In 2020, measures to improve demography will be introduced in Armenia: Avinyan announces new programs to stimulate fertility and assist young families

Arminfo, Armenia
Sept 24 2019

ArmInfo. Starting in 2020, the Armenian government will start implementing new programs to stimulate the birth rate, as well as to promote young families and families  with children. This, according to the office of Deputy Prime Minister  Tigran Avinyan, he said at a meeting of the Council on improving the  demographic situation.

“The government is decisive in improving the demographic situation in  the country, so based on the results of discussions at the last  meeting, we can fix that in 2020 we will start new programs to  stimulate the birth rate, as well as to help young families and  families with children,” he said.

Thus, according to Avinyan, since 2020:

1. The lump-sum allowance for the birth of the first child will be  increased 6-fold from 50 thousand drams to 300 thousand drams.  2.  The size of the one-time allowance for the birth of a second child  will be doubled – from 150 thousand drams to 300 thousand drams.  3.  The monthly allowance for working mothers will be increased by about  41% – from 18 thousand drams to 25 thousand drams.  4. A new type of  childcare allowance will be introduced in rural areas: until the  child is two years old, mothers will be paid 25.5 thousand drams a  month.

5. Work will be carried out to phase out such a vicious phenomenon as  the “wait list to kindergartens.” In preschool and school  institutions, work will be carried out to expand the services of  extended care and training, in particular, care will be organized  according to the principle of co-financing from 08:30am to 7:00pm. As  a result, the working parent should be able to organize the care of  the child in preschool or school institutions located near the place  of residence or work.  6. Since 2020, ambitious programs will be  launched, under which the state will provide both lump-sum cash  assistance and prepaid insurance in the regions to purchase housing  on a mortgage due to the birth of a child. The preliminary budget of  the program will be approximately 500 million drams. According to the  Deputy Prime Minister, the amount will be more than enough as a  start.  In parallel, work will be carried out on targeted housing  programs in the regions, and the Committee for Urban Planning is  already doing this.

According to Tigran Avinyan, these programs are only the beginning,  and from 2021 a new national ideology should be discussed. “That is,  discussions should be held in advance, but from 2021 three children  in a family should become the average norm for us. And all our  programs should aim to ensure that from 2021 any average family in  Armenia has the desire and opportunity to have at least three  children, “he said.

To recall, on August 5, speaking at a rally in Stepanakert, Prime  Minister Nikol Pashinyan named bringing the country’s population to 5  million by 2050 among the global challenges facing the state.

Armenian sappers completely demined two fields in Syrian Aleppo with an area of 90 thousand sq.m.

Arminfo, Armenia
Sept 24 2019

ArmInfo. Armenian sappers  completely demined  two fields in the village of Al Husseini in  Syrian Aleppo.

According to the RA Center for Humanitarian Demining, on September  24, representatives of Aleppo province conducted an exploration of  the area, after which the director of the Expert Center for  Humanitarian Demining SNCO Ruben Arakelyan handed over certificates  to the head of the province, according to which Armenian sappers  completely cleared and demined areas of the first and second hazard  categories. The certificate also states that these areas are clean  and suitable for their intended use.  Armenian sappers demined land  with a total area of 90 thousand square meters, and found more than  50 sq.  m. unexploded ordnance.

Netanyahu: Erdogan, Stop Lying

Jerusalem Post

Sept 24 2019
BY JERUSALEM POST STAFF
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu slammed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Tuesday calling him a liar and saying that “he who doesn’t stop lying about Israel, he who kills Kurds in his own country, he who denies the terrible crimes against the Armenians – that person should not preach to Israel.”


Erdoğan was speaking at the United Nations General Assembly and addressed the conditions of Palestinians in Gaza.       
  

Asbarez: AYF Camp 2019 Brings Diasporan Armenians Together

As the last bus leaves Week H, the dust finally settles and, just like that, another eight amazing weeks of AYF Camp come to an end. With over 1,000 campers and staff, AYF Camp was bustling all summer with immense Armenian spirit, fun Red-Blue-Orange activities and a variety of educationals. “Camp is my home away from home. It’s where people come together. It’s amazing how people who were once strangers to me are now some of my closest friends,” said Natalie Moumdjian (13) from Seal Beach, CA.

What makes AYF Camp so special is its vast global appeal, which keeps growing year after year. In 2019, there were campers and staff from all over the world, including China, France, Kuwait, Lebanon, Qatar, and the United Kingdom. “Being a counselor has given me the privilege to lead and guide the youth of the Armenian community. It is inspiring to see the campers creativity and uniqueness thrive through the activities and experiences made at AYF camp. This opportunity creates lifetime friendships and bonds between campers and counselors. The campers are the reason I look forward to attending every year,” said Deanna Jabourian (Counselor, Week H).

The pride and success of AYF Camp has always been, and will continue to be, the joint effort of all its volunteers and supporting community. AYF Camp is fortunate to have had amazing directors in the past who have paved the way and allowed for the addition of 7 new directors in the 2019 camp season – many of whom are female. For Lori Tashdjian, a first-time director (Week B) and AYF Camp Management Board member, “The spirit of AYF Camp never changes and continues to enrich the lives of Armenian youth. It’s wonderfully fulfilling to watch camp thrive year after year. It is a true testament to our program.” The counselors, under the guidance of these directors, ensured that all campers had a great summer focusing on building friendships, learning about Armenian culture, and enjoying the great outdoors.

The summer was filled with outdoor activities, including canoeing, archery, and Red-Blue-Orange team competitions, as well as educationals and the always-competitive weekly song competition. AYF Camp is truly grateful to all the volunteer educational speakers who came up throughout the summer to ensure that campers went home with more knowledge about the Armenian Nation, our rich culture, and beautiful history. This year, campers were fortunate to partake in a number of new educationals, including Armenian Genealogy, Artsakh, and Leadership. For instance, AYF Camp was thrilled to have two representatives, Manuk Avedikyan and Sedda Antekelian, from the USC Shoah Foundation representing the work that they do with the testimony of Genocide survivors, both of whom “were moved to see the positive impact testimony-based education had on the campers and the genuine appreciation they felt to have the opportunity to watch and listen to Armenian Genocide survivors as well as survivors of the Holocaust and the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda.”

As the 2019 Summer Camp season has come to a close, AYF Camp would like to thank all of the volunteers, campers and community for their continued support in making this summer such a success and hopes to see everyone back next year.

Since 1977, AYF Camp has offered a genuinely rewarding experience, by serving as a place for Armenian youth to make new friends and memories for a lifetime. AYF Camp is the largest and oldest summer camp program in the Western United States focusing on Armenian culture and heritage. For more information, and sign up for our newsletter to receive news and updates on programs and events, visit our website.

Pashinyan, ARF Leaders Meet in Los Angeles

On the margins of his visit to Los Angeles on Sunday, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan met with representatives of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, which among others included ARF Bureau member Dr. Viken Yacoubian and the co-chairs of the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee Avedik Izmirlian and Dr. Carmen Ohanian.

The meeting, which took place at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in downtown Los Angeles focused on the role the ARF has and continues to play in the advancement of the aspirations of the Armenian people in and outside of Armenia.

“I highly appreciate the role of the ARF has played in general and specifically within the context of preserving the Armenian identity,” Pashinyan told his interlocutors.

“Today we are discussing strategic issues, but I believe there is a slight nuance that must be incorporated: In discussing Armenian identity we must take into consideration not only its preservation, but now its development,” said Pashinyan.

“The ARF has had and continues to play quite an active role in Armenia’s domestic life. Within its activity, it’s not always that I have been in agreement with the ARF—that we’ve always agreed on issues—but within the context of our national goals, it does not change anything,” said Pashinyan. “Because those issues around which we do not agree are not that essential, if there are myriad strategic issues on which we agree.”

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his entourage (right) meet with a delegation of the ARF in Los Angeles on Sepr. 22

Dr. Yacoubian, the ARF Bureau member, welcomed Pashinyan to Los Angeles on behalf the party and its representatives, saying that the prime minister’s visit to L.A. had special significance given that during the popular movement in Armenia the people truly raised their collective voice through which they echoed the same vision that has been a source of the ARF’s struggle for the past 128 years.

“In that regard we affirm that the movement was a demand for the establishment of just structures, economic stability, and it sparked hope that the collective voice for advancing our national aspirations will remain united,” said Yacoubian who emphasized the need for the collective pursuit of those goals without divisions in order to put forth the people’s complete potential in the name of our just cause and the security of the homeland, without underestimating the laws and the constitutional order.

Yacoubian also stressed the need to evaluate the issues that concern the Diaspora based on each country and the Armenians that reside there. He emphasized that the preserving the Armenian identity for the Diaspora has not been a task, but rather a means for advance the Armenian Cause and serve the homeland.

“Hence, it is important to treat the Diaspora within this context, in order to not foster cooperation, as has been voiced by some circles, but rather to achieve the creation of the true ‘Armenian World,’ within which the Diaspora, with its people and structures, is present as a participant,” explained Yacoubian.

The ARF Bureau member addressed rumors of alleged splinters within the party, explaining that it is a wrong description of the party, since it operates as a decentralized organization. He pointed out, that the party’s ideology is one and will always be such, hence it cannot be splintered.

In his statements, Izmirlian, the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee co-chair, said that the time has come to serious include and engage the Diaspora in the development of Armenia so it can be an equal partner in the homeland-Diaspora equation. He also added that since their previous meeting last year in New York, some of the reforms discussed have not fully been realized and emphasized the need for advancing those changes to ensure the separation of the executive, judicial and legislative powers and branches of the government.

Izmirlian said that as the force, which has strived to bring together the community and has worked hard to advance unity in the most diverse reality that is the Armenian community of Western United States, the recent creation of the Pan-Armenian Council should be encouraged and supported. The Council, he explained, is hoping to engage more than the current 24 organizations and it aims to address the national challenges collectively, taking into consideration the potential of the community and its institutions.

Dr. Ohanian, the other co-chair of the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee, emphasized the diversity of the Western U.S. Armenian community, pointing out that it is home to countless Armenians from the various communities from around the world, as well as Armenia. She echoed Izmirlian’s sentiments and gave concrete examples of the work the ARF has done to unify and bring together the different segments of the community.

She also prioritized the advancement and elevation of women within the community, as well as in Armenia’s government structures—a sentiment welcomed by Pashinyan during the meeting.

Independence Day Celebrated in Gyumri

BY CATHERINE YESAYAN

This year, the official celebrations for Armenia’s Independence took place in Gyumri, Armenia. It was a good excuse for me to visit the lovely city, once again.

