Armenpress: Newly appointed Ambassador of Japan handed over a copy of his credentials to the Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia

 22:40,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 18, ARMENPRESS. On December 18, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Paruyr Hovhannisyan received the newly appointed Ambassador of Japan to Armenia, Yutaka Aoki, on the occasion of handing over a copy of his credentials, the foreign ministry said.

According to the source, Deputy Minister Paruyr Hovhannisyan, congratulating Ambassador Aoki upon assuming his mission, noted that Armenia attaches great importance to the development of partnership relations with Japan. He expressed confidence that the Ambassador will contribute to further strengthening and deepening of relations between Armenia and Japan.

Both parties emphasized the significant unfulfilled potential of bilateral cooperation and expressed willingness to spare no efforts, particularly in the direction of developing partnership in trade, economy and business ties, tourism, education and science, cultural exchanges, etc. Mutual high-level visits, as well as the intensification of inter-parliamentary relations were also emphasized.

It is noted that Paruyr Hovhannisyan also briefed his interlocutor on the latest developments in the process of normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In this context, the Deputy Minister particularly drew the interlocutor's attention to the "Crossroad of Peace" initiative of the Government of Armenia.

The Deputy Foreign Minister also expressed his gratitude to Ambassador Aoki for the support of the Japanese Government allocated for addressing humanitarian needs of forcibly displaced persons from Nagorno-Karabakh.




The California Courier Online, December 21, 2023

The California
Courier Online, December 21, 2023

 

1-         Armenia Could
Have Gotten a Better Deal

            In the
Prisoner Exchange with Azerbaijan

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher, California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         ‘Amerikatsi’
Review: Armenia’s
Oscar Submission

            Is A
Wayward, Blackly Comic Tale Of Hope

3-         Greg
Martayan Named Valley Economic Alliance Vice President

4-         150
Prominent Leaders Demand Release of Armenian Prisoners from Baku Jail

 

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1-         Armenia
Could Have Gotten a Better Deal

            In the
Prisoner Exchange with Azerbaijan

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher, California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

Thirty two Armenian prisoners of war, languishing in a Baku jail for a long
time, were finally freed and returned back to their overjoyed families. I will
analyze the background and circumstances of their release, pointing out why Armenia should
have gotten a much better deal.

1) The agreement to end the 2020 war, signed by Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, and Armenia’s Prime
Minister Nikol Pashinyan, included a clause that mandated that “an exchange of
prisoners of war, hostages and other detained persons and bodies of the dead is
to be carried out.” Pashinyan’s blunder was that no deadline was set for the
implementation of this clause, thus allowing Azerbaijan to keep the Armenian
prisoners as long as it wished.

2) Pashinyan’s second mistake was that, shortly after the
end of the 2020 war, Armenia
released all the Azeri prisoners, while Azerbaijan released only some of
the Armenian prisoners. There was no all for all exchange.

3) Even though the 2020 agreement did not impose any
preconditions for the release of the Armenian and Azeri prisoners, Pashinyan
made his third mistake by turning over to Azerbaijan
the maps of Armenian landmines in Azeri-occupied Artsakh in return for the
release by Azerbaijan
of a few more Armenian prisoners. Pres. Aliyev learned the valuable lesson that
he can extract more concessions from Armenia by the slow and gradual
release of the Armenian prisoners. In other words, Aliyev discovered that the
Armenian prisoners were more valuable for him if he kept them in a Baku jail, and released a few at a time in return for
further concessions from Armenia.

4) Pashinyan’s obsession over an unnecessary ‘Peace Treaty’
with Azerbaijan provides yet another opportunity for Aliyev to extract further
concessions from Armenia, including the demand for additional Armenian
territories during border adjustment negotiations, the return of Azeris to
their previously inhabited villages inside Armenia, and acceptance of the
so-called ‘Zangezur Corridor’ linking Eastern Azerbaijan to its exclave of
Nakhichevan instead of a road under Armenia’s control, as mentioned in the 2020
agreement.

5) Pashinyan should have refused all meetings and
negotiations with Azerbaijan
until the removal of its forces from the territory it occupies inside Armenia and the
return of all Armenian prisoners of war.

6) Azerbaijan
agreed to exchange two Azeri soldiers with 32 Armenian prisoners of war because
Armenia withdrew its own
candidacy and lifted its veto of Azerbaijan
hosting next year’s prestigious international climate change conference (COP29)
in Baku. This
is the only reason why Aliyev agreed to have such a lop-sided exchange of
prisoners. None of the other publicly mentioned reasons are true. Contrary to
baseless speculations, the U.S.,
EU, NATO, Russia, Turkey, and Iran played no role in arranging
this prisoner exchange. It was Aliyev’s strong desire to use the conference as
a means to show off Baku as an internationally
significant capital in order to deflect attention away from Azerbaijan’s
serious human rights violations and war crimes. Aliyev had gone to great
lengths to host other major events in Baku,
such as the Formula One Car Race, the Non-Aligned Conference Summit,
Eurovision, European Games, etc.

7) Given Aliyev’s fixation on hosting the Climate Summit in Baku at any cost, Armenia should have sought the
release of all Armenian prisoners of war, not just 32 of them. In addition,
Pashinyan should have demanded the release of the high-ranking Artsakh
officials who were captured and jailed by Azerbaijan at the end of September
2023.

8) In the meantime, over 100,000 exiled Artsakh Armenians
are suffering in Armenia,
deprived of the most basic necessities, such as housing, food, and medicines.
Artsakh Armenians have left behind all of their possessions. The Armenian
government should file a lawsuit in the World Court demanding that Azerbaijan pay
compensation for the confiscated properties of Artsakh Armenians.

9) The above cited issues raise serious questions about the
high praise lavished on Pashinyan by his supporters who are proud that he
scored a major success with the release of 32 Armenian prisoners. Little do
they know that a more competent Armenian leader could have gotten much more
concessions from Azerbaijan
than the return of some of the Armenian prisoners.

10) Pashinyan’s supporters are also ecstatic that various
international leaders expressed their satisfaction with the exchange of the
prisoners, hoping that this would lead the two countries to signing a ‘Peace
Treaty.’ What Pashinyan’s supporters do not understand is that a ‘Peace Treaty’
would not actually bring peace to the two countries, since Aliyev has already
violated most of the terms of the 2020 agreement. What assurance can anyone
have that he will respect future agreements? These foreign powers care about only one thing: their
self-interest rather than the national interests of Armenia.

They are pleased that Pashinyan is making repeated
concessions to Azerbaijan,
so that the international community can benefit from Azerbaijan’s oil and gas, while
ignoring Armenian interests and turning a blind eye to Aliyev’s violations of
the human rights of his own people.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         ‘Amerikatsi’ Review: Armenia’s
Oscar Submission

            Is A
Wayward, Blackly Comic Tale Of Hope

 

By Damon Wise

 

(Deadline)—There’s a lot to take in and even more to process
in American-Armenian director Michael Goorjian’s ambitious period piece: What
he’s tilting at here is not beyond the realms of comedy, as Armando Iannucci
proved with his 2017 jet-black satire The Death of Stalin. But tone is crucial,
and Amerikatsi has a waywardness that too often undermines its intent — there’s
a lot that works here and so much that doesn’t. There are moments that are
sensitive, thoughtful, and really quite moving — in an elegant, silent-movie
way — but the framing is so dark in its humor that many viewers may never make
it to them.

In Eastern European literature, the greenhorn caught in the
crosshairs of bureaucracy has long been a staple, and Amerikatsi pushes that
tradition by placing an emigrant American at the heart of its drama. The film
opens in 1915, in what was then the Ottoman Empire, and a young boy named Garo
is sent away in the thick of what he will later come to know as an adult, in
fevered flashbacks, as the Armenian genocide.

The story itself, however, begins 30 years later, following
Josef Stalin’s invitation to survivors of that dark period of history to return
home, now that Armenia is
part of the Soviet Union. After the death of
his wife, Garo — now Charlie (Goorjian), a New Yorker from Poughkeepsie who never quite settled there —
sees his chance to figure out who he really is and sets off to his homeland. By
chance, after saving her son from a mob that swamps a passing bread van, the
first person Charlie meets is Sona, the wife of a high-ranking Soviet general,
who invites him to dinner with her husband Dmitry. Dmitry indulges his wife,
promising to help Charlie find a good job and housing, too. Instead, the
jealous apparatchik secretly arranges to have Charlie arrested, on the grounds
that he is a spy, and sent back to America after a bit of roughing up.

Until now, there’s a goofy quality to Amerikatsi that’s
reminiscent of the self-awareness that sprang up after the fall of the Berlin wall, like the fake supermarket posters in Prague’s Museum
of Communism that say,
“We don’t have it, we’re not open, go and bother someone else.” Charlie, on
account of his “very fancy tie,” is indicted on grounds of spreading propaganda
and the more speculative charge of “cosmopolitanism.” There’s a lot of
dim-witted box-ticking going on (“Filling quotas is always good”), and the visual
presentation — a fusion of Aki Kaurismäki, with its deadpan performances, and
Wes Anderson, in its stylized use of movie grammar — has a lot of fun with
that.

But instead of being let go, Charlie, after a near-miss with
a firing-squad, gets sent to Siberia for 10
years hard labor. As he and others are about to get their marching orders, an
earthquake hits Armenia
and the prisoners are reprieved, but only so they can rebuild the prison walls.
The mood is much darker now; Charlie is beaten, has his head shaved, and is
sent back to his cell with a noose “for the dumb American.” The damage means
that Charlie now has a view; looking out of his prison bars he can see into the
home of an Armenian couple nearby. Living vicariously through their mealtimes,
parties and arguments, Charlie is now inured to the brutality of his everyday
existence and becomes intoxicated by theirs, living a proxy version of the
authentic life he came for.

His Russian captors call him Charlie Chaplin, and with good
reason, since the better part of the film is largely silent, as Charlie absorbs
and gorges on the outside world much like Chaplin did as The Little Tramp in
The Gold Rush. Goorjian is at his best in these scenes, which are the most
effective at expressing the film’s themes of diaspora and identity. The
brutality and cruelty, however, are hard to laugh off, and while it’s clearly
not the film’s intention that we should ever do so, Goorjian’s film asks a lot
of its audience to stay with it as a vehicle for his no doubt heartfelt thoughts
of hope and reconciliation.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
3-         Greg Martayan Named Valley
Economic Alliance Vice President

Greg Martayan was tapped to serve
as The Valley Economic Alliance’s Vice President of External Affairs.

The Valley Economic Alliance is a
strategic private-public collaboration comprising governments, corporations,
small businesses, educational institutions, and community organizations whose
mission is to engage and unite behind the principles, policies, and practices
necessary for economic vitality and prosperity.

Bringing together a sustainable
economic future for the five-city San Fernando Valley region, including Burbank, Calabasas, Glendale,
Los Angeles and San Fernando is a top priority. An area of
more than 160,000 businesses, over 2 million residents, and covering more than
400 square miles.

“I look forward to working closely
with the five cities represented in the San Fernando
Valley and their elected officials, to create a more economically
sustainable Valley. In addition, I recognize that small businesses,
corporations, and the entrepreneurial spirit are what drive the Valley, which
is why I want to make sure they know they are heard in the halls of government.
I’m honored to be working with President and CEO Sonya Blake, who has been a
true visionary both for the Valley and the Alliance. The future is bright,” Greg
Martayan said.

“Greg is such an amazing addition
to our administrative team, with his notable and successful service, I know he
will be a great champion for the Valley economy and our partners,” said Sonya
Blake.    

**********************************************************************************************************************************************

4-         150
Prominent Leaders Demand Release of Armenian Prisoners from Baku Jail

 

Over 150 Nobel Prize laureates, business leaders, former
heads of state, and humanitarians signed a letter calling for the immediate
release of the Armenian Prisoners in Baku jail,
including eight Armenian political prisoners, who are former leaders of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s government illegally detained following Azerbaijan’s
invasion and seizure of the region in September. Several dozen other prisoners
of war arrested during the conflict also remain in custody. The collective plea
echoes growing concerns over conditions and treatment of these imprisoned
individuals, including prominent Armenian businessman and humanitarian, Ruben
Vardanyan.

“The human rights abuses witnessed in the wake of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict demand urgent attention and action.,” said Noubar
Afeyan, a signatory who is co-founder of the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative.
Afeyan has long collaborated on global and regional economic development and
humanitarian projects with Vardanyan, who has become a symbol of the broader
struggle for political freedom and human dignity in the region. “We call on
President Aliyev to fulfill his obligations to the international rule of law,
ensuring those unjustly imprisoned can return safely to their families,” said
Paul Polman, Vice Chair of the United Nations Global Compact and former CEO of
Unilever. Polman is one of the letter’s signatories, alongside former heads of state,
such as Ernesto Zedillo, former President of Mexico; Mary Robinson, former
President of Ireland; Oscar Arias, former President of Costa Rica and Nobel
Peace Prize Laureate, and Elisha Wiesel, Chairman of the Board of the Elie
Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, and son of the
late Elie Wiesel, former Co-Chair of Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. Other
prominent signatories represent a wide range of sectors, including Richard
Branson, CEO of Virgin, Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce; Ariana Huffington,
founder of Thrive and The Huffington Post; and Serj Tankian, renowned musician
and lead vocalist of System of a Down. “The unjust detention of Vardanyan and
so many others being held in Baku
violates their basic human rights,” said Mary Robinson, Former UN High
Commissioner of Human Rights.

As asserted in the letter, the detention of Armenian
prisoners is a clear violation of international norms, including the Third
Geneva Convention. In recent weeks, members of the European Parliament and
European Council have pursued a peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the release of all
illegally held detainees arising from the conflict in Karabakh. In October, the
European Parliament passed a resolution calling on Azerbaijan to release and commit to
a broad amnesty for all the inhabitants of Karabakh who have been arrested
since September 19, including former officials from the region. The European
Parliament has also called for sanctions against the individuals in the Azerbaijani
Government responsible for multiple ceasefire violations and violations of
human rights in Karabakh, as well as investigations into the abuses committed
by Azerbaijani forces that could constitute war crimes.

Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA) introduced a resolution
calling on Azerbaijan
to immediately release all prisoners of war (POWs) and civilians currently
detained in the years-long attack on Artsakh. The resolution also calls on
President Biden to impose sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights
Accountability Act on Azerbaijani Government officials responsible for the
illegal detention, torture, and extrajudicial killing of Armenian prisoners of
war, civilian detainees, hostages, political prisoners, and others detained
persons.

 

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Chess: Levon Aronian disappointed in FIDE over scrapping of presidential term limit

SportStar – The Hindu, India
Dec 18 2023

Published : Dec 18, 2023 21:48 IST , CHENNAI 

S. PRASANNA VENKATESAN

The World chess federation’s (FIDE’s) approval of a motion to scrap the presidential term limit in its annual general assembly on Sunday has met with disappointment from the Armenia-born chess great, Grand Master Levon Aronian.

Previously, the president had to step down after two four-year terms in power.

Expressing his disapproval of and disappointment at the decision, Aronian said at the Chennai Grand Masters Chess Championship on Monday, “I think generally it doesn’t matter what kind of governance, serving more than two terms always leads to trouble. Leadership is something that is very infectious and it is something you want to do forever. No matter how good of a leader you are, you are going to eventually start developing those birth traits that belong to all of the leaders that stay there for too long. So, it’s my personal opinion. I think when you make such decisions, a lot of the good things that you do get undone. Because now you are perceived as an usurpator of the position. I don’t like that decision. And I’m disappointed in FIDE.

https://sportstar.thehindu.com/chess/chennai-grand-masters-2023-levon-aronian-disappointed-fide-scrapping-president-term-limit/article67651742.ece

FROM ARMENIA TO UKRAINE: UNICEF MAPS OUT HUMANITARIAN ACTION FOR CHILDREN IN 2024


Dec 18 2023

Emergency Response


How UNICEF plans to meet urgent and escalating needs of children in a number of conflict and crisis hotspots around the world, by leaning into local partnerships to accelerate and sustain impact and appealing for more flexible funding support. 

UNICEF — which is funded entirely by voluntary donations from public and private sector donors — has launched an appeal for $9.3 billion to support Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) in 2024.

The extensive plan for the year ahead reflects an increasingly dire situation for children in the world today due to conflicts, natural disasters and the devastating impacts of climate change — from child displacement to outbreaks of preventable disease to mounting food insecurity. In many places around the world where UNICEF works, these crises tend to overlap and amplify one another. 

In announcing the appeal, UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell said receiving flexible funding from donors is ideal. UNICEF specializes in emergency response, often being the first on the ground as a crisis unfolds and among the last to leave and supporting efforts to recover and rebuild; flexible funding allows UNICEF to respond quickly and deliver assistance to the most vulnerable children, when and where it is needed, and to adapt or pivot as needs and conditions change, sometimes hour by hour.

Flexible funding enabled UNICEF's South Sudan country office to quickly deploy social workers and set up Child-Friendly Spaces at remote border locations, where more than 130,000 women and children fleeing the conflict in Sudan had arrived by early August. Flexible funding also allowed UNICEF to kickstart its response in Gaza, including the prepositioning of essential WASH supplies such as bottled water, and the allocation of humanitarian cash transfers to conflict-affected households.

UNICEF's strategy for 2024 also leans into "localization" — UNICEF's term for collaborating with local partners, who play a crucial role in delivering immediate relief to children in hard-to-reach places and in longer-term resilience building and system strengthening.

"Millions of children continue to be caught in humanitarian crises that are growing in complexity and scale, and that are increasingly stretching our resources to respond,” Russell said. “With predictable flexible funding, UNICEF and partners can quickly support children in need from the moment an emergency strikes, while preparing for future risks to save and improve lives.”

With predictable flexible funding, UNICEF and partners can quickly support children in need from the moment an emergency strikes, while preparing for future risks to save and improve lives. — UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell

There are 43 separate action plans for 2024 — a global plan, 30 separate plans covering individual countries*, seven regional plans and five that cover a different multi-country crisis. While each plan estimates funding needs for specific programs and interventions, UNICEF encourages supporters not to earmark their donations to a specific country or cause.

Here are some examples of how UNICEF plans to keep delivering for children in 2024.

In late September-early October 2023, over 100,000 ethnic Armenians — including 30,000 children — fled to the Republic of Armenia following a hostile military operation in Nagorno-Karabakh, their region of origin. Around 98,000 refugees have been officially registered to date and they are located throughout Armenia, with the highest numbers in Yerevan, followed by Syunik, Kotayk and Ararat provinces. This significant influx of refugees is deeply affecting already overstretched host communities. UNICEF is already on the ground assisting the government-led response, helping to meet urgent needs in health and nutrition, education and child protection, with special focus on supporting separated and unaccompanied children and children with disabilities.

The plan for 2024 includes continuing to work with government and civil society partners to ensure inclusive and age- and gender-appropriate services for uprooted children, adolescents and families, providing social protection through humanitarian cash assistance or vouchers, and helping to deliver water, sanitation and hygiene support, among other measures. Learn more.

For other countries click on the link below

https://www.unicefusa.org/stories/armenia-ukraine-unicef-maps-out-humanitarian-action-children-2024







Washington Must End Its Support for Azerbaijan’s War Crimes

 JACOBIN 
Dec 18 2023
ALEX GALITSKY, 
SHAHED GHOREISHI

The US has long offered unconditional military assistance to Azerbaijan even as it carries out ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh. It’s consistent with Washington’s support for brutal human rights violators from Saudia Arabia to Israel.

The other week, Azerbaijan’s president scolded US secretary of state Antony Blinken over efforts to curtail military assistance to the Caspian dictatorship in the wake of its assault on the Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. While US arms and assistance to Azerbaijan have largely been overlooked, they are representative of how Washington’s security assistance has facilitated war crimes and perpetuated a global system built on the selective application of human rights and international law. In the case of Azerbaijan, US assistance enabled ethnic cleansing on a shocking scale.

However, amid public outcry over the nonenforcement and rollback of human rights conditions on military assistance to US allies from Turkey to Saudi Arabia to Israel — a recent decision by the Senate to suspend military assistance to Azerbaijan marks an unprecedented step toward the enforcement of human rights standards and congressional oversight long absent from US foreign policy.

Last month, Azerbaijan invaded Nagorno-Karabakh (also known as Artsakh), forcibly expelling its entire indigenous Armenian population, aided by US security assistance. As a direct consequence of the impunity Washington has granted Baku, Azerbaijan, is now threatening further military action against Armenia — a risk recently acknowledged by Secretary Blinken.

Azerbaijan hasn’t always enjoyed the kind of impunity other recipients of US military assistance do. In the early 1990s, Azerbaijan was prohibited from receiving US aid pursuant to Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act, which suspended all forms of aid to Azerbaijan in light of its aggression against Armenian civilians during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War.

While this prohibition is still in effect, following the September 11 attacks it has been subject to a national security waiver — an all-too-familiar tool that has granted the US president far-reaching discretion over military assistance, unbeholden to congressional oversight and the long-ignored human rights conditions mandated under the Leahy Laws and Section 502B of the Foreign Assistance Act.

In an attempt to garner Azerbaijan’s support for the United States’ 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, the waiver of Section 907 saw hundreds of millions of dollars funneled to the government through lucrative defense contracts and security assistance. This has only escalated in recent years as Washington now justifies its uncritical support for Azerbaijan as necessary to secure its role as an alternative energy supplier for Europe and a regional bulwark against Russia and Iran.

Despite President Joe Biden’s campaign pledge to cut military aid to Azerbaijan after its assault on Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020, his administration has twice reauthorized assistance to Baku, even in the face of strong congressional opposition. These waivers have continued despite the Azerbaijani government’s torture and execution of Armenian prisoners of war, human rights abuses, and war crimes against civilians, and a humanitarian blockade that precipitated the ethnic cleansing of Artsakh. Washington had every opportunity to prevent this unfolding humanitarian and security crisis but instead chose to embolden Azerbaijan by rewarding its behavior with security assistance.

Azerbaijan is an instructive case in the abject failure of current US policy. Not only did unconditional assistance to Azerbaijan grant the United States little-to-no ability to influence or constrain Baku’s behavior — the lack of conditions on assistance to Azerbaijan sent a green light to its government that it would face no material repercussions for its human rights abuses, emboldening its behavior. US arms sales haven’t even deterred Azerbaijan from engaging with US rivals, as Baku continues to expand its energy partnerships with Russia and Iran.

Washington’s support of Azerbaijan will signal to other recipients of US military assistance that they will continue to face zero accountability for their actions, despite Biden’s pledge to ensure autocrats “pay the price” for their aggression. Furthermore, Washington’s reckless policy threatens to destabilize the region further by encouraging war profiteers to take a page from Washington’s playbook, with Turkey closing a major arms deal with Saudi Arabia in July, and Israel selling weapons to Azerbaijan used to perpetrate horrific human rights abuses against Armenians in Artsakh at the same time it perpetrates unconscionable war crimes of its own in Gaza.

Immediately before Azerbaijan’s assault on Nagorno-Karabakh, US officials affirmed that they “would not countenance any attempt at ethnic cleansing” by Azerbaijan. Washington’s failure to hold Azerbaijan accountable after it breached this red line will only embolden further aggression as Baku eyes Armenia’s sovereign territory. It will also undermine whatever confidence anyone might still have had in Washington’s willingness to uphold human rights. It sends a clear signal to other recipients of US military assistance engaged in human rights abuses, from Turkey’s relentless assault on Kurdish communities in Northern Syria and Iraq, to Saudi Arabia’s crackdowns at home and its mass murder of refugees and destruction of Yemen, to Israel’s indiscriminate attacks on Palestinian civilians in Gaza — heightening the risk of conflicts that could engulf the entire region.

