Armenpress: President Sarkissian congratulates Indonesia’s Widodo on Independence Day

President Sarkissian congratulates Indonesia’s Widodo on Independence Day

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 10:07, 17 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has congratulated Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo on the Indonesian Independence Day.

“I am confident that the relations between Armenia and Indonesia will continue developing both bilaterally and in multilateral arenas for the benefit of our nations,” Sarkissian said in a telegram published by his office.

The Armenian President wished President Widodo strong health and success, and to the people of Indonesia peace and prosperity.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenpress: Armenian CDC reports 6 coronavirus fatalities in last 24 hour

Armenian CDC reports 6 coronavirus fatalities in last 24 hours

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 11:15, 17 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, ARMENPRESS. 38 new COVID-19 cases were recorded in the last 24 hours, the Armenian Center for Disease Control and Prevention said. However, only 284 tests were carried out Sunday.

The cumulative total of confirmed cases stands at 41701, with 34655 recoveries. 71 people recovered over the last 24 hours.

6 people died from COVID-19 complications over the last day, raising the total death toll to 824. This number doesn’t include the deaths of 244 other people infected with the virus, who died from other pre-existing illnesses.

As of August 17, the number of active cases stands at 5978.

A total of 185594 tests were conducted in Armenia since the outbreak began in March.

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

COVID-19: Only 5 active cases in Republic of Artsakh as of latest data

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 11:17, 17 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, ARMENPRESS. Artsakh’s authorities say there are only 5 active cases of COVID-19 in the country as of August 17.

Moreover, no new cases were recorded over the last 24 hours.

The cumulative total number of confirmed cases stands at 254, with 248 recoveries. So far, there haven’t been any coronavirus-related deaths in Artsakh.However, one person infected with the virus had died earlier, but the death was caused by other pre-existing illnesses. 

Artsakh’s health authorities conducted 8 046 tests since the onset of the outbreak.

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Government-backed candidate for high court justice opts out

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 11:59, 17 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, ARMENPRESS. A government-backed candidate for Constitutional Court judge has withdrawn his candidacy.

Vahram Avetisyan, the Head of the Chair of Civil Law at the Yerevan State University, who was named by the government in July as a candidate for a vacant seat of Constitutional Court judge, said in a statement he finds it unrealistic to get 80 votes in parliament and he considers participating in the future process of the election to be “inexpedient”.

He said he has formally submitted the withdrawal request to Speaker of Parliament Ararat Mirzoyan.

“At the same time I thank the Government for nominating my candidacy for Constitutional Court judge, and I wish success to the judiciary reforms in Armenia for the benefit of our citizens and our country,” Avetisyan said in a statement.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

The Case of the Reappearing Art

Tufts.edu
Aug 18 2020

With help from software, a Tufts art history professor uncovers long-unseen fresco paintings in thousand-year old Armenian churches
A wall painting from the Church of Saint Gregory “Abughamrents” at Ani, from the 11th century; the animation shows what emerges using Photoshop: a row of standing figures, each with halos and wearing layered drapery. Image: Christina Maranci
August 18, 2020

On the rolling plateau along the border between Turkey and Armenia stand the ruins of the Cathedral of Ani, a magnificent building constructed between 989 and 1001 AD, along with many other long-abandoned churches in Ani, which was once called the City of 1,001 churches.

Now thousand-year-old paintings are coming to life again on the cathedral’s walls, thanks to Christina Maranci, Arthur H. Dadian and Ara Oztemel Professor of Armenian Art and Architecture at Tufts.

Within a century of the cathedral’s construction, the Seljuk Turks swept in from the east; during their occupation of Ani the cathedral became a mosque. It was then, perhaps, that its interior walls were whitewashed, covering whatever Christian art might have adorned the church. In the many hundreds of years since then, no one has seen more than hints that there were frescos hidden under the white paint.

But Maranci, the author of The Art of Armenia, managed to unearth some of the long-hidden frescos with the help of a simple tool: Adobe Photoshop. The result is not only fresh evidence of Armenian art long thought lost, but also a method to find even more hidden treasures from the ancient world.

Maranci published a paper in the Revue des Études Arméniennes about her findings, and has given talks around the country and in Armenia. “The response has been really exciting,” she said. “I was really glad to see that the experts in Armenia were thoroughly convinced, and really excited that this is a new tool to open up whole new chapters of Armenian art.”

Maranci used Photoshop a few years before on faded wall paintings at another Armenian church, the seventh-century Cathedral of Mren, located in a militarized zone in eastern Turkey. Access to Mren was restricted for years, so when Maranci finally was able to go one day in 2013, she spent as much time as she could in the crumbling building taking photos of the fading wall paintings.

“The ox that emerged in the apse of the Cathedral at Ani using Photoshop is particularly elegant and sensitively wrought, with limpid, alert eyes, a dark diamond on his brow, and gently curved ears,” said Christina Maranci. Image: Courtesy of Christina Maranci

Back at her hotel later that night, she uploaded the Mren photos to her computer, and began to identify figures never before seen. Back at Tufts, with the help of Christine Cavalier, visual resources manager at the Department of History of Art & Architecture, she uploaded them to Photoshop, and using basic filtering was able to bring more details to light, helpful for her work as an art historian.

