LA Times reporters investigate how the descendants of Armenian genocide victims were swindled out of millions in settlement funds

April 1 2022

Russian ambassador refuted information that Russian peacekeepers were allegedly sent to Ukraine from Nagorno Karabakh

ARMINFO
Armenia –
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.Appropriate conditions should be created between Azerbaijan and Armenia for peace talks.  Russian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Mikhail Bocharnikov stated  this at a press conference, APA reports.  

According to the ambassador, Russia is always ready to support the  start of peace talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia, and in this  vein, he recalled that Azerbaijan sent a proposal to Armenia to start  peace talks.  Bocharnikov also refuted media reports that military  personnel of the Russian peacekeeping contingent deployed in  Nagorno-Karabakh were allegedly sent to Ukraine. "Peacekeepers are in  Nagorno- Karabakh and have not been sent to Ukraine," the diplomat  stressed. 

Yerevan Brandy Company revives legendary blend ARARAT ‘Otborny’

Panorama
Armenia,

Created back in 1902, the legendary blend ARARAT “Otborny” was the first Armenian vintage brandy, which became an opening chapter in the chronicle of triumph of the Armenian brandy-making.

In the year of meaningful anniversaries – the 135th anniversary of brandy-making in Armenia and the 120th anniversary of the first Armenian vintage brandy, Yerevan Brandy Company revives the collection version of the legendary ARARAT “Otborny” blend.

The author of the original blend is Mkrtich Musinyants, whose creative curiosity and outstanding academic background reflected the gifts of the generous Armenian nature along with its unique grape varieties in one single brandy. Soon after its very creation, the blend managed to leave the international jury members of one of the most influential French competition astonished, Yerevan Brandy Company said in a press release on Tuesday.

Being an alumnus of a prestigious French winemaking school, Musinyants’ “Otborny” served as a tribute to his homeland. The blend is a brilliant representation of the notion that the unity of Armenian nature and genuine craftsmanship create a gold benchmark that continues to inspire connoisseurs for generations ahead.

ARARAT “Otborny” features intense amber color with copper shine. Rounded and long-lasting taste plays with notes of citrus, caramel, and toffee. The ending chord of the taste completes with faded bitterness of almonds.

“The rebirth of “Otborny” brandy, first and foremost, is the credential of Yerevan Brandy Company’s historical succession. This is our homage for the heritage that we are a part of. This is also our pride for having a unique collection of spirits, which not only gives us an opportunity to recreate historical blends but also to produce collection reserves,” says Serge Khachatryan, Chief Operating Officer of Yerevan Brandy Company.

The renaissance of historical blends highlights the unique legacy of ARARAT. It also comes to underline the idea that only exceptional brands with profound history can recreate noble samples and make them collectioanal.

“Being a collection reserve, the recreated blend of “Otborny” emphasizes its organoleptic harmony more eloquently, since three additional years of post-blend aging perfectly reveals the shades of rare spirits. Working with ARARAT Vintage Range is always an incredible experience and a fascinating dialogue with different generations,” says Hamlet Antonyan, Head of Production of Yerevan Brandy Company.

ARARAT “Otborny” will enrich ARARAT Vintage Collection and will continue the stylistic solutions of the range’s packaging. The illustrations and main color design of “Otborny” glorify the unique essence of Armenian grape varieties as a symbol of irreplaceable inceptions of the bright stories.

The limited distribution of the ARARAT “Otborny” will definitely create yet another dialogue with the connoisseurs of ARARAT Armenian brandy.

Amnesty International: Armenia 2021

Amnesty International
Armenia,

There was no accountability or justice for victims of violations committed during the 2020 Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict and its aftermath. Over 100 people were killed or injured by mines planted by Armenian forces in areas ceded to Azerbaijan. Some 36,000 ethnic Armenians remained internally displaced. Peaceful protests were largely permitted after Covid-19 and martial law restrictions were lifted, but freedom of _expression_ and access to information continued to be restricted. Environmental concerns at the Amulsar gold mine remained unaddressed. Domestic violence remained a widespread problem, exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Political tensions remained high throughout the year. The prime minister resigned in April following months of anti-government protests over his handling of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict but was re-appointed after his party won a majority in snap elections in June.

Security along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border remained volatile with uncertainties over demarcation lines. Occasional cross-border fighting led to military and civilian casualties.

The Covid-19 pandemic and the aftermath of the 2020 conflict exacerbated the country’s economic hardships. According to the World Bank, Armenia suffered an 8% contraction in GDP, leading to the impoverishment of 70,000 people and driving 720,000 people into a lower welfare group. The elderly and less well-off were disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, facing greater obstacles in accessing healthcare due to the lockdown restrictions and repurposing of public healthcare resources. Their ability to cover routine expenses – especially household services, utilities, food, medicines and medical services – also decreased significantly.

Vaccination uptake remained low, with only 23 % of the population receiving a full dose of the vaccine by December, amid a widespread anti-vax campaign. In response, in August, the government made Covid-19 vaccination mandatory for all government workers and many private company employees.

No progress was made in investigating war crimes and other violations of international humanitarian law during the 2020 conflict and its immediate aftermath, or in bringing those suspected of individual criminal responsibility to justice.

Over 100 people were reported killed or injured by mines planted by Armenian forces in territories where they had ceded control to Azerbaijan. Armenia shared several maps detailing landmine fields in exchange for Azerbaijan returning Armenian captives. In December the president of the European Council reported that Armenia had returned all landmine maps. However, the accuracy of these maps was challenged by Azerbaijan.

Many of the approximately 91,000 people displaced at the height of the fighting in 2020 returned to Stepanakert/Khankendi and other parts of the Nagorno-Karabakh region, which remained under the control of Armenia. Some 36,000 people remained displaced in Armenia and Armenia-controlled Nagorno-Karabakh, and 24,000 of them from areas controlled by Azerbaijan faced long-term displacement. Returnees faced difficulties in accessing livelihoods, education and healthcare.

Peaceful protests and demonstrations were largely permitted throughout the year. By January, the government had rescinded most public health and emergency law-related restrictions imposed due to security concerns and the Covid-19 pandemic, including restrictions on public gatherings.

The right to freedom of _expression_ continued to be unduly restricted.

The government introduced several legislative amendments curtailing independent media and other critical voices. In March, the National Assembly increased the maximum fine for insult and defamation to AMD 6 million (approximately US$12,000). In August, another set of legislative amendments criminalized insulting public figures, making repeated insults punishable by up to three months’ imprisonment. In September, police opened a criminal case under this new law against a Facebook user for insulting the prime minister in a comment under a photo featuring him.

The authorities continued the prosecution on trumped-up charges of human rights defender Sashik Sultanian in retaliation for his criticism of the treatment of the Yazidi ethnic minority in Armenia. An investigation into his alleged incitement of national hatred had been opened in October 2020, after he published an online interview on problems faced by the ethnic Yazidis. His trial started in August and was ongoing at the end of the year. If convicted, he could face three to six years in prison.

The Prosecutor General’s Office and state investigative bodies failed to effectively investigate attacks and threats against NGOs and media outlets, including looting of the offices of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and Open Society Foundations, in the aftermath of the conflict in 2020.

The Amulsar gold mine project in southern Armenia remained halted, pending the outcome of an ongoing criminal investigation into intentional concealment of information on its environmental impacts. The investigation was launched in response to protests by local residents and environmental campaigners since 2018.

Women continued to be affected by higher levels of domestic violence during the Covid-19 pandemic while access to services and protection remained inadequate. The pandemic also exacerbated the heavy burden of unpaid care work which continued to fall mainly on women and girls.

Armenpress: Madeleine Albright, first female US secretary of state, dies

Madeleine Albright, first female US secretary of state, dies

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 00:28, 24 March, 2022

YEREVAN, MARCH 24, ARMENPRESS. Madeleine Albright, the first female US secretary of state and who helped steer Western foreign policy in the aftermath of the Cold War, has died, CNN reported citing a statement from the Albright family.  

She was 84 years old.

The cause was cancer, Albright's family said in a statement Wednesday.

Albright was a central figure in President Bill Clinton's administration, first serving as US ambassador to the United Nations before becoming the nation's top diplomat in his second term.

President Joe Biden paid tribute to Albright in a lengthy statement Wednesday, calling her a "force" and saying working with her during the 1990s while he was on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee was among the highlights of his Senate career.

"When I think of Madeleine, I will always remember her fervent faith that 'America is the indispensable nation,'" said Biden, who ordered flags at the White House and all federal buildings to be flown at half-staff in Albright's honor.

"Few leaders have been so perfectly suited for the times in which they served," Clinton said in a statement. "As a child in war-torn Europe, Madeleine and her family were twice forced to flee their home. When the end of the Cold War ushered in a new era of global interdependence, she became America's voice at the UN, then took the helm at the State Department, where she was a passionate force for freedom, democracy, and human rights."

Clinton later told CNN's Wolf Blitzer that he had recently spoken with his former top diplomat.

‘We are at war’: Hovik Aghazaryan comments on Andranik Kocharyan’s statement

Panorama
Armenia –

Armenia is still in a “state of war”, according to MP Hovik Aghazaryan from the ruling Civil Contract faction.

“This is a war. Isn't the gas related to the war? We are in a state of war, it’s just ceasefire now,” he told reporters on Wednesday, referring to a statement of his fellow MP Andranik Kocharyan that "we should be united and get to live in conditions of disrupted gas supplies.”

His comments came after Azerbaijan deliberately cut off gas supply to Artsakh on March 21, shortly after its restoration.

Gas delivery to Artsakh from Armenia was first disrupted on 8 March due to damage to a pipeline passing through Baku-held territory. The Azerbaijani troops did not allow maintenance workers to repair the pipeline, causing a humanitarian crisis in Artsakh for 11 days.

The damaged pipeline was finally repaired on March 18 and gas supply to Artsakh was restored on March 19 to be again disrupted two days later.

No Russians left? Militants from Syria, Libya and Karabakh on their way to Ukraine

The Russian Federation transfers a military contingent from Nagorno-Karabakh (Azerbaijan) to Ukraine to compensate for the losses and attracts a large number of mercenary fighters from other countries like Syria and Serbia. This is reported by the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine

The General Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defence reports that Russia continues to recruit mercenaries in Syria and Libya. In Syria, 14 mercenary recruitment centers have been opened in the territories controlled by Bashar al-Assad’s regime.

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After a short preparation, they are to be sent to Russia on two Tu-134 aircraft (up to 80 passengers) and Tu-154 (up to 180 passengers) to Chkalovsky airbases in the Moscow region.

“In recent days, Russia has gathered thousands of Syrian mercenaries into the occupying forces… It is envisaged that the Syrians will use heavy artillery and sniper weapons against Ukrainians,” the Ministry of Defense noted.

Information on Russia’s training of mercenaries from Libya has also been confirmed. Russia will pay foreign mercenaries a monthly salary of $300-600. 

According to available information, on March 9-10, 800 servicemen of 102 military bases (Gyumri, Armenia) of the Southern Military District were moved to the Russian Federation for further transfer to the combat zone.

Up to 1,500 people of the 40th separate Marine Brigade (Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky) of the Pacific Fleet are sent in trains to Belarus.

Azerbaijani forces fire 120mm mortars in direction of village school in Artsakh

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 10:55,

YEREVAN, MARCH 11, ARMENPRESS. Around 10:20, March 11 the Azerbaijani forces fired two 120mm mortar shells in the direction of the Khnapat village (Askeran region) in Artsakh. The shells hit the area near the village school, the Artsakh Ministry of Interior said.

No one was hurt in the attack.

In addition, the Ministry of Interior said that now the Azerbaijani military deployed in positions adjacent to the Taghavard village in Martuni region are using loudspeakers to threaten the villagers, telling them to leave the territory.

The Ministry of Interior said the regional police departments are preparing materials over the incident.

Armenian, Russian parliamentarians discuss situation in region

ARM INFO
March 1 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.On February 28, the RA NA Vice President, the NA Acting President, the Co-Chair of the Inter-Parliamentary Committee on Cooperation between the National  Assembly of the Republic of Armenia and the RF Federal Assembly Hakob  Arshakyan had a telephone talk with the Deputy Speaker of the RF FA  Federation Council, the Co-Chair of the Inter- Parliamentary  Committee on Cooperation between the RF Federal Assembly and the RA  National Assembly Yury Vorobyov.  

As the press service pof the RA NA reports, Hakob Arshakyan and Yury  Vorobyov discussed the situation in the region, as well as issues  regarding the procedure of the works of the Inter-Parliamentary  Committee on Cooperation between the RA NA and the RF FA.

The sides also touched upon a number of issues on holding of the next  sitting of the Inter-Parliamentary Committee on Cooperation.

Turkey envoy discusses normalization with Armenia with Patriarch Sahak II

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 23 2022

Turkey-Armenia Special Representative for normalization with Armenia, Ambassador Serdar Kilic paid a courtesy visit to the Armenian Patriarchate on Tuesday, February 22, and met with His Beatitude Patriarch Sahak II.

During the meeting, the Ambassador expressed his satisfaction with the first meetings with the representative of Armenia, Ruben Rubinyan, and expressed hope that “the solid steps to be taken in the normalization process will pave the way for positive developments between the two countries.”

His Beatitude the Patriarch emphasized that they support the normalization of Turkey-Armenia relations, and that the good neighborly relations that will be reached in the end will provide an environment of peace and tranquility not only for the people of the two countries, but also for the countries in the region, and will lead to regional economic, social and cultural developments.

Ambassador Serdar Kilic thanked the Patriarch for providing the opportunity for the meeting.