Embassy of Lebanon in Armenia expresses condolences regarding the tragic incident in Yerevan

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 18:40,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. The Embassy of Lebanon in Armenia expressed condolences in connection with the tragic incident that took place in Yerevan's "Surmalu" shopping center.

"The Embassy of Lebanon in Armenia expresses its deepest condolences to all those who lost their relatives as a result of the tragic explosion that took place in the "Surmalu" shopping center on August 14. We wish the wounded a speedy recovery, and our thoughts and prayers remain with the friendly people of Armenia at this difficult time," ARMENPRESS was informed from the Facebook page of the Embassy.

Yerevan blast: 5 Iranian, 1 Russian citizen among 21 missing persons

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 18:44,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. As of 6:19 p.m., August 15, firefighting, search and rescue operations are continuing in Yerevan's "Surmalu" shopping center. Firefighting works are carried out in 4 locations. As a result of the fire and explosion in "Surmalu" on August 14, 21 people may be missing, 4 of them Iranian and 1 Russian citizen.

6 citizens are confirmed dead. All of them are citizens of Armenia.

Minister of Emergency Situations Armen Pambukhchyan is coordinating the firefighting works at the scene.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Gnel Sanosyan visited the scene earlier today.

PM Pashinyan sends congratulatory message to Prime Minister of India

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 18:52,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to Prime Minister of the Republic of India Narendra Modi on the occasion of Independence Day. As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister, the message reads as follows,

“Please accept my warmest congratulations on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the independence of the Republic of India.

It is gratifying to see the significant progress and achievements of India during the years of its independence. India's dynamic development in various fields has a positive impact on the development and modernization of the world.

We share common values and interests that truly strengthen the ties between the two countries anchored on mutual trust. Both our interactions coming from the depths of history and our cooperation in various fields give a unique character to our cooperation. Armenia supports India in its efforts to solve also global challenges.

Ensuring a high level of political dialogue, we are ready to support the implementation of new and ambitious cooperation programs in the fields of trade, economy, investment and technology.

Taking the opportunity, I wish you, Your Excellency, good health, success, and peaceful skies and prosperity to the friendly people of India.

Please accept, Your Excellency, the assurance of my highest consideration”.

Embassy of Iran expresses condolences over the tragic incident in Yerevan

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 18:55,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. The Embassy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in the Republic of Armenia expressed its condolences regarding the tragic incident that took place in the "Surmalu" shopping center in Yerevan.

 "The Embassy of the Republic of Iran in Yerevan expresses its condolences to the families of those who died as a result of the explosion in the "Surmalu" shopping center. We share with you the pain of this tragedy. We wish endurance to the families of the victims, and speedy recovery to the injured," ARMENPRESS was informed from the Embassy’s Twitter page.

Number of Yerevan blast victims reaches 7

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 19:15,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. The number of victims of the fire and explosion that took place on August 14 in Yerevan's "Surmalu" shopping center has reached 7, ARMENPRESS reports the spokesperson of the Ministry of Emergency Situations Hayk Kostanan informed on his "Facebook" page.

“A while ago the rescuers discovered another body.

At the moment, there are 7 victims.

Search and rescue works continue”, he wrote.

The number of missing persons is 21, 5 of which are citizens of Iran and one is a Russian citizen. !3 citizens are still in hospitals.




Stanislav Zas sends condolence message to Nikol Pashinyan

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 19:26,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. CSTO Secretary General Stanislav Zas sent a condolence message to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on the occasion of the explosion in Yerevan's "Surmalu" shopping center, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister. The message reads as follows,

"Together with the fraternal Armenian people, we mourn the devastating explosion that took place in one of Yerevan's shopping centers.

We express our deepest condolences to the relatives and friends of the victims. We wish a speedy recovery to all the injured, and successful work to the rescue services in discovering the missing and eliminating the consequences of the emergency situation."