Then, last summer, Maranci read a master’s degree applicant’s essay that quoted expert opinions that there was no evidence in the art history literature about wall paintings in northern Armenian churches around the turn of the first millennium. Maranci thought the experts were wrong.

Suddenly she remembered digital photos she had taken of the whitewashed walls of the Cathedral of Ani over the years—it is not in a military zone and is accessible to visitors—and started to upload them into Photoshop.

“I was really glad to see that the experts in Armenia were thoroughly convinced, and really excited that this is a new tool to open up whole new chapters of Armenian art,” said Christina Maranci.After adjusting a variety of level, curve, and inversion tools in the software to enhance the photos, all of a sudden she saw the image of an ox emerging out of the whitewash in the apse at the front of the church.

Some detective work went into understanding the image, which had likely not been seen since the 1000s, said Maranci, who is chair of the Department of Art and Art History. She knew that oxen only appear a few times in the Bible: the vision of Ezekiel and in Revelations in the Gospel of John.

“In these two cases, which are often visually conflated in medieval art, a throne of God appears surrounded by an ox, a man or angel, a lion, and an eagle,” she said. “These figures quickly became symbols for the four evangelists: ox (Luke), man (Matthew), eagle (John), and lion (Mark).” The four are usually arranged with the ox and lion below the man and eagle, “reflecting the primacy of the Gospels of John and Matthew.”

A throne was also visible to the right of the ox; just to its left was another image, similar in size and shape to that where the ox was. It had a halo, and what looked like feathers. Maranci thinks it represents an eagle. Below that, where in Armenian medieval art a lion would be sitting, she found images that fit a lion, too.

Another photo of a partial inscription in Armenian yielded its secrets when Maranci searched a digital Armenian Bible for two phrases it contained: “has approached” or “having approached,” and “of God.” There was only one sentence with both: a passage in Luke 10:11.

But some images needed less translation. One photo featured “a very elegant looking angel with a narrow figure, beautifully articulated wings, and a nice halo,” said Maranci. “It was a very extraordinary image.”

Taylor McNeil can be reached at [email protected].

Paris, Dubai, Beirut: Upcoming flights to/from Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 18 2020

Armenian troops to participate in International Army Games 2020

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 18 2020

Yervand Khundkaryan President of Armenia Constitutional Court?

News.am, Armenia
Aug 18 2020

18:52, 18.08.2020

During the meeting with judge candidate of the Constitutional Court Yervand Khundkaryan, who is nominated by the General Assembly of Judges, the deputies of the My Step faction of the National Assembly also asked him questions about holding the position of President of the Constitutional Court. This is what deputy of the My Step faction Lusine Badalyan told reporters today.

Asked what kind of questions the deputies had asked Khundkaryan, Badalyan said the following: “The questions were particularly related to the cases that the judge candidate has examined in the past. We asked all of our questions, but I can’t say that the answers were very exhaustive.”

Asked if she sees Khundkaryan as President of the Constitutional Court, Badalyan said the following: “He didn’t show the pretensions to become President of the Constitutional Court, even if he had pretensions. All judge candidates of the Constitutional Court are potential Presidents of the Constitutional Court for the My Step faction.”

When told that during the meeting reporters heard how MP Sos Avetisyan had said that Khundkaryan has the pretension to become President of the Constitutional Court, Badalyan said she might have missed that part and the issue has been raised from time to time.

Talking about the meeting earlier, head of the My Step faction Lilit Makunts had tried not to answer reporters’ question about the possibility of Khundkaryan becoming President of the Constitutional Court and stated the following: “I can’t say anything about the judge candidate becoming or being elected or not elected President of the Constitutional Court because the candidate also has to come to parliament where he will be asked questions, after which deputies will decide whether they will vote in favor or against Khundkaryan.”

The tragedies driving Gladys: Extraordinary story of how the woman leading NSW through coronavirus lost 40 of her family in a genocide

The Daily Mail, UK
Aug 18 2020
  • Gladys Berejiklian may seem a familiar presence with her daily COVID briefings
  • But voters rarely hear about the tragedies her family had borne over the years 
  • Glimmers of the private NSW Premier’s past have been dragged out of her
  • Revealed some 40 of her relatives died in World War I’s Armenian Genocide 
  • Family moved to Australia from the Middle East for a better life in Sydney
  • In newspaper interview last year, Berejiklian revealed she was a ‘lucky’ twin
  • Her sister was stillborn and she only learned of her existence later in life

Gladys Berejiklian’s ‘secret’ twin sister died at birth and she hails from a family who fled a genocide where more than 40 of her relatives died, before her parents sought a better life in Australia. 

The New South Wales Premier, 49, may seem like a familiar presence to most voters due to her coronavirus warnings broadcast daily throughout the state.

