URGENT: Armenian, Azerbaijani FMs invited to Moscow today – Kremlin

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 00:50, 9 October, 2020

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 9, ARMENPRESS. President of Russia Vladimir Putin urged to cease the military operations in Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone, citing humanitarian reasons. ARMENPRESS reports, citing Kremlin’s official website, the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been invited to Moscow for holding consultations on this issue on October 9.

‘’Following a number of telephone conversations with Prime MIinster of Armenia NIkol Pashinyan and President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, President of Russia Vladimir Putin urged to cease military operations in Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone for humanitarian reasons – exchange of captives and bodies of victims.

With the mediation of Foreign Minister (Sergey Lavrov –edit), the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been invited to Moscow on October 9 for holding consultations’’, reads the press release of the Kremlin.

Editing and translating by Tigran Sirekanyan

AGBU Press Office: AGBU and Hayastan All Armenian Fund Launch #AID4ARTSAKH Matching Gift Program with $1M Grant from AGBU

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Website: 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.agbu.org__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!8GNmRGMp5raZKkzZwL4sGdUOr3GT6VYZQRbTwVjVsHBIiUk29P3LLEyXN9X7Hw$
 
  
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
  
Monday, October 5, 2020
  
AGBU and Hayastan All Armenian Fund Launch #AID4ARTSAKH Matching Gift Program 
with $1M Grant from AGBU

In support of the rapidly growing need for humanitarian relief in Artsakh, the 
AGBU Board of Directors, in coordination with the Hayastan All Armenian Fund, 
jointly announced the #AID4ARTSAKH Matching Gift program, open for donations 
through November 15, 2020.  
 
These matched funds will be used exclusively for humanitarian relief and 
emergency medical equipment in Artsakh and Armenia as a result of the full-scale 
war unleashed by enemy aggression on September 27, 2020. 
 
To generate momentum behind this time-sensitive initiative, AGBU has already 
made available $1 million to the Hayastan All Armenian Fund with the commitment 
to make a matching contribution of up to $5 million, depending on total gifts 
received between now and the campaign deadline.
 
AGBU is prepared to match, dollar for dollar, up to $5 million raised during the 
campaign window which will apply for any individual donation up to $100,000. 
This raises the stakes even higher for a generous outpouring from all Armenians 
who wish to see their support work twice as hard to save Armenian lives on and 
off the battlefield.
 
"During this very critical stage in the defense effort, AGBU's matching gift 
opportunity will maximize funding when food and supplies for civilians and 
life-saving medical equipment for injured soldiers are depleting fast," stated 
Hayastan All Armenian Fund Executive Director Haykak Arshamyan. "The infusion of 
$1 million out of the gate, with the prospect of increasing that sum tenfold, 
should inspire every last Armenian worldwide to act without delay."
 
AGBU Berge Setrakian described this initiative as a "foregone conclusion". He 
noted that considering the gravity and severity of the need among those in 
harm's way, whether civilians confined to bomb shelters or injured soldiers in 
dire medical distress, there is "no question about what we are called to do at 
this dark hour."
 
To rush support for emergency relief in Artsakh, donors are encouraged to give 
online to AGBU, which will release the funds directly to the Hayastan All 
Armenian Fund as each $500,000 is generated. Please note that to qualify for the 
AGBU match, donations must be made directly to AGBU. To contribute, go to 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.agbu.org/aid4artsakh__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!8GNmRGMp5raZKkzZwL4sGdUOr3GT6VYZQRbTwVjVsHBIiUk29P3LLEynA7iwQA$
  or [email protected] for wire transfers. Donations may also be made to local 
AGBU offices.
 
For more information about this limited time matching program, contact 
[email protected] 

The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) is the world's largest non-profit 
organization devoted to upholding the Armenian heritage through educational, 
cultural and humanitarian programs. Each year, AGBU is committed to making a 
difference in the lives of 500,000 people across Armenia, Artsakh and the 
Armenian diaspora.  Since 1906, AGBU has remained true to one overarching goal: 
to create a foundation for the prosperity of all Armenians. To learn more visit 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.agbu.org__;!!LIr3w8kk_Xxm!8GNmRGMp5raZKkzZwL4sGdUOr3GT6VYZQRbTwVjVsHBIiUk29P3LLEyXN9X7Hw$
 .


AID4ARTSAKH_ARMENIAN-EASTERN.doc

AID4ARTSAKH_ARMENIAN-EASTERN.doc


AID4ARTSAKH_ARMENIAN-WESTERN.doc

AID4ARTSAKH_ARMENIAN-WESTERN.doc


AID4ARTSAKH_ENGLISH.doc

AID4ARTSAKH_ENGLISH.doc


AID4ARTSAKH_FRENCH.doc

AID4ARTSAKH_FRENCH.doc


AID4ARTSAKH_SPANISH.doc

AID4ARTSAKH_SPANISH.doc


AID4ARTSAKH_ARMENIAN-EASTERN.pdf

AID4ARTSAKH_ARMENIAN-EASTERN.pdf



AID4ARTSAKH_ARMENIAN-WESTERN.pdf


AID4ARTSAKH_ENGLISH.pdf

AID4ARTSAKH_ENGLISH.pdf


AID4ARTSAKH_FRENCH.pdf

AID4ARTSAKH_FRENCH.pdf


AID4ARTSAKH_SPANISH.pdf

AID4ARTSAKH_SPANISH.pdf

Azerbaijani President accused Armenia of preparing for a new war

Pledge Times
Sept 20 2020

Armenian NPP discusses re-extension of 2nd power unit beyond 2026

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 15:55,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Nuclear Power Plant’s administration discussed the re-extension of the lifespan of its power unit N2 beyond 2026 during a videoconference with Rosatom Service.

The executives also discussed the interim results of the ongoing lifecycle extension works of the power unit N2 and the 2021 equipment and systems modernization plan.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Film: Armenian film “Chnchik” included in competition program of Busan IFF

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 15 2020
Armenian film “Chnchik” included in competition program of Busan IFF

The full-length feature “Chnchik” by Aram Shahbazyan has been included in “New Currents” competition section of Busan International Film Festival, the Armenian National Cinema Center informs.

Produced with the financial support of the National Cinema Center of Armenia, the long-awaited film, which came a hard way all through the years, was finally released in 2019.

Busan is the most representative International Film Festival in Asia, which kicks off on October 21-30.

Busan IFF is prominent for its high aesthetic standards and refined film program.

The festival program features 192 films from 68 countries.

Hayastan All Armenian Fund transfers donations to Syrian-Armenians

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 15:17, 9 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. The Hayastan All Armenian Fund donated around 70,000 dollars to help mitigate the COVID-19-related healthcare and socio-economic situation of the Syrian-Armenians.

The fund’s director Haykak Arshamyan transferred the donation to the Armenian Embassy in Damascus on September 9.

“The donation is proportionally distributed – 30,000 dollars to the 502 teachers and 42 maintenance staff of Armenian educational institutions in Syria. At the same time a total of 40,000 dollars in assistance was provided to our compatriots who are being treated in hospitals in Syria,” the fund said.

The donation was made from the COVID-19 Armenia: Let’s Overcome the Pandemic Together fundraiser.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Countering the totalisation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict

International Politics and Society
Sept 7 2020
By Laurence Broers | 07.09.2020

The escalation that began on 12 July claimed the lives of 18 people, including one civilian, making it the most serious since the ‘four-day war’ of April 2016. Although dying way after 5 days, the escalation featured new trends, or the strengthening of pre-existing ones, destabilising the fragile status quo holding the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace.  

Most obviously the violence occurred on the de jure international Armenia-Azerbaijan border, some 200 kilometres away from the heart of contested territory in Nagorny Karabakh itself. Secondly, although not new, Turkey’s support of Azerbaijan was more explicit, intensive and bullish than in April 2016, with a number of meetings between defence officials of the two states taking place in the immediate aftermath. And beyond the South Caucasus, diasporic and migrant communities of Armenians and Azerbaijanis across the world mobilised, and in many cases engaged in scuffles, brawls and the vandalism of property.  

In short, July’s clashes furnished evidence of the totalisation of conflict, whereby any issue or space, including those far from Nagorny Karabakh itself, can become arenas for new Armenian-Azerbaijani violence.

July’s violence drew a line under a two-and-a-half-year period associated with the rhetoric of ‘preparing populations for peace’. That phrase came out of a January 2019 meeting between foreign ministers Elmar Mammadyarov (now retired) and Zohrab Mnatsakanyan. Moreover, until July an exceptional calm reigned along the frontlines, potentially enabling a public debate reaching beyond security.

Yet despite a range of proposals put forward by civil society, ‘preparing populations for peace’ remained an empty container devoid of substance. After a single exchange visit by journalists across the divide in November 2019, Armenia and Azerbaijan invested instead into a new season of symbolic offensives.

Armenian and Azerbaijani positions on the core political issues at stake – the status of Nagorny Karabakh, displacement, access and security – have been widely divergent for years. After July’s clashes, meaningful dialogue on the Basic Principles, or on fashioning a viable alternative, appears further away than ever. 

July’s clashes were essentially the result of unregulated interactions in a side-theatre unrelated to Nagorny Karabakh, where neither side had strategic gains to make, nor vital interests to protect through military action.

Renewed Armenian-Azerbaijani crisis coincides, moreover, with a wider crisis in multilateral diplomacy. Just as the shooting had died down, on 18 July the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) entered a crisis after member-states failed to agree on extending the mandates of several key leadership posts – including the Secretary General.

While this may not directly affect the Minsk Group, the body mandated to mediate between Armenia and Azerbaijan, it is symptomatic of the decline of the liberal peace and of multilateral diplomacy. Multilateralism’s loss is the gain of entrepreneurs of more authoritarian models of conflict management visible, for example, in Libya and the Middle East today.

Even if they have often expressed frustration with the Minsk Group, that fact remains that Yerevan and Baku have more influence over its consensual decision-making processes than they might over authoritarian models of conflict management practiced in proximate theatres by neighbouring powers. Totalising the conflict risks a loss of control over its dynamics. What, then, can be done?

It is critical to counter the totalisation of the conflict by breaking down the Armenian-Azerbaijani rivalry into more manageable pieces, with some being less contested than others. Both Armenia and Azerbaijan could benefit by introducing measures to regulate those parts of their interactions that do not involve their red lines.    

July’s clashes were essentially the result of unregulated interactions in a side-theatre unrelated to Nagorny Karabakh, where neither side had strategic gains to make, nor vital interests to protect through military action. On the contrary, the concentration of civilian populations on either side of the border, in addition to transport and energy infrastructure clustered nearby, attach prohibitive risks for both parties to major escalations in this area. Both would gain through implementing localised measures to counter misperceptions and facilitate communication. 

A timely report by the International Crisis Group has highlighted several such areas, precisely in the region where July’s escalation took place: cooperation on enabling agriculture, restoring water infrastructure and clearing landmines. Practical initiatives in this area, moreover, have a precedent in pioneering work by the organisation Saferworld in 2010-12 to support a civilian ceasefire monitoring mechanism.

It is consequently crucial to reinstate informal Armenian-Azerbaijani dialogue, as a normal and unremarkable feature of relations between all of the parties to the conflict.

Azerbaijan may be reluctant to introduce ceasefire monitoring infrastructure along the Line of Contact around Nagorny Karabakh, which Baku sees as embedding an unacceptable status quo.  But in the area of the undisputed (if still not demarcated) international border, ceasefire support infrastructure could regulate risk and make relations more predictable in a side-theatre where stability would bring benefits to both sides.

Beyond a pragmatic approach to localised and mutually beneficial problem-solving, international best practice in peacebuilding acknowledges the need for dialogue on wider social and identity issues. These issues are not generally discussed within the framework of OSCE mediation, yet as the burgeoning Armenian-Azerbaijani memory wars and the rippling of violent polarisation across Armenian and Azerbaijani communities worldwide in July shows, they play at least as significant a role in the impasse as disagreement on core conflict drivers. Discourses of nationalism, attitudes towards justice, the past and memory politics, the impacts of militarisation and dehumanisation, and the impacts of political patriarchy are all relevant for the transformation of conflict.

Picking up the pieces in the aftermath of violence is always difficult. In the current stage of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations it is especially challenging, as research in 2019 found that informal dialogue between the parties was at its lowest level since the conflict began in 1988. Under these conditions, public reactions to frontline events, as demonstrations in Baku following the violence in July showed, are all the more difficult to control and channel in the direction of peaceful change.

It is consequently crucial to reinstate informal Armenian-Azerbaijani dialogue, as a normal and unremarkable feature of relations between all of the parties to the conflict. Securitised societies locked within echo-chambers become arenas in which leaders can fall victim to discursive entrapment. As they confront a new impasse of their own making, leaders across the divide should look to civil society actors as ‘critical friends’ and partners, not threats, in the quest to transform their relations.


Gyumri invites to celebrate city’s day in online platform

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 16:45, 4 September, 2020

GYUMRI, SEPTEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. The residents of Gyumri, the second largest city of Armenia, will celebrate the city’s day on September 5 under the title “My Love Gyumri”.

This year this day will be celebrated online due to the novel coronavirus pandemic.

An online concert will be held. The museums in the city will organize online excursions during the whole day.

On the same day the opening ceremony of the Yuri Vardanyan Weightlifting Sports School will take place.

Social apartments will be handed to families affected from heavy hails this year.

Reporting by Armenuhi Mkhoyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

CivilNet: Armenia To Create 100,000 Strong Auxiliary Military Force, Includes Women

CIVILNET.AM

1 September, 2020 22:56

0:00 Armenia plans to create a 100,000 strong auxiliary military force which will include women.
1:09 Eleven die of alcohol poisoning.
1:43 The Armenian Foreign Minister says he is ready to meet with his Azerbaijani counterpart.
2:27 A new criminal case has been opened against Serzh Sargsyan’s head bodyguard.
3:00 An explosion at a brandy factory kills two.

PM Pashinyan offers congratulations on Knowledge and Schooling Da

y

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 14:40, 1 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan addressed a congratulatory message on the Knowledge and Schooling Day, the PM’s Office told Armenpress.

 “Dear pupils and students,

Dear teachers and parents,

I congratulate you on the occasion of the Knowledge and Schooling Day.

The situation in the Republic caused by the novel coronavirus pandemic doesn’t enable to visit school on this memorable day. Unfortunately, the first graders as well have to spend their September 1st without entering to an educational facility.

Nevertheless, after analyzing the development course of the pandemic, we decided to open the schools after several days and ensure the study process with the maintenance of the anti-coronavirus rules.

At the same time, I am happy that universities are partially starting their activity from September 1st, and the freshmen are entering into a new stage of life to fill and enrich the concrete professional knowledge.

At the same time I want to thank all teachers for conducting the remote learning at the highest level.

Dear pupils and students,

As I said above, during this academic year we should strictly follow the anti-coronavirus rules aimed at preventing the possibility of schools becoming a center for the spread of the virus, in order to be able to conduct the study process in a normal way. I am sure that we will jointly overcome also this difficulty with consistent steps”, the Armenian PM said, urging the students and pupils to confidently move on the new way of life for their benefit and for the benefit of their parents, the people and the state.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan