Displaced Karabakh resident: Current situation in Artsakh proves that it shall be de-Armenianized

NEWS.am
Armenia – Aug 8 2022

The current situation in Artsakh proves that Artsakh shall be de-Armenianized. This was stated by Levon Hayryan, Chairman of "For Hadrut" NGO, during Monday’s demonstration outside the US embassy in Armenia.

According to him, they ask to the co-chairing countries of the OSCE Minsk Group to fulfill the obligations they have undertaken to resolve the Karabakh conflict.

Hayryan emphasized that after the 44-day war in the fall of 2020, the Armenian authorities constantly accuse each other of who is to blame for the handover of Artsakh’s Hadrut and Shushi to the Azerbaijanis.

"Whoever is handing over [Artsakh’s] Aghavno, Berdzor [now], also handed over Hadrut and Shushi," he said, in particular.

Also, Hayryan presented the demands with which they came to the US embassy.

"Our demand is to restore the borders of the Artsakh Republic in 1994, and after that to resolve the issues through negotiations. In the letter addressed to the US, we first addressed the most important fact. We wrote that inhumane injustices are being committed in Artsakh, and America, as the flag bearer of democracy, has no right to be indifferent. We thanked the US for helping Armenia in these years. I spoke also about refugees. Now the situation of the refugees is wretched," said Levon Hayryan.

A group of people displaced from Artsakh are protesting today near the US embassy in Armenia. They relayed their request to the US Ambassador to Armenia, Lynne Tracy, in a letter.

Tigran Abrahamyan: Aliyev’s main point is that Armenians, Azerbaijanis can already live together

NEWS.am
Armenia – Aug 13 2022

Referring to the construction of the new route along the Lachin (Berdzor) corridor Friday, the president of Azerbaijan noted that in the last 6-7 months, the work of the representatives of the construction company was carried out without the accompaniment of Russian peacekeepers, and they had the opportunity to communicate with the local Armenian residents. Tigran Abrahamyan, an MP from the opposition "With Honor" Faction in the National Assembly of Armenia and a security expert, wrote about this on Facebook Saturday morning.

"The general idea of the speech is that during that time there was no enmity between Armenians and Azerbaijanis, normal relations were established, and there was no need for the presence of Russian peacekeepers.

Even if we put aside the propaganda deviations of [Azerbaijani President Ilham] Aliyev's speech, an announcement was made about a rather dangerous idea in the political sense.

Aliyev's main point is that Armenians and Azerbaijanis can already live together, communicate without INTERMEDIARIES; in this case, Russians.

If we keep in mind that there are 3 years left until the end of the 5-year term of deployment of [Russian] peacekeepers in Artsakh [(Nagorno-Karabakh)], it was naturally understandable that a basis is already being prepared [by Azerbaijan] for not extending the term of the peacekeepers, or demanding a high price for the extension.

But any step, plan aimed at the joint residence of Armenians and Azerbaijanis is a tragedy in itself," Abrahamyan added.

Azeri military again breaches ceasefire in Artsakh

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 10:17, 8 August 2022

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani military again violated the ceasefire in Artsakh and is spreading fake news falsely blaming Artsakh.

“The statement issued by the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense saying that the Defense Army of the Republic of Artsakh violated the ceasefire is false,” the Defense Ministry of Artsakh said.

“No significant incidents took place overnight August 7-8 and as of 09:00. Despite the relative stability the tension remains. In some directions, the Azerbaijani military again violated the ceasefire by firing various-caliber small arms. Work continues to be done together with the Russian peacekeeping contingent in direction of further stabilizing the situation,” it added.

Yan’an – the Chinese city considered the birthplace of revolution and example of poverty alleviation

Yan'an – the Chinese city considered the birthplace of revolution and example of poverty alleviation

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 11:39, 8 August 2022

YAN’AN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. Yan'an is a prefecture-level city in the Shaanbei region of Shaanxi province, China, bordering Shanxi to the east and Gansu to the west. This city has an important role in the Chinese revolution is considered the birthplace of the revolution.

As part of a program organized by the China International Press Communication Centre, international journalists were taken on a tour to Yan'an.

Located near the mid of the legendary Yellow River, the city is best known for its iconic 44-meter pagoda dating back to the Tang dynasty on the Baota Mountain. It is a tourism hotspot given the spectacular view of the city from the heights. Ever since 1937, when Mao Zedong visited the city, the pagoda became a “lighthouse” of joining the revolutionary forces among the youth.

Photos by Varvara Hayrapetyan

A few kilometers from the city is the village of Liangjiahe, where the current Chinese leader Xi Jinping worked in his early life. Committed to the One Town One Product idea, the village is now best known all across China for a unique, flavorful type of apple, which is being exported all over the world. The village has been numerously recognized as the best village community in the country and is an example of China overcoming poverty and hunger.

The locals of Yan’an cherish the memory of their ancestors and respect the present.

In the past, the city was in a desert, but through diligence and commitment, now the 2,5 million population of the city is living surrounded by rich forests and cultivated gardens.

Varvara Hayrapetyan




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/11/2022

                                        Thursday, 


Jailed Former Top Prosecutor To Be Released On Bail

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Former Prosecutor-General of Armenia Aghvan Hovsepian (standing) during his 
trial in a Yerevan court, May 16, 2022.


A court in Yerevan on Thursday granted bail to former Prosecutor-General Aghvan 
Hovsepian who was arrested last September on a string of corruption charges 
denied by him.

Judge Mnatsakan Martirosian ordered that Hovsepian pay 100 million drams (about 
$245,000) before being released from custody pending trial.

Hovsepian’s lawyers had argued that their client suffered from a number of 
diseases, including severe diabetes, that they insisted were incompatible with 
detention.

Hovsepian, 69, served as Armenia’s chief prosecutor from 1998-1999 and 
2004-2013. He went on to become the first head of a newly created 
law-enforcement agency, the Investigative Committee, in 2014. He ran the 
committee until the 2018 “Velvet Revolution” that brought current Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian to power.

Hovsepian was one of Armenia’s most powerful state officials during his tenure.

The former top prosecutor now stands accused of bribery, money laundering and 
illegal entrepreneurial activity.

The Anti-Corruption Committee claims that he also misappropriated several 
properties while in office.

Hovsepian denied the charges at the start of his trial in early May. He said 
these charges are based on false testimony given by two individuals.



Reports On Next Round Of Turkey-Armenia Talks In September Not Confirmed In 
Yerevan Yet

        • Tatevik Sargsian

The Armenian and Turkish envoys for normalization talks, Ruben Rubinian and 
Serdar Kilic (combination photograph).


Official Yerevan does not yet confirm reports in the Turkish media quoting a 
senior diplomat in Ankara that the next round of talks between special 
representatives of Turkey and Armenia on normalization will take place in 
September.

Vahan Hunanian, a spokesman for Armenia’s Foreign Ministry, told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service on Thursday that “at the moment there is no agreement regarding 
the next meeting.”

He added that officials in Yerevan “in due time inform the public about 
scheduled meetings of the special representatives of Armenia and Turkey engaged 
in the normalization process.”

So far, Armenia’s Ruben Rubinian and Turkey’s Serdar Kilic have met four times 
since the beginning of this year in a fresh bid to achieve rapprochement between 
the two neighbors feuding over historical events, including the Ottoman-era 
genocide of Armenians denied by Turkey.

The first meeting between the two envoys took place in January in Moscow, 
Russia, with the three subsequent meetings taking place in Vienna, Austria.

The unnamed high-ranking Turkish diplomat told the Turkish media that Ankara 
insists that the next rounds of talks take place not in third countries, but in 
Armenia and Turkey, but for this, the diplomat said, a number of clear steps 
must be taken.

After all meetings that have taken place between Rubinian and Kilic the parties 
emphasized their readiness to go for a full settlement of relations without 
preconditions.

Following their latest round of talks on July 1 the two envoys announced 
agreements on enabling the crossing of the land border between Armenia and 
Turkey by third-country citizens as well as on commencing direct air cargo trade 
between the two countries.

The official who talked to the Turkish media also noted that the current process 
is different from the 2009 negotiations, but he said that “one can talk about 
taking clear steps like signing a document when there is a certain maturity in 
the process.” According to him, normalization should be carried forward with 
steps aimed at increasing confidence.



Moscow Rejects Criticism Of Russian Peacekeepers In Karabakh

        • Astghik Bedevian

Russian peacekeepers guard the area in the town of Lachin (file photo).


Russia does not consider “separate criticism” of its peacekeepers in 
Nagorno-Karabakh to be fair, a senior diplomat in Moscow said on Thursday.

During a news briefing Ivan Nechayev, a spokesperson for the Russian Foreign 
Ministry, stressed that Russian peacekeepers in the region are engaged in 
efforts to stabilize the situation on the ground.

During last week’s weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan, Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian strongly criticized the Russian peacekeeping operation in 
Nagorno-Karabakh following the most serious fighting along the line of contact 
that left at least two Armenian and one Azerbaijani soldiers dead.

Pashinian urged Russia to do more to prevent further ceasefire violations, 
charging that Baku has been stepping up such violations despite the presence of 
Russian peacekeeping troops in the region.

“In these circumstances, it is becoming imperative to adjust details of the 
[Russian] peacekeeping operation in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Pashinian said. “We 
expect that any attempt to cross the line of contact will be stopped by the 
peacekeeping troops of the Russian Federation.”

In an apparent reaction to this criticism, Nechayev said that “along with 
intensive political contacts Russian peacekeepers also continue to be engaged in 
active work, taking necessary efforts for stabilization on the ground.”

“Both Baku and Yerevan have before emphasized the important role of the Russian 
peacekeeping contingent. We do not consider separate criticism of the 
peacekeepers to be fair,” the diplomat added.

Nechayev also announced that Moscow plans to organize high-level trilateral 
contacts by the end of August on different subjects concerning the settlement of 
Armenian-Azerbaijani relations.

The representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry stressed that the situation 
around the Lachin corridor should be resolved in accordance with the trilateral 
statement of November 9, 2020.

“Point 6 of the statement stipulates that the plan for the construction of a new 
route through the Lachin corridor, which will ensure a link between Karabakh and 
Armenia, should be determined with the agreement of the parties in the next 
three years, with the subsequent redeployment of Russian peacekeeping troops to 
maintain the security of the route,” he said.

The Armenian prime minister also insisted last week that the ceasefire agreement 
requires Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia to work out before 2024 only a plan for 
the construction of a new Armenia-Karabakh road. He emphasized that no such plan 
had been drawn up yet.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said, however, that the three sides did agree 
on the “route” of the new corridor early this year and accused Yerevan of 
dragging out construction work on its Armenian sections.

After the latest escalation in Nagorno-Karabakh the local ethnic Armenian 
authorities ordered the few remaining Armenian residents of villages situated 
along the current route of the Lachin corridor to leave their homes for good 
until August 25.

Incidentally, Azerbaijan announced on August 11 the completion of the 
construction of its section of the road bypassing Lachin. The Armenian side 
launched construction on its section of the road on August 1 and expects the 
work to be completed by spring. Until then, authorities say, people will have to 
fall back on unpaved roads for travel.



Tehran Reassures Yerevan Over Iran-Armenia Border


Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi (R) and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
meet in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, September 17, 2021.


Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reiterated his country’s opposition to any 
attempt to alter borders in the region as he held a phone call with Armenian 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian reported by Yerevan on Thursday.

The reassurance comes a week after a major escalation in the Nagorno-Karabakh 
conflict zone in which at least two ethnic Armenian and one Azerbaijani soldiers 
were killed on August 3. Both parties blamed each other for the most serious 
fighting since March.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan has also accused Armenia of showing ‘unconstructive 
approaches’ in terms of implementing the Russia-brokered ceasefire agreement 
that put an end to a deadly 44-day conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh in the fall of 
2020.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov, in particular, charged earlier 
this week that Armenia was dragging out the implementation of the point 
concerning the opening of road and railway links to connect Azerbaijan to its 
Nakhichevan exclave via Armenia’s southern Syunik province.

The ceasefire that stopped the war in Nagorno-Karabakh commits Armenia to 
opening rail and road links between Azerbaijan and its Nakhichevan exclave. 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has repeatedly claimed that it calls for an 
exterritorial land corridor that would pass through Syunik, the sole Armenian 
province bordering Iran.

At least one of the routes of what Baku calls the ‘Zangezur corridor’, namely 
the railway, should stretch along the river Arax, which marks the border between 
Armenia and Iran.

Armenia publicly supports the idea of unblocking regional transport links, but 
rejects what it calls “the corridor logic” behind such efforts. Armenia insists 
that it must maintain sovereignty over the transport routes in its territory.

A statement issued by Pashinian’s press office today said that during their 
telephone conversation the leaders of Armenia and Iran discussed “issues related 
to regional developments and security challenges.”

“The prime minister of Armenia presented to the president of Iran details about 
the recent border incidents between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In the context of 
establishing stability and peace in the region, Pashinian emphasized the 
importance of the full implementation of the trilateral agreements of November 
9, 2020, January 11 and November 26, 2021,” it said.

“Referring to the recent tense incidents in the South Caucasus, the president of 
Iran mentioned the statement made by Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution 
Ayatollah Khamenei during the recent meetings with the presidents of Russia and 
Turkey that Iran is sensitive about its borders in the Caucasus region and will 
oppose any attempt to alter them,” the statement added.

Pashinian’s press office said that the parties also “exchanged ideas on 
bilateral ties and emphasized the importance of bringing them closer.”

“Pashinian expressed satisfaction with the development of Armenian-Iranian 
relations and noted that Armenia is ready to maximally promote the transit of 
goods between the two countries and to develop cooperation in the field of 
infrastructure in terms of roads, energy and other directions.

“The president of Iran described the relations between the two countries as 
historical and deep and emphasized the need to raise the level of sustainable 
Armenian-Iranian economic cooperation,” the statement said.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned against attempts to block 
Armenia’s border with his country when he held separate meetings with Turkish 
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Tehran 
last month.

Under the 2020 ceasefire agreement, Russia, which protects Armenia’s borders 
with Iran and Turkey, is to oversee the security of the transport links between 
Azerbaijan and its western exclave passing through Armenian territory.

Images of Russian checkpoints set up along several roads in Syunik that appeared 
on the Internet earlier this week fueled speculations among Armenians about an 
imminent deal on the transport links. But Russia’s Federal Security Service said 
the stepped-up security measures were due to increased drug trafficking and 
other illegal cross-border activities in the area.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/10/2022

                                        Wednesday, 


Azerbaijan Slams Armenia For ‘Unconstructive Approaches’


Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov (file photo).


Armenia has shown unconstructive approaches in terms of the implementation of 
the terms of the Russian-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement, Azerbaijan’s top 
diplomat charged on Wednesday.

Speaking at a joint press conference with his visiting Algerian counterpart in 
Baku, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said that Azerbaijan wants to 
have good relations with its neighbors.

“The only right path to settle relations is to mutually respect the principle of 
the inviolability of each other’s borders, and we are moving forward based on 
that principle,” Bayramov said, as quoted by Azerbaijani media.

In March, Azerbaijan presented Armenia with five elements which it wants to be 
at the heart of a peace treaty to be signed by the two South Caucasus nations 
that fought a bloody six-week war over Nagorno-Karabakh in the fall of 2020.

The elements include a mutual recognition of each other’s territorial integrity. 
The Armenian government, in principle, agreed to the elements, but said they 
should be complemented by other issues relating to the future status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh and the security of its population.

Amid a fresh escalation of violence in the conflict zone on August 3 when at 
least two Armenians and one Azerbaijan soldier were killed, Nagorno-Karabakh’s 
de facto ethnic Armenian authorities ordered the evacuation, by the end of 
August, of several Armenian-populated settlements along the Lachin corridor, 
which is protected by Russian peacekeepers under the terms of the 2020 ceasefire 
agreement.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian argued during a cabinet session on 
August 4 that the trilateral agreement requires Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia 
to work out, before 2024, a joint “plan” for the construction of a new 
Armenia-Karabakh road. No such plan has been drawn up yet, he said.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said, however, that the three sides did agree 
on the “route” of the new corridor early this year and accused Yerevan of 
dragging out work on its Armenian sections.

Eventually, the few remaining Armenian residents of the town of Lachin and 
Armenian families in the village of Aghavno have been ordered to leave their 
homes for good until August 25 as the area is due to be handed over to 
Azerbaijan’s control then.

In his remarks made on August 9 Bayramov accused Armenia of dragging out the 
fulfilment of another term of the 2020 ceasefire concerning the unblocking of 
regional transport links.

The Azerbaijan foreign minister again stressed that Armenia has still not opened 
road and railway links to connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan exclave that 
Baku calls the ‘Zangezur corridor’ implying the extraterritorial status to be 
given to the routes passing through Armenia’s southern Syunik province.

Last week, the Armenian prime minister again implicitly rejected the corridor 
logic for the unblocking of regional transport routes, insisting that Armenia 
must maintain sovereignty over the transport routes in its territory. At the 
same time, he said that Azerbaijan is free to use any territory of Armenia, 
including Syunik, for transit purposes in accordance with Armenian legislation.

Bayramov said yesterday that Azerbaijan will in any case get an alternative 
transport link to its western exclave, referring to the recently launched 
construction of a bridge over the river Arax, which is part of the 
infrastructure for such a connection via Iran.

“Armenia is simply given a chance not to be left out of regional cooperation. If 
Yerevan fails to make the right decision, then it will damage its own 
interests,” the top Azerbaijani diplomat said, as quoted by Azerbaijan’s Turan 
news agency.



Armenian Opposition Slams Government Over Karabakh Corridor ‘Deal’

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

A Russian peacekeeper stands guard on a road in the town of Lachin (file photo).


Armenian opposition lawmakers have slammed the government for “again making 
deals behind the people’s back” after it was announced last week that Armenians 
will have to leave two settlements along the Lachin corridor linking Armenia and 
Nagorno-Karabakh in the coming weeks.

“Here again we are dealing with agreements and verbal arrangements reached 
behind the people’s back, and the deadline [for the evacuation of villages] 
revealed to the public is just another evidence of this,” the Armenian 
parliament’s opposition Hayastan faction said in a statement.

After the latest escalation of violence in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone on 
August 1-3 in which at least two Armenian and one Azerbaijani soldiers were 
killed authorities in the Armenian-populated region revealed arrangements made 
with Azerbaijan through Russian peacekeepers that Armenian residents of several 
settlements along the current Lachin corridor, including the town of Lachin and 
the village of Aghavno, will be required to leave their homes for good until 
August 25.

The five-kilometer-wide corridor became Nagorno-Karabakh’s sole overland link to 
Armenia following the 2020 war. Armenian forces pulled out of the rest of the 
wider Lachin district under the terms of the Russian-brokered ceasefire that 
stopped the six-week hostilities.

The truce accord calls for the construction of a new Armenia-Karabakh highway 
that will bypass the town of Lachin and two Armenian-populated villages located 
within the current corridor protected by Russian peacekeeping troops.

Construction work on a new road in the Lachin corridor

Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership revealed early last week that Azerbaijan had 
demanded through the peacekeepers the quick closure of the existing corridor and 
suggested that the Armenian side use a bypass road which has yet to be 
constructed.

Armenia’s government dismissed the demands as “not legitimate” amid renewed 
deadly fighting along the corridor in which Azerbaijan claimed to have captured 
several strategic heights. The Armenian side has not confirmed the loss of such 
heights yet.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian argued during a cabinet session on August 4 that 
the truce accord requires Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia to work out before 2024 
a joint “plan” for the construction of a new Armenia-Karabakh road. No such plan 
has been drawn up yet, he said.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said, however, that the three sides did agree 
on the “route” of the new corridor early this year and accused Yerevan of 
dragging out work on its Armenian sections.

In its latest statement the opposition Hayastan parliamentary faction accused 
the current Armenian authorities of “serving the Turkish-Azerbaijani interests” 
in implementing a plan for the “exodus of Armenians” from Nagorno-Karabakh 
together with Ankara and Baku.

Hayastan, a bloc whose leader outside of parliament is former President Robert 
Kocharian, a top Pashinian critic, called for “nationwide consolidation”, 
stressing that “stopping the spinning wheel of defeats is possible only by 
removing the current authorities.”

Gegham Manukian

Hayastan lawmaker Gegham Manukian claimed that the Pashinian government 
“consistently fulfills the points of the trilateral statement of November 9, 
2020 that are beneficial to Azerbaijan, while not taking any steps towards the 
release of Armenian prisoners of war mentioned in the same document.”

“The authorities of Armenia have washed their hands of the Artsakh 
[Nagorno-Karabakh – ed.] Republic, the Artsakh Armenians and Artsakh’s security. 
Even though under the government program presented to the National Assembly in 
2021 as well as the election program of the [Pashinian-led] Civil Contract party 
the guarantor of the security of Artsakh Armenians is the Republic of Armenia, 
today Armenia is trying to completely put itself aside and leave Artsakh and 
Artsakh Armenians alone in this process,” Manukian said.

Vahagn Aleksanian, a member of the ruling Civil Contract faction, dismissed 
Hayastan’s criticism, claiming that instead of criticizing Azerbaijan, the 
opposition faction “extends the Azerbaijani aggression to the Armenian political 
and media domains.”

Vahagn Aleksanian

“First, I am very surprised that the Hayastan faction has finally decided to 
speak about the existence of the Lachin corridor and the Azerbaijani aggression 
there, because I had the impression that they did not want to talk about it. It 
was especially surprising, considering the fact that the Lachin corridor, under 
the terms of the 2020 ceasefire, is under absolute control of Russian 
peacekeepers. The Hayastan faction, for some reason, did not talk about that,” 
Aleksanian said.

“But generally the same pattern appears to be working with Azerbaijan and the 
Hayastan faction. Azerbaijan commits some kind of provocation, aggression, 
violates agreements, and after that the Hayastan faction, in its own style, 
starts accusing the Armenian authorities over the matter,” the pro-government 
lawmaker added.



Armenia To Conduct Population Census in October

        • Naira Nalbandian

People in a park in Yerevan, Armenia, July 2022.


After twice postponing a decennial census of the population due to the 
coronavirus pandemic, Armenia will hold it this year, with questionnaires for 
the first time to be filled in electronically.

According to the government, the third census of the population in the history 
of independent Armenia will be conducted from October 13 to October 22, with its 
results to be summarized within a year.

Authorities plan to spend about 1.5 billion drams, or some $3.7 million, on the 
event that will include visits to households and other data collection.

Armenia took its previous two population censuses in 2001 and 2011. It planned 
to conduct its third population census in 2020, but had to postpone it first 
until 2021 and then until 2022 because of the pandemic.

Vardan Gevorkian, head of the population census department of Armenia’s 
Statistics Committee, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that a combined method will 
be used for the population census this time around.

“We will use data from the state register with a 25-percent sample to be 
interviewed. Electronic questionnaires will be filled in with the use of 
tablets. This is new for us. If earlier paper questionnaires were filled in and 
census takers visited all households, now 25 percent of the sample will be made 
automatically, using a computer, in other words, it will concern every fourth 
household,” the official said.

By law, answering questions during a population census in Armenia is mandatory. 
According to officials, people will be asked a total of 39 questions, including 
those about their marital status, education, occupation, health, housing 
conditions, the main sources of livelihood and so on. Among the questions will 
also be ones about the availability of a second citizenship and the place of 
permanent residence of absent family members.

“If people answer questions correctly, we will get the correct results. Of 
course, there may be deviations, because we are using the combined method for 
the first time. There will be certain differences between the data in the 
administrative register and the data that we will actually obtain, which is due 
to the fact that the register keeps records of registered citizens, while we are 
going to deal with actual residents,” Gevorkian said.

According to the 2011 population census, Armenia had a population of a little 
more than 3 million people, which was by some 200,000 people less than according 
to the results of the population census taken 10 years earlier.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Turkish press: Azerbaijani soldier killed in attack by Armenian forces

Ruslan Rehimov   |03.08.2022

BAKU, Azerbaijan

An Azerbaijani soldier was killed when "illegal Armenian armed detachments" opened fire in the border region of Lachin, authorities said on Wednesday. 

They targeted Azerbaijani military positions early on Wednesday, according to a statement by the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry.

An Azerbaijani soldier was killed due to a bullet wound, it added, noting that a Russian peacekeeping contingent had been deployed in the area where the attack took place.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

Their most recent clashes were in September 2020, during which Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages that were occupied by Armenia for nearly three decades.

A Russia-brokered deal brought an end to 44 days of intense conflict in November 2020.  

*Writing by Gozde Bayar in Ankara

Turkish press: Ankara blasts UN official for visit to contentious Armenian memorial

President of the United Nations General Assembly Abdulla Shahid speaks at the U.N. headquarters in New York, U.S., July 18, 2022. (REUTERS Photo)

The Foreign Ministry on Wednesday harshly criticized the president of the United Nations General Assembly's visit to Armenia, accusing Abdullah Shahid of being used as a "tool for Armenia's biased theses."

In a written statement, the ministry said Shahid paid a visit to the memorial of the so-called genocide in Armenia and stressed that a person in such a position should have "acted responsibly."

The ministry said the U.N. official should have been "more careful" and acted responsibly as his role as head of the U.N. General Assembly requires fairness and impartiality.

Those representing the U.N. authorized bodies "are required to act in accordance with the U.N. acquis and international legal norms and rules, in particular the 1948 U.N. Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide," the statement added.

Ankara further condemned and rejected "attempts to falsify historical facts and international law through political manipulation."

"Turkey believes that the facts regarding the 1915 events should be handled in a full, fair, and honest framework," it added.

Turkey's position on the events of 1915 is that the deaths of Armenians in eastern Anatolia took place when some sided with invading Russians and revolted against Ottoman forces. The subsequent relocation of Armenians resulted in numerous casualties.

Ankara objects to the presentation of these incidents as "genocide," describing them as a tragedy in which both sides suffered casualties.

The country has repeatedly proposed the creation of a joint commission composed of historians from Turkey and Armenia and international experts to tackle the issue.

In 2014,then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan expressed his condolences to the descendants of Armenians who lost their lives in the events of 1915.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Turkey was one of the first countries to recognize Armenia's independence on Sept. 21, 1991.

However, following the 1993 occupation by Armenian forces of the Karabakh region, internationally recognized as Azerbaijani territory, the border between the two countries was closed. Another contentious issue between the countries is the events of 1915 in the Ottoman Empire.

The visit to the so-called genocide memorial comes as Turkey and Armenia are trying to mend ties after years of tensions.

Turkey and Armenia restored diplomatic contacts last December after they were suspended for years.

In January, special envoys from Ankara and Yerevan began talks to fully restore ties "without preconditions."

