Armenia: Canada to send two experts for EU mission seeking peace in Nagorno-Karabakh (+Links)

Canada –

OTTAWA – Canada is sending two officials to support a European mission that is aiming to prevent another war between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Jul 21, 2023

OTTAWA – Canada is sending two officials to support a European mission that is aiming to prevent another war between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The unarmed European Union mission in Armenia is a project involving a hundred civilian monitors who keep tabs on the security situation at the border with Azerbaijan.

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly has announced that Canada will contribute to the mission and send two recruited experts.

The mission follows heightened tensions in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, an area that is mostly populated by ethnic Armenians but is internationally recognized as being part of Azerbaijan.

Joly said in April that she was “deeply concerned” about Azerbaijan escalating the long-running dispute with Armenia over the province by blocking its main access road.

Canada has joined similar European Union missions in the past, with military and civilian projects deployed to places such as Afghanistan and the West Bank.

The move comes just months before Canada aims to open a full embassy in Armenia this fall.

It also follows unconfirmed reports that Canada may loosen its arms embargo against Turkey, which Ottawa barred from receiving weapons after Canadian sensors showed up in drones Azerbaijan used in the Nagorno-Karabakh region in a 2020 war.

https://www.thestar.com/politics/federal/armenia-canada-to-send-two-experts-for-eu-mission-seeking-peace-in-nagorno-karabakh/article_98b68bc9-a1c3-51f1-9f4e-cf5d68f49658.html


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Asbarez Interview with Founder of Armenia’s Women’s Support Center Maro Matosian

Maro Matosian


The Women’s Support Center Helps Victims of Domestic Violence in Armenia.

BY NANE AVAGYAN
Translated by Aleen Arslanian

Domestic violence is on the agenda in Armenia. “To fight against domestic violence, a systemic approach is needed. It includes systematic work by coordinating the efforts of state bodies and community services,” said Maro Matosian, the founder and director of Armenia’s Women’s Support Center. Founded with the support of diaspora organizations, this non-governmental organization has been engaged in the prevention of domestic violence and providing assistance to victims of violence for more than ten years. Matosian discussed the successes, challenges, and future plans of the organization in an interview with Asbarez.

Nane Avagyan: How and when was the Women’s Support Center founded?

Maro Matosian: The organization was launched in Los Angeles in 2010. A fundraiser was held here [in Los Angeles] and the issue of domestic violence received a great response. We were also lucky to have the support of Marie Yovanovitch, who was the U.S. ambassador to Armenia at that time and very interested in women’s issues. We also had the support of the USAID, the Armenian International Women’s Association, and the Tufenkian Foundation. We started our work in Armenia with the cooperation of these organizations. We were then joined by the John and Hasmik Mgrdichian Foundation and in 2012 we opened the first shelter, creating a safe environment for abused women and children, as well as providing them with various support and counseling. When we started, we only had forty beneficiaries, but when they found out about us, they started contacting our hotline and the number of beneficiaries reached to about 400 a year. In 2019, we opened the second shelter, thanks to a donation by the San Francisco chapter of the AIWA, in front of Srbuk Sargsyan.

N.A.: What was your initial experience in Armenia like?

M.M.: When we first started operating, our main problem was that the topic of domestic violence—including sexual assaults against women and violence against children and the elderly—was taboo in Armenia, because these topics were not discussed during the Soviet years. The society was not ready: they were neither aware of the real problems, nor ready to solve them, because there were no relevant specialists, for example, social workers or psychologists. There was not even a law that would condemn and provide protection to the victims of violence, and no preventive measures were taken. Society refused to accept the problems, and even the government said that we were exaggerating. In 2012 and 2013, we managed to make a breakthrough when we made a lot of noise about two serious incidents. We spoke to media outlets and a number of public organizations and broke through the atmosphere of silence. The media then began to regularly cover various cases of domestic violence.

N.A.: What kind of incidents or cases are we talking about?

M.M.: Mostly, there were cases of physical violence: the husband or the mother-in-law, or both simultaneously, against the daughter-in-law. There were also cases against the elderly, when the caregiver, for example, the child, subjects his father to violence by taking his pension, or throws him out in order to take possession of the house. In one incident, we were stoned for “destroying families and opposing traditional values,” but I don’t think that it is in the Armenian tradition that you should subject your parents, children, or wife to violence. This is what the public should understand and take steps to resolve, because prevention is not only possible through the law or through police force, it is also possible through the approach of the public. If society tolerates such an attitude, it is difficult to fight against it. When we say that the culprit is the abuser, and not the victim, we emphasize this, because very often when we go to court the judge turns to the victim, asking, “What did you do to be abused?” In other words, that question in itself is an accusation against the victim. We even had a case where a woman was stabbed and killed in front of two young girls, and the murderous husband justified his actions in court by saying that his wife was cheating on him with a Turk, without presenting any facts. In that case too, the judge asked the murdered girl’s daughters if they were not ashamed of their mother’s actions, and there was no mention of the murderer. In other words, society gives men the benefit of the doubt. We are fighting against this.

N.A.: What services does the Women’s Support Center offer?

M.M.: Operating in order to prevent and respond to domestic violence, the Women’s Support Center carries out activities in three directions. First, we support the beneficiaries by providing comprehensive assistance from social workers, providing psychologists and lawyers to children and adults, as well as providing them with a shelter. The second direction is training, informing social workers, police officers, journalists, teachers, and other groups of society about what domestic violence is. Police and social workers are the first line of assistance to victims of violence, and professional training helps them really understand the impact of violence on the victim. For example, initially, a person subjected to violence often has a hard time discussing exactly what happened, and the first responder must be able to differentiate, make appropriate inquiries, create an environment for the beneficiary to express themselves calmly and receive support accordingly. For this purpose, we also hold various conferences, seminars, and give interviews to the media. The third area of our activity is advocacy, which is an internationally accepted model. We believe that if institutional changes are not implemented, laws are not improved, methodology is not applied, and all the work remains only on the shoulders of non-governmental organizations, it becomes almost impossible to move forward. The state should have regulatory mechanisms (toolkits), but unfortunately, there are not many appropriately trained specialists in this field in Armenia today.

At the same time, we cooperate with non-governmental organizations in different regions who want to deal with domestic violence issues, we train them, and today there is one support center in each region. The number of our beneficiaries increased after the information about the support centers was spread. There were regions in Armenia, for example Yeghegnadzor, where we have not had a beneficiary for years, and when we turned to the police, they said that the population is small and maybe there are no cases of violence. However, when the support center was established there, applications began coming in. In other words, if women have no way out or do not know what to do in these instances, the law thinks that there is no violence. We have also created a coalition of non-governmental organizations dealing with issues of domestic violence.

N.A.: How do you support the beneficiaries under your care in planning for their future?

M.M.: After assessing each case, we understand which group of beneficiaries are most at risk and offer them shelter. There are those who agree stay with us for two to three months, during which we help them with legal issues and psychological counseling. In addition to the fact that the beneficiaries are rehabilitated with us and use the services provided by the center, women acquire various skills and specializations and we help them find a job, which ensures financial independence and security for their children.

N.A.: In 2017, the National Assembly of Armenia adopted a law on “Prevention of domestic violence, protection of persons subjected to family violence and restoration of family solidarity.” How would you rate its effectiveness?

M.M.: We actually participated in the development of the mentioned law, in partnership with a number of other organizations. We had been fighting to have a new law implemented for years. We presented a draft, and Armenia finally accepted it within the framework of the agreement with the European Union. Although it was not perfect, we felt that it was necessary to start somewhere, and it was a good start. We considered the biggest problem of the law to be that violence is not criminalized, and that means the punishment is only an administrative penalty. For example, we had a case of severe violence: a woman with five children was subjected to violence for fifteen years, and the sentence set for her husband was only 150 thousand drams [less than $400]. The abuser also declared in court that the fine would not be a problem for him, and claimed that he would resort to violence again if he deemed it necessary. In other words, that impunity—not holding the perpetrator accountable—is a message to society that his actions is acceptable. They tell me that there is domestic violence everywhere, and I counter that, in countries where the law is strict, where the abuser is held accountable, the number of violence cases decreases. Another rule that we consider unacceptable encourages the victim to return to the abuser and refers to reconciliation, which is also not possible according to international law, because you cannot reconcile a couple that has unequal power dynamics.

N.A.: Currently, work is underway to amend the law. Are you participating in this process?

M.M.: We are working towards law reforms, and the first thing we insist on is that domestic violence is criminalized. We also added a point about psychological violence, which always goes hand in hand with physical violence. In the definition of a victim of domestic violence, we proposed to include the category “partner,” that is, when people are not married, but are in a relationship and subjected to violence. The law should also specify stalking as a controlling behavior. These are the events that are not addressed in the law, but support centers regularly encounter such cases.

Also, we consider the issue of urgent intervention to be important: the abuser should be removed from the house for at least twenty days, and he should not have the right to approach the victim. In the near future, a citizen who has been subjected to violence in the family will have an alarm device with them, and the abuser will wear an electronic bracelet or an ankle monitor. Through these devices, the police will clearly record whether the abuser violates the ban and comes near the victim. Regarding our proposals, we work closely with the Ministry of Social Security, members of parliament, and lawyers. There is a lot of resistance against us, because we put forward ideas that are not in the public culture, and it is very difficult to change those stereotypes or to get our ideas across.

N.A.: Do you receive any kind of support from the government?

M.M.: After 2018, the situation in terms of dialogue with state bodies has changed, it has become easier. The government adopted the western model, so public organizations are more flexible, have daily contact with the beneficiaries, and in this respect the state can trust and lean on the organizations. At the same time, it is financially beneficial. Instead of creating special bodies dealing with the problem, the state partners with non-governmental organizations and subsidizes them to an extent, which proves that the state assumes responsibility in this matter. Since 2018, we have been included in the All-Armenian Fund program, within the framework of which the government asked us to train support centers.

N.A.: Are there any final thoughts you’d like to share?

M.M.: There is no excuse for violence, and we as a society should strive to become more tolerant towards each other. In my opinion, the main reason for domestic violence is inequality—the privileged status of men. The self-esteem of most of the women who apply to our centers is very low, they feel that they are not suitable for anything, they have no value, they feel guilty, which is a consequence of years of physical and psychological violence. About forty percent of them have suicidal thoughts, of which thirteen percent have attempted suicide once or twice.

The Women’s Support Center creates conditions for the victims of violence to recover, again find their place in society, and start living anew. Since we began operating, we have helped about two thousand women, who they later became our ambassadors and helped other women and families. Today, the organization is considered one of the best local expert groups in Armenia, and the European Council considers us to be the only organization that provides such services. For all this, we should thank our Diaspora Armenians who helped to establish and organize the Women’s Support Center. I urge our compatriots in the Diaspora to continue supporting us, because the shelters operate through donations, which can be made through our website.

Armenpress: PM Pashinyan thanks outgoing French Ambassador for effective cooperation

 20:15,

YEREVAN, JULY 19, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan received Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of France to Armenia, Anne Louyot, who is completing her diplomatic mission in Armenia, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime MInister. 

The Prime Minister thanked the Ambassador for contributing to effective cooperation and further development of Armenian-French relations. Nikol Pashinyan noted that the Armenian-French cooperation in various fields has a dynamic character and expressed belief that it will continue to strengthen in the near future.

The Prime Minister wished the Ambassador success in her future activities.

Artsakh’s Minister of State presents results of the meeting with the command of Russian peacekeepers

 17:44,

YEREVAN, 14 JULY, ARMENPRESS․ Artsakh Republic State Minister Gurgen Nersisyan presented details of the meeting with the command of the Russian peacekeeping troops stationed in Artsakh.

ARMENPRESS reports, Gurgen Nersisyan said that they agreed with Alexander Lentsov, the commander of the Russian peacekeeping troops, that the peacekeepers will report the situation in Artsakh to the relevant Russian structures on a daily basis.

According to the Minister of State, the command of the peacekeeping mission admits that the provisions of the tripartite declaration of November 9, 2020 have been violated. "They admitted that they have work to do to eliminate the humanitarian crisis," added Gurgen Nersisyan.

The Minister of State added that the residents of Askeran region will stay in the tents placed near the permanent location of the peacekeeping troops until clear solutions are given to the problem.

The other participants of the popular movement returned to Stepanakert, where tents will also be set up, according to the Minister of State, to keep the red light of the situation in Artsakh burning.

Van Novikov




Artsakh NGOs send an open letter to the international community regarding Azerbaijan’s policy of ethnic cleansing

 19:27,

YEREVAN, JULY 10, ARMENPRESS. The civil society of Artsakh sent an open letter to the international community regarding the ethnic cleansing and genocide policy carried out by Azerbaijan, and appealed to international human rights organizations and civil society to bring the voice of Artsakh to the international community and demand practical steps from their governments to prevent further crimes against humanity by Azerbaijan.

ARMENPRESS reports, the letter is posted on the Facebook page of the Human Rights Defender of Artsakh.

“The people of the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), facing the threat of genocide, appeal to all countries and peoples of the world, as well as to international organisations designed to ensure proper implementation of international law.

Since June 15, 2023, having resorted to a provocation on the Hakari Bridge, Azerbaijan has tightened the blockade of Artsakh, which lasts for almost 7 months, starting from December 12, 2022, and has blocked the humanitarian transportation carried out by the ICRC and the Russian peacekeeping contingent, including transportation of patients to medical institutions of the Republic of Armenia, supplies of food, medicines, essential goods, fuel, thereby sharply aggravating the humanitarian crisis in the country. A week later, on June 22, 2023, the Azerbaijani side installed concrete blocks on the bridge where an illegal checkpoint had been installed on April 23, 2023, literally blocking the only road connecting Artsakh with Armenia and the outside world. Since June 25, 2023, the transportation of patients to medical institutions in Armenia accompanied by the ICRC has been restored, however, knowing the destructive pattern of Azerbaijan, which uses humanitarian issues as a lever of pressure on Artsakh, there are no guarantees that it will not be interrupted yet again. These actions of Azerbaijan should not be considered as separate acts of aggression, but as a part of the consistent and systematic policy of ethnic cleansing against Artsakh and its indigenous Armenian population. On the night of June 28, 2023, Azerbaijan resorted to another military provocation against Artsakh using long-range artillery and a drone, resulting in the death of four Artsakh servicemen defending their Homeland and the peaceful population from the Azerbaijani aggression.

Ignoring the adopted resolutions of the European Parliament of January 19, 2023 and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) of June 22, 2023, the decision of the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) of December 21, 2022, the decision of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) of the United Nations (UN) of February 22, 2023, Azerbaijan, as if mocking the authority of these organisations, stubbornly continues to conduct the policy of genocide and patriacide against the people of Artsakh, demonstrating criminal self-will, thereby opposing itself to the civilized world. In addition, the President of Azerbaijan openly allows himself to threaten representatives of the international community who do not share his approach to resolving the Artsakh issue, while believing that international law is entirely on the side of Azerbaijan.

Official Baku rejects the demand to provide guarantees for the security of the people of Artsakh and constantly insists that this is an internal problem of Azerbaijan, which it intends to solve at its discretion. Against the background of blatant Armenophobia, which has become part of the state policy of the authoritarian regime of Azerbaijan and completely permeates the Azerbaijani society. As there is plenty of evidence, it is not difficult to imagine what this "solution" might be if the people of Artsakh suddenly find themselves under the rule of Baku.

We welcome the growing international understanding that the people of Artsakh need firm international guarantees of protection. We thank the congressmen who spoke on this matter in the US Congress on June 21, 2023, calling a spade a spade and giving an objective assessment of Azerbaijan's policy, as well as all other international actors who have the courage to speak out loud about the existential threats posed by Azerbaijan and looming over the people of Artsakh.

We express our hope that more and more people in the world will understand the genuine causes of this conflict and understand why the people of Nagorno-Karabakh made a legitimate request to withdraw from the Azerbaijani SSR and join Armenia in 1988, which led to the beginning of Azerbaijani aggression and a bloody war in which Artsakh people were forced to defend themselves.

Now, when there are calls from various international platforms for a peaceful resolution of the conflict by including Artsakh in Azerbaijan, we suggest recalling the history of the Second World War and trying to imagine: would it be possible to call Jews to live under Hitler's Nazi government? Modern Azerbaijan is also a Nazi state in relation to the Armenians, and it is not difficult to make sure of that – in case of an objective look at this issue without unilateral consumption of the Azerbaijani propaganda.

Having survived the horrors of the three wars unleashed by Azerbaijan, pogroms, exile, psychological terror, human and material losses, continuing to live with the looming existential threat, the people of Artsakh are demanding to use all existing international mechanisms to prevent ethnic cleansing and genocide carried out by Azerbaijan.

In view of the current situation, we demand the presence of representatives of all relevant international organizations in Artsakh. Taking into account the violations of the agreements reflected in Point 6 of the Trilateral Statement of November 9, 2020, according to which free and safe passage through the Lachin corridor should be ensured, we call on the international organizations, namely the UN, to send an international mission to the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) in order to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe in Artsakh, strengthen and improve the functioning of the peacekeeping institute.

Also, due to the fact that Azerbaijan openly ignores the implementation of the decisions of the ECHR and the ICJ of the UN issued during the blockade, we appeal to the international community to impose sanctions against this country.

On behalf of the civil society of Artsakh, we appeal to the international human rights and civil society to help bring the voice of Artsakh to the wider international community and demand that their governments take real preventive measures in order to prevent Azerbaijan's next crimes against humanity.

While expressing our gratitude for being concerned about the fate of the people of Artsakh, we emphasize that the only reliable guarantee of our rights and security is the recognition of the independence of the Republic of Artsakh, which is based on the right of the people to self-determination, enshrined in international law, and the free will of the people of Artsakh.

Artsakh is not a “territory” inherited by someone by the right of the strong, but our Homeland, where we have a full and inalienable right to a safe life. Artsakh is not just a handful of 120,000 people, not counting about 30,000 forcibly displaced Artsakh residents, who were expelled from their homes as a result of Azerbaijan's military aggression in 2020. Today Artsakh is a test of the values declared by the democratic world and a litmus test of the world order. The essence of the value system of the changing world order will be defined by the choice made between lies, discrimination, violence, terrorism, authoritarianism on one hand or freedom, democracy and respect for human rights on the other”.

54 US Congressmen demand Joe Biden to stop military aid to Azerbaijan and support Artsakh

 20:17, 21 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS. 54 US Congressmen, led by Congresswoman Barbara Lee, sent a letter to the Secretary of State Antony Blinken, demanding the US President Joe Biden's administration to stop military aid to Azerbaijan and support Artsakh, ARMENPRESS reports, the Armenian Committee of America said in a message.

"54 US Congressmen, led by Congresswoman Barbara Lee, sent a letter to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, demanding that Joe Biden's administration stop military aid to Azerbaijan, support Artsakh and oppose Azerbaijan's blockade of Artsakh and anti-Armenian aggression," the message states.

Questionable Secret Land Lease Deal Threatens Historic Armenian Community Land and Property in Old City


June 12 2023

Feature Story


A questionable land lease deal that the Armenian Patriarchate was pressured into making imperils land and property amounting to one-quarter of the area of the entire Armenian Quarter—approximately 3.2 hectares (almost 8 acres)—or 14 percent of Jerusalem’s Old City.1 The deal, made first with the Jerusalem Municipality and then with Israeli Australian businessman Dany Rubinstein, would reportedly sign away the property for 99 years.

Such a lease could be detrimental to the presence of the Armenian community in the Holy Land as well as to the character of the Old City overall.

While details are still hazy, the deal reportedly includes a parking area used by the community called “Goveroun Bardes,” Armenian for “Cows’ Garden”, as well as five residential homes belonging to Armenian families alongside it.2 According to local sources, the parking lot alone can accommodate from 150 to 180 cars.3

The Armenian community, outraged by the secretive deal, has been protesting continually since details were first leaked last fall and then solidified in April with a visit from Israeli land surveyors and a new sign on the parking lot in Hebrew and English announcing it as the property of XANA Capital.

Rubinstein reportedly aims to build a low-rise luxury hotel on the property.

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A sign in English and Hebrew, erected by XANA Capital at the entrance to the Cows’ Garden parking lot in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City. The wooden cross was placed by unidentified workmen on June 13, 2023, then removed by Israeli police the following day.

Credit: 

Amos Chapple RFE/RL

Community Outrage

Hagop Djernazian, 22, a young Armenian activist, has been working diligently to raise awareness on the dangers of losing this land. He uses 18th- and 19th-century maps of the Old City of Jerusalem and its quarters to help explain the implications of the proposed deal: “I invite people who are unaware of the importance of Goveroun Bardez [which is the main part of the land lease] to look at the map of the Old City . . . and consider the historic and strategic importance of that parcel of land.”4

Entrance to the Armenian convent in the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City, captured sometime between 1898 and 1914 by photographers from the American Colony, Jerusalem

Credit: 

Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division [LC-DIG-matpc 06551]

Hagop Djernazian points out to the Armenian property, namely, the Seminary, included in the controversial land lease deal, May 19, 2023. Left: the Armenian parking spot—Cows’ Garden

Credit: 

Muath Khatib for Jerusalem Story

At the third protest against the land lease, held on May 19, 2023, Jerusalemite Armenian historian George Hintlian addressed the crowd: “There is no such thing as only the Armenian Quarter. The four quarters are one—it’s one Jerusalem, and they are all connected. Whatever happens in other quarters happens in the Armenian Quarter.”

George Hintlian

Hintlian, an expert on the Armenian Genocide, said that Israeli attempts to acquire Armenian properties do not surprise him; he has witnessed massive pressure, sometimes to the point of assassination attempts, over several decades. “The Armenian Quarter is a targeted quarter,” he noted. “We are one of the communities under constant pressure.”

Hintlian described the various fraudulent Israeli methods, including settler attacks and involving high-level governmental officials, to take over Armenian properties. “There is forgery, manipulation, and bribery in this deal,” he asserted. What makes this deal especially problematic is that it was done without securing approval from the Armenian Synod. (In fact, the priests had opposed it.) The Armenian community is working with international lawyers to revoke it.

Rally held on May 12, 2023, inside the Armenian monastery to protest the land lease deal

Credit: 

Arda Aghazarian for Jerusalem Story

In May 2023, the Armenian Patriarchate defrocked the priest Baret Yeretzian, director of the Real Estate Department of the Patriarchate, for deceptions related to the lease; he has since fled to Southern California. Meanwhile, on May 11, the Palestinian Authority and Jordan suspended recognition of the Armenian Patriarch Nourhan Manougian, who has served for a decade in what is normally a lifelong position.5

Three Armenian groups, which together represent the entire Armenian community, released a joint statement on May 20, asserting that the impact of the “illegal lease would be immeasurably detrimental to the presence and the national ethos of the Armenian presence in the Holy Land.”6

Setrag Balian, an active member of the Armenian community in Jerusalem, addresses the protesters against the land lease deal on May 12, 2023, at the Armenian monastery in the Old City of Jerusalem.

Credit: 

Arda Aghazarian for Jerusalem Story

The Broader Implications for Christians in Jerusalem

The Armenian land lease case is not disconnected from the broader Israeli practices against the non-Jewish residents of Jerusalem, which have accelerated in recent years.

For Jerusalemites, the fate of the Armenian property calls to mind the recent Ateret Cohanim settler takeover in March 2022 of parts of the Petra Hotel, owned by the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate. In a joint statement dated April 4, 2022, the heads of local churches in Jerusalem described the hotel’s lease as “a threat to the continued existence of a Christian Quarter in Jerusalem.”7

On August 7, 2022, the Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, together with the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem and the Franciscan Custodian of the Holy Land, vehemently opposed the Israel Nature and Parks Authority’s plan to expand the Israeli national park to parts of the Mount of Olives. The plan would entail confiscating and nationalizing some of the holiest Christian sites, an attack on Christians in Jerusalem.8 Although the authority said it would withdraw the plan, it is likely that the Israeli authorities will proceed when public attention shifts elsewhere.9

George Hintlian, Armenian historian and local resident

The Israeli government plan to convert the country into an exclusively Jewish state, which has accelerated in recent years, poses a major threat for all Christians and their heritage in Jerusalem.10 

In a recent report by the US Department of State on religious freedom in Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza, the Office of International Religious Freedom noted the grave public concerns over the Christian presence in the country. Some of the reported issues stated in the report include “violence and harassment against clergy and worshipers by Israeli extremists; vandalism and desecration of church properties; attempts by settler organizations to obtain strategic property in and around the Christian quarter of the Old City and the Mount of Olives; and restrictions on residency permits for Palestinians as part of Israel’s Citizenship and Entry Law.”11

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Anti-Christian vigilantism by extremist Jews has spiked since the new Israeli government assumed power.

The report also mentions other restrictions that infringe on religious freedom and worship, such as greatly restricting attendance for Christians wishing to attend the Holy Fire ceremony at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and the audacious threats by settlers and extremist Israelis toward Christians.

The racist chants of extremist Israeli settlers are not disconnected from state policy. Most recently, some of the Orthodox and ultra-Orthodox members of the Knesset (Israel’s parliament) have been aggressively pushing to pass religious-based legislations: One of the bills currently on the table is to imprison any person (e.g. evangelical Christians) who promotes Christianity to Jews.12 Recently, even a deputy mayor of Jerusalem was filmed at a protest again Christian missionaries in the Old City, chanting “Missionaries go home!” He stated, “As far as I’m concerned, let every [Christian] missionary know they are not welcome in the Land of Israel.”13

In this context, the uproar of the Armenian community at the reported land lease deal is not occurring in a vacuum: It stems from a deep-rooted understanding and dread that the deal, if implemented, represents a very real threat to the centuries of Armenian presence, identity, heritage, and culture in Jerusalem, one of many small steps toward the larger goal of transforming historic Palestine into an aggressively Jewish exclusivist state.

At the moment, the active Armenian community of Jerusalem is raising awareness on the importance of this issue, and concentrating all efforts to revoke the lease. “This quarter is everything to me. It’s the only place we have for Armenians to gather in the Holy Land,” said community leader Djernazian. “We have to fight for it.”14

1

“Armenian Quarter Land Sale Threatens Christian Presence in Jerusalem,” Jordan News, May 14, 2023.

2

Amos Chapple, “Jerusalem Armenians Fear Shadowy Land Deal Marks ‘Beginning of the End,’” Radio Free Europe | Radio Liberty, June 16, 2023.

3

Appo Jabarian, “Jerusalem Armenian Quarter’s ‘Goveroun Bardez’ (‘Cows’ Garden’), Valued at $27-$39 Billion, Illegally Leased under a Veil of Darkness,” Armenian Life, October 13, 2021.

4

Interview with the Jerusalem Story Team, May 2023.

5

“Jordan, Palestine No Longer Recognize Armenian Patriarch Nourhan Manougian,” Asbarez, June 13, 2023.

6

Kegham Balian, “Goveroun Bardez: Saving the Oldest Armenian Diaspora in the World,” Armenian Weekly, May 24, 2023.

7

“Statement by Patriarch Theophilos III on the Illegal Seizure of the Little Petra Hotel by the Radical Extremist Group Ateret Cohanim,” Protecting Holy Land Christians, March 29, 2022.

8

Jacob Magid, “Parks Authority Says It’s Shelving Mount of Olives Plan That Angered Church Leaders,” Times of Israel, February 21, 2022.

9

US Department of State, “2022 Report on International Religious Freedom: Israel, West Bank and Gaza,” Office of Palestinian Affairs, May 17, 2023.

10

Z. S. Andrew Demirdjian, “The Risk of Leasing Out Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem Land,” Keghart, September 9, 2021.

11

US Department of State, “2022 Report on International Religious Freedom.”

12

“Two Knesset Members Propose Law Banning Spread of Christianity in Israel,” Jordan News, March 22, 2023.

13

Canaan Lidor, “‘Missionaries Go Home’: Hundreds Protest Christian Worship Near Western Wall,” Times of Israel, May 28, 2023.

14

Isabel Debre, “In Jerusalem’s Contested Old City, Shrinking Armenian Community Fears Displacement after Land Deal,” AP News, June 7, 2023.


https://www.jerusalemstory.com/en/article/questionable-secret-land-lease-deal-threatens-historic-armenian-community-land-and-property 

Erdoğan pulls out of European summit

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | Adem Altan/AFP via Getty Images

CHISINAU — A massive gathering of European leaders on Thursday has suffered its first high-profile casualty, with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan pulling out at the last minute.

The Turkish leader, who won five more years at the helm of his country in second-round elections on Sunday, will not travel to Moldova for the one-day summit, according to three officials involved in the preparations. 

The so-called European Political Community (EPC) — a new collective launched in the wake of Russia’s war in Ukraine — is meant to draw together European leaders beyond the EU. More than 40 European leaders will be present Thursday, including those from all 27 EU countries plus non-EU countries like Britain and Turkey, as well as the Western Balkan nations.  

The gathering, set to take place outside Chișinău, Moldova’s capital, is the second summit held under the EPC banner, following an inaugural meeting in Prague last October. 

Erdoğan attended that summit in the Czech capital but clashed with his Greek counterpart Kyriakos Mitsotakis during an end-of-summit dinner. 

Erdoğan, who has dominated Turkey’s politics for two decades, won the country’s election on Sunday, despite a strong showing by a coalition of opposition parties. 

The 69-year-old leader is expected to announce his new Cabinet on Friday with an inauguration scheduled for the following day. 

European leaders started arriving in the Moldovan capital of Chișinău Wednesday ahead of the summit, which is taking place in a castle and winery 35 kilometers outside the city.

ICJ ruling on Azeri checkpoint in Lachin Corridor expected soon

 17:01, 8 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is waiting for the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ruling on its request regarding Azerbaijan’s checkpoint in Lachin Corridor, the Representative of Armenia for International Legal Affairs Yeghishe Kirakosyan told reporters on June 8.

“As of this moment, after our application we’ve received a response from the Azerbaijan side regarding our request, we have also submitted our response to that, we’ve also presented additional evidence, and at this moment we are waiting for the decision by the International Court of Justice, which will be presented soon,” Kirakosyan said after the inauguration of the International Courts and Arbitrage master’s educational program at the Yerevan State University.

The United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan on February 22 to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions. The Lachin Corridor has been blocked by Azerbaijan since 12 December 2022. 

Kirakosyan said that Azerbaijan not only ignores the February 22 ruling by the ICJ but is also further escalating the situation by installing a checkpoint in Lachin Corridor. “Since then we’ve regularly presented information to the court that Azerbaijan is not implementing the court’s decision. After the checkpoint was installed, there was a need to apply to the court with a new request, asking it to further specify the interim measures indicated on February 22, to clarify it further, given Azerbaijan’s unlawful conduct,” Kirakosyan said.

Armenian metal smelting plant will continue its activities in the border area irrespective of Azerbaijan’s complaint

 17:38, 8 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. GTB Steel, which is building a smelting plant in the village of Yeraskh, Ararat Province, Republic of Armenia, issued a statement responding to the statement of the Ministry of Environmental Protection of Azerbaijan that the construction and operation of the smelter will harm the environment of their country.

“Today, the press published the statement of the Ministry of Environment of Azerbaijan regarding the construction of the black metal scrap processing plant (smelter) in Yeraskh village, Ararat province of Armenia. The Ministry of Environment of Azerbaijan stated that the construction/operation of the smelter will harm the environment of their country.

Without giving much importance to the foregoing statement of Azerbaijan, however, taking the opportunity to provide more detailed information about our project to the Armenian society and based on our commitment to carry out transparent and accountable activities, "GTB Steel" LLC reports the following:

The owner of the smelter under construction is "GTB Steel" LLC, which applied in accordance with the RA legislation and received a positive conclusion on the impact on the environment from the national competent authority, the RA Ministry of Environment, with appropriate test requirements that meet all international standards. The conclusion confirmed that all modern technologies for the exclusion of negative impact on the environment will be implemented and all equivalent measures will be carried out. It should also be noted that the smelter is not in operation and is still under construction.

In addition to the foregoing, we inform that "GTB Steel" LLC will continue its activities in the border community of Yeraskh, which is so important for the Republic of Armenia, following all the requirements specified by the Armenian legislation, and for the benefit of the Republic of Armenia.

Perhaps, this is the reason for the reaction of the neighboring state. Despite of the above-mentioned actions with hostile motives, we are fully committed to continue our project in the border community of Yeraskh, which is highly important for the economy of the Republic of Armenia”, ARMENPRESS reports, reads the statement issued by GTB Steel.