New Ambassador of Bulgaria presents credentials to Armenian President

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 14:27,

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, ARMENPRESS. Newly appointed Ambassador of Bulgaria to Armenia Kalin Anastasov presented his credentials to President Armen Sarkissian, the Armenian President’s Office told Armenpress.

President Sarkissian congratulated the Ambassador on appointment and wished him success. He said the relations between Armenia and Bulgaria have always been built on firm historical-cultural ties. It was stated that next year marks the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Bulgaria.

The Ambassador said he will invest maximum efforts to promote the bilateral ties and the cooperation in different spheres of mutual interest.

In turn President Sarkissian noted that the Armenian-Bulgarian relations have a great potential for development and stated that he is expecting the Ambassador will contribute to its utilization with his active works.

The Ambassador handed over the letter of the Bulgarian President to his Armenian counterpart where he reaffirms the invitation sent to Sarkissian to pay an official visit to Bulgaria.

The Armenian President and the Bulgarian Ambassador also discussed the agenda of the bilateral relations, stating that there are great opportunities for implementing joint programs.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian shepherd dragged and beaten by Azerbaijanis – Ombudsman

Public Radio of Armenia

The criminal attack of dragging and beating the Aravus village shepherd by Azerbaijani military servicemen confirms the urgent need for a security zone around Syunik, Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan says.

Immediately after this information, the Human Rights Defender of Armenia initiated fact-finding activities with the involvement of the Syunik subdivision of the Defender’s Staff.

The shepherd submitted alarming complaints to the Staff of the Human Rights Defender that he grazed 14 large and small cattle on a pasture about 500 meters from his house on 18 April 2021. Between 5 and 6 pm, when he was in the area about 50 meters away from the Azerbaijani positions, he was approached by three Azerbaijani armed servicemen.

According to the shepherd, the Azerbaijani military servicemen first threatened him with weapons, and then two of them pulled him and tried to take him to the trench in the direction of the Azerbaijani positions by force. The Azerbaijanis constantly cursed and threatened the man.

As Armenian servicemen rushed for help, the third Azerbaijani serviceman hit the shepherd in the eye, causing a bruise and immediately fled to their positions.

During the Human Rights Defender’s Office fact-finding activities, it was also established that the Azerbaijani military had shouted insults at the shepherd in the same place of the Aravus village, and at around 7 pm he received threats from Azerbaijani soldiers who were openly displaying firearms on 20 April 2021.

The staff of the Human Rights Defender also recorded the alarming interview of the head of Aravus village about the incident in mass media.

The head of the Aravus village informed the Human Rights Defender’s Office that there are houses in the villagers less than 500 meters away from the Azerbaijani positions (for example, 100 or 200 meters). This fact was also recorded by the Human Rights Defender’s Office monitoring conducted at the site.

The RA Human Rights Defender specifically states that the Azerbaijani servicemen committed a criminal attack on an Armenian border resident. This confirms the gross violations of the internationally recognized rights of the citizens of the Republic of Armenia, as well as the rights enshrined in the Constitution of Armenia.

These are rights to physical and psychological immunity; right to property and other vital rights.

This incident clearly substantiates the Human Rights Defender’s proposal on creating a security zone around Syunik province in order to guarantee rights of Armenian citizens.

There should be no Azerbaijani soldiers, signs or flags in the immediate vicinity of the Syunik villages and on the roads connecting the communities of the province, the Ombudsman says.

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender will send the information about these incidents to relevant international organizations, as well as will include it in the security zone concept.

Turkish press: Bedros Sirinoglu: US, EU, some other countries far from ‘well-intentioned approach’ on 1915 events

Andac Hongur   |23.04.2021
The Head of Armenian Foundations Union Bedros Sirinoglu

ISTANBUL

The head of the Armenian Foundations Union in the Turkish metropolis Istanbul on Friday criticized the instrumentalization of 1915 incidents that happened between the Turkish and Armenian nations by political authorities.

"We do not approve of the handling and using of some painful and saddening incidents that took place between the two nations more than 100 years ago by political authorities. We are against the instrumentalization of our sorrows by daily politics," said Bedros Sirinoglu, the chairperson of the Armenian Foundations Union and Surp Pirgic Armenian Hospital Foundation.

Sirinoglu told Anadolu Agency that the union wanted to address Turks, Armenians, and the international community as Armenian citizens living in Turkey.

"The deplorable incidents in history can be discussed by Armenian and Turkish state authorities as well as objective historians," he said. "But as far as I see, those who get involved in the issue with political motives, the US, the EU and some other countries are far from the well-intentioned approach."

Sirinoglu added that the usual statement intending to share the Armenian nation's grief is expected from the US' White House due to the 106th anniversary of the 1915 incidents.

"The pre-condition of empathizing with the Armenian nation should not be tarnishing the Turkish nation's honor or having a hostile attitude towards Turkey. As a Turkish citizen, I believe we need to reinforce the love, respect, and friendship between the two communities, leaving no place for grudge or hatred," he went on. "The political interventions from the outer world do nothing but hinder these wishes."

Underlining that solving the issues with Turkey and Armenia's mutual understanding will be for the benefit of everyone, Sirinoglu said: "It is known that Armenia is going through very serious problems today. Those who were provoking Armenia against Turkey were doing the same thing 100 years ago, too. When we consider 'Who won and who lost?' the Ottoman state, the Armenians as well as Turkish citizens were on the losing side."

"We are citizens of the Republic of Turkey. We trust in our state and we demand that the incidents of 1915, which foreign statespersons turned into a political material and which mean a lot to us, to be handled in independent commissions by historians," he continued.

"All interventions by those who are not parties to the incidents will only deepen our wounds, make it bleed. The issue is the responsibility of Turkish and Armenian nations," Sirinoglu added.

Armenpress: Citizens demanding PM Pashinyan’s resignation protest near Government Houses

Citizens demanding PM Pashinyan’s resignation protest near Government Houses

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 21:03,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. A group of citizens demanding the resignation of Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan are protesting near the Government Houses, ARMENPRESS reports they are waiting for Pashinyan’s return from Syunik Province.

Participant of the protest, ARF member Gegham Manukyan said that they are planning to continue the protest that started in Syunik today for the resignation of the PM.

Pashinyan paid a visit to Syunik on April 20. On April 21 a group of citizens in Agarak community of Syunik blocked the movement of the PM's car, chanting insulting expressions.




Shurnukh residents face security concerns in addition to social issues – Ombudsman

Panorama, Armenia

Armenia's Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan alone with the President has visited Shurnukh village in Syunik province of Armenia. 

As the Ombudsman's Office reported, the locals have raised security issues among the main challenges they face. Their concerns occurred as a result of illegal presence of Azerbaijani servicemen on the road leading to the community. They also face many social issues, the Ombudsman's Office said. 

"As a result of border processes after the war some people have been deprived of their apartments, agricultural lands and pasture. Due to the presence of Azerbaijanis, some people deprived of their houses have raised issues concerning the construction of new houses. The Human Rights Defender reaffirmed his commitment to develop concept of demilitarized security zone in Syunik region for ensuring the protection of human rights."

It is noted that the Ombudsman's Office along with the Office of the RA President will sum up the results of their visit and implement join steps.

Armenia’s envoy to UN sends letter to Guterres regarding the “military trophy park” in Baku

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 13:08,

YEREVAN, APRIL 17, ARMENPRESS. The Permanent Representative of Armenia Mher Margaryan has addressed a letter to the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres regarding the inauguration of the so-called “military trophy park” in Baku displaying a most dehumanizing “collection” of grotesque wax figures portraying ethnic Armenians, as well as a macabre exhibition of helmets, equipment and personal belongings of the Armenian soldiers murdered during the 44-day war, ARMENPRESS reports the Permanent Representation of Armenia to the UN informs.

“The celebration of human death and suffering at the highest political level in Baku through the propagation of denigrating, dehumanizing imagery of ethnic Armenians is yet another manifestation of the state-led policies of inciting anti-Armenian hatred and is an overt demonstration of a genocidal intent,” Ambassador Margaryan states in the letter.

CivilNet: ‘Risk of new war’ with Azerbaijan looming, most Armenians say

CIVILNET.AM

16 Apr, 2021 09:04

By Mark Dovich

“Do you see a risk of new war in Artsakh?” is the difficult question Armenians are finding themselves increasingly having to answer, using the name for Nagorno-Karabakh that most Armenians prefer.

According to a new survey conducted last month by the Caucasus Research Resource Center, only 22% answered no. Many Armenians believe another war will break out over Nagorno-Karabakh — within one year from now (18%), within five years (13%) or within ten years or after (5%). Moreover, a plurality of those polled (24%) responded that “the war had not finished.” The poll, commissioned by CivilNet, asked respondents extensive questions about the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, among other topics.

