Armenian MP: Azerbaijan’s plans, which don’t exclude use of force, will remain unchanged

Panorama
Armenia – Feb 28 2023

Azerbaijan continues doing everything it can to extort the maximum concessions from Armenia and Artsakh, opposition MP Tigran Abrahamyan claims.

Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Abrahamyan, the secretary of the Pativ Unem faction, underscored the international efforts to suppress Azerbaijan's actions proved inefficient during the 2020 war in Artsakh as well as the three subsequent Azerbaijani attacks against Armenia’s sovereign territory.

"Thus, regardless of what the Armenian and Artsakh authorities say, Azerbaijan's intentions, which do not rule out the resolution of its problems through the use of force, will remain unchanged," the deputy stated.

Abrahamyan also noted that the Armenian authorities had already unveiled their main approaches to the Artsakh issue.

"The publicly expressed approaches are enough to suggest that the processes focus on concessions regarding the Artsakh people’s right to self-determination and a settlement in line with the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan,” the MP charged.

‘We inherited Saryan’s Armenia from Martiros Saryan’, artist’s granddaughter says

Panorama
Armenia – Feb 28 2023

Today, February 28, marks the 143rd birth anniversary of prominent Soviet Armenian painter Martiros Saryan.

As a matter of tradition, intellectuals and employees of the Martiros Saryan House-Museum laid flowers at the monument to the great landscape artist in a park named after him in central Yerevan. Then they went to the Komitas Pantheon to lay flowers at Saryan's tomb.

Speaking to Panorama.am, Saryan's granddaughter, art critic and museum director Ruzan Saryan quoted Armenian artist Grigor Khanjyan as saying: "There were times we used to say, ‘let's go to Yerevan, Armenia to see Saryan’, then it was like, ‘let's go to see Saryan's Armenia’.”

"He left us a legacy of Sarian's Armenia, because the perception of our country has completely changed. Before Saryan, Armenia was portrayed in the arts as gray and colorless. Saryan really made a revolution, showing how beautiful our nature is, how colorful, rich and diverse it is, what a gifted and talented people live on the slopes of Aragats, struggling and creating," Ruzan Saryan said.

She stressed Armenians are lucky to have had Saryan, Hovhannes Tamanyan, Alexander Spendiaryan, Romanos Melikyan, Avetik Isahakyan, Yeghishe Charents and a whole galaxy of brilliant intellectuals.

"We inherited from them today’s Yerevan. They took a heroic step; they gave up a life of comfort – they were people who had already made major achievements – and came to Armenia to pay their debt to their country and people. It's a pity that our compatriots are now leaving Armenia. We should stick to our roots and culture and finally learn to appreciate ourselves," she added.

An exhibition will launch at Saryan Museum on Wednesday, showcasing posters from the most important exhibitions organized by the museum in the past 55 years as well as books published over the last ten years.

Ruzan Saryan stresses there is always something to tell about Martiros Saryan.

"It's a whole ocean with no visible shores. We still have so much to do. In seven years we will be celebrating Saryan's 150th birth anniversary. I hope that the anniversary will also be marked by UNESCO with beautiful exhibitions in famous European capitals. If we do not do this, no one will do it for us. We must learn to present our culture to the world,” the art critic stressed.

“We have seven years to publish plenty of materials, complete the publication of his letters and print albums of unknown or little-known paintings by Saryan. There is a big job ahead and we should do it together," she added.

Saryan also urged officials to help popularize the legacies of great artists.

CivilNet: Russia rejects Azerbaijan’s demand for Lachin corridor checkpoints

CIVILNET.AM

28 Feb, 2023 10:02

  • Armenian Parliament Speaker Alen Simonyan announced that Yerevan and Baku have reached a “consensus” on a number of “internationally accepted” points in a possible peace agreement.
  • Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov dismissed Baku’s calls for checkpoints along the sole road connecting Armenia and Karabakh following talks with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.
  • Baku launched first-of-its-kind legal proceedings against Yerevan under a 1994 energy treaty, alleging that Armenia violated international law by running hydroelectric power plants in Karabakh.

Armenpress: Horror train crash kills dozens in Greece

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 09:47, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. At least 32 people have died and dozens more injured after two trains collided in northern Greece, BBC reported citing local emergency services.

[see video]
A train said to be carrying around 350 passengers hit a freight train travelling in the opposite direction near the city of Larissa late on Tuesday night.

The passenger train had been travelling from Athens to the northern city of Thessaloniki when it crashed head-on with the other train, leading to a fire in at least one of the carriages.

A representative of the Greek fire service, Vassilis Vathrakogiannis, confirmed 32 fatalities, in addition to some 85 injured. At least 25 of those injured are said to be in “serious condition,” according to the Greek broadcaster ERT News.

Thirty ambulances reportedly rushed to the scene to treat the victims, with multiple hospitals in nearby Larissa now operating on an “emergency basis,” local reports added. Fire crews battled a blaze that erupted in some cars, while the police and military have also mobilized rescue teams, RT reported. 

The cause of the crash is not known.

“It was a very powerful collision. This is a terrible night… It’s hard to describe the scene,” RT quoted Costas Agorastos, the regional governor of Greece’s Thessaly region as saying.  Agorastos added that around 250 survivors had been evacuated to Thessaloniki on buses.

One survivor described how the carriage he was in was engulfed in flames as it rolled over following the crash.

"We heard a big bang," passenger Stergios Minenis was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

"It was a nightmarish 10 seconds. We were turning over in the carriage until we fell on our sides and until the commotion stopped. Then there was panic. Cables, fire. The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned. Fire was right and left," Minenis said.

"For 10, 15 seconds it was chaos. Tumbling over, fires, cables hanging, broken windows, people screaming, people trapped."

Armenian, Italian foreign ministries hold political consultations

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 10:04, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian and Italian foreign ministries held political consultations on February 28 in Rome.

The Armenian foreign ministry reported that the consultations were co-chaired by Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Paruyr Hovhannisyan and his Italian counterpart Edmondo Cirielli.

A wide circle of the bilateral agenda items were discussed, the foreign ministry said.

The sides expressed readiness to take steps for enhancing economic ties. Cooperation in culture, education and science was also discussed.

“The parties also discussed a number of international and regional issues, including the Armenia-EU enhanced partnership, possibilities for mutual support as part of international organizations, and stressed the importance of periodically holding political consultations,” the foreign ministry said in a read-out.

Deputy FM Hovhannisyan briefed the Italian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Edmondo Cirielli on the difficult security situation in the region and Armenia’s commitment and efforts to establish peace. Hovhannisyan presented the grave humanitarian consequences of the ongoing blockade of Lachin Corridor and attached importance to the fulfillment of the International Court of Justice order.

During the Rome visit the Deputy FM also met with the Vice President of the Italian Senate Gian Marco Centinaio and the President of the Foreign Relations Committee of the Chamber of Deputies Giulio Tremonti.

Parliament holds moment of silence in honor of 2008 Yerevan unrest victims

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 10:14, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. Lawmakers held a moment of silence in commemoration of the victims of the 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan.

Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan asked MPs to observe the moment of silence at the March 1 plenary session.

Eight protesters and two police officers were killed in the violent suppression of anti-government street protests that followed a disputed presidential election held in February 2008 which saw Serzh Sargsyan take office. Former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the main opposition candidate in the ballot, rallied his supporters to protest against alleged vote rigging.

Ter-Petrosyan's supporters held nonstop rallies in Liberty Square until they were forcibly dispersed by riot police early on March 1, 2008.

Russia hopes Armenia and Azerbaijan will implement initiatives developed jointly

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 11:34, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. Russia hopes that the jointly developed peace initiatives will be implemented during the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict resolution, Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has said.

She described the region as “pivotal” and said that “there’s still hope that the peace initiatives which [Armenia and Azerbaijan] have developed jointly with Russia will be implemented,” TASS news agency quoted Zakharova as saying on Sputnik radio.

The Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman slammed as “indecent” what she described as “the West’s attempts to be involved in the South Caucasus.” Zakharova said the West is engaged in such a policy not for resolving the conflict but “quite the opposite."

“Unfortunately we’ve been observing such trends there for many years, and now the West is even more active,” Zakharova said.

The spokeswoman said there are no successful examples of conflict resolution with participation of Western partners, while the “number of conflicts is growing because of the collective West.”

Armenian law enforcement agencies seek to introduce electronic tagging for domestic violence cases

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 11:46, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. Armenian law enforcement agencies seek to introduce electronic monitoring to deter repeat domestic violence offenders from reoffending and to keep victim-survivors safe.

Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs Arpine Sargsyan presented a bill on introducing electronic tagging in preventing domestic violence at the plenary session of parliament on March 1.

The current law enables law enforcement agencies to conduct either “urgent intervention” or institute a “protection measure” in domestic violence cases, with the latter requiring a court order.

Citing international experience, Sargsyan said the electronic monitoring will increase effectiveness of protecting the victims.

The bill seeks to enable relevant authorities the power to order the offender wear the ankle or arm monitor, while the victim will have a notification device designed to issue a warning (both to the victim and police) in case of the offender approaching them.

Monument commemorating victims of 2008 post-election unrest inaugurated in downtown Yerevan

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 12:46, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. A monument commemorating the victims of the 2008 post-election unrest, colloquially known as the March 1 events, was inaugurated today near City Hall in downtown Yerevan.

President Vahagn Khachaturyan, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan, Yerevan Mayor Hrachya Sargsyan, other government officials, members of the public and family members of the victims attended the inauguration.

Photos by Mkhitar Khachatryan

“I want to underscore that March 1 is not a day of mourning,” PM Pashinyan said in his speech. “Because, of course, we mourn and commemorate the victims, but March 1 has a wider context, and the meaning of the life and struggle of our killed brothers is about something completely different. After the 2021 parliamentary election I had various occasions to say that for the first time in the history of Armenia, elections became not the cause of a domestic crisis but the way to overcome the domestic crisis. This is also my personal conclusion from the 1 March 2008 events because as you know I was personally significantly involved in those events and the conclusion is that March 1 was actually about the lack of democracy, it was about breaking the people’s free _expression_, deforming it, depriving the people of _expression_ and making decisions. And this is how we must perceive the meaning of March 1. And at least from this perspective the struggle and sacrifice of March 1 reached its goal, because vote rigging is a closed chapter in Armenia and there won’t be a return to it.”

He described the Armenian people as the “guarantors” for never allowing a return to vote rigging and said that the vision of the people is to live a free, happy and fruitful life in a strong, independent and sovereign country.

Deputy Mayor of Yerevan Tigran Avinyan noted that the monument is being opened 15 years since the events. “The meaning of March 1 teaches us a lesson that there should never be a dividing line between the government and the people. And whenever the government and people have these lines it leads to crimes like March 1,” Avinyan said.

The sculptor of the monument, Albert Vardanyan, said his creation “came from his heart” because “everyone shared the pain” of those days. “This is an ode to the people and government, so that we never again see such days.”

Eight protesters and two police officers were killed in the violent suppression of anti-government street protests that followed a disputed presidential election held in February 2008 which saw Serzh Sargsyan take office. Former President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the main opposition candidate in the ballot, rallied his supporters to protest against alleged vote rigging.

Ter-Petrosyan's supporters held nonstop rallies in Liberty Square until they were forcibly dispersed by riot police early on March 1, 2008.

[see video]

Greece train crash: Armenian Foreign Minister offers condolences

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 14:06, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan extended condolences to the families of the victims of the deadly train crash in Greece.

“Deeply saddened by news of horrific train collision in Greece that claimed dozens of lives,” FM Mirzoyan said in a tweet addressed to his Greek counterpart Nikos Dendias. “Our heartfelt condolences to families & friends of victims & we wish a speedy recovery to injured. Armenia stands by brotherly Greece & its people in this tragic moment.”

At least 36 people have died and dozens more injured after two trains collided in northern Greece.