Caucasian leopard caught on tape in southern Armenia

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 10:41, 1 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The monitoring cameras of the ministry of environment and the WWF Armenia Office have once again caught on tape a Caucasian leopard in the Arevik National Park in Syunik Province.

The Caucasian leopard is currently listed as “critical” in Armenia's Red Book – the list of the country's endangered, vulnerable or threatened animals.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

[see video]

President Harutyunyan sees chance for forming “government of national accord” in Artsakh

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 11:00, 1 December, 2020

STEPANAKERT, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan says he has launched political discussions with public and political circles over the existing challenges and future actions, and that he now sees “the opportunity that we will be able to form a government of national accord to unite all our efforts for the security and development of our country and the welfare of our people”.

He said he is always ready to cooperate with all his countrymen who are able to contribute to rebuilding the country.

“I expect us all to set aside personal ambitions and interests and serve to the same national goals shoulder to shoulder,” he said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian CDC reports 843 new COVID-19 cases

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 11:11, 1 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. 843 new cases of COVID-19 were recorded in the last 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 135967, the CDC reported.

1923 people recovered, raising the number of total recoveries to 110365.

2490 tests were conducted over the last 24 hours.

29 people died from COVID-19 complications, bringing the death toll to 2193. This number doesn’t include the deaths of 559 other individuals (17 in the last 24 hours) infected with the virus, who died because of pre-existing illnesses, according to health authorities.

As of December 1, 11:00, the number of active cases stood at 22850.

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

COVID-19: Schools in Armenia to resume in-person learning from December 7

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 11:50, 1 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports has instructed provincial authorities and the Yerevan City Hall to resume in-person learning of the 5-12th grades in schools starting December 7.

The 1-4th grades are already conducting in-person learning.

The decision was made jointly with the healthcare ministry.

The schools will continue following the health authorities’ coronavirus guidelines.

Clinically vulnerable and 65+ employees of schools can work remotely.

At-risk children will continue learning remotely.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Catholicos Garegin II personally visits ARF’s Gegham Manukyan and convinces to stop hunger strike

Catholicos Garegin II personally visits ARF's Gegham Manukyan and convinces to stop hunger strike

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 12:08, 1 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The ARF official Gegham Manukyan and several of his supporters demanding the resignation of the Prime Minister have stopped their hunger strike after the Catholicos Garegin II personally visited them outside the government headquarters and asked them to do so, a spokesperson for the Armenian church said.

Manukyan, who declared an indefinite hunger strike on November 23 in demand of the resignation of PM Pashinyan, said it was “hard to refuse the Catholicos”.  He said he would continue “the struggle.”

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

CivilNet: Major Armenian Cultural Heritage Sites Under Threat of Erasure in Aftermath of Second Artsakh War

CIVILNET.AM

2 December, 2020 12:18

By George Terterian

In the immediate aftermath of the Second Artsakh War, which began September 27, 2020 and lasted 44 days, worldwide Armenians are raising concerns over the destruction, desecration, or alteration of Armenian cultural heritage sites that are now under control of Azerbaijan.

The image is seared into the psyche of every Armenian in the world: a lone cellist (Belgian-Armenian Sevak Avanesyan) playing “Kroonk” (the crane) in the freshly bombed Sourp Ghazachetsots Cathedral in Shushi. The same gesture was repeated by world-renowned cellist Yo-Yo Ma, to honor his friends and the greater Armenian diaspora. Then a pianist played a solo concerto before the same bombed-out Christian cathedral. Soon thereafter, the Azerbaijani public-relations machine caught on and began a mirror-image campaign of projection wherein a lone violinist performed before a war-ravaged and neglected “Cultural Center” building in Fizuli, as Azerbaijan has made like claims of Armenians neglecting mosques and other sites.

The war of words and cultures is well and truly joined however as both Armenia and Azerbaijan (and their respective communities abroad) accuse one another of cultural genocide. The heart of the matter is who shall retain control over various historically and culturally significant sites in the aftermath of the Second Artsakh War.  As for the Azerbaijani narrative, they have pointed to old, abandoned mosques in the Alkhanli village near Fizuli and in Aghdam being left neglected and allowed to become more or less a barn for farm animals (a video shows cows and pigs, the latter of which is highly offensive to the Muslim faith as an “unclean” animal). Azerbaijanis also point to the abandoned city of Aghdam, which Armenians neither renovated nor resettled, as proof of neglect.  Once again, there is a bright line between abuse and neglect. For example, when Turkey left the ruins of Ani (the medieval Armenian “city of 1001 churches”) to the fate of time, that was clear neglect and indifference. When Turkey turns the majestic Hagia Sofia Church into a functioning mosque, that is abuse and cultural appropriation and erasure.

In December of 2005, the prelate of northern Iran’s Armenian church, Bishop Nshan Topouzian, filmed – from across the Araxes River in Iran – the Azerbaijani military taking sledgehammers to thousands of ornate Armenian “khatchkar” stone-crossed at the Julfa Cemetery. The Azerbaijani soldiers can be seen loading the remnants onto truck beds and dumping them in the Araxes. This chilling footage can be found in a 2006 film entitled “The New Tears of Araxes”. The film is available for viewing on YouTube.  Satellite images show the scale and finality of the cultural erasure.

The Azerbaijani government, a hereditary dictatorship run by Ilham Aliyev, the son of the former dictator Heidar Aliyev, has steadfastly refused entry for UNESCO and other international inspectors to view the Julfa cemetery site, which is now a military firing range. Azerbaijan has denied that Armenians ever lived in Nakhichevan, despite the existence of these Armenian cultural artifacts and the fact that the word “Nakhichevan” is a wholly Armenian word (nakh= first; ichevan=place of rest) or as according to the nineteenth-century language scholar, Heinrich Hubschmann, the name "Nakhichavan" [sic] in Armenian literally means "the place of descent," a reference to the descent of Noah's Ark on the adjacent Mount Ararat. The Azerbaijani narrative is that Christian Albanians built the churches, despite not only their distinct Armenian architecture, but Armenian language inscriptions.  

Of course, this is not just a “he said – she said” narrative of accusation and denial. Azerbaijani dissident intellectuals have fearlessly criticized their own authoritarian regime for acts of “cultural vandalism”. The Azerbaijani writer Akram Aylisli was a highly popular writer in Azerbaijan, that is until the publication of the 2012 novella ‘Daş Yuxular’, translated to “Stone Dreams”. In it, Aylisli wrote of the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the 20th century, and of the massacres of Armenians by Azerbaijanis in 1988 (Sumgait, Baku and Kirovabad/Ganja) and tied them to historical parallels of pogroms and massacres of Armenians in his native village of Aylis, Nakhichevan by Turkish soldiers in 1919. Azerbaijanis took great offense to the sympathetic depiction of Armenians by the writer. Since then, Aylisli became persona non grata in Azerbaijan. President Aliyev signed a presidential decree that stripped Aylisli of the title of “People’s Writer”; and the pension that came with it.  Aylisli’s books were burned by Azerbaijanis his own hometown and other towns, his son and wife were fired from their jobs, and a bounty of some $13,000 was promised for cutting the writer’s ear off. The Ministry of Education withdrew his works from the school curriculum. Aylisli’s plays were banned from theaters. Azerbaijani writers, artists and academics repudiated him. The Union of Azerbaijani Writers convened a meeting and expelled Aylisli from its membership. In March 2014, a formal request was made by various public figures throughout the world to nominate Aylisli for the Nobel Peace Prize. Aylisli is presently under “house arrest” in Baku.

Saint John the Baptist Church, commonly known as Kanach Zham, is an Armenian Apostolic church located in Shushi. It is just uphill from the Ghazanchetsots Cathedral. Kanach Zham means “Green Chapel” in Armenian, this is because at one time the church’s domes were painted green. The church dome and bell tower were destroyed soon after Azerbaijani forces captured the town.

