Turkish press: 6 outdoor ancient sites in Turkey to add to your 2021 travel bucket list

Abandoned buildings are seen through the fog in Kayaköy, Muğla province, Dec. 11, 2020. (AA Photo)

Happy New Year, everyone! Leaving behind a hectic 2020, we have a fresh 12 months ahead of us to enjoy the outdoors and regain the vivid wanderlust that might have dimmed inside us during the pandemic. There's no doubt that last year was mentally and physically challenging. We all had to quickly adjust to a new way of life, in which we were obliged to stay home and were largely deprived of the activities we were used to doing.

The second and third waves of COVID-19 took us back to the drawing board and made it clear that the impact of the pandemic on our daily life will not abate anytime soon. However, we only have one life, and as long as we fully abide by the hygiene and social-distancing rules, it is safe and refreshing for our minds to voyage in the open air to relieve our fatigue.

To start 2021 on the right foot, I have compiled a list of six must-see ancient heritage sites in Turkey that you should add to your itinerary this year.

The Sümela Monastery is carved out of rocks in a wooded area 300 meters above the Altındere Valley, Trabzon. (DHA Photo)

Sümela Monastery

For foreign visitors, and perhaps even many local Turkish tourists, the Black Sea coasts of Turkey do not rank among the top-visited locations in the country.

Sümela Monastery is one of the most prominent and unique Christian heritage sites in this "cradle of civilizations." Apart from its importance in Orthodox history, the monastery, nestled in green hills with acres of virgin woods, is primarily remarkable for being built on the nearly 90-degree cliffside of Mount Karadağ.

As ancient accounts suggest, the monastery was founded by two Athenian monks, who contemporaneously had the same dream in which they were shown the location of the monastery by angels. Subsequently, they traveled separately to Trebizond (the ancient name of Trabzon), oblivious to each other. There, they serendipitously ran into each other and decided to build a monastery at the sacred place that was shown to them in their dreams.

The Sümela Monastery contains many historical frescoes. (DHA Photo)

Even though undoubtedly, Sümela Monastery is the most well-known tourist attraction in Turkey's Black Sea region, the monastery's name was almost forgotten on dusty shelves due to a 3 1/2-year comprehensive restoration. In 2018, the monastery was reopened to the public, and today, it receives thousands of visitors daily.

Sümela Monastery is open for visits from 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the summer season (March 15-Oct. 15) and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in winter (Oct. 15-March 15).

Unannounced changes in visiting hours might occur due to COVID-19. Click to access the most up-to-date visiting information.

The church atop the hill abuts the Akhurian River, or River Arpaçay, which forms the Turkish-Armenian border. (Photo by Argun Konuk)
Argun Konuk and his girlfriend Ayesha pose at the Tigran Honents Church in Ani. (Photo by Argun Konuk)

Ancient City of Ani

A personal favorite of mine in Turkey, the ancient city of Ani, is also called the city of 1,001 churches. It was added to UNESCO's World Heritage List in 2016. However, the main element behind Ani's fame was the commercialization of the Eastern Express train. The scenic train route running 1,300 kilometers (808 miles) from Ankara to Kars has attracted abundant interest, especially from Turkey's young population; however, services are temporarily suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The ancient city is situated on an open plateau in the eastern Turkish province of Kars overlooking the Akhurian River (locally known as Arpaçay), which makes up the geographical border between Turkey and Armenia. In its heyday, Ani was one of the world's largest cities with around 100,000 residents. The city's name was first mentioned in antiquity in the fifth century A.D., which is also assumed to be the period when the city was founded.

The site boasts dozens of ruins that consist of churches, chapels, cathedrals, mosques and old dwellings. An average tour of Ani would take at least two hours, as the site is quite vast. So, make sure you reserve enough time to see this stunning, unforgettable place.

Although this site is categorized as a medieval Armenian city, you'll also find ruins from the Seljuks, Georgians and other civilizations that were the subsequent rulers of Ani. The rich amalgamation of cultures makes Ani stand out as a very unique site.

The ancient city of Ani can be visited from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. in summer (April 1-Nov. 1) and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in winter (Nov. 1-April 1). The site is closed on weekends, and the entrance fee is TL 15 ($2).

Click here to access the latest information for tourists.

An aerial photo of Ihlara Valley. (Photo by Argun Konuk)

Ihlara Valley

According to Turkey's Culture and Tourism Ministry, in 2019, Ihlara Valley was the sixth most visited archaeological site in the country. Ihlara Valley, identified as Peristremma in historical sources, is located to the west of the world-renowned Cappadocia region in modern-day Aksaray. Besides its historical importance, the valley offers some of the most stunning flora and fauna in Turkey.

The earliest inhabitants of Ihlara Valley were the early Christians seeking refuge from Roman prosecution. As they were looking for a safe, secret place to live and practice their religion, they stumbled upon Ihlara Valley in the fourth century A.D. and started living there. Gradually, this hidden settlement grew into a large town with 4,000 dwellings and around 80,000 residents. Overall, there are approximately 10,000 rock-cut structures in the valley.

The valley has 105 churches; however, only 14 of them are open to visitors. These churches hold some of the finest examples of frescoes and wall paintings that depict scenes from Jesus Christ's life and verses from the Bible. The valley itself is 14 kilometers long and 200 meters (656 feet) wide. The walls of the valley reach up as high up as 150 meters.

Before visiting, it might be helpful to be familiar with the multiple entrances to Ihlara Valley. There are four entrances in total. The most popular one is the entrance that the signboards along the road will lead you to. However, you have to climb down more than 300 steps, which might not be the most comfortable experience for some. Two other entrances are in the villages of Belisırma and Ihlara. The Belisırma entrance allows you to enter the valley with your car and can be considered the ending point of the section of the valley meant for tourists. The village of Ihlara is considered the starting point of the valley. The farthest entrance is at the village of Selime, considered the end-point of the valley. This entrance is mainly preferred by hiking groups.

My personal opinion is that the Belisırma entrance offers the most convenient and comprehensive route. The tourist path spans between the villages of Belisırma and Ihlara and covers all the major sites in the valley.

You can visit the valley from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. in summer (April 1-Oct. 1) and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in winters (Oct. 1- April 1). Ihlara Valley is closed on Mondays, and the entrance is TL 45.

Click to see when and how to visit Ihlara Valley.

Underground city of Derinkuyu

Although a newly discovered subterranean settlement underneath the Nevşehir fortress will seemingly acquire Derinkuyu's long-held title of the world's largest ancient underground city, Derinkuyu is still the most popular in the region.

The story of Derinkuyu's foundation is similar to that of Ihlara Valley. In the second century, early Christians fleeing Roman persecution came to the area of Cappadocia and built this city. Knowing that it was unsafe to roam freely outside, the early Christians constructed a massive eight-story underground complex that would offer them refuge from their oppressors.

There are hundreds of rock-cut rooms in Derinkuyu which served as barns, stables, food storage rooms, wine production facilities, churches, chapels, dwellings, meeting rooms, religious schools and more. These structures are connected by narrow tunnels with low ceilings.

Derinkuyu Underground City is closed on Mondays. The site can be visited from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. between April 2 and Oct. 1 and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. between Oct. 2 and April 1. The entrance fee is TL 50.

Due to the pandemic, there might be some abrupt and unannounced changes in visiting hours. Click here to access the most up-to-date information.

Photo shows a general view of Göbeklitepe. (Photo by Argun Konuk)

Göbeklitepe

Göbeklitepe is Turkey's latest addition to the UNESCO World Heritage List (included in 2018). As its commercial name, "Zero Point in History," alludes, Göbeklitepe's discovery changed the fundamental assumptions about human history.

Before Göbeklitepe's discovery, it was assumed that the transition of prehistoric people from nomadic lives to settlements was induced by the introduction of farming and husbandry. However, Göbeklitepe proved that the people who lived there had settled in one place for religious purposes to be able to practice their beliefs millennia before previously thought. Outdating the pyramids of Egypt and Stonehenge by 7,500 years, Göbeklitepe is the oldest known temple in the world with a history of 12,000 years.

Göbeklitepe is situated within the borders of the most populated city in southeastern Turkey, Şanlurfa. It can be visited from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in summer (April 2-Oct. 24) and from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in winter (Oct. 25-April 1). The entrance fee is TL 45. The site is closed on weekends.

Click here to access the latest visiting information.

Kayaköy village has a mystical atmosphere, especially during foggy winter weather. (AA Photo)

Kayaköy

Our final spot, Kayaköy, takes us to the warm shores of the Mediterranean town of Fethiye in southwestern Mupla province.

Abandoned buildings are seen through the fog in Kayaköy, Muğla province, Dec. 11, 2020. (AA Photo)

Kayaköy was a wealthy Ottoman village mostly inhabited by Greeks. The village had its golden age between the 18th and 20th centuries. However, with the population leaving for Greece due to the population exchange between Turkey and Greece as part of the Lausanne Conventions in 1923, the settlement turned into a ghost town. The ruins can be visited today.

In the last decade, owing to the rising popularity of the Blue Lagoon in Ölüdeniz, Kayaköy has come to be known as one of the symbols of the region. Each day the popularity of this ghost town grows as tourists flock to Kayaköy.

You can visit Kayaköy from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. between April 1- Oct. 1 and from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. between Oct. 1- April 1. The site is closed on weekends. The entrance fee is TL 10.

Nonprofit Brings Christmas Presents to 2,000 Displaced Armenian Children

Missions Box
Dec 29 2020

NEWPORT BEACH, CA — In an effort to bring joy and Christmas to the displaced suffering Armenian children, For The Martyrs, a 501c3 organization will bring Operation Christmas to Armenia. Operation Christmas will provide wrapped Christmas boxes that are full of gifts such as toys, dolls, clothing, and more for children so they can have a present to open on the holiday.

Photo by For the Martyrs, Facebook

Due to the Azeri aggression, 75,000 Armenians are now internally displaced, 90% of them are women and children. 97% of Armenians are Christians. Many Eastern Christian Churches in the Middle East celebrate Christmas on January 6th. The For The Martyrs team will be received by His Excellency Archbishop Raphael Minassian Ordinary of the Armenian Catholics in Armenia, Georgia and Eastern Europe.

This initiative is led by the Founding President of For The Martyrs, Gia Chacon, a young Christian woman who has led multiple mission trips and efforts to help refugees across the world. She was inspired by her grandmother, Dr. Michelle Corral, who was personal friends with Mother Teresa.

  • Humanitarian Organizes ‘For The Martyrs’ To Bring Attention To Neglected Persecuted Christians
  • For The Martyrs in SoCal Raising Awareness About Christian Persecution
  • For more info: visit the For The Martyrs Website


About For the Martyrs

For the Martyrs is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that seeks to bring awareness to the crisis of Christian persecution, advocate for religious freedom, and provide aid to suffering Christians across the globe. Founded by Gia Chacon.

About Gia Chacon

Founder of For the Martyrs, Gia Chacon is a humanitarian, speaker and Pro-Life Director of Bienvenido US. She first began her humanitarian efforts in 2017 and has traveled to Central America, East Africa, and throughout the Middle East. She has worked with the victims of hurricanes, natural disasters, hunger crisis, and refugees of war and persecution. Through working with refugees and hearing their stories, her first-hand experience in the Middle-East, as well as her extensive research of religious oppression, Gia felt called to make a larger impact for the suffering members of The Body of Christ. This led to the founding of For the Martyrs. In addition to public speaking, pro-life advocacy and religious freedom advocacy, Gia is a published writer and has been featured in articles and interviewed on TV and radio shows. To donate or learn more please visit www.forthemartyrs.com.

CONTACT: Paloma Chacon, 949-281-6259, [email protected]

Armenia suspends import of Turkish goods

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Jan 1 2021

TEHRAN, Jan. 01 (MNA) – Yerevan government suspended the import of Turkish –made goods to Armenia for six months in response to Turkish military support for the Republic of Azerbaijan.

This ban was adopted on October 20, 2020 and has come into force today on January 1, 2021.

This prohibition shall not include goods and materials required for manufacture of goods produced by Armenia itself.

Armenian Ministry of Economy has said that the ban will not increase the price of goods in the country because it believes that the consumption of Turkish goods is not dominant in this country and Yerevan is able to compensate for the shortage of Turkish goods from countries such as Iran, Belarus, Russia and China.

After 44 days of conflict erupted between Armenia and Republic of Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh region, the two sides reached a tripartite ceasefire agreement on November 14 with the mediation of Russia.

According to the agreement, Armenia was obliged to evacuate the occupied territories of the Republic of Azerbaijan in Aghdam, Kalbajar and Lachin and to establish a land corridor from Nakhichevan to Azerbaijan.

During this war, Armenia accused Ankara government of openly providing arms and logistics to the Republic of Azerbaijan.

MA/FNA13991012000136


Writers’ Union of Armenia calls on Ukrainian counterpart to abandon politicization of culture

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 14:55,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The Union of Writers of Armenia has commented on its Ukrainian counterpart’s decision on blacklisting Armenian authors.

The President of the Union of Writers of Armenia Edward Militonyan underscored that politics and culture should be differentiated. 

Asked to comment, Militonyan told ARMENPRESS that the literary ties between different countries are the spiritual and artistic wealth of any given nation.

“Ukrainian diplomat, translator and researcher on Armenian studies Oleksandr Bozhko regularly published the books of Armenian writers. He most recently translated into Ukrainian the late novelist Vardan Grigoryan’s book. He is always publishing the works of Armenian writers in the Ukrainian press. Meanwhile, on December 25 we presented several poems written by the president of the Ukrainian Union of Writers in the online edition of the Grakan Newspaper,” Militonyan said.

He added that politics should proceed on its own path and it shouldn’t be mixed with the spiritual and cultural arena.

“The translation of the best pieces of work from different countries is first of all enriching the country which is translating them and spreading good literature and the high cultural values. We, figures of culture, are inclined to bringing different nations closer to one another, and convey their spiritual values. This is our main objective. The foundation for the progress of mankind and peaceful co-existence in the world is in spreading the good and the beautiful,” Militonyan added, noting that politics could sometimes disturb the spread of these main values.

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Russian PM confident Armenia-Russia partnership will continue to strengthen in 2021

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 19:29,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. Prime MInister of Russia Mikhail Mishustin sent a congratulatory message to Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan. ARMENPRESS reports the message runs as follows,

''Honorable Nikol Vovayevich,

I sincerely congratulate you on New Year and Christmas holidays.

During the passing year the Armenian Russian relations, which are based on the principles of friendship, partnership and alliance, dynamically developed. Progress has been made over major joint projects. Integration cooperation within the Eurasian Economic Union has been strengthened.

I am convinced that the multidimensional cooperation between Armenia and Russia will continue to strengthen in 2021. I consider it important to ensure effective cooperation in the post-conflict reconstruction of Nagorno Karabakh.

Honorable Nikol Vovayevich, I wish you good health and welfare, and peace and prosperity to all the citizens of fraternal Armenia''.

Some 43,000 people return to Artsakh

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 11:46, 22 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS. Nearly 43,000 people have come back to Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) since the ceasefire entered into force, TASS reports citing the Russian Defense Ministry.

“Today 351 people were delivered by buses from Yerevan to Stepanakert. The bus traffic was escorted by patrols of the Russian peacekeeping contingent and military police. <…> In total, some 43,000 refugees have returned to their places of residence in Nagorno Karabakh”, the ministry said.

Russia’s peacekeepers are in Nagorno Karabakh in accordance with the agreements confirmed by the November 9 joint statement on a full ceasefire in the region made by Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/23/2020

                                        Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Another Armenian Mayor Prosecuted
December 23, 2020

Armenia -- The Investigative Committee building in Yerevan.

Law-enforcement authorities moved on Wednesday to arrest another Armenian town 
mayor who has demanded Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s resignation and backed 
protests against his rule.

The Investigative Committee asked an Armenian court to remand Manvel Paramazian 
in pre-trial custody after charging him with kidnapping and violent assault.

Paramazian has run Kajaran, an industrial town in Armenia’s southeastern Syunik 
province, since 2016. He was among the heads of more than a dozen local 
communities who issued earlier this month statements condemning Pashinian’s 
handling of the war with Azerbaijan and demanding his resignation. They accused 
him of putting Syunik’s security at grave risk with Armenian troop withdrawals 
completed over the weekend.

The mayors encouraged hundreds of local residents who blocked a regional highway 
to disrupt Pashinian’s visit to Syunik on Monday. One of them, Arush Arushanian, 
was detained hours before the protest.

A Yerevan court ordered the Investigative Committee to free Arushanian on 
Tuesday. Nevertheless, the law-enforcement agency leveled a string of criminal 
charges against the mayor of the town of Goris and asked for a court permission 
to arrest him again. Arushanian rejected the accusations as politically 
motivated.

Paramazian spoke to journalists when he arrived at the Investigative Committee 
headquarters in Yerevan for an interrogation on Wednesday morning. The Kajaran 
mayor again denounced Pashinian and demanded his resignation.

In a statement issued in the evening, the committee said Paramazian has been 
charged with kidnapping and beating up, together with several other men, a 
Kajaran resident who assaulted his father in April this year. It said five other 
individuals were indicted earlier as part of the same criminal case.

Police arrested four of those men in May, sparking protests by hundreds of 
Kajaran residents sympathetic to Paramazian. Investigators searched the mayor’s 
home but did not prosecute him at the time.



Opposition Party Wants Another Russian Military Base In Armenia
December 23, 2020
        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia -- Edmon Marukian, the leader of the opposition Bright Armenia Party, at 
a news conference in Yerevan, December 23, 2020.

Russia should set up a second military base in Armenia to guarantee the South 
Caucasus country’s territorial integrity after the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, the 
leader of a major Armenian opposition party said on Wednesday.

Edmon Marukian made a case for the deployment of Russian troops in Armenia’s 
southeastern Syunik province bordering Iran as well as Azerbaijani districts 
southwest of Karabakh.

Azerbaijani forces mostly recaptured two of those districts during the six-week 
war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10. Parts of the 
Zangelan and Kubatli districts adjacent to Syunik remained under Armenian 
control until last week.

Armenian army units and local militias completed their withdrawal from those 
areas at the weekend amid angry protests staged by many local residents. The 
latter say that they can no longer feel safe because Azerbaijani forces will now 
be stationed dangerously close to their communities as well as a strategic 
highway passing through the mountainous region.

“People have fears and I will dare to say those fears must be eliminated,” 
Marukian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“The only way to to allay those fears and save Syunik from depopulation and 
preserve the province as Armenia’s backbone now is to deploy a Russian military 
base there,” he said.


Armenia -- Russian soldiers hold a military exercise at the Alagyaz shooting 
range, September 24, 2020.

Russia currently has up to 5,000 troops mainly stationed along Armenia’s closed 
border with Turkey. Marukian argued that their Soviet-era base headquartered in 
Gyumri has successfully precluded Turkish “infringements” of his country’s 
internationally recognized territory.

The Armenian-Turkish border is also protected by Russian border guards in 
collaboration with their Armenian colleagues.

The Russian military and border guards have already set up several outposts in 
Syunik over the past two months. The Armenian Defense Ministry said late last 
week that the border guards will also patrol sections of the main regional 
highway straddling the Soviet-era Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

Marukian’s Bright Armenia Party (LHK) is one of the two opposition groups 
represented in the Armenian parliament. The LHK was until recently reputed to be 
a pro-Western party. Its U.S.-educated leader has criticized Armenia’s 
membership in Russian-led military and trade blocs in the past.

Marukian visited Moscow last week on what his aides described as a private trip. 
He denied on Wednesday any connection between the trip and his calls for 
stronger Russian military presence in Armenia.



Dozens Of Karabakh Civilians ‘Still Missing’
December 23, 2020
        • Marine Khachatrian

NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- A fragment of a Smerch rocket sticks out of the ground near 
the town of Martuni, October 26, 2020

About 40 civilian residents of Nagorno-Karabakh remain unaccounted for more than 
one month after a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement stopped the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani war, a senior official in Stepanakert said on Wednesday.

“According to various reports, it is very likely that some of these 40 people 
have also been killed,” Artak Beglarian, Karabakh’s human rights ombudsman, told 
a news conference. “The information will be updated.”

Beglarian said he hopes that most of these missing persons are held captive in 
Azerbaijan or are hiding in areas seized by the Azerbaijani army during the war 
and will return home soon.

Azerbaijan has so far confirmed the deaths of two Karabakh Armenians held in 
Azerbaijani captivity. Both elderly civilians lived in Karabakh villages 
currently controlled by Baku.

The ceasefire agreement which took effect on November 10 requires the warring 
sides to release all prisoners of war and civilians held by them. Armenia and 
Azerbaijan exchanged the first groups of such prisoners on December 14. They 
included 14 ethnic Armenian civilians.

Echoing statements by Armenian officials, Beglarian claimed that Baku is still 
holding dozens of other prisoners and refusing to acknowledge this fact which he 
said is corroborated by amateur videos posted on Azerbaijani social media 
accounts.

Beglarian said the missing persons do not include 21 other Karabakh residents 
who his office believes were captured and killed by Azerbaijani forces. The 
bodies of the vast majority of these victims have already returned by 
Azerbaijani authorities or recovered otherwise, he added.

Earlier this month, Britain’s The Guardian daily examined gruesome videos that 
show men in Azerbaijani army uniforms beheading two elderly men recognized by 
their Karabakh Armenian relatives and neighbors.

“The ethnic Armenian men were non-combatants, people in their respective 
villages said,” the paper wrote on December 15.

“The villagers’ testimony in interviews with the Guardian corroborates 
identifications by a human rights ombudsman for the Armenian-backed local 
government [Artak Beglarian] and two prominent Armenian human rights lawyers 
preparing a criminal case relating to the murders,” it said.



EU Approves More Coronavirus Aid To Armenia
December 23, 2020

The European Union announced on Wednesday 24 million euros ($29 million) in 
additional financial assistance designed to help Armenia cope with the 
coronavirus pandemic and its severe socioeconomic consequences.

The EU Delegation in Yerevan said the aid will support the Armenian government’s 
“healthcare and anti-crisis measures for vulnerable groups and businesses 
affected by COVID-19.”

“We have already disbursed around Euro 60 million this year in direct 
grant-based budget support to Armenia to tackle COVID-19 and more is yet to 
come,” the head of the delegation, Andrea Wiktorin, said in a statement. “Our 
assistance is expected to help implement important economic reforms, preserve 
jobs and small businesses and promote inclusive growth in Armenia.”

The statement also quoted Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian as 
saying that it “will greatly contribute to Armenia’s recovery from the pandemic.”

The latest allocation is part of a 92 million-euro coronavirus-related aid 
package for Armenia approved by the EU in April.

The pandemic has hit the country of about 3 million hard, with 155,440 
coronavirus cases and at least 2,691 deaths officially confirmed so far. The 
Armenian Ministry of Health reported on Wednesday morning the deaths of 20 more 
people infected with the disease.

The pandemic is also the main reason why the Armenian economy is projected to 
shrink by more than 7 percent this year after three consecutive years of robust 
growth.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Armenpress: Artak Beglaryan appointed chief of staff of Artsakh President’s Office

Artak Beglaryan appointed chief of staff of Artsakh President’s Office

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 09:51, 24 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan has signed a decree on appointing Artak Beglaryan chief of staff of the President’s Office, the Presidential administration of Artsakh reports.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Azerbaijan takes complete control over Kapan-Agarak road in Syunik Province – Mayor

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 14:31,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. The road linking Kapan with the village of Agarak in the province of Syunik has completely gone under Azerbaijani control and thus Armenian citizens have stopped using it, the Mayor of Kapan Gevorg Parsyan told lawmakers during a discussion.

“We have three problematic roads – Kapan-Goris, Kapan-Tchakaten and the Kapan-Agarak village. The Kapan-Goris road is functioning, Kapan-Tchakaten is also functioning, but we had to stop using the part leading from Kapan to Agarak village because it has completely gone under [Azerbaijani] control,” Parsyan said.

However, he noted that there is an alternative road but it is several times longer and needs a complete reconstruction.

“Because of not using the road, in a sense the villagers of Agarak, Yeghvard and Ujanis have become blockaded,” Parsyan said.

The parliamentary discussion is launched by the opposition Prosperous Armenia party to discuss the ongoing delimitation and demarcation at the state border.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Minister: Damage caused to Artsakh economy in recent war comparable to volume of its GDP for several years

Panorama, Armenia

Dec 23 2020

The blow dealt to the economy of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) during the recent war unleashed by Azerbaijan is comparable to the volume of its GDP for several years. Artsakh State Minister Grigory Martirosyan said in an interview to RIA Novosti on Wednesday.

“The damage inflicted by the enemy is simply enormous. Now work is underway to assess it in monetary terms, but we can already state that it is comparable to the volume of the republic’s GDP for several years. This primarily affects such sectors as agriculture and energy,” Martirosyan said.

According to the minister, after the recent military conflict in Karabakh, the population of the country has found itself "on the brink of a humanitarian crisis." The damage caused by the hostilities primarily affected infrastructure facilities and private property of citizens, Martirosyan said.

"Our economy has been deprived of agricultural lands and energy facilities due to the retreat of Armenian forces from most of the territories or the occupation of them by the enemy during the hostilities. Not to mention that most of the citizens' property – real estate, personal and agricultural equipment – has either been destroyed or left in areas outside our control,” the Artsakh official said.