US Ambassador meets with relatives of captured Armenian servicemen

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 10:39, 5 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, ARMENPRESS. Ambassador of the United States to Armenia Lynne Tracy met with relatives of Armenian servicemen who were captured in 2020 and 2021, the Embassy said in a news release.

"The discussion focused on human rights issues, including point eight of the November 2020 trilateral ceasefire statement by Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia on the exchange of prisoners of war, hostages and other detained persons, and dead bodies, and the Geneva Convention.

We urge the release of all prisoners as well as increased efforts to obtain information about the fate of missing servicemembers, including from the 1990s, noting the pain of families who do not know their loved ones’ whereabouts or fate”, the Embassy said.

U.S. "encourages" further Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 6 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev on Tuesday, April 5 and expressed his encouragement for further peace negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

According to two separate statements from the Department of State, Blinken cited Pashinyan and Aliyev’s planned meeting with European Council President Charles Michel on April 6.

"He reiterated the United States stood ready to help by engaging bilaterally and with like-minded partners, including through our role as an OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair, to help the countries find a long-term comprehensive peace," the statements said.

Pashinyan's office said in a statement of its own that the PM presented the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) caused by the actions of the Azerbaijani units, the humanitarian issues, and attached importance to a targeted reaction from the United States.

Azerbaijan has broken into Nagorno-Karabakh, and the incursion has left three Armenian soldiers dead and at least 14 others injured. On March 24, Azerbaijan stormed into the zone of the responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers stationed in the area and is refusing to completely withdraw its forces from strategic heights.

the two exchanged views on the demarcation and delimitation of borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the possibility of unblocking communications in the region, as well as the ongoing dialogue between Armenia and Turkey.

UK lawmakers meet displaced Karabakh civilians in Syunik

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 6 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - The members of a UK delegation led by the Head of Great Britain-Armenia Friendship Group Tim Loughton have visited the province of Syunik to communicate with and learn more about displaced residents if Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh).

During the 44-day war unleashed by Azerbaijan in the fall of 2020, more than 20.000 families from Artsakh moved to Syunik. About 4.000 displaced people currently reside in the province, including 248 families displaced from Shushi, Askeran and Hadrut.

The Chair of the Armenian parliament's Standing Committee on Foreign Relations Eduard Aghajanyan, members of the Committee Maria Karapetyan, Sargis Khandanyan, and Yerevan's Ambassador to the UK Varuzhan Nersesyan accompanied the delegation.

During a meeting, Syunik governor Robert Ghukasyan presented the situation created in the provnce after the 44-day war and underlined that the international community should express its distinct position on concrete cases.

“We heard these people’s stories who had gone through the war. That information is interesting and valuable. We would like to take with us their messages, their voice to our parliament and present everything happening in this part of the world,” Loughton said.

Member of the British delegation Baroness Caroline Cox noted: “Beginning from 1991 first war, I have been next to you. I have seen with you the tragedies and horrible events that have happened during these years. I have seen what crimes have been committed by Azerbaijan in the war. We know that you have suffered a lot. I have always admired the Armenian people, every time you reborn from the ashes. You will always be in my heart and prayers. I am next to you.”

Armenpress: Post-war social crisis alleviated, proper living conditions in place – Artsakh authorities

Post-war social crisis alleviated, proper living conditions in place – Artsakh authorities

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 09:49, 8 April, 2022

STEPANAKERT, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. 46,000 people were displaced in the 2020 war in Artsakh, and over 25,628 of them have returned. Housing and employment are the top issues for them and the Artsakh Ministry of Social Development and Migration is working to resolve the problems.

In an interview to ARMENPRESS, the Minister of Social Development and Migration of Artsakh Armine Petrosyan said that immediately after the war they began the implementation of a number of assistance programs to mitigate the social issues of the forcefully displaced citizens.

Thanks to the programs implemented both with our own means as well as jointly with the Government of Armenia, we can say that right now we have succeeded in mitigating the social crisis and creating maximally favorable living conditions for our population. These were mostly short-term social support programs and currently we aim at replacing them with the kind of programs that would ensure employment opportunities,” Petrosyan said.

The Artsakh authorities are also working on the housing issues, as well the issue of giving a legal status to the internally displaced persons.

We’ve developed new approaches for solving social issues aimed at creating jobs, developing SMEs and providing support to farmers. For this purpose we’ve opened a foundation under the ministry, the function of which is to cooperate with philanthropists and investors to encourage the opening of SMEs in Artsakh and assist farmers,” she added.

In addition to the implemented various programs, the Artsakh authorities plan to substitute the assistance programs with development programs in 2022.

We are planning to organize vocational training programs for displaced people and other social groups, provision of social assistance to unemployed displaced people to start small entrepreneurships in villages, as well as the implementation of self-employment and employment through the donations from private philanthropists and charitable organizations within the framework of the ministry’s Social Development Programs Foundation,” the minister added.

The Artsakh authorities also launched a Social-Psychological Center which will research all social needs of citizens and act as a bridge between the society and the ministry. The first office of the center was opened in Martuni. Gradually it will expand to Stepanakert, Askeran and Martakert.

Minister of Social Development and Migration of Artsakh Armine Petrosyan said that 46,000 citizens were displaced in the war, and 25,628 of them have returned to Artsakh so far.

Asked what job opportunities exist for the displaced persons, Petrosyan said the available jobs are mostly in the private sector: construction and services.

Interview by Ani Danielyan




Russia will continue to assist Armenia in strengthening defense capacity and protecting the border – Lavrov

Public Radio of Armenia
April 8 2022

Russia will continue to assist Armenia in ensuring the protection of the border and strengthening the defense capacity, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said as he welcomed his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan to Moscow.

“As a key partner of Armenia, we will continue to help you strengthen your defense capacity and ensure the protection of the border,” Lavrov.

He also noted that Moscow will continue to ensure the implementation of the trilateral agreements between the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan on Nagorno-Karabakh, including the activities of the Russian peacekeeping contingent.

“On the Karabakh settlement, there are three groups of agreements reached at the highest level in November 2020, in January and November 2021. And we will continue to ensure the implementation of these agreements, including the activities of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Karabakh in strict accordance with its mandate,” he said. is he.

It’s not just reading a text behind the screen: Armenian students try their hand at journalism

March 29 2022
March 29, 2022

Journalism is an attractive field for many students in Armenia. Many young people grow up watching the presenters behind the screen, and imagine their future on TV, but few realise the challenges of the profession. Armenian universities, in turn, mainly provide students with theoretical knowledge, but there is almost no opportunity to practice that knowledge.

The EU-funded “European Media Facility in Armenia – Building Sustainable and Professional Media” project is a good opportunity for journalism students. It is implemented by Deutsche Welle Academy in cooperation with BBC Media Action, OSF-Armenia, Investigative Journalists NGO (Hetq.am) and Factor Information Centre. Within the scope of the project, graduate students in journalism get the opportunity to improve their knowledge and skills. The courses consist of two parts: 12 participants get the chance to participate in online courses with BBC journalists, and six of them are then provided with the opportunity to gain the knowledge with work experience on Armenian online broadcaster Factor TV.

The students continue their learning at Factor TV, participate in editorial activities together with the journalists, and prepare three materials independently. At the end of the project, the best three materials prepared during the probationary period are selected, and the winners announced.

“I had absolutely no idea where I would end up”

Mariam Teymurazyan, a 20-year-old third-year student at Yerevan State University, has come a long way from her home village of Vazashen in the Tavush region of Armenia. She chose journalism when she was a teenager.

“Everyone told me that journalism is my calling,” Mariam recalls, adding that Factor TV staff had held a meeting with students at Yerevan State University, during which she decided that she should definitely try her hand.

Mariam during the working process
Mariam Teymurazyan
Mariam working with camera

“I filled out the questionnaire, and the answer came in a few days. I wasn’t sure if I would be in the list of 12 selected participants, but I remember my happiness when seeing my name there,” says Mariam, noting that the main focus of the online courses was on visualisation: BBC journalists teach the students to build up their material in such a way that different, unique content is created, and so that the reader does not get bored.

Some of Mariam’s fellow students had also interned at Factor TV, and she had heard a lot about the media. At the end of the online course, she too was chosen to spend a three-month probationary period there: “The experience is very different from the theory that we learn in university. It’s very different when you’re working on an article – you don’t go out of your comfort zone: you interview your friends and people you know and do not take risks. But here, at Factor, you can take that risk, because you know there is a person behind you that you can turn to, and he or she will explain everything to you. Certainly, there is support at university, but it’s a bit different, because you don’t have any practice there.”

Mariam remembers her first day at Factor TV, how she met the editor, journalists and other employees. But she is more impressed by her first visit to the news booth and newsroom. “It’s a completely different feeling when you step into a newsroom where you will work. In fact, we worked in another room outside the newsroom, but all the conditions were created for us. It was really interesting to appear in the newsroom. When the editor says that you should sit in one place during the live, then in another place the material of one of the journalists is being discussed, while another journalist is preparing to leave for an interview. And when you are engaged in all this process, you also go with them, run with them, participate with them. It is a completely different experience.”

Mariam’s excitement was accompanied by fear, especially when she was receiving assignments from the editor. Initially, she was timid to call various officials and ask questions, but she overcame this anxiety too. “I had absolutely no idea where I would end up. I thought I would sit in the frame, read the text and leave. And now I realised that the reality is different.”

During the probation, the participants had to prepare three materials: text, video and studio interview. “It is a completely different situation when you do an interview in the studio. You feel even more responsibility, because it is not only your job, but also the people behind the cameras.”

Mariam has since tried to pass on the knowledge and skills gained during the project to her fellow students. “Life before the project – you’re an ordinary 18-19-year-old girl who knows about journalism, goes to university, writes articles about her friends, doesn’t take any serious steps. And after the projoect – you are already moving forward with clear steps, you are learning to be independent, to be a journalist. You understand that you are a journalist who has a name and you must do everything to keep that name high.”

“You are silver-tongued, you will become a journalist

21-year-old Arpine Hakobyan from Akunk village, Gegharkunik region, has been interested in journalism since childhood. Everyone said she was eloquent, so she would become a journalist. And thus, from the 5th or 6th grade, she decided to become a journalist with the ambition of appearing on TV. Arpine therefore decided to enter the Department of Journalism of Yerevan State University.

Arpine in the newsroom of Factor.TV
'You are silver-tongued, you will become a journalist'
Arpine during the preparation of the TV report

“When I was a child, I thought that there’s nothing difficult to be a journalist: you just have to sit down, read your text, and that’s it. But now I realise how much time you spend on the material, if you want it to be of good quality,” says Arpine.

While studying, Arpine started reporting for various media outlets.  At that point, she realised that she was on the right track in her profession. And when this project came up, Arpine was keen to seize the opportunity.

During her probation, Arpine hosted a live broadcast, which she described as the most nerve-racking moment of her life. She had been well prepared for the live broadcast, but for various reasons the events had been postponed, and for the first time she went live impromptu. At that moment she was encouraged by the cameraman working with her. “They used to say at University that a journalist has no personal life and should be available at any time, and even after the end of the working day you can’t say ‘That’s it, my work is over, I go home.’ During the probation I realised that it was true.”

Arpine’s story about air raid shelters was one of the winners of the project. She had worked on the material both in the capital Yerevan and in the city of Vardenis, Gegharkunik region. However, she didn’t expect that her name would be announced during the event. “I was sitting at the graduation event and checking my phone when Aram Abramyan took the first card to announce the names and read my name – Arpine Hakobyan. I honestly did not expect it and was shocked. I can’t remember how I found myself on the stage. You think that your material is good, you have worked a lot on it and have put it a lot of effort. I didn’t rule out that one of my materials would win, but on the other hand, the other materials were also good. That’s why it was so unexpected.”

Arpine presented her prize, a phone, to her mother, who had initially advised her to become a teacher, since she was sure it would be difficult for a girl to find a job in journalism. But now, in addition to the award, Arpine received a job offer from Factor TV. Now Arpine assists other students of the project. “I am their peer, and many of them know me from university and are not shy to ask for advice. The fact that now they come and learn, as I did before, is really inspiring for me.

“Wherever I go, I will be more confident”

Knarik Vardanyan from the village of Musayelyan in the Shirak region did not think about becoming a journalist at all. For a long time she couldn’t decide on a profession, and given her outgoing personality, chose journalism during her last year at school.

“Journalists are the fourth power, which means you can make a change. Secondly, I want to try everything, and journalism gives me that opportunity. You also get a chance to be very active, to communicate with different people,” says Knarik, noting that at first she imagined that she would host programmes, but while studying she understood that this is a completely different profession. “Until now, I have not decided in which field I want to work. I am currently working in the field of human rights. But I strive for visualisation and TV.”

Knarik Vardanyan
Knarik working with camera at TV studio
Knarik at the Yerevan State University

Knarik missed the first opportunity to apply for the project, thinking that it might interfere with her classes. But when she heard the feedback from her fellow students about the project, she decided to try. “You can get experience here, that’s why I decided to apply for the second cohort. And I got into the project. During the online courses, I learned what steps one needs to take to get a quality report or interview. And now I try to use the knowledge I gained in my work routine.”

Knarik says the most difficult step is the first one – when you have theoretical knowledge but don’t know how to use it. Knarik took that first step during the probation; now she says that wherever she goes, she will be more confident.

She remembers that she was perturbed when she first had to meet face to face with an official to prepare a report. In that case she had the support of other journalists, whose presence gave her confidence. “At first it was difficult, but then, as I gained more experience, everything settled down, I gained confidence and had no other problems.”

Knarik was impressed by the intense daily life of journalists, when they work on an article without having finished another one. “We went with one of the journalists to cover a meeting. There I realised that I could not prepare political materials. Of course, being at the centre of events is impressive, but I realised that this is not my thing. I also realised that it is very difficult to hide emotions, to do your job without emotions.”

During the probation Knarik realised that so-called daily journalism was not her thing. “I loved the studio interview format. I did my first one at Factor TV and realiaed that I can work with a camera. I think I will be involved in similar projects in the future, dealing with people and cameras.”

One of the three materials prepared by Knarik was among the winners. “I honestly had a feeling that one of my materials would win. It was not a surprise to me. But I was very happy.” Like Arpine, Knarik not only won a prize but was offered a job at the end of her probation.

The project therefore not only gives the journalism students the opportunity to gain practical knowledge, but also to share their experience and knowledge with their fellow students. It also enables students to find real work in the Armenian media and apply their knowledge as professional journalists.

The programme is ongoing and the application process is currently open to third- and fourth-year students who want to develop their storytelling skills. The project consists of two parts: online courses with BBC journalists, and a three-month probation at Factor TV.

Author: Ami Chichakyan

Article published in Armenian, Russian and English on Aravot.am

https://euneighbourseast.eu/news-and-stories/stories/its-not-just-reading-a-text-behind-the-screen-armenian-students-try-their-hand-at-journalism/

Azerbaijan Adds Fuel to Armenian Concerns in Karabakh

March 31 2022
With Russian peacekeepers distracted by war, Armenian activists, clergy, and officials debate how best to secure ancient churches and human rights in Artsakh.
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Suffering freezing temperatures during the long winter cold in the Caucasus Mountains, this month Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh had no heating for three weeks. The natural gas “malfunction,” stated Azerbaijan’s state-run energy distribution company, has now been repaired.

It is not often that pipeline maintenance draws international concern.

The European Union and Freedom House both called for quick resumption of the supply in order to avert a humanitarian crisis. Over 100,000 residents in the contested enclave rely on Armenian natural gas that passes through Azerbaijani territory.

Nagorno-Karabakh, which Armenians call Artsakh, lies within the internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan. Armenians accused Azerbaijan of deliberate disruption, prevention of repair, and installation of a new valve with which they can shut off gas flow at will.

Secured by Armenians backed by Armenia’s military following the fall of the Soviet Union, Artsakh sought independence for three decades while controlling six buffer zones in depopulated Azerbaijani lands. Negotiations failed to resolve the dispute, until Azerbaijan launched a 44-day war in 2020 that recovered significant territory.

A Russian-brokered ceasefire ended active hostilities.

Yet skirmishes continue, and Azerbaijan accuses Armenia of instigation. Last November, Armenia stated an Azerbaijani incursion occupied 15 square miles of sovereign territory. Christianity Today was reporting from one of the liberated buffer territories at the time.

Image: Christianity Today

Nagorno-Karabakh

And in the month prior to the pipeline issue—with the world’s attention focused on Ukraine—Russia officially accused Azerbaijan of breaking the terms of the ceasefire. Monitors recorded at least four incidents of firing toward Armenian villages. Three soldiers were reportedly killed by an Azerbaijani drone; another was shot by a soldier across the border.

After years of holding the upper hand in Nagorno-Karabakh, the reversal suffered in the war has Armenians fearful of genocide. Now victorious, Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev has pledged to develop the area economically and to treat Armenians as equal citizens.

The recent conduct makes many doubt these promises.

“They openly can’t go for a full-blown war today since Russian peacekeepers are deployed here,” stated an Armenian journalist. “So they do everything to disrupt normal life and make people leave their homeland.”

But it goes beyond “Artsakh.”

To emphasize its sovereignty over the region, Azerbaijan has mandated that the designation “Nagorno-Karabakh” no longer be used. Armenians see this as erasure—similar to what they allege is being done to their nation’s cultural heritage.

The ninth-century Dadivank Monastery, called Khudavan by Azerbaijan, is now labeled to be Caucasian Albanian, a defunct Orthodox sect traced to the Udis, a tiny Christian minority group still present today. Priests from this recently revived church were appointed to administer the monastery, with several other worship sites delinked from their Armenian origins.

After the war, the Armenian Apostolic Church created a department to preserve its historic churches in the territories that changed hands. Monitoring satellite imagery and Azerbaijani social media feeds to document violations, the department also tracks examples of pilgrims denied access to once-active religious sites.

“We call on the international community, and give them the facts,” said Garegin Hambardzumyan, head of the Department for Preservation of Cultural and Spiritual Values of Artsakh. “The world needs to know the truth.”

An Apostolic priest, Hambardzumyan works with institutions such as UNESCO, which has still not been granted investigative access to the contested territories by Azerbaijan. He informs the widespread Armenian diaspora, which plays an active role in lobbying foreign governments. And his department’s reports also go to the Armenian government, whose lawyers determine the best course of action.

International outcry led to Azerbaijan backtracking last month on an announced committee to remove alleged Armenian forgeries from historic churches. Armenia also won a provisional judgment from the International Court of Justice, calling on Azerbaijan to prevent and prosecute incidents of vandalism and desecration.

But is this enough?

Some Armenians have floated the controversial idea of remedial secession, a theory in international law in which a nation loses its right to territory if it oppresses the resident people. Bangladesh (from India) and Kosovo (from Serbia) are sometimes given as examples.

The legal strategy is being considered at the highest levels.

“When the life of a people in a larger entity is no longer possible because there is an existential threat,” said Maria Karapetyan, a member of Armenia’s parliament, “the only way to secure their existence is secession, to live as a separate entity.”

While the idea has not been adopted as official policy, Karapetyan, also the English-language spokeswoman for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party, stated that Artsakh has been a human rights issue from the beginning. In 1991, an independence referendum was overwhelmingly approved amid a boycott by its Azerbaijani minority and met with violent rejection by authorities, she said.

Mutual ethnic atrocities followed for the next three years, as thousands were killed and over 1 million people displaced from their homes.

Since then, the general strategy for peace—though never enacted—was for Armenians to trade the buffer zone territories in exchange for Azerbaijan granting special status, even independence, to Nagorno-Karabakh. The 2020 war voided this option.

Today, the Civil Contract party holds to the necessity of negotiations, while insisting on a formal demarcation of borders and the removal of military forces from the frontlines. Communications must be resumed with Azerbaijan, which can then open paths for trade.

Despite the military defeat in 2020, Karapetyan’s party overwhelmingly won a majority share of parliament in early elections last June, running on a platform of peace. With its mandate renewed, Pashinyan’s government has surged forward with the controversial task of normalizing relations with neighboring Turkey—which strongly backed Azerbaijan during the war.

Karapetyan dismissed, however, Aliyev’s promise to integrate the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, calling it a “fairy tale.” Others are looking at strategies to intervene.

Clerics at Hamdarzumyan’s conference last September heard a geopolitical rationale. The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principle, adopted by the United Nations in 2005, seeks to ensure the international community never again fails to prevent war crimes and ethnic cleansing—such as in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

“If you can frame the destruction of cultural heritage as a war crime,” said Sheila Paylan, an international lawyer, “there’s no reason why we can’t push forward the R2P envelope.”

It is warranted, said Eric Hacopian, an Armenian analyst. In the early 2000s, Azerbaijan destroyed thousands of ornate funeral khachkar cross-stones in Nakhchivan, erasing the historic marker of Armenian residence.

The only comparable modern precedents, he said, are the Taliban’s demolition of Buddha statues, the Islamic State’s damaging of Palmyra, and the Chinese government’s desecration of Uighur mosques.

“This is the league that Aliyev is in,” said Hacopian. “You’re dealing with a state that systematically destroys cultural sites in Europe.”

But regardless of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, many Armenians are worried simply by the terms of the ceasefire. Point 9, the final one listed, called for the unblocking of all economic and transportation routes.

While consistent with Pashinyan’s mandate, a key application pertains to a southern corridor connecting noncontiguous Nakhchivan with the rest of Azerbaijan. It would be overseen by Russian peacekeeping forces, who currently monitor the Lachin corridor between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

The idea has been championed by Turkey, where President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sees it as a way to connect the entire Turkic world. Armenia is the only interruption, which worries those who fear for more than a mountainous enclave.

The proposed corridor would pass through Armenian sovereign territory, and it puts some residents ill at ease.

“If they are going to take my village for peace, that already is not peace,” said Alen Avedisyan, who lives near Meghri, 230 miles southeast of Yerevan on the Iranian border. “Erdoğan wants to be Saladin, ruling from the Mediterranean to China.”

A history teacher and father of three daughters, he recalled the day three decades earlier, when the 12 Azerbaijani families in his village fled. Armenians, with tears in their eyes, helped them load their worldly goods into trucks. The wives who stayed behind changed their Azeri names.

His province of Syunik, also known as Zangazur, is only 25 miles across at its narrowest point. In January 2021, a joint Armenian-Azerbaijani-Russian committee was formed to reopen routes per the ceasefire agreement, but little progress has been made.

Aliyev has threatened to take it by force, if necessary. But his rhetoric goes further. He has highlighted Zangazur as Azeris’ ancestral land—to which they will definitely “return.” He even described Yerevan as a “political and strategic goal,” which Azeris “must gradually approach.”

Some analysts have posited that such language is meant to give Azerbaijan domestic room to negotiate over Nagorno-Karabakh or Lachin, in order to “trade” these historical claims in any future settlement.

“We want communication, not land,” said Mubariz Qurbanli, chairman of Azerbaijan’s state committee on religious associations, when CT asked about Zangazur in December. “We will recognize each other’s boundaries.”

But for many Armenians, Aliyev’s statements prove the problem is far deeper than a pipeline.

And whether the solution lies in lobbying, arbitration, or even remedial secession, it is clear to them that Nagorno-Karabakh must be made an international issue.

“With all we have gone through in the world today, we should be done with war,” said Avedisyan. “But small countries are in the hands of big countries, and big countries must play a role for peace.”

https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/march/nagorno-karabakh-war-armenia-azerbaijan-artsakh-fuel-russia.html

Analyst: Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh ‘on the verge of failure’

Panorama
Armenia –

Political analyst Hrant Melik-Shahnazaryan has weighed in on the Azerbaijani invasion of an Artsakh village on Thursday.

He claims if the Azerbaijani troops are not pushed back from the village of Parukh and the adjacent heights as soon as possible, it means that the success of the Russian military in Mariupol and Izyum is “for naught”.

“We must be well aware of the current geopolitical realities and the purpose of events unfolding around us. Artsakh and Ukraine are not the main goals of the conflict between Russia and the West. The goals are different and are much more global. Artsakh and Ukraine are just two fronts of this conflict. And if Russia really believes that the country has enough potential to restore its former zones of influence, it has to prove that it is able to serve two fronts and, if necessary, three or four,” he wrote on Facebook.

Melik-Shahnazaryan believes the Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh is now "on the verge of failure".

“They took responsibility for ensuring stability on our geopolitical front and are failing. They are failing disgracefully,” he stated.

“The Russians have only two ways out of this situation. I have already talked about the first one: they must drive the Azerbaijanis back to their starting positions. Moreover, they must hold them to account for their brazen behavior.

“This is a pro-Armenian solution to the problem. But there is also a second way, which would be simply destructive for us.  It is as follows: the Russian side contains the discontent of Armenians, pretending as if nothing serious has happened in Artsakh. This is, of course, a temporary solution for Russia in this difficult times. But it is there, and our main task as a people should be not to let it happen.

“It makes no sense to pin our hopes on the authorities. The Armenian society must solve this problem, using its resources, including the media, the expert community, political forces, intellectuals, etc.  At the same time, we have very little time for all this, literally one or two days,” the analyst said.

Minister of Defense comments on recent incidents in military

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 11:40,

YEREVAN, MARCH 18, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Defense of Armenia Suren Papikyan visited the Province of Syunik on March 17, the Ministry of Defense said in a press release.

Papikyan visited a military base and during a meeting with officers addressed the recent incidents that happened in military units. The Minister of Defense underscored that the incidents are a result of improper level of discipline in certain units as well as improper level of morale of individual servicemembers.

After being briefing on the incidents by the officers in charge, the Minister of Defense issued instructions and directives to the army corps commander to take necessary measures to rule out such cases.

Papikyan also visited the border zone adjacent to the Nerkin Hand community where Major-General Artak Budaghyan, the Commander of the Army Corps, presented the current situation.

Papikyan was also briefed on the ongoing construction of a military base.

Music: Maestro Mansurian highlights role of Armenian language in patriotic pursuits

Panorama.am 
Armenia –

CULTURE 12:28 18/03/2022 ARMENIA

Maestro Tigran Mansurian highlighted the role of the Armenian language in patriotic aspirations as he met with students of the National Polytechnic University of Armenia on Thursday.

"The art of composition is not a performing art, but an ideological one. In this case young people have great opportunities, they study in developed countries and return to Armenia. I believe there will be successors. Being in action, being part of the changing world is essential," said the leading composer.

Speaking about the musicality of the Armenian language, the composer stated that music and the Armenian language are closely linked with one another. "With its accents and phonetics, it is already music. We must always recognize the role of the Armenian language in patriotic pursuits. Language is the foundation of instrumental music. Every language is not only phonetics, but also a worldview system,” Mansurian said.

The maestro also talked about his childhood and student years. "I was a naughty child, I never thought about my teachers being happy with me. I was always fighting,” he said.

Mansurian described himself as self-taught. "I was an insatiable reader. I didn't attend a music school, I learned music by myself. When there is no teacher, when you are alone with yourself, a direct connection is formed between music and you. Nevertheless, I was surrounded by caring people,” he noted.