Azeri government tells fake eco-activists to stop ‘protest’ because now they have checkpoint in Lachin Corridor

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 17:04,

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, ARMENPRESS. The fake Azeri eco-activists who have been blocking the Lachin Corridor since December 12, 2022 under made up environmental pretexts announced Friday that they will end their ‘protest’ at 18:00, April 28, according to the Azerbaijani Azertag news agency.

They were told to stop their demonstration by the Azeri government.

The Azerbaijani presidential envoy in Shushi, Aydin Kerimov, met with representatives of the so-called eco-activists and told them that there is a new situation with the Azerbaijani checkpoint in the Lachin Corridor, and they were offered to stop their activities.

Armenia and Azerbaijan to hold peace settlement talks in Washington on Sunday

Reuters

Armenia-Azerbaijan border dispute

MOSCOW, April 29 (Reuters) – Armenia and Azerbaijan will hold a new round of talks in Washington on Sunday to try to normalise relations, Yerevan said on Saturday, after weeks of rising tensions over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Armed forces from the two Caucasus neighbours have frequently exchanged fire amid disputes over the mountain enclave, which is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but populated mainly by ethnic Armenians.

Azerbaijan set up a new checkpoint last Sunday on the Lachin corridor, a road to Karabakh that passes through Azeri territory, in a move that Armenia that called a gross violation of a 2020 ceasefire.

"From April 30 Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan will be in Washington DC on a working visit. The next round of discussions on the agreement on normalisation of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan is scheduled," the spokesperson, Ani Badalyan, said on her official Facebook page.

There was no immediate confirmation of the meeting by Azerbaijan.

Later on Saturday, the Armenian defence ministry said one of its soldiers had been injured by shot fired by Azeri forces near the village of Tegh in Armenia's southern Syunik province, Tass news agency said.

Tegh is the last village on the Lachin Corridor in Armenia before it enters Azeri territory.

Russian peacekeepers were deployed in 2020 to end a war, the second that Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought over the enclave since the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union.

Despite years of attempted mediation between them, Armenia and Azerbaijan have yet to reach a peace agreement that would settle outstanding issues such as the demarcation of borders and return of prisoners.

Reporting by Reuters Editing by Alexandra Hudson

Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict: Accepted India’s advice! Armenia and Azerbaijan will stop the bloody conflict!

Armenia-Azerbaijan border dispute

Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict: Armenia and Azerbaijan Tension is rising again on the border between This tension is regarding the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. Now both the countries are trying to normalize their relations. Armenia’s Foreign Ministry spokesman has said that Armenia and Azerbaijan will hold a new round of talks tomorrow in the US capital Washington. The great thing is that last year India had advised both the countries to negotiate a solution to the military conflict.

Russian troops were deployed in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region in the year 2020 to end the war. The region is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but is predominantly populated by Armenians.

Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan wrote on Facebook, “From April 30, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan will be in Washington DC. Here the next round of meeting will be held to improve relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. However, this meeting was not immediately confirmed by Azerbaijan.

Mediation efforts have been going on between Armenia and Azerbaijan for many years, but the two countries have not reached any peace agreement yet. Issues like demarcation of borders and return of prisoners are major causes of disputes between the two countries. Azerbaijan set up a new post on the Karabakh-Lachin corridor road last Sunday, which Armenia has called a violation of the 2020 ceasefire.

Also read- PM Modi’s Mann Ki Baat will be telecast live in UN as well

Let us tell you that last year India had advised both the countries to improve relations through dialogue. Foreign Ministry spokesman Arindam Bagchi had said that no military solution can be found through war. He had said that we appeal to the attacking side to stop the attack immediately and advise both the sides to reach a peaceful solution.

https://www.newsdayexpress.com/world/armenia-azerbaijan-conflict-accepted-indias-advice-armenia-and-azerbaijan-will-stop-the-bloody-conflict/

France calls on Azerbaijan to reopen humanitarian corridor with Armenia

France's foreign minister on Friday urged Azerbaijan to restore "unhindered movement" through the Lachin corridor, the only land link between Armenia and the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.


Azerbaijan established a checkpoint at the entry of the corridor last weekend, a move that Armenia denounced as a breach of the latest ceasefire between the two arch-foes.

France's top diplomat Catherine Colonna said during a news conference in Yerevan that Armenia's territorial integrity must be respected.

Her Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan said for his part that free movement "should be restored".

Colonna arrived in Armenia after first visiting Baku, where she was hosted by Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev.

"The purpose of the visit is to reaffirm France's support for the Armenian government and people," Colonna said.

She said it was important for Armenia and Azerbaijan to resume negotiations to secure a resolution to their decades-long standoff.

"We encourage you to resolutely take this path," Colonna said, adding this was "the only way to achieve a just and lasting peace".

She acknowledged this was a "difficult path".

Colonna also said Paris was ready to back Armenia in the process, "alongside the European Union and the United States, in coordination with the OSCE and the United Nations". 

France has a large Armenian minority, and President Emmanuel Macron has sought to retain Paris's influence over resolving the Karabakh conflict.

On Thursday, Azerbaijan rebuked Paris for failing to use its influence to help calm tensions in the South Caucasus.

On Friday, Azerbaijan reiterated that it had set up a checkpoint on "Azerbaijan's territory."

"We continue to be in close contact with the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Russian peacekeeping contingent to best facilitate humanitarian access," Deputy Foreign Minister Elnur Mammadov was quoted as saying in a statement sent to AFP on Friday.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two wars over the mountainous enclave of Karabakh that left tens of thousands dead.

Moscow brokered a ceasefire after the latest bout of fighting in 2020 and posted peacekeepers along the Lachin corridor. 

With Moscow bogged down in Ukraine and unwilling to strain ties with Azerbaijan's key ally Turkey, the United States and European Union have sought to steer a thaw in ties.

Asked whether he wanted negotiations hosted by Europe and Washington or Russia, Mirzoyan said there was "no difference between the platforms".

He was due to travel to Washington for a trilateral meeting with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

(AFP)

 

Is Armenia Sliding Toward Authoritarianism?

Political persecution, human rights violations, spying on opposition figures, and other instances of illiberal behavior should worry observers of the country.

by Aleksandar Srbinovski

Despite high expectations following the Velvet Revolution of 2018 that overthrew the regime of ex-President Serzh Sargsyan, the democratic landscape of Armenia has remained bleak in recent years. The current government of the country is steadily backsliding towards non-democratic governance, and perhaps even authoritarianism.

Of special concern has been the persecution of political activists and journalists, as reflected in the annual reports of a number of NGOs specialized in evaluating the functioning of democratic institutions. Reports about Armenia’s democratic environment also include human rights violations, the persecution of political activists and members of LGBTQ+ community, as well as instances of domestic violence.

For instance, Freedom House, in its most recent annual report, downgraded its assessment of political rights and civil liberties in Armenia. The report revealed that large-scale measures were being taken against political dissidents, journalists, and human rights activists by the country’s authorities.

Moreover, in its report last May, Google’s Threat Analysis Group revealed the unlawful use by “government-backed actors” of spyware called Predator, created by the North Macedonian company Cytrox. The software had been used to target journalists, dissidents, and human rights activists in the country, with local media outlets reporting that the electronic devices of several Armenian opposition politicians have been hacked. Yet Predator is not the only spyware being used; an Armenian opposition leader Artur Vanetsyan once claimed that the Pegasus spyware had been installed on his phones in 2021. Despite the claim and the following scandal, the use of Pegasus against Armenian journalists and opposition figures has apparently not been discontinued. According to a study conducted by social media specialists in Armenia in November 2022, Pegasus may still monitor the key opposition and media personalities.

The worrying developments do not stop with such spying. It is apparent that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has also begun persecuting members of the previous government he overthrew. For instance, two former defense ministers have been arrested on what have been described as politically-motivated charges. Former Defence Minister Seyran Ohanyan, who served from 2008 to 2016, was arrested in 2020 on charges of embezzling over $2 million in state funds. The same charge was also brought against another former defense minister, David Tonoyan, who was detained in 2021.

The ex-minister Tonoyan, two other generals, and an arms dealer were arrested by the National Security Service (NSS) in September 2021 as part of a criminal investigation into the supplying of an allegedly outdated missile to Armenia’s armed forces. However, experts believe the arrest of Tonoyan had a political motivation—he was simply made a scapegoat for Armenia’s defeat in the six-week war with neighboring Azerbaijan in 2020. Having served as the defense minister between 2018 and 2020, Tonoyan resigned a week after his country’s capitulation in the war over Karabakh but obviously could not escape the persecution. It’s worth noting that Tonoyan, contrary to what one would assume, defended Pashinyan’s signing of the trilateral statement of November 2020 that ended the war. “Despite the fact that the Armenian Armed Forces, the entire system of the Ministry of Defense and the government did their best to be successful, calling the agreement reached to end the Karabakh war a ‘betrayal’ or ‘defeat’ is an insult,” he said in response to criticism voiced following Armenia’s signing of the deal.

The political persecution does not stop there; members of the country’s political opposition have been targeted, namely Dashnaktsutyun (Armenian Revolutionary Federation) party members. Artavazd Margaryan, head of Dashnaktsutyun faction in the Council of Elders (the municipality council) of Artashat, was detained for seventy-two hours along with the party’s activist Gerasim Vardanyan in January this year. The arrest was mocked by Margaryan’s lawyer, who posted on social media: “The detention is obviously illegal; it is devoid of any logic. You won’t believe it, but Margaryan had such charges only because he has a phone.”

Some arrests may end up in a tragedy, as was in the case of Armen Grigorian. A notable opposition personality, Grigorian fainted in court and later passed away in the summer 2022. He was put in pre-trial custody for two months, despite committing no crimes and despite lawyer and family concerns about his health. As each day went by, his immune system got worse.

Rapid Political Change

What is perhaps most surprising is how fast Armenia’s trajectory from budding democracy towards increasing illiberalism occurred. After the ruling government won the snap elections in the summer of 2021, things began to shift quickly. The government resumed its interrupted task of finding “the enemies of the people”—a process evocative of Stalin-era purges—with increased speed after receiving what Prime Minister Pashinyan calls a “steel mandate” from his people following the 2020 war. The representatives of the Armenian diaspora communities living in various countries around the world were one of the initial targets in this fight. For instance, the authorities in Yerevan refused to let Mourad Papazian, the chairman of an Armenian diaspora organization in France, enter the country in July 2022. Papazian, who has never committed a crime, was solely prohibited from entering Armenia due to his alleged involvement in anti-Pashinyan protests in Paris in 2021.

Pashinyan’s blacklist does not stop with Papazian. At Zvartnots airport on August 1, Armenian security personnel approached two Dutch-Armenians, Massis Abrahamian and Suneh Abrahamian, and informed them that they had been designated persona non grata in Armenia. Similar to Papazian, these two diaspora activists were prohibited from entering the country because they spoke out against Armenia’s current government.

Also notable is how quickly religious freedoms have also been declining in the country. In 2020, the NSS launched an investigation into Sashik Sultanyan, the chairperson of the Yezidi Center for Human Rights, after the latter publicly stated that Armenia’s Yazidi community was facing discrimination. Despite the criticism by international human rights NGOs, Sultanyan’s trial was in progress as of late 2022. If convicted, the activist will face six years in prison on the charge of being a part of an “anti-state” conspiracy.

Likewise worth mentioning is the deteriorating condition of media freedom as well. According to the Resource Center on Media Freedom in Europe, media freedom remains restricted in Armenia, “among threats of violence, strong political inferences, and expensive defamation lawsuits.” An Armenian-based NGO, the Committee to Protect Freedom of _expression_, has recorded fifteen cases of journalists experiencing physical violence between January and September 2022. Moreover, most print and broadcast outlets are affiliated with political or larger commercial interests.

Despite earlier promises during and after the 2018 Velvet Revolution that brought Nikol Pashinyan and his team to power, and even the 2021 snap elections during which the war-torn society gave another chance to the incumbent government after the devastating defeat in the conflict against Azerbaijan, the political climate in Armenia has been changing, unfortunately in the negative direction. As one Armenian expert expresses, the country`s leader “has turned hatred into a principle of governance and lies into a form of governing.”

Aleksandar Srbinovski is a journalist with over fifteen years of experience working in print and online media. He has worked for Nova Makedonija, Newsweek, Europa, Blic, Politika, ABC News, Vecher, TV Sitel, and Skok. He holds a BA in journalism from the Saints Cyril and Methodius University of Skopje and has pursued continued training with the University of Oklahoma.

Image: Shutterstock.

https://nationalinterest.org/feature/armenia-sliding-toward-authoritarianism-206438


St. Mark’s Armenian Church showcases a female vocal ensemble in Springfield

Massachusetts -

Published: Apr. 29, 2023 at 5:45 AM GMT+3|Updated: 16 hours ago

SPRINGFIELD, MA. (WGGB/WSHM) – St. Mark’s Armenian Church held a concert on Friday evening in Springfield.

The event started at 7 p.m. and featured a female vocal ensemble from Armenia.

The church ensemble performed classical spiritual music.

Karen Belezarian’Tesini, the event’s organizer said more events like this are in the works.

“We are the first community in the United States to be able host this wonderful ensemble so we’re very privileged,” said Belezarian’Tesini.

The performance was open to the public for all to enjoy.

Theater: Play by thespians from Iran, Armenia, Russia, Ukraine promotes peace

 TEHRAN TIMES 
Iran –

TEHRAN – A troupe comprising artists from Iran, Armenia, Russia and Ukraine has produced a theatrical performance in Yerevan promoting peace.

The play “The Border’s Secret” was co-directed by Shiva Sarmast from Iran and Harutyun Hovhannisyan from Armenia at Babylon Theater on March 24 and 25.

Sarmast and Hovhannisyan also played roles in the play, which was performed by a cast composed of Shideh Ghaffarian and Pedram Zamani from Iran, Aram Sardaryan from Armenia, Corrina Odd from Russia and Anastasia Rykunova from Ukraine.

“The idea to stage the play entered my mind during a meeting with my Armenian friends, including Harutyun Hovhannisyan,” Sarmast told the Persian service of MNA on Friday.

“We agreed to speak in our native languages, asking something from each other,” she said and added that the result was amazing, because they perceived each other demands despite their unfamiliarity with each other’s languages.
 
She said that play is about the perception of freedom in different countries and the endless struggle to achieve it and added, “Harutyun perceived the idea as the Tower of Babel myth and suggested taking it to the stage as a theatrical performance.”

Cast members first rehearsed separately and then they joined together in rehearsals that ran for a week. 

Sarmast said that due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, many Ukrainian artists left their homes to live in Armenia.

“The husband of our Ukrainian cast member, Anastasia, is from Russia; they met each other at the university and one day before the beginning of our rehearsals they married amid the flames of war flickering between their countries,” she explained.

Sarmast referred to wars as mutual human sufferings and noted, “We just want to live in peace and happiness.”

She said that their desire for freedom shaped the idea for the performance and added, “Accordingly, the characters each had their own stories; they united in their performance and achieved freedom.”

“In fact, languages and borders do not matter; the secret behind the borders between the countries is not the lines drawn on maps, but the measure of the communication between the peoples living on the two sides of the lines is of great importance,” she asserted.

Sarmast said that “The Border’s Secret” won public acclaim in Yerevan and noted that their troupe is seeking to perform the play in several other countries. 

Photo: A scene from “The Border’s Secret” co-directed by Shiva Sarmast and Harutyun Hovhannisyan.

MMS/YAW

Azerbaijani troops open fire on farmer in Nagorno Karabakh

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 17:20,

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, ARMENPRESS. A farmer in Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) came under Azeri gunfire on April 28, the local authorities said in a press release.

The Ministry of Internal Affairs of Nagorno Karabakh said that Artur Ramazyan, a farmer in Askeran, was working in his tractor in a pomegranate garden around 11:05, April 28, when the Azerbaijani troops deployed in an adjacent military position opened fire on him from various caliber small arms.

The farmer stopped the agricultural work.

The Russian peacekeeping contingent has been notified on the shooting, the authorities added.

No injuries were reported.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 28-04-23

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 17:18,

YEREVAN, 28 APRIL, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 28 April, USD exchange rate up by 0.21 drams to 386.64 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 2.16 drams to 424.69 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.11 drams to 4.85 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 0.09 drams to 481.83 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 202.15 drams to 24683.15 drams. Silver price up by 3.83 drams to 312.57 drams. Platinum price stood at 16414.1 drams.

Tension in Caucasus is maintained due to long-lasting contradictions between Armenia and Azerbaijan. CSTO Gen.-Sec.

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 19:51,

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, ARMENPRESS. CSTO General Secretary Imangali Tasmagambetov stated that tension in the Caucasus region is maintained due to long-lasting contradictions between Armenia and Azerbaijan, ARMENPRESS reports, citing TASS, the CSTO General Secretary announced on April 28, during the event dedicated to the 20th anniversary of the CSTO Joint Headquarters.

"The world is returning to times of confrontation, with the prospect of further strengthening the potential for conflict. The negative trends have a direct impact on the situation of the entire perimeter of the CSTO zone of responsibility," Tasmagambetov said.