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Armenian singer’s first trip to U.S. pays off with Houston Grand Opera prize

Houston Chronicle
Feb 3 2022

Five years ago, Navasard Hakobyan planned to become a physician. Then the principal of his school heard him sing and suggested medicine might not be the proper path. His parents agreed.

“That very day in our house it was decided that I would become an opera singer,” he says through a translator from his Armenian home, “not knowing what it was and how difficult the road ahead was for me.”

Last month, that road led him to the Wortham Center, where Hakobyan took first prize in Houston Grand Opera’s 34th annual Concert of Arias. Singing selections from Tchaikovsky’s “Mazeppa” and Donizetti’s “La Favorite,” his robust baritone won over a panel of top HGO officials: general director and CEO Khori Dastoor; artistic advisor and soprano Ana Maria Martinez; and artistic and music director Patrick Summers. Soprano Christine Goerke, then appearing in HGO’s production of Francis Poulenc’s “Dialogues of the Carmelites,” also served as a judge.

In a celebratory news release, Dastoor beamed at “an awe-inspiring evening, full of beautiful music and spirited competition.”

“The rising stars who took the Wortham stage hold the keys to the future of this artform, and I’m happy to share that the future is looking bright indeed,” she said.

“I think the judges responded to the beauty and power of Navasard’s talent — he has an extraordinary voice that makes him capable of very deep _expression_ through music,” says HGO Studio director Brian Speck. “He is also a committed performer that inhabits the music and invites you into his world.”

Hakobyan’s first onstage role was Silvio in Ruggero Leoncavallo’s “Pagliacci,” which he has since played twice more. In 2018, he joined the young artist program of the National Academic Theatre of Opera and Ballet in Yerevan, Armenia. The next year, he won the President of the Republic of Armenia Youth Prize.

Before the Concert of Arias, also known as the Eleanor McCollum Competition for Young Singers, Hakobyan’s other successes on the international stage came at Moscow’s José Carreras Grand Prix and last year at the Premiere Opera Foundation’s International Vocal Competition. There, he competed virtually and won $2,500.

Speck saw Hakobyan at one of these events and invited him to compete in Houston, where the young baritone triumphed over the contest’s eight other finalists — including Cuban-Puerto Rican soprano Amanda Batista, who took second place, and the third-place finisher, South Korean bass-baritone Jongwon Han — due to the “striking” quality of his voice, he believes.

“His sound fills the theater effortlessly,” says Speck. “You could close your eyes and just enjoy the sound. I think what makes his performances thrilling is the combination of that visceral reaction to his sound, and the way he shares himself when he sings. He stays in the moment and really communicates with the audience through his voice.”

Hakobyan’s trip to Houston for the concert, where he spent 13 days, also marked his first time in the United States. Although his time outside rehearsals was limited, it still sounds like the city left a favorable impression.

“I loved Houston,” Hakobyan says. “It is a very beautiful city, it has a lot of interesting sightseeing places. There is inexplicable vibe in the city which gives you very positive energy. I felt it.”

Hakobyan says he plans to invest his $10,000 prize money from the concert developing his career. One of his first steps will be to enter HGO Studio in the fall, where Speck will be happy to have him. “I’m excited that Houston audiences will have the chance to hear Navasard on the HGO stage early in his career,” he says.

“I think he will be a huge contributor to the operas in which he performs at HGO,” Speck continues, “and at the same time, we’ll be able to provide him with support to ensure his success and a foundation of skill and experience that will help him to build a major career in opera.”

When Speck’s invitation to compete in Houston arrived, Hakobyan says he accepted it “without thinking long.” Now, that intuition has paid off.

“At that moment I did not understand why I agreed, but my inner voice was telling me that I must definitely participate,” he says. “At that moment I felt that a new door of life was opening for me. In fact, I was right.”

Chris Gray is a Galveston-based writer.

Armenia responds to Azerbaijan’s reaction to border proposals

Feb 4 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Vahan Hunanyan has responded to Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov’s remarks about recent proposals sent by Yerevan to Baku.

Bayramov said, in particular, that the Armenian side putting forward and added that Armenia has no legal, political or moral right to impose any conditions on the issue of delimitation of the borders. Bayramov also claimed that Armenia has undermined the activities of the trilateral working group.

Hunanyan reminded that the November 26, 2021 statement signed by the Prime Minister of Armenia, the Presidents of Russia and Azerbaijan clearly shows that the three leaders have agreed to undertake steps towards increasing the level of security and stability on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, and to lead the process to the formation of a bilateral commission on delimitation and demarcation.

“It derives from the statement signed by the leaders of the three countries that the activities of the commission on delimitation and demarcation should be preceded by the agreements on steps towards increasing the level of security on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and the implementation of those agreements. It is also logical amid the fact that it is difficult to imagine the implementation of delimitation in the borders where ceasefire violations are observed every day,” Hunanyan noted.

“The Republic of Armenia, being really interested in the full implementation of the agreements, has formulated its notions for their implementation. The Azerbaijani side did not give any substantive response and rejected them, without offering any options for implementing the agreements reached by the leaders of the three countries.

According to the diplomat, describing Armenia’s proposals as “conditions”, “preconditions” and then making moral, political and legal assessments on them has no logical link to said process.

Hunanyan also weighed in on the the trilateral working group on unblocking regional communications.

“Ironically, on the same morning, Prime Minister [Nikol] Pashinyan announced at the Cabinet meeting that Armenia is in the stage of undertaking practical steps towards restoring the Yeraskh-Julfa-Ordubad-Meghri-Horadiz railway, and that the Armenian Co-Chair of the working group, Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan had a substantive discussion on this topic with his Russian counterpart, Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk, and Director General of “Russian Railways” Oleg Belozyorov on February 2 in Yerevan,” he said.

“Assessing the situation, Prime Minister Pashinyan stated that the first results of the work of the Trilateral Working Group seem very close. In this context, the statements of the Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan are at least paradoxical, and we hope that they do not mean Azerbaijan’s renunciation of the agreements on the reopening of the railway reached in Brussels. I would like to note that the Republic of Armenia reaffirms its commitment to the agreements, which the Prime Minister publicly stated several times.

“It should be noted that Armenia has also made proposals to the Azerbaijani side on the opening of the roads. We have not received any response from the Azerbaijani side to these proposals yet. Armenia is ready to start implementing these proposals as soon as possible.”

Armenia’s Covid-19 infections grew by 4192 in the past day

Feb 4 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The number of confirmed coronavirus infections in Armenia grew by 4192 to reach 383,458 on Friday, February 4 morning, according to information provided by the Health Ministry.

Fresh figures also revealed that 2510 more people recovered, 10 patients died from Covid-19, while two others carrying the virus died from other causes in the past 24 hours.

A total of 8857 tests have been performed in the past day, the National Center For Disease Control and Prevention said.

So far, 346,224 people have recovered, 8075 have died from the coronavirus in the country, while 1545 others carrying the virus have died from other causes.

Azerbaijani press: Culture Ministry develops action plan for "Year of Shusha"

By Trend

Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Culture is developing an action plan within the Year of Shusha [city liberated from Armenian occupation in the 2020 second Karabakh war], announced this year upon President Ilham Aliyev’s order, Maryam Gafarzade, spokesperson for the ministry, told Trend.

“As part of the work carried out in the cultural capital of Azerbaijan, it’s planned to restore historical monuments, museums and libraries, and other cultural institutions of the city,” Gafarzade said. “It’s also planned to hold local and international events, concerts and festivals in the city throughout the year, organize media tours, and shoot new films.”

“Along with traditional cultural events such as “Kharibulbul”, “Days of Vagif’s Poetry”, “International Music Festival of Uzeyir Hajibayli [famous Azerbaijani composer of the 20th century]”, this year it’s also planned to hold a literary festival in Shusha to celebrate the 190th anniversary of Khurshidbanu Natavan [famous Azerbaijani poetess of the 19th century, born in the city],” she noted.

According to her, in order to promote the rich cultural heritage of this ancient Azerbaijani city, the ministry launched the “Pearls of culture of Shusha city” project.

The project covers such directions as “Architectural chronicle of Shusha city”, “Shusha – temple of Azerbaijani music”, “Shusha – hearth of mugham”, “School of carpet weaving of Karabakh – Shusha”, “Literary life of Shusha city”, “Style of national clothes”, and “Personalities of Shusha city “.

“The main goal of the project is wider promotion of the rich culture of this ancient region [Karabakh],” concluded Gafarzade.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijan urges int’l legal action against Armenia after new deadly blast

By Sabina Mammadli

Azerbaijani Human Rights Commissioner Sabina Aliyeva has urged international action against Armenia in accordance with international law norms and principles, the ombudsman’s office has reported.

The appeal was made by the commissioner in response to the death of an Azerbaijani civilian as a result of a cluster bomb explosion on February 1, 2022,  in Yevlakh region located far from the zone of the 2020 war with Armenia.

Armenia’s refusal to provide complete and accurate maps of mined areas continues to pose a serious threat, resulting in fatalities.

“In this regard, I call on international organizations, ombudsmen, and national human rights institutions of foreign countries to express their attitude towards violations of human rights by Armenia,” the ombudsman stated.

On October 6, 2020, cluster-type missiles attacked the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan main export oil pipeline in Azerbaijan’s densely populated Yevlakh region, which is located far from the combat zone.

Since September 27, 2020, Armenian armed forces have shelled densely populated areas of Azerbaijan with heavy artillery installations and prohibited weapons, causing severe damage to social facilities, historical and cultural sites, as well as objects of strategic importance to the country, and many people have died and been injured, Aliyeva said.

In violation of the 1949 Geneva Convention, Armenia purposefully and persistently planted mines on Azerbaijani territory, posing a significant threat to regional peace, security, and cooperation.

On December 9, 2021, the Prosecutor-General’s Office reported that 29 civilians and seven military servicemen were killed, and 109 servicemen and 44 civilians were injured in varying degrees as a result of mine explosions in the country’s lands since November 10, 2020.

A Moscow-brokered ceasefire deal that Baku and Yerevan signed on November 10, 2020, brought an end to six weeks of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Azerbaijani army declared a victory against the Armenian troops. The signed agreement obliged Armenia to withdraw its troops from the Azerbaijani lands that it has occupied since the early 1990s.

The peace agreement stipulated the return of Azerbaijan’s Armenian-occupied Kalbajar, Aghdam and Lachin regions and urged Armenia to withdraw its troops from the Azerbaijani lands that it has occupied since the early 1990s. Before the signing of the deal, the Azerbaijani army had liberated around 300 villages, settlements, city centers, and historic Shusha city.

Azerbaijani press: Baku rejects Turkish MP’s "baseless" claims, urges apology

By Vugar Khalilov

Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva has rejected as “baseless” Turkish MP Aykut Erdogdu’s claims on the alleged “tangled and dark ties” between the Azerbaijani and Turkish leaders.

“We reject the completely baseless accusations made by the CHP [Republican People’s Party] MP about the allegedly ‘tangled and dark ties’ between the leaders of Azerbaijan and Turkey.  Relations between President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev and President of the Republic of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan are fraternal and based on the two countries’ national interests,” Abdullayeva said in a statement published on the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry website.

In response to the Turkish MP’s unfounded accusations about Azerbaijani-Turkish energy relations and the two leaders, the spokesperson emphasized that Azerbaijan and Turkey have open, completely transparent, and mutually beneficial cooperation in all areas, including energy.

She went on to say that as a result of these relations, the strategic partnership between the two countries has been strengthened even further, reaching the level of alliance with the historic Shusha Declaration, and the bonds of brotherhood between the two peoples have been strengthened like never before.

“Unfortunately, this is not the first time a CHP representative has taken an anti-Azerbaijani stance and attempted to confuse baseless allegations. These efforts, however, have no chance of success because the manipulation of any pro-Armenian politicians cannot overshadow Turkish-Azerbaijani relations,” Abdullayeva emphasized.

Azerbaijan is expecting the CHP to apologize for the allegations made by the deputy. Otherwise, Baku reserves the right to take the issue to court, Abdullayeva said.

In response to claims about bilateral energy relations, she emphasized that the Trans-Anatolian Gas Pipeline Project (TANAP), as a strategic infrastructure project, is based on strong cooperation and friendship between Azerbaijan and Turkey, as well as the strong political will of the two countries’ leaders to address energy security issues.

The TANAP project has a total investment of $6.3 billion. At its peak, the project provided 15,000 jobs, with the majority of the investment coming from local producers. It should be noted that the TANAP project has added a significant amount of value to the Turkish industry and related sectors, Abdullayeva said.

“We want to emphasize that the tariffs used in this project fully comply with all international standards. The Turkish side earns the same amount of transit revenue because it is a 30 percent partner in the project via BOTAS,” she added.

The diplomat noted that along with Azerbaijan, Turkey imports natural gas from Russia, Iran, Qatar, Nigeria and other countries and that Azerbaijan has the lowest natural gas price among these producers.

On the other hand, the TANAP project creates new economic and social opportunities for Turkey and ensures the sustainability of its energy security at a time when natural gas prices are at their peak and gas shortages are growing, Abdullayeva stressed.

SOCAR Turkey, a subsidiary of Azerbaijani State Oil Company in Turkey, won a completely open and transparent tender in 2008 with an investment of $ 2.04 billion, she said of Petkim, one of Turkey’s largest enterprises.

Abdullayeva added that additional investments in Petkim totaled $ 1.2 billion over the next few years.

Furthermore, with SOCAR’s multibillion-dollar investment, the construction of the STAR refinery and its integration with the Petkim petrochemical plant has created opportunities for Turkey to produce an additional $ 2 billion worth of products. Turkey previously spent $ 2 billion on the import of these products, the spokesperson reminded.

Abdullayeva emphasized that the friendly and fraternal relations established by the leaders of the two countries have allowed Azerbaijan to invest more than $ 19 billion in Turkey to date.

On February 1, Erdogdu alleged on his Twitter post that there was corruption in Turkey’s natural gas purchase and that the country had lost billions of dollars due to a change in the natural gas agreement signed with Azerbaijan.

He claimed that the TANAP project provided no benefit to Turkey.

“While these confused and dark relations between Erdogan and Aliyev continue, 51 percent of Petkim was transferred to SOCAR and after this transfer, SOCAR received significant benefits,” he claimed.

It should be noted that the aforementioned tweet has been removed from the MP’s Twitter account.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijani, French, EU Council presidents, Armenian PM meet online [UPDATE]

On 4 February, a video conference was held on the initiative of President of the French Republic Emmanuel Macron with the participation of President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, President of France as Chair of the European Union Emmanuel Macron, President of the European Council Charles Michel and Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, Azertag has reported.

The sides stressed the importance of the joint meeting held in Brussels on 14 December 2021 on the initiative of President Charles Michel and with the participation of President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev and Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan.

As a continuation of the Brussels peace agenda, detailed discussions were held on the normalization of Armenia-Azerbaijan relations. In this regard, in accordance with the pre-determined agenda of the event, the sides exchanged views on various aspects of relations between the two countries, including humanitarian issues, confidence-building measures, the problem of landmines Azerbaijan is facing, the opening of communications, the delimitation and demarcation of borders, the start of talks on a peace agreement.

President Ilham Aliyev reiterated Azerbaijan’s position on the issues under discussion.

During the discussions, President Ilham Aliyev drew special attention to determining the fate of those missing during the first Karabakh war, locating mass graves, enhancing international support for Azerbaijan in the process of demining the liberated territories, and opening a transport corridor by rail and road.

The head of state highlighted the fact that of a total of 3,890 Azerbaijani citizens, including 71 children, 267 women and 326 elderly people, went missing during the first Karabakh war.

President Ilham Aliyev noted that since the end of the Patriotic War, 36 Azerbaijani citizens had been killed and 165 injured in mine explosions.

The issue of UNESCO’s mission to Azerbaijan and Armenia was also discussed at the meeting. The sides agreed that a mission would be sent to both countries.

Follow us on Twitter @AzerNewsAz  

Abdullah Ocalan: Symbol of 100 years of Kurdish resistance

Green Left
John Tully
February 6, 2022
Since his kidnapping by Turkish military intelligence in Nairobi in
1999, Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Ocalan has
endured almost 23 years of imprisonment. For much of that time he has
been confined on Imrali island, in the Sea of Marmara, without any
contact with family or friends.
His jailers hoped that by slamming shut the prison doors, the world
would forget about Ocalan’s existence. But for millions of Kurds and
their supporters around the world, Ocalan is a living symbol of
resistance to a century of oppression by the Turkish state.
According to the Turkish government, Ocalan is a terrorist. The
Australian government agrees, listing the PKK as a terrorist
organisation.
The listing was originally made in 2005 by the John Howard Coalition
government after a visit by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the autocratic
Turkish leader. It has been periodically renewed since then, including
by Labor governments. The listing was made for purely opportunistic
political reasons. Government justifications simply do not add up.
The PKK is not and never was a threat to the security of Australia,
nor that of any other outside of the Turkish state. Several European
courts, including the highest Belgian court, have ruled that the PKK
cannot be treated as a terrorist organisation. Instead, it is a party
to an armed conflict with the Turkish state.
Under Ocalan’s leadership, the PKK launched an armed struggle against
the Turkish state in 1984. It has since declared several unilateral
ceasefires and, in 2013, Ocalan was permitted to join peace talks. He
continues to advocate for a peaceful solution to an intractable
conflict.
Originally formed as an orthodox Marxist-Leninist party with the aim
of creating an independent Kurdish state, the PKK has since taken a
different approach under Ocalan’s intellectual guidance. Ocalan argues
that given the ethnic plurality of Turkey and the Middle East, the
solution to the century-long oppression of the Kurds and other
non-Turkish populations lies in what he calls “democratic
confederalism” — autonomy with full rights for all peoples.
This shift did not, however, cause the Turkish government to back away
from its determination to maintain Turkey as the ethnically pure
political-cultural organism envisaged by Kemal Ataturk at the time of
the inception of Turkish Republic in 1923. Ever since, the Kurdish
people have endured cultural and, at times, physical genocide.
In recent times, the Erdogan government has stepped up repression both
inside and outside the boundaries of the Turkish state. Thousands of
Kurds have been arrested and many killed, especially members of the
pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party. Cities in heavily Kurdish areas
have been bombed.
The Turkish military has also invaded and occupied the mainly Kurdish
regions of Rojava in northeast Syria, ethically cleansing towns and
cities and collaborating with Islamist terrorists, including ISIS. The
Kurdish-speaking Yazidis over the border in Iraq have also been
targeted by Turkish troops.
Yet world governments and much of the media continue to avert their
eyes from Turkey’s war crimes and crimes against humanity.
The Kurds have a well known saying that they have no friends but the
mountains. But they do have many friends around the world, including
in trade unions, left-wing and green parties, and other organisations
of civil society: people who have seen the injustice heaped on the
Kurdish people and are determined to help end it.
Key to fighting such oppression is to demand governments take the PKK
off the terror list and call for the immediate release of Ocalan, so
that he can lead the struggle for peace with justice for the Kurdish
people in Turkey and neighbouring states.
Prison has not broken Ocalan, nor stopped his brain from working. In
his prison cell, he has written a stream of original books and
articles dealing with many aspects of Kurdish freedom and broader
human emancipation.
Central to this is his insistence that “a society can never be free
without women’s liberation”. His watchword is that “you must believe
before everything else that the revolution must come, that there is no
other choice”.
*
[John Tully is a historian and activist with Australians For Kurdistan.]
 

Armenpress: Pashinyan’s visit to Turkey and participation in the Antalya conference is not discussed

Pashinyan’s visit to Turkey and participation in the Antalya conference is not discussed

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 09:14, 5 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 5, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan’s visit to Turkey and participation in the Antalya diplomatic conference is not discussed, ARMENPRESS reports the spokesman of the MFA Armenia Vahan Hunanyan announced.

Hunanyan commented on Turkish Vice President Fuat Oktay’s statement that Nikol Pashinyan will visit Turkey in March to attend the Antalya Forum. The invitation to that diplomatic meeting has been sent to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan and the special representative of Armenia Ruben Rubinyan.




4032 new cases of COVID-19 confirmed in Armenia, 6 die – 02/05/2022

4032 new cases of COVID-19 confirmed in Armenia, 6 die

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 11:18, 5 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 5, ARMENPRESS. 4032 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the past 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 387,490, the National Center of Disease Control and Prevention of Armenia said.

8857 tests were administered (total 2,679,525).

2132 people recovered (total 334,394).

6 patients have died, bringing the total death toll to 8081.

As of January 24, the number of active cases stood at 29,501.