Azerbaijan’s Aliyev pleased with absence of criticism from Armenia at Eastern Partnership Summit

News.am, Armenia
Dec 16 2021

Azerbaijan expects a response from the OSCE Minsk Group in accordance with the new geopolitical realities. The statement came from Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev addressing the Eastern Partnership Summit in Brussels, the Azerbaijani media reported, citing the press service of the Azerbaijani leader.

Aliyev thanked President Charles Michel of the European Council for always keeping regional issues on the agenda. He especially noted that on the initiative of the European Council head, constructive talks took place Tuesday in Brussels between the President of Azerbaijan and the Prime Minister of Armenia, and which lasted about five hours. Aliyev attached importance to Charles Michel's contribution to the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and noted that these talks were detailed, in which the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the delimitation and demarcation of their borders, and construction of transport infrastructure—in particular, of railways—were discussed.

Also, President Aliyev noted that there was a constructive atmosphere between Armenia and Azerbaijan at the sixth Eastern Partnership Summit, and stressed the role of the European Union in the formation of this atmosphere. Aliyev said it was important not to miss this opportunity and use it to continue efforts to ensure lasting peace in the region.

The Azerbaijani leader stressed that during international events in previous years, the Armenian leadership "usually made baseless and accusatory statements against Azerbaijan." Evaluating positively the fact that this time it did not happen, Ilham Aliyev noted that he did not speak directly against Armenia. He said that this attests to the creation of fertile ground for the normalization of relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Referring to the role of the OSCE Minsk Group, Ilham Aliyev noted that no results have been achieved during the 28 years of negotiations. Aliyev stressed that Azerbaijan expects a response from the OSCE Minsk Group in accordance with the new geopolitical realities. According to him, the Azerbaijani side believes that the Minsk Group can help prepare a peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, delimit their borders, establish contacts between people, strengthen confidence-building measures, and in other matters.

Touching upon the issue of minefields in the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) territories now occupied by Azerbaijan, its president noted that so far about 200 people were killed or injured in related landmine explosions. In this regard, he stressed the importance of providing technical and financial assistance to Azerbaijan by the European Union and its bloc member countries to eliminate this problem.

At the end of his speech, President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan once again thanked the President of the European Council for his contribution to the efforts toward the normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations.

Haberturk: There will be new Armenian-Turkish roadmap, corridor will be key issue

News.am, Armenia
Dec 16 2021

Columnist for Haberturk Cetiner Cetin has provided details about the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

The Turkish journalist claims that by January 15, 2022, Armenia will have set up a task force and another group that will be in contact with Pashinyan [Prime Minister of Armenia].

“There will be a three-step roadmap between Armenia and Turkey. First, chartered flights will be launched. The key issue during the negotiations will be the opening of the Turkey-Nakhchivan-Azerbaijan corridor. Ankara wants to see the opening of the corridor by May-June. The economic relations will be established in the third stage, which will be launched in July,” wrote the columnist.

Garo Paylan: Armenian-Turkish relations will be normalized more quickly than expected

News.am, Armenia
Dec 16 2021

Garo Paylan, an Armenian lawmaker from the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) of Turkey, has expressed his positive stance on the statements on appointing envoys for normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

As reported the Turkish T24 website, Garo Paylan declared that, as a Member of Parliament, he is ready to assume responsibility for the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

“This is a window of opportunity for peace, for which Armenian, Turkish and Azerbaijani figures need to take responsibility. The normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations will happen more quickly than expected. The only thing that is necessary is political will,” wrote Garo Paylan.

Armenian MP: Armenia accepts as a basis the map of 1926, but Russia offered the one of 1974 to stabilize situation

News.am, Armenia
Dec 16 2021

There are several military maps, and some of them are approved by the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic and the Soviet Socialist Republic of Azerbaijan, but we are talking about the map of 1926, after which there have been many transformations, and the latest map is the military map dating back to 1974. This is what deputy of the ruling Civil Contract Party Arman Yeghoyan told reporters in parliament today.

According to him, that military map indicates the border at the level of hills, and this is the most recent map. “There have been changes, but not in every place. Armenia accepts as a basis the map of 1926, but we don’t have the maps that are in accordance with all the documents. There are many maps that neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan has, but the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces has them, and Russia has offered to be guided by those maps. Demarcation and delimitation can change many things.

Currently, Armenia was offered this map in order to stabilize the situation, and it is the last map approved by the General Staff in 1974,” he said.

Armenia government to provide assistance to citizens having lost property in Shurnukh and Vorotan for 5 more months

News.am, Armenia
Dec 16 2021

Since the Shurnukh and Vorotan settlements of Syunik Province of Armenia are currently under Azerbaijani control, the citizens registered or having actually resided in those settlements and have lost residential real estate registered at the address of another place of residence in Armenia, will receive social assistance for another five months.

The government adopted the relevant decision. According to the rationale, through this action, beneficiaries receive AMD 300,000 lump-sum assistance and AMD 68,000 monthly assistance. The beneficiaries have already received their lump-sum payments and the monthly financial assistance for the months of February-July 2021, but taking into consideration the current events, the government found it appropriate to continue to provide assistance for another five months.

Moreover, financial assistance, including AMD 300,000 lump-sum will be provided to children born after July 1, 2021, that is, children whose parent is a beneficiary having received assistance through the action.

Armenia government to pay salaries and benefits of employees of Nairit Factory

News.am, Armenia
Dec 16 2021

During today’s session, the Armenian government made redistribution in the state budget, amendments and supplements to one of its previously adopted decisions and allocated AMD 237,862,400 to the Ministry of Emergency Situations of Armenia.

As a result, the salaries of the employees of Nairit Factory CJSC and the unpaid benefits for 18 employees will be paid.

Asbarez: Hye Hopes 2nd Annual Telethon to Support Education in Syunik, Armenia

Hye Hopes 2nd Annual Telethon flyer

GLENDALE—Hye Hopes will host its 2nd annual Telethon, airing Live from 6 to 9 p.m. PST, on Monday, December 20. This year, the funds raised during the telethon will support the students, teachers, and schools of Armenia’s Syunik region.

Hye Hopes is celebrating its one-year anniversary! In the span of a year, your contributions have allowed Hye Hopes to equip schools in the Syunik region with innovative technology, essential educational resources, and staff development. Since its inception, Hye Hopes has successfully completed two 8-week sessions, and is looking forward to the completion of its third 8-week session in December.

In an effort to continue to support the students, teachers and schools in the Syunik region, Hye Hopes is hopeful the telethon will provide much needed financial support to continue providing educational resources for the schools in Kapan, Goris and Verishen. They have announced their next phase—delivering essential educational resources and technology to the schools in Meghri and Sisian.

The telethon will feature special performance and appearances by: California State Senator Anthony J. Portantino, Araksya Karpetyan of Good Morning LA Fox 11, Consul General of Armenia in Los Angeles Ambassador Armen Baibourtian, Superintendent Glendale Unified School District Dr. Vivian Ekchian, composer and musician Greg Hosharian, Element Band’s Ara Dabandjian, musician Shant Massayan, actress/playwright Lori Tatoulian, and other special local and state elected officials.

Joining throughout the United States are special guests from Boston, New York, Tennessee, Detroit, Chicago and Los Angeles. Student leadership from our High School Armenian Clubs of Hoover, GHS, CVHS, and Clark Magnet will also be presenting and performing at the telethon. Hye Hopes will be connecting live with the students in Kapan and Verishen during the telethon.

Please join Hye Hopes on YouTube live, Monday, December 20 from 6 to 9 p.m. PST. For more information and to donate early visit the website or email Hye Hopes at [email protected].

Behind the Mystery of Armenia’s Oil-Covered White Storks

Winter 2021

This summer, as in the past, volunteers gathered in a field next to Hovtashen’s town hall (pictured here) 
to treat oiled birds, like this one. Photo: Biayna Mahari

From Audubon Magazine

Behind the Mystery of Armenia's Oil-Covered White Storks

In the half decade since oiled birds were first spotted, volunteers and conservationists have raced to care for the iconic animals—and pushed the government to address pollution sources.

By Nyree Abrahamian


Winter 2021

In 2017 residents of Armenia’s Ararat Valley region began noticing a strange phenomenon: White Storks that nest in their villages were covered in a thick, oily substance. Villagers alerted BirdLinks Armenia, an organization that monitors birds and butterflies, which assembled a team to wash the iconic waders and nurse them back to health before releasing them into the wild. With each passing year, Armenians have seen more oiled storks, which indicates that, rather than being an isolated incident, the issue is complex and systemic. And as the problem has gotten bigger, so has the response. Conservationists, community leaders, and volunteers across Armenia have been treating affected storks, as well as working to find the sources of the pollution and advocating for the government to address them.

Exalted in legends and folklore, storks hold a special cultural significance for Armenians. They are bearers of good fortune (not just of babies, as the universal trope holds). One of Armenia’s most well-loved folk songs, “Bari Aragil” (“Good Stork”), implores: “Come live by my house, good stork. Weave your nest atop my poplar tree.” Nowadays, while telephone poles are the more common perch of choice for the birds, Armenians still celebrate the appearance of a nest near their home. This sense of kinship has no doubt played a role in residents’ concern for the birds. This summer, as in the past, volunteers gathered in a field next to Hovtashen’s town hall to treat oiled birds.

Suren Mkrtchyan, a former Hovtashen mayor, has helped lead the charge to protect storks in his community. He’s been aided by bird lovers of all ages, including Mari Sharimanyan, six, and her mother, Margarita. Throughout the summer volunteers capture oiled birds, many of which are severely malnourished and injured from failed attempts to fly. They transport the roughly three-foot-tall, nine-pound waders to cleaning sites, where they scrub them with two detergent solutions before rinsing and drying them. Then they take the cleaned birds to protected, semi-wild environments, where they hand-feed them sliced pieces of fish and observe them until the storks fully regain their strength ahead of fall migration. A portion of Armenia’s White Storks winter in Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. “These birds are sacred,” Mkrtchyan says. “They have lived alongside us, always.”

Many Armenians share his sentiment. More than 1,000 families take part in BirdLinks Armenia’s “Nest Neighbours” program, which started in 2006, long before the oil mystery. “Storks are an excellent indicator of things that are going wrong in the environment because they’re very sensitive and they’re at the top of their food chain,” says executive director Karen Aghababyan. “The other thing they have going for them is that people really care about them. We found a way to channel that love and care into data collection.”

Participants monitor nests near their homes, keeping track of the storks’ arrival and nestling survival. While the species isn’t deemed threatened, tracking storks provides early warning signs of potential risks.

Those careful observations have revealed that, over the past decade, some stork nesting areas in Armenia have had notably lower rates of breeding success than others. Aghababyan and his colleagues sampled the soil in these areas and found high concentrations of DDT and other banned pesticides, which may be linked to the decline.

Exposure to oil is a newer, yet no less worrisome, development. For the past three years the researchers have been observing 33 villages where the contamination is most prevalent; they’ve seen the percentage of affected nestlings grow from 5 percent in 2019 to 58 percent in 2021. They also identified a likely major culprit: a sturgeon farm that’s been documented illegally dumping waste from gutted fish into a nearby canal, which causes clogging. Storks foraging for invertebrates and small vertebrates at the site pick up the fatty residue, which they transfer to their chicks.

Amid the public outcry, the government has taken action. Companies responsible for illegal dumping—including the Hovtashen sturgeon farm, multiple canneries, and a potato chip factory—have been fined, and now, under strict monitoring by the State Inspectorate Body, are required to transport waste products to the municipal dump, says Voskehat Grigoryan, head of the Department for Protected Areas in Armenia’s Ministry of Environment. What’s more, the country’s waste management legislation and enforcement mechanisms are undergoing an overhaul.

While it’s still too early to gauge the effectiveness of these measures, the recent attention has amplified the cultural significance of Armenia’s legendary White Storks—they’re not just a sign of luck, but also a call to attention, to caution, and to care.

This story originally ran in the Winter 2021 issue as “Fortune-Tellers.” To receive our print magazine, become a member by making a donation today.

For more photos click on the link below

Cyprus: More awareness of Armenian and Cypriot Maronite Arabic languages

Dec 17 2021

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State authorities in Cyprus continue to support minority language speakers by funding existing cultural institutions and establishing new sports facilities where their languages can be used, according to a new report by the Committee of Experts for the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. (see executive summary in Greek)

The Charter had entered into force in Cyprus in 2002 and applies to the Armenian and Cypriot Maronite Arabic languages.

The report indeed praises “regular” consultation with representatives of minority organisations and their elected representatives in the Parliament, by which their opinions are taken into account. Indeed, awareness about the Armenians and Maronites in Cypriot society has improved, and no cases of discrimination were reported. A new scheme for funding cultural activities and the overall financial support of the state authorities is “well-structured and adequate,” within the possibilities of the state budget, according to the report.

Armenian is taught in pre-school, primary and lower secondary education, with teaching of Armenian begun in upper secondary education from September, this year according to the state authorities of Cyprus. The Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation broadcasts a radio program in Armenian on a daily basis, but Armenian is absent from print media.

Meanwhile, Cypriot Maronite Arabic is taught only in primary education. The report says that teaching this language should be extended to pre-school and secondary education to cover more age groups and thus ensure the future of Cypriot Maronite Arabic. Cypriot Maronite Arabic is almost absent from broadcast media. However, according to government sources from Cyprus, a series of short documentaries on minorities that are being broadcast since September 2021 by the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC) may raise awareness in Cyprus about both minorities and their languages, besides providing teaching materials in minority languages.

While the offer of teaching materials has improved since previous monitoring, the report calls on state authorities to improve teacher training for Armenian and especially for Cypriot Maronite Arabic.

The report notes that state financial support for both minority languages focuses on the cultural sphere of public life. But consultation between the minority language speakers and state authorities could be initiated to gradually extend both minority languages to other fields of public life, based on the slow but steady rise of the number of speakers of Armenian and Cypriot Maronite Arabic.

Will Armenia, Turkey finally break jinx?

Dec 17 2021
As normalization with Armenia remains crucial for Turkey’s broader regional aspirations, there are still major political and psychological stumbling blocks before the process. 
Fehim Tastekin
December 17, 2021

Desperately scrolling through foreign policy titles to alleviate its mounting domestic and foreign woes, Turkey is initiating a new opening with Armenia, aiming to turn decadeslong hostility into hospitality.

Turkey and Armenia have mutually appointed special envoys as the first step in reinstating the ties severed in 1993. This will be followed by the resumption of charter flights between Istanbul and Yerevan. 

The envoys are expected to lay out a road map for the normalization process. Turkey had recognized Armenia after it gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1990 but stopped short of establishing diplomatic relations. Following the occupation of Kalbajar by the Armenian forces in 1993, Turkey sealed off its borders with its eastern neighbor, closing off its land and air borders in solidarity with Azerbaijan. While air borders were reopened in 1995, the land borders remain sealed off.

Establishment of diplomatic ties and unlocking the borders are of critical significance for Ankara to realize its strategic aspirations in the South Caucasus and beyond. Normalization may also help Turkey to repair its tarnished image in the eyes of European and US capitals over Ankara’s military involvement in the Nagorno-Karabakh clashes last year.

But not everybody is on board, with some in Yerevan infuriated with the plan. The Turkish military support that helped Azerbaijan recapture seven occupied areas in Nagorno-Karabakh evoked historical enmity toward Turkey in some minds. 

As the Armenian public was trying to reel off from the deep resentment and disappointment over the defeat, Ankara has lost no time in unveiling its aspiration to turn the Azeri-Armenian cease-fire deal into a design that would allow Turkey's political and economic expansion toward the Caspian basin and Central Asia through transportation links and pipelines. 

The design rests on setting up a corridor linking Turkey directly to Azerbaijan through the autonomous Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan along the Turkish border. According to the Russian-brokered Nov. 9 cease-fire deal, Armenia has to allow the construction of the corridor across its southernmost province of Syunik, known also as Zangezur. 

In a bid to secure Yerevan’s willingness, Moscow’s facilitating role and thwart regional rivalries jeopardizing its strategy, Ankara proposed to form a six-way cooperation platform that involves Azerbaijan, Armenia, Georgia, Russia, Iran and Turkey. Turkish and Armenian diplomats along with their Azeri, Iranian and Russian counterparts gathered in the platform’s first meeting held in Moscow on Dec. 10, days before the normalization plan was unveiled. 

Turkey had engaged in a normalization process with Armenia in the past aiming to prevent the Armenian genocide issue from hampering Ankara’s back-then friendly ties with the Western capitals. Yet the two normalization agreements signed between Yerevan and Ankara in Zurich in 2009 following many rounds of secret talks had been shelved after Erdogan assured Baku that the deals would not be implemented until Armenia withdrew from the contested territories in Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenian side also suspended the ratification process in 2010. The agreements were declared “void” in 2018. Under the agreements, the borders between the two countries were to be opened within two months after the ratification of the agreements.

Now the new round of efforts aims to smooth over Ankara’s strained ties with the West.

Normalization efforts appear to be a rare positive agenda item between Ankara and Western capitals. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that they “welcome and strongly support” the move. Turkey’s ties with Armenian were standing out as one of the contentious points in the Ankara-Washington line following President Joe Biden’s recognition of the Armenian genocide. Citing a Turkish official, Bloomberg reported that Biden encouraged Erdogan to open Turkey’s borders with Armenia during the two leaders’ meeting in Rome.

Armenian President Nikol Pashinyan’s calculus, meanwhile, seems to be resting on the opening of the borders in a bid to strengthen his country’s economy and eventually diminish the nation’s dependence on Russia. Yet it remains unanswered to what extent Yerevan can distance itself from Moscow, as the former still depends on Russian forces on the ground to maintain security in Nagorno-Karabakh and keep the Lachin corridor linking Armenian-controlled Nagorno-Karabakh regions to the mainland open.

The normalization move seems to be in line with calculations of the European Union, which is seeking to gain a foothold in the region. After failing to restrain Moscow’s ambitions in Ukraine, the West was also on the sidelines as Russia deployed a peacekeeping mission in Nagorno-Karabakh, increasing its influence in the South Caucasus. As Russia — one of the co-chairs of the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, along with France and the United States — mediated a truce between the warring parties, Washington and Paris were sidelined as well as other Western powers.

Both the South Caucasus platform and trade routes linking Armenia to Russia via Azerbaijan could be seen as achievements that would further consolidate Moscow’s hold in the region. Russia’s hosting of the platform’s first meeting has also underlined Moscow's role. 

Renewed normalization efforts come at a time when Western capitals have shifted their focus to the region again, aiming to curb Russian ambitions amid tensions over Ukraine. EU Council President Charles Michel hosted Pashinyan and Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev in a trilateral summit in Brussel on Dec. 14. The Azeri and Armenian leaders also held a one-on-one meeting on the sidelines of the summit. According to a statement by the council, the two leaders agreed on initiating negotiations on the delimitation and demarcation of the state borders and restoration of railroads. The EU also pledged “technical assistance to both countries” to support the talks.

The two leaders also agreed to make border and customs control arrangements based on the “principle of reciprocity,” while disagreements over land roads have been left for the next round of talks. Reciprocity was a condition demanded by Aliyev in response to Pashinyan’s plans to set up custom points around Syunik. 

Following the meeting, Pashinyan said Armenia would receive railway access to Iran and Russia, adding that relaunch of the railways would be based on internationally accepted border and customs regulations. 

He also stressed the transportation lines will remain under the authority of the countries. While Turkey describes the link connecting Nakhchivan to Azerbaijan as a “corridor,” Pashinyan’s remarks prioritize the relaunch of existing transportation lines and underline Yerevan’s sovereignty on these lines.

Meanwhile, Baku seems in no rush to fully normalize its ties with Yerevan, unlike Ankara, which is hard-pressed for a positive agenda item. Announcing the normalization efforts on Dec. 14, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu signaled caution, stressing that Turkey would “coordinate” every step with Baku.

Leaving some room for Ankara to maneuver, Pashinyan expressed his country’s readiness for dialogue without “any precondition.”

Despite the exciting steps, prospects seem far from certain. Nagorno-Karabakh may no longer be an obstacle to Armenian-Turkey normalization, yet political and psychological stumbling blocks remain intact. 

The most contentious issue between the two countries appears to be the recognition of the Armenian genocide. In a bid to avoid the issue becoming an impediment, the two sides had agreed in 2009 to set up an international commission to investigate the massive killing and deportation of hundreds of thousands of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in 1915.

Domestic opposition in both countries stands as another potential derailing factor, with the Armenian opposition being particularly vocal. Claiming that Turkey was “wishing to destroy the Armenian state,” opposition lawmaker Tigran Abrahamyan warned the government of “devastating consequences.” Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan’s remarks about some preconditions that Turkey was seeking has provided further ammunition to the opposition. In an interview with Le Figaro, Mirzoyan said Turkey set “new conditions” including the corridor linking Turkey to Azerbaijan. Still, Pashinyan's victory in the June 2021 elections provided the president with sufficient confidence to signal positive messages to Ankara.

Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party’s de facto alliance with nationalists also poses risks to the normalization process. The normalization process might come at political costs depending on the position that Erdogan’s nationalist allies will take. 


https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2021/12/will-armenia-turkey-finally-break-jinx