French Foreign Minister to visit Armenia this week

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 10:41,

YEREVAN, APRIL 25, ARMENPRESS. French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna will visit Armenia this week, the French Foreign Ministry announced Tuesday.

Colonna will be traveling to Azerbaijan and Armenia on April 26-28.

The visit “will reiterate France’s commitment to support the negotiations between the two countries for a fair and lasting peace based on principles of international law and territorial integrity.”

Colonna will call for respect of the rights of the Armenian population in Nagorno Karabakh and immediate restoration of passage along the Lachin Corridor, the French Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The French FM will meet with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in Armenia. She will then visit the headquarters of the EU monitoring mission in Jermuk.

FM Colonna will also visit the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

Armenian Genocide Education Act Introduced in U.S. House of Representatives

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 11:34,

YEREVAN, APRIL 25, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Representatives Anna Eshoo (D-CA), David Valadao (R-CA), Ted Lieu (D-CA), and Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) re-introduced the Armenian Genocide Education Act on April 24 – a bipartisan measure, backed by the ANCA, which would allocate $10 million over 5 years to help educate American students about Ottoman Turkey’s 1915-1923 Genocide of Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Syriac, Arameans, and Maronite Christians, the ANCA reported.

“The ANCA thanks Reps. Eshoo, Bilirakis, Lieu, and Valadao, welcoming their introduction of this timely bill, brought forward in the wake of official U.S. recognition of the 1915 Genocide and amid renewed efforts by Azerbaijan and Turkey to complete this crime against the Armenian nation,” remarked ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “This federal legislation represents a necessary next step, building upon U.S. remembrance, alerting Americans to the ongoing threat of genocide, and ensuring that future generations benefit from the terrible lessons of this still unpunished crime. We will do all we can to support this bill and look forward to it being passed by Congress and signed into law by the President,” added Hamparian.

“By ensuring students have access to the resources necessary to understand why and how the Armenian Genocide occurred, the Armenian Genocide Education Act preserves the legacies of the victims, combats genocide denial, and ensures that future generations learn the lessons of this dark chapter of history,” said Rep. Eshoo, who is the lead author of the measure. “This legislation honors the memories of my ancestors and all those who perished at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.”

Representatives Eshoo, Valadao, Lieu, and Bilirakis were joined by 38 of their House colleagues as original cosponsors of the Armenian Genocide Education Act, including: Jake Auchincloss (D-MA), Tony Cardenas (D-CA), Judy Chu (D-CA), David Cicilline (D-RI), Jim Costa (D-CA), Jasmine Crockett (D-TX), Nanette Diaz Barragan (D-CA), Jimmy Gomez (D-CA), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), Jared Huffman (D-CA), Sara Jacobs (D-CA), Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-CA), William Keating (D-MA), Rick Larsen (D-WA), Barbara Lee (D-CA), Susie Lee (D-NV), Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY), James McGovern (D-MA), Grace Meng (D-NY), Joseph Morelle (D-NY), Kevin Mullin (D-CA), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Chellie Pingree (D-ME), Katie Porter (D-CA), Linda Sanchez (D-CA), John Sarbanes (D-MD), Janice Schakowsky (D-IL), Adam Schiff (D-CA), Brad Schneider (D-IL), Brad Sherman (D-CA), Mikie Sherrill (D-NJ), Abigail Spanberger (D-VA), Haley Stevens (D-MI), Eric Swalwell (D-CA), Dina Titus (D-NV), Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), and Lori Trahan (D-MA).

The lead Congressional advocates of the measure cited the key role that education plays in genocide prevention.

“Our darkest moments as a human race have come during times when those who knew better stood silently, making excuses for passivity and allowing injustice and persecution to reign. We must acknowledge the atrocities of the past so that we might hopefully prevent them in the future,” said Rep. Bilirakis. “One of the best ways to achieve this goal is through education and awareness, which is why I am proud to co-lead the Armenian Genocide Education Act again in the 118th Congress.”

Rep. Lieu concurred, noting: “The Armenian Genocide was one of the most horrific losses of human life in modern history. It resulted in the deaths of roughly 1.5 million Armenians, and even more were displaced and forced to start new lives from scratch. Remembering atrocities like the Armenian Genocide is crucial to ensuring they never happen again. A key part of that is education, which is why I’m proud to co-lead the Armenian Genocide Education Act with Representatives Anna Eshoo, Gus Bilirakis, and David Valadao. This bill honors the legacies of those who perished by helping to ensure future generations learn about, and never forget, the Armenian Genocide.”

Rep. Valadao stressed that, “people who fail to understand history are bound to repeat it, and education is one of the best tools we have to prevent repeating some of our darkest days. The Armenian Genocide Education Act preserves the memories of the 1.5 million Armenians who were killed at the hands of the Ottoman Empire, and ensures Americans have accurate information on why and how this horrific event happened.”

Congressional Armenian Caucus founding co-Chair Frank Pallone welcomed the introduction of the measure, stating, “education is one of the best ways we can honor the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide and ensure it never happens again. This bill will help keep the memory of this horrific genocide alive by ensuring future generations have access to historically accurate resources. Expanding access to educational tools moves us one step closer to fulfilling our obligation to speak candidly about the past that is directly tied to our moral responsibilities of the present.”

Congressional Armenian Caucus Vice-Chair Adam Schiff (D-CA) explained, “when we remain silent in the face of injustice, we dishonor the victims and make further tragedy inevitable. Through education, we can combat genocide denial and ensure that future generations learn the lessons of history. The Armenian Genocide claimed 1.5 million lives. It must never be forgotten. And it must never happen again. Not to the Armenians. Not to anyone.”

The Armenian Genocide Education Act was introduced on April 24th, the international day of Armenian Genocide commemoration. Building upon the 2019 passage of H.Res.296 and S.Res.150 – which specifically rejected any official U.S. association with Armenian Genocide denial – the Armenian Genocide Education Act seeks to counter discourse and propaganda that claims that Ottoman Turkey’s systematic and deliberate state-sponsored mass murder, national dispossession, cultural erasure, and exile of millions of Christians between 1915 and 1923 did not take place. A similar measure was introduced in the last session of Congress.

Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day


New York –


BINGHAMTON, NY (WIVT/WBGH) – Monday the 24th, is and members of the local Armenian community gathered outside of Binghamton City Hall this morning to raise the tri-color flag as a sign of hope.

The Armenian Genocide, often referred to as the first genocide of the 20th century, occurred from 1915 to 1923.

Binghamton Mayor Jared Kraham says that today’s flag raising honors the over one million Armenians that were killed due to religious persecution and is meant to spread awareness the forgotten tragedy.

The Pastor at Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church, Kapriel Mouradjian says that the flag represents the hard work and determination of his ancestors to escape religious persecution.

Pastor at Saint Gregory the Illuminator Church, Reverend Kapriel Mouradjian says, “In the upcoming days, when this flag flies high outside Binghamton City Hall, there will be people with Armenian roots who will drive by and otherwise maybe not look at City Hall, but will see that flag, will recognize what the tri-colored flag represents and give thanks.”

Mayor Kraham presented Mouradjian with a proclamation that declares Monday, April 24th as in the City of Binghamton.

He calls on residents to commemorate and remember the tragedy and to acknowledge the contributions of Armenian community here locally, and across the country.

Burnt flags, border clashes, and prisoners: Tensions continue to escalate in Armenia and Azerbaijan

Screenshot from a video by Vox explaining the history of the conflict and the 2020 war.

Tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan reached a new high at the opening ceremony of the European Weightlifting Championship in Yerevan, Armenia, on April 14, 2023. A man, who was identified later as an employee of Armenian public television, ran onto the stage, grabbed the Azerbaijani flag during the opening ceremony, set it on fire, and ran off the stage with the flag in his hands. Azerbaijani athletes immediately withdrew from the competition, citing safety concerns.

Azerbaijan's National Olympic Committee and the Ministry of Youth and Sports condemned the burning of the flag and described it as a “barbaric act.” Several government officials in Armenia also condemned the incident.

The flag burning followed deadly clashes between the two countries near Lachin Corridor on April 11, which left a total of seven soldiers dead — four Armenia soldiers and three Azerbaijani soldiers. There were also reports of at least eight soldiers left wounded during the clash. This has been the first major violence since  EU Civilian Monitors were deployed on the Armenian side of the Azerbaijan-Armenia border after violent clashes in September, reported Eurasianet.

Both countries’ Defense Ministries accused the other of provoking the latest skirmish.

In a separate development, Armenian security forces detained two Azerbaijani soldiers for crossing into Armenia. Official Baku said soldiers got lost due to inclement weather. On April 17, both soldiers were charged with illegal border crossing, smuggling, and illegal circulation of weapons and ammunition. Azerbaijani media reported that at least one of the arrested soldiers was tortured during his detainment. A video circulated online showing evidence that one of the soldiers was beaten. On April 18, according to reporting by the Armenian Service for Radio Liberty, charges against one of the soldiers were changed. The serviceman is accused of killing a security guard after crossing into Armenia. The new charges confirm earlier rumors that the soldier was responsible for the murder of the security guard. According to OC Media, in a video shared on social media, the soldier claimed to have “shed Armenian blood.” One member of the Armenian parliament speaking to Armenian Service for Radio Liberty, Narek Kahramanyan, said the arrested soldier confessed to the committed crime.

In January 2023, the International Crisis Group released a report sharing recommendations for how to avoid a third war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The authors of the report urged Brussels to “endow its new two-year civilian monitoring mission with adequate resources as well as flexible mandate to foster communication and cooperation between the parties. It [the mission] should seek Baku's cooperation for the mission, including cross-border access, and (if possible) let the mission's staff liaise with Russian border guards.” The April clashes signal the lack of progress thus far. Moscow, one of the stakeholders in the reconciliation efforts, was quick to blame Western interlocutors, alleging their involvement was stalling the peaceful resolution and destabilizing the process.

Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev, voiced similar concerns in March during a Novruz holiday celebration statement. Aliyev lashed out at the mediators, accusing them of prolonging the conflict rather than helping to solve it.

In an interview with Politico, a senior official in the EU's diplomatic service said, on condition of anonymity, that things have not gone as planned for the civilian monitoring mission. “We were hoping for a different scenario with Baku,” said the official. Instead, the mission, which was deployed to Armenia's border with Azerbaijan in February 2023, has been discredited as an undercover “military intelligence operation,” and according to one news platform affiliated with the Azerbaijan state, the mission's goal was to “provoke Azerbaijan into a new war.”

But based on recent developments between the two countries, it is unlikely that the EU, or any outside parties, are responsible for the provocations.

In March 5, three Nagorno-Karabakh police officers and two Azerbaijani soldiers were killed as a result of clashes. On March 16, two civilians died in a landmine explosion in Aghdam, a region that was formerly under the control of Armenia but which came under Azerbaijan's control following the second Karabakh war. On March 22, the Armenian Defense Ministry said a soldier was killed on the border with Nakhchivan, just south of Yerevan. Azerbaijan's Ministry of Defense was quick to deny any involvement in the death of the soldier. It did, however, hold Armenia accountable for wounding one of its own soldiers on March 20.

Separately in December 2022, Azerbaijani citizens claiming to be environmental activists began blocking the Lachin Corridor, the sole land route connecting Armenia to the Karabakh region. The corridor remains blocked at the time of writing this article. On April 5, the so-called eco-activists prevented a group of local residents from entering Stepanakert (Khankendi in Azerbaijani). The government of Azerbaijani denies any involvement in the blockade, despite evidence that the so-called environmentalists are indeed supported by the government. However, Aliyev has praised the protestors.

Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of orchestrating the blockade, while authorities in Karabakh accuse Azerbaijan of forcing remaining Karabakh Armenians into submission. Lachin Corridor is supposedly under the protection of Russian peacekeepers who have been deployed in the territory since November 2020, following the Russia-brokered agreement signed between Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. They are also in charge of providing security for entry and exit points of the corridor. In a broader context, however, the role of some 2,000 Russian peacekeepers remains vague. The lack of clearly defined roles, responsibilities, and activities in the 2020 agreement is now becoming an issue. The blockade is a testament to that.

Official Baku has also criticized the Russian peacekeepers too, referring to them as “occupiers” and accusing them of harboring pro-Armenian sentiments.

In February, during the Munich Security Conference, leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan met for trilateral talks with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken. Ahead of the meeting in Munich, Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced that a peace plan was offered to Azerbaijan. Speaking to journalists in Munich, Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev said although there was progress based on the wording of the peace treaty, “it was not enough.” According to OC Media reporting, “three key issues remain undecided in Azerbaijan and Armenia’s peace agreement process: the demarcation of borders between the two countries, the opening of transport links, and the rights and security of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenian population.” Last year, official Baku proposed its own five-point plan, which included pledges to recognize each country's territorial integrity, border demarcation, open transportation links between the two territories, and an agreement to abstain from threats.

In October last year, both leaders pledged to mutually recognize each other's territorial integrity and sovereignty at the European Political Community summit held in Prague. It was during the meeting in Prague that the two leaders agreed to a civilian EU mission alongside their common border.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan is determined to go after the man who burnt the national flag at the championship as well as those involved in the alleged torture of the arrested Azerbaijani soldier. According to reporting by Turan News Agency, the Prosecutor's Office in Baku launched a criminal investigation seeking punishment against all the perpetrators involved in the flag-burning incident. The Office is planning an appeal to the relevant bodies of foreign countries and international organizations to ensure accountability for crimes against the Azerbaijan citizen.

Separately on April 14, the Baku office of the International Committee for Red Cross said they were looking into arranging a visit for the two Azerbaijani soldiers arrested after crossing into Armenia.

https://globalvoices.org/2023/04/19/burnt-flags-border-clashes-and-prisoners-tensions-continue-to-escalate-in-armenia-and-azerbaijan/

Armenia recognized Nagorno Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan with Madrid Principles in 2007, says PM Pashinyan

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 13:49,

YEREVAN, APRIL 18, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said that by adopting the Madrid Principles as the basis for resolving the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in 2007, Armenia recognized Nagorno Karabakh to be part of Azerbaijan.

Pashinyan made the remarks in parliament in response to a question from Hayastan (Armenia) faction MP Artur Khachatryan.

The lawmaker asked the PM to clarify why the 2022 report on the government’s program doesn’t mention the right to self-determination of the people of Nagorno Karabakh when the 2021-2026 government program noted it as one of the bases for conflict resolution.

Pashinyan said that in the negotiations legacy which he received in 2018 there is no “people of Nagorno Karabakh” wording, but rather an “entire population of Nagorno Karabakh” wording. “There words are highly important. Yes, the people is a constitutive entity under the Helsinki Act and all other acts. The population isn’t a constitutive entity, meaning it is not an entity to sovereignty. And third, if we say self-determination, from whom and where are we self-determining? For example, why aren’t we saying let Armenia self-determine? Because Armenia self-determined with the 1991 Alma Ata Declaration. From whom? From the Soviet Union, because it was part of the Soviet Union,” Pashinyan said.

PM Pashinyan explained that Armenia had a concept around this issue before 2007. The concept was the following: Nagorno Karabakh, like the others, is also self-determining from the Soviet Union, and there was a narrative that Nagorno Karabakh has never been part of Azerbaijan. In 2007 the Madrid Principles emerged, which stipulated that determining the status of Nagorno Karabakh and the entire process must be agreed with Azerbaijan. “Why must it be agreed with Azerbaijan if we don’t recognize Nagorno Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan? We have recognized Nagorno Karabakh to be part of Azerbaijan with the Madrid Principles. I’ve said it is a problem when our negotiations content and public narrative don’t match. We’ve recognized but we didn’t say, and all wars and fighting were related to this,” he said.

PM Pashinyan added that an entity to self-determination is the one who wants to self-determine, but Nagorno Karabakh has been left out of the negotiations process in 1998. After this, the right to self-determination was simply left written in the Helsinki Final Act.

“And today I am saying, let’s decide, either we face this or let’s note what’s going to happen. I have information, I have the analysis, and I am saying, if we don’t face this reality, it’s not going to happen,” Pashinyan added.

MP Khachatryan argued that Pashinyan is equalizing self-determination with independence, whereas the Helsinki Final Act defines self-determination as something completely different. For example, the MP said, Armenia could self-determine and decide that it no longer needs a parliamentary republic and adopt theocracy. The MP argued that this is what the Helsinki Final Act is all about.

 

Pashinyan answered by saying that Azerbaijan has been saying the same thing during the entire negotiations process. “They were also saying that self-determination doesn’t mean that an independent state must exist. They were also saying that the entity to that self-determination aren’t the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh alone, the Azerbaijanis are also an entity, they were saying that the Azerbaijanis must also decide. That’s why I am speaking about the people-population wording. I’ve said back in 2019 that the negotiator of the Nagorno Karabakh issue must be a representative of the people of Nagorno Karabakh because the people of Nagorno Karabakh did not vote in our parliamentary elections, hence I don’t have a mandate. I’ve continuously and constantly expressed these positions,” Pashinyan said.

Asked about his vision of a future status for NK, Pashinyan said there can’t be any talk about a future status as long as the status it has so far isn’t stipulated in the logic of the narrative voiced by the MP.

Speaking about the MP’s observation regarding the ICJ ruling on the Kosovo issue, Pashinyan said that the ICJ had determined that self-determination doesn’t require permission from central authorities. “The Russian president also spoke about this in context of the events in Ukraine. He said that a region doesn’t have to apply to the [central authorities] for self-determination. There was a lot of discussion back then, but no one noticed that in 2007, with the Madrid Principles, we already accepted that we must do it together with them, it can’t be done unilaterally. That’s why I am saying that we’ve had a different concept before 2007,” the Prime Minister said.

It’s impossible to change history by deleting Armenian letters and breaking to pieces Armenian cross stones – Simonyan

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 17:41,

YEREVAN, APRIL 14, ARMENPRESS. The delegation headed by President of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan is participating in the plenary sessions of the Inter-Parliamentary Assembly of the CIS participating states in St. Petersburg.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the parliament of Armenia, Alen Simonyan delivered an extended speech at the plenary session, which was preceded by the speech of the Speaker of the Milli Mejlis of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Sahiba Gafarova. Gafarova built her speech with famous Azerbaijani-style provocative rhetoric, accusing the Armenian side of not cooperating and creating various obstacles for Azerbaijanis.

Misrepresenting the situation related to the Lachin Corridor crisis, deliberately avoiding the facts and relevant assessments of international authoritative structures, she put forward old theses that are pleasing to the ears of the Azerbaijani society and are regularly repeated, based on Armenian hatred.

In response to Gafarova's speech, the President of the National Assembly of Armenia presented fact-based situation to the partners of the parliaments of the CIS countries.

“Distinguished Valentina Ivanovna,

Dear colleagues, participants of Plenary Session,

The cooperation within the frameworks of the CIS for Armenia has been and remains an important direction of collaboration. The practical experience accumulated by the Inter-Parliamentary Assembly of the CIS during these years is very valuable. Together with that, now we should establish guidelines for further joint work as a benefit for the economic, social and cultural development of our peoples and states.

Colleagues,

Today, the world, including our region stands before new challenges. The security crisis and the realities caused because of 44-day war, the aggression followed it and the occupation of 150 km2 sovereign territory of Armenia promise new threats for the whole region.

Violating the paragraphs of the trilateral statement of November 9, 2020 and ignoring the requirements of the UN General Judicial body – the UN International Court of Justice, the Azerbaijani authorities as ‘environmentalists’ in mink fur coats, under false pretest have blocked the Lachin Corridor already for more than four months. About 120.000 Armenians residing in Nagorno Karabakh because of failure and blockade of the energy infrastructure are deprived of the accessibility of first aid goods and services, including medical supply of vital importance.

The Russian peacekeeping troops, the mandate of which, by the way, has not been signed by Azerbaijan until now, as well as due to the presence of the International Committee of Red Cross the humanitarian crisis has not outgrown to humanitarian disaster in Nagorno Karabakh.

The illegal blocking of the Lachin Corridor by Azerbaijan under the false ecological veil created real environmental problems in Nagorno Karabakh, as the gas and electricity disruptions resulted in unplanned deforestation, which can result in serious systemized and long-term degradation of the environment.

In parallel with the Lachin Corridor blockade, Baku terrorizes the indigenous Armenian population of Nagorno Karabakh. The Azerbaijani Armed Forces regularly violate the ceasefire regime. The peaceful residents doing agricultural work often are shelled. There are numerous announcements of the Russian peacekeeping troops in this connection.

Only a few days ago, on April 11, on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia, on the part of Tegh village of Syunik Region, a group of servicemen of the Azerbaijani armed forces approached the servicemen of the Republic of Armenia under the pretext of clarifying the border checkpoints, provoked from firearm, then also from big caliber weapon and opened fire to the direction of the Armenian positions. There are casualties and wounded on both sides.

Ladies and gentlemen, all actions of the Azerbaijani military are documented by operative video shooting, which is available on the internet.

The implemented provocation is the next encroachment of Azerbaijan against the territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia. This policy of Azerbaijan is not new: it is the continuation of the attacks carried out on the Republic of Armenia in May and in November of 2021, as well as in September 2022, as a result of which, Azerbaijan occupied the sovereign territories of the Republic of Armenia.

I should state that in the mentioned part the actions of Baku are provocative, and they oppose the joint statements adopted as a result of meetings held in Prague on October 6, 2022 and in Sochi on October 31.

It is necessary to withdraw the armed forces from both sides on the distance secure from the border, as a reliable guarantee of the situation stability. We express our readiness in this issue from 2021, besides, such action stems from the logic and quadrilateral agreements of Prague and trilateral one of Sochi.

The Armenian side, as before, announces that it has no territorial requirements from its neighbours and towards anybody, and is ready to solve the current issues on the spot through constructive negotiations.

Colleagues,

Out neiighbour does not stop xenophobic policy and rhetoric. Claims are sounded almost against the whole sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia.

I cannot but mention the very important humanitarian issues facing all of us. Until now Azerbaijan illegally holds prisoners of war and the civilians. The issue of preservation of the Armenian cultural heritage on the territories of Nagorno Karabakh that passed under the control of Azerbaijan. The access of the UNESCO Mission into Nagorno Karabakh is blocked, in the event when numerous churches, cemeteries, monuments of marshals and generals of the Great Patriotic War have already been destroyed. The impression is that deleting Armenian letters and breaking to pieces the Armenian cross stones, which are already several hundred years old, is it possible to change the history. It is clear that by that Baku destroys the traces of the centuries-old presence of the Artsakh native people.

Summing up the abovementioned, we call on the international community and all colleagues interested in peace and stability in the region to condemn the aggressive actions of Azerbaijan through addressed statements and distinct steps against the Armenians of the Republic of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh and by that prevent the further escalation of the situation, which can be spread to other regions of the world.

Thanks for your attention,” said the President of the National Assembly of Armenia Alen Simonyan.

Lyon Mayor Grégory Doucet meets with father of Armenian POW illegally kept in Baku

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 19:03,

YEREVAN, APRIL 13, ARMENPRESS. On April 13, Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Paruyr Havhannisyan received the delegation led by Lyon Mayor Grégory Doucet.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from MFA Armenia, welcoming the guests, the Deputy Minister highlighted the special ties and effective cooperation between Yerevan and Lyon, which has its own place in the privileged Armenian-French relations. Paruyr Hovhannisyan thanked for organizing the fourth forum of Armenian-French decentralized cooperation in Lyon last year at a high level and for hosting the representatives of Armenian territorial administration bodies.

Expressing gratitude for hosting the Lyon delegation in Armenia with special warmth these days, Grégory Doucet confirmed his willingness to further deepen and strengthen the relations with Yerevan, which started in 1992.

The sides particularly highlighted the realization of joint projects between the communities of Yerevan and Lyon, Armenia and Lyon metropolis, particularly in the economic sphere.

Paruyr Hovhannisyan presented to the delegation the current challenges of the region and Armenia's continuous efforts to establish peace. Referring to the aggressive actions of Azerbaijan, including the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh due to the illegal blocking of the Lachin Corridor and the provocation of the Azerbaijani side near the Tegh community on April 11, he noted that Azerbaijan's attitude is aimed at completely disrupting efforts to establish stability and peace in the South Caucasus. In this context, he emphasized the imperative of sending an international fact-finding mission to the Lachin Corridor and stressed the importance of implementing the February 22 decision of the International Court of Justice.

It is noted that at the end of the meeting, on the initiative of the French side and with the mediation of the Armenian Foreign Ministry, a meeting was held with Seyran Saghatelyan, the father of Armenian prisoner of war Grigor Saghatelyan, who is illegally held in Azerbaijan, and the Mayor of Lyon.

Armenian Foreign Minister holds meeting with OSCE Chairperson-in-Office in Yerevan

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 09:52,

YEREVAN, APRIL 13, ARMENPRESS. The OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Foreign Minister of North Macedonia, Bujar Osmani has arrived in Armenia.

A meeting between Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and Osmani is currently underway in Yerevan. It will be followed by an enlarged meeting.

Osmani is in Armenia as part of a regional trip.

He traveled to Georgia and Azerbaijan before arriving in Armenia.

Armenia to take part in US-led military drills


April 7 2023


 7 April 2023

Armenia has announced it will take part in two US-led military drills in Europe in 2023, after the announcement and then retraction of Armenia’s participation in the Defender 23 international military drills. 

On Thursday, Armenia appeared on a list of 26 countries participating in the US-led Defender 23 multinational military drills in Europe, set to take place from 22 April to 23 June. A few hours later, Armenia was removed from the list.  

Armenia’s Defence Ministry spokesperson did not explain the change, but told state news agency Armenpress that the country ‘is planning to participate in two other military exercises organised by the US army command in Europe — KFOR (Kosovo Force) and Saber Junction military exercises’. 

The US Defence Department reportedly told an Armenian journalist that questions about Armenia’s removal from the list should be addressed to the Armenian government. 

According to RFE/RL, Armenia was also close to joining a US-led military training in 2021 but withdrew at the last minute. 

The news about Armenia’s participation in the drills came against a background of increasingly tense relations between Armenia and Russia, its long-term strategic ally. 

Relations between the two countries have been strained since the end of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, particularly following outbreaks of violence between Armenia and Azerbaijan. 

Recently, tensions between Moscow and Yerevan have further increased, with Armenia agreeing in January to host a two-year EU Monitoring Mission, and, in March, signalling its intent to ratify the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC). 

[Read more:  Russia ‘criticises’ Armenia’s International Criminal Court ratification]

Moscow has not yet commented on Armenia’s decision to participate in the US drills, but senior officials have frequently criticised Armenia’s growing ties with the West. Last week, Russia banned dairy imports from Armenia, in a move widely seen as an attempt to exert pressure on the country.  

Yerevan has, in turn, criticised Russia and the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) for not providing military support to Armenia during conflicts with Azerbaijan following the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. Earlier this year, the Armenian government refused to host CSTO exercises, having also refused to participate in the exercises in 2022. 

Armenia also declined to appoint a deputy secretary-general of the CSTO and did not agree to the deployment of a CSTO peacekeeping force to the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.


Armenia fears it will soon be invaded again – with no one to help

Switzerland – April 6 2023

In the shadow of the Ukraine war, another confrontation is brewing on the edge of Europe. The rising petrostate Azerbaijan wants to redraw the political map. Neighboring Armenia is defenseless, as a visit to the disputed border area shows.

Andreas Rüesch, ShurnukhApril 6, 2023
For more articles in English, visit our homepage or sign up for our Weekly Edition newsletter. Please note that the following story was machine translated with minimal editing.

Thick fog clings to the slopes of Shurnukh, but the division of this mountain village can be seen immediately. Three different flags greet you upon entering: the Armenian on a hill, the Azerbaijani one 50 meters further down. However, it is a third power that decides whether a visitor's journey may continue.

«Your documents, please,» says a voice in Russian. It is a young officer, somewhat surprised at the visit, who has emerged from behind a camouflage net. His uniform identifies him as a member of the Russian border troops who monitor the borders of this mountainous country under an agreement with Armenia. A new-looking armored personnel carrier with the Russian flag underlines who is ensuring a precarious calm here, 2,000 kilometers south of Moscow.

At 1,400 meters above sea level, the drastic changes brought about by the Armenian-Azerbaijani war of autumn 2020 can be seen here from up close. Until then, the village had been far from the front lines. The fact that in communist times someone had drawn an administrative border between the Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan right here played no role in the everyday life of the 150 inhabitants.

For decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Armenians ruled on both sides of the main road – the authorities of the Republic of Armenia in the upper part, and those of the Armenian pseudo-state of Nagorno-Karabakh, which had broken away from Azerbaijan, below. This changed abruptly with the Armenian defeat two years ago: Azerbaijan gained control over seven districts in the west of the country, and Shurnukh suddenly became a divided border village.

When the new masters took position below the road, they forced an exodus from that part of the village. «They just came one morning and gave us until midnight to leave our homes,» says war veteran Ararat Aghabekyan, a resident with a graying beard and military camouflage vest. Aghabekyan packed his things, but he didn’t go quietly. He set fire to his house so that it would not fall into the hands of the enemy, and posted the video of the blazing flames on the internet in protest. He loudly rails against «the Turks,» as the Azerbaijanis are often called here, and the «scoundrel» Ilham Aliyev, the authoritarian head of state of Azerbaijan.

The farmer comes back only on days like today, when he works his field in the Armenian-controlled upper part of the village. New houses are now being built there for the 13 displaced families. However, the construction, which began two years ago, is progressing slowly. This is also due to the tricky logistics; the isolated outpost of Shurnukh can only be reached with a special permit from the Armenian secret service.

Once, vital north-south transit flowed through here, in the form of extensive freight traffic with neighboring Iran, which is only 50 kilometers away as the crow flies. However, the winding road in this area runs along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border – sometimes a few meters to the left of it, sometimes on the other side. The regime in Baku is using this to assert its supremacy here as well. On the way to Shurnukh, a large blue sign at the side of the road makes it clear that we are entering Azerbaijani territory. An Armenian officer in Shurnukh contemptuously dismisses this as grandstanding. However, traffic on this route has come to an almost complete standstill.

Whereas the journey from Shurnukh to the nearest town used to take just over half an hour, those affected now have to take a detour that is four times longer on a narrow side road. Long-distance international traffic is also using this route now. At least, on a rocky spur along this route, you can admire Tatev Monastery, a historic jewel dating back to the 9th century that bears testimony to the long Armenian-Christian presence in the area.

From Tatev, Iranian trucks drive down on winding roads into a 500-meter-deep gorge before climbing up again on the other side. Some of them break down and are left at the side of the road, or are unable to pass by oncoming traffic on the bends. All this means economic losses for Armenia. However, it is harmless compared to the military threat that seems to grow daily.

It is abundantly clear that Azerbaijan is not content with the 2020 triumph, and has an appetite for more territory. Three times since that war, it has advanced into Armenian territory in short military campaigns, occupying border areas totaling 140 square kilometers, according to the government in Yerevan. These are strategic heights from which Armenian villages and roads can be shelled. This is a turning point in the decades-old conflict, because now, for the first time, the focus is not only on the fate of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region – the territory of the motherland Armenia itself is being called into question.

In March, the number of violations of the 2020 ceasefire agreement skyrocketed. In addition, martial rhetoric coming from Baku makes one fear the worst. Aliyev, Azerbaijan's president, has made it clear in several speeches that he doesn’t recognize Armenia's territorial integrity. At the summit meeting of Turkic states in mid-March, he portrayed the neighboring country as an artificial entity, and used the term «Western Azerbaijan» to describe it.

In particular, he regularly refers to southern Armenia as «our historic land». This brings back memories of Putin's approach in speeches dismissing the Ukrainian state as an error of history before then taking military action. Appeals for moderation from Washington and Brussels have so far failed to impress Aliyev.

Specifically, Baku is demanding the creation of a land corridor through Armenian territory to Nakhchivan, an Azerbaijani exclave on the border with Turkey. In this way, there would be a direct land connection between the two Turkic states for the first time. Armenia categorically rejects this. It offers to open east-west transit routes, but wants to retain sovereignty over its territory – and not allow uncontrolled transit, as the Azerbaijanis envision. Armenians fear that such a corridor would otherwise cut their country in two. The fact that Aliyev always speaks of the «Zangezur corridor,» thus using using the old Turkish name for southern Armenia, further reinforces the fear of territorial claims.

Who could prevent Azerbaijan from achieving its goals by force? The southern tip of Armenia is highly vulnerable militarily. At its narrowest point, the country is only 26 kilometers wide. On the roads of the region, it is notable that, despite the tensions, there are hardly any military vehicles to be seen. Armenia's army is considered grossly inferior – weakened by the 2020 defeat and burdened by supply problems, as its traditional supplier, Russia, is now short of war materiel itself.

However, Moscow still represents a power factor, not least thanks to its military presence in the country. Driving north from Shurnukh, a large new building with a Russian flag is visible, obviously a military base. Satellite photos indicate that it was created only in the last two years. However, Russia is not a reliable security guarantor for Armenia. Although the two countries are bound by a mutual defense pact, Moscow didn’t come to the rescue during the recent Azerbaijani border violations.

The consequences of this lack of protection can be observed an hour's drive further north at Jermuk. The spa and ski resort, located at 2,100 meters above sea level, owes its fame to its medicinal springs and Jermuk mineral water, which is exported to many countries. But it has been making headlines since last September primarily because of the military threat it faces. Azerbaijani troops advanced unexpectedly through mountain passes at that time, occupied an area of about 38 square kilometers and shelled the village with artillery for two days. Horrified tourists sought shelter in the basements of their hotels.

The cable car entrepreneur Armen Tadevosyan found dozens of exploded shells and rockets on his premises. He quickly had the damage to his restaurant and the ski rental house repaired, but the scars on the walls caused by bomb fragments are still visible. That winter, only one-tenth of his usual clientele showed up. «People are scared. The Azeri positions are now only 4.5 kilometers from here,» Tadevosyan says. The Armenian state subsidized the renovation work, but that didn't change the fact that the image of the resort has suffered badly, he says.

One can only speculate about the Azerbaijanis' motives. Satellite photos show that they established supply routes at altitudes of up to 3,000 meters prior to their advance. Perhaps they wanted to inflict economic damage with the shelling or terrorize the population in order to force concessions.

Tadevosyan mentions another hypothesis, which is also being considered by political scientists. A well-developed road leads from Jermuk into the valley, where it meets the main north-south axis, which is vital for Armenia. If Azerbaijani troops succeed in advancing to that point in the next attack, the entire south of the country will be cut off from supplies, the entrepreneur says. Aliyev could then dictate the terms of peace.

No matter who you talk to in Armenia, the fear of a new war is palpable. Foreign policy and strategy experts in the capital Yerevan appear dejected. The moment seems ideal for Azerbaijan to create new facts on the ground by force. Russia, Europe and America are distracted by the Ukraine war, and for the West, Azerbaijan has even gained in importance as an energy supplier as a result of that conflict.

Journalist Maria Titizian nevertheless argues for help for her adopted country with all her energy. Born in Canada as a descendant of Armenian emigrants and genocide survivors, she moved to Yerevan over 20 years ago to help shape the young Armenian state. «We’re realistic. The world doesn’t care about Armenia. But it should!» she says. Titizian, editor-in-chief of a politically rebellious online weekly magazine, speaks of a battle between David and Goliath. Armenia doesn’t want pity, she says, adding that it also has nothing to offer, certainly no petroleum. However, one thing is clear, she says: «We need Western help for our security.»