Armenia wants to establish relations with Turkey without preconditions. Pashinyan

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 21:15,

YEREVAN, 24 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. Armenia wants to establish relations with Turkey without preconditions, ARMENPRESS reports Pashinyan said during an online press conference organized for the representatives of mass media and non-governmental organizations.

"Do we want to open the Armenia-Turkey border? Yes, we are sincere in that position. It did not happen then (ed. In 2009), now we must try to take into account the previous experience," he said.

Answering the question to what extent it is possible for Turkey to put forward preconditions for the normalization of relations again, Pashinyan emphasized. "Yes, there were no preconditions in the Armenian-Turkish protocols of 2009, but later preconditions appeared. We cannot guarantee that this will not happen again. We need to understand how interested the parties are. The process is transparent from the very beginning of the political negotiations. This has never been the case before.”

The Armenian PM mentioned that they have no secrets from the public. "Our policy will be in the realm of public announcements. But constantly leaking working information will not benefit the process."

Referring to the failure of the 2009 process, Pashinyan noted that there were factors that were different at that time. "At that time, the negotiations were conducted by the President on the Turkish side and the Armenian President on the Armenian side. But at that time Turkey was a country of parliamentary model of government. It is true that the President of Turkey was a representative of the ruling political team, but nevertheless, he was not the head of the country, the Prime Minister was the head. The dialogue is now taking place under a mandate given by the President of Turkey. In other words, this is one of the factors that can have a certain impact on the process, hopingly, a positive impact”, the PM said.

Electricity generation on the decline in Armenia

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 22 2022

A total of 6 billion 848.4 million kilowatt-hours of electricity were generated in Armenia in January-November 2021, down by 2% from the same period of 2020, Armenia's National Statistical Committee revealed.

According to the latest figures, electricity generation at thermal power plants (TPPs) increased by 5.1% to 3 billion kWh in eleven months. In the meantime, power generation at hydropower plants rose by 25.5% to 2,085.4 million kWh in the reporting period.

In January-November 2021, Armenia’s Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) generated 1 billion 679.6 million kilowatt-hours of electricity, marking a 31․6% year-on-year decline.

Electricity generation at solar power plants stood at 82.3 million kWh in the first 11 months of last year, securing a 4.2-fold increase from the same period of the previous year.

Pashinyan congratulates Petkov on 30th anniversary of Armenian-Bulgarian diplomatic relations

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 12:37,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to the Prime Minister of Bulgaria Kiril Petkov on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Bulgaria, Pashinyan’s Office said.

The message reads:

“Your Excellency

I extend my warmest congratulations on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Bulgaria. The Protocol signed in 1992 officially recorded the centuries-old historical and cultural interactions between our two peoples.

Over the past three decades, our bilateral interstate relations have been marked by the continuous development of sincere and effective cooperation based on mutual respect, trust. Today we have a rich bilateral agenda, which covers many areas, including partnership in international organizations, political dialogue, inter-parliamentary cooperation, as well as active cooperation in the fields of education, culture, trade and economy.

I am convinced that the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement, in its turn, will best contribute to the further strengthening and deepening of the wide range of our bilateral cooperation.

Once again congratulating you on the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations, please accept, Your Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration”.

Sergey Manassarian, Armenian ambassador to China, praised the Beijing winter Olympics as a high-quality and safe games

Jan 14 2022
Fri, , 6:57 PM

According to data from Armenia, the trade volume between the two countries is expected to reach US$1.2 billion in 2021

According to data from Armenia, the trade volume between the two countries is expected to reach US$1.2 billion in 2021

Beijing, China, Jan. 14, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Beijing Winter Olympics will open on February 4th. Recently, Armenian Ambassador to China Sergey Manassarian publicly stated that "China has a lot of experience in fighting Covid-19 epidemic and hosting the Olympic Games, and believes that the Beijing Winter Olympics will be successfully held and become one of the most successful Winter Olympics in history. Armenia attaches great importance to its relations with China and expects the cooperation between the two countries to develop rapidly after the outbreak.

Looking forward to the success of the Beijing Winter Olympics

Sergey Manasaryan said that although winter sports are not very popular in Armenia, and the level of athletes’ winter sport skills is not very high, they still look forward to the success of the Winter Olympics as "the most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part". "There are expected to be 6 to 8 athletes who will participate in skiing and other sports events. The final list of entries has yet to be finalized, and athletes are still competing for 'tickets' to the Winter Olympics."

Regarding the anti-pandemic measures China has taken to ensure the safety during the Winter Olympics, Sergey Manasaryan said that the most important thing for the successful holding of the Winter Olympics is the safety of the participating athletes and the Chinese people. "China is very experienced in fighting the pandemic. The series of anti-pandemic measures it has taken are correct and effective. Athletes of the Winter Olympics must respect China's decisions and measures. China has hosted the Summer Olympics and Paralympics and is very experienced in organizing the Olympic Games."

Manasaryan pointed out that as early as the post WWI, there have been cases of exerting political pressure on or even boycotting the Olympic Games. Unfortunately, this problem has become a common issue since that. "One of the main principles of the Olympic Charter is to ensure the rights and freedoms of the participants of the Olympic Games. To achieve this, it is necessary to ensure that the Olympic Games are free from the influences such as political pressure and political discrimination. Politics should be separated from the Olympic Games."

"To exert political pressure on the Beijing Winter Olympics is actually to boycott the main principles of the Olympic Charter, because Beijing is only the host city of the Winter Olympics," said Sergey Manasaryan, adding that China has done a lot of preparation work over the past six years since 2015 when it won the bid for the 2022 Winter Olympics.

Last year, Mr. Sergey Manasaryan was invited to visit the Olympic Village and the venues and infrastructure of the Winter Olympics. "I believe that the Beijing Winter Olympics will be above-standard and safe. I also believe that it will become one of the most successful Winter Olympics in Olympic history."

Welcome Chinese tourists to Armenia

In 2022, China and Armenia will celebrate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

"China and Armenia both have a long history and splendid culture, and the history of friendly exchanges between the two countries lasts for more than 2,000 years," said Sergey Manasaryan, adding that China and Armenia keep a close relationship and cooperate in many fields." Armenia firmly adheres to the One-China Principle, supports China's position on the Taiwan issue, and agrees that Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Tibet affairs are China's internal affairs," he emphasized.

Since the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries, great progress has been made on economic and trade cooperation. Since 2009, China has been the second largest trading partner of Armenia for many consecutive years, and the scale of bilateral trade has continued to expand.

According to data from Armenia, the trade volume between the two countries is expected to reach US$1.2 billion in 2021, an increase of 35%-40% over the previous year, said Sergey Manasaryan, commenting that although the absolute value is not huge, it is already a great achievement for Armenia.

"In the future, China and Armenia can strengthen cooperation in food processing, alcoholic beverages, machinery, minerals, chemicals, and infrastructure construction." In the view of Sergey Manasaryan, Armenia is a landlocked country with a relatively small market. He hoped that the two countries can promote cooperation in the fields of transportation and logistics, such as opening direct flights, etc., after the pandemic is over. "Armenia attaches great importance to the development of science and technology, and hopes that more Chinese companies, especially technology companies, will invest in and cooperate with Armenian companies."

In 2019, China and Armenia signed a visa-free agreement, which came into effect in January 2020. Over the past two years, tourism has developed rapidly between the two countries.

"Armenia is a very friendly country. It has cliff stone carvings, ancient reliefs, temples and beautiful natural scenery, which is especially picturesque in late spring or autumn," said Manasaryan, adding that Armenia welcome more Chinese tourists to come for a visit.

Believe in a brighter future between the two countries

Since the outbreak of the pandemic, Armenia has provided China with a large amount of medical masks and other materials when China was at a difficult time to fight against the pandemic. Armenia has expressed its determination to stand with China. China has also assisted Armenia in its fight against the pandemic from various aspects, including selflessly donating anti-pandemic materials and medical equipment.

On January 12, Sergei Manasaryan, Armenian Ambassador to China received the interview by Workers’ Daily. Reported by Dou Feitao.

"The most popular vaccines in Armenia are those produced by China," said Sergey Manasaryan. Experts from China and Armenia have held many video conferences to exchange experiences. The Chinese medicine has played a very important role in the treatment of Armenian patients, he added.

Sergey Manasaryan expressed his sincere gratitude to the Chinese government and enterprises for their selfless assistance to Armenia. According to him, China's ability to control the pandemic is inseparable from the leadership of the Communist Party of China, the correct decision-making of the Chinese government, and the organization and discipline of the Chinese people. "Since the very beginning of the pandemic outbreak, China has shared pandemic information and anti-pandemic experience with other countries in an open and transparent manner. In the future, the two countries will continue to deepen cooperation to control the pandemic as soon as possible," he said.

Mr. Sergey Manasaryan has been in China for almost 6 years. "I believe that the two countries will have a brighter future, and the cooperation between two countries will take a fast track after the pandemic," he said. In his opinion, the relationship with China has a very special status in Armenia's foreign policy, and Armenia is committed to working with China in multiple aspects.

At the end of the interview, Sergey Manasaryan also conveyed his blessings through the newspaper. On the occasion of the coming of the Year of the Tiger, he hopes that the Chinese people will be healthy and enjoy a good and prosperous life.

Source: http://www.workercn.cn/34067/202201/14/220114020753271.shtml

Top Armenian peacekeeper says key task was to stop terrorists from poisoning water supply

TASS, Russia
Jan 12 2022
In Almaty, in addition to the Druzhba waterworks, the Armenian peacekeepers are also guarding one of the largest bread factories

ALMATY, January 12. /TASS/. One of the key objectives of the Armenian peacekeeping unit in Almaty was preventing the rampaging terrorists from poisoning the local water supply, the unit’s commander Major Ayrapet Mkrtchyan told journalists on Wednesday.

"One of the main tasks at the Druzhba water supply facility was the prevention of the water [supply] from being poisoned," he stated.

According to the commander, the water supply facility is a strategic object and quite possibly it could have been targeted for contamination by the terrorists.

In Almaty, in addition to the Druzhba waterworks, the Armenian peacekeepers are also guarding one of the largest bread factories.

According to the January 6, 2022 decision by the CSTO Collective Security Council, the bloc's collective peacekeeping forces were deployed to Kazakhstan for a limited time period in order to stabilize and normalize the situation. The contingent includes the armed forces of Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Currently, the main mission of the Russian units is to protect Almaty’s main strategic facilities.

Armenian government transfers 15% of its shares at Zangezur Copper Molybdenum Combine to National Interests Fund

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 12:19, 5 January, 2022

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 5, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government will transfer the 15% shares it holds in the Zangezur Copper Molybdenum Combine to the Armenian National Interests Fund (ANIF) for accredited management, while still holding state ownership in the shares.

The decision was made at the Cabinet meeting on January 5.

The move is expected to provide more effective participation in the government’s shareholding at the company.

Turkish press: Christianity in Turkey and the Middle East

An interior view of the Church of St. Anthony of Padua on Istiklal Avenue, Beyoğlu, Istanbul, Turkey, July 31, 2020. (Photo by Getty Images)

Christian minorities living in the Middle East, the birthplace of the religion, aim to maintain their culture on the axis of the Muslim majority. With the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, they attempted to obtain their social rights while being divided into scattered communities. Christians, who reside in various places from Turkey to Egypt, are sometimes exposed to the reality of immigration, but sometimes, on the contrary, they may encounter a climate of tolerance.

A study conducted in 1893 during the reign of Ottoman Sultan Abdülhamid II revealed that Muslims constituted more than 80% of the Ottoman population of approximately 21 million, while the population of Christians was estimated to be around 15%. Towards the end of the 19th century, Armenian Apostolic, Syriac, Assyrian, Chaldean and “Rum” (Greek) communities formed the leading Christian communities and sects living under Ottoman rule and settled around Turkey, the Balkans and the Levant. The Ottoman Empire had long followed a policy of tolerance towards the communities within its borders that felt they belonged to different ethnicities, religions and sects, and the interaction between Muslim-Christian subjects, which increased rapidly after Istanbul's transition to Ottoman patronage, reached high levels.

Perhaps one of the most striking aspects of the Ottoman period was that, apart from the nationalist regimes during its collapse, it contained many different identities, Christian, Jewish, Circassian, Georgian, Kurdish and more, within the scope of a system called "millet." Although the term "millet" is understood as "a nation" in today's Turkish society, when its Arabic origins are examined, it means a community belonging to a sect. However, with the integration of many different religious, ethnic and cultural groups into the empire, the word lost its old meaning and became the name of the system that aimed to ensure a peaceful society within the framework of tolerance. It was so successful that, before the era of nationalism put pressure on all empires, Armenians were called "millet-i sadıka," which means "the loyal nation," as few nations would associate with each other, and Armenian guilds and communities often had a positive reputation in the eyes of the public before certain unfortunate incidents occurred.

With the proclamation of the Republic of Turkey (Oct. 29, 1923) and the transition to the multi-party system, Turkey became a country where Christians could be represented at the parliamentary level and freedom of religion and belief was guaranteed by the Constitution. Articles 24 and 25 of the Constitution contain the following sentences: “Everyone has the freedom of conscience, religious belief and conviction. No one can be compelled to participate in worship, religious rites and ceremonies, or to reveal their religious beliefs and convictions; He cannot be condemned or accused because of his religious beliefs and convictions.” In this context, regardless of their religion or denomination, Christians and other religious groups in Turkey had the right to officially establish churches, associations and places of worship and were able to freely practice their religion.

Recently, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan visited two important churches, the Bulgarian St. Stephen Church and the newly opened Syriac Orthodox St. Ephrem (Mor Efrem) Church, religious sites he described as a new wealth for Istanbul.

A total of 20 million Christians live in the Middle East, mostly in Lebanon, Egypt, Israel, Iraq, Turkey and Syria. Considering the fact that there are few Christians in the Gulf region, it is possible to say that large portions of the Christian population in Syria and Iraq migrated to Western countries due to the prevalence of terrorism at home.

While more than 15 million Copts, Egypt's indigenous Christian ethno-religious community, live in relative peace as the state tries to prevent them from being persecuted by radical groups like Daesh, in Palestine and Israel, Christians are ignored in the conflict between the two sides. Thus, in another part of the Middle East, Christians have to emigrate, succumbing to the unfortunate luck of being born in Iraq and Syria. In light of this adversity, the population of Palestinian Christians alone has declined by 50% since the 1990s.

Apart from the island of Cyprus, the country with the highest percentage of Christians in the Middle East is Lebanon, which is in economic and political turmoil. In Lebanon, where 30% of the people believe in Christianity and mostly adopt the Maronite sect, the presidential election system is determined according to the Christian president-Muslim prime minister method, similar to the Kurdish president-Arab prime minister system in Iraq, and thus the social rights of minorities are established and widely accepted. Lebanese people emigrated far from the sociopolitical polarization of the Lebanese Civil War, which took place between 1975-1990 and saw hundreds of thousands of people die, with Christian Maronites and Muslims fighting relentlessly. Today, they are striving to put their identity conflicts aside and emerge from the crisis the entire country is in together.

Although the number of Christians in the Middle East remains the same today as 100 years ago, members of the faith are able to live their lives in certain countries that they feel show more tolerance. This is especially true in Turkey, where there are miraculous structures from the Sümela Monastery to the St. Anthony of Padua and St. Peter Orthodox churches. The fact that such religious institutions can be protected is an important source of hope for the future of Christianity in the region.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Former minister of EU Affairs in Poland, member of the European Parliament

CoE: More awareness of Armenian language in Cyprus, but room for improvement

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 3 2022

State authorities in Cyprus continue to support minority language speakers by funding existing cultural institutions and establishing new sports facilities where their languages can be used, according to a new report by the Committee of Experts for the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages.

The Charter had entered into force in Cyprus in 2002 and applies to the Armenian and Cypriot Maronite Arabic languages.

The report indeed praises “regular” consultation with representatives of minority organizations and their elected representatives in the Parliament, by which their opinions are taken into account. Indeed, awareness about the Armenians and Maronites in Cypriot society has improved, and no cases of discrimination were reported. A new scheme for funding cultural activities and the overall financial support of the state authorities is “well-structured and adequate,” within the possibilities of the state budget, according to the report.

Armenian is taught in pre-school, primary and lower secondary education, with teaching of Armenian begun in upper secondary education from September, this year according to the state authorities of Cyprus. The Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation broadcasts a radio program in Armenian on a daily basis, but Armenian is absent from print media.

Meanwhile, Cypriot Maronite Arabic is taught only in primary education. The report says that teaching this language should be extended to pre-school and secondary education to cover more age groups and thus ensure the future of Cypriot Maronite Arabic. Cypriot Maronite Arabic is almost absent from broadcast media. However, according to government sources from Cyprus, a series of short documentaries on minorities that are being broadcast since September 2021 by the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC) may raise awareness in Cyprus about both minorities and their languages, besides providing teaching materials in minority languages.

While the offer of teaching materials has improved since previous monitoring, the report calls on state authorities to improve teacher training for Armenian and especially for Cypriot Maronite Arabic.

The report notes that state financial support for both minority languages focuses on the cultural sphere of public life. But consultation between the minority language speakers and state authorities could be initiated to gradually extend both minority languages to other fields of public life, based on the slow but steady rise of the number of speakers of Armenian and Cypriot Maronite Arabic.

USSR: Armenia increases its dependence on Russia after the Nagorno Karabakh war

Market Research Telecast
Dec 29 2021

A serious call to order by Russian President Vladimir Putin ended harsh hostilities in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict just over a year ago. The bloody war between Armenian and Azerbaijani troops over the mountainous enclave had already claimed thousands of lives. 44 days of combat in which Turkey – an ally of Baku and the support that helped tip the balance definitively in favor of Azerbaijan – was gaining too much relevance. So Putin worked hard on a somewhat uncomfortable agreement with the two countries with which, in addition, he strengthens his influence in the southern Caucasus and guarantees dependence on Armenia. And with the pact came the so-called Russian “peacekeepers”, who already patrol the enclave, internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan. The one in Nagorno Karabakh was the only one of the conflicts bequeathed by the Soviet Union – such as that in Moldova or Georgia – in which there was no Russian military presence. Up to now.

Russia has not issued a peace resolution. The conflict remains as a “latent volcano”, indicates Anna Karapetyan, director of the think- tank Armenian Insight Analytical Center, as evidenced by the outbreak of a trickle of deadly skirmishes. In addition, there are still very important fringes: such as Azerbaijan returning dozens of soldiers captured during the war, says the expert. The trilateral agreement ended a quarter century of Armenian military control over Nagorno Karbaj, a touchstone for Armenian national identity and inhabited mostly by Armenian people. Azerbaijan had lost most of control of the remote, mountainous region in the war of the 1990s. But this dominance has been regained after last year’s war.

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Although somewhat volatile, the agreement has been a “significant diplomatic and geostrategic victory” for Putin, highlights Oleg Ivanov, head of the Center for Social Conflict Resolution. Moscow, an ally of Baku and Yerevan, two former Soviet republics with which it has substantial historical and economic ties – and it sells arms to both – had neglected that part of the tumultuous South Caucasus, a region wedged between Russia, Iran and Turkey. And the latter country (a member of NATO), an increasingly assertive player, was gaining momentum. This scheme did not fit in with Putin’s foreign policy, who works hard and with different strategies to maintain influence in his backyard. The freezing of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict has allowed him to play another of his favorite roles and fundamental to his playbook as a global superpower: that of mediator.

Moscow wants a permanent and comprehensive redesign of the security map of the South Caucasus, from where it wants to remove any NATO presence, as well as the entire post-Soviet space. This is what he has demanded of the Military Alliance at a time of high tension due to the concentration of troops along the borders with Ukraine. For now, the Kremlin has guaranteed itself a very important dependence on Armenia, remarks Alexander Iskandaryan, director of the Caucaus Institut in Yerevan. Also, the involvement of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, who came to power in 2018 after mass protests against political elites and who was initially viewed with suspicion from Moscow, but who with the signing of the agreement has ended up convincing the Kremlin of which is not wayward. “Russia provides security, not only with soldiers, but also politically. Armenia looks towards Moscow looking for this factor, while when it looks at the EU it sees a benchmark in the model of development and democracy, ”says veteran political scientist Iskandaryan in his bright office in the Armenian capital.

In Armenia, with a significant diaspora in North America and Europe – especially in France – but also in Russia, there are no parties that clearly advocate breaking ties with Moscow, which controls most of the strategic resources and is joined by agreements. of association and defense. The Russian has lost a lot of territory among the population, especially among young people, who now travel more to EU countries and the US than to Russia. But although there are those who believe that Moscow allowed the conflict to go too far, a good part of the population believes that without Moscow the war would have resulted in the total loss of control of the enclave. This is helped by Russian public relations policy, which shows its combat engineers clearing munitions on the ground or escorting buses in which some Armenian refugees have returned to Stepanakert, the region’s capital.

The risk for Armenia is that this dependence on Russia is excessive and even “dangerous”, explains analyst Richard Giragosián, director of the Regional Studies Center. “The peacekeeping mission can be imitated, but there is an increase in the Russian military presence in the area, because it is Moscow that will control all regional trade and transport and also the Armenian border,” says Giragosián. This expert points out that, unlike other conflicts, Moscow now wants the involvement of the West as a formula to legitimize its diplomatic drive. The Kremlin would like a peace deal, says the analyst, that would allow that temporary group of peacemakers to become permanent and even expand with international forces.

Meanwhile, the Russian deployment – which already had a small and fairly old base in Armenia – has relegated Ankara to a secondary role. Although Turkey, which in a certain way considers itself the winner of the resulting post-war scenario, is also working to increase its influence in the southern Caucasus and has even declared that it wants to “normalize” relations with Armenia that have been broken for decades and also very damaged by the Turkish lack of recognition of the Armenian genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century.

The Russian “peacekeeping” contingent is relatively modest on paper: some 1,960 personnel with small arms, 90 armored personnel carriers and another 380 motor vehicles. They have 27 checkpoints, most far from the front, along the main transportation arteries in the Armenian-populated areas of Nagorno-Karabakh and the Lachin corridor, a narrow, hilly eight-kilometer highway that connects the region with Armenia. . Although it lacks a detailed mandate, it analyzes in a report Olesya Vartanya of the ISPI, and that is a vulnerability if, over time, one of the parties (or both) begins to blame the Russian soldiers for not protecting enough or too much.

The military teams will remain in Nagorno Karabakh for five years, according to the treaty; extendable for another five. And so on if Baku or Yerevan do not demand their withdrawal. And this window raises the doubts of analysts, who recall the example of other conflicts, such as that of the separatist region of Moldova in Transnistria, where there are Russian troops of “peacekeepers” since the war of the 1990s, or the secessionist territories. Georgians from Abkhazia and South Ossetia, where Moscow carried out a military intervention and there are also Russian bases, which the Kremlin operates as dials of pressure and destabilization in a country that wants to join NATO and the EU. “We see that the Russians arrive, but then they don’t leave,” says Giragosián.

Political scientist Anna Karapetyan believes that it will not be Yerevan that calls for the withdrawal of Russian soldiers. In Armenia, after the agreement was signed, thousands of people took to the streets and demanded the resignation of Nikol Pashinián, who they accused of capitulating and of not having taken care of relations with Moscow, the strong ally that, according to his idea, could have turned the balance as Ankara did by supporting Baku and selling it a bunch of drones that have been instrumental in its victory. But although many continue to blame the government for the management of the conflict, Pashinián again won the elections held last June.

Jora Pogosián, 78, and her family are among the more than 35,000 Armenians displaced by the conflict. They believe that if it had not been for the Kremlin, Armenia would have lost control of the entire region, which is seeking self-determination under the name of Artsakh and whose authorities are now analyzing making Russian the second official language. “As long as the Russian peacekeepers are there there will be no major escalations. If it had not been for the intervention of Moscow, the destruction would have been abysmal and the number of Armenian victims infinite, ”says Jora Pogosián very seriously. “Make no mistake, this has shown us that in the end we can only turn to Russia,” says this veteran of the first Nagorno-Karabakh war.

In a house lent by some friends on the outskirts of Yerevan, which still does not have heating and which is kept relatively warm thanks to the wood donated by acquaintances, Jora’s daughter-in-law, the teacher Lilith Pogosián, says that she tries to get ahead as may. The family lived in Hadrud, a village in the mountainous enclave now in the hands of Azerbaijan. Last year, when the fighting raged, they packed up all their belongings and left their home and farm, in which they had invested all their savings to start a family-run vodka and honey business. “I don’t find the point of going back to the area now,” Jora Poghosián laments: “To another town? There are no opportunities for development, but if the Armenians leave and that will soon become uninhabited, everything will be lost ”.