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Azerbaijani press: Baku, Paris discuss Azerbaijan-Armenia normalization [PHOTO]

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov and French Foreign Ministry’s Ambassador for Eastern Partnership Brice Roquefeuil have discussed Azerbaijan-Armenia normalization in Baku, the ministry has reported.

“At the meeting, the process of normalization of interstate relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia and steps taken in this direction were discussed. In particular, the sides exchanged views on the implementation of the agreements reached after the Brussels meeting,” the ministry said.

Moreover, the sides also touched on the current regional situation, as well as other international problems.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and European Council President Charles Michel met in a trilateral format in Brussels on April 6.

The meeting was held for a continuation of the discussions on the situation in the South Caucasus region and the development of EU relations with both countries.

The leaders took stock of developments since their last meeting in Brussels in December 2021 and their videoconference, together with French President Emmanuel Macron, in February 2022. They reviewed progress on the implementation of undertaken commitments. The leaders discussed the recently reported tensions and reiterated the necessity of adhering fully to the provisions of the 9/10 November 2020 trilateral statement.

Both Aliyev and Pashinyan have expressed a willingness to work quickly toward a peace agreement between their countries. To that end, it was decided to instruct foreign ministers to begin work on drafting a future peace treaty that would address all of the issues.

At the same time, it was also agreed to convene a Joint Border Commission by the end of April. The Joint Border Commission's mandate will be to: delimit the bilateral border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and ensure a stable security situation along and in the vicinity of the borderline.

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    "Immortal Regiment" march dedicated to the heroes participating the Great Patriotic War held in Yerevan

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     13:12, 9 May, 2022

    YEREVAN, MAY 9, ARMENPRESS. The silent "Immortal Regiment" march dedicated to the heroes who took part in the Great Patriotic War was held in Yerevan's Victory Park, ARMENPRESS reports the participants of the march took with them the photos of the heroes of the Great Patriotic War. Vahram Karapetyan, Director General of the Dom Moscow Cultural and Business Center, congratulated all the veterans who did their best to win the bloody war that killed 27 million people.

    "Glory to the veterans who died, who survived. We remember the participants of the Great Patriotic War, we honor their memory. Today we want our veterans to live longer so that they can tell the true story. We will do our best to pass on the memory of the war from generation to generation so that it is not forgotten. This is our history that we must respect," Karapetyan said.

    According to the director general of the Moscow House Cultural and Business Center, since the first days of the Patriotic War, the heroes have written with their blood, "We will die, but we will not surrender."

    "How can we forget those words? That is why today is a glorious day, Victory Day. The Victory was shaped by the peoples of all the countries of the Soviet Union. The Armenian people, of course, played a significant role in this victory. We can say with pride that the role of the Armenian people in the victory in the Patriotic War is great, because more than 600 thousand Armenians took part in that war, of which 300 thousand died, more than 100 Armenians were awarded the title of Hero of the USSR. It is a great achievement for the Armenian people. We are proud of our heroes, we respect their memory," Karapetyan concluded.

    Photos by Hayk Badalyan, Gevorg Perkuperkyan




    Azerbaijan holding international regatta in occupied Armenian Mataghis town of Karabakh

    NEWS.am
    Armenia – May 6 2022

    The Azerbaijani authorities are holding an international regatta in the Azerbaijani-occupied Armenian town of Mataghis—in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)—, which has been renamed "Sugovushan."

    ‘"President's Cup-2022" regatta on rowing, kayaking, and canoeing has started in Sugovushan settlement,” APA reported.

    This international competition is dedicated to the 99th anniversary of birth of former Azerbaijani president, the late Heydar Aliyev.

    More than 100 athletes from Azerbaijan, Moldova, Uzbekistan, Turkey, and Georgia are participating in the regatta being held in Mataghis Reservoir.

    Yerevan Says Baku Has Agreed to Discuss Armenia’s 6-Point Proposal

    The Armenia-Azerbaijan border

    Armenia has submitted a six-point proposal to Azerbaijan, which according to Armenia’s National Security chief, Baku has agreed to discuss.

    Armen Grigoryan told reporters on Thursday that Baku has not rejected the presumably new proposals submitted by Yerevan, saying that in his talks with a top Azerbaijani official this week, there were signals that Azerbaijan was ready to discuss these points, although he did not specify what they are but said that the document was in response to Baku’s five proposals, which include a demand for Armenia to recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity—including Artsakh.

    “Azerbaijan’s proposed points were not unacceptable for Armenia. With its six points Armenia proposed that there also should be a resolution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in order for comprehensive peace to be possible,” Grigoyan said.

    When Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan met last month in Brussels they agreed to begin the process of drafting a “peace treaty,” based on which talks would take place. Charles Michel, the President of the Council of Europe, who mediated the April talks, said that the European Union was prepared to advance the talks between Yerevan and Baku.

    “Our approach is that these two packages—“5+6 points”—should be merged together as a start of negotiations over a peace treaty in order to find a long-term solution to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict,” Grigoryan said.

    He reiterated Armenia’s position on prioritizing a solution to the security, defense and rights of Armenians living in Artsakh and that the status of Nagorno Karabakh should be developed in accordance.

    “I haven’t seen a public rejection of this package [by Azerbaijan],” said Grigoryan. “There is an understanding in our discussions that these two packages should be joined and that negotiations should start. Both the Azerbaijani side and all other international partners have this understanding. Starting negotiations over the 5+6 points is a legitimate approach and we’ve seen that understanding,” Grigoryan said.

    Grigoryan on Monday met with Aliyev’s chief advisor Himet Hajiyev in Brussels. The meeting was mediated by the EU’s Special Representative to the South Caucasus Toivo Klaar.

    Armenia’s national security chief said that for Yerevan signing a peace treaty with Azerbaijan meant that a settlement to the Karabakh conflict will also be found.

    “We see the resolution to the conflict through ensuring security—the security of our compatriots living in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as ensuring rights,” said Grigoryan. “A status [for Artsakh] must be determined accordingly.”

    “Guarantees of ensuring security will also be there, and at this moment we don’t know what kind of guarantees will exist from an institutional perspective, we will discuss this during negotiations and if we reach any decision and see that the security of our compatriots will definitely be ensured we will give consent to it,” Grigoryan said.

    He emphasized that one of the issues will be discussed during the “peace talks” will be the recognition by Armenia and Azerbaijan of each other’s territorial integrity.

    “Of course, we note that in 1992 Armenia and Azerbaijan recognized each other’s sovereign territories and sovereignty within the CIS, but you also know that other developments have taken place since then. Armenia and Azerbaijan continue recognizing each other’s territorial integrity and sovereignty,” added Grigoryan.

    He made the remarks in response to recent statements by Aliyev, who on Wednesday again addressed the “Zangezur Corridor,” his scheme to link mainland Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan through Armenia.

    “As for the Zangezur corridor, this corridor is already a reality,” Aliyev said. “The railway, the highway passing through the territory of Zangilan region, will not only connect the main part of Azerbaijan with the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic, but will also become a new route of international cargo transportation, it will be an international route.”

    Grigoryan said statements such as the ones made by Aliyev do not contribute to a positive outcome of any talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the future.

    Grigoryan also said on Thursday that a commission to delimit and demarcate the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan has not been established yet, adding, however, that discussion on the matter were ongoing.

    “Discussions around this continue. Of course we hoped that it would be possible to find solutions and move forward by the end of April. But I can say that now intensive discussions continue and there is hope that a meeting could take place soon. The discussions are around the approaches regarding the working group, and there are questions on other matters as well and we haven’t found the final answers to them so far. As soon as we find the answers, there will be a public statement and a meeting will take place,” Grigoryan explained.

    RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/05/2022

                                            Thursday, May 5, 2022
    
    
    Russia Hopes For ‘Return To Stability’ In Armenia
    
    
    RUSSIA – Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, bottom, looks on as Russian President 
    Vladimir Putin speaks via video call during a news conference in Moscow, 
    December 17, 2020
    
    
    In its first official reaction to ongoing anti-government protests in Armenia, 
    Russia expressed hope on Thursday that political stability there will be 
    restored soon.
    
    “This is entirely and completely an internal affair of Armenia,” Kremlin 
    spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in Moscow. “Armenia, as you know, is our 
    ally, it is our partner in several integration formats very important for us.”
    
    “Armenia is our great friend. And therefore, of course, we are interested in 
    seeing this difficult period end as soon as possible and a period of stability 
    start again,” he said.
    
    Peskov said that the return to political stability will allow Armenia and 
    Azerbaijan to gradually implement their agreements brokered by Russian President 
    Vladimir Putin after the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
    
    The agreements call for the restoration of transport links between the two South 
    Caucasus nations and a demarcation of their long border. Yerevan and Baku have 
    made little progress towards their implementation so far.
    
    Russia accused the European Union of trying to sideline it and claim credit for 
    these initiatives after European Council President Charles Michel hosted fresh 
    talks between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President 
    Ilham Aliyev in Brussels on April 5. Moscow has since been seeking to regain the 
    initiative in the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process.
    
    Pashinian said after the Brussels talks that the international community is 
    pressing Armenia to scale back its demands on Karabakh’s status and recognize 
    Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. He signaled his readiness to make such 
    concessions to Baku, sparking the opposition protests in Yerevan.
    
    
    
    Armenian Military Told To Draft Opposition Protesters
    
            • Susan Badalian
            • Robert Zargarian
    
    Armenia - Opposition supporters demonstrate in Yerevan, May 4, 2022.
    
    
    Senior pro-government lawmakers on Thursday urged the Armenian military to call 
    up men participating in continuing opposition demonstrations aimed at forcing 
    Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to resign.
    
    They held an extraordinary session of the Armenian parliament committee on 
    defense and security as thousands of opposition supporters blocked streets and 
    highways and marched through Yerevan for the fifth consecutive day. Opposition 
    leaders pledged to keep up the pressure on the government.
    
    Police have arrested hundreds of protesters, most of them young men, since the 
    start of what Armenia’s leading opposition groups call a “civil disobedience” 
    campaign. All of them were set free after spending several hours in police 
    custody.
    
    Andranik Kocharian, the chairman of the parliament committee, suggested that 
    many of them evade compulsory military service or periodical call-ups of army 
    reservists.
    
    “We want to see [real] citizens of Armenia among the detainees, who must have 
    their involvement in the army, if the political goal [of the opposition] is the 
    security of Artsakh (Karabakh) and Armenia,” Kocharian said during the committee 
    meeting.
    
    “I am calling on Armenia’s police and the National Security Service to collect 
    personal data of these citizens and pass them on to the Armenian Defense 
    Ministry,” he said.
    
    Other pro-government lawmakers as well as high-ranking law-enforcement and 
    military officials attending the meeting backed the idea.
    
    Armenia - Andranik Kocharian is interviewed by RFE/RL, January 11, 2022
    “It would be very good if well-trained young men … participated in the defense 
    of our borders and the borders of Artsakh,” said Ashot Zakarian, the chief of 
    the Armenian military police.
    
    “We will try to pass that information on to our colleagues from the Defense 
    Ministry who will ascertain if those individuals are of fighting age and try to 
    draft them,” Artur Martirosian, a deputy chief of the national police, told the 
    panel, for his part.
    
    Human rights activists condemned Kocharian’s initiative as illegal and 
    despicable. One of them, Artur Sakunts, insisted that the police are not allowed 
    to share the personal data of detainees with any other state body.
    
    “Even if there are draft dodgers they must not be caught and taken [to the 
    military] from protest sites,” said another activist, Nina Karapetian. “This is 
    not normal. This looks like a witch hunt.”
    
    Opposition leaders likewise scoffed at the unprecedented instructions given to 
    the military.
    
    “Are there no limits to their meanness?” Ishkhan Saghatelian, the main speaker 
    at the ongoing protests, told journalists.
    
    Armenia - Riot police arrest an opposition protester in Yerevan, May 5, 2022.
    “There were two disabled guys without legs speaking from this podium yesterday,” 
    Saghatelian said, referring to participants of the 2020 war in Karabakh.
    
    In his words, at least 40 of the protesters detained in various parts of Yerevan 
    earlier on Thursday are also war veterans. The police reported 92 arrests.
    
    The opposition claimed that the authorities ordered security forces to step up 
    the use of force against its supporters because the anti-government protests are 
    gaining momentum.
    
    “The disproportionate force used against Armenia’s citizens testifies to one 
    thing: Nikol has no power anymore,” said Anna Grigorian, a lawmaker from the 
    opposition Hayastan alliance. “Real power lies in the streets.”
    
    Hayastan and the other parliamentary opposition force, Pativ Unem, say that 
    Pashinian must resign because he wants to cede Karabakh to Azerbaijan. The prime 
    minister rejected the opposition demands when he spoke in the parliament on 
    Wednesday.
    
    
    
    Armenia Eyes U.S. Boost To Energy Security
    
            • Sargis Harutyunyan
    
    USA - Senior U.S. and Armenian diplomats hold a session of the U.S.-Armenia 
    Strategic Dialogue, Washington, May 3, 2022
    
    
    A memorandum of understanding on “strategic nuclear cooperation” between Armenia 
    and the United States could strengthen the South Caucasus country’s energy 
    security, a senior Armenian diplomat said on Thursday.
    
    U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat 
    Mirzoyan signed the document after talks held in Washington on Monday. An 
    Armenian delegation led by Mirzoyan also met with other senior U.S. State 
    Department officials as part of a bilateral “strategic dialogue” launched three 
    years ago.
    
    In a joint statement issued after the talks, the two sides said the memorandum 
    “will serve as a mechanism through which our governments can develop stronger 
    ties between our nuclear experts, industries, and researchers.” They gave no 
    further details.
    
    Armen Yeganian, a senior Armenian Foreign Ministry official accompanying 
    Mirzoyan, expressed hope that this and two other US.-Armenian documents signed 
    in Washington “will contribute to Armenia’s energy security and independence and 
    the strengthening of democracy.”
    
    “This memorandum will enable us to use, to a certain extent, American know-how 
    and achievements and to engage in exchanges between our scientists,” Yeganian 
    told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
    
    Commenting on the memorandum, State Department spokesman Ned Price said on 
    Monday that “Armenia looks to diversify its energy supply.”
    
    Russian nuclear fuel and natural gas generate roughly two-thirds of Armenia’s 
    electricity. Russia has financed the $300 million modernization of the Metsamor 
    nuclear power plant completed last year and expressed readiness to help the 
    Armenian government replace it by a new facility in 2036.
    
    Deputy Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Hakob 
    Vartanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service last week that Moscow and Yerevan have 
    formed a task force that will explore the possibility of jointly building the 
    new nuclear plant.
    
    In Yeganian’s words, Armenian and U.S. officials have not discussed a possible 
    U.S. participation in the ambitious project.
    
    
    
    Armenian-Azeri Commission On Border Demarcation Still Not Formed
    
            • Nane Sahakian
    
    ARMINIA -- An Armenian flag flies at a new Armenian army post on the border with 
    Azerbaijan, June 18, 2021
    
    
    Armenia and Azerbaijan have not yet formed a joint commission on demarcating 
    their border despite an agreement to that effect reached by their leaders, a 
    senior Armenian official said on Thursday.
    
    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
    agreed to set up the commission before the end of April at their last meeting 
    held in Brussels a month ago. They said it will also be tasked with easing 
    tensions along the long and heavily militarized border.
    
    The foreign ministers of the two states discussed the issue in two phone calls 
    in the following weeks.
    
    The Armenian Foreign Ministry said on April 25 that the two sides will soon hold 
    a “meeting regarding the commission.” Aliyev announced, meanwhile, that he has 
    already appointed Azerbaijani members of the body.
    
    Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, said Yerevan and 
    Baku are continuing their “intensive discussions” on the issue.
    
    “We have not yet found final answers to questions regarding the working group 
    and some other issues,” he said without elaborating.
    
    Grigorian again met with Aliyev’s top foreign policy aide, Hikmet Hajiyev, in 
    Brussels on Monday. He said they also discussed preparations for separate 
    negotiations on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty.
    
    In March, Baku presented the Armenian side with five elements which it wants to 
    be at the heart of the treaty. They include a mutual recognition of each other’s 
    territorial integrity. Yerevan said they are acceptable to it in principle, 
    fuelling more Armenian opposition allegations that Pashinian is ready to help 
    Azerbaijan regain full control over Nagorno-Karabakh.
    
    Grigorian told reporters that Armenia has also presented its own proposals 
    regarding the peace treaty but declined to reveal them. Baku signaled its 
    readiness to discuss them at the upcoming negotiations, he said.
    
    
    Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
    Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
    1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
    
     
    

    Peter Balakian offers keynote address at Capitol Hill commemoration of Armenian Genocide

    Public Radio of Armenia
    May 4 2022

    Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Peter Balakian and U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) Chair Nadine Maenza joined last week with Members of Congress on Capitol Hill in commemorating the Armenian Genocide, the first such in-person gathering since the U.S. Congress and President fully and formally recognized this crime, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

    In eloquent remarks, Balakian expressed gratitude to Congressional leaders and President Biden for recognizing the Armenian Genocide, while forcefully challenging Turkey’s denials and obstruction of justice for this crime.  “More than 30 nations have passed Armenian Genocide resolutions in Europe, in the Middle East, South America, and North America as statements of moral redress to Turkey for its failure to face its genocidal crimes,” stated Balakian.  “Think of Germany’s restitution and reparations for Israel and the Jewish people as the high moral ground. Reparations and restitution are always a necessity, as it is now in the Armenian case.”  

    Balakian argued that Genocide recognition is also important in understanding our contemporary world.  “The Turkish extermination marks the first time a modern government used its bureaucracy, parliament, advanced technology and communications, organized killing squads, and extreme nativist ideology – Pan-Turkism – to target and destroy an ethnic group in a concentrated period of time,” explained Balakian. “We can learn from the Armenian case a good deal about what the Nazi regime did to the Jews and Roma of Europe; what Pol Pot did in Cambodia; what the Hutu did to the Tutsi in Rwanda; and, the fates of Bosnian Muslims, Rohingya, Uighurs and other ethnic groups in our time, who are being subjected to the same.”

    U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom Chair Nadine Maenza explained the pivotal role President Biden’s first Armenian Genocide acknowledgment played in 2021. “As USCIRF said then, this step finally and firmly placed the United States on the right side of this terrible tragedy,” stated Maenza crediting the Armenian American community for its steadfast pursuit of recognition and justice. “As we reflect on this genocide of the past, let’s not forget the places where genocide is happening right now and other crimes against humanity.  Let us renew our commitment to always stand together and stand against acts of hatred and intolerance wherever they may occur,” she concluded.

    “Our community and coalition partners were honored to have Peter Balakian and Nadine Maenza at our first Congressional observance since the United States officially recognized the Armenian Genocide, and – of course – are gratified by the growing support for the Armenian Genocide Education Act,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We look forward to working with legislators from across the aisle to see this bipartisan measure – introduced by Representatives Maloney and Bilirakis and supported from the podium by so many of the speakers at this year’s Capitol Hill remembrance – enacted into law.”

    Dr. Khatchig Mouradian, the Armenian and Georgian Area Specialist for the Library of Congress and an internationally respected Armenian Genocide scholar, offered remarks at the solemn observance and emceed the evening.  “When we achieve acknowledgment, we are only starting the path to remembering, commemorating, and giving meaning to that action of acknowledgment,” stated Mouradian.  “We can transform our reality for sure. I say this because if it was possible a hundred years ago, it is possible today. If a hundred years ago under the most dire circumstances, transforming our reality – yes it took a long time – but it was possible, it is also possible today, because we have stronger communities and because we have allies who have joined us today,” concluded Mouradian.

    Republic of Nagorno Karabakh Representative to the U.S. Robert Avetisyan, greeted with a standing ovation, explained that for Artsakh, which continues to be the target of Turkey and Azerbaijan’s attacks, genocide recognition is an existential issue.  “When we talk about genocide recognition, the scope is pretty different. I know that for many of us sitting here and around the world, it is a moral restitution test. For many of us, it is a material restitution test.  For Artsakhtsis, it is a matter of life and death. It’s a different scale for us. It’s a different perspective. And, the consequences and the effect of genocide is absolutely different when it comes to Artsakh. This is our hope. This is our expectation. This is why we give such huge importance to recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the rest of the world and, first and foremost of course, by Turkey and other countries.  It’s not there yet, which means that the struggle continues.”

    Joining in the commemoration were Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Jackie Speier (D-CA), Armenian Genocide Education Act lead author Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), and Representatives Don Beyer (D-VA), Judy Chu (D-CA), Jim Costa (D-CA), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), Brenda Lawrence (D-MI), Susie Lee (D-NV), Katie Porter (D-CA), John Sarbanes (D-MD), and Brad Sherman (D-CA), as well as, Maryland State Representative Lorig Charkoudian.  Maria Martirosyan, Chair of the Congressional Armenian Staff Association, and the Armenian Ambassador were among others offering remarks.  Fr. Sarkis Aktavoukian of Soorp Khatch Armenian Church in Bethesda, MD offered the invocation for the evening.

    Congressional Leaders Agree – After Recognition, Education

    Throughout the commemoration members of Congress stressed their support for the Armenian Genocide Education Act (H.R.7555) introduced earlier in the week by Representatives Carolyn Maloney and Gus Bilirakis (R-FL).  In moving remarks, Rep. Maloney explained, “We have done the work to advance the recognition. Now we have to renew our commitment to raising awareness and further education about the Armenian Genocide. Let’s not forget it was the United States and our people who were some of the first to speak out about this atrocity, and that many of our firsthand documents about the Genocide, as Peter [Balakian] pointed out, are those from American diplomats such as Morgenthau, missionaries, and aid workers. And while the problems of the past are getting the attention they finally deserve, Armenia and her people still face trials today.”

    Rep. Sarbanes concurred, noting that “It was your pressure keeping this issue front and center – day in day out, year in year out that got us to this place of heightened vigilance and the kind of formal recognition that we have had. It is now incumbent on all of us to ensure that the education around the Armenian Genocide is as deep, broad, and compelling as it could possibly be.”

    Virginia Congressman Don Beyer stressed that “genocide scholars rightfully acknowledge that unless we study history, unless we admit it, unless we record it, that’s absolutely vital to prevent it from happening again. And, the violence and the instability that we have witnessed in the Caucasus in recent years are just proof that these crimes from decades ago are not irrelevant. They’re not forgotten. They’re still relevant to our lives today and they’re warnings of what can happen to us if we don’t remain vigilant.”

    Striking a Blow Against Genocide Denial

    Throughout the evening, Members of Congress stressed the important role of international Armenian Genocide recognition in the battle against genocide denial.

    Rep. Anna Eshoo, who shared a captivating account of how the Armenian Genocide Resolution was brought to the U.S. House floor for a vote in October 2019, shared her reaction upon its passage.  “When it happened, we cried. We watched the votes pile up and, in that short period of time, and over 100 years of official U.S. denial was wiped out,” stated Rep. Eshoo.

    Rep. Brenda Lawrence recounted her Congressional trip to Turkey, where she stood up for truth against the Erdogan government’s denial machine.  “I want you to know, I stand here today, just like stood on the soil of Turkey and looked them in the eye, I will stand with you against anyone who tries to deny the history [of the Armenian Genocide] so we can be committed to ‘never again,’” stated Rep. Lawrence.

    Senator Van Hollen, remarked, “as we gather here to remember history, and to remember the Armenian Genocide, it’s really that opportunity to say ‘never again’ and to make sure that we put that into action in events that are going around the world here today.”

    Fighting for Increased Aid to Artsakh; Zero Military Aid for Azerbaijan

    In many of their remarks, Members of Congress cited the key role U.S. aid to Artsakh can play in response to Turkey and Azerbaijan’s 2020 attack against Armenia and Artsakh while arguing for cutting all military assistance to Azerbaijan.

    Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone explained, “we are going to continue to fight, not only because we believe there is a genocidal aspect to this, but because we believe the future of the Armenian Republic and Artsakh is very important.  We believe that America must keep pointing out that these two countries very much share our values and our democracy and that we recognize that fact as an important part of the Armenian experience.”

    Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Jackie Speier concurred, noting, “Now, we have been working with the State Department and trying to get them to recognize how Azerbaijan has not been a friend of this country, that it is certainly not a friend of Armenia, that they have been aggressors much like we have seen Russia be an aggressor. So we continue to make sure that there is not going to be more funding like that $100 million that originally went to Azerbaijan. We draw attention to the fact that in Artsakh, for three weeks, there was no gas; and, that more recently, a village was taken. We have made it very clear through letters that we have sent that we have got to come up with the lasting settlement; that Artsakh has a right to survive and to exist.”

    Senior House Foreign Affairs Committee member, Rep. Brad Sherman, spoke out against President Biden’s 2021 decision to waive Section 907 restrictions on U.S. aid to Azerbaijan.  “It is not enough for the President to recognize the Genocide. He has to stop granting any waiver under Section 907 for the sale of weapons to a regime in Azerbaijan, which is trying to obliterate Artsakh and has designs on parts or all of Armenia as well.  With so many people displaced, with so many towns destroyed, America needs to be there, not only to take care of refugees, and humanitarian concerns, but to make it clear that this ceasefire is not a permanent resolution, that the land of Artsakh needs to be restored, and the Minsk process cannot be kept in the freezer forever.”

    Orange County, CA Representative Katie Porter asserted, “we have to prioritize peace and global security. Azerbaijan’s aggression in Armenia is the antithesis of those values, which is why I cosponsored a resolution condemning Azerbaijan’s attacks on Artsakh and affirming the role of the OSCE Mink Group in negotiating peace.”

    New Jersey Congressman Josh Gottheimer, who recently had a poignant meeting with Artsakh refugees from the 2020 war, noted “I will stand strong with our ally [Armenia] in the face of threats and continued attacks from its neighbors, that includes continuing our call for the release of Armenian prisoners of war detained by Azerbaijan, as well as continued support for critical humanitarian assistance to Artsakh.”

    Nevada Congresswoman Susie Lee stated, “unfortunately right now, the war on Artsakh by Azerbaijan and Turkey is just a continuation of the existential threat that the Armenians face today in your homeland and what remains the Republic of Artsakh and the borders of Armenia. I condemn Azerbaijan’s reckless military attacks against Armenians and continue to stand with the Armenian community. As an advocate seeking a resolution to this conflict, Turkey must acknowledge and take accountability for its past. As a people, Artsakh and Armenia continue to face the threat of state-sponsored hate and ethnic cleansing.”

    Central Valley California Congressman Jim Costa praised President Biden for recognizing the Armenian Genocide but said more needs to be done to help the people of Artsakh.  “We have built on that [recognition]. The funding that we’ve provided, is a start. The money for [Artsakh] demining is important, but it’s not enough.  Going back and trying to hold Azerbaijan’s feet to the fire, notwithstanding the Minsk accords.”

    Increasing Armenian American Presence in the Nation’s Capitol

    Congressional Armenian Staff Association Chair Maria Martirosyan shared the important role Armenian American staffers play in incorporating the community’s experiences in shaping U.S. policy.  “These staffers, many of whom are direct descendants of Armenian Genocide survivors, work each day at the nation’s capitol to support members of Congress shape domestic and international policies. While centuries of persecution and displacement may have resulted in lost family histories, generational trauma, and lost economic opportunities it has also instilled in us the ability to survive persevere and thrive. And today, Armenian American congressional staffers harness their experiences, strengths, and talents to help shape the future of this nation and the world.”  

    Martirosyan also chairs the ANCA’s Hovig Apo Saghdejian Capital Gateway Program Advisory Committee (CGPAC), which, along with ANCA staff and supporters, helps recent graduates start their careers in policy, politics, and media in the nation’s capital.

    Asbarez: Armenian Genocide Monument in Brussels Vandalized; ‘Grey Wolves’ Suspected

    A Khatchcar that is a memorial for the Armenian Genocide in Brussels was vandalized

    A monument dedicated to the Armenian Genocide in Brussels was desecrated overnight, with graffiti sprayed on its base on the main structure, which is a traditional cross-stone—Khatchkar.

    The Brussels-based Committee for the Defense of the Armenian Cause (CDCA-Belgique) and European Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD) were alerted about the desecration. The base of the Katchkar was spray-painted with three red crescents, while the phrase “fuck Paylan” was spayed on the main structure.

    The CDCA-Belgique and the EAFJD said in a statement that the symbols and logos sprayed on the cross stone suggest that his an act committed by the Turkish Neo-Fascist Grey Wolves organization.

    Garo Paylan, an Armenian member of the Turkish parliament representing the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP), on Saturday introduced a motion calling for Turkey’s official recognition of the Armenian Genocide. The mere introduction of the motion was rebuffed by members of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) who threatened legal action. On Tuesday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey accused Paylan of treason.

    Over the weekend, Turkey’s Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, while on an official visit to Uruguay, brandished the Grey Wolves sign to a group of Armenian protesters in Montevideo, resulting in angry rebukes by Uruguay’s president and foreign minister. Uruguay was the first country to recognize the Armenian Genocide in 1965.

    The CDCA-Belgique and EAFJD acknowledged Cavusoglu’s blatant disregard in their joint statement.

    “There is every reason to believe that the Grey Wolves may be state-sponsored, and it cannot be ruled out that the perpetrators of the vandalism were inspired by the Turkish foreign minister’s inappropriate behavior,” said the statement.
     
    “EAFJD and CDCA Belgique firmly and unequivocally condemn this heinous act of vandalism which is a clear reflection of Armenophobia and the consequence of what unpunished fascism looks like,” added the statement.

    The groups went on to urge the government of Belgium and European Union leaders to:

    • Strongly and unequivocally condemn this heinous and Armenophobic act of vandalism against the memorial to the victims of the Armenian Genocide in Brussels.
    • Immediately dissolve the Grey Wolves organization, which has a documented history of extremely violent actions, dissemination of violent threats and incitement to hatred against the authorities and Armenians;
    • Open an independent-led investigation on Turkish extremist networks in Belgium and across the EU;
    • Adopt a law criminalizing the denial of the Armenian Genocide in Belgium

    “Impunity and denial create a breeding ground for new crimes against humanity as was the case in 2020 when Armenian native populations of Nagorno Karabakh / Artsakh suffered a large-scale military aggression by Turkey-backed Azerbaijan and Jihadist groups,” said the groups in their statement.
     
    “As European citizens, we believe that an ultra-nationalist and openly fascist organization such as Grey Wolves has no place in a free and democratic Europe. Therefore, we demand and expect action and justice from our leaders,” the EAFJD and CDCA-Belgique said.

    Second meeting in Grigoryan-Hajiyev format took place in Brussels

    ARMINFO
    Armenia – May 2 2022
    Marianna Mkrtchyan

    ArmInfo.Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan met with Assistant to the President of Azerbaijan Hikmet Hajiyev in Brussels. EU Special  Representative for the South Caucasus and the crisis in Georgia,  Toivo Klaar, announced this on his Twitter account.

    "Happy to have been able to host Hikmet Hajiyev and Armen Grigoryan  in Brussels for a second meeting in this format," Klaar wrote.

    Earlier, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev announced about the  meeting.  It should be reminded that the Armenian side did not make  public about the first meeting. The meeting became known after the  announcement of the EU press service on March 31.

    Singer, songwriter Forsh hospitalized after suffering ministroke

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     16:17, 29 April, 2022

    YEREVAN, APRIL 29, ARMENPRESS. Singer, songwriter Vahan Gevorgyan, known by his stage name Forsh, is recovering in a hospital after suffering a mini-stroke, his son Areg Gevorgyan told ARMENPRESS.

    “It was a mini-stroke, nothing serious, he will recover without complications,” Areg Gevorgyan said.

    Honored Artist of Armenia Forsh is expected to be discharged from hospital over the weekend.