US State Department: Azerbaijan is destroying Armenian spiritual heritage of Nagorno-Karabakh

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Armenia – May 16 2023

The US Department of State has released the 2022 Religious Freedom Report of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF). In particular, in the report, Azerbaijan is on the list of countries under special watch.

In 2022, the state of religious freedom in Azerbaijan had negative dynamics. The government continued to exercise considerable control over religious figures, continuing to prosecute and detain them.

It is noted in the report that at the end of last year, 19 people were imprisoned in Azerbaijan for their religious beliefs. Local human rights organizations also say that the government continued to use physical violence, detain, and imprison religious activists, and that many of the arrests of religious activists—including on drug charges—were political in nature.

The report points as well to the destruction of the Armenian spiritual heritage by Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh territories now under the control of Baku.

International bodies and other organizations continue to question the willingness of the Azerbaijani government to protect and preserve the religious and cultural heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent territories under Azerbaijani control, the report adds.

In February, the then minister of culture of Azerbaijan Anar Karimov  announced the creation of a working group to remove the "fake" Armenian apostolic inscriptions from churches. But apparently, after international outrage, the government abandoned the plan, and in March, the European Parliament condemned Azerbaijan's continued policy of destruction and denial of Armenian cultural heritage in and around Nagorno-Karabakh, the report notes.

USCIRF recommends that the US government provide funding to the United States Agency for International Development and the US embassy in Azerbaijan to restore, preserve, and protect places of worship and other religious or cultural sites in Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas.

Armenia permanent delegate: UNESCO mission needs to be urgently sent to Karabakh, neighboring areas

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Armenia – May 16 2023

The 216th meeting of the UNESCO Executive Board started Monday at the UNESCO headquarters. Ambassador Christian Ter-Stepanian, Permanent Delegate of Armenia to UNESCO, delivered an address during the first plenary session held on the same day, the foreign ministry of Armenia informs Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Referring to the activities being carried out by UNESCO in emergency and war situations, the permanent delegate of Armenia recalled the current situation as a result of the military aggression unleashed by the armed forces of Azerbaijan on the sovereign territory of Armenia on September 13, 2022.

Ter-Stepanian, expressed his conviction that UNESCO bears responsibility for all those people whose right to education is violated. In that context, he recalled the consequences of Azerbaijan's blocking of the Lachin corridor for the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh, including the violation of the right to education of 30,000 children. He reaffirmed the urgency of sending the UN inter-agency fact-finding mission due to the described situation.

Also in his remarks, the permanent delegate of Armenia to UNESCO expressed concern regarding the threats to the Armenian cultural heritage in the Karabakh territories now controlled by Azerbaijan, particularly in the regions of Shushi and Hadrut. In that context, Ambassador Ter-Stepanian reaffirmed the desire to urgently send a UNESCO mission to Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent territories.

In his address, the permanent delegate of Armenia to UNESCO reflected also a number of joint initiatives implemented by UNESCO and Armenia and which are in the current phase.

Germany ambassador: EU monitoring mission in Armenia has already had good start

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Armenia – May 16 2023

The EU monitoring mission in Armenia has already had good start, and they are doing as much as they can within their limited capabilities. German ambassador to Armenia Victor Richter stated this in an interview with Armenian News-NEWS.am. Below is the text of this interview.

Mr. Ambassador, for several months now, the civilian monitoring mission of the European Union has been deployed in Armenia, the head of which is a German. How would you rate the activity of the mission?

I think that the humanitarian mission has already had a good start. So they're in the phase of filling up the personnel in the phase of recruitment. But they're already operational since it's a couple of months. So they are making their monitoring tours in the territory which is under their mandate and have established many contacts with the administrations, with the local populations.  So they are building up a good communication and building up trust and confidence for the people which are living in that region. And I think this is one of the also main tasks of this mission to stabilize the situation and to build confidence.

What are they exactly doing?

As far as I know, they are constantly visiting villages which are close to the border. They are having discussions and contact with the local populations there, are taking up their needs and wishes and trying to create a certain level of trust that the situation is stable and that they are monitoring the situation as a whole.

Have they already made any reports?

They're reporting to Brussels.

How often do they submit reports?

I don't know. I cannot tell you details. So they're reporting to Brussels and then there's a further distribution, which is under the authority of Brussels of the EU authorities there.  So we as embassies are not involved in operational issues. That's why I cannot tell you too much detail.

How many observers are there now in the mission?

So at the end there will be more than one hundred. So as far as I know, they have reached now more than a half of that, and it's steadily going up.

Mr. Ambassador, we do not really see the reflection of those reports in the statements by the officials of the European Union; even after the last border tension, as a result of which there was one casualty on the Armenian side.

Yeah, I think there is a communication between the European Union authorities and also Armenia, of course, also with the member states, with the states that are involved also here in the region. And they are doing as much as they can within their limited capabilities with only 50 now and will be 100. So that's a big border line. That's the whole line of the border under their mandate; with Azerbaijan also to Nakhchivan. That's why they cannot be everywhere every time. But they try, of course, to be as present as possible physically and also taking into account the security aspect.

They are called to make the region safer with their presence. But for example, the recent border escalations do not indicate a safer region.

They are trying to create, as much as possible stability and security for the situation at the end, as much as a civilian mission can do.

A five-way meeting is expected in Chisinau on June 1, in which [German] Chancellor Olaf Scholz will also participate. Meanwhile, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan announced that they have not yet decided whether [President] Ilham Aliyev will participate in that meeting or not. Don't you think that such a statement has a negative impact on Germany's efforts to normalize relations?

I cannot tell you more than which has [been] published by the authorities of the office of [European Council President] Monsieur Charles Michel. So that has been announced, and this is our information that we have.

Olaf Scholz stated that it is necessary to reach a peaceful resolution, not only from the point of view of the territorial integrity of Armenia and Azerbaijan, but also from the point of view of the self-determination of the citizens of Nagorno-Karabakh. How do you see the solution of the Karabakh problem?

So, I cannot add additional aspects to what has been said by our Chancellor and also by the spokesman person of our government.  So, Germany is doing its best to assist this peace process as a whole, which should of course take into account also the interests and the security and the rights of the Armenians living in the former autonomous region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Is Germany ready to act as a mediator in case of creation of international mechanisms for dialogue between Baku and Stepanakert, considering that Azerbaijan is against the creation of international mechanisms?

I cannot go into these details because, you know, these negotiations are very confidential; so, I don't know the details.

Thank you very much.

9 patients evacuated from Nagorno Karabakh

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 13:03, 16 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Healthcare of Nagorno Karabakh/Artsakh announced Tuesday that nine seriously-ill patients together with 7 attendants have been transported to Armenian hospitals.

The patients were taken to Armenia by ambulance, accompanied by Russian peacekeepers, amid the ongoing blockade of the Lachin Corridor by Azerbaijan.

Over 100 patients have been deprived of the possibility to be transported to Armenia for crucial medical care since the ICRC stopped the medical evacuations and supply of medication to Artsakh on April 29.

25 of the 100 patients are in critical condition.

 



Italy seizes cocaine worth € 800 million reportedly intended to be smuggled into Armenia

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 12:16, 16 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. Italian law enforcement agencies in the western town of Gioia Tauro in the Metropolitan City of Reggio Calabria have seized a record 2,7 tons of cocaine that was reportedly intended to be smuggled into Armenia, according to the Italian ANSA news agency.

[see video]

The huge consignment of cocaine was smuggled into the Italian port from Ecuador in two containers loaded with 78 tons of bananas.  According to the report, the cocaine with a street value of €800,000,000 was intended to be smuggled into Armenia through the Port of Batumi in Georgia.

The anti-mafia law enforcement agency of Reggio Calabria coordinated and executed the drug bust.

ANSA quoted the law enforcement agency as saying that the cocaine was “of extremely high quality and very well preserved.”

Italian authorities have seized 37 tons of cocaine in the Gioia Tauro port since 2021.

Asbarez: Granite City, Ill. Establishes Friendship City with Artsakh’s Ashan

Pictured left to right: Steve Hagopian, Mayor of Granite City Mike Parkinson, Stephen Hagopian and Rev. Taniel Manjikian.


The Granite City City Council issued a proclamation on April 18 establishing a Friendship City between Granite City, Illinois, and Ashan, Republic of Artsakh, reported the Armenian National Committee of America-Eastern Region.

This proclamation, spearheaded by Granite City Mayor Parkinson, sets the foundation for long-term cooperation between the two cities and provides opportunities to “engage in critical exchange of ideas to further Ashan’s support of economic stability, cultural preservation, and strong social ties in Artsakh,” as outlined in the proclamation.

Ashsan is a border village in the Martuni Province of the Republic of Artsakh, and has been severely impacted by Azerbaijan’s timeline of aggression, most recently their brutal blockade of Artsakh that has surpassed 145 days, hindering the delivery of vital necessities. 

“Artsakhtsis, and more specifically the citizens of Ashan, have been subjected to the inhumane treatment of Azerbaijan for years. While resolute in our will to remain in our homes and on our indigenous lands, we have faced our fair share of hardships. This proclamation and the establishment of this Friendship City shows our people that the Diaspora and the communities in the Eastern United States have our back. With the support of the international community, we can continue to stand up to the enemy, amidst the threat of annihilation,” said Armen Balasanyan, Mayor of Ashan. “We have endured over 145 days of blockade and one thing remains certain, our right to live on this land is unalienable,” he concluded.

Through the tireless efforts of ANC of Southern Illinois activists, this proclamation expresses that Granite City stands in solidarity with the people of Ashan – sending a clear message that their plight is not one to face alone. 

“We are extremely proud of the stance that Granite City Mayor Parkinson took by issuing this Friendship City proclamation. This step builds on the longstanding relationship the Armenian community has built with the elected officials of Granite City. Through this proclamation, Mayor Parkinson powerfully demonstrates that he stands with the Armenians of Artsakh who are on the brink of genocide,” said Steve Hagopian, ANC of Granite City co-chair.

U.S. Faults Azerbaijan for Destroying Armenian Religious Landmarks in Artsakh

The Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shushi was dismantled by Azerbaijanis


State Department Places Azerbaijan on “Special Watch List”; Calls for Funding for USAID for Restoration and Protection of Artsakh Sites

The United State has faulted Azerbaijan for destroying Armenian religious and cultural landmarks in Nagorno-Karabakh, with the State Department placing Azerbaijan on a “Special Watch List.”

These details were outlined in the State Department’s International Religious Freedom Report 2022, which was released recently. The report calls on the U.S. government to fund the United Stated Agency for International Development for restoration and protection efforts of the sites in Artsakh.

“International structures and other organizations continue to question the willingness of the government of Azerbaijan to protect and preserve the religious and cultural heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding territories under Azerbaijani control,” said the report.

“In February, the former Minister of Culture Anar Kərimov announced the creation of a working group, the purpose of which was to remove Armenian Apostolic inscriptions from churches, which he called ‘unreal.’ With most probability, the government abandoned the plan after the international community’s outrage, and in March the European Parliament condemned Azerbaijan’s continuous policy of erasing and denying the Armenian cultural heritage in and around Nagorno-Karabakh,” the report added.

The U.S. Commission for International Religious Freedoms, which prepares the annual report, recommended that the US government “provide funding to the US Agency for International Development and the US Embassy in Baku for the restoration, preservation, and protection of places of worship and other religious or cultural sites in Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas.”

Asbarez: Artsakh is Governed by its People’s Mandate, Says Foreign Minister

Sergey Ghazaryan is Artsakh's foreign minister


Artsakh’s Foreign Minister Sergey Ghazarian on Tuesday said his government is guided by the mandate it has received from its citizens, when they overwhelmingly voted for independence in 1991.

He added that the Artsakh authorities cannot renege on the people’s _expression_ of free will.

Speaking to reporters, Ghazaryan also lamented that the European Council President Charles Michel did mention the current situation in Artsakh—Azerbaijan’s blockade, the illegal checkpoint and the ongoing aggression and the acute humanitarian crisis—in his statement following his meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan in Brussels on Sunday.

Instead Michel said he called on Aliyev to create security guarantees for the “Armenians of the Nagorno-Karabakh oblast,” a term used to describe Artsakh during the Soviet times, before Artsakh’s declaration of independence.

The EU leader also announced that Armenia and Azerbaijan “confirmed their commitment” to respect each other’s territorial integrity, specifying Azerbaijan’s 86,600 square kilometers, which includes Artsakh.

“The people of Artsakh declared their decision through free _expression_ of will on December 10, 1991. There have been various opinions since, but the authorities of Artsakh are guided by the mandate bestowed upon them by the people and cannot go against that _expression_ of will,” Ghazaryan told reporters.

While the Artsakh foreign minister did not directly address the territorial integrity issue and the ramifications of Michel’s statements on the future of status of Artsakh, he did fault the EU leader for ignoring the current realities on the ground.

“Most importantly, he [Michel] did not mention Azerbaijan’s non-compliance with the requirements of the International Court of Justice and the dire humanitarian situation established in Artsakh as a result of Azerbaijan’s provocative steps,” Ghazaryan said, referring to ICJ’s February 22 ruling ordering Azerbaijan to ensure “unimpeded movement” on the Lachin Corridor.

In a strongly-worded statement on Monday, Artsakh’s Foreign Ministry said “the EU leadership continues to ignore the legitimate rights and interests of the people of Artsakh and is guided solely by their own geopolitical and short-term interests in the region to the detriment of the values of democracy and human rights declared by the European Union.”

AW: Hadrut: A community in exile committed to cultural preservation

When Alexandra Avanesyan, a fine arts teacher at Hadrut art school, asked her students to draw their dream house, sisters Mane and Milena from Togh village said they had already lost theirs. Mane, who attended first grade in her native village for only three weeks before the 2020 war forced her to flee, doesn’t remember her school or classmates. But her eyes light up for a moment and then fill up with tears when she talks about her home. “It was the most beautiful house, two-story, with flowers in the yard and a fence.”

During the 44-day war that Azerbaijan launched against Artsakh in 2020, the region of Hadrut, along with Shushi, was violently conquered by Azerbaijan, creating an internally displaced population of 13,500 people. About 5,380 of them live in Artsakh; almost the same number live in the Republic of Armenia. The rest have emigrated abroad.

Azerbaijan’s political propaganda often invokes the large number of Azerbaijani refugees/displaced persons from the 1990s war, which in numbers is almost comparable to displaced Armenians from the same era (a fact that Azerbaijan conveniently omits). Yet there is rarely mention of the ethnically cleansed indigenous Armenians of Hadrut, who became homeless just two years ago.

On March 20, forcibly displaced Armenians of Artsakh called on UNHCR, Pashinyan, Putin and Aliyev to organize their return to their homes. 

Today, over two years after the war, the displaced people of Hadrut are mostly settled in Artsakh’s capital Stepanakert. According to Artur Baghdasaryan, head of the administration of the Hadrut region in exile, the government in Stepanakert is building housing for former residents of Hadrut. Construction on a residential district with over 250 apartments was underway until Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh, which shut down all construction projects due to the lack of imported building materials. Were it not for the blockade, the first set of houses would have been completed by now.

The enduring blockade has also impacted employment prospects, with massive layoffs by businesses that have neither supplies nor outside markets to work with. In addition to housing, employment and social problems, the displaced people of Hadrut also face challenges in realizing the right to an education and freedom of creative _expression_. Having lost their homes and schools, people from Hadrut now conduct their art lessons at the Komitas Music School in Stepanakert. In addition, due to high demand, the teachers offer art classes on weekends as well. This all impacts the quality of education and the educators’ well-being.

Tatevik Mkrtchyan was hired to direct the Hadrut art school about a month before the 44-day war. After taking refuge in the Republic of Armenia, Mkrtchyan returned to Artsakh immediately after the war, despite losing her home in Hadrut. She understood the importance of maintaining Hadrut’s education system in exile as a way to preserve their culture and also encourage displaced people to return to Artsakh, despite having lost their ancestral villages.

Today, more than 100 students attend the dance, theater, fine arts, clothing modeling and decorative-applied arts departments at the relocated Hadrut art school, which is an extracurricular school. Most students are displaced from different settlements of the Hadrut region.

Young girls take dance lessons at the relocated Hadrut art school

“At first, you reject reality. Then you accept it, and then you try to overcome it,” says Mkrtchyan.

Since the building conditions are not satisfactory, she is forced to combine her administrative work in the director’s office during choir practice. “We even conduct painting classes in the kitchen. But we are not complaining. At least in these conditions, we are able to educate the children and bring them closer to the world of art,’’ she added.

Despite all odds, neither the administrators nor the teachers have lost hope in returning to Hadrut one day. Until then, they want to live together as a community. If they build houses close to each other, the school intended for Hadrutsis should be close by.

“If there is hope to return to our homes to Hadrut, we must keep our traditions alive. My great-grandmother was a native of Shushi. After the 1920 massacres in Shushi, her family, along with nearly all Armenian residents of Shushi, dispersed, instead of creating a community in exile. When Shushi was liberated in 1992 during the first Karabakh war, they did not return to their hometown, and other displaced Armenians lived in Shushi instead of them.” Mkrtchyan thinks that they shouldn’t make the same mistake. “When we go back to our homes in Hadrut one day, we, our children and grandchildren should live there,” she added.

Hadrut art school

In this environment, displaced people from Hadrut are also able to preserve their dialect, customs and memories. This is important not only for them but Armenians and indigenous peoples everywhere. Throughout the centuries, Armenian communities have been repeatedly displaced by war or earthquake. Until 2020, Hadrut was one of the few corners of the Armenian homeland where the people had lived in the same region for many centuries, if not millenia, without displacement. Gatherings between and after classes and conversations in Hadrut’s sweet and unique dialect may slightly ease the longing and pain. “For us, talking about the butcher from Hadrut or sharing the success story of Nora, who opened a sweet shop in Yerevan, with the dialect of Hadrut is more valuable,’’ added Mkrtchyan.

Outside this community, there has been little appreciation for Hadrut’s unique dialect and enduring culture. Among the exceptions is Yerevan-based author Arpy Maghakyan’s 2022 children’s book Sun-kissed Shushi, in which a poem about the legendary tree Tnjri is presented in the Hadrut dialect. But recognition of Hadrut’s unique place in Armenian ethnography is not enough for cultural survival. The Stepanakert-based people from Hadrut know this all too well, which is why they consciously rely on each other not only for cultural preservation, but in daily life. If someone needs to find an apartment or a job, they all try to organize it through their  acquaintances. Helping each other and sticking together is a strategic choice, even if that may make life harder. “It’s not that we provide better education than other schools in Stepanakert. It is not even appropriate that in the art school we teach children of different ages in the same groups together. We also work on Saturdays and Sundays, but we have no other option,” said Avanesyan. “I am afraid that we will lose ourselves too. We have already lost a lot of each other, and we must keep those memories, traditions and our dialect alive, even in exile.” She notes that children are the key to this survival, and she has reasons to feel hopeful since “children understand everything, and all their dreams are related to returning home.”

The people of Hadrut today, who are based in Stepanakert, live less than 100 kilometers away from their ethnically cleansed and occupied homes. Yet they make the choice to keep Hadrut alive, for the sake of their own well-being and for future generations. “If you don’t have a home, it’s like you’re lost. You can’t find your place in this world.”

Hadrut art school

Siranush Sargsyan is a freelance journalist based in Stepanakert.


Armenpress: Armenian Prime Minister participates in 4th Council of Europe Summit in Reykjavík

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 09:39, 17 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 17, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan participated in the opening ceremony of the 4th Council of Europe Summit in Reykjavík, Iceland on May 16.

Heads of State and Government, and heads of delegation from over 40 countries attended the event, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a press release. 

Prime Minister of Iceland Katrín Jakobsdóttir and Council of Europe Secretary General Marija Pejčinović Burić welcomed the visiting leaders.

French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and others delivered remarks at the opening ceremony.

The Armenian Prime Minister participated in a roundtable discussion on democracy as part of the summit.

The summit is held May 16–17.