UN Secretary-General welcomes ceasefire in Gaza

Save

Share

 12:00, 8 August 2022

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres welcomed the announcement of the ceasefire in Gaza and Israel.

“The Secretary-General welcomes the announcement of a ceasefire in Gaza and Israel,” Stephane Dujarric, Spokesman for the Secretary-General said in a statement.

 “He is deeply saddened by the loss of life and injuries, including children, from airstrikes in Gaza and the indiscriminate firing of rockets toward Israel from population centers in Gaza by Palestinian Islamic Jihad and other militant groups.
 
He extends his deepest condolences to the victims of the violence and their loved ones.
 
The hostilities have contributed to a humanitarian emergency. Crossings into Gaza have been closed and power shortages are affecting essential facilities and supplies. Hundreds of buildings and homes have been destroyed or damaged, leaving thousands of Palestinians homeless.
 
The Secretary-General commends Egypt for its efforts carried out, in close coordination with the UN, to help restore calm.
 
The Secretary-General calls on all sides to observe the ceasefire.
 
He reaffirms the United Nations’ commitment to the achievement of the two-State solution based on relevant United Nations resolutions, international law, and prior agreements and the importance of restoring a political horizon. Only a negotiated sustainable political solution will end, once and for all, these devastating cycles of violence and lead to a peaceful future for Palestinians and Israelis alike.”

CivilNet: Images appear online of Berdzor church converted into mosque

CIVILNET.AM

10 Aug, 2022 09:08

On August 25, the Lachin corridor, including the Armenian-populated communities of Aghavno, Berdzor (also known as Lachin), and Sus, will be handed over to Azerbaijan. CivilNet’s Karabakh team went to Aghavno and Berdzor after the evacuation order was announced to talk to residents. What do they think about leaving? What assistance are they receiving? And what do they want others to know about the decision that has led to them losing their homes?

Film: Documentary About Artsakh War Screens in Glendale


Aug 9 2022

First published in the Aug. 6 print issue of the Glendale News-Press.

Although the documentary “Motherland” is largely centered around events from two years ago, it was prescient that it screened this week at the Glendale Laemmle Theatre.
“Motherland,” directed by journalist Vic Gerami, chronicles the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War, but as Gerami pointed out during the Thursday screening, it’s a conflict that hasn’t yet ended. Hostilities flared up again this week, as Azerbaijani forces reportedly attacked Artsakh Defense Force troops in violation of the ceasefire and territorial concessions.
Still, Gerami — an Armenian American activist who hosts “The Blunt Post with Vic” on KPFK 90.7-FM — expressed during the screening that, in a theater full of elected officials, scholars and allies, there may yet be hope for the Armenian cause.
“This is such a dynamic room and it gives us hope,” he said following the film, “because seeing some of the things I’ve seen, you have to have hope, because otherwise you just go crazy.”
Clocking in at just over two hours, “Motherland” explores the Armenian history of Artsakh in the context of Russian and Soviet imperialism and draws a link from the Armenian genocide perpetrated by the Turkish-dominated Ottoman Empire and the wars Azerbaijan waged against the breakaway Artsakh Republic — which, for nearly a century, had been under Azeri administration.
After Artsakh Armenians declared independence and successfully defended themselves in the 1990s, the film contends that the hereditary dictatorship in Baku — currently led by Ilham Aliyev — cultivated an Azeri national identity of dominating their Armenian neighbors and consolidated control of Azerbaijan’s oil and gas resources to amass personal fortunes, buy political goodwill across the globe and construct a technologically sophisticated military.

Broadly, “Motherland” advances a narrative that Azerbaijan, through political maneuvering and strategic donations, began laundering a positive global image in 2011 with some sort of national identity campaign eyed for 2020.
The COVID-19 pandemic and American presidential election, Gerami contends, provided ample distraction for Baku to launch its offensive, which killed more than 5,000 Armenians. The film takes aim across the political spectrum — from Republican President Donald Trump for enabling Aliyev, Democratic President Joe Biden for opening up arms sales to Baku and ostensibly progressive organizations like Amnesty International for “both-sidesing” the conflict with false-equivalencies.
The film, edited by Chris Damadyan, slickly weaves history and present events together with archival and crowd-sourced footage, crisp graphics and charts and interviews often filmed by producer Henrick Vartanian.
Interviewees included a number of American politicians — chief among them U.S. Congressman Adam Schiff of Burbank, New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez and New Jersey Congressman Frank Pallone — as well as foreign leaders and academics.
The crew also traveled to Armenia and Artsakh to record the testimonies of refugees and veterans of the wars.
“I caught myself looking up, going like ‘What did he just say?’” Vartanian said of filming those veterans. “That was quite an emotional experience to hear from the soldiers.”
The documentary also necessarily includes the blurred-out cellphone videos taken during the 2020 war that depict Azerbaijani soldiers committing atrocities against Armenian soldiers and civilians — executions, scalpings, beheadings — to illustrate what they say the world as effectively looked away from.
Damadyan recalled that, during the editing process, a source had compiled and provided an archive of all the publicly available videos from social media.
“Just going through that, I don’t know how many times I had to walk away from the computer and dry my eyes and wash my face and gather myself back up,” Damadyan said.
Mayor Ardy Kassakhian, who hosted a question-and-answer session with the film’s creators after the screening, said that he’s watched every documentary about Artsakh and hailed “Motherland” as the “most encyclopedic” of them.
“You put literally everything that we try to explain to people into this film,” Kassakhian told the filmmakers. “You got very rare interviews with individuals that no one else has gotten interviews with.”
Gerami admitted that the first cut of the film ran in at more than three hours and that a lot of “painful cuts” were required to bring it down to feature length. During the Q&A, Gerami said he strove to avoid wading into Yerevan politics because, at the end of the day, he asserts it is a story about the genocidal aspirations of two hostile neighbors and how the world has placated them.
“At the core of this film, it’s about freedom, the right to self-determination and human rights. It’s universal, and I was not going to muddy it getting into the politics,” Gerami said. “I made this film for non-Armenians. We don’t want to preach to the choir, although I think a lot of Armenians can benefit from watching this, too.”
This week’s screening — sponsored by Kassakhian, Assemblywoman Laura Friedman and state Sen. Anthony Portantino — was just the second, and Gerami is currently seeking a distributor for the documentary.
He is also aiming to host additional screenings, as local as Glendale Community College and as widely as Congress. Gerami noted that it was important to bring the film to Glendale, no less to a theater adjacent to Artsakh Avenue.
While reflecting on the filming, Vartanian noted that this was his first trip to his ancestral home, an experience he’ll never forget.
“The sun was different. The light was different, the color, everything,” Vartanian recalled. “The fact that the signs were all in Armenian, I kept giggling. ‘I can read that. I know what it means.’”
At this, Kassakhian quipped, “They have that on Colorado Boulevard, too.”

Documentary About Artsakh War Screens in Glendale

Washington Urges Armenia And Azerbaijan To Engage In Dialogue

Aug 7 2022

US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has urged the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan to engage in dialogue to resolve the conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

US State Department spokesman Ned Price announced that Blinken, who is on an Asian tour, spoke by phone with the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, and the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev.

Price said that the US Secretary of State assured Prime Minister Pashinyan that the United States is closely monitoring the situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh.

Price noted that during his talks with the two leaders, Blinken urged the establishment of direct dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan to resolve issues related to or arising from the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

After a first war that resulted in 30,000 deaths in the early 1990s, in the fall of 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a lightning war to control the mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh region, which split from Azerbaijan with the support of Yerevan.

The last war in 2020 killed about 6,500 people and ended with a Russian-brokered truce.

As part of the armistice agreement, Armenia relinquished large swathes of territory it controlled, and Russia deployed a peacekeeping force of about 2,000 soldiers tasked with monitoring compliance with the fragile truce.

Despite the fragile diplomatic truce between Armenia and Azerbaijan, tension remains high between the two former Soviet republics. Both countries regularly report outbreaks of violence and casualties among soldiers. And last Wednesday, Azerbaijan announced its control of several sites and the destruction of targets in Nagorno-Karabakh, in an escalation that led to three deaths and led to fears of renewed conflict. With the mediation of the European Union, the two countries are negotiating a peace treaty.

The United States: We are monitoring the situation in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.



Armenian MPs expect Russian peacekeepers to restore stability in the area of their responsibility

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 3 2022


Armenian MPs expect Russian peacekeepers to restore stability in the
area of their responsibility

 August 3, 2022, 22:14 1 minute read

Amid a new wave of Azerbaijani aggression against Artsakh, lawmakers
from the Armenia’s ruling Civil Contract faction expect the Russian
peacekeepers to take necessary actions to ensure stability in their
area of responsibility.

Noting that the latest aggression has been mostly unfolding in the
direction of Lachin corridor, MP Vahagn Aleksanyan reminds that
according to the November 9 statement, the corridor is under the
responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers.

“We should expect clear actions from the Russian peacekeeping mission
in order to exclude the further escalation of the situation and to
eliminate the existing tension, this is the obligation and
responsibility of the Russian side, stipulated by the tripartite
statement of November 9,” he said in a statement.

MP Hripsime Grigoryan said Azerbaijan’s ongoing military actions in
the area of responsibility of the Russian peacekeeping forces are not
only a gross violation of the trilateral statement of November 9,
2020, but also a direct disrespect for all parties to the statement.

“This should be clearly noted by the Russian Federation and
appropriate actions should be taken to restore peace and stability as
soon as possible,” she said.

Arusyak Julhakyan said Azerbaijan’s actions “target not only the
Lachin Corridor, but also the entire zone of responsibility of the
Russian peacekeeping forces.”

“Another gross violation of the tripartite statement by Azerbaijan is
unacceptable. The Russian peacekeeping force must ensure peace and
stability in its area of responsibility in accordance with its
mandate,” the lawmaker added.

Condemning the new wave of aggression by Azerbaijan, MP Alkhas
Ghazaryan said “in this context, Russian peacekeepers must take all
necessary actions to ensure the establishment of stability in their
area of responsibility.”


 

Latest Azeri aggression stems from two demands issued to Armenian authorities, MP says

Panorama
Armenia – Aug 2 2022

MP Tigran Abrahamyan of the opposition Pativ Unem faction claims Azerbaijan’s latest military aggression against Artsakh is attributed to two demands it has issued to the Armenian authorities, threatening to use force if Armenia fails to comply with them.

“The first demand concerns the presence of the Armenian military on the territory of Artsakh, which the Armenian Security Council secretary referred to in a statement issued recently,” Abrahamyan wrote on Facebook on Tuesday.

After the 44-day war, no conscripts were drafted from Armenia to Artsakh and the last conscripted soldiers will be discharged by the end of August.

“From September there will be no servicemen holding Armenian citizenship in Artsakh and, in fact, the Azerbaijani demand will lose its relevance,” the deputy said.

“The second issue which remains high on Azerbaijan’s agenda is the opening of a corridor to Nakhichevan through Armenian territory. It is no coincidence that the Azerbaijani president says if the Armenian authorities do not fulfill this demand, they will reconsider their approach to the corridor connecting Armenia and Artsakh.

“Aliyev goes even further, saying that the Lachin corridor should have the same status as the corridor envisaged for Armenia.

“Simply put, if Armenia does not provide a corridor, but rather a road with an Armenian checkpoint on it, Azerbaijan threatens to set up a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor,” Abrahamyan stated.

Azerbaijani forces began attacking the Artsakh army positions in the country’s north and northwest on Monday morning. The Artsakh troops thwarted all Azerbaijani attempts to cross the line of contact, the Defense Ministry said.

The situation on the contact line remained tense as of Tuesday morning.

CivilNet: Possible Turkish border reopening causes angst in Armenia’s border villages

CIVILNET.AM

30 Jul, 2022 08:07

In Margara in Armenia’s Armavir region, the morning starts with the sound of the Islamic call to prayer. The village lies less than a kilometer away from Turkey, with the village of Alican clearly visible on the other side of the border. As efforts to normalize relations between Armenia and Turkey continue, the prospect of opening the border, which has been closed since the early 1990s, has become a heated topic of discussion in the village. CivilNet’s team went to Margara to find out more.

Project of Christ statue on Armenian mount sparks historians’ and rights defenders’ criticism

Caucasian Knot
Project of Christ statue on Armenian mount sparks historians' and rights defenders' criticism
The installation of a statue of Jesus Christ on Mount Atis violates the law on the protection of cultural heritage and natural areas, 16 human rights and public organizations have stated. They doubt the attractiveness of the statue for tourists.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported that on July 16, on the top of Mount Atis, activists held a rally against the erection of the above statue, which was the initiative of Gagik Tsarukyan, the leader of the "Prosperous Armenia" Party. The idea was approved by the Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, who announced that the statue would increase tourists' interest in Armenia. Scientists opposed the idea, while the Armenian Apostolic Church believes that the statue is contrary to the cult tradition.

The construction of the statue has revealed corruption risks in the alienation of a public area that is a historical monument, as well as the non-transparent activities of Armenian authorities, the authors of the statement signed by the Transparency International Anticorruption Centre, the Vanadzor Office of the Helsinki Civil Assembly, the Helsinki Association of Armenia and other organizations assert.

"They are destroying not only a natural monument, but also the cultural and historical heritage. There are more than 50 antiquities of the Neolithic, Stone and Bronze Ages on Mount Atis," said Garegin Miskaryan, the initiator of the petition against the construction of the statue.

Asmik Arutyunyan, an expert from the NGO "Rights Protection Without Borders", said that authorities had ignored the demand of public organizations and continue the construction.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 03:53 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

See earlier reports:
Scientists oppose construction of residential houses near scientific centre in Yerevan, In Yerevan, police detain five opponents of construction in a park, Human rights defenders criticize dispersal of protest against construction in Yerevan.

Author: Tigran Petrosyan Source: СK correspondent
Источник: ?fbclid=IwAR2_V5t3XzFzo5wKjb-VWY21W6822D2HyL0ES3YlLs9VIOFHGHhANCWqG9E
© Кавказский Узел

Representative of ruling party in Turkey links normalization of relations with Yerevan to how Armenia keeps its word

NEWS.am
Armenia –

Spokesman for Turkey's ruling Justice and Development Party Ömer Çelik responded to a question about the normalization of relations with Armenia.

Ömer Çelik stated that the normalization of relations depends on to what extent Armenia keeps its word.

According to him, some states and the Armenian Diaspora are attempting to sabotage Armenia in order to keep it under their influence.

Oppositionist Mikayel Badalyan released on bail

Panorama
Armenia –

A court in Yerevan ordered the release of opposition blogger Mikayel Badalyan on a bail of 6 million drams late on Friday, Arsen Babayan, a senior member of the opposition Homeland Party, said on Telegram.

He had earlier been taken to Armenia Republican Medical Center with internal bleeding.

Badalyan, who is a pro-Russian activist, was arrested on May 24 on charges of making a “false statement about terrorism” under Article 259 of Armenia’s Criminal Code.

He denies the charges as politically motivated.