Armenpress: Armenia has fantastic clear and starry sky. Ahead of the STARMUS VI festival, Astrophotography School is launched

Armenia has fantastic clear and starry sky. Ahead of the STARMUS VI festival, Astrophotography School is launched

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 20:17,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 31, ARMENPRESS. The School of Astrophotography, launched prior to the STARMUS VI Festival, will reveal the secrets of the fine art of working with stars, practical skills and knowledge to the participants with the help of world-renowned astrophotographers.

ARMENPRESS reports on the first day of the school that started in Aghveran on August 31, the editor of Astronomy magazine, Michael Bakich, delivered a lecture entitled "What Astronomy magazine wants", presenting the problems the magazine solves, the topics it covers and how to present the cosmic and the celestial in one photo.

"There is one thing that we like to do very much – collecting and publishing photos taken from all over the world, so that other people can see that beauty and learn how to do it. Here is why we are here. The magazine has a scientific section where specialists present the latest discoveries made in space. We also make publications about historical astronomy. And Armenia is simply full of astronomical events, it is simply wonderful. I have only been here for a day and I have already fallen in love with Armenia. It is simply indescribably beautiful here," he said.

Photos by Hayk Manukyan

Michael Bakich mentioned that the other section of the magazine is mainly intended for beginner astronomers. "Here during the course, I will teach you what you will need for an astronomical magazine after you have mastered the technique and how to take photos for the magazine. As for cooperation with photographers of Armenian nationality, Oshin Zakarian of Armenian nationality has been taking photos for the magazine for almost 40 years. So, we have a great connection with Armenia," emphasized Michael Bakich.

Armenian astrophotographer Oshin Zakarian presented the basics of astrophotography with a digital single-lens reflex camera (DSLR). He mentioned that on all three days of the event, from August 31 to September 2, practical trainings are scheduled at night hours in high places, targeting the starry sky and the Armenian nature.

"Astrophotography school is a unique event for photographing the space, intended for those who want to enter the depths of the sky with the darkest night images of the Earth with their own equipment. Astrophotography is sometimes called photographic astronomy. It is also a method of making star observations and pursues two purposes: research and art," he said.

The astrophotographer mentioned that he takes pictures of the stars together with ground scenes, that is, he does not only take pictures of the sky, but together with the stars he takes pictures of old churches, nature and various sights.

He emphasized that Armenia is a wonderful place from the point of view of photographing the stars. "With very simple and inexpensive equipment, you can easily photograph the stars, especially in a country like Armenia, which has a fantastic clear sky, where stars can easily be seen," said the astrophotographer.

On the second day of the astrophotography school, participants will first study the introduction to Planetary Imaging, then learn how to work in the terrain: location survey, composition and lighting.

On the third day, David Eicher, editor of Astronomy magazine, will talk about why it is necessary to photograph strange and obscure images, how using star trails can capture more details, obtaining unique and unrepeatable images. Renowned astrophotographer Christopher Go will present a hands-on workshop on his experience.

"Astronomy is one of the few sciences where even a novice photographer can make a great contribution," Christopher Go, an astrophotographer who arrived in Armenia from the Philippines, said.

He emphasized that the latest technologies enable us to get excellent photos from space. According to him, competent photographs can become a very important research source.

PRESS RELEASE: Legacy Naming at AUA: The Kevork & Cecile Keshishian Student Union

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact Person: Narek Ghazaryan [email protected]


Legacy Naming at AUA: The Kevork & Cecile Keshishian Student Union


The recent naming of the Kevork & Cecile Keshishian Student Union has spurred a great deal of enthusiasm among students, faculty, and staff of the American University of Armenia (AUA). The generous contribution of the Keshishian family towards naming the student union will leave a lasting legacy honoring the lifelong community service and meaningful impact the couple has made in Lebanon and the United States. Their name inscribed at the front entrance of the AUA student union will inspire students for generations to come. 

Cecile Keshishian, née Simonian, and her late husband Dr. Kevork Keshishian were both born to survivors of the Armenian Genocide. Kevork grew up in Aleppo, Syria and Cecile in Beirut, Lebanon. For both, obtaining a good education was of utmost importance. 