After arriving in Armenia, we decided to take a train to Gyumri. However, there were no pre-sale tickets available. Fortunately, a friend of mine was able to call in a favor from a friend – asking them to be at the station two hours early to purchase the tickets for us.

With our tickets in hand, we waited for the train to leave for Gyumri, at 9:15 a.m. The express train ride, which cost less than $6, took two hours and 15 minutes.

It’s heartwarming to see how much the country has improved. The train, and its two wagons, arrived on time, and was very clean and comfortable. We arrived in Gyumri, where we were welcomed by an array of Armenian youth distributing Armenian flags. And, thus, the Independence Day festivities began.

Click on the above gallery to view photos from Independence Day in Gyumri.

Thousands Welcome Pashinyan to Los Angeles

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Sept. 22 addressed thousands of community members at LA Grand Park

Thousands braved the scorching heat on Sunday to converge on Grand Park in downtown Los Angeles and welcome Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and hear him address the local Armenian community in his first trip since becoming prime minister in May, 2018 after a popular movement that toppled the government of Serzh Sarkisian.

Pashinyan, who arrived in Los Angeles late early Sunday morning, had a full schedule meeting with Armenian community organizational leaders, holding a press conference and attending a reception at City Hall hosted by L.A. City Councilmember Paul Krekorian who organized the event with L.A. County Supervisor Kathryn Barger, before meeting the community at Grand Park. Los Angeles Fire Marshal’s office estimated that 18,000 people attended the public rally.

As the City Hall reception concluded, political officials, dignitaries and guests descended the City Hall steps for the official program. As host of the rally, Councilmember Krekorian kicked off the program by introducing the many federal, state and local officials who had gathered to welcome Pashinyan to Los Angeles. He also took time to thank all individuals, city and county departments and their leaders for ensuring a safe and successful event.

Speaking at the rally were Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, California Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis, Representative Adam Schiff, State Senator Anthony Portantino, State Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian and LA County Supervisor Barger.

An exuberant and impatient crowd roared as Pashinyan was called to the stage and with chants of “Nikol, Nikol, Nikol,” welcomed the prime minister, who, in what has become commonplace for him, embraced the cheers and took his place at the podium to deliver what was one of the most important addresses since assuming office.

The more than one-hour speech focused on his impression of what it means to be Armenian and advanced the concept Pan-Armenianism, which included granting every Armenian citizenship to the country.

“I hope that the 10 million Armenians around the world will become, allow me to say so – the promoter of Armenia, because Armenia is the country for all of us and Armenia is our homeland,” Pashinyan said.

He expressed hope that after the developments which took place in Armenia interest towards Armenia will grow among the Armenian youth. “I have already been told that this is already taking place, that hundreds, thousands of Armenians—young Armenians in America and elsewhere—who didn’t speak Armenian have begun, after the revolution, to become more interested in their country, their identity and history.”

“Because,” he said “being Armenian is cool.”

The prime minister also spoke about his vision of what he called the “Great Repatriation.” In this realm, Pashinyan said that by saying one lives in Armenia did not necessarily mean that the person is physically living in Armenia, but has a home to call their own there.

He said that in modern times people are constantly on the move, with most people spending their time traveling, whether for business or pleasure.

Thousands turned out on Sept. 22 to welcome Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to Los Angeles

“Great repatriation means, for instance, to live physically in Armenia for a month or two months a year. Today the real estate prices have significantly increased in Armenia and Yerevan, and having a house in Yerevan, Armenia, means to make a very good and reliable investment, and every Armenian who does not yet have a house in Armenia should have one. Repatriation means to have a business in Armenia, and the most important is to have a citizenship of Armenia. Every Armenian should have citizenship of Armenia,” explained Pashinyan.

Armenia is not only representing its population, but also the o entire 10 million Armenians and is going to restore its economic, political, scientific and cultural greatness, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at a meeting with the Armenian community in Los Angeles.

The Los Angeles Fire Marshal estimated the crowd to be at 18,000 on Sept. 22 at Grand Park

“The Armenian people are victorious. They are heroes, talented people who created a civilization and as Sevak says in his poem they are people who possess a will to give back. And yes, we had a very difficult history. Sometimes we even were on the brink of collapse, but we survived the genocide, the migration, we survived the wars, the hunger, the geopolitical collapses. The key mission of today’s generation is to restore the greatness of our people and show it to the world, but first of all to ourselves,” said Pashinyan.

In his remarks, Pashinyan also declared that if it weren’t for Diaspora’s continued efforts and support, Armenia as we know it today would not exist. He commended the Diaspora, especially the Los Angeles Armenian community, for steadfastly heeding the call of the homeland and supporting the people of Armenia and Artsakh. He also singled out Kirk Kerkorian and his Lincy Foundation for the enormous impact they had in advancing Armenia’s roads and modernizing key aspects of transportation in the country.

The Rose and Alex Pilibos Armenian School choir performed the American and Armenian National Anthems at the start of the program.

Western Primate Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Western Prelate Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian and Reverend Joseph D. Matossian of the Armenian Evangelical Church said the Invocation of the event.

Asbarez will have coverage of other events related to Pashinyan’s visit to Los Angeles in its future editions.

The California Courier Online, September 26, 2019

The California Courier Online, September 26, 2019

1 –        Armin Wegner Asked Franz Werfel
            Not to Write his ‘40 Days of Musa Dagh’
            Part IV (Final)
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com
2-         Over 10,000 Gather in Los Angeles to Welcome PM Nikol Pashinyan
3 –        AAF Ships Over $62M of Medicines to Armenia, Artsakh
4-         Captain Garo Kuredjian Selected as New Police Chief of Fillmore
5-         City Council Moves to Rename Tujunga Intersection ‘William
Saroyan Square’

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1 –        Armin Wegner Asked Franz Werfel
            Not to Write his ‘40 Days of Musa Dagh’
            Part IV (Final)
            By Harut Sassounian
            Publisher, The California Courier
            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

The California Courier has published in a four-part series the
exchange between the two historic figures Armin Wegner and Franz
Werfel. This is the final installment.

Of course, I do not know your own connection with Asia Minor, and I
can be fooled by guessing it. Strangely, I have found that the Jewish
soul, in the frame of German and Prussian characters, makes them
better able to imagine than the majority of German poets can, that
this Asian soul usually stands much further away and stays more alien
to the descendant of the European crusaders. This probably has its
deep foundation in the law of antagonism.

I have no right to ask you to give up your project. That probably
wouldn’t help much either. But you will certainly not be grateful to
me if I, who from the first moment of our meeting, passionately loved
and venerated your poetic work, ask you to consider all my thoughts,
which I submit to you here. Precisely because I appreciate you, not
only as a writer, but I also know the depth of your humanity, I can do
so with a clear conscience. Perhaps it will cause you to drop an
unfinished project that has barely begun, or to go beyond to design a
shorter novelistic study, as it originally began?

I need not emphasize the immense gratitude and the deep reassurance
that would fulfill me, having the opportunity to complete and market
my work without fear of competition. Truly, I cannot give up my
project, which has become my mission from my deepest, profound
experience, for which I have sacrificed laborious years of toil under
the greatest hardships and struggles, and for the sake of it, stood in
the background for so long.”

Werfel responded on Dec. 23, 1932 from Vienna: “Let me first briefly
tell you the story of the formation of my Armenian novel. Since the
war, I have been to the Middle East twice (for several months) – the
first time in 1925, the second time in 1929. In Damascus, I had a
shocking experience with Armenian children, which, to some extent,
made an epic plan virulent in me, which already existed since I first
heard of these things; perhaps just after the war. I do not know for
exactly how long. Oftentimes, in my method of writing, the dramatic or
epic plans grow in the darkness for many years before they are strong
enough to entice me to work. (I wrote the Verdi novel part time in
1911 and completed it in 1923.) In the case of my Armenian novel, I
started studying and sketching only last year. Of course, the work
progressed rapidly during the summer, and today I have already
finished more than half of my book. (around 400 printed pages.)

Be that as it may, I naturally like to acknowledge your primary
concern and bow to you for being an eyewitness. However, I am almost
reluctant to point out that there is no material legitimacy in the
field of poetry [creative writing]. You indicate it several times in
your letter. There are, perhaps, ‘personal’ substances that may belong
to the peculiarity of a particular writer – the World War, with all
its chapters, of which the Armenian tragedy is one, may by no means
count on these substances. Fairly considered, you have in your great
experience and your fateful connectedness, a tremendous advantage over
me, who cannot create his work based on experience, direct exposure,
grasp of senses, but only from imagination, inventiveness and thus
some historical documents. With such a competition, therefore, the
worry should be far more on my side.

But I believe, dear Wegner, that we can both be very calm, because our
works will certainly be completely different. Mine uses documented
facts of only one single episode that covers a few pages in the Alster
collection of Lepsius. The episode serves me as the framework for a
universal human happening, for a symbolic development, for figures
purely invented, it is not an end in itself but only an occasion. Nor
will there be much talk of atrocities and massacres in my book. I will
set aside all the documentary stuff. The human destiny of the invented
characters alone will be important. The scene I am referring to, the
contents of which have become known to you through the newspapers, has
very little to do with the actual novel. The scene I am referring to,
the contents of which have become known to you through the newspapers,
has very little to do with the actual novel. A multi-volume work like
yours will project a gigantic and magnificent painting of the Armenian
destiny, with ten thousand details. While mine, I hope, will be a
story limited to a certain region and a small fragment of people. The
emphasis will be more on the mythical-human side rather than the
Armenian cause.

Lastly, I am surprised about the muffled suspicion that sounds from
certain lines of your letter.

You are suggesting that I had heard of your correspondence with the
Prussian Academy and Paul Zsolnay Publishing House, and might have
been inspired to write my Armenian novel. In fact, I entered the
meeting room of the Poets Academy for the first time in my life
fourteen days ago, and, as far as publishing correspondence is
concerned, my own stuff is already annoying enough.

But is it possible that you seriously believe that the facts of your
work could stimulate my choice of substance and put you off your work?
You are a poet and, therefore, you know that it is not us who choose
the substance, but the substance chooses us. Nothing is more sensible
to me than that everything I write is essential, i.e., dictated from
within.

Until yesterday, from your books I had only the beautiful volume ‘The
Face of the Cities,’ which I admire and love very much. Unfortunately,
I haven’t read any of your prose. Since I work a lot, I read almost no
novels or short stories. I just got the mail with your open letter to
Wilson. The real glow of your words deeply moved me.

Please do not overestimate the rivalry of our works. They go different ways.

For me, and globally, you are a great authority on the Armenian cause,
through knowledge, experience, and connectedness. This was shown to me
in just the few pages I went through yesterday. The glow of these
pages, however, also suggests that your publisher cannot be unhappy,
even when another, be it a layman or artist, tries to serve the same
mission.”

Fortunately, Franz Werfel was not dissuaded by Wegner to give up his
plans to write “The Forty Days of Musa Dagh.” On the other hand,
Wegner published only the first volume of his planned four-volume
book, depriving the world of his precious eyewitness accounts of the
Armenian Genocide.

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2-         Over 10,000 Gather in Los Angeles to Welcome PM Nikol Pashinyan

LOS ANGELES (Combined Sources)—Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was
appointed and then elected to his post after leading a wave of
anti-government protests between March and May of 2018 that led to the
resignation of former Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan in what has become
known as the Velvet Revolution — and has been widely hailed as a
harbinger of democracy by championing free elections and government
transparency.

“We have created a new image for Armenia,” said Pashinyan after
lauding the warm California welcome in Armenian, the diaspora crowd
chanting his name.

“We have developed a new slogan: It’s cool to be Armenian,” he said.
“And together we have to make it even better, because the Armenian
people is one of a great history and past. And our country has a
bright future.”

Los Angeles City councilmember Paul Krekorian, who became the first
Armenian elected to city office in 2010, played a leading role in
organizing the rally. Burbank Rep. Adam Schiff also addressed the
crowd, calling LA the “capitol of the Armenian diaspora.”

LA Mayor Eric Garcetti praised Pashinyan’s leadership, saying “A day
of sunshine has come to Armenia, a day of openness, of democracy. The
day has come to invest and support and help the new Armenia rise, and
rise and rise under this prime minister.”

Los Angeles County Supervisor Kathryn Barger said “It was an
incredible privilege to welcome His Excellency Prime Minster of
Armenia Nikol Pashinyan to Los Angeles County! His wisdom and
dedication to democracy are inspiring. It’s a privilege to collaborate
and share best practices to make our communities stronger.”

“Thank you everyone who joined us on such a spectacular and historic
day to welcome the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol
Pashinyan / Nikol Pashinyan and spouse Anna Hakobyan! Thank you
Councilmember Paul Krekorian for hosting this wonderful event to honor
a true champion of democracy,” said California State Assemblymember
Adrin Nazarian.

The majority of attendees, clapping and dancing along to traditional
music and dance performances on the steps of City Hall, came in
predominately from such Armenian community population centers as
Glendale, Burbank, Pasadena and the San Fernando Valley. Buses to
downtown Los Angeles were made available to the communities.

While estimations of the Armenian population in Greater LA vary, the
2000 census reported over 150,000 Armenians in LA County with some
40,000 living in the San Fernando Valley.

“We’re here to honor and welcome him, for having led the revolution
and cleaning up corruption,” said Hrair Koutnouyan of Glendale, who
came to see Pashinyan with his wife. “A government that’s without
stealing and cheating isn’t something that’s easily accepted, but he’s
proving it can be done.”

Some, like 24-year-old Ani Dergrigorian of Glendale, who has lived in
Armenia, is “optimistic” about Pashinyan’s leadership but hopes to
hold him to account on issues facing every day Armenians. She and her
sister, Areni, brought signs that demanded an end to environmentally
harmful mining practices in the nation’s Almusar region.

“Maybe we don’t feel the impacts as much here, but it’s more important
than ever for us to be engaged in politics in Armenia,” she said.
“We’re all facing climate change on the same planet. At the end of the
day it impacts us too.”

Monterey Park doctor Jack Der-Sarkissian said he was moved by the
“optimism and enthusiasm” in Armenia following the Pashinyan-led
protests, what he and his supporters call the “Velvet Revolution.”
He’s listening for proof that the leader will be the steward of
democracy he said he would.

“A lot of people in Los Angeles will financially invest in their
families and Armenia needs it,” he said. “At the end of the day he
needs to convince people like myself that it’s the right time to
invest in Armenia. He has a lot of work ahead of him.”

Pashinyan said victory in the Artsakh liberation struggle would not be
possible without the assistance of the Diaspora. He noted that the
United States has steadfastly assisted Armenia and the Armenian
people.

On the morning of September 22, Pashinyan met with the executives of a
number of Armenian community organizations. The meeting was attended
by nearly 70 people, Armenia’s Honorary Consuls in Fresno and Las
Vegas, as well as spiritual representatives of the Armenian community.

“This is an important meeting that we have looked forward to since
last year. From the moment I stepped out of the airport, I felt the
presence of the Los Angeles Armenian community—a and I want to thank
them for this readiness. I will have many occasions to speak today—so
at today’s meeting, I am taking the role of a listener,” said
Pashinyan, who said he was eager to answer all questions.

Pashinyan introduced the vision of implementing a pan-Armenian agenda
and the idea of pan-Armenianism; discussed the figures of Armenia’s
economic development and positive trends; tourism; the settlement
process of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict; as well as the ongoing
structural reforms in judiciary, and public administration system,
among other issues.

