Samkharadze: Georgia Ready to Facilitate Dialogue Between Armenia and Azerbaijan

Messenger, Georgia
Nov 20 2023
By Liza Mchedlidze

Monday,


The delegation from the Parliament of Georgia actively participated in the 21st autumn meeting of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly held in Yerevan.

As per the Parliament's press service, Nikoloz Samkharadze, Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and leader of the permanent Georgian Parliament delegation, discussed the visit of OSCE President Pia Kauma and the delegation to Georgia, along with highlighting Georgia's regional role in his address.

Samkharadze conveyed Georgia's readiness to facilitate peace dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan, offering Tbilisi as a potential venue for negotiations. He expressed hope that, with the commitment publicly expressed by both sides, lasting peace between the two brotherly neighboring countries could be achieved in the coming months.

"I believe it was a very timely visit to assess the current situation and explore the possibilities of establishing lasting peace in the South Caucasus. It was also crucial for the delegation to visit the occupation line and the settlements of internally displaced persons-individuals who have been unable to return to their homes for more than 15 years, with some enduring displacement for up to 30 years due to the Russian occupation. I would like to emphasize that Georgia is ready to facilitate the peace dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

We are prepared to offer Tbilisi as a venue for negotiations, and we hope that, with the commitment that both sides have publicly expressed and made, we will be able to celebrate lasting peace between our two brotherly neighboring countries in the coming months. From our side, Georgia is ready to facilitate the dialogue," said Samkharadze.

In response to the leader of the Georgian parliamentary delegation, Pia Kauma, the president of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, expressed her pleasure in visiting Georgia and highlighted the significance of the moment. She noted that Georgia has been granted the status of a candidate for the European Union, with the official announcement expected in December.

Pia Kauma reaffirmed the OSCE's full support for Georgia's territorial integrity and emphasized the organization's commitment to promoting peace in the region, particularly between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

AW: The theft of Artsakh

“Courage is contagious. When a brave man takes a stand, the spines of others stiffen.”

—Billy Graham, American evangelist and author (1918-2018)

 

Unfortunately, there was no “brave man” to take a stand against the unprovoked and brutal attack by the Azerbaijani government on Artsakh, an autonomous Armenian enclave in the South Caucasus, and her 120,000 indigenous inhabitants. Prior to the attack, the 9-month blockade of Artsakh’s Berdzor (Lachin) Corridor—the lifeline and only road where aid from Armenia could reach the people—was blocked by the Azeris. No one, especially reporters, and nothing, was allowed in or out of the region. With so many months of dwindling food, medicine and other essentials, the people were slowly and painfully suffering genocide by starvation. In an instant, an ancient civilization—Nagorno Karabakh to the rest of the world, but to the Armenians always Artsakh—was gone due to the Azeri government’s agenda to rid the indigenous Armenians of Artsakh from their homeland. 

Artsakh was a part of historic Armenia, as was Nakhichevan (an Armenian word meaning “place of the first descent,” and linked with Noah’s Ark). Nakhichevan too suffered the same fate as Artsakh, when in the summer of 1918, the Azeris massacred its Armenian population. In 2006, 2,000 Armenian khachkars (cross-stones) were destroyed by the Azeris, a Turkic people, in the medieval Armenian cemetery of Julfa, Nakhichevan. Today, no evidence of Armenian civilization remains there. Similar atrocities against the Armenians had occurred in the Azerbaijani cities of Sumgait in February 1988; in Kirovabad, again in 1988; and in Baku in 1990. In those pogroms, thousands of Armenian lives were lost as the Azeris slaughtered them, robbed them, burned their homes and expelled those who survived, who fled to Artsakh and Armenia. Armenian history is being rewritten, whose population continues to decrease because of the invasions, pogroms and annihilations over the centuries. 

A small wall rug of Artsakh’s “Papik and Tatik” that the author bought in Shushi (Photo: Knarik O. Meneshian)

The atrocities against the Armenians had also occurred even earlier. In General Andranik and the Armenian Revolutionary Movement, Andranig Chalabian explains that the Armenian revolutionary movement was “clearly a misnomer, since the movement was essentially defensive in nature.” It was formed to save the lives of the defenseless people against the constant atrocities committed against them—the indigenous Armenians of Western Armenia, now eastern Turkey, by the Turks in the 1800s and 1900s. Chalabian writes of the inhuman treatment of the Armenians: “Although other Christian minorities, such as the Greeks and Assyrians, lived in Turkey and suffered discrimination, the treatment of the Armenians was particularly nefarious, because its objective was to eradicate a people living in their own ancestral homeland.” 

