Famous French singers to perform in Yerevan to honor Charles Aznavour on 95th birthday anniversary

Famous French singers to perform in Yerevan to honor Charles Aznavour on 95th birthday anniversary

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15:59, 2 March, 2019

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Famous French singers Patrick Fiori, Hélène Ségara, Léa Castel, Slimane and others will perform in Yerevan on the 95th birthday anniversary of renowned French-Armenian singer Charles Aznavour.

Charles Aznavour has passed away at the age of 94 on October 1, 2018.

The concert “For You, Aznavour” will take place in the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concert Complex on May 26, the organizers of the concert told reporters today.

“Each singer will sing one song of Aznavour and one more song from their songs. No dance or other performance will be held”, director Lusine Martirosyan said.

French-Armenian Hayk Shahbazyan, co-author of the project, said the French singers will perform with the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra led by conductor Eduard Topchyan.

Director of the Armenian National Philharmonic Orchestra Ruzanna Sirunyan said they have accepted the cooperation proposal with pleasure and stated that there may arise some problems for the Orchestra because the concert is at the Sport Complex, but the organizers and the executives of the Complex will provide assistance to solve these problems

The concert is also planned to be held in Moscow and Paris.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




PM Pashinyan addresses congratulatory message on Diplomat’s Day

PM Pashinyan addresses congratulatory message on Diplomat’s Day

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16:41, 2 March, 2019

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan addressed a congratulatory message on Diplomat’s Day, his Office told Armenpress.

The message runs as follows:

“Dear diplomats,

I congratulate you on the Day of Diplomat of Armenia.

It’s noteworthy that your professional day is linked with the one of the most important events in the history of the Armenian people and the development stage of the Armenian statehood when Armenia’s flag was raised at the UN headquarters by fulfilling the centuries-old dream of our people, that is the legal and symbolic fixation of Armenia’s place and position in the big family of sovereign states.

Armenia’s foreign policy priorities, the firmness of the security of Armenia and Artsakh, the dignity of our citizens and the will to see our country better are the values that lie in the core of your activities and should guide you towards new achievements.

There are serious issues in the Armenian foreign policy agenda which are vital for our state. Armenia’s natural development, security and international reputation are linked with our position and stance towards these issues.

Currently Armenia is on the path of courageous and irreversible reforms in different spheres of public life. You, the diplomats, also have an important mission in these processes, in terms of materializing the whole potential in the foreign political field which has been coordinated by the recent peaceful, velvet and democratic revolution in our country.

Following the velvet revolution we faced new challenges on the one hand, but on the other hand we have unprecedented opportunities. Today Armenia has reached the highest rating in the international arena. The proofs of this are all the visits and meetings. Till now the recent and ongoing changes in Armenia have deserved and continue deserving the highest appreciation of the international community. We must be able to materialize this with foreign political and economic achievements.

Dear diplomats,

Our joint mission is to make Armenia a country of law and justice, truthfulness and the most important values, such as freedom, democracy, rule of law and human rights protection, and we will not deviate from this mission by a millimeter.

At this point, our most important priority is to turn the political revolution into an economic one. Strengthening Armenia’s foreign policy’s economic component is one of our urgent tasks of today, and the foreign ministry plays a key role in this matter. We also need to comprehensively and thoroughly introduce all opportunities for the improvement of the business climate in our country at the international arena.

Dear diplomats,  

Today we have an exceptional unity to promote our pan-national agenda the goal of which is to implement the goals and dreams aimed at strengthening our statehood. In this regard I expect from you consistent and dedicated work.

Once again congratulations on your professional day. I wish you new courageous ideas and full energy on the path of implementing them for the benefit of our state and welfare of our people”.

 

 

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Police comment on media reports on detaining former finance minister and his bodyguards

Police comment on media reports on detaining former finance minister and his bodyguards

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17:47, 2 March, 2019

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. The Police of Armenia neither deny nor confirm the reports on detaining former finance minister Gagik Khachatryan and his bodyguards.  

Edgar Janoyan – head of the department of media at the Police, told Armenpress that the Police always carry out operations related to bodyguards.

According to certain media reports the Police detained Gagik Khachatryan and his bodyguards for touring with an escort.




Asbarez: Preening and Primping for President in 2020

Garen Yegparian

BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

In case you hadn’t noticed, the 2020 U.S.A. presidential election has commenced in earnest. Possibly, you had even noticed that it began almost immediately after the 2016 election. Such has become the fate of anyone pursuing a four-year stint at the White House. The campaigns are almost never-ending.

First, let’s go over some numbers and basics. A candidate for president must be a natural-born citizen of the United States, at least 35 years old, and a resident of the United States for at least 14 years.

According to ballotpedia.org, there are already 559 candidates for president! This may astound you, as it did me, until you learn that in 2016 there were 1780. Of course, we only hear about the most significant, likely-to-win people. Many of them were probably on very few, or even just one, states’ ballots. The current crop includes 192 Democrats, 13 Greens, 19 Libertarian, and 72 Republican candidates. Of those who have made their interest known, some have formalized it by outright filing as candidates, while others have created exploratory committees to test the waters before jumping in.

Since the political system in the U.S. is such that it is extremely unlikely that anyone other than a Democratic or Republican candidate will win, I shall focus on them for now.

It’s easier to start with the Republicans since they currently hold the presidency. Typically, no serious challengers come forth from a sitting president’s party. Yet, President Donald Trump is so odious to so many people, there is chatter about a possible run against him in the Republican primary elections. No one has yet come forth and said s/he would do that, but according to Ballotpedia, fourteen names have been bandied about. I don’t believe that any Republican will ultimately try to oust Trump, and not only for the traditional reason that he is their sitting president. Unfortunately, tragically, that party, at least on the federal level, has come to resemble almost all of the parties we see in the Republic of Armenia – individual, strong-man centered, if not outright personality cults rather than being ideologically or policy based. Add the current state of the investigations into potential wrongdoing by Trump and the defensiveness that has naturally engendered. The president, senators, and representatives of that party have every political reason to stick together strongly so they can create and ride out the storm of legal shenanigans that are soon to come. Why I use “shenanigans” instead of “proceedings” is the topic of a separate article.

Moving to the Democratic party candidates, the broad observation that can be made is that the ideological “flavor” of the candidates has moved significantly to the left of where it has been for the last few decades. This is good news, not just because better policies are being proposed as a result, but also because it gives voters a clear choice of what type of government, laws, and policies they want to have. Do they want Congress and the President acting in the interests of the people of the country at large, or in the very narrow interests of the monied elites and large/mega corporations?

Given my current awareness level of the Democratic candidates, Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, Sen. Bernie Sanders, and Sen. Elizabeth Warren the best suited for the job. Given political realities, I think Gabbard faces the greatest challenges to advancement in the primary elections of these three. My solution occurred to me when Sanders announced that he would be looking closely at having a woman as his vice-presidential running-mate. Why not join forces now for a Sanders-Gabbard ticket in November 20120?

On the Armenian front, I was disappointed when I saw the ANCA report cards for Sanders (a C) and Warren (a C+). Gabbard, on the other hand stood out with an A+. I also noticed a posting by ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian observing that Gabbard seemed to be on the tongues of Armenians more than any other candidate.

At this point, it seems to me the Armenian community’s interests in the U.S. mitigate in the direction of strongly supporting Gabbard with an eye to the Sanders-Gabbard ticket I already mentioned. Perhaps Republican Armenians should re-register as Democrats to vote for her in the primaries. They can always re-register as Republicans later. Whether to support Trump, the eventual Democratic nominee, someone else, or even no one for president (as happened in 2016) is something that can be determined in the summer of 2020.

Get out there and work on Gabbard’s campaign. If not hers, work on any other candidate’s so that Armenians are a potent presence in this presidential election cycle, regardless of who survives the next 18 politically grueling months before we know definitively who will be on the ballot in November 2020.

“Heritage” hosted the former president of Colombia, the general secretary of the EPP

Press release
“Heritage” hosted the former president of Colombia,
 EPP General Secretary
March 2, 2019, Yerevan. Today in the central office of “Heritage” Raffi Hovhannisyan, International Affairs Secretary Andranik Grigoryan, party member Hovsep Khurshudyan had a meeting with the President of the International Union of Center-Centered Democrats (ICDM), former President of Colombia Andres Pastrana, General Secretary of the European People’s Party (EPP) Antonio Lopez-Isturisi White and their accompanying secretary of the structure Cesar. With Rossello.
During the meeting, internal and external political issues were discussed, as well as a wide range of issues related to further cooperation in the domains of the EPP and the CDMM. Raffi Hovhannisyan introduced the high-ranking guests to some items on the agenda of the regular, 12th congress of “Heritage” to be held at the end of March. 
“Heritage” party
news service
“Heritage” party was founded in 2002. and operates throughout the territory of the Republic of Armenia. The address of the central office is: Yerznkyan 75, Yerevan 0033. For more information, you can contact “Heritage” party by phone: (37410) 27-16-00, fax: (37410) 52-48-18, e-mail: by mail: , website: www.heritage.am.

The Ethiopian Armenian Community

Friends,

Please attend the presentation on “The Ethiopian Armenian Community”, by Asbed Pogarian, on Thursday, March 14 at 7:30 pm, in the Aram and Anahis D. Boolghoorjian Hall of the Merdinian School: 13330 Riverside Dr. Sherman Oaks, CA 91403 (Please see the announcement below for details).
Also, please find the ARPA Institute annual Newsletter/Report link. Please read it and let us know what you think and if you have any suggestions or criticisms we would like to learn about them:



Please also view the videos of the latest ARPA presentations on: 1. “The 1862 Zeytun Rebellion and the Armenian Press”, 2. “Transforming Identity or the case of Musa Dagh after 1915” and 3. “The Azgagrakan Movement: An Embodied form of Armenian Nationalism” by Aram Ghoogasian, Khoren Grigoryan and Armen Adamian in the following links:





Also Enjoy watching Classical Armenian as the pillar of independent Armenian civilization video of the presentation by clicking on the following:

https://youtu.be/VVCsDqssZo4
Please view the video on “A Tribute to Those Who Perished, Gyumri: 30 Years of Challenges and Recovery by Gegham Mughnetsyan” in the following link: 
Please also view the video on “How Armenia Can Cycle and Scoot Its Way To Prosperity” By Terenig Topjian,  in the link: 

GO TO: http://www.arpainstitute.org to donate and/or get more information about ARPA activities.
Please also view the link below and see how you can help ARPA Institute raise more funds. See how you can add to the close to $2000 that have been raised thus far. 
Here is how it works: You can help us by doing some searches on Goodsearch yourself. Just make Goodsearch.com your default search engine and do a few searches a day for ARPA Institute (select ARPA Institute as your cause). If 1000 people do one search per day, we can earn close to $4000 per year. So, please use GOODSEARCH for all your searches and help!

Antilias – STUDENTS FROM THE NATIONAL UNITED SCHOOL GROUP VISIT TO THE HOLY FATHER

Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
PO Box : 70 317 Antelias – LEBANON
Tel: (+961-4) 410 001 / 3
Fax: (+961-4) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]

NATIONAL UNION
A GROUP OF SCHOOL STUDENTS VISIT TO THE HOLY FATHER

 

Carnival itself
on the eve of the holiday, a group of students from the preschool department of the National United School,
On Friday, March 1, 2019, they presented themselves with Armenian handicrafts and costumes
H.E. Aram A. To the Catholicos. They ordered His Holiness in the hall of the monastery
A carnival program, as well as what they brought with them  Armenian today.

His Highness
The Patriarch warmly accepted the Armenian religious and cultural traditions alive
the students of the holding school, talked with them about the holiday council
after evaluating this initiative and the work of the directorate in this regard
his paternal blessing.

 

 


Communication & Information Department

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/01/2019

                                        Friday, March 01, 2019
Aliyev, Pashinian To Meet Again
March 01, 2019
Switzerland - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (L) and Azerbaijan's 
President Ilham Aliyev meet in Davos, January 22, 2019.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
have agreed to meet soon for further talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, 
international mediators said on Friday.
The U.S., Russian and French diplomats co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group made the 
announcement in a joint statement issued more than a week after they held talks 
with Pashinian and Aliyev in Yerevan and Baku. They said they discussed 
“preparations for a meeting of the leaders in the near future, including 
possible topics for discussion.”
“The leaders accepted the Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ proposal to meet soon under 
their auspices,” added the statement. It gave no dates.
Pashinian’s most recent meeting with Aliyev took place on January 22 on the 
sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. It came a week 
after fresh negotiations held by the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers 
in Paris. According to the mediators, the ministers acknowledged the need for 
“taking concrete measures to prepare the populations for peace.”
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) meets with the co-chairs of the 
OSCE Minsk Group in Yerevan, February 20, 2019.
Visiting neighboring Iran this week, Pashinian announced that another 
Armenian-Azerbaijani summit will likely be held “soon.” “In essence, it is 
going to be a meeting without an agenda,” he told members of the Armenian 
community of Tehran.
Pashinian sounded pessimistic about chances of decisive progress towards a 
Karabakh settlement. He again declared that he cannot “speak on behalf of 
Karabakh” in the negotiating process.
The Armenian leader also said that Azerbaijan, not Armenia, must be the first 
to tell the international community whether it is prepared for a compromise 
peace accord because it regularly threatens a military solution to the Karabakh 
conflict.
In what may have been a related development, the influential head of Armenia’s 
National Security Service (NSS), Artur Vanetsian, seemed to rule out on 
Thursday major concessions to Baku.
Vanetsian made a point of travelling, together with Karabakh President Bako 
Sahakian, to a formerly Azerbaijani-populated area south of Karabakh. He 
attended a meeting of Karabakh officials that discussed their plans to build a 
new settlement and cultivate more agricultural land in the area bordering Iran.
“As a result of implementing this project we will send a clear message to the 
Armenian people and the outside world to the effect that we do not intend to 
give back a single inch of land,” Vanetsian said at that meeting.
Pashinian similarly stated on January 30 that the Armenian side will not agree 
to make territorial concessions Azerbaijan in return for mere peace in the 
region. “We can’t even discuss the lands-for-peace formula,” he said.
The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry criticized those remarks, saying that 
“withdrawal of Armenian troops from the occupied Azerbaijani territories” has 
long been at the heart of the peace process mediated by the United States, 
Russia and France.
Over the past decade, the mediating powers have advanced a framework accord 
calling for the liberation of virtually all districts around Karabakh that were 
occupied by Karabakh Armenian forces during the 1991-1994 war. In return, 
Karabakh’s predominantly Armenian population would determine the disputed 
territory’s internationally recognized status in a future referendum.
Ex-Mayor Freed After Hefty Payment
March 01, 2019
Armenia -The Investigative Committee headquarters in Yerevan.
The former longtime mayor of the Armenian town of Hrazdan has been released 
from custody after agreeing to return over 102 million drams ($210,000) in 
public funds which he had allegedly embezzled while in office.
Aram Danielian was arrested on Tuesday in connection with what law-enforcement 
authorities described as misuse of land and property taxes collected by the 
Hrazdan municipality in 2015-2018. The former head of a municipality division 
tasked with tax collection was also arrested on suspicion of embezzling the 
money.
Through his lawyer, Danielian denied any wrongdoing on Wednesday. The lawyer, 
Aleksandr Sirunian, said his client could only be faulted for allowing other 
local officials to waste or pocket the collected taxes.
Armenia’s Investigative Committee announced on Friday that Danielian “accepted 
his guilt,” “recovered the 102.2 million-dram damage inflicted on the state,” 
and was set free as a result of that on Thursday. “The investigation is 
continuing,” it said in a statement.
The law-enforcement agency did not specify whether it will bring criminal 
charges against the other suspect.
A member of former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican Party, Danielian ran 
the town located 45 kilometers north of Yerevan for over 15 years. He resigned 
in July two months after Sarkisian was ousted from power during the “velvet 
revolution” led by Nikol Pashinian, Armenia’s current prime minister.
Thousands Mark 2008 Violence Anniversary In Yerevan
March 01, 2019
        • Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian leads a demonstration on the 11th 
anniversary of deadly post-election violence in Yerevan, March 1, 2019.
Thousands of people led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian marched through 
central Yerevan on Friday to mark the 11th anniversary of the breakup of 
post-election protests in Armenia’s capital which left ten people dead.
The crowd silently walked from the city’s Liberty Square to the site of violent 
clashes between security forces and opposition protests which broke out on 
March 1, 2008. Pashinian laid flowers there, as did many other demonstrators.
“Today, on March 1, 2019, I want to make it clear that the return to the past 
is impossible in our country,” Pashinian declared in an address to the nation 
aired earlier in the day. “Armenia will not return to corruption, political 
persecutions, political violence and abuse.”
Pashinian urged Armenians to join him in paying respects to the victims of the 
worst street violence in Armenia’s history and “all political killings” 
committed since the country’s independence.
The 2008 unrest resulted from a disputed presidential election which formalized 
the handover of power from outgoing President Robert Kocharian to his preferred 
successor, Serzh Sarkisian. The main opposition presidential candidate, Levon 
Ter-Petrosian, refused to concede defeat, alleging serious fraud.
Armenia - Thousands of people mark the 11th anniversary of deadly post-election 
violence in Yerevan, March 1, 2019.
Ter-Petrosian supporters held nonstop rallies in Liberty Square until they were 
forcibly dispersed by riot police early on March 1, 2008. Thousands of them 
gathered and barricaded themselves elsewhere in the city center later on that 
day. Pashinian, then a newspaper editor, was among Ter-Petrosian associates who 
addressed them there.
Eight protesters and two policemen died in ensuing clashes. Citing the 
violence, Kocharian declared a state of emergency and ordered army units into 
Yerevan late on March 1, 2008.
The former Armenian authorities accused the Ter-Petrosian-led opposition of 
organizing the “mass disturbances” in a bid to seize power. Dozens of 
Ter-Petrosian allies, including Pashinian, were jailed on charges strongly 
denied by them.
Armenia’s Special Investigative Service (SIS) completely changed the official 
version of events shortly last spring’s “velvet revolution” which brought 
Pashinian to power. It now says that Kocharian illegally used the military 
against the protesters.
Kocharian was arrested in December five months after being charged with 
overthrowing the constitutional order. The ex-president denies the accusations 
as politically motivated, alleging a “vendetta” waged by Pashinian.
The SIS has also indicted but not arrested three retired Armenian generals. 
They and Kocharian could go on trial already this spring.
Armenia - A police officer lays flowers at an unofficial memorial to the 
victims of the 2008 post-election violence in Yerevan, March 1, 2019.
In his statement, Pashinian condemned the former regime for using “illegal 
force” against the protesters but did not mention Kocharian or any other 
suspects by name. He read out the names of the ten victims of the bloodshed 
instead. “The shots fired on the victims of March 1 were targeted at each of 
us,” he said.
Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress (HAK), from which Pashinian split in 
2013, welcomed the premier’s decision to organize Friday’s march. The party’s 
deputy chairman, Levon Zurabian, and other senior members participated in it. 
But Ter-Petrosian himself did not show up.
Zurabian hailed the criminal charges brought against Kocharian and the 
generals. “Everything is clear,” he told reporters. “The constitutional order 
was overthrown and the army was used against the people.”
Unlike the HAK, the two opposition parties represented in the current Armenian 
parliament, Prosperous Armenia (BHK) and Bright Armenia (LHK), declined to join 
the Pashinian-led demonstration. Some of their senior representatives accused 
the premier of using the unrest anniversary for political purposes.
The BHK and LHK leaders laid flowers at an unofficial memorial to the March 
2008 victims earlier on Friday.
Press Review
March 01, 2019
“Zhoghovurd” carries a commentary on the 11th anniversary of the 2008 
post-election violence in Yerevan. The paper says that Armenia’s former 
authorities “did everything to cover up” the use of lethal force against 
opposition protesters and its consequences, blaming the bloodshed on Levon 
Ter-Petrosian and his associates. It welcomes a renewed and very different 
investigation into those tragic events which began after last year’s “velvet 
revolution.” “It is imperative to clear up all circumstances and hold the 
guilty accountable,” it says. “And this must be done in a way that will leave 
no doubts about the impartiality of judges and investigators [dealing with the 
case.]”
“Aravot” disagrees with those who say that the March 2008 tragedy in Yerevan 
must not be “politicized.” “That tragedy was a direct consequence of political 
events and, more precisely, rigged elections,” argues the paper. Having said 
that, it goes on, all political forces must acknowledge that “the practice of 
falsifying elections began in 1995” and that “the electoral process was 
accompanied by violence from that moment on.” “It’s just that [former President 
Robert] Kocharian went beyond all limits with his trademark brutality and 
vengefulness,” it says.
Lragir.am comments on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s latest statements on the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Visiting Iran, Pashinian said that Armenia will 
continue to seek international recognition of Karabakh’s right to 
self-determination and its greater role in Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks. A 
senior aide to Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev responded by ruling out any 
change in the current negotiating format. The online publication sees “two ways 
out of this situation.” “Either the negotiations will be frozen until the 
parties change their motivation or one of them will blink and cannons will 
start firing,” it says.
(Lilit Harutiunian)
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 Guardian names demolishment of Armenian cross-stones in Azerbaijan ‘cultural genocide’

The Guardian names demolishment of Armenian cross-stones in Azerbaijan ‘cultural genocide’

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20:51, 1 March, 2019

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. The Guardian has published an article headlined ”Monumental loss: Azerbaijan and ‘the worst cultural genocide of the 21st century” about the demolishment of Armenian cross-stones in Azerbaijan. ARMENPRESS reports the periodical writes that the the greatest cultural diaster taking place at the moment might be taking place not in Syria, but in Caucasus, meaning the demolishment of Armenian cross-stones in Azerbaijan.  

‘ According to a lengthy report published in the art journal Hyperallergic in February, the Azerbaijani government has, over the past 30 years, been engaging in a systematic erasure of the country’s historic Armenian heritage. This official, albeit covert, destruction of cultural and religious artefacts exceeds Islamic State’s self-promotional dynamiting of Palmyra’, The Guardian writes.

The periodical reminds that on 15 December 2005, the prelate of northern Iran’s Armenian church, Bishop Nshan Topouzian, filmed – from across the river in Iran – the Azerbaijani military methodically laying waste with sledgehammers to all that remained of Djulfa. The soldiers loaded the debris on to truck beds and dumped it into the Araxes.

‘The footage can be found in a 2006 film entitled The New Tears of Araxes posted on YouTube, edited by Maghakyan and scripted by Pickman. It is chilling. Satellite research shows that, in 2003, the uneven, textured landscape was dotted with multiple small structures. By 2009, it is flattened and empty’, writes the periodical, adding that the Azerbaijani government has repeatedly refused international inspectors’ entry to the site.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan