"Ser Artsakh" Initiative will continue to be implemented despite the blockade of Artsakh. Anna Astvataturian Turcotte

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 10:32,

Yerevan, May 22, ARMENPRESS. "Ser Artsakh" will continue to support Artsakh newborns under the blockade, giving each newborn its first gift box.

In an interview with Armenpress, Armenian-American author, philanthropist, lawyer, president of the "Anna Astvatsaturian" Foundation and founder of the "Ser Artsakh" Initiative, Anna Astsvataturian  Turcotte stated that her Foundation continues to deliver the gift boxes through representatives of the Republic of Artsakh and the Red Cross.

"On June 1, 2022, International Children's Day, we launched the "Ser Artsakh" Initiative based on the desire to support and protect the children born in Artsakh after the 44-day Artsakh war in 2020. It was extremely important for me to nurture the children born in families who chose to live in Artsakh. And today, almost a year later, I can say that we were able to gift 1553 boxes full of vital essentials for mother and babies to every newborn in Artsakh," she said.

Anna Astvatsaturian emphasized that she had previously decided to implement the program for one year, but since Artsakh is under the blockade at the moment, and the need for this help is more than ever, she decided to continue delivering aid until December, or as long as they can deliver to Artsakh.

When brainstorming the initiative in early 2021 it was important for Anna to include items either made in Armenia or Artsakh or purchased there.  This was a way to support the local economy and  promote domestic products. "One of my very good friends in Artsakh, who makes wooden toys, agreed to make the wooden toy bird, which has become the symbol of the project," she added.

"Before the project started, we were looking for Armenian-made clothes, toys, and care items for months. And of course, we found high-quality items of Armenian production, which we included in the gift boxes. There were some things that were not produced in Armenia, for example, diapers or thermometers. That was unfortunate, but we purchased these in Armenia for the Artsakh babies to support the Armenian economy and the Armenian businesses.

Anna Astvatsaturian said during the conversation that at the time they were finalizing the idea for this project and deciding which products to include in the boxes, many people asked her why she was focusing on the best and highest quality products instead of just mere quantity. It was hard for people who had not seen the refugee path to understand the emotional nuances. “I was a refugee once too and wore second-hand clothes and my brother played with old worn-out toys. I remember the feeling that came with that very well. It is a second layer of trauma. To me this project is not a donation but a gift because Artsakh families deserve the best and we should honor them for being so strong.” she said

Astvataturian mentioned that this program is an opportunity for her not only to support Artsakh and the economy of Armenia, but also to connect the Diaspora to Artsakh with their donations. “For me, the most important thing was not giving support but to show the Diaspora that people live and continue to be born in Artsakh. And to show the people of Artsakh that the Diaspora is still worried about them. The most important thing was emotional support, showing them our attention, and providing  these rare moments of joy with so much stress and pain around them daily. “- she added

When speaking about new projects, Anna Astvataturian said that she plans to meet and talk with the leadership of the Syunik region in order to discuss the idea of implementing a similar project there as well, under the title "Ser Syunik".

"It is very important for me that people stay in Syunik and have many children there. It is also important for me to ensure they know we remember them.   I hope that this assistance will last, because this is an opportunity for people to continue to stay in Artsakh and Syunik.

“At the moment, the situation in Artsakh is quite difficult and the Diaspora is very concerned about this issue, and I have come to talk to people on the ground and understand the situation," said Anna Astvatsaturian.

She mentioned that the project requires quite a lot of resources because each box costs around $105 and any support is very important for the Foundation. Anyone can support the Initiative by visiting www.astvatsaturian.org.

Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte is an American-Armenian writer, philanthropist, lawyer, elected official, president of the Westbrook City council and the president of the "Anna Astvatsaturian'' foundation. Anna also is an author of a book "Nowhere, a Story of Exile, 2012"based on her diaries which she wrote as an 11 year old child escaping the Baku massacres. In 2013 Anna spearheaded a successful recognition of Artsakh at the state of Maine legislature. Since thenAstvatsaturian Turcotte has implemented a number of charitable programs in Armenia and Artsakh. In 2020 she founded the Anna Astvatsaturian Charitable Foundation. One of the fund's major projects is the "Artsakh War 2020: Losses, Challenges – Opportunities for resistance development'' survey conducted after the 44-day war.




RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/22/2023

                                        Monday, 


U.S. Sanctions Another Armenian Firm

        • Robert Zargarian

U.S. -- Department of Commerce sign seal emblem at headquarters building in 
Washington, January12, 2019.


The United States has added an Armenian trading company to its long list of 
entities accused of helping Russia evade U.S. sanctions imposed since the 
Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The U.S. Department of Commerce blacklisted the company, Medisar, along with 69 
Russian entities on May 19. It accused them of supporting Russia’s military and 
defense industry.

Founded in 2001, Medisar is based in Yerevan. It owns a large warehouse located 
there.

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, a company executive, who did not want to 
be identified, acknowledged that Medisar has imported chemicals and laboratory 
equipment from the United States and the European Union and re-exported them to 
Russia. He insisted that company has not violated any Armenian laws and that the 
Armenian authorities have been aware of its operations.

Company representatives said they do not know yet the likely impact of the U.S. 
sanctions on Medisar’s continued activities. It was not clear whether they will 
stop doing business with Russia.

Medisar, which paid over $1 million in taxes last year, is the second 
Armenian-registered entity blacklisted by the United States. The other firm, 
TAKO, was sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets 
Control (OFAC) in April.

TAKO was registered in May last year about three months after the outbreak of 
the war in Ukraine. According to the Armenian state registry, it is fully owned 
by a Russian national and specializes in wholesale trade in electronic and 
telecommunications equipment and parts.

U.S. officials apparently pressed the Armenian government to comply with the 
sanctions during a series of meetings held earlier this year.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian admitted on Monday that the issue is on the 
agenda of his government’s dealings with the U.S. and the EU. He said that 
despite its “strategic” relations with Russia and membership in the Russian-led 
Eurasian Economic Union, Armenia “cannot afford to be placed under Western 
sanctions.”

“Therefore, in our relations with Russia we will act on a scale that allows us 
to avoid Western sanctions,” he said, adding that Yerevan is “in constant 
communication with our Western partners.”

In a joint “compliance note” issued in March, the U.S. departments of Justice, 
Treasury and Commerce said that third-party intermediaries have commonly used 
China, Armenia, Turkey and Uzbekistan as “transshipment points” to Russia as 
well as Belarus.

Russian-Armenian trade skyrocketed last year, with Armenian exports to Russia 
nearly tripling to $2.4 billion. Goods manufactured in third countries and 
re-exported from Armenia to Russia are believed to have accounted for most of 
that gain.




Pashinian Defends Arrest Of Fallen Soldier’s Mother

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia - Protesters demand the release of Gayane Hakobian outside the prime 
minister's office in Yerevan, .


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian sought to justify on Monday the arrest of a 
grief-stricken woman accused of attempting to “kidnap” his son which has sparked 
street protests and widespread condemnation in Armenia.

Gayane Hakobian, whose son Zhora Martirosian was killed during the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh, was detained last Wednesday after an argument with Ashot 
Pashinian. Citing the latter’s testimony, Armenia’s Investigative Committee said 
that Hakobian tricked the young man into getting in her car after she ran into 
him outside a court building in Yerevan.

Pashinian Jr. jumped out of the car shortly after Hakobian drove it towards the 
Yerablur Military Pantheon, according to the law-enforcement agency.

Hakobian strongly denies the accusations carrying between four and eight years 
in prison. Her lawyers say she simply wanted to talk to the 23-year-old.

A Yerevan court approved her pre-trial detention on Saturday, triggering an 
angry demonstration attended by several dozen other parents of fallen soldiers 
and hundreds of their sympathizers. The parents announced afterwards a nonstop 
sit-in outside the prime minister’s office in the city’s central Republic Square.

Armenia - Protesters stand outside a court building in Yerevan during a hearing 
on Gayane Hakobian's arrest, May 20, 2023.

The protest continued on Monday as Nikol Pashinian held a news conference amid 
tightened security in and around the building.

The prime minister made clear that he will not tell his son to withdraw the 
complaint lodged against Hakobian because they both believe that “in Armenia all 
issues must be solved in a legal way.”

“If there was no crime, let them close the case,” he told a news conference. “If 
there was a crime, let them finish the investigation and send the case to court 
and let the court make a decision.”

Pashinian did not comment on why Hakobian has to be kept under arrest pending 
the outcome of her trial.

He also declined to answer a question from the protesters which was put to him 
by a reporter. They wanted to know “what you felt when ordering the arrest.”

“Gayane is not guilty and the accusation brought against her is fabricated,” one 
of the protesting parents told journalists. “I consider her a political 
prisoner.”

“So his son cannot be told to sit in a car so that we just talk to him and they 
consider that kidnapping. But who will be held accountable for the deaths of my 
and Gayane’s sons and the 5,000 other boys?” said another.

Armenia - People demonstrate in support of Gayane Hakobian, May 20, 2023.

Armenian opposition leaders and other critics of the government claim that 
Pashinian ordered Hakobian’s arrest in a bid to muzzle the families of deceased 
soldiers who have staged demonstrations over the past year to demand his 
prosecution on war-related charges. Several female opposition parliamentarians 
visited the woman in custody at the weekend.

Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian also condemned the woman’s arrest, saying 
that it is an “even greater disgrace” than a recent incident during which 
Armenian parliament speaker Alen Simonian spat at a heckler in Yerevan. 
Ter-Petrosian said that the Armenian authorities are only heightening political 
tensions in the country with their “impudent and short-sighted actions.”

“If things continue like this, a much sadder, if not explosive, prospect awaits 
our country,” he warned in a statement.

The Armenian Apostolic Church likewise expressed “deep concern” at Hakobian’s 
prosecution and called for her release from custody.




Armenian PM, Church Trade Fresh Barbs


Armenia – Catholicos Garegin II leads Easter mass at St. Gregory the Illuminator 
Cathedral, Yerevan, April 9, 2023.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has accused the Armenian Apostolic Church of 
meddling in politics, prompting a scathing response from the office of its 
supreme head, Catholicos Garegin II.

“Nothing prevents them [the church] from setting up a party and embarking on 
political activities through that party,” Pashinian said during a visit to 
Armenia’s Tavush province. “That would be more honest towards voters, and they 
would be on the same plane with other political rivals.”

“When the state and the church mix together there is nothing more dangerous than 
that. The state must mind its own business, the church must mind its own 
business,” he told a group of local schoolchildren in remarks publicized on 
Saturday.

The church was quick to hit back at Pashinian, underlining its strained 
relationship with the Armenian government.

“If some people want to practice ecclesiology, they can try to get admitted to 
the Theological Seminary; of course, if they overcome the educational threshold 
set for admission and present convincing arguments about their good health,” 
said Archbishop Arshak Khachatrian, the chancellor of the church’s Mother See in 
Echmiadzin.

Pashinian’s relationship with the ancient church, to which the vast majority of 
Armenians belong, has increasingly deteriorated in recent years and especially 
since the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Garegin and other senior clergymen 
joined the Armenian opposition in calling for Pashinian’s resignation following 
Armenia’s defeat in the six-week war.

The Catholicos last month defended those calls and deplored the prime minister’s 
statements on the Karabakh conflict condemned by the opposition as 
pro-Azerbaijani.

A pro-government parliamentarian responded by accusing the Armenian Church of 
interfering in political processes. She also denounced Garegin’s homily read out 
during the Easter mass at Yerevan’s Saint Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral on 
April 9.

“When justice and truth cease to be the core of our undertakings and activities 
in state and public life, we will continue to face manifestations of pilatism,” 
Garegin told hundreds of worshippers during the mass.




Pashinian Confirms Readiness To Accept Azeri Control Of Karabakh


Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks during a news conference in 
Yerevan, .


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Monday gave the clearest indication yet that 
he has agreed to recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh through 
a peace treaty currently discussed by Yerevan and Baku.

“If we and Azerbaijan correctly understand each other, Armenia recognizes 
Azerbaijan’s 86,600-square-kilometer territorial integrity, assuming that 
Azerbaijan recognizes Armenia’s 29,800-square-kilometer territory,” Pashinian 
said, repeating statements made following his May 14 meeting with Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev.

“The 86,600 square kilometers include Nagorno-Karabakh,” he told a news 
conference. “But it must also be noted that we are saying the issue of the 
rights and security of Karabakh’s Armenians must be discussed in a 
Baku-Stepanakert format.”

Pashinian again stressed the need for the “creation of international mechanisms” 
for such talks between the Azerbaijani government and Karabakh’s leadership. 
Yerevan, he explained, is specifically seeking international guarantees against 
“ethnic cleansing” in the Armenian-populated region which he said is planned by 
Baku.

While expressing readiness for dialogue with Baku, the authorities in 
Stepanakert have repeatedly rejected any settlement that would restore 
Azerbaijani control over Karabakh.

Armenia - Armenian opposition activists rally outside the border village of 
Kordnidzor in support of Nagorno-Karabakh, May 20, 2023.

In a joint statement with Armenia’s leading opposition groups issued last week, 
the five political parties represented in the Karabakh parliament warned 
Pashinian against formally recognizing Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan. They 
said that such a deal would be “devoid of legal basis.”

Despite this warning, Pashinian made clear that he hopes to sign the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty “as soon as possible.” He said that Yerevan 
presented Baku with fresh proposals regarding the remaining sticking points 
after marathon talks held by the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers 
outside Washington earlier in May.

“We are now waiting for their reaction,” added the Armenian premier. He did not 
disclose those proposals.

Pashinian and Aliyev are scheduled to meet again in Moscow on Thursday. They 
will hold on June 1 another meeting in Moldova which will be attended by 
European Union chief Charles Michel, French President Emmanuel Macron and German 
Chancellor Olaf Scholz.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

LA City Council names Westside intersection ‘Republic of Artsakh Square’

The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously on Tuesday, May 16, to name a Westside intersection “Republic of Artsakh Square” to raise awareness of a dictatorship that has imposed a blockade on Artsakh, threatening 120,000 people with starvation and preventing medical care, City Council President Paul Krekorian said.

The council voted to approve a motion authored by Krekorian and Councilmember Traci Park, whose district includes the newly designated Artsakh Square, to name the intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Granville Avenue in honor of the embattled region that has great meaning for L.A.’s Armenian community.

The intersection is also the location of the Los Angeles consulate of Azerbaijan.

“Azerbaijan’s dictator has explicitly threatened genocide and called for the expulsion of all Armenians from territories he claims, once again threatening the annihilation of the Armenian people in their ancient homeland,” Krekorian said in a statement.

“This square will stand as a symbol of Artsakh’s self determination and our unequivocal opposition to the Azerbaijani dictatorship’s unproved aggression to erase Armenian history and culture,” Park said in a statement.

Krekorian accused the regime of Azerbaijan President Illham Aliyev of attempting to erase the history of Armenians in their ancestral homeland for the last 25 years, adding that the campaign has intensified since Aliyev’s occupation of Artsakh’s territory in 2020.

The Republic of Artsakh, formerly known as the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh, seceded from the Soviet Union and formed a democratic state. It is surrounded by the territory of Azerbaijan and only has access to Armenia and the outside world through the Lachin Corridor, which is now being cut off by the armed forces of Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan’s Consulate General in Los Angeles has accused Armenia of committing atrocities on its land.

“In the early 1990s, Armenia invaded and ethnically cleansed 20% of Azerbaijan’s sovereign territory with impunity. Over 1 million Azerbaijanis were forcibly displaced from their lands (800,000 from occupied districts of Azerbaijan and 250,000 from Armenia),” Consul General Nasimi Aghayev said last year.

“In 2020, Azerbaijan liberated its territories from Armenia’s illegal and United Nations-condemned occupation. During the war, Armenia bombed our major cities, using even the widely banned cluster munitions (as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International also confirmed), as a result of which 101 Azerbaijani civilians, including 12 infants and children, were killed, 423 civilians were wounded and 80,000 displaced.”

Krekorian’s motion was seconded by council members Bob Blumenfield, Nithya Raman, Monica Rodriguez, John Lee and Hugo-Soto Martinez.

Under the motion, the City Council directed its Department of Transportation to erect permanent ceremonial signs to identify the intersection of Wilshire Boulevard and Granville as Republic of Artsakh Square.

Ex-chief of Urban Development Committee sentenced to 8 years in prison in graft case

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 15:41,

YEREVAN, MAY 15, ARMENPRESS. A Yerevan court on Monday sentenced the former Chairman of the Urban Development Committee Vahagn Vermishyan to 8 years imprisonment on corruption charges denied by him.

Vermishyan’s lawyer Alexander Kochubayev told reporters that his client will appeal the verdict to a higher court, while a complaint has already been filed to the European court concerning his remand.

Vermishyan has been remanded in pre-trial detention since early 2020.

He is accused of bribery and abuse of power.

Unknown Rembrandt portraits unearthed after 200 years

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 11:01,

YEREVAN, MAY 15, ARMENPRESS. Two rare portraits by Rembrandt, unknown to art scholars and never placed on public display, have been unearthed after 200 years in a UK family’s private art collection, Financial Times reports.

Experts at auction house Christie’s came upon the paintings while carrying out a routine valuation.

The eight-inch-high portraits will now go up for sale at Christie’s showrooms in London on July 6, after going on display in New York and Amsterdam, with an estimated value of £5mn-£8mn for the pair.

Ancestors of the family, whose identity was not disclosed by Christie’s, bought the pair of small-scale oil paintings in 1824, at a Christie’s auction.

Painted just as Rembrandt was establishing a reputation as a sought-after artist, the portraits depict Jan Willemsz van der Pluym and his wife Jaapgen Carels, a couple with family connections to the artist.

Azerbaijan conducts drone attack on Armenian positions, wounding two servicemen: Yerevan

IRAN FRONT PAGE
My 12 2023

The Azerbaijani armed forces used an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) near the village of Sotk on Friday morning, wounding two Armenian servicemen,  Armenia's Defense Ministry reported.

Renewed border clashes have erupted between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces, according to Yerevan, a day after deadly fighting threatened to derail European Union-led weekend peace talks between the Caucasus arch-foes.

Border clashes on Thursday left an Azerbaijani serviceman dead and four Armenian troops injured.

“On May 12, at around 10am, the Azerbaijani Armed Forces violated the ceasefire in the direction of Sotk using UAVs. Two servicemen of the Armenian Armed Forces were wounded. The health condition of one serviceman is assessed as satisfactory and [that of] the other one is critical,” the statement said.

The ministry also reported that as of 10:30am, the situation at the front line is relatively stable.

Baku and Yerevan are locked in a decades-long territorial dispute over Azerbaijan’s Armenian-populated region of Nagorno-Karabakh, over which they have fought two wars.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev are scheduled to meet on Sunday in Brussels for talks led by European Council President Charles Michel.

The rival leaders had also agreed to jointly meet the leaders of France and Germany on the sidelines of a European summit in Moldova on June 1, according to the EU.

Pashinyan on Thursday accused Azerbaijan of looking to “undermine the talks” in Brussels.

He warned there was “very little” chance of signing a peace deal with Azerbaijan at the meeting.

A draft agreement “is still at a very preliminary stage and it is too early to speak of an eventual signature”, Pashinyan continued.

South Caucasus: EU to bring together leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Brussels

May 9 2023

The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed, with EU diplomatic mediation, to meet again on 14 May 2023 for a trilateral meeting in Brussels. The European Union will be represented at the meeting by European Council President Charles Michel, who continues his efforts  to advance the EU’s efforts to promote stability in the South Caucasus and normalisation between the two countries.

Their discussions will also be flanked by a meeting together with President Emmanuel Macron of France and Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany, in the margins of the upcoming European Political Community (EPC) summit in Chisinău on 1 June 2023.

The leaders also agreed to continue to hold trilateral meetings in Brussels as often as necessary to address current developments on the ground.

President Michel also expressed his intention to invite the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan, France, and Germany to meet a second time in the margins of the next EPC summit in Granada in October 2023.

Find out more

Press release

https://euneighbourseast.eu/news/latest-news/south-caucasus-eu-to-bring-together-leaders-of-armenia-and-azerbaijan-in-brussels/

Armenian-Azerbaijani talks in Washington, but what comes next?

May 3 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Mirzoyan-Bayramov talks in the USA

Negotiations between the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan continue in the US through the mediation of US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken. The details of the talks, which began on May 1, have not been disclosed; only minimal information is being conveyed from Washington.

The State Department reported that the meeting was taking place in a “constructive atmosphere.” The parties are also refraining from lengthy comments. The Armenian Foreign Ministry announced that, according to the preliminary plan, May 4 is the last day of negotiations.

“Issues related to the security situation in the region and the process of normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan were discussed. The humanitarian situation that has developed as a result of the illegal blocking of the Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan was mentioned,” the statement of the Armenian Foreign Ministry reads.

Meanwhile, Russia has already announced that the reduction of tension in the region “first of all is possible on the basis of those trilateral documents that were signed together with Russia.” Press Secretary of the President of Russia Dmitry Peskov said that so far these “documents are absolutely uncontested.”

There is also information that the Washington meeting will be followed by negotiations mediated by Moscow. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, before leaving for Washington, said that for Yerevan “there are no differences between the platforms, the peace process is the same, the negotiations are around one draft peace treaty, in fact the negotiations are the same.”

But local analysts believe that these theses are “incorrect, false and dangerous for Armenia” — “we are talking about completely opposite, mutually exclusive goals of the mediators”.


  • Azerbaijan installs checkpoint at entrance to Lachin road. Information and comments from Baku and Yerevan
  • “Azerbaijani citizen killed the plant’s security guard” – Armenian Prosecutor General’s Office
  • “We will live in our Motherland”: reaction to Aliyev’s speech
  • Ilham Aliyev: “Either they will live under the flag of Azerbaijan, or they will leave”

According to information coming from the US, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken considers the dialogue between Yerevan and Baku “the key to achieving lasting peace in the South Caucasus.” The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan are reportedly “working together to achieve a peaceful future for the South Caucasus region.”

“We believe that peace between these two countries is possible and we are happy to accept them. We expect peace and stability between these two countries and in the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh,” US State Department Deputy Spokesman Vedant Patel said.

He also said that a number of American diplomats are involved in the negotiation process:

“Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations Lou Bono is significantly involved not only in these meetings, but also as part of his work in the South Caucasus. You know that Secretary Blinken took part in the first plenary session and met with ministers over dinner. So we continue to be significantly involved.”

When asked about the extent to which it is possible to merge the positions of the parties following negotiations in the United States, Patel preferred to refrain from “hypothetical assumptions.”

To a question from Radio Azatutyun (Liberty) about whether issues related to Nagorno-Karabakh are being discussed during the talks, the following answer was received from the US State Department:

“Official Washington asked Baku and Yerevan to consider how best to protect the rights and security of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. The issue of the rights and security of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh is a key issue in the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The only way to find a lasting solution to a conflict that has claimed too many lives and lasted too long is for these people to finally feel safe in their homes, with their rights protected.”

The State Department gas not provided any other details on what issues Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov are discussing. There is only a report that the ministers are discussing a project called “Agreement on the resolution of relations.”

The Prime Minister of Armenia talked about the signing of a peace treaty with Azerbaijan and the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

Armenian journalists tried to find out if the “Agreement on the resolution of relations” is a peace agreement which is expected to be signed. MP from the ruling party Arman Yegoyan confirmed that this is the same document that has been talked about for some time.

When asked about the name change, the deputy replied: “To answer this question, I would have to reveal substantive details.” He refused to comment in more detail on when and in connection with what the name of the document was changed, as “this will mean a substantive discussion about its content.”

Another deputy from the government, secretary of the Civil Treaty parliamentary faction Artur Hovhannisyan, said that the renaming of the peace treaty took place by mutual agreement with Azerbaijan and “does not contradict the content and goals of the process that existed before.”

The head of the parliamentary commission on foreign relations, Sargis Khandanyan, was asked by journalists whether there would be confusion if the parties went to talks in Moscow after the meeting in Washington, to which he replied:

“From the point of view of Armenia there is no confusion, Armenia clearly knows what it wants, always and on any platform upholds these principles. This is ensuring peace in the region, protecting the security of Armenia’s borders, sovereignty, territorial integrity, protecting the rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, regardless of the platform.”

Commenting on Peskov’s statement regarding the talks in the United States and the lack of alternatives to the trilateral documents signed with the mediation of Russia, Khandanyan said:

“The document of November 9 is certainly very important. And it is very important that many of the provisions prescribed there are respected. But the question here is also why Mr. Peskov does not say, why Russia does not guarantee the provisions guaranteed by the tripartite declaration of November 9, in particular unimpeded movement along the Lachin corridor, the return of Armenian prisoners, etc.”

The head of the mission of EU observers monitoring the Armenian-Azerbaijani border said that they inform the Azerbaijani authorities in advance when and where exactly they will be

Political scientist Ruben Mehrabyan commented on the statement of the Armenian authorities that Yerevan does not differentiate the platforms where the peace agreement with Azerbaijan is being discussed. He says the ruling party claims that there is no difference where the negotiations take place, and there is no difference in their content. Mehrabyan himself believes that “both theses are incorrect, false and even dangerous” for Armenia, even if they are made as a “diplomatic statement” that does not express a real assessment:

“There is not so much a difference, but an abyss, since we are talking about completely opposite, mutually exclusive goals. At least for us [the Armenian side].

As a result of the expected results from the negotiations taking place on the western platform, Armenia, having yielded in some things, should receive

  • strengthened independence and sovereignty,
  • reducing the “need” of Russia,
  • expansion of the field of possibility of independent steps,
  • development prospects.

Russia will increase its presence in the region, primarily in Armenia, turning its “necessary” into “irreplaceable”.

The independence, democracy and sovereignty of Armenia disappear.

Forget about development, get used to Gazelle, Cheburnet and other Russian garbage in fulfillment of “your obligations within the framework of the EAEU” [an economic union operating under the leadership of Russia, Armenia is a member of it]. And the key-keepers with the train of a thieves’ company will come to power [in Armenia].

Despite the inaction of its allies whom Armenia asked for help, the country’s authorities avoided talking about leaving the Russian military bloc. But it was said that perhaps “the CSTO is leaving Armenia”

Not to mention the fact that peace negotiations are underway on the western platform, and in the case of Russia it will not be peace, but a controlled “non-peace”, the control panel of which will be conditionally in the hands of Kopirkin-Lentsov-Safonov-Ivanov.

This bazaar will continue until you [meaning the Armenian authorities] take away the gun that is pointed at the head of Armenia — fascist detachments scattered along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, which, taking advantage of the weakness of Armenia, wrested from the government a decision on the “legality” of their deployment. Now it’s time to return this herd to the barn before our head is crushed.

Be aware and, by decision of the government, return them [the Russian military] to your garrison until there is a final decision on this issue. And start a conversation with Tehran about gas, with Brussels about the accelerated implementation of the 2013 agreement.

Before the 2013 Eastern Partnership Summit, Yerevan refused to sign the Association Agreement with the EU. At that time, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, visiting Moscow, announced that Armenia was joining the Customs Union, which later became the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU).

It is needless to repeat that the so-called “Russian platform” must be avoided.

Ratify the Rome Statute [appeal to the Armenian authorities]; you will bring trouble to all of us if you do not firmly hold on to the Western platform.

Those same “research-professional-expert” platitudes like “what if the Russians won’t allow it”, “what if there are no Russians”, “but on earth … [there are only Russians in the region]”, etc. not important. Send all this clockwise, neutralize this rabble in red shorts, get rid of this evil at the state level – at least to the level and clarity of Moldova, and then we will have a chance for a decent world.

Otherwise we get guarantees of Russian chaos, chaos that the Russians will impose on us with your hands and hang the blame on your neck.”

https://jam-news.net/mirzoyan-bayramov-talks-in-the-usa/

Armenia PM says “huge differences” with Azerbaijan over peace deal

Armenia – May 6 2023

PanARMENIAN.Net - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian still sees a “huge difference” in the wording of a draft peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the two sides’ positions despite reported progress in bilateral talks hosted by the United States this week.

Pashinian, in an exclusive interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on May 5, said that the key differences concern not only Nagorno-Karabakh but also territorial and security guarantees.

“We are still unable to reach agreement in the draft peace agreement on the wording that will give us confidence that Azerbaijan recognizes 29,800 square kilometers of Armenia” within its Soviet-era borders, he said.

Pashinian also highlighted the need for guarantees as “any agreement, even the most unambiguously written one, allows for interpretations.”

Pashinian, who spoke with RFE/RL while on a two-day official visit to Prague, referred to the draft bilateral Agreement on Peace and Establishment of Interstate Relations that was discussed by Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Azerbaijani counterpart, Jeyhun Bayramov, during the U.S.-sponsored talks.

A joint statement issued on May 4 at the conclusion of the talks said Mirzoyan and Bayramov and their teams “made progress in mutual understanding on some articles of the draft bilateral peace agreement” but noted that positions on a number of key issues remain different.

Despite U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s optimism that “with additional goodwill, flexibility, and compromise, an agreement is within reach," Pashinian assessed the progress as minimal.

“While the difference between the sides was 1 kilometer before, now it is 999 meters. It is also progress, but there is still a huge gap,” he said in the interview with RFE/RL.

Pashinian reiterated Armenia’s position that the issue of the rights and security of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians should be discussed in a dialogue between Baku and Stepanakert with international engagement.

“Otherwise, this topic and agenda can simply be forgotten by Azerbaijan,” he said.

He also said that both international and local mechanisms should be applied to such matters as the withdrawal of troops and the establishment of a demilitarized zone. In addition, there are different interpretations in Yerevan and Baku on how to address the rights of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians.

Pashinian said that the discussion that started in Washington can continue in Moscow, denying claims that there are “Western” and “Russian” drafts that differ from each other.

“Sometimes I read articles, listen to interviews as I want to understand what people are talking about. If I weren’t prime minister, I would have thought that there was something I didn’t know,” said Pashinian.

He said that while there have been some approaches from the West, they have not been presented as an option in writing.

“An approach is verbal. Perhaps if we put it down and read on paper, it may turn out that we understood this approach wrong, that it is not what it looked like. In August 2022, the Russian side submitted a written proposal, we accepted it, Azerbaijan rejected it. We haven’t seen Russia putting that option on the table for a second time,” Pashinian said.

Tensions along the restive Armenian-Azerbaijani border and around Nagorno-Karabakh leading to sporadic fighting and loss of life have persisted despite the cease-fire and the presence of Russian troops.

They flared anew last month when Azerbaijan installed a road checkpoint at the start of the Lachin Corridor, the only route linking Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh.

Armenia says the checkpoint, set up on April 23, is a violation of the ceasefire agreement. Azerbaijan insists it established it in response to what it says were Armenian military supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia denies that accusation.

Armenia, Azerbaijan made ‘tangible progress on a durable peace agreement’, says Blinken

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 10:41, 5 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 5, ARMENPRESS. Armenia and Azerbaijan have discussed some ‘very tough issues’ over the last few days and they’ve made ‘tangible progress’ on a durable peace agreement, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said at the closing session of talks between Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov.

“I want to start by thanking our colleagues, both foreign ministers, their delegations for traveling here and for spending the time here in – at the Foreign Service Institute, and especially for their commitment to dialogue, and I think a recognition on the part of both Armenia and Azerbaijan that the only path to a lasting, durable peace is through dialogue.  The United States is very happy to continue to offer its support, its engagement, its good offices to host this discussion and any future ones toward an enduring peace.  That is the objective," Blinken said. 

"The two sides have discussed some very tough issues over the last few days and they’ve made tangible progress on a durable peace agreement.  I hope that they see – and I believe that they do, as I do – that there is an agreement within sight, within reach.  And achieving that agreement would be, I think, not only historic, but would be profoundly in the interests of the people of Azerbaijan and Armenia, and would have very positive effects even beyond their two countries.I think the pace of the negotiations and the foundation that our colleagues have built shows that we really are within reach of an agreement.  The last mile of any marathon is always the hardest; we know that.  But the United States is here to continue to help both of our friends cross the finish line.  And as I say, I think we’re very much within reach of that.I have to say, finally, that the leadership that we’re seeing from both Armenia and Azerbaijan, and from my friends the foreign ministers, is inspiring.  None of this is easy, but the commitment, the determination to move forward, to deal with the remaining challenging issues is real.  And we feel, coming out of these few days, that, as I said, we’ve made very tangible progress.  A final agreement is within reach, and we’re determined to continue to help our friends achieve it.So with thanks to both of you, to both of your delegations, as well as to Prime Minister Pashinyan and President Aliyev for sending you here.  I thank everyone, and we look forward to continuing,” the U.S. Secretary of State added.