Parliament Speaker visits Holy Transfiguration Church of New Nakhijevan and Russia Diocese of Armenian Apostolic Church

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 16:31, 6 October, 2021

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 6, ARMENPRESS. During his official visit in Russia Speaker of Parliament of Armenia Alen Simonyan and his delegation visited the Holy Transfiguration Church of the New Nakhijevan and Russia Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Parliament’s press service said.

Primate of the Diocese Archbishop Ezras Nersisyan delivered his blessings to the Speaker and his delegation, wishing productive activity.

At the meeting Speaker Simonyan presented some details from his visit to Russia. The meeting also focused on the Homeland-Diaspora ties and the role and importance of the Armenian church in this process. Issues relating to the Diocese were also discussed.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian, Italian Presidents discuss Karabakh conflict settlement

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 16:57, 6 October, 2021

ROME, OCTOBER 6, ARMENPRESS. During the meeting with his Italian counterpart in Rome, President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian presented his assessment to the situation around the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, reaffirming Armenia’s readiness to continue the works on peacefully settling the conflict with the mediation of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs, Armenpress correspondent reports from Rome.

President Sarkissian has arrived in Italy on a state visit at the invitation of President Sergio Mattarella.

“In this sense we valued the importance of maintaining balanced positions and approaches over the issues that are sensitive for us. We highly appreciate the readiness of the government of Italy to continue the support to the ROCHEMP (Center for Cultural Heritage) program and contribute through this program to the preservation of historical-cultural monuments both in Armenia and elsewhere”, the Armenian President said.

He stated that Armenia is grateful to friendly Italy for demonstrating sensitivity on human rights matters. Sarkissian added that Armenia highly appreciates the resolution adopted by the Italian Parliament on March 2 which calls for the release of the Armenian prisoners of war from Azerbaijan.

“We also welcome the documents adopted by nearly 50 regional and city councils of Italy in support of Artsakh and its people. We attach importance to the participation of the Italian specialists to the preservation of the Armenian historical-cultural heritage, as well as the direct cooperation with UNESCO”, Armen Sarkissian said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Hydropower in Karabakh: Armenians’ loss is Azerbaijan’s gain

EurasiaNet.org
Oct 7 2021
Ani Mejlumyan, Ulkar Natiqqizi Oct 7, 2021
A hydropower dam in Sugovushan, territory the Armenians call Mataghis. (president.az)

Before last year, energy was one of the bright spots in Nagorno-Karabakh’s economy. The de facto authorities had built a network of small hydropower plants to supplement a larger, Soviet-era dam.

As a result, the territory produced all its own electricity – the majority of which was from hydropower – and by 2018 was even exporting some to Armenia. It was one of the few spheres in which Nagorno-Karabakh was not dependent on its patron state.

Following last year’s war, however, Azerbaijan retook much of its territory that it had lost in the first war between the two sides in the 1990s. And that land included most of those hydropower plants.

Of the 36 plants that operated in Armenian-controlled territory before the war, only six remain under Armenian control. The hydropower production capacity in the territory decreased from 191 megawatts before the war to 79 megawatts now.  

“Indeed, they gained an economic advantage and we lost,” Armen Tovmasyan, Karabakh’s de facto minister of economy and agriculture, told Eurasianet.

The largest single hydropower facility in the region, Sarsang, was built in 1976 on the Tartar River in what was then known as the Aghdara region. (Independent Azerbaijan changed the name to Terter in 1993; Armenians know the region as Martakert.) The 50 megawatts of energy it produces remain under control of the Armenian side, now making up more than half the territory’s hydropower capacity. In addition, five smaller plants are in territory that remained under Armenian control following the war.

“All the other plants are under the adversary’s control, meaning the republic of Artsakh is not self-sufficient as it was before the war,” Tovmasyan said, using the alternative Armenian name for the region. “The deficit is being made up by energy imported from Armenia.”

But Armenia itself is also suffering electricity problems. Operations at the Metsamor nuclear plant, which generates about 40 percent of Armenia’s electricity, have been suspended since May 15; it is scheduled to reopen in October. On top of that, the natural gas-powered Hrazdan Thermal Power Plant, operated by Gazprom Armenia, also has been operating at only 30 percent capacity since April.

And Sarsang itself is producing far less than it could be: According to the plant’s operator, in the first quarter of 2021 production was half what it was in the same period the year before.

Meanwhile, electricity transfers between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh have been interrupted by the loss of transmission lines that once ran through the Kelbajar region, which was ceded to Azerbaijan as part of the ceasefire deal. The only remaining transmission line runs along the Lachin corridor connecting the two entities, “which decreases the stability of supply,” Tovmasyan said.

As a result, Karabakh has been suffering power outages. “In September, until the last week of the month we had blackouts that sometimes would last for hours,” Anush Ghavalyan, a Stepanakert-based political commentator, told Eurasianet, adding that the situation seems to have improved recently.

“Frequent power shortages are happening mainly because today Artsakh is primarily supplied by the plant built near the Sarsang reservoir, the capacity of which will not be enough to provide electricity to the entire territory of Artsakh. That’s why there are regular outages,” Gegham Stepanyan, Nagorno Karabakh’s human rights ombudsman, told reporters on September 9. “If concrete measures are not taken to ensure energy security, we will face severe problems next fall,” he added.

The bulk of the territory’s hydropower plants are in the mountainous Kelbajar and Lachin regions, which also was ceded to Azerbaijan. According to reporting by the investigative news website Hetq just before the war, the plants were owned by a wide variety of former government officials in Karabakh and Armenia. 

The largest hydropower company in Karabakh, Artsakh HEK, owns and operates Sarsang. It also held two plants in the Terter region, which ended up under Azerbaijani control. Artsakh HEK’s shareholders are primarily wealthy diaspora Armenians.

The primary shareholder is a Turkish-Armenian businessman, Vartan Sirmakes, who owns controlling shares in two major Armenian banks, runs a company that had been involved in gold mining in Nagorno-Karabakh, and is co-founder of the luxury watch brand Franck Muller. Sirmakes has divided his shares in Artsakh HEK via two companies: 36 percent in M. Energoinvest CJSC through his associate Burak Kirkorian; and 17 percent in another company, Multicontinental Distribution Limited, which is registered in London and in which Sirmakes owns 75 percent of the shares. 

The second major shareholder is French-Armenian businessman Joseph Oughourlian, who controls a wide variety of businesses in Europe and the United States, from an investment advisory firm to a French soccer club. The head of Artsakh HEK’s board of directors is Arayik Harutyunyan, the current de facto president of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The plants also had a political significance, as a means of demonstrating Armenians’ intent to cement their control over these territories. When one plant in the Lachin region was opened in 2012, a senior official from the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaktsutyun party said it demonstrated that “the Karabakh authorities guarantee that these territories are ours and will remain so. That the people are here and will stay.”

Following the war, Azerbaijani officials say that the departing Armenian forces “destroyed and looted” those power plants as they pulled out. Tovmasyan said such claims are a “lie” and that some associated infrastructure was damaged in fighting but that the plants themselves were not destroyed.

Now, Azerbaijanis say that they are steadily repairing and putting them back to work.

In February, just three months after fighting stopped, President Ilham Aliyev formally opened a medium-sized, 8-megawatt hydropower plant at Gulabird in the Lachin region.

“This is the first power plant being commissioned on the liberated lands. It has great significance and great symbolic meaning. We are returning to these lands,” Aliyev said on the occasion. “Renewable energy has huge potential in this region.”

By June, another two plants were reopened in the Terter region, Sugovushan-1 and Sugovushan-2, with 7.8 megawatts of total capacity. (When they were under Armenian control and operated by Artsakh HEK, they were known as Mataghis-1 and Mataghis-2.)

The plants now under Azerbaijani control are now owned by the state and are being reconstructed and operated by the country’s state-owned energy firm, Azerenergy.

Overall, the small plants in Lachin and Kelbajar have a capacity of 120 megawatts. Two others, which span the Araz River that divides Azerbaijan and Iran, will produce a further 120 megawatts for Azerbaijan when they are completed.

Preliminary work on these – Khudaferin and Maiden Tower – were begun under the Soviet Union but work was interrupted when Armenian forces captured the territory in 1993. Iran continued building its half of the project, while Azerbaijan was forced to suspend construction on its side.

In 2016, though the territory on the Azerbaijani side of the river was still under Armenian control, Azerbaijan and Iran quietly signed an agreement on continuing construction. Now, Azerbaijani officials say that the plants will be completed by 2024, and Iran and Azerbaijan will share the electricity they produce 50-50.

The renewal of hydropower is part of what the Azerbaijani government is calling a “green energy zone” in its newly retaken territories. “We are conducting work on hydroelectric power stations and many small hydropower plants in Karabakh,” Energy Minister Parviz Shahbazov told journalists in May, saying that work also is underway in building wind and solar energy capacity: “We intend to provide the Karabakh region with electricity through green energy sources in general.”

Meanwhile, officials in Nagorno-Karabakh are working out how to deal with their new energy deficit.

Authorities are building a new 1-megawatt solar plant, in Haterk in the Martakert region, the energy minister, Tovmasyan, told Eurasianet. That would complement another 4-megawatt plant already in operation.

And they are also sticking with hydropower: One 17.6-megawatt plant is under construction in Getavan, in the Martakert region, and a second, 25-megawatt plant is planned in the Sarsang-Mataghis area, Harutyunyan, the de facto leader, said during a government session also attended by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. 

“If this happens, we can become self-sufficient,” he said.

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Ulkar Natiqqizi is a reporter based in Baku.

Remember us: recognising and rediscovering the Armenian Genocide

The Article, Canada
Oct 7 2021
by HEIDI KINGSTONE

On 24 April 2021, the American President Joe Biden formally recognised the Armenian Genocide. It had only taken 106 years to the day. April really is the cruellest month, as TS Eliot wrote in The Waste Land. The Armenian Genocide is crucial in understanding other genocides that followed. Until the Nazis, it was the high watermark of mass murder in the 20th century.

The world watched the genocide of 1915 unfold almost in real-time in what was then the Ottoman Empire, as the Turkish authorities systematically deported and killed most of the empire’s Armenian population. Over nearly two years of death marches, massacres and forced conversions, the New York Times published more than 140 articles on the subject. Here are some of the terms used to describe the “unparalleled savagery” and “acts of horror”: “young women and girls appropriated by the Turks, thrown into harems, attacked or else sold to the highest bidder”, “endure terrible tortures”, “revolting tortures”, “their breasts cut off, their nails pulled out, their feet cut off”, “burned to death”, “helpless women and children were roasted to death”, “1,500,000 Armenians starve”, “dying in prison camps”, “massacre was planned”, “most thoroughly organised and effective massacres this country has ever known”.

Three years later, at the end of World War One, in 1918, the Hearst newspapers serialised the biographical account of a young orphaned girl: Arshaluys Mardiganian. She had witnessed the murder of her entire family. In 1919, Hollywood made a silent movie, Ravished Armenia/Auction of the Souls, where she played herself. She changed her name to Aurora Mardiganian. Like Anne Frank decades later, both young women crystallised the horrors of the war from their personal accounts.

Donald Bloxham, a professor of modern history, wrote, “The genocide carried out on the Armenians was not only the first of its type but also the most successful. [The 1904-1908 genocide of Namibia’s Nama and Herero people is now considered the first.] Having wiped out a population, the perpetrators then succeeded in virtually erasing any memory of its destruction.”

The Armenian Genocide may have been the “forgotten genocide” in the 1950s during the Cold War. Still, since the 1960s and especially from 2015 onwards, genocide studies, which grew out of Holocaust studies, expanded. The Holocaust is the most frequently described genocide, but the Armenian one is probably a distant second.

When Hitler was planning to invade Poland in 1939, he wanted to send Polish intellectuals and opposition figures to a concentration camp. When someone objected, referring to the Armenian slaughter, he was reputed to have replied, “Who remembers the Armenians?” This was the lesson the Nazis had learned. Nations could get away with mass murder.

There was a long and slow build-up to the 1915 genocide by the Muslim Ottomans against the Christian Armenians. After five centuries of dominance, the Ottoman Empire was in decline. The elites were desperate to save the empire and hold on to their power, status and privileges. The Armenian reformers and revolutionaries were looking for political and social justice and equality, and sovereignty, which they didn’t have under the Ottomans. Non-Muslims were second-class subjects in the Empire.

When the “Bloody Sultan” Abdul Hamid II came to power in 1876, it was at a time of rebellions. He believed that Turkification was the answer to Ottoman woes. He is best remembered for overseeing the decline of the Empire and the Armenian massacres of the 1890s. These “infidels” were labelled with the conventional tropes of alienation. Armenians were called disloyal, ungrateful and accused of profiteering from others, all of which began a justification for the violence.

The Turkish bourgeoisie grew as it acquired Armenian possessions, property and status during the 1908 Young Turk revolution and later in World War One. Local elites played a crucial role in creating the atmosphere. “They incited and provoked people and created this hateful, hostile atmosphere between Muslims and Christians,” says Dr Umit Kurt, an academic and author of The Armenians of Aintab. The Ottomans created false rumours. “They said that Armenians were attacking mosques and raping women. They handed out pamphlets about the threat of an independent Armenia.”

In 1913, the most militant faction, the Young Turks, who believed the Armenians were collaborating with foreign powers, took over the Ottoman Empire in a coup d’etat. Mehmet Talaat (pictured below) came to power, the de facto leader of the Government and one of the architects of modern Turkey — but also of the Armenian Genocide, which he ordered as Minister of the Interior.

Talaat (1874 –-1921) (Alamy)

1915 was a catastrophic year for the Ottomans. Fighting on the side of the Central Powers (Germany, Austro-Hungary) and against the Entente (France, Britain, Russia), they suffered their worst defeat. In January, the Ottomans were defeated by the Russians at Sarikamish in the Caucasus Mountains. The Young Turk-led government blamed the Armenians and scapegoated them.

Most historians date the final decision to exterminate the Armenian population from March or early April 1915. Talaat began by arresting Armenian intellectuals on 24 April 1915. That was and is the first step to destroying a community and making it headless. The responsibility for the deaths of more than one million Armenians, probably closer to 1.5 million, out of an Ottoman population of three million, rests primarily with him. By May 1915, the Entente powers were noting that the Young Turks had committed “crimes against humanity” against the Armenians.

A month later, the Ottoman Young Turks issued a Law of Confiscation, which allowed them to confiscate and then liquidate Armenian assets and properties, just as the Nazis would later do. The Ottomans in Aintab, now Gaziantep, would lay out the plundered goods of the Armenians in the middle of the street, and everything would be sold at ludicrously low prices.

This massive transfer of economic wealth was like winning the lottery for the local Muslim population. The material gain was a great motivator in perpetuating the genocide. The Young Turks benefited when they killed their neighbours and found willing executioners, eager to slaughter their Armenian neighbours, friends and countrymen for gain as much as revenge.

Some Muslims may have tried to help the Armenians, but to do so was illegal. Families were threatened, and they chose not to see what was going on in front of them. They said nothing because of fear, greed or both. Most people were afraid, and there was substantial resentment of the Armenians and economic opportunity for the perpetrators and collaborators. Still, the sense of terror can’t be underestimated, especially when your family is at risk.

