Armenian PM hopes the project on planting 10 mln trees will be implemented next year

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 10:36, 31 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 31, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan hopes that the project of planting 10 million trees in Armenia will be possible to implement already next year.

“Unfortunately, this year we will not be able to implement the big project of planting 10 million trees due to the coronavirus, but we hope we will implement it next year”, the PM said at the ministry of environment while introducing the newly-appointed minister to the staff.

 

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Artsakh reports 4 new cases of COVID-19 in past 24 hours

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 11:17, 31 July, 2020

YEREVAN, JULY 31, ARMENPRESS. 4 new cases of the novel coronavirus have been detected in the Republic of Artsakh, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 236, the ministry of healthcare said today.

The total number of recoveries has reached 167.

The number of active cases is 68.

Currently 119 people are quarantined.

No death cases have been registered in the Republic.

So far, 5691 COVID-19 tests have been conducted.

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

The Literary Armenian News – 08/01/2020

La Valse, Ni Noble, Ni Sentimentale

Waltz or pass a cradling caress
Frown or prance, test in tenses past
Thickest orchestral glorying
Ghosts of war’s transmigrant memes
Customs undressed, immolated, effaced
Magical stitches, maddening wistful douleurs
Panic pickled, swirling hemorrhaging
Harmonic goose steps, stiffened spines
Smiling boots glistening in Prussian violins
Recidivist frivolity, for a grand dance or grosse pause
Perturbed, blind soldiers hobbling past stretchers
Kicking the contours, counting the dead
Mustard gains
Acid gargles
Yellow vomit
Mass graves
Worlds of war wedded arms merchants
Virgin tails plucked from the sky
Moulins Rouges or pink butterfly
Dreams and screams in pews and trenches
Scar fountains, penny operas
Empires somnambulant, plagued and black
Genocidal vengeance sputtering us all
In Faustian borrowed beard disguises drenched
In noisy endless macabre rising madness



Bedros Afeyan
Davies Symphony Hall
With Ravel, 2-28-2009

Dr. Bedros Afeyan is a theoretical physicist who works and lives in the Bay area with his wife, Marine. He writes in Armenian and in English and also paints and sculpts. He is the current editor of The Literary Armenian News at News.org/tlg/
***************************************************************************
The homepage for The Literary Armenian News is at: Armenian News.org/tlg/

Dr. Bedros Afeyan ([email protected]) is the editor of The Literary Armenian News (TLG), and will consider works not only of poetry, but also in the area of short fiction. Quality of language, excellence of translation, quality of song and images are all crucial to the aesthetic value of any work up for consideration.
Please note the following important guidelines:
  • All submissions to TLG MUST be sent to Armenian [email protected] and [email protected]. No others will be considered.
  • With your submission include a short bio about the author;
  • Submissions may not be anonymous, but at the author’s request we may use their pen-name and/or withhold their Email address for purposes of privacy;
  • Submissions which have not yet been selected will continue to receive consideration for following issues;
  • In art, selection is necessarily a judgement call. As such, we will not argue why a particular submission was or was not selected;
  • There is no guarantee or promise that a submission will be published.
*******************************************************************
    Week ion Review
    The Critical Corner
    The Literary Armenian News
    Review & Outlook
    Probing the Photographic Record
    Armenia House Museums
    …and much more
? Copyright 2020,  Armenian News Network / Armenian News, all rights reserved.
Regards,
Armenian News Network / Armenian News
Los Angeles, CA     / USA

Breitbart News: Turkey Sends Fighter Jets to Azerbaijan After Threat to Bomb a Nuclear Power Plant

Turkey Sends Fighter Jets to Azerbaijan After Threat to Bomb a Nuclear Power Plant

Breitbart News
31 July 2020

By FRANCES MARTEL

Turkey’s state-run Anadolu news agency confirmed the arrival Turkish F-16 fighter jets on Friday to Azerbaijan 
for joint military drills, aiding a nation that threatened to bomb a nuclear power plant this month.

Azerbaijan is currently embroiled in a heightened tension situation with its neighbor and longtime rival Armenia. 
Both have disputed the Nagorno-Karabakh border territory, legally under Azerbaijani command but claimed by Armenia because the population there is ethnically Armenian, for years. The current tensions follow a military skirmish elsewhere on the border, in the Tavush region, that occurred in early April, leaving 16 dead soldiers on both sides.
It remains unclear which side started the fighting that led to those deaths, but the government of Turkey immediately condemned Armenia for triggering the hostilities and stated it would offer any support Azerbaijan requested.

On Friday, Anadolu reported that Ankara and Baku had organized joint military drills featuring air exercises.

“Turkish F-16 fighter jets have arrived in Azerbaijan for joint military exercises, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry said on Friday. In a statement, the ministry said the jets will take part in the TurAz Qartali-2020 Joint Exercises, which began on Wednesday,” Anadolu reported. “The drill, involving jets and helicopters, will continue in the capital Baku as well as Nakhchivan, Ganja, Kurdamir, and Yevlakh until Aug. 10.”

Anadolu noted the context of the Tavush attack and revealed that, of the 16 killed, 11 were Azerbaijani soldiers, including a major general in the Azerbaijani army.

On Wednesday, Anadolu noted that the two states are also planning joint ground exercises next week, including “artillery, armored vehicles, and mortars striking simulated targets.”

Turkey’s increased involvement in Azerbaijan follows a threat from that country to bomb a nuclear power plant in the region, potentially causing millions of casualties. Armenia is home to the Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant, a poorly maintained relic of the Soviet era built near an earthquake fault. Following the Tavush incident, a spokesman for Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry threatened to destroy it.

“The Armenian side must not forget that our army’s state-of-the-art missile systems allow us to strike the Metsamor nuclear plant with precision, which could lead to a great catastrophe for Armenia,” the spokesman, Vagif Dargahli, said. Turkey offered Azerbaijan air support shortly after this statement.

The Armenian government accused Azerbaijan of seeking a renewed genocide against Armenians, the victims of the first modern genocide.

“Such threats are an explicit demonstration of state terrorism and genocidal intent of Azerbaijan,” the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said. “The threats voiced by the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan to launch missile attacks at the Armenian Metsamor Nuclear Power Plant indicate the level of desperation and the crisis of mind of the political-military leadership of Azerbaijan.”

The joint exercises with Turkey are occurring at a time in which there appears to be no active hostility on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. On Friday, Armenia’s Ministry of Defense certified that the situation was “relatively calm,” according to the Armenian outlet Hetq, by which Yerevan meant that gunfire did target Armenia, but no reported injuries occurred.

On Monday, however, Armenia accused Azerbaijan of breaking a temporary ceasefire between the two countries, killing an Armenian soldier.

“It should be stressed that Azerbaijan resorted to this provocation few days after the statement issued by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, which particularly emphasized the importance of strictly adhering to the ceasefire and refraining from provocative actions in this period,” the Armenian Foreign Affairs Ministry asserted in a statement, referring to a group of European neighbors working to get both sides to dialogue.

“At the same time, Azerbaijan announced joint large-scale military exercises to be held with Turkey. All these demonstrate that the leadership of Azerbaijan, through its provocative actions, is undermining the efforts of the international mediators aimed at de-escalating the situation and resuming the peace process, thus bearing the responsibility for the consequences of further destabilization,” the Foreign Ministry denounced.

A week before that incident, a spokeswoman for the Armenian Defense Ministry accused Azerbaijan of attacking Tavush once more and suffering what Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) called “heavy casualties. Azerbaijan denied that any such incident occurred.

Turkey enjoys positive relations with Baku for both ideological and ethnic reasons, as Azeris speak a Turkic language and are generally considered a Turkic people. Armenians, on the other hand, are ethnically distinct and majority Christian; the Kingdom of Armenia was the first state in human history to adopt Christianity as its religion.

The Ottoman Empire committed what is widely regarded as the first genocide of the modern era against the Armenian people — as well as other Christians such as Assyrians and Greeks — in the beginning of the 20th century, killing 1.5 of an estimated 2 million Armenians in the world. To this day, Turkey denies that its actions constituted genocide and alleges, contradicting most authoritative historical accounts, that the killing of Armenians and other Christians occurred in the context of war and that many Turks also died.

Follow Frances Martel on Facebook and Twitter.

CivilNet: How to ensure rapid development in the IT sector? EU4Digital highlights women as the key to growth

CIVILNET.AM

3 August, 2020 10:38

Information and Communications Technology (ICT) is one of the fastest growing sectors in Armenia. In 2018, Software and Services and Internet Service Providers accounted for 7.4% of Armenia’s GDP of $12.4 billion, up from 3.6% of GDP in 2013.

As one of the most effective engines of the economy, Armenia’s increasingly significant IT agenda receives strong support from the European Union. The harmonisation of digital markets is one of the EU’s key policies in the region, channelled through the EU4Digital initiative, which brings together priority actions and programmes in the digital field.

EU4Digital aims to extend the European Union’s Digital Single Market to the Eastern Partner states, developing the potential of the digital economy and society. One of the key thematic areas of EU4Digital is ICT innovation, supporting reforms and actions to favour the development of ICT research, start-ups & innovation ecosystems across the region, drawing from EU experience and best practices.

But while the ICT sector is growing in Armenia, it remains overwhelmingly male: according to the Enterprise Incubator Foundation’s latest IT Industry Report (2018), 19,522 employees were registered in Armenia’s Information and Communication Technologies sector, 27% more than the previous year. However, the vast majority of professionals in the industry – 68% – remain male, a figure that has barely changed since 2013, when it stood at 69%, and a shocking imbalance that highlights the unexploited opportunities and potential for growth in the sector.

Speaking to CivilNet, Anna Pobol, an EU4Digital ICT innovation expert, explains why the increase of women’s involvement in the industry is so important.

“Increasing women’s participation in the ICT sector has the potential to further stimulate the economy, not only through a simple increase of female participation as workforce (by reducing barriers to their employment), but also because women bring new skills to the workplace, that are complementary to those of men,” says Pobol.

Citing a recent study by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), she says the increased participation of women will lead to greater productivity, adding that the presence of women does not replace but complements that of men in the production process. In other words, an increase in the number of women in the workforce may bring more economic benefits than an addition of the same number of male employees.

But women in the region face specific challenges: “The distribution of responsibilities between women and men throughout the Eastern Partnership region is still unequal compared to EU countries. On top of their working hours (often overtime), women spend more time on household chores, and are also responsible for childcare and nutrition,” says Pobol.

It is therefore particularly important to develop special programmes to support women in the field of ICT innovations, with a focus on raising awareness of opportunities, promotion of digital skills and education, and support as well as guidance of women who have decided to start their own business.

“The EU4Digital programme seeks to involve women in all its ongoing activities and takes a special approach to targeting the needs of women in networking and training,” said Anna Pobol.

In recent years, special attention has been paid to the issue of gender ratio in the ICT sector in Armenia. Zhenya Azizyan, Project Manager at the Enterprise Incubator Foundation in Yerevan, says that promoting women’s involvement in the sector is a priority.

The Enterprise Incubator Foundation is one of the largest technology business incubators and consulting companies in the region. “We implement multilateral programmes aimed at the development and promotion of the sector, particularly educational and business orientation,” Azizyan explains. “And we target the involvement of many different layers of society in these programmes. In recent years, some of our programmes are aimed especially at promoting women’s involvement not only in the IT sector per se, but also by using technological and innovative solutions, to operate in other areas, and thereby, to increase competitiveness.”

According to Azizyan, more than 70% of the content team of the Enterprise Incubator Foundation’s staff is made up of women, including in the regional centres․ “This ratio has almost always been the same (never less than 50%): over the years, along with a tenfold increase in our total team, the number of female employees has proportionally increased.”

Azizyan came to the IT sector, because it was very natural for a “genetic mathematician”, she says. She studied at the Faculty of Mathematics of Yerevan State University, where boys predominated.

“At first, it may have been really difficult for a woman to be immersed in a developing sector that was dominated by men, especially in the managerial ranks. But, I never had such complexes. At the same time, the mentality of the IT community is also special, which contributes to gender equality: the sector is very open to talent, wherever it comes from,” says Azizyan.

Yeva Hyusyan, an economist by profession with years of experience in the IT sector, says the stereotypes are gradually being broken down. 

In 2013, Hyusyan founded Solo Learn, a company that provides IT education through mobile applications. At the time, people weren’t used to working through mobile, but the company broke through and Hyusyan succeeded.

Just as she has seen attitudes to technology changing since 2013, so too the attitude towards women. “When I was working at the Microsoft Innovation Centre in Armenia, we were in a very active phase of cooperation with the government. It was very interesting when you entered male government circles. I realised they didn’t know how to treat women; they didn’t treat you badly, they just weren’t used to dealing with a woman,” says Hyusyan.

According to her, the gender imbalance in ICT is due to traditional thinking about so-called ‘male’ and ‘female’ professions.

“People used to think that if you are a woman, you can’t be a good programmer. However, I think that mentality has changed very quickly in the last few years,” says Hyusyan, adding: “Yes, there are many boys in the sector, but there are also many girls, as they are educated with all the possibilities.”

In the past, girls were expected to get married, have children and be satisfied with that. But Hyusyan says the world is changing: “It should never be the only purpose of life, unless it is a personal choice.” Increasingly, girls can express themselves and show off their ideas without fear of being rejected. By joining the digital revolution, women are not only achieving greater equality, they are contributing their talents in a way that will benefit not only the sector, but the country as a whole.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijani diaspora’s success forces Armenian PM to purge officials in own government

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Aug. 2

Trend:

The fact that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan purged the officials in the Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs, fired 13 people, including high-ranking officials, clearly testifies that there are big problems in the activity of the Armenian diaspora.

The wave of activity of the organizations of the Azerbaijani diaspora, which followed a new outbreak of conflict in mid-July as a result of another Armenia’s provocation, aroused unrestrained anger of the Armenian diaspora abroad and became a real disaster for Yerevan and the Armenian lobby.

For the first time in history, the Armenian lobby found itself helpless amid the pressure of the Azerbaijani diaspora.

Azerbaijanis, demanding justice and protection of human rights, were subjected to the wild extremist attacks by Armenians in the center of Europe and in the US.

However, it is also important that Armenians, traditionally proclaimed as “peaceful keepers of Christian values in a hostile environment,” this time showed rowdy aggression in many Western cities before the eyes of the international community and the world media, finally debunking the myth of their allegedly innocent “long-suffering” essence.

Of course, this was a consequence of the consolidation of the Azerbaijani diaspora around Azerbaijan and the national idea, which resulted in the organized rallies in many countries.

According to the Armenian media, the reason for Pashinyan’s sharp reaction was the ineffectiveness of the diaspora committee.

The head of the department for the Armenian communities in Europe, the head of the department for relations with the Armenian communities in Western Europe and 11 more high level officials of this structure were fired, the Armenian media reported.

In particular, Pashinyan was extremely outraged by the defeat of the Armenian diaspora in those countries where it traditionally has the majority.

The prime minister was also outraged that High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan, was hiding these days, reportedly, in native California.

According to the newspaper, Pashinyan sharply rebuked Sinanyan, saying that his diaspora policy completely failed.

Pashinyan realizes that besides the defeat of the Armenian armed forces in the battles in the direction of Azerbaijan’s Tovuz district, the weakness, incompetence and inappropriate aggressiveness of the Armenian diaspora amid the law-abiding activity of the Azerbaijani diaspora, which successfully conveyed the fact of Armenia’s provocative and occupational policy to the world community, dealt a severe blow to Armenia’s image and Pashinyan’s personal authority.

The Armenian community has been shocked by the unprecedented unity, solidarity and courage shown by the Azerbaijani diaspora.

The huge Armenian diaspora, having become skilled in emigrant political games, provocations and lobbying during two centuries, turned out to be powerless against the just indignation, high ideology and combat spirit of the relatively few Azerbaijani activists abroad, who for the first time in history acted purposefully and in such an organized manner.

Thus, the activity of the Azerbaijani diaspora has put Armenia and the Armenian lobby in the worst position.

Such a deafening failure forced the Armenian prime minister to purge the officials in the diaspora committee.

However, it is obvious that no purge and populist statements in which Pashinyan is so “strong” will not outweigh the total frustration reigning in the Armenian society as a result of the demonstrative defeat both in the clashes on the border and on the fronts of an ideological war.

Trend News Agency’s department of politics



Turkish press: Turkish, Azerbaijani joint drill continues during Eid al-Adha – Turkey News

A joint military exercise by the land and air elements of the Turkish and Azerbaijani armies has continued during the Muslim holiday Eid al-Adha, Turkey’s Defense Ministry said on Aug. 1. The military exercise was conducted with the participation of mechanized units and attack choppers in the drill taking place on the territories of Azerbaijan, according to the ministry.

The ministry said over Twitter that the two countries’ contingents have continued the preparations for the drill, which will last until mid-August over the weekend.

The weekend exercises included mechanized units, snipers, fire support teams, commandos and attack helicopters, it added.

The annual exercise aiming to improve the two armies’ cooperation and coordination was launched on July 29 after the tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan has escalated as a result of the former’s attack on the border.

The exercises are planned to be executed in two phases; land and air. The former is planned to be concluded on Aug. 5 while the latter will last until Aug. 14 with warplanes and air defense elements being used.

Turkey has expressed full support and assistance to Azerbaijan while urging Armenia to stop its attacks that would further de-stabilize the Caucasus. 

Upper Karabakh, an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan, is under illegal Armenian occupation since 1991.

Maritime training with Spain

In the meantime, the ministry announced in a separate statement on Aug. 2 that Turkish and Spanish navies are conducting maritime training in the northern Aegean as part of a NATO mission. 

“Standing NATO Maritime Group-2 (SNMG-2) units consisting of Spanish ESPS ALVARO DE BAZAN and TCG YILDIRIM conducted maritime trainings with TCG DOĞAN and TCG MARTI on 30 July 2020 in the Northern Aegean Sea,” the ministry said in a tweet.

ANN/Armenian News Week in Review – 08/02/2020

Armenian News Network / Armenian News

Armenian News: Week in Review

ANN/Armenian News

August 2, 2020

Table of Contents

Introduction

Listen to us on…

Your Hosts

Guests This Week

Topics for This Week

Living With Conflict #WordsNotSwords

Overview

Sources

Panel Discussion on Robert Kocharyan’s Interview

Overview

Sources

Lightning Round

The SIS Charges Arthur Danielyan

Nominees for the Constitutional Court

The PM’s Outlook on the State of the Pandemic

Staff Changes in the High  Commissioner’s Office

Headlines in the News

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

People in the News

Robert Kocharyan

Arman Bichakchian

Ararat, the Yeezey Foam Runner

Hello, and welcome to Armenian News Network, Armenian News.

This Week in Review we have a panel of scholars, journalists and activist from Armenia and Azerbaijan discussing the violence between the communities in cities around the world, and who initiated a call for peace on twitter with the hashtag #WordsNotSwords, which gained many notable signatories online.

We also discuss the interview that former president Robert Kocharyan gave to three media outlets in the Armenian press.

We close with a quick lightning round of questions to our resident panel for analysis from Headlines from the past week.

         

  • Hovik Manucharyan

  • Asbed Bedrossian

  • Asbed Kotchikian

  • Emil Sanamyan

  • Alen Zamanyan

From July 12 to July 17 Armenia and Azerbaijan clashed on their border, killing tens of servicemen and civilians from both sides. In the following week the press and propaganda from both sides picked up in an effort to align international opinion and sympathies on their side, and some demonstrations in cities around the world got out of hand, resulting in violence between protestors, injuries and arrests. 

Even more worrisome, the violence spilled over to ordinary citizens and businesses in some diaspora communities. According to media reports restaurants and other businesses in Moscow were attacked by groups from opposing sides. Individual Azerbaijanis and Armenians, including children, were targets of random attacks. In some cases, humiliating videos of the victims being beaten were posted on social media. In Moscow police arrested over 30 people connected to the violence. We also read reports of vandalism of an Armenian school in San Francisco, attacks against individuals and businesses around the world, including Turkey, Germany, other places in Europe and in the US.

Observers indicate that this level of animosity between communities did not exist even during the worst days of war. The violence in the diaspora led some scholars, both Azerbaijani and Armenian, to call on their respective communities to renounce from street violence and re-engage in peaceful activism.

We are joined today by some of the initiating signatories of that call:

  • Dr. Artyom Tonoyan – Originally from Gyumri, Armenia, Dr. Artyom Tonoyan is a Research Associate at the University of Minnesota’s Center for Holocaust & Genocide Studies, where his research is focused on the nexus of religion and violence.

  • Arzu Geybulla – Arzu is an Azerbaijani columnist and writer, with special focus in digital authoritarianism and its implications on human rights and press freedom in Azerbaijan. Arzu has written for Al Jazeera, Eurasianet, Foreign Policy Democracy Lab, Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty, CODA and more. She is a contributor at Open Democracy, IWPR, and Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso.

  • Ulvi Ismayil – Ulvi is a historian and researcher, based in Washington, D.C. and originally from Baku. He works with international development organizations such as UNHCR and USAID and has been involved in Azerbaijan-Armenian peace-making multilateral projects since 2004. He has written on the subject and has even developed his own peace proposal.  Ulvi was a co-author of a joint petition drafted in 2014 calling the sides to observe peace along the line of contact.

  • Emil Sanamyan – Emil Sanamyan, who is a senior research fellow at USC’s Institute of Armenian Studies specializing in politics in the Caucasus, with a special focus on Azerbaijan. He is a regular contributor to ANN/Armenian News.

  • Diana Yayloyan – Diana Yayloyan is a Research Associate at the Ankara-based think tank TEPAV, working on Armenia-Turkey civil society dialogue supported by the European Union. She is also a Ph.D. Candidate at the Middle East Technical University with a focus on Gender & Peacebuilding.

  • Artyom Tonoyan’s tweet on #WordsNotSwords

  • Dr. Katy Pearce’s geovirtual spread analysis on #WordsNotSwords

  • #WordsNotSwords

On July 29, former President Robert Kocharyan gave an interview to 3 news sources (5րդ Ալիք, Հ2, and Yerkir Media) where he talked about issues ranging from internal politics to NKR conflict and regional developments.

We are joined by our resident panel, Asbed Kotchikian, Emil Sanamyan and Alen Zamanyan.

Dr. Kotchikian is Professor of political science and international relations at Bentley University in Massachusetts.

Emil Sanamyan is a senior research fellow at USC’s Institute of Armenian Studies specializing in politics in the Caucasus, with a special focus on Azerbaijan.

Alen Zamanyan is a software engineer in Los Angeles, and has been consistently following and analyzing Armenian affairs for over a decade.

Our initial take on the interview.

  • Robert Kocharyan’s interview with 5 TV, H2 and Yerkir Media.

This week the SIS brought charges against Arthur Danielyan for the fight with Alen Simonyan in the streets of Yerevan. No charges have been leveled against Alen Simonyan.

A faction of ANC members and supporters of former president Levon Ter-Petrosyan  have criticized the government’s nominee to the Constitutional Court, Vahram Avetisian. They say that his father was linked to former regimes, passing several judgements on cases related to the March 1, 2008 events which Vahram Avetisian has never condemned.

The Supreme Judicial Council elected Yervand Khundkaryan, who is currently chairman of Court of Cassation, as their nominee for one of the three vacant seats in the Constitutional Court. 

And Gor Hovhannisyan, a German legal scholar who was already nominated once for the constitutional court in 2019, has said  that president Sarkissian’s office had reached out to him again.

We discuss these nominations.

Prime Minister Pashinyan this week declared that the situation over coronavirus has significantly improved in Armenia. He has also expressed hopes that the state of emergency can be lifted by September. This perception is based on data from recent days when the recovery rate has outpaced new infection rate. Do the statistics support the Prime Minister’s declaration?

This week the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs, Zareh Sinanyan, is in Los Angeles on vacation. However back in Yerevan the Prime Minister fired most of the staff of the Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs. What’s going on?

  • Armenia’s economic activity index declined by 4.7% in six months. The downturn is attributed to the pandemic.

  • Over the weekend Vahram Avetisyan was nominated for the position of judge of the Constitutional Court.

  • Responding to concerns about Armenia’s newly adopted National Security Strategy (NSS), Artsakh secretary of National Security Samvel Babayan put out a statement. Excerpt: ”…There is no alternative to the international recognition of the Republic of Artsakh. The security of Artsakh cannot be put for an auction…” Some of these issues were discussed in ANN/Armenian News’s Week in Review last week (Episode 4, 7/26/20).

  • Erdogan’s AKP ruling party proposed a law strengthening state control over social media, threatening press freedom.

  • Moderna has launched large-scale Stage 3 trials of COVID-19 vaccine.

  • PM Pashinian responded to Margarita Simonyan’s accusations, in an interview to RBC, a private Russian TV channel.

  • Renovation of homes damaged from Azerbaijani shelling launched in Armenia’s Tavush province

  • Three young Armenians attacked by the Azerbaijanis in Kumkapı/Istanbul.

  • Hate Among Usa documentary co-produced by David McKenzie, Dean Cain, Montel Williams and Sergey Sarkisov has received a Daytime Emmy Award in the Outstanding Directing Special Class category.

  • Armenians continued protesting Azerbaijani aggression in London, Montevideo.

  • Mayors of a number of French cities have issued a statement expressing solidarity with Armenia and supporting peace in the South Caucasus.

  • Azerbaijan accuses Azerbaijani activists abroad of having ties to Armenia.

  • Turkey and Azerbaijan have launched large-scale joint military drills this week. Exercises are scheduled in Baku, Nakhichevan, Ganja, Kurdamir and Yevlakh. Russia and Armenia are closely following the exercises, which came as a direct response and pressure on Armenia following the Armenian-Azerbaijani border conflict earlier this month. 

Defense Minister Tonoyan said the tactical nature of these drills is not concerning, but they could turn into provocative actions near the borders, defense structures and other infrastructures of Armenia.

  • Armenia gave notice that it will suspend the CFE-required military inspections by Turkey on its territory. Armenia consider Turkey to be a security threat, which supports direct military aggression against Armenia.

  • Guatemala’s Congress committee adopted a resolution on Armenia-Azerbaijan border situation.

  • FM Mnatsakanyan called on Israel to stop deadly weapons deals with Azerbaijan. He says these weapons are being targeted at civilians and civilian infrastructure, and that he will pursue this issue vigorously.

  • PM Pashinyan declared that the situation over coronavirus has significantly improved in Armenia. This perception is based on data from recent days when the recovery rate has outpaced new infection rates.

  • Minister of High-Technology Hakob Arshakyan announced that the government will improve Digital TV network, communication and Internet access in Armenia’s border villages.

  • Armenian Ambassador to the US, Varuzhan Nersesyan’s op-ed in Newsmax.com.

  • The Armenian government is supporting a local program that includes $64,000 for installing solar stations in the wider Noyemberyan region. The program is funded by the USAID.

  • Armenia has confirmed its participation in the Army-2020 forum to be held in Russia August. This is a large-scale military Arsenal exhibit.

  • Armenian winemaker cellars are 70% full amid coronavirus.

  • Armenia’s Demanding Applicant initiative files two lawsuits in court. These are the high performing students who were not admitted to universities.

  • Yerevan Appellate courts have twice now denied motions to arrest Mikayel Minasyan, son-in-law of former president Serzh Sargsyan and former Ambassador to the Vatican.

  • Turkish actress Songul Oden, 41, has married ethnic Armenian Arman Bichakchian (Arman Bichakci)

  • Kanye West’s Yeezy Foam Runner named “Ararat” was in instant sellout and hit with Armenian Americans.

  • Burbank Police Department has increased police patrols around Armenian Centers in the city in order to prevent possible acts of vandalism or violence. LA city councilmember Paul Krekorian warned the LAPD of a potential surge in hate crimes against Armenians.

  • The UK’s former envoy to Turkey, Richard Moore was named MI6 Director.

  • A faction of ANC members and supporters of former president Levon Ter-Petrosyan  have criticized the government’s nominee to the Constitutional Court, Vahram Avetisian. They say his father was linked to former regimes passing several judgements on cases related to the March 1, 2008 events.

  • Nikol Pashinyan gave an interview to the Russian RBC TV channel in which he rebutted Margarita Simonyan’s Facebook posting last week, as well as addressed other topics.

  • A TUMO center will open in Tavush region.

  • Japan to provide grant to Armenia for purchasing ambulance vehicles.

  • Azerbaijanis attack Armenian-owned hookah bar in Cologne, Germany.

  • Carpet production drops in Armenia by 72․4% in 2020 year over year.

  • Agos, an Armenian media outlet, has reported three recent incidents targeting Armenians living in Turkey as a result of the conflict involving Azerbaijan. Agos editor Bagrat Estukian and Turkish Armenian MP Garo Paylan are quoted in this article by Armenpress.

  • Jirayr Sefilyan and Arthur Vanetsyan were summoned to the NSS for questioning. 

  • Ten members of the staff in the Office of the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs were fired by the Prime Minister. The High Commissioner, Zareh Sinanyan, is on vacation in Los Angeles. The reasons are yet unclear and unverified.

  • The Supreme Judicial Council elected Yervand Khundkaryan (currently chairman of Court of Cassation) as their nominee for one of the three vacant seats in the Constitutional Court. It is now the president’s turn to offer a nominee. Gor Hovhannisyan, a German legal scholar who was already nominated once for the constitutional court in 2019, stated that president Sarkissian’s office had reached out to him again on the topic of nomination for one of the current CC vacancies. He indicated that he declined the president’s office twice on the grounds that he doesn’t believe the removal of three judges was constitutional. 