"Warrior of Peace" competition kicks off in Armenia

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 19:52,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. On August 15, the opening ceremony of the "Warrior of Peace" competition held within the framework of the "International Army Games-2022" was held at the Monte Melkonyan Military Sports Academy, which was attended by the Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Armenia Major General Edvard Asryan, high-ranking representatives of the Ministry of Defense and the Armed Forces, heads of foreign diplomatic missions and military attachés accredited in Armenia.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Defense Ministry, greeting the participants of the competition, Major General Edvard Asryan expressed confidence that the teams will demonstrate their skills and a high level of combat readiness.  

"The contestants are the best, they have gone through the difficult path of pre-selection, earning the honor of representing the armed forces of their countries in an honest struggle. The "Warrior of Peace" competition will be a true celebration of military brotherhood and courage and will contribute to the strengthening of international military cooperation," Edvard Asryan said in his welcome speech.

The representatives of the armed forces of Armenia, Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan participate in the "Warrior of Peace-2022" competition.




Armenpress: Yerevan blast death toll rises to 8

Yerevan blast death toll rises to 8

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 23:24,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, ARMENPRESS. As a result of the explosion in Yerevan's "Surmalu" shopping center, the number of victims has reached 8, ARMENPRESS reports spokesperson of the Ministry of Emergency Situations Hayk Kostanyan said.

"Rescuers have just pulled out another body from the ruins," Kostanyan said, noting that the number of victims has reached 8.

Search and rescue operations are going on.

AGBU Joins Forces with EU to Boost Armenia’s Economy with Katapult Creative Accelerator Program

Official signing ceremony of the Memorandum of Understanding between the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport of RA, Ministry of Economy of RA, Ministry of High-Tech Industry of RA, the Delegation of the EU to Armenia and AGBU ArmeniaAs part of its longstanding nation-building efforts in Armenia, AGBU has joined forces with the European Union to help reimagine Armenia’s creative economy and transform it into a key strategic sector for advancing national and economic development.

Earlier this July, AGBU organized a press conference and public event in Yerevan to introduce the Katapult Creative Accelerator Program—a three-year EU-funded initiative to be co-implemented by AGBU Armenia and Creative Armenia. Its core activities are designed to harness the collective intelligence of the creative and cultural communities of the country which include members of the performing arts, sound recording, dance, theater, opera, ballet, live music, cinema, and filmmaking disciplines.  Visual arts encompasses museums, photography, fine arts, graphic design, and other two-and-three dimensional art forms. Also included is publishing—digital and traditional–as well as video game developing, retailing, advertising, architecture, and all media delivery platforms: radio broadcasting; TV programing/production; and social media.

Through strategic programs, investments, and policy development, Katapult will promote, connect, and empower Armenia’s rich and varied talent pool which has been markedly underutilized in Armenia for far too long. In tackling key issues plaguing this sector, especially infrastructural services, Katapult envisions a well-deserved boost in market share for a sector credited as the third largest employer in the EU.

Cultural Strategist and Project Lead Anna K. Gargarian Presenting Katapult Creative Accelerator Program and “THRIVE: Ecosystems for Creativity” Conference Launch Event

Highlighting the importance of the Cultural and Creative industries, Frank Hess, the head of Cooperation, EU Delegation to Armenia, stressed Armenia’s potential economic gains from the sector, citing the impressive turnovers the EU realizes from its investments. “In the EU, the Cultural and Creative Industries (CCIs) generate around €509 billion per year, representing 5.3 percent of the EU’s total GDP and employs 12 million full-time jobs, which constitutes 7.5 percent of the EU’s employment and the third largest employer sector in the EU.”

Katapult encompasses three of AGBU’s four pillars of activity—education, culture, and socio-economic development. AGBU Armenia believes that by investing in these areas, there is a real potential for job creation and innovation, which will serve as a primary driver of innovation and entrepreneurship. The program, which takes a full cycle approach from creative ideation through production to market distribution will promote creative talent and products through media partnerships, marketplace events and talk series. Katapult will also connect partnerships and promote networking across other economic sectors in addition to the worldwide Armenian diaspora. 

“We want to create sustainable livelihoods, drive the economy, and help position Armenia on the world map of creative ideas, products and talents,” AGBU Armenia President Vasken Yacoubian stated, adding that AGBU respects the knowledge and experience of the creative community in Armenia. The end goal of the program, he explained, is to build an industry that generates socio-economic vitality and affirms a strong civic identity, rooted in culture, for nation building.

Audience at the “THRIVE: Ecosystems for Creativity” Conference

The launch event featured the official signing ceremony of the Memorandum of Understanding between Armenia’s Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport, Ministry of Economy, and Ministry of Technology, European Union’s Delegation to Armenia and the Armenian General Benevolent Union. Signatory parties committed to cooperate within the scope of the Katapult Creative Accelerator Program. 

Katapult is a three-year commitment by the EU, but AGBU and Creative Armenia are resolved to implement long-term projects with systemic impact to make fundamental changes to the creative ecosystem.

In order to set the tone for the systemic change to come, Katapult’s public launch included an open summit of international experts sharing their experience on system-building from the perspectives of education, business, regional exchange, IT and cultural policy. Guest speakers included Jaqueline Karaaslanian (LearningLearning Architects, MIT Media Lab), Thomai Serdari (Luxe Brands, NYU Stern school of business), Tamara Janashia (CUMA Labs Georgia), Narek Vardanyan (The Crowd Funding Formula), and Pat Cooke (University College Dublin, the Irish Arts Council).

By 2025, Katapult aims to incubate 135 creative businesses and projects via Creative Armenia’s Artbox, and support ten cultural institutions across the country through technical investments, international mentorship, and capacity building. Through Katapult Pavilion, Armenian designers, artists and musicians will exhibit their products to international markets at world renowned expos. Annual Katapult Talks will provide virtual and physical platforms for dialogue to connect global creative communities, and share experience on developing creative industries. Katapult research and the founding of a Creative and Cultural Industries Council will advocate for policy changes to incentivize support and investments in culture in the long term.

More information on Katapult can be obtained online. Details about the Artbox incubator for culture can be found at Creative Armenia, a global arts foundation for the Armenian people that discovers, develops, and champions innovative talent across the arts.


Asbarez: Dr. David Low’s New Book on Ottoman Armenian Photography Published

“Picturing the Ottoman Armenian World: Photography in Erzerum, Harput, Van and Beyond” book cover

LONDON/NEW YORK—I. B. Tauris, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing, announced the publication of Dr. David Low’s book “Picturing the Ottoman Armenian World: Photography in Erzerum, Harput, Van and Beyond” as part of the “Armenians in the Modern and Early Modern World” series.

The Armenian contribution to Ottoman photography in the last decades of the empire has been well-documented. Studios founded and run by Armenian Ottomans in Istanbul contributed to the exciting cultural flourishing of Ottoman ‘modernity,’ before its dissolution after World War I. Less known however are the pioneering studios from the east in the empire’s Armenian heartlands, whose photographic output reflected and became a major form of documenting the momentous events and changes of the period, from war and revolution to persecution, migration and ultimately, genocide.

“Picturing the Ottoman Armenian World: Photography in Erzerum, Harput, Van and Beyond” examines photographic activity in three Armenian cities on the Armenian plateau: Erzurum, Kharpert. and Van. It explores how indigenous photography was rooted in the seismic social, political, and cultural shifts that shaped Armenian lives during the Ottoman Empire’s last four decades.