The author also includes a chart, showing that the Armenian population in 1000 A.D. was six million; in 1890, it was three million; and in 1920, five years after the 1915 Genocide of the Armenian people by the Turkish government, it was one million. Today, the total number of Armenians worldwide is about 10 million, with under three million in Armenia. He also presents a revolting example of the Turkish government’s treatment of their Christian subjects: “From the 16th century through the 19th century, when an Armenian died in Turkey, a funeral service could not be held without first obtaining a burial permit from the authorities.”  

The following is an example of such a burial permit. “Dressed in a gown as black as tar, the crown of Satan on his head, banished from the throne of the Lord, his beard salt and pepper, his hair black, eyes sunken, body bulky, appearance detestable, religion savage, his existence harmful, he denies God, bad from the start, you cursed creature, you old lizard, priest Nahabet!” The permit continues, “We are informed that one of your multitude of blasphemers…a subject of the majestic Ottoman state…has suddenly died…May the Most High God annihilate and turn to dust all the blasphemers. Although the soil and earth will not accept his detestable and nauseous carcass, what to do…? The heat and air will create a loathsome smell and will discomfort the Muslims…We hereby allow you to dig a deep pit in the dung place of the blasphemers and, while reading and singing, you can throw him in there and bury him.” It was Frederick Davis Green (1863-1962), an American author, clergyman and missionary to Armenia, who responded to the claim that “the Turks are tolerant of members of other faiths…” “Yes,” he said. “So long as Christians submit to all forms of oppression, and make no claims in regards to rights, they are gladly tolerated.”

In a recent YouTube video, an Artsakh Armenian family, gaunt and weak from the blockade, said after fleeing Artsakh, “The conditions were unbearable. Our village was surrounded by Azeri military. There were explosions, bombings and attacks on all sides by the Azeris.” When they were asked how the behavior of the Azeri military was towards them as they left Artsakh, they responded, “If there was a reporter or the French at the border, the Azeri military did not behave badly, but when there was no one to watch them, such as in Shushi, the behavior of the Azeris towards the Armenians was different. It was horrible.”

In another YouTube video, the story of a 13-year-old boy was presented. The boy had completed the ninth grade and had driven his mother, younger siblings, grandparents and a few neighbors to safety in Armenia, as his father was in the military. The boy explained, at times with tears welling in his eyes, “I have never driven a car before, but I had to drive my family and neighbors to safety. If I did not succeed, I would always blame myself…It took us such a long time, many hours—day and night, to reach Armenia…I slept at the wheel to rest sometimes,” he said, and added wistfully, “My father bought me a bicycle, but I never got to ride it, and he bought my mother a washing machine, but we could not bring it with us.” He continued, as he wiped away more tears from his dark, melancholy eyes that had seen far too much, “Now, I must find work to support my family.” Overnight, the small boy of 13 had become a man.

In yet another YouTube video, a frail and elderly man said softly and sadly, “My two sons were killed in the 2020 war, and I lost an eye…Everything can be replaced, and a new life can be started somewhere else, unless one is elderly, but we cannot take the graves of our families with us. What will happen to the graves of our loved ones now?” As the elderly man paused, then sighed, he continued, “This is my destiny, or rather the destiny of the people of Artsakh. We are now relying on the Armenian government. I hope that, to at least a small degree, they will understand the feelings of those who were forced to flee.” It had taken the elderly man 24 grueling hours on horseback to reach safety in Armenia. An Armenian villager and his wife found the man near their home. They explained that the elderly man, exhausted, had been bent over on his horse and unable to get down. The couple had helped him off his horse and had carried him into their home, where they washed his feet and fed him. 

“Let no one believe that we, the people of Artsakh, left our sacred land for the sake of saving lives. We were forced out! We did not leave voluntarily!”

In one more YouTube video, a young Artsakh mother of five and her husband, a military veteran, who had suffered severe physical and emotional trauma, was interviewed. “My husband is no longer able to care for himself or for his family. He has lost his mind,” she said as she lowered her head for a moment, then added, “Now, I must find work and be the head of our family.” She added, with measured emotion, “Let no one believe that we, the people of Artsakh, left our sacred land for the sake of saving lives. We were forced out! We did not leave voluntarily!”

After the forced takeover, or rather the theft, of Artsakh, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan praised what had occurred in Artsakh. Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev stated, “The entire Republic of Armenia is our historic land!” A day after the takeover of Artsakh, Aliyev sauntered into the Armenian government building in Stepanakert, originally called Vararakn (Armenian word meaning “rapid spring”), trampled on the Artsakh flag, which had been strewn on the floor of the building, walked over to a window and opened it. With his hand, he made a gesture, as if to shoo something out the window, as he wrinkled his nose. 

As I thought about what had happened so easily to Artsakh and her people, and the silence of those who could have easily stopped this barbarism, I wondered, is it really true that no one cares? Not long after, I received an email from a Mr. Humberto Ortega, a high school teacher in Costa Rica, who had, on October 25, 2022, read my articles titled “Artsakh and the Edelweiss” and “Pages from Armenian History” in The Armenian Weekly. The teacher said that he was assigning the two articles to his students and was teaching them about Armenia and Artsakh. Then, upon learning that the Artsakh Armenians had been driven from their homes, Mr. Ortega wrote, “Dear Knarik, you do not know how much we are suffering from the new reality that is occurring in Artsakh, and the worst thing is how the world looks the other way. Please keep me informed about what happens.” When I responded to the teacher that Artsakh was now in the hands of the Azeris, he wrote back, “Is it true? Oh, my God!” and included this prayer for Artsakh: “Our Lady of Narek, our Lady of Narek, pray for your people.” He then asked, “How can I get a small image of Our Lady of Narek, the Marian Patroness of Armenia, and a little flag from Artsakh and Armenia? I want to put them on my car. God bless your people and the Artsakh people!”

The picture Mr. Humberto Ortega sent with his prayer for Artsakh

In my reply to Mr. Ortega, I asked if he was Armenian or part Armenian. He responded that he was not Armenian, that he was Costa Rican, but loved Armenia and the Armenian people. I then wrote to let him know that I was in the process of collecting and mailing to him all the items he had requested, plus the English language book (translated by Thomas J. Samuelian) titled St. Grigor Narekatsi – Speaking with God from the Depths of the Heart, and St. Nerses Shnorhali’s prayer, “In Faith I Confess.” Upon receiving the package, Mr. Ortega wrote a “Thank You” note. Soon after, he wrote the following about Artsakh:

“‘To see a crime calmly is to commit it.’—Jose Marti, Cuban poet, writer, philosopher, nationalist leader (1853-1895)

This idea is what runs through our heads and does not allow us to adequately reason why it can happen that two countries that are located next to each other…one of them (Azerbaijan) wants to take by force a territory (Artsakh) that does not belong to them…It tries to take it by force, without taking into account the mistreatment, the deaths, the expulsion of what belongs to the indigenous Armenians, as well as the erasure of any signs of their religion, churches and customs.

From Costa Rica, a small country in America, that tenaciously defends its democracy, I want the voice of one of its children to reach out and cry out for the application of justice. It cannot be that by force they try to destroy a region like Artsakh, and that they also are trying to take away an entire area of southern Armenia, Zangezur/Syunik, by any means possible. To remain silent is to agree with these crimes, which is why we must make the cry of the Armenians and those who are being expelled from Artsakh reach everyone. I finish my words with another quote from Jose Marti, apostle of Cuban independence:

‘Freedom is not a flag in whose shadow the victors devour the defeated and overwhelm them with tireless resentment: Freedom is a robust madwoman who has a Father, the sweetest of parents—Love, and a Mother, the richest of mothers—Peace. Without mutual love, without mutual help—always a stunted country. Happiness is the prize of those who create, and not of those who destroy.’ 

Your people have been, are, and will be an example of effort, struggles and love for others.”

After reading Mr. Ortega’s message, I read Alexander Pope’s (English poet, 1688-1744) poem “Universal Prayer.” The last two stanzas reminded me of the Armenian people of Artsakh, their ordeals, their current plight—homeless refugees, who were forced from their ancient homeland by the Azeris, their sacred soil where much blood was spilled, and far away now from their centuries-old churches and monasteries, learning centers, ancestral graves, ancient graveyards and Armenian headstones—the khachkars (cross stones). 

One cannot help but wonder what will become of the khachkars; the fourth century Amaras Monastery and Church in Artsakh, founded by St. Gregory the Illuminator; the fifth century first Armenian school at Amaras, founded by St. Mesrob Mashtots, the creator of the Armenian alphabet; the 12th century Yeghishe Kouys Church; the 13th century Anapat Church; the Monastery of Dadivank, built in 1214; Gandzasar Monastery, built between 1216 and 1238; Gtich Monastery, built between 1241 and 1248; the 14th century Monastery of Spitak Khach; and other churches of antiquity, and more recent.

For now, Artsakh, like the Edelweiss, the sweet-smelling flower that dwells high in the mountains of Artsakh and symbolizes “deep love, sacrifice and devotion,” as well as “rugged individualism,” will dwell in the hearts of the Armenians of Artsakh. Their land was also their altar, the blossoms in the fields their incense, the moon and stars their candles, the birds their choir and the rain their blessed water. 

To think that on November 30, 1920, months after Azerbaijan became the first Soviet Republic in the Transcaucasus, Azerbaijan recognized “Mountainous Karabakh (Artsakh) as an integral part of the Socialist Republic of Armenia,” but suddenly, in 1921, they again claimed Artsakh, and in 2023, they simply took it. 

Shortly after I had mailed my package to Mr. Ortega, I learned that the Armenian Evangelical Church’s (Mt. Prospect, Illinois) guest minister on Sunday, October 22, 2023, would be Pastor Joel Tenney, who has been involved in missionary work with his wife, also a missionary, in Artsakh and Armenia for the last three years. He has produced videos about what has been going on in Artsakh and Armenia. His documentary titled Artsakh’s Cry will be shown on YouTube, social media and in select theaters in a few weeks. His book on Armenia titled I Entered the Land of Promise will be available before year’s end. Pastor Tenney, who had initially studied to become a Catholic priest, decided he could serve God better by becoming an evangelist and serving people, especially widows, orphans and unfortunates. Pastor Tenney is 27 years old. He and his wife have five children. Their youngest, born this past August, was given the middle name Ani by their parents because of their love for the Armenian people. The pastor and his wife have applied for Armenian citizenship, and he has learned to speak Armenian and has studied Armenian history and music, especially the works of Komitas Vardapet.    

While Pastor Tenney waited for church to begin, he began to play the piano—a piece by Gomidas Vartabed (1869-1935, ordained Armenian priest, composer, musicologist and considered the founder of the “Armenian National School of Music”). It was the deeply moving song, “Hov Arek Sarer”—”Make a breeze dear mountains, make a breeze. Bring cure to my agony…” After opening prayers, the pastor began to speak, at times with tears in his eyes, as he described some of the things that he had witnessed in Artsakh behind blockaded “doors,” upon entering the territory “illegally,” as he described it. “There was sniper fire, children decapitated, women raped and murdered, and other horrific things too difficult to speak about.” He paused to compose himself and then continued to describe the hungry and emaciated parents, who did not eat in order to give their meager morsels of food to their children. The pastor’s children had said to their parents that because they had everything, they wanted their Christmas gifts this year to be given to “the children of Artsakh, who have nothing.” Pastor Tenney then spoke of the situation in Goris, Armenia. “The situation there is unimaginable, with six to 10 thousand people flocking into the area, collapsing from exhaustion and severe malnutrition. They are nothing but skin and bones, like the photos you have seen of the emaciated people in Auschwitz…” 

Pastor Joel Tenney with Mrs. Arakelian, who drove down with her family from Sts. Joachim and Anne Armenian Church in Palos, Heights, IL (Photo: Knarik O. Meneshian)

Pastor Tenney then stated, “While other countries receive billions of dollars in aid from the U.S., Armenia has received only one million dollars.” The pastor continued, “Plenty of Armenians have been speaking out about the situation in Artsakh, but there is no response.” To do his part in aiding the people of Artsakh, the pastor has become the voice for the Armenians in Washington, D.C., and has “warned” officials and politicians that they will not be reelected if they do not help the Armenians.

After the sermon, Pastor Tenney and the congregation opened their song books and sang hymns, followed by the singing, in Armenian, of the “Hayr Mer” (Our Father), led by the pastor. At the end of the church service and luncheon, as Pastor Tenney walked out of the church and into the parking lot, he looked up toward heaven and began singing, “Hov Arek Sarer.” We listened with amazement to the young American pastor who had become an Armenian at heart. As he walked to his car on his way to St. Gregory’s Armenian Church in Chicago he said, as he looked up toward heaven again, “Gomidas’s song is a prayer.”

There are people who, indeed, do care about the Armenians of Artsakh. These lines from Mary Carolyn Davies’ (American writer, 1888-1974) poem titled “A Prayer For Every Day,” describes a caring heart, similar to those mentioned in this article. “…Help me to know the inmost hearts of those for whom I care, their secret wishes, all the loads they bear, that I may add my courage to their own…” 

Knarik O. Meneshian was born in Austria. Her father was Armenian and her mother was Austrian. She received her degree in literature and secondary education in Chicago, Ill. In 1988, she served on the Selection Committee of the McDougal, Littell “Young Writers” Collection—Grades 1–8, an anthology of exemplary writing by students across the country.” In 1991, Knarik taught English in the earthquake devastated village of Jrashen (Spitak Region), Armenia. In 2002–2003, she and her late husband (Murad A. Meneshian), lived and worked as volunteers in Armenia for a year teaching English and computer courses in Gyumri and Tsaghgadzor. Meneshian’s works have been published in "Teachers As Writers, American Poetry Anthology" and other American publications, as well as Armenian publications in the U.S. and Armenia. Knarik is the author of A Place Called Gyumri: Life in the Armenian Mountains. She has also authored a book of poems titled Reflections, and translated from Armenian to English Reverend D. Antreassian’s book titled "The Banishment of Zeitoun" and "Suedia’s Revolt" She began writing at the age of 12 and has contributed pieces to The Armenian Weekly since her early teens.


Armenian government’s Crossroads of Peace project presented to German Foreign Minister

 11:36, 4 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs Ararat Mirzoyan has presented the Crossroads of Peace project to his German counterpart Annalena Baerbock, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan has said.

“At meeting with Minister of Foreign Affairs of Germany Annalena Baerbock, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan presented project of “Crossroads of Peace” elaborated by Armenia as initiative that can bring economic benefits not only to our region, immediate neighbours, but also to wider world & will become a unique guarantee for peace,” Badalyan said in a post on X.

FM Mirzoyan met with FM Baerbock in Yerevan on November 3.

Jarring Events in Nagorno-Karabakh Sharpen International Focus

Berkeley Law
Nov 4 2023

More than 100,000 people have fled Nagorno-Karabakh on the heels of a military offensive by Azerbaijan that many international observers call a form of ethnic cleansing. An autonomous ethnic Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh is now virtually abandoned.

Azerbaijan blocked the only road between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh to all traffic except Red Cross aid vehicles in December 2022. In June those were also barred, reportedly leading to starvation conditions. After the recent military offensive, Nagorno-Karabakh’s government agreed to dissolve after over 30 years of separatist rule and now Armenia — a country of 2.8 million — is struggling to absorb and assist the massive influx of refugees.

For Berkeley Law 3L Margarita Akopyan, an Armenian immigrant whose relatives lived in the region, the conflict hits home. When she was 6, she came to the United States from Russia, where her mother had moved for job opportunities and her father had moved as a refugee. 

Attacks in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020 fueled Akopyan’s interest in international law. During law school she has worked with the California Asylum Representation Clinic and the Berkeley Law Afghanistan Project, and she is currently senior development editor for the Berkeley Journal of International Law.

Also a former research assistant for Dean Erwin Chemerinsky, Akopyan describes how the past conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh and the recent upheaval there has shaped her path: 

* * * * * 

Throughout high school, I knew I wanted to go to law school and become a public defender. Growing up as a low-income Armenian immigrant, I saw a need for more diversity in legal representation, especially in areas like public defense where all clients come from low-income backgrounds and many are immigrants and people of color. My goal was to provide clients with representation that could better understand both the issues they face and how to assist with those issues.

But in October 2020, during my law school application cycle, Azerbaijan, the country directly east of Armenia, launched an attack on Armenian villages in the Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) region. From 1991 to 2020 Artsakh was an autonomous region largely surrounded by Azerbaijani territory. Many of my relatives lived here. 

What became known as the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War lasted into November and resulted in the destruction of most of the Armenian villages and the death of thousands. Throughout the attack, Azerbaijan committed countless war crimes and human rights violations, including using white phosphorus (a bomb additive banned by the United Nations) and targeting hospitals.

These devastating events led me to shift focus from marginalized groups in the United States to marginalized groups internationally. By the time I arrived on campus in the fall of 2021, I had decided to use my legal education to defend the human rights of my people in Artsakh and all others being stripped of their fundamental human rights.

As I entered my 3L year, the situation in Artsakh has only worsened. In December 2022, Azerbaijan blocked the Lachin corridor, the single road connecting Artsakh to Armenia and the only access point Artsakh has to essentials like food and water. For nine months, the Artsakh population starved, lacking electricity and access to proper medicine. 

In September 2023, Azerbaijan launched another full-scale attack on Artsakh that caused almost the entire population to become refugees, fleeing to Armenia. Today, almost no Armenians remain in Artsakh, and the Republic of Artsakh is set to be dissolved.

As I’ve watched the international community fail to intervene to stop Azerbaijan’s campaign of ethnic cleansing, I find myself about to graduate law school — with the place I entered law school to defend on the brink of dissolution.

Berkeley Law has given me the opportunity to learn about these different struggles for autonomy and human rights around the world, and to spread awareness to my classmates and professors about the struggle of the Armenian people. 

During my time at Berkeley Law, I have participated in the Berkeley Afghanistan Project and the California Asylum Representation Clinic, where I assisted survivors of human rights violations in navigating the asylum process. During my first summer, I worked at the American Bar Association Immigration Justice Project, where I was able to use my Russian language skills to speak with asylum seekers in their native tongue. 

I am also on the boards of the Berkeley Journal of International Law, where I curated and edited articles regarding international law, and the Middle Eastern and North African Law Students Association, where I can provide Armenian representation and help educate fellow students on struggles that are unique to the Armenian community. 

In the next month, I will be meeting with Armenian prelaw students from UC Berkeley and UCLA to help them navigate the law school process and encourage them to apply to Berkeley Law in hopes of increasing Armenian representation on campus. I am excited at the prospect of increasing Armenian representation not just on campus, but also in the legal community.

https://www.law.berkeley.edu/article/events-in-nagorno-karabakh-sharpen-international-focus-for-margarita-akopyan/

Iran, Armenia Initiate Joint Cooperation in ‘Skill Diplomacy’

TASNIM News Agency
Iran – Oct 31, 2023

October, 31, 2023 – 10:15 Economy news

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Officials from Iran and Armenia launched joint cooperation in the field of “Skill Diplomacy”.

In a joint meeting held between Minister of Labor and Social Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Narek Mkrtchyan and Iran’s Deputy Minister of Labor, Cooperatives and Social Welfare Mehrdad Azimi in Karaj on Tuesday, the two sides emphasized the need for strengthening cooperation in the field of ‘skill diplomacy’.

Presently, many developed countries are seeking to acquire and present training and internship courses aimed at training skilled workers and meeting the demand for the required manpower in their market, the head of Iran Technical and Vocational Training Organization (TVTO) said.

In recent years, Iran has tried to provide efficient and competent manpower by relying on skill training, he said, adding, “In this regard, job seekers and the graduates have been hired within the framework of skill training courses”

However, implementation of the National Skill Movement has been put on the agenda of the ministry, Azimi stared.

During the meeting, the two sides emphasized the need for developing bilateral cooperation in the field of presenting skill training commensurate with the requirements of the country’s labor market.

In addition, they stressed the need to establish a specialized technical and vocational training center and use the capacity of the public sector to hold a bilateral festival to introduce the skills of trainees to the economic enterprises, etc.

Iran’s deputy labor minister further termed the visit of the Armenian labor minister to Iran as a turning point in developing and expanding relations between the two countries.

Armenia’s labor minister, for his part, said that the diversity of Iran's services and skill capacities is the main reason for his country's keenness to expand cooperation with Iran.

Armenia is seeking to launch a technical and vocational training center in Syunik province, located in southern part of Armenia, Mkrtchyan said, adding that Iran’s TVTO is equipped with the valuable experiences that can help Armenia to settle problems in the field of skill training.

Jordan recalls its ambassador to Israel

 18:55, 1 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. Jordan's Foreign Ministry on Wednesday immediately summoned the Jordanian Ambassador to Israel back to Jordan. 

The ministry said in a statement that Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi also requested that the Israeli Foreign Ministry not send the Israeli ambassador, who left due to security precautions at the beginning of the conflict last month, back to Amman.

The decision was "an _expression_ of Jordan's position of rejection and condemnation of the raging Israeli war on Gaza," the statement said.

Asbarez: In Tehran, Regional Leaders Pledge to Recognize ‘Inviolability’ of Borders

From left, the foreign ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Russia and Iran in Tehran on Oct. 23


At the conclusion of a summit in Tehran on Monday, the foreign ministers of Iran, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia and Turkey issued a communique pledging to recognize the inviolability of each other’s borders.

Iran’s foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian had invited the summit, known as the “Consultative Regional 3+3 Platform,” which was attended by foreign ministers Ararat Mirzoyan of Armenia, Sergey Lavrov of Russian, Jeyhum Bayramov of Azerbaijan and Hakan Fidan of Turkey.

During the meeting Mirzoyan emphasized the need to address “very complicated problems” in the region, “otherwise, the region is doomed to remain in the past.”

Stressing that it will not be possible to implement future plans if “the red lines of regional coexistence defined by international law are not respected by all,” Mirzoyan indicated that the goals and principles of the United Nations Charter and in particular the exclusion of the use of force and the threat of force, the principles of territorial integrity, sovereignty, inviolability of borders and the protection of fundamental human rights should be the guidelines.

“Furthermore, it is important to adhere to these principles both in our actions and in our rhetoric. In conditions of aggressive and threatening rhetoric, it is difficult to imagine the creation of a favorable environment, which will allow the implementation of ambitious regional projects. Armenia, for its part, is loyal to those principles,” Mirzoyan told his counterparts in Tehran.

The Untied States used caution when discussing the summit, with State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller telling reporters on Monday that some of the countries involved in the initiative were not “reliable partners.”

“We welcome any good-faith engagements that contribute to peace and stability for the people of the South Caucasus regardless of where those talks happen or who is hosting them. But that being said, we recognize the South Caucasus’ delicate geographic position regarding Iran and Russia, but we have not found these countries to be reliable partners, to understate matters,” Miller said.

