USC Tacori Center Workshop Series Focuses on Challenges Facing Armenia

Scenes from USC Taacori Center’s program sessions, which were held between April and June of 2021

Imagine an academic center in Armenia hosting artists, policymakers, scholars, authors, practitioners, scientists from all over Armenia, Artsakh and the world – giving them time and space to work, to learn from each other, and to turn ideas into actions.

Twenty-five minutes outside of Yerevan, Armenia, in the serene village of Maiakovski, The USC Tacori Center will do just that.

The USC Tacori Center has piloted several programs in anticipation of an official opening later this year. No longer delayed by COVID-19, the Center has already begun to serve as a hub for international scholars, students, artists, and journalists, offering a shared space for research, collaboration, and creation.

The Tacorian Family, founders of Tacori Jewelry, gifted the university the use of their large two-story house and continue to offer support for the programs that take place there. The house, and its adjacent mini-fruit orchard, are in a beautiful village named for Russian poet, playwright Vladimir Maiakovski (1893 to 1930).

The Institute is grateful to the Tacorian family for their vision at such a pivotal time in Armenia’s and the Diaspora’s future.

Already this year, five different program sessions took place between April and June.

First, there was Dee-Zoom, a program that invited members of Armenia’s design community and design specialists from six countries for a discussion on challenges and industry gaps. Local and international best practices were shared to improve the diversity and quality of the design industry in the country. 

In May 2021, graduate level students from Armenia gathered at the USC Tacori Center for a four-day Critical Social Science Workshop with Professor Vicken Cheterian from Geneva’s Webster University. The students participated in sessions on Armenia’s geopolitical challenges in the context of domestic expectations and post-Soviet constraints. 

During the same month, media representatives and professors gathered for three additional workshops to define methods of collaboration and to begin to set Armenia’s research agenda –  what are the urgent questions that need to be asked and answered?

The Center’s future programs will invite participants from Gyumri, Vanadzor, Stepanakert and other regions, for art residencies, translation workshops, international student retreats, exhibitions, and conferences, all of which will examine some aspect of the social, cultural, educational, and political challenges facing Armenia, Karabakh, and the Armenian communities in the Diaspora.

Zakharova says “tensions on Armenian-Azerbaijani border easing”

Public Radio of Armenia
June 17 2021
 

Russia says tensions on Armenian-Azerbaijani border are easing.

“In recent weeks, tensions have generally been eased. Relevant consultations on the settlement of the border dispute will continue,” Spokesperson for the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs told a press conference today.

Zakharova noted that Russia continues to provide active mediation efforts aimed at de-escalating the situation.

“Close coordination has been established with Baku and Yerevan through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Defense, border services,” the diplomat added.

“As a sustainable and long-term solution to the problem, we see the earliest start of work on the delimitation of the border between the two countries with its subsequent demarcation. We confirm our readiness to provide this process with the most active assistance,” Zakharova said.

Asbarez: World Cup Qualifying Journey Begins

BY NYREE DER MEGERDICHIAN

Playing with the Coat of Arms on your chest is an unexplainable feeling of humility–a product of hard work, dedication, and determination. I am 19-year-old Nyree Der Megerdichian and I play soccer on the Armenia Women’s National Team.

The author, Nyree Der Megerdichian, on the field in Armenia

Representing Armenia on the field and on an international stage as a Diasporan Armenian is tremendously humbling and I am so thankful to be able to be a part of it. As a team in recent months, we have participated in a series of friendly matches and tournaments in order to prepare ourselves for the upcoming World Cup qualifying games that will begin in September of this year and conclude in April, 2022.

In March, Armenia hosted an international friendly tournament called “Our Game,” and ended up clinching second place. The participating teams were Lithuania, Jordan, Lebanon and Armenia. For the upcoming World Cup qualifiers, Armenia was drawn into Group F which consists of Norway, Belgium, Poland, Albania, Kosovo and Armenia.

The Armenia Women’s National team is very diverse and consists of Armenian girls from all around the world ranging from the United States to Russia, Germany and of course Armenia. Prior to March 2020, the last time Armenia fielded a women’s national team was in 2012. Thanks to the efforts of Anna Tadevosyan and the rest of the Football Federation of Armenia, the program has been resurrected, revamped and continues to grow. Under the leadership of newly appointed head coach Armen Sanamyan, the team continues to build chemistry and develop, gaining momentum to be the best we can be as the qualifiers begin.

Women’s athletics in Armenia is slowly gaining steam and it is very exciting to be a part of this new chapter. I have faith in our team and am looking forward to watching our success grow as we continue to make history within the scope of Armenian sports. Support from the Armenian community is vital in the progression of this team and knowing that we have the backing of friends and family gives us extra motivation to continue to make everyone proud. Wish us luck for the games to come! Go Armenia!!!!

Armenia fumes as leaders of Turkey and Azerbaijan visit retaken Nagorno-Karabakh city | Euronews

EuroNews
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev shake hands after signing "the Shusha Declaration" in Shusha, Nagorno-Karabakh, .   -   Copyright  Turkish Presidency via AP, Pool

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has travelled to the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region as part of a trip reaffirming his nation's political support to Azerbaijan.

He and his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev promised on Tuesday to also boost bilateral cooperation in trade and security.

The pair traveled to Shusha, which Armenians call Shushi, a city that Azerbaijan seized from Armenia's forces in a bruising war over Nagorno-Karabakh last autumn.

Erdogan, a key backer of Azerbaijan in the conflict, is the first foreign leader to visit the city, and he's now promised to open a Turkish consulate there. The two leaders also signed a declaration pledging to deepen commercial, political and military ties.

"It is a condition for everyone who wishes to contribute to the new status of the region, to step back from politics of hatred and provocation, and engage in peace and cooperation,” Erdogan said.

“Once such a climate emerges, we repeat on each occasion that we will do our part to normalise relations with Armenia."

The military victory of Turkish-speaking Azerbaijan over Armenia was an important coup for Erdogan – as Ankara seeks to cement its influence in the former Soviet Caucasus region.

In contrast, the loss of key parts of Nagorno-Karabakh was a huge blow for Armenia, and it sparked a major political crisis there. Thousands of opposition supporters took to the streets in recent months to protest the terms of the ceasefire, and demand the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Pashinyan has been under such pressure to step down that snap elections are scheduled for Sunday (June 20).

Armenia's Foreign Ministry condemned Erdogan's and Aliyev's visit to Shusha in a statement on Tuesday, calling it “provocative actions” that “significantly harm international efforts to establish stability in the region and (that) are absolutely unacceptable.”

The trip has also stirred painful memories for scores of Armenian families who were forced to flee their homes when the area was seized by Azerbaijani forces in November.

Watch Bastien Borie’s report from Yerevan.

https://www.euronews.com/2021/06/16/armenia-fumes-as-leaders-of-turkey-and-azerbaijan-visit-retaken-nagorno-karabakh-city
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Asbarez: A Guide to Armenia’s June 2021 Parliamentary Election


Kocharyan at a campaign rally with the Armenia Alliance in Sisian (Photo: Armenia Alliance, June 8)

According to the latest poll, support for the major political parties is divided as such: 22.4-percent of participants will vote for the Civil Contract party, 20.6-percent for the Armenia Alliance, 4.2-percent for the Prosperous Armenia party, 3.9-percent for the I’m Honored Alliance and 2.9-percent for the Bright Armenia party. Support for Pashinyan’s Civil Contact party has sharply declined from 33-percent of voters, while support for Robert Kocharyan’s Armenia Alliance has multiplied from single-digit numbers.

While Pashinyan and Kocharyan lead the polls, they are joined in the race by 24 other political groupings. A total of 22 political parties and four alliances of two or more political parties have registered with the Central Election Commission to compete in the upcoming snap parliamentary elections. Those political parties have presented 2,605 candidates, who will vie for 105 seats in the National Assembly. Each party has presented a closed rank-ordered list of candidates, according to an electoral reform bill passed in April eliminating the open list component of the “ratingayin” system.

The quota for the proportion of female MPs on each party list must be at least one out of three candidates. A total of 947 women are competing in the race, which is 36.3-percent of the total number of candidates. The Armenia Alliance has the lowest proportion of female candidates (30.7-percent) while the Pan-Armenian National Statehood Party has the highest (43.9-percent). Historically, while women and men vote in equal numbers across gender lines, women are severely underrepresented within the Armenian government.

Pashinyan at a campaign rally for the Civil Contract Party in Gyumri (Photo: Nikol Pashinyan, June 9)

The first party on the ballot is the Fair Armenia Party (FAP), with prime ministerial candidate Norayr Norikyan. The FAP is highly critical of the widespread corruption among former government leaders, and it criticizes Pashinyan’s administration for its failure to deliver convictions on corruption charges. During the FAP’s founding congress on February 20, 2021 (the date was selected in honor of the start of the movement for the liberation of Artsakh in 1988), Norikyan presented a “yellow card” to the Pashinyan administration in this regard. “In politics, only the people and political forces that enjoy their trust can present a red card to resolve the issue of leadership,” he said.

The first president of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosyan, who served between 1991 and 1998, is attempting a political comeback as the head of the Armenian National Congress Party (ANC Party). The ANC Party is the successor to the Armenian National Movement, which formed Armenia’s post-independence government. In 2008, Ter-Petrosyan ran for president in a controversial election cycle that international observers determined was marred by widespread irregularities. Ten people died, and hundreds were injured in a violent state crackdown on rallies, which Pashinyan helped organize, opposing the election of former President Serge Sargsyan. While the ANC Party supported Pashinyan’s My Step Alliance in the 2018 election, Ter-Petrosyan has been publicly critical of Pashinyan’s handling of the Artsakh conflict since the end of the war. In May, he called upon his fellow former presidents to form an electoral alliance to unseat Pashinyan, an offer that Sargsyan and Kocharyan rejected. Nonetheless Ter-Petrosyan, who has also criticized his successors for squandering opportunities for compromise and settlement of the Artsakh conflict, has declared that his primary goals in running for prime minister are to oust Pashinyan and prevent Kocharyan’s return to power.

Acting PM Pashinyan hopes to retain his seat as the head of the Civil Contract Party, which is running independently in this election. In the 2018 snap parliamentary elections following nationwide mass protests that unseated Sargsyan, Pashinyan led the My Step alliance, composed of the Civil Contract and Mission parties, to a landmark victory, earning approximately 70-percent of the vote. The Civil Contract Party, which was formed in 2015, had previously participated in the 2017 election alongside the Bright Armenia and Republic parties as part of the Yelk alliance. Pashinyan has said that the Civil Contract Party rejects “isms”and “hardened ideologies.” “We are not liberal, we are not centrist, we are not social democrat; we are a civil party,” he said during a speech in 2019. Yet the party has come under criticism due to the inclusion of Gurgen Arsenyan and Khachatur Sukiasyan—two wealthy and prominent businessmen—on the 2021 candidate list. “One of the promises of the revolution was that business and politics would be separate, and no benefits would enter parliament,” Bright Armenia Party leader Edmon Marukyan told reporters. “The authorities are breaking their promise again.”

Artur Vanetsyan and Serge Sargsyan at a campaign rally with I’m Honored in Dilijan (Photo: I’m Honored, June 7)

The next party on the ballot is the Awakening National Christian Party, with prime ministerial candidate Ara Zohrabyan. The party’s founder Vahagn Chakhalyan served time in prison in Georgia between 2009 and 2013 on charges of “organization of large-scale events, public disturbance, hooliganism and illegal possession of weapons” that he viewed as persecution for his political activity in Javakhk. Leaders of the Awakening National Christian Party, including Zohrabyan and Chakhalyan, were active in the 2019 Kamk movementagainst the ratification of the Istanbul Convention on preventing gender-based violence and domestic violence. The movement contended that the convention’s prohibition of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity violates the Armenian Constitution in that it prescribes a “third gender.”

Former PM Hrant Bagratyan, who served as part of Ter-Petrosyan’s administration between 1993 and 1996, will be leading his Freedom Party, which he founded in 1997. Bagratyan has been active in the movement calling for Pashinyan’s resignation since November.

Former head of the National Security Service Artur Vanetsyan will lead the I’m Honored Alliance, consisting of the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) and Vanetsyan’s Homeland Party. The RPA, one of Armenia’s longest ruling parties, was founded in 1990 and held seats in parliament in every election cycle until 2018, when it was defeated by the Velvet Revolution. Sargsyan, chairman of the RPA, served as president from 2008 to 2018; during his tenure, the RPA earned approximately 44-percent of the vote in the 2012 election and 49-percent in 2017. Vanetsyan, who served in Pashinyan’s administration, was part of a group of 10 opposition figures briefly detained in November on charges of “organizing illegal violent mass disorder” and allegedly plotting an assassination attempt of the prime minister. At the time, Vanetsyan and Sargsyan were part of the Homeland Salvation Movement, and they have continued to demand the PM’s resignation. Taron Margaryan, who is second on the alliance’s candidate list, has been absent from politics since he resigned from his post as mayor of Yerevan amid corruption allegations in 2018.

Lusine Avagyan is one of two female prime ministerial candidates participating in the election with the United Homeland Party (UHP). The UHP, one of the many political parties formed in the months preceding the election, advanced a message of political unity during its founding congress on April 23. “We do not wish to criticize anyone,” said founder Mher Terteryan. “We want to focus on the future.”

Levon Ter-Petrosyan (Photo: Armenian National Congress Party, June 7, 2021)

The Pan-Armenian National Statehood Party was also founded this spring and will run Artur Vardanyan as its candidate for prime minister. The party vows to strengthen statehood and protect Armenia’s borders in the aftermath of the war.

The Bright Armenia Party, currently the third-largest parliamentary party, is participating in the election with founder Edmon Marukyan at its head. Marukyan, who established the party in 2015, was elected MP in 2012. While the party was formerly part of the Yelk alliance alongside the Civil Contract party, the relationship between the parties soured after Civil Contract MP Sasun Mikayelyan slapped Marukyan during a parliamentary session in May of 2020. Marukyan has called for Pashinyan’s resignation in the aftermath of the war, but he has not associated himself with the Homeland Salvation Movement.

The next party on the ballot is the Our Home is Armenia Party, led by Goodwill ambassador and President of the Union of Armenians in Russia Ara Abrahamyan. The party is presenting a joint list with the Alliance Progressive-Centrist Party, led by Tigran Urikhanyan, who is running for prime minister. Urikhanyan served as an MP with the Prosperous Armenia Party from 2012 to 2017, with the Alliance Progressive-Centrist Party as part of the Tsarukyan Alliance from 2017-2019 and as an independent from 2020 to the present day.

MP Aram Z. Sargsyan is running for prime minister with his Republic Party. Sargsyan founded the Republic Party in 2001 after serving as prime minister from 1999 to 2000. The party advocates for the creation of a professional standing army, strengthened by utilizing the country’s natural resources and investment in science. Sargsyan’s brother was former prime minister Vazgen Sargsyan, one of the eight victims of the deadly shooting in Armenia’s National Assembly on October 27, 1999.

Armenia’s Homeland Party, formed in 2005, is running prime ministerial candidate Artak Galstyan in the election.

The Free Homeland Alliance is the only alliance that includes more than two political parties: the Conservative Party, the Armenian Construction Party, the National Self-Determination Union Party, the National Democrats’ Alliance Party and the Armenian Green (Socio-Ecological) Party. Mikayel Hanrapetyan heads their joint list of candidates.

Business tycoon Gagik Tsarukyan is running for reelection with his Prosperous Armenia party (PAP). The former armwrestling champion and the wealthiest businessman in Armenia owns the Multi Group of companies, which includes over 40 businesses. Tsarukyan is also president of the National Olympic Committee of Armenia. After founding the PAP in 2004, he resigned as its leader in 2015 following a confrontation with Sargsyan, who described him as “evil” and ordered tax audits of his various businesses. The disagreement stemmed from Tsarukyan’s opposition to the 2015 constitutional referendum transitioning from a semi-presidential to a parliamentary system. He returned to politics in 2017, and since then the PAP has been the largest parliamentary opposition party. In September of 2020 Tsarukyan was arrested on suspicion of vote buying, fraud and illegal land appropriation, yet he was released on bail one month later after martial law was declared following the start of the war. While Tsarukyan joined the Homeland Salvation Movement, the PAP is running independently.

The next party on the ballot is the Democratic Party of Armenia, with prime ministerial candidate Tigran Arzakantsyan. Arzakantsyan, founder of the Tigran Arzakantsyan Foundation, served as an MP with the RPA from 2003 to 2012. He is married to Natalya Rotenberg, former wife of Russian billionaire Arkady Rotenberg. Aram G. Sargsyan, the final head of the Communist Party in Armenia prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union, founded the Democratic Party in 1991.

Karin Tonoyan is the second of two women heading a party’s electoral list with the 5165 National Conservative Movement Party. Tonoyan was the host of the Hay Aspet television program, the main goal of which was the “intellectual education of the new generation considered as a factor of national security.” She is the mother of Menua Hovhannisyan, who died serving in the 2020 Artsakh War and was posthumously awarded the Hero of Artsakh title. The 5165 National Conservative Movement Party, the name of which is a reference to the elevation (in meters) of Mount Ararat, has announced that its main goal is to remove Pashinyan from power.

The Citizens’ Decision Social-Democratic Party is participating in the election with Suren Sahakyan heading its electoral list. The party was founded in 2018 in the aftermath of the Velvet Revolution by left-leaning activists who held leadership positions in previous protest movements including the 2012 sit-in to save Mashtots Park from development and the 2015 “Electric Yerevan” demonstrations that reversed a hike in the price of electricity. The party has an extensive platform, including the creation of a welfare state and progressive reforms on gender equality, trade unions, criminal justice reform and the environment.

MP Arman Babajanyan and political scientist Levon Shirinyan are running with a joint list as the Shirinyan-Babajanyan Democrats’ Alliance. Babajanyan, its candidate for prime minister, was elected MP in 2018 as a member of the Bright Armenia party yet has served as an independent since 2019 and founded the For the Republic Defenders of Democracy Alliance Party in 2021. Shirinyan, former leader of the Christian-Democratic Renaissance Party, founded the Christian-Democratic Party in 2021.

Former diplomat Ara Hakobyan is running for prime minister with the National Agenda Party, which he co-founded in 2018.

The Ascent Party is participating in the election with the goals of reorganizing the army and creating a professional, disciplined military. Its candidate for prime minister is Aleksan Minasyan. Minasyan is the founder of the Monte Melkonian Military Academy and the former head of the Vazgen Sargsyan Military University. After retiring from the Armenian Armed Forces in 2003, he established the “Zhayr” Pan-Armenian NGO, which supports the youth in forming self-defense detachments.

Former commander of the Artsakh Defense Army during the first Artsakh war Samvel Babayan is running for prime minister with the Liberal Party. Babayan intended to run in the 2020 parliamentary election in Artsakh with his United Homeland Party, but was declared ineligible due to residency issues. Babayan was briefly arrested in 2017 on charges of illegal arms acquisition and money laundering, yet he was released from custody under the Pashinyan administration.

The Armenians’ Eagles United Armenia Party, founded in 2018 by Khachik Asryan as an outgrowth of the patriotic Armenians’ Eagles non-governmental organization, is competing in its first election cycle. Asryan served as Deputy Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs from 2007 to 2018.

The European Party of Armenia (EPA) favors membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the European Union and distance from Russian influence. Filmmaker Tigran Khzmalyan founded the party in 2018 and is running for prime minister. Khzmalyan worked as a journalist at the A1 and Vesti TV companies during the first Artsakh war and later as the head of the Yerevan TV Studio. He also served as a political analyst for the Armenian Assembly of America and Deputy Director of the UN Department of Public Information. The EPA formed the National Democratic Axis in 2020 alongside Sasna Tsrer, yet registered separately for the upcoming election. Famous singer Ruben Hakhverdyan is ranked second on the party’s candidate list.

Former President Kocharyan, who has not been involved in politics since his term ended in 2008, leads the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) and Resurgent Armenia party in the Armenia Alliance. Kocharyan served as prime minister from 1997 to 1998 and president from 1998 to 2008. He also served as the president of the Republic of Artsakh from 1994 to 1997. During his presidency, several proposals for settlement of the Artsakh conflict were considered, including the Key West agreement, which was rejected by former President of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev. In June of 2018 Kocharyan was charged with “overthrowing the constitutional order” due to his role in the violent state crackdown on the 2008 post-election protests. Following a two-year trial he was acquitted after the court ruled that the section of the criminal code under which he was charged was invalid. The Resurgent Armenia party is led by the former governor of Syunik Vahe Hakobyan. Its membership largely consists of local politicians from the province, including the mayors of Goris, Meghri, Kajaran and Sisian. Chair of the Supreme Council of the ARF in Armenia Ishkhan Saghatelyan is second on the Alliance’s list of candidates.

Sasna Tsrer formed the National Democratic Axis Pan-Armenian Party, which is competing in the election with Vahe Gasparyan at the top of its candidate list. Sasna Tsrer stormed a police station in Yerevan in July of 2016, killing several police officers and taking others hostage. Their demands included the release of detained leader of the Founding Parliament opposition group Zhirayr Sefilian, the resignation of President Sargsyan and a tougher stance on negotiations over the Artsakh conflict.

The final party on the ballot is the Sovereign Armenia party. Its candidate for prime minister, Davit Sanasaryan, is a former member of the Civil Contract party and activist in the “Reject Serge” movement that brought down the former government. A close ally of Pashinyan, he was appointed head of the State Oversight Service, Armenia’s anti-corruption agency, after the Velvet Revolution. Yet in 2019 he was charged with abuse of power in order to “promote the interest of his employee’s business,” and he resigned from his post at the start of this year amid the ongoing investigation. He founded the Sovereign Armenia party in 2021.

Turkish press: Erdoğan-Biden meeting can be roughErdoğan-Biden meeting can be rough

The first bilateral meeting between President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and U.S. President Joe Biden after the U.S. presidential election has gained a degree of importance far above the summit, at least for the Turkish side.

It is a matter of great interest to see how the relationship between Turkey and the United States will change after this meeting, not only for the Turkish authorities and the public but also for all international actors.

Erdoğan wants to change unfavorable perception

Erdoğan wishes to change the perception that there is no dialogue between him and Biden and leave the meeting in Brussels with a success story. If he can leave his first meeting with the new leader of the world’s greatest power, the U.S., with candid photos and a wave of positive developments, Erdoğan will write this on his leadership’s success list above all else.

In addition, when we consider the fragilities of the Turkish economy, it is evident that Erdoğan and Biden’s positive picture will send a strong message to the markets.

The emergence of such an atmosphere at the Brussels meeting is not only necessary for the domestic situation and economy but also for Erdoğan to conduct foreign policy on a comfortable level. First of all, there is this need to address severe issues of disagreement between the two countries and make progress on these topics.

Let’s list Fetullah Gülen’s residence in Pennsylvania and the U.S.’ choice of using the YPG, an extension of the PKK, as a military ally in Syria, as the first two topics. Apart from these, there is a long agenda of regional issues that span over broad geography from Afghanistan to Libya that Turkey and the United States need to work on.

Meanwhile, the consequences of uncertain relations with the U.S. are not just limited to Ankara and Washington. The fact that things are going badly with the U.S. has the potential to narrow Turkey’s maneuvering area in many areas in foreign policy. If Erdoğan can keep his relationship with Biden intact, he will, for instance, be able to negotiate with Russian leader Vladimir Putin from a stronger point. Otherwise, his bargaining cards will weaken against the Kremlin.

Phone call delayed for three months

It is clear that after the presidential election last November, a warm start was not made between Erdoğan and Biden. This situation resulted directly from the conscious choice of the new Democratic administration.

After Biden took office on Jan. 20, he was not hasty in calling Erdoğan. It took three months for this to happen, despite the expectation of many observers that Biden would call Erdoğan at a reasonable time. The situation was quite uncommon during the recent period, especially if we remember that after Barack Obama was elected president in November 2008 – phone calls aside – his first bilateral official visit across the Atlantic was to Turkey on April 5-6, 2009.

Obviously, the Biden front was in a bid to slow Ankara down by making the call slowly.

Biden finally called Erdoğan on April 23. Moreover, this phone call was an unpleasant first contact, as Biden told Erdoğan that he would make a statement a day later, saying he would recognize the “Armenian genocide.” As a matter of fact, he indeed announced this statement from the White House the next day. This was the first time a U.S. president uttered this phrase in an April 24 commemoration statement, and it created a dire situation for Turkish-U.S. relations.

It was also agreed in that phone call that the two leaders would meet during the NATO summit to be held in Brussels on June 14. This meeting waited for almost two months, and numerous contacts were made in preparations for it.

Here comes the much-awaited meeting next Monday, finally taking place.

Firstly warm messages to Biden

In fact, despite Biden’s statement on April 24, which caused outrage in the Turkish public, Erdoğan has always given positive messages, emphasizing his desire to make a fresh start with the United States at the expense of domestic criticism. For example, in his speech dated April 26, Erdoğan recalled his meeting with Biden on June 14 and said: “I believe that we will open the doors of a new era by evaluating these issues face to face in this meeting. We hope to reach an understanding with our interlocutor, leaving aside the issues that poison the relations between the two countries, and that will allow us to look to the future.”

Likewise, on May 16, while addressing the senior executives of U.S. companies that have investments in Turkey, Erdoğan said, “Even though President Biden’s statement about the 1915 events will put an additional burden on our relations, I believe the meeting we will hold at the NATO summit will herald a new era.”

In both statements, the desire to “start a new era” on June 14 was emphasized.

Then comes message of tension in relations

On the other hand, Erdoğan stopped giving warm messages to the White House for the first time last week. Recalling his meeting with Biden in his interview with national broadcaster TRT on June 1, Erdoğan said, “We will, of course, ask why Turkey-U.S. relations are in such a phase of tension.”

He then compared Biden to previous presidents: “So we worked with the democrats before you; we did not have such an outlook. In other words, we worked with Bush, we worked with Obama, but I have never experienced such tension with them. We did not experience any tension with Mr. Trump, and on the contrary, we were very peaceful in our telephone diplomacy; we were very comfortable.”

After listing all these, the president added, “Unfortunately, this meeting with Mr. Biden and our meeting traffic was not that comfortable.”

Erdoğan openly described his situation with Biden as “tension” and did not feel the need to hide that he does not feel comfortable.

In the meantime, he also warned Biden by saying that “those who corner the State of the Republic of Turkey in this way will lose an important friend.”

Biden’s expectations

The whole point is the question of how such warnings are received on the Biden front. As can be seen from the three-month delay in the call from the White House, the Biden administration is calculating that with the distance it has set, it can force Ankara to accept its positions and the framework it has designed in the new balance in which the relationship will settle.

In fact, it is difficult to say that progress has been made on the mutual problems that were on the table in all the preparatory meetings held within the past months and weeks, at least as far as it was reflected to the public. Both sides have put their expectations on the table, and everything is finally up to the Brussels meeting.

Just as Turkey has expectations on issues such as FETÖ and YPG, the U.S. side also has expectations on its front. Turkey’s step back from the S-400 air defense systems it acquired from Russia comes first. In this context, the question marks about Turkey’s strategic direction in the view of the Biden front is an essential factor.

In addition, problems such as democracy, human rights and the rule of law in Turkey are important issues on the agenda of the Biden administration.

As a result, if we act on Erdoğan’s characterizations, the June 14 meeting in Brussels seems to be stuck between the current “tension” in relations and the “new era” expectation.

Azerbaijani servicemen violating the rights of border village residents – Armenian Ombudsman

Public Radio of Armenia
June 4 2021
 
 

Azerbaijani armed servicemen are illegally stopping villagers in the pastures located in the vicinity of Verin Shorja, Nergin Shorja, Norapak, and Kut villages of Gegharkunik region, and are demanding explanations on where they are going, for what purpose and what they transporting, Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan said in a statement.

According to him, Azerbaijani servicemen are also attempting to legally search the cars and are threatening the population.

“In particular, in June three alarming calls were received about the fact that several dozen Azerbaijani servicemen with vehicles regularly move towards the pastures of Verin Shorja village of Vardenis community, to the area where the barns are located and where the villagers graze their animals. Over the past week, they have set up positions closer to the Verin Shroja plateau, making the use of the pastures almost impossible,” the Ombudsman said.

Moreover, he said, at one of the Azerbaijani positions located closer to the plateaus, Azerbaijani servicemen are illegally stopping villagers, and demanding explanations from them.

“Furthermore, the Human Rights Defender’s Office was alerted on June 3 that Azerbaijani armed servicemen are still located in the immediate vicinity of Kut village of Geghamasar community, as a result of which the villagers are able to use only a small segment of the pastures. Moreover, the Azerbaijani armed servicemen are swearing at the shepherds, and threatening with weapons.

The cattle barn in Norabak village of the Geghamasar community, is under the illegal control of the Azerbaijani armed servicemen, and the residents are deprived of the opportunity to use it. There are streams near the barn that were also used for agricultural purposes, but now the villagers can no longer use them.

In the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia, the apparently illegal presence of Azerbaijani armed servicemen in the immediate vicinity of the villages of Gegharkunik region, and their openly criminal acts, seriously endanger the lives and health of the residents of border villages of Armenia, and completely disrupt their everyday life and mental integrity.

Pastures, hayfields, other land plots cannot be used because:

1)   Servicemen of the Azerbaijani armed forces are illegally present in those territories;

2)   These territories are directly in the target of the Azerbaijani armed forces.

All this was confirmed by studies conducted by the Office of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia, including the Gegharkunik regional subdivision.

“The issue is that the need to use these lands is especially urgent for the village residents due to seasonal demands. The harvest season is already due to begin, and the villagers are facing acute problems. This can lead to a sharp decrease in the number of livestock, as there are insufficient conditions for raising them,” Arman Tatoyan said.

According to him, all of this will deepen the existing social problems.

“The rights of the border residents of Armenia are guaranteed by the Constitution of Armenia and by international standards.  Any process related to the state borders cannot be acceptable if the normal life of the border residents is undermined, and if their rights have been grossly violated and continue to be violated or remain under the threat of being violated,” the Ombudsman emphasized.

Thus, according to Ombudsman, the creation of the security zone is an absolute necessity for the purpose of the restoration of the rights of the people, and their protection from threats of violations.

 

US calls for long-term political settlement to the NK conflict, based on the principles of the Helsinki Final Act

Panorama, Armenia
June 4 2021

Chargé d’Affaires of the US Mission to the OSCE Permanent Council Courtney Austrian has issued a statement in response to the Report of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group. 

"As a Co-Chairing country of the Minsk Group, the United States remains concerned by recent developments along the international border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, including the detention of several Armenian soldiers by Azerbaijani forces. We call on both sides to urgently and peacefully resolve this incident. We also continue to call on Azerbaijan to release immediately all Prisoners of War and other detainees, and we remind Azerbaijan of its obligations under international humanitarian law to treat all detainees humanel," the statement, released by the Mission on June 3, said.  

In the words of the US diplomat, any movements along the non-demarcated areas of the international border between Armenia and Azerbaijan to be provocative and unnecessary. "We reject the use of force to demarcate the border and call on both sides to return to their previous positions and to cease military fortification of the non-demarcated border and the emplacement of landmines. Specifically, we call on Azerbaijan to relocate its forces to the positions they held on May 11. We also call on Armenia to relocate its forces to the positions they held on May 11.

These actions will de-escalate tensions and create space for a peaceful negotiation process to demarcate the border on an urgent basis. The United States is prepared to assist these efforts.

The United States also urges the sides to return as soon as possible to substantive negotiations under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs to achieve a long-term political settlement to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, based on the principles of the Helsinki Final Act. "We urge the sides to support the work and budget of the CiO’s Personal Representative, who brings valuable transparency to this process," the statement added. 

‘Children are the most sincere and believing in our society’ – Armenian President addresses message

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 10:28, 1 June, 2021

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian has addressed a message on the Children’s Rights Protection Day, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

The message reads:

“Dear children,

Today is the official day to protect your childhood.

However, first of all, it reminds us, the adults, that the efforts to protect you and your childhood will be in vain if the Homeland, our border, our country, our home, and our yard are not peaceful and safe.

You can realize your dreams, the dreams of your parents and grandparents only in such a homeland.

Dear parents,

Children are the most sincere and believing in our society. They sincerely believe and trust you, their parents, and their family. They are sincerely happy even for the smallest piece of success. They move forward with sincere hope and faith even when they are just learning to walk …

We have no right to question their innate sincerity in any way. Moreover, with our attention, care, love, and warmth, we must be responsible and committed so that their faith, hope, and trust are never lost. Thus, we will strengthen the foundations of our country. Thus, we will educate a generation who will believe in themselves and will believe that the future of Armenia depends on them.

Dear children,

I believe that you will make our country much better.

I believe and wish your childhood be a time for you to dream peacefully and safely in the Homeland and to live a healthy and prosperous life.

In your future life, I wish you would live in the world you were dreaming of and which became a reality owing to your thoughts, ideas, and work”.

CivilNet: Is Aliyev’s Popularity Surging in Azerbaijan – A Talk With Activist Mahammad Mirzali

CIVILNET.AM

09:05

Azerbaijani human rights and democracy activist Mahammad Mirzali was attacked and stabbed 16 times with a knife in Nantes, France, on March 16, 2021. According to Mirzali, many other Azerbaijani activists have been targeted in this way by the Aliyev regime. Mirzali speaks to CivilNet about the events of that day, Aliyev’s post-war popularity in Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijanis’ perceptions of Armenia.