The most well-known of the Armenian cultural heritage sites, Dadivank, dates back to a 1st century chapel founded by the earliest preachers of Christianity. It was built into a monastic complex between the 9th and 13th centuries. It is located in the Karvachar/Kelbajar region which was ceded to Azerbaijan in the Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement. After a massive social media campaign by Armenians worldwide and Dadivanl’s Father Hovhannes Hovhannisyan, who vowed to remain, Russian peacekeepers were placed at Dadivank to protect it from the same desecration and vandalism seen in other parts of Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan.

Per Simon Maghakyan, who has followed and documented this issue for years, one of the most prominent khachkars at grave risk is the 14th century “Angels and the Cross” in the Vank village of Hadrut region, which Azerbaijan captured last month. At this point in time, the status of “Angels and the Cross” khatchkar is unclear.

Founded in the 4th century, shortly after King Tiridates proclaimed Christianity the Armenian state religion, Amaras is located in the Martuni region. At the beginning of the fifth century Mesrop Mashtots, the inventor of the Armenian alphabet, established in Amaras the first-ever school that used his script. According to medieval chroniclers Faustus Byuzand and Movses Kaghankatvatsi, St. Gregory the Illuminator founded the Amaras Monastery at the start of the fourth century. Amaras was the burial place of St. Gregory the Illuminator’s grandson, St. Grigoris (died in 338). A tomb built for his remains still survives under the apse of the nineteenth-century Church of St. Grigoris. Recently, Russia stated they would also place peacekeepers at Amaras to deter vandalism or cultural appropriation.

A 13th-century Armenian Apostolic Church monastery located in the Togh village in the Hadrut region recently ceded to Azerbaijan, Gtichavank was rebuilt in the 13th century. It was a key Cathedral for the autonomous principality of Khachen. The status of Gtiichavank is unknown at present as Hadrut is in the hands of Azerbaijan forces and the Armenians have fled.

Tigranakert is a Hellenistic Armenian city founded by the Greek-speaking Armenian emperor Tigranes II, one of many cities taking on his name. There are also newly-excavated early medieval Christian temples there. It is located in the Aghdam region and has been recently shelled by Azerbaijan. This very important archaeological site is in present danger of being permanently altered.

It is one of the first basilica churches in the world. Some of its unique architectural features suggest that it may have been founded as a pagan temple before the year 301. It is located in the Lachin region that connects Armenia with Artsakh/Karabakh. As for December 1, 2020, the Lachin Corridor connecting Armenia proper with Armenian Artsakh will be ceded over to Azerbaijan with Russian peacekeepers manning the narrow pass.

UNESCO has made a statement about preserving both cultures and the need to have unfettered access.  Much of this is tedious work as the Armenian cultural artifacts have distinctly Armenian features and often Armenian language inscriptions that must be painstakingly altered to obscure their origins. This is not only a fool’s errand, but in a ham-fisted way it provides the world further proof that Armenians are the indigenous people of the South Caucasus. The parallels to the Taliban’s 2001 destruction of the 6th Century Buddhas of Bamiyan are inescapable. The more Azerbaijan feverishly scrambles to erase remnants of the ancient Armenian civilization, the more they prove that Armenian civilization is indeed both ancient and indigenous to the region.

Belgian parliamentary panel adopt resolution condemning Azerbaijani-Turkish aggression against Karabakh

Public Radio of Armenia

Dec 2 2020


The Federal Parliament of Belgium is expected to consider a resolution calling for the immediate withdrawal of the Azerbaijani armed forces from Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Chamber of Representatives of the Belgian Parliament will consider the resolution in the plenary session shortly. The resolution was approved by the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Belgian Federal Parliament today, the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Development (FEAJD) reports.

The resolution condemns the military aggression of Azerbaijan, supported by the Turkish authorities and foreign mercenaries, against the Armenian population of the Republic of Artsakh, as well as the deliberate Azerbaijani attacks on civilians and the use of cluster munitions and phosphorus bombs.

The resolution clearly calls for the immediate withdrawal of the Azerbaijani armed forces and their Turkish and mercenary allies from the Nagorno-Karabakh region, conquered by the use of force and violence. In its preamble, the resolution recalls that in addition to the right to self-determination of the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh, the principle of non-use of force constitutes a basic principle of the OSCE  Minsk Group, which was not respected by Azerbaijan.

Since the final status of Artsakh was not mentioned in the ceasefire declaration signed on November 9, the Chamber calls on the Belgian Government to support the resumption of the negotiations, under the aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group, which will have to take into account in particular the right to self-determination of the population of Artsakh when drawing up a compromise on the final status of Nagorno-Karabakh.

After adoption of the resolution in plenary session of the Chamber, the Belgian Government will have the task of demanding that Turkey no longer interfere militarily in the conflict, that it immediately cease playing a destabilizing role in the  Caucasus and especially that it stops promoting the transfer of Syrian mercenaries and jihadists to Nagorno-Karabakh, by organizing their immediate withdrawal from the region.

According to the resolution, any interference by Turkey in the ceasefire monitoring mission is seen as dangerous for the safety of the local population. Any such mechanism will have to be implemented within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group.

The FEAJD and the Armenian National Committee of Belgium ((CDCA Belgium) welcome the fact that the Chamber asks the Federal Government to do everything possible to contribute, with its European partners, to the reconstruction of the destroyed or damaged buildings of Artsakh and to provide humanitarian aid to the local population and all the families of the victims and refugees. The Government should support the dispatch of a UNESCO mission to preserve the architectural and religious heritage located in the areas of Artsakh now controlled by Azerbaijan.

Finally, the Chamber condemns in the strongest terms the execution of prisoners of war and demands that the perpetrators of these crimes be prosecuted and punished. It proposes the dispatch of international observers without delay to gather evidence of war crimes, such as torture and the execution of prisoners.

The FEAJD and the (CDCA Belgium) are now calling on all federal parliamentarians to adopt this resolution during the next plenary session and will remain attentive to ensuring that the motions voted on are effectively implemented by the federal government as quickly as possible.


Exchange of PoWs and bodies of the dead is a priority, Armenian PM says at CSTO summit

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 2 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan participated in the on-line session of the Collective Security Treaty Organization. The event was attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin, President Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, President Emomali Rahmon of Tajikistan, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev of Kazakhstan, Acting President of Kyrgyzstan Talant Mamitov, and the CSTO Secretary General.

Prime Minister Pashinyan delivered a speech, in which he stated:
“Dear Chairman,
Dear Colleagues,
Dear CSTO Secretary General,

It is my pleasure to greet you to today’s meeting, which summarizes the presidency of the Russian Federation in our organization. The priorities of the Russian presidency sought to address urgent problems related to CSTO development and improve cooperation, and we are grateful for the work done during this difficult period for all of us.

I would also like to thank Stanislav Vasilyevich Zas and the CSTO secretariat for organizing today’s meeting in the on-line format and, in general, for the work being done against the backdrop of COVID-19. And, of course, taking this opportunity, I would like to welcome Acting President of the Kyrgyz Republic Talant Mamytov, who is participating in a meeting of our organization for the first time.

Dear friends,

The Armenian people faced aggression over the past two months. Backed by Turkey and mercenary terrorists recruited in the Middle East, Azerbaijan launched an offensive against the Armenian people.

As you may know, through the mediation efforts of the Russian Federation it was possible to stop the hostilities and agree on measures to de-escalate the situation. More than three weeks have passed since the hostilities ended. Russian peacekeepers have been stationed in the conflict zone. Yet today we are facing a number of urgent tasks.

Firstly, it is the question of the exchange of prisoners of war, hostages, other detainees, as well as the exchange of bodies of killed servicemen and the clarification of the fate of the missing. These are urgent questions.

The Armenian side is ready to speed up this process and increase its efficiency. At the same time, we need to rule out any violence against the prisoners of war and detainees and the humiliation of their dignity.

Secondly, conditions have to be provided for Artsakh residents to return to their homes and restore normal life in Nagorno-Karabakh. People need to be sure that they are safe and can continue to live on their land.

Several tens of thousands of Artsakh people have already returned to their homes, and we are making every effort to help and support our compatriots. Besides, measures need to be taken to protect the Armenian cultural and religious monuments located in the territories under Azerbaijan’s control.

Finally, we need to ensure the safe functioning of transport communications. It is necessary to rule out any provocation and establish normal conditions for the functioning of lifeline infrastructure in Artsakh.

The aforementioned measures, including the unblocking of all economic and transport links in the region, are necessary to lay a firm foundation for long-term peace in the region.

Dear colleagues,

Deployed along the line of contact in Nagorno-Karabakh and the Lachin corridor, which connects Artsakh and Armenia, the Russian peacekeeping force is the guarantor of peace and security in the region.

In this regard, I would like to highlight the exceptional role played by Russian President Vladimir Putin. We kept in close touch throughout the 44 days of hostilities and discussed the necessary measures to stop the bloodshed and save human lives. We are still working very closely with Vladimir Vladimirovich to solve such problems as the search for missing people, the exchange of prisoners of war and dead bodies.

In conclusion, I wish to congratulate Tajikistan on assuming the CSTO chairmanship. I would like to assure you that Armenia remains committed to close interaction with a view to implementing the priorities of Tajikistan’s presidency. Thank you.”

A number of issues related to allied cooperation within the framework of the Organization and the continued improvement of CSTO efficiency were discussed during the meeting. Views were exchanged on topical issues of regional and international security.


Construction of Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire monitoring centre has begun: Turkey

SaltWire
Dec 2 2020

ANKARA (Reuters) – Construction work has started on a joint Turkish-Russian centre to monitor a ceasefire in the mountain enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said on Wednesday.

He said the centre, being built following the worst fighting in decades between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces, would be operating "very shortly".

Azerbaijan and Armenia last month signed a Russia-brokered ceasefire for the enclave, which is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but mainly populated by ethnic Armenians.

Russian peacekeepers were deployed to the region under the deal, which froze Azeri gains in six weeks of fighting.

Turkey has no peacekeepers in the region but said it had finalised an agreement with Russia on setting up the joint centre to monitor the ceasefire.

"An agreement was reached. There is no written obstacle to the formation of our joint observation centre there. Now, its construction is under way. Our colleagues will begin working there very shortly," Akar said.

Turkey backs Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, and has criticised the co-chairs of the OSCE's so-called Minsk Group for not resolving the long-running conflict in decades of mediation. The Minsk Group is led by the United States, France and Russia.

France, whose population includes from 400,000 to 600,000 people of Armenian origin, has said it wants international supervision of the ceasefire.

(Reporting by Tuvan Gumrukcu and Ece Toksabay; Editing by Daren Butler and Timothy Heritage)

Prime Minister Pashinyan receives Djorkaeff brothers

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 13:05, 1 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a meeting on December 1 with the French-Armenian football legend, France’s Goodwill Ambassador for Armenia Youri Djorkaeff and his brother Denis Djorkaeff, who is the Deputy Mayor of the French town of Décines-Charpieu and the advisor to the head of the Football Federation of Armenia.

The Armenian High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan was also in attendance, the Prime Minister’s Office said.

The Prime Minister thanked the Djorkaeff brothers for supporting Armenia and Artsakh in the difficult post-war period.

“I am happy to once again host you. The activity and support which the Djorkaeff family is doing for Armenia and Artsakh is very important. During these difficult times we must be united and unite our pan-national potential to overcome the difficulties and move forward. We must be more active and more closely connected,” Pashinyan said.

Youri Djorkaeff thanked the Prime Minister and said that the Armenian community of France will always stand by the Armenian people.

“Mr. Prime Minister, we are here today to provide humanitarian, moral support and also as a testament to the strong Armenian-French ties. We will continue our commitment, we will continue to stand at your side,” he said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan