Armenian President, Finland’s Foreign Minister meet in Davos

 10:45,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan has held a meeting with Finland’s Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos.

Khachaturyan and Valtonen discussed the enhancement of bilateral agenda between Armenia and Finland, as well as issues pertaining to the Armenia-EU partnership. “The general situation in the South Caucasus region and the existing security challenges were also discussed,” the Armenian President’s Office said in a readout.

Both sides attached importance to the ongoing democratic reforms in Armenia, and the concepts and programs aimed at strengthening democratic institutions, Khachaturyan’s Office added.

EUMA marks 1,500 patrols to border areas

 11:04,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. The European Union Mission in Armenia (EUMA) has marked its 1,500th patrol to the areas bordering Azerbaijan, the monitoring mission said on social media.

“Today, EUMA marks 1500 patrols to the border areas. The Mission is tasked with observing and reporting on the situation on the ground. EUMA conducts patrols from 6 operating bases in Kapan, Goris, Jermuk, Yeghegnadzor, Martuni & Ijevan,” EUMA said in a post on X.

Aurora’s Sunrise by Inna Sahakyan included in top 25 films of 2023 by Irish Cinephile

 11:01,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. Inna Sahakyan’s animated documentary Aurora's Sunrise has been included in the list of 25 best films of 2023 according to Irish Cinephile, an online film and television review platform.

The story of Aurora Mardiganian from Armenian genocide survivor to silent movie star is close to unreal. Having lost her family, escaped slavery and now enduring trauma, she journeys far to tell the world of the Armenian Genocide as it happened. Once in Hollywood, as a star of the silent screen, her story becomes the biggest blockbuster of the time. 30 million dollars is raised, which will save 160 000 orphans, whose descendants number in the millions today. Her courage long forgotten, “Aurora’s Sunrise” revives Aurora’s story through unique testimony, archive footage, and the magic of animation.

Aurora's Sunrise was earlier included in MovieWeb’s 16 Best Animated Movies of 2023.

It also won the Grand Prix at 2023 FIFDH.

Aram Khachaturian 120th anniversary celebrated in China with competition, concerts

 11:33,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. A number of events honoring the 120th anniversary of birth of prominent Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian were organized in China in 2023. 

For the first time, Beijing hosted the Khachaturian International Competition.

The 19th Khachaturian 120th Anniversary International Violin Competition was organized by the Aram Khachaturian Cultural Foundation, China National Opera and China’s state organizations. The competition was supported by the Armenian Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport.

The Armenian State Symphony Orchestra was invited by the Chinese side to play with participants in the final round, and perform at a gala concert. The orchestra, conducted by Sergey Smbatyan, then delivered 3 concerts in late December 2023, one in Beijing’s national Opera House and two at the Xinjiang Culture Center.

French senators introduce motion for resolution condemning Azeri attack in Nagorno- Karabakh

 12:13,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. The French Senate will debate a motion for a resolution to condemn Azerbaijan's military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh and prevent any further attempts at aggression and violation of the territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia, calling for sanctions against Azerbaijan and demanding the guarantee of the right of return of the Armenian population to Nagorno-Karabakh.

The motion for resolution, published on the Senate website, reaffirms the inviolability of the territorial integrity of Armenia, and calls for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal, to their initial positions, of Azerbaijani forces and their allies from the sovereign territory of Armenia.

It warns the French Government, the European Union and the international community about the hegemonic ambitions of Azerbaijan and Turkey as well as the danger they represent for the Republic of Armenia, its territorial integrity and peace in the Caucasus.

The motion seeks to call on the French government to demand from the Republic of Azerbaijan, under penalty of sanctions, the immediate release of the civilian and military prisoners it holds and the immediate return of the bodies of Armenian soldiers killed in combat.

The draft resolution strongly condemns the military offensive of September 19 and 20, 2023 led by Azerbaijan, with the support of its allies, in Nagorno-Karabakh, which forced almost the entire Armenian population to flee. The senators also condemn the arbitrary arrest of political leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The senators wrote that “the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh, when placed under Azerbaijani administration, was repeatedly subjected to organized massacres; considering that the reports of the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance of the Council of Europe (ECRI) and the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) attest to the impossibility of the Armenian populations to live freely in Azerbaijan and that, consequently, the security and freedom of the Armenian populations of Nagorno-Karabakh are not guaranteed…”

2023 marked launch of Armenia-UK Strategic Dialogue: Foreign Ministry’s year-in-review highlights

 11:46,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. In 2023, Armenia and the United Kingdom launched a Strategic Dialogue during Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan’s visit to London, the Foreign Ministry said in a 2023 review about the development of Armenia’s relations with European partners.

“The Foreign Minister’s visit was marked by the official opening ceremony of the Armenian embassy’s new building in London. During the year, the UK Minister of State for Europe Leo Docherty visited the region, and contacts took place between the Armenian FM and the newly appointed UK foreign secretary David Cameron. The active discussions with the executive and legislative bodies, academic-research and media circles of the UK were aimed at developing bilateral political dialogue, partnership in multilateral platforms, as well as mutual understanding around regional issues. An Armenian-British Business Forum was organized in London with the purpose of developing economic cooperation,” the foreign ministry said in the review.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 01/16/2024

                                        Tuesday, 


Ruling Party Figure Less Upbeat On Peace With Azerbaijan

        • Shoghik Galstian
        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia - Gevorg Papoyan.


The deputy chairman of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party 
said on Tuesday that he is less optimistic about a peace treaty between Armenia 
and Azerbaijan after statements from Baku made in recent weeks.

Gevorg Papoyan insisted at the same time that the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace 
process is not deadlocked. He linked the current state of that process to 
preparations for Azerbaijan’s snap presidential election slated for February 7.

“As long as there is a possibility to talk, negotiate and exchange proposals … I 
will not speak of such a situation [deadlock,]” Papoyan told reporters. “But I 
must say that at least I am not as optimistic as I could have been.”

As recently as in December, Pashinian and his political allies reported major 
progress made in Armenian-Azerbaijani talks and said the peace treaty could be 
signed soon. However, subsequent statements made by Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev and his top aides exposed lingering serious differences between the 
conflicting sides. In particular, Baku renewed its demands for an 
extraterritorial corridor that would connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan 
exclave through Armenia.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan spoke on January 10 of “regression” in 
the latest Azerbaijani proposals on the treaty sent to Yerevan. Mirzoyan 
indicated that Baku is reluctant to explicitly recognize Armenia’s borders 
through the peace deal. For his part, Pashinian said on January 13 that Aliyev’s 
demands amount to territorial claims to Armenia.

Armenian opposition leaders portray these developments as another vindication of 
their warnings that Pashinian’s declared “peace agenda” is on the contrary 
increasing the risk of another Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Armenia -- Levon Zurabian at a news conference in Yrevan, May 27, 2021.

Levon Zurabian, the deputy chairman of former President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s 
Armenian National Congress (HAK), said on Tuesday that Aliyev never gave up the 
idea of the so-called “Zangezur corridor” and is planning to try to open it by 
force.

“The fact is that Aliyev is gearing up for a new war,” Zurabian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.

“We mainly hear claims about peace from Pashinian, who I strongly believe is 
trying to present the situation in a way that corresponds to his propaganda 
goals but has nothing to do with reality,” he said. “Our authorities don’t 
understand what’s going on in international politics. They don’t understand 
ongoing processes and dangers.”




EU Again Warns Azerbaijan Against Attacking Armenia


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


The European Union on Tuesday again warned Azerbaijan against invading Armenia 
following Baku’s renewed demands for Yerevan to open an extraterritorial 
corridor to the Nakhichevan exclave.

“The EU has been using every opportunity to pass clear messages to Azerbaijan 
that any violation of Armenia’s territorial integrity would be unacceptable and 
will have severe consequences for our relations,” the EU foreign policy 
spokesman, Peter Stano, told the Armenpress news agency.

“We remain firm and steadfast in this stance,” Stano said, commenting on 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s latest statements on the conflict with 
Armenia.

Aliyev said last week that Azerbaijani people and cargo transported to and from 
Nakhichevan through Armenia’s Syunik province must be exempt from Armenian 
border checks. He also demanded Armenian withdrawal from “eight Azerbaijani 
villages” and again dismissed Yerevan’s insistence on using the most recent 
Soviet maps to delimit the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian rejected Aliyev’s demands, saying that they 
amount to territorial claims to Armenia. Pashinian also accused Baku of 
undermining prospects for the signing of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty 
strongly supported by the EU and the United States.

The EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, issued the same warning to Baku in 
November as the 27-nation bloc decided to deploy more observers to Armenia’s 
volatile border with Azerbaijan. The EU launched the monitoring mission in 
February 2023 with the stated aim of preventing or reducing ceasefire violations 
there.

EU officials have so far not elaborated on the “severe consequences” for 
Azerbaijan. They resisted calls to impose sanctions on Baku even after last 
September’s Azerbaijani military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh that forced the 
region’s practically entire population to flee to Armenia.

Some analysts linked their stance to a 2022 agreement to significantly increase 
the EU’s import of Azerbaijani natural gas. The head of the European Commission, 
Ursula von der Leyen, described Azerbaijan as a “key partner in our efforts to 
move away from Russian fossil fuels” when she signed the deal in Baku.




Armenia Reports First Delivery Of ‘Delayed’ Russian Weapons

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia -- The Armenian Defense Ministry building, Yerevan.


After repeated delays, Russia has delivered to Armenia the first batch of 
weapons envisaged by bilateral defense contracts signed after the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh, according to senior Armenian lawmakers.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his political allies have repeatedly 
complained about those delays amid Armenia’s worsening relations with Russia. 
Deputy Defense Minister Hrachya Sargsyan said in early December that Yerevan 
paid Russia’s state-owned arms manufacturers $400 million but has still not 
received any military equipment so far. He too declined to specify the types of 
weaponry that are listed in those contracts.

Andranik Kocharian, the chairman of the Armenian parliament committee on defense 
and security, said late last week that some of those weapons have been delivered 
to Armenia.

“[The Russians] are giving us something, not on a scale anticipated by us in 
line with the volume of the signed contracts,” Kocharian told Armenian Public 
Television. “But I’m sure that things will be sorted out in the process.”

Gagik Melkonian, another pro-government member of the parliament committee, 
confirmed on Tuesday the first delivery of the Russian weapons, saying that it 
was carried out “recently.”

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, Melkonian claimed to be unaware of what 
exactly was supplied to the Armenian army. The Armenian Defense Ministry also 
did not shed light on that.

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

Russia’s ambassador to Armenia, Sergei Kopyrkin, acknowledged late last month 
“issues” in the implementation of Russian-Armenian arms deals. He implied that 
Russian defense companies have not fulfilled their contractual obligations on 
time because of having to manufacture more weapons for the Russian military 
embroiled in the continuing war with Ukraine.

“But these are working issues that are resolved in the dialogue between relevant 
agencies of Russia and Armenia,” Kopyrkin told the TASS news agency. The two 
sides are now also “discussing new agreements in the field of military-technical 
cooperation,” he said without elaborating.

Russia has long been Armenia’s principal supplier of weapons and ammunition. But 
with no end in sight to the war in Ukraine and tensions between Moscow and 
Yerevan continuing to grow, the Armenian government is increasingly looking for 
other arms suppliers.

Since September 2022 it has reportedly signed a number of defense contracts with 
India worth at least $400 million. In October 2023, it also signed two arms 
deals with France. Pashinian and members of his political team say that this is 
part of their broader efforts to “diversify” Armenia’s defense and security 
policy. They regularly accuse Moscow of not honoring its security commitments to 
its South Caucasus ally.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2024 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Artsakh: The Final Days of a Christian Community

The Washington Stand
Jan 16 2024
COMMENTARY:

Lela Gilbert

Nagorno Karabakh, a tiny Christian enclave locally known as Artsakh, was located for many years in the shadow of Azerbaijan — Ilham Aliyev’s Islamist regime. Despite its location, however, Artsakh’s little community of Armenian Orthodox believers always viewed itself as part of historical Armenia.

In 2004, I had the pleasure of spending a couple of weeks in Artsakh. While visiting with the local Christians there, I enjoyed dinners hosted by local leaders, attended the baptism of a newborn, and especially enjoyed an enlightening conversation with an Armenian Orthodox archbishop.

At the time, I learned that the little Christian community had found itself caught in a sizeable controversy following the demise of the Soviet Union. The first Nagorno-Karabakh conflict continued from 1988 to 1994. Artsakh identified itself as Armenian territory, despite ongoing disputes with its northern neighbor Azerbaijan. Struggles recurred until, beginning in December 2022, Artsakh came under siege by an Azeri blockade. At the time, the world largely ignored a prolonged assault on Artsakh’s 120,000 Christian souls.

During the Artsakh blockade, access to food and medicine were cut off, while public utilities —including electricity, internet, and gas — were either shut down or damaged. At the same time Azeris obstructed the Lachin Corridor, the primary roadway between Artsakh and Armenia. Emergency vehicles and humanitarian aid deliveries were barricaded for more than nine months.

Eventually, in September 2023, Artsakh’s remaining 100,000 Armenian Christians were driven out of their homeland. Azeri President Ilham Aliyev — close ally and confidante of Turkey’s neo-Ottoman leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan — was responsible for this expulsion.

It is worth noting that Armenia was the world’s first Christian nation, declared as such in the year 301 A.D. The phrase “ethnic cleansing” has been repeatedly used to describe the plight of Artsakh’s Christian believers. But few major news sources have taken note of the religious persecution that fueled the Azeri blockage.

Finally, on September 28, 2023, the president of Artsakh, Samvel Shahramanyan controversially signed a decree to dissolve all state institutions by January 1, 2024, formally bringing the existence of the so-called “breakaway state” to an end.

The panicked departure of more than 100,000 Christians followed, and thanks to our friend Anna Grigoryan, we’ve been able to collect accounts of four courageous women who were driven out of Artsakh with their children. Following are separate accounts of their final and painful departure from Artsakh and the huge ordeal of trying to begin new lives in Armenia.

