Greek FM: Humanity’s duty is to recognize Armenian Genocide

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Armenia –

Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias stated the need for further international recognition of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire.

"This year in Greece we remember the victims of the Armenian Genocide. Our thoughts are with the Armenians living in our homeland and around the world. Expanding the geography of international recognition of the Genocide is a duty of humanity," Dendias wrote on social media.

He posted a photo of himself taken in October 2020 during a visit to Tsitsernakaberd in Yerevan, where the minister laid a wreath at the memorial to the victims of the Genocide.

Armenian, Cypriot FMs reaffirm excellent level of bilateral relations

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 12:48, 9 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan and Minister of Foreign Affairs of Cyprus Ioannis Kasoulides held a telephone conversation, discussing the bilateral relations, the Spokesperson of the Foreign Ministry of Cyprus Demetris Demetriou said on Twitter.

“Warm and cordial teleconversation between Cyprus FM Kasoulides and the FM of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan. Reaffirmed the excellent level of bilateral relations and reiterated Cyprus support and solidarity with the Armenian people, in view of the upcoming negotiations”, the Spokesperson said.

Cyprus establishes state agency aimed at preserving Armenian cultural heritage

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Armenia – April 5 2022

A motion for the establishment of a Sub-Ministry of Culture was recently passed unanimously by the parliament of Cyprus. Vartkes Mahdessian, an Armenian member of the House of Representatives of Cyprus, informed about this on Facebook.

“The establishment of the new department concerns the promotion and preservation of the cultural heritage of the communities and the religious groups of Maronites, Armenians and Latins.

On behalf of the Armenian Community, I would like to express my sincere appreciation to my parliamentary colleagues for their ongoing support and solidarity,” Mahdessian added.

Opinion: Armenia is stuck between the West and Russia


March 12 2022


  • Armine Martirosyan
  • Yerevan
  • Hakob Badalyan, political observer: "Between a rock and a hard place"
  • Hovsep Khurshudyan, Chairman of the NGO "Free Citizen": "The Kremlin's plans for Armenia, how will the West respond"

Armenia is balancing between Russia and the West

Armenia has found itself in a difficult situation stuck between Russia and the West. The Ukrainian crisis has further exacerbated this situation. Taking sides for Armenia is an excessive luxury. Such a step for it, according to most local experts, is deadly. And the authorities of Armenia still prefer to remain neutral.

At the same time, the situation in the region has worsened again. A soldier has been killed on the border of Armenia, and in Nagorno-Karabakh, peaceful settlements are being shelled along the entire perimeter of the line of contact. In addition, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces play a recording in Armenian through loudspeakers, calling on their residents to leave their homes in order to save their lives.

How can events develop, what kind of support can Armenia expect from the West or Russia? Comments by political observer Hakob Badalyan and chairman of the NGO “Free Citizen” Hovsep Khurshudyan.


  • Armenian-Azerbaijani escalation: reports from both sides
  • Nagorno-Karabakh gas pipeline damage: technical problems or Azerbaijani sabotage?
  • “Russia ousted the West from the South Caucasus” – former co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group
  • What is the right strategy for Armenia, stuck between the foreign policy ambitions of Russia and Turkey?

“Armenia has always found itself in a difficult situation, when the West and Russia entered a regime of tough resistance. Now the main task for Armenia is not to be on anyone’s side in terms of conducting practical politics. It is clear that Armenia is a member of the CSTO military bloc and the EAEU economic union [both operate under the auspices of Russia – JAMnews], that is, by default, it is already on this side.

But we are talking about a practical policy that can be adequately perceived in the West, even if they see some steps towards Russia.

The West understands that Armenia has many problems, including security, so no one is pushing it to take any action that could provoke an aggressive reaction from Russia.

That is why Armenia should strive for active neutrality, but in such a way that its policy is understandable to both Russia and the West.

Moreover, Armenia should work not only with Russia and the West, it should continue the dialogue with Turkey to improve relations, at least maintain the communication that has been formed today. This is important given the increasing political role of Turkey in the Ukrainian issue.

I would especially single out Georgia in this situation, for which, just like for Armenia, a stable situation in the region is very important, and it is very important not to get drawn into this the tension that exists between Russia and the West. And if we combine even the behind-the-scenes diplomatic efforts of both countries – Armenia and Georgia – then the neutral policy in the current situation will become even more effective.

From the point of view of economic risks, Armenia should try to intensify work with the Arab countries, offer them projects that are attractive for their capital in order to neutralize the risks that may arise as a result of the sanctions imposed against Russia”.

“The authorities are behaving optimally so far, which cannot be said about the public, which, due to the lack of institutional leaders, elites, is subjected to both external and internal manipulations. Various rallies held in the country are proof of this. Moreover, manipulations are carried out both in support of Russia and in support of Ukraine.

But both pro-Russian and anti-Russian manifestos are dangerous for Armenia.

I doubt that this is being done at the behest of the Kremlin or the West. I see no reason to think that someone wants to drag Armenia into the Ukrainian crisis. These provocations come, most likely, from different groups from the same Russia, as well as from Russian satellites in Armenia, who are interested in selling their manipulations to political actors. And, unfortunately, our society is vulnerable in this regard – they succumb to these manipulations, they spread them on social media”.

“Against the backdrop of a large-scale war in Ukraine, the situation in the Caucasus can become a tool for Russia. It can “play” with the situation in the Caucasus region if any political projects from the West are used against it. On the other hand, this situation may become a tool in the hands of others to put pressure on Russia itself.

Russia absolutely does not need instability in the Caucasus today because of its own serious problems in connection with Ukraine.

Russia does not need to get another instability behind its back and be forced to deal with it. Therefore, any instability can be viewed as a means of putting pressure on Moscow by those who have influence on Azerbaijan, who are able to force Azerbaijan to escalate by encouraging it to resolve some issues.

It should be noted that the situation in the region is escalating in parallel with the activation of Turkey in the Ukrainian issue. For a long time, Russia tried to reject Turkish offers of mediation, hoping for direct negotiations with the United States. But after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, America does not want to talk to Moscow, instead increasing the mediating role of Turkey.

It is possible that the aggravation of the situation in Artsakh is the very tool in the hands of Turkey to put pressure on Moscow in order to obtain a mediation mission in the Ukrainian issue. When Russia sits down with Turkey at the negotiating table, as a rule, it concedes something. For us, this is a very disturbing signal. That is why we must continue to work not only with Russia and the West, but also directly with the Turks, so that once again we do not become the subject of trade and be more flexible”.

“The meeting between Nikol Pashinyan and Macron [took place on March 9, the French President invited the Armenian Prime Minister to Paris to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations] is not accidental. Any activity of Turkey puts strain on France as well.

France is already concerned about the whole situation in terms of the role of Europe and its sovereignty in the context of the Ukrainian war. France is concerned about the increasing role of Turkey in one of the key areas for Europe.

Against this background, Armenia, with all its problems, becomes a political tool for France to contain Turkey.

But Macron wants to solve his own problem at the same time. During the pre-election period, the Armenian community is an important factor for the President of France. The Armenians of France are too integrated into French life, the Armenian community has a high rating, and so much so that it can affect the position of the French themselves”.

“Now we see what the West can give Ukraine. It provides weapons that Ukraine resists more strongly, but these weapons do not solve all problems. Ukraine asks to close the sky, but the West does not agree to this, so as not to enter into a direct confrontation with Moscow.

The significance of Armenia and the significance of Ukraine or the Ukrainian game as a whole for the West are incomparable. Therefore, in the event of a new war in Nagorno-Karabakh or Armenia, significant assistance from Western countries, in particular, the closure of the sky, can not be expected.

Talking about the inclusion of Russia in this case is completely pointless.

Russia does not have the resources to fight a war on two fronts, in addition, there is no desire to enter the war against Turkey.”

Russia is an ally on paper, but in reality it is not and never will be.

We do not have an alternative security ally, and there is also no possibility of acquiring one. In our case, war is the most undesirable development for Armenia, which can instantly turn into one ruin.”

“In terms of civilization, Armenia is Europe. It was enough just 3 years of democratic development after the Velvet Revolution of 2018, as in all international rankings, Armenia began to catch up, and in many positions even surpass the countries of the Eastern Partnership associated with the European Union in 2013.

Another thing is that the constant existential threat of 30 times the population and resources of Turkey and Azerbaijan and the zero military presence of the West led to the fact that Armenia has long linked its security with Russia.

April war in 2016 and 44 day war 2020 in NK showed that the Kremlin’s kleptocratic elite can not only betray, but simply sell any, even the closest ally.

Now the people of Armenia, even in terms of security, have less and less hope with Russia and more and more with the West.

But the question here is not only that Armenia is between the West and Russia. Much more dangerous is the Kremlin’s strategic plans for Armenia.

It is clear that before attacking Ukraine, Putin intended to create something like the USSR-2. Without Ukraine, such a project was obviously doomed. But if the Kremlin’s adventure in Ukraine had succeeded, there can be no doubt that Armenia would have been the next victim.

Moreover, Putin would act in close cooperation with Aliyev: Azerbaijan would attack Armenia, and Russia would begin to “save” it. As a result, we would lose another part of our territory, the return of which, of course, Russia would not provide. But as a “salvation” from the genocide, the rest would demand to join a new alliance, and with the worst conditions.

Therefore, Ukrainians are now fighting not only for their independence and the right to self-determination, but also for Armenia, Georgia, Moldova, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan.”

Against the backdrop of the Ukrainian war, Baku took an aggressive stance
“Aliyev is again acting in cooperation with Putin, as was the case in 2020 during the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as in May 2021, when the Azerbaijani armed forces invaded the territory of Armenia and occupied, according to my estimates and information, about 100 square kilometers territory [the Armenian authorities announced the figure of 41 square kilometers].

Russia and the CSTO [a military bloc under the auspices of Russia, of which Armenia is a member] not only did not stand up for their military and economic ally, but did not even condemn the Azerbaijani provocation and invasion, as did France and the United States.

The Kremlin put pressure on the leadership of Armenia not to boldly turn to the UN Security Council.

Despite the fact that French President Macron openly stated that he was ready to submit a special resolution to the UN Security Council if Armenia turned to it with this issue.

Therefore, the containment of Aliyev from further provocations can be effectively organized only with the help of the West.

On March 9, we saw the almost unanimous (with 635 votes in favor, 2 against and 42 abstentions) adoption of the resolution of the European Parliament “On the destruction of cultural heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh.”

The resolution condemns the anti-Armenian policy of Azerbaijan and emphasizes that the elimination of traces of the Armenian cultural heritage is carried out not only with the intention of harming, but also with the aim of falsifying history and erasing the traces of Armenianness.

Everything goes to the fact that the West is inclined to decide the fate of Nagorno-Karabakh according to the Kosovo scenario.”

“Pashinyan’s meeting with Macron during this period is not at all accidental. He invited Nikol Pashinyan to a meeting in Paris before the latter is due to meet with Vladimir Putin [the meeting with Putin is scheduled for early April].

So the French President clearly makes it clear that the West has something to offer Armenia, including in terms of security.

The West today is more consolidated than ever and has the greatest power to solve many regional problems. Especially after the failure of Putin’s aggression against Ukraine, and also after the achievement of a nuclear agreement with Iran, which I do not doubt for a minute, the West will have much more influence both on Turkey and Azerbaijan, and on the South Caucasus and the Middle East regions as a whole.” .

Armenian President, Dutch Ambassador discuss bilateral cooperation

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 16:46,

YEREVAN, MARCH 29, ARMENPRESS. President Vahagn Khachaturyan received today Ambassador of the Netherlands to Armenia Nico Schermers, the Presidential Office said.

The Ambassador congratulated the President of Armenia on election, wishing a productive work.

In his remarks President Khachaturyan highlighted the further expansion of the Armenian-Dutch friendly relations and bilateral cooperation.

The sides exchanged ideas about deepening the cooperation and implementing joint projects in different areas, including economy, education, science and new technologies.

FM Mirzoyan highlights international community’s call for de-escalation in NK in a meeting with US Ambassadaor

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 20:09,

YEREVAN, MARCH 28, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan received US Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracy.

As ARMENPRESS was inmformed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, the meeting focused on the situation over the incursion of Azerbaijani armed forces into the village of Parukh in Nagorno Karabakh, as well as the ongoing provocations against the civilian population of Artsakh and the deliberate disruption of the normal operation of vital infrastructure.

Appreciating the assessment of the aggressive actions of Azerbaijan by the United States, Minister Mirzoyan stressed the need to take active steps to de-escalate the situation, highlighted the need for the international community to consistently address the problem.

Russia has accused Azerbaijan of violating the ceasefire agreement with Armenia in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

 

Moscow on Saturday (March 26) accused Azerbaijan of violating the ceasefire with Armenia signed after the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, deploying troops in areas controlled by Russian forces to maintain peace.

There are frequent incidents between the Armenian and Azerbaijani armed forces, but this is the first time since the conflict in November 2020 that Moscow has accused Vladimir Putin of violating the guarantee agreement. This renewed tension comes at a tense time, during which time Russia has launched a large-scale offensive against Ukraine.

Read more The article is reserved for our subscribersThe role of the Russian military in Karabakh is discussed in Azerbaijan

“Between March 24 and 25, Azerbaijan’s armed forces entered the territory under the responsibility of the Nagorno-Karabakh peacekeeping mission in violation of a tripartite agreement between the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia (…).In a statement, the Russian Defense Ministry condemned the attack.

In Baguio, there is the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan “Sorry” Russian report “One who does not reflect the truth and accepts only one point of view”. Promised that “Azerbaijan has not violated any rules” Ceasefire Agreement and “Russian Defense Ministry calls for full withdrawal of Armenian troops and illegal armed forces from this internationally recognized territory owned by Azerbaijan.”.

According to Russia, Azerbaijani forces have set up a monitoring station “Four attacks by Pyrrhic type drones” On the Karabakh forces near the Farouk area. “Peacekeeping Commission of Russia commands action to resolve situation (…) Appeal for withdrawal of troops sent to Azerbaijan”The Russian Defense Ministry said in a statement.

Read more The article is reserved for our subscribers“It feels like a siege”: a year after the war, the sad life of Nagorno-Karabakh citizens

An Azerbaijani drone killed three people and wounded fifteen, according to Karabakh officials. “Azerbaijan Armed Forces still in Farouk village”, Karabakh Ministry of Defense lamented. Russian diplomacy revealed it “Deep Concern”.

The agreement, signed on November 9, 2020 by Vladimir Putin and the leaders of Armenia, Nicole Pashinian and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, marked the end of a six-week violent conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over control of Nagorno-Karabakh. . Azerbaijani forces made significant regional gains.

Read more The article is reserved for our subscribersNagorno-Karabakh: Vladimir Putin has sealed Yerevan’s defeat after a “complete ceasefire” agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

On Friday, Karabakh officials said two soldiers had been killed by Azerbaijani forces. Armenian Foreign Ministry condemns Saturday “Invasion” It happened and was marked on March 24th “Fixed artillery attack”. He accused his neighbor Karabakh of losing gas and preventing people from warming up, and condemned the situation. “On the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe”.

“We expect the Russian peacekeeping force in Nagorno-Karabakh to take clear action to resolve the situation and prevent further war casualties.”Armenian diplomacy was added.

For its part, the Kremlin on Saturday called on MM. Pashinyan and Putin have twice discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh situation, the day before and the day before.

The Nagorno-Karabakh mountain range, populated mainly by Armenians, was supported by Yerevan, which seceded from Azerbaijan in the fall of the Soviet Union, leading to the First War in the 1990s, killing 30,000 people and creating hundreds of thousands of refugees.

A new conflict erupted in the fall of 2020, killing 6,500 people in six weeks. This ended in a crushing defeat for Armenia, forcing Azerbaijan to cede three areas that form a glacier around Nagorno-Karabakh.

Read our review: The article is reserved for our subscribersBetween Baku and Yerevan, increasing risks

World with AFP

https://www.balkantravellers.com/russia-has-accused-azerbaijan-of-violating-the-ceasefire-agreement-with-armenia-in-the-nagorno-karabakh-region/


A Vicious Circle of Cultural Erasure in Azerbaijan

Wall Street Journal

March 24, 2022 6:34 pm ET

“One war doesn’t make you forget another war,” François-Xavier Bellamy, a French member of the European Parliament, said on March 10. While the world’s eyes are on Ukraine, the European Parliament still found time this month to condemn Azerbaijan’s war against Armenia’s sacred past. This solidarity is encouraging but insufficient.

On Feb. 3 the Azerbaijani government announced that it would target hundreds of sacred sites that bear witness to Armenian Christian history in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. “A working group of specialists,” pro-government media quoted culture minister Anar Karimov as saying, “has been set up to remove the fictitious traces written by Armenians.”

Fictitious traces? Armenian presence in the area goes back thousands of years and can be seen in innumerable monuments. Some churches have roots in the early fourth century, and no serious scholar disputes their authenticity. But Azerbaijan, a majority-Muslim country that conquered much of the region in a 2020 war, is deploying a government-promoted conspiracy theory that casts Armenian cultural monuments as fake. As the Cornell University-based Caucasus Heritage Watch shows in its satellite research, even Armenian cemeteries haven’t been safe from Azerbaijan’s wrath since 2020. Tombstones, new and old alike, are bulldozed in the name of construction.

Azerbaijan proclaims that Armenians did not exist in Nagorno-Karabakh until the 19th century. This conspiracy theory references Caucasian Albania, a kingdom northeast of Nagorno-Karabakh that ceased existence in the ninth century. During the Soviet era, to compete with Armenian and Georgian narratives, Azerbaijani scholars claimed Caucasian Albanians as their ancestors, eventually extending the discredited theory to proclaim that Armenian heritage is stolen Caucasian Albanian heritage. In 2020, Azerbaijan introduced a new conspiracy theory, claiming that Armenian khachkar monuments are “artificially aged.”

Between 1997 and 2006, Azerbaijan covertly flattened every trace of Armenian Christianity in historically disputed areas it controlled already. Azerbaijan now says that the thousands of destroyed monuments, including the prominent churches of Agulis and the celebrated necropolis of Djulfa, never existed. That Baku would extend this project to its new dominions is brazen but unsurprising.

In December, the International Court of Justice ordered Azerbaijan to “take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration.” The organization was particularly concerned with Azerbaijan’s practice of relabeling Armenian monuments as Caucasian Albanian. After some backlash, Azerbaijan’s Culture Ministry walked back part of the Feb. 3 announcement in a new text that was less threatening, but the milder language should fool no one. A 2005 commission created by the Azerbaijani authorities in Nakhichevan identified a list of surviving Armenian monuments for erasure but didn’t explicitly mention destroying them. The monuments were swiftly flattened.

As a natural-gas producer, Azerbaijan is taking advantage of the war in Ukraine: European countries looking to reduce dependence on Moscow are turning to Baku. Some of the isolation it faced from Brussels and Washington after the 2020 war is ending. As the world is distracted with the bloodshed in Ukraine, Baku projects power over newly conquered territory by destroying cultural artifacts.

The goal is to push Armenians out entirely. As their sacred sites are targeted—and their secular infrastructure is deliberately damaged—many will become demoralized and voluntarily leave. In this part of the world, if you don’t have a place of memory, you have nothing.

Azerbaijan’s government might cast the destruction of Armenian monuments as revenge for damage caused to Islamic monuments that were under Armenian control in Nagorno-Karabakh until 2020. But this is a false equivalence. Many sites sustained damage, but there is no evidence of systematic, let alone state-sponsored, erasure. That’s why the International Court of Justice rejected Azerbaijan’s counter-accusation against Armenians last year.

Not that Armenians are blameless. Before the war, Azerbaijanis couldn’t access their sacred sites in the area controlled by Armenians. Now the roles are flipped. Had Armenian and Azerbaijani religious leaders promoted mutual pilgrimages after the first Nagorno-Karabakh war ended in 1994, perhaps more monuments would have survived. Ideas for practical confidence-building measures, like installing public video monitors at churches and mosques, remain ideas.

As a researcher of cultural politics who wishes to prevent more erasure, I try to encourage dialogue. In February, I sent an email to Azerbaijan’s Sheikh-ul-Islam Allahshukur Pashazade. “Your Virtue,” I asked the religious leader of Azerbaijan, “did you approve the building of a mosque in your honor on the site of a destroyed church?” Caucasus Heritage Watch satellite images showed that a mosque built a few years ago in Nakhichevan in his honor replaced a medieval Armenian church that once stood there. Earlier, he attended the opening of at least one other mosque built in place of an Armenian church in Abrakunis.

I didn’t receive a response, but I still pray that the sheikh will use his voice to advocate for resuming Armenian pilgrimages to Dadivank, one of the most sacred Armenian sites to come under Azerbaijan’s control in 2020.

The practice of erasing a culture only feeds conflict. Azerbaijan’s religious leader, despite effectively serving at the pleasure of the president, has more power than global institutions like the European Parliament to stop cultural erasure in Nagorno-Karabakh. He has an opportunity to end this vicious circle—if he has the courage to act.

Mr. Maghakyan is a visiting scholar at Tufts University and executive director of Save Armenian Monuments.

 

Fifth President of Armenia Vahagn Khachatryan takes office

The fifth president of Armenia, Vahagn Khachatryan, took the oath and took office during a special meeting of the National Assembly, broadcasted by local news portals.

Khachatryan swore an oath, placing his hand on a special copy of the Armenian constitution and the 7th century Gospel Vekhamor Avetaran.

Let us add that earlier the Armenian parliament elected the country’s minister of high-tech industry Vahagn Khachatryan as the country’s president, Narek Babayan, head of the counting commission, announced the decision of the parliament. For Khachatryan, who was the only candidate, 71 deputies voted.

The former president of Armenia, Armen Sarkissian, announced his resignation , explaining this decision by the lack of powers that allow him to influence the fundamental processes of foreign and domestic policy.

Issue of organizing meeting between Presidents of Russia, Ukraine discussed at the trilateral meeting in Turkey

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 18:25,

YEREVAN, 10 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Turkey Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu talked about the meeting with Foreign Ministers of Russia and Ukraine, ARMENPRESS reports, Turkish Anadolu news agency informs.

“If the war continues, innocent children will suffer the most. Every day the scale of bloodshed and grief increases. People, who stay in war zones, should be saved”, said Çavuşoğlu.

He emphasized that as long as the long-term ceasefire hasn’t been established, it is important to maintain the humanitarian ceasefire.

According to Çavuşoğlu, the opening of humanitarian corridors is important for the civil population. “If the servicemen on the spot do not follow the agreements, then the evacuated civil residents will face real security threat”, said the Turkish minister.

“Turkey emphasized during the meeting held in Antalya the impermissibility of creation of obstacles in Ukraine for humanitarian activity” he said, calling the trilateral meeting in Antalya “an important beginning”.

“Despite all difficulties, the discussions related to Ukraine were held in the framework of ethics.”, the Turkish minister added.

Çavuşoğlu said that during the meeting with the participation of Lavrov and Kuleba the topic of the organization of the meeting between the Presidents of Russia and Ukraine was discussed.