Sports: Muradyan To Represent Armenia In Billie Jean King Cup [Tennis]

SJSU Spartans
San Jose State University
SAN JOSE, Calif. – San José State's Irena Muradyan is set to represent her home country of Armenia in the 2023 Billie Jean King Cup. Muradyan and the Armenian team will compete in Europe Group III against 10 other countries for one promotion spot.

"We are so proud of Irena, and we wish her all the success in the upcoming Billie Jean King Cup," head coach Chad Skorupka said.

  • This is Muradyan's third year competing for the Armenian team.
  • She led the Spartans with 12 singles wins in dual matches, going 12-6 on the season.
  • She also had the most doubles wins on the year, going 10-7 alongside Rozalina Youseva.
  • Muradyan was named the Mountain West Freshman of the Year in 2021.

Only Russia ought to exercise control over Lachin Corridor, says MP

 12:19,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is in direct contact with Russia over the latest Azerbaijani provocation on Hakari Bridge, ruling Civil Contract faction secretary Artur Hovhaninsyan told reporters.

The situation since the latest Azeri attempt to advance has been the same.

“Our foreign ministry colleagues maintain constant contact with our Russian colleagues, we’ve numerously said that there is a problem in the Lachin Corridor, it is the area of responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers. What happened there is a problem which we have discussed and we are in direct contact with our colleagues,” Hovhannisyan said.

“We once again note that only the Russian peacekeeping contingent ought to have control in Lachin Corridor. What happened there is a major problem. And naturally we are talking about this with our Russian colleagues. As to which context and with what results, the foreign ministry will speak,” the lawmaker said.

The MP said Armenia views Azerbaijan’s actions on the Hakari Bridge as yet another provocation to derail the processes, but Armenia will proceed with its policy and will do everything to suppress all escalation risks, also through international pressure.

Thousands of Armenian Mothers Mourn Children Killed by Azerbaijan

For the past 3 years, the indigenous Armenians of the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)  in the South Caucasus have undergone an aggressive war at the hands of Azerbaijan and its ally, Turkey. According to statements from Azeri state officials, this war’s purpose is to eliminate the Armenian presence in Artsakh. Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, for instance, has repeatedly stated that Armenians in Artsakh “have two options: either they will live under Azerbaijani rule or leave.”  

The war was launched on September 27, 2020 with the support of Turkey and lasted for 44 days. It involved the carpet bombing of cities and villages, the targeting of civilian populations, the recruitment of foreign terrorists from Syria, as well as the systematic perpetration of war crimes and human rights abuses. Azerbaijan used internationally prohibited weapons, and bombed hospitals, kindergartens, and houses during the war.

This aggression has resulted in the deaths of thousands of Armenians, the forceful capture of significant parts of Artsakh territory, the forced displacement of tens of thousands of civilians, as well as the ongoing detention and torture of an unspecified number of Armenian prisoners of war (POWs).

The current official yet approximate number of Armenian prisoners of war in Azerbaijan is 35. But this number keeps rising. Siranush Sahakyan, an attorney who represents Armenia at the European Court of Human Rights, said at a press conference on May 12 that are currently 80 POWs at the hands of Azerbaijan.

Although the trilateral agreement signed on November 9, 2020 meant to suspend the war, Azerbaijan has never ended its aggression. Azerbaijani Armed Forces have continued with unprovoked attacks on Armenian territory, including opening fire on Armenian soldiers carrying out engineering works in the Tegh Community on April 11, 2023, a hostile action which killed four Armenian soldiers and wounded six. Similarly, on March 5, 2023, Azerbaijani troops attacked an Artsakh police car, killing three police officers.

In a separate instance on May 29, 2023, two Armenian soldiers were captured by Azerbaijani forces in a cross-border incursion. The soldiers, Harutiun Hovakimian and Karen Ghazarian, were ambushed and kidnapped after they had delivered water and food to Armenian army units guarding the border with Azerbaijan.

According to unofficial data, around 5000 Armenian soldiers and scores of civilians have been killed by Azerbaijan since the 2020 war. To observe the grief and struggles of Armenian mothers who lost their children due to Azeri aggression, María Luciana Minassian, a human rights lawyer based in Argentina, visited the capital of Armenia (Yerevan) twice this year in March and May.

During those trips, she visited universities, government offices, as well as the Yerablur Military Cemetery, where the Armenian servicemen who lost their lives in defense of the homeland are laid to rest. Minassian also visited the Lachin Checkpoint on the Hakari Bridge recently launched by Azerbaijan and Armenian military positions.

“That was a fact-finding mission which gave me the possibility to get acquainted with the changes Azerbaijan made on the territory,” Minassian told this author in an interview.

“I was very worried that our soldiers were only 400 meters away from the Azerbaijani military positions. Because of the work I have been doing as a lawyer since the 2020 Artsakh War, I know the dangers those soldiers are facing. I felt extremely sad to leave them so close to a barbaric enemy. I know that any of our soldiers who get captured by Azeri forces are subjected to inhuman treatment and torture. I said goodbye to them and by the time I got in the car, I was in tears, devastated.”

Luciana says that the number of Armenian soldiers killed by Azerbaijan is not certain.

“Official statements from the Armenian government placed the number of dead soldiers during Artsakh’s war over 2900; but we usually speak about 5000 casualties.”

Sadly, this number has increased since the end of the war. In September 2022, for instance, Azerbaijan launched another unprovoked assault on sovereign Armenian territory, using combat drones, artillery and large caliber firearms, reportedly resulting in the deaths of dozens of soldiers.

“We have to take into consideration the approximately 95 victims of the September 2022 Azerbaijani aggression against the Republic of Armenia. We also need to take into consideration the identification procedures that are still being processed based on DNA. In many cases, we only have bone as a remnant of an Armenian combatant, and investigations must take place to identify the victim.

“I spoke to many mothers in Yerablur Cemetery. They were very kind and also extremely devastated. The cemetery is the home of everyone who lost a son in the war. I also spoke to the brother of a deceased combatant. He visits his brother’s grave every day and every night. He drives a cab, and in the middle of his work, if he feels like visiting, he stops and spends the rest of his day inside Yerablur. I invited him for lunch, as he was so kind that had offered to get me back to the city. He was so sad the entire lunch, but he was also surprised that his case was brought to my attention.

“When I was in Yerablur, I realized a military burial ceremony was about to take place. The burial ceremony was of a soldier who was identified only by a piece of bone. So it was a controversial case for the mother of the soldier, and it had taken a while to get the information.

“In a sense, the pain and the mourning of those families who lost a loved one during the war has only just begun; parents need to be heard. They gave their most precious treasure to the Armenian Motherland: their sons. And by now they are living lonely lives; many of them don’t work (they do not have the ability to do so). I also witnessed birthday celebrations inside Yerablur. I saw people wearing t-shirts with the fallen soldier´s picture, arriving at a grave, with balloons, and a beautiful cake. This scene is truly sad, very sweet, and filled with love. You get to feel the love, and you get to feel the sadness.

“Mothers only want one thing: they want recognition of their sons’ sacrifices because their lives were lost in territories we may not be allowed to visit for a while, or maybe for a lifetime. In order to honor the lives of these soldiers and their brave efforts, their mothers only ask us not to give up. They want us to continue the freedom struggle for the 120.000 ethnic Armenians who remain under Azeri siege and can´t freely exercise their right to live in their ancestral lands. I would add they also request what in Argentina has called “the right to know the truth”. That is, they are entitled to get informed about the whereabouts and circumstances in which their loved ones perished. 

“When I think about the ongoing Azeri aggression, I also think about all the mothers who at this moment have their sons at the frontlines, at the borders. They are aware of the inhumane, atrocious way Azerbaijani forces treat kidnapped Armenians.”

It is not only Armenian men who are violently targeted by Azerbaijan. Armenian women soldiers have also been subjected to Azeri war crimes. One of the worst atrocities committed by Azerbaijan against Armenia concerns the rape, savage mutilation, and slaughter of a woman who served in the Armenian forces. The soldier was identified as Anush Apetyan, 36, a mother of three children. The Armenian Ministry of Defense confirmed that Apetyan was killed during the Azeri assaults on September 13-14, 2022 along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.

Author Raymond Ibrahim reported on the brutal murder and torture of Apetyan:

“A video of these atrocities, apparently made by the Azeri soldiers themselves, which was emailed to me, shows piles of mutilated and decapitated Armenian soldiers, including the woman in question.  She appears naked, with both of her arms and legs cut off.  One of her eyes is clearly gouged out.  A severed finger appears sticking out of her mouth, and another appears to be sticking out of her private parts.”

Minossain said:

“We must also remember the lives of the women who served Armenia and gave their lives for the Motherland of the Armenians, some of them are also buried in Yerablur, including the ones who perished during the September 2022 attacks on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia. When I was there, I paid my respects to them. I was also able to speak to one of the daughters of a killed Armenian woman soldier and she said she will host me in her house the next time I visit Armenia. I will be extremely honored to meet the relative of a brave female combatant. These heroes will remain in our hearts forever.”

Despite all international calls for de-escalation, Azerbaijan continues to flagrantly violate Armenia’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, international law, the political will and the right to self-rule of the Armenians of Artsakh, as well as the November 2020 tripartite statement signed by Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia to end the 2020 Artsakh War. It appears that the only way to stop the killings and torture of Armenians by Azerbaijan is for the civilized world to recognize Artsakh’s right to self-determination.

Garo Ghazarian, a human rights lawyer, and expert on international law, told this author in an interview: 

“The criteria for people to have realized their right to self-determination is when they have either (a) established a sovereign and independent state, or (b) they have freely associated with another state, or (c) they have integrated with another state after having freely expressed their will to do so. 

“While one of these acts is sufficient to trigger the right of self-determination, the indigenous Armenian population of Artsakh has realized all three. 

“Therefore, if there truly is such a thing as an international community, it must not turn a blind eye to the exercise of these fundamental steps undertaken and practiced for the last three decades by the Armenians of Artsakh. 

“And, to be clear, of all nations, the United States of America must lead in this regard. 

“After all, it was U.S. President Woodrow Wilson during World War I promoted the concept of self-determination, whereby a nation made up of a group of people with similar political ambitions can indeed seek to create its own independent government and state.

“Can anyone seriously question the reality of the unjustifiable deprivation of human rights, and the plight of the Armenians of Artsakh today? I think not.” 

It is high time that the United States, the leader of the Free World, took concrete action to stop this ongoing genocide against Armenians. All United States foreign and military assistance to Azerbaijan must be immediately ceased and the government of Azerbaijan must be sanctioned until it stops its attacks on Armenia and Artsakh.  And for durable peace in the South Caucasus, the US government must recognize the right of self-determination of the people of Artsakh.

https://providencemag.com/2023/06/thousands-of-armenian-mothers-mourn-children-killed-by-azerbaijan/

Armenia Accuses Azerbaijan Of Pursuing A Policy Of “Ethnic Cleansing” In Nagorno-Karabakh

On Friday, Armenia accused Azerbaijan of adopting a policy of “ethnic cleansing” in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, which is inhabited by a majority of Armenians, which has been the subject of a decades-long dispute between the two countries, according to the French Press Agency.

On April 23, Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint at the entrance to the Lachin Pass, the only road linking Armenia with the breakaway region.

The move came after Azerbaijani environmental activists blocked the road for months, which, according to Yerevan, led to a humanitarian crisis in the mountainous enclave, which caused food and fuel shortages.

Azerbaijan stressed that civil transport is moving without hindrance through the Lachin corridor.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Friday that “the humanitarian situation in Karabakh has deteriorated sharply,” after Baku cut off traffic on the road on Thursday.

He added, “Food supplies to Karabakh have practically stopped, and it is not allowed to transfer patients to hospitals in Armenia for medical treatment.”

And he considered that Baku’s actions “prove that Azerbaijan is pursuing a policy of ethnic cleansing in Karabakh.”

On February 22, the International Court of Justice, the highest judicial body of the United Nations, ordered Azerbaijan to guarantee freedom of movement on the road.

On May 24, Armenia asked the International Court of Justice to order Azerbaijan to open the vital corridor.

The two former Soviet republics fought two wars, the first in the early 1990s and the second in 2020, to control the Nagorno-Karabakh region, which unilaterally separated from Azerbaijan 3 decades ago.

After a lightning war that lasted 6 weeks, during which Baku took control of lands in the region in the fall of 2020, the two countries signed a cease-fire, according to which Armenia relinquished swaths of land it had controlled for decades.

The border areas between the two countries are still witnessing frequent skirmishes despite the ongoing peace talks between Baku and Yerevan, mediated by the European Union and the United States.

And when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the Armenians in Karabakh separated from Azerbaijan, and the ensuing conflict killed 30,000 people.

Satellite images show 19th century bridge destroyed in Azerbaijani-controlled area of Nagorno Karabakh

 12:32,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Caucasus Heritage Watch (CHW) has released satellite images showing that a bridge in Nagorno Karabakh dating back to 1835 in an area under Azeri control since 2020 has been destroyed.

CHW said the bridge was destroyed during roadwork.

“We have been concerned about this bridge since last summer. It was clearly visible in an Oct. 2021 satellite image. But the bridge was no longer discernable by July 2022. In CHW’s monitoring report #4, we provisionally designated it as damaged. April 2023 imagery now shows that the bridge was destroyed during roadwork,” CHW reported.

Halevor Bridge, built in 1835, spanned the Ishkhanaget River, 2km southwest of Mets Tagher in Nagorno Karabakh.

Azerbaijan wants to disrupt development of Armenian border towns, says governor of Ararat after Yeraskh shooting

 13:46,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. Ararat Governor Sedrak Tevonyan has assured foreign diplomats visiting the village of Yeraskh that the steelworks which is being built in the village doesn’t pose any environmental threats.

Tevonyan dismissed the Azerbaijani claims alleging that the plant’s construction poses environmental hazards and noted that Azerbaijani authorities actually want to disrupt the development of Armenia’s border towns.

“The Azerbaijani actions seek to disrupt the normal course of development of Armenia’s border towns. They make claims about environmental issues, but I assure you that no such issues exist,” the governor told foreign ambassadors who visited the village a day after the construction site came under Azeri cross-border gunfire, wounding two workers.

200 people are involving in the construction of the plant.

Approximately 1000 people will work at the plant when it gets launched.

Photos by Hayk Manukyan




BREAKING: Azerbaijan blocks Red Cross, Russian peacekeeper-mediated humanitarian passage,cargo through Lachin Corridor

 13:26,

STEPANAKERT, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan has banned all humanitarian passenger and cargo transportation through Lachin Corridor, the Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) authorities said on June 15.

Azerbaijan banned humanitarian passage after the June 15 provocation near Hakari Bridge.

“In particular, 25 patients and their family members were being transported by the International Committee of the Red Cross from Artsakh to Armenia, but the further movement of the vehicles was banned in the illegal Azerbaijani checkpoint functioning in the Kashatagh (Lachin) corridor, forcing them to return to Stepanakert. Besides, a passenger transportation of dozens of persons for urgent humanitarian needs scheduled for today in the Stepanakert-Goris-Stepanakert route that was supposed to take place by the Russian peacekeepers has also been cancelled. The movement of cargo trucks of Russian peacekeepers traveling to Goris for humanitarian cargo transportation has also been suspended,” the Artsakh Information Center said in a statement.

It added that the illegal Azerbaijani checkpoint itself in Lachin Corridor poses grave danger and obstacles for ensuring free movement between Artsakh and Armenia.

“Today’s incident once again confirms the existence of these dangers and obstacles, by additionally threatening the highly limited movement of people and goods for essential humanitarian needs of the people of Artsakh, even by the Red Cross and Russian peacekeepers. The authorities of Artsakh reiterate their position that the mode of the Lachin Corridor envisaged under the 9 November 2020 trilateral statement must be immediately and unconditionally ensured, without any Azerbaijani interference, and the 22 February 2023 ruling by the UN International Court of Justice over this issue must be implemented,” the Artsakh authorities said.

Steel manufacturer determined to continue construction of plant in Yeraskh despite Azeri shootings

 14:04,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. The construction of the smelter plant in Yeraskh is temporarily halted but will resume after clarifying several technical issues with authorized bodies, GTB Steel CEO Tiran Hakobyan told reporters.

GTB Steel is building the steelworks in Yeraskh which came under Azerbaijani gunfire on June 14. Two construction workers were wounded in the shooting.

“Of course we are worried about the incident, but there’s no panic. We are in the sovereign territory of Armenia, we are resolute in our activities, we will not stop and we will continue to work,” Hakobyan said.

The fact that equipment and workers are targeted means that Azerbaijan seeks to disrupt the construction of the plant, he added.

“The reason is clear, they don’t want Armenia to become economically stronger. While our factory will have a rather large investment in the Armenian economy. After completing construction the plant will produce approximately 200-250 thousand tons of rebar annually from black steel, and Armenia will be the main consumer. We view Middle Eastern countries as a market as well,” Hakobyan said.

GTB Steel is co-owned by American companies, with only one of the beneficiaries being Armenian – Grigor Ter Ghazaryan. Building the plant in Yeraskh was Ghazaryan’s idea.

“We had offers to build the plant in various parts of Armenia. We came to Yeraskh at the desire of Grigor Ter Ghazaryan, one of our co-owners, because it’s very important for the border zone to develop. Everyone knows that we have tax privileges, we are exempt from VAT, but we’ve refused this privilege and we are paying VAT,” he said.

200 workers are employed at the construction site. 70 of them are citizens of India.

Indian embassy staffers have visited the two Indian workers at a hospital who were wounded in the June 14 Azeri shooting.

“Since the plant is a technological one, we use the skills of our Indian partners in some issues. We were working normally before these shootings began,” he said, adding that none of the workers want to quit.

Photos by Hayk Manukyan




Media must work together to counter AI threat, says press agencies head

 15:51,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. The head of the European Alliance of News Agencies has called for press agencies to work together to counter the threat posed by artificial intelligence (AI).

Clemens Pig was speaking at the opening of the fifth Future Media Conference organised by the Polish Press Agency (PAP) in Warsaw.

"AI in the wrong hands can lead to massive waves of fake news, attacking and endangering democratic societies," said Pig.

"Therefore it is crucial for us, as news agencies, to work together, benefit from each other in building knowledge of AI, its challenges and opportunities, and to cooperate on joint solutions in order to be able to deal with AI-supported waves of false news and similar challenges.

"Serious media can only survive in this battle with credible and trustworthy journalism," he added.