The first round of normalization talks was held in Moscow on Jan. 14, where both parties agreed to continue negotiations without any preconditions, according to a statement released after the meeting.

Brian May will visit Armenia to rock out at STARMUS VI Festival

ASTRONOMY
Co-founder of Queen, musician, singer, songwriter, astrophysicist, and stereoscopist, Dr. Brian May has just confirmed his presence in Armenia at the beginning of September, 2022.

This September, STARMUS, the international festival of science and music founded by Garik Israelian and Brian May, will take place in Yerevan, Armenia. More than 50 speakers will gather together at this sixth STARMUS celebration, including Nobel laureates, astronauts, scientists, authors, and iconic music stars, to enhance and promote science communication and music.

Co-founder of Queen, musician, singer, songwriter, astrophysicist, and stereoscopist, Dr. Brian May has just confirmed his presence in Armenia at the beginning of September, 2022. Best known as the guitarist of the rock band Queen, and for his international hit songs composed for the band including "We Will Rock You", "The Show Must Go On", "Tie Your Mother Down", "I Want It All", “Too much love will kill you”, "Hammer to Fall", "Save Me" and "Who Wants to Live Forever", Dr. May is also an astrophysicist and science communicator. In 2020, he was ranked the Greatest Guitarist Of All Time by Total Guitar Magazine.

Brian May played a significant role in the Rock Aid Armenia campaign in 1988 (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbqrKju8z6lKQqxvELtB1kw) when he personally invited many world-class musicians (such as David Gilmour, Tony Iommi) to join the project to support Armenia, but until this time he has never been able to visit.

Dr. Brian May met Dr. Garik Israelian, one of the world's leading astrophysicists, from the Institute of Astrophysics of Canary Islands, in 1998. Years later, Israelian helped May to complete his PhD thesis and earn his PhD in astrophysics from Imperial College London in 2007.

The friendship between May and Israelian led to the collaboration with an Armenian duduk legend Jivan Gasparyan. In 2005 they had a once-in-a-lifetime performance together at the 46664 concert in honor of Nelson Mandela held in Tromso, Norway (30min+, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nw2mjmW4q3I).

Brian May worked with Montserrat Caballe on a unique version of Queen’s "Is this the world we created” for her album “The Island of Christianity: Armenia & Artsakh” (www.caballearmania.com).

In 2011, Brian May and Garik Israelian initiated STARMUS – a daring and unique new form of collaboration between art and science. The concept of science popularization along with the sharing of music gave rise to a fascinating global festival that has brought together some of the most brilliant minds on the planet. Its aim is to inspire and educate the next generation of explorers and regenerate the spirit of discovery. Since then, in all 5 festivals have been held (In Spain, Norway and Switzerland) and the 6th will take place in Armenia in September, 2022 (starmus.com/Armenia).

The founders have published 3 Starmus books that include all the lectures and highlights of the first three festivals.

Brian May will be in Armenia for STARMUS VI festival this fall to perform from the main stage. STARMUS VI Armenia will also host world class musicians such as Rick Wakeman, Serj Tankian, the band Sons of Apollo, Andrey Makarevich, and Tigran Hamasyan.

STARMUS https://starmus.com

YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/user/starmusfest

STARMUS VI՝ https://starmus.com/Armenia

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Co-founder of Queen, musician, singer, songwriter, astrophysicist, and stereoscopist, Dr. Brian May has just confirmed his presence in Armenia at the beginning of September, 2022.
RELATED TOPICS: STARMUS VI
As he has done for previous STARMUS festivals, Queen guitarist Brian May will again join a world-class lineup of speakers and musical performers at Starmus VI in September 2022.
Starmus

This September, STARMUS, the international festival of science and music founded by Garik Israelian and Brian May, will take place in Yerevan, Armenia. More than 50 speakers will gather together at this sixth STARMUS celebration, including Nobel laureates, astronauts, scientists, authors, and iconic music stars, to enhance and promote science communication and music.

Co-founder of Queen, musician, singer, songwriter, astrophysicist, and stereoscopist, Dr. Brian May has just confirmed his presence in Armenia at the beginning of September, 2022. Best known as the guitarist of the rock band Queen, and for his international hit songs composed for the band including "We Will Rock You", "The Show Must Go On", "Tie Your Mother Down", "I Want It All", “Too much love will kill you”, "Hammer to Fall", "Save Me" and "Who Wants to Live Forever", Dr. May is also an astrophysicist and science communicator. In 2020, he was ranked the Greatest Guitarist Of All Time by Total Guitar Magazine.

Brian May played a significant role in the Rock Aid Armenia campaign in 1988 (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbqrKju8z6lKQqxvELtB1kw) when he personally invited many world-class musicians (such as David Gilmour, Tony Iommi) to join the project to support Armenia, but until this time he has never been able to visit.

Dr. Brian May met Dr. Garik Israelian, one of the world's leading astrophysicists, from the Institute of Astrophysics of Canary Islands, in 1998. Years later, Israelian helped May to complete his PhD thesis and earn his PhD in astrophysics from Imperial College London in 2007.

The friendship between May and Israelian led to the collaboration with an Armenian duduk legend Jivan Gasparyan. In 2005 they had a once-in-a-lifetime performance together at the 46664 concert in honor of Nelson Mandela held in Tromso, Norway (30min+, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nw2mjmW4q3I).

Brian May worked with Montserrat Caballe on a unique version of Queen’s "Is this the world we created” for her album “The Island of Christianity: Armenia & Artsakh” (www.caballearmania.com).

In 2011, Brian May and Garik Israelian initiated STARMUS – a daring and unique new form of collaboration between art and science. The concept of science popularization along with the sharing of music gave rise to a fascinating global festival that has brought together some of the most brilliant minds on the planet. Its aim is to inspire and educate the next generation of explorers and regenerate the spirit of discovery. Since then, in all 5 festivals have been held (In Spain, Norway and Switzerland) and the 6th will take place in Armenia in September, 2022 (starmus.com/Armenia).

The founders have published 3 Starmus books that include all the lectures and highlights of the first three festivals.

Brian May will be in Armenia for STARMUS VI festival this fall to perform from the main stage. STARMUS VI Armenia will also host world class musicians such as Rick Wakeman, Serj Tankian, the band Sons of Apollo, Andrey Makarevich, and Tigran Hamasyan.

STARMUS https://starmus.com

YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/user/starmusfest

STARMUS VI՝ https://starmus.com/Armenia

https://www.facebook.com/StarmusArmenia

https://www.instagram.com/starmus/

Preparations for FemInno international women’s conference are in active stage. the founder shares the details

Preparations for FemInno international women's conference are in active stage. the founder shares the details

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YEREVAN, JULY 27, ARMENPRESS. Preparations for the FemInno innovative international women's conference to be held in Armenia for the first time are in an active stage. The conference will be held on July 30-31 at the y Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concerts Complex.

ARMENPRESS participated in the preparatory work with the organizers and spoke with the founder of the conference, Seda Papoyan, who emphasized that this is the biggest conference ever organized in Armenia focused on the involvement of women in the fields of information technology and innovation. "This is a conference about women, but not only for women," Papoyan said.

She said that as the Armenian branch of the Girl in Tech international network, they have been operating for about 5 years with the aim of attracting, educating and encouraging the involvement of women in the field of technology. They decided to hold the conference in 2020. They believed that Armenia can take on the rather important responsibility of being a regional technological hub.

“The conference is dedicated to engaging, encouraging and pushing forward women in science, technology and business. The role of men is also very important here, because in the field of science and technology men dominate and they are the decision makers. Often those decision-makers should change their approaches so that women don't have problems," Papoyan emphasized.

According to her, women in these fields have to first prove that they have sufficient abilities, and only then they are given the opportunity to create results. “Why to waste effort and time only on sex-based discrimination”, Papoyan emphasizes. It is necessary to take a person as a specialist and start work from that point.

"The conference is for showing that women have nothing to prove in the field," says the founder of the conference, emphasizing that the conference is entitled “Female is now”.

"We are trying to prove that women's time is now, the present belongs to women, not the future", she said.

Papoyan said that Vice President of the National Assembly Hakob Arshakyan will make an opening speech at the conference in support of the idea and the efforts made for holding the conference.

About three dozen speakers representing more than 15 countries participating in the conference include both women and men. Papoyan emphasizes that there will be bold speeches by male speakers that men are at fault for creating this discrimination.

During the conference, the results of the competition of startups created by both Armenian and foreign women will be summarized. More than 50 applications have been received. There is a professional jury that will decide the best startup or startups among the ten selected. And the prize fund is around 10 thousand dollars. Five of the 10 startups are from Armenia, two from Jordan, one from Bahrain, and the others from Tanzania and Kenya.

The FemInno conference will be continuous. Every year in the summer, the organizers will appreciate, praise the role of women in technology and science. The founder of FemInno emphasizes that this is a solidarity conference, they want to create an interesting cooperative atmosphere between the sexes, to show decision makers that women are really able to create values and there is no need to discriminate against them.