Chaarat discontinues talks to buy Lydian Armenia

Mining Weekly
BY: MARIAAN WEBB
CREAMER MEDIA SENIOR DEPUTY EDITOR ONLINE

Aim-listed Chaarat Gold has discontinued discussions to buy Lydian Armenia, stating that it could not agree an acquisition structure within the required time.

The proposed acquisition would have constituted a reverse takeover, owing to the size of the transaction. Accordingly, trading in Chaarat's shares were suspended in October last year and was reinstated on Monday.

Lydian Armenia, the owner of the controversial Amulsar gold mine, is a subsidiary of Lydian Canada Ventures, owned by US firm Orion Mine Finance and Canadian firm Osisko Gold Royalties.

Development of the Amulsar mine was suspended in 2018, following protests against the project’s potential environmental damage. 

Community commemorates Armenian genocide at Fresno State memorial

Tuesday, 9:26AM

FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) – People all around the world on Monday marked a dark day in World history.

The Armenian genocide started 108 years ago.

Community members gathered at Fresno State to commemorate the lives lost.

On this day in 1915, the Ottoman Empire started arresting Armenians.

One and a half million lost their lives during World War I.

Those who attended the event laid out flowers around the Armenian Genocide Monument.

A religious service followed the event.

Azerbaijani checkpoint blocks road next to Russians tasked with keeping it open

Al-Arabiya, UAE

REUTERS:

A new Azerbaijani checkpoint blocking access to an Armenian-held breakaway region is located right next to a base of Russian peacekeepers who are meant to be keeping the road open, footage filmed by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty showed.

Azerbaijan said on Sunday it had installed a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor, the only road connecting Armenia with Karabakh, where 120,000 mostly Armenian inhabitants broke away from Azerbaijan in the 1990s.

The corridor has been mostly closed since December, when Azerbaijani civilians identifying themselves as environmental activists blockaded the road.

Russian peacekeepers, who under the ceasefire agreement which ended a 2020 war for the territory are required to keep the corridor open, have not intervened, angering Armenians.

The footage shows the Azerbaijan checkpoint installed directly beside a Russian military base. Vehicles flying the Russian flag are visible.

“The Azerbaijanis closed the road from their side,” said Vaghinak Arzumanian, a resident of the nearby village of Kornidzor. “The Russians stood by and did nothing.”

Armenia says the installation of the checkpoint is a violation of the ceasefire agreement. The United States said on Sunday it was “deeply concerned” by the development, which it said undermined efforts towards peace in the region.

Azerbaijan said on Sunday it had taken “appropriate measures to establish control at the starting point of the road.”
https://english.alarabiya.net/News/world/2023/04/25/Azerbaijani-checkpoint-blocks-road-next-to-Russians-tasked-with-keeping-it-open


Honoring Armenian History: KTLA 5 News Special Broadcast

ARMENIAN HISTORY MONTH

April is Armenian History Month in Los Angeles County, which is home to the greatest number of Armenians outside of Armenia itself.

In this special broadcast that aired Monday, , KTLA introduces viewers to the individuals and organizations that contribute to the rich Armenian culture in Southern California, and how they are making a broader impact across the nation and around the world.

KTLA 5’s Ellina Abovian shares stories of Armenian-American entrepreneurs, filmmakers, athletes and educators who are inspiring and elevating others in our community.

Watch the video at 

Los Angeles’ large Armenian community observes Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day

Associated Press

The killing and deportation of Armenians by Ottoman Empire forces in the early 1900s was remembered Monday in Southern California, home to an enormous Armenian American community that only recently has been able to celebrate U.S. recognition that the systematic oppression was genocide.

Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day was marked in the Los Angeles region by big rallies and marches long before 2021, when President Joe Biden became the first U.S. president to use the word "genocide" to describe the campaign of violence.

For decades, the White House had avoided using using the term for fear of alienating Turkey, the successor to the Ottoman Empire and a NATO ally. The government of Turkey vehemently rejected Biden's use of the word.

Biden on Monday issued a statement renewing a pledge to never forget.

"On April 24, 1915, Ottoman authorities arrested Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople — the start of a systematic campaign of violence against the Armenian community. In the years that followed, one and a half million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths — a tragedy that forever affected generations of Armenian families," Biden said.

More than 200,000 people of Armenian descent are estimated to live in Los Angeles County, where April is celebrated as Armenian History Month.

The suburban city of Glendale is a center of the community, and a small section of Los Angeles is known as Little Armenia, where a crowd gathered Monday on Hollywood Boulevard.

Traditional annual remembrance activities on or around the day include protests outside the Turkish Consulate in Beverly Hills and a ceremony at the towering Armenian Genocide Martyrs Monument on a hilltop in suburban Montebello.

The Glendale and Los Angeles school districts closed schools Monday in observance of the day. Last week, the LA district Board of Education voted to support the inclusion of an Armenian check box on the U.S. Census questionnaire so that officials can better serve the population.

100 years on, the nation still remembers the Georgetown Boys (Canada)

Halton Hills, Ontario
Canada
Georgetown's Cedarvale Park – formerly Cedarvale Farm – changed the lives of over 100 Armenian refugees and set the tone for Canadian humanitarianism for decades to come

They are all gone now, so we can never directly hear what they have to say about Georgetown’s Cedarvale Park. But Canada and Armenian Canadians have not forgotten the role the local green space played in history. 

Dubbed the Georgetown Boys – a misnomer as there were many girls too – they were rescued by Canadians from the clutches of an orphan’s lonely death. In Georgetown, the federal government and several benefactors hoped to turn these orphans into good farmers. Cedarvale Park, then a farm, served as their home and proving ground. 

But the absence of the boys and girls today creates an undeserved illusion that Cedarvale Park is unremarkable. The painstaking work of historians, archivists and community leaders, many of whom are Armenian, keep the memory alive. Without them, visitors would miss the park’s connection with the First World War and, more importantly, the Armenian Genocide. 

“Armenians are obsessed by 1915,” said Lorne Shirinian, a descendent of the so-called Georgetown Boys. 

Shirinian is the son of Mampre Shirinian, a Georgetown Boy and Mariam Mazmanian, a Georgetown Girl. Her brother, Ardeshes Mazmanian, was also a Georgetown Boy. 

Lorne Shirinian's mother and uncle, Mariam and Ardeshes Mazmanian.

The Mazmanian siblings likely survived when their parents gave them to Turkish neighbours. Neither appeared to know how they escaped the genocide as they were too young to remember. What they do know is that they lost a brother and both parents in the chaos. 

Lorne Shirinian’s father did not talk much about his experiences with the genocide. Shirinian the younger understands that his father was alone from 1915 to 1918. 

The orphans getting picked to come to Canada was, in effect, a lottery. 

“My father tells me one day all the boys, almost a thousand boys, were lined up and the relief workers came and they asked, ‘Who wants to go to Canada?” Lorne Shirinian said. 

“They went through picking randomly. ‘You, you, you.’ And my father was randomly picked. And my uncle did come to Canada randomly.”

Ardeshes and Mariam were separated at some point. While her brother languished at a Corfu orphanage, Mariam ended up at one in Syro, Greece. Once he arrived in Canada with the first group of boys in 1923, Ardeshes pleaded with ARAC to have his sister come to Georgetown. They were reunited in 1927. Mampre Shirinian arrived in 1924 with the second group of boys. 

Mampre Shirnian and Mariam Mazmanian married in 1935 after meeting at Cedarvale Farm. Their son Lorne was born 10 years later, beginning a long life of being surrounded by the Georgetown orphans.

“The Georgetown Boys would drop in all the time. On the weekends, there would be parties. There would be making sheesh kabob on the barbecue. There were dances in the backyard, much to the chagrin of the neighbours,” Shirinian added.

What Shirinian appreciated most was “their joy and vitality for having survived.”

“I always had the feeling that they looked on me and other offspring of the Georgetown Boys as special because not only did we survive, but we are multiplying.” 

Shirinian has added his voice to multiple sources that have crystallized the memory of the orphans. Through those sources, we can tell their story and get to know who they were. 

The Ottoman Empire – the modern-day Republic of Turkey – was in decline in the late 1800s. Looking for a scapegoat to mask their economic mismanagement, the government took aim at ethnic minorities, especially the Armenians. 

Abdul Hamid II is often called the “Red Sultan” as his throne was soaked with blood.

In 1908 the Young Turks seized power from Abdul Hamid. But the Armenians were not safe. One of the Young Turks’ goals was to turn the Empire into an ethnically homogenous nation. 

After the Battle of Sarikamish ended in a catastrophic defeat for the Turkish army, they had their excuse. The war minister Enver Pasha – who planned the battle – blamed the Armenians.

On Apr. 24, 1915, Ottoman Interior Minister, Talaat Pasha, had 250 Armenian intellectuals arrested in Constantinople. The genocide had officially begun. By 1923, mass deportations, starvation and outright killing wiped out virtually all Armenians in Anatolia. Despite the best efforts of some righteous Turks to save Armenians, it is estimated that some 1.5 million people died.

The government of the Republic of Turkey denies the genocide to this day.

The work of Canadian historians has made Cedarvale Park an equally important piece of the puzzle as the genocide itself. 

Author Jack Apramian, who himself was brought to Cedarvale Farm, wrote the book The Georgetown Boys. Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill authored Like our Mountains, a book about the Armenian Canadian experience. Parts of it tell the story of Cedarvale Farm.

Cedarvale Farm today. Mansoor Tanweer/HaltonHillsToday

Through these two, we know how Canadians got involved in the lives of the orphans. Using various means, Armenian children found themselves at an orphanage on the Greek island of Corfu. The Armenian Relief Association of Canada (ARAC), with the blessing and funding of Ottawa, brought the boys to Canada. 

It should be noted that the events are important not just to Georgetown, but also to the nation . “This is the first time in Canadian history that we helped people in need. And we help them by bringing them to the country,” said local historian Mark Rowe. 

By 1920, Canada was only 53 years old. Canadians had engaged in international humanitarian work, but only as individuals. Thanks to the ARAC and the federal government, Canadians were saving lives abroad as a nation, setting the tone for future aid to refugees.
Tales from the farm

The first group of 50 arrived at the farm on Canada Day, 1923. Eventually, a total of 109 would come to live in Georgetown. Apramian’s book creates a vivid picture of what their lives were like. We know that they adored an Armenian woman the orphans called Mama Bedoukian. 

“Mama Bedoukian, make us some pilaf,” a boy asked her one day. As the boys were missing this traditional recipe, the gathering broke out in chants of “ayo, ayo, ayo,” meaning “yes” in Armenian. 

We also know about a small insurrection that took place at the farm. As part of the push to assimilate the boys into Canada, they were made to take on Anglo-Saxon names. 

After several boys voiced their protests, a boy named Onnig Shangayan summed up their rebellion against the new names neatly. 

“See that boy sitting in the corner? They gave him the name Jackson,” Shangayan began. “An Armenian priest put water on his head and named him Hagopian after his father and mother. Then he lost his father, his mother and all he has left is Hagopian. Now you want to take that away too?”

Slices of life like this and others – like when they built a swimming pool and drained a swamp – are available and accessible to the public. 

We know what their lives were like from other sources as well. Aris Alexanian – more popularly known as the founder of the Alexanian carpet retailer – was their teacher. His photographs give faces to the names. 

In an effort to teach them English, Alexanian had the orphans compile a newsletter called Ararat Monthly. It is named after the mountain in eastern Turkey where Noah’s Ark is reputed to have landed. This newsletter is, perhaps, the best way to hear directly from them. 

In a February, 1927, issue of Ararat, author Arkis Krikorian wrote about how the boys were saddened by the departure of their nurse, Ms. Jennie Farmer. 

“Every boy on our farm is not going to forget her; and as long as we live we will remember that we have a friend, a very kind-hearted friend.” 

The Archives of Ontario and the National Archives of Canada have issues of the magazine preserved. The archives of the United Church of Canada have an extensive list of primary sources. 

Big names in the newspaper world, like the Globe and Mail, raised funds to bring the children to Canada. The Toronto Public Library has a digitized record of these efforts as well as general news about the orphans. 

Dorothy Manoukian and Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill both made documentaries about Cedarvale Park. 

The Sarah Corning Centre for Genocide Education has an aggregated list of sources for those interested in learning more. The Zoryan Institute in Toronto keeps the conversation going. And of course, the Esquesing Historical Society of Halton Hills does its part. 

According to Lorne Shirinian, without such a monumental effort to preserve history means that it “goes into a black hole.”

“These boys survived genocide. They came to Canada not to be forgotten,” he said. “Their sons and daughters did what they could to make sure that their history and the memory of their lives is not lost.” 

July 1, 2023 will mark the 100th anniversary of the arrival of the Georgetown Boys. The Sarah Corning Centre for Genocide Education will commemorate the occasion with a ceremony at Cedarvale Park on Jun. 24. The gathering will begin at 2 p.m. and various government and local dignitaries, including descendants of the Georgetown Boys, will be present.

Trilateral agreements on Karabakh have no alternatives — Kremlin on checkpoint in Lachin

 TASS 


"Russia continues its mediation efforts, mainly the efforts to implement all provisions of the trilateral documents, signed two years ago. Russia will continue to work on this together with Yerevan and Baku. We stay in touch," Dmitry Peskov pointed out

MOSCOW, April 24. /TASS/. Azerbaijan's decision to establish a checkpoint in the Lachin corridor requires additional mediation efforts by Russia, and Moscow will continue to promote the implementation of the trilateral agreements concluded by the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, which remain without alternatives, Russian Presidential Spokesman Dmitry Peskov told the media on Monday.

While commenting on Azerbaijan's checkpoint, established in the Lachin corridor, Peskov said that "the situation is really difficult" and "requires additional efforts" and the understanding on the part of Yerevan and Baku there is no alternative to the implementation of trilateral agreements concluded by the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia.

"Russia continues its mediation efforts, mainly the efforts to implement all provisions of the trilateral documents, signed two years ago. Russia will continue to work on this together with Yerevan and Baku. We stay in touch," the Kremlin spokesman pointed out. "We have been working together with the capitals, I mean with Yerevan and Baku. And we will continue doing so."

Earlier, the Russian Foreign Ministry called on Azerbaijan and Armenia to immediately resume compliance with the existing agreements and expressed concern about growing cease-fire violations in Karabakh. The Russian Foreign Ministry also cautioned "external Western actors" against attempts to throw the situation off balance, including smear campaigns against Russia.

Azerbaijan says its decision to set up checkpoint on border with Armenia is legitimate

 TASS 

The ministry said that Yerevan’s accusations that Baku has violated its commitments under the trilateral statement are ungrounded

BAKU, April 23. /TASS/. Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry said on Sunday that the decision to establish a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor was legitimate and slammed Armenia’s statement on this matter as an attempt to meddle in its domestic affairs.

"The Armenian foreign ministry’s statement is yet another attempt to interfere into Azerbaijan’s domestic affairs and its is unacceptable. <…> The Azerbaijani’s side’s legitimate decision to establish a border checkpoint in its territory is in conformity with all principles and norms of international law," it said in a statement.

The ministry said that Yerevan’s accusations that Baku has violated its commitments under the trilateral statement are ungrounded. "Under the trilateral statement, Azerbaijan undertook to guarantee safe movement of people, vehicles and cargoes along the road linking Lachin and Khankendi (known as Stepanakert in Armenia). This commitment includes measures to prevent abuses of the Lachin road. Apart from that, the establishment of a checkpoint at the beginning of the road introduces no changes into the traffic regime," it stressed.

Baku also lambasted Yerevan’s statements that the establishment of the checkpoint is geared to launch "ethnic purges" as groundless and absurd. "We state once again that there are all the conditions for transparent, safe and orderly movement of Armenian residents of Azerbaijan’s Karabakh region via this checkpoint in both directions," the ministry stressed.

According to the ministry, the statement by the foreign ministry of Armenia, "which boycotted peace talks, indicates its intentions to use this as a pretext to undermine efforts toward the resumption of talks."

"We recommend the Armenian side drop such provocations, demonstrate a responsible approach to the efforts toward building its relations with Azerbaijan on the principles of territorial integrity and sovereignty of states, instead of using various pretext to hamper peace talks," it stressed.


Moscow calls on Baku, Yerevan to immediately return to existing agreements — MFA

 TASS 

It is noted that Russia was ready to provide all necessary assistance to Azerbaijan and Armenia both at the political level and on the ground – with the participation of Russian peacekeeping contingent.

MOSCOW, April 24. /TASS/. Russia calls on Azerbaijan and Armenia to immediately return to the existing agreements, Moscow is extremely concerned about the growing number of ceasefire violations in Karabakh, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement released on Monday.

"We register with extreme concern the increase in the number of ceasefire violations. <…> We urge the sides to immediately return to the existing agreements," the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

"We also warn external Western players and local Russophobe elements working on their agenda against attempts to unbalance the situation by smearing Russia," the diplomats stressed.

The ministry noted that Russia was ready to provide all necessary assistance to Azerbaijan and Armenia both at the political level and on the ground – with the participation of Russian peacekeeping contingent. "We proceed from the fact that the local population should not suffer in any case and no obstacles should be created to their lives," the Foreign Ministry said.

The diplomats pointed out that they considered dangerous the increased level of "accusatory and aggressive rhetoric in the public space of Azerbaijan and Armenia. "In the context of the latest developments on April 23, we especially note the unacceptability of any unilateral steps in violation of the basic provisions of the trilateral statement of the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia of November 9, 2020, whether it is an uncoordinated change in the operation of the Lachin corridor or attempts to use it for purposes not consistent with a peaceful agenda," the statement said.

"We believe that many of the problems that have arisen are the result of months of stalemate and lack of progress in the negotiation process on the main tracks of the trilateral agreements of the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, including the unblocking of transport communications in the region, launching the delimitation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and agreeing the parameters of the peace treaty between Azerbaijan and Armenia. We hope that Baku and Yerevan will show political will and overcome this negative dynamic in the near future," the ministry concluded.

Blockaded Artsakh honors Genocide martyrs in annual march

Stepanakert,

STEPANAKERT — “Remember the past. Protect the future.” This was the slogan of the torchlit march organized by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Youth Office of Artsakh on the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in Stepanakert, in memory of the more than 1.5 million innocent victims.

After the commemoration ceremony performed by Father Minas Movsisyan of St. Hakob Church, participants of the march moved from the church to the Zangakatun memorial built in memory of the Armenian Genocide victims of Stepanakert.

Artsakh’s Minister of Education, Science, Culture, and Sport Norayr Mkrtchyan noted in his speech that the hearts of the Artsakh people who pay their respects to the memory of the Genocide are beating in harmony with the Armenians who are suffering from the Genocide in the four corners of the world.

“We must declare the days of remembrance of our innocent victims as a result of crimes committed against Armenians at all times as days of national revenge and retribution. The souls of innocent victims are crying out for revenge, for justice, for national dignity, for the lost homeland, life and future generations,” said Mkrtchyan.

The torchlight procession, which has become an annual event, has a special meaning this year, as it is the fifth month of Azerbaijan’s ongoing blockade of Artsakh. Even today, after 108 years, the people of Artsakh are facing the threat of ethnic cleansing and genocide.

“On the 108th anniversary of the Genocide and the 133rd day of the siege of Artsakh, this commemorative march is also a wake-up call for humanity to prevent a new Armenian Genocide,” said ARF Artsakh Youth member Ani Hovhannisyan in her comments to the Weekly. “The purpose of the inhumane actions of Azerbaijan in the brutal 2020 war, the murders or deportations of thousands of Armenians, the cultural upheaval in the occupied territories of Artsakh is another attempt to destroy Armenians, deprive them of their homeland and take away our homeland from us.” 

The people of Artsakh strongly believe that we must remember the painful pages of our past, learn from it and protect our future, because indifference and inaction endanger the existence of the Armenian nation.

Stepanakert,

Siranush Sargsyan is a freelance journalist based in Stepanakert.