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3 –        AAF Ships Over $62M of Medicines to Armenia, Artsakh

GLENDALE—The Armenia Artsakh Fund (AAF) delivered the phenomenal
amount of over $62 million of humanitarian assistance to Armenia and
Artsakh from May-September 2019.

The AAF itself collected the $62 million of medicines and other
supplies donated by Direct Relief ($59.5 million); Americares ($2.3
million); Catholic Medical Mission Board ($360,000); MAP International
($9,000) and Row Foundation ($2,500).

Other organizations which contributed valuable goods during this
period were: Project Agape ($97,000) and Armenian Missionary
Association of America ($282,000).

The medicines and medical supplies donated during this period were
sent to the Health Ministries of Armenia and Artsakh, AGBU Claudia
Nazarian Medical Center for Syrian Armenian Refugees in Yerevan,
Arabkir United Children’s Foundation, Armenian Missionary Association
of America, City of Smile, Fund for Armenian Relief,  Institute of
Perinatology, Obstetrics and Gynecology Center, Metsn Nerses
Charitable Organization, Muratsan Children’s Endocrinology Center,
National Hematology Center and St. Grigor Lusavorich Medical Center.

In the first nine months of 2019 AAF shipped to Armenia and Artsakh
$67 million of medicines, medical supplies and other relief products.
In the past 30 years, including the shipments under its predecessor,
the United Armenian Fund, the AAF has delivered to Armenia and Artsakh
a grand total of $892 million worth of relief supplies on board 158
airlifts and 2,447 sea containers.

“The Armenia Artsakh Fund is regularly offered free of charge millions
of dollars worth of life-saving medicines and medical supplies. All we
have to do is pay for the shipping expenses. We would welcome your
generous donations to be able to continue delivering this valuable
assistance to all medical centers in Armenia and Artsakh,” stated
Harut Sassounian, President of AAF.

[email protected].

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4-         Captain Garo Kuredjian Selected as New Police Chief of Fillmore

FILLMORE, Calif.—The city of Fillmore has selected Captain Garo
Kuredjian as its next police chief. Kuredjian has been selected to
replace outgoing chief Captain Eric Tennessen, after the announcement
of his upcoming promotion to commander.

Kuredjian is a 25-year veteran of the Ventura County Sheriff’s Office.
During his career, he has worked patrol and custody, and has an
extensive background in investigations which include assignments in
the city of Thousand Oaks and Moorpark, as well as Internal Affairs.

As a captain, Garo worked as a patrol watch commander, and he served
as the Sheriff’s adjutant and public information officer. Most
recently, he managed facility operations at the Pre-Trial Detention
Facility in Ventura.

Kuredjian brings a diverse background to his new position, including a
bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of California, Los
Angeles, and a master’s degree in public administration from
California State University at Northridge. He lives in Simi Valley
with his family.

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5-         City Council Moves to Rename Tujunga Intersection ‘William
Saroyan Square’

On September 11, Los Angeles City Council members Monica Rodriguez and
Paul Krekorian brought forward a motion to name the intersection on
the corner of Commerce Blvd. and Valmont street in Tujunga as “William
Saroyan Square”.

According to the motion, “William Saroyan was a prolific
Armenian-American writer of plays, short stories and novels. Saroyan’s
works portray the immigrant experience in the United States. He drew
upon his own childhood as the son of Armenian immigrants in Fresno for
inspiration. He has over 4,000 literary works to his credit, dating
from the late 1920s to the early 1980s. He wrote The Human Comedy,
which earned him an Academy Award for Best Original Motion Picture
Story in 1943. Saroyan refused the Pulitzer Prize for his play The
Time of Your Life on the grounds that it was ‘no more great or good’
than anything else he had written.

The motion continues, “Saroyan is recognized as one of the most
notable literary figures of the mid-20th century. The Armenian
community in Sunland-Tujunga is especially proud of Saroyan’s place in
history. It is fitting that we commemorate his life by naming the
intersection of Commerce Ave. and Valmont St., in his honor. Commerce
Ave. is home to the Annual Sunland-Tujunga Armenian Festival which
celebrates and brings awareness to Armenian art and culture.”

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

California Courier Online provides viewers of the Armenian News News Service
with a few of the articles in this week’s issue of The California
Courier.  Letters to the editor are encouraged through our e-mail
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requested to provide their names, addresses, and/or telephone numbers
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, or by phone, (818) 409-0949.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/23/2019

                                        Monday, 
Azeri Soldier Killed In Karabakh
Nagorno-Karabakh -- Karabakh Armenian troops hold exercises, July 11, 2019.
An Azerbaijani soldier was killed in Nagorno-Karabakh at the weekend in what 
Karabakh’s Armenian-backed army described as a failed incursion on its 
frontline positions.
A statement by the Defense Army said an Azerbaijani commando squad “left behind 
one corpse in the no man’s land” after being repelled by its frontline troops 
deployed southeast of Karabakh on Sunday afternoon.
“The Defense Army suffered no losses. Details of the incident are being 
clarified,” the statement said, adding that the “sabotage incursion attempt” 
was filmed by the army’s surveillance cameras installed along the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani “line of contact” around Karabakh.
The Azerbaijani military on Monday confirmed a combat death within its ranks 
but denied launching any commando raids.
According to the Trend news agency, the Defense Ministry in Baku said that an 
Azerbaijani soldier, identified as Ramin Abdulrahmanov, was shot dead in front 
of Karabakh Armenian positions after accidentally “losing his way.” The 
ministry said it has asked the International Committee of the Red Cross to help 
recover his body.
The deadly incident occurred one day before a fresh meeting Armenia’s and 
Azerbaijan’s foreign ministers due to be held in New York. The two ministers 
most recently met in Washington on June 20 in the presence of the U.S., Russian 
and French mediators co-heading the OSCE Minsk Group. The Azerbaijani Foreign 
Ministry described that meeting as “positive.”
It was the most serious Azerbaijani incursion attempt reported by the Karabakh 
army since five Azerbaijani soldiers were killed near Karabakh in February 2017 
in an overnight incident caught on Armenian surveillance cameras. Their bodies 
lying in the no-man’s land were retrieved with the ICRC’s help.
Deadly ceasefire violations on the Karabakh frontlines and the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border have decreased significantly since Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met for the 
first time in September 2018.
Thousands Rally In Los Angeles For Armenia’s PM
        • Karlen Aslanian
U.S. -- Armenian Americans attend a rally held by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian in Los Angeles, .
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian urged Diaspora Armenians to invest in Armenia, 
regularly visit their ancestral homeland and become its citizens as he 
addressed thousands of them at a rally held in Los Angeles on Sunday.
Pashinian spoke before the crowd that gathered in the city’s Grand Park after 
holding meetings with Armenian American organizations.
He began his hour-long speech by thanking Armenia’s worldwide Diaspora for its 
“invaluable” assistance provided to the country since independence. He also 
thanked those California Armenians, many of them born and raised in Armenia, 
who supported last year’s “Velvet Revolution” that brought him to power.
“We hope that the Diaspora will stand by the economic revolution taking place 
in Armenia just like it stood by the political revolution in Armenia,” said 
Pashinian. “And I want to invite all Diaspora entrepreneurs to Armenia because 
in today’s Armenia you won’t come across the obstacles that have existed 
before. In Armenia, systemic corruption has been rooted out and the rule of 
monopolies and oligarchy eliminated.”
Pashinian then renewed his calls for a “great repatriation” of ethnic Armenians 
from the United States and other parts of the world. “Great repatriation means, 
for example, physically staying and living in Armenia for one or two months 
every year,” he explained.
U.S. -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks at a rally in Los 
Angeles, .
“Real estate prices in Armenia and Yerevan are substantially rising now,” he 
said. “Buying a home in Yerevan, in Armenia means making a very good and 
reliable investment … Every Armenian must have a home in Armenia.”
“Repatriation also means owning a business in Armenia and, more importantly, 
having citizenship of the Republic of Armenia. Every [Diaspora] Armenian must 
have Armenian citizenship,” declared Pashinian.
Pashinian proceeded on Monday to New York where he is due to give a speech at a 
session of the UN General Assembly. It was not clear whether he will meet with 
senior U.S. officials during his latest trip to the U.S.
On Saturday, U.S. President Donald Trump congratulated the Armenian leader on 
the 28th anniversary of Armenia’s declaration of independence from the Soviet 
Union.
“The United States welcomes the close cooperation between our nations and your 
government’s commitment to democratic and economic reform,” Trump wrote in a 
letter publicized by Pashinian’s press office. “We strongly support the desire 
of the Armenian people, as expressed during last year’s peaceful events 
throughout Armenia, to live in a democratic country that respects the rule of 
law and is free from corruption.”
“I look forward to building on the partnership between our two countries in the 
years ahead,” added Trump.
Pashinian, Former Security Chief Step Up War Of Words
Armenia -- Prime Miinister Nikol Pashinian and National Security Service 
Director Artur Vanetsian (R) walk in downtown Yerevan, September 21, 2018.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Artur Vanetsian, the former head of 
Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) forced to resign last week, have 
traded fresh and more bitter recriminations.
Vanetsian hit out at Pashinian when he announced his resignation in a statement 
issued on September 16. He said that the latter’s “impulsive” leadership style 
is not good for Armenia and runs counter to the NSS “officer’s honor.”
Pashinian swiftly rounded on Vanetsian through his press secretary. His chief 
of staff said afterwards the former NSS chief was sacked because the prime 
minister was dissatisfied with his work.
Visiting the United States on Sunday, Pashinian accused Vanetsian of showing 
“disrespect for the officer’s honor” by making the “statement against his 
commander-in-chief.” “Would an officer do such a thing?” he told a news 
conference held in Los Angeles. “Do you know what that means? That means 
throwing your shoulder straps into a trash bin.”
“That is disrespectful towards Armenia’s armed forces,” he said, likening 
Vanetsian to Soviet generals who staged a failed coup d’état in August 1991.
Vanetsian hit back at Pashinian in equally strong terms on Monday, saying that 
the premier is misleading Armenians and “again not thinking about consequences 
of his words.” “Imagine what will happen if I suddenly start speaking up 
without thinking about consequences,” he warned in written comments to the 
“Hraparak” daily.
Vanetsian claimed that following his resignation Pashinian has been “sending 
people to me to ask me to keep silent for a while so that the situation calms 
down.” “But I can see now that he is once again breaching understandings and 
making incomprehensible and, in essence, shallow populist statements,” he said.
“I insist with certitude: time will tell who or what will end up in a trash 
bin,” added the 39-year-old career officer of Armenia’s most powerful security 
service.
Pashinian appointed Vanetsian as NSS director two days after the Armenian 
parliament elected him prime minister in May 2018. Vanetsian quickly became one 
of the most influential members of his entourage, overseeing a number of 
high-profile corruption investigations.
Pashinian has not yet publicly explained why he decided to the replace the NSS 
chief. His spokesman, Vladimir Karapetian, suggested last week that Vanetsian 
might have secret ties to Armenia’s former leadership. Vanetsian strongly 
denied that.
Armenian Governor Investigated Over Violent Assault
        • Marine Khachatrian
Armenia -- Vayots Dzor Governor Trdat Sargsian.
An Armenian law-enforcement agency said on Monday that it is investigating a 
provincial governor’s possible involvement in a violent dispute that left one 
man critically injured.
The incident occurred late last week in Yeghegnadzor, the administrative center 
of Armenia’s southeastern Vayots Dzor province. Ara Mkhitarian, an army 
lieutenant-colonel serving there, suffered severe injuries to his head while 
reportedly arguing with an assistant to the Vayots Dzor governor, Trdat 
Sargsian, in still unclear circumstances.
Mkhitarian remained in a coma at a military hospital on Monday, with doctors 
fighting for his life. One of them described the officer’s chances of survival 
as “very small.”
According to Armenia’s Investigative Committee, Mkhitarian suffered his 
injuries when he was punched by the governor’s 28-year-old aide, Harutiun 
Grigorian, and fell to the ground. Grigorian was arrested and charged with 
violent assault over the weekend.
Mkhitarian’s father Samvel and friends dismissed the official version of events 
as they gathered outside the prime minister’s office in Yerevan on Monday 
morning to demand an objective and full investigation of the Yeghegnadzor 
incident. They said that the officer and his colleagues were assaulted by a 
larger group of men that may have included Governor Sargsian.
“How can you knock down a 120-kilogram guy and smash his skull with one punch?” 
argued Samvel Mkhitarian.
“The governor must resign and be put on trial along with his gang,” said one of 
the victim’s friends.
Another protester claimed that an eyewitness who has given incriminating 
testimony against Sargsian is now being bullied by the governor. “We are 
demanding that the prosecutor[-general] put this case under his personal 
control and ensure a fair investigation because we don’t trust the Vayots Dzor 
police,” he said.
Sargsian, who is affiliated with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil 
Contract party, strongly denied his involvement. “I was at home [during the 
incident,]” he told reporters.
The 30-year-old governor confirmed the existence of incriminating testimony 
against him. “I think it must be established who ordered such testimony and the 
person who ordered the false testimony must also be held accountable,” he said.
The Investigative Committee said, meanwhile, that it is taking “urgent 
measures” to “verify the Vayots Dzor governor’s participation in the incident.”
A spokeswoman for the committee, Naira Harutiunian, said investigators are 
studying footage from surveillance camera placed near the scene of the 
violence. “The case is overseen by the chairman of the Investigative Committee, 
Hayk Grigorian,” she added.
Another U.S. Presidential Hopeful Vows Armenian Genocide Recognition
US Senator Elizabeth Warren speaks during her presidential candidacy 
announcement event at the Everett Mills in Lawrence, MA on February 9, 2019.
U.S. Senator and Democratic presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren has 
reaffirmed her strong support for U.S. recognition of the 1915 Armenian 
genocide in Ottoman Turkey.
Warren also vowed to help “strengthen the U.S.-Armenia relationship” when she 
congratulated the Armenian Assembly of America on the 28th anniversary of 
Armenia’s independence marked on Saturday.
“I believe that if we do not recognize the horrors of the past, we risk those 
horrors being repeated in the future,” she wrote in a letter publicized by the 
Assembly on Monday. “That is why I am an original cosponsor of a bipartisan 
Senate resolution that recognizes the Armenian Genocide and encourages 
widespread education of this tragedy.”
“I was honored to speak at the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day centennial 
ceremony in April 2015 at the Armenian Heritage Park in Boston, and I will 
continue supporting efforts to bring recognition to the genocide,” added the 
senator from Massachusetts, a U.S. state with a sizable Armenian community.
Warren is one of the main candidates vying for the Democratic Party’s 
nomination for the 2020 presidential election. A Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted 
earlier this month showed her solidifying her status as a top contender behind 
Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders.
Biden likewise wrote to the Assembly and another Armenian-American lobby group 
last week, saying that the United States must officially recognize the Armenian 
genocide “once and for all.” He too had cosponsored a genocide resolution in 
the U.S. Senate in the past.
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

Assistant to governor arrested for beating military officer in Armenia

Vestnik Kavkaza
Sept 23 2019
23 Sep in 9:00

Assistant to the governor of Armenia’s Vayots Dzor Province Harutyun Grigoryan was arrested, spokesperson for Investigative Committee Naira Harutyunyan wrote on Facebook.

On September 18, a scuffle, involving Lieutenant Colonel Ara Mkhitaryan and assistant to the governor of Vayots Dzor Province Harutyun Grigoryan, took place at the courtyard of a Yeghegnadzor building. The suspect beaten Mkhitaryan, News.am reported.

Lieutenant Colonel Ara Mkhitaryan was taken to hospital, where he underwent an emergency operation.

There are reports that Vayots Dzor Governor Trdat Sargsyan also was involved in the incident, but he denied his involvement.