgen Sarkisian and 
played a major role in Armenian politics in the 1990s and the early 2000s. It 
began losing its political influence after Sarkisian was assassinated in the 
October 1999 terrorist attack on the Armenian parliament.
But the group remained linked to the Armenian military in one way or another. 
It sent thousands of armed volunteers to Nagorno-Karabakh following the 
outbreak of large-scale hostilities there in April 2016.
Manvel Grigorian, an army general who succeeded Sarkisian as Yerkrapah chairman 
in 1999, served as Armenia’s deputy defense minister from 2000-2008. He was 
removed from the military after supporting former President Levon Ter-Petrosian 
in the February 2008 presidential election.
In 2010, Grigorian openly pledged allegiance to then President Serzh Sarkisian. 
He and Yerkrapah helped Sarkisian win reelection in a disputed vote held in 
2013.
Grigorian resigned as Yerkrapah leader shortly after being arrested in June 
2018 on corruption charges. His arrest came two months after Sarkisian was 
overthrown in the “velvet revolution” led by Pashinian. Mikaelian actively 
participated in the protest movement.
The new Yerkrapah leader insisted that he will not turn the veterans’ union 
into the ruling party’s “appendage.” “You saw what happened when they tried to 
make Yerkrapah serve the [former] authorities,” he said.
Mikaelian made clear at the same time that Yerkrapah “will never hamper” the 
current Armenian government.
Pashinian attended and addressed the Yerkrapah congress.
Tsarukian’s Bodyguard Sentenced For Assault
        • Naira Bulghadarian
        • Gayane Saribekian
Armenian - Eduard Babayan (L) attends a parliament session in Yerevan, January 
15, 2019.
A parliament deputy who was until recently Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) 
leader Gagik Tsarukian’s chief bodyguard has been convicted of violent assault 
and sentenced to three and a half years in prison.
Nevertheless, Eduard Babayan will avoid imprisonment because of a general 
amnesty declared by the Armenian authorities late last year.
Babayan, 47, was arrested in July last year after a 50-year-old man, Vyacheslav 
Harutiunov, was hospitalized in Yerevan with severe injuries. The latter 
claimed to have been beaten up at a compound of Armenia’s National Olympic 
Committee headed by Tsarukian. He said he was hit by Tsarukian before being 
repeatedly kicked and punched by Babayan and another person.
Both Tsarukian and Babayan strongly denied the allegation. The burly bodyguard 
was charged even though his alleged victim later retracted his incriminating 
testimony. He was freed on bail in August and elected to the Armenian 
parliament on the BHK ticket in December.
Babayan continued to protest his innocence when he went on trial last month. 
Harutiunov likewise maintained in court he had “slipped” and injured himself. 
“There were no arguments between us, we are friends,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service after a March 21 court hearing.
In a police video released in July, Harutiunov said that he was attacked after 
imploring Tsarukian to get Armenian law-enforcement authorities to withdraw an 
international arrest warrant issued for his son accused of draft evasion. The 
young man is a boxer and Russian national who was told to serve in Armenia’s 
armed forces after receiving Armenian citizenship in order to compete for the 
South Caucasus country in international tournaments.
Prosecutors cited this and other purported evidence of Babayan’s guilt during 
the trial. The judge in the case sided with them, handing down a guilty verdict 
late on Friday.
Babayan’s lawyer, Armen Melkonian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on Saturday 
that his client will appeal against the verdict.
Armenia - Businessman Gagik Tsarukian and his chief bodyguard Eduard Babayan 
(R) at an election campaign rally in Hrazdan, 11 April 2012.
Tsarukian voiced support for Babayan when he spoke to journalists on Monday. 
“Babayan is going to appeal … because no such [violent] thing happened,” he 
said.
Babayan had said earlier that he will resign from the parliament is he is 
convicted of assault. Tsarukian indicated that his former bodyguard will not do 
that for now.
Armenian media have repeatedly implicated Tsarukian’s bodyguards -- and Babayan 
in particular -- in violence, including against opponents of former 
governments, in the past. The BHK leader, who is also one of the country’s 
richest men, always denied those claims.
Armenia Sends Relief Aid To Flood-Hit Iran
        • Nane Sahakian
IRAN -- Men clear away mud following floods in the Iranian city of Mamulan in 
Lorestan province, April 7, 2019
Armenia sent on Monday an aid convoy to neighboring Iran to help victims of 
devastating flash floods that have swept through hundreds of Iranian towns and 
villages, killing at least 70 people.
The southwestern Khuzestan province has been especially hard hit by the floods 
that began with heavy rains on March 19. Gholamreza Shariati, the provincial 
governor, told the official IRNA news agency on Saturday that six local towns 
"must be evacuated as soon as possible" as the government releases water from 
major dams that are near overflowing.
A convoy of trucks carrying 4,000 blankets, 250 beds and 30 tents left Yerevan 
after an official ceremony attended by Armenian Ministry of Emergency 
Situations Felix Tsolakian and Seyyed Kazem Sajjad, the Iranian ambassador to 
Armenia. Sajjad thanked the Armenian government for the aid.
Tsolakian said that the relief supplies were provided by the Armenian-Russian 
Center for Humanitarian Response. They will be handed over to the Iranian Red 
Crescent Society in the northern city of Tebriz, he told reporters.
Roobik Minasian, a Yerevan-based journalist with Radio Farda, RFE/RL’s 
Persian-language service, said the Armenian humanitarian assistance is “very 
symbolic” given the huge scale of the floods. “We can say that aid provided by 
other countries is also symbolic,” he said.
Tsolakian offered to help the Iranian authorities cope with the consequences of 
the natural disaster at a March 28 meeting with Sajjad. “We will be sending 
technical equipment, machinery and rescuers,” he said at a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan held the following day.
The minister did not speak on Monday of a possible dispatch of Armenian rescue 
teams to Iran.
Armenia has maintained a cordial relationship with Iran ever since its 
independence. The leaders of the two nations pledged to deepen bilateral ties 
during Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s recent official visit to the 
Islamic Republic.
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

President Armen Sarkissian meets Horasis Chair Frank-Jürgen Richter in Portugal

President Armen Sarkissian meets Horasis Chair Frank-Jürgen Richter in Portugal

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10:33, 8 April, 2019

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. Armenian President Armen Sarkissian, who is in Portugal to take part in the annual global meeting of Horasis international think tank, met with Chairman of Horasis Frank-Jürgen Richter, the Armenian Presidential Office told Armenpress.

Talking about the possible cooperation directions the officials highlighted the plan to hold one of the future programs of the Center in Armenia. It was stated that the possibility to hold the Horasis China 2020 meeting in Armenia will be considered.

Horasis is an independent, international think tank which hosts meetings to advance solutions to the most critical challenges facing corporations today. Participants jointly identify globally relevant issues and develop interdisciplinary solutions. Among the participants are CEOs of the world’s most respected corporations, key leaders from emerging markets, and public figures including heads of government.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenian community of Boston raises $150,000 for Anna Hakobyan’s City of Smile charitable foundation

Armenian community of Boston raises $150,000 for Anna Hakobyan’s City of Smile charitable foundation

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10:42, 8 April, 2019

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. Nearly $150,000 was raised by the Armenian community of Boston, USA during a sold-out gala Friday night for Anna Hakobyan’s City of Smile charitable foundation at the Westin Hotel in Waltham, the Boston Globe reported.

Anna Hakobyan, the wife of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, was in attendance of the event as part of her visit to the United States.

Hakobyan is Chairman of the Board of City of Smile, the Yerevan-based charitable organization that helps children with cancer in Armenia.

“In wealthy and developed countries, cancer is just a disease, but in many less-developed countries, it is equal to a death sentence,” Boston Globe quoted Hakobyan as saying in her remarks.

Around 450 guests attended the event, including Ambassador of Armenia to the United States Varuzhan Nersesyan, Middlesex County Sheriff Peter Koutoujian, designer Michael Aram, artist Arpi Krikorian and others.

 “I dream to establish . . . a hospital in Armenia which has all of the necessary drugs and techniques so no parent has to take their child to Europe, Russia, or the United States. My dream is that our children stay at home in Armenia and receive treatment in close proximity of their houses”, she continued.

Burlington resident and event co-chair Cynthia Kazanjian — who said City of Smile hopes to appropriate the St. Jude Children’s Hospital model in that it wants to ensure children in Armenia receive treatment regardless of family income — likened Hakobyan’s stature in Armenia and with the Armenian Diaspora to that of former US First Lady Michelle Obama.

“She and her husband, who was elected in December, are trying to build a new Armenia and for the first time, the people there have hope. For a long time, people were either very poor or very rich, with no middle class,” Kazanjian said. “With new leadership, that is changing. It’s very exciting.”

Boston is one of five cities Hakobyan is visiting on a 17-day trip to the United States. While in Boston, she also met with medical professionals and students at Harvard and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, visited the Armenian Heritage Park on the Greenway, and met with Armenian dignitaries for lunch at Union Oyster House. She also visited the Armenian Museum of America and St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary School, both in Watertown.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




SPAYKA executive jailed

SPAYKA executive jailed

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10:50, 8 April, 2019

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. A Yerevan court has approved the State Revenue Committee Investigative Department’s motion to place SPAYKA executive Davit Ghazaryan under a customary two-months pre-trial detention period.

Ghazaryan is the CEO of the major agricultural exporting and freight company SPAYKA suspected in tax evasion.

He denies wrongdoing.

Many employees of SPAYKA are demonstrating outside the courthouse against the arrest. Protesters say they want a meeting with Prime Minister Pashinyan himself.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Increasing tourism flow between Armenia and Russia: Joint Action Plan signed in Moscow

Increasing tourism flow between Armenia and Russia: Joint Action Plan signed in Moscow

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10:53, 8 April, 2019

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s Tourism Committee and the Federal Agency for Tourism of Russia on April 4 signed the 2019-2021 joint action plan within the framework of the session of the Armenian-Russian inter-governmental commission on economic cooperation held in Moscow, Armenia’s ministry of economic development and investments told Armenpress.

The document has been signed by deputy minister of economic development and investments of Armenia Albert Babayan and Deputy Head of the Federal Agency for Tourism Alexey Konyushkov.

The action plan aims at strengthening the friendly ties between the peoples of the two states and contributing to the economic development and tourism potential growth between the two countries.

One of the goals of the action plan is to increase the tourism flows between Armenia and Russia, facilitate the procedures linked with tourist visits and establish ties between the Armenian and Russian tour companies.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




‘Our mission is to help children suffering cancer in Armenia’: PM’s spouse attends gala celebration in LA

‘Our mission is to help children suffering cancer in Armenia’: PM’s spouse attends gala celebration in LA

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11:51, 8 April, 2019

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. Anna Hakobyan, spouse of Prime Minister of Armenia, chair of the Board of Trustees of the City of Smile Charitable Foundation, attended the 34th anniversary gala celebration of the Armenian American Medical Society on April 6, her Office told Armenpress.

Mrs. Hakobyan was accompanied by Armenia’s Ambassador to US Varuzhan Nersesyan, CEO of the City of Smile Foundation Ester Demirchyan, Armenian Consul General in Los Argeles Armen Bayburdian.

The whole proceeds during the gala celebration have been transferred to the City of Smile Charitable Foundation.

Over 800 people participated in the event, including Congressman Adam Schiff, world-renowned rock musician Serj Tankian, Mayor of Glendale Ara Najarian, former mayor of Glendale, City Council member Zareh Sinanian and others.

Anna Hakobyan was invited to the event as a keynote speaker. In her speech she thanked the organizers of the event, the Armenian American Medical Society, doctor Shant Shakherdemyan who made a lot of efforts during these months for the event to take place.

“This event has a very important mission – to help children suffering cancer in Armenia. Today we are uniting for one goal – to ensure healthy, peaceful and happy childhood for Armenian kids. 100 children in Armenia are diagnosed with cancer annually. We are here to assist these children. Together we can fight for the life of each child suffering cancer, and this is our duty not to allow their lives to stop due to absence of finance. You are more aware than me that today cancer is not the one as it was in the past. It is no longer that terrible and incurable disease as it was years ago. The humanity and you – the doctors, have found the ways of overcoming cancer. Today we mainly can win in the fight against cancer, but there are still cases when we fail, and medicine and science have not yet found the magical key against cancer for everyone”, Anna Hakobyan said, adding that the main reason is that a lot of money is needed for the battle. According to her, today mostly in rich and developed countries, for example in US, cancer is just a disease, but in less developed countries cancer and death are synonyms.

“After the Velvet revolution that took place in Armenia last year I am confident that our country will soon be included in the list of the world’s developed countries. But today, our children who suffer cancer now cannot wait for this development, our kids wait for treatment and they need our support. The City of Smile Foundation has been created to change lives, to take these lives to positive direction and return smile to children and their parents. We are starting to keep one smile at the same time bringing smile to a family because as I have once said – by saving one’s life we save the world. Most of you have helped our homeland many times, I know this, and you have done it without any expectation, your only one concern was for your support to reach the right place”, she said.

In this regard the Armenian PM’s spouse assured that each money donated to the City of Smile Foundation will serve its goal – to treat a child suffering cancer, save the lives of these angels and return happiness to their families.

“The worst thing in the world is when you imagine the parents who are sitting next to their kids who are sick in bed and are unable to help them. Today several hundreds of people gathered here and this means how many people stand together with these children and their parents. Once again thank you for being here, I want to thank the team that made this event a reality, thank you for the cooperation and standing with Armenia”, Anna Hakobyan said.

The Armenian American Medical Society awarded certificates to Anna Hakobyan for the works conducted in the City of Smile Foundation and inspiring Armenian women all over the world.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




SPAYKA director appeals for release on bail

SPAYKA director appeals for release on bail

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12:05, 8 April, 2019

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS Jailed CEO of SPAYKA, a major exporting and freight company, has appealed to court to be set free on bail.

Ghazaryan’s attorney Karen Sardaryan told reporters his client hasn’t yet testified.

“The justification of the detention was that Ghazaryan could’ve impacted people for testifying in his favor”, he said.

Today, a Yerevan court approved the investigators’ motion to jail Ghazaryan for two-month amid an investigation into suspected tax evasion.

Sardaryan said they’ve also requested the court to order an additional audit. He said the initial conclusion was prepared in unprecedented haste and they weren’t even aware of it.

According to tax authorities, Ghazaryan’s SPAYKA failed to pay nearly 14,5 million dollars in taxes.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Cyprus parliament to ratify Armenia-EU agreement as soon as possible

News.am, Armenia
April 7 2019
Cyprus parliament to ratify Armenia-EU agreement as soon as possible Cyprus parliament to ratify Armenia-EU agreement as soon as possible

15:54, 07.04.2019
                  

Armenian Parliament Speaker Ararat Mirzoyan met with President of the House of Representatives of Cyprus, Demetris Syllouris on the sidelines of the 140th summit of the Inter-Parliamentary Union.

During the meeting, Mirzoyan noted the strong ties between the friendly peoples of the two countries. He noted that Cyprus was the first country in Europe which recognized and condemned the Armenian Genocide.

In turn, the Armenian parliament adopted a statement condemning the genocide of the Pontic Greeks and Assyrians in the Ottoman Empire.

Mirzoyan noted the importance of ratifying the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Expanded Partnership Agreement as soon as possible. Demetris Syllouris noted that the agreement had been sent to the Cyprus legislature last week, assuring that it would be ratified as soon as possible. He invited Ararat Mirzoyan to visit Cyprus. The invitation has been accepted.

The interlocutors discussed the trilateral format of Armenia-Cyprus-Greece parliamentary cooperation, expressing readiness to make efforts to implement this initiative.

Pashinyan: No one should speak to Armenia and Karabakh from positions of force

News.am, Armenia
April 7 2019
Pashinyan: No one should speak to Armenia and Karabakh from positions of force Pashinyan: No one should speak to Armenia and Karabakh from positions of force

17:02, 07.04.2019
                 

YEREVAN.- It is impossible to speak to Armenia and Karabakh in the language of threats to start a war. Armenia will respond to the threat of war with the peace agenda and, if necessary, peace enforcement, said Armenian Prime minister Nikol Pashinyan, speaking at the special congress of the Yerkrapah Union of Volunteer Land Defenders (UVLD), held in the sessions hall of the Government on 7 April.

“No one should threaten the neighboring people. And in general, no one should speak to us from positions of force. We will respond to the threat of war by the peace agenda and, if necessary, the agenda of peace enforcement,” the PM noted.