Armenia is expecting to sign a new framework agreement with the European Union during Estonia’s presidency at the Council of Europe, foreign minister Edward Nalbandian told a press conference on Tuesday, June 13. “Estonia will assume EU chairmanship on July 1, and Armenia is expecting to sign the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement with the bloc during that period,” Nalbandian said. Estonia’s presidency will end in December 2017, which means that the agreement will be signed by the end of the year. Speaking after a meeting with his Estonian counterpart Sven Mikser, Nalbandian said there is a bigger potential of cooperation between the two countries than the $10 million trade turnover, registered in 2016. Mikser will on Tuesday meet with president Serzh Sargsyan, prime minister Karen Karapetyan and National Assembly speaker Ara Babloyan
Sayat Nova Festival to bring together Armenian, Georgian musicians
Sayat Nova Festival 2017 will launch on June 16 in Tbilisi and will end on June 18 in Yerevan, Armenia. The annual festival, organized by Music of Armenia, will bring together the musicians of the two neighboring countries.
Sayat Nova Festival organizer Hasmik Movsisyan said at a press conference on Monday that Armenian and Georgian musicians will hold a concert at Tbilisi’s St. George Cathedral on June 16. She also added that Jnar Ensemble is set to hold a concert at Yerevan’s Silk Road Hotel on June 17, with Sayat Nova Ensemble closing the festival on June 18.
Sayat Nova Festival is an annual festival aimed at reviving and promoting the legacy of Sayat Nova’s music and ashough culture in general.
Senior Consultant at the Georgian Embassy in Armenia Nino Aptsiauri, present at the conference, highlighted the joint celebration of the festival dedicated to prominent ashik Sayat-Nova.
“Sayat-Nova belongs not only to the Armenian, but also to the Georgian people, since he is a great musician and poet with a regional wisdom. Sayat-Nova is the founder of the ashik poetry and his works are taught at higher educational institutions in Georgia,” she added.
India newspaper: Armenia is a cradle of civilization
The Economic Times newspaper of India published an article about Armenia, in which its writer describes the tourist attractions of the country.
As per the article, “Armenia is picture-postcard turf,” a cradle of civilization, and “as the world wakes up to the charms of this Caucasian nation of 3 million people, tourism [in this country] is galloping—at about 25% per year.”
Also, The Economic Times article noted that even though Armenia has gone through a lot hardships, its “turbulent past still lingers” and “the country is still bedeviled by the Nagorno-Karabakh [Artsakh] conflict with Azerbaijan.”
World’s longest zip line whose construction is currently underway in Armenia
World’s longest zipline whose construction is currently underway in Armenia will be ready this summer, co-founder of Yell Extreme Park Tigran Chibukhchyan told reporters on Friday, June 9.
“The architectural part is almost ready, and only several issues remain to be tackled,” Chibukhchyan said, according to Artsakhpress.
“Construction activities will launch on June 20, set to conclude in late July.”
A fresh Yell Extreme Park will be established in Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh), Chibukhchyan said, adding that Karabakh boasts an immense potential for the development of tourism.
A zipline is designed to enable a user propelled by gravity to travel from the top to the bottom of the inclined cable by holding on to, or attaching to the freely moving pulley.
Part of Armenian humanitarian aid transported to Damascus, Syria
menia,aid,syriaPart of the humanitarian aid shipped to Syria as a result of the assignment given by the President of Armenia, and in accordance with the agreement reached between Armenian and Russian Defense ministries, was transported to Syria’s capital Damascus.
Armenia’s defense ministry said in a release that humanitarian aid for civilians affected by the conflict in Syria and consisting mainly of food and clothing, was unloaded in the territory of Damascus St. Sargis Armenian Church.
According to the source, Armenian Embassy to the Syrian Arab Republic and the Armenian community members are set to facilitate the distribution of the aid.
Armenia’s Ambassador Arshak Poladyan during the unloading, has noted that Armenian community of Syria is a traditional and well-established community with its various institutions, while Syrian-Armenians enjoy positive reputation in the Arab Republic.
“The initiative of delivering a humanitarian aid as assigned by the President of Armenia even further strengthens the development of Armenian-Syrian brotherly relations,” the Ambassador has noted.
To remind, the June 8 shipment is the third phase of humanitarian aid sent to Syria. The first airplane had departed for Latakia from Yerevan, in February of this year.
Armenia court chief judge arrested
YEREVAN. – Gegharkunik District Court of First Instance chief judge Aghvan Petrosyan was arrested on Thursday.
His attorney, Armen Melkonyan, told Armenian News-NEWS.am that his client was immediately taken to court from a hospital in Yerevan, the capital city of Armenia, and a decision was reached on his arrest.
In Melkonyan’s words, however, the court did not enable him to study the case materials and carry out the necessary defense, and gave him solely 40 minutes to prepare his defense arguments.
He noted that his client has serious illnesses, “and despite all this, they urgently discharged him from hospital and arrested him.”
The attorney added that Judge Petrosyan is charged with taking a large bribe, but he pleads not guilty to the charge brought against him.
Universities may hold admission exams twice a year in Armenia, says minister
Armenia’s minister of education and science on Tuesday unveiled plans for revising the university admission procedures to allow entrants to sit for exams twice every year.
Speaking to reporters at the State University of Economics (which was hosting a centralized examination in Armenian Language and Literature), Levon Mkrtchyan said thet are now considering the change “to reduce the overload in the system”.
“If we equip our testing centers with the necessary supplies, we may organize [admission] tests twice every year to give every entrant a second chance,” he said, highlighting also the need of extra financial costs and more building premises.
“We need to slowly arrive at the understanding that the system should focus on testing an entrant’s knowledge rather than catching an error,” he added.
The minister said they intend to initiate the reform this year to be able to apply it to the 2018 entrance examinations.
He said they would need little financial costs and one-time material investment (building premises, computer equipment) to realize the plan.
Serj Tankian looking to set up a music festival in Armenia
A year after Armenians launched a generous new peace prize, the frontman of rockers System of a Down sees more to come in the country — including perhaps a music festival, AFP said.
Serj Tankian, singer of the chart-topping California hard rock band, composed a theme song for the Aurora Prize, which was inaugurated a year ago in the Armenian capital Yerevan.
The award, backed by Hollywood A-lister George Clooney, is presented on behalf of Armenians who survived the bloodletting that claimed 1.5 million lives in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire in 1915.
Armenia and Western historians describe the killings as genocide, but Turkey vehemently objects to the term.
The second edition of the award was presented on May 28 to Tom Catena, the sole doctor in Sudan’s conflict-ravaged Nuba Mountains who has cared for thousands of people, treating everything from war injuries to measles.
Catena, an American and Catholic missionary, will receive $100,000 plus an additional $1 million which will feed charities of his choice.
Tankian, who congratulated Catena in a video appearance at the ceremony as the band prepared for a European tour, said the Aurora Prize showed gratitude to those who helped survivors.
“Any group of people that have suffered immensely, whether it’s genocide or any other type of human-created catastrophe, should embody compassion and an understanding of that pain better than anyone else,” Tankian told AFP.
The Lebanese-born Tankian, whose grandparents survived with help from a Turkish mayor and an American missionary orphanage, said that too often, people fail to draw lessons from their ancestors’ pain.
“I find it really disheartening that there are people who have suffered immensely, or whose grandparents have suffered immensely, and yet their position in life has been unequivocally egotistical and myopic in terms of how they see their lives and how they spend their money,” he said.
– Integrating Armenia with music festivals –
Tankian said he wanted to do more in Armenia and was in the early stages of looking to set up a music festival.
The singer voiced hope that Armenia, rarely a destination for Western artists, could be integrated into the European summer festival circuit with touring bands carrying on to the Caucasus country.
“I’ve always dreamed of setting up an international music festival in Armenia,” he said.
“As much as I have tried to do political work and social work,” he said, “I would also like to carve out time to do art work, music work.”
For the centennial in 2015, System of a Down played its first-ever concert in Armenia. Tankian said he felt overcome with a sense of history, seeing young people and remembering his grandparents. He viewed his band as “part of that catalyst between old and new.”
“It felt like our whole career was built to play that one show in some ways,” he said.
Charles Aznavour proud for his son getting baptized in Armenia
Prominent Armenian chansonnier Charles Aznavour, who is visiting Armenia in the scope of Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, visited today the Tatev Monastery accompanied by his son Nikola Aznavour, friends and colleagues.
The first stop was at Halidzor Station of Tatever Ropeway, where the prominent singer was greeted by acting general director of IDeA (Initiatives for Development of Armenia) Charitable Foundation Edgar Manukyan, Director at Tatever Ropeway Vahe Baghdasaryan and the staff members of the foundation.
Edgar Manukyan presented the history of the construction of the aerial tramway, called the “Wings of Tatev”, implemented in the framework of Tatev Rivival project that has transformed the Tatev region.
Later Aznavour and other guests travelled to Tatev Monastry, where Aznavour’s son Nikola got baptized under the blessing of Michael Vardapet Gevorgyan. The ceremony was accompanied by the monastery choir’s performance.
“I am very proud that my son decided to get baptized in Armenia. My parents would be so happy to learn that my two sons Misha and Nikola got baptized here, in Armenia, staying committed to their roots,” Aznavour said.
Nikola Aznavour on his part added the older he gets the stronger is feels tied to his homeland despite the fact he was born in France, studied in Canada and Switzerland.
Nikola has confessed baptism in Tatev monastery was one of the most memorable moments in his life.
Armenia and Cyprus sign Agreement on Bilateral Military Cooperation Programme
Armenia and Cyprus on Monday signed agreements on Exchange and Mutual Protection of Classified Information, as well as on Bilateral Military Cooperation Programme.
The agreements were signed during the visit of Armenian FM Vigen Sargsyan to Cyprus, in-cyprus.com reports.
The talks between the Armenian Defense Minister Vigen Sargsyan and his Cypriot counterpart Christoforos Fokaides were followed by a meeting in an extended format.
Sargsyan will also be received by President of Cyprus Nicos Anastasiades. Apart from this, he will hold meetings with House President Demetris Syllouris, Cypriot Minister of Foreign Affairs Ioannis Kasoulides, and Archbishop of the Church of Cyprus Chrysostomos II.
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