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The National Assembly approved Pashinyan’s government program

June 7, 2018 By administrator

YEREVAN, JUNE 7, At the special session convened on June 7, the MPs approved the government program. As reports “Armenpress”, 62 voted for the government program and 39 deputies voted for it.

Before the extraordinary session, six MPs from the Republican Party of Armenia (Felix Tsolakyan, Arthur Gevorgyan, Artak Sargsyan, Shirak Torosyan, Arman Sahakyan, Samvel Alexanyan) announced their withdrawal from the National Assembly faction after the 2017 parliamentary elections. : Thus, in the National Assembly with 105 seats, the Republican Party lost the majority. Nevertheless, the Republican Party of Armenia (HHK) has stated that it will not hinder the voting of the government program.

After more than a month’s rallies, Nikol Pashinyan was elected prime minister on May 8. On May 12, the new government was formed, which approved its program on June 1 and presented it to the National Assembly. This program is referred to as transitional by the expert circles and establishes the prioritization of snap parliamentary elections within one year.

ԵՐԵՎԱՆ, 7 ՀՈՒՆԻՍԻ, ԱՐՄԵՆՊՐԵՍ: ՀՀ Ազգային ժողովում հունիսի 7-ին հրավիրված արտահերթ նիստում պատգամավորները հավանության արժանացրին կառավարության ծրագիրը: Ինչպես հաղորդում է «Արմենպրես»-ը, կառավարության ծրագրին կողմ քվեարկեց 62, դեմ՝ 39 պատգամավոր:

Նախքան արտահերթ նիստը՝ 2017 թվականի խորհրդարանական ընտրություններից հետո Ազգային ժողովում մեծամասնություն (58 պատգամավորական մանդատ) ունեցող Հայաստանի հանրապետական կուսակցության վեց պատգամավոր (Ֆելիքս Ցոլակյանը, Արթուր Գևորգյանը, Արտակ Սարգսյանը, Շիրակ Թորոսյանը, Արման Սահակյանը, Սամվել Ալեքսանյանը) հայտարարել էին ՀՀԿ ԱԺ խմբակցությունից դուրս գալու մասին: Այդպիսով, 105 պատգամավորական տեղ ունեցող Ազգային ժողովում ՀՀԿ-ն կորցրել է մեծամասնությունը: Այդուհանդերձ, ՀՀԿ-ն հայտարարել է, որ չի խոչընդոտելու կառավարության ծրագրի քվեարկությանը:

Ավելի քան մեկ ամիս շարունակվող ցույցերից հետո՝ Նիկոլ Փաշինյանը ՀՀ վարչապետ է ընտրվել մայիսի 8-ին: Մայիսի 12-ին ամբողջովին ձևավորվել էր նոր կառավարությունը, որը հունիսի 1-ին հաստատել էր իր ծրագիրն ու ներկայացրել ԱԺ: Այս ծրագիրը փորձագիտական շրջանակների կողմից անվանվում է անցումային և որպես առաջնահերթություն սահմանում է մեկ տարվա ընթացքում արտահերթ խորհրդարանական ընտրությունների անցկացումը:  

Filed Under: News Tagged With: government, Pashinyan's, program

Professor establishes Armenian Scholars Program in Price School

September 22, 2017 By administrator

By Briana Latter, Daily  Trojan – Thursday marked the 26th anniversary of Armenia obtaining independence from Soviet rule, and professor Frank Zerunyan celebrated by wearing his Armenian army uniform.

On all other days, Zerunyan proudly displays the gift from the defense minister of Armenia on a hanger in his office in Lewis Hall. Zerunyan is of Armenian descent, but has no familial connection to the country as it stands today.

Zerunyan teaches graduate level courses in the Sol Price School of Public Policy that focus on governance, negotiation and leadership, and he is in the process of establishing the Armenian Scholars program at USC. The 10-year program is set to begin in Fall 2019.

The program’s goal is to consecutively bring five scholars from Armenia to enroll in the doctorate in public policy and management program at the Price School. Upon graduating, each student will return to Armenia to form a public policy and management department at a university. By the end of the 10th year, the department will have five employees, all graduates of the USC program. If a scholar commits to working for the department for at least five years, USC will pay for his or her education.

“Every year, we will try to recruit someone with a variation of interest in public policy and management so that we don’t have duplicates,” Zerunyan said. “Even though they will all come from Price, we will make sure that they all matriculate into different disciplines.”

The idea for the Armenian Scholars program was conceived about five years ago when Zerunyan began traveling to Armenia to teach. It was at Yerevan State University, the largest university in the country, where Zerunyan realized public management is only offered at the undergraduate and master’s levels in Armenia; a doctoral program in public management does not exist.

After brainstorming ways to combat the issue, he asked colleagues from Yerevan State University to write him a letter about the need for a doctoral program in public management. He then presented the document, as well as his ideas for the Armenian Scholars program, to Jack H. Knott, dean of the Price School.

Zerunyan said Knott supported the idea then and still supports it today.

“Through establishing this Price School doctorate program, we will have the opportunity to prepare the first generation of Armenian scholars and educators in public policy and management,” Knott said in an email to the Daily Trojan. “It will help to improve Armenian governance, professional public management and democratic political development. This program will reflect USC’s moral imperative to use its expertise to make a positive global impact.”

According to Zerunyan, the Los Angeles area is the largest Armenian community outside of Armenia itself, making USC the perfect place for the program.

“My hope is that this becomes the hub of the caucuses in the former Soviet Republics as the premier institution for public policy and management doctorate programs,” he said.

Zerunyan said he will begin recruiting scholars when he teaches in Armenia next summer, and plans to make a final decision by January 2019. In the meantime, he said he will prepare, develop and raise funds for the program.

“To me, this is a mission,” Zerunyan said. “We want them to go back and provide that mission back to the country.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Frank Zerunyan, program, scholars

Armenian pogroms in Baku: The New York Times – Indifference and silence can cause another genocide

January 17, 2015 By administrator

It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

new-york-time-1990The New York Times, July 27, 1990.
blishing the series of evidences of the eyewitness, statements of political and public figures about the Armenian pogroms held in Baku on 13-20 January 1990. The articles are posted on the website of KarabakhRecords.info
Indifference and silence can cause another genocide…

An open letter to international public opinion on anti-Armenia pogroms in the Soviet Union

It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

The New York Times, July 27, 1990.

An era which we all thought ended, the era of pogroms, has resurfaced. Once again this year, the Armenian community of Azerbaijan has been the victim of atrocious and intolerable premeditated massacres.

As scholars, writers, scientists, political leaders and artists we wish, first of all, to express our profound indignation over such barbaric acts, which we wanted to believe belonged to humanity’s past. We intend this statement as more than an after-the-fact condemnation. We want to alert international public opinion to the continuing danger that racism represents to the future of humanity. It forebodes ill that we are experiencing the same powerlessness when faced with such flagrant violations of human rights a half century after the genocide of the Jewish people in Nazi concentration camps and forty years after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It would be inexcusable if, because of our silence now, we contributed to the suffering of new victims.

The situation of Armenians in the Caucasus is, in fact, too serious for us to remain silent. There are moments when we must assume the moral obligation to assist a people in peril. Our sense of obligation leads us today to appeal to the international community and to public opinion.

More than two years ago, active persecution against Armenians began in Azerbaijan. The pogroms of Sumgait in February 1988 were followed by massacres in Kirovabad and Baku in November 1988. As recently as January 1990, the pogroms continued in Baku and other parts of Azerbaijan. The mere fact that these pogroms were repeated and the fact that they followed the same pattern, leads us to think that these tragic events are no accidents or spontaneous outbursts.

Rather we are compelled to recognize that the crimes against the Armenian minority have become consistent practice – if not consistent policy – in Soviet Azerbaijan. According, to the late Andrei Sakharov (New York Times, November 26, 1988), these pogroms constitute “a real threat of extermination” to the indigenous Armenian community in Azerbaijan and in the autonomous region of Mountainous Karabakh, whose inhabitants are 80 percent Armenian.

Horror has no limits, especially when we remember that the threat is against the Armenian people, who in 1915 paid dearly for their right to be different in the Ottoman Empire. There, Armenians lost half their population to genocide, the worst consequence of racism. Furthermore, if the recent pogroms have revived nightmares of extermination not yet overcome, the current total blockade of Armenia and Mountainous Karabakh and 85 percent of those into Armenia pass through Azerbaijan; it would not be an exaggeration to maintain that such a blockade amounts to the strangulation of Armenia. In a land devastated by the earthquake of December 7, 1988, the blockade has paralyzed the economy and dealt a mortal blow to the reconstruction efforts.

It is our sincere hope that perestroika will succeed. But we also hope for the success of glasnost and democratization. We recognize that the passage from a totalitarian state to a rule of law cannot be achieved overnight. It is nonetheless necessary that in the process of transition, the government of the Soviet Union promote legalize and institutionalize such critical forces for democracy as human rights, the principle of toleration, and democratic movements. There is no better defense and demonstration of democracy. At any rate, that is the only way to avoid the worst. In the case of the multinational state, the, worst may mean threats to the right of a people or a minority to exist. It is during periods of transition and uncertainty that rights of peoples – today Armenians, tomorrow another people or minority – are threatened or denied. In this respect, the ease with which we see today the development in the USSR of racist movements, especially the anti-Semitic movement known as Paymat, is for us cause for grave concern.

In the name of our duty of vigilance, we demand that Soviet authorities as well as the international community condemn univocally these anti-Armenian pogroms and that they denounce especially the racist ideology which has been used by the perpetrators of these crimes as justification.

We ask from the Soviet authorities and the international community that all necessary measures be taken immediately to ensure the protection and security of Armenians in the Caucasus and other parts of the Soviet Union. This can begin by bringing about a definitive lifting of the Azerbaijani blockade. It should be clear that the forceful deportation of Armenians is not the solution to the problem of Mountainous Karabakh which, in essence, is a problem of human rights.

The international community of states under the rule of law must prove the authenticity of its commitment to human rights in order to ensure that, due to indifference and silence bordering on complicity, another genocide does not occur.

It is signed by more than 130 human rights activists, public figures and scientists from different countries of Europe and America

The New York Times, July 27, 1990.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Baku, new york time, program

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