Finland’s FM signs application for NATO membership

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 20:53,

YEREVAN, MAY 17, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Finland Pekka Haavisto has signed the application for NATO membership, ARMENPRESS reports, TASS informed noting that the ceremony was broadcast live on Yle TV channel.

A while ago the President of Finland Sauli Niinistö, who is in Stockholm on a state visit, officially confirmed in a live broadcast the decision made by the country’s parliament to join the bloc.

The parliament of Finland on May 17 voted in favor of the proposal to join NATO, 188 deputies voted in favor, eight were against the application. Sweden also plans to submit the application tomorrow.




Armenpress: Russian Deputy FM does not rule out new Pashinyan-Aliyev-Putin trilateral meeting

Russian Deputy FM does not rule out new Pashinyan-Aliyev-Putin trilateral meeting

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 21:52,

YEREVAN, MAY 17, ARMENPRESS. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko does not rule out the possibility of organizing a new trilateral meeting of the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan to discuss the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, ARMENPRESS reports Rudenko told TASS.

“We continue to work systematically at all levels for the implementation of the trilateral agreements reached at the highest level on November 9, 2020, January 11 and November 26, 2021. The leaders are in constant touch. We do not rule out the possibility of organizing a face-to-face meeting if necessary. On May 12, in Dushanbe, within the framework of the sitting of the CIS Council of Foreign Ministers, Sergey Lavrov discussed the full scope of issues related to the normalization of relations between Baku and Armenia with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts,” Andrey Rudenko said.

Campagnes 2022. OTC recrute des volontaires

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Asbarez: Artesia Presents Genocide Proclamation

ANCA-WR and ANCA San Gabriel Valley members at Artesia City Hall


The City of Artesia presented a proclamation to the Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region during “Armenian Heritage Month,” recognizing the Armenian Genocide and in remembrance of the 1,500,000 victims.

The City of Artesia took a firm stance last week with language in its proclamation. Artesia Mayor Melissa Ramoso gave a moving speech about her experience working as a Congressional staffer for Ted Lieu with our issue during the official presentation. 

Special mention must be made to Councilmember Ali Taj, who took the initiative and contacted the ANCA Western Region staff to work on this matter.

Taj is currently the Vice-President of California Contract Cities Association, an association of municipalities who work on policy that affects the entire Los Angeles County region.

Glendale Mayor Ardy Kassakhian and former Montebello Mayor Jack Hadjinian joined the ANCA WR staff along with members of the local ANCA-San Gabriel Valley Chapter.

CivilNet: Partnership Agreement and Karabakh on agenda as Mirzoyan heads to Brussels

CIVILNET.AM

10:05

  • Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan left for Brussels, where he is set to meet with European Commission Vice President Josep Borrell and other high-level EU officials.
  • The Karabakh conflict has taken an especially heavy toll on both Armenian and Azerbaijan elders, according to new reports by Amnesty International.
  • Police detained hundreds of anti-government protesters in Yerevan who blocked streets across the capital in acts of civil disobedience. They are demanding Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation.

Armenian Genocide anniversary: Calls for Armenian resistance fighter to enter French Pantheon

EuroNews
April 25 2022

Missak Manouchian fought the Nazis with a band of communists as part of the resistance   –   Copyright  Jeanne Menjoulet
By Tim Gallagher  with AFP 25/04/2022

Calls have been made for Missak Manouchian, who took part in the French resistance during the Nazi occupation of France in World War Two, to be added to the French Pantheon.

On Sunday the mayor of Marseille, Benoît Payan, praised Manouchian who is of Armenian origin as “the illustrious resistant”, during a speech at a ceremony to commemorate the Armenian genocide.

“I believe that France would be great in offering him a place in the Pantheon of great men,” said the mayor.

The French Pantheon is a building in Paris where the remains of great French citizens are buried.

“Bringing Missak Manouchian into the Pantheon would obviously pay homage to the illustrious resistant; it would also be an act of memory for these millions of Armenian victims of a war that was not theirs.”

Payan, who has made memorial issues one of the main focuses of his mandate, recalled that “it was in Marseilles that hundreds, thousands of Armenian families arrived, rendered stateless by Turkish nationalists”, considering that “without the Armenians and without the Armenians, Marseille would not be Marseille”.

France’s second city has been led by a left-wing coalition, including some of the communist tradition of which Manouchian was a follower, since 2020.

After a ceremony at the Armenian genocide memorial on Sunday morning, hundreds of people marched through Marseille in the afternoon carrying Armenian flags.

A refugee in France after the Armenian genocide, Missak Manouchian formed the “Manouchian group”, one of the most active armed movements of the Resistance.

This group of foreign resistance fighters close to the French Communist Party (PCF) was made up of about sixty men and women.

Manouchian carried out nearly a hundred armed and sabotage operations in the Paris region, including the execution of SS General Julius Ritter, head of the compulsory labour, in September 1943.

Their campaign was disrupted when 23 members of the group were arrested a month later. The group were tortured and handed over to the German military police, before being sentenced to death in 1944.

Just before being executed, Missak Manouchian wrote to his wife Mélinée: “Happiness to those who will survive us and taste the sweetness of tomorrow’s freedom and peace. I am sure that the French people and all the combatants of freedom will honour our memory with dignity”.

In 2015, on the occasion of the entry into the Pantheon of Pierre Brossolette, Geneviève de Gaulle-Anthonioz, Germaine Tillion and Jean Zay, the PCF considered that the absence of any communist representative among them was “a political fault”.


ighter-to-enter-french-panthe 

What impact does bitcoin have on Armenia’s dairy industry?

Armenia’s dairy industry has faced several obstacles in recent years. The main challenge has been the drop in milk prices, which has forced many farmers to abandon their farms. Another challenge has been the imported dairy products, which have often been of lower quality and much cheaper than the local products. If you’re interested in knowing which countries own the most crypto visit this link for more information.

There are growing concerns about the impact of cryptocurrencies on different sectors. In particular, the dairy sector is a growing concern among dairy farm owners and dairy producers. There are several reasons for this, including:

The Armenian government has been trying to support the sector by subsidizing the purchase of local milk and investing in the modernization of dairy farms. 

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The dairy sector of Armenia has been facing difficulty for quite some time now. Unfortunately, the country has shown no signs of recovery yet, and the sector remains very strong despite the economic difficulties faced by the country. 

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Bitcoin can help Armenian dairy farmers to access new markets. Bitcoin can help Armenian dairy farmers to access new markets, say experts. The cryptocurrency could provide a way for the country’s small-scale producers to get paid for their products without going through intermediaries, they say.

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The value of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies has been growing steadily, and so has the interest of governments and institutions to regulate them. While the government of Armenia is yet to support bitcoin officially, it has begun accepting it as a means of payment for local airline tickets and as an alternative method of payment by some restaurateurs.

Bitcoin can positively impact the dairy sector in Armenia by providing a way for farmers to sell their milk for bitcoins and reduce transportation costs.

Overall, Bitcoin can help Armenian dairy farmers by providing a way to increase their profits, access new markets, and diversify their income sources.

https://techstory.in/what-impact-does-bitcoin-have-on-armenias-dairy-industry/

Baku Welcomes Iran’s Role in Reconstruction of Karabakh

Financial Tribune, Iran

The foreign minister of the Republic of Azerbaijan welcomed the participation of Iranian companies in the process of reconstruction of the areas in his country that have been liberated after the last war over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

In a telephone conversation with his Iranian counterpart on Saturday night, Azeri Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov expressed his country’s readiness for continued diplomatic visits and the expansion of political relations with Iran at different levels, Tasnim News Agency reported. 

Pointing to the close and unshakable relations between Baku and Tehran, Bayramov described the participation of the Iranian companies in the reconstruction of Karabakh as a major step in that process.

Iran’s top diplomat, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, hailed the important agreements that the presidents of Iran and Azerbaijan have signed in the past months, saying the full implementation of the contracts is on the agenda.