Facing considerable congressional and public pressure, the Biden administration has now publicly stated that it does not intend to waive restrictions on military assistance to Azerbaijan. But the unanimous passage of the Armenian Protection Act by the Senate last month takes that one step further, prohibiting the executive from exercising its waiver authority for a two-year window. If enacted by the House of Representatives, this would mark an unprecedented step toward enforcing human rights standards and congressional oversight of US security assistance in a rare rebuke of US foreign policy, driven by grassroots action.

Washington’s Faustian bargain with some of the world’s most abusive governments has produced the very outcomes it purportedly seeks to avoid and recklessly enables the ethnic cleansing of Artsakh’s Armenians. The unanimous Senate vote to enforce human rights conditions on assistance to Azerbaijan is not just a step toward justice for the victims of Azerbaijan’s genocidal aggression — it marks an important victory in the effort to curb executive overreach, end the practice of fueling raging regional fires, and stop material US support for war crimes.

https://jacobin.com/2023/12/washington-biden-administration-azerbaijan-war-crimes-armenia-us-military-aid

Armenia’s Energy Security Faces Frosty Relations with Russia

UK – Dec 18 2023

Lacking fossil fuels, Armenia leans on Russian gas and oil for most of its needs.


Armenia’s strained relations with Russia, its traditional strategic ally, may have an impact beyond political and security alliance, affecting the country’s energy security as Moscow supplies most of Yerevan’s gas needs.

Armenia is officially considered a self-sufficient country in terms of its volume of electricity, generating up to 98 per cent of its needs in-country. Experts, however, warn that the reality is more complex.

“Our self-sufficiency depends on the countries from which we import the gas and the uranium that operate our thermal and nuclear power plants. And when our government officials speak about our self-sufficiency, why do they forget to say how we maintain it?” energy expert Armen Manvelyan told IWPR, noting that in fact over 70 per cent of Armenia’s electricity depended on Russia.

According to Armenia’s statistical committee, in 2021 thermal power produced 42.9 per cent of the country’s electricity, while 25.4 per cent was provided by nuclear plants with uranium imported from Russia. Internal resources produce about 31.6 per cent of Armenia’s electricity: 27.9 per cent from hydropower and 3.7 percent from solar power plants. 

In addition, Armenia imports natural gas and oil for most of its energy needs, predominantly from Russia. According to data from the Ministry of Territorial Administration, Russia supplies 87.5 per cent of Armenia’s gas needs via pipeline through Georgia, while Iran covers 12.5 per cent through a barter agreement under which it exports electricity in exchange.

Armenia also trades electricity with Georgia, though volumes are low since the countries’ networks are not synchronised. Energy interconnections with Azerbaijan and Turkey are inactive for political reasons.

In an interview on November 15, Iran's newly appointed ambassador to Armenia, Mehdi Sobhani, hinted that Tehran might help Yerevan reduce its energy dependence on Russia. Since 2009 Armenia has provided Iran with electricity in return for natural gas supplies; the arrangement was due to end in 2026, but in August the two countries agreed to extend and expand it until at least 2030. Russia, however, could turn the tap off as gas giant Gazprom owns the pipeline bringing the gas from Iran to Armenia.

According to the Statistical Committee of Armenia, in 2021 natural gas accounted for 76.2 per cent of imported energy resources and oil products for 21.9 per cent.

Armen Manvelyan, an energy expert, noted that amid the strained relations with Russia in the wake of the situation in Nagorny Karabakh, this dependency was problematic. 

“Armenia is not in the best energy situation right now,” he continued. “Yes, the nuclear power plant is working, thermal power plants are working, but their activities depend on the energy resources supplied from Russia. And if their prices increase, Armenia may face serious problems.”

While a spike in prices is not imminent, the widening rift between Yerevan and Moscow meant that it cannot be ruled out.

“Until now, the existing favourable tariffs were determined by the quality of political relations between the two countries,” Manvelyan said. “If you have good political relations, you get a good price. When you start to spoil your political relations, the situation may become dicey and prices may increase.”

Other experts are more optimistic.

“I think that the problems associated with the dependence on Russian gas are not as acute and existing issues can be mitigated by diversifying the country’s energy system, for example developing further nuclear and solar energy,” Avetisyan told IWPR, adding that supplies from Russia and Iran were mutually beneficial. 

“In the case of Iran, this is done within the Gas for Electricity scheme, while in case of Russia, we buy the gas, we do not receive it as a gift.”

Manvelyan noted that rates were certainly lower for Yerevan. 

“Armenia pays Russian gas at a low price, 175 dollars per 1,000 cubic metre while Azerbaijan sells gas to its ally Turkey at 290 dollars,” he said, adding that Armenia was short of options in terms of friendly neighbours and should hence “make every effort to ensure good relations with Russia”. 

“An increase in gas prices will trigger a chain reaction across the country’s economy as prices of our goods will increase, affecting our export opportunities because our products will become uncompetitive,” he concluded.

OPENING THE ENERGY MARKET

To increase its self-sufficiency, the Armenian government has embarked on a path to liberalise the energy market as a way to boost its electricity export capacity and diversify sources. 

“We support the government of Armenia in implementing reforms in the energy sector. We are working with the Armenian government in three main areas – liberalisation of the electricity market, diversification of energy supplies and development of interstate trade with Georgia,” said Abgar Budagyan, chief of party at Tetra Tech, which implements USAID’s energy programme in Armenia.

For Prime MInister Nikol Pashinyan, the gradual liberalisation of the electricity market which started in 2022 has opened up new opportunities and created favourable conditions for interstate trade. 

“We are developing production capacities, carrying out large-scale reconstruction of substations and power lines, and building Armenia-Iran and Armenia-Georgia high-voltage lines, which contribute to the formation of the North-South Electricity Corridor and create new opportunities for increasing exports, imports, transit or seasonal power exchange. Thus, Armenia can become a kind of regional electricity hub,” he said in June. 

The open market means that consumers can choose an electricity supplier, depending on the offered tariffs. It also means that the Electric Networks of Armenia (ENA) no longer has the monopoly over the electricity supply, although new suppliers still have to use ENA’s distribution network, meaning that the company remains the only guaranteed distributor.

“Since the introduction of the new market model, the Commission approved the licence for 14 suppliers and seven wholesalers are already operating,” Sergey Aghinyan, a member of the Public Services Regulatory Commission, told IWPR.

According to official statistics, in the first six months of 2023, 13.1 per cent of consumers chose new electricity suppliers, up from 5.3 per cent in the whole of 2022. The government forecast the share to reach 23 per cent in 2024. 

Experts and officials noted that the reform contributed to the development of interstate imports and exports.

“In 2022, Armenia exported 365 million kWh to Georgia; in 2012-2021 the amount remained constant at 242 million. This happened mainly because of market liberalisation,” Vardanyan said. Iran remained the main recipient of Armenia’s electricity, with 1178.3 million kWh of electricity supplied in 2022. 

But experts remain divided over the benefits of liberalisation. Avetisyan’s assessment one year on is positive as it is “an important process that provides opportunities for free competition for existing market players not only within the country, but also abroad”.

Manvelyan maintained that authorities should have strengthened state control rather than open the market.

“Energy is one of the few industries that should be very seriously controlled by the state, it is the only one in the position to build large systems and high-voltage networks," he said. "If Armenia were a large country, we could also talk about the private sector, but this is not the case of our country.”

https://iwpr.net/global-voices/armenias-energy-security-faces-frosty-relations-russia

Armenian teen does 44 pullups between two moving trucks

UPI
Dec 18 2023

By Ben Hooper

Dec. 18 (UPI) — An Armenian teenager showed off his upper body strength by performing 44 pullups on a bar positioned between two moving trucks.

Grigor Manukyan, 18, was awarded the Guinness World Records title for the most consecutive pullups on a bar positioned between two moving trucks when he achieved the feat after training with Roman Sahradyan, a coach with multiple GWR titles of his own.

The trucks were required to maintain a speed of at least 3.1 mph during the attempt.

Manukyan broke the previous record of 35, which was set in 2022 by Tazio Gavioli, aka The Italian Butterfly.

"This record was not difficult for me due to my rigorous training," Manukyan told GWR officials. "I think I could have brought the number up to 50, but I decided to stop at 44 and dedicate my record to the bright memory of the heroes who were martyred in the ill-fated 44-day Artsakh war, in which thousands of Armenians died."

Manukyan said he is currently training to take on a similar record for performing pullups from a plane.

Guiness World Records: Armenian teen breaks record performing pull ups between moving trucks

Dec 18 2023
By Sanj Atwal
Published 

18-year-old Grigor Manukyan (Armenia) has broken the world record for the most consecutive pull ups on a bar positioned between two moving trucks.

The trucks were required to maintain a minimum speed of 5 km/h (3.1 mph) while Grigor did as many pull ups as possible without falling.

Performing a total of 44, Grigor smashed the previous record of 35, which was set last year by “The Italian Butterfly” Tazio Gavioli.

“This record was not difficult for me due to my rigorous training,” Grigor said.

“I think I could have brought the number up to 50, but I decided to stop at 44 and dedicate my record to the bright memory of the heroes who were martyred in the ill-fated 44-day Artsakh war, in which thousands of Armenians died.”

Grigor is no stranger to performing incredible feats of fitness from vehicles – in November last year, he set a record for the most chin ups from a helicopter in one minute with a total of 36.

He is currently preparing to set a similar record for the most pull ups from a plane in one minute.

Grigor also holds the record for the most four finger pull ups with a 20 lb pack in one minute (31), and he used to hold a record for the most towel pull ups in one minute (33), but this was later broken by Matthew Caruana (Australia), who beat Grigor’s total by one.

Grigor trains for his record attempts at the Dutsaznatun Regional Center of the Hi-Am Foundation, a sports centre in the Armenian town of Talin, which has a population of around 8,000 people.

Despite the town’s small size, it boasts an astonishing number of world record holders, all coached by Roman Sahradyan, who has achieved multiple Guinness World Records titles of his own over the past decade. One of his most impressive record attempts, for the most consecutive gymnastic high bar giants, can be seen in the below video.

Roman’s record-breaking students include:

  • Hamazasp Hloyan - most pull ups from a helicopter in one minute (32)
  • Narek Nikoghosyan - longest static hold on parallel bars carrying a 100 lb pack (2 min 46 sec)
  • Hayk Ghazaryan - most hula hoop rotations around the neck in 30 seconds (104)
  • Vardges Aghabekyan - longest duration four finger hang (3 min 35.59 sec)
  • Artak Saroyan - longest duration rope hang with one finger (47 seconds)
  • Suren Aghabekyan - heaviest deadlift with the little finger (110 kg; 242 lb 5 oz)
  • Sasun Barseghyan - most hula hoop rotations around the elbow in 30 seconds (118)
  • Miasnik Mkhitaryan - longest static hold on parallel bars carrying a 60 lb pack (6 min 13 sec)
  • Rita Khachatryan - most extended Russian Twist sit ups in one minute (female) (16)

With over two dozen students vying to break as many records as possible, this list looks likely to get bigger and bigger throughout 2024 and beyond.

https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/news/2023/12/armenian-teen-breaks-record-performing-pull-ups-between-moving-trucks-762502


Talakvadze Stresses Vital Importance of Peace Agreement Between Armenia and Azerbaijan for the Region

The Messenger, Georgia
Dec 13 2023
By Liza Mchedlidze

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Deputy Speaker of the Parliament Archil Talakvadze positively assessed the visit to Azerbaijan. According to Talakvadze, the Georgian delegation engaged in significant meetings with key figures, such as the president, the chairman of the parliament, and the prime minister, as well as their colleagues. Talakvadze also highlighted the active nature of the friendship group between the parliaments and mentioned plans for future collaboration.

Parliament Deputy Speaker believes that the future of the entire region, including economic and infrastructural projects, trade relations, and tourism connecting the two countries, significantly depends on the friendship and cooperation between Georgia and Azerbaijan. According to his assessment, the two governments are making every effort to strengthen and enhance relations with their strategic partner for the benefit of their people.

"Georgia supports long-term peace in the region and is prepared to contribute to future negotiations and agreements. Both the leader of this country and our Prime Minister are genuinely committed today, and the government is actively working to facilitate this agreement. Georgia has always been the space where Azerbaijan and Armenia could engage in dialogue.

Today, our mediation and participation are genuinely necessary, and we have once again heard from our partners in Baku that they appreciate and welcome Georgia's involvement in the process of reaching a peaceful agreement.The region, Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia all need this agreement," said Talakvadze.

The Deputy Speaker also expressed gratitude to the government of Azerbaijan for supporting Georgia's European integration. According to him, the message and support President Ilham Aliyev announced in the international arena were once again acknowledged in Baku.

"At this point, of course, we really appreciate the support of our friends. The European integration of Georgia is in the interests of the region as a whole, as well as in the interests of Azerbaijan, and of course it will further strengthen our positions in the international political arena.

There is very little time left before the final decision is made, but it is important that we are focused not only on the candidate status but also on the future when our country is already moving to the final accession stage.

Georgia should be accepted; it deserves its rightful place in the European family, and it is in the interests of both Georgia and Europe.

I believe that a fair decision will be made, one determined by the vision of the European future, the security architecture in Europe, and, most importantly, the function and value of Georgia in the common European policy," Talakvadze said.


IWSC 2024 Wine Judging in Georgia: judges’ impressions of Armenian wines

IWSC
Dec 13 2023
This year, our Wine Judging in Georgia grew into a regional event, with entries beyond Georgia itself. We were delighted to welcome wines from the neighbouring Armenia – a country with ancient wine traditions and an impressive collection of indigenous grapes. Out of around 50 Armenian entries more than a half were awarded with medals.

Following the tasting, our judge, Journalist and Broadcaster David Kermode caught up with Cat Lomax, IWSC judge and Independent Drinks Retail Consultant. Cat shared her opinion of the Armenian wines she tasted and highlighted several important tips and takeaway points for Armenian producers.

Watch the video below to hear judge Cat Lomax' feedback