  • Georgia announces suspension of rail services with Armenia for 16 days due to maintenance.

Robert Kocharyan, second president of the Republic of Armenia, gave a major interview to three Armenian media outlets: 5 TV, H2 and Yerkir Media.

Arman Bichakchian (Arman Bichakci) Turkish actress Songul Oden. He is a businessman, working with uncle, jeweler Sevan Bichakci. His father, Zaven Bichakcian, is an Armenian clergyman in Istanbul.

Sources

  • Famous Turkish actress marries ethnic Armenian businessman

  • The famous Turkish actress married an Armenian businessman

Kanye’s named “Ararat” was an instant sellout… ‘nuff said?

Music: INTERVIEW: Armenian-Ukrainian rappers Samuum shed a light on bride kidnapping

Louder Than War
Aug 1 2020


Armenian-Ukrainian rappers Samuum shed a light on bride kidnapping.

There are not many music videos that feature a woman tied to the roof of a car as four men kidnap her for a forced wedding, but Samuum’s new single Maria is shining a light on a centuries old crime that is now becoming rarer in the Middle East.

Lead singer Lusine Kocharian and video director Andranik Berberian met in Kiev’s thriving underground music scene,  and coming together as Samuum wanted to use the metaphor of bride kidnapping to explore what life is like for some women in Armenia.

“For me it’s my experience of Armenia as we always got to choose,” says Lusine. “You have to choose you want to have a family or a career, you want to work or have a child.

“I don’t understand why that is the case. I had the experience to choose to have family in Armenia, or just have my career.  I chose my career, and I want us to have that choice to have a family and a career.”

Maria is sang in Armenian with a pulsing bassline and a hook that echoes the haunting calls of a praying muezzin’s yell. Samuum set out to challenge the norms of Middle Eastern culture and the tough choices many women in the region still face.

“In our culture it is hard as most of the time you gotta choose. and it’s how we can talk about our development, and we don’t need borders. So it’s how you can’t move if you have those walls in this century about how you want to work or have a family. I wanted to talk about that through my song and explore that question.”

Berberian’s ironic video, inspired by 70s psychedelic directors Sergei Parajanov and Alejandro Jodorowky contrasts the passivity of the victim with the camp high spirits of the four men who have kidnapped her.  To many people the idea that bride kidnapping happens in civilized countries for centuries, let alone still goes in some places, seems almost unbelievable, especially as it means some ‘brides’ won’t be welcomed back to the families.

“There are a lot of villages where it happens but back then it was a normal thing,” notes Kocharian.  “In Armenia now it is much better, but I know that even in America it happens. It is a strange thing, wild and a bad thing. I can’t even imagine that mentality that you couldn’t go back after your kidnapping.

“Not every girl can decide ‘Ok, I can go back to my family’, and not every family can say, ok you can come back. Most of the families say sorry you can’t come back as you are now his wife so you got to be with him., It is rare in Armenia right now, but it happens in other places like Russia, so it not only our national problem.”

“I want girls, even if it happens, I want them to feel they don’t have to marry that guy, or deal with that problem, but you can move on.”

Kockarian is quick to point out that this is a global issue, but the feedback on YouTube for the single from Armenia, and elsewhere, has been very positive, particularly from a new generation pushing to smash down damaging social stereotypes.

“It has been good as I have had a lot of messages saying ‘Thank you girl, you did it’. It is kind of inspirational that they can talk as this whole thing is not exactly about kidnapping as that is just one of the forms to explain what’s going on

“It’s about talking about this wildness, and even if it happens the girls aren’t talking about that so it’s about respect. The comments and views are an inspiration for them and I’m so happy as that is exactly what I wanted.”

“You can study if you want to or talk if you want to. I understand you respect your elders, but you have to talk. We will try to change things, and if we can help somebody I will be very happy.”

We sell weapons to Armenia and Azerbaijan to save military industry, Serbian president says

Vestnik Kavkaza
Aug 1 2020
1 Aug in 21:05

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic said today that Serbia is selling arms to both Azerbaijan and Armenia, since it needs to maintain its military industry in an efficient state.

“Both Azerbaijan and Armenia are our friends. In recent years, we have sold ten times more weapons to Azerbaijan [than to Armenia], ”he noted first of all.

“The military industry employs 17,000 people who must keep their places,” Aleksandr Vučić said explaining the sale of weapons to both sides of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Serbian RTV informs.