Turkish press: Armenian foundation hails Erdoğan, Pashinian phone call

An illustration of Armenian and Turkish flags. (Shutterstock File Photo)

The Association of Armenian Foundations in Türkiye (ERVAP) on Tuesday hailed the recent phone call between President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to improve bilateral ties.

Commenting on the positive atmosphere revolving around both countries' relations, the association said in a statement that the discussion between Erdoğan and Pashinian has turned into a development that determines the agenda of the Armenian community in Turkey.


"All institutions and organizations follow the exemplary leadership with hope and appreciation," the statement said.

While the process of normalization between Turkey and Armenia has led to great expectations recently, the setting created by the direct contact of the two leaders through the phone has added a new dimension to optimism, it said.

Stressing that the normalization of bilateral ties would pave the way for a positive climate, which would benefit social life and institutional activities, the statement further noted that the opportunities for dialogue and empathy to appear in line with the normalization were significant for the future of both peoples.

"Our community, symbolizing the continuity of the tradition of co-existence of two ancient peoples, passionately backs this process of normalization with its rich network of institutions," it said, adding that the leaders of foundations were determined to mobilize all of their experience in this "historical turning point."

Bedros Şirinoğlu, the head of ERVAP, said all segments of the Armenian community in Turkey welcomed the phone conversation between the two leaders, adding the steps to be taken by Ankara could potentially not only change the fate of the South Caucasus but also open a gateway to reshape the international balance.

"The anticipated full normalization is the primary goal that requires patience," he said and called on all pro-peace people in both Turkey and Armenia to support the vision set by the leaders.

In a social media post on Monday, Archbishop Sahag II Mashalian welcomed the leaders' phone talk, saying it built up people's hopes for peace at a time when the world was disturbed by warfare.

"I pray that the peaceful methods of diplomacy become the winner, not death and wars," he said, hoping that the discussion of leaders would open a new chapter in Turkish and Armenian relations.

On Monday, the Turkish presidency said in a statement that Erdoğan and Pashinian expressed their expectations for the immediate implementation of the issues agreed upon during the talks held on July 1 by the special representatives of both countries.


The first round of normalization talks was held in Moscow on Jan. 14, where both parties agreed to continue negotiations without any preconditions, according to a statement released after the meeting.

The Turkish and Armenian envoys met for the second time in Vienna on Feb. 24, and the third meeting was held on May 3 in the same city.

Also, a historic bilateral meeting took place between the foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia on the sidelines of the Antalya Diplomacy Forum on March 12.

As part of the efforts, Turkey and Armenia have also resumed commercial flights as of Feb. 2 after a two-year hiatus.

Armenian, Kazakh officials discuss possibilities of importing oil products from Kazakhstan to Armenia

 

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 11:31,

YEREVAN, JULY 16, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure of Armenia Gnel Sanosyan had a meeting with Kazakh Energy Minister Bolat Akchulakov in Nur-Sultan during his working visit to the Republic of Kazakhstan. ARMENPRESS reports the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure informed that issues related to bilateral cooperation in the field of energy were discussed. In particular, the possibilities and conditions for the import of oil products from Kazakhstan to Armenia were discussed.

Issues regarding the exchange of successful experiences in the fields of renewable energy and energy efficiency were also discussed.

U.S. House set to vote on four pro-Armenian amendments

Panorama
Armenia –

The U.S. House Rules Committee cleared the path for full House consideration of four ANCA-backed amendments to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA – H.R.7900) that call for Azerbaijan’s immediate release of Armenian POWs, require U.S. State Department reports on Azerbaijani war crimes, and place conditions on the proposed sale of F-16 fighter jets to Turkey, ANCA reported.

The amendments may be voted on individually or grouped in “blocs” and voted upon during House consideration of the NDAA, which may begin as early as this Wednesday evening, July 13th.

Pro-Artsakh/Armenia advocates can write, call, and tweet their U.S. Representatives to vote for the amendment by visiting anca.org/ndaa.

“We would like to thank Chairman McGovern for his leadership of the Rules Committee and to express our appreciation to the authors, cosponsors, and all those – in our community and among our coalition partners – who helped bring these ANCA-backed amendments to the U.S. House floor,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We will, in the coming days, strongly back each of these amendments holding Azerbaijan and Turkey accountable – rallying bipartisan support for their passage and ultimate enactment into law.”

The four pro-Artsakh/Armenia amendments to be voted on by the U.S. House are provided below (amendment numbers may change during final House votes on the measures):

Amendment #611 (formerly #698): Introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), the amendment expresses the sense of Congress that the government of Azerbaijan should immediately return all Armenian prisoners of war and captured civilians. Joining Rep. Schiff as Congressional cosponsors of the bipartisan amendment include Representatives Don Beyer (D-VA), Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), Tony Cardenas (D-CA), Judy Chu (D-CA), Katherine Clark (D-MA), Jim Costa (D-CA), Debbie Dingell (D-MI), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Young Kim (R-CA), Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), James Langevin (D-RI), Brenda Lawrence (D-MI), Debbie Lesko (R-AZ), Andy Levin (D-MI), Ted Lieu (D-CA), Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), Tom Malinowski (D-NJ), Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Linda Sanchez (D-CA), Janice Schakowsky (D-IL), Elissa Slotkin (D-MI), Abigail Spanberger (D-VA), Jackie Speier (D-CA), Dina Titus (D-NV), Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), and David Valadao (R-CA).

Amendment #121 (formerly #837): Spearheaded by Representatives Tony Cardenas (D-CA) and Brad Sherman (D-CA), the amendment calls for a report by the State Department and Defense Department that would detail the use of U.S. parts in Turkish drones used by Azerbaijan against Armenia and Artsakh; Azerbaijan’s use of white phosphorous, cluster bombs and other prohibited munitions deployed against Artsakh; Turkey’s and Azerbaijan’s recruitment of foreign terrorist fighters during the 2020 Artsakh war. Joining Representatives Tony Cardenas (D-CA) and Brad Sherman (D-CA) as Congressional cosponsors of the bipartisan amendment include Representatives Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), Judy Chu (D-CA), David Cicilline (D-RI), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), James Langevin (D-RI), Brenda Lawrence (D-MI), Andy Levin (D-MI), Ted Lieu (D-CA), Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Linda Sanchez (D-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Elissa Slotkin (D-MI), Jackie Speier (D-CA), Dina Titus (D-NV), Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), and David Valadao (R-CA).

Amendment #337 (formerly #992): Introduced by Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA), the amendment directs the Secretary of Defense, in coordination with the Secretary of State, to document details of the waiver requirements to Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act and report on whether security assistance to the government of Azerbaijan undermines efforts toward a peaceful settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Joining Rep. Speier as congressional cosponsors of the bi-partisan measure include Representatives Judy Chu (D-CA), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), James Langevin (D-RI), Brenda Lawrence (D-MI), Ted Lieu (D-CA), Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Linda Sanchez (D-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Elissa Slotkin (D-MI), Dina Titus (D-NV), Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), and David Valadao (R-CA).

Amendment #399 (formerly #478): Led by Representatives Chris Pappas (D-NH) and Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), the amendment would place conditions upon the sale or transfer of F-16s or F-16 modernization kits to Turkey. Joining Representatives Pappas and Bilirakis as co-sponsors of the bipartisan measure are Representatives David Cicilline (D-RI), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), James Langevin (D-RI), Andy Levin (D-MI), Ted Lieu (D-CA), Zoe Lofgren (D-CA), Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY), Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), Grace Meng (D-NY), Frank Pallone (D-NJ), John Sarbanes (D-MD), Brad Schneider (D-IL), Brad Sherman (D-CA), Jackie Speier (D-CA), Dina Titus (D-NV). A similar amendment, #208, was withdrawn prior to consideration by the Rules Committee.

Over the past weeks, in addition to nationwide grassroots call and twitter campaigns, the ANCA Leo Sarkisian, Maral Melkonian Avetisyan, and Hovig Apo Saghdejian Capital Gateway Program summer interns and fellows have joined Hamparian and ANCA Government Affairs Director Tereza Yerimyan in advocating for these pro-Artsakh/Armenia priorities in legislative briefings for over one hundred Congressional offices, in addition to a broader office-by-office outreach campaign. The efforts will continue through full U.S. House consideration of the measures.

No international demand to lower bar on Artsakh’s status, opposition leader says

Panorama
Armenia –

Opposition leader Ishkhan Saghatelyan, an MP from the Hayastan alliance, has dismissed Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s claims that the international community is pressuring Armenia to lower the bar on the status of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).

At a press conference on Monday following his four-day visit to Strasbourg, Saghatelyan said he had held meetings with two vice-presidents of the European Parliament, its co-rapporteur on Armenia as well as the heads of the friendship groups with Armenia and Artsakh.

"I have met with various officials of the European Parliament and it seems that there is no international demand to lower the bar on Artsakh’s status claimed by the Armenian authorities,” he said.

“There is a demand to establish peace, but we thoroughly explained to them that it should not be achieved at the expense of the interests of Armenia and Artsakh and imposed peace in the region cannot bring stability," the MP said.

Saghatelyan stated that the interests of Armenia and Artsakh are not properly represented in international organizations, adding European officials have no sufficient information on the situation in the region.

Also, the opposition lawmaker said he raised the issue of Armenian prisoners of war being held in Azerbaijani at all his meetings in the European Parliament. 

Turkish Press: Türkiye offers Armenia to host normalisation talks in Yerevan

Turkey – July 4 2022

Türkiye had offered Armenia to host the first round of normalisation talks between the two countries in the Armenian capital Yerevan, the Turkish foreign minister said.

“We made an offer to Armenia, saying that we can have the first meeting in Yerevan, but Armenia is not ready for this yet due to domestic pressure,” Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Monday in a joint news conference of foreign and interior ministers of Türkiye and Austria in the capital Ankara.

Cavusoglu said that the Armenian diaspora was divided over the Turkish-Armenian normalisation process, adding that there were some protests by extremist groups on Armenian streets.

“We thank Austria (for hosting the normalisation talks), but why shouldn't the next meetings be held in Türkiye or Armenia?” he questioned.

The Turkish foreign minister also reiterated that his country is in consultation with Azerbaijan at every stage regarding the normalisation process.

“After all, we want to continue the process gradually,” Cavusoglu said.

“On the other hand, we support the normalisation between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” he added.

READ MORE: Turkiye, Armenia hold first meeting in years to normalise ties

India supports resolution of NK conflict under OSCE MG Co-Chairmanship: Ambassador’s exclusive interview to Armenpress

India supports resolution of NK conflict under OSCE MG Co-Chairmanship: Ambassador's exclusive interview to ARMENPRESS

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 19:45, 8 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 8, ARMENPRESS. India supports the resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict through the OSCE Minsk Group under the Chairmanship of three Co-Chairs – USA, France and Russia, H.E. Kishan Dan Dewal, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of India to Armenia, said in an exclusive interview to ARMENPRESS on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

[see video]
Presenting his country’s principled position on any bilateral dispute or conflict, the Ambassador said that any bilateral dispute should be resolved through peaceful negotiations, through diplomatic dialogue and through mutual understanding. “There is no place for war”, he says. “There is no place for threat of force, there is no place for use of violence, we are strictly against it”.

Touching upon the possibility of forming a strategic partnership between Armenia and India, Kishan Dan Dewal said that the political relations between the two countries are strong and are going to get stronger now.

ARMENPRESS presents the 2nd part of the interview with the Indian Ambassador below:

To read the 1st part of the interview, click the following link:

– Mr. Dewal, what other current and potential projects can the two countries initiate or implement together in the key areas of cooperation, as political dialogue, transport, economic and trade, culture and education or other spheres of mutual interest?

– That’s a very long list.

– I’m sorry, it is.

 - That’s quite long list, but I can just tell that both countries have great potential in many fields. First of all is the political sphere, where we need to enhance, increase our political interaction to the highest possible level. When Foreign Minister visited India, he carried with him an invitation from Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for our Prime Minister. So, we are working on increasing our political context. That is one.

On educational sphere, as I mentioned you, Armenia has limitations in terms of receiving more students because of the number of seats that could be offered to foreign students yet and for which more infrastructure is needed, but because of the Ukraine crisis we expect more Indian students coming this year.

On cultural sphere we are working on many projects and, as I mentioned to you, I would like to show more India to Armenian people and also more Armenia to our Indian people. That is on the cultural aspect.

Lastly, I want to mention that our trade between India and Armenia right now has touched almost 180 million US dollars. It is very less compared to our other trade partners, but there's a very positive trend which has gone and there's a huge potential to fulfill the demands of Armenian society in Armenian market from India especially when we see the crisis in the near neighborhood and we are ready to offer our all kind of support and all kind of products that can be useful for the Armenian economy and also we’d like to get more Armenian stuff in the Indian market, right now it is very less.

And thirdly, both countries are working on opening trade corridors, working on bringing more contact through our connectivity projects and especially through the international North-South Transport Corridor and using Chabahar port in Iran which India has developed. So, we are working on this aspect as well.

– The trade and economy are always key components of bilateral relations between countries, aren’t they?

– Yes, they are stimulus. See, I mean unless you have some economic interest, the political relations don’t move on their own. So, I’d say that economy is the stimulus for any society. I mean, you and me are working because of economy. Of course, also because of the love towards country, but economy is a very strong stimulus. So, unless economic and trade relations are strong, unless there are potential, other fields don’t move that fast, I would say.

– Nations like Armenia and India – we know more about culture, history, but you cannot cease to be a part of modern world, especially when you are talking about developing bilateral relations between the countries. I was reading recently about Armenian-Indian mutual trade: according to the Statistical Committee of Armenia, ArmStat, the trade turnover between Armenia and India amounted about $181 million in 2021. This is a very good dynamic, but I don’t know the content of this trade, what is fostering, activating the trade between the two countries. Can you mention specific data?

– In the last 3-4 years, there is more and more realization in the Armenian economy, that India is supplying to the world all kinds of products, including medicine among pharmaceutical products. We exported this year COVID vaccines, textile, food items, you name it and we are there, also the IT services. Now there is an interest among Armenian businessmen to engage India more and more and that is why we see very good upward trend in our trade figures in the last years. Specifically, in the last years there has been more export from Armenia to India than from India to Armenia, and quite a big chunk of it is gold export.

– This year is notable also for the Indian nation, as India celebrates the 75th anniversary of the Independence. India has acquired a prominent role in international relations. Prime Minister Modi has put forward several initiatives domestically and internationally. Could you please present some of the most important?

– As you know this in August 2022, we will be completing 75 years of our Independence; it is a very big and important milestone for us. This will also give us satisfaction as a nation that we have come a long way after our Independence. When we got independence in 1947, we were a country with 12% of literacy rate, and now our literacy rate is touching 80%. That time India was in a very poor economic condition, today we are the 6th largest economy in the world. We were struggling even to provide basic food and necessities to our countrymen, today we are a food surplus producing country, we are exporting food to the world. So we have achieved many, many things in the last 75 years, including our achievements in science and technology, defense and other fields. But to celebrate these occasions, our Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has initiated and guided us to start some new initiatives. I will name some of them.

One of them is called “Atmanirbhar Bharat” – self-independent India. There is a move to make India self-independent in any field, whatever we are importing, now we are trying to make it within India. So that comes to our next program, which is called “Make in India”. They are intertwined, once you want to become self-independent, then the program “Make in India” comes, and in “Make in India” we are trying to bring technologies from all over the world, from friendly countries, who are ready to share with us, and also we are inventing our own new innovative ideas, making those services and products in India.

Thirdly, we have stated what is called “Startup India”, new initiative by the Government of India to encourage new business ideas, innovative ideas, and give them support, governmental support and all other facilitation, for youngsters. By this “Startup India” there has been a very very positive progress. Within last 3 years many unicorns have appeared in India after this initiative has taken off.

Fourthly, our Prime Minister Modi has given very much emphasis on cleanliness within our country, for which we have started “Swachh Bharat” that is Clean India movement and almost every person is now a part of this mass movement, where we are trying to make our country not look like any other developing country, but look like any other modern developed country, giving signal that India is now moving ahead in all spheres of life.

 

– How is the pandemic situation in India now in terms of the fight against COVID-19?

– As you know COVID-19 has impacted the whole world and we are no exception to it, it started from Wuhan, China, but has taken over the entire world and you have seen how situations were difficult in Europe, in Italy, in US, so we were not exception. In first surge of the pandemic we were able to contain it to great extent, but the second wave was little difficult for us, but with our own local resources and management we were able to overcome that difficult time. Not only did we overcome ourselves, but we exported and supplied medicines, pharmaceuticals and vaccines to the entire world, we also gave as donations to many friendly countries, we supported this under “Vaccine Maitri” program, that is Vaccine friendship, under that program we sent help to more than 70 friendly countries. Once we overcome this situation, the third wave came to India, but because of our preparations there was less loss of lives and we were able to contain it very very fast and in today’s time while we are talking we have resorted back to our normal life, normal economic activities and everything is almost back to normal, we have opened our airports, flights are going and now we are inviting tourists also.

– So, in general, we can say that situation is more improved, better than one or two years ago in terms of coronavirus, isn’t it?

– I would say that situation in India has normalized, while we are speaking today, the total number of COVID-19 cases are now coming every day to 2000, which is miniscule for Indian population, it’s not threatening. Because of our vaccine program, where we have vaccinated majority of our eligible population, coronavirus pandemic has subsided and it is going to go down. We hope that it will not come back.

– Coming to the regional political issues: India was always active and observant concerning Nagorno Karabakh conflict and the regional security in South Caucasus. Indian MFA in May 2021 and Minister Jaishankar during his visit to Yerevan in October 2021 made important statements regarding Azerbaijan’s military encroachment into Armenia’s territory and India’s support to the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict within the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship. It would be very interesting to know what are the main priorities of India in our region and your country’s approaches to the long-lasting and comprehensive resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

– As you know we have always supported peaceful resolution of any bilateral dispute or conflict, Nagorno Karabakh is no exception for us and officially it has been our position and it continues, that any bilateral dispute should be resolved through peaceful negotiations, through diplomatic dialogue and through mutual understanding. There is no place for war, there is no place for threat of force, there is no place for use of violence, we are strictly against it. That is one.

Secondly, we have always supported the OSCE Minsk Group format, because this is the internationally recognized format, which is acceptable to Armenia and which we also support and we welcome their efforts to find long-lasting solution to this issue. So we continue to support the resolution through the OSCE Minsk Group under the Chairmanship of three Co-Chairs (USA, France and Russia).

Apart from this, as you know, wherever we found that there was international law violation, we have issued very strong statements, they are on our website, you can refer to it, and we have issued statement on couple of occasions. When our Foreign Minister was in Armenia in October 2021, we referred to this issue and we have made our position very clear on this.

– And as we see, we have very tough dynamic international and regional issues. How much these recent developments and processes around our region impact on this kind of issues in your perception? How do you see these processes in Caucasus, around Caucasus?

– I would say that South Caucasus for us is our extended neighbourhood. Peace and stability in this region is in our interest and this is what we expect and we hope that it will remain like this and peace and stability is not only in the interest of any country, it is also in interest of your country, it is in Armenia’s interest, if peace and tranquility and stability remain in this area. As regards new developments, our Government, my Foreign Ministry is fully aware of what is happening in the region, we are keeping watch, we have principled position on resolution of conflicts, but we would welcome if any peace process takes place through which lasting solution can be found out, we will certainly support such a position.

– Yerevan and New Delhi seem to share common interests also in regional, political and security areas. As we all know, there is an ongoing conflict around Kashmir region with Pakistan’s destructive role. In this regard, Armenia has always supported India on the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, as Armenian officials stated permanently. On the other hand, the other well-known fact is that Pakistan is a close ally of Azerbaijan and Turkey supporting Azerbaijani side in Nagorno Karabakh conflict, including the 2020 war against the Artsakh Republic. Therefore, Armenia highly appreciates India’s principled position and continuous support for the peaceful and comprehensive resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh issue. On your opinion, what can be done to build a strategic partnership between Armenia and India in terms of political and military-technical cooperation to address common challenges and threat perceptions?

– Good question. A difficult one, but I’ll try to answer. First of all, I thank the Government of Armenia and Armenian people for being very supportive to the issue of Jammu and Kashmir, which is an integral part of India. That is very important to be underlined. In the recent past we have made a domestic legislation, through which the former state of Jammu and Kashmir is now a Union Territory, i.e. administered from the Center, Union Territory of Ladakh and Jammu and Kashmir. As regards the role of Pakistan, as you are aware and everyone else is aware, that Pakistan has been making transport of terrorism into our territory, and we have been able to thwart those efforts continuously. I am happy to share with you that in the last 2 years, when J & K has become a Union Territory, along with Ladakh, the incidents of terrorism have been controlled to a great extent and the support that earlier they were getting is not any more there, I mean, the support of some vested local elements which they were getting, they are not getting anymore. The people of Jammu and Kashmir fully understand that their prosperity lies in peace. Because of new legislation applicable to the former state of Jammu and Kashmir now have been enacted for this Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir, because of this new change and there is positive change, there is economic growth, there is peace in the area.

On the second part of the question, I wish to reiterate that I have mentioned, that our political relations are strong, they are going to get stronger now, we share a lot of common concerns and common interests, there are platforms to exchange views on those concerns. One of such platforms is Foreign Office consultations, which we regularly conduct and this year we conducted a few months back in India and in Armenia, and also high-level visits and high-level meetings are also a very positive signal in this direction. As regards any other common platforms and strategies, I think both sides are working on this and as and when we feel that we will have any such dialogue, we will be willing to do that. Now we are working very actively to engage Armenia more politically.

– In this context, one of the recent significant news is that you met with Suren Papikyan, Armenian Minister of Defense, as far as I remember you were talking about developing the cooperation in defense sphere. Could you tell us more detailed about this discussion, how the cooperation in defense is going to be enlarged between Armenia and India?

– As regards defense cooperation, there is interest from Armenian side to have more defense ties, which we understand, and as you know, we have already initiated such cooperation. I visited Mr. Papikyan as a courtesy, as he took over newly as a Defense Minister, it was more like a courtesy call rather than any detailed discussion, but both sides are moving in positive direction.

 

– Do we have already substantial military cooperation between the two countries or are we going to create them? As much as you can talk about publicly.

– As I mentioned, we are working positively, there is no need to give details in this interview, but both sides are working to safeguard each other’s interest, that is very important, and secondly, to have strong partnership in all possible fields, which I mentioned earlier and when we say all possible fields, defense is also one of them, on which we are working.

– Armenia participates in Iran’s initiative of “Persian Gulf – Black Sea” international transit corridor project along with Iran, Georgia, Greece and Bulgaria. We are aware that Indian side’s interest in this initiative was one of the topics discussed with the Armenian side during Minister Jaishankar’s visit to Yerevan. Could you comment this information and present India’s position on its possible involvement in “Persian Gulf – Black Sea”?

– Yes, sure. During the visit of our Foreign Minister, the issue of connectivity was discussed between both the sides, and there was great interest shown by Armenia to have direct connectivity with India and we appreciate your position and we appreciate your concern also. As regards our position, we are member of International North-South Transport Corridor, INSTC, which passes through Iran, and we would like Armenia to be directly connected with India by whatever method or whatever way it is possible. As regards the Persian Gulf – Black Sea corridor, on this officially we are yet to get the proposal from Armenian side, but the talks are there. As you know, we have developed Chabahar port in Iran with Indian investment and Chabahar port can be very, very valuable asset for Armenia for transit of its goods, which can come through Iranian territory to Armenia and further to the Black Sea. In that way we are positively inclined and will discuss this with your side.

– So it’s a real possibility, Chabahar port is going to connect with Persian Gulf and that’s how India can be involved, right?

– Yes, this is what I said, we have developed Chabahar port with Indian investment and we would like Chabahar port to be utilized by Armenia for the benefit of both the countries, for the benefit of Armenia and its people and for the benefit of India and its people. If you use Chabahar to connect from here to Black Sea, we would be more than happy to see more connectivity between India and Armenia.

 

– Can we assume that through these kind of projects, Indian market is going to connect through our region with Europe? I mean we are talking about the great road from the East to the West, aren’t we?

– Yes, the purpose of the International North-South Transport Corridor was exactly the same, to connect India through this route with Europe, and the use of Chabahar port, certainly will bring Indian market closer to Europe, and European market closer to India.

– You mean Armenia also can benefit from this corridor, right?

– Yes, this is exactly what I said, you are on the way, you are a transit country, so not only to look at Europe as market for transit only, but you should also see that you can import goods directly from India using this route.

– In that context, we would like also to know your views on India’s activities and projects in the North-South International Transit Corridor program, as well its link with mentioned “Persian Gulf – Black Sea” initiative.

– As you know, India is one of the founding members of the International North-South Transit Corridor and the idea is to connect Indian ports through Persian Gulf and from Persian Gulf, using the land territory towards Russia and towards the European market. Now there have been lots of discussions and talks and work on this and it is still undergoing and we are looking forward for fully operationalization of this route.

– We talked a lot about politics, economy, but I see a lot of interesting pictures, and one of this is Mount Ararat. Is that you on the photo? If I am not mistaken you have reached the top of Ararat, haven’t you? Can you please talk about it, about your feelings when you reached the top?

– In this picture you see me on the top of Mount Ararat, in August 2021 I went to Mount Ararat along with an Armenian group, I was fortunate enough to climb to the top, and from Ararat I could see Yerevan.

 

– And your impressions?

– Impression, I would say, it was amazing feeling, when you reach the top you see the world with everybody down there, so you feel on the top of the world. That is one. Secondly, you feel so small, because you see huge mountains around and you are small piece of blood and muscles standing on top of a mountain. So that makes you very humble when you go on top of a mountain and you think for short while, you start think about philosophy, but I must say that it was a very unique experience, spiritual one and going on the top and seeing from there the surroundings, it’s difficult to express in words. We were 6 o’clock in the morning on the top and the sun was shining as if it was 12 o’clock, it was so bright, it was very bright. And I took my Indian flag and the symbol of India @75, as we are celebrating India’s 75th anniversary of independence.

– Wasn’t it hard to climb one of the highest mountains?

– It was not too difficult, but it was hard, difficulty level was, I would say, it was not for beginners, first of all, you need some preparation for that, the last leg of climb was bit difficult.

– What other hobbies do you have, apart from climbing the mountains and going to nature?

– Climbing mountain is one of my foremost hobbies, I have also been to your highest point – Aragats, 3 peaks, one I think I should do it this year, apart from this all your other smaller mountains, apart from hiking I am also little bit into music, I play some instrument.

– Which instrument?

– I play guitar and as a hobby I sing a bit.

– Raj Kapoor’s songs?

– No, my own songs. I am also into running, sports, I am going to run half marathon this Sunday.

– This is also a good chance to present other musicians’ songs, we know some, but maybe there are other important musicians or singers that we don’t know in Armenia.

– Yes, that is why we are now trying to make a cultural forum, where we could present more modern Indian cultural aspect, including from Bollywood to the Armenian population. There are many new artists, which Armenian people are not yet aware about.

 

– Could you share your knowledge about Armenian culture, Armenian music or literature? Have you explored?

– Frankly literature I have not read much, though I have read some translations of Charents and since the language is a barrier, I could not read original in Armenian. As regards music, I am hearing your traditional Armenian music, including instrumental on duduk, etc. and some compositions of Komitas I have heard and they are quite impressive.

– Is Komitas well-known in the East, in India?

– I would be very frank with you, if somebody has interest in music, only those would know some master artist of music or any other field. So in India certainly those who have interest in classical music, or western music, they will certainly know about Komitas, but of course, not everybody knows him. For that matter, in India many people don’t know about our own artists as well.

– What about Indian traditional instruments. Have you ever tried to play any Indian traditional instrument?

– One instrument is called sitar, it’s a string instrument. I don’t play any Indian instrument, but in our cultural center we are teaching some Indian instruments and there are many Armenians who are playing sitar, which is very heartening to see. Sitar is a string instrument, very classical one, typical Indian and as I mentioned we did a concert some time back here, in which sitar was played by one Armenian, Peter Davidian, of Armenian origin, but citizen of Australia, so he played sitar for us.

– Who are better singers, Indian singers or Armenian?

– Both styles are different. Indian style is typical Indian, both are unique in their own way, it’s difficult to compare.

– Coming to the end of our interview, main topic is the anniversary of diplomatic relations, you mentioned some events already implemented.

– One event.

– What other events are going to be conducted on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and India?

– As I mentioned, I will repeat the same, we are trying to host a Gala concert of Indian music and dance in Armenia. That’s one. Two, we are planning to host an Armenian group in India, three – both sides are trying to bring out stamps commemorating the 30th anniversary, stamps by your Postal body and from our Post office. I will be organizing one reception on this occasion, or we will work with your colleagues in Foreign Office, maybe we’ll do a joint reception. Also we should not isolate that this is the 30th anniversary, I would say this year whatever event we do, it is part of our 30th anniversary celebration, including visit of Honorable Foreign Minister to India. This is also part of our celebration.

 

– Do you have something to address to the Armenian audience on this occasion and on Armenian-Indian relations in a wider sense?

– Sure, to our Armenian audience, I would like to say that first of all I would like to thank them for hosting me for last 3 years, it’s very friendly country, very friendly people, and I like this country very much and I have been all around, I have seen the nature of Armenia, saw the mountains, first feeling is of gratitude to Armenia and its people.

Secondly I would like to say that many Armenians, who have not visited India, their impression about India is mostly from Bollywood movies, so my request is to go to India, visit India and see from your own eyes, there are many more things which are not seen in Bollywood movies, for somebody to see real India, he has to visit India, so I would invite Armenian people to go to India, stay there, it’s not very expensive, flights unfortunately are not direct now, but in future, one Armenian airline is planning to start direct flights, then the travel will become very easy, it will be only 4.5 hours flight, can you believe it, just 4.5 hours flight to India. And from our side, the Embassy, we normally give visa in one day, we are very flexible, very friendly, if someone genuinely travelling for tourism or any other purpose, we give visas and also e-visas are available, if somebody wants to travel, he directly applies online and it is given, and if they apply to us, we will give in a very short time.

Thirdly I want to mention, which in Armenia many people are not very aware that India is a very developed country now in the medical field, and now we are promoting what is called medical tourism, for which we are getting lot of people with medical conditions for treatment in India, best of the hospitals are available for treatment in India and they are 1/5 cheaper than any European and western countries, comparable hospitals and their treatments. And from CIS region a lot of countries people are going to India for this. This I wanted you to share with people that in India we have very developed medical facilities and if they need medical assistance, they can visit India for this.

Fourthly, I want to say that India is much more than yoga, elephant, tea and Bollywood. These 4 things are important, but India is thousand times more than these 4 things, to really see what is India you see once India and I would welcome you and your people, your colleagues and all our Armenian friends to see incredible India.

– Mr. Dewal, thank you for this exceptional, exclusive chance to meet you, thank you for very interesting and useful conversation about India and Armenia, and Armenian-Indian relations. Thank you.

-Thank you very much, it was my pleasure that you came and we talked on almost everything.

Interview by Aram Sargsyan

Cameraman: Hovhannes Mkrtchyan

Photographer: Gevorg Perkuperkyan

Sound director: Tatevik Zakaryan

Video Editor: Vahagn Galstyan




Azerbaijan delayed meeting again: Armen Grigoryan and Hikmet Hajiyev may meet in near future

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 15:19,

YEREVAN, JUNE 30, ARMENPRESS. The meeting between Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan and Head of Foreign Policy Affairs Department at the Azerbaijani presidential office Hikmet Hajiyev, which was scheduled on June 27-28, did not take place.

Armen Grigoryan told reporters today that there was an agreement before this meeting, but it was also delayed.

“There are no concrete reasons why Azerbaijan delayed the meeting. We have information that such a meeting may take place in the future”, Armen Grigoryan said.

Azerbaijan MFA calls on Yerevan ‘not to waste time on reanimation’ of OSCE MG

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Armenia –

Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry called on Yerevan "not to waste time on the reanimation" of the OSCE MG.

Baku announced that statements of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on the normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations "cast doubt on Yerevan's ambitions to establish lasting peace in the region."

At the same time the ministry noted that "the statement of the Prime Minister (Nikol Pashinyan) that "opening of communications is beneficial for Armenia", draws attention as a new approach of the Armenian leadership. It seems that Armenia needs time to accept the truth. We hope it will not take long for Armenia to realize the effectiveness of the Zangezur corridor, which has already become a reality."

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry also accused the Armenian side of disrupting meetings at various levels.

The Prime Minister of Armenia, without referring to a specific case, said that "the Azerbaijani side boycotted a meeting at least once." "If we start listing the meetings proposed by international mediators in the post-conflict period, which Armenia violated under various pretexts or disrupted them through various provocations 1-2 hours before they started, the list will be very long," the statement says.

Baku considers that "if Yerevan really wants peace, it should show political will and take concrete steps on the way to peace instead of wasting time on resuscitation of the format, the effectiveness of which has always been low and whose members now openly admit its impossibility (of the OSCE Minsk Group)."

Lars is open, traffic has been restored

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 22:51,

YEREVAN, JUNE 27, ARMENPRESS. Thanks to the active construction work and efforts of the Georgian side, the traffic was recently resumed in Lars. The road is open, ARMENPRESS reports the spokesperson of the Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Sona Harutyunyan wrote about this on her Facebook page.

"Let me remind you that Lars was closed since yesterday. Due to heavy rains and flooding of the Terek River, part of the 136th kilometer (neutral zone) of the Mtskheta-Stepantsminda-Lars highway was damaged," she wrote.

The California Courier Online, June 30, 2022

1-         After a Century, Bankrupt Turkey Wasting

            Huge Sums to Deny the Armenian Genocide

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Irvine mayor’s efforts to repair relations with Armenian community

            could lead to memorial, school curriculum

3-         Despite threats, Armenian activist won’t stop fight for trans rights

4-         Haig Adomian (January 29, 1958 – May 29, 2022)

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

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1-         After a Century, Bankrupt Turkey Wasting

            Huge Sums to Deny the Armenian Genocide

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

The Turkish government’s denial of the Armenian Genocide is as futile
as a man who repeatedly hits his head against a wall, hoping the wall
would give way.

For more than a century, successive Turkish governments have done
everything in their power to cover up the heinous crime of the
Armenian Genocide committed by their predecessors. No Turkish leader
has had the courage and honesty to admit the truth. Instead, Turkey
has wasted huge sums of money to deny the undeniable. It has bribed
questionable scholars and crooked politicians around the world to
distort the historical facts. Ankara has published hundreds of
deceptive books and made several trashy movies to cover up its crimes.
Over several decades, Turkey has spent tens of millions of dollars to
hire American lobbying firms to pressure the U.S. Congress not to
acknowledge the Armenian Genocide. All of these efforts failed
miserably. The U.S. House of Representatives recognized the Armenian
Genocide in 1975, 1984 and 2019. The U.S. Senate unanimously
recognized it in 2019. Moreover, two U.S. Presidents acknowledged it:
Pres. Ronald Reagan in a Presidential Proclamation in 1981 and Pres.
Joe Biden in his commemorative statements on April 24, 2021 and 2022.
The most authoritative American acknowledgment of the Armenian
Genocide took place on May 28, 1951, when the U.S. government
submitted an official report to the World Court, stating that the
Armenian Genocide was one of the “outstanding examples of the crime of
genocide.”

Despite all Turkish pressures, threats and bribes, over 30 countries
have formally acknowledged the Armenian Genocide. This is in addition
to acknowledgments by the United Nations War Crimes Commission in
1948, the UN Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and
Protection of Minorities in 1985 and the European Parliament
repeatedly since 1987.

Most of these acknowledgments took place at a time when the Republic
of Armenia did not exist as an independent state. The Armenian
Diaspora, in a David vs. Goliath battle, was able to counter the
denials of the powerful Turkish government, supported by its NATO
allies and scores of Islamic states.

All of these denialist efforts are based on the simple misconception
that should the Turkish government acknowledge the Armenian Genocide,
it would then be obligated to pay restitution to surviving Armenians.
Regrettably, many Armenians have the same misconception. The fact is
that the Turkish government is liable to pay reparations and return
confiscated Armenian properties and territories, regardless of whether
Turkish leaders acknowledge their guilt or not. Political statements
by government leaders are of no value in a court of law. Courts deal
with facts and documents. No matter how many times Turkey denies the
genocide, the Republic of Armenia has the right to take its demands
for restitution and return of territories to the International Court
of Justice (World Court), where only governments have such
jurisdiction.

After an entire century of denial, the Turkish government announced
last week its latest desperate attempt to counter the facts of the
Armenian Genocide by forming the TEKAR Foundation (Turkish Armenian
Issue Research Foundation). This is a coalition of three Turkish
groups: Educational Friends Foundation, Baskent (Capital City)
Strategic Research Center, and Center for Countering Fanatic Armenian
Lies. The new Foundation held its inaugural assembly on June 25.

TEKAR plans to republish a Turkish denialist book written by Esat Uras
(1882-1957), titled: “The Armenians in history and the Armenian
question.” As a member of the Committee of Union and Progress (Young
Turks), Uras played a key role in planning and executing the Armenian
Genocide. His book is replete with gross misrepresentations.

The Turkish Foundation also stated that it will “print Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk’s views, thoughts and statements on Armenians, Armenian
activities and Armenian relations.” I hope the Foundation will not
forget to quote from Ataturk’s interview published by the Los Angeles
Examiner on August 1, 1926, in which he said: “These leftovers from
the former Young Turk Party, who should have been made to account for
the lives of millions of our Christian subjects, who were ruthlessly
driven en masse from their homes and massacred…. They have hitherto
lived on plunder, robbery and bribery.”

The TEKAR Foundation has 23 members on its board of trustees. The
chairman of the board is Mehmet Arif Demirer, a chemical engineer, not
a historian! Incomprehensibly, the board is composed of six military
officers, three engineers, two economists, one gastronomist, one
student, and several others of miscellaneous backgrounds. It looks
like the real purpose of the TEKAR Foundation is to provide jobs to
Pres. Erdogan’s circle of friends. While it is a good thing that these
Turks want to study the Armenian Genocide, their intention is not
seeking the truth!

Turkish denialists have never understood that the more they deny the
Armenian Genocide and the longer they talk about it, the more the
world becomes aware of the Armenian Genocide. In other words, Turkey
foolishly keeps publicizing the Armenian Genocide to new generations
while trying to deny it.

The second thing that the Turkish leaders never understood is that the
sooner they acknowledge the crimes of their predecessors, the sooner
they will gain the respect of the international public opinion. When a
Turkish leader eventually acknowledges the truth, he will be praised
worldwide and may even be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. By
their denials, Turkish leaders are doing a major disservice to their
own reputations, not to mention the huge sums of money they are
wasting at a time when the Turkish economy is bankrupt!

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2-         Irvine mayor’s efforts to repair relations with Armenian community

            could lead to memorial, school curriculum

By Tess Sheets

(Orange County Register)—When a video surfaced in March of Irvine
Mayor Farrah Khan joking and laughing during a meeting in 2020 with
representatives of local Turkish groups, it sparked a furor among some
community members who noted among the party a man who has been
outspoken in denying the Armenian Genocide.

Residents penned letters and turned up at City Council meetings to
voice their outrage. An Armenian group denounced the county Democratic
Party for its early endorsement in Khan’s 2022 mayoral race.

In demand letters penned to the public and Khan, an immediate apology
from the mayor was requested, along with a pledge to distance herself
from anyone who has denied the genocide and for her support for
teaching public school students about the history of the carnage.

Khan and Armenian community members have since met and it could mean
an Armenian Genocide memorial is constructed in Irvine – Khan said she
will support finding a place in the city. She’s also agreed to
approach the Irvine Unified school board about coordinating training
for educators on teaching about the genocide. And, at an April City
Council meeting, she said she donated $1,500 to the Genocide Education
Project.

Khan was quick to post recorded statements to social media
apologizing, but has also said the video wasn’t an accurate
representation of what was discussed during that meeting – she’s
having a company look into its editing.

The video’s captions had an “incorrect translation” of the
conversation between her and Turkish community members, she said,
suspecting its out-of-context release now was “politically intended,”
timed for two weeks before the Democratic Party of Orange County
planned to announced its early endorsements.

The mayor remains steadfast that discussions at the meeting, which she
said was one of many held with community members after her 2020
mayoral win, did not touch on the Armenian Genocide, as some have
said.

She promised to cut ties with anyone critical that the genocide occurred.

“I think it’s a little disheartening,” Khan said of the response to
the video. “I think I’ve been in the middle of conflicts before—from
India and Pakistan, from Palestine and Israel—and I’ve never had the
community react this way to me. I have never had this type of
experience. It’s always been like, ‘We’re upset, let’s have a meeting.
Let’s talk. Let’s have an understanding.’”

In the released video, Khan is accepting congratulations for her
mayoral win, she said. When she is presented a box of Turkish
Delights, captions appear depicting the conversation between Khan and
a community member identified later as Ergun Kirlikovali. They read
that he says on “Armenians’ occasions,” Khan could eat the candies and
they would “disappear.”  Khan responds, “I’ll make sure I eat it in
front of them.”

Some said they believe Khan and Kirlikovali were referring to
Armenians disappearing. But the mayor said there was “no mention of
Armenian Genocide.”

“As a person of faith, as a person who has worked in interfaith for so
many years, has 17 years of community building behind me, I would
never make fun of anybody,” Khan said in an interview. “That’s not who
I am. That’s not what I would do.”

She said she has a company looking into the authenticity of the video
with captions, and “preliminary findings from them is that this is a
chopped up, kind-of sliced up video. It’s not what I said. It’s not
what I was discussing at the time.”

Khan said the company, which she declined to name or provide further
details on, is preparing a final report on its review, which she will
present publicly when it’s completed.

“I’m really hoping for that professional report to come out to kind of
put to rest the idea that people are calling me a racist and that I’m
denying the genocide or saying that Armenians should disappear,” Khan
said.

Violet Bulujian, chair of the Orange County chapter of the Armenian
National Committee of America, said seeing the video was a gut-punch.

“To say that we were outraged is an understatement,” said Bulujian.

“If you imagine the Democratic mayor attending a meeting that was
hosted by Holocaust deniers, and that mayor says, ‘I pledged to stand
with you no matter what,’ and then laughs along with them, that would
not be tolerated, under no circumstances,” Bulujian said.

Led by UCI professor of Physics and Astronomy Kev Abazajian, the
Southern California Armenian Democrats wrote that Khan’s response to
the community “has been as reprehensible as the original hate speech,”
and the Democratic Party’s endorsement should be taken back “until
which point she properly acknowledges the extent of the harm of her
actions and takes concrete steps to reconcile with the Armenian
community.”

The Democrats of Greater Irvine, a group also chaired by Abazajian, a
2018 City Council contender who lost out to Khan and Councilman
Anthony Kuo, voted to censure the mayor at a meeting in April for “her
participation in hate speech, supporting and promoting Armenian
Genocide denialists and continued denial of the years-long
relationship with Armenian Genocide denialists.”

Abazajian said the issue is “way bigger than Irvine,” recalling that
he and others were outraged in 2021 when Khan lauded the country of
Azerbaijan as a “secular democracy” during an Azerbaijani Consulate
event celebrating its Republic Day. The ANCA Western Region, which
represents all of California, in a letter to the Central Committee
asking the group not to award Khan its annual “Truth Award,” calling
Azerbaijan “one of the most authoritarian regimes on earth, ranking
amongst the worst offenders when it comes to democratic rights, press
freedom and fundamental human rights.”

Khan said at the time she “did not realize there is a conflict going
on,” between Azerbaijan and Armenia and she later sat down with the
ANCA group to apologize, but she felt singled out because the
criticism came as she was being considered for the Central Committee
award. Other elected officials who were part of that Azerbaijani event
didn’t receive the same pushback, she said.

Bulujian’s organization, the ANCA, has also noted that Kirlikovali was
among a group that Khan announced in 2021 as her mayoral advisory
committee. Khan said the residents weren’t appointed as part of an
official committee, instead the group was formed out of an “open call
to community members that I should be interacting with, to come on and
share with me what they’d like to see more of in the city,” she said.

Kirlikovali also said the conversation during the meeting with Khan in
2020 was about Turkish desserts and not about Armenians disappearing.

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3-         Despite threats, Armenian activist won’t stop fight for trans rights

There has been no legislation passed for LGBTIQ rights in Armenia
since leading trans activist Lilit Martirosyan’s historic speech to
the National Assembly in 2019—but, she argues, at least she has
brought some visibility to the country’s transgender and gay
communities.

“After my speech, Nikol Pashinyan’s government started to speak more
about LGBTIQ issues,” said Martirosyan. “[Former] governments never
spoke about LGBTIQ people.”

Martirosyan is the founder of the Right Side, a non-governmental
transgender and sex workers’ rights group in Yerevan. On April 5,
2019, she became the first out trans woman to speak in the Armenian
parliament, calling for for an end to violence and discrimination
towards trans people.

In response, she was met with online death threats, doxxing, and calls
by parliamentarians to have her burned alive. When Martirosyan tried
to report the threats to the police, they laughed at her, she said.
Most health centers also turned her away when she sought treatment for
the panic attacks she’d developed.

“After my speech at the National Assembly, everybody started
recognizing my face,” Martirosyan told openDemocracy in a video call
from her apartment in Yerevan. “I started receiving hate messages not
only on my social media platforms, but on the streets, in shops, and
other places.”

Nowadays, to avoid public harassment, she wears a mask whenever she
steps foot outside her home, even though COVID-19 restrictions have
been lifted in Yerevan.

Though awareness about transgender people in Armenia has increased
thanks to her speech, living openly as a trans activist remains
extremely hard in this conservative country. Nevertheless, Martirosyan
refuses to leave.

“Of course, I can take my passport and go to different European
countries or to the US, but my community is here,” she said.
“Transgender people, especially transgender women, are in a bad
situation here.”

Martirosyan stresses the urgent need for a hate crime law, legal
gender recognition and access to trans health care in Armenia.

There is no legal definition of ‘hate crime’ in Armenian law. As a
result, law enforcement agencies don’t collect data about such crimes.
Out of 113 incidents of harassment against LGBTIQ people in the last
two years, only 27 cases were reported to the police, but none of them
was considered a hate crime, according to a survey by the Right Side.

Acknowledging the potential for human rights violations, the Council
of Europe’s Committee of Equality and Non-Discrimination last year
recommended that Armenia adopt effective legislation and “policies to
strengthen action against discrimination based on sexual orientation,
gender identity, gender _expression_ and sexual characteristics”.

The lack of protection against discrimination and harassment in the
workplace makes earning a living difficult for transgender people in
the country. Many, Martirosyan included, get into sex work to provide
an income.

Martirosyan is also taking a case to the European Court of Human
Rights in which an Armenian trans man’s application to correct his
gender marker on his birth certificate from ‘female’ to ‘male’ was
denied by Armenian courts. Currently, the Ministry of Justice requires
paperwork proving a trans person’s sex-reassignment surgery—a medical
intervention that’s outlawed in Armenia and costly to do abroad, and
which not everyone wants to go through.

“It’s a big problem, because there are transgender people who don’t
want sex reassignment surgery,” Martirosyan explained. She was the
first trans woman in Armenia to legally change her name on her
passport in 2015. She changed the gender marker to ‘F’ in 2021.

For Martirosyan, the hardest part of her job as an activist is raising
awareness and changing societal attitudes about trans people in
Armenia.

Her activism was rewarded in The Netherlands last year by the Red
Umbrella Fund, a global fund for sex workers, and by the Human Rights
Tulip, with a prize of 100,000 euros. Martirosyan says she used the
money to buy bigger office space for the Right Side in Yerevan.

“Maybe after ten or more years things will change,” she said. “We will
continue to work even though it’s dangerous for us.”

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4-         Haig Adomian (January 29, 1958 – May 29, 2022)

Haig Antranig Adomian was born in Los Angeles, California to George
and Corinne Adomian.

An inspiring and beloved personality, Haig was an adventurer, world
traveler, athlete, visionary dealmaker and businessman, real estate
agent, writer, researcher, and print and broadcast journalist, always
as a lifelong supporter of Armenian causes. He served as a news anchor
at Horizon TV, worked as a writer/producer/director, and wrote and
worked for Armenian newspapers including Asbarez as well as
co-publishing at Armenian Life.

After attending the University of Georgia from age 11, he graduated in
1978 with a degree in History from Princeton University, where he
played rugby and rowed crew. He was an Eagle Scout and a black belt in
karate.

Haig loved learning and teaching, hiking, music and songwriting,
scriptwriting, film and broadcasting, acting and directing, family
history and collecting and telling stories, among many passions. His
limitless creativity, and his talent for deal-making, benefited many,
and promised great things to come from projects he was endlessly
envisioning. For Haig, survival of the people was a priority and
bringing happiness was his nature. His remarkable brilliance, humor,
energy and integrity warmed many hearts and will live there forever.

Haig is survived by his mother Corinne, his sisters Diane and Laura,
his four sons James, David, Daniel, and Garrison, and godfather and
uncle Dr. Gerald (Jerry) Adomian, along with his beloved companion
Sara Medina and family, and his worldwide network of family and
friends. His untimely passing followed a sudden illness while
overseas.

Haig will be remembered at Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills (6300 Forest
Lawn Dr, Los Angeles, CA 90068), with a visitation on Thursday, July 7
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The funeral service will be held Friday, July 8 at 2:30 p.m. in the
Old North Church, Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills, with a graveside burial
immediately following. Memorial dinner will be held after the funeral
services at a location to be announced at the church.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to The American Armenian
National Security Institute – AANSI. Checks may be made out to AANSI
and mailed to: 330 N. Brand Blvd., Ste. 1250, Glendale, CA 91203.

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5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against COVID-19

More than 2.2 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine have been
administered in Armenia since commencing the vaccination program a
year ago, authorities said on Monday, June 27. For the third week, no
new deaths were reported. Armenia has recorded 423,243 coronavirus
cases. Armenia has recorded 8,629 deaths; 412,661 have recovered.

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