Arguing that photographic practice was marked by the era’s central movements, it shows how photography was bound-up in Armenian educational endeavors, mass migration and revolutionary activity. Photography responded to and became the instrument of these phenomena, so much so that it can be shown that they were responsible for the very spread of the medium through the Armenian communities of the Ottoman East and the rapid increase in photographic studios. Contributing to growing interest in Ottoman and Middle Eastern photographic history, the book also offers a valuable perspective on the history of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

Author Dr. David Low

“Like many works with an Armenian focus, this is a book written in response to absence. Armenians are widely acknowledged as being central to photography in the Ottoman Empire, and yet the stories of Armenian photographers, their lives and their images, remain largely unwritten,” Dr. Low said. “However, rather than produce a history of photography in the conventional art historical mode, my aim has been to write what might be termed a photographic history, a history that uses the lives of photographers and, moreover, their subjects and images as a means of entering and exploring a wider history of Armenians in the Ottoman East,” he continued. “While written in response to absence, the book endeavors to avoid the prevalent notion of photographs as the vestiges of a lost world. It approaches them instead as the creations of a vibrant world and the products of lives being lived. Its central preoccupation is how we might write productively about photographs and what sort of histories might be produced when we closely study, scrutinize and converse with them.”

Reviews of the book are available below:

“Picturing the Ottoman Armenian World powerfully fills the most glaring lacunae in photography studies of the Middle East: a critical and rigorous deep dive into the central role of the Armenians in the history of Armenians in the history of Ottoman photography. Low gifts us a scrupulous and erudite social and art history of Armenian photography that promises not only to change how we think of Ottoman visual culture but also shakes how we understand the history of photography writ large,” said Stephen Sheehi, Wellesley College, U.S.

“Low provides a ground­breaking study of photography from a neglected region of the Ottoman Empire. He tells the compelling story of multi-generational Armenian families of photographers, whose work was long believed lost in the 1915 genocide. An important contribution to both the history of photography and the social history of Ottoman Armenians,” said Armen T. Marsoobian, Southern Connecticut State University, U.S.

Professor Bedross Der Matossian (University of Nebraska, Lincoln), series editor of the “Armenians in the Modern and Early Modern World” noted: “We are extremely happy to publish David Low’s book. It is well known that Armenians have played a dominant role in introducing photography to the Middle East in the 19th and the 20th centuries. Low’s book is a sophisticated analysis that incorporates the history of Armenian photography in central cities of historic Armenian with the major political and socio-economic transformations that took place in the Ottoman Empire. The book will have a lasting impact on the ways in which scholars will view Armenian contribution to photography.”

Dr. David Low is a photographic historian focusing on the Ottoman Armenian world and the place of photography in Armenian lives, as well the wider intersections of photography, migration and exile. He was awarded his PhD by the Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London.

Forthcoming Books in the Series include:

  • “The Brass Band of the King: Armenians in Ethiopia,” Boris Adjemian July 2023 • 9780755648412 • Hardback • £90.00 • 288 pages;
  • “Ararat in America: Armenian-American Culture and Politics in the Twentieth Century,” Benjamin F. Alexander October 2023 • 9780755648818 • Hardback • £85.00 • 256 pages;
  • “The Armenian Diaspora and Stateless Power: Collective Identity in the Transnational 20th Century,” edited by Talar Chahinian, Sossie Kasbarian & Tsolin Nalbantian • November 2023 • 9780755648207 • Hardback • £65.00 • 256 pages;
  • “Armenians in Turkey after World War II: An Archival Reader of USSR Consular Documents,” Talin Suciyan December 2023 • 9780755646326 • Hardback • £85.00 • 224 pages;
  • “Syrian-Armenian Women Migrants in Armenia: Gender, Identity and Painful Belonging,” Anahid Matossian February 2024 • 9780755648467 • Hardback • £85.00 • 256 pages;
  • “Russia’s Other Eastern Church: The Armenian Confession and the Tsarist Autocracy,” Paul W. Werth June 2027 • 9780755646104 • Hardback • £85.00 • 256 pages.

For more information about the series visit the website. For more information about the series and submission please contact Bedross Der Matossian via email: [email protected].