Holy Fire ceremony underway at Church of Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem

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 14:34,

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, ARMENPRESS. The ceremony of Holy Fire is taking place in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem but without pilgrims due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, Chancellor of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem Koryun Baghdasaryan said.

He informed that according to the decision of the Israeli government the ceremony should be attended by 10 clergymen belonging to the Greek Orthodox, Armenian, Assyrian, and Coptic.

Greek City Times is live streaming the Holy Fire ceremony.

Reported by Anna Grigoryan

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenpress: Coronavirus: Death toll in Iran surpasses 5,000

Coronavirus: Death toll in Iran surpasses 5,000

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 14:42,

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, ARMENPRESS. According to the latest data, the number of people infected with the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) in Iran has increased by 1,374, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 80,868, the Armenian Embassy in Iran said.

73 more deaths have been registered. The death roll has risen to 5,031.

3,513 citizens are in serious condition.

1,923 more patients have recovered, and the total number of recoveries has reached 55,987.

Armenpress: Ambassador Balayan expects close cooperation with First Resident Dutch Ambassador to Armenia

Ambassador Balayan expects close cooperation with First Resident Dutch Ambassador to Armenia

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 14:04,

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s Ambassador to the Netherlands Tigran Balayan commented on the appointment of Nico Schermers as First Resident Dutch Ambassador to Yerevan.

“Glad to read about Rijksoverheid [government of the Netherlands] decision to appoint an experienced diplomat Nico Schermers as First Resident Dutch Ambassador in Yerevan. Looking forward to our close cooperation”, the Armenian Ambassador wrote on Twitter.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




PM chairs consultation on draft strategy of Police reforms

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 16:13,

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan chaired a consultation today during which the draft strategy of Police reforms were discussed, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.

The PM was thoroughly introduced on the actions expected to be taken in 2020-2022 on the sidelines of the reforms. The reforms will mainly focus on creating a Ministry of Interior and a patrol service. According to the strategy the following priority directions of the reforms are proposed: structural changes in the Police system and clarification of functions, creation of a patrol service and an operative management center, raising the efficiency of preliminary investigation, maintenance of public order, revision of community police, attractiveness of service in the Police, preparation of personnel and professional development, improvement of human rights, transparency and public accountability.

PM Pashinyan highlighted the implementation of reforms in the Police system and the formation of a new image of a police officer. “The service in the Police should become attractive and the system must be provided with cadres with high professionalism”, he said, highlighting the necessity of ensuring social guarantees.

Touching upon the road traffic control Pashinyan said the policy should be not fining the citizens, but taking measures to prevent violation of rules. “Our this project is very important, and I do not see any obstacle for it to be implemented within the set timetable”, the PM said and gave concrete instructions to the responsible officials for implementing the strategy.

According to the strategy the patrol service will start operating in the first quarter of 2021.

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




CIVILNET.Design of New District in Yerevan Revealed

CIVILNET.AM

17 April, 2020 22:00 
Archbishop Navasard Kchoyan has been charged with fraud and money laundering. The National Assembly has passed a law allowing asset seizures.COVID-19 recoveries continue to outpace newly confirmed cases. And the National Assembly has elected a new head of the Central Bank.
 

CIVILNET.A State of Emergency for Workers

CIVILNET.AM

17:16 

While the dedicated work of doctors and nurses are justifiably the center of attention and praise by society and government officials during the pandemic that has turned our world upside down, other workers in essential services that are on the front lines of fighting or supporting the battle against the Covid-18, are often missing from the spotlight. Without the dedication of supermarket and food service employees, facility maintenance and sanitation workers, delivery people and factory workers that help supply the society’s daily needs, the world as we know it would come to a halt. Without them, the rest of us would also be exposed to higher risks. People working these jobs are highly exposed to the risks of the pandemic and they deserve the recognition and praise of the society but more importantly, added support and protection from not only the private sector but also the government apparatus. Under the special circumstances caused by the outbreak of Covid-18 and the daily increase in the numbers of the infected, these workers deserve special treatment and support from government entities. In this new reality, it is not a stretch to consider their work as public service and their work environment as hazardous. 

The lack of attention and empathy for the working conditions at these jobs can go under the radar in sharply stratified and patriarchal societies where there is a large gap of income between the rich and poor, men and women. In the absence of strict enforcement and government supervision of existing worker protection laws and lack of effective workers unions, the health and overall well-being of these workers and their families are at the mercy of their employers and can easily be compromised if left unsupervised. In 2018, about 700,000 of Armenia’s estimated 2.95 million population lived under the poverty level (am.undp.org) and 17.71% of the population were unemployed (ceicdata.com). Moreover, the latest numbers on the average earnings of women in Armenia was 66.4% of men’s earning, or the gender pay gap was 33.6%, despite that fact that women lead men in tertiary degree graduation ratio by an average of 10% (unesco.org). These numbers and Armenia’s post-Soviet history of lax enforcement of labor protection laws, hardly suggest these workers (often women) have much of a bargaining power, unless the government is willing to pass additional legislation to protect their rights in the new and evolving circumstances, or at least, supervise a more strict enforcement of the existing labor laws on the books.

Armenia’s Constitution and Labor Code offers some hope in this regard. The labor legislative framework in Armenia is contained in the Constitution, as well as the Labor Code and other legal acts in the social and economic field. Together, they provide workers and employers a solid framework for association and theoretically, guarantee the rights of the Armenian workforce. Article 139 of the Labor Code, for example, indicates that the normal duration of the work should not exceed forty (40) hours a week, or eight hours per day and the maximum duration, including overtime work carried out at the request of the employer, should never exceed forty-eight (48) hours per week and twelve hours per day. Overtime is strictly regulated, namely some limitations are introduced for young and disabled workers, workers with family responsibilities, or work in hazardous conditions (Article 144). According to Article 146, overtime should not exceed four hours during two consecutive working days and 120 hours per year. Article 148 also regulates night work. This is defined as work performed between 10 pm and 6 am. And finally, articles 183 to 189 of the Labor Code state that particular wage conditions are provided for overtime work or night work, work carried out in hazardous conditions, during public holidays and rest days, idle time and part-time work (ilo.org).

Conventional wisdom tells us that the free market does many things very well. It helps foster an entrepreneurial spirit and it gets people motivated to come up with new ideas. I think it was Bill Gates who said: “Nobody believe in completely unadulterated capitalism.” ‘Nobody,’ is probably an exaggeration as there are people who’d love the unadulterated version, but they just can’t get away with it in the face of organized labor opposition. Independent Armenia’s version of the free market economy and capitalism is a product of an oligarchy and widespread corruption as well as a reaction to the perverse version of Soviet socialism. It will take more than a popular revolution to create a level playing field for all citizens in the free market. In the meantime, with vast wealth concentrated in the hands of the few, a high national poverty and unemployment rates, and without a tight government supervision, workers at lower ebbs of the pay scale can remain vulnerable to less than ideal working conditions.

The pandemic, however, can be an opportunity for society, private sector and the government to work together to attend to the needs of Armenian workforce. In this new reality, the welfare of the workers is not just a constitutional or legislative imperative but it can also be considered a national security and health issue. People who work in supermarkets, the food service, factories or hospitals, for example, can be considered essential, front-line workers. They consistently come into contact with the public, work long and unusual hours and can be exposed to infection from their work environment, or on their way to and from work. These people can get infected, go home and infect their family members and neighbors. Because of their economic conditions and family responsibilities, they do not have the privilege of self-isolation. 

Move than ever, the Armenian government has to be the driving force and not just a passive observer in protecting the welfare of the workers in the new reality induced by the pandemic. The state of emergency should also extend to strict enforcement of the Labor Code and the Constitution when it comes to the well-being of the workers. In partnership with the private sector, the government should guarantee an environment where workers are compensated fairly for their work considering its hazardous nature, overtime is fairly calculated and compensated, proper breaks and nutrition are available during work hours, access to proper protective gear is accessible and mandatory at all times, fundamentals of hygiene are reviewed with workforce on a periodic basis and the work environment is sanitized and disinfected by the business owners on a regular basis. 

In the past few weeks the government has come a long way in adopting measures to lighten the economic burden of the pandemic on businesses and ordinary citizens, but a revolution where drastic improvements in workers’ rights and conditions are not achieved, especially under these circumstances, can always be accused of indifference to the needs of the ordinary citizen. Ernesto Ché Guevara was once quoted as saying: “In order to know about the illnesses of society, you have to know what men are suffering from, how they suffer.” Regardless, of what one thinks of Guevara’s politics or his version of the revolution, there is an undeniable element of truth in his observation. Armenia’s post-revolution government has to make it its business to understand what the society is suffering from, and how. The ability to truly empathize and act for the welfare of the workers and ordinary citizens, beyond words and symbolisms, is what will make the revolution a success and make those chosen by the people to lead drastically better than the ones who came before them.
 

Fresno will quietly mark anniversary of Armenian Genocide due to COVID-19, but not forget

Fresno Bee, CA

06:00 AM

People stand and sing during a memorial service for Soghomon Tehlirian at Masis Ararat Cemetery on April 23, 2006. The monument to the Armenian hero was created in 1969 and renovated in 1995. Fresno Bee file

I stood there that afternoon staring at the nearly 20-foot monument located inside the Masis Ararat Cemetery off Belmont and Hughes. What I was looking at was an eagle swopping down and grabbing a snake.

The monument, located near the middle of the cemetery, is dedicated to Soghomon Tehlirian. Tehlirian avenged the murder of his father, mother, three sisters, two brothers and a niece by shooting Talaat Pasha, one of the principal architects of the Armenian Genocide. A Berlin jury found Tehlirian not guilty by reason of temporary insanity. Most experts agree that Talaat had an active role in developing the plans to eliminate the Armenians.

Sevag Tateosian Fresno Bee file

My grandparents talked about Tehlirian. They also despised Talaat, a member of the Young Turks regime. Ironic that now, in their final resting place, they are steps away from this monument.

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Like many others, commemorating the Genocide was important to my grandparents. I am certain they thought daily of those atrocities committed against the innocent civilian population. The truth is that for Armenians in America and around the world there is this heaviness that we feel when it comes to the Genocide, and this idea that so much was taken from us. For Tehlirian it was personal. His immediate family members were part of the 1.5 million killed.

Quantifying the loss is nearly impossible. My family, both sides, were landowners and wealthy. All of that was taken from them at the order of the Ottoman Turkish government. The part that bothers me the most is the spin by the present-day Turkish government that it was the Armenians fault. This is “victim blaming” at its highest degree.

This year as April 24th approaches, there will be no massive commemorations. No large protests in front of the Turkish embassies. No flags raised in front of Fresno’s City Hall and the cemetery. No noontime or evening gatherings at Fresno State.

Instead, families are left to commemorate in private, sheltering in place. Even though the coronavirus has erased the ability for public gatherings, I bet families will still commemorate. I ask those reading this to join my family in lighting a candle on the evening of April 24th and remembering those innocent lives that were lost. Since you are home, find a movie about the Genocide (“The Promise,” “Architects of Denial,” as well as others) to learn more. Although this occurred more than 100 years ago, it is still real and painful today.

As I began to drive off from the cemetery, I had many thoughts. I remembered a poem by Fresno’s own William Saroyan. His poem reads in part, “… Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.”

This year, just as commemorations will be different, there is a silver lining. The U.S. House and Senate passed resolutions recognizing the Genocide. It’s one more reason to celebrate and be proud of our country, the U.S.A. Armenian Americans have done really well in Fresno and the United States. They’ve led companies, been successful in business, construction, law, recycling, politics, food, health care, entertainment and much more.

As far as that pesky coronavirus that is shaking up the world, an Armenian American is the co-founder and chairman of one of the companies leading to create a much needed vaccine. As Saroyan so eloquently put it, “…see if they will not create a New Armenia.”

Sevag Tateosian is an analyst with the Fresno County Department of Public Health. He hosts and produces The Central Valley Ledger on CMAC Comcast 93 and Att 99.

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Armenians are strong people. So they are capable of forgiving Turkey for the genocide

Fresno Bee, CA

06:00 AM             

Huge crowds of Armenian Americans march during an annual commemoration of the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians under the Ottoman Empire in Los Angeles Wednesday, April 24, 2019. The march was intended to press demands that Turkey, the successor of the Ottoman Empire, recognize the deaths as genocide. Turkey contends the deaths starting in 1915 were due to civil war and unrest. AP

Most of us have experienced hard things: Betrayals. The loss of a loved one. Cross-country moves. Failed marriages. Sick children. Combat. Empty refrigerators. Empty hearts. But the majority of us have never lived through a pandemic. This is hard.

We’re not used to being told to shelter in place and stay at home. We’re not used to waiting in line to get into the grocery store. We’re not used to figuring out online classes and virtual school. We’re not used to canceled events, vacations and graduations. We’re not used to overwhelmed hospitals. We’re not used to this many people being sick and dying all at once.

This is hard.

Silva Emerian Fresno Bee file
   

But some of us remember living through the Great Depression. Some of us remember what it was like during World War II. Some of us lived through genocide.

The Armenian Genocide was the first holocaust of the 20th century — a crime against humanity resulting in the death of 1.5 million Armenians and the deportation of hundreds of thousands more. It was on April 24, 1915 when the leaders of the Ottoman Empire in Turkey rounded up Armenian businessmen, community leaders and clergy and shot them dead, thus beginning the systematic murder and deportation of all the Christian Armenians living in their (historically Armenian) land.

My great-grandparents were among the survivors. They ended up in Syria, where my parents were born. Others landed in Lebanon, Egypt, the United States, France and Australia, creating a worldwide diaspora. Like seeds, we were scattered around the globe, where we planted schools and churches and new communities. We not only survived — we thrived.

For the last 105 years, the Turkish government has denied that the Armenian Genocide occurred. Despite eyewitness accounts, including that of Henry Morgenthau, U.S. ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1913-1916; despite photographic evidence, mass graves and first-person testimony from survivors; despite physical proof and tangible documents making denial unfounded and implausible, the denial continues.

This is hard.

With denial comes a lack of closure. Not having recognition fuels anger. Hearing the stories of suffering, torture and indescribable torment leads to vengeful thoughts. Every year the scab continues to get ripped off. The wound remains open. And a painful legacy continues to get passed down the generations — a legacy of hatred for Turkey.

This hatred, of course, is in direct opposition to our Christian faith. Armenia became the first Christian nation in the world in 301 AD, and it is our faith that has kept us strong for more than 1700 years. It is our faith that enabled us to endure the genocide. And it is our faith that will help us overcome our hatred.

It will be hard. Because without recognition, without an admission, without reparations, how can we progress? How can we just let go of a century of pain? How can we turn the other cheek? How can we possibly move on from the persecution that shaped our modern identity?

There is one way. Forgiveness. With or without recognition, we as Christians can choose to forgive the Turks who killed our ancestors. We can choose to pray for the current government of Turkey that continues its denial. We can choose to bless the more than 98% of Turks who do not know Jesus and pray for the protection of the 0.3% of Christians living in that country.

This will not come naturally to Armenians. We are a stubborn group. We will resist. We will kick and scream. We will outright refuse. We will feel absolutely justified in our pain and anger. And in so doing, we will never move forward as a country or a people.

We have to forgive. We have to pray to reconcile. We have to change our mindset and outlook for Turkey. If we don’t pray for a heart-change in the people there, we can never expect any change in their minds or behavior.

Armenians are fighters. Armenians are survivors. And Armenians can do hard things.

Even forgive.

Silva Emerian of Clovis is a freelance writer and editor, wife and mother. Connect at [email protected], on her blog OnMyShoebox.com, on Facebook and Instagram @onmyshoebox.

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Armenia President signs changes to Judicial Code

News.am, Armenia

                        

YEREVAN. – On March 30, the Law on Amendments and Addenda to the Judicial Code of the Republic of Armenia and the 13 related laws were submitted by the National Assembly (NA) to the President for signing, the President’s press service informs.

As per the source, the government initiated these laws on the grounds of increasing the effectiveness of anti-corruption measures.

According to a statement from the President’s Office, the President expects these laws to be applied unconditionally with high responsibility, excluding any pressure on or interference with the functioning of the judiciary.

The President’s Office discussed its respective concerns, considerations, and questions on these draft laws with the chairman of the NA Standing Committee on State and Legal Affairs and the Minister of Justice, and received additional clarifications.

According to the RA President’s press service, President Armen Sarkissian on Sunday signed the aforesaid law and the 13 related laws.