Armenian Parliament speaker ‘apologises’ for spitting on ARF member


April 7 2023


 7 April 2023

Armenian parliamentary speaker Alen Simonyan has apologised for spitting at a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) in central Yerevan.

Simonyan spat on Garen Megerdichian after the latter called him a ‘traitor’ on Sunday.

On Thursday, Simonyan wrote an apology post on Facebook after facing calls to resign.

‘I'm sorry I got out of line’, read Simonyan’s post. ‘Indeed, democracy implies that an official must and can be criticised, and why not? Provocations could also take place. We must not give in to them’.

‘I want to apologise to all CITIZENS of the Republic of Armenia’, Simonyan wrote.

Megerdichian, who does not hold Armenian citizenship, is not mentioned in the post.

Megerdichian claimed that Simonyan ordered his guards to overpower him and then spat in his face in a popular dining area in central Yerevan.

Many in Armenia criticised Simonyan’s behaviour, including the country’s first president, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, who demanded that the ruling party sack the parliamentary speaker. 

However, members of the ruling Civil Contract party have ruled out firing Simonyan.

The Union of Informed Citizens, a civil society organisation, filed a criminal report about the incident to the Prosecutor’s Office, however, they have yet to respond to or comment on the complaint.

Daniel Ioannisyan, the group’s programme director, told RFE/RL that Simonyan’s actions could be described as ‘hooliganism’ under Armenia’s criminal code.

In 2021, Armenia’s then–Minister of High Tech Industry, Hakob Arshakyan, was caught on camera punching a journalist in the face in a cafe in central Yerevan. Arshakyan has since been appointed deputy speaker of parliament.


Armenia Says Preparing To Possibly Open Land Transit Route On Border With Turkey

April 6 2023

 (@ChaudhryMAli88) 

The Armenian authorities are preparing for a possible opening of the land border with Turkey for citizens of third countries in accordance with a prior agreement on the issue, Rustam Badasyan, the head of the Armenian State Revenue Committee, said on Thursday

YEREVAN (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 06th April, 2023) The Armenian authorities are preparing for a possible opening of the land border with Turkey for citizens of third countries in accordance with a prior agreement on the issue, Rustam Badasyan, the head of the Armenian State Revenue Committee, said on Thursday.

In March, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said that Yerevan and Ankara had reaffirmed their readiness to open the land border for citizens of third countries and people with diplomatic passports by the start of the 2023 tourist season.

"You know about the adopted decision and ongoing talks as regards citizens of third countries and those who possess diplomatic passports. Together with other government departments we are now getting prepared so that the border checkpoint (with Turkey) could start working as soon as possible if such a decision is taken," Badasyan told journalists.

In July, the two countries agreed to open the land border for the movement of citizens of third countries and decided to initiate the necessary process on the matter, following a meeting of the special representatives of Turkey and Armenia on the process of normalization of relations in Vienna.

Turkey and Armenia currently do not have official diplomatic relations. The border between the two countries has been closed on Ankara's initiative since 1993. Tensions between the nations arose over a range of issues, including Turkey's support for Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue and its opposition to the process of international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Empire.

Bittersweet Easter for Turkish city’s dwindling Armenian community

April 10 2023

The aroma of corek, a spiced bun the Armenian community makes for Easter, is once again wafting through the streets of Diyarbakir in southeast Turkey.

For the first time in eight years, Armenians were able to celebrate Easter Sunday mass at their church in the city after it was badly damaged during clashes between the Turkish army and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in 2015-16.

The small community was left without a place to meet — but the Surp Giragos Armenian Church has recently been restored and is now open again.

"We haven't had this chance for a long time. Today we are happy as a community," said Gaffur Ohannes Turkay, a member of the foundation that runs the church.

But it was also a "bitter celebration". 

"Nothing is the same as before," he said.

However, earlier restoration of the church in 2011 had helped rebuild the city's Armenian community that many feared lost after the massacres of 1915, followed by discrimination and violence into the 1980s that saw many move to Istanbul or migrate to Europe.

Ankara refuses to recognise the 1915-16 killings of more than a million Armenians as genocide.

Named the unfaithful quarter by Muslims after the once majority Christian population, Sur was known for modest means, narrow streets and old homes built of basalt, the black volcanic rock on which much of the city was constructed.

Much of Sur too had been left in ruins by the fighting, but was quickly rebuilt. Today broad avenues run through the district, lined with villas and swanky new shops, adjacent to the remains of what was once the old town.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has for years supported the construction sector as a pillar of his economic policy to strengthen Turkey, with gentrification often sidelining cultural heritage.

Once an integral part of the Ottoman Empire's multifaceted society, only 60,000 ethnic Armenians are still believed to live in modern Turkey.

– Gentrification –

"Today there are 50 to 60 people who are officially in Diyarbakir's Armenian community," said Turkay.

"But many more people come to the festivals and services because there are a lot of Islamised Armenians in this region."

He himself is from a family which converted to Islam to survive the genocide.

The church has now taken on a new role as a rare place where people can rediscover traces of the old Diyarbakir.

While the locals snub the reconstructed areas in the old town, the church garden, which also boasts a cafe, is always full.

"In this quarter, I only come here. I refuse to go any further, it's painful to see the place like this," said Irfan, a regular at the garden cafe.

"We boycott the other places. But here it's different," added Hikmet, another cafe-goer.

"The church represents a link to the lost Diyarbakir and that goes for all the inhabitants, Christians or Muslims," said Silva Ozyerli, an Armenian from Diyarbakir who travelled from Istanbul to celebrate Easter.

"We can breathe here," she said, admitting: "I avoid the reconstructed areas because I want to preserve the memory of the quarter where I spent my childhood."

Few expect that even a change in president at the May 14 election could lead to the quarter undergoing a renovation true to its cultural heritage.

"Easter means resurrection, rebirth. I want to hold on to hope, but getting back the old quarter seems impossible," said Ozyerli.

"Today I thank God for at least preserving our church."

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AW: Literary Lights to feature We Are All Armenian in virtual event

The International Armenian Literary Alliance (IALA), the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) and the Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center continue their reading series, Literary Lights, with another virtual event, featuring Aram Mrjoian, editor of We Are All Armenian, who will be joined by contributors, Kohar Avakian, Chris McCormick and J.P. Der Boghossian. The event will take place on Zoom on April 29, 2023 at 1 p.m. EST. Registration is required.

We Are All Armenian is a groundbreaking collection of personal essays–by established and emerging Armenian voices–exploring the multilayered realities of life in the Armenian diaspora. Anthology contributors include Liana Aghajanian, Naira Kuzmich, Sophia Armen, Nancy Kricorian, Olivia Katrandjian, Nancy Agabian, Chris Bohjalian, Aline Ohanesian, Raffi Joe Wartanian, Anna Gazmarian, Raffy Boudjikanian, Hrag Vartanian, Mashinka Firunts Hakopian, Carene Rose Mekertichyan and Scout Tufankjian.

Literary Lights is a monthly reading series, held from February to November in a mixed online and in-person format, featuring new works of literature by Armenian authors. Audience members are invited to read along with the series.

The International Armenian Literary Alliance is a nonprofit organization launched in 2021 that supports and celebrates writers by fostering the development and distribution of Armenian literature in the English language. A network of Armenian writers and their champions, IALA gives Armenian writers a voice in the literary world through creative, professional, and scholarly advocacy.


Ruling party doesn’t consider sacking Speaker of Parliament

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 15:18, 6 April 2023

YEREVAN, APRIL 6, ARMENPRESS. The ruling Civil Contract party doesn’t consider sacking Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan, the Chairman of the Parliamentary Committee on Foreign Relations MP Sargis Khandanyan (Civil Contract) said Thursday.

“No such issue was discussed neither within the Civil Contract party nor the faction. The National Assembly elected a Speaker in August of 2021 and he continues fulfilling his duties, and there’s no other discussion in our faction. No such issue exists in our agenda and I don’t think there’s a need for that,” Khandanyan said.

Speaker Alen Simonyan is accused of spitting at an opposition heckler in downtown Yerevan for calling him a “traitor”.

Former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan described Simonyan’s alleged actions as “unforgivable” and demanded his ouster.

United States tells citizens to leave Russia immediately

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 14:18, 31 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 31, ARMENPRESS. Washington has called upon Americans who are traveling to or residing in Russia to leave the country “immediately” in the aftermath of the arrest of Wall Street Journal (WSJ) correspondent Evan Gershkovich.

“We are deeply concerned by the troubling reports that Evan Gershkovich, an American citizen, has been detained in Russia,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said in a statement. “Last night, White House and State Department Officials spoke with Mr. Gershkovich’s employer, the Wall Street Journal. The Administration has also been in contact with his family. Furthermore, the State Department has been in direct touch with the Russian government on this matter, including actively working to secure consular access to Mr. Gershkovich. The targeting of American citizens by the Russian government is unacceptable. We condemn the detention of Mr. Gershkovich in the strongest terms. We also condemn the Russian government’s continued targeting and repression of journalists and freedom of the press.I want to strongly reiterate that Americans should heed the U.S. government’s warning to not travel to Russia. U.S. citizens residing or traveling in Russia should depart immediately, as the State Department continues to advise.”

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Washington was “deeply concerned” about the development, adding that “in the strongest possible terms, we condemn the Kremlin’s continued attempts to intimidate, repress, and punish journalists and civil society voices.”

“We reiterate our strong warnings about the danger posed to US citizens inside the Russian Federation. US citizens residing or traveling in Russia should depart immediately,” the top diplomat said in a statement.

Gershkovich, a WSJ correspondent who covers news from Russia, Ukraine, and the former USSR, was detained in the city of Yekaterinburg on suspicion of espionage, Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) announced earlier on March 30. RT cited Dmitry Peskov as saying the journalist was caught “red-handed” while trying to obtain Russian state secrets.

Tech-oriented Armenia could be lucrative market for Israel

Times of Israel
March 30 2023

YEREVAN, Armenia —After 30 years of bilateral diplomatic relations, Azerbaijan—a predominantly Muslim nation that uses its vast oil wealth to buy Israeli drones and other weaponry—on Wednesday formally established its embassy in Tel Aviv.

Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen and his counterpart from Baku, Jeyhun Bayramov, led the opening ceremony, with Bayramov highlighting their strong relationship built on “dialogue and mutual understanding.”

Yet with far less fanfare, the Jewish state is also quietly restoring its political and economic ties with Azerbaijan’s arch-enemy, Armenia.

Rising interest in this ancient landlocked nation coincides with Armenia’s booming economy, fueled by an influx of software engineers from nearby Russia who are eager to escape deteriorating conditions at home ever since their country invaded Ukraine more than a year ago.

At least 150,000 Russian professionals, and maybe more, have fled here—often with their families in tow—since the war broke out on Feb. 24, 2022. But Russia’s loss is Armenia’s gain. This mountainous, landlocked Caucasus republic of 3 million—an imperfect but lively democracy with an ancient alphabet and a fledgling tech sector—has benefitted handsomely from Russia’s brain drain.

For one thing, the new arrivals have helped push Armenia’s GDP growth to 13% last year, even as it remains mired in a simmering conflict of its own with neighboring Azerbaijan; the last major war between the two ex-Soviet republics erupted in 2020 and killed an estimated 6,000 people on both sides. Meanwhile, Armenian exports to Russia tripled to $2 billion in 2022 compared to a year earlier, and remittances in the other direction quadrupled to $3.2 billion.

“This influx of Russians is a mini-version of what happened in Israel after the Soviet collapse,” said Ashot Arzumanyan, a partner and co-founder at SmartGate VC, a venture capital fund that invests in startups involved in everything from AI and robotics to biotech manufacturing.

“So many scientists and engineers left the USSR and settled in Israel. That set off a very strong wave of talent and initiative,” said Arzumanyan, whose fund is currently seeking $15-30 million from high-net worth individuals, including many in southern California’s large and influential Armenian diaspora. “Something similar is happening in Armenia—lots of really talented people moving here and becoming part of Armenia’s tech scene.”

 

Book: How ‘We Are All Armenian’ collection gives voice to a range of experiences

In “We Are All Armenian: Voices from the Diaspora,” editor Aram Mrjoian collects essays from 18 writers, all of whom have Armenian ancestry, that offer different perspectives on ethnicity and identity. (Photo credit Dustin Pearson / Courtesy of University of Texas Press)

Aram Mrjoian was reading the work of writers who, like him, are of Armenian heritage and noticed something pervasive.

Regardless of the type of story being told, Mrjoian saw writers commenting on the Armenian Genocide and ensuing population displacement. He perceived a “constant demand for context, particularly historic context” within the varied works, though he understood the reason for it. 

“At least in my own experience, that was often an editorial demand coming not from my own writing but from the sense of what editors are looking for,” said the writer, who is an editor-at-large at the Chicago Review of Books and associate fiction editor at Guernica, during a recent phone call. 

With that in mind, Mrjoian wanted to develop a project where Armenian writers didn’t have to explain Armenian history over and over again. And now it’s here: “We Are All Armenian: Voices from the Diaspora,” just published by the University of Texas Press, brings together essays from 18 writers who have Armenian ancestry and offer different perspectives on ethnicity and identity to the collection. 

“All of them understood the assignment right away,” says Mrjoian. “Even though I didn’t give anyone specific subject matter, all the essays came back completely different, which was really exciting.”

While the history of the Armenian Genocide might not be something that always needs to be explained, it’s part of what makes this collection important and necessary, says novelist Chris Bohjalian, author of such books as “The Sandcastle Girls,” “Midwives” and “The Flight Attendant.”

“Of the roughly ten million Armenians on the planet, fewer than 30 percent live in Armenia. Most of us are descendants of survivors of a Genocide who were robbed of everything, including their — our — homeland. We are a diaspora people,” says Bohjalian in an email interview“Moreover, because there are so few of us on the planet, we are a people who live on a tightrope: if we fall too far to one side, we risk assimilation and the loss of our heritage. If we fall to the other, we risk cultural banishment and remain forever the outsiders.”

Explaining why he decided to participate in the project, Bohjalian says this: “I cannot stress enough the demographic cataclysm today of having perhaps as many as three-fourths of our ancestors in the Ottoman Empire exterminated a little over a century ago. Our homeland, including Artsakh, is beleaguered both by the simple fact we are badly outnumbered by nation-states to the east and west that still do not want us to exist, and by the reality that it’s hard to get Western nations to pay attention to us. Try explaining the Lachin corridor linking Artsakh with Armenia to someone in, for instance, Washington, D.C. who cannot even find Armenia on a map or is unaware of the Armenian Genocide.”

Moreover, while Mrjoian was working on the book, a major event brought the historical context into the spotlight. In the fall of 2020, the 44-Day War (or the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War) over the ethnic Armenian enclave of Artsakh mobilized those in the global Armenian diaspora and rekindled calls for wider recognition of the Armenian Genocide. 

“At that time, too, I was putting everything together, writing my introduction, thinking this changes the way I write an introduction,” Mrjoian recalls, “This changes the way that people are going to read these essays.”

Moreover, the struggle didn’t end with a ceasefire. Since December 2022, the Armenians of Artsakh have been living under a blockade, as Azerbaijan closed off the Lachin Corridor, effectively leaving an estimated 120,000 people without access to food, medicine and other essentials. Despite calls from world leaders and international human rights organizations for Azerbaijan to end the blockade, it persisted through the winter and is still ongoing. 

But that’s not all that may change how readers digest these essays. In early February, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake hit portions of Turkey and Syria. The devastation includes regions of both countries that have been historic homes to Armenians and where there are still Armenian populations. 

In his essay, “Going Home Again,” Bohjalian writes of his own travels to Turkey, specifically his ancestral hometown of Kayseri. 

In our email interview, Bohjialian notes that, while he hasn’t heard of much damage to Kayseri as a result of the earthquake, he has previously visited cities that were severely impacted, like Adana, Gaziantep, Diyarbakir and Sanliurfa. 

“Among the small moments of grace in the devastation is this: the restored Armenian church in Diyarbakir, Surp Giragos, has been sheltering homeless earthquake survivors the past few weeks. (It experienced very little damage.),” he writes. “Surp Giragos is among the most beautiful churches I’ve seen anywhere. In January, it was a symbol for people who lost everything in 1915; in February, it became a haven for people who lost everything in 2023.”

Overall, though, the essays within “We Are All Armenian” point to the varied experiences within the diaspora. “Because we’re a global diaspora, we’re all experiencing elements of culture, elements of religion, food, philosophy, language differently in different parts of the world,” says Mrjoian. “It’s not going to look the same. It’s kind of hyper-local.”

And the breadth of experiences — including those who are multiethnic, multiracial and LGBTQ+, as well as those who didn’t grow up embedded in Armenian communities and don’t speak the language — is important to consider. Mrjoian says that he hopes the book might prompt conversations about inclusivity regarding ethnic heritage. 

“You can’t dictate that one person has a right to their heritage and one doesn’t,” says Mrjoian. “I’m hoping that when an audience sees this, they’ll see that it’s really meant to welcome people in and maybe some of the conversations around it might be difficult, but those conversations hopefully help us move forward and progress.”


https://www.ocregister.com/2023/03/29/how-we-are-all-armenian-collection-gives-voice-to-a-range-of-experiences/

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 23-03-23

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 17:08, 23 March 2023

YEREVAN, 23 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 23 March, USD exchange rate up by 0.16 drams to 388.33 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 3.40 drams to 422.31 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.06 drams to 5.10 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.43 drams to 477.37 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 29.28 drams to 24337.83 drams. Silver price down by 1.38 drams to 278.98 drams. Platinum price stood at 16414.1 drams.