The following are the nine points highlighted in the statement:

  • Taking into account the importance of developing friendly relations between countries based on mutual interests and good neighborliness, they emphasized in this regard the importance of peaceful settlement of disputes, respect for sovereignty, political independence, territorial integrity, inviolability of internationally recognized borders, non-interference in internal affairs, prohibition on the threat or use of force and respect for human rights based on all the principles of the United Nations Charter;
  • While expressing their views on various international issues, they discussed the most significant issues in the region and emphasized the importance of platforms like the Consultative Regional Platform “3+3” in providing opportunities for constructive dialogue and establishing mutually beneficial cooperation between the countries of the region that have the primary role in this regard;
  • Highlighted the positive impact of the economic cooperation on strengthening mutual trust, the well-being of nations and the stability of the region;
  • Emphasizing the importance of cultural cooperation, people-to-people contacts and joint projects in the field of education, science, tourism, culture and sports;
  • In order to enhance lasting peace and economic development of the region, they will strengthen bilateral and multilateral consultation and interaction;
  • Welcoming the ongoing processes of normalization and development of relations between all the countries of the region;
  • While positively evaluating the results of this meeting, they reaffirmed the openness of this Platform for equal participation of Georgia;
  • The Ministers also exchanged views on the situation in Gaza. They emphasized the need for immediate termination of targeting innocent civilians;
  • The Foreign Ministers of the Republic of Armenia, the Republic of Azerbaijan, the Republic of Turkey and the Russian Federation thanked the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran for the good reception and successful holding of this meeting.

“With an assessment of the regular meetings of the “3+3” Regional Platform in expanding and strengthening the environment of trust and cooperation in the region, they agreed that the next meeting will be held in Turkey on a date that will be coordinated through diplomatic channels,” the announcement concluded.

Arthur Khachatryan, a lawmaker representing the opposition Hayastan bloc in Armenia’s parliament, said Tuesday that the Tehran announcement should compel Azerbaijan to pull out its troops from Armenia’s sovereign territories.

“The definition of the territorial integrity, according to the Helsinki Final Act, means the resolution of territorial disputes peacefully. Yes, all countries, especially neighbors, must resolve relations without the use of force. Thus, Azerbaijan, who adopted that statement yesterday, should pull back its occupying troops from Vayots Dzor, Syunik and Gegharkunik as early as today,” Khahtryan said Tuesday.

“But having adopted such a statement on one hand, and simultaneously maintaining its occupying troops in Armenia, Azerbaijan is sending out a clear message that it does not intend to go for peace if that peace treaty is short of a capitulation statement by Armenia,” the lawmaker added.

Khachatryan said that Armenia must take all measures to ensure its territorial integrity and the political rights of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, including their right to self-determination.

It is impossible to destroy Hamas without destroying Gaza and its civilian population, says Lavrov

 15:20,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 28, ARMENPRESS. It is necessary to "stop" in the Gaza Strip and announce humanitarian programs, said in an interview with BelTA.

"It is necessary to stop, it is necessary to announce humanitarian programs to save the population, which has found itself in a blockade: no water, no electricity, no food – there is none of this," Lavrov said.

He stressed that if the Gaza Strip is destroyed and two million people are expelled, it will be a catastrophe for many decades or even centuries.




The International Community

Vanadzor Fountains (Photo: Arthur Ovanesian, 2021)

Author’s note: I’m deeply grateful to Arthur Ovanesian and Perla Kantarjian for their invaluable suggestions.

Yet again history
has decided
to visit the present.
Like always,
it has come
unannounced,
empty-handed.
Once more, we said:
“Please give us bread.”
They said here’s pain
and we did receive it.
We suggested:
“If not food,
you may bring any gift.”
We got only poison.
We said, day by day:
“Our bodies are growing slim.”
They answered:
“Ah, you’re getting smart now.”
Perhaps we spoke too often
about our tormenter’s sin
that’s why some understood
it as being without,
and others thought
it was their own.
We raised our voices:
“Our people are living in hell.”
The response:
“Your situation looks bright.”
We begged:
“Please protect our plot of land.”
They wondered:
“Why are you requesting fences?”
We informed them:
“Our home
isn’t safe.”
They advised:
“Then go ahead and keep 
the doors open.”
With time, we told them:
“It’s still getting too hot.”
Finally, a few understood,
but still they did nothing.
We warned: “The last
of our people are leaving.”
Oh, what a burden
this was to hear!
We suggested:
“Let’s make a list of demands.”
They thought:
“Perhaps we’re getting too cunning.”
We pronounced:
“Our enemies could be pétulant.”
I guess, in our ignorance,
we didn’t pronounce
it the right way,
sounding playful, exuberant.
We asked: “Are we not
being sensible enough?”
They said: “Yes, but still
you’re being too sensitive.”
We cautioned:
“They mean war.”
They calmed us down:
“That’s all in the past.”
We said: “It could happen այսօր.”
They heard what they wanted to hear:
“We’re too much of an eyesore.”
Now that everyone has left,
there’s no enemy left.
All the “occupiers” have fled.
All the “separatists” are gone.
There are no more people
to call “traitors” and “dogs.”

Glossary of terms:

PainBread (French)
GiftPoison (German)
SlimSmart, intelligent (Dutch)
Sin: (Without in Spanish) (a reflexive pronoun in Swedish)
HellBright, luminescent (German)
PlotFence (Slovak)
HomeMold (Finnish)
HotThreat (Swedish)
LastBurden (German)
ListCunning (German)
PétulantExuberant, Playful (French)
SensibleSensitive (French)
WarWas (German)
David Garyan holds an MA and MFA in Creative Writing from Cal State Long Beach. In addition, he received an MA in International Cooperation on Human Rights and Intercultural Heritage from the University of Bologna. He has published four collections of poetry with Main Street Rag. He serves as General European Editor for Interlitq, an international online literary magazine where he has interviewed and published the work of some of the most notable writers and academics of our time, including Sari Nusseibeh, Elena Poniatowska, Susan Stewart, Harry Northup and Clifford Ando, among others. His poem, “Open Letter to the Students of Brandeis University with Bibliography,” published in Volume 11 of The American Journal of Poetry, was praised by Joyce Carol Oates and promoted on her official Twitter page. He lives in Trento.


Asbarez: After Raising Azerbaijani Flag in Stepanakert, Aliyev Again Vows Military Action

President Ilham Aliyev raises Azerbaijani flag in Stepanakert on Oct. 15In Vitriol-Filled Speech, Aliyev Vows to Punish Artsakh Leaders

Weeks after ethnically cleansing Artsakh of its Armenian population, President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan traveled to capital Stepanakert on Sunday and raised the Azerbaijani flag, after which, in a vitriol-filled speech again threatened military action against Armenia.

“The Flag I raised today will fly here forever, and we will live here forever. Karabakh is ours, Karabakh is Azerbaijan!” declared Aliyev.

After the flag raising ceremony, Aliyev entered the government. Azerbaijani media outlets posted videos of Aliyev stepping on an Artsakh flag, which was strategically placed on the ground for him to walk over.

President Ilham Aliyev walks over the Artsakh flag in Stepanakert on Oct. 15

“Unfortunately, the words I said 20 years ago and repeated many times did not register with them. They thought those were just words. No, I do what I say; everyone knows it, including Armenia, and they should not forget it either,” Aliyev ranted.

“Don’t forget the Patriotic War [2020 war]! Don’t forget the counterterrorism operation [the large-scale attack on Artsakh in September]! If some forces in Armenia ever think about revenge, let them take a good look at these images,” Aliyev said pointing to the newly raised Azerbaijani flag in front of what once served as an Artsakh government building.

“We have achieved what we wanted and fulfilled the decades-long wishes of the Azerbaijani people. We have restored the dignity of the Azerbaijani people. We have returned to our lands, we have restored our territorial integrity, and at the same time, we have restored our dignity,” declared Aliyev.

“The three clowns who used to sit here and call themselves ‘president’ await their deserved punishment today,” Aliyev added, referring to Artsakh’s leaders. “I wonder if the man who used to sit in one of these buildings and call himself a ‘prime minister’ will ever dare to threaten us again. His tea is being served in the detention facility as we speak.”

“A separatist who called himself a ‘foreign minister’ once sarcastically said that Azerbaijan should open an embassy in our country if it wanted to raise its flag in Khankendi [Stepanakert]. Now, his tea is also served there in the detention facility. Our flag is flying high here. This should be a lesson to them,” added Aliyev, referring to Artsakh’s former foreign minister, Davit Babayan.

Before going to Stepanakert, Aliyev visited all of the regions of Artsakh, including the Sarsang Reservoir, which he claimed was built under the leadership of his father, Haydar, who served as Communist Party head of Azerbaijani SSR for decades.

Aliyev explained that his visit coincided with the 20th anniversary of his “election” as president and the 100th anniversary of his father’s birth.

He blamed the “anti-nationalist” forces who ousted his father from power in 1987 for the loss of Karabakh in the 1990s and explained that when he assumed power he would return Azerbaijan “to its glory.”

“Unfortunately, the then-Azerbaijani leadership let the situation spiral out of control and showed cowardice, helplessness, and indecision,” Aliyev said.

“Nationalists occupied this place, so many rallies with anti-Azerbaijani slogans were held in this square, and all this encouraged the nationalists even more. Armenian nationalists, Dashnaks, and bloodthirsty international terrorists were constantly coming here from Armenia. It was here that the policy of ethnic cleansing against our people began,” claimed the Azerbaijani leader, again pointing to the government building, he declared that “those sitting in this building in those years were the cause of the tragedies of Armenian and Azerbaijani peoples.”

He hailed Heydar Aliyev as the “National Leader and the Savior” of Azerbaijan and credited him for the “vision” to “reclaim Azerbaijan’s history.”