The France-Armenia Chamber of Commerce concerned over illegal activities against Gurgen Khachatryan

Panorama, Armenia
May 6 2020

The French Chamber of Commerce and Industry, which has been operating in 92 countries, including Armenia since 2011, has today expressed concern over the situation surrounding one of its partner companies Ucom and its Chairman of Board of Directors, making a public statement which reads:

“The France-Armenia Chamber of Commerce and Industry has been following closely the developments around Ucom and Galaxy Group of Companies, within the scope of its mission in Armenia—which is the improvement and development of the commercial, business and investment climate.

We are convinced that the business and investment environment in this difficult transition period in Armenia must be protected from instability, from a decrease in business confidence and from an atmosphere of mistrust.
In this context, it was particularly disturbing to see the Prime Minister’s newly appointed spokesperson’s Facebook statement about the government’s intention to interfere in the sale of Ucom’s shares and the events around Gurgen Khachatryan, the chairman of the company’s board of directors.

The RA Constitution proclaims freedom of economic activity and guarantees economic competition. It also defines the economic order of the State, which is based on private ownership, freedom of economic activity and free economic competition, with the goal of achieving general economic well-being and social justice through state policies.

At the same time, the main governing principle in the Republic of Armenia is that of separation and balance of the legislative, executive and judicial powers.

Being deeply convinced that the three branches of power in Armenia must be independent, we would like to believe that the spokesperson’s remarks about the possibility of an unhealthy interdependence of the judicial and executive powers are simply a result of her inexperience,” the statement said.

It is noted that in a rule of law state, the executive refrains from interfering in disputes among shareholders, from influencing such disputes or putting pressure on shareholders. Also, before a court verdict is reached, it refrains from making controversial and dubious statements and/or actions that may affect the impartiality of the court’s decision and have a negative effect on the Republic of Armenia’s business environment and the country’s attractiveness for investments.

“We continue to follow the developments, and we are hopeful that the parties will refrain from unlawful and unconstitutional approaches and actions,” the statement concluded.

Number of coronavirus cases in Armenia grows by 138 in past 24 hours, reaching 3,313, death toll increases to 45

Aysor, Armenia

The number of coronavirus cases grew by 138 in the past 24 hours, reaching 3,313 the Center for Control and Prevention of Diseases reported on Sunday.

According to the center, a total of 1,325 patients have recovered, 1,928 are getting treatment.

The coronavirus death toll reached 45.

Fifteen coronavirus patients died from other illnesses.

British Armenian actor Andy Serkis reads entire Hobbit online, raises $351,000 for charity

Public Radio of Armenia

UK Foreign Office privately admitted the 1915 massacre of Armenians was genocide – Geoffrey Robertson

Public Radio of Armenia

Bangladesh’s last Armenian dies

The Independent of Bangladesh
End of an era
Independent Online/ AFP

Michael Joseph Martin, Bangladesh’s last Armenian, has died aged 89, bringing an end to the more than 300-year presence of the once thriving and powerful minority Christian community.

Martin spent decades as custodian of the Armenian Church of the Holy Resurrection which was founded in 1781 in what was once the heart of the Armenian community in Dhaka.

Armen Arslanian, the church’s warden who is based abroad, said Martin “was instrumental in maintaining the survival of the Armenian Church in Dhaka.

“Without the many personal sacrifices and complete devotion to the church, the premises and the history of the Armenians in Dhaka would not have survived today,” he added as he announced Martin had died on April 11.

The Bangladeshi capital was once home to hundreds of Armenians who first arrived in the 16th century and became major traders, lawyers and public officials in the city.

Martin came to Dhaka in 1942 following in the footsteps of his father who had settled in the region decades earlier. He was originally a trader.

Martin — whose Armenian name was Mikel Housep Martirossian — went on to look after the church and its graveyard where 400 people are buried, including his wife who died in 2006.

When their children left the country, Martin became the sole remaining Armenian in Dhaka and lived alone in a mansion in the church grounds.

“When I walk, sometimes I feel spirits moving around. These are the spirits of my ancestors. They were noble men and women, now resting in peace,” Martin told AFP in an interview published in January 2009.

– Palatial homes –

The marble tombstones he tended display family names such as Sarkies, Manook and Aratoon from a time when Armenians were Dhaka’s wealthiest merchants with palatial homes who traded jute, spices, indigo and leather.

“The earliest surviving Armenian tombstone is that of Khojah Avietes Lazar who died in Dhaka on June 7, 1714, this makes the known Armenian presence in Bangladesh to be over 300 years, similar to that of the community in Kolkata,” Liz Chater, who did extensive research on the Armenian presence in South Asia, told AFP.

Martin had said the Armenians, persecuted elsewhere, were embraced in what is now Bangladesh first by the Mughals in the 16th and 17th centuries and then by the British Empire.

“Their numbers fluctuated with the prospects in trading in Dhaka,” Muntasir Mamun, a historian at Dhaka University, told AFP in 2009.

But they dominated business. “They were the who’s who in town. They celebrated all their religious festivals with pomp and style,” he said.

The decline came after the British left India and the subcontinent was partitioned in 1947 with Dhaka becoming the capital of East Pakistan and then Bangladesh after it gained independence in 1971.

In his last years Martin worried about who would take over as the church caretaker after his death.

“This is a blessed place and God won’t leave it unprotected and uncared for,” Martin said.

“When I die, maybe one of my three daughters will fly in from Canada to keep our presence here alive,” Martin said, speaking broken Bengali with a thick accent.

“Or perhaps other Armenians will come from somewhere else.”

The present warden of the Armenian Church visits Bangladesh every two to three months.

Armenian alphabet, and the man who designed it

The Tribune, India

Mesrop Mashtots, a priest, laid out the structure of the Armenian alphabet around the religion of the people. The country still remembers him

In letter and spirit: A family’s visit to the Alphabet Monument. Young boy having himself photographed standing close to the first letter of his own name.

BN Goswamy

What do we — I mean what does the average Indian — know about Armenia? Virtually nothing, would be my guess. Most of us might even have problems locating it on the map of the world, even of the Near East. When studying history at the University, I recall, we did read a paragraph about the ‘Armenian Massacres’ as a part of the general chapters on what used to be called ‘The Eastern Question’ — the struggle between great European powers following the collapse of the once great Ottoman empire of Turkey — but the whole thing was for us just an abstraction, as it were.


Folio from an illustrated manuscript recording a copy of the will of Alexander the Great

And yet, this small country, ‘land of rugged mountains and extinct volcanoes’ — greatly reduced from what it used to be once, when it was ‘one of the most powerful in all of Asia in the ancient world’; and now ‘a fraction of the size of ancient Armenia’ — has a history and a culture that is singularly fascinating. And tragic, at the same time. Stretching from the Caspian to the Mediterranean Seas once, it became subject to waves of invasions by a succession of neighbouring empires. It was conquered by Greeks, Romans, Persians, Byzantines, Mongols, Arabs, Ottoman Turks, Russians. It was the Ottoman Turks, however, who, from the 16th century onwards, grasped it from the neck as it were and bludgeoned it into submission. In the 19th century, their grip started loosening in general, as one reads, but Armenia continued to suffer under Turkish domination. One can judge this from what I have referred to above: the great Armenian Massacre — designated later as the first genocide of the 20th century — which dates back to 1915, when the Turks ordered the deportation of Armenians to the deserts of Syria and Mesopotamia. Stories of untold misery have come down. Estimates vary but it is generally believed that between 6,00,000 and 1.5 million Armenians were murdered, raped, or died of starvation. There is a stunning statistic at hand: 10 million Armenians live outside of Armenia today, which is three times the total population of Armenia.

A view of the Alphabet Monument Park close to Yerevan

Against this tragic backdrop, consider some facts about the country. Armenia — the ancient name is Hayk — finds mention several times in the Bible, especially with reference to Mount Ararat, which tradition identifies as the mountain that Noah’s ark rested on after the flood. It was not Rome under Constantine the Great but Armenia which was the first country in the world to officially embrace Christianity as its religion.This was in ca. 300 CE; Armenia has stayed almost wholly Christian since then. There have been some remarkable figures that Armenia has produced in the past: bankers, collectors of art, entrepreneurs. But even if one simply puts together a list of Armenians who, in our own day and age, have achieved not only prominence, even stardom, but impacted their fields, the list is truly impressive. Consider, for instance: Andre Agassi, tennis icon; Arshile Gorky, abstract expressionist painter; Gary Kasparov, chess player; Cher, singer and entertainer; Kevorkian, distinguished art collector; Gulbenkian, legendaryphilanthropist; Khachaturian, renowned music composer. And all this, without counting that habitual eyeballs-grabber, Kim Kardashian, reality TV star and socialite.

There is this desire among Armenians to stand out and be, somehow, different. It is as if under the constant threat of being submergedand swept aside, or pushed into obscurity,‘Armenians became both cosmopolitan as well as fierce protectors of their culture and tradition’, as an official website puts it. Identity was a matter of concern. An early but significant manifestation of this is the manner in which they celebrate the uniqueness of their script, for instance: essentially what I write to draw attention to here. This script was invented in the 5th century — the year often cited is 405 CE — and everyone mentions the name of its inventor with great respect: Mesrop Mashtots. Mesrop, a priest, engaged in preaching the Gospel, sensed a problem while dealing with his flock, for the scripts, if they knew any — Greek, Persian or Syriac — could not adequately express the language they spoke. The Word of God could not be suitably communicated, in other words. He therefore set about inventing a national alphabet. Supported by royalty he spent a great deal of time doing this, leaning naturally upon the scripts that he knew — Pehlavi, Aramaic, Avestan or Greek — but going beyond them. In the end he came up with a script, the letters of the alphabet of which were unique. He laid out the structure of the alphabet around the religion of the people. He made the first letter ‘A’, which was the first letter in the word Astvats, or God, and the last letter ‘K’, with which the name of K’ristos — Christ in other words — begins. There were 36 letters in his alphabet to which, many centuries later, two more were added, and now it has 31 consonants and 7 vowels. But, in its essence, the Armenian alphabet is recognised as the work of Mesrop Mashtot. His is a name celebrated throughout the Armenian world: every child ‘knows’ him; the Armenian Apostolic Church uses his alphabet; the literature of Armenia constantly mentions him; statues representing him have been raised at place after place. He is an icon. His alphabet has served as a means of stabilising and formalising Armenian speech; it is always spoken of as having ‘facilitated the unity of the Armenian nation and church’.

An idealised portrait of Mesrop Mashtot, inventor of the Armenian alphabet

Not too many footnotes survive. But a spectacular footnote to the invention of the Armenian alphabet, raised just fifteen years ago, might defy the ravages of time. In 2005, after sixteen hundred years had elapsed, an Armenian architect, J. Torosyan, took each letter of the alphabet, carved them on a giant scale, and erected them in an open rocky space not far from the capital city of Yerevan. It is the final resting place of Mesrop Mashtot. The stone out of which the letters were carved is the Armenian tuff: soft rock that emerged from volcanic ash billions of years ago.The great Mount Aragats looms in the background.

Not many — Armenians or others — who come visiting the country turn back without visiting this majestic monument. Not many at the same time know that Armenian letters have been inscribed by Unesco in the Representative List of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Do we know of anything comparable, anywhere else?



Ottoman Empire’s deportation of 200 Armenian intellectuals from Istanbul

Blitz Weekly
May 8 2020
 
 
 
 
 May 8, 2020  0 Comments
 
Andrew Harrod
 
April 24 marked the 105th anniversary of the 1915 Ottoman Empire’s deportation of 200 Armenian intellectuals from the Ottoman capital of Istanbul, an event that is remembered as the start of the Armenian genocide. Fitting reflections for this time come from Sister Hatune Dogan, a Syriac Orthodox Christian nun from Turkey, who has written about how 1915, this “so-called year of the sword,” fits within centuries of Muslim sharia subjugation of Christians.
 
Born in 1970, Dogan came with her family as refugees to Germany and now heads there a Christian humanitarian aid organization. In 2010, she wrote in German about her life and work in Es Geht ums Überleben: Mein Einsatz für die Christen im Irak (It is about Survival: My Work for the Christians in Iraq). She gave this author a copy during a 2014 presentation in Washington, DC.
 
Readers of Dogan’s biography would find unsurprising the 2019 book by Benny Morris and Dror Ze’evi, The Thirty-Year Genocide: Turkey’s Destruction of Its Christian Minorities, 1894-1924. These Israeli historians extensively documented how World War I’s infamous Armenian Genocide was part of wider ethnic cleansing campaigns of successive Turkish regimes against Armenian, Assyrian, and Greek Christian communities. In these three decades, jihadist beliefs played a central role in the slaughter of an estimated 1.5 to 2.5 million Christians in Asia Minor; Christians plummeted from 20 to two percent of Anatolia’s population.
 
Dogan’s family memories confirm such longstanding historical Christian suffering under Islamic domination. The practice of Turkish society was that a “Muslim may not namely be punished because of a Christian and land in prison,” and “no decade passed without plundering, murders, kidnappings, and rapes,” she wrote. Her community remembered how often in the past sharia restricted non-Muslims, such that Christians could not ride horses and had to wear distinctive clothing, while Christians’ houses could not be higher than those of Muslims.
 
Dogan’s family had its own share of 1915’s horrors. One marauding Kurdish tribal irregular forced one of her great aunts into a “marriage,” and even called his “wife” a houri after the eternal virgins who supposedly please faithful Muslim men in the afterlife. By contrast, Dogan’s family has remained friendly with one Muslim Turkish family, whose ancestors helped protect her maternal grandmother from a Muslim mob.
 
From more recent times, Dogan recalled how Christians in Turkey would say goodbye with tears to relatives entering military service and worry about not seeing them again, given frequent military abuse of Christians. Such recruits “have war from the first roll call—and indeed in their own company,” she wrote. In the Turkish military, Christians “are the enemy” and the “victim of harassment, mistreatment, and torture” from fellow Muslim officers and men.
 
Across decades, Dogan’s father and brothers would tell “always the same” stories of Turkish military service. At the beginning of her father’s military service, 80 men confronted him in the shower, insulted him, and spat upon him as an uncircumcised Christian. They screamed demands that he undergo circumcision and become a “regular Muslim.”
 
Dogan, meanwhile, remembered that state lesson plans prescribed weekly two hours of Muslim religious instruction, even though her teacher was the local school’s only Muslim. Dogan and her fellow students agreed to boycott the instruction, but they could not avoid speaking Turkish, as their mother tongue of Aramaic was “strictly prohibited.” Not even during breaks could they speak Aramaic.
 
Only with Dogan’s work with Christian refugees in Iraq did she discover a place where Christians had had a “certain protection”: under the dictator Saddam Hussein. Unlike much of the Muslim-majority Middle East, under Hussein’s Baathist nationalism the “Arab nation—not the Islamic—was the center point of the worldview of this strictly secular dictatorship.” Iraqi Christians accordingly enjoyed certain rights and freedoms denied to their coreligionists in neighboring countries.
 
Dogan particularly noted that Iraq’s Christians were “disproportionately in high positions,” such as the Chaldean Christian Tariq Aziz, for many years Hussein’s foreign minister. Having attended Christian-led, state-subsidized schools, Christians were “often better educated than Muslims,” wealthier, and “more modern” in outlook. Hussein even preferred in his bodyguard Christians to Shiites, whom his Sunni-minority-based dictatorship deeply distrusted.
 
Yet even under Hussein, Christians had a precarious position, Dogan noted, and an estimated 100,000 Christians left Iraq in the mid-1990s. After the 1991 Gulf War, the “Islamization waves in the Orient no longer passed by without trace Iraq, which had become internationally isolated and domestically under strong pressure,” she wrote. “‘Allahu Akbar’—‘God is almighty’ [sic] —decorated from now on the flag of Iraqis, anti-Americanism was increasingly Islamist-based,” while Hussein planned to build the world’s largest mosque in Baghdad.
 
Even worse, Iraqi Christian prospects declined precipitously after the 2003 American-led overthrow of Hussein. Dogan observed that Iraqi “Christians came collectively under suspicion of having sided with the Americans and British.” The American military’s frequent employment of Christians as translators often provoked the accusation that Christians were collaborators and supporters of “American invaders.”
 
So being Christian in Iraq became a “stigma,” Dogan noted. “Hardly a half year after the American invasion began a systematic persecution of Christians.” Thus “churches were blown apart, priests were murdered in beastly manners, nuns were raped, children were kidnapped, mistreated, and murdered,” while beheadings “quasi publicly executed” some individuals.
 
Dogan has come to the conclusion that in Iraq and elsewhere, Christian “refugees currently cannot be integrated into Islamic societies” that reject universal human rights. “In some Muslim lands Christian women count as wild game,” she wrote in a time before the Islamic State’s jihadist sex slavery shocked the world, while Christian schools in Jordan raise fears of proselytizing Muslims. In all, for both Shiites and Sunnis, a “democratic form of government following Western examples is directed against Islam and therefore a work of Satan.”
 
Dogan, as well as Morris and Ze’evi, have provided in their writings a fuller, more proper remembrance of 1915’s murderous events. This year was no isolated incident, but the logical result of a sharia supremacist culture that has dominated the greater Middle East from its seventh-century Muslim conquests until the present. Armenian genocide memorials should never forget that.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Flags of 6 Armenian divisions were hoisted into Yerevan sky as a sign of triumphant spirit and strength of Armenia

Arminfo, Armenia

ArmInfo.On May 9, the flags of 6 Armenian divisions were hoisted into the Yerevan sky as a sign of the triumphant spirit and strength of Armenia.

According to the Ministry of Defense, during the ceremony, the flags of 6 Armenian divisions were taken out of the “Mother Armenia” military museum by soldiers of  the honor guard of the RA Armed Forces and handed over to World War  II veterans. Then the honorary motorcade delivered the veterans to  the military airport, where they handed over the flags to the pilots  of the Armenian military aviation. Within minutes, combat aircraft of  the RA Armed Forces sailed off into the Yerevan sky, symbolizing with  this action the eternity of the triumphant spirit and strength of  Armenia.

To note, on the occasion of Victory Day, a rich and multi-genre  cultural program will be held tonight. In particular, the military  academy of the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Armenia, Arsen  Grigoryan, jazzman Vahagn Hayrapetyan, rock band, artists of  the State Theater of Song, famous opera singers will take part in it.

 

Foreign Minister clarifies Canada’s position on Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
May 6 2020

Tbilisi: Former Armenian PM: I wish Gakharia could teach us how to battle Covid-19

Georgia Today
May 6 2020

“The situation is harsh in Armenia regarding the coronavirus,” said former Armenian PM Hrant Bagratyan on a television news show ‘Pressing’.   

Bagratyan reminded the audience that a state of emergency had been declared in Armenia in mid-March.

“At that time, we had 18 infected patients, today we have about 2619, which means that the number has increased almost 146 times. In 50 days, the number of patients increased 146 times. As of March 15, there were 156,000 infected worldwide, 3.5 million today. On March 15, there were 2 cases per 100,000 people, 0.4 in Armenia. Today, there are 46 infected per 100,000 people in the world, 91 in Armenia. We are doing better than the rest of the world,” he claimed.

The former PM also stated that: “On March 15, Georgia had 35 infected patients, Armenia had 18. Today Georgia is doing 7 times better than us.”

“Today, I wish Georgian Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia to come to Armenia for two weeks and hold executive power and show us how to deal with the pandemic,” he added. 

By Beka Aleksishvili