Press Release, SIOP Asia XV Congress, Press Conference, 18.05.2023

[Eng text below]

Հարգելի գործընկերներ

Այսօր տեղի ունեցած Մանկական ուռուցքաբանության միջազգային միության ասիական 15-րդ համաժողովին (SIOP Asia 2023 XV Congress) նվիրված մամուլի ասուլիսի մանրամասները ներկայացված են կից հաղորդագրությունում։

Լուսանկարներ` https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1CaY73-K0-Zh_Sa2xvnXNeTuDQOJVtafY 

ՄԻԱՍԻՆ ՔԱՂՑԿԵՂԻ ԴԵՄ

Շնորհակալություն համագործակցության համար։
Մեդիա պատասխանատուներ՝
+374 94 35 47 34 Սիրանուշ Գյուրջինյան
+374 93 32 44 25 Հայկուհի Գրիգորյան 

Հարգանքով

SIOP Asia XV համաժողովի մեդիա թիմ
——————————————————————
Dear Colleagues,

Please, find attached the official Press Release about today's Press Conference  devoted to the SIOP Asia 2023 XV Congress in Armenia.

Photos: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1CaY73-K0-Zh_Sa2xvnXNeTuDQOJVtafY 
THROUGH THE HARDSHIPS TO THE STARS  

Media Representatives:
+374 94 35 47 34 Siranush Gyurjinyan,
+374 93 32 44 25 Haykuhi Grigoryan.

Thank you for your cooperation.

_______________

DNA Strategy, Consulting Agency




18.05.2023_General Info about SIOP 2023 (1).docx

MS-Word 2007 document

ANCA Summer Academy expands to two sessions

Applications are open for the third annual ANCA Haroutioun and Elizabeth Kasparian Summer Academy – now hosting two sessions: July 31-August 4th, 2023, and August 7-August 11, 2023.

WASHINGTON, DC – Due to overwhelming nationwide student interest, the third annual Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Haroutioun & Elizabeth Kasparian Summer Academy has expanded to two sessions this August – offering Armenian American high school students, 17-19 years of age, an insider’s look at advocacy and career opportunities in the nation’s capital.

Applications are available online at anca.org/summer and must be submitted by June 1. The first session of the week-long program will take place from July 31-August 4, 2023, while session two will be held from August 7-August 11, 2023.  

“The ANCA is eagerly awaiting the next cohort of participants,” said ANCA Associate Programs Director Tatevik Khachatryan. “This year is unique because we are offering two sessions for our participants. The intensive one-week session welcomes the best and brightest Armenian American students to our nation’s capital, teaching them valuable skills that can be transferred and applied to their academic work.”  

The ANCA Summer Academy is limited to 10 students per session with the strongest academic records and with the strongest background in community youth activism, including participating in the Armenian Youth Federation, Armenian churches and organizations, schools, student groups and individual initiatives.

ANCA Summer Academy participants will stay at the ANCA Aramian House, a landmark property in downtown Washington, DC which serves as the home and permanent headquarters of the ANCA’s signature youth programs. The Aramian House is named in honor of the late community leader and philanthropist Martha Aramian of Providence, Rhode Island.

Past Summer Academy participants have explored Armenia and Artsakh’s diplomatic challenges and opportunities in discussions with former US Ambassador to Armenia John Evans and Artsakh Representative to the US Robert Avetisyan. In the past, Big Whig Media founders Ken and Keith Nahigian discussed the broader Washington, DC political media scene and effective communication strategies during a tour of their state-of-the-art multi-media studio located just blocks from the White House. Dr. Khatchig Mouradian, the Armenia and Georgia Area Specialist at the Library of Congress has also spoken to program participants.

The program will involve direct engagement with federal policymakers, ANCA experts and a range of professionals who are involved in matters related to both the Republics of Armenia and Artsakh. The Academy will also benefit from presentations from both those who have worked on issues related to the Armenian Cause for decades and those who are currently working in Washington, DC on contemporary matters. Summer academy participants are also introduced to a wide range of career opportunities on Capitol Hill, international development, advocacy and consulting by accomplished Armenian Americans in each of the areas.

