Yerevan refutes Baku’s claim that Armenian forces attempted to infiltrate into Azerbaijan

TASS, Russia
June 2 2021
The Armenian ministry stressed that "the national armed forces did not cross the border with Azerbaijan on June 1 or previous days."

YEREVAN, June 2. /TASS/. The Armenian Defense Ministry has slammed a statement by the Azerbaijani military agency claiming that the Armenian armed forces attempted to carry out an incursion into the country’s territory as disinformation, the Armenian ministry said in a statement on Wednesday.

"The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry has spread more disinformation claiming that 40 Armenian servicemen crossed the Azerbaijani border late on June 1, after which Azerbaijani armed units ‘forced them to retreat to their initial positions’." This sort of disinformation is issued by the Azerbaijani military and political leadership to impress the international community," the statement reads.

The Armenian ministry also underscored that "the national armed forces did not cross the border with Azerbaijan on June 1 or previous days."

Following the end of military action in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone last fall, when seven regions adjacent to Nagorno-Karabakh fell under Azerbaijan’s control, the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan moved to the immediate vicinity of the Syunik and Gegharkunik Provinces. The situation there exacerbated on May 12. Then, the Armenian Defense Ministry announced that the Azerbaijani Armed Forces attempted to carry out "certain operations" in the Syunik Province in a bid to "redefine the border." The Azerbaijani forces ceased their activities after the Armenian Armed Forces took measures in response.

However, both parties regularly report new incidents. On May 27, Azerbaijan announced that it had captured six Armenian servicemen during an attempt to cross the border. The Armenian side confirmed that the servicemen were captured yet emphasized that at the time they were involved in engineering works in the border area of Armenia’s Gegharkunik Province. Later, Yerevan said that it had turned to the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) with regards to the escalation of the situation on the Armenian-Azeri border. In their turn, the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group on settlement in Nagorno-Karabakh put forward their de-escalation plan, which involves the parties withdrawing troops and beginning the process of demarcating and delimiting the state border with the assistance of the Minsk Group.

Azerbaijani press: MOD: Azerbaijan pushes back Armenian troops in Kalbajar

By Aisha Jabbarova

Azerbaijan has expelled around 40 Armenian armed forces that illegally entered 400 meters into its territory, the Defence Ministry reported on June 2.

The incident occurred in the direction of Kalbajar region’s Armudlu village on the border on June 1 at 8 PM.

The report said that the Armenian forces were stationed at a point with coordinates 40 degrees 04 minutes 30 seconds north latitude and 45 degrees 54 minutes 42 seconds east longitude (N 40 ° 04′30 ″; E 45 ° 54′42 ″).

The units of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces did not use any weapons during the operation.

The ministry described the incident as “another provocation” by Yerevan and warned that Armenia carries full responsibility for this provocation.

It also stressed that Armenia seeks to increase the tension along the border with Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan on May 27 detained six Armenian saboteurs who sought to infiltrate into Azerbaijan and plant mines on the supply routes leading to the Azerbaijani Army near Kalbajar.

Earlier, on May 24, a military truck belonging to the Azerbaijani Army exploded on a mine near Kalbajar, leaving one serviceman injured.

Azerbaijan and Armenia have failed to come to an agreement on the demarcation of their state border following the collapse of the Soviet Union. The tension over border delineation gained a fresh momentum following the end of the Second Karabakh War in 2020.

Turkish press: US history riddled with massacres, genocide

Ovunc Kutlu   |02.06.2021

ANKARA

US President Joe Biden's controversial recognition of 1915 events between Armenians and Turks as genocide brings to light massacres in American history in the last 500 years.

Biden called the events of 1915 an "Armenian genocide" on April 24, breaking American presidents' long-held tradition of refraining from using the term.

But during the course of American history, the US and its European ancestors have been involved in numerous massacres and carried out genocides against indigenous peoples.

Genocide is an act committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group, according to the Geneva Convention.

With that in mind, the conquest of the Americas in 1492, European colonization led to the systematic eradication of indigenous peoples on the continent.

Native American genocide

The 13 American colonies' population grew from about 2,000 to 2.4 million between 1625 and 1775 while displacing Native Americans from eastern North America.

After the colonies declared independence in 1776 from Great Britain and formed the US, the settlers started to move west, clashing with and eradicating the Apache, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chinook, Navajo and Sioux tribes. Some of the names today are sadly used for American warfare helicopters and ubiquitous sport utility vehicles.

The national holiday, Thanksgiving, celebrated in November, is traced to the 1620s when European settlers invited Native Americans to a feast. The settlers later killed the population and gave thanks to God for allowing them to slaughter the "savages."

The surviving descendants of Native American tribes live in poverty on federally recognized Indian reservations across the US.

Almost 100 million indigenous people in the Western Hemisphere have been killed or died prematurely because of the Europeans and their descendants in five centuries, according to David E. Stannard in his book, American Holocaust: The Conquest of the New World.

Around 12 million indigenous people died within present US geographical boundaries between 1492 and 1900, according to Russell Thornton in American Indian Holocaust and Survival: A Population History since 1492.

Genocides against Africans and slavery

Despite having unalienable rights — life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness – as enshrined in the American Declaration of Independence, not all in the new colonies were considered equal.

The colonies had a system of slavery, which European settlers carried as a practice into the Americas from the Old World, despite English Protestants praising themselves as Puritans.

A conservative estimate of 35 million men, women and children were brought from Africa to the New World between the 16th and 19th centuries.

Around 12.5 million of those brought to North America were used as free labor in fields and worked under grueling conditions, according to the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database.

The systematic repression of Africans continues to the present day in the US government application of laws, health and education.

Early US wars

A century before gaining civil rights and liberties, Blacks had to fight in the white man's wars in the US military.

More than 200,000 Blacks joined Union forces in the American Civil War, while an unaccounted number of free and slave Blacks were used for manual labor in the Confederacy. The war that began in 1861 and lasted until 1865 left 750,000 soldiers dead with an undetermined number of civilians.

Despite overthrowing its colonial ruler, Great Britain, the US pursued colonial interests in Southeast Asia during the late 19th century.

Around 20,000 Filipino combatants and as many as 200,000 civilians died from violence, famine, and disease during the Philippine–American War between 1899-1902, according to the State Department's Office of the Historian.

On the domestic front in early 20th century, the Tulsa race massacre in 1921 saw white residents attacking Black population and burning their businesses and homes.

Almost 300 Black people were killed as a result, and more than 800 were injured in the massacre that left over 10,000 Black people homeless.

Biden said Tuesday it was no riot, but instead a hate-fueled "massacre," adding "As soon as it happened there was a clear effort to erase it from our collective memory, from the news and everyday conversations."

Atomic bomb and Cold War coups

The US, along with allies in the UK and France, won World War II with the Soviet Union against Nazi Germany. But it was the end of the war that marked the American massacre against Imperial Japan in the Pacific and the advent of the atomic bomb.

Japanese casualties were around 110,000 in the battle for Okinawa, the largest and bloodiest battle of the war.

To end it all, the US dropped two atomic bombs on Japan in 1945 that killed an estimated 140,000 people in Hiroshima and 74,000 in Nagasaki, according to the global civil society coalition International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons.

The US emerged as one of two remaining superpowers in global politics after the war and extended its scope to South America, Middle East, Western Europe and Far Asia.

The first proxy war in the Cold War era came in Korea from 1950-53, with more than 930,000 Koreans and Chinese forces dead. On the civilian side, more than 1,550,000 North Koreans died, while 990,000 South Koreans were killed, bringing the death toll to nearly 3.5 million.

To exert control on Iranian oil resources, the US and the UK orchestrated an Iranian coup in 1953 to overthrow democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh and strengthened the monarchical rule of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. The coup killed 300, while an estimated 10,000 were executed in years to follow.

The US treated Central and South American countries as its back yard during the Cold War to steer governments away from socialism and communism.

A Guatemalan coup in 1954 deposed democratically-elected Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz with the support of the US and installed the military dictatorship of Carlos Castillo Armas. Guatemala fell into a civil war for the next three decades, with 200,000 people killed.

The 1973 Chilean coup that deposed the Popular Unity government of President Salvador Allende saw Gen. Augusto Pinochet seize power with the support of the US. A truth and reconciliation report in 1991 found that more than 2,000 were killed.

The US sold more than $120 million in military equipment to Argentina in 1977 and 1978 alone as part of Operation Condor, which caused an estimated death toll of at least 60,000 people.

Vietnam War

Arguably the deadliest war in US history came in Vietnam when Washington wanted to contain the spread of communism in Southeast Asia, but the conflict lasted two decades, which also spilled into Cambodia and Laos.

The number of Vietnamese civilians dead is estimated as high as 2 million, with another 1.8 million killed during the fighting. About 18.2 million gallons of Agent Orange was sprayed from American fighter planes from 1961 to 1971. The Vietnamese government claimed 400,000 people were killed from the chemical and 500,000 children were born with congenital disabilities.

While the Cambodian Civil War killed 300,000, the Laotian Civil War caused more than 60,000 dead. That brought the massacre's toll to almost 4.2 million.

Iraq, Afghanistan

After Asia, the US turned its attention to the Middle East from the 1990s with the Gulf War. Washington's presence in the region intensified in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terror attacks in the US and changed the whole landscape in the Middle East.

The Gulf War caused around 5,000 civilian deaths, but it was the subsequent wars that saw casualties rise exponentially.

From the beginning of the US invasion of Iraq in 2003, through its insurgency and civil war, more than 1 million are estimated to have been killed.

Around 240,000 have died in the US war zone in Afghanistan and Pakistan since 2001.

As of April 2021, more than 71,000 Afghan and Pakistani civilians are estimated to have lost their lives as a direct result of the war, according to Brown University.

European Union calls for urgent return of all detainees and addressing important humanitarian issues of the Karabakh conflict

Panorama, Armenia
June 3 2021

President Charles Michel of the European Council has highlighted the importance of stability and prosperity of the South Caucasus for the EU and of deepening relations with Armenia and Azerbaijan. As the press service at the Council reported, Charles Michel's remarks came during the meeting with acting PM of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and in phone call with Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev. 

According to the source, He Charles Michel that the full implementation of the 9 November 2020 ceasefire declaration by Azerbaijan and Armenia is essential for regional security and stability. The EU is ready to provide expertise on border delimitation and demarcation and to support confidence building.

The European Union also encourages both parties to cooperate, as matter of urgency, on the return of detainees and full transparency with regard to mine fields, and other important humanitarian issues. The EU is providing almost 20 million EUR in humanitarian assistance and will continue to be engaged.

Addressing these immediate challenges is, however, only a first step towards a sustainable peaceful settlement. The PEC called on both sides to engage in renewed negotiations in a constructive spirit. The European Union has a profound interest in the security, stability and prosperity of the South Caucasus region as an integral part of the EU's Eastern Partnership.

Armenia managed to ensure macro-economic stability last year, caretaker finance minister assures

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 12:40, 1 June, 2021

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. In 2020 Armenia has managed to ensure the macro-economic stability despite the difficulties caused by the pandemic and the war, Caretaker Finance Minister Atom Janjughazyan said at the joint session of the parliamentary standing committees, adding that, however, the government has paid a price, that is the increase in debt.

He reminded that Armenia, like many other countries, has revised its fiscal policy during the year, making it in accordance with the economic decline period.

The caretaker minister also talked about the anti-crisis measures taken by the government. “We should notice that all these could not have a price which needs to be paid. That price, in fact, was the change in the state debt”, he said, proposing to assess the situation objectively. “The government’s debt-GDP ratio comprised 63.5%, the state budget deficit has been nearly 5%, which is logical in the context of revised fiscal policy”, he added.

“Balanced revisions, anti-crisis measures have been carried out, as a result of which we managed to ensure the macro-economic stability, which has no alternative from the perspective of further development”, he said.

The caretaker minister reminded that 7.6% economic decline has been registered in 2020.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson resigns

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 16:28,

YEREVAN, MAY 31, ARMENPRESS. Spokesperson of the Armenian foreign minister Anna Naghdalyan has announced her resignation today.

“I would like to inform that I no longer fulfill the duties of the spokesperson of the foreign ministry. I want to thank all media representatives, my colleagues at the foreign ministry and my team for the productive cooperation and support at this difficult and responsible period.

I want to specifically thank Ara Aivazian and Zohrab Mnatsakanyan for the trust: it was a great honor to work with such experienced and patriotic diplomats.

I would like to note also that I will continue my work in the diplomatic service”, she said on Facebook.

Anna Naghdalyan has been serving as foreign ministry spokesperson since October 10, 2018.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Pope pays tribute to late Armenian Catholic Patriarch Ghabroyan

Vatican News
Pope Francis offers his condolences to Armenian Catholics mourning the loss of Armenian Catholic Patriarch Gregoire Pierre XX Ghabroyan, who died on Tuesday at the age of 86 in Beirut, Lebanon.

By Vatican News staff writer

In his condolence message sent on Saturday, Pope Francis praised the pastoral witness and outreach of Patriarch Ghabroyan, who headed the Armenian Patriarchate of Cilicia based in Beirut, Lebanon.

The message in French came through Cardinal Mario Zenari, Apostolic Nuncio in Syria, his personal representative at the Patriarch’s funeral held in the Armenian Catholic Cathedral of St. Gregory the Illuminator-St. Elias in Beirut, where he read the Pope’s message.

The Pope praised the pastoral sensitivity of Patriarch Ghabroyan with his tireless outreach and care for serving the most destitute Armenian communities suffering from the war and poverty, especially in Syria and Lebanon.

The Pope also recalled their meetings together, especially in the summer of 2015 when he was elected Patriarch and asked the Pope for a special blessing in order to lead the Patariarchal Church despite his advanced age.

Pope Francis also recalled other meetings with Patriarch Ghabroyan in Rome, during his Apostolic Journey to Armenia in 2016, as well as in 2018 with the inuguration of the statue of Saint Gregory of Narek in the Vatican gardens.

The Pope recalled fondly all these occasions, which offered opportunities to express his closeness with the "beloved Armenian people who have suffered so much in the course of their history but who have always remained faithful to the profession of faith in Christ the Savior."

He commended the Patriarch's soul to the mercy of God and for the intercessory prayer of Mary, Mother of God, of Saint Gregory the Illuminator, and of Saint Gregory of Narek, together with all the Armenian martyrs and saints.

Archbishop Boutros Marayati of the Catholic Armenians of Aleppo presided over the funeral ceremony on Saturday. He took over following the death of the Patriarch in the role of Administrator of the Patriarchal Church of Cilicia of the Armenians.

Auxiliary Bishop Kevork Assadourian of Beirut of the Armenian Catholic Patriarchate delivered the homily at the funeral, where he spoke of the Patriarch’s long ministry in the service of the Church and the Armenian people, emphasizing in particular his dedication to the poor.

"First of all, the late patriarch was a lover of the poor, as evidenced by the assistance and closeness he wished to offer, away from the spotlight, in favor of poor families especially over these last two years when Lebanon is experiencing unsustainable economic and social conditions," said Bishop Assadourian. "In recent days, even the illness that afflicted him, could not stop the pursuit of his work. Even on his hospital bed he continued to manage, organize and convene meetings trying to meet the needs of his Church and his people."

Cardinal Leonardo Sandri, prefect of the Congregation for Eastern Churches also sent a special message of condolence recalling the witness and dedication of the Patriarch Ghabroyan. The Apostolic Nuncio to Lebanon, Archbishop Joseph Spiteri, read Cardinal Sandri's message of condolence.

Also participating in the funeral ceremony were the bishops and clergy of the Armenian Catholic Church, as well as representatives of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches of Lebanon, including Patriarch of Antioch of the Maronites, Cardinal Béchara Boutros Raï, Patriarch of the Great House of Cilicia of the Armenians Aram I, and Patriarch of the Syrian Catholic Church His Beatitude Yousef Younan.

A representative of the President of the Lebanese Republic was onhand, as well as representatives of the political, diplomatic and civil society.

The burial ceremony will take place in the Patriarchal seat of the Convent of Our Mother of Bzommar, where the Patriarch will be buried in the cemetery reserved for Armenian Patriarchs.

 

Beirut: President Aoun condoles Armenian Catholics for death of Catholicos Krikor Pedrios the twentieth

MTV Lebanon
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President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, received on Wednesday afternoon at Baabda Palace a delegation from the Armenian Catholic Patriarchate, including Archbishop George Asadurian, MP Jean Talouzian, Father Ravi Hovhansian, Mehran Bukharian and Joe Zulikian. The mourning was conveyed to the President by the Catholicos of the Cilicia House of Armenian Catholics, Patriarch Krikor Pedros the twentieth, who passed away on Tuesday noon.

The delegation briefed President Aoun on the arrangements made for the funeral, which will be held at 10:30 am next Saturday in the Cathedral of St. Gregory and Mar Elias the Prophet in Beirut.

For his part, President Aoun expressed his sorrow for the absence of Patriarch Krikor, noting the achievements he made during his presidency of the Armenian Catholic Patriarchate, and the presence which distinguished him on the spiritual and national levels.  

The President conveyed his warm condolences to the Armenian Catholics, asking God to have mercy on his soul, in the world of eternity.nat

Russia proposes to help delimit the Armenia-Azerbaijan border Asia News

News Tribune, Quebec, Canada
May 19 2021

Moscow took action after Armenia accused Azerbaijan of sending troops across the border last week.

Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said that after Armenia accused Azerbaijan of invading the border, Moscow offered to mediate negotiations.

Armenia accuses Azerbaijan of sending troops across borders The fragility of the Russian broker’s ceasefire was emphasized last week. Last year’s ceasefire interrupted the fighting between Armenians and Azerbaijani for six weeks.

Azerbaijan denied crossing the border and stated that its troops were only defending itself.

But Armenia said Friday that Azerbaijan has not fulfilled its promise to withdraw troops that crossed the border.

Lavrov told reporters during a visit to Dushanbe, the capital of Tajikistan, on Wednesday: “Russia first provided assistance to delimit the border.”

He added that Moscow is proposing to establish an Armenian-Azeri joint committee, and Russia may participate as an advisor or mediator.

According to TASS, Armen Grigoryan, secretary of the Armenian Government’s Security Council, stated that the demarcation work can only begin before the Azerbaijani forces leave Armenian territory.

However, according to Interfax news agency, the Armenian Defense Ministry stated earlier on Wednesday that a dialogue between the Armenian Defense Minister and Azerbaijani defense officials is ongoing.

“Without a peaceful resolution within a reasonable period of time-if the Azerbaijani army cannot be restored without any prerequisites, the Armenian armed forces have the right to resolve this issue by other means, including force,” the Ministry of Health said.

After November, Moscow helped ensure a ceasefire During the battle, the Azerbaijani army drove the Armenians out of large tracts of territory Since the 1990s, they have been in control of the Nagorno-Karabakh area and surrounding areas.

Russia has a military base in Armenia and last year sent peacekeepers to the area to help implement the ceasefire.

It has strong ties and mutual defense treaties with Armenia, but it also maintains friendly relations with Azerbaijan.