Category: 2021
Armenia receives ten more Azerbaijani soldiers.0
Armenia receives ten more captured soldiers from Azerbaijan.
MOSCOW, Dec 19 (Reuters) – Following talks last week between both sides and European Council President Charles Michel, Azerbaijan handed over ten captured Armenian soldiers to Armenia on Sunday for the second time this month, the two countries said.
On November 1, Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to a ceasefire along their shared border.
Following the deadliest clash since a war last year, Russia urged them to take a step back from confrontation.
After the worst fighting since a 44-day war between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azeri army over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave last year, which killed at least 6,500 people, Armenia had asked Russia for assistance.
The State Security Service of Azerbaijan said in a statement that it had handed over 10 Armenian soldiers detained on Nov. 16
It also let go of ten soldiers in December.
Russia acted as a go-between in that situation.
The names of the second group of ten prisoners of war handed over were published by Armenia’s Armenpress media outlet, citing Vahan Hunanyan, the Armenian foreign ministry’s press secretary.
(Alexander Marrow contributed reporting; Mark Heinrich edited the final product.)
Catching up with David Gharibyan: Actor, producer, and Armenian media personality
Armenian media personality, actor, and producer David (Davit) Gharibyan chatted with Powerjournalist Markos Papadatos on November 24 about his latest endeavors.
Regarding his future plans, he said, “We live in a time when the future is connected with the present in a rapidly changing exponential pattern and if everything goes according to plan, I will soon move to France to implement new fashion projects. I will continue to work in my country, combining it with French.”
“Let me inform you that the TV series ‘Ari Parenq’ is currently being broadcast in the USA and Armenia, of which I am one of the producers and there are plans to shoot ‘Ari Parenq 2’ in the future, or another TV series, already in the humorous genre, which will involve well-known TikTokers in Armenia,” he elaborated.
“I would also like to hold an award ceremony, which I will talk about in the future. I will continue my cooperation with my Bulgarian colleagues. I was very impressed by the Prince of Morocco, Mullah Ismail, with whom my telephone conversation was very encouraging and promising in terms of innovative cooperation. That’s all,” he said.
David Gharibyan and Nasko Lazarov. Photo Courtesy of hiLIFR
He opened up about some of his proudest moments of 2021. “One of the memorable days of this year is my visit to Bulgaria within the framework of ‘Mr. Bulgaria,’ where I was invited as a member of the jury. During that time, thanks to my good friend Nasko Lazarov, I met a number of new friends and colleagues, including Adrian Sina, the lead singer of Romanian Accent, the talented Romanian designer Catalin Botezatu, and the beautiful Bulgarian singer Andrea, as well as my compatriot, King of Poker Roger Hayrapetyan. I have a great desire to invite them to Armenia to get acquainted with our culture and traditions,” he said.
“I was very happy to go back to Barcelona, Spain, 10 years later, to visit my friends and to enjoy the Spanish fiestas, as well as my long trip to France, the most impressive moment of which was meeting my uncle in Paris, whom I had not seen for 30 years,” he said.
On his daily motivations, he said, “I do not want to sound arrogant, but I want to open a new creative page on the “Canvas of Unknownness” of space and time, weave my tapestry, from which warmth and light will be delivered, use my colors in the palette, leave my mark for the future.”
Photo Coutesy of hiLIFR
For his fans and supporters, Gharibyan said, “I think people in the field of art create for the sake of humanity, the well-being of people, without fans, it will be like a private house, without inhabitants, it will lose its role and significance. Dear fans, the breath and presence of each of you leaves its contribution to my works, it is a caring food for further creation. Know the truth, I always need your support.”
“I wish all the inhabitants of the Earth peace and health. No wars and epidemics. Good luck to you,” he concluded.
For more information on actor, producer, and media personality David (Davit) Gharibyan, check out his IMDb page, and follow him on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and check out his official website.
David Gharibyan and family. Photo Courtesy of David Gharibyan
Azerbaijan releases Armenian prisoners of war after EU talks
Armenia selects special diplomat for discussion with Turkey
(MENAFN) In line with the Armenian Foreign Ministry representative, Armenia chose its special diplomat for discussion with Turkey.
The representative shared in a Twitter post “Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly Ruben Rubinyan will be the special representative of the Republic of #Armenia for the process of the dialogue between Armenia and #Turkey.”
Turkey selected Serdar Kilic, previous ambassador to the US, as special envoy to discuss steps for normalization of ties with Armenia.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu stated Kilic had been selected with the agreement of Leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
MENAFN19122021000045012476ID1103396749
A Nevada conservative running for attorney general leans hard into her Israeliness
WASHINGTON (JTA) — Sigal Chattah reached across the breakfast table for my phone.
“Let me show you some Israeli ingenuity,” she said.
She pulled out a card-shaped device. Within seconds, mine was playing back an ad for her campaign to be Nevada’s attorney general.
“I’m Sigal Chattah, an Israeli-born lawyer running to be America’s number one conservative attorney general,” she says in the ad.
I figured out later she was using a smart card, called OneTapConnect. But as a tech-ignorant Boomer, I’m easily impressed. Chattah grinned. “Israeli ingenuity!” she said again.
I didn’t immediately get it. “The device is Israeli?”
No, the device is American, she said. “But I call it Israeli ingenuity.”
What’s Israeli in this exchange is not the device, but Chattah’s brand: A tech-savvy immigrant from the Start-Up Nation, ready to fight for the rights of “all Nevadans,” as her website puts it.
Chattah is well-known in Nevada for her prominence as a lawyer in a range of actions against the state’s anti-COVID restrictions. Most notably, in the 9th Circuit, the most liberal federal court of appeals, she helped overturn the state’s ban on gatherings over 50 in houses of worship.
She is running virtually unopposed for the GOP nomination to unseat the incumbent Democratic attorney general, Aaron Ford, in November 2022. Nevada, which United States President Joe Biden won narrowly in the 2020 election, has become reliably purple, and there are no polls on the attorney general race.
She is among an emerging class of Republicans whose members do not outright reject former US president Donald Trump, which would alienate his substantial following, but also do not wholly embrace him. Her campaign photo gallery includes a photo with Trump, but also with one of his nemeses, Anthony Scaramucci, Trump’s former spokesman. She will not endorse Trump’s claim that he won the election in her state.
Chattah also leans heavily into her Israeliness. She likes telling folks that she is the first Israeli American to run for a statewide office, in any state. (She’s not.) The ad, calling her “Israeli-born,” has gone viral. It doesn’t mention her big 9th Circuit win, but it targets Ilhan Omar, the Democratic US representative from Minnesota who is among Israel’s fiercest critics in Congress.
It’s not just branding. An hour with Chattah in Washington’s Mayflower Hotel breakfast room is like an hour at a Tel Aviv cafe with an Israeli politician: easy transitions from policy to family and back again, peppered with unguarded revelations. This is not your standard-issue, wary-of-the-lamestream-media Republican candidate.
There are other dissonances: She came here when she was 14 and talks about shutting down borders. She’s a small-government conservative and a warrior against COVID restrictions who fiercely defends Israel but mocks its anti-virus shutdowns and does not understand why her family there is so happily government-dependent.
She’s a Mizrahi — or Middle Eastern Jewish — immigrant attending a conference of the Federalist Society, dedicated to preserving in amber the musings of a cohort of white Christian males.
The contradictions emerge sharply when Chattah explains how she decided to run for attorney general, citing her anti-COVID restrictions activism.
“The COVID cases are all constitutional cases,” she said. “I’m an Israeli immigrant. The whole point is to come to this country and everything is beautiful, and the Constitution is what protects us. If the Constitution doesn’t protect us, if America is no longer the land of opportunity, we might as well go back home.”
If the Constitution doesn’t protect us, if America is no longer the land of opportunity, we might as well go back home
Wait: What’s unbeautiful about Israel? We had just spent half an hour discussing Israeli identity, and Chattah’s eager embrace of it.
In response, Chattah unloaded frustrations about an American Jewish community that does not embrace Israeli-American groups’ determination to combat the anti-Israel boycott. (Chattah is active in the Israeli American Council and she chairs the Israeli American Civic Action Network. She also is on the board of Or BaMidbar, an Israeli-friendly Sephardic synagogue in Las Vegas.)
She recounted with horror a conversation with a (non-Israeli) rabbi who told her his congregants were not interested in backing Israeli American initiatives because “they don’t come to our synagogues, they don’t assimilate.”
So what’s wrong with going back?
“My dad has a saying, it’s terrible but it’s true: ‘The best thing about Israel is outside of Israel,’” she said in Hebrew.
My dad has a saying, it’s terrible but it’s true: The best thing about Israel is outside of Israel
Her countrymen and women, the ones back in Israel at least, baffle her. “The people in Israel, my friends, they see all the debate over the vaccines, they don’t understand — ‘[the government] said get vaccinated, we all got vaccinated,’ they say,” Chattah shrugged. “They are conditioned like that. They’re also conditioned to pay 40 percent income tax.”
Her Israeli American compatriots here baffle her too, to a degree. Chattah confesses to having immediately plunged into an American identity when she arrived at 14, with her parents who were seeking increased economic opportunity. The family had landed first in New York, but found everyday life there too difficult, so they went back to Israel, before returning to the States in Las Vegas.
Now she despairs a little of the inability of other Israeli Americans to organize. And she is furious with Israeli Americans in Arizona for lashing out at State Rep. Alma Hernandez for compromising on a Holocaust education bill this year, removing the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism from the bill. A number of Hernandez’s fellow Democrats saw the IHRA definition as too broad. (Most controversially, the IHRA definition includes some forms of anti-Israel _expression_.)
“Israelis, they go head to the wall, they don’t understand, you can’t explain it to them,” Chattah said. How Israeli Americans treated Hernandez, one of the most outspoken pro-Israel Democrats on a state level, “was horrendous,” Chattah said.
Chattah is all about alliances: She brought the Police Protective Association on board for an initiative against anti-Israel boycotts. Seeking to establish a museum on Holocaust and genocide, she allied with Armenian Americans. She also helped lead lobbying for passage this year of Nevada’s own state bill mandating Holocaust education.
“I’ve been active in the community since I arrived in 1989,” she said. “You know somebody who knows somebody who knows somebody.”
When she talks about her family, the Israeli comes through — the single mom appalled at the choices her daughter was making in Las Vegas. She ended up sending her daughter to Pennsylvania to attend Jewish day school.
“She was getting mixed up with the wrong crowd,” Chattah said. “The problem in Vegas is, because it’s small, it’s so easy to be corrupted.”
Israelis are a relatively recent migration, and like other recent arrivals, the pull between their old and new countries comes through in different ways. I tell Chattah about another Israeli running for statewide office, Merav Ben-David in last year’s Wyoming race, and how Ben-David told me she was obsessively tracking the anti-Netanyahu movement in Israel.
Ben-David won the Democratic nomination for US Senate, but lost the election. Disabused of the claim that she was the first Israeli American to run for statewide office, Chattah exclaimed, “She ran as a Democrat?”
Chattah said Israeli Americans “are aggressive, they’re social, they’re recent immigrants, they haven’t assimilated.”
I asked her how she identifies, as a Jewish American or an Israeli American. “I would say I identify as an Israeli American.” She waited a beat. “Absolutely.”
Student at Blair High School’s Armenian Academy named finalist in Congressional App Challenge
Ruben Ghazarian, a 9th grader at the Armenian Academy at Blair High School in Pasadena, California, has been named a 2022 Finalist in the Congressional App Challenge, Asbarez reports.
This competition is the most prestigious prize in student computer science. The Challenge seeks to inspire and innovate efforts around STEM, coding, and computer science.
Congresswoman Judy Chu, representative for California’s 27th congressional district, announced the five finalists and winner on December 16th. A total of 27 students from Congresswoman Chu’s district entered the competition.
Ghazarian has been coding for over two years and was excited for the opportunity to compete in this challenge. His app, entitled “Resto-Math,” took over two months to develop, which he did in between his studies at school.
Ruben is the son of Pasadena residents Mr. and Mrs. Garabed and Lucine Ghazarian.
According to Ghazarian, he designed the app to help students learn math in an entertaining way, without being repetitive. He hopes to one day have a career in business, computer science, engineering, or robotics.
https://en.armradio.am/2021/12/19/student-at-blair-high-schools-armenian-academy-named-finalist-in-congressional-app-challenge/
Ten Armenian POWs return home
Ten Armenian prisoners of war have returned home through the mediation of the President of the European Council Charles Michel, Spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs informs.
The names of the prisoners have also been published:
Galstyan Hrachik
Dolanyan Mkrtich
Harutyunyan Gagik
Poghosyan Radik
Ghevondyan Andranik
Nazaryan Artur
Shahinyan Marat
Petrosyan Sevek
Stepanyan Karlen
Vasilyan Hayk
Happy to have repatriated 10 Armenian servicemen: Tovio Klaar
Happy to have been able to repatriate 10 Armenian servicemen, EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in Georgia Tovio Klaar said in a Twitter post.
Ten Armenian POWs were repatriated with the mediation of the President of EU Council Charles Michel.
Tovio Klaar called it “an important gesture by Azerbaijan in the process of addressing humanitarian issues ”
“The European Union will continue to work with both countries to build on the successful meetings of the President of the EU Council with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.
EU Council President Charles Michel hosted the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan for a trilateral meeting on the sidelines of the Eastern Partnership Summit in Brussels.