Participants from the 2022 Summer Academy class discussed the academic and community impact of the program. Arev Buchaklian from Wisconsin explained, “I think, in a way, Summer Academy made me more Armenian. I learned things about Armenia, politics, and Artsakh that I have never learned before, and met some very influential people. This is only the beginning of my journey with the ANCA, as I will absolutely be applying to more of their programs in the future.”

Alique Stepanian from Massachusetts explained, “The Summer Academy provided me with such a diverse and fulfilling experience of getting more deeply involved in the Armenian-American political field and the Armenian Cause.”

New York participant Andrew Sarkissian concurred, noting, “Participating at the ANCA summer academy equipped me with the skills necessary to make a real difference to Hai Tahd through the US government.”

Arda Tazian from California concluded, “Being a part of the ANCA Summer Academy in Washington, DC has been an incredible experience. It gave me the opportunity to broaden my horizons and better understand ways to advocate for the Armenian community, while simultaneously bonding with others who share my passion for the Armenian Cause.”

Haroutioun and Elizabeth Kasparian

The ANCA Summer Academy is named in honor of Haroutioun and Elizabeth Kasparian in recognition of their lifetime of selfless service and sacrifice for the Armenian community and cause, through a generous grant by their daughter and son-in-law, Arsho and Adour Aghjayan and grandson Nareg. It is the latest in the series of youth empowerment and career development programs including the Leo Sarkisian Internship Program, Hovig Apo Saghdejian Capital Gateway Program, Maral Melkonian Avetisyan Fellowship, and the ANCA Rising Leaders Program – which features the Lucine Kouchakdjian Capitol Hill Day.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots organization. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters and supporters throughout the United States and affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/10/2023

                                        Wednesday, 


Armenian Opposition Activist Acquitted Of Assault Charge

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Riot police clash with opposition protesters in Yerevan, June 3, 2022.


An Armenian court on Wednesday acquitted a well-known opposition supporter of 
assaulting a police officer during last year’s anti-government protests in 
Yerevan.

The 37-year-old Igor Khachaturov actively participated in daily demonstrations 
which Armenia’s main opposition groups began last May to demand Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian’s resignation over his readiness to make sweeping concessions to 
Azerbaijan. The protests, which lasted for nearly two months, were marred by 
several clashes between riot police and opposition supporters.

Khachaturov was arrested during one of those incidents and spent two months in 
pre-trial detention. He strongly denied assault charges brought against him 
before and during his trial.

The judge presiding over the trial, Tatevik Grigorian, found him not guilty in a 
ruling hailed by opposition leaders. One of them, Artsvik Minasian, said that 
prosecutors failed to present any evidence in support of the accusations based 
on incriminating testimony given by a single policeman.

The Office of the Prosecutor-General said it will decide whether or not to 
appeal against the verdict after receiving a copy of its full text from the 
court.

Khachaturov is one of more than 50 opposition protesters who were charged with 
resisting or assaulting riot police last year. Only he has been acquitted by 
court so far.

By contrast, no police officers were prosecuted for using excessive force 
against protesters even though about 60 oppositionists were formally recognized 
by investigators as “victims” of police violence. Videos posted on social media 
showed policemen punching protesters as the latter were dragged away and 
arrested by other officers.

Igor Khachaturov’s father Yuri was the chief of the Armenian army’s General 
Staff from 2008-2016. He served as secretary general of the Russian-led 
Collective Security Treaty Organization when the current Armenian authorities 
indicted him as well as former President Robert Kocharian in 2018 over their 
alleged role in a 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan. Armenia’s Constitutional 
Court declared charges brought against them unconstitutional in 2021.

