Red Cross facilitates transfer of 12 patients from blockaded Nagorno Karabakh

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 13:16,

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. 12 patients from Nagorno Karabakh requiring urgent surgical interventions were transported today by the International Committee of the Red Cross mediation to Armenia for treatment, the Ministry of Healthcare of Nagorno Karabakh said in a statement.

6 others returned after receiving treatment.

Five children are in neonatal and intensive care in the Arevik clinic in Nagorno Karabakh. Another 7 patients are hospitalized in the Republican Medical Center in Stepanakert. Two of them are in critical condition.

The ICRC facilitated the transfer of 365 patients since the blockade began.

The Lachin Corridor – the only road connecting Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world – has been blocked by Azerbaijan since 12 December 2022. 

The United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan on February 22 to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions. Azerbaijan has so far ignored the ruling.

Armenia has low debt burden – PM

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 12:14,

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is a country with a low debt burden with its 46% debt-to-GDP ratio, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting on April 27. 

e in the national currency has increased while the debt in foreign currency has dropped. “This means that our state debt has become more resistant to currency risks within the framework of this process,” Pashinyan said.

The debt-to-GDP ratio decrease is due to the dram appreciation because most of the debt is in foreign currency, and on the other hand it has to do with the progressive economic growth pace. Moreover, the fact that the deficit was lower than projected also had impact.

“We could involve new amounts if the government were to reach that stance. The problem isn’t the debt, the problem is how we use the debt to increase the potential of our economic growth,” the PM added.

Pashinyan highlighted the use of debt for capital investments.

The debt-to-GDP ratio stood at 46,7% in 2022 against the projected 60,2%. The figure is a 13,6% drop compared to 2021. Armenia’s government debt stood at 10 billion 86 million USD as of December 31, 2022.

Ahead of Baku Formula 1 Grand Prix, Armenia calls on int’l sports community to condemn Azeri policy of ethnic cleansing

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 13:35,

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of the Republic of Armenia has called on the organisers of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" European tournament – due to take place in Baku – and the international sports community to raise a voice of protest regarding Azerbaijan’s policy of ethnic cleansing in Nagorno Karabakh.

Below is the full statement released by the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of the Republic of Armenia.

 

“The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of the Republic of Armenia calls on the organisers of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" European tournament and the international sports community to raise a voice of protest regarding the ethnic cleansing policy of the Azerbaijani authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh.The Ministry draws the attention of the sports community to the fact that since December 12, 2022, the Republic of Azerbaijan has illegally blocked the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to both Armenia and the world, creating an ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh. On February 22, 2023, the United Nations International Court of Justice satisfied Armenia's claim, obliging Azerbaijan to open the Lachin Corridor immediately. To this day, Azerbaijan has not only failed to comply with the court's decision but has also cut off gas and electricity supplies. On April 23, the Azerbaijani authorities set up an illegal checkpoint on the humanitarian corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, taking 120,000 Armenian residents of Nagorno-Karabakh hostage. With this policy, the Azerbaijani authorities are trying to ethnically cleanse the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing them to leave their native land.The organisation of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" European tournament in Baku aims to cover up the policy of extermination of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.We call on the organisers and participants of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" not to be part of the cover-up of the policy of ethnic cleansing.”

France’s foreign minister in Azerbaijan for talks on easing tensions with Armenia

Al-Arabiya, UAE
AFP

France’s Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna began a visit to Azerbaijan on Wednesday to hold talks with longtime leader Ilham Aliyev on easing tensions with Baku’s arch-foe and Caucasus neighbor Armenia.

Baku and Yerevan have been locked for decades in a territorial conflict over Azerbaijan’s Armenian-majority region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

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Colonna’s trip comes as both Western nations and Russia — which has traditionally mediated the conflict — accused Azerbaijan of violating the Moscow-brokered ceasefire that ended a 2020 war with Armenia.

Tensions flared again this week, with Baku setting up a checkpoint on the only land link between Armenia and Karabakh.

Colonna is due to hold talks with Aliyev — who became president after his father’s death in 2003 — and her Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov.

France has moved to make efforts to mediate the conflict in recent months, with Russia distracted by its Ukraine offensive.

A French diplomatic source said the visit was important but was taking place in a “tense” context, describing relations with Baku as “difficult in recent months.”

After visiting Baku, Colonna will travel to Yerevan before making her way to Georgia’s capital Tbilisi on Friday.

In Remembrance Of The Armenian Genocide (in NYC)

Photos Nicollette Barsamian

US Senator Charles Schumer spoke at the April 23 Armenian Genocide Remem­brance event on Broadway and 45th Street in Times Square. Senator Schumer said, “Today we remember the victims of the Armenian Genocide and all their de­scendants. 108 years later, we honor the memory of all Armenians and stand in solidarity with the Armenian American community. We must never forget.”

https://www.qgazette.com/articles/in-remembrance-of-the-armenian-genocide/

Food: 7 rising Armenian chefs who are making a mark on L.A.’s food scene

Los Angeles Times

For decades, Armenian immigrant food in Los Angeles was the hospitable shop skewering varieties of kebab, charring lahmadjoon in a brick oven or slicing shawarma onto pita bread, sumac and roasted garlic puncturing the air, streaming from the vertical rotisserie out to the sidewalks.

When a genocide and political turmoils forced millions of Armenians out of their homeland, their culinary heritage met influence from the Middle East and other countries where they found refuge. They carried those traditions — some old, others more recent — all the way to the United States, where food became one of the most important and defining facets of the community. As the Armenian community in Los Angeles grew to become one of the largest outside of Armenia, it became more and more difficult to distinguish Armenian food as a whole.

“To me, Armenian food is a foundation of certain flavors, and then building off of that, a sort of seamless fusion with other cultures that were so hospitable to us as a people. In return we’ve kept and preserved their culinary heritage through our cooking,” says Crista Marie Ani Aladjadjian, founder of Mezze Spices, an ethically sourced spice collection that pays tribute to her Syrian Armenian heritage.

Over the last decade, a new generation of Armenian chefs and restaurateurs has emerged, eager to break boundaries and expand the cuisine narrative by bringing in new flavors and spices. Take Ara Zada, chef and co-author of “Lavash,” a cookbook that explores the flatbread that’s so integral to Armenian cuisine. Zada and comedian Jack Assadourian Jr. went viral earlier this year when the pair began releasing cooking tutorials for unique Armenian Mexican dishes, including a “lahmarito,” or burrito with rounds of lahmajune, spiced basturma meat, hummus and traditional fillings of carne asada, Mexican rice, pico de gallo and salsa, all wrapped in lavash.

“If we stick to traditional food and don’t acclimate to what is trendy, I think our food will get lost,” said Mary Keledjian, the supervising culinary producer for “MasterChef.” “There is a special place in keeping traditions alive and [cooking something] exactly as it is supposed to be. And there is this other spectrum of mixing Armenian food with different styles. It’s the way forward.”

As sons and daughters of first- and second-generation Armenian immigrants entered into the culinary world, they kept in mind the flavors cherished by their parents while embracing all the diversity that a city like L.A. offers. The chefs and restaurants highlighted here serve as pioneers in the transformation of Armenian immigrant cuisine, drawing influence from California’s seasonality, local food cultures and more.

Film: Visions du Réel 2023 Review: LANDSHAFT Delves into the Psychogeography of Eastern Armenia’s Contested Borders


Daniel Kötter directed the contemplative road movie, screening at the Swiss documentary festival.

Martin Kudlac


In his latest psychogeographic documentary, Landshaft, German director Daniel Kötter diverges from his urban periphery-focused trilogy — Hashti TehranDesert View, and Rift Finfinnee — and turns his lens toward Eastern Armenia's captivating mountainous landscape. This landscape is home to inhabitants caught in the crossfire of extractivism, war, and displacement.

Competing in the Burning Lights sidebar at the Visions du Réel international documentary film festival, Landshaft takes viewers on a poignant road trip through the disputed border area between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Steering a beat-up Lada, emblematic of the Soviet era, along rugged dust roads, Kötter transcends the bucolic travelogue the film appers to be.

Though Landshaft is a contemplative road movie, its political underpinnings are unmistakable, as Kötter chooses not to display explicit war imagery or military equipment. The film delves into the underreported Nagorno-Karabakh wars between Armenia and Azerbaijan, spanning from 1988 to 1994 and reigniting in 2020, with post-war tensions persisting until 2022.

Kötter explores the psychogeography of the region and the emotions of those living near the mine, the border, and in the aftermath of war. This approach combines serene widescreen shots of the mountainous landscape with off-screen witness testimonies recounting displacement, resettlement, war sirens, battles, and the constant threat of future military escalation.

The film's depiction of time at a standstill in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of Eastern Armenia evokes a period piece aesthetic. This temporal suspension is the result of the ongoing conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, effectively trapping locals in the amber of the Soviet era.

Landshaft deliberately avoids explicit political commentary, choosing instead to listen to the stories of Armenians affected by the conflict. Kötter interweaves panoramic visuals of the expansive, desolate steppes and occasional dilapidated settlements with voiceovers from locals, sharing their experiences as both civilians and military personnel. This juxtaposition of visual and audio elements transforms Landshaft into an archaeological excavation of an ongoing historical event.

Without taking sides, the documentary delves into human rights territory and captures the feel of a lost chapter from history books. Its 'slow-cinema' form emphasizes the stagnant nature of the military occupation while maintaining a veneer of suspense beneath the surface.

Continuing his series of political geographies in Landshaft, Kötter employs his signature observational method, focusing not on the explicit and obvious but rather on the absence of violence and war. The film's implicit nature and remediation through the memories and concerns of locals serve as a powerful reminder of the underlying tension and constant threat permeating the region.


North Providence honors victims, survivors of Armenian Genocide

NORTH PROVIDENCE – In what’s become a local tradition, a crowd of about 50 people gathered in front of the North Providence Town Hall building last Friday to raise the Armenian flag in memory of the Armenian Genocide.

The event honored Margaret Topalian Moorachian, daughter of Armenian genocide survivors Tarviz (Mesrobian) and Garabed Topalian.

Mayor Charles Lombardi led the Pledge of Allegiance and opening remarks came from Stephen Elmasian, chairperson of the Armenian National Committee, who asked for a moment of silence in memory of Sen. Maryellen Goodwin, who was being laid to rest that morning.

“She was a staunch supporter of our cause and a resident of Smith Hill,” he said about Goodwin.

Elmasian also thanked Lombardi for hosting the annual event and thanked former Mayor A. Ralph Mollis, who initiated the flag-raising ceremony more than two decades ago.

“It all started right here, in North Providence, Rhode Island, in the smallest of states,” he said.

Lombardi introduced Topalian Moorachian, a woman he described as an outstanding citizen and contributor to the community before handing her an official proclamation and having her address the crowd.

“I stand here both honored and humbled as an American Armenian and as the daughter of Armenian Genocide survivors. Thank you to the Armenian National Committee for giving me this opportunity,” she said.

She said she was taken aback when she received noticed from Elmasian about being honored and asked for a few days to think about it.

“Well I did (think about it) and said why not, because my Armenian heritage is very important to me,” she said.

Regarding her parents, who survived the Armenian Genocide, Topalian Moorachian said their life together can be considered an American love story.

“They created a family of five children, who breathed in the values of their parents, which their parents held dear, loyalty, family, community, sacrifice, kindness, generosity, work and celebration,” she said.

With regard to the genocide, Topalian Moorachian said it has been a persecuted nation since ancient history.

“Yet the people have never given up and fought for their beliefs,” she said. “Perhaps it was this heritage that helped my parents to be resilient, despite the traumas they experienced. Our parents not only survived but thrived. Their children did as well.”

Elmasian mentioned how a lot has changed in the last 20 years and that because of our efforts, “President Biden, U.S. Congress, both the House and the Senate and 49 of the 50 states now officially recognize the Armenian Genocide.”

Lombardi welcomed the elected officials who were present and called the event a symbolic one for him.

“The morning after I was sworn in as mayor of the town, we came out to raise the Armenian flag. It was the first official act for our office and each year, Armenians throughout the world honor those who perished,” he said.

“Let’s all do our best to bring awareness about the Armenian Genocide because it was an undeniable chapter in our world’s history,” the mayor added.

Because of the many contributions that Armenian Americans have made to enrich the state through their leadership, in business, agriculture, academia, government, the arts, and in the judiciary community, Lombardi said, the town officially declared April 24 as Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day in the state.

Elmasian said all 38 cities and towns in the state would be flying the Armenian flag on April 24, including at the Statehouse.

Topalian Moorachian received her plaque and got to raise the flag with assistance from her grandchildren.

“Thank you, sir, for letting my grandma be the one,” one of her grandchildren said as they raised the flag.

https://www.valleybreeze.com/news/north-providence-honors-victims-survivors-of-armenian-genocide/article_8c7449ca-e12e-11ed-b8d7-ff09d0eb2b94.html

Survey on CSOs in Armenia highlights lack of proper protection against hate speech, pressure, and attacks against CSOs


The Transparency International Anti-Corruption Centre in Armenia has presented its latest Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) Meter report for Armenia.

The study was conducted by the ‘CSO Meter: A Compass to Conducive Environment and CSO Empowerment’ project, implemented with the financial support of the European Union.

The survey revealed both positive and negative developments in the areas of participation in the decision-making process, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, protection by the state, right to privacy, and digital rights.

According to the survey, the legislative progress has slightly improved the rating of freedom of speech, but practical issues remain.

It also says that a lack of proper protection against hate speech, pressure, and attacks against CSOs and unequal treatment of CSOs and businesses in registration and taxation issues continue to be problematic. Additionally, the effectiveness of CSO participation in decision-making processes and lack of incentives for financial stability of CSOs are also issues.

The report is available in English and Armenian.

Find out more

Press release

https://euneighbourseast.eu/news/latest-news/survey-on-csos-in-armenia-highlights-lack-of-proper-protection-against-hate-speech-pressure-and-attacks-against-csos/

Bulgarian Political Parties marked 108 Years since the Armenian Genocide

Bulgaria –

With declarations from the parliamentary rostrum, the political formations in the 49th National Assembly marked the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

The leader of "Vazrazhdane" (Revival) Kostadin Kostadinov reminded:

"The genocide against the Armenians is not only a tragedy for them, but also a crime with global dimensions against civilization and humanity. This is the beginning of the process of erasing Christianity within the boundaries of the then Ottoman Empire 100 years ago."

Among the dead were 50,000 Bulgarians, Kostadinov reminded.

Ilina Mutafchieva from WCC-DB noted:

"Aghet, the Armenian word for an unimaginable crime, is the way to best describe what was done against humanity against the Armenian people."

Atanas Zafirov from BSP pointed out:

"The marking of this date is also a tribute to all those who fell victim to mass persecutions, systematic, deliberate extermination and ethnic cleansing. May God forgive the souls of the martyrs!"

History knows many painful moments and they should not be used for political purposes, urged the leader of DPS Mustafa Karadayi:

"Such topics should be left to historians. We politicians should look for ways of reconciliation and dialogue, for unification, not as an occasion for division."

GERB-SDS MP Toma Bykov made an analogy with today's situation:

"And when we all come out here and condemn the actions of the Ottoman Empire 100 years ago, but we are not able to clearly and categorically condemn the actions of the Russian Empire in the present, it means that maybe we are a bit hypocritical."

The chairman of TISP's parliamentary group, Toshko Yordanov, expressed regret that the topic is again being used politically and read the poem "Armenians" by Peyo Yavorov, reminding:

"The Armenian Genocide is part of Bulgarian history. Just as our ancestors fled from the horror of the Ottoman Empire in Bessarabia or in Banat, in the same way a part of the Armenian people fled to free Bulgaria and became part of our history and whatever we say here, the Bulgarian people have a clear attitude towards this tragedy".

On April 24, 2015, in connection with the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the event, the Bulgarian National Assembly adopted a declaration acknowledging the mass extermination of Armenians.

https://www.novinite.com/articles/219854/Bulgarian+Political+Parties+marked+108+Years+since+the+Armenian+Genocide