Anahit M. writes, “On September 25 an explosion occurred where my nephew, Aram, was killed. Rushing to the hospital we saw hundreds of people severely injured. He suffered severe burns from the fire and later died at the hospital. Many others passed away. That day we lost a precious part of our lives … he was only 25. Meanwhile, we were forced to leave our city of Stepanakert. Although I deal with this pain every day, I still hope and believe that one day we will go back to Artsakh.”

Margarita explains, “We lived in our beloved Artsakh for 20 years. However, we were betrayed by our government. Sadly, we had to evacuate from there when the war began. I was a proud mother; my son served in the military for 16 months until we all had to flee from our city. I couldn’t bear leaving my son to die, so we took off with him. At this time, I can only put my hope on Jesus Christ, because He’s the only one that can change this situation.”

 

Sharmagh recalls, “I lived my whole life in Artsakh, working as a nurse for 12 years in the ER of the Stepanakert hospital. The 2020 war was brutal, and we lost many close ones. Then, after the war we came under total blockade for nine months. Facing hunger, we were disappointed [by] the whole world, yet still hoping for the best. But suddenly, on September 19, 2023, the war started, and we had to evacuate. It’s impossible to describe what we went through. People from all the villages and cities were gathered in the city of Stepanakert, on the streets. Suddenly the Azeris started to bombard Stepanakert and the villages surrounding it. After just one day of war, we were told to evacuate from our home, and for now we live in Yerevan. But we don’t lose our hope that one day we will return to out motherland.”

Roxanne remembers, “The morning of September 19 was dark and cold when I sent my daughter to school. Owing to the blockade, there was no food. I had to wait in a long line to get overpriced fruit, so my kids can eat that day. Coming back, I heard bombings. and was quickly debating on running home to my six-year-old or getting my daughter from school. … We heard explosions all night, had no food or water, just constant fear and putting our hands to our ears to not hear the sounds outside. After 24 hours there were no more bombings, but they ordered us to flee from our homes. I couldn’t even pack all the necessities because my mind was burdened with other thoughts.”

“We were told to be mindful of what to bring,” she continued, “so I only brought the documents [and] warm clothes for me and my kids. I only had two loaves of bread and one bottle of water, so each hour I broke a piece of the bread and gave it to my son with a little bit of water. Reuniting once again with my family, dirty, hungry, and lost, having no close friends in Armenia, we took the bus to a village far away from the border called Bazum, and later we moved to the city of Kirovakan. The Armenians were very kind to us, fed us, bathed us, and gave us a temporary place to stay. Every day, I grieve about how I left my husband’s grave and didn’t even bring a little soil from there.”

Today, more than 100,000 Armenian refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh are struggling to begin new lives in Armenia. Their hopes for returning to their earlier lives in Artsakh are fading, while their struggle to restart their lives is a daunting challenge. Although their plight is not widely reported in the United States, these Christian believers deserve our concern and our prayers. May their safety in Armenia continue, their wounds be healed, and their efforts to begin new lives be blessed and protected.

Topics:Religious Persecution, International Religious Freedom

Lela Gilbert is Senior Fellow for International Religious Freedom at Family Research Council and Fellow at Hudson Institute's Center for Religious Freedom. She lived in Israel for over ten years, and is the author of "Saturday People, Sunday People: Israel through the Eyes of a Christian Sojourner."

https://washingtonstand.com/commentary/artsakh-the-final-days-of-a-christian-community

Exclusive: EU warns Azerbaijan of ‘severe consequences’ if Armenia’s territorial integrity is violated

 14:04,

BRUSSELS, JANUARY 16, ARMENPRESS. The EU has been passing clear messages to Azerbaijan that any violation of Armenia’s territorial integrity would be unacceptable and will have severe consequences for EU-Azeri relations, European Commission’s lead spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy Peter Stano told Armenpress.

“The European Union has spared no diplomatic efforts to help reach a mutually acceptable settlement of the conflict over the past few years.

“We have been in close contact with the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaderships, tirelessly reiterating our support for the sovereignty, territorial integrity of both countries and the resolution of issues exclusively by peaceful means. Our communication channels remain open.

“The EU has been using every opportunity to pass clear messages to Azerbaijan that any violation of Armenia’s territorial integrity would be unacceptable and will have severe consequences for our relations.

“We remain firm and steadfast in this stance. 

“The President of the European Council Charles Michel, the High Representative /Vice-President Josep Borrell and the EU Special Representative Toivo Klaar continue their engagement for a sustainable and lasting peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Stano told Armenpress Brussels correspondent Lilit Gasparyan when asked to comment on Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s latest threats and territorial claims against Armenia.