But the nation is now taking a good look at Berejiklian, who along with Victoria’s Daniel Andrews, has played an outsize role leading the fight against the pandemic. 

While Premier Berejiklian’s work ethic, cautious instincts and her success (so far) in staving off a second coronavirus wave are well known, voters may be less familiar with the NSW leader’s personal backstory. 

Surprisingly for a politician, Berejiklian rarely speaks about herself, with details about her family’s past dragged, begrudgingly, out of her over several years. 

The two biggest insights into the Premier’s personal life emerged in a 2018 speech where she was instructed to talk about herself, and in a lengthy newspaper interview prior to the last state election.

As the Ottoman Empire massacred its Armenian subjects during World War I, Berejiklian’s grandparents fled the tiny, landlocked Caucasus nation for the Middle East. 

‘More than 40 of my relatives were among the 1.5 million Armenians massacred in what became the first genocide of the 20th century,’ Berejiklian said in a landmark address to The Sydney Institute. 

‘All four of my grandparents were orphaned and witnessed untold atrocities.’ 

Her mother, Arsha, was born in Jerusalem, Israel, and her father, Krikor, in Aleppo, Syria – a city now known for a more recent humanitarian crisis.

Berejiklian’s mother and father migrated, separately, to Sydney in the late 1960s, met and later married at an Armenian Orthodox church in Chatswood, in the city’s north. 

They worked as a nurse and a boiler-maker/welder – her father working on the Opera House during its construction – and settled in suburban North Ryde.  

Gladys, the oldest of three sisters Rita and Mary, was born on September 22, 1970. 

She spoke Armenian at home, attended public schools, was her high school captain and carried the burden of being the first-born to parents ‘obsessed’ with her attending university.

‘I was extremely competitive and wanted good marks but from the talk of the kids I hung out with in our neighbourhood, I was doomed,’ Berejiklian said in her speech.

Somewhat unsurprisingly, Berejiklian was the school captain of Peter Board High School 

‘Based on what the local kids told me, every kid who went to North Ryde High got bashed up and was forced to take drugs. 

‘This petrified me. I didn’t even know what drugs were but I was pretty sure they were bad.’  

But she went on to study at university and became the president of the state’s Young Liberals.

In 1996, she wrote a letter to newly elected Prime Minister John Howard, demanding a meeting – and was shocked when he said ‘yes, sure.’

She then worked as an executive for the Commonwealth Bank and was elected to the NSW Lower House for the seat of Willoughby in 2003, before becoming transport minister in the O’Farrell and Baird governments.

In that landmark speech, Berejiklian admitted that sharing her personal story was ‘not something that comes easily to me’. 

Indeed, news reports at the time said fellow party members saw her reluctance to share a bit of her personal life as a weakness. 

‘In public life, part of my M.O. has been to not stray from core business – after all, I have been elected to do a job, and to do it well,’ she said.

But even then her remarks were quite reserved compared to the deeply personal admission she later made to a reporter.

Berejiklian, who is not married and is extremely close with her siblings, told The Weekend Australian magazine last year that there was something else that drives her – the loss of her twin sister.

‘I’m very lucky… for me every day in life is a bonus,’ Berejiklian was quoted saying.  ‘I had a twin sister and she didn’t make it. It was just luck that I came out first. 

‘Imagine if you had a twin; you came out first, they didn’t make it, I feel like I’ve got to justify my existence by sacrificing. So I don’t care if I’m not happy all the time. I feel like I’ve got to work hard.’ 

Berejiklian said she only learned she had a twin when an acquaintance came over when she was a child and asked: ‘Where’s the other one?’ A birth certificate describing her as the ‘elder’ of twins later confirmed the truth.

Arsha Berejiklian told The Weekend Australian that she didn’t tell Gladys about her sister, as she didn’t want to upset her.  

As for the present, Berejiklian and her government continue to battle the coronavirus crisis with the Premier warning on Monday, as ever, that the state’s residents should not fall into complacency and get tested if they have virus symptoms.

NSW GOVERNMENT: 

Early in the pandemic, New South Wales initially suffered the biggest number of coronavirus cases and deaths. 

At the heart of the crisis was the doomed Ruby Princess cruise ship being granted permission to offload its passengers on Sydney Harbour. 

In a report released last Friday, barrister Bret Walker SC said a NSW Health expert panel’s decision to label the Princess ‘low risk’ was ‘as inexplicable as it is unjustifiable’. 

Twenty-eight people died as a result of infections from the ship and 62 people who weren’t on board contracted the virus. 

Berejiklian on Monday apologised ‘unreservedly’ for the fiasco. ‘Those circumstances should and never will happen again in NSW,’ she said.

‘We have learnt so much since those horrible mistakes.’

New South Wales has avoided plunging into lockdown style restrictions in the wake of Victoria’s second wave.

Public health experts have praised the state’s contact-tracing operation and in a hopeful sign, this week’s daily numbers have been in the single digits so far.

But there is anxiety surrounding recent cases with unknown sources. 

Armenia revises mask-wearing rules for TV anchors

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 18 2020