Dr. Khatchig Mouradian to be Honored at ANCA-WR Genocide Education Awards Luncheon

Dr. Khatchig Mouradian

GLENDALE – The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region’s Education Committee announced that Dr. Khatchig Mouradian will receive the prestigious “Richard G. Hovannisian Higher Educator Award” at the sixth Annual ANCA-WR Armenian Genocide Education Awards Luncheon to be held at the Legacy Ballroom in Glendale on March 25 at 11a.m. 

“The ANCA-Western Region Education Committee is proud to present Dr. Mouradian with the Richard G. Hovannisian Higher Educator Award this year,” said Alice Petrossian, ANCA-Western Region Education Committee Chair. “Beyond his excellence in academia and valuable contributions to Armenian Genocide Studies, Dr. Mouradian has been a long-time advocate of the Armenian Cause and human rights issues around the world.”  

Dr. Mouradian currently serves as the Armenian and Georgian Area Specialist in the African and Middle Eastern Division at the Library of Congress, is a lecturer in Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies (MESAAS) at Columbia University, and serves as Co-Principal Investigator, with Prof. Paul Boghossian (Chair, NYU Philosophy), of the project on Armenian Genocide Denial at the Global Institute for Advanced Study, New York University.  

Last week the ANCA-Western Region announced that Dr. Stephan Astourian and journalist Christina Pascucci will also be honored during the event.

“An award can serve as the capstone of a career or an incentive to pursue one’s calling with even greater enthusiasm. For me, the ‘Richard G. Hovannisian Higher Educator Award’ is the latter,” said Dr. Khatchig Mouradian. “It is a vow renewal after years of teaching about genocide and human rights, and I look forward to the next decade of learning from and being inspired by my students.”

Dr. Mouradian is the author of “The Resistance Network: The Armenian Genocide and Humanitarianism in Ottoman Syria, 1915-1918.” This groundbreaking book, published by Michigan State University Press in 2021, has received the Syrian Studies Association “Honourable Mention 2021” and the 2022 Aronian Book Prize for Excellence in Armenian Studies. He is the co-editor of two forthcoming volumes on Ottoman and Middle Easter history: “After the Ottomans: Genocide’s Long Shadow and Armenian Resilience” (London: I.B. Tauris, forthcoming in 2022) and “The I.B.Tauris Handbook of the Late Ottoman Empire: History and Legacy” (under contract with I.B. Tauris).

Dr. Mouradian’s work has been featured in The Washington Post, The New York Review of Books, BBC, FOX TV, France 24, The New York Review of Books, RT, Al Jazeera, CNN Türk, Imedi TV (Georgia), The Economist, The Boston Globe, Newsweek, Psychology Today, Elle Magazine, Euronews, Eurasianet, Clarín (Argentina), Al-Monitor, The Times of Israel, The Worcester Telegram and Gazette, Burlington Free Press, The Jewish Advocate, Al-Ahram (Egypt), Truthout, Middle East Eye, Arab News, QPosts.com and several other news outlets on issues related to the Armenian Genocide, human rights, mass violence, and Armenian, Ottoman, and Middle Eastern culture, politics, and history.

The “Richard G. Hovannisian Higher Educator Award” was established by the ANCA-Western Region’s Education Committee in honor of the scholar, historian and academician Richard Hovannissian who was once dubbed as the contemporary Movses Khorenatsi. Dr. Richard G. Hovannisian was honored by His Holiness Karekin I and Karekin II and awarded the Movses Khorenatsi medal by the Republic of Armenia, the Medal of St. Mesrop Mashtots by the Republic of Artsakh, and made the “Prince of Cilicia” by His Holiness Aram I for his advancement of Armenian Studies.

“At a time when the Armenian nation is in desperate need for intellectuals who create legal, theoretical, political, and philosophical frameworks, Dr. Mouradian is one of a handful who can live up to the billing of an intellectual and help our nation in shaping the accurate framework for our collective future,” said ANCA Western Region Board Chair, Nora Hovsepian, Esq.

A native of Beirut, Lebanon, and the descendant of the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923, Dr. Mouradian received a Ph.D. in History from the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University, a graduate certificate in Conflict Resolution from the University of Massachusetts, Boston, and a B.S. in Biology from Haigazian University, where he also completed graduate coursework in Clinical Psychology. Since his migration to the United States of America, Dr. Mouradian has led countless Armenian and non-Armenian human rights initiatives and has been bestowed with the Armenian Relief Society’s Agnouni Award (2018), the Hrant Dink Justice and Freedom Award of the Organization of Istanbul Armenians (2014), and other awards.

The Armenian Genocide Education Awards Luncheon is open to the public and is an event where educators are honored for their dedication to teaching about the Armenian Genocide. 

Tickets and sponsorship opportunities are available online. Please reserve your tickets immediately as last year this event sold out early. 

For additional information about the Awards Luncheon, visit the ANCA-WR Education Committee website or call (818) 500-1918.

The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


Hrazdan police fatally shoot ax-wielding robbery suspect

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 13:46,

YEREVAN, MARCH 13, ARMENPRESS. Hrazdan Police Department officers fatally shot a robbery suspect who was armed with an ax, authorities said Monday.

In a statement, police said the officers responded to a robbery report early Monday morning in the Vanatur district, Hrazdan. Upon arrival, officers were confronted by the ax-wielding suspect and were forced to open fire to neutralize the threat, according to a statement released by police.

The suspect, a 45-year-old man from Hrazdan with a criminal record, died in the hospital.

An investigation is underway.

Russian Defense Ministry reports one ceasefire violation in Nagorno-Karabakh

 TASS 
Russia –
No one was injured

MOSCOW, March 11. /TASS/. Russian peacekeepers registered one violation of ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Russian Defense Ministry said in a bulletin, published Saturday.

"One ceasefire violation has been registered in the Martakert District. No one was injured," the Ministry said. According to the bulletin, the Russian peacekeeping contingent has initiated a procedure over this incident.

"In order to ensure the security of Russian peacekeepers and to prevent potential incidents, constant contact is being maintained with General Staffs of Azerbaijani and Armenian Armed Forces," the Defense Ministry said.

https://tass.com/defense/1587403

Over 290,000 tourists visited Armenia in January-February

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 12:05,

YEREVAN, MARCH 11, ARMENPRESS. Over 130,000 tourists visited Armenia in February this year, a figure described by the Tourism Committee as “the highest” compared to the same month in previous years.

The figures for February of 2019, 2020 and 2022 stood at 96,000, 107,000 and 72,000 respectively.

In total, over 290,000 tourists visited Armenia in January-February of 2023, the Tourism Committee said in a press release.

Growth in inbound tourism from the following five countries was recorded in January-February 2023 – Russia (52%), Georgia (12%), Iran (5%), USA (1%), and Germany (1%).




Azerbaijani press: Protest of Azerbaijani activists aimed at stopping illegal use of Lachin road by Armenian side – FM

Politics Materials 28 February 2023 13:26 (UTC +04:00)

BAKU, Azerbaijan, February 28. The peaceful protest of Azerbaijani eco-activists on the Lachin-Khankendi road is aimed at stopping the gross violation by the Armenian side of its use, Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Jeyhun Bayramov said during a press conference with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov, who is on a visit to Baku, Trend reports.

"The root cause of this situation was a gross and repeated violation by Armenia of the provisions of the trilateral declaration, which provides for the solely humanitarian nature of the use of the Lachin-Khankendi road. For two years, the Azerbaijani side has repeatedly pointed out this misuse and gross violations by Armenia," he said.

According to the minister, Azerbaijan did so both through closed channels and through mediators, as well as repeatedly entering this matter into public discourse.

"After the situation reached the level of protests, the Armenian side, refusing to change its position, agreed at the level of its top political leadership that it has nothing to do with this issue, with the root cause, or with road safety issues, attempting to place all responsibility on Azerbaijan and Russia," said Bayramov.

Bayramov noted that the Armenian side is actively engaged in a propaganda campaign, trying to mislead the international community and create buzz around this situation by refusing constructive dialogue and attempts to find solutions.

"From the first day, the Azerbaijani side stated that we are doing and will do everything in our power to avoid any negative humanitarian consequences, primarily for the Armenian population living in the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan. And for more than two months, Azerbaijan has been consistently engaged in this, being in almost daily contact with the peacekeeping contingent as well as with the International Committee of the Red Cross. The legitimate demand of representatives of the Azerbaijani civil society must be heard and fulfilled," he said.

Azerbaijani press: Meeting with Armenian residents of Karabakh is Azerbaijan’s next major step for peace, stability – official

Politics Materials 1 March 2023 17:04 (UTC +04:00)

BAKU, Azerbaijan, March 1. The meeting of Azerbaijani representatives with Armenian residents living in Azerbaijan's Karabakh, which was held on March 1 at the headquarters of the Russian peacekeeping contingent, temporarily deployed in the territory of Azerbaijan (Khojaly), is Azerbaijan's next major step to ensure peace and stability in the region, MP of Azerbaijan's Milli Majlis (Parliament) Afat Hasanova told Trend.

According to her, Azerbaijan has consistently taken the necessary steps after the second Karabakh war to ensure peace and stability in the region.

"While at the Munich Security Conference, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev noted that the rights and guarantees of the Armenian minority in Karabakh will be discussed. We are ready for it. But with those representatives of Armenian community who lived, who were born, and who lived in Karabakh throughout their life. And the purpose of the meeting held on March 1 is to establish such contacts," Hasanova said.

She noted that Azerbaijan is confidently moving towards its goal, neglecting any outside interference.

"So far, smear campaigns have been carried out against our country with the involvement of foreign media and NGOs. But it seems that these campaigns, like many other provocations, did not achieve any results, and failed. After the historic victory in the second Karabakh war, Azerbaijan successfully achieves its goals in the diplomatic arena, and holding this meeting is another diplomatic success of our country," Hasanova said.

Ramin Mammadov, Member of Parliament, has been designated as a point person for the contacts with the Armenian residents of the Karabakh region of the Republic of Azerbaijan.

To that end, on 1 March 2023, in the city of Khojaly, at the headquarters of the Russian Federation’s peacekeeping contingent temporarily deployed in the territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ramin Mammadov held a meeting with the representatives of the Armenian residents living in the Karabakh region of the Republic of Azerbaijan.

Also present at the meeting was Masim Mammadov, head of the monitoring group inspecting illicit exploitation of our natural resources comprised of experts with the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources, State Service on Property Issues under the Ministry of the Economy and AzerGold Closed Joined-Stock Company.

Initial discussions were held during the meeting regarding the reintegration to the Republic of Azerbaijan of the Armenian residents living in the Karabakh region under the Constitution of the Republic of Azerbaijan and its legislature.

Armenia: EU-funded Artbox Entrepreneur accelerator programme starts its activities

Feb 23 2023

On 21 February, the Artbox Entrepreneur accelerator programme was officially launched in Armenia, with 24 newly-selected participants.

During the eight-week career acceleration programme, a new generation of creative entrepreneurs will meet and work with leading mentors to develop their creative careers.

“Culture, creativity, and enterprise are interconnected and essential components of a thriving society that fosters innovation, economic growth, and social progress. The EU wishes all creators good luck and inspiration on their new journey,” says the EU Delegation to Armenia in a Facebook post.

Artbox is developed by Creative Armenia, funded by the European Union in Armenia and launched in partnership with AGBU Armenia within the framework of the KATAPULT Creative Accelerator Programme. 

Find out more

Press release

International court orders Azerbaijan to "ensure movement" on blockaded road

Feb 23 2023
Joshua Kucera Feb 23, 2023

An international court has ordered Azerbaijan to “ensure unimpeded movement” on the highway connecting Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh, which has been virtually closed for more than two months as a result of government-backed protests blocking the road.

But the ruling appears to have little immediate prospect of lifting the blockade, as Azerbaijan argues that it is not in fact blocking the road and so is not obliged to do anything it isn’t already doing.

The International Court of Justice, the top court of the United Nations, ruled on February 23 that “Azerbaijan shall … take all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.”

Armenia had asked the court in January to impose provisional measures against Azerbaijan for the blockade. Following the decision, Yerevan declared victory. “[I]n accordance with the Court’s orders, Azerbaijan's blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh and other actions must now come to an immediate end,” Armenia’s foreign ministry said in a statement following the ruling. “Armenia will closely monitor the situation and inform the Court of any violations as Armenia’s case against Azerbaijan proceeds.”

Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry sidestepped the main thrust of the ruling – that the court demanded it ensure free movement on the road – but pointed out that the court “took note” of Baku’s argument that it “has and undertakes to continue to take all steps within its power and at its disposal to guarantee safe movement along the Lachin Road.”

The ruling “will have little effect on the situation on the ground until peace [is] reached [between] the two countries as every [document] interpreted differently by the parties,” tweeted Farid Shafiyev, the head of the Azerbaijan state-run think tank Center for Analysis of International Relations.

Indeed, international law has traditionally had little effect on the ground throughout the history of this conflict.

In December 2021, in another provisional ruling in the same case, the ICJ demanded that Azerbaijan act to protect Armenian cultural sites on its territory. Months later, though, researchers used satellite imagery to detect the destruction of an Armenian church in what they called a “serious violation” of the ICJ ruling.

If Azerbaijan also disregards this ICJ ruling, the UN Security Council can take up the issue. Armenian officials have already called on the body to do so.

But enforcement of UNSC resolutions requires political will by some state willing to undertake the effort. 

In 1993, the UN Security Council issued four resolutions demanding that Armenian forces withdraw from Azerbaijani territory surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. Those remained unimplemented until 2020, when Azerbaijan took them back by force in the Second Karabakh War.

The current blockade was launched on December 12, when a group of activists backed by the government set up a protest on the road near Shusha. Since then the only traffic that has been able to pass has been vehicles of the Russian peacekeeping contingent and occasional transfers of ill people accompanied by the International Committee of the Red Cross. It has resulted in widespread shortages of goods in the territory, and ordinary people stuck on either side of the roadblock have been stranded.

Azerbaijan has denied that it is blockading the road. Officials have offered a variety of explanations for the situation, including that it is the Russian peacekeepers who are blocking traffic or that the Armenian residents of Karabakh simply refuse to travel on the road.

At the same time, however, Azerbaijan has begun to advance formal demands that it exert oversight on the road. It recently offered a proposal to Armenia, in the ongoing negotiations over a comprehensive resolution to the conflict, to set up checkpoints on the Lachin Corridor. In exchange, it would allow Armenia to operate its own checkpoints on the proposed route that Baku calls the “Zangezur Corridor.”

In its ruling, the court declined an Armenian request to force Azerbaijan to “cease its orchestration and support of the alleged ‘protests’ blocking uninterrupted free movement along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.” The court argued that the measure was “not warranted,” without offering further explanation.

The court also declined an Armenian request to direct Azerbaijan to restore regular natural gas supply to the territory, which has been repeatedly interrupted during the blockade. The court said it did not have evidence that Azerbaijan was disrupting the supply.

It also rejected Azerbaijan’s request that the court demand new measures related to allegations that Armenia has continued to plant land mines on Azerbaijani territory.

Joshua Kucera, a senior correspondent, is Eurasianet's former Turkey/Caucasus editor and has written for the site since 2007.

https://eurasianet.org/international-court-orders-azerbaijan-to-ensure-movement-on-blockaded-road

President of Artsakh: Integration with neighboring Azerbaijan is out of the question

NEWS.am
Armenia – Feb 23 2023

The people of Artsakh must live a sovereign, secure and decent life, we must have a guaranteed right to self-determination and to control our own destiny in the homeland, the status quo must be preserved until a comprehensive and final settlement of the conflict, and the violators must be subjected to the strongest international censure and brought to justice, said President Araik Harutyunyan at a meeting of the Artsakh government.

According to him, public authority should be exercised in the manner prescribed by the Constitution and laws of the Republic of Artsakh.

"We are ready for dialogue and conflict resolution with Azerbaijan, but we have clear principles and red lines stemming from the fundamental rights, vital interests and demands of the people of Artsakh. In this context, the following main circumstances must be taken into account:

– First of all, it is necessary to provide a stable and mutually trustworthy environment, excluding provocations, cases of the use of force and psychological violence, so that we can discuss the issues of concern to both sides. Moreover, if the most narrow and everyday issues can be discussed and solutions found through simple contacts, then I think the involvement of the international community is important for the discussion of more global issues;

– The blockade should be lifted, and Artsakh should have continuous and unrestricted land communication with Armenia, without any involvement of the Azerbaijani side;

– The security and normal functioning of vital infrastructures running from Armenia to Artsakh, which are under Azerbaijani control, should also be guaranteed by fully restoring gas and electricity supply and excluding new cases of their disruption.

It is important to stress that because of the failure of these infrastructures, as I have already mentioned, the water resources of the Sarsang reservoir have sharply decreased, which in spring and summer will create a serious crisis for Azerbaijani farmers, because there will not be enough water resources to irrigate tens of thousands of hectares of land;

– Our official dialogue can take place within an appropriate international format, which should be based on mutually acceptable principles, the norms of international law;

– The composition of the negotiating delegations must be determined exclusively by the sides, which means that Azerbaijan cannot interfere in the issue of forming the Artsakh delegation, and the same logic must be applied to the process of forming the Azerbaijani delegation;

– The proper involvement of Artsakh in the international community processes, including the presence of UN structures in Artsakh, must be ensured, which will provide important guarantees of security and development for the people of Artsakh;

– For both the dialogue itself and the comprehensive resolution of the conflict, the use of force and the threat of force must be excluded, which must be guaranteed by international security guarantees;

– The right of the people of Artsakh to self-determination and to control their own destiny is non-negotiable. It is the natural and fundamental right of our people, which is also enshrined in well-known international documents;

– Artsakh will never renounce its sovereignty, and integration with neighboring Azerbaijan is out of the question;

– International recognition of the realization of the right of the people of the Republic of Artsakh to self-determination and any other process or decision that goes beyond the logic of protection is unacceptable from our side, as it will surely lead to the ethnic destruction of the population of the Republic of Artsakh by Azerbaijan," Harutyunyan said.

New U.S. Ambassador presents copy of credentials to Armenian Foreign Minister

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 17:05,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. The new United States Ambassador to Armenia Kristina Kvien presented the copy of credentials to the Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan on February 20.

Photos by Hayk Manukyan

FM Mirzoyan congratulated Ambassador Kvien on assuming office and attached importance to the further deepening of the Armenia-United States partnership in areas of mutual interest. The importance of the Armenia-United States Strategic Dialogue format was emphasized in context of advancing the agenda based on common democratic values, the foreign ministry said in a read-out.

FM Mirzoyan appreciated the United States support for strengthening institutional capacities and fostering the government’s democratic reforms in Armenia.

Issues related to regional security and stability were also discussed at the meeting.

The latest developments in the Armenia-Azerbaijan settlement process, including the trilateral meeting in Munich were discussed.

The Armenian side highly appreciated the efforts made by the United States both trilaterally and as a co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group for the establishment of lasting peace in the region.

Speaking about the illegal blockade of Nagorno Karabakh by Azerbaijan, FM Mirzoyan emphasized that Azerbaijan must unconditionally restore the regime of the Lachin corridor as defined under the 9 November trilateral statement.