Like their Nazi counterparts, too, Ottoman doctors experimented on children. They murdered those with learning difficulties by injecting them with poison, and they carried out experiments on others using typhus injections. Turkish doctors killed infants at the Red Crescent Hospital in Trabzon, used morphine to murder others, and gassed children in school rooms. Local officials used Armenian women and girls as prostitutes.

According to Paul G Pierpaoli Jr in The Armenian Genocide Encyclopedia, Dr Mehemet Reshid, who hated all Christians without distinction, treated Armenian patients as inferior. The atrocities were so horrific you have to ask what is wrong with the human race. He “devised brutal ways in which to treat Armenians. These included nailing horseshoes to their feet and forcing them to walk through Ottoman streets. He nailed Armenians on crosses to mimic the fate of their pre-eminent religious symbol, Jesus Christ. Dr Reshid also engaged in bizarre human experimentation on Armenians, resulting in his victims’ deaths…Their eventual mass extermination eerily anticipated how Nazi doctors attempted to justify their brutal treatment and mass killing of European Jews during WWII.”

Mass deportations began in June 1915. By the time of the death marches, most of the men were dead, either shot or bayonetted. The youngest and most attractive women were raped and young children taken as sex or military slaves. Older women, men and children were sent in cattle cars or on marches in the desert in caravans of death. They went without provisions in the scorching heat while paramilitary killing units followed behind. Marauding gangs robbed and raped. And typhus, pneumonia and dysentery killed as efficiently as hunger, thirst and exposure.

Armenians deported to the deserts of Syria in June 1915 were forced to walk over the dead bodies of Armenians towards the concentration camps where they were expected to die. Instead, 400,000 deportees arrived in Aleppo, a surprise for Talaat. “It was from this moment that they began to establish the series of concentration camps, which were in effect death camps as they had no food or provisions for survival.” Although a few Turkish officials were taken to court after the war, most were acquitted or not put on trial.

While the Americans have finally acknowledged the Armenian Genocide, the Turkish government still denies it. The Armenian Genocide scholar Professor Alan Whitehorn, Professor emeritus at the Department of Political Science and Economics at the Royal Military College of Canada, explains.

“There are often many reasons; one is psychological,” says Professor Whitehorn. “It’s tough for you to say: you know, my father, my grandfather or my uncle participated in mass murder. It’s even harder to acknowledge that your relative has done harm, to have been a murderer who’s killed or engaged in sexual abuse. Perhaps there’s embarrassment or family guilt. You don’t want to pass on the bad news about an elderly relative to your children.”

He adds: “The psychological is quite important. If you’re a product of ultra-nationalism and the Ottoman Empire was under the influence of the Young Turks, you don’t want to acknowledge mistakes. I mean, it’s the nature of nationalism to be proud of your country and critical of other countries. There’s a sense of self-superiority and subordination of the others. This is doubly so when you’ve had a history of an empire, where the subject peoples are considered inferior and need to show deference and subservience. So I think that historic nationalist sense of ‘we’re superior and we don’t acknowledge our mistakes to supposed inferiors’ is germane.”

(Alamy)

Also, as soon as you acknowledge your collaboration, there could be penalties and demands for compensation — reparation is the obvious one, as is the restitution of land and buildings. 

“The politics of genocide is not without long-term financial cost to the perpetrator state,” says Professor Whitehorn. Apart from making postwar Turkey a less ethnically diverse nation, “in slaughtering the Armenians, a key segment of its merchant class was wiped out.”

The Austrian-born Jewish author Franz Werfel wrote about the Armenian Genocide in 1933. His fact-based novel, The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, was an international success. It also became a cause célèbre in Hollywood, when the Turkish Ambassador to the US before World War Two prevented its filming. The State Department supported the decision to keep good relations with the Turks.

The story is a fictionalised account about a cluster of Armenian villages that held out against Ottoman troops in 1915 for 40 days. The survivors escaped to French naval ships that took them to safety in Egypt.

Werfel wrote: “The book was conceived in March 1929, during a stay in Damascus. The miserable sight of some maimed and famished-looking refugee children working in a carpet factory gave me the final impulse to snatch time from the Hades of all that was, this incomprehensible destiny of the Armenian nation. The writing of the book followed between July 1932 and March 1933.”

The Jews in the Warsaw ghetto and in other Jewish ghettos read and re-read Werfel’s novel. In the Holocaust, they were looking for inspiration to fight against the Nazis. It was an inspirational and almost unique case of resistance and survival.

Professor Whitehorn’s metzmama, his Armenian grandmother, survived the Young Turks’ genocide. She was one of 100,000 orphans who did. She spent ten years in refugee camps and orphanages, including ones in Corfu and Greece, until an Egyptian Armenian family adopted her. In his work, Whitehorn has often wondered where she found the will to survive. Her first husband, whom she met in Egypt, had survived the genocide but couldn’t cope, and killed himself while she was pregnant.

Professor Whitehorn’s work on genocide and human rights is a way of saying thank you to his metzmama and those who need help today. He works at night when all is quiet — “except for the voices of the past who whisper their haunting words. Remember us . . . Please remember us.”

Turkish Press: Russia suggests 3 3 format with Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia in Caucasus

Yeni Safak, Turkey
Oct 7 2021
News Service09:45 October 07, 2021AA

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov announced on Wednesday that Moscow suggests the establishment of a new format in the Caucasus, comprising three Caucasian states — Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia — and their three “big neighbors” — Russia, Turkey, and Iran.

The format will address the issues of security, unblocking economic and transport ties, Lavrov said at a news conference following a meeting with his Iranian counterpart Hossein Amir-Abdollahian in Moscow.

“The joint statement (by Russian, Armenian, and Azerbaijani leaders that put an end to the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh) contained the principles that define joint steps to advance the settlement, including work on unblocking all transport communications, unblocking all economic ties in this region, from which not only Armenia and Azerbaijan but also Georgia will benefit.

“Iran, Russia, and Turkey, as the closest neighbors of these three republics, will also benefit from this,” the minister said.

According to Lavrov, Iran already expressed its positive attitude to the initiative, the same reaction Russia met from Turkey and Azerbaijan.

“We work with our Armenian colleagues. We hope that Georgia, despite all problems it is experiencing, will be able to see its fundamental interest in creating such a mechanism for consultations and coordination of solutions for the accelerated development of this region, which has been holding back its development for a long time due to the ongoing conflicts here,” he said.

Lavrov then urged Abdollohian to ratify the Convention on the Legal Status of the Caspian Sea, insisting it will ensure non-interference of foreign states in regional affairs.

“The Convention on the legal status of the Caspian Sea directly prohibits the presence of military forces of any non-Caspian states on the Caspian Sea. The Convention will enter into force as soon as the last instrument of ratification is received,” Lavrov said.

The issue is currently being considered in the Parliament of the Islamic Republic of Iran, he added.

“I hope that the decision on ratification will be made quickly, and then the convention will fully become an international legal document ensuring the appropriate regime in the Caspian Sea,” he said.

For his part, Abdollohian said Iran is concerned over the military drills held by Azerbaijan.

“As for the South Caucasus, we have concerns. We are dissatisfied with the statement of one neighbor, we think that the neighbors of Iran should respond positively to our policy aimed at developing good neighborly relations. We will not tolerate geopolitical and map changes in the Caucasus. And we have serious concerns about the presence of terrorists and Zionists in this region.

“Azerbaijan has held six military exercises with foreign countries, I think these are provocative actions. Such a volume of exercises does not cause positive emotions. Iran held only one exercise inside its own territory and informed all countries of the region through diplomatic channels,” he said.

Iran is for dialogue with the countries of the region as a tool to avoid outside interference, Abdollohian noted.

“I hope that in the near future we will reach a point where there will be no misunderstandings and tensions, conflicts in the region,” he said.


– Russia, Iran mull separate meetings on Afghanistan

Addressing the situation in Afghanistan, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said Iran supports the formation of an inclusive Afghan government that includes all ethnic groups and is concerned about the development of terrorism and drug trafficking.

The two ministers paid special attention to facilitating the deliveries of humanitarian aid to Afghanistan, he said.

Iran is going to summon a meeting of countries — neighbors of Afghanistan — in the near future at the level of foreign ministers and will invite Russia, he said.

“We will hold a meeting of Afghanistan’s neighbor countries at the level of foreign ministers in the near future, plus Russia. We want to hold it in Tehran. Russia also wants to hold a Moscow-format conference to provide assistance to the settlement in Afghanistan. We view Iran’s participation (in the conference of the Moscow format) positively,” he said.

Lavrov confirmed that the two ministers spoke about prospects for regional and international cooperation to promote the post-conflict reconstruction of Afghanistan.

“Both the Russian Federation and the Islamic Republic of Iran have relevant initiatives in this regard. We talked today about how to optimally coordinate efforts to implement them,” the minister also noted.

https://www.yenisafak.com/en/world/russia-suggests-3-3-format-with-turkey-iran-azerbaijan-armenia-georgia-in-caucasus-3581716




Armenian Podcastle company raises $7M in funding

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 7 2021

Podcastle, a Yerevan, Armenia-based platform for podcast creators which helps them record, produce and publish their content, raised $7M in funding, TechCrunch reports.

The round was co-led by RTP Global and Point Nine, with participation from S16 VC and previous investors Sierra Ventures and AI Fund.  

Podcastle says it has around 150,000 creators so far, but says it’s adding to that number quickly with easy-to-use tools for podcast creators such as enabling studio-quality remote interviews using consumer-grade mics, multitrack recording and editing, and the ability to isolate the speech in the podcasts and improve it. It can also convert text to speech and vice-versa, allowing creators to edit their audio like text documents.

Artavazd Yeritsyan, founder and CEO of Podcastle and former VP of Engineering at Picsart, said: “In 2022, the average time spent listening should rise to 1 hour and 37 minutes per day, meaning the industry becomes one of the most influential categories in storytelling. We at Podcastle strive to remove all technical barriers and allow creators to focus on the thing that really matters — producing and delivering content they’d like to share with others”.

He says that while Descript is an editing tool, Podcastle is closer to a “creation” platform where creators can start with the remote interviews and continue editing without leaving the platform. “It’s like comparing Microsoft doc with Google Docs. Or Sketch versus Figma. In those cases, we are Google Docs and Figma,” he told TechCrunch’s Mike Butcher.

Alexander Pavlov, managing partner at RTP Global said: “The podcasting market reached $11.46 billion in 2020, and Podcastle offers a unified solution to satisfy aspiring hosts and creators. We see the huge potential behind the platform and are happy to further support Podcastle on its way to success”.

Louis Coppey, partner at Point Nine Capital said: “At Point Nine, we’ve invested in several creative software over the past few years such as PlayPlay in Paris, GravitySketch in London or Shapr3D in Budapest. These three businesses are radically simplifying the creation of videos and designs in VR or 3D. Podcastle is paving the way for the democratization of audio content production.”

Podcastle offers four pricing plans and its base features are available for free.

Armenian Church textiles displayed at Tufts University

PanArmenian, Armenia
Oct 7 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Aidekman Arts Center of the Tufts University Art Galleries presents an exhibition of Armenian church textiles from August 5 to December 5 called Connecting Threads / Survivor Objects, the Armenian Mirror Spectator reports.

It is a small but varied collection of 11 embroidered, block printed and painted objects that are rare surviving legacies of Armenian culture. The exhibition was organized by Christina Maranci, Arthur H. Dadian and Ara T. Oztemel Professor of Armenian Art and Architecture, and Chiara Pidatella, Research Curator.

Dr. Maranci related the origins of the exhibit: “Basically it came about by me poking around through the website of the Armenian Museum and also the Museum of Fine Arts and noticing the wealth of liturgical textiles. I thought it would be a nice way to exhibit Armenian art by looking at textiles because of the ways in which textiles speak to the early modern experience. I talked about it with Dina Deitsch, the director of the art galleries. That is how it came about and it seemed like a really great opportunity to teach.”

The materials for the exhibition emerged from the work conducted in Maranci’s spring 2021 seminar, The Threads of Survival, which included ten undergraduate and graduate students. She said, “My intention was never for this to be a large show. It was always to be something that was the product of student research. The crucial thing actually was taking objects that had been almost completely unstudied, barely catalogued, and to do deep research on them. Each student was assigned a single object, and had a chance to do that kind of careful work with a single object over the course of a semester.”

It is also an unusual exhibition for the galleries because they usually display contemporary art, from the 20th century to the present, and don’t often show historical works, Deitsch said. The Armenian focus adds to its uniqueness.

Armenia readying to issue Diaspora bonds

PanArmenian, Armenia
Oct 7 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Armenian government has decided to issue bonds for the Diaspora. The problem of whether issuing Diaspora bonds by Armenia is expedient has been regularly raised, but the government is now looking to regulate the issue by legislation.

The Armenian government needs to invest the financial resources of the Diaspora in the economy, and the funds should not be donated, but lent to the country. Chairman of the Financial Market Members Association Karen Zakaryan told the Public Radio on Wednesday, October 6 that the government will issue retail bonds, whose yield is slightly lower than in the event of conventional bonds.

The Diaspora bonds will be issued in dollars may be available for $100 each․ The matter is still under discussion.

The Diaspora High Commissioner Zareh Sinanyan noted that the government came up with the idea in 2018, discussed it for a long time, and now a research phase is underway to determine the “mood” and how feasible the idea is. The initiative is also a way to generate money quickly in emergency situations, says the Chief Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs.

Iran hints at change in region’s transit map with Armenia project

PanArmenian, Armenia
Oct 7 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – Minister of Roads and Urban Development of Iran Rostam Ghasemi has said that joint infrastructure projects with Armenia will change the transit map of the region.

Ghasemi said in a tweet that thanks to the special mission entrusted to the deputy ministers of the two countries, the problem of what he called “the Caucasian corridor” will be completely changed.

According to him, all those who created the problems should know that they can’t block roads in front of Iran. At the same time, he added, it will be difficult to restore “burned bridges”.

The Iranian official was probably hinting Azerbaijan, whose police stationed on the Goris-Kapan highway in Armenia demand payments from Iranian trucks drivers.

Armenia "doesn’t know what Baku transports through its airspace"

PanArmenian, Armenia
Oct 7 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – Head of the Civil Aviation Committee Tatevik Revazian has said the Armenian side does not what or whom Azerbaijani planes are carrying to Nakhijevan when using Armenia’s airspace.

Revazian made the remarks in an interview with the Public Television on Wednesday, October 6, in response to a statement from Baku, according to which Azerbaijan has begun to use the airspace of Armenia for domestic passenger flights to Nakhijevan․

Weighing in on concerns about the contents of the aircraft, Revazian said Azerbaijan has no right to transport weapons using a civilian plane. The official added that Armenia has never closed its airspace to Azerbaijan who stopped using it in 2014.

On 12 November 2014, an Armenian Mil Mi-24 attack helicopter was shot down by Azerbaijani Armed Forces during a training flight in Nagorno-Karabakh, killing all three crew members.

“Azerbaijan has never, in fact, closed its border for Armenian aircraft either, except during the 44-day war. We have never used Azerbaijan’s airspace because it was not commercially justified,” Revazian added.