TURKISH press: ‘Turkey’s future with presidential system’

Buket Guven, Mehmet Tosun   |25.12.2020
Turkey's Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) Leader Devlet Bahceli makes a speech during his party's group meeting at the Grand National Assembly of Turkey in Ankara, Turkey on November 24, 2020. ( Raşit Aydoğan – Anadolu Agency )

ANKARA

Turkey’s future is with a presidential system, the head of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) said Thursday. 

In a meeting with MHP’s provincial heads, Devlet Bahceli said those who want an improved and strengthened parliamentary system should not waste time. He said the Turkish nation has made its decision and the curtain is closed.

Bahceli also praised Turkey’s efforts against the novel coronavirus.

"While many countries yield to despair in the face of the coronavirus outbreak, Turkey took precautions, became the pioneer and displayed exemplary behavior with its strong health infrastructure. It has come to the forefront especially with the equipment of city hospitals and our heroic struggle of the healthcare professionals."

He went on to say that with its health diplomacy, Turkey lent a helping hand to other countries.

Bahceli also noted that neither US sanctions and the EU’s sanction threats nor Greek provocations will make Turkey kneel down.

ECHR’s final verdict on Demirtas

Touching on the ruling by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on Turkish opposition politician Selahattin Demirtas, Bahceli said: "We do not recognize the final verdict. We do not care. We cry out here that it is invalid in the national conscience. We reject this insult to the national will and Turkish courts."

The ECHR on Tuesday ruled that the arrest of Demirtas in 2017 on terror charges violated his freedom of _expression_ and right to participate in elections.

The co-leader of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) was being deprived of the right to liberty, security and freedom of choice, the ruling said.

Turkey's government accuses the HDP of having links to the PKK terrorist organization.

The court also urged Turkey to take all necessary measures for the release of Demirtas and ruled that Ankara should pay "€3,500 [$4,264] in respect of pecuniary damage, €25,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage and €31,900 in respect of costs and expenses."

In November 2016, Demirtas along with 12 HDP lawmakers were arrested on terror-related charges.

He was sentenced in September 2018 to four years and eight months in prison after he was convicted of "spreading terrorist propaganda," "terrorist organization leadership" and "public incitement to hatred and hostility."

Turkey to use S-400s

On the S-400 missile defense system that Turkey purchased from Russia, Bahceli said: “If we bought the S-400s, we will definitely use them.”

“Instead of putting them in hangars, we will deploy the batteries against hostile environments,” he added.

In April 2017, when its protracted efforts to buy an air defense system from the US proved fruitless, Turkey signed a contract with Russia to acquire the S-400s.

US officials have voiced opposition to their deployment, claiming they would be incompatible with NATO systems and would expose next-generation F-35 jets to possible Russian subterfuge.

Turkey, however, stressed that the S-400 would not be integrated into NATO systems and posed no threat to the alliance or its armaments.

Bahceli also criticized a decision of the lower house of the Belgium parliament on Upper Karabakh.

“We tear up that decision criticizing Turkey,” he said.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

New clashes erupted on Sept. 27, and the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces, violating cease-fire agreements.

During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from Armenian occupation.

The two countries signed a Russia-brokered agreement on Nov. 10 to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

Asbarez: Two Books by Hakop Karapents Translated into Farsi

Book cover of the Farsi translation of Hakob Karapents’ “Yek ensan va yek sarzamin”

Coinciding with the ninety-fifth birth anniversary of prolific Diaspora Armenian writer Hakob Karapents, two publishing houses in Iran have announced the release in Farsi of his works: “Ketabeh Adam” [The Book of Adam], the writer’s most celebrated and popular novel by Khazé Publishing, and “Yek mard va yek sarzamin” [A Man and a Land], an anthology of fifteen short stories and essays by Siyamak Book (Ketab-E-Siyamak).

This is the first time that works of Karapents are published in the country of his birth. These publications will provide the first opportunity for the Farsi-speaking community and literary circles in Iran to become acquainted with Karapents and his unique literary legacy as well as his Armenian compatriots who will read his works in Farsi for the first time.

The first title, “Ketabeh Adam,” is translated by Andranik Khechoumian, celebrated Iranian Armenian writer, playwright, and translator. The book includes an introduction and a brief biographical sketch of the writer by Ara Ghazarians, curator of the Armenian Cultural Foundation, and a preface by Abbas Jahangirian, prominent Iranian writer and literary critique.

The “Book of Adam” is Karapents’ second novel. He wrote it after a little more than a decade since his first novel, the “Daughter of Carthage” (1972). He began writing it in mid-1980 and completed in less than a year time. The book is dedicated to his wife Alice. It received rave reviews by several Diaspora Armenian literary critiques. It is the winner of the Armenian General Benevolent Union’s Alex Manoogian Literary Award, and French-Armenian Writers Society’s Eliz Kavookjian-Ayvazian Literary Award. The second edition of the novel was released in Armenia in 2012.

The novel has also been adapted for the stage twice by two young Armenian dramatists, actor, and cinematographer in Tehran (2005) dedicated to Karapents’ 80th birth anniversary under the direction of Seto Gojamanian titled “Where are we to be buried,” and in Los Angeles (2017) by Armen Sarvar titled “Yes, Adam Nourian.”

The “Book of Adam” is constructed on three levels: the state of the American social order in the final decades (1980s) of the twentieth century; the current crisis of the Diaspora Armenian; and the crisis of man finding himself at the end of the twentieth century.  The characters and plot serve as the means of linking this triad of knots together and reaching a certain truth. “Aside from flashback,” as observed by the late editor, writer and translator, Aris Sevag, “the book is written to understand life by the return trip and to live life by the road ahead, the metaphysical with the real, sometimes relying on non-existent realities which are more powerful than the real; therefore, from tie to tie, there surfaces a dry journalistic style to produce a clash between tangible and intangible realities.  From this standpoint, the ‘Book of Adam’ enters the self-contained current of contemporary American literature, which is a sad and nondescript visit to solitary persons and solitary communities.”

Book cover of the Farsi translation of Hakob Karapents’ “Ketabeh Adam”

The second book, “Yek mard va yek sarzamin” [A Man and a Land] is divided into five sections, includes twelve short stories and three essays, selected from Karapents’ following titles “Mijnarar” [Interlude] (2), “Amerikyan shurjpar” [American Rondo] (3), “Ankatar” [Incomplete] (4), “Mi mard u mi erkir” [A Man and a Country] (3),and “Erku ashkharh” [Two Worlds] (3). Dedicated to her mother, Kitoush Arzouian-Arakelian, the compiler, translator, Armenoush Arakelian presents a tastefully written preface in three languages (Armenian, Farsi, French), as well as a brief biography of Karapents and his literary legacy. The selected pieces represent diverse aspects and dimensions of Karapents’ work, unique linguistic character and literary style, which according to the Arakelian even has “poetical resonance.” Arakelian, translator, editor, also born in Tabriz, Iran, is a graduate of the Sorbonne University, majoring in French. She has been active on the Armenian cultural and literary scene in her country of birth. She has collaborated with “Alik” daily, “Payman Quarterly,” and “Ararat Bulletin” and has co-edited and translated six books.

In Arakelian’s words, “Karapents ushers the reader to the multilayered and multifaceted world of his characters, their lives and events. The heroes of his works are alive, vibrant and not restrainted by the rules of the world in which they live. He penetrates into the inner world of the man, probes their souls and reflects their feelings and dreams.” For Karapents life, a mix of bitter episodes and cycles of happiness, is always incomplete and that man is in perpetual search of happiness and perfection.

According to Arakelian Karapents’ stories are “captivating and filled with delicate feelings of love as well as the spirirt of eternal struggle.” His stories are also replete with expressions of criticism and protest against tyranny, injustice and sham slogans of human rights. In Karapets’ words, “Even in wisdom there is white wrath, which emanates from the unjust’s everpresent fixation.”

This is the first time that Karapents’ works in general and short stories in particular are presented in Farsi in one volume. Prior to the release of “Yek mard va yek sarzamin” only a couple of his essays and biographical sketches about his life and literary legacy had been published in the Farsi-language Armenian “PaymanCultural Quarterly” (no. 9/10, no. 53) and “Mirza” magazine.  Hopefully, the above titles will inspire other scholars and literary figures to undertake similar projects and make Karapents’ rich and unique literary legacy available to wider audineces in Farsi-speaking communities worldwide.

Many years ago, in answer to an interviewer’s question about writing in English Hakob Karapents had responded: “Many encourage me to write in English. . . in order to partake in the American literature, one has to be an American.  I am an Armenian, a Diaspora-Armenian, which is a unique creature in the history of mankind . . . I have lived for many years in America, however I do not consider myself an American.  Despite all, my Armenianness is my identity, my license to walk among the crowds and feel that I am different.”

This conviction, to which Karapents remained loyal during his entire literary career, unfortunately, for decades, deprived the non-Armenian speaking readers, English in particular, of a rich literary treasure. Karapents’ works were not fully appreciated among his people either as he wrote in Eastern Armenian in a Western Armenian speaking reality. Furthermore, his works sadly, falling victim to Cold War politics, remained inaccessible in Soviet Armenia, thus depriving even his compatriots from a unique literary genre and scope of contemporary Armenian literature.

In the final years of his life, Karapents was persuaded to make some of his works available in English. He finally agreed to have some of his short stories translated into English. “Return and Tiger,” a collection of fifteen short stories, translated by Tatul Sonentz, and published by Blue Crane Books, was sadly released a couple of months after his passing in 1994. This was followed by the publication of another anthology, a collection of seven short stories by the young Hakob Karapents written in 1950s, titled “Widening Circle and Other Early Short Stories,” in 2007.

Hakob Karapents was born in Tabriz, Iran in 1925 to Armenian parents with roots deep in the historic Artsakh (Karabagh). He moved to the United States in 1947 and studied in Kansas City University, majoring in journalism. Later he attended the Columbia University where he studied psychology. He joined the Voice of America, Armenian Section in 1954, where he served over a quarter of a century and served as the Chief of the Armenian Service. After his retirement in 1979, Karapents moved first to Connecticut and later in 1989, after a decade of self-imposed seclusion, to Watertown, Massachusetts, where he lived until his death in 1994.

Karapents is the author of over nine hundred articles in Armenian and English, ninety short stories, two novels, as well as essays, commentaries, book reviews, etc. In accordance with his wishes, his library, publications, personal effects and memorabilia were donated to the Armenian Cultural Foundation of Arlington, Massachusetts, where an entire room is dedicated to his collection and papers. In 1995, the Yerevan City Council, dedicated No. 6 high school after Karapents, where a small museum was also established in recent years. In the final days of his life Karapents expressed his wish to establish a scholarship under the auspices of the Hamazkayin Cutural and Educationsl Society, Armenia to support promising youth persuing careers in journalism, literature, and philology. Since 2000 over one-hundred-thirty deserving students from various higher academic institutions have received annual scholarships. The Scholarship Fund in the United States is managed by the Amaras Art Alliance, a non-profit, tax-exempt organization registered in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

December 24,  2020

President and Prime Minister Meet

December 24,  2020



President Armen Sarkissian (left) met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Dec. 24

President Armen Sarkissian and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan met on Thursday.

Their offices released specific details about the meeting, only that they discussed the current situation in the country and ways to confront the challenges facing the homeland.

The two leaders also discussed the defense and security of Armenia’s border regions, re-establishing a semblance of normalcy in Artsakh and the issues related to the assistance programs undertaken by the government.

It was the first time the leaders were meeting since the Pashinyan signed the November 9 agreement that ended the war but mandated the surrender of historic Armenian territories in both Armenia and Artsakh to Azerbaijan.

Days after the agreement was announced, Sarkissian announced that he was not informed about the document and its provisions and urged the government to put forth a comprehensive proposal to emerge from the crisis. He also called for the resignation of the government and snap elections, which would be organized by a temporary national accord administration made up of experts and professionals.

Azerbaijan Conceals Actual Number of Captured Armenians, Says Artsakh Rights Defender

December 24,  2020


Artsakh Human Rights Defender Artak Beglaryan

Azerbaijan is concealing the actual number of captured Armenias, said Artak Beglaryan, Artsakh’s Human Rights Defender during a farewell press conference on Wednesday in Stepanakert.

Beglaryan announced his resignation from the post and, on Thursday, he was named chief advisor to Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan.

According to him, Azerbaijan has so far returned 53 Armenian prisoners of war. This number includes women, two elderly Armenian men who died in Azerbaijani prisons, with evidence of brutal violence against them. Beglaryan said the vast majority of those returned report of extreme physical and psychological abuse, adding that currently most of them are being treated at various hospitals.

Beglaryan explained that there different categories of Armenian POWs: individuals whose captivity has been officially recognized by Azerbaijan, those who, according to hard evidence, are being held captive but are not acknowledged by Azerbaijan, and people about whom there is little or no information, but there is indirect information about their captivity.

According to the human rights defender, dozens of Armenians—including the 62 servicemen who went missing in Khtsaberd village and several dozens more—are currently being held captive in Azerbaijan. He explained the his office updating and submitting lists to mediators, saying these Armenians must be returned without any conditions.

During his briefing, Beglaryan also reported that at least 60 civilians were killed as a result of Azerbaijan’s military aggression, from September 27-to November 9. He announced that a report, released on Wednesday, includes the names of these civilian casualties and, in some cases, the circumstances of their deaths.

According to Beglaryan, 39 civilians were killed as a result of the recent hostilities, either from being hit by missiles and bombs, while the remainder are known to have been killed in captivity or in the occupied territories. He said most of the remains have been found, and there are other details that are being verified.

Beglaryan stressed the need to give status to the civilian casualties so that their family members can receive support and social benefits. He added that close to 40 civilians have gone missing during or after the recent Artsakh war, suggesting that there is evidence of capture of several civilians, and at least 163 civilians were injured.

Beglaryan said that he and his counterpart in Armenia, Arman Tatoyan have published six reports detailing the killings, the inhumane treatment of Armenian captives, and the Azerbaijani military’s defiling of bodies of the dead during the military aggression from September 27 to November 9.

According to him, these reports were prepared on the basis of open sources, media, and data found on the internet. He explained that the reports have not been made available to the public because they contain horrifying photograph and videos. However, he explained, that they been sent to the relevant government agencies in Armenia and Artsakh, as well as to international organizations, including human rights groups and foreign countries.

Beglaryan noted that several human rights organizations had responded, while the United Nations and and the Council of Europe commissioners for human rights were also conducting their own investigations.

However, Beglaryan lamented that the international community has largely been restrained in its statements in this regard, and it continues to use false parity, which is absolutely unacceptable. He did say that some of the organizations have publicly announced their intention to visit Artsakh based on the information contained in the reports.

“It would have been good if they had not isolated Karabakh before the [recent Artsakh] war, or visited it during the war. They have done neither. We hope that in the future they will not politicize visits to unrecognized countries and will fulfill their mandate, regardless of Azerbaijan’s destructive position,” said Beglaryan.

Newsom Appoints Haig Baghdassarian as Deputy Secretary and Chief Counsel of State Food and Agriculture Department

December 24,  2020



Governor Gavin Newsom with Haig Baghdassarian

ANCA-Western Region Welcomes the Appointment of its Former Legislative Consultant

The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region Board of Directors extended its warmest congratulations to longtime ANCA activist and former ANCA-WR Chief Legislative Consultant Haig Baghdassarian on being appointed as the Deputy Secretary and Chief Counsel at the California Department of Food and Agriculture.

Baghdassarian’s appointment by Governor Gavin Newsom was announced on Thursday.

“We are so proud of our own Haig Baghdassarian for this consequential appointment,” remarked ANCA-WR Board Chair Nora Hovsepian, Esq. “Haig has been an integral part of our ANCA-WR team for several years, and we are confident that he will exceed Governor Newsom’s expectations in serving the interests of all Californians. We wish Haig good luck and success in his new post and look forward to celebrating his accomplishments.”

“I am honored and humbled at having been appointed by Governor Newsom to serve in his administration,” said the incoming CA Department of Food and Agriculture Deputy Secretary and Chief Counsel Haig Baghdassarian, Esq. “Given the extraordinary challenges facing our state in the wake of the pandemic, I appreciate the governor’s confidence, and look forward to serving our fellow citizens well.”

Baghdassarian has been Principal for the Law Office of Haig Baghdassarian since 2009. He was Chief Legislative Consultant for the Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region from 2013 to 2018, Contract Attorney for Meyers Nave LLP in 2008 and Legislative Coordinator for the Los Angeles City Ethics Commission in 2007. Baghdassarian served as a Deputy City Attorney in the San Francisco City Attorney’s Office from 2004 to 2006 and a San Francisco Human Rights Commissioner from 2001 to 2004. Baghdassarian earned a Juris Doctor degree from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law.

Asbarez: Police Brutally Beat Opposition Protesters

December 24,  2020



Armenia’s police on Thursday brutally beat, shoved and dragged opposition protesters, who were gathered at Armenia’s government building as they continued to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, blaming him for signing the November 9 agreement that ended the war, but stipulated the surrender of territories in Artsakh and Armenia to Azerbaijan.

Police officers barricaded and formed a human shield in front of the Armenian government building in Yerevan where protesters gathered as the government was in session.

Ministers apparently had entered the building from other entrances, because the protesters kept the main door to the building was closed for more than five hours.

The police then used unprecedented force against the protesters, pushing and shoving, and in some instances beating.

During the confrontation with the police, five women were injured. Police arrested 69 activists, among them the son of Artsakh War Hero Shahen Meghryan, Zinavor, as well as Sako Minoyan an AYF and ARF Shant Student Association activist from Los Angeles who was beaten and sustained injuries to his face and nose.

“Syunik is not as well guarded as this despicable traitor is,” said Armenian Revolutionary Federation leader Gegham Manukyan, referring to Pashinyan, as well as the heavy armed police presence, saying the law enforcement officials “should think about that.”

The ARF is part of a coalition of 16 opposition parties that have banned together to demand Pashinyan’s resignation and have called for snap parliamentary elections, which would be administered by a national accord government. This National Salvation Movement has chosen Armenia’s first prime minister Vazken Manukyan to their candidate for Armenia’s premiership.

Thousands joined the movement on Tuesday during a day-long strike, which saw people from varied walks of life joining in the protest, which was taking place a day after Pashinyan was forced to cut his visit to the Syunik Province short because protesters had blocked the roadway leading to the cities of Kapan, Goris and Meghri. The Mayor of Goris, Arush Arushanyan, one of the organizers of the protest in Syunik was arrested early Monday morning for saying in a social media post that Pashinyan was not welcome in the province after key positions along in Armenia-proper were forced to be surrendered to Azerbaijan as a direct ramification of the November 9 agreement.

The wave of those calling for the prime minister’s resignation grew on Thursday when 130 professors and staff members of Yerevan’s Brusov State University of Languages and Social Sciences issued a statement calling for Pashinyan’s resignation, saying the current government is unable to confront the challenges facing Armenia because of the November 9 agreement.
“We, the representatives of a higher education institution, are responsible for educating the patriotic generation and we cannot be indifferent to the political situation and the moral atmosphere in the country,” the statement added.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/24/2020

                                        Thursday, December 24, 2020

Former Culture Minister Wanted On Corruption Charges
December 24, 2020

Armenia -- Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosian at a press conference in Yerevan, 
July 29, 2015.

An Armenian law-enforcement agency has brought corruption charges against former 
Culture Minister Hasmik Poghosian and a prominent diplomat.

The Investigative Committee said on Thursday that Poghosian had abused her 
position to misappropriate a state-owned historic building in downtown Yerevan 
and land occupied by it.

The property, worth an estimated 201 million drams ($383,000) in the early 
2000s, housed a non-governmental cultural organization of which Poghosian was 
the deputy chairperson.

The Investigative Committee claimed that shortly after being appointed as 
culture minister in 2006 she illegally privatized the property before selling it 
to an offshore-registered company owned by one of her relatives. The company 
paid only $550 for it, the committee added in a statement.

The statement also said that the complex fraud scheme was facilitated by Armen 
Smbatian, who headed the NGO in question and was Armenia’s ambassador to Russia 
at the time.

Poghosian, who served as culture minister from 2006-2016, has been charged with 
abuse of power and money laundering. According to the statement, law-enforcement 
bodies will try to track down and arrest her, suggesting that she may not be in 
Armenia at present.

Smbatian stands accused of assisting in the alleged abuse of power. The 
Investigative Committee said he posted bail and was not arrested. It was not 
clear if he will plead guilty to the accusation.

Smbatian most recently served as Armenia’s ambassador to Israel. The Armenian 
government recalled him shortly after the outbreak of the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh on September 27 in protest against continuing Israeli arms 
supplies to Azerbaijan.



Court Blocks Arrest Of Anti-Pashinian Mayor
December 24, 2020
        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia -- Goris Mayor Arush Arushanian.

An Armenian court refused on Thursday to allow investigators to arrest the mayor 
of the town of Goris who was prosecuted after calling for civil disobedience 
against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

The 29-year-old mayor, Arus Arushanian, was among the heads of more than a dozen 
communities in Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province who issued earlier this 
month statements condemning Pashinian’s handling of the war with Azerbaijan and 
demanding his resignation.

Arushanian urged Goris residents late on Sunday to block a regional highway and 
not allow Pashinian to visit Syunik. He was arrested several hours later for 
organizing what the Investigative Committee considers an illegal protest. A 
Yerevan court of first instance ordered the committee to free Arushanian on 
Tuesday.

Shortly after the order the law-enforcement agency indicted Arushanian on a 
string of charges, including abuse of power, illegal entrepreneurship and 
assault. It also requested a court permission to arrest him again.

A Yerevan judge refused to grant such permission. According to Arushanian’s 
lawyer, Armen Melkonian, the judge found no legal grounds for the mayor’s 
pre-trial detention.

Melkonian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that his client was again summoned to 
the Investigative Committee for questioning later on Thursday. Arushanian 
rejects the accusations as politically motivated.

On Wednesday, the committee indicted and moved to arrest the mayor of another 
Syunik town who has called for Pashinian’s resignation. Manvel Paramazian, who 
has run the town of Kajaran since 2016, was charged with kidnapping and 
assaulting another man in April this year.



Russia Vows Continued Relief Aid To Karabakh
December 24, 2020

Nagorno-Karabakh -- Local residents repair a roof with construction materials 
supplied by Russia as humanitarian aid, November 25, 2020.

Russian Emergencies Minister Yevgeny Zinichev has visited Armenia and Azerbaijan 
to discuss Moscow’s continuing humanitarian assistance to Nagorno-Karabakh.

Zinichev held talks on Wednesday with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev as well as his Armenian and Azerbaijani 
counterparts.

According to Russia’s Ministry of Civil Defense and Emergencies, he “expressed 
readiness to conduct an additional assessment of the humanitarian needs” of 
civilian areas in Karabakh gravely affected by the recent war and to provide 
them with more aid.

“The main objective of the ongoing humanitarian operation is a quick restoration 
of peaceful life in the region,” a ministry statement quoted Zinichev as saying.

In another statement issued on Thursday, the ministry said a fresh batch of 
Russian aid was delivered to Karabakh on Wednesday. It included construction 
materials, heaters and other household appliances.


RUSSIA - Personnel and equipment of a Russian Emergencies Ministry unit is 
examined at the Noginsk Rescue Center before being sent to Nagorno-Karabakh on 
humanitarian mission, November 23, 2020.

Russia deployed about 2,000 peacekeeping troops in Karabakh shortly after 
brokering the Armenian-Azerbaijani ceasefire agreement that stopped the six-week 
war on November 10. It also opened in Stepanakert a “center for humanitarian 
reaction.”

The center coordinates ongoing Russian-led demining operations in Karabakh and 
is also tasked with helping to rebuild homes and public infrastructure destroyed 
or seriously damaged during the hostilities.

Zinichev’s ministry claims to have sent a total of 1,500 tons of relief supplies 
to Karabakh so far. Pashinian thanked Moscow for this assistance when he met 
with Zinichev in Yerevan.

The war displaced an estimated 90,000 ethnic Armenian residents of Karabakh 
making up 60 percent of the disputed territory’s population. Most of them fled 
to Armenia. Officials say that at least 42,000 refugees have returned to 
Karabakh since the start of the Russian peacekeeping operation.



Pashinian Seeks To Allay Concerns Over Armenian Border Region
December 24, 2020
        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia -- An opposition protester stands against the backdrop of riot police 
protecting the main Armenian government building in Yerevan, December 24, 2020.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian insisted on Thursday that the latest Armenian 
troop withdrawals resulting from the Russian-brokered ceasefire in the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone did not endanger the security of Armenia’s 
southeastern Syunik province.

Pashinian again sought to reassure Syunik’s population amid continuing street 
protests in Yerevan staged by opposition parties demanding his resignation.

Syunik borders the Zangelan and Kubatli districts southwest of Karabakh which 
were mostly recaptured by Azerbaijan during the recent war. Armenian army units 
and local militias completed late last week their withdrawal from parts of the 
districts close to the provincial capital Kapan and many other communities.

Many local residents are now seriously concerned about their security as well as 
the safety of the main provincial highway running along a 20-kilometer stretch 
of the Soviet-era Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Hundreds of them blocked another 
section of the highway on Monday to bar Pashinian from visiting the mountainous 
region. The prime minister cut short his visit as a result.

Speaking at a weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan, Pashinian reiterated that “not 
a single inch” of Armenia’s internationally recognized territory has been ceded 
to Azerbaijan.

“What is happening at this stage is a geolocation of some border sections the 
operational purpose of which is to ensure security … Our position is that with 
these actions we are enhancing security guarantees for Syunik and creating a new 
security system of Armenia,” he said.

Pashinian admitted at the same time that this process could result in “painful 
situations” for two Syunik villages. He implied that some of their houses and 
agricultural lands could end up under Azerbaijani control.


Armenia -- Riot police clash with opposition protesters outside the main 
Armenian government building in Yerevan, December 24, 2020.
As Pashinian addressed his ministers several hundred opposition supporters 
demonstrated outside the main government building and tried to disrupt the 
weekly cabinet meeting. Some of them clashed with security forces deployed in 
and around the building. Several protesters were detained on the spot.

“Our country will be increasingly unprotected as long as Nikol Pashinian remains 
prime minister,” Gegham Manukian, a leader of the opposition Armenian 
Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), told the angry crowd.

Dashnaktsutyun is a key member of a coalition of more than a dozen opposition 
groups holding demonstrations in a bid to force Pashinian to resign. They blame 
him for the Armenian side’s defeat in the war with Azerbaijan and want him to 
hand over power to an interim government that would hold snap parliamentary 
elections within a year. Pashinian and his political allies reject these demands


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Armenpress: Artak Beglaryan appointed chief of staff of Artsakh President’s Office

Artak Beglaryan appointed chief of staff of Artsakh President’s Office

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 09:51, 24 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan has signed a decree on appointing Artak Beglaryan chief of staff of the President’s Office, the Presidential administration of Artsakh reports.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Artsakh authorities search for bodies in Zangelan

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 11:08, 24 December, 2020

STEPANAKERT, DECEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS. The Artsakh authorities have found the bodies of 8 servicemen in Fizuli and Jabrayil amid ongoing search operations.

“Overall, so far the number of remains of the war victims that have been found is 1069,” the Artsakh State Service of Emergency Situations spokesperson Hunan Tadevosyan told ARMENPRESS.

“Today, the search and rescue operations continue in the directions of Jabrayil and Zangelan, namely Kovsakan, as well as in the Shushi area. Despite the unfavorable weather conditions, the rescue service chief has ordered not to stop the operations.”

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan