The number of congressmen supporting the bill on teaching about the Armenian Genocide is increasing

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 18:07,

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, ARMENPRESS. The number of congressmen supporting the bipartisan bill on teaching about the Armenian Genocide is increasing in the US Congress, ARMENPRESS reports the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) informs on its Facebook page that US Congressmen Barbara Lee, James McGovern, Jackie Speyer and Jimmy Gomez have expressed their support for the bill.

The bipartisan bill on teaching about the Armenian Genocide was introduced in Congress by US Congressmen Carolyn Maloney and  Gus Bilirakis. The goal of the bill is to allocate $ 10 million to the Library of Congress over the next five years to implement educational programs on the history, lessons, circumstances, and current manifestations of the Armenian Genocide.

In particular, educational programs should address the deliberate, state-sponsored massacres, deportations, and cultural annihilation of Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Syrians, Chaldeans, Aramaeans, Maronites, and other Christian minorities 1915-1923.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is currently working hard to get as many congressmen as possible to pass the bill.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 11-04-22

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 18:17,

YEREVAN, 11 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 11 April, USD exchange rate is down by 0.85 drams to 474.84 drams. EUR exchange rate is up by 0.36 drams to 518.15 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate is down by 0.31 drams to 6.06 drams. GBP exchange rate is down by 0.96 drams to 619.43 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price is up by 84.59 drams to 29638.30 drams. Silver price is up by 3.08 drams to 375.94 drams. Platinum price stood at 16414.1 drams.

French Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group emphasizes the interest of France in the preservation of the format

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 18:20,

YEREVAN, 11 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. The Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan on April 11 received the French Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Brice Roquefeuil.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Security Council, welcoming the visit of the Co-chair to Yerevan, the Secretary of the Security Council emphasized the necessity of comprehensive and lasting resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh issue under the auspices of the co-chairmanship of the OSCE Minsk Group. In this context Co-chair Roquefeuil also emphasized the interest of France in the preservation of the OSCE Minsk Group format and resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

The interlocutors exchanged thoughts both on regional issues, and on security issues between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The President of Armenia and the Ambassador of India exchange thoughts about new directions of partnership

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 19:08,

YEREVAN, 11 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan on April 11 received Ambassador of India to Armenia Kishan Dan Dewal.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the President of Armenia, at the beginning of the meeting Ambassador Kishan Dan Dewal presented the President with the book of the Minister of External Affairs of India Subrahmanyan Jaishankar “The India Way: Strategies for and Uncertain World”.

At the meeting the sides exchanged thoughts about the prospects of development of Armenian-Indian relations, new directions of partnership.

The interlocutors mentioned that Armenia and India have great potential for deepening cooperation and can implement mutually beneficial programmes in a number of fields, in particular high technologies, education, healthcare, transportation, air communication, culture and tourism.

This year marks the 30th anniversary of establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and India and the sides emphasized that based on 30 year of interstate relations, opportunities for implementation of more ambitious programmes should be created.

Armenpress: Armenian, Azerbaijani FMs exchange views on issues related to the preparation for peace talks

Armenian, Azerbaijani FMs exchange views on issues related to the preparation for peace talks

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 19:38,

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan had a telephone conversation with his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov on April 11.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, the ministers exchanged views on demarcation and formation of the commission on border security, preparation of peace talks and humanitarian issues.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/11/2022

                                        Monday, 
Armenian, Azeri FMs Discuss Peace Talks
Armenia -- Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and Azeri Foreign Minister 
Jeyhun Bayramov.
In a rare phone call, the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan discussed 
on Monday plans to sign a peace treaty between their countries and demarcate 
their border.
The conversation came less than a week after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met in Brussels for talks 
hosted by European Council President Charles Michel. Aliyev and Pashinian agreed 
to instruct their foreign ministers to start official negotiations on the 
comprehensive treaty and to set up before the end of this month a joint 
commission on the border demarcation.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry said Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his 
Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov “exchanged views on the creation of the 
commission on delimitation and border security, preparation of peace 
negotiations and humanitarian issues.” It gave no other details.
The call came hours after the conflicting parties traded fresh accusations.
In a statement on the 30th anniversary of mass killings of ethnic Armenian 
civilians in the Karabakh village of Maragha, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said 
“ethnic cleansing” of the Karabakh Armenians remains “the real goal of official 
Baku.” It also said Armenia will continue to defend the Karabakh Armenians’ 
right to a “free, secure, dignified life in their homeland.”
Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry responded by accusing Yerevan of lacking a “real 
desire” to make peace with Baku.
Earlier in the day, Mirzoyan met in Yerevan with Brice Roquefeil, the French 
co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group.
“Ararat Mirzoyan presented Armenia's position on the start of negotiations on 
Azerbaijan over the peace agreement, emphasizing in that context the mediation 
role of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs,” read a separate statement released by 
his press office.
Speaking after talks with Mirzoyan in Moscow on Friday, Russian Foreign Minister 
Sergei Lavrov said France and the United States have stopped working with Russia 
within the framework of the Minsk Group co-headed by the three world powers. 
Lavrov claimed that they have “cancelled the co-chairing troika” of the group.
U.S. and French officials have not publicly confirmed that.
World Bank Sees ‘Significant’ Growth Slowdown In Armenia
U.S. -- An atrium is seen at the World Bank headquarters building during the 
IMF/World Bank annual meetings in Washington, U.S., October 14, 2017
Economic growth in Armenia will practically grind to a halt this year due to 
fallout from the war in Ukraine, the World Bank said on Monday, echoing a 
similar forecast by the country’s Central Bank.
“The impact of the war in Ukraine and sanctions on Russia is likely to be 
significant given Armenia’s strong economic links with Russia,” the bank said in 
its latest Europe and Central Asia Economic Update.
“The growth forecast has been downgraded for 2022 from 5.3 percent pre-war to 
1.2 percent, with lower remittances and real wages impacting consumption; 
heightened uncertainty impacting investment; and exports contracting due to the 
projected contraction in Russia and slowing global and regional growth,” it 
added.
The Central Bank of Armenia cut its economic growth forecast for 2022 from 5.3 
percent to 1.6 percent about a month ago. It too predicted sizable drops in 
Armenian exports to Russia and multimillion-dollar remittances from Armenians 
working there.
Russia is Armenia’s number one trading partner and export market, with bilateral 
trade totaling $2.6 billion last year, a fact emphasized by the World Bank.
“Russia accounted for 28 percent of Armenia’s exports and 30 percent of its 
imports on average from 2018-2021 and is the source of all of Armenia’s wheat 
and gas imports,” reads the bank’s quarterly report. “In 2021, remittances from 
Russia amounted to 5 percent of GDP, 41 percent of net [foreign direct 
investment] stock was associated with Russian entities, and Russian tourists 
accounted for 40 percent of all tourist arrivals.”
“In addition, Armenia will also be impacted by elevated global food and fuel 
prices, with fuel imports accounting for 9 percent of imports in 2021,” it adds.
Food prices in the country rose by an average of 12.1 percent in the first 
quarter of this year, government data shows. They already went up by over 11 
percent last year, reflecting a global trend.
Aliyev, Pashinian Brief Putin On EU-Sponsored Talks
Russian President Vladimir Putin, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev meet in Sochi, Nov. 26, 2021
The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan telephoned Russia’s President Vladimir 
Putin at the weekend to brief him on their latest meeting in Brussels that 
prompted strong Russian criticism of the European Union’s role in the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday accused the EU of trying to 
sideline Moscow and use the Nagorno-Karabakh for its “Russophobic line” amid the 
conflict in Ukraine. Lavrov said that the 27-nation bloc wants to claim credit 
for Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements on border demarcation and transport links 
that were brokered by Putin following the 2020 war in Karabakh.
The Kremlin reported that Putin stressed the importance of implementing those 
agreements in his separate phone calls with Azerbaijani President Ilham and 
Armenian President Nikol Pashinian initiated by the latter on Saturday. It said 
they also discussed preparations for an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty which 
topped the agenda of Aliyev’s and Pashinian’s trilateral meeting with European 
Council President Michel held last Wednesday.
Michel said after the Brussels meeting that Aliyev and Pashinian agreed to start 
drafting the comprehensive peace accord and to set up a commission tasked with 
demarcating the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
“The president of the Russian Federation expressed readiness to fully support 
these processes,” the Armenian government’s press office said in a statement on 
Pashinian’s conversation with Putin.
Speaking after talks in Moscow with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan, 
Lavrov argued on Friday that Aliyev and Pashinian already agreed to create a 
commission on border demarcation at their November 2021 meeting with Putin held 
in Sochi. He said Mirzoyan assured him that that agreement “remains in force.”
Lavrov also said that the United States and France have stopped working with 
Russia in their capacity as co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group that has for 
decades been spearheaded international efforts to end the Karabakh conflict.
Reprinted 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.
 

Want to pursue a project abroad? Fulbright U.S. Scholar awards can help

Yale News – Yale University
April 5 2022
Left to right: Sharon Chekijian, Kayhan Nejad, Allie Agati, and Paul Van Tassel.

As the granddaughter of Armenian genocide survivors, Dr. Sharon Chekijian, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at Yale, has long had an interest in her family’s native country. She visited for the first time as a college student in 1991 as part of a summer language program, and learned on her return flight to the United States that the Soviet Union — of which Armenia was then a part — had just collapsed. She was on one of the last planes to leave the country before the collapse.

Ever since, Armenia has been more than a home away from home for Chekijian. Her work in the country has included advising the Armenian medical establishment on how to improve stroke care. And soon she’ll return to the American University of Armenia (AUA), where as a U.S. Fulbright Scholar she’ll help establish an emergency medicine residency program at the school in cooperation with the Armenian Ministry of Heath’s National Institutes of Health over the next three years.

The Fulbright program awards more than 800 fellowships annually to American faculty and higher ed administrators, artists, journalists, scientists, other professionals, and scholars outside of the academy in support of international opportunities. Over the past five decades the program has supported the work of hundreds of Yalies.

Chekijian is grateful for the support. The emergency medicine system in Armenia today, she says, is comparable to that of the United States in the 1960s. “There are no emergency-trained doctors, but there are 700 or so doctors who are working as emergency physicians in the system, some of whom have temporary assignments, such as anesthesia residents,” said Chekijian, who is also medical director of the Yale New Haven Hospital Physician Assistant/Nurse Practitioner Residency Program. “There’s no dedicated emergency medicine training program, but some of the doctors have dedicated their lives to this field.

The idea behind my project is to make sure that they are up to speed, that they have all of the knowledge that they need, and then to establish them as the faculty members going forward who will teach other people this discipline as part of a more formal training program.”

Since it was established in 1946, the Fulbright Program, which is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, has awarded some 8,000 different grants annually to U.S. students, foreign students, and U.S. and foreign visiting scholars. Its U.S. Scholar Program allows educators, researchers, and other professionals to teach, conduct research, or do both in over 135 countries worldwide. Most awards are for a period of two months to one year, and are given on the merits of the research or teaching project.

Since the program’s inception, Fulbright U.S. Scholars from Yale have traveled to such countries as China, Israel, Chile, Ghana, Panama, and New Zealand (to name just a few) to teach or to conduct research in fields as diverse as theater arts, sociology, environmental sciences, law, music, psychology, agriculture, neuroscience, and religious studies. Typically, about three or four Yale faculty members and postdocs win Fulbright U.S. Scholar awards each year.

Yale’s Fulbright scholars strengthen the university’s global engagement and make important contributions to international understanding,” said Pericles Lewis, Yale’s vice president for global strategy and vice provost for academic initiatives. “I encourage faculty and students to consider applying to the Fulbright program.”

For Paul Van Tassel, professor of chemical and environmental engineering and of biomedical engineering in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, who has won the Fulbright U.S. Scholar award twice, the opportunity has allowed him to conduct research at two different institutions in France about a dozen years apart.

With his first award, in 2006, Van Tassel spent six months at the Université Louis Pasteur in Strasbourg, France, where he was able to work in a laboratory with researchers he had collaborated with briefly as a postdoctoral student in the mid-1990s. His research at that time was focused on fabricating thin polymer films that could be used as coatings for biomedical applications.

This was really my first time interacting with them as a peer, and it was a wonderful experience,” he said. “Being able to live and work with the team really cemented a relationship between my lab and theirs, and exposed me to many of their interesting projects.”

During his second visit, in 2019, Van Tassel worked in a pharmacology lab at the University of Paris-Saclay, where he researched polymer systems to deliver therapeutic agents. He also had the opportunity to lecture informally and to serve as a mentor to postdoctoral students at the school.

With these experiences, you of course have the opportunity to interact with colleagues from a different culture,” he said. “But you are also seeing up close the different systems within which these individuals work: how other places manage and administer science and education is really eye opening. Such a perspective helps you not only to develop your own intellectual trajectory, but also to gain a better appreciation of other ways of doing things.”

And the program doesn’t just support faculty. In 2019, Allie Agati, senior associate director of Yale Study Abroad, participated in a Fulbright International Education Administrators seminar, a two-week program designed for staff members at higher education institutions who work in the international education sector to help them connect with societal, cultural, and higher education systems in other countries. As a Fulbright U.S. Scholar, she traveled to South Korea, where she visited more than a dozen universities to learn about the country’s education system.

While her Fulbright experience was not directly related to her daily work advising students on study abroad opportunities in Spain, Latin America, or the Middle East, participating in the program was one of Agati’s own professional development goals. It was her first trip to Korea, and the Fulbright program specifically preferred applicants with no prior experiences in Korea.

Being able to speak with and learn from those who work in the same field but have a different approach to how they encourage students to seek out their own study abroad opportunities, or support them when they come to their campuses, was really valuable,” she said. “And I appreciated learning more about Korean culture in general.”

Shortly after earning his Ph.D. at Yale last year, Kayhan Nejad, a historian of the Middle East and Russia, flew to Turkey to begin his academic year-long stay as a Fulbright U.S. Scholar. He is currently serving as a senior research scholar at the Sabanci University in Istanbul.

Nejad is especially interested in the topic of 20th-century revolutions, comparing those in Russia, Iran, and Turkey, and examining how those three nations have supported each other’s state-building projects. He’d conducted archival research for his dissertation in Moscow as a student, but was unable to travel to the Middle East to conduct research because of the COVID pandemic. His Fulbright award is now giving him the opportunity to investigate Turkish archives as he prepares a monograph for submission to an academic press.

I’m currently working in the Ottoman archives primarily, and I’m gathering Turkish-, Persian-, and Russian-language documents that are pertinent to the relations of all three states in the early 20th century,” he said. “I’m reconstructing how revolutionaries moved between those states and collaborated with each other.”

In addition to his days conducting research, Nejad, an amateur mountaineer, is also enjoying climbing in Turkey, a hobby that has introduced him to many Turks who share his interest. He has also joined with Turkish neighbors in caring for stray animals in the city.

Likewise, Agati said that her time traveling around Korea and getting to know traditions around food and other cultural aspects of life in the country was a special part of her time there. Learning how the South Koreans handle life in the context of geopolitical tensions with North Korea, she said, was especially illuminating.

For Chekijian, her travels in Armenia have given her an opportunity to see a nation that is still in the process of building itself as an independent state, even as it remains vulnerable to conflict. While her Fulbright award was granted in 2020, she had to postpone her travel to Armenia because of the Nagorno-Karabakh (known to Armenians as Artsakh) war that year, when there was an armed conflict with Azerbaijan, supported by Turkey, over the ethnically Armenian Republic of Artsakh.

It has been exciting to witness the building of the country,” she said. “I’ve also been lucky to find great partners there with whom to do this deep work of establishing an emergency medicine training program.”

Traditionally, there is not a lot of money for global health research other than for research about infectious diseases such as HIV, tuberculosis, and, most recently, COVID,” she added. “Getting support for work in emergency systems development is pretty challenging, so I am very grateful to receive this award.”

The Fulbright U.S. Scholars Program is now accepting applications for the next round of awards. Visit their website for more information. Faculty members with questions may also contact 

Historic Armenian city of Shushi named "cultural capital of Turkic world"

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 5 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Shushi, the historic Armenian city in Nagorno-Karabakh, which came under Azerbaijan’s control in the war in fall 2020, has been declared the “cultural capital of the Turkic world” for 2023, Caspian News reports.

The announcement was made at a ministerial meeting of the International Organization of Turkic Culture, known as TURKSOY, in the Turkish city of Bursa.

During the war, the iconic Holy Savior (Ghazanchetsots) Cathedral in Shushi was struck twice by Azerbaijan, which resulted in the collapse of part of the roof, injuring people sheltering inside and journalist covering the hostilities.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) said back then that the two attacks “suggest that the church, a civilian object with cultural significance, was an intentional target despite the absence of evidence that it was used for military purposes.” The organization collected remnants of the weapon used to strike the church, which “corroborated the use of guided munitions.”

In 1920, the Armenian half of Shushi was destroyed by Azerbaijani armed forces, which also defiled the cathedral of the Holy Savior and other significant Armenian heritage sites. Multiple reports and photos prove that now too, the Armenian cultural heritage of the city is being destroyed.

France says situation in Karabakh "disturbing"

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 5 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – French Ambassador to Armenia Anne Louyot has described the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) as “disturbing”.

Louyot made the remarks at a meeting with Vice President of the National Assembly Ruben Rubinyan who provided details about the situation in the Karabakh, created as a result of the invasion of the Azerbaijani armed forces.

According to Rubinyan, the policy of Azerbaijan is aimed at the eviction of Armenians from Artsakh.

Azerbaijan has broken into Nagorno-Karabakh, and the incursion has left three Armenian soldiers dead and at least 14 others injured. On March 24, Azerbaijan stormed into the zone of the responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers stationed in the area and is refusing to completely withdraw its forces from strategic heights.

Other issues related to regional security, as well as the dialogue between Armenia and Turkey were also on the table.

Ontario declares May of each year as “Armenian Heritage Month"

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 5 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Ontario Legislative Assembly has unanimously approved a bill declaring May of each year as “Armenian Heritage Month,” Asbarez reports.

Bill 105 was sponsored by Scarborough-Agincourt Member of the Provincial Parliament (MPP) Aris Babikian. The Ontario Legislative Assembly is the first legislature in Canada to adopt such a measure to honor and pay tribute to Canadian-Armenian contribution to Canadian society.

“I am overwhelmed by the unanimous and unwavering support and solidarity of my colleagues in the Legislative Assembly,” said Babikian after the adoption of the bill. “I am humbled to be their colleague and represent the people of Scarborough-Agincourt in the Ontario house of democracy.”

“My heartfelt gratitude to Ministers Paul Calandar (Markham-Stouffville, Stephen Lecce (King-Vaughan), Lisa Macleod (Nepean), and colleagues Robin Martin (Eglinton-Lawrence), Vincent Ke (Don Valley North), Effie Traintafilopoulos ( Oakville-Burlington), Logan Kanapathi (Markham-Thornhill), Jennifer Stevens (St. Catharines), and Gurratan Singh (Brampton-Center) for their camaraderie and heartfelt expressions,” added Babikian. “I am proud to sponsor this Bill and uphold the memory of our pioneers who sacrificed so much so that the community may thrive and make it a model for so many other groups.”

In his speech, MPP Babikian cited the history of the Armenians in Ontario, the establishment of various Armenian communities in the province, Canada’s noble experiment in helping Armenian Genocide survivors and orphans, and why May was selected as the month to celebrate Ontario Armenians. In his speech, Babikian mentioned the names of some of the renowned Ontario Armenians who have left their indelible impact on Ontario daily life.

On April 24, 1915, a large group of Armenian intellectuals was rounded up and assassinated in Constantinople by the Ottoman government. On April 24, 2022, Armenians worldwide will be commemorating the 107th anniversary of the Genocide which continued until 1923. Some three dozen countries, hundreds of local government bodies and international organizations have so far recognized the killings of 1.5 million Armenians as Genocide. Turkey denies to this day.