‘You learn to hide your identity’: being queer in the Armenian army

Aug 8 2023
 8 August 2023

While military service is mandatory in Armenia, the prospect comes with many dangers for queer Armenians. Faced with a system that labels them mentally ill while both denying and mocking their existence, there appears to be no easy way through. 

For Artak Adam, the threat of military service loomed heavy as they approached their 18th birthday. 

Being queer, Artak knew what their options were: being labelled mentally ill on account of their identity and forcibly exempted, being subjected to discrimination and violence within the armed forces, or hiding their identity and living in fear of being outed. 

‘I was exempted from the army as a person with a mental disorder’, Artak states, in the noisy cafe where we agreed to meet.

The 23-year-old queer activist is one of very few people who was willing to discuss the discrimination and violence that young queer Armenians face on their journey to military service, or the way to being exempted from it.

The lack of tolerance towards queer people in Armenia is nothing new. An ILGA-Europe report earlier this year ranked Armenia among the most homophobic countries in Europe, alongside Russia, Turkey, and Azerbaijan. The report noted the lack of tolerance towards queer people, particularly in closed institutions like the army. 

While violence and discrimination against queer people go widely unnoticed by the general public, for queer individuals and the wider community, the consequences can be severe. 

Point 8 of a 2018 decree by the Ministry of Health exempts people with a ‘personality disorder’ from the two-year military service that is mandatory for all Armenian men over the age of 18. It is common knowledge that this label is frequently applied not to those with diagnosed personality disorders, but to queer people. 

While acknowledging that the practice is wrong both legally and ethically, Armenian activists and human rights groups have not fought the rule, as exemption may be the only way to prevent queer young people from facing discrimination and violence in the army. 

However, many want to join the army while concealing their identities; some want to serve their country, while others need the military passports held by current and former serving army members to pursue their chosen careers, for example in the public services or the police. 

But what awaits them in the military is unclear: there are no publicly available statistics on the number of queer people serving in the army or exempted from the army based on their sexual orientation. Statistics about cases of violence and discrimination in the army, both against queer people and in general, are almost impossible to find, as the Defence Ministry keeps a wide range of information secret. 

According to rumours that have neither been definitively proven nor formally dismissed, if queer conscripts come out during their mandatory military service, they are transferred to a separate military unit in Armenia for those considered ‘other’. 

However, these people and those who continue their service in other military units often decide not to speak out against the discrimination they face, so as to avoid scandal or further discrimination. 

Luiza Vardanyan is a lawyer at Pink Armenia, a leading queer rights group. 

Vardanyan says she has reason to believe the rumours of a ‘queer brigade’ in the Armenian army. 

The lack of public information about the unit, and the number of soldiers serving in it, she says prevents human rights organisations from understanding more about the conditions and attitudes that queer people face in the army. 

Vardanyan says that the cases they deal with are from two broad stages — conscription and in the army. 

‘The most common cases [during the conscription process] are discrimination by doctors’, Vardanyan says. ‘The conscripts are asked questions about their sexual life, orientation, and preferences’. 

Cases of maltreatment of queer people are reported even from the psychiatric hospitals where conscripts go to secure army exemption. 

‘There were cases in which conscripts were asked to stay at the hospital overnight or [hospital staff] even tried to keep a person there forcefully’, says Vardanyan. She adds that the psychiatric examination is verbal, making an overnight stay unjustified. 

‘In another case, a trans person approached the military commissariat to collect their military passport after serving as a man, despite identifying as a trans woman, but was rejected and bullied.’

‘They were told the passport could not be given to them as the staff did not understand whether the person was a man or a woman.’ 

The issue was solved with Pink Armenia’s intervention and an appeal to the Ministry of Defence. Vardanyan says the ministry is dealing with such cases based purely as human rights violations, without focusing on the gender perspective. 

In one case, Pink Armenia appealed to a Yerevan court regarding violence against a queer person who faced discrimination based on their sexual identity while serving in the army. 

The court dismissed the case, and in 2022 Pink Armenia appealed to the European Court of Human Rights. 

In the absence of official data or public statements, the only way for both Pink Armenia and other human rights organisations to gain insight into the treatment of queer people in the army is when victims of discrimination approach them for assistance. 

Their attempts to help do not always succeed. Vardanyan says that in one case, a former soldier approached them about being sexually assaulted within the army during the 2020 Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. They later broke off contact.

Artak was born in a small town in eastern Armenia. They knew that undergoing mandatory medical examinations for the army in a small town ‘where everyone knows everyone’ was set to trigger scandal and abuse towards both Artak and their family, so decided to undergo the examinations in Yerevan. 

Medical examinations of conscripts start a few years before the beginning of military service. Throughout this time, they are required to pass through a number of procedures aimed at revealing any issues that could potentially compromise their military service, including having a ‘non-traditional’ sexual orientation. 

Artak says that their family was relatively supportive, which helped a lot. 

‘I have a paradoxical dad, though’, says Artak, smiling. While he was occasionally violent against members of the family, Artak says he also had ‘the best conversations’ with him about their sexuality. 

However, family issues and Artak’s father’s behaviour had severe psychological consequences, and he says he found it hard to communicate with ‘traditional, patriarchal Armenian men’. 

‘I could not imagine how I was supposed to talk with the boys [in the army], how I was going to eat at the same table with them. I thought they would mock me… they would rape me’, Artak says.

Artak Adam. Courtesy photo.

Artak says that such deeply-ingrained homophobia is also common in other institutions, like prisons. 

‘In closed institutions, being an LGBT person is not a question of orientation but a status’, they say, adding that even slightly ‘feminine’ men become targets of discrimination.

Artak says they knew from the outset that they did not want to join the army; their manners, the way they spoke, or any details about their identity were liable to make them a victim of discrimination and violence. 

They decided, at 18 years old, that their best tactic was to ‘not look weak’ in front of their potential harassers. 

The decision worked, they say. According to the activist, their ties with Armenian NGOs and lawyers, and their ‘threats’ to make things public helped minimise the mockery and harassment they experienced. 

‘I even told the doctors I was going to open an NGO that would work specifically with conscripts and protect their rights’, Artak says. 

‘I did [later]. But I don’t know why I said it at the time’,  the activist said, smiling. 

After Artak’s lawyer got involved, staff at the commissariat became significantly more respectful. 

‘They started using the right terms with me, treating me well’, Artak says. They say it is ‘worth mentioning’, as it demonstrates that the institutions are capable of treating queer people well. 

‘But the problem is’, the activist says, ‘that they usually think of LGBTQ people as “second class” people. They treat us like they’d treat a murderer’. 

Artak’s experience of medical examination was free of physical violence, but did involve psychological mistreatment. 

Refusing to talk with them behind closed doors, doctors forced the 18-year-old Artak to talk about their sexual identity while the door remained open, allowing other conscripts to look and listen in from the corridor. 

‘They probably thought they’d get infected if the door was closed’, Artak says, only half joking. 

Their story was not unique among queer conscripts. 

A 2022 report by DiverCity, the queer and feminist civil society organisation that Artak had promised to create, recorded a number of cases in which queer conscripts were made fun of or forced to talk about their sex lives while others listened in, putting them at risk of abuse and bullying after leaving the examination room. 

‘I was asked if I was active or passive when having sex’, one of the queer people interviewed by DiverCity said. ‘I was instructed to get my hormones examined. […] My mother forced me to undergo hormone therapy for about 8 months: I was injected with male hormones’. 

The bullying against Artak continued on the final examination. The head of the commissariat made homophobic remarks about the colourful clothing Artak was wearing, accusing them of wearing such clothes as a ‘deliberate provocation’. 

‘It was clear from the very first moment that you have lived your life in your own world for eighteen years, and now you are in a place where they treat you like an object’, says Davit (not his real name) from Yerevan about his time in the army. 

‘And it’s not just about me’. 

While Davit hid his sexuality for the two years he spent in the army, he witnessed the responses that queer men faced when outed. He says the defining themes of his time in the army were fear and caution, as he had to hide everything that defined him: his voice, manners, and things he liked to talk about. 

The reason was clear: if outed, his life would never be the same. 

A queer soldier serving alongside Davit who was also trying to hide his identity was exposed by other soldiers shortly after his conscription. 

‘The next day, the whole unit was gathered to witness [his humiliation]. […] The head of the unit called the soldier names, insulting and cursing him’, Davit recalls. ‘There were around 1,200 soldiers there’.

Shortly afterwards, he was discharged from the army after being sent to a psychiatric hospital. 

‘His life was split into two parts’. 

Davit says it was unpleasant being in such an environment, especially in the period following the incident. ‘It’s like they wanted to show their dominance; masculinity’. 

‘You are afraid… It doesn’t matter if that happened to you or someone else or what was the reason. The jokes, the bullying […] It makes you feel terrible’.

‘You learn to hide your identity. You learn to be more cautious and attentive’.

Davit, now 27, says it’s not only in the army that he has had to hide his identity; Armenian society is not much more welcoming. 

Not allowing queer men into the army is not a solution, Davit says, suggesting that the answer lies instead in changing mindsets and educating people. 

‘There are [queer] people who really want to serve in the army. They need to be given the chance.’, 

https://oc-media.org/features/you-learn-to-hide-your-identity-being-queer-in-the-armenian-army/

Armenpress: UN experts urge Azerbaijan to lift Lachin corridor blockade and end humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh

 23:21, 7 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 7, ARMENPRESS. A group of UN experts today expressed alarm over the ongoing blockade of the Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan, which has led to a dire humanitarian crisis in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The blockade, obstructing the sole road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia for the past seven months, has left the population facing acute shortages of food staples, medication, and hygiene products, impacted the functioning of medical and educational institutions, and placed the lives of the residents – especially children, persons with disabilities, older persons, pregnant women, and the sick – at significant risk.

“The blockade of the Lachin Corridor is a humanitarian emergency that has created severe shortages of essential food staples including sunflower oil, fish, chicken, dairy products, cereal, sugar and baby formula,” the experts said.

They warned that the region was rapidly depleting its medical reserves, and hospitals were struggling to provide care as the operation of ambulances has been hampered due to declining fuel supplies.

The experts urged authorities in Azerbaijan to immediately restore the free and secure movement of persons, vehicles, and cargo moving along the Lachin corridor in both directions, in accordance with the ceasefire agreement of November 2020.

They also called on Russian peacekeeping forces deployed in the region, to protect the corridor under the terms of the ceasefire agreement.

“By lifting the blockade, the authorities can alleviate the suffering of thousands of people in Nagorno-Karabakh and allow for the unimpeded flow of humanitarian assistance to the civilian population,” the experts said. “It is essential to ensure the safety, dignity, and well-being of all individuals during this critical time,” they said.

"We urge the Government of Azerbaijan to uphold its international obligations to respect and protect human rights, including the right to food, health, education and life. We also emphasise the importance of cooperation and dialogue among all parties involved to find a peaceful and sustainable resolution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict," the experts said.

The experts: Michael Fakhri, Special Rapporteur on the right to food; Farida Shaheed, Special Rapporteur on the right to education; Claudia Mahler, Independent Expert on the enjoyment of all human rights by older persons; Gerard Quinn



https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1116953.html

Armenpress: France demands restoration of free movement along Lachin Corridor

 17:30, 5 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 5, ARMENPRESS. France demands the restoration of the free movement of persons and goods along Lachin Corridor, the French Ambassador to Armenia Olivier Decottignies posted on X, formerly known as Twitter. 

France demands restoration of the free movement of persons and goods in both directions of the Lachin Corridor, as well as uninterrupted gas and electricity supply to the population,” Ambassador Decottignies said.

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since late 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. The ICJ reaffirmed its order on 6 July 2023.

Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno-Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations.

On July 25, the Government of Armenia said that it will try to send over 360 tons of flour, cooking oil, sugar, and other foodstuffs and medication to Nagorno-Karabakh to mitigate the humanitarian crisis resulting from the blockade of Lachin Corridor. Armenia requested the Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh to escort the aid but Azerbaijan has blocked the convoy at the entrance of the Lachin Corridor.

Azerbaijan arrests Nagorno-Karabakh resident during medical evacuation for "war crime"

July 31 2023
Lilit Shahverdyan, Heydar Isayev Jul 31, 2023

Vagif Khachatryan, a 68-year-old Armenian from Nagorno-Karabakh, was arrested by Azerbaijani border guards at the Lachin checkpoint on July 29.

He was one of 15 patients being evacuated to Armenia by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which responded by immediately halting all patient transfers. 

Azerbaijan's General Prosecutor's Office said Khacatryan was arrested because he was a suspect in war crimes against Azerbaijanis during the first Karabakh war of the early 1990s. It pointed to his alleged involvement in a specific episode on December 22, 1991, in Meshali village of Khojaly district of Karabakh. 

"Together with other people of Armenian nationality, he used various weapons, including firearms and infantry fighting vehicles, to completely destroy the village," it read. "They raided the village and killed 25 people of Azerbaijani nationality, injured 14 people, and contrary to national and international law norms expelled 358 Azerbaijanis from their domiciles."

Khachatryan faces charges of "genocide" and "deportation or forced movement of the population" under Azerbaijan's Criminal Code. Azerbaijan's prosecution body said an international search warrant was issued against him in 2013. 

Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry said on July 30 that he had been placed in a medical facility in Baku. Red Cross representatives have visited him there and put him in contact with his family.

Armenian and Karabakh authorities characterized the detainment as a "gross violation of international law" by Azerbaijan.

Nagorno-Karabakh's human rights ombudsman, Gegham Stepanyan, said that he and his counterpart in Armenia had confirmed that "there is no data on Vagif Khachatryan in any international intelligence system." 

(Eurasianet, too, was unable to find evidence that an international body had issued a search warrant for Khachatryan.)

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said that before performing a medical evacuation, the ICRC shares the list of Armenian patients with Azerbaijani authorities, and the transfer is carried out only after the list is approved by both sides. 

Hence, according to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Azerbaijan would have been aware of Khachatryan's impending evacuation and would have been able to plan his arrest.

"The arrest of a person who is under the protection of international humanitarian law and the ICRC cannot be qualified otherwise than as a war crime," it added.

The statement also warned that Azerbaijan makes "an open threat to apply the same approach to other residents of Nagorno-Karabakh as well." 

Armenia has asked the European Court of Human Rights to take interim measures against Azerbaijan in regard to the Khachatryan case.

What did Vagif Khachatryan do during the First Karabakh War?

Khachatryan did fight against Azerbaijan. His native village, Patara, is about six kilometers from Meshali, the site of the alleged atrocity.

Artak Beglaryan, an advisor to Karabakh's state minister, rejected the war crimes charge but confirmed that, "Like all males, he protected his homeland in the 1991-94 war," Beglaryan said.

Armenian newspaper Hraparak reported on 30 July that Khachatryan was the personal driver of Samvel Babayan, who was the leader of Karabakh's local armed force, the Artsakh Defense Army during and after the first Karabakh war. Khachatryan's daughter denied this claim

Images and footage are circulating widely in Azerbaijani media and social networks that supposedly implicate Khachatryan in the Meshali massacre. The evidence presented thus far has been thin, however. 

English-language pro-government Azeri Times resurfaced an old TV interview from 2001 where an Azerbaijani prisoner of war from the 1990s recounts tortures against him and names an Armenian commander named Vagif.

"Most likely this prisoner will be a witness against Vagif Khachatryan in the court," the outlet speculated. 

A widely circulated photo allegedly showing Khachatryan in Meshali, was soon proven to have been taken in 1994, three years after the Meshali events. 

Several former residents of Meshali told Azerbaijani media that they recognized Khachatryan as a participant in the massacre. "I recognized him as soon as I saw him on TV, I was angry that this scoundrel was still alive. I believe that he and other criminals will serve their punishment," one former resident Vali Valiyev told pro-government news agency Report.az. "

Tural Hamid, of Baku-based think tank Topchubashov Center, tweeted that it is "very likely* that Khachatryan participated in the attack on the village at that time as "his age allows for it". Hamid acknowledged, however, that "it is difficult to say whether he was involved in the killing of specific civilians." He added that the Azerbaijani court system was not objective and therefore could not produce a credible verdict on the case. 

Implications for Karabakh's male population

Like Khachatryan, most of the adult male population of Nagorno-Karabakh fought either in the first war in 1991-94, which the Armenian side won, or in the second war in 2020, which Azerbaijan won. Those who have not fought have at least served in the local army, which has mandatory service at age 18. 

Azerbaijan refers to the Karabakh army as a collection of "illegal armed formations."

Tigran Grigoryan, a political analyst originally from Nagorno-Karabakh, told CivilNet that Azerbaijan's move "means that now the entire male population of Nagorno-Karabakh is imprisoned there."

"All of this can be qualified as some sort of illegal activity by the Azerbaijani authorities" and used to present trumped-up charges against male civilians. This means that male civilians will be unable to leave Nagorno-Karabakh even in case of medical emergency," he added.

Humanitarian situation in Karabakh

Khachatryan's arrest comes amid a rapidly deteriorating humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, which has been under Azerbaijani blockade since last December. 

The blockade has been total or near-total since June 15, when Baku closed its checkpoint on the Lachin corridor connecting Karabakh to Armenia. 

Only ICRC vehicles carrying patients have been allowed to use the road since then, though at times Azerbaijan has prevented patient transfers as well. 

On July 27 the Armenian government dispatched 400 tons of humanitarian aid in a truck convoy headed to Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan has denied the trucks entry and they remain stuck at the border. 

Heydar Isayev is a journalist from Baku.

Lilit Shahverdyan is a journalist based in Stepanakert. 

https://eurasianet.org/azerbaijan-arrests-nagorno-karabakh-resident-during-medical-evacuation-for-war-crime

Secretary of Security Council holds meeting with outgoing EU ambassador

 14:52, 31 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 31, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council Armen Grigoryan has held a meeting with the outgoing Head of the EU Delegation to Armenia, Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin.

Grigoryan thanked Ambassador Wiktorin for her efforts towards further developing and enhancing the Armenia-EU partnership during her tenure, Grigoryan’s office said in a readout.

Ambassador Wiktorin underscored and expressed confidence that active bilateral cooperation will continue to strengthen and develop.

The regional security situation and the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh were also discussed.

Vassilis Maragos, the Head of Unit for Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo in the Directorate-General for Neighborhood and Enlargement Negotiations of the European Commission, was named Witkorin’s successor in April.

Sports: European U23 Weightlifting Championship: Armenia’s Liana Gyurjian wins gold, Petros Petrosyan gets silver

Armenia – Aug 3 2023

At the European U23 Weightlifting Championship being held in Bucharest, the capital of Romania, Armenia’s Liana Gyurjian won the gold medal in combined total in the women’s 87kg category, with the result of 221 kg (96+125). She was also the first in the Snatch and the Clean and Jerk.

Armenia's Petros Petrosyan won the silver medal in combined total in the men’s 109kg category, with a result of 370 kg (163+207). He also became a silver medalist in Snatch and the Clean and Jerk.

Team Armenia have already won 5 gold, 5 silver, and 6 bronze medals in this championship.

In the junior competition, Armenia’s Meruzhan Yeghoyan (61 kg), Seyran Khudanyan (55 kg), Martin Poghosyan (73 kg), Aleksandra Grigoryan (59 kg), Mnatsakan Abrahamyan, and Julieta Avanesyan (+87 kg) have won bronze medals.

The California Courier Online, August 3, 2023

The California
Courier Online, August 3, 2023

 

1-         Jerusalem
Armenian Patriarchate’s

            98-Year
Lease Details Revealed

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Armenian
Gov’t Seems to be Producing

            ‘straight
up legendary’ Snoop Dogg Yerevan concert

3-         Former
Ambassador Armen Smbatyan, Son Sergey

            Arrested
for Large-Scale Real Estate Fraud

4-         Holden
Secures $2M in Funding for AYF Camp

************************************************************************************************************************************************

 

1-         Jerusalem
Armenian Patriarchate’s

            98-Year
Lease Details Revealed

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

           

In recent months, I have been contacted by many readers who
asked me to write about the controversy regarding the Jerusalem Armenian
Patriarchate’s lease of around 25% of the Armenian Quarter to a Jewish investor
for 98 years. However, as the details of the lease contract were not made
public, I was unable to write about it.

Trying to learn the facts, I called the Armenian Patriarch
of Jerusalem Nourhan Manougian twice, asking him for a copy of the contract. He
did not respond. I spoke with now defrocked Fr. Baret Yeretzian, one of the
signatories of the contract, who said he did not have a copy of the contract. I
made several unsuccessful attempts to contact some of the lawyers who went on a
fact-finding mission to Jerusalem
and prepared a 184-page report. I was told that the report has not been made
public because it had some sensitive information. I also contacted an Armenian
activist in Jerusalem
and one of the sponsors of the fact-finding mission.

Even though I still have not seen a copy of either the
report or contract, I just read a revealing article in the Keghart website
which posted an interview with a Jerusalem Armenian activist who had a copy of
the 184-page report, including the contract with one of the pages missing. I
decided to write about what I have learned so far, even though I prefer to
review personally copies of the contract and report.

For those who have been following the various scandals
involving the Jerusalem Armenian Patriarchate, there is nothing surprising:
sad, but not surprising. Such covert land leases and sales of precious items
owned by the Patriarchate have been going on for decades.

This current scandal is not just a questionable business
transaction. It has political repercussions given the controversy between
Palestinians and the State of Israel over Jerusalem.
It has also consequences for the survival of the dwindling Armenian community
in Jerusalem.

 

The contract for the lease has been signed by three
clergymen: Patriarch Nourhan Manoughian, now defrocked Father Baret Yeretzian,
and Archbishop Sevan Gharibian. As Fr. Baret, the former director of the
Patriarchate’s Real Estate Office, has come under intense criticism, many feel
that the Patriarch has attempted to shift the blame on Fr. Baret, making him
the scapegoat. Nevertheless, King Abdullah II of Jordan, historically the
custodian of Holy Sites in Jerusalem, and
Mahmoud Abbas, the head of the Palestinian National Authority, in a joint
announcement, blamed the Patriarch and suspended their recognition of
Archbishop Manougian as the Patriarch of the Armenian Church in Jerusalem, the Holy Land and Jordan.

Hagop Djernazian, an Armenian activist in Jerusalem, told Keghart that the
Australian-Jewish investor, Rubinstein/Rothman, plans to build a seven-star
hotel on ‘Goverou Bardez’ (Cows’ Garden), the land leased from the Armenian
Patriarchate. The size of the property leased is 11,500 square meters or
123,785 square feet. The annual payment to the Patriarchate is $300,000.
However, Fr. Baret told me that the income will be 5% of the hotel’s profits
which can vary from year to year. Djernazian said that the leased land
currently includes five Armenian homes, the Patriarch’s Garden, the Patriarch’s
private parking as well as the hall of the seminary. At the end of the first 49
years, the buyer has the option to renew the lease for another 49 years.

Djernazian also explained that the lawyers obtained a copy
of the contract from an unknown third party, not the Patriarchate nor the municipality of Jerusalem, but he insists that the
contract is genuine, as “we were able to confirm it with the Patriarchate.”

Patriarch Manougian, under pressure from Armenians
worldwide, has promised to cancel the contract, but a unilateral cancelation
may result in legal challenges and financial penalties. A representative of the
Palestinian Authority stated that it would be willing to pay the penalty for
cancellation. However, Djernazian does not seem to be aware of that pledge, as
he told Keghart: “If money is needed, I’m sure the Patriarchate, the community
and the Armenian nation will work together to raise the required amount to pay
the cancellation penalty.”

According to Djernazian, there are a couple of problems with
the contract:

1)  It violates the
by-laws of the Patriarchate;

2)  The date on the
contract is altered from July 7 to July 8, 2021, to reflect the date that the
investor’s company, Xana Gardens Limited, was registered in Israel. Fr.
Baret explained the discrepancy as a simple typing error.

It is not clear what the next steps are to resolve this
thorny issue. One way would be for the Jerusalem Armenian community to hire
Israeli lawyers to sue the Patriarch or the Jewish Investor, however, no one
else other than the Patriarch and the Jewish investor have legal standing in
court.

Given the prominence of Jerusalem
in the world and importance of the Armenian presence in the Holy City
starting from the fourth century, this lease is of interest to all Armenians
worldwide as well as Palestinians, the State of Israel, and the King of Jordan.

However, one party we have not heard from is the Government
of Armenia which could officially contact the State of Israel to make its
wishes known. However, Armenia’s
leaders have their hands full right now, given the precarious situation in
Artsakh and Armenia.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         Armenian Gov’t Seems to be
Producing

            ‘straight
up legendary’ Snoop Dogg Yerevan concert

 

By Jenny Yettem

The California
Courier

 

On July 28, American rapper Snoop Dogg posted a video to
Instagram announcing, “Armenia,
what it do? It’s your boy big Snoop D-o-double-G with some big news coming your
way. I’ll be rolling through your beautiful city of Yerevan on September 23 for a special show,
yea. It’s not a regular gig—it’s nothing regular about this. It’s gonna be
straight up legendary. Word on the streets is that Armenian people got that
next-level hospitality game. I can’t wait to see y’all and celebrate together.
September 23. At the Stadium. Big Snoop Dogg and Armenia. Spread the word.”

The caption says, “Armeniiaaaa, I’ll be pulling up to
Hrazdan Stadium in Yerevan
on September 23rd for a special show. Head to dopingspace.com for ticket sign
up and on sale info.”

The event is not posted on Snoop Dogg’s official website. It
is also not posted on any of the major ticket sales sites, including
LiveNation, StubHub, Ticketmaster, or AXS.

The last concert dates for the other websites are: August 22
in New Mexico (Ticketmaster); August 25 in Sacramento (StubHub); and August 27 in Irvine, Calif.
(LiveNation and AXS).

The Doping Space website home page states “The event is
being held under the auspices of the Government of the Republic
of Armenia” underneath Armenia’s coat
of arms.

According to an unconfirmed financial agreement posted to
GlobalHye Information Services by Ara Papian—Armenia’s former Ambassador to
Canada from 2000 to 2006—the Armenian government has agreed to pay the
organizers $23 million for a series of three concerts ($6.2 million; $9
million; and $7.9 million, respectively).

The Armenian government has denied these reports.

In a statement released Saturday, the Prime Minister’s
Office said the media reports are “totally untrue.”

It added that soon the Cabinet will adopt a decision in
relation with the upcoming concert and all the details, including its possible
economic impact, will be made public.

The two other event sponsors are Evoca and apparently Jack
Daniel’s. The link to Evoca redirects to the online banking platform whose
vision is “to be the most innovative and progressive commercial bank in Armenia whose
services will be available online without visiting the bank.”

Jack Daniel’s is a popular brand of Tennessee whiskey. The link on the Doping
Space website, however, is not active.

Doping Space by Doping Creative Agency says its “primary
focus has been on promoting creativity and inspiring innovation through our
diverse areas of activities. Today, we are extending our expertise to bring
that same ‘doping’ to the music industry.”

“Our vision is to elevate Yerevan into a thriving hub for international
modern music. And to achieve this, we have assembled a team of seasoned
industry professionals to organize mega-concerts of unparalleled magnitude.”

“Dope” is rap parlance for something being pleasing or good.
It’s also slang for marijuana. While it may be a matter of translation,
“doping” is not used as a verb in English except to mean “the unlawful use of
drugs to enhance or inhibit the performance of an athlete, racehorse, or
greyhound.”

The website has not started selling tickets yet but is
registering subscribers by name, phone number and email to announce when
tickets become available.

Not everyone in Armenia is giving Snoop Dogg the
next-level hospitality he anticipates. “I love Snoop. But they’re trying to
distract the people from noticing the horrible future they’re facing by
spending millions to bring him to Armenia for a concert. They did the
same with 50 Cent around or after the 44-Day War,” wrote Harout Farajian on
Facebook, on July 29. Farajian is a repatriate to Armenia
from Los Angeles.

 

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3-         Former Ambassador Armen Smbatyan,
Son Sergey

            Arrested
for Large-Scale Real Estate Fraud

 

YEREVAN—Sergey Smbatyan, the artistic director, and chief
conductor of the Armenian State Symphony Orchestra, along with his father,
Armen Smbatyan, the former ambassador of Armenia to Israel, have been arrested
and accused of engaging in particularly large-scale fraud.

The General Prosecutor’s Office alleges that Smbatyan’s
actions led to a loss of one billion drams for the state, and that the
300-square-meter plot of the Yerevan
Tchaikovsky Music
School was stolen.

The department announced that the “Sochocenter” company
proposed to construct a multi-functional complex called “Book World” in honor
of the 500th anniversary of Armenian printing and Yerevan’s recognition as the world book
capital in 2012.

The company also offered to build a new boiler house and
concert hall for the Tchaikovsky school at its own expense.

Back in 2012, the government granted a central area worth
about 170 million Drams to the “Sochocenter” company, which, according to law
enforcement officers, is owned by the Smbatyan family.

However, instead of fulfilling the proposed project, the
company started constructing a 17-story business center, leading the
Prosecutor’s Office to label the investment project as fraudulent and aimed at
looting the territory.

The former ambassador, Armen Smbatyan, who has held various
positions in Armenia,
allegedly convinced a relative, Avag Smbatyan, to establish the “Sochocenter”
company on behalf of Sergey Smbatyan to avoid linking his son’s name to
business activities. Another co-founder of the company is former minister of
culture and close friend Hasmik Poghosyan, who is currently under
investigation.

Shortly after its establishment, Sokhosetri’s then-director,
now head of the Komitas Museum Institute, Nikolay Konstadyan, presented the
investment project to the mayor. The Mayor of Yerevan forwarded the proposed
plan to the Minister of Culture, Poghosyan, for evaluation. Poghosyan allegedly
knew about the Sochocenter company’s true intention to use the land for
non-educational purposes and build a multi-functional building on it but did
not oppose the investment plan. Consequently, the government approved the
program.

Months later, Poghosyan reportedly signed “Property
Expropriation and Pledge” and “General Lien” contracts with “Sokhocentr”,
intentionally omitting the primary investment obligation defined by the
Government’s decision, which was to construct the “Book World”. This allowed
Sokhocentr’s shareholders to register ownership rights to the plot of land at
36 Koghbatsi Street in Yerevan on November 3, 2016, without fulfilling the
stated obligation, resulting in property damage amounting to 966 million 103
thousand drams for the state.

As of now, the Smbatyan family has not responded to the
accusations, and their lawyers cannot be reached. Hasmik Poghosyan, who is
under investigation, is also considered an accused in this case, and law
enforcement is currently trying to locate co-founder Arman Petrosyan.

It is worth noting that Sergey Smbatyan not only serves as
the head of the symphony orchestra of Armenia and Principal Conductor of
the Malta Philharmonic Orchestra—he was just recently appointed UNICEF Armenia
Ambassador (see page 2). In this role, Maestro Smbatyan will use his passion for
music and dedication to cultural education to advocate for the rights and
well-being of children.

 

**********************************************************************************************************************************************

4-         Holden
Secures $2M in Funding for AYF Camp

 

The Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) Camp has secured $2M in
funding from the State of California, thanks in large part to the support of
Assemblymember Chris Holden and the leadership of the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA) National and California chapters who played a
pivotal role in advocating for and securing this significant state funding by
working in collaboration with the AYF Camp board.

This funding will be dedicated to major renovations at AYF
Camp Big Pines and AYF
Camp Twin
Valleys. After years of
tirelessly working on growing and improving the Camp, the AYF Camp Management
Board will move from the planning phase to the execution and engineering phases
of development.

Prior to his election to the Assembly in 2012, Holden was a
mayor and City Councilmember in Pasadena.
Holden currently serves as Chairman of the Appropriations Committee, the most
powerful position after Speaker.

 

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************************************************************************************************************************************************

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Mirzoyan, Khovaev emphasized the need to immediately lift the blockade of Lachin Corridor

 19:12,

YEREVAN, JULY 21, ARMENPRESS. On July 21, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan received Igor Khovaev, the Russian Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, the special representative of the Russian Foreign Minister for supporting the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from MFA Armenia, during the meeting, issues related to regional security and stability were discussed.

Ararat Mirzoyan reaffirmed the approaches of the Armenian side regarding the establishment of comprehensive stability in the South Caucasus and key issues in the process of regulating relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The imperative to address the rights and security issues of the people of Nagorno Karabakh under the international mechanism was emphasized.

The interlocutors thoroughly discussed the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulted by the illegal blocking of the Lachin Corridor. The need for Azerbaijan to immediately lift the blockade of the Lachin Corridor, according to the tripartite declaration of November 9, 2020 and the rulings of the UN International Court of Justice of February 22 and July 6.

Moscow comments on work with Azerbaijan for opening Lachin Corridor

 15:15,

YEREVAN, JULY 20, ARMENPRESS. Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova has commented on Moscow’s ongoing work with Azerbaijan in ending the blockade of Lachin Corridor.

Zakharova was asked at a press briefing whether Russia could influence Azerbaijan to open the corridor and whether it’s possible to airlift aid to Nagorno Karabakh.

“We are working with all parties, not only in the public dimension, as far as methodology is concerned. Regarding supplying humanitarian aid, as you understand, individual countries of an international organization are developing numerous options for resolving this issue,” she said.

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since December 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. Moreover, Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations and the Red Cross has been facilitating the medical evacuations of patients.

A Cry for Homecoming

Diana (left) and Tatevik (right) together in Cascade. Yerevan, Armenia. July 7, 2023.

Seven months have passed since the start of the blockade of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh). Food, vital medicines and fuel supplies are scarce or unavailable, and hundreds of citizens wait in line each day to see what goods they can acquire. We have all heard the stories—the dire need for the international community to condemn Azerbaijan’s blockade of the only lifeline connecting Artsakh with Armenia, loved ones separated with no ability to return home and no end in sight. Earlier this month, I spent some time with two of several dozen students from Artsakh who are now essentially stranded in Yerevan after their studies ended.

Diana and Tatevik are medical students in their first year at Mkhitar Heratsi Yerevan Medical University. The blockade began during their studies, and they have not been able to return home since. They have not been able to see their friends, their family or their homes. Every day, they keep in touch with their families through phone and video calls, if lucky with the connection, witnessing their families’ pain and feeling helpless.

They share their personal stories with the Weekly.

Tatevik Samvelyan, 18 from Stepanakert. Yerevan, Armenia. July 7, 2023.

Eighteen-year-old Tatevik Samvelyan is from Stepanakert. She originally considered going to school to become a translator. But after the 2020 Artsakh War, she came to the decision that the country needs more doctors and felt it was the obligation of every citizen to do something for their homeland.

“Last time I was at home everything was much different and much warmer”

The last time Tatevik spent at home was in October 2022 for her birthday. She says it was the most impressive birthday, because she didn’t think she would get the opportunity to travel home on that day. It was a surprise organized by her father who, along with her mother and younger brother, kept it a secret until the last minute. “It was such an emotional moment when I knew about it because I was worried that it would be my first birthday away from the family,” Tatevik says. One particularly memorable moment was a surprise photoshoot her parents organized, in which she took photos in the white coat of a doctor. 

“I love my birthday a lot. And I don’t know why, but last time I was at home everything was much different and much warmer. And the day I was coming back to Yerevan I was so emotional,” recalls Tatevik, overcome with tears.

A tearful Tatevik

“On my birthday in 2020, I was in Gyumri, and obviously I wasn’t in the mood to celebrate anything. But my dad, who was still in Karabakh, was encouraging me to do something nice on that day. So I spent the day with my relatives, and on the same day in the evening I received a present—flowers and a stuffed animal—and I was told that it was from my dad although he was on the front,” recalls Tatevik. 

While Tatevik has been in Yerevan, she has kept in contact with her father, although he’s not that talkative. She asks him about the current situation back home and tells him about her classes and how she spends her days to lighten the mood. As a military doctor, he also helps Tatevik with her lessons, and sometimes they prepare lessons together. 

When the blockade started, Tatevik like many others thought that it would only last a short period of time and that the road would open soon; however, the more time that passed, she began to lose hope that it would ever open again.

Tatevik (left) and Diana (right) walking together in Yerevan. July 7, 2023.

“Other students are dreaming about going abroad for vacation—our dream is simply to go home” 

Tatevik reiterates what hundreds of residents of Artsakh say on a daily basis—that they have a serious problem with food deliveries. However, she hopes that something will change “because it simply cannot remain in this status.” “After exams, other students in the group were discussing their vacation plans like going to the beach, Egypt and other countries. At that moment my friend and I (again from Artsakh), were just looking at each other because our dreams are so different. We simply dream of going home, to hug our parents and loved ones.” 

While the citizens of Artsakh desperately wait for the road connecting to Armenia to open, Tatevik says that if there is a chance to go home she will do that, even knowing that it will be much harder to come back to Yerevan again.  

“I think that we, the people of Artsakh, do not deserve what we’ve been going through. I was wondering why regular people can dream about going abroad for a vacation, but we are dreaming about simple things, like going home or having electricity or eating fruits and vegetables.” 

When asked if she’s going to try to convince her family to move to Yerevan with the situation worsening in Artsakh, she replies, “I don’t want to think that one day I won’t live in Artsakh or something bad will happen to Artsakh. No, I don’t want to think about bad things. I would say the opposite. I want to go back home, instead of convincing them to move here. And I want to live in our pre-war Artsakh.”  

Diana Arakelyan, 19 from Lernavan (Askeran region). Yerevan, Armenia. July 7, 2023.

Diana Arakelyan, 19, is from Lernavan in the Askeran region, not far from Stepanakert. She lived in a large house surrounded by gardens with her parents, grandparents, two sisters and her six-year-old brother David. Her older sister currently studies in Artsakh, while her younger sister came to Yerevan to pass her exams at the American University of Armenia and remains in Yerevan with Diana.

“Mom, you’re cutting out, change your location” 

Diana says that the white coat of the doctor is a “completely different world” for her, and she was inspired by her grandmother when choosing a career in medicine. After the 2020 war, her desire to become a doctor “doubled and even tripled,” she says, because doctors are needed more than ever in Artsakh. 

Like Tatevik, Diana was also planning to travel home after the end of the semester in January. When the blockade started, she thought it was something temporary. As it continues, her only contact with the family is through phone calls, rarely video calls, which are frequently interrupted due to the poor Internet connection. “Mom, you’re cutting out, change your location,” quotes Diana, the most frequently used sentence when talking to her mother. 

While Diana is trapped in Yerevan far from her family, her parents sometimes joke by saying, “You are the one who is under blockade, not us, because you are the one who cannot come back home.” 

“See, Din, I painted this heart for you”

David, Diana’s six-year-old brother, is the one she misses the most. “I miss my parents differently, but in the case of Davo, I can’t explain, it’s something special. He resembles me a lot, and we share a unique and close bond. I often joke that, you know mom, he is my son, not yours,” says Diana.

As her family recounted, during the first period of the blockade, David was upset with their mother for not buying him bananas, something he has always enjoyed eating. “When they told me that story, I couldn’t help myself and got emotional, because before the blockade we would

“See, Din, I painted it for you.”

buy him literally whatever he wanted, and now as the stores are empty, there is nothing they can do. So I urge my mom, ‘Don’t keep him in Artsakh because he’s not used to the situation. Send him to me and I will take good care of him,’” says Diana. 

She says that she always asks David how he spends the days in school and what new things he has learned. During one of Diana’s video calls, he showed her a heart that he had painted for her: “See, Din, I painted it for you.”

“He always asks when I’m coming back. I used to say, you know, I have classes here and I cannot come right now. And recently when I was talking to my mom and told her that I finally passed all the exams, he cheered up thinking that I can manage to go home now. ‘Din, you will come home, won’t you? I’m waiting for you.’ I was trying to change the subject because to be honest, I have no hope that I will manage to go home anytime soon.”  

“I was dreaming of sitting outside at night and enjoying the lights of Stepanakert, but now there are no lights, neither can I go”

Diana says that she usually speaks with her father on Sundays and asks him about the agricultural work he does on their land. “Near our land, there is a spot from which there is a magnificent view of where Stepanakert, Shushi on the hill and Askeran on the other side can be seen, and it feels like you are embracing all of Karabakh. I used to tell my Dad that in the summer I would come back, we would celebrate many things, and he would make samovar tea for me. I was dreaming of sitting outside at night and enjoying the view and the lights of Stepanakert. But now neither can I go, nor can you see any lights in Stepanakert,” says Diana. 

Diana believes that all of this is being done to break the Artsakh people, but Azerbaijan must understand that it’s not possible. “My grandparents always say that they have seen even worse days in 1992 and it couldn’t break them. They say that we will find the strength to go through this situation without food, without taking a shower, and without electricity, with one candle. The only important thing is that we live in peace, that our soldiers come back safe and healthy. The rest is not important; the rest we can handle,” Diana says. “I have so many thoughts in my mind, all kinds of scenarios are running through my head, but I’m trying to think that everything will be okay. I am trying to think that some solution will be found for this situation. I’m not sure what scenario will happen. What I am sure of is that this situation will come to an end as soon as they [Azeris] understand that they cannot break us and force us to leave our homes.” 

Diana in front of Zoravor Surb Astvatsatsin Church in Yerevan, Armenia. July 7, 2023.

Diana says that after the war in 2020, when they returned back to Karabakh, she was depressed and one of her only coping methods was to pray. “That is what helped me to find the strength to try to go back to the pre-war lifestyle. Although I cannot forget all the feelings I went through, I’m trying to pass that. But it’s impossible to forget that because it’s not over and we are now in kind of a ‘passive war,’” she says.

Towards the end of our conversation, I asked Diana about her plans and the plans of her family. “We have put aside all the plans we had made before. Everything has changed now, and our plans for the future have changed too. I will put it this way. People living there don’t even make plans. They live their days trying to enjoy every single moment and to appreciate that nothing bad happened on that day and their beloved ones are safe. And every morning each of us prays that nothing bad happens on that day,” she answers. 

Diana and Tatevik together at Cascade, Yerevan, Armenia. July 7, 2023.

Anthony Pizzoferrato is an Italian American freelance photojournalist, documentarian and filmmaker based in Yerevan, Armenia. His work places emphasis on reporting and documenting conflicts, political events, complex social issues, human rights and cultural history within post-Soviet states and the Middle East while creating understanding, intimacy and empathy. His work on the war in Ukraine and protests in Yerevan has been published in Getty Reportage.