INTERVIEW: Ruben Vardanyan, ousted state minister of Nagorno-Karabakh

By Robert Anderson in Prague 

The status of Nagorno-Karabakh must be settled as part of any final peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and this will require a joint effort of Russia and the West in the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), Ruben Vardanyan, the ousted state minister of the unrecognised breakaway Azerbaijan territory, told bne IntelliNews in an interview.

“It needs to be a joint effort of Russia and the West in the UNSC,” the Armenian-born billionaire says. He admits that the “difficult relations” between East and West might obstruct this but says “in spite of differences in other areas [this could be a] good example of common ground”.

There have been indications that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan might be prepared to cut a separate peace deal with Azerbaijan – which has held the upper hand militarily since the 2020 war – and leave the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh to reach its own settlement with Baku. Vardanyan says the two disputes have to be handled as one.

“This has to be one deal,” says Vardanyan. “There are so many inter-connected issues, I don’t see how they can separate this issue.”

He also warns that any attempt by the Yerevan leadership to stop being the protector of Nagorno-Karabakh would be a big political mistake. “I believe it would be the end of their political career if they do the deal with the conditions they now declare,” he says, pointing out that there is a “difference between the Armenian government and prime minister and the Armenian nation” on this.

Pashinyan’s government has long had a frosty relationship with Vardanyan, who was close to the previous Yerevan regime, and it was clearly glad to see the back of him last month. When asked about his relationship with Pashinyan, Vardanyan jokes, “I have no relationship with Pashinyan.”

Putting Azerbaijan under pressure

As a first step, Vardanyan says the involvement of Russia and the West and other powers is necessary to force Azerbaijan to end its three-month blockade of the only road from the breakaway territory to Armenia.

The former state minister says the blockade had created a “really tough” humanitarian situation inside Nagorno-Karabakh. He says the economy had “collapsed” as businesses shut down, construction and agriculture were impossible and electricity, gas and petrol supplies were unreliable, while children couldn’t get a normal education. 

Last month the International Court of Justice ruled that Azerbaijan should reopen the Lachin Corridor to Armenia.

“Azerbaijan has to be put under pressure,” Vardanyan says, adding: “They [Russia and the West] need to come together to make this court decision obligatory on Azerbaijan.”

Vardanyan also argues that the existing mission of 2,000 Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh should be put under a UN mandate, extended for “dozens of years” and increased in size and given heavier weaponry.

There is no way that Nagorno-Karabakh can agree to put itself under the dictatorial rule of [Azerbaijan's President] Ilham Aliyev, he insists. “There is no chance we can live together in one state [with Azerbaijan] but we can live side by side,” he says.

The controversial 54-year-old tycoon – who founded Russian investment bank Troika Dialog in 1991, sold it to Sberbank in 2011 and disposed of the rest of his Russian businesses in 2013 – continues to defend the Russian peacekeepers against criticism that they have deliberately stood by during the Azerbaijani blockade, which is ostensibly being carried out by environmental activists.

“I recommend that everyone who criticises the Russian peacekeepers comes here to live. They are the only ones providing security for us. I don’t see it as wise for us to criticise those providing security for us,” he insists.

His defence of the Russian position in the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict has led to accusations that he is a Russian puppet, a charge he dismisses. “They couldn’t believe someone of my level would come to this place for patriotic reasons,” he says.

Too big a problem

Vardanyan gave up his Russian citizenship in 2022 and moved to Nagorno-Karabakh. Since his dismissal he has remained in the enclave, where he has funded philanthropic activities.

Both Azerbaijan and Armenia were clearly unhappy with his appointment as chief minister in November and were relieved when Nagorno-Karabakh President Arayik Harutiunian dismissed him last month.

Baku had refused to negotiate with him as a representative of the breakaway territory, and face-to-face talks took place the day after he was dismissed. 

Vardanyan says that Harutiunian himself openly admitted that he had come under heavy external pressure to dismiss him, and denies that there are any significant differences between them. “It was too big a problem for him,” he claims.

He also denies that he was an obstacle to a settlement, pointing out that there have been no follow-up talks and the two sides remain as far apart as ever. “If I was the obstruction, nothing changed [afterwards] and so it’s not true,” he says.

The meeting between the two sides showed the “different expectations” and was a “huge misunderstanding”, he argues. “Armenians came to discuss technical issues and Azerbaijan came to talk about the takeover of the country.”

Any talks should only resume under international auspices and under clear legal principles, he argues.

Asked finally whether there could still be a role for him in any peace process, he says, “whatever I am needed for by my country I will do it”.