Putin thanks Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh

Vestnik Kavkaza
Dec 21 2021
 21 Dec in 16:40

Russian President Vladimir Putin thanked the Russian peacekeepers in the Karabakh region for professionalism, endurance, and persistence.

"Our peacekeepers have been assisting to maintain stability in the Karabakh region for more than a year," Putin said at an expanded meeting of the Defense Ministry on December 21.

"The humanitarian situation has been improved, the territory of a number of districts has been cleared of mines, social infrastructure has been restored, historical and cultural monuments have been preserved thanks to the efforts of our peacekeepers," he noted.

"I would like to thank the personnel performing peacekeeping tasks for professionalism, endurance, and persistence," Putin added.

Pandemic Keeping Massive Emigration From Armenia From Being Even Bigger – OpEd

Dec 21 2021

By Paul Goble

Economic problems and security concerns in the wake of the fighting last year have caused a sharp increase in emigration from Armenia, with 103,000 more Armenians leaving that country than entering it during the first nine months of 2021, reversing the pattern of the previous three years when more Armenians arrived than left.

The total for 2021 may not be as devastating because Armenians working abroad on a temporary basis often return to their homeland in the fourth quarter, but at the same time, experts say, the number now leaving is probably lower than it would be were it not for pandemic restrictions (russian.eurasianet.org/в-армении-наблюдается-резкий-рост-оттока-населения).

What that suggests is that if the pandemic eases, Armenian outmigration could accelerate, further pushing down the country’s population – it has already lost more than 600,000 people since 1991 – and make it even more difficult for Yerevan to reverse its economic decline and ensure its control of many parts of the country suffering depopulation.

Most of the current outflow from Armenia is to the Russian Federation, and many Armenians who go there don’t plan to return. According to Yerevan, about 22,000 Armenians took Russian citizenship in the first half of 2021, the highest level over the last four years and one that poses serious problems for the future (azatutyun.am/a/31530758.html).     

Those are of two kinds. On the one hand, it suggests that even more Armenians will leave the republic and not return; and on the other, it means that if Armenians who acquire Russian citizenship do return, they will likely feel even more linked to Russia than they had in the past and will seek to promote even closer Armenian ties with Moscow.

Paul Goble is a longtime specialist on ethnic and religious questions in Eurasia. Most recently, he was director of research and publications at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy. Earlier, he served as vice dean for the social sciences and humanities at Audentes University in Tallinn and a senior research associate at the EuroCollege of the University of Tartu in Estonia. He has served in various capacities in the U.S. State Department, the Central Intelligence Agency and the International Broadcasting Bureau as well as at the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Mr. Goble maintains the Window on Eurasia blog and can be contacted directly at  .

https://www.eurasiareview.com/21122021-pandemic-keeping-massive-emigration-from-armenia-from-being-even-bigger-oped/

Asbarez: Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Allocates Over $140,000 to Armenian Schools in Lebanon

The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation’s Armenian Communities Department logo

The Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation has allocated more than $140,000 to the 16 Armenian schools in Lebanon. This follows the donation of 650 tablets and 50 laptops to the schools at the beginning of 2021.

Since its establishment, the Armenian Communities Department has paid special attention to the Armenian schools in the Middle East. In recent years, the Foundation has developed a comprehensive strategy for Lebanon, with a particular focus on the Armenian community schools.

Currently, Lebanon is facing one of the worst economic crises in its history. In response, the Foundation has temporarily suspended The School Grant Program it launched in 2020. Instead of supporting three schools to develop comprehensive educational projects, it is supporting all schools to meet immediate needs.

The current support provided to Lebanon is in addition to the Foundation’s other initiatives in the country: scholarships, special education, teacher training, publications and funding for cultural initiatives by youth.

For further information visit the Armenian Communities Department’s website.

Asbarez: Vahe Vahian’s Armenian Translation of Kahlil Gibran’s Literary Masterpiece Revived

GLENDALE—Poet and spiritualist Kahlil Gibran’s world-renowned work, “The Prophet,” which was translated into Western Armenian in 1984 by Armenian author and teacher Vahe Vahian, has been republished as a paperback edition with a preface by author and literary critic Arpi Sarafian.

While the book will be officially released to the public in the coming months, copies are now available for purchase for the holidays at Abril Bookstore’s new location: 1022 E. Chevy Chase Dr., Suite C, Glendale, CA or from the bookstores’s website.

“The Prophet” is a literary work that has been popular reading around the world ever since its publication in 1923. Yet, a translation that is considered by many to be the best rendering into Western Armenian of the celebrated classic has not been available for over 35 years now. This second edition is a response to the numerous requests for the Vahe-Vahian translation, following the publication in the Armenian press of several articles about the Armenian translations of the Gibran classic.

The second edition of Vahe Vahian’s translated version of Kahlil Gibran’s “The Prophet” includes 12 full-page illustrations by Gibran

This second edition is an exact paperback replica of the 1984 first edition, except for the addition of a Preface by Arpi Sarafian.

“The Prophet” is a collection of poetic essays that are philosophical, spiritual, and, above all, inspirational. Gibran’s musings cover such sprawling topics as love, marriage, children, giving, eating and drinking, work, joy and sorrow, housing, clothes, buying and selling, crime and punishment, laws, freedom, reason and passion, pain, self-knowledge, teaching, friendship, talking, time, good and evil, prayer, pleasure, beauty, religion, and death. Each piece reveals deep insights into the impulses of the human heart and mind. 

With 12 full-page drawings by Gibran, this beautiful work makes a perfect holiday gift for anyone seeking enlightenment and inspiration.

Construction of Iran-Armenia transit route to be completed soon: MP

Iran Front Page
Dec 24 2021

An Iranian legislator says the construction of a transit route that will directly connect Iran to neighboring Armenia is in a final stage and will be completed in the near future.

Lawmaker Jalal Mahmoudzadeh briefed on Friday media about the agenda of a visit by members of the Iran-Armenia Parliamentary Friendship Group to Yerevan, where they held meetings with their counterparts and other officials of the country.

He said the Iranian parliamentary delegation had a meeting with Armenia’s Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Gnel Sanosyan to share views on ways to expand bilateral trade and speed up the construction of the transit motorway.

“Currently, the 30-kilometer transit route between Iran and Armenia is under construction with the participation of both Iranian and Armenian contractors and is undergoing changes to directions,” he said.

Mahmoudzadeh said that a 20-kilometer section of the route was ready for use, and that the project would be “completed soon.”

In October, Iranian Deputy Transport and Urban Development Minister Kheirollah Khademi announced an agreement between Iran and Armenia for building new transit routes, which would eliminate the need for the two countries to use the roads that pass through Azerbaijan Republic.

He inspected the construction site of the transit route under construction between the northeastern Iranian town of Nordooz and Yerevan. The project, named Tatev, will enable freight between the two countries to run entirely on Armenian land.

Earlier this year, a diplomat dispute broke out between Iran and Azerbaijani Republic over Baku’s decision to set up checkpoints on the road and charge Iranian drivers $130 for transit rights.

The Iranian MP added Armenian members of the Friendship Group would also be invited to Iran in the future for talks with Iranian ministers and businessmen.

Assessing Armenia-Turkey Normalization – OpEd

Dec 24 2021

By IWPR

By Richard Giragosian*

In an apparent breakthrough in the long-standing deadlock between Turkey and Armenia, the two countries have agreed to appoint envoys to negotiate the normalisation of ties. The restoration of direct flights is also planned. 

Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Çavuşoğlu announced the move in parliament on  December 13 following months of positive public statements hinting at a rapprochement from not only  Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan and Turkish president Recept Tayyip Erdogan, but also by Ilham Aliyev, Azerbaijan’s leader  and a close ally of Turkey.

This announcement, seen as Turkey taking a first step in support of restoring ties  with Armenia, is significant for three reasons.

First, the process of normalisation and a foundation for eventual reconciliation is part of a broader effort following the 2020 Nagorny Karabakh conflict to restore regional trade and transport in the South Caucasus region. 

This is important for both sides, as Armenia needs to escape from its isolation and closed borders in order to better adapt to the new reality that followed the conflict, including the loss of control over extensive territory.

For Turkey, a mounting economic crisis has also imposed its own cost on keeping borders closed and missing opportunities to open new markets.

Secondly, a return to diplomatic engagement between the two countries  offers a rare win for Turkey’s foreign policy and a positive development after months of political instability and economic crisis.  This is especially important after Turkey’s own isolation within the NATO alliance and its estrangement from the US, its traditional ally.  Moreover, normalisation with Armenia is also a component of Erdogan’s more ambitious  effort of rapprochement with Israel, the UAE and others.

For Ankara then, normalisation with Yerevan offers important diplomatic dividends with the West, especially after the strains between Turkey and the US, and with NATO as well as with the EU. 

In this context, any move by Turkey to reopen the border and establish diplomatic relations with Armenia offers specific bonuses, including a new strategic opportunity to galvanize economic activity in the country’s impoverished east .

Turkey also needs an opening with Armenia more than ever before.  Some observers see last year’s 45-day Karabakh war as a victory for Turkey as much as for Azerbaijan.  This view stems from the unprecedented military support and unexpectedly direct engagement by the Turkish military in waging the war alongside Azerbaijani forces.  Although this joint military effort succeeded in seizing large areas of territory and gaining control over parts of Karabakh, Ankara’s victory is neither as complete nor as convincing as it might seem.  Rather, Turkey is now over-extended in both the military and diplomatic dimensions. 

This assessment is also confirmed by Russia’s belated engagement in the conflict, as shown by the future peacekeeping mission in the region .  This proved embarrassing for  Ankara, as Moscow seems to have reneged on promises for a great, more direct role for Turkish military peacekeepers.  Russia allowed Turkey a merely symbolic status, with a minimal, marginal position in peacekeeping planning and supervision within Azerbaijan itself.  This effectively gives Russian peacekeepers the dominant role in the region.

Russia also excluded Turkey from  the tripartite Armenian-Azerbaijani-Russian working group on regional trade. This means that normalisation with Armenia could provide Turkey with a “seat at the table” and a more active role in regional plans for the restoration of trade and transport.

At the same time, Turkey did regain its lost position as Azerbaijan’s primary military patron state, thereby replacing Russia as leading arms provider and source of weapons.  This is also matched by a deeper trend of a shifting balance of power, with a resurgent Turkey empowering an over-confident Azerbaijan after the successful military campaign against Karabakh.  

A third important factor stems from the fact that normalisation is not a new policy.  Armenia remains committed to a consistent policy of “no preconditions,” seeking merely a reopening of the closed border and the establishment of long-denied diplomatic relations with Turkey. 

In fact, the two countries have never established formal ties. Turkey has kept its border with Armenia closed since the 1990s, in the wake of what Turkish authorities said was Armenia’s occupation of Karabakh and surrounding districts.

Now, both Turkey and Armenia gain from an earlier period of negotiations in 2008-2009 that resulted in the signing of two diplomatic protocols in Zurich.  That process, which required Swiss mediation, was effectively undermined by Azerbaijan insistence that that normalisation would be an unearned reward for Armenia, convincing Turkey to demand progress over Karabakh in a new prerequisite that halted the process.  But although it failed in its implementation, this dialogue not only offered serious points of concession beyond but also offers “lessons learned” for this coming round of talks.

Nonetheless, it is also imperative to note that normalisation is just that: a mere first step and not reconciliation or rapprochement.  Normalisation of relations stands as the basic minimum, and reconciliation stands apart as a much more intensive, broader and longer process spanning generations.

So although a welcome move, this week’s announcement is merely an initial move toward the most basic of relations between neighbours: the reopening of the closed border and the establishment of diplomatic ties between Ankara and Yerevan.

This does, however, reflect a new environment more conducive to de-escalation and post-war stability, as well as the start of a return to diplomacy after unprecedented Turkish military support for Azerbaijan’s war for Karabakh in 2020.

And as it was Azerbaijan that derailed the earlier round of diplomacy for normalisation, Turkey has been cautious, determined to ensure Azerbaijan’s support to extend such an offer to Armenia.  But given the looming elections in Turkey and a serious crisis in its politics, the outlook for normalisation also depends as much on Turkish domestic concerns as on the separate track of Armenian-Azerbaijan diplomacy.

In that context, this may be an attempt by the embattled Turkish president to present a more mature model of statesmanship, with a policy favoring normalisation that much of the Turkish opposition would be hard pressed to oppose.  This is also the broader perspective of Erdogan’s similar bid to improve relations with Israel and the UAE, although with every vote in a looming 2023 election critical, he will need to counter likely criticism from his long-time nationalist allies. 

Yet no matter the motivation, the outlook for Armenia-Turkey normalisation is good . After decades of strained relations, this marks a refreshingly positive start.

*Richard Giragosian is the director of the Regional Studies Center (RSC), an independent think tank in Yerevan, Armenia. Published by IWPR

The Institute for War & Peace Reporting is headquartered in London with coordinating offices in Washington, DC and The Hague, IWPR works in over 30 countries worldwide. It is registered as a charity in the UK, as an organisation with tax-exempt status under Section 501(c)(3) in the United States, and as a charitable foundation in The Netherlands. The articles are originally produced by the Institute for War and Peace Reporting.

https://www.eurasiareview.com/24122021-assessing-armenia-turkey-normalization-oped/

Pashinyan Says Meeting With Erdogan Possible If Envoys’ Talks Successful

SPUTNIK
Dec 24 2021
YEREVAN (Sputnik) – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that his meeting with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan would be possible if the talks between the special representatives of the two countries are successful.
Earlier in December, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said that in order to normalise relations with Armenia, the parties would soon mutually appoint special envoys, and charter flights with Yerevan would also be opened. The minister noted that Ankara was considering the applications of Turkish and Armenian airlines for flights Istanbul — Yerevan — Istanbul.
"There is no such idea, no agreement. But if the negotiation process with the participation of Mr. [Deputy Chairman of the Armenian parliament, Armenian Special Representative Ruben] Rubinyan successfully advances and the process matures to this point, then this should be followed by a meeting at a high and the highest level," Pashinyan said during an online press conference.

Armenia interested in signing peace treaty with Azerbaijan — Armenian PM

TASS, Russia
Dec 24 2021
The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs have recently offered an agenda for the talks

YEREVAN, December 24. /TASS/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Friday that Yerevan is interested in signing a peace treaty with Baku.

"Naturally, we are interested in signing a peace treaty and the beginning of talks on it. The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs have recently offered an agenda for the talks. One of its provisions was the issue of the comprehensive peace settlement. We are interested in it. We have never refused to discuss this topic and are not going to refuse," he said in a live broadcast on his Facebook account.

The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the highland region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union break-up, but primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1992-1994, tensions boiled over and exploded into large-scale military action for control over the enclave and seven adjacent territories after Azerbaijan lost control of them. Talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement have been ongoing since 1992 under the OSCE Minsk Group, led by its three co-chairs – Russia, France, and the United States.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, 2020, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. On November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh. Under the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the engagement line in Nagorno-Karabakh and along the Lachin corridor that connects Armenia with the enclave to exercise control of the ceasefire observance. Apart from that, a number of districts came over to Baku’s control.

Several months later, on January 11, the three leaders met in Moscow and reached an agreement on unblocking regional communications. Following this agreement, a working group at the level of deputy prime ministers was set up.

Putin, Aliyev and Pashinyan met again in Sochi on November 26. The talks were timed to mark the anniversary of their ceasefire statement. The three leaders agreed to take steps to enhance stability and security at the Azerbaijani-Armenian border. They also agreed that a bilateral commission on the delimitation and demarcation of the state border should be set by Azerbaijan and Armenia. Russia will provide consultancy on the sides’ request.

Armenian American groups fight distrust, disinformation to encourage COVID-19 shots

Los Angeles Times
Dec 24 2021

In Armenia, it is estimated that less than a quarter of residents had gotten vaccinated against COVID-19 as of mid-December, even as the country has drawn vaccine tourists.

The numbers are not nearly as stark in Glendale and Los Angeles neighborhoods such as Little Armenia, Thai Town and Sunland-Tujunga — areas that are hubs for one of the biggest populations of Armenians outside Armenia.

But they have lagged behind the Los Angeles County average, troubling some community leaders and physicians who fear that enduring distrust of government — stemming from genocide, upheaval and a precarious history in other countries — has made it harder to sway some Armenian Americans to get the shots.

For immigrants from the former Soviet Union, “there wasn’t any trust or credibility toward government,” said Assemblyman Adrin Nazarian (D-North Hollywood). Other Armenians who came from countries including Iran, Lebanon and Syria, he said, had faced “civil wars, internal strife, fear of retribution.”

All of that has fostered “a lot of concern towards just blanketly accepting what government is telling them,” Nazarian said.

It is unclear whether vaccine hesitancy or refusal is more pronounced among Armenian Americans than any other group in L.A. County, since public health officials do not track them as a group. But Nazarian called attention to the numbers in areas like Little Armenia, where only 56.6% of eligible residents were fully vaccinated as of mid-December, compared with 70% countywide.

In Glendale, where more than a third of residents are estimated to be of Armenian descent, the vaccination rate was 62.1%

Vic Keossian said that in Glendale parks, she has heard elderly men playing chess repeat the same doubts that have dogged public health outreach all over the county. “They have all this distrust in the vaccine,” Keossian said.

And false claims about the shots causing infertility have had a particular resonance in her community, she said, because of the trauma reverberating through its history.

“Armenians just have a different connection, I think, to fertility after going through genocide,” said Keossian, who works for the Armenian Relief Society Western USA as program supervisor for a county COVID-19 community equity fund. “It’s something that’s really ingrained in us.”

Vaccination rates have been extremely low in Armenia itself. In early November, only 12% of adults there were fully vaccinated against COVID, according to a presentation by the country’s health ministry. The numbers have ticked upsignificantly since then, reaching an estimated 32% of Armenian adults as of mid-December, but have remained lower than in neighboring countries, according to statistics tracked by Our World in Data.

Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, Armenians had lower levels of confidence in vaccines than most of the European region, according to a study published in the Lancet. Armenian American Medical Society board member Vicken Sepilian said that in Armenia, such attitudes had been exacerbated by problems with the AstraZeneca vaccine rollout.

For people who rely heavily on news and social media from Armenia, “all of this has trickled down to our Armenian communities here,” Sepilian said.

In the U.S., “you’re seeing this among the people who have the most direct links to Armenia,” said Armine Lulejian, a clinical assistant professor of population and public health sciences at Keck School of Medicine of USC.Among Armenian Americans who have emigrated from Armenia, “they have this backlash against anything ‘Big Brother'-ly since the collapse of the Soviet Union. If the government is saying it, they’re against it.”

Eric Hacopian, a political consultant for L.A. candidates who is currently residing in Armenia, also faulted “a feeder loop of misinformation” that can be especially potent among immigrants coming from the former Soviet Union or much of the Middle East who see little credibility in state authorities or the media.

“Social media keeps everyone in touch with their home countries,” Hacopian said. “They’ll keep in touch with the good, and they’ll keep in touch with the bad.”

Some believe that the devastation from the war last year between Armenia and Azerbaijan is also at play. For many Armenian Americans, “I feel like COVID took a back seat because of what the people went through,” said Talar Aintablian, director of operations for the social services division of the Armenian Relief Society of Western USA.

In Glendale, the vaccination numbers have notably lagged among seniors, with 75.4% being fully vaccinated as of mid-December, compared with 88% of seniors across the county.

Glendale city officials said they have worked with the county to set up vaccination clinics at trusted sites including St. Mary’s Armenian Apostolic Church and recorded videos on the COVID-19 vaccines with physicians known to the Armenian community.

Among them is Haig Aintablian, a UCLA emergency medicine doctor who has gotten vaccinated publicly and spoken on Armenian-language television about it. The physician said he is blunt about the suffering and death he has seen from the virus.

“More needs to come from Armenians that have seen COVID,” he said. But Armenian American residents who have suffered from the virus sometimes fear talking about the issue, he said, “because it’ll come off as vaccine pressure.”

The Glendale public library has also hosted online trainings for people to become “vaccine influencers,” but only one person attended the Armenian-language training and disappeared at the end without asking any questions, said Evelyn Aghekian, a library assistant who ran the presentation.

Aghekian said that when she sat with Armenian-language flyers for the event outside the Glendale Galleria, some people welcomed the outreach, but for others, “they come, they pick up the paper, they look at me, shake their head and walk away.”

“But they took the paper,” she added.

In November, Nazarian helped host an online event on YouTube featuring Armenian American physicians talking about the COVID-19 vaccines. The trio of doctors countered common misinformation about the shots and talked about why vaccines are still recommended for people who have previously been infected with COVID.

During the live event, some viewers accused Nazarian and the doctors of being traitors. One person commented in the online chat that they were “hiding the truth from your own community,” adding an Armenian term that roughly translates to “backstabbers.”

At one point, Nazarian asked the panelists to respond to a statement by one commenter about the vaccines causing cancer. Dr. Jack Der-Sarkissian, a family medicine doctor with Kaiser Permanente, replied, “I’m not sure where the basis of that concern would be.”

He explained that cancer is a form of damage to DNA and reiterated that the COVID vaccines do not alter recipients’ DNA. Still, Der-Sarkissian said, “I would never dismiss a concern. I think that’s what science is.”

Der-Sarkissian said the worries he has heard from Armenian American patients aren’t radically different than others, but he has been surprised that vaccine hesitancy “seems to have united the community in ways that I had not anticipated.”

The doctor said the reaction seemed to be shaped by the recent war, which he described as a once-in-a-generation loss and experience of perceived abandonment that “deeply impacted not just people in Armenia but the people here in Los Angeles.”

Nazarian also pointed to grief and trauma from the war.

“You had the world stay completely silent as this small little country was fending for itself,” he said. For a community that waited decades for a sitting U.S. president to acknowledge the Armenian genocide, that sense of international indifference “just leant itself to further distrust.”

George Lousparian, a construction contractor who lives in Sunland-Tujunga, said that many people in his culture distrust government from the experiences that they or their families have had in Turkey, Iran or under Soviet regimes. But he said his own concerns about the vaccines stem from shifting messages from U.S. government officials.

He cited changing guidance early in the pandemic about masks, as well as emerging information about waning protection from the vaccine and the need for booster shots. “With so many inconsistencies, how do I trust it?” he asked. “My skepticism is not because of being Armenian or not. I make decisions based on what data is out there.”

L.A. County Public Health officials said that since May, more than a dozen agencies partnering with the county had done outreach to more than 8,300 Armenian American residents about the vaccines. The Armenian American Medical Society teamed up with Glendale and the county to provide health information at vaccination clinics outside the Glendale Galleria.

The Armenian Relief Society of Western USA has also hosted vaccination clinics at its Glendale headquarters, sent Armenian-speaking volunteers to vaccination clinics, translated public health information into Armenian, and canvassed parks and other gathering places in Glendale ZIP Codes with especially low vaccination rates.

“Sometimes people are willing to hear what we have to say,” said Suzy Petrossian, project coordinator with ARS Western USA. “And other times we get a lot of, ‘No, we don’t want it, this is all made up.’”

Some simply say “Kuh mtatzem” — or “I’ll think about it.” Case manager Ani Tangyan lets them know she’ll be there if they ever want help getting the shots.

“After one month, two months, they are coming” back, Tangyan said, and they ask, “Where is that girl?”

Times staff writer Hamlet Nalbandyan contributed to this report.


Armenia President rejects Karabakh conflict is religious war

PanArmenian, Armenia
Dec 24 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net - Armenian President Armen Sarkissian has strongly rejected suggestions that the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict was not just a land dispute, but also a religious war between Christian-majority Armenia and Muslim-majority Azerbaijan.

“It was never a religious war,” Sarkissian said in an interview with Arab News. “Armenia has wonderful relations with a lot of states where Islam is a major religion, states where Islam is the only religion, or states that have Islam as their state religion”.

“The other side (Azerbaijan and Turkey – Ed.) sometimes like to use that (the “religious war” description – Ed.) in order to accumulate support from Islamic world, but Armenia never tried to get support from Christian states.”

He also said Armenia is not a religious state and already enjoys “excellent relations” with Arab countries as well as Iran, which “didn’t take the path of destroying Armenian heritage or churches —in fact the government financed the restoration of Armenian churches in Iran.”