Armenia`s former human rights defender reports four incursions into Armenia`s territory by Azerbaijani troops

ARMINFO
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo.The Azerbaijani troops have until now made four incursions into Armenia's territory, Armenia's former human rights defender Arman Tatoyan. 

According to him, the Azerbaijani troops have made incursions into  the following Armenian territories: the village of Nerqin Khand,  Syunik region, in March, 2022; the Vardenis community, Gegharkunik  region, in May 2021; Goris, Syunik region, May 2021; the borderland  near the village of Tsav, Syunik region, October, 2020.  

"We must not forget the incursion into the part of the Tsav and take  it into account in all the actions. The Azerbaijani armed forces'  illegal presence on he Goris-Kapan and Kapan-Chakaten roads  (November- December, 2020), as well as illegal blocking of the roads  (since November 2021).   

"We must not forget that since November 2020 Azerbaijani troops have  been present in the vicinities of Armenian villages, and often in the  lands and houses Armenian citizens have legally owned since the  Soviet times, as well as in the communal lands and houses," Mr  Tatoyan said.

BOOK: Der Matossian’s book takes closer look at Adana massacres

Nebraska Today
March 2 2022
by Deann Gayman | University Communication

On April 23, 1909, the Omaha Daily Bee reported on its front page that “all inhabitants of several Armenian villages and towns have been killed … victims number ten thousand.”

The newspaper was referring to the shocking massacres that engulfed Adana in April 1909. These massacres were twin eruptions of violence that claimed the lives of at least 20,000 Armenians and 2,000 Muslims in the former Ottoman Empire, presently Turkey.

At the time, these massacres were covered extensively by the press; however, they soon fell into oblivion. Historians tend to concentrate more on the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923 which killed up to 1. 5 million Armenians.

But a new book by University of Nebraska–Lincoln historian and preeminent scholar of ethnic violence in the Ottoman Empire, Bedross Der Matossian, sheds light on the Adana massacres and the political, economic and societal factors that led up to it. The book, “The Horrors of Adana: Revolution and Violence in the Early 20th Century,” offers one of the first close examinations of the events that led to the massacres. It will be published March 15 by Stanford University Press.

Courtesy | Ernst Jackh Papers, Columbia University
Destroyed buildings are shown in the city of Adana following the 1909 massacres.

Relying on documents and newspapers from 15 archives in a dozen different languages from around the world, Der Matossian examines the events from the perspectives of victims, perpetrators, bystanders and humanitarians.

“It was a period where massive violence shook the province,” Der Matossian, Hymen Rosenberg Associate Professor of Judaic Studies and history, said. “The historiography of the Adana massacres has been represented in a superficial way — as Muslims killing Christians. I argue that that’s not the case. I argue that we have to really go into depth in order to understand why these massacres took place. As historians, we have to really understand and explain why phases of violence erupt in a specific period of time and lead to a cataclysm of violence.”

“In order to fully understand the Adana violence, we have to really understand the political and socio-economic structure of the province of Adana.”

The book follows his examination of the Young Turk Revolution of 1908 in “Shattered Dreams of Revolution: From Liberty to Violence in the Late Ottoman Empire,” and begins with the economic hardships wrought for some by the invention of the cotton gin and other new technologies. Previously, cotton grown in the region had been harvested by 70-80,000 migrant workers.

“The requirement for labor started decreasing with the development of new technology,” Der Matossian said. “Armenians played an important role in the introduction of this new technology of cotton machines, and there’s anger and envy towards perceived Armenian superiority in the economic sphere. Economic changes created a kind of resettlement.”

Also playing a role in the massacres was the despotic government in power, which fomented rumors and conspiracy theories. Adana was under extensive surveillance by the government before the 1908 revolution because a small group of Armenians had formed revolutionary groups in order to fight against the depredations and persecutions suffered in the eastern provinces.

“Post-1908 revolution, the conspiracies about the intentions of the Armenians were spread very fast by discontented elements of the province leading to an exacerbation of an already contentious situation.” Der Matossian said. “The government and the local notables in power now believed that Armenians were preparing an uprising in order to reinstate the kingdom of Cilicia.”

Courtesy | Ernst Jackh Papers, Columbia University
Tents were put up in a refugee camp in Adana.

Der Matossian, who is the grandson of Armenian genocide survivors, said it is important to grow the historical knowledge of these massacres, as history has a way of repeating itself.

“Massacre is an extremely important thing that needs to be analyzed,” he said. “I argue in the book that massacre is not an aberration. It is a logical process that has its unique dynamics and has an evolution and a conclusion.”

“They are endemic to urban centers — they start there and spread — but they are not endemic to specific religions, cultures or societies.”

And, he does not want these massacres to be forgotten.

“I also wrote this book because in the field of Middle Eastern Studies, in the field of Ottoman and Turkish Studies, this important phase is not even in the footnotes,” Der Matossian said. “Most scholarship tends to concentrate on the Armenian genocide because of its magnitude and bypasses this important episode. I’ve tried to lay out here the complexity of the situation and what we can learn from this specific episode.

“What types of measures can we take? Because these massacres not only happened in 1909, similar dynamics and similar actors played important roles in different massacres across the course of the 20th century.”

Der Matossian concludes his book by comparing the Adana Massacres to the 1905 Pogroms of Odessa (Ukraine) and the Sikh Massacres of 1984 (India).

Presidential candidate says Pashinyan Administration’s vision of peaceful development era is entirely acceptable

Save

Share

 14:41, 2 March, 2022

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, ARMENPRESS. Presidential candidate Vahagn Khachaturyan says he believes that Armenia must seek to establish good-neighborly relations with its neighbors and the country’s development must be seen within this logic.

Speaking in parliament during his confirmation hearing as president, Khachaturyan, the incumbent minister of high-tech industry, said Armenia must be able to live in peace with neighbors.

“Speaking and negotiating is a better way than arguing or fighting or showing force to anyone. We can show force with knowledge and skills,” he said.

Khachaturyan says the Pashinyan Administration’s goal of opening an era of peaceful development is entirely acceptable for him, and that the President of Armenia must also work in this direction.

Armenian, French leader talk Karabakh, security in South Caucasus

March 1 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and French President Emmanuel Macron have discussed the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh and the strengthening of security and stability in the South Caucasus region.

On a phone conversation on Tuesday, March 1, the two weighed in on issues related to the forthcoming Armenian-French cooperation forum in Paris and their upcoming meeting.

The leaders of the countries exchanged views on the processes taking place in the international arena, Pashinyan's office said.

Turkish press: What happened to Russia’s Air Force? US officials, experts stumped

In this photo taken from video provided by the Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022, an MiG-31 fighter of the Russian air force carrying a Kinzhal hypersonic cruise missile is parked at the Hemeimeem air base in Syria. (Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP)

Before Russia's invasion of Ukraine, U intelligence had predicted a likely blistering assault by Moscow that would quickly mobilize the vast Russian air power that its military assembled in order to dominate Ukraine's skies.

But the first six days have confounded those expectations and instead seen Moscow act far more delicately with its air power, so much so that U.S. officials can't exactly explain what's driving Russia's apparent risk-averse behavior.

"They're not necessarily willing to take high risks with their own aircraft and their own pilots," a senior U.S. defense official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Vastly outmatched by Russia's military, in terms of raw numbers and firepower, Ukraine's own air force is still flying and its air defenses are still deemed to be viable – a fact that is baffling military experts.

After the opening salvos of the war on Feb. 24, analysts expected the Russian military to try to immediately destroy Ukraine's air force and air defenses.

That would have been "the logical and widely anticipated next step, as seen in almost every military conflict since 1938," wrote the RUSI think-tank in London, in an article called "The Mysterious Case of the Missing Russian Air Force."

Instead, Ukrainian air force fighter jets are still carrying out low-level, defensive counter-air and ground-attack sorties. Russia is still flying through contested airspace.

Ukrainian troops with surface-to-air rockets are able to threaten Russian aircraft and create risk to Russian pilots trying to support ground forces.

"There's a lot of stuff they're doing that's perplexing," said Rob Lee, a Russian military specialist at the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

He thought the beginning of the war would be "maximum use of force."

"Because every day it goes on there's a cost and the risk goes up. And they're not doing that and it just is really hard to explain for any realistic reason."

The confusion over how Russia has used its air force comes as President Joe Biden's administration rejects calls by Kyiv for a no-fly zone that could draw the United States directly into a conflict with Russia, whose future plans for its air force are unclear.

Military experts have seen evidence of a lack of Russian air force coordination with ground troop formations, with multiple Russian columns of troops sent forward beyond the reach of their own air defense cover.

That leaves Russian soldiers vulnerable to attack from Ukrainian forces, including those newly equipped with Turkish drones and U.S. and British anti-tank missiles.

David Deptula, a retired U.S. Air Force three-star general who once commanded the no-fly zone over northern Iraq, said he was surprised that Russia didn't work harder to establish air dominance from the start.

"The Russians are discovering that coordinating multi-domain operations is not easy," Deptula told Reuters. "And that they are not as good as they presumed they were."

While the Russians have been under-performing, Ukraine's military has been exceeding expectations so far.

Ukraine's experience from the last eight years of fighting with Russian-backed separatist forces in the east was dominated by static World War I-style trench warfare.

By contrast Russia's forces got combat experience in Syria, where they intervened on the side of Bashar Assad, and demonstrated some ability to synchronize ground maneuvers with air and drone attacks.

Ukraine's ability to keep flying air force jets is a visible demonstration of the country's resilience in the face of attack and has been a morale booster, both to its own military and Ukraine's people, experts say.

It has also led to mythologizing of the Ukrainian air force, including a tale about a Ukrainian jet fighter that purportedly single-handedly downed six Russian aircrafts, dubbed online as "The Ghost of Kyiv."

A Reuters Fact Check showed how a clip from the video game Digital Combat Simulator was miscaptioned online to claim it was an actual Ukrainian fighter jet shooting down a Russian plane.

The United States estimates that Russia is using just over 75 aircraft in its Ukraine invasion, the senior U.S. official said.

Ahead of the invasion, officials had estimated that Russia had potentially readied hundreds of the thousands of aircraft in its air force for a Ukraine mission. However, the senior U.S. official on Tuesday declined to estimate how many Russian combat aircraft, including attack helicopters, might still be available and outside Ukraine.

Both sides are taking losses.

"We do have indications that they've lost some (aircraft), but so have the Ukrainians," the official said.

Armenpress: Decision taken on "denazification, demilitarization" of Ukraine – Putin

Decision taken on "denazification, demilitarization" of Ukraine – Putin

Save

Share

 08:27,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. Russian President Vladimir Putin said that he made the decision to hold a special military operation in response to the address of leaders of Donbass republics, TASS reports.

"People’s republics of Donbass approached Russia with a request for help. In connection therewith, <…> I made the decision to hold a special military operation. Its goal is to protect the people that are subjected to abuse, genocide from the Kiev regime for eight years, and to this end we will seek to demilitarize and denazify Ukraine and put to justice those that committed numerous bloody crimes against peaceful people, including Russian nationals," Putin said in the television address as quoted by TASS.

Justice and truth are on Russia’s side, President Vladimir Putin said in a special television address.

"The welfare, the very existence of entire countries and peoples, their success and health are always originating from the strong root system of culture and values, experience and traditions of ancestors, directly depending on abilities to quickly adapt to continuously changing life, consolidation of the society, its readiness to consolidate and gather all forces together for moving forward," Putin said.

"Forces are always needed but they can be of different quality," the Russian leader said. "And we know the real strength is in justice and truth that are on our side," he added.

Pashinyan congratulates Macron on 30th anniversary of establishment of Armenia-France diplomatic relations

Save

Share

 13:30,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory letter to President of France Emmanuel Macron on the 30th anniversary of the establishment of the diplomatic relations between the two countries, the PM’s Office said.

The letter reads:

“Respectful Mr. President, dear Emmanuel,

February 24th, 1992 is a memorable year for Armenia and France. 30 years ago this day Armenia, which opened the page of its new history with the declaration of independence, established diplomatic relations with the French Republic.

Thus, the Armenian-French connections and friendship, having a history of centuries and strengthened by the presence of the Armenian community of France, gained an interstate framework for further development.

I praise the fact that over the past three decades Armenia and France have managed to establish unique relations based on close political dialogue and regular high-level contacts, active parliamentary partnership and decentralized cooperation, as well as to develop multisectoral cooperation in economic, educational, scientific, cultural, healthcare and other areas.

We attach great importance to the close cooperation with France within the frames of European structures and international organizations.

For Armenia, as an active member of the International Organization of La Francophonie, holding the Francophonie Summit in Yerevan in autumn 2018 was of exceptional importance, within the frames of which it was a special honor also to host you in our country. I would like to note that the French University in Armenia, which is one of the most significant achievements of our bilateral relations in educational field and plays a vital role in Armenia’s higher education system, brings its valuable contribution to the spread of Francophonie also in our country.

We highly appreciate the valuable commitment of France to assist Armenia’s economic development which is reflected in the Armenian-French economic cooperation development roadmap signed in Paris in December 9, 2021 and defines our common commitment to raise our bilateral partnership in infrastructure, agriculture, new technologies and healthcare absolutely to a new level and quality in the next five years. Moreover, the importance on deepening the comprehensive partnership with France is also reflected in the Armenian government’s five-year action plan.

The recognition of the Armenian Genocide by France as the first country and declaring April 24 as an Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day in France based on your decree are of special importance in the history of the interstate relations of Armenia and France. With this step France has once again showed its solidarity with Armenia and the Armenian people, as well as its deep dedication to the universal values.

France is always careful and consistent with the protection of Armenia’s vital interests and the fundamental rights of the Armenian people. We highly appreciate the clear positions and solidarity of France and yours personally during the military aggression against Nagorno Karabakh, as well as your determined efforts and commitments to resist the geopolitical and humanitarian problems caused by the war, including in the preservation of the historical-cultural heritage of Artsakh.

Armenia also attaches great importance to France’s key role together with the other OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries – Russia and the United States, in the peaceful settlement process of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, which aims at clarifying the status of Nagorno Karabakh with the guarantee of the rights of Artsakh-Armenians to self-determination.

Today, the relations between Armenia and France mark their 30th anniversary with important achievements, which, I am sure, will continue deepening and expanding with our joint efforts, by opening new bright pages in the history of the Armenian-French unique relations for the long duration of the Armenian-French brotherly friendship.

Looking forward to meeting with you soon and continuing our regular discussions, please accept, Mr. President, the assurance of my highest respect”.

PM Pashinyan congratulates Estonian counterpart on national holiday

Save

Share

 16:18,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory message to the Prime Minister of the Republic of Estonia Kaja Kallas on the occasion of the country's national holiday, the Prime Minister’s Office said.

"Your Excellency,

On behalf of the Government of the Republic of Armenia, and on my personal behalf, I cordially congratulate you and convey the best wishes on the occasion of the Estonian national holiday – the Independence Day.

Armenia seeks to strengthen friendly relations with Estonia based on common values and mutual trust.

I am full of hope that through joint efforts we will give a new impetus to the mutually beneficial Armenian-Estonian cooperation in the spheres of mutual interest, which will be greatly facilitated by the implementation of the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement signed between Armenia and the European Union.

I wish you good health and all the best, and peace, prosperity and further progress to the people of Estonia”, reads the Prime Minister’s message.

Armenian community, alliances and upcoming elections – [REPORT]

 Lebanon
Feb 19 2022

The Armenian community in Lebanon has six electoral seats, five for the Armenian Orthodox and one for the Armenian Catholic, distributed as follows: four in the Beirut First District, including one for the Armenian Catholic, one in the northern Metn and one in Zahle.
 
The number of Armenian voters in Lebanon is 106,476. However, 86,163 of them are Armenian Orthodox and 20,313 are Armenian Catholic. 
 
Their turnout in the last elections was about 28 percent.


To watch the full report, please click on the video at the link




Azerbaijan opens fire, damages civilian homes in Karabakh

Feb 19 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - The Azerbaijani military on Friday, February 19 opened fire on civilian homes in the Nagorno-Karabakkh village of Taghavard, the Prosecutor General's office of Artsakh said in a statement.

The walls of several houses in the community were damaged, while a bullet even pierced through the window of one of them and landed on the floor.

According to the statement, the Russian peacekeeping contingent has been notified of the incident.

The Russian peacekeepers were deployed in Artsakh immediately after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Russian and Azerbaijani Presidents Vladimir Putin and Ilham Aliyev on November 9, 2020 signed a statement to end the war in Karabakh. Under the deal, the Armenian side returned all the seven regions surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, having lost a part of Karabakh itself in hostilities.