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Labor market ‘not sensitive to women’s problems’ in Armenia – human rights activist

March 10, 2018 By administrator

Zaruhi Hovhannisyan

Zaruhi Hovhannisyan

The existing tough rules on Armenia’s labor market are not adjusted to the specific needs and problems of women, according to a female human rights activists.In comments to the Armenian service of RFE/RL (Azatutyun), Zaruhi Hovhannisyan addressed particularly the short period of the maternity leave, which she said is often treated as an “extra burden” for many employers.

“That extra burden, so to speak, is paid to an employee who doesn’t work de-facto in a given period of time, and that makes women more sensitive in practice. As for the traditional perception, yes, that problem does really exist. Unemployment, from the point of view of domestic violence, is treated also as a form of economic violence, as a specific method of depriving a woman of [the opportunity to earn] her own income, have the freedom of mobility to choose where to work and how, and most importantly – realize her potential as a specialist,” she added.

Hovhannisyan noted that despite females’ higher engagement in the educational sector, women have a considerably lower status and presence on the labor market. “That [stereotype] is also imposed by families, as we traditionally see this kind of understanding of the woman’s as a housewife,” she noted.

Hovhannisyan attributed the existing inequalities and discrimination to the dominating mentality in the Armenian society. “Our logic [is still too immature] to develop the perception that fathers too, can take a paid parental leave to replace mothers for six months, for instance, to be feel their own role in the process of raising the child. It should not absolutely matter [for employers] whether a man or a woman has applied for a specific job. That problem exists, in a hidden form, also in the government [agencies], as they very often avoid to hire females, considering men more predictable and stable,” she added.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, human rights activists, Zaruhi Hovhannisyan

Armenia, EU Have never been closer, says Mogherini

March 9, 2018 By administrator

Armenia, EU

Armenia, EU

Armenia and the European Union have never been closer than today, High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Federica Mogherini said in a video address to participants of the European Planning Meeting being held in Yerevan these days, the Armenian service of RFE/RL (Azatutyun.am) reports.

The annual event held in the Armenian capital for the first time has brought together 220 youth workers from 24 European countries.

“I know this is the first time that you hold your annual meeting in this part of Europe. And the moment you’ve chosen is just perfect,” Mogherini, who is also vice-president of the European Commission, said in her address to the young people.

“Last November we had a very important summit in Brussels with our six partners in Eastern Europe, and with Armenia, in particular, we signed three groundbreaking agreements.

We signed a new partnership agreement that we hope can make the lives of our citizens much easier both in Armenia and the European Union.

“For instance, if you are a young Armenian engineer, it will be much easier for you to work inside the European Union and vice versa. Armenian universities will now have access to the European Union’s programs for research and innovation that is the biggest international research program in the world. We also signed new agreements to improve connections between the European Union and Armenia both by plane and on the road.”

In her remarks addressed to the young participants of the forum in Yerevan Mogherini stressed that the EU dreams of “a European continent where borders are not an obstacle, but a gateway for young people like you.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, EU, Mogherini

Armenian National Security uncovers group engaged in document fraud

March 6, 2018 By administrator

The Armenian National Security Service has detected a group of Armenian and foreign citizens that has long been engaged in document fraud.

In particular, during 2016-2017 members of the group printed and sold 40 false documents for foreign citizens, confirming the fact of having completed military service in another country, based on which they were later registered in Armenian military commissariats, obtained citizenship of the Republic of Armenia and were exempt of military service.

Besides, the group falsified and sold a number of driver licenses, birth and marriage certificates, education, residence and vehicle registration documents, which were later presented to relevant authorities in Armenia and foreign countries.

The National Security Service confiscated the devises, stamps, seals and forms used for falsification of official documents, as well as samples of certificates and other official documents made for 140 Armenian and other nationals made on behalf of local self-government bodies and separate organizations.

The eleven members of the group have been charged with forgery under parts 1 and 2 of Article 325 of the Armenian Criminal Code (Forgery, sale or use of forged documents, stamps, seals, letter-heads, vehicle license plates).

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, document fraud

Armenians Find New Prescription Rules A Bitter Pill To Swallow

March 5, 2018 By administrator

New Prescription Rules

Pharmacists across Armenia could be forgiven for breathing a sigh of relief on March 1, after days of long lines and last-minute buying before new rules that changed many common over-the-counter drugs to prescription-only took effect.

Many Armenians, especially the elderly, had lined up for hours across the country in the waning days of February to hoard some of the 2,700 drugs that were put out of reach without a doctor’s signature.

The government says the move will shield people from the danger of self-medicating.

But for many of the country’s 3 million citizens, having to go to a doctor’s office to get permission to take medicines they’ve been buying freely for years is proving a bitter pill to swallow.

“This is just another stupid law,” says one woman who lined up for medicine in the capital, Yerevan.

“Seeing a doctor in our reality is connected with expenses and our people, as you see, certainly have financial problems. The superfluous lines, the whole rush, additional expenses, even at polyclinics that are supposed to be free-of-charge…. This surely will not work in our country,” she added.

The Health Ministry’s February 19 announcement of the move immediately sparked confusion that helped lead to the rush. Many people were unsure which of the roughly 4,700 drugs available in the country would be put on the list.

The ministry has since clarified the process, with antibiotics, hormonal medications, and codeine-containing drugs falling under the new rules. A compulsory-prescription system for intravenous and anticancer drugs will take force from July 1.

“Any changes to regulations cause certain discomfort. Physiological discomfort causes, first of all, dissatisfaction, and later, when people see changes are actually positive, comes satisfaction,” Health Minister Levon Altunyan told reporters on March 1.

“Today, we have the first stage of reaction to the change. I am sure there will also be a second, more positive phase,” he added.

Health Ministry officials have stressed that regular medicines such as aspirin and other similar painkillers will not be affected by the new regulations.

But the explanations have failed to quell fears among many that the pills they stock their medicine cabinets at home with won’t be available when they need them in a mountainous and rugged country frequently faced with shortages.

“I thought I could buy a few drugs that still have a long time to go before expiry so as to send them to my sister, who lives in the mountains. If there is a heavy snow, she can’t go to a polyclinic for a prescription,” a woman waiting in a line explained.

Armenians are sensitive to any regulatory change and accuse the government of corruption and mishandling an economy that has struggled to overcome the legacy of central planning since the country seceded from the Soviet Union in 1991.

Curbing access to medicines and a perceived failure to explain it to the public appear to have added to the animosity toward the move.

“Everyone’s asking what’s going to happen. No one is aware [of the details],” said one pharmacist in Yerevan.

“I have no idea how we it will work…. We don’t know what these prescriptions will be like, whether people will go to doctors or not,” she added.

Written by Alan Crosby based on reporting by RFE/RL’s Armenian Service correspondent Anush Murdyan

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, New Prescription Rules

Armenian Church commemorates St. John of Odzun, St. Gregory of Tatev and other saints

March 3, 2018 By administrator

St. Gregory of Tatev

The Armenian Apostolic Church honors the memories of Armenian Patriarch St. John of Odzun, St. John of Vorotan, St. Gregory of Tatev and St. John the Patriarch of Jerusalem, on March 3, the third Saturday of the Great Lent.

The St. John (Hovhannes) of Odzun, who was recognized as “the Philosopher”, is one of the greatest fathers of the Armenian Church, the Araratian Patriarchal Diocese reports. According to hagiographers, he possessed both spiritual and mental brilliance.  During the 11 years of his reign (717-728), Catholicos Hovhannes managed to withstand Byzantine and Arab pressures and incursions, while struggling mightily against sects.

Hovhannes of Odzun endowed to us a rich and priceless literary legacy.  His work entitled “Canons of the Armenians” is the first voluminous collection in Armenian history, which contains ecclesiastical canons and laws. He is also famous as the author of numerous sermons and church hymns. Among the most important initiatives undertaken by Catholicos Hovhannes of Odzun, is the church council convened in Dvin in 726, with the aim of reforming the Armenian Church.  He also convened the meeting in Manazkert in 726, dedicated to the goal of strengthening the union of the Armenian and Assyrian Churches.

The tomb of Catholicos Hovhannes is in the Church of Srbanes (St. Hovhannes) in the village of Ardvi, near his birthplace of Odzun.  The church has remained a sanctuary for the faithful of the Armenian Nation.

The names of Vartabeds (church divine or archimandrite) St John (Hovhan) of Vorotan (1315-1388) and St. Gregory of Tatev (1346-1410) are closely interrelated. Gregory of Datev, the greatest Vardapet and theologian of the Armenian Church, studied under Hovhan of Vorotan, and later raised the famous school founded by his teacher in the Monastery of Tatev. Gregory of Tatev authored numerous significant theological works.  Included in his literary legacy are the “Book of Questions” and the collections of his sermons.  He is closely associated with Hovhan of Vorotan, because as a result of the notes and records made by Gregory, a portion of the literary legacy of Hovhan has survived to this day.

Finally, the blessed memory of St. John the Patriarch of Jerusalem is commemorated on the same day, along with the aforementioned three fathers of the Armenian Church.  St. John was Patriarch of Jerusalem in the 4th Century.  He is remembered to this day as being a great orator and a defender of Christianity through his sermons.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, St. Gregory of Tatev

Armenia – a journey to the origins of Christianity: TV5 Monde

March 3, 2018 By administrator

The Christian faith has been the true cement of Armenian identity, France’s TV5 Monde says, recommending to visit the country nestled among churches and monasteries.

The vast majority of churches and monasteries are in the middle of nature or at the end of an abandoned village, the feature says.

In Armenia, there are still about 40,000 khachkars which are always located near temples or in cemeteries, or are curved on the walls of monasteries, it says.

The French TV correspondents visited several churches in the country, as well as a khachkar workshop in the city of Vanadzor, where Sergey Danielyan, a graduate of the local art school, revives the ancient art.

“I have already curved five hundred khachkars, and none of them looks like the other,” said the master.

Related links:

Ru.armeniasputnik.am. Французское ТВ: в Армении до сих пор есть около 40 тысяч сокровищ
TV5 Monde. Arménie, voyage aux sources du christianisme

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, origins of Christianity

Armenia Scrapping Protocols To Normalize Relations With Turkey

March 1, 2018 By administrator

Armenia Scrapping Protocols

Armenia Scrapping Protocols

Armenia has canceled two 2009 protocols aimed at normalizing bilateral relations with bitter regional rival Turkey, the Caucasus country’s presidential office says.

President Serzh Sarkisian declared the normalization deal invalid and that details of the move would be published in the near future, spokesman Vladimir Hakobian said on March 1.

Media in the region have previously reported that Sarkisian has said he was open to new negotiations to normalize relations “under new conditions.”

The two protocols, signed by the Armenian and Turkish foreign ministers in Zurich in October 2009, would have established diplomatic relations between Ankara and Yerevan as well as reopened the countries’ mutual border.

However, the deal was frowned upon in both Yerevan and Ankara. Parliaments in both countries have failed to ratify the documents and scrapping of the protocols had been long discussed in Armenia.

In February 2015, Sarkisian said he had asked parliament speaker Galust Sahakian to return the protocols to him since “the Turkish government has no political will, distorts the spirit and letter of the protocols, and continues its policy of setting preconditions.”

In September 2017, Sarkisian told the United Nations General Assembly that Armenia would declare the “futile” protocols “null and void” in the spring of 2018 if Ankara did not show any progress toward their implementation.

“The leadership of Turkey are mistaken if they think that those documents can be held hostage forever and ratified only at the most opportune occasion from their very point of view,” Sarkisian said.

On February 21, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian told the European Parliament that Yerevan was close to scrapping the protocols, claiming that Armenia spared no effort” to see the deal succeed but that “Turkey has missed a historic chance of reconciliation.”

Turkey did not immediately comment on Yerevan’s move to scrap the deal.

Relations between Turkey and Armenia have been strained for years over their differing accounts of the mass killings of Armenians.

The World War I-era mass slaughter and deportation of up to 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks is considered by many historians and several nations as genocide. Turkey objects, saying that Armenians died in much smaller numbers and because of civil strife rather than a planned Ottoman government effort to annihilate the Christian minority.

Armenia has also been locked in a long conflict with Turkish ally Azerbaijan over Azerbaijan’s breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which has led to the closing of the Turkey-Armenia border.

Nagorno-Karabakh, populated mainly by ethnic Armenians, declared independence from Azerbaijan amid a 1988-94 war that claimed an estimated 30,000 lives and displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

Internationally mediated negotiations with the involvement of the OSCE’s so-called Minsk Group have failed to result in a resolution. The Minsk Group is co-chaired by France, Russia, and the United States.

With reporting by RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, Reuters, PanArmenia.net, Asbarez, and Interfax

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenia, protocols, Scrapping, Turkey

ANCA backs targeted $70 million “Peace and Prosperity” aid package for Artsakh and Armenia

March 1, 2018 By administrator

aid package for Artsakh and Armenia

aid package for Artsakh and Armenia

In testimony submitted today to the Senate panel drafting the Fiscal Year 2019 foreign aid bill, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) called for a targeted $70 million aid package that would fund de-mining and rehabilitation in Artsakh, implementation of the Royce-Engel proposal to deploy gunfire locators along the line-of-contact, the expansion of U.S-Armenia economic and military partnerships, and support for Armenia as a regional safe haven for at-risk Middle East refugees.

ANCA Government Affairs Director Raffi Karakashian opened his testimony to the Senate’s Appropriations Subcommittee on State-Foreign Operations by marking the 100th anniversary of the first Armenian Republic, inviting the panel to join with him in celebrating a century of U.S.-Armenia relations. He then turned to the ANCA’s top-line priorities:

 Artsakh: $6 million to complete de-mining and rehabilitate the disabled, $4 million to promote peace

Armenia:
 $30 million in economic aid, $10 million in military aid, $20 million for Middle East refugees

Azerbaijan:
Suspend U.S. military aid and strengthen Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act

In each of these areas, Karakashian shared with appropriators how the ANCA’s proposals advance U.S. interests and suggested concise, draft legislative language for their consideration.  He closed his testimony by reaffirming the ANCA’s commitment to Armenia’s aid-to-trade transition, asking Members of the Subcommittee to encourage the Trump Administration to make full use of the U.S.-Armenia Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) and Economic Task Force, and, most urgently, to move forward with the long-overdue negotiation of a modern U.S. Armenia Double Tax Treaty.

The full text of the ANCA’s testimony is provided below:

As we mark the 100th anniversary of the first Armenian Republic – celebrating a century of U.S.-Armenia relations – we want to thank the Subcommittee for its longstanding leadership in fostering the bilateral friendship of our two nations, to voice our appreciation for the steady progress of Armenia’s aid-to-trade transition, and to seek your continued support for strengthening Armenia’s independence, securing a durable and democratic peace for Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), and sustaining Armenia as a regional safe haven for at-risk refugees.

Our specific requests are as follows:

Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh): Complete De-Mining, Promote Peace, Help the Disabled

Since Fiscal Year 1998, direct U.S. aid to Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) has represented a powerful investment in peace and an enduring expression of America’s leadership in supporting a negotiated and democratic resolution of outstanding security and status issues between Artsakh  (Nagorno Karabakh) and Azerbaijan.

American assistance has met pressing humanitarian needs, including clean water for families and mine-clearance across Artsakh’s (Nagorno Karabakh) farmlands, towns, and villages.  The HALO Trust, with the support of this Subcommittee, is close to declaring Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) mine-free, but needs continued funds to complete its life-saving work.  We were, in this regard, encouraged by the support of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who, in his written response to questions about Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) submitted to him during a June 2017 House Foreign Affairs hearing, affirmed: “We remain focused on completing demining as quickly and as thoroughly as possible.”

In addition to de-mining, we urge this panel to support the operations of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh)-based regional rehabilitation centers, like the Lady Cox Rehabilitation Center in Stepanakert, which serve children, adults, and seniors with physical and mental disabilities.

We commend legislators for supporting the Royce-Engel peace proposals, which call for the placement of OSCE-monitored, advanced gunfire locator systems and sound-ranging equipment to determine the source of attacks along the line of contact.

Request:  We ask the Subcommittee to appropriate no less than $6,000,000 in direct aid for Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), and no less than $4,000,000 for the deployment of gunfire locator systems along the line of contact.

Language:

Of the funds appropriated by this Act, not less than $6,000,000 shall be made available for assistance for Nagorno Karabakh.

The Committee recommends funding for Nagorno Karabakh-based regional rehabilitation centers to care for infants, children and adults with physical and cognitive disabilities.

The Committee recommends continued funding for, and the geographic expansion of, Nagorno Karabakh de-mining, ordnance clearance, and mine-safety programs.

In the interest of effective U.S. oversight of our aid programs, the Committee recommends, that the Department of State and USAID lift any official or unofficial restrictions on U.S. travel, communication, or contacts with Nagorno Karabakh government officials or civil society stakeholders.

The Committee recommends making available no less than $4,000,000 to deploy gunfire locators, as part of the Royce-Engel peace proposals.

2) Azerbaijan – Suspend U.S. Military Aid

The oil-rich Azerbaijani regime of Ilham Aliyev neither needs nor deserves U.S. military aid.

Azerbaijan has, in recent years, failed three key Congressional tests of its commitment to peace:

a) The Aliyev government, in the wake of its April 2016 major military offensive, has obstructed the implementation of the bipartisan Royce-Engel accountability/peace proposals, which call on all parties to the Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) conflict to agree to the withdrawal of snipers, heavy weapons, and new armaments, the addition of OSCE observers, and the deployment gunfire locator systems.

b) The Aliyev government has condemned the U.S.-Artsakh Travel and Communication Resolution (H.Res.697), a constructive bipartisan measure that seeks simply to open up channels of dialogue and discourse toward a peaceful resolution of regional conflicts.

c) Azerbaijan remains a recipient of U.S. military aid despite acting contrary to the spirit and letter of Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act.

In both cases, the Aliyev regime has rejected reasonable pathways to peace, choosing violence over the hard but necessary work of negotiations.

Request:  We ask the Subcommittee to zero out U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan, including Foreign Military Financing and International Military Education and Training, until its government agrees to the Royce-Engel proposals, ceases its threats of renewed war, stops cross-border attacks into Armenia and Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), and agrees to the resolution of regional conflicts through peaceful means alone.

Language:

None of the funds appropriated by this Act may be made available for assistance to the armed forces or security services of Azerbaijan until such time as the President determines and reports to the Committees on Appropriations that Azerbaijan has stopped obstructing implementation of the Royce-Engel proposals, ceased its threats of violence, ended cross-border attacks into Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, and agreed to the resolution of regional conflicts through peaceful means alone.

Add the following certification requirement to the President’s waiver authority under Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act:

In the last fiscal year, Azerbaijan has not taken hostile action, either through military force or incitement, including but not limited to threatening pronouncements by government officials toward Armenia or Nagorno Karabakh, and has both stated and demonstrated its commitment to pursuing a lasting peace with Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh through solely non-violent means.

3) Armenia – Support a Democratic Ally and Trading Partner

Armenia – a Christian nation deeply rooted in Western democratic values – has, despite dual Turkish and Azerbaijani blockades, emerged an important regional ally and international partner for the United States on a broad array of complex challenges.  The Armenian military has been among the highest per capita providers of peacekeepers to U.S.-led deployments, including those in Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon, Kosovo, and Mali.  Increased U.S. assistance will facilitate the further growth of bilateral military cooperation (in the areas of peace-keeping, field hospitals, and capacity-building), while also promoting the continued expansion of U.S.-Armenia economic relations.

We commend the Subcommittee’s commitment to American Schools and Hospitals Abroad, which continues to provide vital support for the American University of Armenia and the Armenian American Wellness Center.

Request: 
 We ask the Subcommittee to appropriate at least $30,000,000 in U.S. economic assistance and $10,000,000 in military assistance to Armenia, in order to further develop U.S.-Armenia economic relations and to expand the scope and depth of U.S.-Armenia military cooperation.

Language:

Of the funds appropriated by this Act, not less than $30,000,000 shall be made available for economic assistance to Armenia.

Of the funds appropriated by this Act, not less than $10,000,000 shall be made available for military assistance to Armenia.

The Committee encourages the Millennium Challenge Corporation, upon Armenia meeting its merit-based governance criteria, to give full and fair consideration to Armenia for a Science, Technology, Education, and Math education grant for its public school system.

4) Armenia – Sustain a Safe Haven for At-Risk Christians and other Middle East Refugees

Armenia, a small country with a per capita GDP of less than $4,000 per year – has welcomed nearly 25,000 refugees from Syria, with only modest levels of U.S. and international relief and resettlement assistance.

Armenia has provided full citizenship rights to Armenian Syrian refugees, and has sought to compassionately integrate all arriving families into Armenian society, but faces serious financial constraints in meeting the needs of these refugees. Specific areas in need of support include short-term housing/rental assistance, job-training, and social and economic integration.

Request:
 We ask the Subcommittee to appropriate at least $20,000,000 to help Armenia provide transition support to refugees from Syria and throughout the Middle East who have found safe haven in Armenia.

Language:

Of the funds appropriated by this Act, not less than $20,000,000 shall be made available for assistance to Armenia for the purpose of providing transition and resettlement assistance to Middle East refugees.

In closing, we would like to emphasize, once again, our appreciation for this Subcommittee’s leadership in Armenia’s aid-to-trade transition. It is in this spirit that we call upon you to continue encouraging the Administration to make full use of the Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) and U.S.-Armenia Economic Task Force, and – most urgently – to move forward with the long-overdue negotiation of a modern U.S. Armenia Double Tax Treaty.

The ANCA, as always, thanks you for your leadership and looks forward to working with the Subcommittee to strengthen the U.S.-Armenia alliance, promote regional stability, and advance American foreign policy and economic interests.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: aid package, Armenia, Artsakh

Prominent Armenian filmmaker Albert Mkrtchyan dies aged 81 Մահացել է Ալբերտ Մկրտչյանը

February 28, 2018 By administrator

filmmaker Albert Mkrtchyan dies

Prominent Armenian filmmaker, screenwriter and actor Albert Mkrtchyan died following a long illness on Wednesday, February 28, one day after his 81th birthday.

The information was confirmed by the theater named after his brother, Mher Mkrtchyan.

Mkrtchyan was born in 1937 in Leninakan (now Gyumri) in the Armenian SSR.

He has directed and written a number of successful films, including “The Tango of Our Childhood” (1985), “The Song of the Old Days” (1982) and “Breath” (1989).

Երկարատև հիվանդությունից հետո մահացել է ռեժիսոր, սցենարիստ, դերասան, ՀՀ ժողովրդական արտիստ Ալբերտ Մկրտչյանը։ Տեղեկությունը Ռադիոլուրին հաստատել են Երևանի Մհեր Մկրտչյան արտիստական թատրոնից։

Նշենք, որ երեկ լրացել էր ռեժիսորի 81-ամյակը։

Ալբերտ Մկրտչյանը ծնվել է 1937 թվականի փետրվարի 27-ին՝ Գյումրիում: Նա հայտնի դերասան, ԽՍՀՄ ժողովրդական արտիստ Մհեր Մկրտչյանի եղբայրն է։

1960 թվականին ավարտել է Երևանի գեղարվեստա-թատերական ինստիտուտի դերասանական բաժինը, իսկ 1971 թվականին՝ Մոսկվայի Կինեմատոգրաֆիայի ինստիտուտիռեժիսուրայի ֆակուլտետը՝ Եֆիմ Ձիգանի արվեստանոցը (ՎԳԻԿ)։

1960–1966 թվականներին եղել է հայկական հեռուստաստուդիայի, 1971 թվականից՝ Հայֆիլմ ստուդիայի ռեժիսոր, 1995–1999 թվականներին՝ Գյումրիի դրամատիկական, 2000թվականից՝ Երևանի Մհեր Մկրտչյանի անվան արտիստական թատրոնների տնօրեն և գեղարվեստական ղեկավար։

1980–2001թվականներին դասավանդել է Երևանի Հայկական պետական մանկավարժական համալսարանում (պրոֆեսոր՝ 1995 թվականից), 2001 թվականից՝ Թատրոնի և կինոյի պետական ինստիտուտում։

Ռեժիսորն արժանացել է ՀՀ «Մովսես Խորենացի» (2000), ՀՀ մշակույթի նախարարության ոսկե մեդալների (2007), «Հայակ» հայկական ամենամյա առաջին կինոմրցանակաբաշխության Հատուկ մրցանակի (2012)։

Ինչպես հայտնում են Մշակույթի նախարարությունից, Ալբերտ Մկրտչյանի մահվան կապակցությամբ կստեղծվի թաղման կառավարական հանձնաժողով:

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Albert Mkrtchyan, Armenia, dies, filmmaker

Business Insider: Armenia among 13 easy countries for English-speakers to get around in

February 26, 2018 By administrator

Armenia among 13 easy countries for English-speakers

Business Insider has compiled a list of 13 countries where it says language barrier won’t keep the visitors from taking an adventure. Based on calculations of the percent of people who speak English per some probably-in-the-ballpark estimates, the authors of the ranking include Armenia as a country where around 40% of the population speak English and visitors have a good chance of running into someone to communicate easily.

“The country enjoys a 98% literacy rate, and most Armenians under 30 speak English with flair — often with a British accent. Although Americans rarely visit Armenia, Europeans do, so instead of translating a dozen languages for them, road signage, menus, and venues are also in English. Chances are high you’ll meet someone who knows where you’re from and you probably already know someone with Armenian roots,” the source said.

It is noted that Armenia can offer thousands of mind-boggling monasteries and churches to tourists, several of which are uncrowded UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

“High living is low-cost; you can go to a world-class opera for the price of a movie ticket, while cabs, cafés, wine, beer, and groceries are enjoyed at 1960s US prices. It’s also on the legendary Silk Road, with one still-standing Armenian motel, Orbelian’s Caravanserai, built in 1331, where road-warrior merchants and their caravan-pulling animals rocked medieval happy hours, and so should you.” the magazine writes.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenia, easy countries, English-speakers

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