Yuri Khachaturov’s elder son Grigori is also an army general. He was arrested in 
March this year on charges of money laundering denied by him.

Grigori Khachaturov was among four dozen high-ranking military officers who 
accused Pashinian’s government of incompetence and misrule and demanded its 
resignation in February 2021. The unprecedented demand was welcomed by the 
Armenian opposition but condemned as a coup attempt by Pashinian.




Medical Evacuations From Karabakh Halted Due To Azeri Checkpoint

        • Susan Badalian

Nagorno-Karabakh - A convoy of Red Cross vehicles is seen outside Stepanakert, 
January 4, 2023.


The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) confirmed on Wednesday that 
it had to stop evacuating critically ill patients from Nagorno-Karabakh to 
Armenia shortly after Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor late 
last month.

The ICRC has transported scores of such persons to Armenian hospitals since Baku 
effectively blocked Karabakh’s land link with Armenia in December. Only Red 
Cross vehicles as well as convoys of Russian peacekeepers were able to pass 
through the road.

Eteri Musayelian, a spokeswoman for the ICRC office in Stepanakert, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that the medical evacuations were suspended on April 
29 due to the “new situation” created by the Azerbaijani checkpoint.

“In this new situation, we need to understand whether the terms remain the same 
and whether they are acceptable to all,” explained Musayelian.

“We are now negotiating with all decision-makers because there need to be 
agreements acceptable to all sides so that we can continue our humanitarian 
mission as a neutral humanitarian organization,” she said without disclosing any 
details of those negotiations.

Artak Beglarian, a Karabakh official stranded in Yerevan because of the 
blockade, said Azerbaijan’s “dictatorial regime” blocked the evacuations and is 
now trying to impose passport controls on Karabakh patients and Red Cross staff 
passing through the Lachin corridor.

“30 patients waiting for transfer [to Armenia,]” Beglarian wrote on Twitter.

They include Karo, a 10-year-old Karabakh Armenian boy suffering from multiple 
illnesses. According to his mother, Narine Danielian, Karo was due to be 
transported to Armenia for urgent medical treatment on May 2 along with four 
other children.

“Every minute is really critical for their life,” said Danielian.

Azerbaijan claims that its checkpoint was set up to stop the transfer of weapons 
from Armenia to Karabakh.

The Armenian side has strongly denied any arms supplies and accused Baku of 
another gross violation of a Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the 2020 
Armenian-Azerbaijani war. Russia and the United States have also criticized 
Baku’s move.




Baku Also Reports Progress In Peace Talks With Yerevan


U.S. - US Secretary of State Sec Antony Blinken hosts talks between the Armenian 
and Azerbaijani foreign ministers, May 1, 2023.


Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said on Wednesday that he and his 
Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan made progress towards a peace treaty 
between their nations during four-day negotiations held outside Washington last 
week.

“It cannot be said that we fully reached an agreement as there are quite a lot 
of differences between the positions of the parties,” he told reporters. “But 
some points of the peace treaty were agreed upon in those negotiations. We took 
a step forward.”

Bayramov did not shed light on those points.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who attended the opening and closing 
sessions of the talks, likewise reported “tangible progress” made by Bayramov 
and Mirzoyan. A U.S. State Department spokesman, Vedant Patel, said on Monday 
that the two ministers “agreed in principle to certain terms” of the peace deal 
discussed by them.

“We believe that with additional goodwill and flexibility and compromise an 
agreement is within reach,” Patel said, echoing Blinken’s earlier comments.

The secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigorian, cautioned on 
Tuesday that the conflicting sides still disagree on key terms of the would-be 
treaty. He said those relate to Azerbaijani recognition of Armenia’s existing 
borders, an internationally supervised dialogue between Baku and Karabakh’s 
leadership as well as “international guarantees” for the sides’ compliance with 
their peace accord.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
are scheduled to meet in Brussels this Sunday in a bid to build on the apparent 
progress in the peace process.

Bayramov stressed the importance of the upcoming summit. He suggested that it 
could pave the way for a deal sought by Baku.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service later on Wednesday 
that Bayramov and Mirzoyan will meet in Moscow on May 19 for further talks that 
will be hosted by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Czech Republic supports Armenia’s efforts for peace – PM Fiala

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 16:17, 4 May 2023

PRAGUE, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. The Czech Republic supports Armenia’s efforts aimed at a peaceful solution, Czech PM Petr Fiala said during a joint press conference with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan when asked by a reporter why the government of the Czech Republic isn’t taking actions and sanctioning Azerbaijan for blocking the Lachin Corridor.

“We must continue taking steps which will lead to a peaceful resolution. We’ve created an opportunity for that in Prague, we support Armenia’s efforts aimed at a peaceful resolution,” Fiala said.

“We’ve expressed concern over the humanitarian situation in NK, which is due to the blockade of the Lachin Corridor. The EU released a statement. And we support  this statement. It calls for ensuring security, freedom and safety of movement of the NK residents,” PM Fiala said.

He praised the Armenian Prime Minister’s efforts for peace and said that he can expect support from EU members.

“The common goal of the Czech Republic and EU member states is to achieve stability and lasting peace in the region, which means to guarantee the rights of Armenia, of Armenians. This is important,” Fiala added.

Armenia again calls for international fact-finding mission to Lachin Corridor and Nagorno Karabakh

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 16:27, 4 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has emphasized the Czech Republic’s support for the EU’s decision on deploying a long-term monitoring mission to the border with Azerbaijan.

Speaking at a joint press conference with his Czech counterpart Petr Fiala, PM Pashinyan said that during their meeting he presented the regional situation and the security issues. Pashinyan said that he noted that despite all efforts the situation remains tense.

“This is because Azerbaijan continues its policy of using force and the threat of force despite all well-known agreements, constantly escalating the situation on the border with Armenia, in Nagorno Karabakh and in Lachin Corridor,” Pashinyan said.

PM Pashinyan called on the international community to give a targeted and clear assessment to the situation, especially because Azerbaijan’s current actions are preparations for ethnic cleansing against the Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh.

Pashinyan said it is necessary to ensure access of an international fact-finding mission to Nagorno Karabakh and Lachin Corridor.

Despite all difficulties, the Armenian government adopted the peace agenda, Pashinyan added.

“We believe that there is no alternative to peace in our region. We are fully engaged in the negotiations process with Azerbaijan and we will continue to be engaged in the future, with the goal of achieving results and not simply negotiating for the sake of negotiations. In order to achieve this goal we hope that Azerbaijan will abandon its policy of using force and the threat of force,” Pashinyan said.

It was not an easy decision to invite the EU monitoring mission to Armenia. Pashinyan

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 20:45, 4 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is interested in deepening cooperation with the European Union, ARMENPRESS reports, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan announced during "Armenia's democracy in the troubled region: Security and stability needs" discussion held at the Prague Center for Transatlantic Relations, addressing the issue of cooperation with the EU.

"Armenia is generally in a very delicate situation. We are under siege. There are many doubts about Armenia. Many in the West think that we are a Russian proxy country and government. Many in the East think that we are a pro-Western government with pro-Western policies," Pashinyan said.

The Prime Minister mentioned that some of Armenia's neighbors are lobbying for those two positions, they go to the West, saying that Armenia is a close ally of Russia and that whatever they do against Russia, they should also do against Armenia, the next day they fly to Moscow and say that the Prime Minister of Armenia cooperates very closely with the EU, is implementing an agenda of democratic reforms, and that the Prime Minister of Armenia is diverting Armenia from the East to West.

"We act as transparently as possible and, of course, we are interested in deepening our cooperation with the EU. And to be honest, inviting an EU monitoring mission to Armenia was not an easy decision, because it does not provide any security guarantee, on the one hand, it can cause new challenges, and on the other hand, it is very important for us to stay focused in order to maintain international attention towards our region." said the Prime Minister.

Pashinyan noted that after the events in Ukraine, international attention was almost completely focused on Ukraine. And it creates risks of instability in the South Caucasus region.

Is Armenia Sliding Toward Authoritarianism?

Political persecution, human rights violations, spying on opposition figures, and other instances of illiberal behavior should worry observers of the country.

by Aleksandar Srbinovski

Despite high expectations following the Velvet Revolution of 2018 that overthrew the regime of ex-President Serzh Sargsyan, the democratic landscape of Armenia has remained bleak in recent years. The current government of the country is steadily backsliding towards non-democratic governance, and perhaps even authoritarianism.

Of special concern has been the persecution of political activists and journalists, as reflected in the annual reports of a number of NGOs specialized in evaluating the functioning of democratic institutions. Reports about Armenia’s democratic environment also include human rights violations, the persecution of political activists and members of LGBTQ+ community, as well as instances of domestic violence.

For instance, Freedom House, in its most recent annual report, downgraded its assessment of political rights and civil liberties in Armenia. The report revealed that large-scale measures were being taken against political dissidents, journalists, and human rights activists by the country’s authorities.

Moreover, in its report last May, Google’s Threat Analysis Group revealed the unlawful use by “government-backed actors” of spyware called Predator, created by the North Macedonian company Cytrox. The software had been used to target journalists, dissidents, and human rights activists in the country, with local media outlets reporting that the electronic devices of several Armenian opposition politicians have been hacked. Yet Predator is not the only spyware being used; an Armenian opposition leader Artur Vanetsyan once claimed that the Pegasus spyware had been installed on his phones in 2021. Despite the claim and the following scandal, the use of Pegasus against Armenian journalists and opposition figures has apparently not been discontinued. According to a study conducted by social media specialists in Armenia in November 2022, Pegasus may still monitor the key opposition and media personalities.

The worrying developments do not stop with such spying. It is apparent that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has also begun persecuting members of the previous government he overthrew. For instance, two former defense ministers have been arrested on what have been described as politically-motivated charges. Former Defence Minister Seyran Ohanyan, who served from 2008 to 2016, was arrested in 2020 on charges of embezzling over $2 million in state funds. The same charge was also brought against another former defense minister, David Tonoyan, who was detained in 2021.

The ex-minister Tonoyan, two other generals, and an arms dealer were arrested by the National Security Service (NSS) in September 2021 as part of a criminal investigation into the supplying of an allegedly outdated missile to Armenia’s armed forces. However, experts believe the arrest of Tonoyan had a political motivation—he was simply made a scapegoat for Armenia’s defeat in the six-week war with neighboring Azerbaijan in 2020. Having served as the defense minister between 2018 and 2020, Tonoyan resigned a week after his country’s capitulation in the war over Karabakh but obviously could not escape the persecution. It’s worth noting that Tonoyan, contrary to what one would assume, defended Pashinyan’s signing of the trilateral statement of November 2020 that ended the war. “Despite the fact that the Armenian Armed Forces, the entire system of the Ministry of Defense and the government did their best to be successful, calling the agreement reached to end the Karabakh war a ‘betrayal’ or ‘defeat’ is an insult,” he said in response to criticism voiced following Armenia’s signing of the deal.

The political persecution does not stop there; members of the country’s political opposition have been targeted, namely Dashnaktsutyun (Armenian Revolutionary Federation) party members. Artavazd Margaryan, head of Dashnaktsutyun faction in the Council of Elders (the municipality council) of Artashat, was detained for seventy-two hours along with the party’s activist Gerasim Vardanyan in January this year. The arrest was mocked by Margaryan’s lawyer, who posted on social media: “The detention is obviously illegal; it is devoid of any logic. You won’t believe it, but Margaryan had such charges only because he has a phone.”

Some arrests may end up in a tragedy, as was in the case of Armen Grigorian. A notable opposition personality, Grigorian fainted in court and later passed away in the summer 2022. He was put in pre-trial custody for two months, despite committing no crimes and despite lawyer and family concerns about his health. As each day went by, his immune system got worse.

Rapid Political Change

What is perhaps most surprising is how fast Armenia’s trajectory from budding democracy towards increasing illiberalism occurred. After the ruling government won the snap elections in the summer of 2021, things began to shift quickly. The government resumed its interrupted task of finding “the enemies of the people”—a process evocative of Stalin-era purges—with increased speed after receiving what Prime Minister Pashinyan calls a “steel mandate” from his people following the 2020 war. The representatives of the Armenian diaspora communities living in various countries around the world were one of the initial targets in this fight. For instance, the authorities in Yerevan refused to let Mourad Papazian, the chairman of an Armenian diaspora organization in France, enter the country in July 2022. Papazian, who has never committed a crime, was solely prohibited from entering Armenia due to his alleged involvement in anti-Pashinyan protests in Paris in 2021.

Pashinyan’s blacklist does not stop with Papazian. At Zvartnots airport on August 1, Armenian security personnel approached two Dutch-Armenians, Massis Abrahamian and Suneh Abrahamian, and informed them that they had been designated persona non grata in Armenia. Similar to Papazian, these two diaspora activists were prohibited from entering the country because they spoke out against Armenia’s current government.

Also notable is how quickly religious freedoms have also been declining in the country. In 2020, the NSS launched an investigation into Sashik Sultanyan, the chairperson of the Yezidi Center for Human Rights, after the latter publicly stated that Armenia’s Yazidi community was facing discrimination. Despite the criticism by international human rights NGOs, Sultanyan’s trial was in progress as of late 2022. If convicted, the activist will face six years in prison on the charge of being a part of an “anti-state” conspiracy.

Likewise worth mentioning is the deteriorating condition of media freedom as well. According to the Resource Center on Media Freedom in Europe, media freedom remains restricted in Armenia, “among threats of violence, strong political inferences, and expensive defamation lawsuits.” An Armenian-based NGO, the Committee to Protect Freedom of _expression_, has recorded fifteen cases of journalists experiencing physical violence between January and September 2022. Moreover, most print and broadcast outlets are affiliated with political or larger commercial interests.

Despite earlier promises during and after the 2018 Velvet Revolution that brought Nikol Pashinyan and his team to power, and even the 2021 snap elections during which the war-torn society gave another chance to the incumbent government after the devastating defeat in the conflict against Azerbaijan, the political climate in Armenia has been changing, unfortunately in the negative direction. As one Armenian expert expresses, the country`s leader “has turned hatred into a principle of governance and lies into a form of governing.”

Aleksandar Srbinovski is a journalist with over fifteen years of experience working in print and online media. He has worked for Nova Makedonija, Newsweek, Europa, Blic, Politika, ABC News, Vecher, TV Sitel, and Skok. He holds a BA in journalism from the Saints Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje and has pursued continued training with the University of Oklahoma.

Image: Shutterstock.

https://nationalinterest.org/feature/armenia-sliding-toward-authoritarianism-206438


Blockaded Artsakh honors Genocide martyrs in annual march

Stepanakert,

STEPANAKERT — “Remember the past. Protect the future.” This was the slogan of the torchlit march organized by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Youth Office of Artsakh on the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in Stepanakert, in memory of the more than 1.5 million innocent victims.

After the commemoration ceremony performed by Father Minas Movsisyan of St. Hakob Church, participants of the march moved from the church to the Zangakatun memorial built in memory of the Armenian Genocide victims of Stepanakert.

Artsakh’s Minister of Education, Science, Culture, and Sport Norayr Mkrtchyan noted in his speech that the hearts of the Artsakh people who pay their respects to the memory of the Genocide are beating in harmony with the Armenians who are suffering from the Genocide in the four corners of the world.

“We must declare the days of remembrance of our innocent victims as a result of crimes committed against Armenians at all times as days of national revenge and retribution. The souls of innocent victims are crying out for revenge, for justice, for national dignity, for the lost homeland, life and future generations,” said Mkrtchyan.

The torchlight procession, which has become an annual event, has a special meaning this year, as it is the fifth month of Azerbaijan’s ongoing blockade of Artsakh. Even today, after 108 years, the people of Artsakh are facing the threat of ethnic cleansing and genocide.

“On the 108th anniversary of the Genocide and the 133rd day of the siege of Artsakh, this commemorative march is also a wake-up call for humanity to prevent a new Armenian Genocide,” said ARF Artsakh Youth member Ani Hovhannisyan in her comments to the Weekly. “The purpose of the inhumane actions of Azerbaijan in the brutal 2020 war, the murders or deportations of thousands of Armenians, the cultural upheaval in the occupied territories of Artsakh is another attempt to destroy Armenians, deprive them of their homeland and take away our homeland from us.” 

The people of Artsakh strongly believe that we must remember the painful pages of our past, learn from it and protect our future, because indifference and inaction endanger the existence of the Armenian nation.

Stepanakert,

Siranush Sargsyan is a freelance journalist based in Stepanakert.


Parliament vice-speaker: Armenia stated that Karabakh’s right to self-determination is limited by Azerbaijan’s wish

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Armenia –

By accepting the Madrid Principles, Armenia has, in fact, declared that Artsakh's (Nagorno-Karabakh) right to self-determination is limited by the wish of Azerbaijan. Ruben Rubinyan, deputy speaker of the National Assembly (NA) of Armenia, stated this on Friday, during the debates on the report on the implementation and results of the 2022 program of the 2021-2026 program of the Armenian government at the special session of the NA, commenting on the speeches of the opposition MPs.

"I want to understand why you did not recognize the Republic of Artsakh when you were in power," said the deputy speaker of the parliament, addressing his opponents.

And commenting on the statement of opposition MP Artur Khachatryan that the right to self-determination cannot be curtailed, Rubinyan suggested returning to history and its chronological order.

"In 1991, a referendum was held in Artsakh. According to the results of the referendum, the people of Artsakh voted in favor of declaring Nagorno-Karabakh an independent republic. Can we consider that an act of self-determination? Yes. And now a question: Why did Armenia not recognize the self-determination act of Artsakh? Until now, under no authorities of Armenia, Armenia has not recognized Artsakh as an independent republic. The problem is that we are entangled in our own terminology," said the NA deputy speaker.

Rubinyan, however, did not address the question of why the incumbent Armenian authorities did not recognize the independence of Artsakh after their predecessors.

Armenian school students get exclusive chance to speak with Shenzhou 15 crew

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 13:22,

YEREVAN, APRIL 20, ARMENPRESS. A group of school students in Armenia were given the opportunity to speak with the crew of Shenzhou 15, the Chinese spaceflight that launched on 29 November 2022.

China’s Ambassador to Armenia Fan Yong said that this event – first of its kind organized in Armenia – is a very good chance for Armenian young people to get to know China’s achievements in space.

“Because Armenia and China are very good partners and friends, we try to share our experience of development with Armenia. I think this is a very good chance to spark interest for space among Armenian young people, which will then develop the country. The development of astronautics played a big role in China’s path of development,” the Ambassador said.

“I think the knowledge in this sector is highly important for Armenia because Armenia has also launched a satellite into space,” he added.

Deputy Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport Artur Martirosyan said the event is a sign of the friendship between Armenia and the People’s Republic of China.

“Around 60 children are participating in this online dialogue. I am sure that this will be a very good opportunity for them to choose a future profession,” he said.

Students from 14 other countries from the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation were also participating in the video conference with the crew of the Shenzhou 15 .

The students got to know the activities of the crew, their daily routine and work.