Ser Artsakh gift boxes continue their journey

An Artsakh mother with her newborn and Ser Artsakh delivery

“To honor and support the heroic, inspiring and strong people of Artsakh who choose to raise future generations in their homeland” – this is the motto and mission of the “Ser Artsakh” charity program initiated by the Anna Astvatsaturian Foundation, to bring love to all those Artsakh families living in such difficult conditions.

The items included in the gift boxes that are provided to the mothers of Artsakh in the framework of the “Ser Artsakh” Program are made in Armenia or Artsakh and include onesies, pajama sets, sleeping sacks, towels and blankets, health care essentials (diapers, wipes, baby shampoo, thermometer and pacifier), as well as maternity hygiene necessities for the new mother, a custom-made soft baby book and a wooden wheeled toy. In Artsakh, they are carefully packaged and delivered to maternity hospitals in time for the next baby to be born.

There are three maternity hospitals in Artsakh: Martakert, Martuni and Stepanakert. Since the launch of the program, 161 children, including 10 in Martakert and six in Martuni, have received their gift boxes. Among the newborns were two sets of twins, a pair of beautiful sisters and a pair of brothers with their grandfather’s strength in their veins.

Victoria is one of the most common names. Parents hope that the choice of the child’s name will be decisive in the fate of both the child and Artsakh.

Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte

“The news about the donation of 18 boxes in one day made me very happy. When mothers told me how helpful these items are for them to raise these babies, that was the moment when I realized how important it is for the diaspora to keep donating to maintain the continuity of this project,” said Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte, president of the Anna Astvatsaturian Foundation. “Despite my childhood as a refugee from Baku, I was taught by my parents to always work toward more out of life. With this project, I choose to do the same in Artsakh. Armenian children and their future are my constant focus and I will never stop expecting and working toward a better future for them.”

An individualized approach is taken with each mother. The Foundation works with Artsakh’s Ministry of Health and is notified when these mothers and their newborns will be discharged from the hospital. It is important to the Foundation that no baby leaves the hospital without receiving a gift box.

“Mothers always accept the gift with gratitude. Many are even waiting for our gift boxes. There was a case when a pregnant woman contacted us and informed us that her child will be born in a few months. She asked us not to forget about her baby and to visit her with a box as well,” Armine Vardanyan, representative of the Anna Astvatsaturian Foundation in Artsakh, recalls with a smile.

Ser Artsakh gift boxes

Environmentalists Speak Out As Armenia Restarts Controversial Gold Mine

June 30 2022

On June 18, new amendments in the country’s mining code went into force. Among other things, they allow companies to carry out mining with environmental impact assessments more than a year old, as long as the delay was caused by reasons that include “civil disobedience.”

Development of the Amulsar mine was suspended in 2018 following large protests against the project’s potential environmental damage. Since then its prospects have fallen and risen as the government appeared unable to reconcile the need for investment and jobs in the country with the serious environmental consequences that the mine threatened, and the resulting popular opposition to the project.

The government has not said formally whether it intends to restart the mine project. But activists monitoring it say that all signs point in that direction. 

After parliament passed the law earlier this year, a group of activist organizations appealed to the government to revoke it. “This legislative change is, in fact, a restriction on the constitutional right to hold public meetings, rallies, marches, demonstrations, as well as the right to participate in decision-making,” the February 10 letter read. “It is obvious that the legislative change is primarily related to [the] Amulsar gold quartzite mine development project.”

The activist organizations appealed to President Vahagn Khachaturyan to not sign the law but he did on June 18, saying that experts consulted by his office confirmed that the law was constitutional. 

Amulsar is one of the largest foreign investments in Armenia. The company that operates it, Lydian International, says that it has already invested $300 million in the project and claims that the mine would contribute $488 million to the state budget through taxes and royalties over its 11-year operation, amounting to 1.4 percent of the country’s gross domestic product. 

But many experts and environmentalists believe that the mining process in Amulsar, close to the resort town of Jermuk, will harm the local ecology and could even pollute Lake Sevan, Armenia’s largest source of fresh water. 

As an opposition politician, Nikol Pashinyan also opposed the project, the contract for which had been signed in 2007. When Pashinyan became prime minister following 2018’s “Velvet Revolution,” activists, encouraged by the rise to power of someone they saw as an ally, rallied for a new wave of protests against the mine that summer. The prosecutor general’s office launched a criminal case in August 2018 against the operator of the mine, Lydian Armenia, accusing it of damaging the environment by unauthorized mining operations.

The government commissioned a new audit of the project, arguing that the initial environmental impact assessments were tainted by the close association with Lydian Armenia of the experts who carried them out. When the new audit was released, in August 2019, it largely supported the previous assessments, though it did identify some additional risks. 

Pashinyan initially said the new audit was positive enough to go ahead with the project, but a public backlash forced the government to backtrack and promise that it would produce yet another environmental impact assessment. 

Lydian responded by threatening to sue for damages of up to $2 billion if the government pulled out of the project. Demonstrations began again to gather steam, with clashes between police and protesters in August 2020. A month later, however, the war with Azerbaijan started and the issue largely dropped off the public agenda. 

The criminal case, meanwhile, was terminated in December 2021. No new environmental impact assessment was ever carried out, and the new law means that Amulsar can move forward using the most recent assessment.

Sources in the current and former governments have told Eurasianet, on condition of anonymity, that economic needs in the post-war period have meant the likelihood of the mine reopening has significantly increased. 

Western embassies, in particular the British and American, have long supported the project. United States Ambassador Lynne Tracy visited the mine site in April and “encouraged an expeditious and transparent resolution of outstanding disputes around the project,” the embassy said in a statement. She also “welcomed Lydian’s commitment to upholding the highest international labor and environmental standards and noted the potential for the project to serve as a significant driver of growth for Armenia’s economy.”

Environmental activists disagree. 

“[T]here is abundant evidence of serious violations of a wide range of rights in the development of the Amulsar gold mine, from substantive and procedural environmental rights to social, economic and political rights of affected individuals and communities,” wrote CEE Bankwatch Network, an organization monitoring projects in the region funded by international financial institutions, in a new report.

It recommended that the Armenian government revoke all licenses to operate the mine, initiate an “independent expert assessment of the costs and benefits” of the project, then “take this assessment into account to ensure that negative impacts are duly identified and prevented and that local populations and communities may directly benefit from the project if it is finally pursued.”

By Eurasianet.org


MP Hayk Mamijanyan gives up parliament post

Panorama
Armenia – July 1 2022

MP Hayk Mamijanyan of the opposition Hayastan bloc has stepped down as deputy chairman of the Armenian parliament committee on foreign affairs, which he took over in 2021.

“Considering the parliamentary diplomacy as a key tool to properly represent the interests of Armenia and Artsakh on international platforms, I tried to use it as efficiently as possible,” he said in a statement announcing his resignation on Friday.

"Given the political and moral crisis created by the political majority, I have decided to give up the post of deputy chairman of the National Assembly Standing Committee on Foreign Relations, continuing to use my knowledge and ties for the benefit of the homeland, including through the parliamentary and party diplomacy," Mamijanyan said.

Team of Armenian Mountaineers Summit Highest Peak in North America

Members of the first-ever all-Armenian American mountaineering team who climbed Mt. Denali


BY VAZGEN MAZANIANS

Before last month, only few Armenian climbers had ever stood on the highest peak in North America. Now, three Armenians have written themselves into the record books, becoming the first all-Armenian American team to summit Mount Denali.

Nestled at the heart of Denali National Park, this lofty peak is a geological testament to the broad notion set forth by the historian and novelist Wallace Stegner. “National Parks are the best idea we ever had,” he wrote. “Absolutely American, absolutely democratic, they reflect us at our best rather than our worst.” It might be said then that to climb Denali, to endure its bitterly cold temperatures and dizzying heights, is to seek out the very best that America has to offer.

A typical ascent to the summit following the standard and most popular route along the West Buttress has a 55 percent success rate among climbers and can take anywhere from 18 to 23 days to negotiate the 13,000-foot change in elevation. Common hazards in attempting to reach the top include extreme cold (even in summer), altitude illness, crevasses, avalanches, ice and rock fall, and extreme weather.

The all-Armenian American Mountaineering team consisted of five members (four men and one woman). Arlen Keshishian as Team Leader, Lernik Tahmasian, Zare Agazaryan, Hakoop Abnoos, and Roubik Mardirosian. All five members have years of mountaineering experience and collectively have summited some of the notable world peaks including Mt. Aconcagua, Mt Elbrus, Mt. Orizaba, Mt. Rainier, Lenin Peak, Mont Blanc, and Ecuador peaks such as Chimborazo. The team locally practiced in Southern California for over a year getting ready to climb Mount Denali. They have also been members of local Armenian non-profit organizations in Los Angeles area promoting hiking and mountaineering for many years.

After many days of going through all the camps fighting extreme cold and very heavy packs, on May 30, three of the team members including Arlen Keshishian, Roubik Mardirosian, and Lernik Tahmasian were able to reach the summit of this magnificent mountain. Subsequently all five members of the climb safely returned to Base Camp and now have reached their residences in Los Angeles, California where they plan to celebrate the historic climb with team supporters and local Armenian community.

“There’s so few Armenian Mountaineers attempting challenging peaks that it’s our responsibility to bring awareness to our younger generation and our community for healthy life style,” said Arlen Keshishian. The team plans to discuss the benefits of hiking and mountaineering in their local communities in the coming months.

Armenia and Israel are ready to intensify cooperation in the field of healthcare

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 21:21,

YEREVAN, JUNE 30, ARMENPRESS. The Minister of Health Anahit Avanesyan received the newly appointed Ambassador of the State of Israel to the Republic of Armenia Joel Lion (residence in Jerusalem) and the Honorary Consul of the State of Israel Ashot Shahmuradyan, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Ministry of Health of Armenia.

“Israel's rich experience in medicine and the reforms launched in the Armenian healthcare system are a potential for expanding the cooperation between Armenia and Israel”, the statement said.

Presenting the general situation of the healthcare system of Armenia, Anahit Avanesyan singled out a number of directions for activating the Armenian-Israeli contacts in the sphere:

  • Exchange of experience in creating the best model of the healthcare system;
  • Increase the effectiveness of preventing cardiovascular disease, cancer and other non-communicable diseases by increasing the capacity of specialists;
  • drug production,
  • Sharing the experience of emergency medical teams.

It is noted that Ambassador Joel Lion welcomed the efforts to intensify the Armenian-Israeli cooperation and made proposals. In particular, the sides discussed the possibility of organizing trainings for Armenian specialists and exchange of experience in cooperation with the Israeli International Cooperation Agency MASHAV.

The Ambassador noted that within the framework of her visit to the State of Israel on the occasion of the 72nd session of the WHO European Regional Committee in September, Anahit Avanesyan will have the opportunity to personally get acquainted with the peculiarities of the Israeli healthcare system.

Armenians hold Arab League, World responsible for Turkey for settlement in their lands

Kurdish Press – Belgium
 The co-chair of the Armenian Social Council, Arief Kasbian, held the Arab League and the international community responsible for Turkey’s settlement projects on the lands of the displaced Armenians in the occupied Syrian regions, Turkey and its endeavors to change the demography of the region, indicating at the same time that this policy is an extension of the Armenian massacres at the hands of the Ottomans in the nineties of the last century.  .

 The Turkish occupation state continues its settlement projects within the occupied Syrian areas amid the silence of the international forces, despite the rejection of the region’s residents and the warnings of the Autonomous Administration and human rights organizations in north and east Syria against Turkey’s efforts to carve out and annex the occupied Syrian lands.

 The Turkish settlement projects are funded by "Qatari, Kuwaiti, and Palestinian" organizations and associations, especially in the Afrin canton, the occupied Serêkaniyê and Girê Spî/Tal Abyad areas.  It was within the land of the Armenian diaspora in Girê Spî / Tel Abyad.

A local source from the town of Al-Ali Baglia in the occupied canton of Girê Spî / Tal Abyad told our agency on June 23 that the Kuwaiti "Sheikh Zayed Organization" had started building a religious complex on a land of 170 dunums owned by the Armenian diaspora Akop.

 With Kuwaiti money, the occupation is building a religious complex on the land of an Armenian diaspora in Girê Spi – Hawar News Agency (hawarnews.com)

 Commenting on the issue, the co-chair of the Armenian Social Council in al-Hasakah Canton, Arief Qasbian, confirmed to our agency that "the occupation of the lands and the forced displacement of the Armenians, and the seizure of their lands, is a systematic and continuous policy pursued by the Turkish occupation state, to eliminate the history, civilization and presence of the Armenians," indicating that this policy began  since the massacres of Armenians at the hands of the Ottomans.

 Arief noted that their occupied areas in northern and eastern Syria are witnessing a demographic change before the eyes of the world, considering the silence of international forces as tacit approval and partnership in the genocide of the Armenians and the rest of the region’s components of the Kurds, Arabs, Circassians, and others.

 Arief Kasbian pointed out the silence of the Arab community towards the Arab organizations participating in financing the settlement projects of the Turkish occupation state, saying: "The organization that supports the settlement project on the lands of the Armenians is Kuwaiti, and Kuwait is a state in the Arab League, but the League is silent and did not express a clear position regarding the settlement on the Syrian lands.  through these Kuwaiti organizations.

 Arief Qasbian also held the community and international forces, led by the League of Arab States, responsible for the actions of the Turkish occupation state in terms of displacing the people, seizing their property, and changing the demography of the region.  Turkey's settlement projects in northern and eastern Syria.

 The co-chair of the Armenian Social Council in Al-Hasakah Canton, Arief Qasbian, called on human rights organizations and the United Nations to intervene and limit the project, which she described as "the Turkish-Kuwaiti-Qatari project", and the crimes of the Turkish occupation state against the peoples of the region, and to protect the existence of the components in light of attempts to exterminate them.

A

https://www.hawarnews.com/en/haber/armenians-hold-al-world-responsible-for-turkey-for-settlement-in-their-lands-h31510.html

Watch the report in Arabic at the link below

الأرمن يحمّلون الجامعة العربية والعالم مسؤولية استيلاء تركيا على ممتلكاتهم والاستيطان أراضيهم 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9OpO3I0uopI&t=220s


Gustavo Petro wins presidential election in Colombia

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 09:49,

YEREVAN, JUNE 20, ARMENPRESS. Senator Gustavo Petro, leader of the left-wing “Historic Pact” coalition, wins the second round of presidential elections in Colombia, according to the results of counting of 98.22% of ballots, reports TASS.

According to the National Civil Registry, 50.51% of voters favored Petro. His rival Rodolfo Hernandez received 47.22% of votes.

“It is a celebration for the people today. Let the people celebrate the first popular victory. Let so much experienced suffering be softened by the joy that fills the heart of the homeland,”Petro tweeted after the vote outcome was announced.

Hernandez has not yet commented on the outcome of the vote that took place Sunday.

Secretary General of Council of Europe visits Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan

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 14:45, 16 June 2022

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Secretary General of the Council of Europe Marija Pejčinović Burić visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan on the sidelines of her official visit to pay tribute to the memory of the Genocide victims.

Marija Pejčinović Burić laid flowers at the Eternal Flame and then toured the Armenian Genocide Museum.

Photos by Hayk Badalyan

The Secretary General of the Council of Europe arrived in Armenia on an official visit on June 16-17.

On June 17 she is scheduled to meet with Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan. Within the framework of the visit, meetings with the President, the Prime Minister of Armenia, the Catholicos of All Armenians, the Vice President of the National Assembly of Armenia and the Minister of Justice are planned.

Putin says "interested" in stabilization of situation in Armenia

PanARMENIAN
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net - Russian President Vladimir Putin said at a meeting with Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturian on Friday, June 17 that Russia understands everything that is happening in Armenia and what the situation in the country to be stable.

"We understand everything that is happening today in Armenia, around Armenia. We are determined to develop our partnership relations. We are interested in the situation in the country being stable and guaranteeing progressive development," Putin said, according to RIA Novosti.

He noted that Armenia is a strategic ally of Russia: "We appreciate that."

The two Presidents met on the sidelines of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum.

Armenia between Turkey and Azerbaijan

Greece –
OPINION

The post-Soviet region is known for turbulent internal and external political processes. The hotspots inherited by states after the collapse of the Soviet Union remain to this day, and are hindering stability in this region. One of these hotspots is Nagorno-Karabakh, an independent unrecognized state with an Armenian population between Armenia and Azerbaijan, formed as a result of a military conflict (1991-94) between the two countries. Despite the fact that the international community recognizes Azerbaijan as the owner of these territories, until recently Armenia insisted on recognizing these lands as Armenian.

The Armenian Revolution

After the end of the war, power passed into the hands of military officials in both Armenia and Azerbaijan. In Armenia, despite the periodic change of power, people from the highest military level, who came to Yerevan from Karabakh, became presidents. This caused dissatisfaction among the people, especially against the backdrop of an unstable economic situation. In 2015, the former president of Armenia, Serzh Sargsyan, initiated amendments to the constitution, changing the country from a presidential to a parliamentary republic. Despite Sargsyan’s promises that he would not put forward his candidacy for the post of prime minister in 2018, he did, and was elected. In the spring of 2018, mass protests began in Armenia, which led to Sargsyan’s resignation, and Nikol Pashinyan, leader of the revolutionary movement, oppositionist and former MP, became the prime minister. Two years later, in 2020, Azerbaijan launched a large-scale offensive operation against Nagorno-Karabakh, and most of the territories came under its control. In the history of the post-Soviet region, this military conflict was called the 44-Day War, in which about 5,000 people died on each side.

Economic relations

The war ended with the signing of a ceasefire agreement between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia as an intermediary, which sent peacekeeping forces to Nagorno-Karabakh to ensure military stability. However, this ceasefire document also included clauses on establishing economic relations in the region without any further clarification. Now, the discussion on these economic relations has opened.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijan was left with an enclave in the south of Armenia, Nakhichevan, bordering Armenia, Iran and Turkey. For 30 years, before the 2020 war, Azerbaijan had no land access to this territory. Therefore, it was expected that the discussion on the establishment of economic relations would include the opening of a land road through southern Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh, and hence Azerbaijan. The opening of this road spurred border skirmishes between Azerbaijan and Armenia and the issue of delimitation and demarcation of the borders between the two countries arose. Without clarifying the borders first, and despite the fact that the bilateral military-political situation was still not “prosperous” enough, Pashinyan proceeded with the process of opening routes. Azerbaijan, taking good advantage of this opportunity, increased pressure by delaying the start of the delimitation and demarcation of borders, moving forward along the sovereign territory of Armenia, and demanding that the routes’ opening process be accelerated. What is even more surprising is that the prime minister of Armenia seems willing to initiate this process not only with Azerbaijan, but also with Turkey, with which there is the question of recognizing the 1915 genocide and the issue of the territorial demands of Western Armenia.

What does Pashinyan want?

‘The hostility between Azerbaijan and Armenia will not disappear with economic relations and the opening of routes. This step carries risks for Armenian national interests’  

It is known that Turkish ambitions to translate the plan of Pan-Turkism into reality are growing increasingly stronger. Establishing economic relations without preconditions (at least on the recognition of the genocide) gives the green light not only to Turkey but also to its closest ally, Azerbaijan. The Armenian government is conducting a large information campaign about the benefits of economic relations with Turkey and Azerbaijan in a manner that makes people wonder whether national interests have been put aside. It’s perfectly understandable that, for 30 years, Armenia was in a state of semi-isolation in the region. The country has borders with Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran and Turkey, and the bulk of its foreign economic activity is with Georgia and Iran. However, the hostility between Azerbaijan and Armenia will not disappear with economic relations and the opening of routes. This step carries risks for Armenian national interests in the mid- to long term.

In economic terms, according to expert calculations, the opening of the railway from Nakhichevan to Azerbaijan through Armenia will give Armenia $1.2 million in profit per year – the payback period for the project, taking into account the planned investments, is 100 years. In addition, the economies of both Turkey and Azerbaijan are several times that of Armenia’s. When opening access to investments in the country, the economy could be captured by large Turkish and Azeri companies, which in future could be used also for political purposes.

Geopolitical situation

On this large regional football field, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Russia remain in the game, Armenia has become the ball, and Georgia and Iran have been left on the sidelines. With the opening of economic routes in the South Caucasus, Russia could diversify the ways of foreign trade in goods with Iran, Turkey and even India, whose path to Russia lies through Iran. On the other hand, Tehran is dissatisfied with the latest regional developments: firstly, because previously Azerbaijan could only trade with the southern part of Turkey through Iran, but now there will be an alternative; and secondly, because Turkey and Azerbaijan will strengthen their positions in the region, at the expense of Iran, which is already fighting for its position in the Persian Gulf.

The development of economic relations in the region at the moment seems to work against the national interests of Armenia. Is Pashinyan betraying his state or is he being subjected to political pressure from outside? It is possible that Pashinyan is afraid of a new war, therefore making friends with the enemies looks like a solution. However, in the case of Azerbaijan, Pashinyan could insist on clarifying the borders first, and in the case of Turkey, an emphasis could be given to recognizing the 1915 genocide. Also, Pashinyan could rely more on the Armenian diaspora for economic support rather than hoping for benefits from economic relations with Turkey and Azerbaijan. The Armenian diaspora, even in the recent past, has often raised funds to support the state.


Elias Hadjikoumis is a foreign, security and defense policy expert and a member of the International Institute for Strategic Studies.