Steel beams arrive at Glendale’s Armenian American Museum

Los Angeles – Jan 26 2024

Things have been quiet for a while, but construction is getting back into swing at the future Armenian American Museum in Glendale.

The museum announced this week that the first structural steel beams have been put into place at the construction site, which sits just east of Brand Boulevard at the southern edge of Glendale Central Park. They will eventually form the frame of a a two-story, approximately 51,000-square-foot building with a basement garage.

Alajajian Marcoosi Architects is designing the museum, which will have a jagged exterior modeled on rock formations seen in the Armenian Highlands. Inside, plans call for permanent and temporary exhibition galleries on the building's upper level, with a lobby, an auditorium, offices, and other functions below.

Gallagher & Associates is leading the design team for the museum's permanent exhibition, which will focus on the Armenian Genocide.

The project's location within Glendale Central Park is thanks to a $1-per-year ground lease agreement between the museum and the City of Glendale. The lease runs for an initial term of 55 years, with four optional 10-year extensions that could push that total to 95 years.

Construction of the Armenian American Museum will be paired with a planned revamp of Glendale Central Park, which will convert a parking lot into park to space to replace the open area lost to the museum footprint.


Israel’s Cofix enters Armenia with Yerevan store


Jan 26 2024

The value-focused coffee chain and local franchisee Galaxy Group are seeking to open 10 further outlets across the west Asian country within the next 12 months

Israeli fixed-price coffee chain Cofix has entered Armenia with a store at the Yerevan Mall shopping centre. 
 

Cofix and its local master franchisee Galaxy Group are seeking to open a further 10 outlets in Armenia this year, with a 766sq ft flagship site set to open in the capital city Yerevan in February 2024. 


The coffee chain said it will offer a four-tier pricing system in Armenia, with its cheapest beverages costing AMD 600 ($1.49) and the most expensive AMD 1,500 ($3.71). 


“By aligning with strong local partners like Galaxy Group, we ensure that our global growth is grounded in local market understanding and operational excellence. We don't believe in a one-size-fits-all strategy. Our approach is to tailor our presence, ensuring that while Cofix’s core values remain constant, each outlet reflects the local character and preferences. Cofix Armenia exemplifies this approach, and we are excited to bring this unique experience to our guests in Yerevan,” said Shaun Lewis, Chief Operating Officer, Cofix Global. 


Founded in 2013, Cofix now operates more than 400 outlets across Israel, Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Poland, Spain and Armenia.  


Yerevan-based Galaxy Group manages a portfolio of 15 businesses across Armenia, Georgia and Belarus. Its hospitality division includes French bakery chain Paul, premium café SantaFe and local bar-restaurant concept Pahest 33. 


New York Times Spins Lemkin’s Work on Genocide

Jan 23 2024
Raphael Lemkin’s application of the term genocide to the Ottoman Turk’s systematic mass slaughter of the Armenians predated the Holocaust, write Mischa Geracoulis and Heidi Boghosian.

By Mischa Geracoulis and Heidi Boghosian
Common Dreams

On Jan. 11, The New York Times published an article by Isabel Kershner and John Eligon titled “At World Court, Israel to Confront Accusations of Genocide.” 

From the standpoint of critical media literacy and ethical journalistic practices, the article exhibits framing biases, historical and contextual omissions and overly simplistic reasoning that attempts to explain why “Israel has categorically rejected the allegations being brought this week in the International Court of Justice by South Africa.” 

We assert that this editorial spin does a disservice to journalism and adds to a faulty record that enables human rights violators.

The overall tone is in lockstep with corporate media’s bias toward Israel — a bias credibly substantiated by the likes of the Lemkin Institute for the Prevention of Genocide, The InterceptThe GuardianMint Press News and Common Dreams. While multiple aspects of the article are troublesome, the third sentence provoked our immediate response letter to The New York Times. That sentence is as follows.

“Genocide, the term first employed by a Polish lawyer of Jewish descent in 1944 to describe the Nazis’ systematic murder of about six million Jews and others based on their ethnicity, is among the most serious crimes of which a country can be accused.”

Raphael Lemkin, who coined the word “genocide” on Sept. 12, 1948. (UN Photo)

Days later, echoing a similar mischaracterization of Raphael Lemkin’s work, USA Today published a piece by Noa Tisby titled, “Is Israel guilty of genocide in Gaza? Why the accusation at the UN is unfounded” (Jan. 16). 

Tisby’s article, like that of Kershner and Eligon, amended the breadth and depth of Lemkin’s work to accommodate a particular narrative.

Considering The New York Times’ reputation as a leading U.S. paper of record, the need for public correction therein took precedence over the op-ed in USA Today. Hence, our letter:

“As two Armenian Americans who grew up in the shadow of the 20th century’s first genocide, an attorney and a media expert respectively, we found critical context lacking in ‘At World Court, Israel to Confront Accusations of Genocide,’ by Isabel Kershner and John Eligon (January 11). Any discussion of genocide and Raphael Lemkin is grossly incomplete without citing how the Armenian genocide informed the Polish-Jewish lawyer’s noble work.

Lemkin (b. 1900), while a university student in the 1920s, learned of the Ottoman Turk’s coordinated mass slaughter of Armenians that culminated in 1915. The extermination of Armenians informed Lemkin’s life mission to establish international laws and treaties making genocide a punishable offense. In 1944, Lemkin finally named that crime genocide. 

This article implies that Lemkin advocated solely for the Jewish cause. A humanitarian first, Lemkin sought to establish protections for all people. For example, he worked with Algerians who sought to hold accountable their colonizers for crimes against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide impelled Lemkin to action. Absent this historical context, the article reinforces the Israeli government’s illogical claim that Jewish people are the sole victims of genocide. South Africa’s charge that the Israeli government is engaging in genocide reflects Lemkin’s commitment to the denunciation of the crime irrespective of ethnicity.”

The New York Times ignored our letter.

Oversimplifying Lemkin’s endeavors does a shameful disservice to his legacy. Such a decontextualized presentation edits out the foundation of his body of work and contracts the character of his mission.

It ignores the events that prompted and preoccupied his thinking on international discourse toward establishing laws against the crime that he came to term “genocide.” 

Lemkin was horrified that the Ottoman Turkish government could kill its own citizens — albeit “dhimmi,” or second-class citizens — with impunity. 

His application of the term genocide to the Ottoman Turk’s systematic mass slaughter of the Armenians predated the Holocaust. Years later, as a formidable advisor to prosecutors at the Nuremberg Trials, Lemkin drew conclusive parallels to the Nazis’ genocidal massacre of Europe’s Jewish citizens.

Editing the Armenian Genocide from Lemkin’s life work has contemporary and historical implications. In light of increasing attacks by a radicalized right-wing contingency in Israel on Jerusalem’s Armenians, deleting the Armenians from current reporting sets a dangerous tone for Armenians living under current threat. 

The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention has featured articles on Armenphobia and on the Armenians’ right to exist, and has issued statements of concern over recent attacks on the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem.

Jerusalem’s Armenians, or “East Jerusalemites” as they are designated by the Israeli government, like other Palestinians, live in a system that privileges Israel’s Jewish population. 

Hostilities from Jewish fundamentalists toward Armenians in Jerusalem are nothing new. However, the level and frequency of aggressions have intensified thanks to Netanyahu’s far-right government which has energized and normalized them. 

With attention concentrated on Gaza, Israeli extremists are free to act without fear of consequences. The Lemkin Institute explained that this can be “viewed as another attempt by Israeli extremists to create a homogenized Jewish ethnostate in the Palestinian territories.”

The New York Times article’s abridged version of Lemkin’s work emboldens those who continue to deny that the 1915 Armenian Genocide occurred. To selectively invoke Lemkin’s work on genocide as a defense against the charges brought against Israel banks on the idea that public memory is short. 

A well-worn quote reported by A.P.’s Berlin bureau chief, Louis Lochner, from a speech given by Hitler to his military generals before the 1939 Nazi invasion of Poland rhetorically asked, “Who today, after all, remembers the annihilation of the Armenians?” 

With hot wars blazing and existential alarms blasting, we not only remember the Armenians but uphold this New York Times article as a cautionary tale that words matter.

Mischa Geracoulis is a media literacy expert, writer and educator, serving as Project Censored’s curriculum development coordinator, and on the editorial boards of the Censored Press and The Markaz Review.

Heidi Boghosian is an attorney and is the executive director of the A.J. Muste Memorial Institute. Previously she was the executive director of the National Lawyers Guild, a progressive bar association established in 1937, where she oversaw the legal defense of people targeted by government. She also co-hosts the weekly civil liberties radio show “Law and Disorder,” which is based out of Pacifica Radio’s WBAI, New York, and is broadcast to more than 25 states on over 60 nationally affiliated stations.

This article is from  Common Dreams.

Views expressed in this article and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

https://consortiumnews.com/2024/01/23/new-york-times-spins-lemkins-work-on-genocide/

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Armenian News Note: The link to the Common Dreams piece is at the link below:
               

Biden urges US Congress to approve F-16 sale to Turkey ‘without delay’ – Reuters

 11:05,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. U.S. President Joe Biden sent a letter to leaders of key Capitol Hill committees on Wednesday informing them of his intention to begin the formal notification process for the sale of Lockheed Martin F-16 aircraft to Turkey once Ankara completes Sweden’s NATO accession process, Reuters reported citing sources.

In the letter to the top Republican and Democratic members of the Senate Foreign Relations and House of Representatives Foreign Affairs committees, Biden urged Congress to approve the sale "without delay," a U.S. official told Reuters.

Earlier on Wednesday the White House sent a letter to members of Congress urging approval of the $20 billion sale of F-16 aircraft and modernization kits to Turkey, four sources familiar with the letter told Reuters.

Turkey's parliament ratified Sweden's NATO membership bid on Tuesday.

The sources said the letter was sent on Wednesday, and that the Biden administration has not yet formally notified Congress of plans for the sale.  Lawmakers had said they were awaiting Turkey's approval of Sweden's NATO membership- including President Tayyip Erdogan's signature – before deciding whether to approve the sale.

Authorities introduce mandatory road safety audit requirement

 11:37,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government has introduced mandatory safety audit requirement of roads. The decision was adopted at the January 25 Cabinet meeting.

The government will also introduce an integrated system for road safety data management.

Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosyan said that the purpose of the initiative is to increase the level of safety of the road networks, tunnels and reduce possible risks.

The safety audit will be implemented during construction and a year after commissioning. The audit has been used during road construction projects involving international partners, and now it will be implemented in all projects as a mandatory requirement.

Azerbaijan extends Ruben Vardanyan’s jail term

 12:30,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. An Azeri court has extended the pre-trial detention of Ruben Vardanyan, the former State Minister of Nagorno-Karabakh, for another four months.

Aurora Humanitarian Initiative co-founder and former State Minister of Nagorno-Karabakh Ruben Vardanyan was arrested by Azerbaijani authorities on September 27, 2023 while en route to Armenia together with tens of thousands of others amid the mass exodus of Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh. He has been jailed in Azerbaijan since then on fabricated charges of terrorism financing and border trespassing.

Military procurement plan classified ‘state secret’

 12:42,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government has approved a bill on classifying military procurements as “state secret.”

The military procurement plan, the bid, technical characteristics, procurement organizational process, as well as the company that made the supplies or rendered services will be classified a state secret.

The decision will take effect January 28.

Employment reaches record high in Armenia

 13:11,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. A ‘historic record’ number of jobs was recorded in Armenia in December 2023, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting on January 25.

“In December 2023, the number of jobs was 741,726, which is more by 193,737 compared to May of 2018, which means that 193,737 jobs were opened in Armenia since May of 2018,” Pashinyan said.

The December 2023 indicator is 5,3% more compared to December 2022.

Cadastre committee chief highlights ‘legal assessment’ in border delimitation process

 13:13,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 25, ARMENPRESS. The “legal assessment” is the most important part in the delimitation and demarcation process between Armenia and Azerbaijan, according to Cadastre Committee chief Suren Tovmasyan.

“It is only based on the legal assessment that we can say which maps can serve as the basis for carrying out this process,” Tovmasyan told reporters when asked whether or not authorities have updates on which maps will be used in the process. “These works are underway, the Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia is chairing a task force, which includes my deputies, daily work is done,” he said.

Asked to comment on PM Pashinyan’s earlier statement that ‘Armenia never had a [land] cadastre certificate,’ Tovmasyan said that the premier was referring to the fact that the country’s borders are not delimitated or demarcated. “When Armenia’s borders will be demarcated and delimitated, it would mean that Armenia’s borders are documented,” Tovmasyan said.