Armenia continues to insist on visible international mechanisms for direct talks between Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan

Save

Share

 12:55, 2 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 2, ARMENPRESS. Armenia continues to insist on mechanisms for Stepanakert-Baku dialogue, Member of Parliament Arman Yeghoyan (Civil Contract) told reporters.

Asked whether Armenia would be ready to sign any document with Azerbaijan when the Azeri troops are located in sovereign territory of Armenia, Yeghoyan said that this is one of the most important points in the talks. He said that the withdrawal of the Azeri troops from sovereign territory of Armenia is among the terms of Armenia.

“We believe that no agreement can function without a strong international system of guarantees. This is the minimum bar that we must ensure. There must be some international guarantees, without it the treaty won’t function effectively,” Yeghoyan said.

The lawmaker added that Armenia will continue to insist on visible mechanisms for the Stepanakert-Baku dialogue.

Yeghoyan noted that the rhetoric of the international community has changed significantly, becoming better, more targeted and substantial for Armenia.

Speaking about the duration of the talks in Washington D.C., Yeghoyan said that the content is very voluminous and substantial, thus the long duration.

Asked whether or not a document could be signed after the talks in Washington D.C., Yeghoyan said that would depend on the course of the talks.

Armenia’s permanent population is 2,928,914, according to new census

Save

Share

 13:58, 2 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 2, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s permanent population is 2,928,914, according to the 2022 census conducted in October.

The preliminary results of the census were released earlier this week.

“The number of the permanent population includes the sum of the numbers of the population permanently (usually) residing in RA and present at the time of enumeration and temporarily absent at the time of enumeration. The number of temporary absences includes persons permanently (usually) residing in RA, but absent from RA for a period of up to one year at the time of the census,” the Statistical Committee said in a press release on the preliminary data.

The current population, according to the census, is 2,638,917. This number “includes the sum of the number of the population permanently (usually) residing in RA and present at the time of enumeration and temporarily present at the time of enumeration. The number of temporary presents includes persons who are in RA for no more than one year at the time of the census and persons who do not live permanently in RA.”

Armenian authorities conducted census twice before, in 2001 and 2011.

In 2001, the permanent population and current population stood at 3,213,011 and 3,002,598 respectively.

In 2011, the permanent population was 3,018,854, while the current population was 2,871,771.

Armenpress: FM Mirzoyan, Blinken discuss Armenia-Azerbaijan normalization process, regional security

Save

Share

 19:43, 1 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 1, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken discussed regional security and the Armenia-Azerbaijan normalization process during their meeting in Washington D.C. before the trilateral talks, foreign ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan said in a readout.

Badalyan said in a tweet that FM Mirzoyan and Secretary Blinken discussed “issues related to regional stability & security, process of normalization of relations between Armenia & Azerbaijan.”

“Humanitarian situation resulting from illegal blockade of Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan was touched upon,” the spokesperson added.

A trilateral meeting between Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov is currently underway in Washington D.C.

Asbarez: Recovered Testimony Brings Light, More Questions, to an Armenian Family

Mary Antekelian, center, with daughter-in-law Sirvard, son Levon, and grandsons Hovannes and Andranik, the author’s father


BY SEDDA ANTEKELIAN
From the USC Shoah Foundation

Over the past month, for the first time, I listened to the testimony of my late great-grandmother, Mary Antekelian, a survivor of the Armenian Genocide. The interview is an audio recording, but I could picture the conversation as if I were in the room – my grandma, Sirvard Antekelian, sitting by her mother-in-law’s side, interjecting throughout the oral history interview to make sure that Mary, then around 81, answered questions clearly and with historical accuracy.

I did not know until a few months ago that my great-grandmother had recorded testimony as part of the Richard G. Hovannisian Oral History Collection, which consists of more than 1,000 audio interviews of Armenian Genocide survivors, recorded under the direction of the esteemed UCLA professor starting in the 1970s. Mary Antekelian recorded her testimony on February 17, 1985. She passed away on August 1, 1986, just a little more than a year before I was born.

USC Shoah Foundation added the Hovannisian Collection to its Visual History Archive in 2018 and has since been working to digitize and index the testimonies. Upon learning that my great grandmother’s testimony had become available, I could not wait to listen to her story and hear her voice for the first time. And, adding to my surprise, I could also hear the voice of my Grandma, Sirvard, which I had not heard since her passing in 2008.

The way in which Mary spoke and the dialogue between her and Grandma were so familiar to me. In fact, over and over while I listened to the testimony, many of my questions were preempted by my Grandma’s demands for clarification. It was as if she could hear the questions that I would also ask 40 years later. My Grandma and I were very close, and I think I owe my deep interest in studying and teaching about my Armenian heritage, in part, to her.

It was following in Grandma’s footsteps that I was called into the field of education. In my role as Learning and Development Specialist at USC Shoah Foundation, I develop educational resources and facilitate workshops for teachers worldwide, presenting effective strategies for how to teach with testimony to help students understand the history of the Armenian Genocide from various perspectives.

I am also a doctoral candidate of USC Rossier’s Global Executive Doctor of Education program. With the knowledge and experience I have gained, I hope to continue to deepen my contribution to the field of genocide education.

Yet, even with my full immersion in Armenian history, I have never known much about my own family’s history, especially on my father’s side, though I have always been eager to learn more. After listening to my great-grandmother’s 90-minute testimony, recorded in Armenian, I came away with both more information and more questions than before.

Born in about 1904 in the town of Gaziantep, Turkey (at that time in the Ottoman Empire), Mary Belamjian was the second eldest child of six, born into a loving family.

Mary Antekelian with her husband Yeghia and her first cousins, Levon and Avetis Belamjian

Her testimony revealed that her father, whom she described as pious and gentle, was a tailor specializing in the production of intricate textiles and garments who had converted the family from the Armenian Apostolic faith to Catholicism. I was raised following the traditions of both the Armenian Apostolic Church and the Protestant Church, and had not known until now that Catholicism had played a part in my family’s history. I also learned that the Ottomans shut down the French Catholic school Mary attended as the First World War began in 1914.

At the beginning of 1915, Armenian men who served in the Ottoman army were disarmed and forced to work hard labor under brutal and unbearable conditions. Mary’s father was one of them. In her testimony, she shares that after a few weeks he managed to escape and then spent several months evading capture as he traveled back home to his family.

While Mary’s father had been away, official orders from the leading Ottoman Young Turk government Committee of Union and Progress called for the deportations of Armenians starting in the eastern Ottoman provinces by the spring of 1915 and then extending to regions across Anatolia and Cilicia—which included Gaziantep—by that summer.

In 1914 about 30,000 Armenians—some 4,000 families—lived in Gaziantep. From the testimony, I gathered that Mary’s mother was able to secure her family an exemption from the deportations, possibly because as tailors they could contribute to the war effort by committing to sew military uniforms. When Mary’s father returned, close to a year after he was drafted into the Ottoman Army, he stayed in hiding in the house helping the family sew uniforms.

Mary shares that only a few other local Armenian families were also spared, as their skills and craftsmanship were deemed useful to the government. However, thousands were violently sent away in several waves of deportations to either the deserts of Dayr-al-Zawr, the region of Hama, Homs and Selimiye or the Jebel Druz region, in southern Syria and areas of present-day Jordan. Mary remembers that only a few Armenians returned to Gaziantep after the war.

Out of an estimated population of close to 2 million Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1914, around 1.5 million Armenians were killed during the Genocide, mostly in 1915 and 1916 but continuing even after. Today, Armenians make up a small percentage of Turkey’s minority population.

Mary expresses heartache reflecting on the loss of other family members and neighbors. I had assumed Mary had been orphaned during the Genocide, so I was shocked and heartened to hear that her parents and siblings survived.

While listening to her testimony, it was also endearing to learn the story of how Mary and my great grandfather, Yeghia Antekelian, became engaged. Initially, when Yeghia’s family had asked Mary’s father for her hand, he had refused, since Mary was only 16. However, Yeghia continued to show up for months at their home every day until, exasperated and worn down, Mary’s father agreed to let them marry.

They were engaged in 1920, but a new war broke out in Gaziantep between Turkish Nationalists and the French Army who occupied the region. The Armenian community, including Mary and Yeghia’s families, were forced out of the region during the Siege of Aintab (Antep). The couple finally reunited and wed in Aleppo, Syria, in 1921. Shortly after, they moved to Alexandria, Egypt, where their sons Levon (my Grandpa) and Gevork were born in 1928 and 1938. In 1948, many Armenians, including Yeghia and Mary, repatriated to Armenia, which was then a part of the Soviet Union.

Levon Antekelian married Sirvard Danayan in 1956. They had two sons, my father, Andranik and his brother, Hovannes. Levon and Sirvard and their sons immigrated to Los Angeles in 1976, with Mary following in 1981 with her son Gevork and his family.

Though my Grandma and Grandpa have both passed away, they left behind a treasure trove of family photos.

On a recent Sunday evening, I visited my Uncle Hovik, hoping to rummage through these old photographs. I walked into his house to find that he, my aunt and my cousins already had the albums stacked on the dining room table and photos piled all around them.

I joined the expedition into family history. We passed around photos, laughing at familiar faces from a different era, and wondered at faces no one could name. My uncle and aunt shared memories about the photos—funny, sad, and heartwarming stories that my cousins and I had never heard.

Mary and her eldest grandchild, Andranik, the author’s father

Around that dining room table, I asked my uncle if he was ready to listen to some of the testimony. Yes, he said, he was. As I played a clip from my laptop—voices recorded nearly 40 years ago about events that occurred more than 100 years ago—I watched this man, who has the biggest heart, transported back in time, just as I had been.

More than a century after the Genocide, Armenian families still live with its reverberations. We inherited trauma, we inherited fear, we inherited a sense of indignity that our trauma was not recognized or honored.

But we also inherited a passionate and deep commitment to our culture, to our history, to remembrance, and to family.

Sedda Antekelian is USC Shoah Foundation’s Education and Outreach Specialist, Armenian Genocide. She is a fourth-generation survivor of the genocide.




WATCH: Asbarez Interview with L.A. City Councilmember Soto-Martinez

[Watch the video]

Los Angeles City Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martinez sat down for an interview last week with Asbarez Editor Ara Khachatourian.

Soto-Martinez, who represents the 13th Council District, was elected in November.

During the short time that he has served on the City Council, Soto-Martinez has joined Council President Paul Krekorian in advancing a motion to condemn Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh and call on Baku to immediately open the Lachin Corridor.

Reflecting on the situation in Artsakh, Soto-Martinez said that his life-long advocacy for human rights prompted him to advance the measure and believes that preserving human rights and the Armenians right to self-determination in Artsakh must be advanced on local, state and federal levels.

Engaging and empowering the Armenian constituents in CD 13 is part of his broader agenda of ensuring participation by all residents in the political process, Soto-Martinez told Khachatourian.

To that end, his priorities have been to address the homelessness situation, which Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass declared a state of emergency upon assuming office. Soto-Martinez said that he and his office are working closely with the mayor to ensure that her plan of action is applied to CD 13. These include providing mental health care as well drug counseling to the unhoused.

Soto-Martinez said that he is also tackling the issue of affordable housing in the district and explained the steps he has taken to ensure that the district has a say in future city development plans and projects.


Schiff Spearheads Opposition to U.S. Rifle Sale to Azerbaijan


Leads 17 Representatives in sending Congressional letter calling on Commerce Secretary Raimondo to Block Export License

WASHINGTON—Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA) was joined by 17 U.S. Representatives in calling on the Biden Administration’s Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo to block a proposed license allowing the sale of high-powered American-made rifles to Azerbaijan, an exercise of legislative oversight strongly backed by the Armenian National Committee of America.

The Schiff letter follows a similar letter sent last month by U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez (D-NJ), and an earlier ANCA letter sent in February of this year.

“We want to thank Representative Schiff and all who joined him in demanding long overdue answers from Secretary Raimondo to multiple Congressional inquiries and our own still-unanswered letter of February 13th of this year,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “Secretary Raimondo needs to get out in front of this escalating controversy by publicly announcing that any proposal to arm Azerbaijan is dead-on-arrival. Period. Full stop.”

The Schiff letter poses seven key questions to Secretary Raimondo, who previously served as Governor of Rhode Island:

  1. Can you please confirm whether the Department of Commerce has received a request for an export license for lethal weapons to Azerbaijan?
  2. If so, who is the intended recipient and what is the stated purpose of the weapons?
  3. Has the Department of Commerce made a final decision on the license request? If no, when does it anticipate doing so?
  4. Has the Department of State been consulted yet as part of this process, including the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor? Have reports from outside experts such as the International Crisis Group and Human Rights Watch been considered as part of the process?
  5. Does the State Department concur with granting an export license?
  6. How would it be possible to guarantee that U.S. weapons will not be used in the commission of war crimes, violations of human rights, or actions that will trigger full-scale war affecting the people of Artsakh and Armenia? And if it is not possible, how can the provision of such weapons be justified?
  7. Have you provided a response to the Armenian National Committee of America’s February 13 letter? Will you commit to providing a response to this group?

Joining Rep. Schiff in co-signing this letter were Representatives Tony Cardenas (D-CA), David Cicilline (D-RI), Jim Costa (D-CA), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), Barbara Lee (D-CA), Seth Magaziner (D-RI), James McGovern (D-MA), Grace Meng (D-NY), Donald Norcross (D-NJ), Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC), Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Katie Porter (D-CA), Abigail Spanberger (D-VA), Haley Stevens (D-MI), Eric Swalwell (D-CA), and Rashida Tlaib (D-MI).

News of a possible sale of U.S. rifles – including assault-style and semi-automatic sniper models – to Azerbaijan first broke on February 1st when Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair Robert Menendez (D-NJ) announced his “deep concern and strong opposition” to the proposed sale. “The export of weapons to an authoritarian country that wages war against a neighbor, blockades a vulnerable population, and commits rampant human rights violations at home is not consistent with the Administration’s commitment to democracy and human rights,” Sen. Menendez stated in a letter to Secretary Raimondo. “Further, the consideration of this export license further compounds my dismay that the Administration continues to allow the export of assault-style and sniper rifles abroad – even while supporting an assault-style rifle ban domestically – and deepens my reservations about the Department of Commerce having jurisdiction over such exports,” concluded Senator Menendez.

ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian and the local ANC chair from Secretary Raimondo’s home state of Rhode Island, Steve Elmasian, expressed similar concerns in a February 13th letter to Secretary Raimondo. “As you know, from your long friendship with Americans of Armenian heritage in Rhode Island and across the United States, our community is deeply troubled by the U.S. military aid program to Baku, and even more shocked by the possibility that American offensive weaponry may be deployed against Armenians in Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) and Armenia. The victims of Azerbaijan’s attacks are, very often, the relatives and friends of Armenian American citizens,” stated Hamparian and Elmasian.

The complete text of Schiff’s letter is presented below.

April 25, 2023

The Honorable Gina M. Raimondo
Secretary of Commerce
U.S. Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Ave NW
Washington, DC 20230

Dear Secretary Raimondo:

We are at a pivotal point concerning the security of the South Caucasus and the safety of the people of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh). For more than 125 days — since December 12, 2022 — Azerbaijan has imposed a blockade of the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Artsakh to the outside world. The effect has been devastating to the population, rendering 120,000 individuals without access to food, medical supplies, consistent gas and electricity, and essential human rights such as freedom of movement. Despite an International Court of Justice ruling that ordered Azerbaijan to “take all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions,” Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev refuses to lift the blockade and told press those obstructing the road are “a source of pride.” Azerbaijan is once again weaponizing basic human necessities to further degrade already strained living conditions for the people of Artsakh and force concessions from Armenia.

We are also increasingly concerned about the possibility of renewed military action by Azerbaijan, including the threat of ethnic cleansing in Artsakh and war against Armenia, something that would be utterly catastrophic for the Armenian people and the region. On April 11, 2023, Azerbaijani armed forces opened fire on Armenian soldiers carrying out engineering works in the Tegh Community of Armenia, killing four Armenian soldiers and wounding six more. On March 26, Azerbaijani troops cut off a dirt road some Armenians had used to get around the blockade, prompting the Russian ministry of defense to announce that Azerbaijani units had “crossed the line of contact” in violation of the 2020 ceasefire statement. On March 5, Azerbaijani troops attacked a Nagorno-Karabakh police car, killing three officers. President Aliyev is using ever more threatening rhetoric. In a January interview, speaking on Azerbaijan’s prior use of military force, Aliyev said, “Because last year, since March, we have shown three times that no one can withstand us and we will achieve what we want.”

Given these circumstances, it was alarming to hear in recent conversations with leaders from the Armenian and Artsakh diaspora that the U.S. government may be considering granting export licenses for the shipment of lethal weapons such as sniper rifles to Azerbaijan. We strongly oppose this and urge you to unequivocally deny any such requests, which would exacerbate the precarious security and humanitarian situation in Artsakh and leave blood on the United States’ hands. Such a move would also be contrary to the Biden Administration’s stated values on protecting human rights and policies such as the United States Conventional Arms Transfer Policy outlined in a February 23 memorandum. The February memorandum recognizes, “United States national security is strengthened by greater respect worldwide for human rights and international law, including international humanitarian law.” We could not agree more. We cannot speak out for human rights while approving the provision of U.S. weapons that can be used to further Azerbaijan’s war and commission of war crimes.

It is clear from U.S. government reporting that weapons in the hands of Azerbaijan’s security forces are likely to contribute to the commission of human rights violations. The State Department’s Human Rights Report on Azerbaijan documents a pattern of significant human rights abuses committed by Azerbaijan’s security forces, including “credible reports of unlawful killings involving summary executions of Armenian soldiers in Azerbaijani custody,” torture, and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment in 2022. The report states that “impunity remained a problem” and the government failed to prosecute or punish “the majority” of officials responsible for human rights abuses. It further states the Azerbaijani government took no action on the Council of Europe’s Committee for the Prevention of Torture reports, which “stated that torture and other forms of physical mistreatment by police and other law enforcement agencies, corruption in the entire law enforcement system, and impunity remained systemic and endemic.”

In addition to our deep concern for the humanitarian and moral implications of sending U.S. weapons to security forces known for “systemic” problems with impunity and the commission of war crimes, we have serious concerns over the global security impacts. An unclassified Office of the Director of the National Intelligence (ODNI) report dated October 2022 states, “In the South Caucasus region, Azerbaijan is the country most likely to renew large-scale conflict in an effort to consolidate and expand the gains it won in its 2020 military action against Armenia over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.” The report references the September 2022 fighting in which Azerbaijan attacked Armenia, reaching as far as 25 miles into sovereign Armenian territory. Azerbaijani soldiers continue to maintain positions within Armenia’s internationally recognized borders. With respect to sniper rifles in particular, there is a history of Azerbaijani snipers firing into Armenian territory in violation of past ceasefire agreements. Indeed, International Crisis Group previously recommended the “withdrawal of snipers from the line of contact” to reduce the risk of all-out war.9 The United States must not fuel conflict by approving the export of more lethal weapons such as sniper rifles.

We have urged the Administration to make clear to President Aliyev that further attacks on Armenia and Artsakh will result in sanctions and other measures, and have regularly called for security assistance to Azerbaijan to be immediately ceased pursuant to Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act. We request your response to the following questions:

  1. Can you please confirm whether the Department of Commerce has received a request for an export license for lethal weapons to Azerbaijan?
  2. If so, who is the intended recipient and what is the stated purpose of the weapons?
  3. Has the Department of Commerce made a final decision on the license request? If no, when does it anticipate doing so?
  4. Has the Department of State been consulted yet as part of this process, including the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor? Have reports from outside experts such as International Crisis Group and Human Rights Watch been considered as part of the process?
  5. Does the State Department concur with granting an export license?
  6. How would it be possible to guarantee that U.S. weapons will not be used in the commission of war crimes, violations of human rights, or actions that will trigger full-scale war affecting the people of Artsakh and Armenia? And if it is not possible, how can the provision of such weapons be justified?
  7. Have you provided a response to the Armenian National Committee of America’s February 13 letter? Will you commit to providing a response to this group?

It is vital that we take every opportunity to assert strong U.S. leadership to promote peace in the South Caucasus and the protection of the human rights of the people of Armenia and Artsakh. We look forward to receiving your prompt response on this important matter.

Sincerely,


Asbarez: Blinken Hosts Mirzoyan and Bayramov Talks in Washington

Secretary of State Antony Blinken hosted the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington on May 1


Before Meeting, Blinken Expresses U.S. Concern to Aliyev about Lachin Checkpoint

Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Monday hosted a meeting between the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov in Washington, where normalization of relations between the two countries was discussed.

According to Armenia’s foreign ministry, the humanitarian situation resulting from the Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin Corridor was discussed, as was the regional security situation.

In its statement issued after the meeting, Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry only mentioned the discussion about regional security issues and normalization of relations with Armenia.

During a telephone conversation on Sunday with President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, Blinken expressed the United States’ “deep concern” over Baku’s decision to establish a checkpoint at the Lachin Corridor.

“Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken spoke with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev today to underscore the importance of Azerbaijan-Armenia peace discussions and pledged continued U.S. support.  Secretary Blinken shared his belief that peace was possible,” said a statement issued by the State Department.

“He also expressed the United States’ deep concern that Azerbaijan’s establishment of a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor undermines efforts to establish confidence in the peace process, and emphasized the importance of reopening the Lachin corridor to commercial and private vehicles as soon as possible,” added the State Department readout of the call.

Blinken also held a telephone conversation on Saturday with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and underscored “the importance of Armenia-Azerbaijan peace discussions and pledged continued U.S. support,” according to a State Department readout of the call.

“Secretary Blinken reiterated that direct dialogue and diplomacy are the only path to a durable peace in the South Caucasus. He expressed his appreciation for the Prime Minister’s continued commitment to the peace process,” a State Department statement added.

According to the prime minister’s press service, Pashinyan emphasized to Blinken that Azerbaijan’s actions in the Lachin Corridor are in line with Baku’s policy of ethnic cleansing in Karabakh and the complete eviction of of Armenians from Artsakh.

“The Prime Minister emphasized the importance of the adequate response of the international community to Azerbaijan’s actions, which undermine regional security, and taking active steps towards the unconditional implementation of the judgment of the International Court of Justice,” Pashinyan’s office said.

Earlier on Monday, Blinken held separate talks with Mirzoyan and Bayramov.

Armenia’s foreign ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan said in a social media post that Blinken and Mirzoyan “issues related to regional stability & security, process of normalization of relations between Armenia & Azerbaijan. Humanitarian situation resulting from illegal blockade of Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan was touched upon.”

Last week Armenia and Russia confirmed that a meeting between Mirzoyan and Bayramov would take place in Moscow in the near future, without specifying a date.

Evidently, the Blinken-mediated meeting, which was announced on Friday, preceded the Moscow talks as Russia has stepped up its insistence that the U.S. and the European Union are muscling their way into areas under Moscow’s purview.

Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova declared on Thursday that given the agreement to hold talks in Moscow the attempts by the United States and the European Union, particularly France, to play an “honest mediator” role have failed.

“The attempts of the French and American partners to convince everyone that they are guided solely by the interests of achieving peace in the South Caucasus can be dismissed by their periodic anti-Russian attacks,” said Zakharova.

“Such announcements do not attest to constructive efforts or their claim of being an honest mediator. Such expressions strengthen our sentiments that the real aspirations of Washington and Paris are politicized, and are aimed at undermining Russia’s positions. Caring about the fate of the people living in the region is clearly not included in their plans,” Zakharova added.

AW: Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region announces 17th annual gala

WATERTOWN, Mass. – The Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region (ANCA-ER) is pleased to announce that its 17th annual ANCA Eastern Region Gala will take place on Saturday, October 7, 2023, at the Royal Sonesta Boston Hotel located at 40 Edwin Land Boulevard, Cambridge, MA.

Hosted by the ANC of Eastern Massachusetts, the evening will feature a cocktail reception, seated dinner, silent auction and an awards program. The region will present the ANCA Eastern Region Freedom Award and ANCA Eastern Region Vahan Cardashian Award to individuals whose work advances the Armenian Cause.

“Mark your calendars for the 17th annual ANCA Eastern Region Gala in Boston this fall. Our gala committee is in the early planning phases and will be announcing more information in the coming weeks. We hope that our activists and supporters throughout the eastern region will attend and support our annual fundraising event and join us to mark the contributions we have all made to Hai Tahd this year with our focus on Artsakh advocacy,” said Steve Mesrobian, ANCA-ER board member.

The Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region is part of the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots organization, the ANCA. Working in coordination with the ANCA in Washington, DC, and a network of chapters and supporters throughout the Eastern United States, the ANCA-ER actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


St. Illuminator’s hosts Emma Grigoryan art exhibition

NEW YORK, NY—On Sunday, April 16, St. Illuminator’s Armenian Apostolic Cathedral held the opening reception for a retrospective art exhibition featuring the paintings of the talented Armenian artist Emma Grigoryan, installed in Pashalian Hall.

 After opening remarks by Rev. Fr. Mesrob Lakissian,  Anahit Hovhannisyan introduced the artist, who expressed her gratitude to the many people who helped shape her life and inspire her art, and her appreciation to St. Illuminator’s for hosting the exhibition. 

Grigoryan was born and raised in Gyumri, Armenia. She attended the famed Panos Terlemezian Art School in Yerevan and graduated from the Yerevan Fine Arts and Theater Institute. She became a member of the Union of Fine Artists of Armenia in 1971. Grigoryan has lived in New York City for the past three decades, where she created much of her striking, colorful and imaginative artistic output in the tradition of the finest painters Armenia has ever produced. Her paintings have been exhibited in collective and individual shows in different countries, including the US, Moscow, Canada, Belgium, Lebanon, Iraq and Armenia. 

The reception was attended by art lovers and guests, who enjoyed Grigoryan’s paintings and the hospitality provided by the exhibition committee. 

The exhibition is on view every day until Monday, May 15. Many of the works on display are available for purchase with part of the proceeds benefiting the cultural programs of St. Illuminator’s. Those interested in purchasing Grigoryan’s works are invited to inquire with the Cathedral office.  

Emma Grigoryan art exhibition at St. Illuminator’s

RI Senate unanimously passes Armenian Genocide resolution

Armenian flag flying over the RI State House on April 24, 2023

PROVIDENCE, R.I.—The Armenian tricolor proudly flew over the Rhode Island State House on April 24 and 25, as well as in the RI Senate on Tuesday, as the Armenian Genocide resolution (No. 937) was introduced by a grandchild of survivors.

Senator David P. Tikoian (Smithfield, North Providence and Lincoln) began his remarks on the Senate floor by expressing sincere gratitude to Senate President Pro Tempore Hanna Gallo of Cranston. Senate President Gallo, a longtime supporter of the Armenian community and cause, encouraged Tikoian to sponsor and introduce the resolution this year, taking over a role she has had for many years. The late Senator Maryellen Goodwin, a Smith Hill native who passed away last week, played a major role for many years, along with Senator Gallo.

Reading of the Armenian Genocide resolution with Senate Pres. Pro Tempore Hanna Gallo looking on

Senator Tikoian spoke to his fellow senators after the reading of the resolution about its importance to him as a descendant of orphans of the Genocide, Garabed Topalian and Tarviz Mesrobian. “It is because of their survival that I stand before you today,” Tikoian said. He explained the importance of recognizing the Armenian Genocide each year, making the connection between the events of World War I and the Holocaust during World War II.

“It is only through learning and remembering past atrocities, as we are doing here today, that we work towards their prevention and become a more humane society,” Tikoian stressed, recalling the Senate’s passage on March 30 of a resolution designating April as Holocaust and Genocide Awareness Month, which he cosponsored with Senator Josh Miller.

Senator David Tikoian speaking about the importance of the Armenian Genocide resolution

“Passed by the entire Senate,” stated Senate President Gallo as every senator on the floor stood for passage of the resolution.

Sen. Thomas Paolino (l.) with Sen. Tikoian

Senator Leonidas Raptakis (Coventry) of Greek descent and Senator Thomas Paolino, who represents parts of Lincoln, North Providence and North Smithfield, spoke in support of the resolution. Senator Paolino noted that he was proud to support this legislation in honor of his late grandmother, who was Armenian.

Senator Leonidas Raptakis speaking in support of the resolution

The Rhode Island Armenian community is grateful for the Senate’s passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, following last week’s passage of the resolution introduced in the RI House by Rep. Katherine Kazarian (East Providence). Rep. Kazarian follows in the footsteps of longtime supporter Deputy Majority Leader Rep. Arthur Corvese (North Providence).

Community members with Sen. Tikoian (back center), including (l. to r. In front) his aunts Margaret Moorachian and Carol Mesrobian and his mother Ann Tikoian.

Stephen Elmasian is the co-chair of ANC-RI. He recently retired as the fiscal manager for the RI Secretary of State.