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Elton John happy to be part of positive changes in Armenia

May 27, 2018 By administrator

YEREVAN, MAY 27,  Famous British singer Elton John, who arrived in Armenia on May 26 at the invitation of Armenian President Armen Sargsyan, mentioned that Armenian President Armen Sargsyan and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan have made great changes in Armenia and he is happy that he is part of the tsunami :

As reports “Armenpress”, the musician said this on May 27 at a brief meeting with journalists at Yerevan-My Love Foundation.

Touching upon the future of Armenia, John stressed that it is impossible to change everything at once, we must step by step.

British singer Elton John, Armenian President Armen Sargsyan and Starkey Foundation director William Austin have arrived in Haik and Elza Titizian Children’s Rehabilitation Center.

On May 27, 100 hearing aids were distributed to children during the charity campaign.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Elton John, HAPPY

Young Armenian cousins from Voskepar village happy to join the army

July 25, 2017 By administrator

Rafik Beglaryan, a young man from Armenia’s bordering village Voskepar, together with his cousin Armen Beglaryan are getting ready to begin their military service in the Armenian Armed Forces, with the lottery determining Artsakh as the place of their service.

“It will be great if we serve in the same military unit. We would cope with the [military] service easier together,” Rafik Beglaryan said in an interview with Panorama.am.

18-year old Rafik Beglaryan is a karate competitor, who currently studies at Armenian State Institute of Physical Culture. The future soldier has positive attitude towards the military service, trying not to focus on negative aspects.

Rafik is not concerned with the fact that he might serve in the frontline.

“We are well aware what it means to defend a border. We are not afraid of shootings,” he says, adding that it would certainly be better if the boys from the bordering villages of Tavush Province served in the same province.

Rafik’s cousin Armen Beglaryan is studying at National University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia. Armen hopes to hold his service with his cousin as well, adding that they will always be mentally connected even when serving in different military units.

Armen also does not find it difficult to service in the frontline.

“We are village boys and will easily engage in the service. In addition to that, we have lived amid constant shootings throughout our entire lives, we are used to it. On the contrary, it is a little bit unusual when they [Azerbaijani forces] do not fire shots,” Armen jokes, adding that all the houses in Voskepar villages face the border with Azerbaijan.

The brothers wish the conscripts a safe and peaceful service.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, HAPPY, young

gagrule.net wish you all a happy and fabulous New Year 2017

December 31, 2016 By administrator

 

 

http://gagrule.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/Happy-2017-2-short_2.mp4

Filed Under: Events, News Tagged With: 2017, HAPPY, new year

French Minister of State: I’m happy for Bundestag voting on Armenian Genocide

June 3, 2016 By administrator

minister genocideI’m happy for the Bundestag voting on the Armenian Genocide recognition, Minister of State for European Affairs of France Harlem Désir wrote on his Twitter page.

France continues to struggle for the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide, he noted.

The Bundestag, the lower house of the German parliament, on Thursday formally recognized the Armenian Genocide, with the aforesaid resolution and with only one vote against and one abstention. The resolution also notes that the Bundestag regrets that the German government at the time did nothing to stop this crime against humanity, and therefore the Bundestag also acknowledges the respective historical accountability of Germany.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: 99th Armenian Genocide, Bundestag, French, Genocide, HAPPY, minister

Nagorno-Karabakh’s a Happy Breakaway Republic, But Its War Goes On

July 12, 2015 By administrator

BY Anna Nemtsova

In the decades since the post-Soviet war that spawned this little “independent” enclave, the Armenian diaspora in the West has helped turn it into a surprising democracy.

1436666960715.cachedSTEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh—At sunset flocks of swallows race through the pink sky over the central square of Stepanakert, a city once bombed and largely destroyed in a the post-Soviet war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In the 21 years since the heavy fighting ended, there is still occasional shooting around the frontier with Azerbaijan, but this capital of the self-proclaimed state — this early “breakaway republic” — of Nagorno-Karabakh is peaceful. Published on The daily beast

Superficially, it resembles other quasi-nations dotting the map of the former Soviet Union: Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Transnistria and more recently the embattled self-proclaimed states of Donetsk and Luhansk in Ukraine. But where those have depended mainly on Russian backing, and critics would argue they are Russian creations, Nagorno-Karabakh has found other sponsors.

Some 150,000 people live here, but the enclave has support from a much greater population of ethnic Armenians around the world, and on a summer evening the veranda of the Florence Garden restaurant on the corner of the main square is full of Karabakh’s visiting benefactors. The sound of clinking glasses mingles with leisurely chatting in Armenian, French, English and Russian. The tranquil scene seems almost surreal, considering Karabakh’s war-torn history and its militarized present.

In some crucial respects, indeed, it is more at ease and more fair to its people than Armenia itself. Less than 200 miles away in the Armenian capital of Yerevan, police detained dozens of civil activists last week. Armenian protesters unhappy about state corruption and mismanagement  had blocked a street outside the presidential palace for over two weeks.

Nagorno-Karabakh, tucked in the green mountains of the Caucasus, has preferred to remain a distant observer of any geopolitical turmoil, developing under the influence of the Armenian diaspora in the West.

The Artsakh Republic, as locals call their mountain homeland, is aware that the rest of the world did not acknowledge the republic’s existence. But people also realized that any political instability could awaken the not-so-frozen war with Azerbaijan. Dozens of soldiers continued to die on both sides of the 21-year-old front line that is now the de facto border between Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijan. Another all-out war could involve neighboring Iran and Russia, and wholesale destruction once again, and that’s not wanted here.

To prevent traumatizing revolutions, Stepanakert made elections transparent and honest. Besides, the state is so tiny that it seems everyone knows everyone, and local officials are just too exposed to cheat the voters.

Arayik Harutyunyan, the prime minister, told The Daily Beast that Nagorno-Karabakh is different from the other internationally unrecognized states in the former Soviet Union. If Abkhazia, Transnistria, South Ossetia and the recently broken away and still fighting Donetsk and Luhansk republics embraced opaque authoritarian governments, Nagorno-Karabakh demonstrated that with transparent and democratic presidential elections it could beat corruption and organized crime successfully.

The tranquil scene seems almost surreal, considering Karabakh’s war-torn history and its militarized present.

One could leave a purse on a bench in the park and find it the next morning, locals told us. “Maybe we managed to cure the typical post-Soviet diseases because we are so isolated,” Harutyunyan said in a recent interview, then thought for a moment and conceded with a smile: “We are intolerant toward gays.”

Democracy is not the only goal for Nagorno-Karabakh. Very soon, Harutyunyan promised, Karabakh would turn into a black caviar heaven, to demonstrate to Azerbaijan that they not only despise dictatorship, they can also grow rich: “In five years, our Golden Fish will produce and export tons of black caviar,” Harutyunyan said. Last year, Nagorno-Karabakh founded the Golden Fish sturgeon farm thanks to a Swiss-Armenian investor, Vardan Semakesh, who was also the largest investor in the republic’s hydroelectric power plant.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s shaky status does not allow it to have its own airport. The windy road trip from Armenia takes six or seven hours. But at the border checkpoint last week, two reporters in a car did not have to show their documents.

In the last decade, Nagorno-Karabakh has signed friendly resolutions and agreements with various American and European cities and regions. Last year, Basque representatives visited Stepanakert; thanks to the strong Armenian lobby in the U.S., the state of California established cooperation with the local administration. Armenia, whose president, Serj Sargsyan, was born here, provided more than 30 percent of the modest annual  budget of about $200 million.

If in Armenia people are angry with deep-rooted corruption, here in the break-away state, businessmen feel safe. “I escaped Yerevan and opened my business in Stepanakert, where there is no corruption and nobody can make me pay a bribe,” says Dro Karapetyan, the owner of the Florence Garden restaurant and rock club.

And yet any conversation on the street or in private homes slowly drifts back to memories of war, and to stories of today’s losses on the border. It can seem at times that Nagorno-Karabakh is living a Groundhog Day of violence. More than 30,000 people died in the Armenia-Azerbaijan ethnic conflict in the late 1980s and early 1990s; hundreds of thousands were forced out of their homes on both sides of the front line.

When asked about similarities with the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, Lucine Sarkisyan, an assistant at a grocery store, shook head dismissively. ”In Luhansk and Donetsk they have water and electricity—we had nothing when we lived in that basement for two years,” she said, pointing at her house across the street.

Every local schoolboy knows that right after graduation he will put on his uniform and go to defend his state from enemies. That is what school programs taught the post-war generations; schools also train kids to assemble Kalashnikovs, throw grenades and climb walls for combat training. Many boys liked to watch weekly television shows about the army. One of the children’s drawings at Stepanakert’s School #3 exhibit themed “Peace” depicted soldiers marching in front of Grad missile launch systems.

Has Nagorno-Karabakh ever heard of a pacifist movement? “I have trouble imagining anything like that,” Stella Balayan, a school teacher in Martuni told The Daily Beast. She is still in mourning for her son, Col. Garik Balayan, who was killed in May 2014 during his night shift on the border. Looking at a printout of an official commemoration, Stella learned more about her son’s military service than she had ever heard from him.

One thing people in Nagorno-Karabakh do not understand is why their friend Russia is selling weapons to Azerbaijan, for about $4 billion in the last few years, including sophisticated S-300 anti-aircraft missile systems. Last August, shooting in the conflict intensified, the death toll increased by dozens.

Playing the role of peacemaker, Russian President Vladimir Putin brought the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia to the same table in his residence in Sochi to discuss the situation with Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev insisted that Armenia should withdraw its forces from Nagorno-Karabakh, while Armenian President Serj Sarkisyan accused Azerbaijan of not following UN resolutions.

When asked about how Russia helps Nagorno-Karabakh, the self-proclaimed state’s foreign minister, Karén Mirzoyan, said that Nagorno-Karabakh did not see much help from Russia. “We receive more support from the United States,” Mizroyan said.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: breakaway, HAPPY, Nagorno-Karabakh’s, Republic

Saddam’s Daughter Happy to see Militants Crush Iraqi Government

June 14, 2014 By administrator

Saddam daughter raghadSaddam Hussein’s daughter Raghad, seen here at a protest in 2007, says she is joyous at seeing the Iraqi government defeats at the hands of Islamic militants. Photo: AP

By Alexander Whitcomb and Halat Rebwar

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Raghad Saddam Hussein, exiled daughter of the former Iraqi dictator who was ousted in 2003 and later hanged, expressed joy at the Iraqi military collapse against an Islamist onslaught.

“I am happy to see all these victories,” she told the Al-Quds newspaper in Jordan, after militants captured Tikrit, her father’s hometown. “These are victories of my father’s fighters and my uncle Izzat Al-Douri,” she added, referring to the leader of the Iraqi Baathist Party, which is officially banned by the government.

Al-Douri has been identified as the main commander of former Baathists, who have partnered with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) to capture Mosul, Tikrit, and other predominantly Sunni cities. He was a senior military commander and vice president under Saddam, and avoided capture by US-led coalition forces following the dictator’s collapse in 2003.

Raghad, Saddam’s eldest daughter, was confident the militants would successfully undermine the current government.

“I am relieved. Someday, I will return to Iraq and visit my father’s grave,” she said. “Maybe it won’t happen very soon, but it will certainly happen.”

In 2006, the freshly-elected Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki placed Raghad and al-Douri on a “wanted list” of prominent Baathist figures. Al-Douri topped the list, and Raghad was number 16.

Al-Douri evaded capture and formed several brigades that were active in the insurgency campaign against Iraq’s post-Saddam government and US occupying forces. He was thought to have resided in Syria, Qatar and within the country itself at various stages, before resurfacing in the latest conflict over the last days.

Jordan granted Raghad and her children asylum for “humanitarian reasons.” Months later, her father was executed for crimes against humanity, and the Iraqi government denied her request for his body to be buried in Yemen, pending the withdrawal of international forces.

In mid-2007, international police agency Interpol issued a warrant for her arrest, charging her and her associates with involvement in insurgent activity.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: HAPPY, ISIL, Mosul, Saddam’s Daughter

Fukushima creates its own Pharrell Williams HAPPY video and it’s really inspiring

June 9, 2014 By administrator

From tsunamis to radiation, Fukushima has been inundated with bucketloads of bad news over the last three years. But one h-1media-savvy local has reimagined Pharrell Williams’ smash hit “Happy” to bring the beat back to the “island of good fortune.”

“Fukushima is also happy!!” Hitomi Kumasaka, the founder and CEO of Fukushima-based Social Media Labs, which is behind the funky remake, wrote on her YouTube page.

With a cameo from Fukushima’s mayor and a cast of characters showcasing the region’s social vibrancy, Kumasaka’s clip put a Japanese spin on Pharrell Williams’ global chart topper.

For anyone not familiar with the original video, just imagine a lot of really “happy” people dancing to a neo-soul jam carried by a Curtis Mayfield-inspired falsetto.
With the help of over 200 people, 214 gigabytes of footage were compiled over two weeks to distill four minutes of pure bliss from Fukushima City.

Kumusaka said she was trying to dispel the image of Fukushima as a gloomy and disaster-hit town where people shuffle by in masks fearing for their lives. She makes no bones about trying to appeal both to a domestic market and the international stage, where negative news of Fukushima has been unrelenting. Noting that the video has been viewed by 121 countries worldwide, she said it was not her intention to create “a tourist propaganda video,” though alluring street scenes to the Noji Onsen (hot springs) perched 1,200 meters above sea level might certainly pique the interest of a few intrepid travelers.

But from dumping radioactive water into the Pacific Ocean to irradiated fish, Fukushima-fever is so prevalent in Japan that even cooking-themed comic books have been infected with fear. When the troubles confronting your backyard are apocalyptic in nature, sometimes the only thing you can do is keep calm and dance on.

The Japanese government has done its best to get people to return to the affected area, though even the manager of the Fukushima nuclear plant has admitted that efforts to bring the disaster-stricken plant under control have resulted in an “embarrassing failure.”

Kumasaka, however, believes these lingering issues should not rain on anyone’s parade.

“Many people might think that Fukushima has been unhappy after 3/11,” Kumasaka said on her YouTube Channel referring to March 11, 2011, when the devastating earthquake and tsunami stoke Japan’s eastern coast. “But it’s not true. With this video I want you to know that we are also happy and healthy just like you. Please enjoy our dance and share our happiness!”

Stylistically and thematically, the infectious tune lends itself to imitation. As of May, more than 1,500 videos had been created in homage to the global hit, which itself has generated 284 million views on YouTube so far.

People across Japan have also made similar videos for other prefectures, including Tokyo, Okinawa and Kyoto.

But while those thousand-plus fans were likely playing their part in the viral phenomenon merely for the love of the song, a place like Fukushima can’t help but make a broader statement with a simple declaration of happiness.

It remains unclear if Kumasaka was commissioned by the government to craft a viral hit that could generate some positive PR, or if she did it for the sake of her beleaguered region. At the time of writing, Kumasaka was not immediately available for comment.

If anyone needs a cheer-up in Japan, then it is indeed the Fukushima province. Despite three years having passed since the devastating earthquake and tsunami, the crippled nuclear plant is still plagued with controversy and scandals. At the end of May, it emerged that 90 percent of the employees escaped the facility after the quake and the tsunami initially damaged it in contrary to earlier reports.

READ MORE: 90% of Fukushima crew fled failing nuclear power plant

While TEPCO, the plant operator, has started work on a giant underground barrier wall of ice set to isolate the water build-up – in spite of the warnings that the ground may sink.

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: Fukushima, HAPPY, inspiring

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