Armenpress: The European Parliament fully supports the idea of sending an international fact-finding mission to the Lachin Corridor

 20:53, 21 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS. The European Parliament fully supports the idea of sending an international fact-finding mission to the Lachin Corridor. ARMENPRESS reports, the chairperson of the Security and Defense Subcommittee of the European Parliament Nathalie Loiseau said during a press conference, answering the question whether the issue of sending a fact-finding team to the Lachin Corridor was discussed with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan as part of her visit to Armenia, and whether she currently sees such an opportunity?

"First, there is a decision of the International Court of Justice regarding the unblocking of the Lachin Corridor, which must be properly implemented. Second, the European Parliament fully supports the idea of sending a fact-finding mission.

The European Parliament also welcomes the idea of an international presence in general to fully protect the rights and interests of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.

We are also completely in favor of a UN Security Council resolution being adopted. And the sooner, the better it will be if the members of the UN Security Council prepare a draft of such a resolution," said Loiseau.

Brownback Calls for Congress to Support Armenia

6/22/2023 United States (International Christian Concern) ––“This is the oldest Christian nation facing again for the second time in only about a century the possibility of a genocide,” project coordinator Robert Nicholson stated as he returned from his trip from Armenia.  

Nicholson is discussing the Armenian Christians who suffered up to 1.5 million deaths in the waning years of the Ottoman Empire that the U.S. now recognizes as a genocide.  

Former Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback informs Congress about the ongoing crisis between Azerbaijan and Armenia as he returned from a fact-finding trip to the two countries Tuesday.  

Alongside the human rights group Philos Project, Brownback traveled to Armenia and Azerbaijan to learn more about the ongoing conflict between Muslims in Azerbaijan and Christians in Armenia. The conflict began after the dissolution of the Soviet Union when both countries claimed the land for themselves. The first Nagorno-Karabakh War in 1994 ended with Armenia taking control of Nagorno –Karabakh. 

Conflict reemerged in 2020, with Azerbaijan taking control of large swaths of the region. Armenia’s only access to Nagorno-Karabakh is now through a thin strip of land called the “Lachin corridor.” 

In December, Azerbaijan established a blockade of the Lachin corridor which has resulted in a crippling of the Armenian infrastructure in Nagorno-Karabakh.  

Nicholson said that because of this blockade, “There has been no natural gas flowing since March, and other energy supplies, [such as] electricity, are spotty at best. Families have been separated. Surgeries have been canceled. The 120,000 people inside [Nagorno-Karabakh] are really desperate for help.” 

Coming back from his travels, Brownback has called for Congress to pass a Nagorno-Karabakh Human Rights Act to establish basic security guarantees for the Nagorno-Karabakh population. 

He also called on the U.S. to reinstate previously used sanctions on Azerbaijan should it continue its blockade. Many media outlets have characterized this conflict as a territorial dispute, but both Brownback and Nicholson have clarified that the conflict is more one of ideology and religion.  

With this striking call to action, Nicholson added, “There’s room for the United States to play a very constructive role in helping these different parties, both of which are our allies, to reach a peaceful and just solution to end the conflict.” 

https://www.persecution.org/2023/06/22/brownback-calls-for-armenia-support/

Post-War Trauma Prompts Armenia’s Sex Imbalance

UK –

Experts note that the conflict and still-volatile security may be behind the rise of a skewed ratio between boys and girls.

YEREVAN BASED JOURNALIST

Ani hopes that the child she is expecting means a new start. The 48-year-old’s world was shattered on the autumn day in 2020 when her 19-year-old son was killed fighting in the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorny Karabakh region. Desperate to fill the void he left she sought to replace him with another child – and she wanted it to be a boy. 

“One year later I got pregnant, naturally, but I lost the baby due to complications. The fetus was developed enough, it was a girl,” Ani (not her real name) told IWPR. She cannot say whether she would have carried on with the pregnancy if she had known the baby was a girl. “I had double feelings: I wished it was a boy, it turned out to be a girl…”

Ani fell into depression but was determined to have another child. In 2022 she applied to the state programme that provides free in-vitro fertilisation for parents who lost children during the 2020 war. 

Ani’s desire for a boy is not isolated. Nearly 4,000 Armenian servicemen died in the 44 day-war and many grieving parents have sought to have boys to replace their dead children. Experts maintain that the post-war trauma may have played a role in the rise of Armenia’s sex imbalance at birth after years of stability.

In 2022, the Statistical Committee of the Republic of Armenia recorded 112 boys for 100 girls, up from 109 boys to 100 girls registered in 2021. The standard biological ratio isof 105 boys to 100 girls, according to data from the UN Population Fund (UNFPA). 

“Before the war we had a pretty good index, we had a decrease every year,” Health Minister Anahit Avanesyan told IWPR. “Unfortunately, after the war, there was a certain change again in the society’s mood and perception.”

Armenia has been battling against high rate of prenatal sex selection for decades. The conservative, patriarchal society values boys over girls and with technology allowing the sex of the baby to be known at an early stage, some families opt for an abortion in the case of a female fetus. 

The sex ratio at birth started rising in the early 1990s as the country became independent: it peaked in 2000 with 120 boys for 100 girls and in 2013 was still 114 male births per 100 female. Selective abortions are thought to have left the country short of an estimated 80,000 girls.

“It is a problem of national mentality; the society, both here and in the wider region, favours sons over daughters as the continuation of the family,” psychologist Sona Hovakimyan told IWPR.

Awareness campaigns and measures like announcing the sex of the baby at a later stage managed to slowly contain the imbalance, which dropped in the late 2010s. Then, in 2020, the war broke out, leaving a country traumatised.

According to psychologist Hovakimyan, mothers who have lost a son may seek to have a male child to fill the gap left by their dead child. 

“When having an abortion, a woman goes through all the stages of loss again but it is the woman's decision whether she is ready to take that step or not. In that decision, it is very important for a woman to know her possibilities, to understand her fears,” she noted.

UNFPA research in 2022 showed that the preference for boys over girls is on the rise in Armenia. 

About 91 per cent said that “sons continue the lineage” and 83 per cent stated that “boys are the defenders of the motherland”. In a similar poll conducted by UNFPA in 2017, respondents were 64 per cent and 17 per cent respectively. 

The defeat in the 2020 war and the increasingly volatile security situation along the border with Azerbaijan are thought to be behind the sharp increase of respondents who see sons as “defenders of the motherland”.

CONTINUING THE FAMILY NAME

“The issue of gender selection deepens even more when the family is expecting a third child,” says Zaruhi Tonoyan, coordinator of the UNFPA’s programme to combat gender discrimination. “In fact, from the second child on, families prefer to have a child whose gender will differ from the gender of the first, also considering that the birth rate is decreasing.”

This is what happened in Alla’s family. 

“My firstborn, my daughter, is five years old. My husband adores her, he says he wouldn't exchange her for 1,000 boys. But his family dreamed of a grandson and he kept saying that our second child had to be a boy,” Alla (not her real name), told IWPR. The 28-year-old lives in a village in the eastern region of Gegharkunik, which borders Azerbaijan -the UNFPA research showed that the region has the highest prevalence of families favouring boys over girls. 

Alla’s in-laws repeatedly told her that a woman’s duty was to give birth to a boy child to continue the family name.

“The topic was discussed so much that I was inclined to think that our second child ought to be a boy. When I got pregnant two years ago, I found out it was a girl… We were not expecting a girl. A boy was needed,” she recalled, adding, “I don’t want to talk too much about it. I had an abortion. I had to.”

After the abortion, Alla developed health problems; doctors said it will take her body a long time to recover.  

“I committed a sin, I did it without realising it. I've gone to 1,000 doctors, but I can't get pregnant. God punished me,” she said as she showed a small shrine she had set up in a corner of her room. She said that her day starts and ends with a prayer, in the hope “to be forgiven and have another child”.

In 2013, UNFPA recorded that the imbalance was particularly dramatic for third births: the level of 173 sons born for every 100 daughters was the world’s highest.

Experts maintain that the root of the problem needed to be addressed.

“We should learn to value girls, women should be valued in society. We need to have conversations about it, so that we can prevent the issue of gender-based selection,” Tonoyan said. “We are taking a step back. We had a positive index, which we need to achieve again by continuing awareness activities regarding this issue, as well as capacity building among healthcare workers, who should provide proper counseling to women for the latter to make informed decisions.”