Overall, 78% of those polled said the next step to resolving the conflict was “the return of prisoners, then everything else.” Every other possible answer, such as “clarify the status” of the disputed territory, received support from 5% of respondents or fewer. (Last week, a plane thought to be bringing Armenian prisoners of war home turned out empty upon arrival to Yerevan, prompting widespread outrage in Armenia.)

Respondents were also asked “what Armenia’s general goal should be” in Nagorno-Karabakh. To that question, answers were much more split. Thirty percent of Armenians answered “the return of all territories” lost in last year’s war, while 22% said the return of the borders of the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast, the Soviet-era administrative entity at the center of the conflict and the basis of self-determination claims. Meanwhile, 20% answered, “maintain current borders,” and another 20% said it was difficult to answer.

The survey explored six potential “approaches to the settlement” of the conflict that civilians would like to see. When asked to give their first choice solution, respondents overwhelmingly answered either “Artsakh officially part of Armenia” (34%) or “Artsakh an independent state” (27%). For their second choice, 39% of respondents answered granting the territory “special status within the Russian Federation.” Each other option, which all involved either joint Armenian-Azerbaijani or sole Azerbaijani administration over the region, garnered support from less than 1% of respondents.

Those polled were questioned extensively about their opinions on “the further settlement of the Karabakh conflict.” In particular, respondents were asked to state which country, in their opinion, was key to a resolution of the conflict, as well as which countries they thought “important” to be involved with potential peace negotiations.

The plurality of respondents, at 35%, answered “the Armenian government” when asked on which country the settlement of the conflict depends. Other popular answers included “world powers (U.S., Russia, China, EU),” at 32%, and “the Russian Federation” alone, at 33%. Interestingly, only 15% of respondents said that resolving the conflict depends on Azerbaijan, a massive drop of 16 percentage points since last year’s survey, which was conducted between August 15 and August 29, several months before the most recent round of fighting broke out.

There was greater consensus on which countries should (and should not) be involved in the resolution process. More than 80% of respondents said Russia should be “very involved” or “somewhat involved” with peace negotiations — while nearly the same proportion answered that Turkey “should not be involved at all.” The majority of those polled also said they envisioned seats at the negotiating table for France and the U.S., which, together with Russia, chair the OSCE Minsk Group.

In a separate question, the plurality of respondents (49%) called the Minsk Group’s work either “very important” or “more or less important,” while 30% said the group’s work was either “more of less not important” or “not important at all.” Another 19% percent of respondents said it was too difficult to answer. The Minsk Group was created during the first Nagorno-Karabakh war in the 1990s and is meant to encourage peaceful resolution of the conflict.

Additionally, there was a series of questions about the Russian peacekeeping forces that have been stationed in Nagorno-Karabakh since the signing of a ceasefire agreement between Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia last November.

When asked about their level of trust or mistrust toward the peacekeepers, slightly more than half of respondents answered that they trust the peacekeepers fully or mostly. On the other end of the spectrum, 25% of respondents said they “absolutely” or “mostly” do not trust the Russian forces. Sixteen percent of those polled answered “neither trust nor mistrust.”

The survey also asked respondents if they thought “Russian peacekeeping forces will continue to work in Artsakh” after their five-year mandate in the region ends. Though the plurality of those polled said “do not know,” the answers “yes” and “probably yes” together garnered 47% of respondents’ support. Meanwhile, only 15% answered either “no” or “probably no.”

The topic of reestablishing transport connections between Armenia and Azerbaijan was also included in the survey. In the 1990s, Azerbaijan, alongside Turkey, imposed a devastating economic embargo on Armenia, shuttering the borders entirely. Although the borders remain closed for now, the November 2020 ceasefire agreement includes calls for “all economic and transport links in the region [to] be unblocked.” In Armenia, a potential Azerbaijani transport corridor going through Meghri, Armenia’s southernmost town, has emerged as a subject of great debate and concern.

In the survey, 53% of respondents said they felt “fully negative” toward the reestablishment of Armenian-Azerbaijani transport links. Only 4% said they felt “fully positive” about the proposal to reestablish transport connections.

When asked which of two statements they agreed with more, the majority of respondents (59%) said they agreed more with the statement that “the launch of the Meghri corridor poses a threat to Armenia’s national security,” while only 12% answered “the launch of the Meghri corridor creates the foundations for economic development.” 9% said they agreed with both statements.

Finally, canvassers asked “how much do you believe in the cohabitation of Armenians and Azerbaijanis,” meaning the prospect that the two groups could peacefully live side-by-side. A whopping 72% of Armenians said they “do not believe at all” that it could be possible, while 18% answered “to some extent I believe, to some extent I do not believe” it to be possible. Only 3% said they “fully believe” that Armenians and Azerbaijanis can live together peacefully. Before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Armenians and Azerbaijanis across the South Caucasus lived side-by-side. In some villages in southern Georgia, they still do.

Canvassers gathered the data between March 12 and March 25, when Armenians were largely focused on the crisis of political legitimacy swirling around Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan after Armenia’s disastrous defeat in last year’s war. Around that time, concerns were also growing about the fate of Armenian cultural sites, such as the Dadivank Monastery, that are now under Azerbaijani administration. Worries over the treatment of Armenian prisoners of war and demands for their return had also become frequent topics of discussion across Armenia by this time.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev made a series of visits to areas retaken from ethnic Armenian forces in the war, widely seen, by Armenians and international observers alike, as a provocative move. On March 15, for instance, Aliyev visited a medieval Armenian church and said “all these inscriptions are fake.”

"Park" dedicated to Artsakh war in Baku a proof of Azerbaijani genocidal policy towards Armenians – Ombudsman

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 10:26,

YEREVAN, APRIL 13, ARMENPRESS. The so-called "park" dedicated to the Artsakh war in Baku is a proof of Azerbaijani genocidal policy and state supported Armenophobia, Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan said in a statement.

“A so-called "exhibition-park" related to the September-November 2020 war was opened in Baku today, on .

In the "park", along with the Armenian military equipment, mannequins of the Armenian military servicemen have been displayed, all of which presented in a degrading manner, in a manner violating human dignity. This is done to ensure the widest possible publicity.

It is obvious from the published videos and photos of the "Park" that the exhibition was designed to increase and encourage hatred and animosity towards the population of Armenia and Artsakh, the citizens of Armenia. Exhibitions are with cynicism to publicly humiliate the memory of the victims of the war, the rights of missing persons and captives, to violate the rights and dignity of their families.

Personal belongings of the soldiers of Armenia and Artsakh are displayed with the same cynicism, and the helmets of the killed soldiers are displayed knowing that it will cause additional suffering to their families, to the Armenian and Artsakh society, and will generate new hatred in the Azerbaijani society.

The Azerbaijani authorities also showed scenes of Armenian prisoners in the opened "park". This step is especially reprehensible against the background that in Azerbaijan, prisoners of war and civilians continue to be held illegally, in gross violation of international human rights requirements.

It is obvious to the Azerbaijani authorities that this sensitive issue would cause mental pain and suffering to the families of the missing persons and captives, as well as to the Armenian society in general.

Numerous complaints and alarms with this content have been addressed to the RA Human Rights Defender, as well as alarming posts on social networks were registered.

The monitoring of the Armenia’s Human Rights Defender’s Staff revealed posts on Azerbaijani social networks about the exhibition (we will publish the evidence separately), which only welcomed and encouraged the initiative of the President of Azerbaijan, and the comments testified to the obvious hatred and hostility towards Armenians.

The opening of such a "park" clearly confirms the fact of institutional hatred towards Armenians in Azerbaijan and existence of a state policy of propaganda of animosity. This policy has been consistently implemented for years, confirmed by concrete evidence.

The consequences of this policy are the atrocities and torture, killings of Armenian military servicemen and civilians by Azerbaijani Armed Forces in the 2020 September-November war; the 2016 April war or other Azerbaijani armed attacks on the.

State-sponsored hostility was the reason why the Azerbaijani military brutally tortured and killed Armenian servicemen and civilians, being with open faces and with exceptional cynicism, without even thinking about responsibility, and being confident that they would only be praised for that.

Therefore, the demonstrations in the "park" dedicated to the September-November 2020 war clearly reaffirm existence of the Azerbaijani genocidal policy towards the entire population of Armenia and Artsakh.

This absolutely vicious phenomenon proves once again that we must not allow ourselves to be intoxicated with false Azerbaijani peace building initiatives; they are just veils for the international community.

This statement of Armenia’s Human Rights Defender will be sent to international bodies, with a special note that these steps of Azerbaijani authorities are horrible phenomena leading to torture, cruelty, absolutely disturb peace and solidarity in the region”, the statement says.

Urartu-Era Artifacts Discovered in Yerevan

April 7, 2021



Archeologists excavate site in Yerevan where Urartu-era artifacts were discovered

Artifacts dating back to the Urartu period were discovered near the Erebuni historical-archeological reserve museum in Yerevan’s Karmir-Blur neighborhood.

Pottery fragments were discovered during the construction of the Argavand-Shirak section of the western circular road. Construction was immediately halted, and the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport granted permission for urgent excavations.

Fragments of different jars dating back to the 7th and 6th century BC were found, said Mikayel Badalyan, Director of the “Erebuni” Historical and Archaeological Museum-Reserve.

“We have traces of a structure in the upper part. This is suggested by the arrangement of stones. If we look closely, we can see three stones lined up in one direction. This could be a tomb, a wall, or some other structure. Of course, people will look and not understand, but it is very important from an archeological point of view,” he explained in a video posted on the Yerevan municipality’s Facebook page.

Russian peacekeepers deny foreign reporters access to Nagorno-Karabakh – Reporters Without Borders

Panorama, Armenia
April 9 2021

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) calls on Russia, whose peacekeepers have controlled access to Nagorno-Karabakh from Armenia since the end of last autumn’s war between Azerbaijan and Armenia, to stop denying entry to foreign reporters. RSF also urges the UN and Council of Europe to ensure respect for the right to the freedom to inform.

As the organization said in a a released statement, since last February, at least ten foreign journalists have been denied entry by the Russian peacekeeping troops controlling access to Nagorno-Karabakh from Armenia via the so-called Lachin corridor.

They include the French photographer Christophe Petit-Tesson, who said: “I spent several days there in January but the rules have changed since then.” Vincent Prado, a reporter for the Enquête Exclusive current affairs programme on the French TV channel M6, has had his requests to visit the territory refused several times by the Russians without any explanation.

It is noted that similar unexplained refusals have been received by Neil Hauer, a Canadian freelancer for the Guardian and CNN, and Mark Stratton, a British journalist who described his frustration in an interview for the BBC. The photographer Kiran Ridley received permission to visit the enclave but was turned back at the Russian checkpoint on 4 April. 

With some difficulty, reporters Jonathan Walsh and Mohamed Farhat from the French TV news channel France 24 managed to get in at the start of March thanks to a privileged contact on the spot, but they are among the very few journalists to have succeeded.

“A growing number of foreign journalists are being systematically refused entry by Russian soldiers,” said Jeanne Cavelier, the head of RSF’s Eastern Europe and Central Asia desk. “There are no objective grounds for this obstruction. The reporters do not pose a threat to the territory’s safety, which is guaranteed by peacekeeping troops.” 

Cavelier added: “Without international media, Nagorno-Karabakh is liable to become a news and information ‘black hole.’ We call on the Russian authorities to allow journalists access, regardless of their nationality. And we call on the UN and Council of Europe to ensure respect for the right to the freedom to inform, which is all the more essential in a conflict or post-conflict situation.”

According to the statement, the cease-fire agreement that the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia signed under Russia’s aegis on 9 November 2020 has no specific provision for the entry of journalists. Press accreditation is issued by the consulate of Nagorno-Karabakh’s unrecognised Republic of Artsakh or by the Armenian foreign ministry but it is the Russia peacekeepers who grant or refuse entry to foreign citizens, who are notified of the decision on the eve of their planned visit. Armenians and Russians just need to show their passports in order to enter.

It notes that Access to Nagorno-Karabakh is also restricted via Azerbaijan, which is ruled by the authoritarian President Ilham Aliyev. TV crews from France 24 and the European channel Arte made highly controlled visits from Azerbaijan and were not able to report freely.

It is reminded that at least seven journalists were injured during the Nagorno-Karabakh war from 27 September to 9 November. Three journalists who were injured when missiles were fired on the town of Martuni on 1 October – Armenia TV’s Avetis Harutyunyan and Aram Grigoryan and the Armenian news agency ’s Sevak Vardumyan – and the brother of a fixer who was killed the same day filed a case against Azerbaijan at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg on 26 March.

https://www.panorama.am/en/news/2021/04/09/Reporters-Without-Borders-Nagorno-Karabakh/2483620