Eurovision: Local media reports up and coming singer Rosa Linn will represent Armenia at Eurovision 2022

wiwibloggs
Feb 15 2022

Armenia last competed in Eurovision back in 2019 and little has been heard from them so far this season. However Armenian media is now reporting that upcoming singer-songwriter Rosa Linn will represent her country at Eurovision 2022.

Armenian news site Hraparak reports that Rosa Linn has been internally selected by broadcaster AMPTV. No further details of the Rosa Linn’s song for Turin are known, but the newspaper says that confirmation of Rosa Linn and her song will be revealed next month.

Otherwise known as Roza Kostandyan, upcoming singer-song Rosa Linn already has a Eurovision connection. She has been part of Nvak, Tamar Kaprelian‘s programme for young musical artists.

Rosa Linn is highly involved in her music. As well as singing and writing her songs, Rosa Linn is also involved with production. Last year FLAUNT magazine described her as Armenia’s “first woman music producer”.

Her official biography notes that while Rosa Linn was raised in a country that has seen plenty of conflict over the years, Rosa Linn has been left with “a predisposition for love in all its forms.” She believes that “it is her duty and purpose to spread as much love as she can.”

Rosa Linn released her debut single “KING” in September last year. The cool alternative R&B song was a collaboration with Rosa Lin and the American electro-pop artist KIIARA. “KING” features bilingual lyrics, with Rosa Linn effortlessly mashing up Russian and English — sometimes in the same sentence.

The music video has picked up over 240,000 views on YouTube, while on Spotify it’s enjoying over 480,000 listens.

Armenia last competed at Eurovision 2019, when the internally selected singer Srbuk performed “Walking Out”.

The following year, broadcaster ARMTV brought back national final Depi Evratesil. It was won by the Armenian-Greek singer Athena Manoukian, who was due to go to Eurovision 2020 with her song “Chains On You”. However, due to the contest being cancelled because of the pandemic, Athena did not realise her Eurovision dream.

Last year, after initially confirming for Eurovision 2021, broadcaster AMPTV later withdrew. The broadcaster explained their withdrawal as “considering the latest events, the shortness of production time as well as other objective reasons that make the proper participation of Armenia at ESC 2021 impossible.”

Armenia also withdrew from Junior Eurovision 2020. However, after returning to Junior Eurovision 2021, the country took home their second Junior Eurovision victory, with Maléna’s song “Qami Qami”.

Armenian Defense Ministry denied Baku’s statement about the shelling of Azerbaijani posts on the border

Feb 15 2022

YEREVAN, February 15. /Then24/. Baku’s statement that the Armenian Armed Forces fired at the positions of the Azerbaijani army in the northeastern and eastern directions of the border does not correspond to reality. This was reported on Tuesday in a press release from the Armenian military department.

“The Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan has again spread disinformation, claiming that on February 14 and 15, units of the Armenian Armed Forces opened fire on Azerbaijani military positions located in the northeastern and eastern parts of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. The situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border is relatively stable and is under full control of the Armed Forces of Armenia,” the report says.

Earlier, the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan reported on the shelling of the positions of the armed forces of the republic on the border of the two countries from the territory of Armenia. According to the ministry, on the night of February 15, the positions of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces came under fire from the territory of the adjacent Tovuz region.

On November 16, 2021, intense fighting took place between the armed forces of Armenia and Azerbaijan in the border regions of the Syunik region of Armenia. Yerevan stated that the Azerbaijani military launched an offensive deep into the territory of Armenia. The state highway connecting the capital of the republic with the southern regions of the country and Iran was under threat. Baku blamed Armenia for what happened, accusing the Armenian armed forces of provocation. According to the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry, the Armenian servicemen attacked the posts of the Azerbaijani military.

In connection with these events, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu alternately held telephone conversations with colleagues from Armenia and Azerbaijan. The press service of the Russian defense ministry reported that after that, the heads of the Azerbaijani and Armenian defense ministries took measures to stabilize the situation on the border, the situation returned to normal. However, the parties periodically report incidents in this direction of the state border. The latest incident occurred on January 11 this year. Then one Azerbaijani soldier died. The Armenian side also suffered losses.

Armenian political crisis deepens

Feb 15 2022
by Vladimir Rozanskij

President Sarkisyan’s resignation leaves the field open to Prime Minister Pushinyan. The prime minister has been accused of yielding to Azerbaijan and Turkey. Fears of an authoritarian drift in Yerevan.

Moscow (AsiaNews) – The resignation at the end of January of President Armen Sarkisyan has further exacerbated political clashes in Armenia’s young democracy. The former head of state explained in recent days that he had resigned due to a “lack of powers” attributed to his role, and moved to the Caribbean islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis, where it was discovered he already held a third citizenship, in addition to the British one that was already known.

In Novaja Gazeta, Stepan Grigoryan, the former Armenian ambassador to Russia and now a political scientist, says that ‘in certain countries like ours, in addition to written agreements, verbal ones are very important, as happened in the change of presidency between Serz Sargsyan and Armen Sarkisyan, who was promised that as president he would be responsible for attracting investment to Armenia and would play an important role in foreign policy’.

Sarkisyan was elected in 2018, and in recent years has had to find a way to work with Prime Minister Nikol Pašinyan, protagonist of the “velvet revolution” and then of the defeat with Azerbaijan in Nagorno Karabakh, then confirmed in the early elections of 2021. The Pašinyan government has blocked all of the president’s initiatives, using the popular legitimacy it still enjoys despite many contradictions. However, Grigoryan warns that ‘even a revolutionary government needs control by the other powers of the state’.

The Pašinyan administration is heavily criticised, among other things for the lack of competence of its members, chosen from ‘civil society’, who do not seem to be able to cope with the tremendous challenges of recent years.

“I spoke to an important member of the ruling party,’ Grigoryan explains, ‘and he said: if Azerbaijan has 1,000 tanks, Turkey 10,000 and we only have 300, we have to do what they want. I told him that Luxembourg doesn’t have any, but lives in peace between France and Germany.

After Pašinyan’s confirmation, the resigning president did not have the strength to continue the confrontation, and joined the destructive criticism of the opposition, together with the Armenian Church, the University of Yerevan and the Academy of Sciences. It is precisely the rigidity of the intellectual, cultural and political elite that has further strengthened popular support for the prime minister, whose resignation was all they were asking for, without proposing any alternatives or compromises.

Sarkisyan sent his resignation letter from London, before flying to the Caribbean, and this contemptuous attitude attracted even more discontent among the population. Pašinyan had good reason to exasperate the former president after his war defeat in 2020, when it became clear that he wanted to get rid of him, which he could not do through parliamentary channels where he would need 75% of the votes (he now controls 67% anyway).

Grigoryan and several other commentators maintain the crisis has deepened as Pushinyan is about to conclude new agreements on Nagorno Karabakh, giving in on many points in order to close the disputes with Azeris and Turks. Above all, it seems inevitable that Karabakh will be recognised as part of Azerbaijan, ‘since the whole world now recognises it’, as the Armenian Prime Minister himself recently stated, something that the opposition and Armenian high society are not prepared to accept.

With Turkey, the head of government would be willing to stop insisting on denouncing the genocide of the early 1900s, arguing that “the Armenian diaspora, rather than national institutions, must deal with this”. Road accesses to Nakhičevan would be opened, allowing Turkey to communicate directly with Azerbaijan.

Finally, Pushinyan could try to replace Sarkisyan with a person loyal to him, making a democratic “short circuit” similar to those he denounced at the time of the “velvet revolution”. In this way, Grigoryan concludes, “he too would turn into a kind of autocrat, and I do not think he would enjoy the current consensus for much longer”.

Assemblymember Holden Builds Ties Through Syunik, Armenia Sister City

Feb 14 2022
Published on Monday, February 14, 2022 | 12:16 pm

Assemblymember Chris Holden resolution’s, ACR 105, providing for Sister state relationship with the Province of Syunik in Armenia has passed the Senate Floor.

Syunik is the southernmost province in Armenia and has historical and cultural significance for Armenia and the world. It is one of the original provinces of the ancient Kingdom of Armenia.

“Strengthening the relationship with Syunik comes at a critical time as regional powers like Azerbaijan and Turkey pose a threat to its existence and livelihood. This resolution reaffirms California’s solidarity with Armenia and our 1-million-strong community of California-Armenians,” said Assemblymember Holden said. “There is power in our solidarity and there is even more when we acknowledge the wrongs committed and urge for justice. We set precedent for the future with our action or inaction and today, we are creating long-lasting ties to thread forward a better tomorrow.”

It is also home to the Armenian Stonehenge which dates to the Bronze Age and has petroglyphs that are seven thousand years old. Syunik is described by Armenians as the backbone of Armenia, as it is essential to importing and exporting goods from the south.

ACR 105 would reinforce California’s solidarity with and support for the people of Syunik and will facilitate mutually beneficial educational, economic, and cultural exchanges between the two states. The resolution would also create a taskforce with representatives from the community of Syunik, government of Syunik, government of California and community partners of California.

“As an immigrant, this issue hits close to home for me. I and many of my constituents worry about the safety of loved ones residing in that region. So, I am deeply aware of the uncertainty inherent in living there and the privilege we have to live in California. By creating this sister-state relationship with the Syunik Province, we will do our part, albeit small, to share some of the benefits of living here through economic, educational, and cultural engagement,” said Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian, co-author of ACR 105.

The Destruction of Christian Cultural Heritage

Feb 15 2022

Azerbaijan’s government has announced that it intends to erase Armenian inscriptions on religious sites in the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Republic, which Azerbaijan invaded through an aggressive war against Armenians in 2020.

Azeri Minister of Culture Anar Karimov told a press briefing on February 3 that a working group was established that will be responsible for removing “the fictitious traces written by Armenians on Albanian religious temples,” Eurasianet reported.

Azerbaijan’s government has tried justifying the move by falsely claiming that the churches were originally the heritage of Caucasian Albania rather than Armenians. These particular churches, however, were unquestionably built by Armenians.

This decision by Azerbaijan is in direct violation of the 2021 ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ). This ruling states that Azerbaijan must “take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration affecting Armenian cultural heritage, including but not limited to churches and other places of worship, monuments, landmarks, cemeteries and artefacts.”

This is not Azerbaijan’s first attempt at destroying Armenian cultural heritage. Two prominent academic researchers on cultural heritage, Simon Maghakyan and Sarah Pickman, wrote in 2019 that a ground-breaking forensic report tracked Azerbaijan’s destruction of 89 medieval churches, 5,840 intricate cross-stones, and 22,000 tombstones in Nakhichevan. Maghakyan labels the destruction “the greatest cultural genocide of the 21st century.”

Save Armenian Monuments condemned the Azerbaijani government’s recent launch of a “working group of specialists to remove the fictitious traces written by Armenians.”

“We are nauseated by Azerbaijan’s brazen belligerence to continue its targeting of Armenian sacred sites,” remarked Dr. Virginia Davies, President of Save Armenian Monuments. “The purge organ does not just violate the December 7, 2021 International Court of Justice decision that ordered Azerbaijan to protect Armenian monuments,” continued Davies, “it is tantamount to a declaration of genocide, emboldened by the West’s shameless courting of Azerbaijan despite the latter’s 2020 aggression against Armenians and 1997-2006 state-sanctioned flattening of every Armenian cultural monument in the exclave of Nakhichevan.”

Azerbaijan’s closest ally, Turkey, has also excelled at cultural heritage destruction throughout the decades. During the 1914-23 Christian genocide committed by Ottoman Turkey against Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks, around 2.5 million Christians were exterminated, and much of the religious and cultural heritage of the victims was destroyed. Author Raffi Bedrosyan notes:

As the Armenian population got wiped out of Anatolia in 1915, so did these churches and schools. Along with the hundreds of thousands of homes, shops, farms, orchards, factories, warehouses, and mines belonging to the Armenians, the church and school buildings also disappeared or were converted to other uses. If not burnt and destroyed outright in 1915 or left to deteriorate by neglect, they became converted buildings for banks, radio stations, mosques, state schools, or state monopoly warehouses for tobacco, tea, sugar, etc., or simply private houses and stables for the Turks and Kurds.

Similar cultural crimes were also committed against Assyrians and Greeks in Turkey. The Greek Hagia Sophia Church in Constantinople, which was once the world’s greatest church, was first converted into a mosque after the city’s invasion by Ottoman Turks in the fifteenth century. It was later converted into a “museum” in 1935 by the Turkish government. In July 2020, the historic former church was reconverted into a mosque. A month later, another historic Greek church, the Chora Church, which became the “Kariye museum and museum warehouse” in 1945, was converted into a mosque again.

In yet another example of desecration, the historic Greek Hagia Sophia Church in the city of Edirne was opened as a mosque by Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet) on December 24, 2021, on Christmas Eve, after its restoration was completed.

Turkey now looks like a graveyard of destroyed or abused churches and monasteries. For instance, the Armenian St. Bartholomew Monastery, which has become an excavation site for treasure hunters and villagers, only has a wall remaining today. This historic Armenian Monastery, located in the city of Van in eastern Turkey, was in use until the 1914-23 Christian genocide.

Many churches in Turkey are listed for sale on the internet. The 1,700-year-old Mor Yuhanna Assyrian (Syriac) Church in the city of Mardin, for instance, was listed at a price of ₺7,250,000 (around $530,000) according to Turkish media. The church is registered as a cultural property by Turkey’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Worship is no longer held in the church, which was used as a warehouse for a long time. İbrahim Aycun, who claims to be the owner of the church, says that his father bought the building as a warehouse and workplace, and that he inherited it from his father. The historic church was listed on online classifieds and shopping platforms as a “building for sale” in 2020.

Turkey has imported its tradition of destroying cultural heritage to northern Cyprus, which it has illegally occupied since 1974. In an attempt to erase the ancient culture of the area, Turkey has illegally changed all the Greek names of areas, towns, and villages to Turkish names. According to the 2012 report “The loss of a Civilization: Destruction of Cultural Heritage in Occupied Cyprus,” Turkey “has devoted itself to the systematic destruction and obliteration of the cultural heritage of the areas under its military control”:

The churches have been subject to the most violent and systematic desecration and destruction. More than 500 churches and monasteries have been looted or destroyed: more than 15,000 icons of saints, innumerable sacred liturgical vessels, gospels and other objects of great value have literally vanished. A few churches have met a different fate and have been turned into mosques, museums, places of entertainment or even hotels, like the church of Ayia Anastasia in Lapithos. At least three monasteries have been turned into barracks for the Turkish army (Ayios Chrysostomos in the Pentadactylos Mountains, Acheropoiitos in Karavas and Ayios Panteleimonas in Myrtou). Marvelous Byzantine wall-paintings and mosaics of rare artistic and historical value have been removed from church walls by Turkish smugglers and sold illegally in America, Europe and Japan. Many Byzantine churches have suffered irreparable damage, and many cemeteries have been desecrated or destroyed.

During the second phase of Turkey’s invasion in 1974 “the [Maronite] Monastery of the Prophet Elias was savagely bombed by the Turkish air force; it caught fire and was badly damaged. The Church and Monastery were subsequently looted and desecrated. What remains of the complex is now used as a stable for holding livestock.”

Cultural genocide appears to be what genocidal groups have in common. In the 1930s and ’40s, Nazis often vandalized and destroyed synagogues and other properties of Europe’s Jewish communities. In 2001, the Taliban blew up and destroyed the statues of Buddhas in Afghanistan. In 2017, the UN Security Council condemned “the unlawful destruction of cultural heritage, inter alia destruction of religious sites and artefacts, as well as the looting and smuggling of cultural property from archaeological sites, museums, libraries, archives, and other sites, in the context of armed conflicts, notably by terrorist groups” such as Islamic State (ISIS), al-Qaida and associated individuals and groups.

There was also the destruction of Yazidi cultural heritage in the Yazidi homeland of Sinjar in Iraq by ISIS in 2014. According to a 2019 report by Rashid International e.V., Yazda, and Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa (EAMENA) entitled “Destroying the Soul of The Yazidis: Cultural Heritage Destruction During the Islamic State’s Genocide Against the Yazidis,” Yazidi temples, shrines, and other religious and cultural sites belonging to Yazidis were systematically destroyed by ISIS.

The destruction of cultural heritage is comparable to violations of fundamental rights such as rape, slavery, and torture, according to the report, which adds:

The right to access and retain cultural heritage is acknowledged as a human right under international law…

Amongst crimes against humanity, the crime of persecution is of special significance in the protection of minorities. Its key purpose is to guard against patterns of discriminatory attacks on civilian populations, which rank among ‘the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole’. The destruction of tangible cultural heritage is a key indicator of such a discriminatory attack. Concurrently, the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, the ICTY [International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia] and the International Law Commission (ILC) viewed ‘the destruction of religious buildings as a clear case of persecution as a crime against humanity’.

The destruction of cultural heritage is an attempt to eradicate the common ground a community stands on. It is an attempt to break the bonds that bind individuals together and form a common whole. It is more than just an attack on objects, it is an attack on the identity of the individual and the community, a tearing of the soul.

Undemocratic governments such as Turkey and Azerbaijan, as well as terrorist groups such as ISIS, al-Qaida, and the Taliban, have for decades systematically and irreversibly destroyed the cultural heritage of indigenous peoples. They start their genocide by mass murdering people and then continue the process of extermination by targeting their cultural heritage so that no traces of their victims’ existence will remain and their history will be wiped out from the face of the earth.

The crime of cultural heritage destruction has been committed against the same victims by the same perpetrators again and again—in Turkey, Cyprus, the South Caucuses, and the Middle East. Perpetrators enjoy a culture of impunity and appeasement; they never have to worry about accountability. They continue destroying the souls of their victims and parts of world heritage of immeasurable value. And the world just watches idly by.

Uzay Bulut is a Turkish journalist currently based in Israel.


New St. Sarkis Armenian Church consecrated in San Diego

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 15 2022

More than 15 years in the making, the new St. Sarkis Armenian Church was consecrated in San Diego. The church is located at 13925 El Camino Real, near Del Mar, Asbarez reports.

The jubliant weekend of ceremonies took place from January 28 to 30 and was presided over by Western Primate Archbishop Hovnan Derderian of the Armenian Apostolic Church of North America, and Parish Priest Very Rev. Fr. Pakrad Dz. V. Berjekian.

More than 350 attendees, each day, occupied the new sanctuary for Friday’s Opening of the Door Ceremony, Saturday’s Consecration, and Sunday’s first regular Divine Liturgy service (“Badarak”) in the new church. The clergy, public officials, parishioners, friends, and other special guests, celebrated with remarks, presentations and sacred music—and were masked according to State COVID Protocol.

Newly-commissioned stained glass windows, paintings, mosaics, crosses and icons adorned the sanctuary as the church was formally consecrated. An overflow tent outside with live a video and audio feed accommodated additional parishioners, and receptions followed every service.

Newspaper: Armenia PM ‘oversees’ work of 44-day war parliamentary inquiry committee

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Feb 14 2022

YEREVAN. – Past daily of Armenia writes: As it is known, the authorities of the day have formed a parliamentary committee of inquiry studying the 44-day [Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)] war [in the fall of 2020], which started its work yesterday.

Before that, it had become known that the parliamentary opposition factions are not going to participate in the work of the committee, considering it another show organized by the authorities.

According to Past newspaper’s information, the list of those to be summoned to the inquiry committee was previously discussed and agreed with [PM] Nikol Pashinyan. Moreover, according to the information we have, he has given clear directives and instructed “not to engage in self-activity” without his knowledge.

According to the newspaper’s information, also, he has ordered to organize a discrediting campaign against the opposition factions on the topic of not participating in the work of the committee, at the same time to specifically target the more active MPs in connection with the topic.

Several villages in Armenia’s Gegharkunik Province are deprived of water due to Azerbaijan incursions

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Feb 15 2022

A number of villages in Gegharkunik Province of Armenia have been deprived of water due to criminal incursions by Azerbaijan.

Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan and his staff visited Geghamabak, Jaghatsadzor, Norabak, Kut, and Sotk villages of Gegharkunik.

The ombudsman and his staff’s fact-finding work carried out in these villages is presented in the video above.

Country to Live party: ‘Shushi Declaration’ is undisguised threat to Armenia and Artsakh

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Feb 15 2022

The “Shushi Declaration” signed between Azerbaijan and Turkey on June 15, 2021 in occupied Shushi, and then ratified by their respective parliaments, is an undisguised threat to Armenia and Artsakh [(Nagorno-Karabakh)], which officially confirms and reaffirms a hostile policy against Armenia and Armenians and ensuing actions deriving as a result. The Country to Live party of Armenia has noted this in a statement it released Tuesday. The statement continues as follows:    In particular, as before, the declaration now stipulates that the Artsakh issue is “resolved”, despite the statements of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries that the issue of a comprehensive settlement of the status of Artsakh remains on the agenda of the OSCE Minsk Group. 

The agenda of forming a “one nation, two states” alliance of Turkic-speaking countries is enshrined as a strategic goal of Turkey and Azerbaijan, [and] moreover, the “Zangezur Corridor” is considered a priority in terms of achieving that goal, considered separate from the process of unblocking communications in the region.  The recent working group set up by the Ministry of Culture of Azerbaijan, which aims to once again eliminate and distort the Armenian cultural heritage at the state level, once again proves that we are dealing with retaliatory steps by antagonist countries, whose long-term goal is to place the region under the sole Turkish sphere of influence. 

At the same time, the Armenian government continues to push forward the agenda of opening an “era of peace” inadequate to these challenges, considering it exclusively a process of unblocking roads, when in fact we can only achieve peace after establishing  the inadmissibility of the use of force, the threat of force, the exclusion of hatred, propaganda of hostility at the state level, and the way of achieving the solution of problems in a constructive atmosphere of negotiations without preconditions. In this context, the foreign policy agenda should continue to be dominated by the Artsakh status agenda as a real guarantee of security and long-term stability. At the same time, it is necessary to develop and implement a clear reform policy strategy in the field of army building. 

The clearly destructive and presumptuous manner of conduct by Azerbaijan is not only left without an adequate response from the international community, but also indirectly is even  “encouraged”, especially when the international community seeks to equate the aggressor with the party affected by the aggression. The recent announcement of € 2 billion in EU aid to the authoritarian Azerbaijan raises a number [of] questions, including the EU’s commitment to democratic values and their promotion in the region.  As the above-mentioned issues have strategic importance in the context of building a real and lasting peace in our region, the “Country to Live” party is going to present its circumstantial concerns to the ambassadors accredited to Armenia and international representations, as well as propose concrete actions against cultural vandalism.


Azerbaijan Prosecutor General’s Office intends to ‘bring’ Artsakh President ‘to account’

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Feb 15 2022

The Prosecutor General’s Office of Azerbaijan has announced that it intends to “catch” and “bring to account” President Arayik Harutyunyan of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh).

“Arayik Harutyunyan, the leader of the so-called ‘Nagorno-Karabakh,’ will be arrested and interrogated in the near future,” said Nemat Avazov, head of the investigation department of the Prosecutor General’s Office of Azerbaijan, the Azerbaijani media reported.

Harutyunyan is accused of “four terrorist acts committed in October 2020 against civilians in Ganja.”

“The terrorist act was committed from the territory of Armenia. As a result, 26 [Azerbaijani] civilians were killed and 175 were injured. On his social media account on October 4, Arayik Harutyunyan took accountability for the terrorist act. A criminal case—under various articles of the [Azerbaijani] Criminal Code—has been filed on the incident, and Arayik Harutyunyan has been declared wanted. The fact that he has not been called to account so far is temporary. I believe that under the international convention, Harutyunyan will be arrested by the investigative-operative team, and will be interrogated in a short time,” Avazov said, according to Azerbaijani media.

To note, the matter is about the military operations which were provoked in the fall of 2020—and due to the military aggression of Azerbaijan and Turkey against Artsakh and Armenia.