Shant-2015: The country brought to a high level of combat readiness

All state agencies are prepared to make prompt and balanced decisions in any situation envisaged by the scenario of the “Shant-2015” strategic command post exercises, Deputy Chief of General Staff of RA Armed Forces Movses Hakobyan told a press conference today. According to him, the country has been brought to a high level of combat readiness, Armenpress reports.

“The exercises aim to reveal the potential of the state in case of possible war. This is the first time Armenia is holding exercises of such scale, involving all state agencies,” Hakobyan said.

“It’s still untimely to assess the results, the outcome will be summed up at a later stage. The agencies get certain assignments, some of which should be applied in practice. All participating bodies will get assessed,” Movses Hakobyan said.

He stressed that the Armenian Armed Forces have seriously prepared for the military exercise and have all kind of material resources stored for as long as 65 days.

Istanbul Biennial commemorates Armenian Genocide

– The 14th Istanbul Biennial, Saltwater: a Theory of Thought Forms, opened this week amid calls for all participating artists to suspend their work for 15 minutes in support of Turkey’s Kurdish minority.

Most notable is the focus on Armenia and the Armenian genocide, an atrocity not recognised by the Turkish state. At the press opening on 2 September, Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, the curator of this year’s biennial, said it was “very timely” to speak about what happened 100 years ago, as well as the “traumas and ethnic cleansing” that has occurred in other parts of the world throughout history, including Australia, Syria, Poland and Germany.

In what Christov-Bakargiev described as a “diplomatic act”, the Dilijan Art Initiative, which sponsored the Golden-Lion winning Armenian pavilion at the Venice Biennale this year, is supporting 13 artists in Istanbul who are either Armenian, of Armenian descent or have made works relating to Armenian history.

They include the Modernist painter Paul Guiragossian, who was born to survivors of the Armenian genocide and has 14 works on show in Istanbul Modern. A self-portrait from 1948 bears witness to Guiragossian’s itinerant life: a shell destroyed the artist’s Beirut studio in the 1970s, damaging many canvases. The self-portrait was repaired, but the scar across his cheek remains.

“My father was born in Jerusalem and his work often deals with displacement and marginalised people,” says Manuella Guiragossian, the president of the Paul Guiragossian Foundation.

At the Galata Greek School, the Lebanese-born artist Haig Aivazian is presenting a performance of a folkloric song by the Armenian-Turkish oud master Udi Hrant Kenkulian, whose family survived the genocide and lived in Istanbul from 1918 onwards. Titled Wavy Wavy Is the Sea of Bolis, O Mother, the work combines “two complex sets of melodic, cultural and linguistic creolisations” that echo the “transition of the Ottoman Empire to the Turkish republic”, says Aivazian, who is also exhibiting in the Armenian pavilion in Venice.

Upstairs, the Iraqi-Jewish artist Michael Rakowitz is showing The Flesh Is Yours, The Bones Are Ours. The newly commissioned installation consists of plaster friezes moulded from architectural details crafted by Armenians throughout Istanbul. “[The friezes] show the traces of Armenian hands and fingers, which bear silent witness to what happened in the city in 1915 when the Armenians were annihilated and dispossessed,” Rakowitz says.

Several other works that refer to Armenian history are dotted around the city—the biennial covers more than 30 venues this year. For example, the Belgian-born artist Francis Alÿs is presenting a new black and white film, Silence of Ani, which depicts children from Eastern Anatolia playing bird songs on whistles and flute-like instruments.

Despite the potential for backlash over the Armenian question, Christov-Bakargiev says she encountered no censorship in the lead up to the biennial. Indeed, the curator sees hope in the transformative power of art. “With and through art we mourn, commemorate, denounce and try to heal and commit to the possibility of joy,” she says.

Public TV: New season starts Monday

Armenian Public TV starts the new season on Monday, September 7 with the launching of a number of new and fresh programs and interesting projects.

Committed to its long-term traditions, the Public TV will offer educational-cultural, entertaining, social and cognitive, patriotic programs, as well as new feature films and documentary series.

Shant-2015: President convenes special sitting of the government

As part of the “Shant-2015” strategic command post exercises Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan convened a special sitting of the Government.

The Ministers briefed on the process of implementation of directives in their respective spheres stemming from the scenario of the exercises, reported on the problems in certain situations and presented suggestions for their solution and for application of more efficient measures.

In his opening remarks President Sargsyan stressed the significance of the exercises, underlining that every drill pursues two objectives – to train and to check. The final goal is to be ready to take the most effective measures in case of real threat to the territorial integrity and security of the country.

After the exercises are over, the work of the participating agencies and their leaders will be assessed, plans for the elimination of the shortcomings will be worked out.

Shant-2015: Ancient manuscrips of Matenadaran moved to a safer repository

Within the framework of the “Shant-2015”strategic  command-post exercises the precious manuscripts of the Matenadaran Institute were moved to a special repository, Armenpress reports.

Director of Matenadaran Institute Hrachya Tamrazyan said “the Institution is one of the unique centers, which has secured the best safeguarding measures.”

“The new building is furnished with an unprecedented storage system, which is unique in the world. The items on display in different places can be moved to and kept in Matenadaran,” he said.

“Evacuation is a secret program. There are large storage areas in both the old and new building,” he said.

The Director assured the storages are safe even from natural disasters. “These repositories are meant for manuscripts and ancient books. The state has made huge investments in the creation of this system,” he noted.

Islamic State blows up Palmyra funerary towers

Jihadist militants from Islamic State (IS) have blown up three funerary towers at the ancient city of Palmyra, Syria’s antiquities chief has said, the BBC reports.

Maamoun Abdul Karim told the AFP news agency that “the best preserved and most beautiful” had been destroyed.

The multi-storey sandstone monuments, standing outside the city walls in an area known as the Valley of the Tombs, belonged to rich Palmyrene families.

Their demolition comes only days after IS blew up Palmyra’s two main temples.

The group, which captured the Unesco World Heritage site from government forces in May, has previously destroyed two Islamic shrines near Palmyra, which they described as “manifestations of polytheism”.

Armenian man killed in Damascus

Armenian Sargis Parsikian, born in 1954, was killed as Damascus came under heavy rocket attack on Thursday, September 3, Lebanon-based Aztag daily reports.

The funeral will take place today at the Armenian St. Sarkis Church in Damascus.

The attacks on the city over the past few days have left tens dead and wounded.

Armenian, Russian Presidents to meet in Moscow

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan will meet with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin as part of a working visit to Moscow, President’s Press Office reports.

The leaders of the two countries will discuss a wide range of issues related to Armenian-Russian bilateral relations, cooperation in the political, economic and humanitarian spheres.

They will exchange views on issues of cooperation within the framework of integration processes after Armenia’s accession to the Eurasian Economic Union and will refer to the future programs.

OSCE monitoring: No ceasefire violation registered

On September 4, in accordance with the arrangement reached with the authorities of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, the OSCE Mission conducted a planned monitoring of the Line of Contact between the armed forces of Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan in the northern direction of Kuropatkino settlement of the NKR Martuni region.

From the positions of the NKR Defense Army, the monitoring was conducted by Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk and his Field Assistants Jiri Aberle (Czech Republic) and Yevgeny Sharov (Ukraine).

From the opposite side of the Line of Contact, the monitoring was conducted by staff member of the Office Peter Svedberg (Sweden) and Personal Assistant to the Personal Representative of the CiO Simon Tiller (Great Britain).

The monitoring passed in accordance with the agreed schedule. No violation of the cease-fire regime was registered.

From the Karabakh side, the monitoring mission was accompanied by representatives of the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Defense.

Azerbaijan keeps shelling Armenian villages

 

 

 

The Azerbaijani side kept shelling in the direction of Armenia’s frontline villages in Tavush province yesterday.

The rival used weapons it had never applied before, head of Koti village Felix Melikyan told Public Radio of Armenia. He said mother and son were wounded as a result of firing.

“They are getting treatment at Noyemberyan Medical Center. The wounds are not life-threatening,” he said.

Melikyan added that the windows of houses were broken, a barn was burnt.

Head of Chinari village Samvel Saghoyan said the shelling started at about 7 p.m. and continued through midnight. He said the morning was peaceful, despite the unprecedented activeness of the rival.

Firing was reported in the direction of Nerkin Tsakhkavan and Sevkar villages, as well.