Pashinyan: Armenia provides and will continue to support Nagorno-Karabakh

NEWS.am
Armenia – May 31 2022

Armenia will transfer 20 billion drams to Nagorno-Karabakh in 2022. The funds will go towards housing construction. Prime Minister of the Republic Nikol Pashinyan stated this at the National Assembly during a preliminary discussion of the execution of the state budget for 2021 on May 31.

Armenia, according to the leader, renders and will continue to render support to Nagorno-Karabakh.

“In particular, in 2021, all utility payments of the population of Karabakh, within a certain amount for each, as well as all salaries in the public sector, were paid from the state budget of the Republic of Armenia. In general, since November 2020, we have provided support in the amount of 136 billion drams, and we do not intend to stop there,” Pashinyan said.

He noted that in 2019 the state budget of Karabakh amounted to about 118 billion drams. Of these, approximately 58 billion drams were transferred from Armenia. In 2021, the state budget has already amounted to 174 billion drams. Of these, 128 billion drams were provided by Armenia.

“In 2022, these payments will increase to 144 billion drams. In particular, pensions and benefits in Karabakh increased by 20% in 2022,” the PM added.

In addition to current expenses, about 20 billion drams will be allocated for the needs of housing construction. In total, 50 billion drams will be allocated for this in the coming years.

Artsakh government to assist restoration of Hakobavank monastery

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 5 2022

Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) President Arayik Harutyunyan on Sunday visited the Hakobavank monastic complex, on the occasion of Pentecost, and attended the Divine Liturgy served there, reported by the Office of the Artsakh President.

The head of state highlighted the restoration program of this monastic complex, and noted that an instruction has already been given to provide the necessary state funds to that end.

Ucom provides Arthur Abraham’s park with free Wi-Fi

Ucom provides Arthur Abraham's park with free Wi-Fi

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 13:35, 2 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 2, ARMENPRESS. On June 1st, at 16:00, at Nerkin Charbakh 3rd Street, the official opening of the park for children, built by the former WBO world champion, famous boxer Arthur Abraham, took place. Ucom has provided the park area with high-speed Wi-Fi internet access, which will allow visitors to benefit from the internet access for free. 

“Why did I choose to build this park in Nerkin Charbakh? First of all, everyone is well aware that this community represents the most vulnerable, below-average income inhabitants of Yerevan. And secondly, I was born and raised here, and as a "thank you" to my birthplace, I've built this park. My goal here was to create a cozy place for our mothers, sisters, for all people in general, to walk and enjoy their rest. For the visitors of the park to have access to the internet, I turned to Ucom, and I'm grateful the Company gave their prompt response and expressed willingness to provide the park area with free Wi-Fi. By the way, I've checked, the internet is truly fast in here”, said Arthur Abraham.

“As a green operator, we welcome the existence of green areas in Yerevan and the digitalization of the latter. I am convinced, thanks to our high-speed internet, visitors will be able to read books online, watch movies, communicate with their close ones, and organize their work in nature. I am glad for such a partnership with Arthur Abraham”, said Ara Khachatryan, Director General at Ucom. 

The park also offers a colorful playground for children.

Tolerance is a nice word

(Photo: Alek Surenian)

There is a presupposed idea that tolerance, or at the very least, a laissez-faire “live and let live” mantra lives in tandem with American culture. Although culture can be used as a multifaceted term, I’m generally speaking about a dominant culture in juxtaposition with a “minority culture.” Some may accuse me of being contentious, but this is merely an observation from an Armenian American who has lived most of his life in a huge urban hub where many different people coexist. 

As an immigrant growing up in the US, you become hyper aware of the differences between American culture and the one from your small community and home, be it racial, ethnic or otherwise. As a child trying to blend in, you work on taming the little idiosyncrasies of your “other” culture for fear of not fitting in or offending anyone. You think that overt displays of ethnic pride are cheap acts of panhandling a need to be seen. The consequence of this realization is that you either assimilate completely and all but denounce ethnic pride or quietly celebrate it so as to not be seen “too much.” There are also some who choose the complete opposite and refuse to adopt anything from the dominant culture as a “Hail Mary” approach at not losing something deemed sacred to so many.

