AYF initiates Artsakh “Sponsor a Student” program

Following the attack on Artsakh on September 19-20, virtually all of the Armenian residents of Artsakh were forced to relocate to Armenia. Promptly, many individuals and organizations mobilized to address their needs and facilitate their integration into Armenia’s society, economy and daily routines. With a similar objective in mind, the Armenian Youth Federation-Youth Organization of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (AYF-YOARF) Central Executive has initiated a fundraising campaign aimed at supporting families and school-aged children from Artsakh, called the “Sponsor a Student” initiative. 

Shortly after the mass attacks and relocation, a member of the Central Executive traveled to Armenia to gain a better understanding of the situation and the ongoing necessities of the affected families. Numerous families, seeking to enroll their children in schools, were turned away due to full capacity or inadequate resources for students. 

The Central Executive decided that as the youth organization of the ARF, it is important and necessary to support our fellow youth of Artsakh and ensure that we maintain their right and access to education through these extremely difficult times in our nation’s history.

Therefore, the Central Executive has launched a fundraising program to purchase backpacks filled with school supplies to distribute to the displaced Artsakh youth throughout Armenia. The backpacks will include all the essentials to help alleviate these students’ transition to starting school in Armenia.

A donation of $50 will sponsor supplies for one student. The Central Executive has set a first round goal of $25,000 to sponsor 500 students. 

Upon reaching this goal, future rounds will be announced to continue providing additional support to those children who have not yet received supplies. 

We encourage you to join us and donate to our Sponsor a Student initiative, to support the children of Artsakh who have gone through enough difficulties and trauma for a lifetime. We also ask that you challenge your friends, colleagues and family members to do the same.

Founded in 1933, The Armenian Youth Federation is an international, non-profit, youth organization of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF). The AYF-YOARF Eastern United States stands on five pillars that guide its central activities and initiatives: Educational, Hai Tahd, Social, Athletic and Cultural. The AYF also promotes a fraternal attitude of respect for ideas and individuals amongst its membership. Unity and cooperation are essential traits that allow members of the organization to work together to realize the AYF’s objectives.


Racine, New Jersey and Greater Boston host 2023 ACE Weekend and AYF Junior Conferences

Mid-Atlantic ACE weekend participants

From October 20-22, Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) Junior members took part in their respective regions’ Armenian Cultural Educational (ACE) weekend and Junior conferences. The weekend was hosted in the Midwest by the Racine “Armen Garo” Chapter, in the Mid-Atlantic region by the New Jersey “Arsen” Chapter, and in the New England region by the Greater Boston “Nejdeh” Chapter. 

ACE is an annual weekend where Junior members have the opportunity to participate in a variety of Armenian educationals and activities to form a strong connection with their Armenian culture. Educationals and activities range between dancing, language, cooking and other valuable aspects of Armenian heritage and tradition.

The weekend started with lectures discussing Armenian traditions throughout Armenia and the region. Arev Kaligian, Vartenie Kachichian and Holly Khaligian led a baking activity, during which Juniors learned how to prepare choreg, a well-known Armenian sweet bread, and kekhke, delicious pastry.

While waiting for the bread to rise and bake, Juniors spent time learning about the Armenian language. They learned the meaning of a revolutionary song and how to sing it. Juniors in the Mid-Atlantic and New England regions learned “Lerner Hayreni” from lecturers Shant Keshishian and Ani Khachatourian, while Juniors in the Midwest region learned “Arunod Trosh” from lecturer Nora Fronjian. 

The ungers then played games of Telestrations, but in Armenian, which was put together by the AYF Eastern Region’s Central Language Council. 

Following the language activities, the Juniors were treated to the choreg they had made earlier in the day along with lunch. For the final portion of ACE weekend, juniors spent time embracing Armenian music and art. The afternoon kicked off with an educational about Armenian art and how it can be used as a form of activism. The participants also spent time learning about different instruments. As the final activity of ACE weekend, the Juniors learned traditional dances from Armenia and Artsakh. 

To end the day, Juniors hosted region-wide conferences, where participants from each chapter in attendance briefed their fellow members about how their chapter’s year had gone. They also learned how AYF convention works at the Senior level and had the opportunity to come up with improvements that can be made locally and region-wide for the upcoming year.

AYF Juniors offered the following reflections about ACE weekend:

“It was a great time, and I had a lot of fun with my friends.” – Christian Kindt, Chicago “Ararat” Chapter

“I thought ACE was very fun and such a great way to learn about our Armenian culture and connect doing activities related to what we learned.” – Ani Haroutunian, New Jersey “Arsen” Chapter

“It was really fun, and we had a lot of fun activities to do, and it was entertaining.” – Tsoline Papazian, Chicago “Ararat” Chapter

“I felt that the lectures and accompanying activities were so very appropriate and relevant for the current place we as a nation and people are at. It’s with this new information and drive that we can accomplish our various goals as an organization.” – Krikor Iskenderian, Greater Boston “Nejdeh” Chapter

Founded in 1933, The Armenian Youth Federation is an international, non-profit, youth organization of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF). The AYF-YOARF Eastern United States stands on five pillars that guide its central activities and initiatives: Educational, Hai Tahd, Social, Athletic and Cultural. The AYF also promotes a fraternal attitude of respect for ideas and individuals amongst its membership. Unity and cooperation are essential traits that allow members of the organization to work together to realize the AYF’s objectives.


Asbarez: Mesrobian School’s Cultural Night Returns With Roar

Mesrobian Armenian School students performing during Cultural Night on Oct. 20


BY NAROD EKMEKJIAN

Back and better than ever, October 20 marked the return of Mesrobian School’s renowned Cultural Night, an evening full of vibrant displays of Armenian traditions, art, cuisine, and the physical and spiritual unity of an Armenian school and community.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the popular event was placed on a temporary hold to ensure the safety of students and attendees. Nevertheless, with the decreasing severity of the pandemic and the help of both the school’s dedicated faculty and the diligent Parent Faculty Association, the return of Cultural Night became a spectacular event.

This long-awaited homecoming sparked a palpable sense of excitement and relief within students, such as 11th grader, Emma Deravedissian, who stated, “I can speak on behalf of all Mesrobian students when I say it was a truly missed event, and we are so glad it has returned!”

The night opened with a warm introduction and welcome speech to the estimated 700 guests. As the night continued, the environment soon became filled with cultural spirit, as all grades presented a wide array of the most exceptional traditional and modernized Armenian dances.

This diverse display revealed the collective dedication of faculty, staff, and dance instructors, Lily and Eliz Grigorian, whose diligent efforts were supported with the enthusiastic and celebratory reactions from the audience. It is certain that the audience left with a lasting impact from their committed efforts.

In addition to cultural performances were high amounts of social productivity, supported with the wide variety of Armenian souvenirs, merchandise, and delicacies. This combination of lively conversations and delectable cuisines made the occasion a memorable one.

It is crucial to acknowledge that the recent loss of Artsakh had a significant influence on the event, most powerfully displayed by the heartfelt demonstration presented by the 11th and 12th grade boys. “As I watched, I couldn’t help getting all emotional; I even shed a few tears… This, along with all the other performances, truly was an outstanding display,” said an Armenian Mesrobian School parent who was moved by the performancs.

Azerbaijan’s ambassador to Ireland criticises EU Parliament’s resolution on Nagorno-Karabakh

The Journal, Ireland
Oct 30 2023
Azerbaijan's ambassador to Ireland criticises EU Parliament's resolution on Nagorno-Karabakh
Tensions remain high between Azerbaijan and Armenia with Azerbaijan this week hosting joint millitary drills with Turkey near the border of Armenia.

AZERBAIJAN’S AMBASSADOR TO Ireland and the UK has criticised the European Parliament for accusing Azerbaijan of ethnic cleansing and said the tone of the conversation surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh “needs to change”.

Speaking to The Journal, Ambassador Elin Suleymanov, rejected the Parliament’s accusation as an “emotional decision” and said Azerbaijan wants to work with the EU as an equal partner “not somebody who would be mentored, lectured and have fingers pointed at”.

Earlier this month, the European Parliament passed a resolution which said it considered that the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh amounted to ethnic cleansing and strongly condemned the “threats and violence committed by Azerbaijani troops”.

The parliament also called on the EU and member states to immediately offer all necessary assistance to Armenia to deal with the influx of refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh and the subsequent humanitarian crisis.

The resolution was passed by a landslide with 491 votes in favour, 9 against and 36 abstentions.

Azerbaijan rejects this claim of ethnic cleansing, but Ambassador Suleymanov accepted that at least 100,000 people have fled Nagorno-Karabakh into neighbouring Armenia following Azerbaijan’s offensive on the region in September.

The United Nations sent a monitoring mission to the region at the beginning of October to find the area largely deserted but has not itself used the term ethnic cleansing. 

A UN spokesperson said at the time: “Our colleagues were struck by the sudden manner in which the local population fled their homes and the suffering that the experience must have caused them.”

The spokesperson added that the UN did not come across any reports of violence against civilians following the latest ceasefire while the UN has committed to further visits to the region.

However, Armenia said that the monitoring mission had come too late.

Internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh became a breakaway state under the control of ethnic Armenian forces in 1994 following a six-year conflict and has remained a point of tension ever since.

A war in 2020 returned control of much of the area to Azerbaijan. Flash forward to last month, a lightning offensive by Azerbaijani forces resulted in separatists relinquishing the rest of the region.

Last week, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev raised his nation’s flag over the capital city in a ceremony reaffirming Baku’s control over it.

Speaking to The Journal earlier this month, Armenia’s Ambassador to Ireland Varuzhan Nersesyan warned that the situation with Azerbaijan is at risk of deteriorating further and urged the international community to guarantee the rights of ethnic Armenians to return to the region. 

Azerbaijan has consistently claimed that ethnic Armenians who wish to return will have their rights protected if they choose to do so, but Armenia does not believe this will be the case. 

Azerbaijan’s ambassador to Ireland, Elin Suleymanov said he can understand Mr Nersesyan’s “emotional frustration” and said that he believes there definitely needs to be a signed peace agreement between the two countries.

“Our objective is to build a region where we can all live in peace and cooperate with each other towards a more prosperous future for all of us,” he said. 

Suleymanov added that a “fundamentally important question” is why the Armenian ambassador “talks about the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan all of the time?”

“He doesn’t speak about anything else,” he said.

Azerbaijan’s blitz offensive on September 19 has resulted in a huge refugee crisis, when almost all of the 120,0000 ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh fled to Armenia.

Suleymanov pointed out that between 800,000 and 900,000 Azerbaijani’s were expelled from the region in the 1990s.

“We don’t want to do what they did to us.

“Most of those people who escaped Armenian occupation, their houses were destroyed. They were escaping violence, murders, military also. People who left Azerbaijan today for Armenia, they did not do so under direct order and they were not encouraged to leave,” he said.

Suleymanov said what Azerbaijan wants to see now is for both countries to sign a peace agreement.

However, tensions remained heightened between both countries with Azerbaijan this week hosting joint military drills with Turkey near the border of Armenia. 

Suleymanov said that such drills are routine and pointed to Armenia’s purchase of defensive military equipment from France this week and said “Azerbaijan has to be prepared”.

Meanwhile, Armenia’s Ambassador to Ireland warned this month that the situation with Azerbaijan is at risk of further deterioration and said Azerbaijan has “openly expressed territorial claims towards the Republic of Armenia”.

Suleymanov refuted this point and said: “Remember, on many occasions, the President of Azerbaijan said very clearly, and every official in Azerbaijan has repeated: we have no military objectives on Armenian territory.”

“Against all this rumor mill, we don’t have any plans to attack Armenia,” Suleymanov said.

On the same day that Azerbaijan started its drills near the border of Armenia, representatives from both countries, along with Turkey and Russia, met for talks hosted by Iran in a bid to find a solution without the West.

Iran and Russia both denounced European and US interference in the issue, with Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov calling out the EU in particular.

Peace talks hosted by the EU have been proposed for later this month by European Council President Charles Michel, but a date has not yet been set.

Additional reporting from AFP.


Yerevan Hands Protest Note to Moscow Over ‘Insulting’ Program on Russia’s State-Run TV

A graphic featured on the Russian Channel One Program shows George Soros as a puppet master of Pashinyan and his government


Russian State-Run Television Airs Program Disparaging Pashinyan and Saying Russia Should Control the “Zangezur Corridor”

The escalation of tensions between Armenia and Russia took on new form when Russia’s state-run Channel One aired an hour-long program criticizing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for his government’s handling of the Artsakh issue, and, among other issues, advancing the imperative for the opening of the so-called “Zangezur Corridor” to be controlled by Russia.

The program, which aired on Monday evening, was deemed so “insulting” that Armenia’s Foreign Ministry handed a protest note to Russia after summoning its ambassador to Armenia Sergey Kopyrkin on Tuesday.

“In connection with the program aired on October 23 on the all-Russian federal TV channel Channel One, during which insulting and absolutely unacceptable statements were made against high-ranking officials of the Republic of Armenia, Armenia’s Foreign Ministry summoned Sergey Kopyrkin, Ambassador of the Russian Federation to Armenia,” a statement by the foreign ministry said Tuesday when the protest note was also presented.

The growing rift between Moscow and Yerevan has also spilled into other facets of bi-lateral relations, with the Speaker of the Russian Duma, Viasheslav Volodin, announcing that it has tabled a measure that would recognize Armenia-issued drivers’ licenses as identification.

“We thought it appropriate to delay the [ratification of] the measure, which grant additional privileges [to Armenian citizens], since Armenia’s National Assembly members and the government have not taken any steps on the issue of the status of the Russian language,” Volodin said.

He explained that Belarus and Kyrgyzstan have also determined the status of Russian language in their countries through Constitutional amendments.

Then on Monday Channel One, the leading state-run television channel, aired an hour-long program entitled “Nikol Pashinyan: The Bearer of Calamity,” in which Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his circle, including National Security Chief Armen Grigoryan and Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan were labeled as “Soros agents,” referring to the American billionaire George Soros whose “democracy-building” contributions to emerging democracies have caused domestic havoc in some of the recipient countries.

The program did not shy away from emphasizing the more than 30 billion-ruble (over $320 million) annual funding Armenia receives from Moscow, as well as that four Russian military basis operating in Armenia where some 4,000 Russian border units are deployed, Azatutyun.am reported having translated the content of the show.

As relations have worsened between the two countries, Russia has signaled its support for the controversial land corridor from Azerbaijan to Nakhichevan through Armenia—a move Yerevan vehemently opposed and called an infringement on Armenia’s sovereign territory.

The Channel One program also featured a government official who, according to Azatutyun.am, claimed to have participated in meetings of the deputy prime ministers of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, who are tasked with untangling the transport routes between the two countries and the more complex task of delimiting and demarcating the borders.

The Russian official featured on the program did not mince words when asserting that Russia’s goal and desire is to take control of the so-called road connecting Azerbaijan to Nakhichevan.

“The 45-kilometer [almost 15 miles] road, called the Zangezur Corridor, has to be built,” the official said on the Channel One program. “We don’t understand why Armenia is against it.”

Economic activity index grows 9,7% in nine months

 15:34,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 25, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s economic activity index grew 9,7% in January-September 2023 compared to last year’s same period, according to data released by the Statistical Committee.

Industrial production output dropped 0,6%, while gross agricultural output increased 1,7%.

Construction grew 17%.

Trade turnover grew 23,3%. Services grew 13,4%.

The consumer price index grew 2,8%, while the industrial product price index grew 1,3%. Electrical energy production decreased 2,8%.

Foreign trade grew 47,2% (exports grew 48,5% and imports grew 46,4%).

IRC Responds to Nagorno-Karabakh Displacement

Oct 20 2023
Press Release
Joanna Nahorska
Senior Global Communications Officer
IRC Global Communications
+1 646 761 0307

A month since the escalation of the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh which forced almost the entire ethnic Armenian population to flee, the International Rescue Committee (IRC) calls on the sustained support for the over 100,000 displaced. According to reports, as few as 50 to 1,000 ethnic Armenians are now left in the region. Armenia, a nation with a population of 2.8 million and over 25% poverty rate, could encounter substantial difficulties in meeting the needs of the displaced individuals as winter approaches.

After meeting with displaced Armenians and local NGOs in Goris and Yerevan, the International Rescue Committee (IRC) will support four local partners in distributing essential winter items and ensuring the safety of women and girls. 

Kathryn Sokol, IRC’s Emergency Unit, said:
“Tens of thousands of people who fled Nagorno-Karabakh are currently being hosted in Armenian homes and collective shelters. The efforts from the government, local civil society, and neighbours has been astounding, but the displaced population will still need support to meet their immediate needs in the coming months.

“Most people fled very quickly, leaving everything behind. As the temperatures start to plummet, they now urgently need warm clothes for their children, bedding, means to heat their homes and to cook. Having experienced the emotional trauma of sudden displacement, they also require support to recover from the impact of the conflict.

“During our visit, we encountered a family of six staying in a rented apartment, relying on a single small electric heater that was insufficient to warm even one room in mid-October. In another shelter, seven people shared a single room equipped with only three twin-sized beds. The facility had only two showers and toilets to accommodate nearly seventy people, illustrative of the challenging living conditions faced by the displaced population.”

The IRC is working with the OxYGen Foundation for Protection of Youth and Women Rights, Women’s Resource Center, Partnership and Teaching Non-Governmental Organization and WINNET Goris Development Foundationto meet the needs of 1,700 people who have fled, providing people in need with blankets, warm clothes, heaters, and bedding to ensure they can keep warm, as well as creating safe spaces for women in collective shelters. Our partners will also distribute dignity kits and offer initial psychological and legal assistance.

https://www.rescue.org/press-release/irc-responds-nagorno-karabakh-displacement





Belgian businessmen visit Armenia to explore new opportunities for stronger ties

 14:08,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 19, ARMENPRESS. Belgian businessmen have arrived in Armenia to strengthen and enhance economic relations between the two countries.

Eric Bletard, Trade and Investment Counselor at Wallonia Export and Investment Agency said at a press conference on October 19 that the delegation includes businessmen from the areas of pharmaceuticals, construction, electronics and waste processing.

“Our businessmen have come to Armenia with concrete goals, they plan to visit a number of enterprises of Armenian partners. The Belgian businessmen are interested in both the Armenian market as well as the opportunities of accessing other markets through Armenia,” Bletard said. He said that the areas of healthcare and energy could also be considered.

According to Bletard, trade turnover between Armenia and Belgium grew significantly in 2021-2022, and they expect 50% growth in 2023.

“There are opportunities for cooperation in the service sector and technologies. I am highlighting the tech sector. Armenia has serious reputation abroad from this perspective. Belgium requires good specialists in the tech sector, and Armenia can help in this issue,” he said.

Ambassador of Belgium to Armenia Eric De Muynck said the two countries have big potential to develop economic relations in the most various sectors. He said that the newly opened embassy in Armenia can play an important role in this issue.

The Ambassador said he has proposed the Armenian officials to consider cooperation opportunities in pharmaceuticals and new technologies. All proposals are under consideration, he said.

Belgium-Armenia Chamber of Commerce President Valery Safaryan said they are trying to serve as a “unique bridge” for the businessmen of the two countries. The organization was founded 18 years ago.

Issue of enclaves to be resolved during delimitation and demarcation of borders, says Armenian Cabinet minister

 13:17,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosyan has said that all issues related to the enclaves between Armenia and Azerbaijan will be resolved during the delimitation and demarcation process.

As difficult as the contentious issue of enclaves may seem in the Armenian-Azeri talks, the issue is actually simple because there are maps and legal grounds in place pertaining to these areas, he said.

Any territory constituting an enclave must have some legal base, the minister said.

“When two given countries recognize each other’s territorial integrity, this must be followed by the delimitation and demarcation process, as a result of which the borders will be determined in all regards. It’s not the name that matters, but the legal documents. Speaking about enclaves, don’t forget Artsvashen, which is big in size and substantiated with legal regulations. When the delimitation and demarcation process starts, all issues pertaining to the enclaves will be resolved as part of that,” Sanosyan told reporters.

Only targeted provisional measures will prevent Azerbaijan from continuing ethnic cleansing – Armenia at world court

 14:20,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Time and again, Azerbaijan has shown not only that it is willing to mislead the international community, but also that it is willing to misrepresent the International Court of Justice orders in doing so, or even to use them to justify its own violations of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination, Armenia’s agent before the ICJ Yeghishe Kirakosyan said in his opening remarks during the world court oral proceedings on the request for the indication of provisional measures filed by Armenia against Azerbaijan.

Kirakosyan said that in these circumstances, nothing other than targeted, unequivocal provisional measures protecting the rights of the ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh will suffice to prevent the ethnic cleansing Azerbaijan has perpetrated from continuing and becoming irreversible.

Below is the transcript of Kirakosyan’s speech at the ICJ hearing.

“Madam President, distinguished Judges of the Court, it is an honor to appear before you today as the Agent of the Republic of Armenia. 

“Less than nine months ago, I stood at this podium and warned that Azerbaijan was putting in motion a plan to ethnically cleanse Nagorno-Karabakh of all ethnic Armenians. Madam President, it pains me greatly to say – that has now materialized.

“After a nine-month blockade, maintained in flagrant violation of the Court’s Orders and in the face of widespread international condemnation, on 19 September, Azerbaijan launched a full-scale attack on Nagorno-Karabakh. It then cynically opened the Lachin Corridor for the first time in nine months only to let out more than 100,000 fleeing ethnic Armenians. Despite comprising for millennia the great majority of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh, almost no ethnic Armenians remain in Nagorno-Karabakh today. If this is not ethnic cleansing, Madam President, I do not know what is.

“I expect my counterpart will tell you this afternoon that Azerbaijan is committed to “reconciliation” and a “peaceful future” with ethnic Armenians. But if those words sound familiar to you, it is because he said the exact same thing nine months ago, after which Azerbaijan continued to deliberately interrupt vital public utilities and starve the ethnic Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh for another eight months, before brutally attacking them and causing them to flee their ancestral home.

“I expect my counterpart will tell you that Azerbaijan will permit those it considers its citizens to return. He promised the same thing in October 2021 when he claimed that, in areas that had been transferred to Azerbaijan in 2020, Azerbaijan was  “committed to the return of displaced persons, regardless of their national or ethnic origin.” Two years later, not a single ethnic Armenian has been permitted to return to those areas, and instead virtually all remaining ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh have been forced to flee their homes.

“I expect my counterpart will also tell you that Azerbaijan will treat any ethnic Armenian who returns in accordance with Azerbaijan’s obligations under the CERD. He promised treatment of ethnic Armenians in accordance with the CERD in October 2021 as well. Two provisional measures orders by the Court did not deter Azerbaijan from escalating its violations of the CERD.

“Madam President, distinguished Judges of the Court, let me be perfectly clear: since September 2020, Azerbaijan has been taking steps to cleanse Nagorno-Karabakh of ethnic Armenians, and it has been doing so while Armenia’s claims under the CERD are pending before the Court. Political considerations may have prevented the international community from acting to stop it, but the reality of such ethnic cleansing is crystal clear to all.

“Azerbaijan’s accountability for violations will be determined at the merits stage of this case. But you can still make a meaningful difference on the ground today. There is still time to prevent the forced displacement of ethnic Armenians from becoming irreversible, and to protect the very few ethnic Armenians who remain in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as those who have been abducted and are currently unlawfully detained in Azerbaijan’s prisons.

“Madam President, distinguished Judges of the Court, Azerbaijan’s cynicism crosses any imaginable boundary. It complains that Armenia’s claims before this Court are “contrary to the norms and principles of international law,” and asserts that such actions  “constitute the main threat to establish peace, security and justice in the region,” and alleges that Armenia is “not interested in the process of peace and normalization with Azerbaijan.” Such remarkable stance is in stark conflict with the very foundations of the international legal order, which is based on the premise that disputes should be resolved by peaceful means only. And it reflects the way Azerbaijan prefers to resolve its disputes, that is by resorting to the illegal use of force. Is this how Azerbaijan understands peace and security? 

“Before I conclude by outlining the presentation of Armenia’s case this morning, please allow me one final point. Time and again, Azerbaijan has shown not only that it is willing to mislead the international community, but also that it is willing to misrepresent the Court’s Orders in doing so, or even to use them to justify its own violations of the CERD. In these circumstances, nothing other than targeted, unequivocal provisional measures protecting the rights of the ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh will suffice to prevent the ethnic cleansing Azerbaijan has perpetrated from continuing and becoming irreversible; to safeguard Armenians’ millennia long enduring cultural presence in Nagorno-Karabakh from being eradicated, as was already done in Nakhichevan and is being done elsewhere in Azerbaijan; and to protect the abducted political-military leadership of Nagorno-Karabakh from fabricated criminal charges. If your provisional measures retain any ambiguity whatsoever, Azerbaijan will exploit them. And in so doing, it will ensure that the ethnic Armenian presence and history in Nagorno-Karabakh are permanently wiped out.  While we do not do so lightly, it is in these circumstances that we approach the Court for the third time.

“The remainder of Armenia’s presentation this morning will be structured as follows:

“First, Mr. Martin will set out the facts compelling Armenia’s request.

“Second, Professor Sicilianos will explain why Armenia’s requests fall within the jurisdiction of the Court, why the rights for which protection is sought are plausible, and how those rights are linked to the provisional measures requested.

“Third, Ms. Macdonald will demonstrate the ongoing irreparable prejudice and urgency necessitating the indication of provisional measures.

“Fourth, Professor Murphy will explain why each of the first nine provisional measures requested by Armenia is necessary to protect the rights of ethnic Armenians.

“Fifth, Professor d’Argent will explain why the tenth and final provisional measure requested by Armenia is equally necessary and offer certain concluding remarks about Armenia’s third request for provisional measures.

“Finally, I will return to the podium to read Armenia’s final submissions.

“I thank you, Madam President, distinguished Members of the Court, for your attention and careful consideration of Armenia’s Request. I now kindly ask that you invite Mr. Martin to address the Court.”