€1.9 million grant for street lighting in Yerevan

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the Ministry of Finance of Armenia and the Municipality of Yerevan city have signed an agreement to allocate a co-financing grant of €1.9 million to support the modernisation of street lighting in the city of Yerevan.

The grant is provided by the E5P fund (Eastern Europe Energy Efficiency and Environment Partnership) which is managed by the EBRD and pools donor contributions from the European Union and a number of donor countries including Armenia.

In May 2015, the loan to modernise Yerevan’s street lighting system by introducing new energy-efficient technologies that will benefit the city’s residents. The grant will now help to make the lighting more efficient and environmentally friendly.

The current street lighting network of Yerevan consists of old, inefficient and environmentally polluting mercury-based lights. The heavy-metal based content of the current lighting system contributes to energy waste and is a considerable environmental hazard. Due to the antiquated condition of the current system and the high percentage of lights that are not working, large parts of the city are not sufficiently illuminated.

The project will help to introduce new energy-efficient LED lighting, a control and monitoring system, pole replacement and renovation as well as power cable replacement. This will result in better service quality and improved environmental standards due to reduced energy consumption and the minimisation of operating and maintenance costs.

Better-lit streets will also be safer for pedestrians and motorists alike. The new LED lighting is expected to cut the cost of energy consumption by 64 per cent and will result in annual electricity cost savings for the municipality.

Mark Davis, Head of the EBRD’s Yerevan office, said: “We are very grateful to our donors, especially to the European Union and Sweden, as well as the government of Armenia and the municipality for such a successful cooperation. The grant is a very important contribution by the E5P fund. It will complement the EBRD’s initial financing and ensure the successful continuation and completion of the project. This is the first project for E5P in Armenia that sets a standard and an example which we hope to implement again in future projects in solid waste management or energy efficiency with the help of E5P grants.”

400-year-old church re-emerges from beneath Mexican reservoir

The relics of a 16th-century church built by Spanish colonisers has emerged from a reservoir in the south of Mexico, The Independent reports.

It is the second time the church, usually submerged on the reservoir bed, has been revealed in the state of Chiapas as a result of drought.

A water level drop of at least 80 feet in the Grijalba river which feeds the reservoir has revealed the 400-year-old roofless religious building, with its 10 metre high walls, 61 metre length and 14 metre wide hall.

The river was last this low in 2002, when visitors were able to walk about inside the church.

Today, fishermen are ferrying curious passengers around the ruins, which were submerged in 1966 when the nearby dam was completed and the area flooded.

“Hayastan” All-Arme fundraiser in Toronto aimed at Artsakh’s development

On October 18, the annual fundraiser of “Hayastan” All-Armenian Fund took place in Toronto, organized by the local chapter of the foundation with the support of the Embassy of Armenia in Canada.

Ambassador of Armenia to Canada Armen Yeganian, the Primate of the Armenian Diocese of Canada, Bishop Abgar Hovakimyan, members of clergy, non-government sector, politicians, journalists, numerous members of the Armenian community were present at the event. The guest of honour of the night was the priest of Dadivank Monastery, previously of Gandzasar Monastery, Reverend Father Hovhannes Hovhannisyan, who recalled episodes from the Artsakh liberation war.

In his speech Ambassador Yeganian emphasized, that the Armenian nation has its input in the development not only of its Motherland, but also of many countries around the globe, and that Armenia and Artsakh are advancing in many spheres. “Emphasizing the work of “Hayastan” All-Armenian Fund, let me underline the success of its Toronto Chapter, which for many years showcases its strength, endurance and the ability to achieve higher grounds”, Ambassador stressed.

The record-breaking amount of over 700.000 dollars was raised during the evening, which will be directed at the realization of several important projects in Artsakh.

Syrian troops to take back Aleppo: Ambassador

Syrian ambassador to Russia, Riyad Haddad, said there was “heavy fighting” ahead, as Syrian troops braced for a “decisive battle” to retake the country’s second largest city of Aleppo from jihadist terrorists, reports.

“Half of the city remains in the hands of the terrorists, while the other half is under our control… Our troops, backed by Russian aviation, are encircling the city and preparing for a ground offensive. This is going to be a heavy fight because the terrorists are getting a lot of support from Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan,” Haddad said in an interview with Gazeta.Ru.

The ambassador also said that Russian airstrikes had brought immediate results destroying many enemy strongholds and arms depots, and cutting off the terrorists’ supply routes.

“Another major result [of the Russian airstrikes] is that many terrorists have laid down their arms and surrendered to the Syrian army, while many others retreated towards the Turkish border,” the Syrian envoy added.

Riyad Haddad emphasized that the Syrian authorities were closely coordinating their actions with Russia, but maintained no contact with the command of the US-led coalition.

Minsk Group Co-Chairs due in Armenia October 26

The Minsk Group Co-Chairs will arrive in Armenia on October 26, Spokesman for the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs Tigran Balayan informs in a Twitter post.

The mediators are expected to meet with Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

The Co-Chairs will visit Baku on October 28, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov told a press conference in Baku.

There is no need to hurry for defining the place and date of the next meeting between the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents, Mammadyarov noted.

“There are two ways: either the presidents will choose the place of a meeting, or the co-chairs will make a proposal. In all cases, we are waiting for the co-chairs’ visit to the region and we will discuss it,” he said.

Lamar Odom breathing on his own, taken to Los Angeles

Now breathing on his own, former NBA star Lamar Odom has been taken from Las Vegas to Los Angeles to continue his recovery, CNN reports.

ESPN, citing sources, said Odom was taken by medical helicopter to a Los Angeles hospital Monday night.

Former college coach Jim Harrick said on CNN’s “New Day” that the 35-year-old athlete has made “a little bit of progress” and has told his estranged wife, Khloe Kardashian, “I love you.”

Odom was after he was found unconscious at the Love Ranch, a brothel in Nevada where he had been holed up for several days.

Cleveland author honors memory of Armenian Genocide with new novel

Processions of refugees wander the desert of Syria – defeated and lost, desperate for some safe passage under a beating sun as pitiless as the world around them.

It is a familiar scene, one we have come to witness on a daily basis. But this particular scene is not from the Syrian civil war, 2015.

It is 1915, a year that brought the Armenian Genocide. Historians estimate that 1.5 million were systematically killed by Ottoman Turks. It began one evening with the rounding up and killing of Armenian intellectuals in Constantinople and included the forced death march of hundreds of thousands into the Syrian desert.

The Armenian Genocide led to the creation of a vast diaspora, with vibrant immigrant communities taking root in America. It is also the invisible character that shapes and haunts “The Ash Tree.”

Beachwood resident Daniel Melnick’s latest novel spans decades and generations to chronicle an Armenian-American family. While the book opens in 1972, in California, it quickly reaches back to 1915, to the crumbling Ottoman Empire.

Or, more precisely, the memory of 1915 – since memories of traumatic events are as vital to the events themselves in “The Ash Tree.”

“Memory is a very crucial thing to me, and the status of memory is central where there is this huge trauma,” says Melnick, who will do a reading at Mac’s Backs in Cleveland Heights at 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 22. “It impinges on each of the characters and directly on the consciousness of Armen.”

That would be Armen Ararat, the central figure in “The Ash Tree.” His life spans the entirety of the novel, beginning as a youth when he witnesses the corpses of 20 Armenian men hanging from the gallows under the supervision of Turkish gendarmes and soldiers.

We are quickly pulled forward 10 years to Berkley, California – where Armen is a student living with an Armenian landlady, Madame Hagopian, whose husband was one of the 20 men who perished that night.

“There’s hardship, even starvation, I know, but there is hope,” she says, exuding a world-weary yet stubborn belief that the endangered must somehow stick together to survive.

It’s an ongoing theme – one that comes with great tension in “The Ash Tree.”

You see, this is a story not about the Armenian-American per se. Rather, it is an exploration of the hyphen in between “Armenian” and “American” – the struggle, the road, that existential purgatory that lies between the Old World and the “American Dream.”

“So much of our culture is focused on identity politics, but what is often overlooked is the struggle to find identity,” says Melnick, a Jewish-American and a retired Cleveland State University literature professor who continues to teach at Case Western Reserve University.

“It is a genuine ongoing tension in not just the Armenian-American but also in other communities,” he adds, “where you have people that want to retain a connection and some that want to wash their hands of it.”

Melnick, 71, based “The Ash Tree” on his family and the community he encountered through his wife, Jeannette Melnick (nee Arax). Her painting, depicting a family on a fraying tapestry, is on the cover of the book.

“The Armenians have the fragile status of a dispersed people, and you suddenly had hundreds of people settling in places – some you wouldn’t imagine, like Fresno,” he says, referring to the his wife’s hometown. “And yet Fresno had a lot of same qualities of the lands they left behind.”

The central California city became a magnet for Armenian farmers in part because of its Mediterranean-like soil and weather.

“You could plant anything in Fresno and it could grow, just like back home,” says Melnick. “And the other thing is about Fresno is that it was this farmland, this city in the desert on the edge of the civilized world. It was the Wild West, with different people settling there from Mexico to farm and harvest – a collision of cultures, with a wildness and anarchy that wasn’t that different from home.”

So close, yet so far away – 7,000 miles, that is.

As Armen, who pens poetry before assuming the life of a farmer and businessman in Fresno, writes: “In exile, I cannot forget.”

America might be his place of exile, but it is home to his eventual wife, Artemis. And as a girl, the Connecticut-born Armenian-American dreamed of marrying an American-born man. She wanted to be free from the specter of 1915.

Negotiating the push and pull of the Old and New worlds is common in immigrant families, even generations later. But it is particularly acute in the Armenian-American community, says Melnick.

Not just because of the genocide, but also because of the ongoing struggle to have it recognized.

While France, Russia, Canada and Brazil and 40 other countries around the world have officially recognized the Armenian Genocide, United States still has not, due to pressure and threats from Turkey, which denies that the genocide took place.

“Armenians feel that it’s a terrible mistake and injustice that the American government allows Turkish denials to continue,” says Melnick.

The grievance has been a uniting  cultural force within the Armenian community, though it has also led to political divisions — which are explored in “The Ash Tree.”

“Armen is a lefty – and there were many in the Armenian community that saw the Soviet Union as a protector of Armenia,” say Melnick, referring to Armenia’s absorption into the U.S.S.R., in 1922. “On the right, there were those opposed to Stalin, so you have a very complicated feelings and complex situations.”

Divisions surrounding big events resonate throughout “The Ash Tree,” even as it culminates in the turbulent 1970s, when militant and clandestine groups dominated American and European politics.

That’s not to say that “The Ash Tree” is a historical or a political novel.

“While there are historical markers and political threads throughout the story, I’m more interested in how people cope with big events,” says Melnick.

George Santayana is famous for saying, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” Yet it is a half-truth – for we are often overtaken by the past even if we remember it all too well.

“When I started thinking about this story, I wanted this to be a monument to the Armenians,” says Melnick. “But the idea of the hyphenated person resonates with so many different people that connect it with their lives and experiences and how they have dealt with memory and history.”

Melnick released the book for the centennial of the Armenian Genocide to underscore both the memory and the history.

“The irony is that it correlates with the massive exodus of Syrians,” he says. “One hundred years later… it is haunting.”

Europa League: Henrikh Mkhitaryan to skip match in Baku

Armenian international Henrikh Mkhitaryan is likely to miss Borussia Dortmund’s upcoming UEFA Europa League match against Gabala FC in Azerbaijan, reports.

The issue has long been discussed, but now it’s almost certain: Henrikh Mkhitaryan (26) will not fly Wednesday for the match against Gabala in Baku. “The risk for the Armenians is too large,” the club has said.

BVB boss Hans-Joachim Watzke told Bild: “Mkhitaryan will probably be denied boarding. We have the situation checked, and there because of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, we have a personal duty to care for our players.”

“The entry would be possible; however, in visa matters it’s always a problem if someone visited Nagorno Karabakh in the recent years. Azerbaijan sees this as a provocation,” Watzke said.

Azerbaijan violates the ceasefire 150 times overnight

The Azerbaijani side violated the ceasefire 150 times overnight, the Armenian Ministry of Defense reports.

The rival fired more than 3,000 shots from weapons of different caliber, including 82mm mortars, in the direction of the Armenian positions

The front divisions of the NKR Defense Army confidently continue with their military duty and resort to retaliatory measure when necessary.

Artsakh’s Matenadaran to open soon

On 19 October Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan visited the building of Matenadaran being constructed in the neighborhood of the Gandzasar monastic complex and got acquainted with the carried out activities, NKR President’s Press Service reports.

The President had a meeting with Hrachya Tamrazyan, director of Scientific-Research Institute of Ancient Manuscripts Matenadaran after St. Mesrop Mashtots and a group of scientists and specialists of the institution.

The President noted with satisfaction that the activities had entered into the final phase and this scientific-cultural center would start its work soon.

Bako Sahakyan expressed gratitude to the director and the staff of the Matenadaran after St. Mesrop Mashtots for constant assistance stressing that without their high professional and patriotic activity it would have been impossible to successfully implement the establishment of Artsakh’s Matenadaran.