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EBRD appoints George Akhalkatsi head of Yerevan Office

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 15:53,

YEREVAN, MARCH 17, ARMENPRESS. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has appointed George Akhalkatsi as the new head of its Yerevan Resident Office, replacing Dimitri Gvindadze, the EBRD said in a statement.

“Mr Akhalkatsi will take up his new role on 1 May 2022 and be based in the Armenian capital. He will oversee the Bank’s investments and operations in Armenia, reporting to Catarina Bjorlin Hansen, Regional Director for the Caucasus.  

Mr Akhalkatsi, a Georgian national, started his career as a lawyer before moving into banking at Société Générale. He joined the EBRD in 2009 and his most recent position was Associate Director, Senior Banker based in Tbilisi.

He has previously worked with the EBRD’s Manufacturing & Services and Credit Risk Management teams in London. He has a Masters in Law from Tbilisi State University and an MBA from INSEAD.

As the new Head of Office, Mr Akhalkatsi will draw on his significant country-level and cross-sectoral experience to maintain the Bank’s successful partnership with Armenia”, the statement says.

The EBRD has been working in Armenia since 1992. Its focus is on helping to diversify the economy by supporting investment in various sectors, as well as promoting the development of the financial sector and small and medium-sized enterprises.

To date, the Bank has invested more than €1.8 million in 200 projects across the country.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 01-03-22

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 17:36, 1 March, 2022

YEREVAN, 1 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 1 March, USD exchange rate up by 0.94 drams to 484.86 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 108.45 drams to 649.42 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.02 drams to 4.77 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 105.31 drams to 541.98 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 447.46 drams to 29771.91 drams. Silver price up by 2.91 drams to 379.58 drams.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijan puts Armenian ex-presidents on int’l wanted list [VIDEO]

By Vugar Khalilov

Azerbaijan's Military Prosecutor's Office has put former Armenian presidents Robert Kocharyan and Serzh Sargsyan on an international wanted list, Trend has reported.

Both men are prosecuted under the relevant articles of the Azerbaijani Criminal CodeKocharyan and Sargsyan are being prosecuted under relevant articles of the Azerbaijani Criminal Code, the Military Prosecutor's Office stated.

"These persons were put on the wanted list under the relevant articles of the Criminal Code for making illegal decisions to proclaim the so-called 'Nagorno-Karabakh Republic' and other crimes," the prosecutor's office said.

It was recalled that both Kocharyan and Sargsyan were active members of the anti-Azerbaijan separatist movement beginning in 1988 when the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan entered its open phase.

"Since February 1988, in order to incite national enmity, hatred between the Azerbaijani and Armenian peoples, these persons arranged and held meetings in organizations and institutions of Khankandi city [in Azerbaijan’s Karabakh] with the participation of workers who were Armenians by nationality,” the prosecutor's office noted.

“They  [ex-presidents] declared that Karabakh belongs to Armenians and only Armenians should live there, called for the dismissal of Azerbaijanis from their jobs, forcible eviction from Karabakh, and burning of their houses,” he added.

It should be noted that in an interview with Thomas de Waal in the 2000s, Serzh Sargsyan said: “Before Khojaly, the Azerbaijanis thought that they were joking with us, they thought that the Armenians were people who could not raise their hand against the civilian population. We needed to put a stop to all that. And that’s what happened."

Armenia committed genocide against the 7,000-person population of Azerbaijan's Khojaly town on February 26, 1992.

As a result of the Khojaly genocide, 613 peaceful Azerbaijanis were killed, including 63 children, 106 women, and 70 elderly people. Simultaneously, 487 civilians were seriously injured, and 1,275 people were kidnapped. The fate of 150 hostages remains unknown, including 68 women and 26 children.

During the genocide, 56 people were killed with extreme cruelty, with their heads peeled off, various limbs severed, eyes removed, and pregnant women's bellies pierced with bayonets. As a result, eight families were utterly destroyed, 25 children lost both parents, and 130 children were orphaned.

Relevant documents adopted by the parliaments of Mexico, Pakistan, the Czech Republic, Peru, Colombia, Panama, Honduras, Sudan, Guatemala and Djibouti recognized the Khojaly massacre as an act of genocide. The parliaments of Romania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Jordan, Slovenia, Scotland, and Paraguay, as well as the executive and legislative bodies of 22 U.S. states have strongly condemned the Khojaly tragedy as a massacre. The Organization of Islamic Cooperation recognized Armenia as an aggressor and the Khojaly tragedy as genocide.

Every year on February 26, the victims of the Khojaly genocide are remembered at the initiative of national leader Heydar Aliyev.

This heinous act was preceded by a slew of others. Armenians set fire to around 20 buildings in the Baghanis-Ayrim village of Gazakh region, killing eight Azerbaijanis. A family of five, including a 39-day-old newborn, were all burnt alive.

Between June and December 1991, Armenian troops murdered 12 and wounded 15 Azerbaijanis in Khojavand region's Garadaghli and Asgaran region's Meshali villages.

Armenian military detachments bombed buses on the Shusha-Jamilli, Aghdam-Khojavand, and Aghdam-Garadaghli routes in August and September of the same year, killing 17 Azerbaijanis and injuring over 90 others.

In October and November 1991, Armenians burned, destroyed, and plundered over 30 settlements in the mountainous area of Karabakh, including Tugh, Imarat-Garvand, Sirkhavand, Meshali, Jamilli, Umudlu, Garadaghli, Karkijahan, and other significant villages.

CivilNet: Azerbaijan puts former presidents Kocharyan and Sargsyan in wanted persons list

CIVILNET.AM

21 Feb, 2022 10:02

  • Former Armenian Presidents Robert Kocharyan and Serzh Sargsyan have been declared as wanted persons in Azerbaijan.
  • Samvel Babayan, a former commander of the Artsakh Defense Army, has called on military commanders who are now part of Armenia’s opposition to testify before the government commission that will be looking into the circumstances of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev will sign an agreement in Moscow to elevate relations between the two countries.

Credits: Ruptly

Minister presents main goals of 2030 education development strategy

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 13:06, 21 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. Two goals are placed in the basis of the 2030 education development program of the government, the Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport Vahram Dumanyan said at a press conference.

“Everyone has their talent, the first objective is to discover that talent. Everyone must have the chance to express themselves,” he said.

He said the second goal is for education to be high-quality, competitive, based on national values in all phases of education. He said that this all should contribute to the development and strengthening of Armenia.

“I’d like to emphasize that the strategy we presented is in line with the Government Program, as well as the 2050 Armenia Transformation Strategy,” Dumanyan added.

Liberation Movement to launch signature campaign demanding Pashinyan’s resignation

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 23 2022


Armenia’s Liberation Movement is launching a signature campaign demanding Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation.

The campaign will start on February 25, the birthday anniversary of legendary Armenian military commander Andranik Ozanian, from Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan, the movement said in a statement on Wednesday.

"Thus, we do not authorize the Armenian authorities to negotiate on our behalf with the Turkish and Azerbaijani sides. We expect all opposition political, public forces and individuals to actively participate in this initiative," the statement said.

“No political or party interests can be put above the national interests, which require the immediate removal of the current pro-Turkish authorities,” it added.

The Destruction of Christian Cultural Heritage

Feb 15 2022

Azerbaijan’s government has announced that it intends to erase Armenian inscriptions on religious sites in the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Republic, which Azerbaijan invaded through an aggressive war against Armenians in 2020.

Azeri Minister of Culture Anar Karimov told a press briefing on February 3 that a working group was established that will be responsible for removing “the fictitious traces written by Armenians on Albanian religious temples,” Eurasianet reported.

Azerbaijan’s government has tried justifying the move by falsely claiming that the churches were originally the heritage of Caucasian Albania rather than Armenians. These particular churches, however, were unquestionably built by Armenians.

This decision by Azerbaijan is in direct violation of the 2021 ruling by the International Court of Justice (ICJ). This ruling states that Azerbaijan must “take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration affecting Armenian cultural heritage, including but not limited to churches and other places of worship, monuments, landmarks, cemeteries and artefacts.”

This is not Azerbaijan’s first attempt at destroying Armenian cultural heritage. Two prominent academic researchers on cultural heritage, Simon Maghakyan and Sarah Pickman, wrote in 2019 that a ground-breaking forensic report tracked Azerbaijan’s destruction of 89 medieval churches, 5,840 intricate cross-stones, and 22,000 tombstones in Nakhichevan. Maghakyan labels the destruction “the greatest cultural genocide of the 21st century.”

Save Armenian Monuments condemned the Azerbaijani government’s recent launch of a “working group of specialists to remove the fictitious traces written by Armenians.”

“We are nauseated by Azerbaijan’s brazen belligerence to continue its targeting of Armenian sacred sites,” remarked Dr. Virginia Davies, President of Save Armenian Monuments. “The purge organ does not just violate the December 7, 2021 International Court of Justice decision that ordered Azerbaijan to protect Armenian monuments,” continued Davies, “it is tantamount to a declaration of genocide, emboldened by the West’s shameless courting of Azerbaijan despite the latter’s 2020 aggression against Armenians and 1997-2006 state-sanctioned flattening of every Armenian cultural monument in the exclave of Nakhichevan.”

Azerbaijan’s closest ally, Turkey, has also excelled at cultural heritage destruction throughout the decades. During the 1914-23 Christian genocide committed by Ottoman Turkey against Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks, around 2.5 million Christians were exterminated, and much of the religious and cultural heritage of the victims was destroyed. Author Raffi Bedrosyan notes:

As the Armenian population got wiped out of Anatolia in 1915, so did these churches and schools. Along with the hundreds of thousands of homes, shops, farms, orchards, factories, warehouses, and mines belonging to the Armenians, the church and school buildings also disappeared or were converted to other uses. If not burnt and destroyed outright in 1915 or left to deteriorate by neglect, they became converted buildings for banks, radio stations, mosques, state schools, or state monopoly warehouses for tobacco, tea, sugar, etc., or simply private houses and stables for the Turks and Kurds.

Similar cultural crimes were also committed against Assyrians and Greeks in Turkey. The Greek Hagia Sophia Church in Constantinople, which was once the world’s greatest church, was first converted into a mosque after the city’s invasion by Ottoman Turks in the fifteenth century. It was later converted into a “museum” in 1935 by the Turkish government. In July 2020, the historic former church was reconverted into a mosque. A month later, another historic Greek church, the Chora Church, which became the “Kariye museum and museum warehouse” in 1945, was converted into a mosque again.

In yet another example of desecration, the historic Greek Hagia Sophia Church in the city of Edirne was opened as a mosque by Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet) on December 24, 2021, on Christmas Eve, after its restoration was completed.

Turkey now looks like a graveyard of destroyed or abused churches and monasteries. For instance, the Armenian St. Bartholomew Monastery, which has become an excavation site for treasure hunters and villagers, only has a wall remaining today. This historic Armenian Monastery, located in the city of Van in eastern Turkey, was in use until the 1914-23 Christian genocide.

Many churches in Turkey are listed for sale on the internet. The 1,700-year-old Mor Yuhanna Assyrian (Syriac) Church in the city of Mardin, for instance, was listed at a price of ₺7,250,000 (around $530,000) according to Turkish media. The church is registered as a cultural property by Turkey’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Worship is no longer held in the church, which was used as a warehouse for a long time. İbrahim Aycun, who claims to be the owner of the church, says that his father bought the building as a warehouse and workplace, and that he inherited it from his father. The historic church was listed on online classifieds and shopping platforms as a “building for sale” in 2020.

Turkey has imported its tradition of destroying cultural heritage to northern Cyprus, which it has illegally occupied since 1974. In an attempt to erase the ancient culture of the area, Turkey has illegally changed all the Greek names of areas, towns, and villages to Turkish names. According to the 2012 report “The loss of a Civilization: Destruction of Cultural Heritage in Occupied Cyprus,” Turkey “has devoted itself to the systematic destruction and obliteration of the cultural heritage of the areas under its military control”:

The churches have been subject to the most violent and systematic desecration and destruction. More than 500 churches and monasteries have been looted or destroyed: more than 15,000 icons of saints, innumerable sacred liturgical vessels, gospels and other objects of great value have literally vanished. A few churches have met a different fate and have been turned into mosques, museums, places of entertainment or even hotels, like the church of Ayia Anastasia in Lapithos. At least three monasteries have been turned into barracks for the Turkish army (Ayios Chrysostomos in the Pentadactylos Mountains, Acheropoiitos in Karavas and Ayios Panteleimonas in Myrtou). Marvelous Byzantine wall-paintings and mosaics of rare artistic and historical value have been removed from church walls by Turkish smugglers and sold illegally in America, Europe and Japan. Many Byzantine churches have suffered irreparable damage, and many cemeteries have been desecrated or destroyed.

During the second phase of Turkey’s invasion in 1974 “the [Maronite] Monastery of the Prophet Elias was savagely bombed by the Turkish air force; it caught fire and was badly damaged. The Church and Monastery were subsequently looted and desecrated. What remains of the complex is now used as a stable for holding livestock.”

Cultural genocide appears to be what genocidal groups have in common. In the 1930s and ’40s, Nazis often vandalized and destroyed synagogues and other properties of Europe’s Jewish communities. In 2001, the Taliban blew up and destroyed the statues of Buddhas in Afghanistan. In 2017, the UN Security Council condemned “the unlawful destruction of cultural heritage, inter alia destruction of religious sites and artefacts, as well as the looting and smuggling of cultural property from archaeological sites, museums, libraries, archives, and other sites, in the context of armed conflicts, notably by terrorist groups” such as Islamic State (ISIS), al-Qaida and associated individuals and groups.

There was also the destruction of Yazidi cultural heritage in the Yazidi homeland of Sinjar in Iraq by ISIS in 2014. According to a 2019 report by Rashid International e.V., Yazda, and Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa (EAMENA) entitled “Destroying the Soul of The Yazidis: Cultural Heritage Destruction During the Islamic State’s Genocide Against the Yazidis,” Yazidi temples, shrines, and other religious and cultural sites belonging to Yazidis were systematically destroyed by ISIS.

The destruction of cultural heritage is comparable to violations of fundamental rights such as rape, slavery, and torture, according to the report, which adds:

The right to access and retain cultural heritage is acknowledged as a human right under international law…

Amongst crimes against humanity, the crime of persecution is of special significance in the protection of minorities. Its key purpose is to guard against patterns of discriminatory attacks on civilian populations, which rank among ‘the most serious crimes of concern to the international community as a whole’. The destruction of tangible cultural heritage is a key indicator of such a discriminatory attack. Concurrently, the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, the ICTY [International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia] and the International Law Commission (ILC) viewed ‘the destruction of religious buildings as a clear case of persecution as a crime against humanity’.

The destruction of cultural heritage is an attempt to eradicate the common ground a community stands on. It is an attempt to break the bonds that bind individuals together and form a common whole. It is more than just an attack on objects, it is an attack on the identity of the individual and the community, a tearing of the soul.

Undemocratic governments such as Turkey and Azerbaijan, as well as terrorist groups such as ISIS, al-Qaida, and the Taliban, have for decades systematically and irreversibly destroyed the cultural heritage of indigenous peoples. They start their genocide by mass murdering people and then continue the process of extermination by targeting their cultural heritage so that no traces of their victims’ existence will remain and their history will be wiped out from the face of the earth.

The crime of cultural heritage destruction has been committed against the same victims by the same perpetrators again and again—in Turkey, Cyprus, the South Caucuses, and the Middle East. Perpetrators enjoy a culture of impunity and appeasement; they never have to worry about accountability. They continue destroying the souls of their victims and parts of world heritage of immeasurable value. And the world just watches idly by.

Uzay Bulut is a Turkish journalist currently based in Israel.


Asbarez: European Parliament Urges EU to Actively Advance Karabakh Settlement

The European Parliament chambers

The European Parliament passed a measure on Thursday urging the European Union to take more active and aggressive steps to ensure a lasting settlement for the Karabakh conflict.

Saying that the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs must “swiftly” return to the region and their mediation roles, the European Parliament resolution also stressed that the OSCE Minsk Group remains the only internationally recognized format for the resolution of this conflict, on the basis of the principles of territorial integrity, non-use of force, self-determination and equal rights, and peaceful resolution of conflicts.

The legislation also is pressing Azerbaijan and Armenia to address post-war issues, including the demarcation of borders and the release of all remaining prisoners of war.

In the resolution, the European Parliament reaffirmed its “unwavering support to the Eastern Partnership (EaP) countries, and in particular as regards their independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity within their internationally recognized borders as well as the respect for the will of the people to decide their own future and foreign policy, free from outside interference”.

The European Parliament also called for the full implementation of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement with Armenia, stressed the need for increased EU and Member State engagement in the South Caucasus for the region’s stability and prosperity as well as to counteract the influence and interference of regional powers.

“With this resolution, the European Parliament, in a principled manner, made emphasized Azerbaijan’s efforts to distort the truth,” said Kaspar Karampetian the president of the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy.

“The role played by Anna Aghajanyan, Armenia’s Ambassador to Brussels, and her team of diplomats was extremely decisive,” said Karampetian. “Of course, as in the past, the EAFJD continues to engage and inform European Parliament members and other political circles, all in the name of Armenia’s state interests.”

Old Khndzoresk Cave Village: Armenia’s Abandoned City of Caves

Feb 11 2022
CECILIA BOGAARD

In 2016, Armenia was included in National Geographic 's list of ten places that deserve more travelers. First on the list was Armenia, and amongst the locations they recommended travelers visit was the Old Khndzoresk cave village. Once home to thousands of residents, this was at one point the largest village in eastern Armenia, created by building homes within the volcanic rock and caves of the steep Khor Dzor gorge. Today these abandoned homes are fascinating to explore.

While it may seem strange, no one is quite sure when the Old Khndzoresk cave village in Armenia was founded. Nevertheless, the first written record to mention it dates back to the 13th century. Archaeological evidence points to the caves having been inhabited for at least 1,000 years.

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In 1730, villagers from the Old Khndzoresk cave village murdered the famed Armenian military commander Mkhitar Sparapet, who played an important role in Armenia’s struggle for liberation against the Ottomans. Legend has it that they were afraid that the Ottomans would attack the village if they were to discover him hiding there. Visitors can still visit his stone tomb which is located to the south of the cave village.

Left: Old Khndzoresk cave village. (Vahagn Grigoryan / CC BY-SA 4.0 )

 Right: View of the Old Khndzoresk cave village during the winter. (Vahagn Grigoryan / CC BY-SA 4.0 )

Some of the cave dwellings have been carved out of the volcanic rock, while other houses have been built into naturally formed caves. In a census from the 1900s, there were as many as 1,800 homes in the Old Khndzoresk cave village, housing more than 8,000 people. The houses were built one on top of another, and each residence had several rooms.

The houses were connected by tunnels and locals claim that people would use ropes and ladders to travel up and down the different levels of habitation. The village also included churches, schools, leather workshops, dyeworks and stores. There was also a sacred fountain known as the nine children, due to a local legend about nine children orphaned when their mother was killed in battle.

A lonely table remains in one of the caves within the Old Khndzoresk cave village. ( StockAleksey / Adobe Stock)

It was only in the 1950s, 1958 to be precise, that residents moved from the ancient caves to a newer village built above, appropriately named New Khndzoresk. This move turned the once bustling village into a ghost town . There appear, however, to be different explanations for why the cave dwellings were deserted.

“Some say an earthquake in the 1930s devastated the village and left the cave dwellings unsafe, leading to a gradual departure,” explains Smithsonian Magazine . “Others suggest the residents were forced to move by Soviet leaders, who deemed the caves uncivilized and wanted to source the rock as building material.” Nowadays the two villages, New Khndzoresk and Old Khndzoresk, are connected by a 160 meter (525 ft) cable bridge which was built in 2012.

Suspension bridge which connects the Old Khndzoresk cave village with New Khndzoresk. ( Arty Om / Adobe Stock)

Located about 4 hours from Yerevan, Armenia’s capital city, and just 6 kilometers (3.73 mi) from the town of Goris in southeastern Armenia, is New Khndzoresk. From here its just a walk across a vaguely terrifying cable bridge to an entire abandoned world at the Old Khndzoresk cave village . Before crossing the bridge there is a lookout and a café (open from May to October). This is a great place for hiking and exploring for hours, moving in and out of the various caves and dwellings.

By Cecilia Bogaard

https://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-places-europe/old-khndzoresk-cave-village-0016405 

Tatoyan Says Azerbaijan is Holding POWs to Advance Political, Military Interests

Armenia's Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan (right) meets with Britain's Ambassador to Armenia, John Gallagher on Feb. 8

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan on Tuesday told Britain’s Ambassador to Armenia that Azerbaijan continues to detain Armenian prisoners of war in an effort to advance Baku’s military and political interests.

John Gallagher, the UK ambassador, was briefed by Tatoyan about the violations of rights of Armenia’s border residents by the Azerbaijani armed forces, with concrete facts and examples. Tatoyan also emphasized the need for Azerbaijani armed forces to immediately withdraw from the roads in the vicinity of Armenian villages and stressed the need creating a demilitarized security zone.

The human rights defender also spoke about the urgency for the return of Armenian captives illegally being held in Azerbaijan, as well as the fact that those people are held there for political and military interests, for trade purposes.

Tatoyan praised Britain for its commitment to human rights and highlighted his office’s cooperation with various British human rights institutions.

Other issues discussed during the meeting included inconsistencies within Armenia’s judiciary, as well as the protection of rights of women and children were also discussed.

Tatoyan told Gallagher that during the COVID-19-related restrictions in Armenia a working group was formed at his office dealing with the protection of women’s, children’s rights, the prevention of domestic violence. He also presented the current challenges in the field of the protection of rights of children.