He also referred to the fruitful results of the most recent meeting of the Iran-Azerbaijan Joint Economic Commission in Baku as a major progress in the promotion of mutual relations.

The two senior diplomats stressed the need to maintain regional and international cooperation between the two neighbors and save the relations from the plots hatched by the common enemies of their nations.

In a separate telephone conversation on Saturday, Amir-Abdollahian and his Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias talked about cooperation between Tehran and Athens and the latest developments in the Vienna talks on the removal of sanctions against Iran.

Stressing the need to broaden Iran’s economic and trade relations with Greece, Amir-Abdollahian called for plans to immunize bilateral ties against the influence of the third parties.

Highlighting the great potential of Iran and Greece for the promotion of economic and trade cooperation, Amir-Abdollahian stressed the need to immunize the age-old relations between the two countries against the influence exerted by certain third parties and actors.

Briefing his Greek counterpart on the latest developments in the Vienna talks on the removal of anti-Iran sanctions, the foreign minister reaffirmed Tehran’s resolve to strike a good and sustainable agreement.

Dendias highlighted the significance of relations with Iran, calling for the continuation of contacts between the Greek and Iranian authorities.

The two senior diplomats also emphasized the necessity of closer interaction between Tehran and Athens and their cooperation in the international organizations.

Iran, Armenia hold talks on transportation cooperation

MEHR News Agency, Iran


TEHRAN, May 16 (MNA) – The Iranian Minister of Roads and Urban Development says he has held talks with his Armenian counterpart on developing transporting cooperation between the two countries as part of the north-south transit corridor (INSTC).

At the end of the talks between the Iranian Minister of Roads and Urban Development Rostam Ghasemi with the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure of the Republic of Armenia, the Iranian minister stated that Iran and Armenia’s geographical locations could be used as transit road route from east to west and north to south if there is serious cooperation between the two countries.

Ghasemi said that there is not a lot of transportation cooperation between Iran and Armenia in the current situation, but the construction of a new route between the two countries will be a step toward achieving high-level transportation cooperation.

He said that there are currently restrictions on the movement of Iranian trucks on the Armenian side of the border, adding, “We are trying to use Iranian companies to widen this route and standardize it.”

The Iranian minister also said, “We can deliver the goods needed by Armenia from the port of [Iranian] Shahid Rajaei [in the south] to Julfa [on the Iranian side of the border with Armenian] by rail and from there to Armenia.”

Ghasemi announced that the Armenian infrastructure minister will visit the Tehran-North freeway in Iran and the 6.5-kilometer bridge built on this route which connects and shortens the road between the Iranian capital with the northern provinces.

As regards linking the Iranian Chabahar port to the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), the Iranian minister said, “The construction of the port itself has been physically completed and we have signed an agreement with the Indians regarding the transfer of equipment to the port and operationalizing it, but there are still some disputes between the Iranian Ports and Maritime Organization and the Indians that we are resolving.”

Regarding the Chabahar-Zahedan railway project, Ghasemi said, “In recent years, the [Iranian] National Development Fund has provided resources for the construction of the Chabahar-Zahedan railway, but with this amount, the project will not be completed. We are looking to provide more budget for the Chabahar-Zahedan railway from other sources.”

KI/5491431


https://en.mehrnews.com/news/186847/Iran-Armenia-hold-talks-on-transportation-cooperation



This Family Fled The Armenian Genocide. Their Arlington Rug Store Turns 100 This Year


Dona Manoukian looks closely at a photo of the Manoukian brothers and their family.

A young couple walks through a set of glass doors with a wagon. It’s heavy, so they’re both hauling it with purpose. Rolled up, laying inside it is a red rug.

“You didn’t convince him of the color?” asks Mikael Manoukian. His family has owned Manoukian Brothers Oriental Rugs in Arlington, VA for generations.

“He’s not quite sold,” says the customer, Tsholo Chidakwa, who just moved to the area from South Africa.

“Do you think the blue would work?” asks Manoukian. “I might be able to get one of these in a light yellow.”

“Just send us a picture and then we’ll come and take a look at it in the store,” says her husband, Munya. “Rugs, they define the space.”

Although he studied business management in college, Manoukian didn’t plan to become a businessman. His passion lies in video production and live events, having spent nearly two decades as a cameraman – and is a self-described “recovering” actor. But when his father, Paul, began to age out of work, it fell upon him to run the family business: The oldest “oriental” rug store in the D.C. region.

Mikael Manoukian walks through the back of the shop, where hundreds of rugs sit in stock.Héctor Alejandro Arzate / DCist/WAMU

“I wouldn’t have chosen to do it,” says Manoukian, 52. “My goal was to basically honor my ancestors and their effort and do the best I could do.”

Those ancestors were the Manoukian brothers – Manouk, Noury, Mishel, and Mikael’s grandfather, Moses. They were forced to flee the city of Aintab, which is present day Gaziantep in Turkey, during the Armenian Genocide. That genocide, which has been recognized by the United States, occurred between 1915 and 1923.

According to Rouben Adalian, the director of the Armenian National Institute, a non-profit organization that researches and documents the history of the genocide, more than two million Armenians were systematically killed and forcibly deported.

Outside the shop, a sticker with the flag of Armenia reads, “Armenia Wants Peace.”Héctor Alejandro Arzate / DCist/WAMU

“The Armenian-American community effectively emerged on account of the atrocities that were being committed in the Ottoman Empire,” says Adalian. “Nearly all of them were people seeking refuge, looking for a way to simply hang onto life now and restart.”

The Manoukian family was able to escape to Aleppo in Syria before catching a French boat traveling across the Mediterranean. Eventually, they reached Ellis Island in New York before moving to D.C., where the brothers started a new life.

“My grandfather and his brothers came over here not to start a business, but to flee a genocide,” says Manoukian.

Most of the brothers found work at places like the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co. (A&P) grocery stores to provide for their family, according to Manoukian. In 1922, with enough money saved up, Manouk opened A&P Rugs store in Foggy Bottom, taking inspiration for the name from his days at the grocery chain. Like many immigrants throughout U.S. history, Manoukian says his great-uncle opened a business that felt familiar to his own culture.

Tsholo Chidakwa and her husband, Munya, return a rug to Manoukian.Héctor Alejandro Arzate / DCist/WAMU

“He started the first little boutique, and it was probably simply because he came from an area and tradition that [knew] about rugs,” says Manoukian.

Seeing the benefit of selling products they were knowledgeable about, the rest of the Manoukians decided to open up rug shops in the District too. Not long after, says Manoukian, the brothers combined forces under one brand: Manoukian Brothers Oriental Rugs.

At the time, getting a hold of hand woven “oriental” rugs took both business acumen and hustle. The brothers would make their way to New York City to meet with rug dealers who imported the goods from Afghanistan and India, among other countries. They built relationships with the wholesalers, browsing hundreds of intricate rugs in between friendly games of backgammon and cups of thick Turkish coffee. When the brothers saw a rug they liked, they’d engage in lengthy negotiations before striking a deal.

“That was a very traditional thing to do,” says Dona Manoukian, Mikael’s mother, who continues to help run the business alongside him. “They brought their culture with them.”

Although it has gotten smaller over the past century, Adalian says the Armenian community in D.C. thrived for a time. Some families got involved in the hotel business, while some others specialized in the rug business.

A stack of rugs are spread by Manoukian to showcase the different styles and patterns.Héctor Alejandro Arzate / DCist/WAMU

“Small as it was, it was a coherent community,” says Adalian. “That’s one craft that many Armenians practice in the old country and one that turned out to be a profitable business in the U.S.”

Business was good for the Manoukians. The rug store became a staple not just for local customers, but nationally as well. In 1971, Manoukian Brothers supplied an antique sarouk rug from Iran to the federal government. When the rug was used as an underlayment for the U.S. Constitution inside the National Archive, it marked a milestone for the family. Since then, the business has provided, cleaned, and repaired rugs for institutions like Congress, the U.S. Capitol, and the Supreme Court.

As a youth, Paul, Mikael’s father, would help his father and uncles around the store. It was expected of him to not just continue the family business but also earn a college degree, Manoukian says. Paul became a civil engineer for the Washington Metropolitan Area Transportation Authority, but on his lunch breaks, evenings, and weekends, he was a part-time rug salesman.

As time moved on, however, Moses, Mikael’s grandfather, and his brothers got older and were unable to travel as frequently as they once were. As he approached retirement from the WMATA in 1998, Paul took on the responsibilities of running the family business full time, just as his son Mikael would eventually do for him.

A framed photo reads, “CONSTITUTION DAY – SEPTEMBER 17, 1971. Antique Sarouk Carpet from Manoukian Brothers with the Constitution of the United States of America.”Héctor Alejandro Arzate / DCist/WAMU

For more than 20 years, Dona and Paul carried the family business into a new generation. He strengthened relationships with clients both longtime and new, while she streamlined their management and hired more employees. For Dona, it was just part of being married to a Manoukian.

“You don’t just marry the person, you marry the whole family,” says Dona. “The food, the traditions…things like that.”

Paul continued to barter with rug wholesalers in New York City. Sometimes, returning with a carrier van filled to the brim with Afghan gabbehs or peshawars from Pakistan. Or sometimes, no rugs at all.

Despite the ups and downs of running a business, Dona says it was always one of Paul’s goals to be fair to his customers and make the hand-knotted rugs – which are sometimes seen as luxury goods – more accessible by making payment plans available for them.

Manoukian places his hand over a recently repaired rug.Héctor Alejandro Arzate / DCist/WAMU

“One of the things that Paul Manoukian always tried to do was to price rugs so that anybody who wanted a handmade rug could afford it,” says Dona.

Although the business sat in the heart of the District for most of its existence, they relocated to Arlington after losing their lease about 4 years ago – which is around the same time that Mikael took over the reins. While it hasn’t been easy, he feels an obligation to carry on the family business. He says it’s not so difficult compared to his family’s escape from the Armenian Genocide.

“All I have to do is run a business,” says Manoukian. “I’m not fleeing for my life.”

In addition to his daily responsibilities, Manoukian is focusing on community outreach. Last year, the business hosted the Rug Shop Concerts inside the store front. Utilizing his chops in video production, the performances were shot in 4K and provided local musicians with a safe venue to perform and receive donations.

Manoukian is also working to continue raising awareness of the Armenian Genocide. In March, the Virginia Senate and House of Delegates passed a resolution to commend the store for celebrating 100 years of business. Delegate Alfonso Lopez, the son of a Venezuelan immigrant, says the resolution is one way to honor the family’s history after escaping the Ottoman Empire.

“Not only is it a family-run business rooted deeply in the history of our region, but its past is grounded in the same kind of stories of perseverance and success that have drawn so many immigrant families to the United States, including my own,” says Lopez. “It’s only right that the Commonwealth of Virginia officially honor the Manoukian family and the success of Manoukian Brothers Oriental Rugs—because they embody the very best of what the American Dream has meant to so many who have come before us and will provide an example of hope to the many who will come after.”

Manoukian in his office.Héctor Alejandro Arzate / DCist/WAMU

As a second generation Armenian-American, Manoukian recognizes the challenges and sacrifices his ancestors had to endure. Like many immigrants and refugees, the Manoukian brothers didn’t plan to flee their home country. He hopes that Afghan refugees and other groups that have recently arrived in the region can find solace in his family’s story.

“I’m a product of a departure from 100 years on,” says Manoukian. “It might give hope to people who have come 20 years ago. Who have come 10 years ago. Who are coming now.”

While the next century has yet to be written for the business, Manoukian says it would be great if it could transition to someone who also cares about the quality of the work, even if it’s outside the family. Much like the Manoukians and their culture, Dona says she is certain that the demand for high-quality rugs will live on.

“They are classic just like classical music. It will always endure.”

https://dcist.com/story/22/05/15/va-manoukian-brothers-100-armenian-genocide/