After completing his secondary education in Aleppo, Kevork won a scholarship and moved to Beirut to study medicine at Saint Joseph Jesuit University. After graduation, he practiced pediatrics until emigrating to the U.S. in 1968. He then switched his specialty to radiology, embarking on a three-year residency and becoming an American Board-certified radiologist. Dr. Keshishian was a well-known speaker and lecturer in the Armenian Diaspora. He was also a pioneer in the field of family dynamics and authored four books in Armenian: How to Raise Kids in a Happy Home; Puberty & Its Problems; Love & Family; and Sexual Harmony in Married Life


Cecile pursued her secondary school education at the Melkonian Educational Institute in Cyprus and majored in business. Upon returning to Beirut, she began working as an executive assistant at Canada Dry International at a time when the company was expanding into various countries in the Middle East. Later, after the couple emigrated to the U.S., she continued her education while raising two children and graduated magna cum laude from Notre Dame College with a double degree in American history and business. 


In the U.S., Kevork and Cecile raised their two children, Alek and Aleen, with the same values with which they had grown up: active devotion to education, philanthropy, and the Armenian cause. 

Cecile served as President of Manchester, New Hampshire’s CMC Hospital Associates (with over 600 members) and the first non-American-born President of the New Hampshire Medical Auxiliary. She was also one of the founders of the New Hampshire Good Samaritans Suicide Prevention Hotline and a board member of the American Children’s Theatre.  


In 2005, Cecile was awarded the Ellis Island Medal of Honor the only award of its kind sanctioned by both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives joining the illustrious company of Ronald Reagan, Henry Kissinger, Bill and Hillary Clinton, and many other notable Americans.


Cecile notes that her philanthropic spirit was passed on to her by her mother. Orphaned during the Genocide at the age of four, her mother overcame the trauma she had experienced and worked hard to graduate from the American University of Beirut School of Nursing. “She became a nurse who then used her earnings to educate me and my three siblings. Her philosophy of life, which she also passed on to us, was to ‘leave the world a better place than you found, or else your life would have no meaning,’” Cecile recalls, recounting how her family would regularly welcome refugees into their home during the war in Lebanon in the 1970’s, helping them find jobs, enroll in local schools, and find housing.   


Her husband similarly bore a strong community service mindset. An active community leader since his youth in Lebanon, Dr. Keshishian continued his efforts in the U.S. as a member of the AGBU International Central Board while also serving as President of the Tekeyan Cultural Association, consistently focused on further expanding programs and chapter memberships throughout the U.S. and Canada. Dr. Keshishian likewise instilled the notion of philanthropy into their children at a very young age. Both Alek and Aleen now donate time and money to various Armenian and American causes. 


Cecile recalls how she and her husband learned about AUA before it was even founded, when Dr. Keshishian and Dr. Mihran Agbabian, both members of the AGBU Central Board, discussed the potential establishment of a university to bring Western-style education to Armenia. The idea was soon realized with the backing of philanthropist and President of AGBU International Louise Manoogian Simone, who suggested that this university should have an affiliation with a university in the U.S. Cecile explains that “as descendants of survivors of genocide, we always prioritized education over all else and believed that education opens doors. It is a privilege to help AUA educate Armenians and expose them to all the benefits of a Western education.”


A few years ago, when considering the AUA facility where they would want to leave a lasting family legacy, Dr. and Mrs. Keshishian felt that the Student Union would be the most fitting location a place all students use for meetings, study groups, discussions, and other curricular and extracurricular activities. “We hope that students at AUA recognize the importance and blessing of a great education and that they will use the knowledge they gain to make their community and the world a better place.” 


Located on the first floor of the Paramaz Avedisian Building (PAB), the Kevork & Cecile Keshishian Student Union measures 300 square meters, with a capacity of 150 persons. The facility houses a large collaborative space, a kitchenette, a study room, the Math & Writing Center, and a meeting room frequently used by student committees and the Student Council. 


Narek Ghazaryan| Chief Communications Officer (CCO)

+374 60 612 513  

[email protected]  

40 Baghramyan Avenue, Yerevan 0019, Republic of Armenia

aua.am


The Keshishian Family, 1992 (from left- Alek, Cecile, Kevork, Aleen).jpeg

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Front entrance of the Keshishian Student Union .jpeg

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View of the Keshishian Student Union’s main room and kitchenette .jpeg

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The Keshishian Family at Aleen’s graduation from Harvard University, 1990 (brother Alek graduated from Harvard in 1986).jpeg

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View of the Keshishian Student Union’s meeting room and study areas.jpeg

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RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/31/2022

                                        Wednesday, 


Court Agrees To Free Armenian Oppositionist

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia - Opposition politician Avetik Chalabian stands trial in Yerevan, August 
1, 2022.


An opposition figure prosecuted on what he sees as politically motivated charges 
was expected to be set free on Wednesday night after Armenia’s Court of Appeals 
agreed to grant him bail.

Avetik Chalabian was first arrested on May 13 on charges of trying to pay 
university students to participate in anti-government demonstrations in Yerevan. 
He went on trial on July 26 and was released from prison the following day 
because of the expiry of his detention period.

Although prosecutors did not ask the judge presiding over the trial to extend 
the detention, he decided to send Chalabian back to jail on August 3. 
Chalabian’s lawyers challenged the decision in the higher court, asking it to 
release their client on bail. The prosecutors did not object to the request.

The court set the bail amount at 15 million drams ($37,000). The oppositionist’s 
family and legal team scrambled to raise the sizable sum after a Court of 
Appeals judge, Ruzanna Barseghian, announced the decision in the evening.

Barseghian was scheduled to rule on the appeal at noon. Commenting on the delay, 
one of the defense lawyers, Varazdat Harutiunian, suggested that she resisted 
government pressure to keep Chalabian under arrest.

The charges leveled against him are based on leaked audio of short fragments of 
his conversation with the head of the student council of the Armenian National 
Agrarian University. Chalabian’s lawyers say that the recording was doctored by 
the authorities. They have repeatedly demanded the release of full audio of the 
conversation.

Chalabian, who leads a small opposition party, has also accused the authorities 
of forcing his younger brother Ara to resign from Armenia’s Central Bank because 
of his political activities.

Ara Chalabian headed the bank’s Department of Corporate Services and Development 
until announcing his resignation in late July. He gave no reason for his exit.

Armenian news websites claimed earlier in July that the bank chairman, Martin 
Galstian, told Ara Chalabian to quit, citing an order from Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian. The Central Bank and Pashinian’s office did not confirm or refute 
those reports.



EU Head Hosts Another Armenian-Azeri Summit


Belgium - EU Council President Charles Michel meets with Armenia's and 
Azerbaijan's leaders in Brussels, .


The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan reportedly agreed to intensify discussions 
on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty when they met again in Brussels on 
Wednesday for talks hosted by European Council President Charles Michel.

It was their third trilateral meeting in five months held in the Belgian 
capital. It lasted for about four hours.

“Today we agree to step up substantive work to advance on the peace treaty 
governing inter-state relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan and tasked the 
Foreign Ministers to meet within one month to work on draft texts,” Michel said 
in a statement released after the meeting.

The Armenian government likewise said that the two ministers will meet before 
the end of September to “continue substantive negotiations” on the peace accord 
sought by Azerbaijan.

Michel already said in early April that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev pledged to “move rapidly” towards 
negotiating such an accord.

Baku wants the treaty to uphold Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh. Yerevan 
has said, for its part, that it should address the disputed territory’s status. 
The Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers most recently met in Tbilisi in 
July.

Michel also said on Wednesday that he, Aliyev and Pashinian “reviewed progress” 
on ongoing efforts to restore Armenian-Azerbaijani transport links and demarcate 
the border between the two South Caucasus states.

“We agreed that the next meeting of the [Armenian-Azerbaijani] Border 
Commissions will take place in Brussels in November,” added the head of the 
European Union’s top decision-making body.

The commissions met in Moscow on Tuesday. Russian officials led by Deputy Prime 
Minister Alexei Overchuk also participated in the meeting.

Michel reported no further agreements on the transport links. He said in May 
that Aliyev and Pashinian agreed on “principles of border administration, 
security, land fees but also customs in the context of international transport.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan are to reopen their border to commercial and passenger 
traffic under the terms of a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped their 
six-week war for Nagorno-Karabakh in November 2020.

Aliyev has repeatedly claimed that the deal calls for an exterritorial land 
corridor for Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan exclave passing through Armenia’s Syunik 
province. He has said that passage through the corridor must be exempt from 
Armenian border controls. Yerevan has rejected his demands.



Russia Scoffs At EU Mediation In Armenian-Azeri Talks


RUSSIA - Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Maria Zakharova speaks at a news 
briefing in Moscow, January 20, 2022.


Russia on Wednesday dismissed the European Union’s continuing efforts to broker 
Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements, saying that they are driven by geopolitics, 
rather than a sincere desire to end the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The Russian Foreign Ministry claimed that the EU has nothing to offer the 
conflicting sides as European Council President Charles Michel hosted fresh 
talks between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Brussels. It was their 
third meeting in five months.

“We see that the EU’s activity in the South Caucasus is determined by 
geopolitical ambitions,” said Maria Zakharova, the Foreign Ministry spokeswoman. 
“In our opinion, this basically has nothing to do with a real desire to 
facilitate the normalization of Azerbaijani-Armenian relations.”

“I would say that these are pseudo-initiatives of the Europeans,” she told a 
news briefing in Moscow. “They are more like an attempt to shamelessly 
appropriate the laurels of mediation [from Russia,] which is not backed up by 
anything.”

“We, as mediators, are working, and this work brings concrete results and is 
assessed accordingly by the parties. As for those who pretend to be mediators 
while not being intermediaries, apparently they are just not capable of offering 
anything,”

Moscow has repeatedly deplore the EU’s mediation efforts before, saying that 
they are part of the West’s attempts to hijack Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks 
and use the Karabakh conflict in the standoff over Ukraine. A senior EU diplomat 
insisted in June that the 27-nation bloc is not competing with Russia in its 
pursuit of the conflict’s “comprehensive settlement.”

Michel held his latest trilateral meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev the day after senior Armenian 
and Azerbaijani officials met in Moscow for the second round of negotiations on 
demarcating the border between the two South Caucasus states. Russian officials 
led by Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk also participated in the talks.

Overchuk and his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts also co-head a trilateral 
commission dealing with practical modalities of establishing 
Armenian-Azerbaijani transport links in line with a Russian-brokered ceasefire 
that stopped the 2020 war in Karabakh.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday that the commission has 
made “substantial” progress towards reaching concrete agreements. “I hope that 
they will be formalized very soon,” he said.



Former Karabakh Army Chief Arrested In Armenia

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenian Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutiunian (left) and Karabakh army 
commander Mikael Arzumanian, December 3, 2020.


Armenian law-enforcement authorities have arrested a former commander of 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s army on criminal negligence charges stemming from the 2020 
war with Azerbaijan.

Lieutenant-General Mikael Arzumanian was reportedly taken into custody 
immediately after entering Armenia from Karabakh earlier this week. The 
Investigative Committee officially confirmed his arrest and indictment late on 
Tuesday.

In a statement, the law-enforcement agency claimed that Arzumanian failed to 
properly perform his duties after being appointed as commander of Karabakh’s 
Armenian-backed Defense Army on October 27, 2020, one month after the outbreak 
of the war. It specifically blamed him for the capture by Azerbaijani forces of 
the strategic Karabakh town of Shushi (Shusha) which occurred less than two 
weeks later.

The statement said Arzumanian did not deploy more troops around Shushi in the 
days leading up to the town’s fall and misled the public about the situation on 
the ground.

It was not clear whether Arzumanian will plead guilty to the accusations. His 
lawyer could not be reached for comment.

NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Azerbaijani soldiers patrol at a checkpoint on a road 
outside the town of Shushi (Susa), November 26, 2020.

Arzumanian, 49, was replaced by another Karabakh general last year. He has 
worked as an advisor to Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, since then.

Harutiunian on Tuesday voiced support for Arzumanian through his spokeswoman, 
who described the latter as “one of our best military commanders.”

“His efforts made during the 2020 war are also undeniable,” the official, Lusine 
Avanesian, told the Artsakhpress news agency. “True, he took command of the army 
only 12 days before the end of the war, but he made large-scale efforts to 
conduct military operations effectively.”

Armenian opposition leaders questioned the credibility of the charges leveled 
against the Karabakh general. They included Seyran Ohanian, a former defense 
minister who was hastily named to coordinate the defense of Shushi just days 
before the town’s capture.

“Mikael Arzumanian was the [wartime] commander of the Defense Army for only 
10-12 days,” Ohanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Wednesday. “It was hard 
to turn things around in that situation.”

Armenia - Parents of soldiers killed in the 2020 Karabakh war rally outside 
prosecutors' headquarters in Yerevan to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian's 
prosecution, .
Other opposition figures went farther, saying that Arzumanian’s arrest is part 
of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s efforts to deflect blame for the disastrous 
war.

“Everyone except the supreme culprit is guilty,” Artur Vanetsian, a former 
National Security Service director, said in a sarcastic Facebook post.

The Armenian opposition holds Pashinian primarily responsible for the outcome of 
the six-week war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 9, 2020. 
The prime minister has put the blame on Armenia’s former leaders.

Arzumanian took over as Karabakh army commander after his predecessor, Jalal 
Harutiunian, was seriously wounded in an Azerbaijani missile strike. Harutiunian 
was appointed to a senior military position in Yerevan after recovering from his 
wounds. He is not known to be facing any criminal charges.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

  

“The fate of hundreds of missing persons remains unexplained” – Armenian Foreign Ministry


Aug 30 2022



  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Day of Victims of Enforced Disappearances

There are 303 Armenian citizens still considered missing after the 44-day war in Karabakh. These figures were published in a statement of the Ombudsman of Armenia on “International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances”. The Ombudsman also makes reference to August data from the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The statement of the Armenian Foreign Ministry also indicates that the fate of hundreds of missing and forcibly disappeared during the Karabakh wars (in the early 90s and in the fall of 2020) remains unclear.

“The lack of cooperation from the Azerbaijani authorities makes it impossible to conduct an accurate assessment of the number of missing persons and obtain reliable information about the fate or whereabouts of the missing, and whether they are alive,” the Foreign Ministry said in its statement.


  • Armenian-Azerbaijani talks in Moscow and Brussels: more contradictions than connections
  • A new US co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group has been appointed. What does it mean?
  • “Armenia offers Azerbaijan three roads through its territory” – details from an expert

A fourth meeting of the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan is scheduled for August 31 in Brussels. The agenda of the talks has not been disclosed. It is not known whether Nikol Pashinyan and Ilham Aliyev will discuss the issue of returning Armenian prisoners of war held in Baku.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on May 25 that Azerbaijan has confirmed the presence of 39 prisoners. According to Armenian human rights activists, at least 80 more people are being held in Baku. After the end of the second Karabakh war, 150 prisoners returned to Armenia from Azerbaijan.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry says that after the ceasefire was established in November 2020, Azerbaijan has continued to hold Armenian prisoners of war, including civilians, and further information is impossible due to a “lack of cooperation on the part of the Azerbaijani authorities.”

“Azerbaijan continues to ignore the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights regarding the application of interim measures to provide information about Armenian hostages in Azerbaijan, as well as urgent measures presented by the International Court of Justice on December 7, 2021, obliging Azerbaijan to stop its racist and discriminatory policy against Armenians,” the recent statement of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs reads.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs considers the issue of disappearances a humanitarian priority that needs to be depoliticized:

“In the absence of such an approach, justice and social recovery, and therefore long-term peace will remain abstract.

We call on the international community to take responsibility for ensuring unconditional access to the entire territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, which can alleviate the existing humanitarian crisis.”

International Day for the Victims of Enforced Disappearances was established by the UN General Assembly in 2010.

“Enforced disappearances of people have become a global problem, not limited to any particular region of the world.

Of particular concern are:

  • continued harassment of human rights defenders, relatives of victims, witnesses and lawyers dealing with cases of enforced disappearance;
  • the use by states of anti-terrorist activities as an excuse for violating their obligations;
  • still widespread practice of impunity for enforced disappearances,” UN experts say.

Armenia and Azerbaijan interpret the status of these people differently. According to one expert, Russia is closer to Azerbaijan on the issue

Public Advocate of Armenia Kristine Grigoryan, who specifically authored the statement, stressed in it that ongoing conflicts in the modern world have created a “favorable environment” for the crime of enforced disappearance.

“The continued practice of the Azerbaijani authorities of not providing information about prisoners and missing persons or distorting such information is nothing more than the use of human rights issues for political purposes prohibited by international humanitarian law,” the Ombudsman believes.

Kristine Grigoryan claims that current response mechanisms are not effective enough. She believes that in order to enforce the norms stipulated by international law, states must enshrine them in their domestic legislation.

Luís Figo arrives in Armenia

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 13:51,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. Portuguese former professional footballer Luís Figo has arrived in Armenia.

“I am delighted to let you all know that I am traveling to Yerevan, the capital city of beautiful Armenia”, he said in a video address.

Luís Figo said that he is looking forward to having fantastic time in Armenia.

EU’s Michel to hold phone talks with Pashinyan and Aliyev

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 14:28,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. President of the European Council Charles Michel is planning to hold telephone conversations with Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev ahead of their upcoming trilateral meeting scheduled on August 31 in Brussels.

“Preparatory calls today in advance of tomorrow’s fourth Brussels meeting with Azerbaijani President and Prime Minister of Armenia”, Charles Michel tweeted.

IAEA inspection team arrives in Kiev — CNN

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 15:18,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. A 14-member team from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) led by its Director General Rafael Grossi has arrived in Kiev, TASS reports citing CNN.

The delegation was seen by CNN reporters in a Kiev hotel. No information is yet available on when the mission will arrive at the Zaporozhye nuclear power plant.

The inspectors would assess the physical damage to the plant and check the facility’s security and safety systems.

Armenia’s Pashinyan, EU’s Michel hope for effective talks at upcoming Brussels meeting

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 15:32,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan held a telephone conversation today with President of the European Council Charles Michel, the PM’s Office said.

The sides touched upon the upcoming trilateral meeting of PM Pashinyan, Charles Michel and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev scheduled on August 31 in Brussels. They highlighted the continuation of dialogue and expressed hope for the negotiations to be effective.

Nikol Pashinyan and Charles Michel also discussed issues relating to the Armenia-EU bilateral agenda.

STARMUS VI: Brian May and Serj Tankian to perform Queen’s The Show Must Go On in Yerevan

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 15:42,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. In a few days Armenia will host the 6th edition of the STARMUS festival.

STARMUS Founding-Director, astrophysicist Garik Israelian told reporters at the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concert Complex – the venue of the festival – that the festival’s format will be unique and one-of-a-kind.

“All Starmus festivals were unique and amazing and we tried to do everything for this festival which will be held in Armenia to be historic and memorable and as good as the previous ones,” Israelian said.

In addition to the lectures and discussions the festival will feature two concerts: STARMUS co-founder, Queen guitarist Brian May will deliver a performance. May performed at virtually all previous festivals, playing one or two pieces, but in Armenia he will deliver 5 and more performances.

Brian May and System of a Down frontman Serj Tankian, together with a choir, will perform Queen’s The Show Must Go On. During the musical part of the festival a special tribute will be paid to the late duduk master Jivan Gasparyan.

Israelian did not disclose further details but noted that very interesting surprises await the participants.

Other noteworthy events at the festival include the Stephen Hawking Medal awarding ceremony, the 108 Minute Round Table featuring Nobel laureates, the Star Party at Garni where telescopes will be installed.

Over 7000 participants are expected to attend the Discover the Cosmos and Change the World conference during STARMUS VI.

The main lectures, concerts and discussions will be held at the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concert Complex in Yerevan.

STARMUS VI festival features presentations by legendary Astronauts, Nobel Prize Winners, prominent figures of science, technology, culture and arts. 

Every edition of the festival is organized around a particular theme related to space exploration, and this year’s topic is 50 Years on Mars.

STARMUS VI will take place 5-10 September, 2022 in Yerevan.

 

 



Authorities release information on size of assistance for Surmalu victims

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 16:10,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs of Armenia drafted and put into circulation a bill on providing assistance in the form of a one-time payment to the victims of the Surmalu trade center explosion.

The ministry proposes to pay 150,000 drams and 300,000 drams to persons who were injured in the blast and received hospital treatment for up to 3 days and more than 3 days respectively.

Families of those who were killed in the explosion (including missing persons) will receive a 3,000,000 dram assistance for every victim (or missing person).

The August 14 explosion at the Surmalu trade center killed 16 people and injured over 60.

1 person is missing in the blast.