American culture, and by extension, most American people, tend to look down on ethnic pride (I’m aware this is a generalization and may be a controversial statement to some). We know from this country’s history that a culmination of a collective “melting pot” of immigrants, including their customs and beliefs, has morphed into an assimilated and repackaged version of what is modern American culture today. However, the United States is a very large and diverse place. While it may bring some universal things to mind when we talk of “American culture,” it may mean a lot of different things to a lot of different people. 

To be clear, I am not making some moral distinction between cultures. It is and has been a natural process that a dominant culture eventually soaks in or alters the less dominant one into its whole. But the word “tolerance,” as I see it being used today, implies an almost libertarian-like “hands off” approach. It suggests a hashing out of differences that isn’t confrontational (in a good way, I suppose). The problem, as I see it, is that it purports to value equality of differences without having to do the work to weed out, or appreciate at best, what those differences really are. It is an antithesis of friendship and brotherhood in the truest sense. I don’t mean blind allegiance. Rather, an equal give and take and more importantly, an honest mutual interest of each other’s cultures. I am fully aware that this goes both ways, and in that regard, I’m speaking to both cultures (dominant and let’s call it recessive, ethnic or immigrant, if you will). Personally, I’d rather see a modicum of interest rather than the overly-politicized and emphasized word which lacks depth and is actually a cover for any serious discussion.

Ethnic pride is something I’ve only recently appreciated in its fullest sense; specifically when it is the only thing keeping a people united, sane, and literally alive while an existential threat looms over their brethren back home. 

A reinforcement of the need to be seen and our friends to hear our story versus the indifference of the dominant force which negates this need is experienced by many Armenian-Americans today. It is something you learn to live with and repress; sort of like being in a relationship when one partner loves the other much more and cohabitation has already settled in. until solidarity is called for. When war broke out in Artsakh, many of us were expecting or at the very least hoping for solidarity from our friends. We were simultaneously shocked and disillusioned at the complete lack of a simple, “Hey what’s going on?” That being said, those few and far between who were watching and listening did not go unnoticed because their eyes and ears felt more than all the tolerance in the world.

It’s ironic that ethnic pride may seem tribal or backwards to the very same people who preach tolerance. They would say that ethnic pride suffers from bad optics and could potentially be exclusive of others. And that’s fine. I know culture has never been a static thing, and I actually agree with them in many ways. I’m just saying I much prefer an honest friendship over the faux tolerance that resembles (in spirit at least) the modern-day corporate advertisement that is at the forefront of every social progress movement.  

I rest my frustrations surrounding this topic here, but I suspect there are many quietly experiencing what I’ve described. I know this may seem a bit harsh but I don’t think I’m asking for too much if I’m calling for an honest approach in solidarity. If we are really honest, we may have to confront the fact that if those within the dominant culture who deem themselves tolerant were to come upon this writing in happenstance; it would surprise us if we were to learn they read past the words “ethnic pride.”

Harut Akopyan was born in Yerevan and now lives in Los Angeles, California. In college, he studied filmmaking and screenwriting. Having played the game from a young age, Akopyan is also an accomplished chess player.


Iran to set up IHIT office in Armenia

MEHR News Agency, Iran


TEHRAN, May 31 (MNA) – Iran's Vice Presidency of Science and Technology announced that the Iran House of Innovation and Technology (iHiT) will be established in Armenia.

The Vice-Presidency has set up IHIT offices in other countries some years ago to develop the global market for knowledge-based products of Iran.

The offices have been already launched in countries such as Russia, Turkey, China, Syria as well as Kenya.

Soon, Armenia and Iraq will host the offices to this end, the Vice-Presidency added.

Earlier, VP Sattari had expressed hope that the inauguration of the Iran House of Innovation and Technology (iHiT) would become a turning point in bilateral economic cooperation between Iran and Kenya in the East African region.

AMK/5502645

Armenian Ministry of Labor employee fired because of photo with Robert Kocharyan

NEWS.am
Armenia –

An amployee of the Armenian Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs has been fired because of photo with Armenian ex-president Robert Kocharyan.

"A few weeks ago, I wrote that a government employee named Anna was fired because of a photo with the second president of Armenia, Robert Kocharyan. Today, I already have permission to make this case public, Armenia bloc MP Agnes Khamoyan noted.

“We are talking about an employee of the Unified Social Service of the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs of Armenia. The photo was posted on May 1st. It was not published by this employee. Civil servants must exercise political restraint. I emphasize this episode in order to show that the employee did not conduct any propaganda, only her photograph with President Kocharyan was published, which led to the dismissal of the latter,” Khamoyan said.

According to her, over these 4 years, especially after November 9, there are many cases when people working in the state apparatus are fired from their jobs just for one “like”.

Anna herself, on the same broadcast, spoke in detail about the fact that the next day, on Monday, she was told that the story with this picture would not be easy, she would receive "what she deserves."

According to her, an instruction was given to strictly monitor her entry and exit from the building.

“I was not a leader, I was not engaged in agitation, and it was by no means me who published the photo. I have not violated a single point of the Civil Service Law. And a week later I was told that the contract concluded with me was cancelled,” said a former employee of the Unified Social Service of the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs of Armenia.

Asbarez: Friends of ANCA-WR Gather in Support of Lt. Governor Eleni Kounalakis Ahead of Primary Elections

Ahead of the June 7 Primary Elections, friends of ANCA-WR gathered to support Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis

LOS ANGELES— Friends of the Armenian National Committee of America–Western Region held a fundraising event in support of California Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis’s re-election campaign. The event was attended by friends of ANCA-WR, ANCA-WR board members, and representatives of the Armenian American community in California.
 
“Lieutenant Governor Kounalakis has been a dedicated friend to the Armenian-American community, so we are proud to support her re-election,” remarked Chair of the ANCA-WR Board of Directors, Nora Hovsepian, Esq. “We are grateful for the Lieutenant Governor’s principled positions on the Armenian Genocide and Artsakh over the years and her dedication to the empowerment of Armenian-Americans in California.” 

ANCA-WR Board and staff members with Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis Friends of ANCA-WR at the fundraiser for Lt. Gov. Kounalakis

During the event, Lieutenant Governor Kounalakis had an honest discussion about issues concerning the Armenian community in California, including the integration challenges faced by Armenian immigrants, the challenges facing Armenian youth in California, the rising levels of cost-of-living, poverty and homelessness, as well as the security threats posed by Turkey and Azerbaijan against the Republics of Armenia and Artsakh.

“It has been an honor to represent California’s vibrant Armenian community during my tenure as Lieutenant Governor,” said Kounalakis during the event. “The contributions Armenian-Americans have made to our state over generations is a testament to their hard work and their dedication to the pursuit of the American Dream.”

Kounalakis, who previously served as the United States Ambassador to Hungary from 2010 to 2013, was the first Greek-American woman ever to serve as a U.S. ambassador, and is the author of “Madam Ambassador: Three Years of Diplomacy, Dinner Parties, and Democracy in Budapest.” 
 
During the fundraising event, Lieutenant Governor Kounalakis recalled the events of August 2012, when Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán suddenly repatriated Ramil Safarov, an Azeri serving a life term in Hungary for hacking an Armenian soldier (Lt. Gurgen Margaryan) to death during a NATO-sponsored training program. She reiterated that PM Orban’s decision to repatriate the axe murderer to Azerbaijan ended Hungary’s two-decade status as a reliable strategic partner of the United States.
 
The fundraising event in support of Lieutenant Governor Eleni Kounalakis was hosted at the prestigious City Club of Los Angeles by longtime ANCA-WR supporter Michael Mahdesian. Mahdesian is currently Chairman of the Board of Servicon Systems, Inc., a business based in Los Angeles. He has previously served as the Deputy Assistant Administrator for USAID’s Bureau of Humanitarian Response between 1993 and 2000 and was the former Executive Director of the United Armenian Fund’s airlift to the 1988 earthquake victims in Armenia. 
 
“We thank Mr. Mahdesian for his forty-years of support to ANCA-WR’s efforts to deliver justice for the Armenian Genocide and security to the people of Armenia and Artsakh,” said Levon Kirakosian, Esq., ANCA-WR Board Advisor.
 
The ANCA-WR endorsed Lieutenant Governor Kounalakis on April 19, 2022. The primary elections are set to take place on June 7, while the General Elections are scheduled for November 8. 
 
Over the past several months, ANCA-WR has been announcing its endorsements as it works tirelessly to ensure issues of significance to the Armenian-American community are addressed by candidates ahead of the upcoming elections. 
 
The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


Turkish press: Policies of ‘Muslim middle powers’ can no longer be dictated by West: Pakistani senator

Riyaz ul Khaliq   |23.05.2022
Pakistani Senator Mushahid Hussain Sayed

ISTANBUL

The policies of “Muslim middle powers” can no longer be dictated by Western nations, while these nations should focus on connectivity, boosting their economies, and coming together for “mutual interests,” a Pakistani senator said.

Calling Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan a “lion of Asia” who has a “vision and will,” Mushahid Hussain Sayed told Anadolu Agency: “We have what I call ‘Muslim middle powers’ emerging like Pakistan, Turkiye, Iran, and Saudi Arabia… and these are important elements who are playing a role for stability.”

“Their policies can no longer be dictated by people sitting in London, Washington or New York or Brussels,” said Sayed, who was visiting Istanbul for a meeting on Palestine with lawmakers from several other countries.

Citing the “role” of Turkiye and Pakistan in Azerbaijan’s second Nagorno-Karabakh war which started on Sept. 27, 2020 and lasted 44 days to recapture its territory from Armenia, Sayed called for greater cooperation on regional connectivity, the economy, defense, and issues of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), Palestine, and Kashmir.

‘Relations between Turkiye and Pakistan not dependent on respective governments’

Sayed, who also chairs the Pakistani Senate’s Defense Committee, said Turkiye and Pakistan enjoyed “a rather unique relationship.”

“It predates the existence of even Pakistan,” he noted.

Recalling the help extended by South Asian Muslims during Turkiye’s war of liberation, he said “this relationship, irrespective of any government in Turkiye or in Pakistan, is always a strong bond.”

“It's now strengthened through mutual interests. The mutual interests are linked with our worldview,” he said.

Sayed said the two countries “have similar positions on the issue of Palestine, Kashmir, and the TRNC.”

“This relationship has been reinforced by our cooperation in the fields of economy, defense, diplomacy, and in the field of regional connectivity, and that is extremely important,” he said, citing the resumption of the Istanbul-Tehran-Islamabad (ITI) freight train as one example.

“When Azerbaijan was fighting the Armenian aggression and occupation of the homeland, Pakistan Turkiye were two countries which rose to the occasion,” he said, adding “because of this move,” the flags of Turkiye and Pakistan were raised in Azerbaijan when they celebrated the Nagorno-Karabakh victory.

Sayed said Pakistan was the first country to send a delegation of parliamentarians to “express solidarity” with Turkiye after the failed coup by the Fetullah terrorist organization in July 2016.

“I, myself, in my speech at the Asian Parliamentary Assembly in Cambodia, said that President Erdogan is 'the lion of Asia',” he recalled. “I meant it because he is a man who has vision, like (former Malaysian Prime Minister) Dr. Mahathir Mohamad.”

Sayed said Erdogan is “a man who takes positions on issues, and he has shown the vision and will to do that.”

Acknowledging that progress in bilateral relations between Turkiye and Pakistan faced “bureaucratic obstacles,” Sayed, however, said, “there are no limits to Pakistan-Turkiye collaboration.”

He said the two countries should sign a free trade agreement “and we should cut through the bureaucratic red tape.”

“It's not a decision for bureaucrats. It is a political decision,” he asserted.

“And there is the issue of dual nationality, which should also be there,” he said. “I will work on these issues.”

Sayed said Istanbul and Turkiye are “the favored destinations of Pakistanis when they go abroad because of love, esteem, and respect.”

“Two big anniversaries are coming up and we are celebrating them together,” he said, referring to the 75th anniversary of the founding of Pakistan in 2022 and the centenary of the founding of the Republic of Turkiye in 2023.

“We will be there with our Turkish brethren to celebrate the historic anniversary because Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah had said that when Mustafa Kemal Ataturk died in October 1938, that this is a day of mourning for the Musalmans (Muslims) of India,” said Sayed, a renowned political commentator.

“That is how high in esteem the father of our nation held the father of the Turkish nation.”

‘Element of racism in Ukraine war’

Commenting on Russia’s war on Ukraine, the Pakistani senator said Pakistan and Turkiye “have broadly similar positions on the issue of the Ukraine war.”

“Of course, nobody can endorse any invasion of any foreign country. But there’s a context to that. And Pakistan, therefore, abstained on that issue because basically, we see it as a European war,” said Sayed.

“We are also concerned! I, as a Pakistani, and as a person who has links with the media, believe that there are, unfortunately, a lot of double standards in the Western media’s coverage of the Ukraine war, because there is an element of racism — as if the lives of Europeans in Ukraine are perhaps more precious than the lives of non-Europeans, be they Kashmiris or Palestinians or Afghans or Syrians or Iraqis,” he said. “That needs to be put on the record.”

Sayed said there is the “context of the NATO expansion” around the Ukraine war.

“We wish that it should not become a part of another new Cold War,” he said.

Complimenting Turkiye for its role in attempting to diffuse the situation, Sayed said “Turkish drones are playing a very important role.”

“The Bayraktar drone has been very effective. It has been used on almost 80 occasions in the Ukraine war, and this drone was also effective in the Azerbaijan war,” he said.

“It is a tribute to Turkish technology that it is so sophisticated. And we as Pakistanis, who are brothers and friends of Turkiye, take pride in the achievements of this country.”

Sayed said President Erdogan is “among those leaders… Perhaps the only international statesman who has the capacity…who has the vision, and who has the will to bring both parties (Russia and Ukraine) to the conference table.”

He warned that “prolonging the war is part of a new Cold War.”

“We do not agree with that view because prolonging the war would create other complications like shortages of oil and food. And it is in that context, it is important that President Erdogan play that role. He has already done it at the level of foreign ministers,” Sayed said, referring to a meeting of the foreign ministers of Russia and Ukraine on the eve of the Antalya Diplomacy Forum in March.

“I hope that if there is a summit between (Ukrainian) President (Volodymyr) Zelenskyy and (Russian) President (Vladimir) Putin that it will be President Erdogan who will host it, Insha Allah!”

‘Resurgence of the East’

Lauding the vision of Pakistani philosopher and national poet Sir Muhammad Iqbal, Sayed said: “this great Muslim philosopher saw it 90 years ago that the sun is rising in the east.”

“I think he was referring to the resurgence of Asia and the emergence of the Asian century,” he said.

Pointing to President Erdogan’s slogan “the world is bigger than five,” Sayed said: “What we are seeing today in the world, and what President Erdogan alluded to, is that it has become a multipolar world where — and this is very important — the balance of economic and political power is shifting from the West to the East. And by the West, I mean the United States of America and Europe.”

He said there were “multiple power centers now…no one superpower, self-styled, can control what is happening today.”

“We see the decline of the US… We see the decline of Europe also, in front of our own eyes. It’s their political clout that is limited… their economies are in bad shape,” he said, citing Brexit as an example.

“In that context,” Sayed emphasized, “I feel that the world has to adjust to new powers, especially in the Muslim world.”

He quoted a remark by Pakistan’s founder, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, during an interview with an American magazine in October 1947, in which Jinnah said: “Pakistan will be the pivot of the world placed on the frontier around which the future geopolitics of the world will revolve.”

“You can see that today when we talk of regional connectivity… we are the hub of regional connectivity,” he said, referring to initiatives like the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and the Economic Cooperation Organization (ECO), which was earlier known as the Regional Cooperation for Development (RCD).

In 1964, said Sayed, “Pakistan, Turkiye, and Iran launched the first initiative in the Muslim world for regional connectivity — the RCD.”

Later on, the RCD evolved into the ECO with the participation of the Central Asian republics, Azerbaijan, and Afghanistan.

The over $50 billion CPEC is the flagship project of China’s multi-billion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

“The train, which leaves London, reaches Beijing in 10 to 12 days. And Turkiye is the center,” he said.

He said thanks to these initiatives, a “greater South Asia” was emerging which “was not a geographical concept that is just a South Asia.”

“It’s a geopolitical concept,” he noted. “This regional connectivity is driven by the economy, energy, roads, railways, ports, and pipelines.”

“A whole new world is opening. And we are at the center of that. So Pakistan and Turkiye, together with countries like China and Iran as well as Central Asia, have to play a historical role,” said Sayed. “This is the need of the hour.”

‘Reject new Cold War era’

Sayed, known for his sharp analysis of China’s socio-politico-economic development, said two “visions were emerging.”

“One is a vision of a new Cold War, conflict, confrontation,” he said, adding this phenomenon was already “happening in Europe, where they see Russia as the enemy.”

“The hawks in Washington talk of China as the enemy… We reject this kind of thing,” he emphasized, arguing that “after so many years of conflict, we cannot have a return to a Cold War…a zero-sum game mindset.”

“We're talking of regional connectivity, connectivity based on cooperation, based on consultations, and it is connectivity among countries, civilizations, and continents,” he added.

Lauding what he called the “historic visit” of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to Islamabad, where he attended the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Foreign Ministers Summit in March this year, Sayed said: “I do recall that President Xi Jinping hosted a conference on the dialogue among civilizations in 2019.”

“He talked of how Islamic civilization has enriched the Chinese civilization — the Confucian civilization. He talked of the Great Mosque of Makkah. He talked of the Indus Valley Civilization. He talked of Ibn Batuta, the traveler who went to China and who has written about China in the past,” said Sayed.

Wang was the first Chinese top diplomat to represent his country at the OIC at this level.

“So there is a lot which is linking the Chinese civilization with the Islamic civilization,” he said.

Sayed said Xi had also presented “for the first time a peace plan for the Middle East on the issue of Palestine.”

He said China was the “first country to support” the war of liberation by Palestinians on the first of January 1965 while Pakistan was the first country which hosted the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) under Yasser Arafat in April 1974 in Lahore at the Islamic Summit, where the PLO was accepted and recognized as the sole legitimate representative of the people of Palestine.

“Pakistan’s support to Palestine predates the creation of our country because Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the father of our nation, gave that support to Palestine,” he recalled.

“In that context,” he said, “there are a lot of commonalities between the positions of Pakistan, Turkiye, and China viz-a-viz Palestine.”

“This needs to be taken forward. This initiative of inviting Chinese Foreign Minister Mr. Wang Yi to Pakistan was very important. And that has reinforced this relationship and together with the BRI, together with the $400 billion China-Iran agreement,” he said, calling it “extremely important.”

Referring to the Beijing Olympics held this February, Sayed said China-Saudi relations and China-UAE relations also add to this phenomenon.

“Pakistan, Egypt, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, other countries. And Turkiye was also represented there.”

“This camaraderie is developing. And interestingly, when Mr. (Samuel P.) Huntington talked in a negative way about the clash of civilizations in 1993, it seems that the Confucian civilization and Islamic civilization are moving closer together, not against anybody, but for the common good. For connectivity, for cooperation, for strengthening development in these countries,” he said.

‘Kashmir and Palestine are inextricably intertwined’

Sayed said the issues of Kashmir and Palestine “are inextricably intertwined.”

“They are both linked with peace, security, and stability in South Asia and the Middle East, respectively,” he added.

“Both (of) our lands are under brutal foreign occupation,” he said, referring to UN Security Council resolutions that grant the peoples of these lands the right of self-determination.

He said Palestinians and Kashmiris were facing “human rights sufferings” while the “demographic balance is sought to be changed by Israel in Palestine and by India in occupied Kashmir.”

“There is a genuine, popular, indigenous, spontaneous resistance to this repression.”

Armenia denies Azerbaijan’s "corridor" claims

MEHR NEWS AGENCY, Iran

TEHRAN, May 24 (MNA) – A senior Armenian government official denied Baku's new remarks about an agreement on the opening of a corridor, saying that no road or transport route can function as a "corridor" in the territory of Armenia.

Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan told Armenpress on Tuesday that there have been no changes in Armenia's stance on the matter. 

Grigoryan's remarks came after Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in a phone conversation with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that during a May 22 meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the two sides reached an agreement on the opening of a "corridor" through Armenian territory, including the construction of both railways and highways.

"No road or transport route can function as a corridor in the territory of Armenia. All agreements reached in Brussels related to the opening of regional connections. They fit in the framework of the public statements made previously by representatives of Armenia," Grigoryan said.

"You can see in the statement of the President of the European Council that the agreements in the context of the opening of regional connections relate to the border and customs control, road fees and organizing international transit. These are important issues for realizing the Armenian Crossroads project and the Government of Armenia will consistently move in this direction.

Earlier, Turkey's Anadolu Agency reported that  Aliyev spoke over the phone with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and updated him on a trilateral meeting between himself, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and European Council President Charles Michel in Brussels on Sunday.

“The president of Azerbaijan touched on the preparation of a peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the presentation by Azerbaijan of five principles based on international law, the normalization of relations between the two countries, the opening of transport corridors, and the delimitation of borders discussed during the meeting,” Azerbaijan’s Presidency statement read. 

“Aliyev gave a positive assessment to the results of the trilateral meeting,” it added.

ZZ/FNA14010303000817

Armenia MoD confirms: Year ago Azerbaijani Armed Forces advanced in Vardasar region

NEWS.am
Armenia –

The Armenian Defense Ministry in response to Sputnik Armenia's request confirmed the fact of another advance of Azerbaijani troops in Syunik – in the area of Mount Vardasar.

"At the beginning of May, we reported that the Azerbaijani Armed Forces or border guards had infiltrated the Armenian territory much to the south – near the height south of the villages Tsav and Nerkin Khand – about a year ago.

The information about the locations of the positions coincides with the former ombudsman Arman Tatoyan's data. Tatoyan said so on 11 April, after Azerbaijani guards moved into the area of Nerkin Hand in March.

However, when Sputnik Armenia asked, the Defense Ministry said that "there are no Azerbaijani positions on the territories adjacent to the village of Tsav, and there never was any."

Moreover, when asked if there were other areas of Azerbaijani armed forces intrusion, except for the Vardenis community (Kut, Verin Shorzha and others) in Gegharkunik, Sev lich, Ishkhanasar and Nerkin Hand areas in Syunik, then the Defense Ministry said that "except for the incursions on Armenian territory in the past, no other cases were recorded".

After examining the satellite maps, on 10 May we decided to send a request to the Defense Ministry again with a satellite picture and indication of the areas of engineering works near Vardasar.

We asked for clarification whether Azerbaijani positions were visible in the photo and (if so, when the incursion took place). The reply was: "Enemy military positions at the points indicated by the arrows were deployed in May-June 2021.

We should note that during the last year there was no official information from the Armenian authorities about an Azerbaijani invasion in this region, as in the case of the Nerkin Hand village area.

https://news.am/eng/news/703482.html