Lawmaker comments on prospects of military cooperation with Russia

 12:31,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Armenia continues military cooperation with Russia but at the same time it is pursuing the path of balancing in terms of security, a lawmaker has said.

Civil Contract MP Artur Hovhannisyan was asked at a press briefing to present Armenia’s vision on the cooperation with Russia in the defense sector.

“We continue to work with our Russian partners, and we’ve already said that in terms of security we are taking the path of balancing. In this regard we are working with all our partners, pursuant to Armenia’s national interests and security,” Hovhannisyan said.

Nicolas Anelka visits forcibly displaced children of Nagorno-Karabakh in Armenia

 12:26,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. Nicolas Anelka, the French professional football manager and retired player has visited the Sport and Culture Center in the Armenian city of Abovyan to meet with forcibly displaced children of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Anelka, who arrived in Armenia for a project on opening a football academy, gifted presents to the children.

Armenia National Olympic Committee President Gagik Tsarukyan accompanied Anelka during the visit to Abovyan.

In a statement, Tsarukyan said Anelka had expressed desire to meet the children of Nagorno-Karabakh and gift them presents.

The Sport and Culture Center in Abovyan has been providing shelter to the NK children since September 2023.

[see video]

‘Environmental megaproject’: Government plans new city park and recreational area in Yerevan

 12:59,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government plans to open a new city park and a recreational area in Yerevan in what Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan described Thursday as an “environmental megaproject.”

The projects concern the Gardens of Dalma, the oldest and biggest garden in the city located in between downtown Yerevan and adjacent districts of Ajapnyak and Malatia-Sebastia, and the Hrazdan Gorge.

The government wants to transform the Gardens of Dalma into a big city park. “We have two projects, and we’ve had discussions about this and I have given instructions. One of them is the transformation of the Gardens of Dalma into a big city park with as minimal interference as possible,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting.

“And the other project, which would become an environmental megaproject if connected with each other, is the project on transforming the Hrazdan Gorge into a recreational area,” Pashinyan added.

The Prime Minister said he supports Yerevan Mayor Tigran Avinyan’s policy of displaying restraint against investment projects in the Hrazdan Gorge in order to preserve the area for a recreational area.

“The Gardens of Dalma are next to Hrazdan Gorge and it’s reasonable for the recreational area to start from the Hrazdan river mouth up to the Korea Gorge,” Pashinyan said.

Exploratory works are now underway in 250 hectares of the Gardens of Dalma. The project involves the leading park-designing company of the UAE. The entire 250 hectares will be designed as a city park.

ANN/Armenian News – Calendar of Events – 01/18/2024

Armenian Ambassador Warns CoE of Azerbaijan’s Threat to Regional Peace

Jan 18 2024

By: Rizwan Shah

Armenian Ambassador to the Council of Europe (CoE), Arman Khachatryan, voiced apprehensions about the recent statements from Azerbaijan, alleging them as possible threats to regional peace efforts. In a meeting with the CoE Committee of Ministers, Khachatryan expressed disapproval of Azerbaijan’s aggressive rhetoric, failure to respect agreements, and imposition of new demands on Armenia. These actions, according to him, obstruct the path to peace and stability in the region.

Khachatryan called on the Committee of Ministers to take decisive actions to prevent Azerbaijan from worsening the regional situation. He emphasized the importance of maintaining peace and respect for international law, referring to recent incidents where Azerbaijan allegedly penetrated 20 km into Armenian territory. In response, Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan highlighted the significance of international legal legitimacy regarding borders and territorial integrity. Khachatryan, supporting Pashinyan’s stance, expressed his concerns about these intrusions and implored for countermeasures.

Khachatryan also drew attention to the report on human rights by CoE Commissioner Dunja Mijatovic, which followed her visit to Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Nagorno-Karabakh. He stressed that the report contradicts Azerbaijan’s allegations about the obstruction of the Lachin corridor and the forced displacement of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh. In response to Baku leader Ilham Aliyev’s statements about the ‘Zangezur corridor’, Pashinyan said that Armenia is prepared to open the road to Nakhichevan for Azerbaijan under the same conditions as Iran.

The Azerbaijani Ambassador to France criticized a draft resolution in the French Senate condemning Azerbaijan’s military attack on Nagorno-Karabakh, claiming it was based on erroneous information. MEP Nathalie Loiseau countered by questioning the ambassador’s understanding of democracy and the rule of law, and emphasized the close ties between France and Armenia. She supported the draft resolution, which calls for the prevention of further aggression by Azerbaijan, the introduction of sanctions, and guarantees for the right of the Armenian population to return to Nagorno-Karabakh.

Ending his address, the Armenian ambassador reiterated Armenia’s dedication to establishing lasting peace in the region, based on the principles agreed upon. Khachatryan’s speech serves as a reminder of the ongoing tensions in the region and the crucial role international organizations like the CoE play in fostering peace and stability.

"Armenia cannot count on integration with the West without Georgia". Opinion

Jan 17 2024
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Relations between Armenia and Georgia

“The growing influence and power of oligarchic circles in Georgia is a problem for Armenia as well,” Armenian political scientist Areg Kochinyan said, commenting on Bidzina Ivanishvili’s decision to return to politics. He believes that strengthening of democracy in Georgia should be important for Armenia as well, as “without Georgia Armenia cannot count on integration with the West”.

At the request of JAMnews, political scientist Areg Kochinyan and Georgian affairs expert Johnny Melikyan commented on the impact Ivanishvili’s return could have on Armenian-Georgian relations, and the aspirations of both countries to move closer to the EU.

Bidzina Ivanishvili, who is considered the shadow ruler of Georgia, announced on December 30, 2023 that he has decided to return to politics. The founder of the ruling Georgian Dream party is now its honorary chairman and has announced his return to active politics for the third time. This time – on the eve of the 2024 parliamentary elections. “The opposition has collapsed and the overly strong ruling party needs to be kept from human error. I will become the new center of gravity,” the billionaire declared.


  • “Ivanishvili’s decision to return has personal motives, fears and risks” – Georgian political scientist
  • Bidzina Ivanishvili returns to politics in Georgia. What did he say in his first statement?
  • Ivanishvili at No. 8 on world list of “destroyers” – POLITICO’s annual ranking

“What is happening in Georgia. Real, functional power becomes official. The person in whose hands, in fact, the power was concentrated, publicly takes over its realization. This is a more honest approach towards the voters and partners, the international community.

As for the Armenian-Georgian relations, they have reached a certain quality and depth, have a certain layer, which will not change its content regardless of the international conjuncture, quality and form of international relations. Besides, only Georgia and Armenia are democratic countries not only in the South Caucasus, but in the entire region. This is also a fact that cannot be ignored, especially by our Western partners.

Of course, the quality of democracy in Georgia, its depth is very important for us. Active political activity of an oligarch, especially one who has accumulated his wealth in the Russian Federation, who seeks to occupy important positions of power, cannot be considered an achievement of democracy. This is a problem that we must try to work with.

In the work of the West, the main approach will be to rely on Armenia and Georgia at the same time. Therefore, as much as we value and consider important the development of democratic institutions and deepening of democracy in Armenia, we should treat these processes in Georgia as well. Armenia cannot count on integration with the West without Georgia.”

“I link Ivanishvili’s return to the internal political processes taking place in Georgia. The goal is to form or strengthen the ranks of the ruling party.

Moreover, the position [of honorary chairman of Georgian Dream] is not symbolic. After the recent changes, Ivanishvili can also nominate a candidate for prime minister. He has the decisive vote and will continue to be the deciding factor.

I don’t expect any drastic changes in Armenian-Georgian relations. There is a team, a policy that has not changed since 2012. During the rule of the Georgian Dream and after the change of power in Armenia in 2018, relations between the elites of the two countries have become even warmer. The basis for deepening relations are the trends in both countries. These are the strengthening of democracy, human rights, freedom of speech.

Perhaps in 2024-25 we will see the formation of a new, renewed agenda of deepening relations, and the countries will consolidate the level of their relations as strategic – as Georgia’s relations with Turkey and Azerbaijan are. If earlier Armenian officials were talking about this, now the Prime Minister of Georgia is already talking about the establishment of strategic relations with Armenia.”

https://jam-news.net/relations-between-armenia-and-georgia-and-ivanishvilis-comeback/

Armenians won’t accept loss of Artsakh

Catholic Register
Jan 18 2024
BY  SUSAN KORAH

The 100,000 Armenians who fled en masse after Azerbaijan seized control of Nagorno-Karabakh — the enclave known to Armenians as Artsakh — last September are now facing a bitter winter as homeless refugees in Armenia.

They and their Church leaders are urgently seeking Canada and the international community’s help in reclaiming their homeland and retrieving their Christian history and heritage in Artsakh, which they fear is being deliberately destroyed by Azerbaijan.

Grieving the loss of their beloved homeland, and haunted by fears of an erasure of their 1,700-year-old history as a Christian nation in Artsakh, their collective anguish can only be described by the Welsh word “hiraeth” (a mixture of yearning, nostalgia, wistfulness and an intense longing for a lost homeland.)

“It’s now over three months since I lost my home,” Siranush Sargsyan, from Stepanakert, Artsakh’s capital, told The Catholic Register. “At the beginning (of the exodus), most people were relieved to be still alive. But now we are going through another stage. We can’t accept the reality that we can’t go back home.”

Sargsyan is an Armenian journalist who has documented through her own experience the persecution and ethnic cleansing of her people by Azerbaijan. Like the thousands who fled Artsakh, she now lives as a refugee in Armenia.

Archbishop Papken Tcharian, Prelate of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Canada, and Archbishop Anoushavan Tanielian, Prelate of the Eastern U.S., appealed to political leaders and the worldwide Christian community for help.

“I appeal to fellow Christian churches to raise their voice and support Armenia, the first nation to adopt Christianity in the year 301 AD as a state religion,” said Tcharian. “Otherwise, the confiscated churches, monasteries and khachkars (Armenian crosses) of Artsakh will be desecrated by Azerbaijan, and the authorities of Baku will distort the history of Armenian Christian Artsakh. In the words of Martin Luther King, Jr., ‘In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.’ ”

Tanielian exhorted the international community to take a lesson from past genocides, including that of Armenians in 1915, and from the ongoing persecution of Christians elsewhere, to stop the aggressors’ actions before it’s too late.

“The best and most effective step the international community and Canada can take, without any delay, is to put into practice the same measures that they usually apply to despots: freezing all the assets of the corrupt government of Azerbaijan; establishing sanctions over their resources, and implementing all resolutions by international bodies,” he said.

 He called on Canada to take a leading role in helping to restore the rights of the people of Artsakh.

“The Canadian government is well-positioned to play an important role in this regard,” he said. “It provided a substantial amount of money via the Red Cross in the first days after the forced evacuation — better to say ‘ethnic cleansing’ or even ‘genocidal attempt’ — of the population of Artsakh.”

He praised Canada’s role in stopping the sale of arms in 2022 to Azerbaijan’s allies that are “bent on erasing the Christian presence in the land of Mount Ararat.” (The mountain where Noah’s Ark is believed to have come to rest).

The sense of loss washed over Sargsyan and her countrymen with particular intensity on Jan. 6 when Armenians — most of whom belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church, an Orthodox Christian denomination — celebrated Christmas.

 “Today is Armenian Christmas, and it’s very important to celebrate it at home with family and friends,” she told The Register. “But now we don’t have a home — a homeland, yes, but not a home.”

Christmas, even under bombardment, is preferable to one without a home, she continued.

“Last year, we celebrated Christmas under siege,” she said. “And we thought it was the most difficult ever, but this year is even worse.”

The destruction of their tangible Christian heritage, and the fear of erasure of their 1,700-year history in Artsakh caused by Azerbaijan’s revisionist policies, is another source of excruciating pain, she emphasized.

“One year ago, Christmas was under siege in Artsakh, but at least in the homeland. Now our churches in Artsakh stand silent, devoid of prayers and liturgy,” Sargsyan said.

“We have not only lost our homeland, our homes, memories, but also the cultural heritage of our millennial history,” she continued, adding that dozens of churches, as well as tens of thousands of khachkars and tombstones have been razed to the ground.

She misses the beauty of the landscape, the rhythm of life in the village where she grew up and the iconic Amaras monastery, one of the oldest Christian monasteries in the world.

 “I grew up near the Amaras monastery built in the fourth century where Mesro Mashtots, the monk, opened the first Armenian school and developed the Armenian alphabet,” she said. “It’s in the Amaras valley and surrounded by mulberry orchards and vineyards, where we worked and eagerly waited for the autumn harvest. It was a family tradition, which we have also lost. All our memories and traditions have been destroyed.”

Although warmly received by her compatriots in Armenia, she, like other refugees, is grappling with financial problems and physical hardship since arriving with little more than the clothes on their backs.

“If we were lucky, we could bring some documents but not much else. The government (of Armenia) and some international organizations provide some help, but it’s nowhere near enough for our basic needs,” she said.

The onset of winter, the lack of winter clothing and fuel for heating homes, not to mention inflated rental prices due to the influx of Russian refugees escaping the war with Ukraine, are multiplying the burdens of a traumatized community, she added.

https://www.catholicregister.org/home/international/item/36348-armenians-won-t-accept-loss-of-artsakh

Lavrov says Azerbaijan ready to sign peace treaty with Armenia on Russia’s territory

Armenia – Jan 18 2024


Yerevan /Mediamax/. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said today that “Moscow has never been the initiator of cooling relations with Yerevan.”

“We remember when many of Armenia’s officials, while still in opposition, agitating during various political processes, election campaigns, called for withdrawal from the Collective Security Treaty Organization, the Eurasian Economic Union. When Prime Minister Pashinyan came to power, we did not have the slightest impulse to somehow distance ourselves from Yerevan. Everything developed as it did under his predecessor – in the economy, energy, social sectors and military-political affairs,” Lavrov said at a news conference in Moscow.

The Russian minister said Azerbaijan is ready to sign a peace treaty with Armenia on Russian territory, but Yerevan’s position remains unclear.

“Our Western colleagues want a peace treaty to be signed only on their territory, this is a fact. It is also a fact that Azerbaijan is ready to sign it on Russian territory. I do not know to what extent Yerevan is for this, although relevant signals have long been sent to the Armenian capital,” Lavrov said.

Renewable energy ‘theft’: COP29 host Azerbaijan in legal battle with neighbour

Jan 18 2024

Dispute centres on resources in mountainous region Azerbaijan seized back from Armenia following lightning offensive in 2020

By Cosmo Sanderson 

A first-of-its-kind claim in which upcoming COP climate summit host Azerbaijan is suing its neighbour Armenia for allegedly stealing its green energy resources is underway in the Netherlands.

A tribunal at the Peace Palace in The Hague last week began hearing the international legal action Azerbaijan has brought alleging Armenia illegally exploited its renewable energy resources.

The case is kicking off in a year in which the eyes of the world will fall on Azerbaijan after it was named as the host of the COP29 climate change summit, which will take place in December.

Azerbaijan has already courted controversy by naming a 28-strong organising committee that doesn’t feature a single woman and appointing an oil industry veteran Mukhtar Babayev, now its minister of ecology and natural resources, as president-designate of the summit.

The renewables resources at the centre of its legal case are based in the landlocked mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh region, which has been the source of two wars between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Both countries have claimed the enclave as their own since the fall of the Russian Empire in 1917.

Azerbaijan controlled the territory for much of the 20th century and built various energy resources there, including the 50MW Tartar hydro-electric plant in the 1970s.

After the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, Armenians seized most of the territory in the First Nagorno-Karabakh War. It fell under the leadership of the internationally unrecognised Republic of Artsakh, which was dominated by ethnic Armenians.

After simmering tensions for decades following that conflict, Azerbaijan seized the territory back in a lightning offensive in 2020 that resulted in a 44-day war with Armenia.

Azerbaijan last year launched a claim against Armenia under the Energy Charter Treaty – the first ever inter-state case under the multilateral framework for energy cooperation – seeking compensation for the alleged illegal exploitation of its resources in the region while it had been under its neighbour’s control.

In a press release last week, Azerbaijan said: “Throughout the illegal occupation, Armenia wrongfully excluded Azerbaijan from accessing its energy resources, expropriated those resources for its own use and benefit, and deprived Azerbaijan of the opportunity to develop them.”

Azerbaijan also said it was “prevented from harnessing the abundant hydropower, wind and solar energy resources” in the region.

The exploitation of hydropower is a key part of the claim. Azerbaijan argues Armenia illegally used the Tartar plant and built at least 37 “additional unauthorised hydropower facilities” during its control of the territory, which contains a quarter of Azerbaijan’s internal water resources.

The claim also concerns fossil fuel assets – Azerbaijan is rich in oil and natural gas resources – including the alleged extraction of coal from the region and damage to a natural gas pipeline.

Armenia has dismissed Azerbaijan’s case as “groundless”.

The proceeding is being administered by the Permanent Court of Arbitration. Three arbitrators have been appointed to hear the case at the Peace Palace.

Azerbaijan launched another international legal action last year in which it accused Armenia of destroying the region’s biodiversity.(Copyright)

https://www.rechargenews.com/energy-transition/renewable-energy-theft-cop29-host-azerbaijan-in-legal-battle-with-neighbour/2-1-1585287

Lydian hands 12.5% stake in Amulsar gold project to Armenian govt

Interfax
Jan 18 2024

YEREVAN. Jan 18 (Interfax) – Armenia's government has taken ownership of a 12.5% stake in Lydian Armenia, which operates the Amulsar gold mine, at zero cost.

"A decision has been made to accept the donation of a 12.5% stake in Lydian Armenia. We hope that the Amulsar mine will serve as a platform for introducing new standards in the mining sector," Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said.

The Amulsar gold deposit is located in the southeast of the country, 13 km from the resort town of Jermuk on Mount Amulsar. Development of the Amulsar field has been suspended since 2018 due to protests by environmental activists.

The Armenian government, Lydian Armenia and the Eurasian Development Bank signed a memorandum of understanding in February 2023 to resume the use of the Amulsar gold deposit, the second largest in the country after the Sotk deposit. "By signing the memorandum, the parties declare their intention to raise $150 million; another $100 million will be raised outside this document," Armenian Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan said at the time. The EDB will allocate $100 million in loans, and another $50 million will be provided by a local bank, he said. Armenian government will receive a 12.5% stake in Lydian Armenia and will ensure the management of possible risks, Kerobyan said.

Lydian Armenia is a wholly owned subsidiary of Lydian Canada Ventures, which in turn is owned by U.S. investment company Orion Mine Finance and Canada's Osisko Gold Royalties. The latter's website said that Amulsar's reserves are estimated at 2.6 million ounces of gold and 12.7 million ounces of silver. The overall resource base is 4.8 million ounces of gold and 25.1 million ounces of silver.

Lydian is the sole shareholder of the Armenian Geoteam Corp., which received an exploration and appraisal license for Amulsar in 2006.

https://interfax.com/newsroom/top-stories/98549/