Ethnographer Hranush Kharatyan agreed. 

“There is a need to change the mentality, to value the role of women. Gender equality wil make the issue [sex selection at birth] disappear,” he told IWPR.

In Yerevan, Ani says that she is now ready for a girl. 

“The new child is the beginning of a new life and will not be a replacement for my lost boy… You know, it is very difficult to be honest with yourself,” she continued. “But you have to be. When you are very honest, you realise that you are selfish, that you want nature to adapt to you and give you what you want. However, this is a matter that should not be interfered with. A girl or a boy, the child must be born.”

https://iwpr.net/global-voices/post-war-trauma-prompts-armenias-sex-imbalance

Armenia Defense Minister, Governor of Kansas Laura Kelly and U.S. Brigadier General Michael Venerdi discuss cooperation

 13:35,

YEREVAN, JUNE 23, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Defense Suren Papikyan held a meeting on June 23 with Governor of Kansas Laura Kelly and Adjutant General for the U.S. State of Kansas Brigadier General Michael Venerdi.

U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Kristina Kvien also participated in the meeting.

The current course of cooperation between the Armenian Ministry of Defense and the Kansas National Guard was discussed.

The U.S. officials are visiting Armenia on the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Kansas-Armenia State Partnership Program.

The course of implementation of the agreements on new cooperation directions which were reached during Papikyan’s September 2022 visit to Kansas were also discussed during the meeting.

Both sides noted the progress in the planned cooperation in areas of mutual interest, such as professional sergeant system, peacekeeping, military medicine, cyber-security, exchange of experience in social protection for servicemembers and their families and other areas.

The parties agreed to continue cooperation and initiate new directions of partnership.

Asbarez: Memorial Honoring Steve Artinian

Steve Artinian


In honor Steve Artinian, the Artinian family will be hosting a gathering for family and friends who want to pay their respects on Tuesday June 27, 2023 from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Homenetmen Regional Headquarters’ Andonian Hall, 2324 Colorado Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90041. There will be valet parking for everyone’s convenience.



Azerbaijani military again fires at farmer in Nagorno Karabakh

 09:56,

YEREVAN, JUNE 23, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani armed forces opened gunfire at a farmer in Nagorno Karabakh on June 22, the Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) Ministry of Defense said in a statement.

The shooting happened after Azerbaijan generated yet another disinformation falsely claiming that it disrupted alleged engineering works by the Artsakh Defense Army.

The Azerbaijani forces opened fire in between 13:40 – 14:20, June 22, at a farmer working in his tractor in agricultural fields of Tchartar.

Nagorno Karabakh authorities said they reported the shooting to the Russian peacekeepers.

As of 09:30, June 23 the situation on the line of contact was relatively stable, the Defense Ministry of Nagorno Karabakh added.

The shooting comes a day after Azeri forces shot and wounded an on-duty soldier of the Defense Army.

Azerbaijani authorities convert Armenian church into mosque in Nagorno Karabakh

 12:04,

YEREVAN, JUNE 23, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani government is turning an Armenian church into a mosque in the territories under its control in Nagorno Karabakh.

A government agency in Nagorno Karabakh posted images online showing the St. Hambardzum Church of Berdzor (Lachin) in Nagorno Karabakh being converted into a mosque.

“Azerbaijan is turning the St. Hambardzum Church of Berdzor into a mosque. Appropriation of history, destruction of cultural identity, religious intolerance and falsification,” the State Service of Preservation of Historic Environment of Nagorno Karabakh said in a statement.

[see videos]

Lachin Has Been Blockaded for 6 Months. Artsakh Rights Defender Calls for ‘Remedial Recognition’

The Lachin Corridor remains blockaded since Dec. 12


Azerbaijan has been blockading Artsakh, through the closure of the Lachin Corridor, for six months. The Artsakh Human Rights Defender published an updated version of a report detailing violations of human rights since December 12, when the blockade began.

Through graphs and charts, the report provides a comprehensive overview of the dire conditions and ongoing provocation by Azerbaijan against the people of Artsakh.

Some of the basic data is presented in below, highlighting the human rights violations during the past 182 day:

  • The movement of people passing through the Stepanakert-Goris highway (along the Lachin corridor) has decreased by about 198 times (2246 entries and departures instead of 445,900);
  • Almost 58 times less car traffic was recorded on the road compared to what should have been in case of no blockade (2,867 car entries and departures, performed only by the Red Cross and Russian peacekeepers, instead of 167,440);
  • Approximately 13 times less vital cargo was imported compared to what should have been in case of no blockade (5,574 tons instead of 72,800 tons);
  • Due to the suspension of the pre-planned operations, about 1400 citizens lost the opportunity to address health concerns that required surgeries;
  • Azerbaijan has completely or partially interrupted the gas supply from Armenia to Artsakh for a total of 117 days;
  • The electricity supply from Armenia to Artsakh has been completely cut for 154 days now, which led to the introduction of rolling blackouts followed by numerous accidents;
  • According to preliminary estimates, about 11,000 people have actually lost their jobs and sources of income (including cases of job retention)
  • The country’s economy suffered loss in the amount of about $346 million;
  • A number of violations of rights are more pronounced in case of vulnerable groups, in particular 30,000 children, 9,000 people with disabilities, 20,000 elderly, 60,000 women (women and girls) and 15,000 displaced persons.

In addition to the continuous and multiple violations of the provisions of the Tripartite Statement of November 9, 2020, the mandatory execution of the decision of the United Nations International Court of Justice on ensuring unimpeded entry and departure of people, cars and cargo along the Lachin corridor has not been implemented by Azerbaijan, which once again is breaching international values and principles.

Furthermore, the Azerbaijani side resorted to new aggressive actions which resulted in human losses and new sufferings among Artsakh people. Since April 23, the Azerbaijani side has installed an illegal checkpoint near the Hakari bridge.

Consequently, the international community has not only the right, but also an indisputable obligation to implement the decision of the International Court of Justice by practical means as soon as possible and to prevent future Azerbaijani crimes, including the new planned and brutal crime against humanity.

All the violations of Azerbaijan against the people of Artsakh are carried out within the framework of its state policy of racial discrimination (Armenophobia) and are deeply directed against their right to self-determination and the fact of its realization, aimed at finally resolving the conflict to their advantage via ethnic cleansing based on the “no people, no rights” logic.

The systematic and consistent policy of ethnic hatred pursued by Azerbaijan, which manifested itself both during the aggression against the people of Artsakh in 2020 and after the establishment of the ceasefire regime, indisputably proves that any status of Artsakh within Azerbaijan is tantamount to ethnic cleansing of Artsakh and the genocide of the Armenians of Artsakh. Therefore, in the context of the Artsakh conflict, the right to self-determination is equal to the right of people to live in their homeland.

The fundamental right to self-determination of the people of Artsakh, as well as the Azerbaijani encroachments and threats against their physical existence on the basis of racial discrimination are more than sufficient grounds for the protection of the people of Artsakh by the international community, as well as the international recognition of the Republic of Artsakh based on the principle of “remedial recognition.”

Sports: Wales opening doors to diverse communities ahead of Armenia fixture

Shropshire Star, Wales
June 14 2023

The Dragons host Armenia in a sold out Euro 2024 qualifier on Friday.

Female football supporters from Wales’ South Asian communities will watch the national team play for the first time on Friday through a new initiative designed to create a more diverse fan base.

The sold-out signs are set to go up for Wales’ Euro 2024 qualifier with Armenia at the Cardiff City Stadium with Rob Page’s side hoping to take another step towards next summer’s finals in Germany.

Among the 33,000-plus capacity crowd will be women benefiting from a partnership between Her Game Too Cymru, Amar Cymru – the group launched in 2020 to give the South Asian community a voice in the national team – and the Football Association of Wales.

Thirty tickets were made available to women from South Asian communities to attend the game. With the offer oversubscribed, fans that missed out have been invited to a Cardiff restaurant on Monday to watch Wales’ Euro qualifier in Turkey.

Roopa Vyas is a director of Her Game Too, the campaign group run by fans to raise awareness of sexism in sport, and has followed the Wales national team at home and abroad.

“We want to show the Red Wall is the friendliest fan base around,” said Caerphilly-born Vyas, who has a Ugandan father and an Indian mother.

“I have gone to games off my own back but I know the barriers that exist and it not easy for people from Muslim, Hindu, Bengali, Somali and other communities to do that.

“Amar Cymru is a progressive group that want to get female fans to games and they came to me as they knew I went to games and could shine a light on it.

I have gone to games off my own back, but I know the barriers that exist and it not easy for some people to do that.

“Hopefully we can go back to the FAW after the game and show them it was successful.”

Shazia Zahoor, born in Cardiff of Pakistani heritage, once played for Dinas Powys Ladies alongside current Wales captain Sophie Ingle and will be among fans experiencing her first international action on Friday.

“I’ve been a football fanatic since I was 13 and wanted to play but the culture did not encourage it,” said Zahoor, who will be joined at the Wales game by her sons Ibrahim, 11, and Zakariya, five.

“Even now I would feel uncomfortable talking to my father about playing football.

“I’m thrilled to be going to a Wales game and taking my two boys. It will be lovely to see other Asian women there because it really is breaking down barriers.”

The FAW want to create a more diverse fan base and has had mascots with South Asian heritage at home games and discussed establishing prayer rooms for fans at the Cardiff City Stadium.

Members of Amar Cymru – which translates to ‘My Wales’ and resonates with the South Indian, Bangladeshi and Punjabi communities – attended a Wales match for the first time in September 2021.

Jalal Goni, the organisation’s founder, says the landscape of Welsh football has changed even in that short time.

“When Amar Cymru started in lockdown it was pre-dominantly made up of males, but Wales being at the World Cup changed things,” said Goni.

“Females were saying how we can watch it and we had an event for the USA game at the World Cup that included arts and crafts and other things for the family as well as the football.

“The World Cup opened up the stadium experience for females. We know the older generation in our communities would not support females going to a male dominated event but we are breaking that stigma down.”

Goni, who will be part of a 10-strong Amar Cymru delegation in Turkey as the group attends a stand-alone Wales away fixture for the first time, added: “There is a lot riding on it.

“Female fans will be dressed differently in head scarves and cultural dresses and we hope there will be no negative comments.

“It is a massive step but the FAW have done a tremendous job in reshaping Welsh football, certainly since Euro 2016.

“Attending Wales games has become more of a family experience and we feel we are ready for this.”

Armenpress: Docus offers first-of-its-kind AI-powered online health assistant

 09:40,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Docus, the acclaimed platform created by two Armenian experts that made headlines last year in India and has since expanded worldwide, is now offering its new product – an AI Health Assistant.

Docus is an AI-powered health platform that enables you to interact with an AI Health Assistant, generate personalized health records, and validate them with top doctors from the U.S. and Europe.

“Anyone can contact Docus AI Health Assistant, create their health records and validate them with leading doctors from the United States and Europe,” Docus CTO and co-founder Gevorg Nazaryan told ARMENPRESS. “This is a first-of-its-kind product that combines an AI-created diagnosis with validated conclusions made under human supervision,” he added.

Docus combines AI with the skills of over 300 top doctors from the U.S. and more than 15 countries in Europe.

The AI Health Assistant is available 24/7 and works by determining a diagnosis based on health-related inquiries submitted by users. It then links the potential patients with leading doctors to validate the diagnosis.

The platform uses GPT-4, OpenAI and vector databases and meets the HIPAA and GDPR data protection requirements, ensuring confidentiality and security of patients.

“It’s important to note that the information generated by the AI serves only as a general educational knowledge. Although AI won’t be able to replace doctors anytime in the nearest future, it does have the potential to significantly impact healthcare. On one hand the AI provides the patients with updated information validated on the basis of the records, and on the other hand it can help doctors in performing ordinary tasks such as analyzing the data of patients and highlighting the important results,” Nazaryan said.

The CTO claims that Docus has the potential to transform the healthcare sector and save lives.

Nazaryan described Docus’ mission to be the improvement of people’s health by combining modern technologies and leading experience.

The is available all over the world.

Karine Terteryan



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