Armenpress: Famous cosmonaut refused to participate in international congress in Azerbaijan, urges others to do the same

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YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 16, ARMENPRESS. The famous American astronaut Garrett Reisman refused to participate in the International Astronautical Congress being held in Azerbaijan, citing that country's military aggression against Armenia, ARMENPRESS reports the cosmonaut made wrote in his "Twitter" microblog.

"Why is the International Astronautical Congress (IAC) being held in Azerbaijan, a country that is guilty of recent military aggression against its neighbor Armenia? Azerbaijan is one of the most corrupt countries, it has one of the worst human rights indicators in Europe. I will not go, and if you are planning to go, please reconsider," Raisman wrote.

He also reminded that Azerbaijan's military aggression against Armenia started in September of last year, which was condemned by the European Parliament.

In his Twitter microblog, the astronaut also shared the reports and assessments of a number of international organizations, for example, the 2021 index of corruption perception of "Transparent International", where Azerbaijan is in a bad position, it is 128th among 180 countries.

Nerkin Tsaghkavan gets a kindergarten after 32 years

Kindergarten students gather for the ribbon cutting at the kindergarten at the Tavush village of Nerkin Tsaghkavan.

TAVUSH—Families in the border village of Nerkin Tsaghkavan have not had a functioning kindergarten since Armenia’s independence in 1991. Thanks to the efforts of the Paros Foundation and the sponsorship of many generous donors including the Dadourian Foundation of New York and contributions in memory of Sona Apelian, this community and its young people will now enjoy the benefits of early education.

Joining Paros staff for the ribbon cutting were Tavush Regional Governor Hayk Ghalumyan, head of the Ijevan Consolidated Community Artur Chagharyan, other regional and municipal officials, kindergarten staff, parents and children, as well as staff from Focus on Children Now, which provided furniture for the kindergarten.  

Head of the Ijevan Consolidated Community Mr. Artur Chagharyan and Paros Executive Director Peter Abajian cut the ribbon on the new kindergarten in the village of Nerkin Tsaghkavan.     

“Today is an amazing day for the more than 500 residents of Nerkin Tsaghkavan, said Peter Abajian, executive director of the Paros Foundation. “Not only will children and their families benefit from the existence of a functioning kindergarten in the village, but new employment opportunities now exist for people in this community.” 

The community of Nerkin Tsaghkavan provided an abandoned building that would be suitable to house a kindergarten for up to 30 children. The Paros Foundation’s team both expanded and reconfigured the space to facilitate its operation as a kindergarten. Aside from expanding the facility, work on the building included installing a new roof, new windows, plumbing, electrical, plaster, paint and flooring. To help make the heating system particularly efficient, an under floor hot water heating system was utilized.  

The Paros Foundation was launched in 2006 and has implemented more than $12 million worth of projects in Armenia through its unique model of philanthropy and community partnership. These projects are located throughout the country with focus on Gyumri and in communities along the border with Azerbaijan. Thanks to the generous support of the Strauch Kulhanjian Family, all administrative expenses are underwritten, allowing 100 percent of donor contributions to be allocated in their entirety to the projects.




AW: The Region in Brief

Artsakh

Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh entered its third month this week. The natural gas supply to Artsakh was disrupted on February 9 for the eighth time since the closure of the Lachin Corridor on December 12, which the Artsakh government blamed on Azerbaijani interference. Artsakh authorities say that the energy system has been overloaded by the cold weather and lack of gas and electricity supply, leading to accidents. Households have been losing power for six hours a day under a government mandated rolling blackout. However, residents have been losing power for longer periods of time due to the pressure on the energy grid. The energy crisis has also caused a series of fires, including a fire at the central headquarters of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) in Artsakh. The building security guard suffered burns and was hospitalized. Artsakh authorities also expanded the food distribution system on February 13. In addition to rice, sugar, buckwheat, pasta and oil, residents can use government-issued coupons to purchase eggs, fruit and vegetables. 

Azerbaijan

The US State Department has called for the “expeditious release” of Azerbaijani political prisoner Bakhtiyar Hajiyev. “We are deeply troubled that Azerbaijani activist Bakhtiyar Hajiyev has remained in detention since the eve of International Human Rights Day, last December, and that he continues to face charges widely understood as politically motivated,” US State Department spokesperson Ned Price said in a press statement on February 11. Hajiyev was arrested on December 9 on charges of hooliganism and has been on hunger strike since January 9. He was hospitalized on February 10 and risks entering a coma. The Baku Court of Appeals denied his request to be released on bail on January 24 due to worsening health and upheld his pre-trial detention until the end of February. 

Georgia

Russian women’s rights activist Anna Rivina has been denied re-entry into Georgia two days after being declared a foreign agent by the Russian government. Rivina is the director of Nasiliu.Net, a non-profit organization that provides shelter and other services to survivors of domestic violence. She has lived in Georgia for several months but was barred from entry on February 12 after a working trip to Yerevan. While hundreds of thousands of Russians have fled to Georgia following the invasion of Ukraine, there have been widespread reports that people critical of the Russian government have not been allowed to enter Georgia. Olga Borisova, a member of the band Pussy Riot, and David Frenkel, a reporter for a Russian outlet that has refused to censor news about the war in Ukraine, are among the Russians who have been denied entry to Georgia.

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian's first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.


Asbarez: Putin, Aliyev Discuss ‘Caucasus Situation,’ No Mention of Lachin Blockade

The Lachin Corridor remains blockaded since Dec. 12


The presidents of Russia and Azerbaijan held a telephone conversation and discussed the current situation in the South Caucasus, the Kremlin reported on Tuesday.

Presidents Vladimir Putin of Russia and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan reportedly touched agreements they have reached with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan regarding the settlement of the conflict in the region.

“The current situation in the South Caucasus region was considered. The importance of consistent steps to ensure stability and security on the Azerbaijani-Armenian border was noted. In this context, the mood for the unconditional implementation of the entire set of relevant agreements of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia at the highest level was confirmed,” the Kremlin said.

The press statement did not specify whether the two leaders discussed the current Azerbaijani blockade of Artsakh, which has been in effect since December 12 when a group of Azerbaijanis posing as environmental activists have shut down the Lachin Corridor, which is the only road that connects Artsakh to the rest of the world.

The Kremlin added that further development of trade and economic cooperation, including the implementation of joint projects in the fields of energy and transport, were discussed in detail. It was agreed to continue contacts in various formats.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijan’s foreign minister, Jeyhum Bayramov, met with Russia’s OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Igor Khovaev in Baku on Tuesday.

“During the meeting, the sides discussed the current situation in the process of normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, negotiations on a peace agreement, as well as various aspects of the protests on the Lachin road,” a statement following the meeting said.

Bayramov also brought to the attention that the Lachin road is not being used for the purposes stipulated by the Trilateral Declaration.

“The Minister stressed that the legitimate demands of the protesters have not been fulfilled so far, the Armenian side is using the situation for its political purposes and diverting the issue into a false direction,” the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry reported.

The meeting also discussed regional security and other issues of mutual interest,” the report reads.

Bayramov called steps and approaches by Azerbaijan as “constructive.” He said that Baku’s proposals for the peace process after the 44-day war have been submitted, and complained that Armenia was continuously “slowing down” the process.

“The minister recalled that Armenia boycotted the next round of peace agreement talks scheduled for last December.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry also unleashed another round of accusations against Armenia, demanding that the United Nations hold Armenia accountable for “war crimes.”

Putin talks to Azeri president, discusses disputed southern Caucasus region

Canada – Feb 14 2024

Russian President Vladimir Putin talked to Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev and noted the importance of ensuring stability and security in the southern Caucasus region, the Kremlin said on Tuesday.

Tensions are high between Azerbaijan and neighbouring Armenia over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, which has a largely ethnic Armenian population but is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan.

In 2020, Azerbaijan retook territory in and around the enclave after a war that ended in a Moscow-brokered ceasefire upheld by Russian peacekeepers. Both sides accuse each other of violations and Armenia now says Azerbaijan is blockading the only road into Nagorno-Karabakh, a charge Baku denies.

"The importance of consistent steps to ensure stability and security on the Azerbaijani-Armenian border was noted," said a Kremlin readout of the call between Putin and Aliyev.

"In this context, it was reaffirmed that all the relevant agreements between Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia at the highest level should be implemented unconditionally."

Late last month Yerevan asked Putin to take a tougher line on Nagorno-Karabakh and for Russian peacekeepers to end what it called the blockade.

(Reporting by David Ljunggren; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Alistair Bell)


Turkey says earthquake diplomacy could help mend Armenia ties

Reuters
Feb 15 2023
Reuters

ANKARA (Reuters) – Humanitarian aid sent by Armenia for victims of last week's devastating earthquake in Turkey could boost the neighbouring countries' efforts to normalise their relations, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Wednesday.

A border gate between the long-feuding neighbours was opened for the first time in 35 years to allow aid for quake victims in southern Turkey. Armenia also sent a rescue team to Turkey to help in the search for survivors.

"Armenia has extended its hand of friendship, showed solidarity and cooperation with us in this difficult time … We need to continue this solidarity," Cavusoglu said at a joint news conference in Ankara with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan.

"The normalisation process in the southern Caucasus region is going on. We believe that our cooperation in the humanitarian field will support this process," Cavusoglu added.

Mirzoyan said through a translator that Armenia remained committed to "the full normalisation of relations and complete opening of the border with Turkey".

Turkey severed its diplomatic and commercial ties with Armenia in 1993 to show support for Azerbaijan, which was at the time fighting a losing battle against Armenian separatists in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

But Turkey and Armenia are at odds primarily over the 1.5 million people Armenia says were killed in 1915 by the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor to modern Turkey.

Armenia says this constitutes genocide.

Turkey accepts that many Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire were killed in clashes with Ottoman forces during World War One, but contests the figures and denies it was systematic.

(Reporting by Huseyin Hayatsever; Editing by Helen Popper)

Armenia’s foreign minister on landmark visit to Turkey to normalize ties

PRESS TV, Iran
Feb 15 2023

Armenian foreign minister Ararat Mirzoyan made a rare visit to Turkey on Wednesday, underlining a desire to “make peace” with the estranged neighbor in the wake of a devastating quake. 

Mirzoyan arrived in Ankara on Wednesday morning, along with his deputy Vahan Kostanyan and Ruben Rubinyan, Armenia’s special envoy for the normalization of relations with Turkey.

“I would like to once again reaffirm the readiness and willingness of Armenia to build peace in the region, and especially to fully normalize relations with Turkey, to establish diplomatic relations and fully open the border between Armenia and Turkey,” Mirzoyan said at a joint press briefing with Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. 

“I consider it symbolic that on Saturday, the Armenian-Turkish border, which has been closed for thirty years, was opened for Armenian lorries loaded with humanitarian aid heading to Adiyaman,” Mirzoyan said.

On Saturday, a border crossing between Armenia and Turkey opened for the first time in 35 years to allow humanitarian aid.

Mirzoyan also announced that the two countries had agreed to jointly repair the Ani bridge and take care of the relevant infrastructure ahead of the full opening of the border. 

For his part, Cavusoglu said Armenia had "extended a hand of friendship to our people," thanking Yerevan for its humanitarian aid.

Cavusoglu said the two sides had discussed the normalization of relations and believed humanitarian cooperation would support the process. The minister said they had also discussed normalization between Armenia and Azerbaijan. 

It was Mirzoyan's second visit to Turkey since March 2022, when he held talks with his Turkish counterpart on the sidelines of a diplomatic forum in Antalya. 

Following the Wednesday meeting, Armenia’s foreign minister visited the city of Adiyaman, which was devastated by the February 6 earthquake, and met with a team of Armenian rescuers working in the area.

The two governments previously held normalization negotiations in 2008. The talks broke down after Armenia refused to link the negotiations with the peace process with Azerbaijan or to allow Turkey a role in their discussions with Baku. 

Diplomatic relations between the two countries have long been hostile, as Turkey denies that a genocide of Armenians took place under the Ottoman Empire.

Relations were formally halted in 1993 during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, and have continued to be tense in recent years, particularly in light of Turkey’s support for Azerbaijan during the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in 2021.

Yerevan’s officially stated position is that normalization with Turkey should be unconditional, implying that issues relating to Nagorno-Karabakh or recognition of the Armenian genocide would not be a part of the discussion.

However, Turkey has suggested that the normalization of relations was contingent on the normalization of Yerevan’s relations with Baku, and has pushed for Armenia to sign a peace treaty offered by Azerbaijan.

Outcome of the meeting of the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Turkey

Feb 15 2023


  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Mirzoyan-Cavusoglu meeting in Ankara

The delegation headed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia has been in Ankara since the morning of February 15. Ararat Mirzoyan met with his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu, the meeting was also held in an expanded format, the foreign ministers of Armenia and Turkey also made statements to the press.

Mirzoyan told journalists that during the meeting, they managed to agree “by joint efforts to repair the bridge of Ani [a historical building of the 10th-11th centuries, part of the bridge is in Armenia, part in Turkey], as well as take care of the relevant infrastructure until the border is fully opened.”

However, there were no statements about the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border and the establishment of diplomatic relations. The Armenian minister only confirmed Yerevan’s readiness for this, while the Turkish minister expressed confidence that the assistance to Armenia after the earthquake, the cooperation “manifested these days” will contribute to the process of normalizing relations. Moreover, Cavusoglu specifically emphasized that he meant not only the normalization of the Armenian-Turkish, but also the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations.

After the devastating earthquake on February 6, the death toll in Turkey and neighboring Syria exceeded 35,000. On February 11, 14 and 15, Armenia sent humanitarian aid to Turkey across the land border, specifically the Margara Bridge, which had not been used for more than 30 years, that is, after the border was closed. In addition, Armenia sent rescuers to the disaster zone. Together with a search and rescue team from the United States, they located and pulled three victims from under the rubble.

All the details of the visit, known at the time of publication, as well as the opinion of the Turkologist Andranik Ispiryan about the statements of Mirzoyan and Cavusoglu.


  • Armenian assistance to Turkey
  • Baku on rapprochement between Yerevan and Ankara
  • Volodin’s statement: what is behind it? Comment

As part of the delegation that flew to Ankara, and the special representative of Armenia in the process of normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations, vice-speaker of the parliament Ruben Rubinyan. The Armenian delegation was met by his Tretsky colleague Serdar Kylych.

According to an official statement from Yerevan, the purpose of the visit is “to demonstrate Armenia’s support for Turkey, which suffered great damage as a result of the devastating earthquake on February 6.”

“This is a historic visit as a result of Armenia’s decision to support a neighbor in need of help. We hope that this is a good sign for the future development of Turkish-Armenian relations,” wrote EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus Toivo Klaar on his Twitter microblog.

As part of the visit, Mirzoyan also visited one of the regions most affected by the disaster, Adiyaman, and met with Armenian rescuers who have been conducting search and rescue operations here since February 7.

This is Ararat Mirzoyan’s second visit to Turkey. In March last year, the first visit of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia to a neighboring country took place to participate in a diplomatic forum in Antalya. A bilateral meeting between Mirzoyan and Cavusoglu also took place then. It is already known that the Armenian minister is invited to the forum this year. Ararat Mirzoyan has already said: “In all likelihood, I will participate in this forum, where, presumably, there will also be a meeting [with a colleague] and a discussion.”

This statement was made by the Armenian Foreign Minister after a meeting with his Turkish counterpart in Ankara. According to him, the Spitak earthquake that Armenia experienced in 1988 is one of the most bitter pages in the history of the Armenian people.

Ararat Mirzoyan said that such natural disasters and their scale “go beyond the borders of the state, becoming a universal tragedy”, so the world must act as a “united front” to overcome them:

“I am convinced that the international community should not remain indifferent to any humanitarian crisis occurring anywhere in the world. It is on this principle that the Armenian government immediately after the devastating earthquake decided to send rescuers and humanitarian aid to Turkey.”

He called it symbolic that on February 11 the Armenian-Turkish border, which had been closed for 30 years, was opened for Armenian trucks heading with humanitarian aid to the Turkish city of Adiyaman.

“The same thing happened last night, and in a few hours the next batch of humanitarian aid will already arrive in Adiyaman. I thank Mr. Cavusoglu for the words of gratitude to our rescuers and the Armenian presence and support in general,” he said.

The official statement at the end of the talks says that negotiators discussed not only steps to normalize relations between Armenia and Turkey, but also regional processes

The Turkish Foreign Minister expressed confidence that recent cooperation will contribute to the process of normalizing relations in the region.

Moreover, Cavusoglu did not talk about Armenian-Turkish relations, but about “the process of normalizing relations between Turkey, Azerbaijan and Armenia”:

“I especially want to note that if these three countries take sincere steps, we will be able to establish long-term peace and tranquility in the South Caucasus, and the long-term stability of the South Caucasus is extremely important in terms of the economic development of this region. The middle East-West corridor, especially after the pandemic and the war in Ukraine, has become extremely important. For this reason, we, as countries on this path, can provide an important contribution not only to the stability and development of our region, but also to steps aimed at increasing cooperation between Asia and Europe.”

The Turkish minister said that during the meeting with Mirzoyan a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan was also discussed.

Cavusoglu also talked about the reconstruction of the Ani Bridge, which is located on the Armenian-Turkish border:

“Our preparation for the future continues, there are studies from both sides regarding bridges at border crossings and there are steps that we can take regarding roads leading to the border. Today we have reached an agreement to speed up these steps.”

He also recalled the earthquakes that occurred in Armenia in 1988 and in Turkey in 1999, and stressed that neighboring countries had helped each other both then and today:

“In these difficult days, [Armenia] again extended its helping hand to us and showed solidarity and cooperation.”

Turkey’s special representative for the process of normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations Serdar Kilich announced a more concrete outcome of the ministerial meeting. We are talking about opening the border for third-country nationals.

“An agreement was reached to give a new impetus to work on this issue. The two ministers have come to this agreement, and we will do our best to start operating the Margara Bridge as soon as possible,” he said.

Commentary by political observer Hakob Badalyan on what topics the presidents of Russia and Turkey might have touched on and how their agreements may affect the South Caucasus region

Turkologist Andranik Ispiryan says that in their statements the foreign ministers of Armenia and Turkey did not talk about specific steps to normalize relations.

“The conversation was only about putting in order the infrastructure leading to the border. And we are waiting for the normalization of relations, which implies the opening of borders and the establishment of diplomatic relations,” JAMnews said.

Ispiryan warned that the mention of the reconstruction of the Ani bridge gave many the impression that it was a road connecting Armenia and Turkey, which is actually the reconstruction of a historical building which has nothing to do with the opening of the land border.

Ispiryan says that the reconstruction of the historical bridge of Ani is only a symbolic step, and the project has been in development since 2009-2010. He considers the talk about the bridge and the Silk Road “a historical sketch, a digression from political issues.”

According to Ispryan, Mirzoyan and Cavusoglu mainly talked about the earthquake, but in the speech of the Turkish Foreign Minister “the Azerbaijani factor was clearly visible.” All official reports on the current process of normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations emphasize that it is proceeding without preconditions.

“Meanwhile, Cavusoglu did not say in his speech that the normalization process is proceeding without preconditions. Moreover, in a manner characteristic of Turkish diplomacy, he indirectly said the existing precondition in the form of the phrase “settlement of Armenian-Turkish and Armenian-Azerbaijani relations.”

He believes that Turkey is waiting for the conclusion of a possible peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, “avoiding concrete steps until then”:

“No matter how hard the Armenian side tries not to notice this, it is necessary to notice the precondition. I think our authorities already see it, they understand that it exists. And this precondition is the resolution of relations with Azerbaijan.”

Turkey officially recognized the Republic of Armenia on December 24, 1991. However, diplomatic relations between the two countries have not been established. The land border between the countries has been closed since 1993.

Talk about an Armenian-Turkish resolution intensified after the second Karabakh war. Special representatives of the negotiation process Ruben Rubinyan and Serdar Kılıç have already met four times, but so far no significant progress has been seen. Only direct flights that operated before the 2020 war have been restored. On July 1, 2022, the special representatives agreed to open the Armenia-Turkey land border for citizens of third countries as soon as possible, as well as direct air cargo transportation. In January 2023, it was announced that Turkey had lifted the ban on air freigh, but the border has not opened even for third-country nationals.

Mirzoyan-Cavusoglu meeting in Ankara

https://jam-news.net/mirzoyan-cavusoglu-meeting-in-ankara/






Efforts to normalize Armenian-Turkish relations – video

     
Al Mayadeen
    Feb 15 2023

"Today we discussed with my colleague [Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat] Mirzoyan the steps necessary to continue the normalization of relations… We agreed to accelerate them," Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told a joint press conference with Mirzoyan.

Watch the video report at https://english.almayadeen.net/videos/efforts-to-normalize-armenian-turkish-relations

Armenia to provide new version of peace treaty to Azerbaijan soon — Security Council

 TASS 
Russia – Feb 14 2023
It was added that "it is extremely important for Armenia to develop an international mechanism within the framework of which Stepanakert and Baku will discuss the issues of rights and security of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh"

YEREVAN, February 14. /TASS/. The Armenian government is currently working on a new version of a peace agreement with Azerbaijan and will submit it to Baku in the near future, Secretary of Armenia’s Security Council Armen Grigoryan said at a briefing on Tuesday.

"The Armenian side received a response to the text [of a peace treaty] suggested by it, this is an ongoing process, the Armenian side is currently working and we will pass it on to the Azerbaijani side as soon as possible," he noted.

The official added that "it is extremely important for Armenia to develop an international mechanism within the framework of which Stepanakert and Baku will discuss the issues of rights and security of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh." That said, he noted that the current peace treaty draft contained a provision on Nagorno-Karabakh but the text had not yet been finalized.