CivilNet: Iran ‘ready’ to organize 3+3 summit in region

CIVILNET.AM

21 Feb, 2023 10:02

  • Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova has again accused the West of attempting to oust Russia from its leading role in the South Caucasus.
  • Iranian Foreign Minister Amir Hossein Abdollahian has announced his readiness to organize a meeting in Tehran in the “3+3 format,” referring to Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Iran, Russia, and Turkey. .
  • The United States’ new ambassador to Armenia, Kristina Kvien, has presented her credentials to Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/21/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Pashinian Ally Slams Karabakh Leader

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Nagorno-Karabakh - Ruben Vardanyan meets with residents of Stepanakert, January 
24, 2023.


Echoing Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s demands, a senior Armenian 
pro-government lawmaker said on Tuesday that Ruben Vardanyan, the 
Nagorno-Karabakh premier, was “sent” to Stepanakert by Russia and must resign.

Gagik Melkonian claimed that Vardanyan’s exit will be announced by Thursday. He 
said it will help to end Azerbaijan’s two-month blockade of the Lachin corridor 
and a rift within Karabakh’s leadership.

“Ask him, ‘Who sent you to Karabakh and why? Why did you cause a split within 
the Karabakh authorities?’ Of course, the Russians sent him. Who else could send 
him?” said the lawmaker representing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil 
Contract party.

He said that Vardanyan must go even if that means the Armenian side has bowed to 
pressure from Azerbaijan.

Aliyev again demanded Vardanyan’s ouster when he spoke during the Munich 
Security Conference at the weekend. He branded the Armenian-born businessman a 
“criminal oligarch” who was “smuggled” to Karabakh from Russia.

Vardanyan was appointed as state minister, the second-highest post in Karabakh’s 
leadership, in November two months after renouncing his Russian citizenship. 
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov insisted in December that Moscow “has 
nothing to do” with the appointment condemned by Baku.

Armenia -- Gagik Melkonian speaks to RFE/RL, February 8, 2019.

Like Azerbaijani officials, Melkonian accused Vardanyan of acting on Russia’s 
orders. Those, he claimed, included “driving a wedge between Armenia and 
Karabakh.”

Last month, Pashinian urged the authorities in Stepanakert to tone down their 
rhetoric and negotiate with Baku in order to get the latter to unblock the sole 
road connecting Karabakh to Armenia. Earlier in January, Karabakh’s government 
and main political factions criticized Pashinian’s statements on the conflict 
with Azerbaijan, saying that they undermine the Karabakh Armenians’ right to 
self-determination.

Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, is due to deliver a video address to 
the population on Thursday. A Karabakh opposition activist, Tigran Petrosian, 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Monday that Harutiunian has decided to replace 
Vardanyan by his chief prosecutor, Gurgen Nersisian.

Mediahub.am quoted Nersisian as saying on Tuesday that he has been offered 
Vardanyan’s job but has not yet decided whether to take up the post of state 
minister.

Vardanyan himself did not comment on his political future. He has made defiant 
statements throughout the Azerbaijani blockade, saying that the Karabakh 
Armenians will never agree to live under Azerbaijani rule despite severe 
hardship endured by them.

Metakse Hakobian, an opposition member of the Karabakh legislature, voiced 
support for Vardanyan and warned Harutiunian against sacking him.



Prominent Armenian General Arrested, Freed

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Grigori Khachaturov attends an award ceremony in the presidential 
palace in Yerevan, September 20, 2019.


A prominent Armenian general who demanded Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
resignation in 2021 was set free on Tuesday one day after being arrested on 
charges strongly denied by him.

Armenia’s Anti-Corruption Court refused to allow the National Security Service 
(NSS) to hold Grigori Khachaturov in detention pending investigation. He walked 
free in the courtroom as a result.

Khachaturov is the former commander of the Armenian army’s Third Corps mostly 
stationed in northern Tavush province bordering Azerbaijan. He received a major 
military award and was promoted to the rank of major-general after leading a 
successful military operation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border in July 2020, 
less than three months before the outbreak of the six-week war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Khachaturov was among four dozen high-ranking military officers who accused 
Pashinian’s government of incompetence and misrule and demanded its resignation 
in February 2021. The unprecedented demand was welcomed by the Armenian 
opposition but condemned as a coup attempt by Pashinian.

Khachaturov insisted on the prime minister’s resignation in a separate statement 
issued in March 2021. He said that “every day and hour” of Pashinian’s rule 
“erodes” Armenia’s national security. He was fired a few months later.

The NSS detained Khachaturov late on Monday on charges of money laundering 
stemming from a controversial criminal case opened against Seyran Ohanian, a 
former defense minister who now leads the parliamentary group of the main 
opposition Hayastan alliance.

Ohanian was charged earlier this month with illegally privatizing in the past 
two buildings in Yerevan and two other, disused properties that belonged to the 
Armenian Defense Ministry. He rejects the accusations as politically motivated.

Law-enforcement authorities say that Khachaturov “de facto” acquired one of 
those properties at a knockdown price and used it for obtaining a bank loan 
worth 18 million drams ($45,000). The retired general’s lawyer, Hakob Yenokian, 
described the money laundering charge as “laughable.”

Several opposition figures voiced support for Khachaturov as they gathered 
outside the Yerevan-based court during a hearing on his pre-trial arrest sought 
by the NSS. They claimed that Pashinian is trying to punish the general for his 
and his close relatives’ anti-government views.

Khachaturov’s father Yuri was the chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff 
from 2008-2016. He served as secretary general of the Russian-led Collective 
Security Treaty Organization when the current authorities indicted him as well 
as Ohanian and former President Robert Kocharian in 2018 over their alleged role 
in the 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan. Armenia’s Constitutional Court 
declared coup charges leveled against them unconstitutional in 2021.

Yuri Khachaturov and his second son actively participated in last year’s 
antigovernment protests staged by the country’s main opposition forces.



Activist Decries ‘Continuing Police Torture’ In Armenia

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia - Busloads of police are seen in the center of Yerevan, December 5, 2019.


The Armenian police continue to ill-treat criminal suspects to extract 
confessions or other testimony from them despite police reforms declared by the 
government, a civic activist claimed on Tuesday.

A government bill enacted as part of those reforms three years ago called for 
surveillance cameras to be installed inside police stations -- and their 
interrogation rooms in particular -- across Armenia by 2023. This was supposed 
to prevent police abuse of detainees which had long been widespread.

Only ten police stations were equipped with such cameras afterwards. They were 
switched off in last July on then national police chief Vahe Ghazarian’s orders.

The police told the country’s Office of the Human Rights Defender that the 
cameras are no longer needed because under another law enacted last year 
suspects detained by the police must now be interrogated by another 
law-enforcement body, the Investigative Committee.

Daniel Ioannisian, a civic activist monitoring the police, dismissed that 
explanation. Ghazarian simply wanted to make sure that his subordinates can 
continue to torture detainees, he claimed, adding that the illegal practice has 
therefore continued unabated.

Ioannisian noted that as recently as on February 10 two lawyers representing a 
juvenile suspect claimed to have been beaten up by officers at a police station 
in Yerevan. The police denied the allegations, saying that the officers 
themselves were insulted and assaulted by the lawyers.

Ghazarian, who is reputedly a childhood friend of Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian, was promoted to head

Armenia’s newly re-established Interior Ministry in January. Ioannisian’s Union 
of Informed Citizens (UIC) and two other non-governmental organizations strongly 
criticized the appointment and pulled out of a government body coordinating 
police reforms in protest. They accused Ghazarian of systematically obstructing 
those reforms.

Ghazarian has not publicly responded to the accusations so far.



Russia Reaffirms Opposition To EU Monitoring Mission In Armenia

Armenia - European Union monitors patrol Armenia's border with Azerbaijan, 
.


Russia has accused the European Union of trying to squeeze it out of the South 
Caucasus, reacting to the deployment of some 100 EU monitors to Armenia’s border 
with Azerbaijan.

The Russian Foreign Ministry insisted that the monitoring mission, officially 
launched on Monday, will not reduce the risk of fresh fighting on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

“Unfortunately, it is not the first time we have recorded the desire of the 
European Union and the West as a whole to gain a foothold in our ally Armenia by 
any means,” the ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, said in written comments.

“We see in these attempts a solely geopolitical background which is far from the 
interests of a real normalization of relations in the Transcaucasus. Everything 
is being done to squeeze Russia out of the region and weaken its historical role 
as the main guarantor of security,” she charged.

Zakharova reiterated the official Russian line that Armenian-Azerbaijani 
agreements brokered by Moscow during and after the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh 
will remain “the key factor of stability and security in the region in the 
foreseeable future.”

RUSSIA -- Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova speaks during a 
press conference in Moscow, July 1, 2021

Moscow already condemned the EU member states in late January just days after 
they formally approved the monitoring mission requested by Armenia. Russian 
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also rebuked Yerevan for refusing a similar 
mission offered by the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) in 
November.

CSTO member Armenia has repeatedly accused the Russian-led military alliance of 
failing to defend it against Azerbaijani “military aggression.”

Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan praised the EU for sending the observers when 
he met with the head of the monitoring mission, Markus Ritter, and another 
senior EU official on Monday. Mirzoyan expressed confidence that the mission 
will make an “important contribution” to regional stability and the security of 
Armenian border areas.

The EU foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, similarly tweeted that the monitors 
“will contribute to human security, build confidence on the ground and support 
EU efforts in the peace process between Armenia and Azerbaijan.”

The EU deployment underscores growing friction between Moscow and Yerevan. 
Russian-Armenian relations have soured lately also because of Azerbaijan’s 
continuing blockade of Karabakh’s land link with Armenia.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has repeatedly accused Russian peacekeepers of 
doing little to unblock the vital road. Moscow has rejected the accusations.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

EU launches civilian mission in Armenia — Council of European Union statement

 TASS 
Russia – Feb 20 2023
"The total – exclusively civilian – staff of the EUMA will be approximately 100, including around 50 unarmed observers," the Council explained

BRUSSELS, February 20. /TASS/. The European Union launched on Monday a European Union civilian mission in Armenia, to help normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, as follows from a statement by the Council of the European Union that holds a meeting in Brussels on Monday.

"The European Union is launching today the EU civilian mission in Armenia (EU Mission in Armenia / EUMA) under the Common Security and Defence Policy (CSDP)," it said.

"Through its deployment on the Armenian side of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border, the objectives are to contribute to stability in the border areas of Armenia, build confidence and human security in conflict affected areas, and ensure an environment conducive to the normalisation efforts between Armenia and Azerbaijan supported by the EU," it went on to say.

"The total – exclusively civilian – staff of the EUMA will be approximately 100, including around 50 unarmed observers," the Council explained in its statement.

"The Operational Headquarters of the mission will be in Yeghegnadzor, in Armenia’s Vayots Dzor province. EEAS Managing Director of the Civilian Planning and Conduct Capability (CPCC) Stefano Tomat will serve as the Civilian Operation Commander, while Markus Ritter will serve as the Head of Mission," it said.

On January 23, 2023, the Council adopted a decision establishing the EU Mission in Armenia. The mission will have a two-year mandate. "The establishment of an EU Mission in Armenia launches a new phase in the EU’s engagement in the South Caucasus," the statement said back then. The two-year mission will be mandated to "conduct routine patrolling and report on the situation, which will strengthen the EU’s understanding of the situation on the ground," the statement said.

Moscow considers EU mission to Armenia as attempt to squeeze it from region — diplomat

 TASS 
Russia – Feb 20 2023
Maria Zakharova stressed that a key factor of stability and security in the region in the foreseeable perspective was the package of agreements between the Russia, Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders

MOSCOW, February 20. /TASS/. Russia sees geopolitical motives behind the European Union’s civilian mission in Armenia geared to squeeze Russia out of the region, which has little to do with the interests of the normalization of the situation in the South Caucasus, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Monday.

"Regrettably, this is not the first time when we see that the European Union is sparing no efforts to win a foothold in our allied Armenia. We see solely political motives, which are a far cry from the interests of the real normalization of relations in the South Caucasus, behind these attempts. It is sparing no effort to squeeze Russia out of the region and weaken its historical role as a key security guarantor. Baku’s openly voiced negative views about this initiative are being ignored," she said, commenting on the deployment of the EU civilian mission to Armenia.

According to Zakharova, the European Unions’ record of settling regional conflicts is quite dubious. "I don’t think Brussels can boast any successes in this area. Suffice it to recall the European Union’s mediatory efforts and its mission in Kosovo," she noted.

She stressed that a key factor of stability and security in the region in the foreseeable perspective is the package of agreements between the Russia, Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders. "The shortest way to improve the situation in the region lies via the comprehensive implementation of these agreements, including the unblocking of transport communication, the delimitation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, establishing ties between people, experts, religious circles, parliamentarians of the two countries, and through peace treaty talks. Russia is ready to continue to promote this," she said.

On Monday, the European Union launched a civilian mission in Armenia, which is tasked to promote settlement of the situation with Azerbaijan. The mission’s two-year mandate envisages patrolling and reporting about the situation to Brussels to raise its awareness of the situation on the ground. According to experts in Brussels, the mission is ultimately geared to enhance the European Union’s influence in the South Caucasus amid its confrontation with Russia.

The California Courier Online, February 23, 2023

The California
Courier Online, February 23, 2023

 

1-         Earthquake
Damage and Corruption

            Are
Intertwined in Erdogan’s Turkey

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

           
www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Armenia sent about $400,000 worth of aid to Turkey and Syria

3-         Azerbaijan, Turkey
citizens buy apartments, houses in Armenia

4-         Armenian
Community, Beverly Hills
City Officials

            Discuss
Anti-Armenian Hate Incident

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against
COVID-19

************************************************************************************************************************************************

 

1-         Earthquake
Damage and Corruption

            Are
Intertwined in Erdogan’s Turkey

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

           
www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

With each passing day, the number of victims of the
earthquake in Turkey
is increasing. Our heart goes out to the nearly 50,000 dead and close to
200,000 injured as of now. The ancient city of Antioch
(Antakya) with a population of 250,000 has
been mostly reduced to rubble.

As I wrote last week, Armenians should distinguish between
the Turkish government that committed the Genocide and the Turkish people who
played no role in this mass crime. Not one of today’s Turks was alive in 1915.

In recent days, hundreds of articles have been written by
journalists from around the world pointing out that Pres. Recep Tayyip
Erdogan’s corrupt practices increased the toll of the disaster manifold.
Erdogan who came to power in 2003 as a devout Muslim has turned into a corrupt
dictator. As it is said, “power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
Many Turks blame Erdogan personally for the large number of deaths and the
collapse or damage of over 100,000 buildings which were poorly-constructed by
the President’s cronies. At least one million people have been left homeless in
Turkey.

Let’s start with the earthquake tax that the Turkish
government established after the earthquake in 1999 which had caused the deaths
of 17,000 people in Turkey.
In 2021, by a presidential decree, the tax was increased from 7.5% to 10% on
all private communication. The billions of dollars raised through this tax were
used to fund construction, transport and agricultural projects, instead of the
intended purposes of reinforcing buildings and disaster prevention.

Reuters reported the anguished plea from a mother whose two
sons were trapped alive for two days under the rubble in Antakya,
begging for a crane to rescue her children. “Many in Turkey
say more people could have survived the 7.8 magnitude earthquake that struck
the south of the country and neighboring Syria if the emergency response had
been faster and better organized.” In the absence of an organized rescue
effort, people were forced to dig through the rubble with their bare hands to
save their family members.

Turkish soldiers either did not show up to help in the
rescue or were too slow to arrive, awaiting orders from Erdogan’s civilian
officials. Interestingly, Erdogan had “risen to prominence more than two
decades ago partly due to his critique of the response to a major 1999
earthquake,” Reuters reported. Instead, “he hollowed out state institutions,
placed loyalists in key positions, wiped out most civil society organizations,
and enriched his cronies to create a small circle of loyalists around him,”
according to Foreignpolicy.com. Kemal Kilicdaroglu, leader of the main
opposition party, said that even more damaging than the magnitude of last
week’s quake was the “lack of coordination, lack of planning and incompetence.”

Making the disaster worse, “in 2019, Pres. Erdogan of Turkey
praised legislation that his political party had pushed through allowing
property owners to have construction violations forgiven without bringing their
buildings up to code,” according to The New York Times. Up to 75,000 buildings
were given such amnesties in the earthquake zone alone. Ironically, just a few
days before the earthquake, the government was about to issue another amnesty
for construction violators. Now the Turkish government is arresting building
contractors with ties to collapsed buildings. But the true culprits are the
government officials who approved these shoddy buildings. Many of the owners of
these buildings have close ties to Pres. Erdogan or his ruling political party.

Rather than taking urgent measures to rescue the trapped
citizens, Erdogan lashed back at his critics. One such critic, “a French
journalist with long experience in Turkey, Guillaume Perrier, was detained at
the Istanbul airport and deported back to France, with a five-year ban on his
reentry into the country,” the Middle East Institute reported. Furthermore, the
government temporarily closed down the social media in the midst of the
earthquake to block criticism of the Turkish government’s incompetence.

The Jerusalem Post published an article on Feb. 20, titled:
“After the earthquake, Turkey’s
Erdogan hunts for scapegoats.” The article stated that: “Erdogan’s house of
cards has collapsed with the earthquake. There is already a rush to find
scapegoats and as well as the arrests of looters…. Faced with the coming
elections, what Erdogan will find equally hard to explain is a video
circulating on social media, where he boasted he had approved a construction amnesty
for buildings in the earthquake epicenter of Kahramanmarash, in 2019. This
meant they were absolved from adhering to building and earthquake regulations.
In the 10 earthquake provinces, almost 295,000 buildings were included.”

One of the unexpected side effects of the disastrous
earthquake is that Turkey
will be preoccupied for several years with the reconstruction of over 100,000
collapsed buildings. Turkey’s
attention will be sidetracked from attacking Syria,
Iraq, Cyprus, Greece,
Armenia and Libya. These
countries will breathe a sigh of relief for a while!

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         Armenia
sent about $400,000 worth of aid to Turkey
and Syria

 

YEREVAN (Arka)—The Armenian
government has allocated 157.8 million drams ($400,000) to the Ministry of
Emergency Situations to cover the cost of humanitarian aid sent to the
earthquake-stricken regions of Turkey
and Syria.

Minister of Emergency Situations Armen Pambukhchyan said
humanitarian aid was sent to Syria
twice by air, to Turkey
also twice by land. The first cargo of humanitarian aid sent to Turkey weighed 100 tons; a second cargo crossed
into Turkey,
but reports did not state the amount of aid that was sent. Syria received
a total of 55 tons of humanitarian aid.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that Armenian rescuers
already returned from Syria
and Turkey.
Armenia sent 27 rescuers to Turkey, and 29 to Syria.

************************************************************************************************************************************************
3-         Azerbaijan,
Turkey citizens buy
apartments, houses in Armenia

 

(News.am)—To date, eight transactions of state registration
of real estate rights have been carried out by Azerbaijani citizens in Armenia, and 82—by Turkish nationals, reports
Sputnik Armenia.

In 2022, Azerbaijani nationals acquired two real estates in Armenia. This
was reported to Sputnik Armenia
by the Cadastre Committee of Armenia—and in response to a written request.

According to the information received, last year,
Azerbaijani citizens acquired one apartment in Armenia’s
capital Yerevan apartment and one house in Lori Province.
The Cadastre Committee added that Turkish nationals bought 11 real estates in Armenia in 2022: 11 apartments in Yerevan. Turkish citizens
did not buy real estate in the provinces.

Also, Azerbaijani and Turkish citizens did not sell any real
estate in Armenia
during the past year. The nationality of the citizens of those countries,
however, is not specified in the response received from the Cadastre Committee.

According to the data published earlier by the Cadastre
Committee, until 2022, six transactions of state registration of real estate
rights were carried out by Azerbaijani citizens in Armenia, and 71—by Turkish
nationals. Accordingly, Turkish citizens had bought 54 apartments in Armenia,
received two apartments as gifts, and exchanged one apartment. In addition,
they had bought five houses, one garage, eight public properties, and 12 plots
of land.

Six real estate acquisition transactions were carried out by
Azerbaijani nationals.

Thus, up to now, Azerbaijani citizens have acquired eight,
and Turkish nationals—82 immovable properties in Armenia.

Turkish citizens had first bought real estate in Armenia in
2005, whereas Azerbaijani nationals—in 2012.

**********************************************************************************************************************************************
4-         Armenian Community, Beverly Hills City Officials

            Discuss
Anti-Armenian Hate Incident

 

GLENDALE, CA  – The
Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) local and national leadership and
a group of leaders from Armenian organizations met with City of Beverly Hills
Mayor Lili Bosse, Police Chief Mark Stainbrook, and City Manager Nancy
Hunt-Coffey, who came to Glendale on February 10th to discuss the anti-Armenian
flyers seen on the route of a protest organized by the Armenian Youth
Federation in response to Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh.

The flyers, which lined utility poles from the Federal
Building to the Azerbaijani Consulate in Los Angeles, threatened that a group
of countries, including Azerbaijan and Turkey, would “wipe Armenia off the map”
– a brazen incitement of genocidal sentiments against the Armenian people.

After the flyers were discovered, the leadership of ANCA
local chapters immediately alerted area elected officials and law enforcement
to the incident. In response to the incident, Beverly Hills Mayor Lili Bosse
condemned the incitement of anti-Armenian hate, stating that “hate has no place
in Beverly Hills
or anywhere. I will always stand up, I will always speak out.” Los Angeles
Mayor Karen Bass also issued a comment, remarking, “there is no place for
anti-Armenian hatred in Los Angeles
or anywhere else.”

“Armenian-Americans are outraged by this latest act of hate
directed against our community,” remarked Armenian National Committee of
America National Board Member Zanku Armenian. “The meeting with City of Beverly Hills
representatives is an important first step in starting a dialogue to confront
the hate and persecution against the Armenian community. No community should
have to endure such treatment.”

A number of organizations, including the Anti-Defamation
League (ADL) of Southern California, the American Jewish Committee (AJC) of Los Angeles, and Jewish
World Watch (JWW), swiftly condemned the hateful flyers.

Initially, the Beverly Hills Police Department announced it
was investigating the anti-Armenian flyers posted in the city but concluded,
based on previous similar incidents, that they are protected free speech.

During the meeting representatives Steve Dadaian and Armen
Hovannisian of the Armenian Bar Association detailed how the events are part of
a bigger picture: about anti-Armenian incidents in California which have led to attacks and
violence against the community in recent years. They outlined how in 2020, the
Armenian-American community of San
Francisco was subject to a string of hate-fueled
attacks on community property.

Three separate incidents involving hateful vandalism on the
property of the Krouzian-Zekarian-Vasbouragan (KZV) Armenian School in San
Francisco, a subsequent drive-by shooting at school property, and an arson attack
on the St. Gregory Apostolic Church in San Francisco followed the ruthless
incitement of anti-Armenian hatred by Azerbaijan’s government in the immediate
lead up to the 2020 Artsakh War.

Other leaders shared that a year prior, Armenian schools in Los Angeles were vandalized with Turkish flags – a cruel
act designed to sow fear amongst the student body while hateful rhetoric and
acts continued unchecked by Azerbaijan
against Armenia
and Artsakh. The Beverly Hills Police Chief expressed understanding and said
they will continue to keep the investigation open to gather additional
intelligence that could lead to potential perpetrators and to ensure the safety
of the community.

During the meeting, ANCA representatives also briefed local
officials on the persistent incitement of anti-Armenian hatred by Azerbaijani
government officials both in Azerbaijan and abroad, noting how Azerbaijan’s
state-sponsored policy of Armenophobia fueled attacks on Armenian communities
not just in the United States but across the world.

Earlier in the day, the Beverly Hills
representatives met with their counterparts in the City of Glendale, including Mayor Ardy Kassakhian,
Police Chief Manny Cid, and City Manager Roubik Golanian, to exchange thoughts
about this situation and commit to working together to stand up against this
kind of anti-Armenian hatred. “We must take active steps in fighting this kind
of persecution of our communities because this has global roots to it starting
with the rhetoric coming from Azerbaijan’s
and Turkey’s
leadership,” said Mayor Kassakhian after the meeting. “We have seen how this
hateful culture gives way to acts of violence affecting any community, which
cannot be tolerated.”

 

***********************************************************************************************************************************************

5-         Armenia Continues Fight Against
COVID-19

 

YEREVAN (Armenpress)—The
cumulative total number of confirmed of COVID-19 cases in Armenia reached
446,008, the Ministry of Health reported on .

The total number of recoveries is 435,162. The death toll is
8,717.

COVID-19 has deeply affected Armenia's economy throughout the
last three years. Primary health care is people’s first point of entry into the
health system and the COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the crucial role it plays.

While responding to the surge in demand due to the health
crisis, primary care centers and staff were able to maintain essential health
services.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************

California Courier Online provides readers of the Armenian News News Service with a
few of the articles in this week's issue of The California Courier. Letters to
the editor are encouraged through our e-mail address, .
Letters are published with the author’s name and location; authors are required
to disclose their identity to the editorial staff (name, address, and/or
telephone numbers for verification purposes).
California Courier subscribers can change or modify mailing addresses by
emailing .

Armenpress: FlyOne Armenia: Largest national carrier by destinations, passenger count plans major expansion, including India flights

Save

Share

 09:05,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. December of 2022 was an unprecedented period for FlyOne Armenia in terms of launching new destinations.

And now, in 2023, the airline plans to further expand the flight directions. FlyOne Armenia will launch roundtrip Yerevan-Dusseldorf flights, will restore the full schedule flights to Beirut, and will also fly to Tehran, Novosibirsk and Samara, according to Flyone Armenia Chairman of the Board Aram Ananyan.

Ananyan told ARMENPRESS that they are also interested in the prospects of launching flights to India.

The airline will announce the specific dates of launching the new destinations ahead of the tourist season in order for travelers to plan their holidays.

FlyOne Armenia began operations on December 18th in 2021 with the Yerevan-Lyon flight.

“Since February 2022, FlyOne Armenia is operating direct roundtrip flights from Yerevan to Istanbul, and since March the airline essentially entered a new phase of development when our destinations in Russia increased rapidly. Now, we carry out flights to the two airports in Moscow – Vnukovo and Domodedovo, to Saint Petersburg, Sochi, Mineralnie Vody and Yekaterinburg. We fly to Chisinau and Tbilisi as well. Regarding European destinations, in addition to Lyon we carry out flights to Paris and Milan, while our Middle Eastern directions are Dubai, Tel-Aviv and Sharm El Sheikh,” Ananyan said.

Ananyan said FlyOne Armenia is the largest Armenian carrier by number of countries served and by passenger count (both inbound and outbound).

“And as a national low-cost carrier this bar is highly obligating for us, and we plan to double the figures soon. We are connecting nearly twenty cities with Yerevan. Soon we plan a significant increase of our fleet and expansion of geography. At this moment FlyOne Armenia operates five Airbus A319 and A320 aircraft. In this regard, we will continue making efforts in 2023 to supplement our fleet because it will allow us to conduct flights to more destinations,” Ananyan said.

Speaking about new initiatives by FlyOne Armenia, Ananyan mentioned TravelOne – the travel agency launched by the airline in 2022.

“We apply the global experience here in Armenia. Any airline must start offering travel services when reaching a particular milestone of development, and in this context the launch of the TravelOne travel agency was no coincidence. Our goal is to become the leader in this arena as well because we see that there is a demand for affordable, high-quality travel packages in our country,” the Flyone Armenia executive said.

Ananyan says that from the very beginning Flyone Armenia’s mission has been to provide affordable and safe flights for everyone traveling to or from Armenia.

The airline’s executive was excited to note their plans to expand into Asia. “You can’t predict developments in the aviation sector, whether or not the destination you are going to launch won’t become a new and highly demanded direction. In this regard we consider that launching flights to India can become the beginning of new opportunities,” Ananyan said.

Ananyan emphasized that in 2022 the airline made big investments in human capital, enabling a number of aviation specialists – including pilots – to return home to Armenia and work here.

[see video]

Interview by Gayane Gaboyan

Photos by Gevorg Perkuperkyan




Deadly new quakes hit Turkey

Save

Share

 10:01,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. Rescuers are once again searching for people trapped under rubble in Turkey after two new earthquakes hit the country, killing at least 6 people.

Tremors of 6.8 and 5.8 magnitude struck in the south-east (Hatay province) near the border with Syria, where massive quakes devastated both countries on 6 February, the BBC reports.

The earlier quakes killed 46,000 people in Turkey and Syria. Buildings weakened by those tremors collapsed in both countries on Monday.

The 6.8 magnitude tremor occurred at 20:04 local time (17:04 GMT), followed by the 5.8 magnitude quake three minutes later.

Interior Minister Süleyman Soylu said three deaths occurred in Antakya, Defne, and Samandag.

Hurriyet later reported that search and rescue teams retrieved three more bodies from the rubble.

According to Anadolu news agency, the quakes were felt in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Iraq, Palestine and Israel.

People in Turkey are advised to stay away from damaged buildings.

Armenian church in Syria’s Kessab suffers more damage in latest quake

Save

Share

 10:05,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. The Holy Mother of God Armenian church in the Syrian town of Kessab suffered more damage in the February 20 earthquakes two weeks after sustaining damages in the devastating February 6 quake, the Gandzasar newspaper reported.

Tremors of 6.8 and 5.8 magnitude struck in the south-east of Turkey near the border with Syria Monday evening.




Triple S Ventures VC invests $250,000 in Docus

Save

Share

 10:29,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. At the closing ceremony of the Seaside Startup Summit Holidays Vizag India 2023, Triple S Ventures VC announced its first investment deal of 2023 with the Armenian startup Docus. Docus provides the first telemedicine platform, where doctors from developing countries collaborate with hundreds of top medical experts from the US and Europe to provide patients with the best possible care.

The most severe patients are concerned with getting a second opinion for their diagnosis and treatment plan. This is a valid concern given that misdiagnosis is the 3rd cause of death and 30% of surgeries appear to be unnecessary.

Docus is an innovative platform that empowers patients and caregivers to access the best medical care through the collaboration of two top doctors: one local and one international, increasing the chances of receiving an accurate diagnosis and treatment.

Currently, Docus focuses on India. Robert Sargsyan, Co-founder, and CEO of Docus, explains, ‘’We are now concentrating on the Indian healthcare sector, as many forward-thinking Indian doctors are open to cooperating with US and European doctors. Furthermore, they speak English as their second language”.

In his statement, Avag Simonyan – the Managing Partner of the fund said, ‘I am assured that the partnership between Docus and Triple S VC will allow the startup to quickly expand in the Indian market’. Mr Simonyan also added, ‘We believe that this will be a precedent for Armenian startups succeeding in India.’

Triple S is a new VC firm founded in 2022 by Artur Janibekyan,Hakob Hakobyan and Avag Simonyan that targets startups in the pre-seed or seed stages.