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    Categories: 2018

Australia ANCA Calls for Government Aid to Artsakh

Representatives of ANC Australia make a presentation in Canberra

The Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU) has called for Australia to provide aid to Artsakh, as part of a wide-ranging presentation made to the Federal Parliament’s Joint Foreign Affairs & Aid Sub-Committee in Canberra.

The role of the Joint Standing Committee of Foreign Affairs, Defense & Trade, and its Sub-Committees, is to consider and report on foreign affairs matters, providing advice to the House of Representatives, Senate and Ministers.

ANC-AU Executive Director Haig Kayserian presented to the Joint Foreign Affairs & Aid Sub-Committee, which is chaired by lawmaker Chris Crewther and includes 18 members of parliament and Senators as its members.

The topics covered included: a) Australia’s position on the Armenian Genocide together with an overview of Australia’s humanitarian relief efforts to assist genocide survivors; b) the history of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict including current resolution efforts; and c) ongoing international aid programs in Armenia and Artsakh.

The ANC-AU concluded the one-hour session by requesting the Australian government reviews its policy on providing foreign aid to Artsakh.

“Thanks to the advocacy efforts of our sister Armenian National Committee in America (ANCA), foreign aid has been secured for humanitarian relief efforts in Artsakh,” Kayserian explained.

Since 2000, the HALO Trust – an international organisation that concentrates its efforts on mine-clearing operations in Artsakh – has used USAID dollars to finance its activities in the region. As well as U.S. funding, the HALO Trust in 2013 also received funding from the UK Foreign Office to finance its de-mining activities in Artsakh.

“Australia has in the past participated in de-mining efforts internationally,” Kayserian added. “We highlighted that Australia has even contributed to the HALO Trust’s de-mining operations in the Asia-Pacific, while in 2006 and 2010, Australia through the NATO Partnership for Peace Program and the Red Crescent, contributed towards unexploded ordnance decontamination efforts in Azerbaijan.”

“We thank the Joint Foreign Affairs & Aid Sub-Committee for allowing us the opportunity to make the case on behalf of Armenian-Australians, that Australia’s assistance should stretch to help the Armenians trying to make lives for themselves in the Republic of Artsakh,” said Kayserian.

The presentation to the Joint Foreign Affairs & Aid Sub-Committee sought to achieve equitable funding to humanitarian de-mining activities in Artsakh, in a first time effort by the ANC-AU to secure Australian foreign aid. The appeal also called for revisions to Australia’s position on the Armenian Genocide and for a more balanced approach to future peace in the Republic of Artsakh.

Tatoyan Vazgen: