Without respect for the families of heroes, the state has no future

Yesterday’s incident between Arpine Soghoyan, the sister of military doctor Hrant Papikyan, who went missing in the 44-day war, and Pashinyan also became an occasion to talk about Hrant Papikyan and his path.


During the 44-day war, Hrant Papikyan repeatedly went to hot spots on the front to evacuate a large number of wounded.


For the last time, before leaving to perform a task, assessing the degree of entrenchment of the enemy in the given area and the extreme danger of the situation, he prevented his subordinate staff from going there and left personally, after which the communication with him was interrupted.


The state and society that do not show proper respect and attitude towards the devotees of the motherland, their mission and families, simply have no future.


Patience and strong will to the families of missing servicemen, eternal glory to all our compatriots who dedicated their life and service for the defense of the motherland.


Tigran Abrahamyan, secretary of “I have an honor” faction




Trump threatens Iran with a new war, Nikol with new repression of the opposition

Trump threatens Iran with a new war, Nicole threatens the opposition with new repressions.


The BBC reports that US President Donald Trump, at the request of the Persian Gulf countries, is postponing a new strike against the Islamic Republic of Iran on Tuesday (today), as negotiations are underway.


Trump noted that the negotiated agreement might be acceptable to the United States.


On his page of the Truth Social social network, the US president also stated that he ordered with the first order to launch a large-scale attack against Iran, if the desired agreement with Iran is not reached.


The situation in the Middle East remains volatile and explosive.


The situation in the Armenian pre-election campaign is also the same.


We are all in a fortunate process for the statehood of Armenia.


At this moment, judging by the escalating situation, I am not so sure that with this way of working of the KP, the parliamentary elections will reach June 7 in a peaceful and reasonable way. It can already be assumed that the current rulers, in order to avoid the expected defeat, can lead the pre-election processes in a completely different way.


P.S.
If I’m not mistaken, on one occasion he said that he “puts himself in a place of madness” in negotiations. That way, he was probably trying to thwart, delay that stage of the banking process and/or avoid liability. The result: it is clear what a disaster it brought for the Armenian people.


And what prevents him from doing the same in this election?


Former RA Deputy Defense Minister Artak Zakaryan




Asbarez: New ICJ Report Confirms Rights of Artsakh Leaders Tried in Baku Were

In a new report issued on Monday, the International Commission of Jurists confirmed that the rights of Artsakh leaders who were tried by a military court in Baku were compromised and the court proceedings “fell short of the guarantees of fairness and equality of arms required under international human rights law.”

The report entitled, “Justice Under Pressure: Independence of Lawyers and the Right to a Fair Trial in Azerbaijan,” found that “the independence of the legal profession in Azerbaijan remains compromised by executive control and influence over the Bar Association, discriminatory admission practices, the punitive use of disciplinary proceedings, and the harassment and prosecution of independent lawyers.”

“These deficiencies, together with the lack of independence of the judiciary, deprive defendants in criminal proceedings of the substantive protections that the right to a fair trial requires under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the European Convention on Human Rights,” the ICJ said.

The detailed report exposes structural and institutional flaws Azerbaijan’s entire justice system and takes the trial of Artsakh leaders as a case study “reflecting wider issues in the administration of justice” in the country.

The ICJ found that Artsakh leaders “were tried before a military court; that defendants were denied effective access to counsel of their choosing; that case materials were withheld or provided in a language the accused did not understand; that defense motions were dismissed without reasoning and omitted from the trial record; that interpretation was inadequate or absent; and that public access, including by accredited diplomatic representatives, was denied.”

“The cases were transferred to the Baku Military Court, even though at least eight of thedefendants were civilians, and therefore should only be tried in ordinary, not military courts, in accordance with international law and standards,” the ICJ report said.

“According to publicly available reports, these trials are marked by practices that violate basic guarantees of justice ‘a fundamentally unfair procedural situation has been created, where the defense is deprived of any realistic opportunity to contest the charges or prove innocence. In such conditions, the very concept of a fair trial turns into a formality, devoid of any content,” the report said citing an investigative piece published in January, 2025 by the French Le Monde newspaper.

“The trials were conducted largely behind closed doors, with only State media permitted access; international observers, foreign media and family members of the defendants were denied access to the hearings,” the report said.

“The ICJ report confirms what the Armenian Legal Center and many human rights advocates/organizations have long warned: the proceedings against the former Artsakh leaders are not credible judicial proceedings, but politically driven trials taking place in a justice system where judicial independence, access to counsel, and basic fair trial guarantees are fundamentally compromised,” Ken Hachikian, the chair of the Armenian Legal Center told Asbarez on Monday.

“Azerbaijan cannot use the language of law to legitimize the unlawful detention and punishment of Armenian hostages and POWs. Nothing short of the immediate and unconditional release of all Armenian prisoners illegally held by Azerbaijan can remedy the injustice documented in this report,” Hachikian added.

Regarding the separate trial of former Artsakh State Minister Ruben Vardanyan, the ICJ report pointed out that charges brought against the defendant dated back to 1988, when Vardanyan did not hold office in Artsakh.

“Vardanyan assumed public functions in Nagorno-Karabakh in late 2022, yet the prosecution brought charges dating back to 1988 in connection with the first Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, despite evidence that at the time he was a student at Moscow State University,” the ICJ report revealed.

:The prosecution of Vardanyan for conduct alleged to have occurred in 1988, more than three decades before his assumption of public office, raises fundamental concerns under the principle of legality. Vardanyan held no political position at the time the charges relate to and could not have foreseen that conduct from that era would form the basis of criminal charges upon his later entry into political office,” the report added.

“The temporal distance between the alleged conduct and prosecution, combined with the timing of charges brought only after Vardanyan assumed a leadership position in a political dispute, suggests application of criminal law in an arbitrary manner. The principle of legality requires that criminal liability be foreseeable and that criminal law be applied with precision and clarity, not selectively against individuals based on their subsequent political activities,” the report explained.

In the conclusion of the report, the ICJ has urged Azerbaijani authorities “to ensure that the Azerbaijan Bar Association operates as a genuinely independent self-governing body, to cease reprisals against lawyers representing clients in politically sensitive cases, to reinstate lawyers disbarred in violation of international law and standards, including those whose disbarments the European Court of Human Rights has found to violate Convention rights, and to ensure that all defendants have effective access to counsel of their choosing at all stages of the proceedings, including on appeal.”

‘You should Have Died when There was the Karabakh Issue,’ Pashinyan Unleashes

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, visibly unhinged, screams at a citizen during a rally in Yerevan on May 18 (Video grab)


Hours after Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan raged against a woman during his election campaign event, he unleashed his fury on an Artsakh Armenian who approached him during another event on Monday.

Arthur Osipyan, the Artsakh Armenian who approached the prime minister, was later arrested and charged with “hooliganism.” Osipyan was a vocal opponent of Artsakh’s last regime, which Pashinyan overtly supported prior to the war.

Yet prosecutors in Armenia announced on Tuesday that they are not investigation Pashinyan for threatening to “kill” his political opponents during the confrontation he had on Monday with the woman, Dr. Arpine Soghoyan, whose brother, senior military medic Hrant Papikyan, has been missing since the 2020 Artsakh War.

Pashinyan reacted with rage against Osipyan who approached Pashinyan to ask him about his support for Artsakh from 2018 to 2020.

The heated exchange resulted in Osipyan being dragged away.

Pashinyan then rushed toward Osipyan, picked up a megaphone and began hurling and shouting insults.

“These Karabakh pseudo-elites must get the hell out of here,” Pashinyan screamed. “What are you doing here? … You should have died when there was the Karabakh issue. Why are you alive at all, you scumbag?”

Osipyan’s attorney, Roman Yeritsyan, said in a Facebook post on Tuesday that his client was detained overnight.

“At this moment he is at the Arabkir police department,” Yeritsyan said adding that Osipyan’s phone is switched off and his Facebook account has been blocked.

Aram I, Vatican Secretary of State Discuss Artsakh Rights, Release of Prisoner

Catholicos Aram I presents a book about Artsakh church to Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin


Ahead of his meeting with Pope Leo XIV on Monday, Catholicos Aram I met with Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican Secretary of State, with whom issues pertaining to the rights of Artsakh Armenians and the release of Armenian prisoners being held in Baku were discussed.

During the conversation, Aram I stated that the return of Artsakh Armenians, the restoration of their rights, the protection of Armenian churches and historical monuments, and the immediate release of the Artsakh leaders currently imprisoned in Baku remain imperative priorities for the Armenian Church and people. In this context, Aram I called for the Vatican’s continued support, the Catholicosate press office reported.

Cardinal Parolin, who is the second highest ranking official in the Vatican, briefed the Catholicos about the Vatican’s initiatives related to Artsakh in general and particularly regarding efforts toward the release of prisoners.

The Catholicos also addressed the situation in Lebanon and commended the consistent efforts of the Lebanese government under the leadership of the President and the Prime Minister.

Referring to southern Lebanon, Aram I stressed that Israel must withdraw its military forces from the region, allowing the Lebanese Army to assume full responsibility for the country’s security and enabling the Lebanese state to reassert its sovereignty throughout all Lebanese territories. Aram I also underscored the urgent need to strengthen internal unity among Lebanon’s various communities and warmly welcomed the Vatican’s continued support for Lebanon.

The Catholicos then turned to the challenges facing Christian communities across the Middle East, emphasizing the urgent necessity of halting Christian emigration from the region and highlighting the important role of the Churches in this regard.

For his part, Cardinal Parolin addressed the difficulties confronting Lebanon and shared information regarding the Vatican’s ongoing diplomatic efforts with Israel and the United States.

Cardinal Parolin also welcomed a proposal made by Aram I to organize special consultative meetings at the Vatican for Christian spiritual leaders in Lebanon, as well as for Christian leaders throughout the Middle East.

At the conclusion of the meeting, Aram I presented Cardinal Parolin with a commemorative gift depicting the Virgin Mary, along with a two-volume publication featuring Armenian churches in Karabakh. Cardinal Parolin, in turn, offered a commemorative gift to Aram I.

Following the hour-long meeting, Aram I also had the opportunity to hold a private conversation with Cardinal Parolin concerning several sensitive matters.

Armenian Center for Political Rights Condemns Threats of Violent Retaliation b

The Armenian Center for Political Rights, a watchdog organization focused on detecting, responding to, and preventing political persecution while safeguarding citizens’ political rights, issued an urgent statement warning about threats made by Nikol Pashinyan against opposition figures ahead of Armenia’s parliamentary elections.

According to the statement, on May 18 — three weeks before the elections — Pashinyan threatened four opposition political figures with physical retaliation, three of whom lead political parties participating in the campaign.

The organization noted that Pashinyan attempted to justify the threats by referencing a video of unknown origin showing four masked and armed individuals threatening him. Without presenting evidence, Pashinyan allegedly attributed the video to the opposition and claimed his political rivals were backing the individuals shown.

The Armenian Center for Political Rights stated that previous threats made by Pashinyan have later been followed by actions from law enforcement bodies, arguing that such rhetoric during an election period raises serious concerns regarding the fairness of the electoral process and the ability of opposition forces to campaign under equal conditions.

The statement further warned that, given Pashinyan’s influence over law enforcement agencies and the judicial system, the May 18 remarks should be viewed seriously and interpreted as a warning of possible imminent political persecution.

Details and reasoning are available in the statement.

Turkish Press: Azerbaijani ambassador says Turkey-Armenia border to open after

Turkish Minute
May 19 2026
Azerbaijani ambassador says Turkey-Armenia border to open after Armenian constitutional changes

Azerbaijani Ambassador to Turkey Rashad Mammadov has said the Turkey-Armenia land border will be opened after Armenia’s June 7 parliamentary elections and planned constitutional amendments to remove references that Baku says amount to territorial claims against Azerbaijani territory, the Cumhuriyet daily reported.

Mammadov made the comments in response to a question about whether Azerbaijan opposes the opening of the border between Turkey and Armenia, which has been closed since 1993.

“We are pursuing a policy agreed with Turkey and are in constant contact with the Turkish Foreign Ministry,” Mammadov told Cumhuriyet in an interview published on Monday, adding that the Turkey-Armenia and Armenia-Azerbaijan normalization processes were being carried out in parallel.

Mammadov said Baku and Ankara were moving “step by step” and that Azerbaijan’s main concern was the language in Armenia’s constitution.

“After the June 7 election, they will amend the constitution and hold a referendum,” he said.

“After the territorial claim is removed, the Azerbaijan-Armenia peace agreement initialed in the United States will be signed. After that, the Armenia-Turkey and Armenia-Azerbaijan borders will be opened.”

Turkey shut its border with Armenia in 1993 in support of Azerbaijan during the first Nagorno-Karabakh war.

Although Ankara and Yerevan launched a renewed normalization process after the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, Turkey has continued to link further progress to a final peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Recent momentum in Turkey-Armenia contacts has coincided with progress, but not a final agreement, between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The two countries initialed a peace deal at a summit in Washington in August 2025, but the agreement has not yet been formally signed.

Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan said in November that Turkey would open the border gates with Armenia once such an agreement is signed.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has pledged constitutional changes, but a possible referendum is expected to come after the June 7 elections.

‘Small steps’ toward normalization

Mammadov was also asked about Turkey and Armenia recently beginning direct trade, which he described as part of a gradual process of normalization.

“We are taking small steps, and Azerbaijan is also taking steps,” he said, adding that Azerbaijan had also started trade with Armenia and was now playing a role in its energy security by supplying oil and fuel.

Turkey and Armenia completed bureaucratic preparations to launch direct trade, Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesperson Öncü Keçeli announced last week, saying that the preparations were complete as of May 11 as part of “confidence-building steps” taken under the normalization process that began in 2022.

Mammadov said Azerbaijan was also enabling the transportation of Armenian wheat and other products from Kazakhstan and Russia through Azerbaijani territory.

“We tell them that if there is peace, your security will also be better,” Mammadov said. “Turkey is also taking very small steps.”

Turkish-Armenian contacts gain momentum

Mammadov’s remarks come amid a recent increase in diplomatic contacts between Turkey and Armenia.

Turkish Vice President Cevdet Yılmaz met with Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan in Yerevan on May 4, marking the highest-level visit by a Turkish official to Armenia since then-president Abdullah Gül traveled there in 2008 during a period of so-called “football diplomacy.”

Yılmaz, who represented President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan at the eighth European Political Community summit in the Armenian capital, said he had a “comprehensive and productive” meeting with Pashinyan on behalf of Erdoğan.

The two sides discussed bilateral ties and cooperation on transportation, customs, energy, digital infrastructure and connectivity.

Yılmaz also welcomed what he called “concrete progress” in the normalization process, pointing to a memorandum of understanding signed for the joint restoration of the Ani Bridge, a medieval bridge over the Arpaçay/Akhurian River near the ruins of Ani that once connected Anatolia and the South Caucasus.

Ankara and Yerevan appointed special envoys as part of the renewed normalization process, with the first round of talks held in Moscow in January 2022.

The fifth round took place at the Alican crossing, which links Turkey’s Iğdır province with Armenia’s Armavir region, on July 30, 2024.

As part of the process, the two countries agreed on confidence-building measures including the start of direct flights, air cargo transport and the opening of the land border to third-country nationals and diplomatic passport holders, although the border remains closed.

The process has also included recent talks on reopening the Kars-Gyumri railway, the only rail link between Turkey and Armenia, which has been idle since 1993.

Concerns over Baku’s role

Mammadov’s remarks prompted criticism from some observers, who saw them as an unusually explicit statement by an Azerbaijani official on when and under what conditions Turkey should open its border with Armenia.

Gönül Tol, founding director of the Turkey program at the Middle East Institute (MEI), a Washington-based think tank, said on X that she had increasingly heard Turkish diplomats complain over the years about how “difficult” Azerbaijan was and how much it sought to dictate terms to Ankara.

“But an Azerbaijani ambassador publicly declaring when and under what conditions the Turkey-Armenia border will open takes things to a new level,” Tol said.

Turkey and Azerbaijan have long maintained a close alliance, often described by officials in both countries as “one nation, two states,” a reference to their ethnic, linguistic and political ties.

The relationship has deepened further since Azerbaijan’s victory in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, during which Ankara provided strong backing to Baku, with the two countries elevating their ties to a formal strategic alliance with the signing of the Shusha Declaration in 2021.

Hamazkayin WR L. Presents Salpy Yeterian 5-27-26

Cultural friends,

The Literary Unit of the Hamazkay District Administration of the Western region is looking forward to the lecture to be held on the Zoom platform on Wednesday, May 27, 2026 at 8:00 pm. 

Presented by Salbi K. Ethereal Topic: Research Translations/Philosophical Responses

You are all cordially invited.

The Hamazkayin Western Region Literary Unit presents Philosophical Translations by Salpy Yeterian. Join us via Zoom.

Յարգանօք՝

Literary Union of Hamazkayin

ZOOM Link 

https://bit.ly/42dTwD5 

Meeting ID: 864 7185 3213

Passcode: 406800

One tap mobile

+16699006833,,86471853213#,,,,*406800# US (San Jose)

+16694449171,,86471853213#,,,,*406800# US

Join instructions

https://us02web.zoom.us/meetings/86471853213/invitations

We encourage you to share with family and friends. 

Warm regards,

Hamazkayin Western Region Literary Group 

Glendale, CA, USA

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NAASR To Host Talk on Armenian Tiflis by Hayk Demoyan

Press Release

National Association for Armenian

Studies and Research (NAASR)

395 Concord Ave.

Belmont, MA 02478

Tel.: 617-489-1610

Email: [email protected]

 

naasr to host illustrated talk on Armenian tiflis by hayk demoyan

 

The National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) host a talk by Dr. Hayk Demoyan, “Tiflis: An Illustrated History of Its Armenian Heritage,” on Thursday, May 28, 2026, at 7:30 p.m. (Eastern)
/ 4:30 p.m. (Pacific), at the NAASR Vartan Gregorian Building, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA.

The event is free and open to the public and can also be attended online via Zoom (registration link: or YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/c/ArmenianStudies).  Following the program there will be a reception to which all attendees are cordially
invited.

Dr. Demoyan’s talk will draw on his massive publication
п╒п╦я└п╩п╦я│: п≤п╩п╩я▌я│я┌я─п╦я─п╬п╡п╟п╫п╫п╟я▐ п╦я│я┌п╬я─п╦я▐ п░я─п╪я▐п╫я│п╨п╬пЁп╬ п╫п╟я│п╩п╣п╢п╦я▐ (Tiflis: An Illustrated History of Its Armenian Heritage, 2024).  This volume presents previously unknown or little-known pages of the history of Tiflis (Tbilisi)—the center of Armenian intellectual,
economic, and cultural activity in the South Caucasus before and after the region’s annexation by the Russian Empire.  Historically, the capital of Georgia developed into a unique micro-civilization where the heritages of many peoples and confessions intertwined. 
The Armenian presence in old Tiflis is an impressive and valuable legacy of both the Georgian and Armenian peoples, who for centuries endured together the trials and hardships of a shared destiny.

Dr. Hayk Demoyan is an independent researcher who has been a U.S. Fulbright Visiting Scholar at the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian
Studies, Harvard University (2017-18), where he researched identity transformation processes in the South Caucasus. He served as the Director of the Armenian Genocide Museum and Institute in Yerevan from 2006 to 2017 and as chief editor of the International
Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies. Among his publications are Western Media Coverage of the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict 1988-1990 (2010),
Armenian Sports and Athletics in the Ottoman Empire (2015), Armenian Legacy in America: A 400-Year Heritage (2018), and
Armenian Entrepreneurship: A Visual History (2023).

For more information about this program, contact NAASR at
[email protected].