Ukraine’s President Zelenskyy makes surprise visit to Finland for Nordic summit

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 15:18, 3 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 3, ARMENPRESS. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has arrived in Finland for a surprise visit, and talks with Nordic prime ministers. The Ukrainian leader will hold talks with Finnish President Sauli Niinistö, and have bilateral meetings with prime ministers from other Nordic nations.

The visit is hosted by Finland's President Sauli Niinistö.

Talks will include "Ukraine's defence struggle," as well as Finnish support for Ukraine and bilateral relations, according to a statement from the president's office. 

President Niinistö will host a Nordic-Ukrainian Summit, which will be attended by Zelenskyy as well as Swedish PM Ulf Kristersson, Norway's PM Jonas Gahr Støre, Danish PM Mette Frederiksen and the prime minister of Iceland Katrín Jakobsdóttir.

Zelenskyy will attend a working lunch with outgoing Prime Minister Sanna Marin, Foreign Minister Pekka Haavisto, and he'll also meet the incoming prime minister, Petteri Orpo who is currently holding talks on forming a new government after April's election, Euronews reported.

U.S. ‘disappointed’ over Turkey banning Armenian overflights

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 11:52, 4 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. The United States has noted with “disappointment” Turkey’s decision to ban Armenian airline overflight permissions, State Department Principal Deputy Spokesperson Vedant Patel said at a press briefing.

Patel said that ‘the U.S. strongly supports Armenia-Türkiye normalization, which we believe would be important for not just these two countries but helpful for stability across the region.’

“We note with disappointment Türkiye’s announcement that it would suspend Armenian airline overflight permissions. An agreement that had previously been reached between these two countries to resume air connections had been a very important confidence-building measure – not just between these two countries, but, again, for regional stability broadly. And it’s our sincere hope that Türkiye and Armenia can continue to rebuild economic ties and open transportation links as well,” he added.

Russian peacekeepers deliver humanitarian cargo to Stepanakert

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 16:32, 1 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 1, ARMENPRESS. The Russian Ministry of Defense said in a daily bulletin on its peacekeeping operations in Nagorno Karabakh that no ceasefire violations were recorded in the last 24 hours.

Monitoring was conducted in 30 observation posts, with patrol being carried out in Martakert, Martuni and Shushi regions in three routes.

It added that humanitarian cargo has been delivered to Stepanakert on Russian peacekeeping contingent’s convoys.

“Engineering-sapper units of the Russian peacekeeping contingent continue mine clearing work in structures and territories. 0,1 hectares of land was cleared during the day,” the ministry added, noting that since November 23, 2020 the sappers cleared a total of 2533,6 ha of territory, 689,5km of roads, 1,940 buildings from landmines and shells, and a total of 26,791 explosive items were discovered and defused.

“Continuous partnership is maintained with the general staffs of the Armed Forces of Armenia and Armed Forces of Azerbaijan with the purpose of ensuring the security of the Russian peacekeepers and preventing possible incidents,” it added.

Erdoğan and opposition candidate Kilicdaroglu will hold rallies in Istanbul at the same time

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 20:26,

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, ARMENPRESS. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his main opponent in the May 14 elections, the united opposition candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu, will hold a rally in Istanbul a week before the elections, on the same day and at the same time, ARMENPRESS reports, Turkish Haberler.com informs.

According to the source, the only difference will be the venue.

Food: 7 rising Armenian chefs who are making a mark on L.A.’s food scene

Los Angeles Times

For decades, Armenian immigrant food in Los Angeles was the hospitable shop skewering varieties of kebab, charring lahmadjoon in a brick oven or slicing shawarma onto pita bread, sumac and roasted garlic puncturing the air, streaming from the vertical rotisserie out to the sidewalks.

When a genocide and political turmoils forced millions of Armenians out of their homeland, their culinary heritage met influence from the Middle East and other countries where they found refuge. They carried those traditions — some old, others more recent — all the way to the United States, where food became one of the most important and defining facets of the community. As the Armenian community in Los Angeles grew to become one of the largest outside of Armenia, it became more and more difficult to distinguish Armenian food as a whole.

“To me, Armenian food is a foundation of certain flavors, and then building off of that, a sort of seamless fusion with other cultures that were so hospitable to us as a people. In return we’ve kept and preserved their culinary heritage through our cooking,” says Crista Marie Ani Aladjadjian, founder of Mezze Spices, an ethically sourced spice collection that pays tribute to her Syrian Armenian heritage.

Over the last decade, a new generation of Armenian chefs and restaurateurs has emerged, eager to break boundaries and expand the cuisine narrative by bringing in new flavors and spices. Take Ara Zada, chef and co-author of “Lavash,” a cookbook that explores the flatbread that’s so integral to Armenian cuisine. Zada and comedian Jack Assadourian Jr. went viral earlier this year when the pair began releasing cooking tutorials for unique Armenian Mexican dishes, including a “lahmarito,” or burrito with rounds of lahmajune, spiced basturma meat, hummus and traditional fillings of carne asada, Mexican rice, pico de gallo and salsa, all wrapped in lavash.

“If we stick to traditional food and don’t acclimate to what is trendy, I think our food will get lost,” said Mary Keledjian, the supervising culinary producer for “MasterChef.” “There is a special place in keeping traditions alive and [cooking something] exactly as it is supposed to be. And there is this other spectrum of mixing Armenian food with different styles. It’s the way forward.”

As sons and daughters of first- and second-generation Armenian immigrants entered into the culinary world, they kept in mind the flavors cherished by their parents while embracing all the diversity that a city like L.A. offers. The chefs and restaurants highlighted here serve as pioneers in the transformation of Armenian immigrant cuisine, drawing influence from California’s seasonality, local food cultures and more.

Azerbaijan says its decision to set up checkpoint on border with Armenia is legitimate

 TASS 

The ministry said that Yerevan’s accusations that Baku has violated its commitments under the trilateral statement are ungrounded

BAKU, April 23. /TASS/. Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry said on Sunday that the decision to establish a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor was legitimate and slammed Armenia’s statement on this matter as an attempt to meddle in its domestic affairs.

"The Armenian foreign ministry’s statement is yet another attempt to interfere into Azerbaijan’s domestic affairs and its is unacceptable. <…> The Azerbaijani’s side’s legitimate decision to establish a border checkpoint in its territory is in conformity with all principles and norms of international law," it said in a statement.

The ministry said that Yerevan’s accusations that Baku has violated its commitments under the trilateral statement are ungrounded. "Under the trilateral statement, Azerbaijan undertook to guarantee safe movement of people, vehicles and cargoes along the road linking Lachin and Khankendi (known as Stepanakert in Armenia). This commitment includes measures to prevent abuses of the Lachin road. Apart from that, the establishment of a checkpoint at the beginning of the road introduces no changes into the traffic regime," it stressed.

Baku also lambasted Yerevan’s statements that the establishment of the checkpoint is geared to launch "ethnic purges" as groundless and absurd. "We state once again that there are all the conditions for transparent, safe and orderly movement of Armenian residents of Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region via this checkpoint in both directions," the ministry stressed.

According to the ministry, the statement by the foreign ministry of Armenia, "which boycotted peace talks, indicates its intentions to use this as a pretext to undermine efforts toward the resumption of talks."

"We recommend the Armenian side drop such provocations, demonstrate a responsible approach to the efforts toward building its relations with Azerbaijan on the principles of territorial integrity and sovereignty of states, instead of using various pretext to hamper peace talks," it stressed.


Hundreds Attend LAUSD and ANCA-WR Education Committee Event Commemorating the Armenian Genocide

ANCA-WR Education Committee Members with LAUSD’s Kelly Gonez


LOS ANGELES—Hundreds of students, parents, teachers, and administrators gathered on April 19 to commemorate the Armenian Genocide: Remembering the Armenian Genocide: Memory & Remembrance to Awareness & Action, organized by Los Angeles School District’s Board Member, Kelly Gonez, in partnership with the ANCA Western Region Education Committee. 

“It was an emotional day for me to see our community come together to see our talented students sing and recite poems in honor of the Armenian Genocide Observance Day.  Being a former LAUSD student and an employee, I never thought I would see the day where the second largest district in the United States will close down to remember the victims of the Armenian Genocide. Truly remarkable!” said ANCA Western Region Education Committee Board Member, Lucy Martirosyan. 

The event, which took place at Mt. Gleason Middle School in Sunland, included performances from students who honored their Armenian heritage, a statement from school board member Gonez dedicating her unwavering support for the Armenian students she represents, and awards distributed to Armenian-American educators who have gone above and beyond to educate students about the Armenian Genocide and Armenian heritage. 

ANCA-WR Education Committee Members with children’s book author Nora Kayserian and her debut book, “Unstoppable Zabel” Crowd of parents, students, teachers and administrators watch student performances

Parents and teachers were later invited to a presentation by students about the Armenian struggle to survive in their ancestral homeland in the face of Turkey and Azerbaijan’s genocidal campaign. “Many people ask what the Armenian People are fighting for,” one student said in their presentation, “We fight because we want to live in peace; free from persecution and genocide. All we want is peace.”

Students performed moving poetry, songs, and other celebrations of Armenian heritage and resilience. Arts and crafts opportunities were available for students who chose to draw their names in an ancient Armenian calligraphy known as bird lettering or Trchnagir. Educators also presented their work in the dual language program, which has allowed thousands of Armenian students to engage in their studies in both Armenian and English. 

“I want to thank every teacher who joined us at our event and who work every day to preserve the memories, lives, and stories of Armenians. It was inspiring to see our students perform works that spoke to the richness of Armenian culture and heritage. I also want to thank ANCA-Western Region and its amazing Education Committee for leading such meaningful work and for helping craft a better, more inclusive world for all our children to thrive in,” said LAUSD Board Member Kelly Gonez.

The commemorative event is accompanied by the recent launch of the collaborative K-12 Educator’s Guide: a comprehensive resource of frameworks and lessons, developed by the office of LAUSD Board Member Kelly Gonez and ANCA Western Region Education Committee, to help educators teach about the Armenian Genocide. In 2019, Gonez introduced a resolution written in collaboration with the ANCA Western Region Education Committee, which passed unanimously in 2020, establishing April 24 as a student and staff-free day, allowing teachers, students, administrators, and families to observe and remember the Armenian Genocide. This year will be the first that LAUSD students will have this important day off. The 2023 Educator’s guide serves as a critical tool for teachers to educate their students about why they have the day off, and what they can do to commemorate the event annually, and stand in solidarity with their Armenian peers.

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

Genocide survivor testimonies now accessible at the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History

The Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection, one of the Zoryan Institute’s earliest and most transformative projects, has been added to the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History housed at the AGBU Papazian Library. The collection contains over 750 interviews of Armenians who survived the genocide, and these interviews are now accessible to students, faculty members or researchers at the American University of Armenia (AUA) and in Yerevan.

The Zoryan Institute entered into an agreement with the AUA in 2018 to establish the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History with the purpose of transcribing, translating and subtitling the interviews of the Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection into English.

AGBU Papazian Library director Satenik Avakian played a major role in coordinating activities of the center since its inception. “As a member of the center’s development team from the outset, I am so excited to see the impact that the center and this collection will have on AUA students and researchers,” said Avakian. “I take great pride in being part of the establishment of this center, and I look forward to seeing the incredible work and research that comes out of this impressive collection of interviews.”

The majority of the interviews of the collection were conducted in the Armenian language, and with the support of AUA students working with the center, the Zoryan Institute aims to make these interviews accessible with English subtitles to a wide demographic of people who can learn from these first-hand accounts of survival.

Araz Margossian, the academic support librarian at AUA responsible for the on-site management and coordination of the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History, states, “The Zoryan Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral Histories are the memories and testimonies of unique and individual human souls who witnessed, encountered and survived the atrocities of the Armenian Genocide. It is a great privilege and responsibility for the Zoryan Institute and AUA Center for Oral History to assume the role of housing, overseeing the transcription and translation of the collection, and coordinating access to these testimonies in Armenia.”

The Armenian Genocide Oral History Project, launched in 1983, was initiated by the Zoryan Institute when it became evident that time was running out for the generation of Armenians who had firsthand accounts of the genocide. It is now the largest audio-visual collection of its kind.

Over the years, the collection has proven to be a very valuable resource for researchers, scholars and filmmakers, given scientific approach used for the interview process, and for its visual component. A detailed questionnaire was developed with 90 questions organized under four broad headings: City/Village Life in the Armenian Homeland; Massacre and Deportation from the Armenian Homeland; Experiences as an Immigrant; and Attitudes and Interpretation. This questionnaire was carefully crafted by multi-disciplinary specialists, including anthropologists, sociologists and psychologists. The questionnaire was not only meant to elicit information about the Genocide, but also provide details and valuable insights into the life of the Armenian people preceding the Genocide and the trends that various disciplines can extract from the collection.

Mari Hovhannisyan, executive administrator of the Zoryan Institute Armenia, speaks to the tremendous benefits that this collection has for researchers. “As a researcher myself, I find the Zoryan Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection incredibly valuable. Using first-hand testimonies in research contributes to various viewpoints and perspectives that fill in the gaps in documented history. With the support of the collection’s detailed catalogue, I can listen to these testimonies and piece together a common understanding of the people from that region at a specific moment in history, which is truly exceptional. I am elated that through the joint efforts of the Zoryan Institute and AUA, we can make these interviews accessible to researchers around the world.”

In addition to its academic strengths and value, the collection’s visual component has also caught the attention of a number of filmmakers over the years. The Zoryan Institute interviews with Armenian Genocide survivors were the inspiration behind two feature-length films. The 1988 PBS hit “An Armenian Journey” by filmmaker Theodore Bogosian, referenced the interview of Mariam Davis, the very first interview conducted for the collection. The 2022 multiple award-winning animated film by Inna Sahakyan of Bars Media “Aurora’s Sunrise” was based on and features the Institute’s interview of Armenian Genocide survivor Aurora Mardiganian.

The collection offers a visually captivating and emotionally impactful element to historical research. The interviews also provide a more comprehensive and nuanced perspective on past events, illuminating how individuals and communities experienced them. “As part of the work being done at the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History, AUA students have embarked on transcribing and translating the interviews of the refugees, soldiers and witnesses of the 44-Day Artsakh War Oral History Project,” said Margossian. “Here again, this work is being done with the objective of making these interviews available in English to scholars and researchers around the world.”

Zoryan Institute and its subsidiary, the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, is a non-profit organization that serves the cause of scholarship and public awareness relating to issues of universal human rights, genocide, and diaspora-homeland relations. This is done through the systematic continued efforts of scholars and specialists using a comparative and multidisciplinary approach and in accordance with the highest academic standards.


AW: ATP and Greenlane NGO distribute vegetable seed boxes in Artsakh


Participant of ATP’s Backyard Greenhouse Project plants vegetable seeds distributed by ATP in Artsakh

Armenia Tree Project (ATP), the leading environmental NGO dedicated to planting trees and providing meaningful economic opportunities for rural Armenians, in collaboration with Green Lane NGO, successfully distributed nearly 1,000 boxes of vegetable seeds to families, institutions and small (up to 1,000 square meters) and large farms across Artsakh this year.

During the first distribution in February of 2023, 51 of ATP’s Artsakh Backyard Greenhouse Project beneficiaries in the Askeran and Martuni districts received five varieties of hybrid cucumber and tomato seeds for their greenhouses. The second distribution, completed on April 1st, expanded the program to include over 120 small and large farmers in all 30 villages of Martuni and farmers from seven villages in Askeran. Seed varieties in the second distribution were cucumber, tomato, okra, beet and spinach and were mostly non-hybrid seeds, so that farmers can collect and replant them next season. Azerbaijan’s continued blockade of the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Artsakh to Armenia, has caused scarcity of fresh food and inflation in Artsakh. The Backyard Greenhouse Project and seed distributions aim to provide relief to this issue and promote food independence. 

“The people who have over one hectare of land in Martuni said it was salvation to receive so many seeds. Otherwise, they would not have been able to grow tomatoes this year” said Masis Zargaryan, the deputy head of the Martuni District Administration of Artsakh. “The impact of the project has been so powerful that the International Committee of the Red Cross has also decided to support people by sending more seeds this month. The good work is contagious.”  

“During this critical time for food supply in Artsakh, we are relieved to be able to continue supporting an ever-growing population of beneficiaries,” said ATP executive director Jeanmarie Papelian. “We continue to urge the international community to condemn Azerbaijan’s violent blockade of ethnic Armenians in Artsakh.”

Armenia Tree Project (ATP) is a non-profit program based in Woburn and Yerevan conducting vitally important environmental projects in Armenia's cities and villages and seeks support in advancing its reforestation mission. Since 1994, ATP has planted and restored more than 6,000,000 trees, and hundreds of jobs have been created for Armenians in seasonal tree-related programs.

NYT: ‘Surge’ in electronic components sent to Russia via Armenia, Kazakhstan

According to the New York Times, senior tax and trade officials from the U.S. and the European Union noticed a "surge" in chips and other electronic components sent to Russia that were "deemed as critical to the development of weapons, including Russian cruise missiles that have struck Ukraine."

The components are being sent to Russia through Armenia, Kazakhstan, and other countries, the New York Times reported on April 18.

Heavy sanctions were imposed on Russia following the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine to prevent such technology from being used on the battlefield.

The European Council announced on Feb. 25 its tenth package of sanctions against Russia, which included "further export bans on critical technology and industrial goods, such as electronics, specialized vehicles, machine parts, spare parts for trucks and jet engines, as well as goods for the construction sector, which can be directed to Russia's military, such as antennas or cranes."

However, electronic component sales through unofficial channels and Russian-allied nations make the official sale figures much lower than the total number of technology sent to Russia.

In late January 2023, a Dutch investigation revealed that millions of microchips made by Dutch companies had reportedly ended up in Russia since Feb. 24, 2022.

The investigation showed a “clear pattern” of a small group of Chinese companies obtaining Dutch chips and exporting them to Russia month after month.

The companies’ spokespeople denied wrongdoing and claimed they don’t do business with Russia, adding that even if their customers are not allowed to re-sell chips, they are powerless if chips end up in Russia through parallel trade.

On April 14, Reuters reported that Ukraine was allegedly finding more electronic components originating from China in Russian weapons recovered on the battlefield, citing a senior adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky's office.