Armenia returns to negotiating table after refusing talks with Azerbaijan in December

 eureporter 


The President of Azerbaijan and the Prime Minister of Armenia have held talks in Brussels facilitated by the President of the European Council Charles Michel. This positive development saw progress on border and transportation issues after earlier talks with President Michel stalled when Armenia refused to participate in a meeting last December, writes Political Editor Nick Powell.

Charles Michel’s efforts to help Azerbaijan and Armenia agree to a lasting peace were put on hold at the end of last year when Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan refused to attend a further meeting in Brussels with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev. But patience by the European Union -and by Azerbaijan- has been rewarded with a meeting that went ahead on 14 March.

It seems that some progress was made in Brussels in the dispute between the two countries. It is primarily over the Karabakh region, which lies within Azerbaijan’s internationally recognised boundaries but has brought devastation to a much larger area during two major wars, causing widespread human misery and economic disruption. After the meeting, the Azerbaijan Ministry of Defence reported that its military positions in the Kalbajar region had come under mortar fire from Armenia’s armed forces.

Nevertheless, the leaders confirmed that they would meet again next month, together with President Macron of France and Chancellor Scholz of Germany, during the European Political Community summit in Chisinau, Moldova. The two sides didn’t offer a detailed readout of their talks in Brussels but President Michel provided some commentary.

“Our exchanges were frank, open and results-oriented”, he said. “Following the recent positive talks in the United States on the peace treaty, the momentum should be maintained to take decisive steps towards the signing of a comprehensive peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan”.

“On border issues, we reviewed progress and the next steps regarding the delimitation of the border”, he added. Charles Michel also reported good progress on unblocking transport and economic links “in particular on the reopening of the railway connections to and from Nakhchivan”.

In an interview with EU Reporter last month, Elchin Amirbayov, who is Assistant to the First Vice-President of Azerbaijan, spoke of his expectation that President Michel would soon resume his role as a facilitator of peace talks. Mr Amirbayov saw the reconstruction of the railway through Armenia linking Azerbaijan with its exclave of Nakhchivan as an important confidence-building measure.

It could form part of the Middle Corridor between Asia and Europe, he argued, enabling Armenia to benefit from this increasingly important trade route once a sustainable peace reopened its borders with both Azerbaijan and Türkiye. He said his country was offering Armenia a ‘win-win’ strategy, not a victor’s peace.

“With it, Armenia will benefit even more because it will be open to investment, for example, from the countries around it”, explained Mr Amirbayov. “It would be considered as a relatively stable place which is not actually risking any new confrontation with its neighbours”.

The Azerbaijan Ministry of Foreign Affairs later confirmed that the Brussels talks had included the delimitation of borders and the restoration of communications. It stressed the extreme importance of the acceptance by Armenia of the internationally recognised territorial integrity of Azerbaijan.

It said that the meeting also provided an opportunity to discuss humanitarian issues, especially included the importance of clarifying the fate of missing persons and of speeding up the process of clearing minefields. Azerbaijan remained ready to continue dialogue and interaction with international partners to achieve normal relations with Armenia.

https://www.eureporter.co/world/azerbaijan-world/2023/05/14/armenia-returns-to-negotiating-table-after-refusing-talks-with-azerbaijan-in-december/

Armenian premier, EC president discuss regional situation — Armenian government

 TASS 
Russia –
The sides also discussed the upcoming tripartite meeting of Nikol Pashinyan, Charles Michel and Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev

YEREVAN, May 14. /TASS/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held an informal meeting with European Council President Charles Michel in Brussels on Saturday to discuss situation in the region, the Armenian government’s press service said.

"In the course of the informal meeting, the sides exchanged opinions about the current military, political and humanitarian situation in the region," the press service said. "Prime Minister Pashinyan touched upon the situation that emerged as a result of provocative and aggressive actions taken by the Azerbaijani armed forces against the sovereign territory of Armenia over the past days and aimed at disrupting the efforts to continue peace talks."

"Issues related to the humanitarian crisis that emerged in Nagorno Karabakh as a result of Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor were also discussed," it said. "The sides have also touched upon questions related to reconciliation of Armenia and Azerbaijan."

The sides also discussed the upcoming tripartite meeting of Pashinyan, Michel and Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev, and the importance of holding a meeting with the participation of French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in Chisinau on June 1.

https://tass.com/world/1617131

Russia thinks that there is no alternative to trilateral agreements on Karabakh — Kremlin

 TASS 
Russia –
Russian presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov pledged that relations between Moscow and Erevan rest on the basis of "advanced partnership"

MOSCOW, May 14. /TASS/. Moscow believes that the trilateral agreements are the only basis for a lasting settlement between Baku and Yerevan, Russian presidential press secretary Dmitry Peskov said on Sunday.

"Naturally, certain sensitive aspects do exist. Russia, you know, is committed to the trilateral documents that were signed two years ago. We insist that there are no alternatives to them as a basis for the settlement. And in order to reach settlement, it is necessary to follow the path of implementing the agreements that were reached by the three parties," he said in an interview with the Moscow.Kremlin.Putin program on the Rossiya-1 television channel.

He pledged that relations between Russia and Armenia rest on the basis of "advanced partnership." "Special relations, which have deep historical roots. We are convinced that they have a bright future," Peskov said.

The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the highland region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union’s break-up, but primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1992-1994, tensions boiled over and exploded into large-scale military action for control over the enclave and seven adjacent territories after Azerbaijan lost control of them. Talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement have been ongoing since 1992 under the OSCE Minsk Group, led by its three co-chairs – Russia, France and the United States.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, 2020, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. On November 9, 2020, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint statement on a complete ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh. Under the agreement, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the positions that they had held and Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the engagement line in Nagorno-Karabakh and along the Lachin corridor that connects Armenia with the enclave to exercise control of the ceasefire observance. Apart from that, a number of districts came over to Baku’s control.

Later, the three leaders adopted several more joint statements on the situation in the region. Last year, Azerbaijan and Armenia began to discuss a peace treaty.

Leaders Will Discuss Anti-Armenian Flyers at Town Hall

Glendale News Press, CA
May 2 2023

The Truth And Accountability League, in partnership with the L.A. County Commission on Human Relations’ L.A. vs. Hate, will hold an in-person town hall “Stand TAAL to Hate” on Thursday, May 4, from 6-8 p.m.
This free event with RSVP is open to the public and is being held at the Glendale Central Library, 222 E. Harvard St. in Glendale.
The town hall will feature an open panel discussion with city officials, experts and community leaders, including the L.A. County Commission on Human Relations Executive Director Robin Toma, Glendale Mayor Daniel Brotman, Police Chief Manuel Cid, Chief of Staff Joseph Iniguez from the L.A. County district attorney’s office, State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan and West Hollywood Mayor Sepi Shyne.
Moderated by TAAL’s founder and chair Vic Gerami, the goal of the meeting is to bring awareness, educate the public and discuss solutions to the rising anti-Armenian racism, Armenophobia and propaganda through questions and discussion with participants.
“The recent anti-Armenian flyers posted around L.A. County — home to hundreds of thousands of Armenian Americans — remind us that we must be vigilant about racism, hate acts and propaganda. It’s unfathomable that on the heels of the Armenian Genocide anniversary, Armenians are terrorized by flyers around schools and churches that call for the extermination of Armenians,” Gerami said.
“But we mustn’t allow the hate of a few to create division, pin us against each other and get us stuck in the problem. The Truth And Accountability League is focused on the solution. We want to bring together, not only members of the Armenian community, but everyone to create awareness, educate and find answers. Our panel of leaders and experts will discuss ways to handle malice that aims to victimize, dehumanize and diminish us. Hate acts affect everyone, regardless of ethnic background, race, religion, sexual orientation or gender identity. TAAL’s town hall is a forum to empower everyone.”
The two-hour event is a part of TAAL’s comprehensive and integrated Community Outreach Campaign to address the rise in anti-Armenian hate crimes the last three years, including the anti-Armenian flyers posted in Glendale on March 31 and similar ones in Beverly Hills in January that called for the massacre of Armenians.
“The Armenian American community is such an essential part of our L.A. County community, but the amount of discrimination and negative stereotyping they’ve experienced is too often understated because it is underreported,” Toma said. “I look forward to sharing the data we collect on acts of hate in our county, and most importantly, what we are doing with L.A. vs Hate to increase reporting and eradicate hate in all our cities and neighborhoods.”
“Stand TAAL to Hate” is a town hall to benefit every group that has experienced racism, been subject to hate crimes and defamation, along with L.A.’s Armenian community, which has been a target of such acts more frequently in recent years. With its nearly 40% Armenian community, Glendale is the perfect crossroad for such an event.
“I am proud to be the mayor of Glendale, a city rich with diversity, including one of the largest Armenian diaspora communities in the world,” Brotman said. “The Jewel City has zero tolerance for racism, hate acts and defamation. I strongly condemn the recent anti-Armenian flyers and work with Glendale Police and community leaders to find the perpetrator.
“I’m honored to be a panelist for the Truth And Accountability League’s town hall. I applaud Vic Gerami and his team for launching a community outreach campaign to create awareness, educate and empower not only the residents of Glendale but all of L.A. County.”
“As district attorney of Los Angeles County, home to more than 200,000 Armenians, I’m immensely proud to represent the largest Armenian population in the United States and the greatest number outside of Armenia itself,” District Attorney George Gascón said. “Our Armenian community makes tremendous academic, artistic, altruistic and many other contributions to our region.
“These hate-filled flyers that incite violence are abhorrent and must be condemned. My office takes hate crimes very seriously, filing 86% of the hate crime cases referred to us, far above the statewide average of 54%. I commend TAAL for becoming an antidote for the poison that is racism and holding this important town hall to promote equality and protect human rights.”
Cid said he looks forward to participating in the upcoming town hall.
“Coming together to discuss hate, accountability and transparency is a powerful act of solidarity and progress. This will be a great opportunity to educate our community on the efforts law enforcement is making to address these challenges, as well as to learn, share, and work together towards a more equitable future,” Cid said.
Kbushyan, an Armenian American, believes in tackling the problem head-on. The state commissioner has been a longtime community organizer and member of Mayor Karen Bass’ transition team.
“It’s been shocking to see anti-Armenian flyers advocating genocide against Armenians in Glendale and across L.A. County,” Kbushyan said. “We must all condemn this bigotry in the strongest terms. While our families and loved ones in Armenia and Artsakh are under assault by Azerbaijan, L.A. County’s Armenian community is being terrorized by hate, defamation and propaganda.
“Vic Gerami and his team at the Truth And Accountability League have taken a proactive step in organizing a town hall in Glendale to create a safe place for the community to address this ongoing matter. I look forward to being on the panel and serving the greater L.A. community.”
The audience will have a chance to submit questions in writing before the start of the town hall. Guests must RSVP through Eventbrite: TAALTownHall.Eventbrite.com.
Elected officials who would like to attend and have special requests and members of the media interested in interviews should contact Gerami at (310) 880-8563 or [email protected].
For additional information, visit TruthAndAccountabilityLeague.org.

First published in the April 29 print issue of the Glendale News-Press.

Glendale town hall seeks solutions to rising Southern California hate incidents

PASADENA STAR NEWS
May 1 2023



A town hall to bring awareness to anti-Armenian racism and other hate is set for Thursday, May 4, in Glendale.

The event, organized by the L.A. County Commission on Human Relations and the Truth And Accountability League (TAAL), seeks to foster a discussion on solutions to rising anti-Armenian incidents, along with other forms or hate against other minority groups in the county.

Moderated by TAAL’s founder & Chair, Vic Gerami, and live-streamed on various platforms, the event’s panel of elected officials and experts include the L.A. County Commission on Human Relations Executive Robin S. Toma, Esq., Glendale Mayor Daniel Brotman, Police Chief Manuel Cid, Chief of Staff Joseph F. Iniguez from the L.A. County District Attorney’s Office, State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan, and West Hollywood Mayor Sepi Shyne.

Rep. Judy Chu, D-Pasadena, will likely be the last panelist, organizers said Monday. Other elected officials, dignitaries, community leaders, and stakeholders are confirmed to attend.

The discussion follows a recent spate of incendiary incidents that have troubled local resident and leaders.

Last month, Glendale police began investigating as a possible hate crime fliers containing anti-Armenian sentiments. They were found posted on poles near St. Mary’s Armenian Apostolic Church in the city, sparking condemnation from city officials.

The fliers reportedly contained messages denying the Armenian genocide, while claiming that Israel “fully supports” its completion. According to reports, The fliers also referenced the ongoing blockade of the Nagorno-Karabakh region by Azerbaijan, which has become a humanitarian crisis.

The region is populated primarily by ethnic Armenians but lies within Azerbaijan. Last year, Azerbaijanis claiming to be environmental activists began blocking a winding road known as the Lachin Corridor that forms the only land connection between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

The blockade threatens food supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh’s 120,000 people. Armenia argues the protests are orchestrated by Azerbaijan and says the country also has repeatedly halted supplies of gas to the region — a claim Azerbaijan also rejected.

That spate of hate coincides with the finding late last year of plastic bags containing fliers with antisemitic messages that were left on driveways and in front of homes in San Marino and Pasadena at the start of the Jewish holiday Yom Kippur.

The incidents come amid a general rise in hate crimes in L.A. County.

Reported hate crimes in the rose to their highest level in 19 years in 2021, jumping 23% from the previous year, according to a report released in December by the county Commission on Human Relations.

According to the report, there were 786 reported hate crimes in the county last year, up from 641 the prior year. The number is the highest it has been since 2002.

The number of hate crimes targeting Asian residents rose to 77, the highest number in at least 20 years, according to the report. In roughly one-fourth of the crimes targeting Asians, the victims were blamed for the COVID-19 pandemic.

The report noted that 46% of racially based hate crimes targeted Black residents, although they only make up 9% of the overall population, and religion-based hate crimes jumped by 29%, with 74% of the offenses targeting Jews. Crimes based on sexual orientation jumped by 15% year over year, with 85% of those crimes targeting gay men.

The event is from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, May 4, at Glendale Central Library, 222 East Harvard St., Glendale.

The Associated Press and City News Service contributed to this article.

https://www.pasadenastarnews.com/2023/05/01/glendale-town-hall-seeks-solutions-to-rising-southern-california-hate-incidents/

ALSO PRINTED IN
https://www.presstelegram.com/2023/05/01/glendale-town-hall-seeks-solutions-to-rising-southern-california-hate-incidents/

TAAL Brings Elected Officials, Experts & Community Leaders Together to Discuss Anti-Armenian Racist Flyers in Beverly Hills and Glendale

 Gagrule.net
April 20 2023

‘It’s unfathomable that on the heels of the Armenian Genocide anniversary on April 24, Armenians are terrorized by flyers around schools and churches that call for the extermination of Armenians’ — Vic Gerami, Founder, TAAL

Los Angeles — Truth And Accountability League (TAAL), in partnership with the LA County Commission on Human Relations’ LA vs. Hate, will hold an in-person Town Hall, ‘Stand Hall to Hate,’ on Thursday, May 4, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. This free event with RSVP is open to the public and is being held at the Glendale Central Library, 222 East Harvard Street, Glendale, 91205. It will feature an open panel discussion with city officials, experts, and community leaders, including the Executive Director, L.A. County Commission on Human Relations Robin S. Toma, Esq., Glendale Mayor Daniel Brotman, Police Chief Manuel Cid, Chief of Staff Joseph F. Iniguez from the LA County District Attorney’s Office, and State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan. 

Moderated by TAAL’s founder & Chair, Vic Gerami, the goal of the meeting is to bring awareness, educate the public, and discuss solutions to the rising anti-Armenian racism, Armenophobia, and propaganda through questions and discussion with participants.

‘The recent anti-Armenian flyers posted around LA County, home to hundreds of thousands of Armenian-Americans, remind us that we must be vigilant about racism, hate acts, and propaganda. It’s unfathomable that on the heels of the Armenian Genocide anniversary, Armenians are terrorized by flyers around schools and churches that call for the extermination of Armenians,’ said Vic Gerami, founder of TAAL.  

He added, ‘But we mustn’t allow the hate of a few to create division, pin us against each other, and get us stuck in the problem. The Truth And Accountability League is focused on the solution. We want to bring together, not only members of the Armenian community, but everyone to create awareness, educate, and find answers. Our panel of leaders and experts will discuss ways to handle malice that aims to victimize, dehumanize, and diminish us. Hate acts affect everyone, regardless of ethnic background, race, religion, sexual orientation, or gender identity. TAAL’s Town Hall is a forum to empower everyone.’ 

The two-hour event is a part of TAAL’s comprehensive and integrated Community Outreach Campaign to address the rise in anti-Armenian hate crimes the last three years, including the anti-Armenian flyers posted in Glendale on March 31 and similar ones in Beverly Hills in January and that called for the massacre of Armenians. 

‘The Armenian American community is such an essential part of our L.A. County community, but the amount of discrimination and negative stereotyping they’ve experienced is too often understated because it is underreported,’ said Robin S. Toma, Executive Director of the L.A. County Commission on Human Relations. ‘I look forward to sharing the data we collect on acts of hate in our county, and most importantly, what we are doing with LA vs Hate to increase reporting and eradicate hate in all our cities and neighborhoods.’ 

‘Stand TAAL to Hate’ is a Town Hall to benefit every group that has experienced racism, been subject to hate crimes, and defamation, along with LA’s Armenian community, which has been a target of such acts more frequently in recent years. With its nearly 40% Armenian community, Glendale is the perfect crossroad for such an event.

Glendale Mayor Daniel Brotman said, ‘I am proud to be the Mayor of Glendale, a city rich with diversity, including one of the largest Armenian diaspora communities in the world. The Jewel City has zero tolerance for racism, hate acts, and defamation. I strongly condemn the recent anti-Armenian flyers and work with Glendale Police and community leaders to find the perpetrator.’

He continued, ‘I’m honored to be a panelist for the Truth And Accountability League’s Town Hall. I applaud Vic Gerami and his team for launching a community outreach campaign to create awareness, educate, and empower not only the residents of Glendale but all of LA County.’

We’ve also witnessed the former president of the LA City Council, Nury Martinez, make a racist statement about a colleague that was caught on tape. The prevalence of the problem led the Burbank Board of Education to revise its anti-racism statement and update the board policy to stand in solidarity with Armenians. 

‘I look forward to participating in the Truth and Accountability League Town Hall in May. Coming together to discuss hate, accountability, and transparency is a powerful act of solidarity and progress. This will be a great opportunity to educate our community on the efforts law enforcement is making to address these challenges, as well as to learn, share, and work together towards a more equitable future,’ said Manuel Cid, Chief of Police, Glendale Police Department.

The audience will have a chance to submit questions in writing before the start of the town hall. RSVP is required and can be sent through Eventbrite: TAALTownHall.Eventbrite.com

‘As district attorney of Los Angeles County, home to more than 200,000 Armenians, I’m immensely proud to represent the largest Armenian population in the United States and the greatest number outside of Armenia itself,’ District Attorney George Gascón said. “Our Armenian community makes tremendous academic, artistic, altruistic, and many other contributions to our region.’ 

He continued, ‘These hate-filled flyers that incite violence are abhorrent and must be condemned. My office takes hate crimes very seriously, filing 86 percent of the hate crime cases referred to us, far above the statewide average of 54 percent. I commend TAAL for becoming an antidote for the poison that is racism and holding this important Town Hall to promote equality and protect human rights.’

CA State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan, an Armenian-American, believes in tackling the problem head-on. He’s been a long-time community organizer and member of Mayor Karen Bass’ Transition Team.

‘It’s been shocking to see anti-Armenian flyers advocating Genocide against Armenians in Glendale and across LA County. We must all condemn this bigotry in the strongest terms. While our families and loved ones in Armenia and Artsakh are under assault by Azerbaijan, LA County’s Armenian community is being terrorized by hate, defamation, and propaganda,’ said State Commissioner Sam Kbushyan.

He added, ‘Vic Gerami and his team at the Truth And Accountability League have taken a proactive step in organizing a Town Hall in Glendale to create a safe place for the community to address this ongoing matter. I look forward to being on the panel and serving the greater LA community.’

Elected officials who would like to attend and have special requests and members of the media interested in interviews should contact Vic Gerami at 310.880.8563 (or) [email protected]. For additional information, visit TAAL’s website, TruthAndAccountabilityLeague.org.

Please click here for photos and see the attached invitation. 

About TAAL

TAAL is a 501©3 non-profit advocacy organization founded in 2020 due to a significant increase in anti-Armenian racism, defamation, hate crimes, and Armenophobia. We monitor and confront bias, disinformation, propaganda, and slander of the Armenian people and culture at the media level, including social media, academics, intelligentsia, and public policy.

Our Mission

To protect human rights, promote equality, combat racism where it appears and exists, stop the defamation and threats of violence against people of Armenian ethnicity, educate the community about racism, bias, and discrimination, achieve worldwide recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and end the crime of Genocide for all people across the world.

About the LA County Commission on Human Relations

The Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations is dedicated to promoting positive human relations in our richly diverse, multicultural county. The Commission works to develop programs that proactively address racism, homophobia, religious prejudice, linguistic bias, anti-immigrant sentiment, and other divisive attitudes that can lead to intercultural tension, hate crimes, and related violence. Partnering with law enforcement, schools, cities, community-based organizations, youth, academics, policy makers, businesses, and other leaders, the Commission brings key players together to resolve immediate intercultural conflicts and to work toward the longer term aim of eradicating bias and prejudice.

LA County’s Human Relations Commission has a legacy that dates back more than 75 years to shortly after the so-called “Zoot Suit Riots” displayed serious, long-standing human relations concerns. This incident, during which large numbers of mostly White young men in the military clashed with local young men of color for three days in the streets of LA, served as a wake-up call to county residents. In January, 1944, the County Board of Supervisors established a Committee for Interracial Progress. Two years later it was renamed the Committee for Human Relations. Following national recognition for its effective work to improve intergroup relations, the Committee became an official agency of County government in 1958 and was renamed the Los Angeles County Commission on Human Relations. The Commission is among the oldest and largest of its kind in the U.S.

Each County Supervisor appoints three Commissioners who serve multi-year terms. The 15-member Commission meets each month. A staff of professional and support personnel in the County’s Department of Workforce Development, Aging, and Community Services executes the Commission’s programmatic work. The Commission’s signature projects include the annual Hate Crime Report and the annual John Anson Ford Human Relations Awards which recognize exemplary practices and exceptional leadership in human relations work.

About Vic Gerami

Vic Gerami is an award-winning journalist and the editor + publisher of The Blunt Post. Gerami is also the host and co-producer of the national headline news + politics program, THE BLUNT POST with VIC on KPFK 90.7 FM (Pacifica Network). 

Most recently, Gerami wrote, directed, and produce the journalistic documentary feature film, ‘Motherland,’ about Azerbaijan’s, Turkey’s unprovoked genocidal attack on Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) in 2020 and the massacre of 5,000+ people, and the two nations’ ongoing campaign of hate, violence, and disinformation against the indigenous Armenians. Here is a sneak peek at the film’s 5-minute sizzle.

Today reaching national and international audiences, Gerami first built a foundation of knowledge and skills by learning the media industry during his years at Frontiers Magazine, followed by positions at LA Weekly and Voice Media Group

Gerami’s radio program, TBPV, covers national, regional, and local headline news, politics, and current events, and Gerami offers analysis and commentary. He also interviews a high-profile member of Congress or other high-profile public figures on each show. His recent guests include Congressman Adam Schiff, Senator Bob Menendez, Congresswoman Jackie Speier, Governor Howard Dean, Congresswoman Katie Porter, Congressman Brad Sherman, Congressman Mike Levin, Congresswoman Maxine Waters, Congresswoman Judy Chu, LA District Attorney George Gascon, among many others. You can listen to all the interviews here. 

Gerami is also a contributor to some of the most prominent publications in the nation, including Windy City Times, Bay Area Reporter, Armenian Mirror-Spectator, The Advocate, The Immigrant Magazine, GoWeHo, Destination Luxury, OUT Traveler, The Fight, and among others.

The Wall Street Journal featured Gerami as a “leading gay activist” in its landmark 2008 coverage of opposition to Proposition 8, the ballot measure that for years denied same-sex couples in California the freedom to marry. In addition to his years of volunteer work as a leading advocate for marriage equality, Gerami served as a Planning Committee member for the historic Resist March in 2017. 

In 2015, Gerami was referenced in the landmark Supreme Court civil rights case, Obergefell v. Hodges, in which the Court held in a 5–4 decision that the fundamental right to marry is guaranteed to same-sex couples by both the Due Process and the Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

https://gagrule.net/truth-and-accountability-league-taal-brings-elected-officials-experts-and-community-leaders-together-to-discuss-anti-armenian-racist-flyers-in-beverly-hills-and-glendale/

Armenpress: ‘Durable peace is possible’ between Armenia and Azerbaijan, says Washington

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 10:12,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. The United States believes that the talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan are an important step forward, State Department Principal Deputy Spokesperson Vedant Patel said at a press briefing on May 15 when asked on the Brussels-hosted summit.

“Obviously, the U.S. was not a party to these talks.  But as a follow-on to the talks that we hosted in Arlington, we continue to believe that these are important steps forward as we continue to find that a durable peace is possible between these two countries,” Patel said.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev held trilateral talks together with the President of the European Council Charles Michel on May 14 in Brussels.

In early May, Armenia and Azerbaijan also held U.S.-mediated foreign ministerial talks in Arlington.

EU continues engagement towards lasting peace and security in the South Caucasus – Josep Borrell

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 11:45,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice-President of the European Commission Josep Borrell has met with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov in Brussels.

In a tweet, Borrell said he welcomed the resumption of the trilateral meetings between Armenia and Azerbaijan hosted by President of the European Council Charles Michel.

“Good exchange with FM Jeyhun Bayramov. Welcomed resumption of trilateral meetings hosted by President of the European Council, discussed its outcomes & way forward and exchanged views on EU-Azerbaijan relations. The EU continues engagement towards lasting peace and security in the South Caucasus,” Borrell tweeted.

Scientist’s invention gets Armenia inducted into IFIA

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 14:05,

YEREVAN, MAY 15, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has become a member of IFIA – the International Federation of Inventors’ Associations – thanks to an invention by a scientist at the National University of Architecture and Construction.

The invention, officially called “Fasteners for Steel Reinforcements”, was awarded the silver medal and a certificate at the 13th International Expo-Competition of Middle East Inventions in Kuwait held in February this year.

The author of the invention is Professor Vardges Grigoryan, Head of the Department of Construction Industry Technology and Organization at the National University of Architecture and Construction. The application to IFIA was submitted by the National University of Architecture and Construction.




Deputy FM responds to EU ambassador’s remarks

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 13:16,

YEREVAN, MAY 15, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Foreign Minister Paruyr Hovhannisyan said on May 15 that it is unclear for him what the EU Ambassador meant by saying that “there are one or two spots where Armenian forces are in border region”.

During the May 15 press conference on Europe Day and the EU-Armenia relations, when asked on the Pashinyan-Aliyev-Michel talks in Brussels, the Head of the EU Delegation to Armenia Ambassador Andrea Wiktorin said: “…naturally it is our hope that both sides withdraw their troops and that everybody is then really going into the work of delimitation and demarcation.”

When asked to clarify what she means by saying “both sides withdraw their troops”, the EU Ambassador said: “It is stated that there are one or two spots where also Armenian forces are, let’s say, in the border region. And you need to have clear delimitation and demarcation. This was the general wording used in Brussels.”

Asked to elaborate, the Deputy FM also addressed the issue.

“It is unclear for me also what the remarks are about. But perhaps it’s about the first war in Nagorno Karabakh. Perhaps it should be viewed from that perspective. But I also find it difficult to say what it was about,” he said.

Hovhannisyan said that perhaps it is an accepted format to always address both sides. “But it is obvious here for everyone that in this period it is about the withdrawal of troops from the territory of Armenia, this has been addressed by the EU, the US and other partners,” Hovhannisyan said, referring to multiple calls made by the international community to Azerbaijan to pull back its troops from sovereign territory of Armenia.

During the press conference the EU ambassador had also mentioned that the issue of the rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh was also discussed at the EU summit.

She said that this implies additional steps as well.

Wiktorin noted that there is an understanding that some kind of an international mechanism is needed for this, and work must be done to develop it and agree it will all parties.

After the April 11 deadly Azeri attack on Armenian troops near the village of Tegh, the EU called for the 1991 line to be respected the forces of either side withdrawn to safe distances.