Armenian opposition Homeland Salvation Movement calling on citizens to gather near parliament building tomorrow

News.am, Armenia
Feb 2 2021

The opposition Homeland Salvation Movement has made the following announcement:

“Let’s all gather near the building of the National Assembly on February 3 at 10 a.m.

The My Step faction of the National Assembly continues to carry out anti-national and anti-state activities under the leadership of the government and its treacherous leader.

On February 3, at the initiative of the government, the National Assembly will hold a special session, and anti-state bills are among the items on the agenda.

We call on our citizens to gather near the building of the National Assembly on February 3 at 10 a.m. to protest against the activities of the anti-national authorities.”

Sports: FC Ararat Yerevan score second victory in Dubai

News.am, Armenia
Feb 2 2021

In Dubai FC Ararat Yerevan played a friendly match with FC Liwa, which represent the second division of the United Arab Emirates, and won 4-1.

FC Liwa’s center-back made own goal after Davit Khurtsidze made a pass from the edge at the 21st minute. At the 28th minute, Edgar Malakyan bypassed the competitor on the right edge and made a wonderful pass, after which Dimitriye Pobulic scored a goal.

At the 62nd minute, FC Liwa earned the right to an 11-meter kick. After the pass made by Serozh Titizyan, who came out as a replacement, Uros Nenadovic scored a goal at the 65th minute and scored a double five minutes later, FC Ararat Yerevan’s press service reported.

On January 30, FC Ararat Yerevan beat Atletico Arabia 7-1 in Dubai. FC Ararat Yerevan’s training in the UAE will end on February 12.

MPs of Armenia parliament majority bloc propose to ban referencing anonymous sources

News.am, Armenia
Feb 2 2021

A group of deputies of the My Step faction of the National Assembly of Armenia recommend making amendments to the law on mass media in order to ban references to anonymous sources, hetq.am reported.

According to the proposed amendments, the requirement for submitting data for release will also be set for online mass media outlets, based on which the latter need to show the name of the particular media outlet on their websites, the full name and organizational and legal form of the legal entity carrying out media activities, and if the implementer of media activities is a natural person — its name and last name and address, if the implementer is an individual entrepreneur, then the number and date of issuance of the state registration certificate, as well as the contact number and e-mail address.

In the draft amendments, the deputies state that, in the context of restriction on freedom of speech, it is necessary to state that the dissemination of unknown sources by way of referencing may entail risks posing a threat to national security.

Court permits 2nd President Kocharyan to leave Armenia on February 3-8

News.am, Armenia
Feb 2 2021

The court of general jurisdiction of Yerevan has allowed second President Robert Kocharyan to leave Armenia from February 3 to 8, according to his legal team.

Based on this, the Police were asked to lift the restrictions imposed on Kocharyan during that time and to reapply them after that.

The heads of the Police and the National Security Service have been informed about the permission granted to Robert Kocharyan to leave Armenia.

Armenian, Russian Defense Ministers discuss issues of post-war security

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 1 2021

Armenian and Russian Defense Ministers Vagharshak Harutyunyan and Sergey Shoygu have discussed the results of staff talks on Armenian-Russian bilateral military cooperation held last week, as well as the process of resolving Armenia’s security issues in the post-war period.

The Minister of Defense expressed satisfaction with the activity of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno Karabakh, noting that the best evidence of its effectiveness is the almost complete observance of the ceasefire, due to which no serious incidents were registered in December-January, except for one case when an Artsakh serviceman was wounded.

Vagharshak Harutyunyan and Sergey Shoygu also referred to issues of regional development.

Armenian Harutyun Kiviryan selected by Russia as cosmonaut candidate

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 1 2021

Harutyun Kiviryan is one of the four candidates chosen by Russia to begin cosmonaut training after an extended one-and-a-half-year selection process.

“The winners are Sergey Irtuganov, Alexander Kolyabin, Sergey Teteryatnikov and Harutyun Kiviryan,” Russia’s federal space corporation Roscosmos announced on its website.

In the near future, they will take general space training course for the next two years.

Kiviryan, 27, earned his engineering degree with a specialty in rockets from the Baltic State Technical University “Voenmeh” in Saint Petersburg and has worked as a test engineer at RSC Energia, Roscosmos’ prime contractor for crewed spacecraft.

Polish politician sends first copy of publication on Azerbaijani war crimes against Armenians to Aliyev

NOVOSTINK
Feb 1 2021
1 February 2021, 10:53 – NovostiNK
Polish politician Tomasz Lech Buczek has sent the first copy of the publication about the crimes of Azerbaijan against the Armenians in Artsakh to the President of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev.

He has enclosed a letter addressed to Ilham Alijev and urged him to free free the Armenian prisoners.

The letter reads:
Your Excellency!

As announced, I am sending to Your Excellency the number 1 (0001) publication about Azerbaijan’s war crimes against the Armenians – Karabakh 2020.

First of all, I appeal to Your Excellency for the RELEASE of the Armenian prisoners of war imprisoned in Azerbaijan. Desperate families of their mother, wife and children await them at home. Their release would become a fact of great historical importance, showing the pursuit of peace in the world.

I also request the exact number of detained Armenian prisoners of war and, through international organizations, to provide information on their health condition.

It also I calls for legal steps to be taken against the criminals of Azerbaijani citizens who committed war crimes during the Karabakh conflict in violation of international conventions and law, as well as the laws of Azerbaijan.

Yours faithfully
Tomasz Lech Buczek


Tomasz Lech Buczek said in an interview with Public Radio of Armenia last week that he had received thousands of threats from Azerbaijan for his intention to publish a brochure on Azerbaijani war crimes against Armenians. Numerous attempts had been made to hack his social media accounts.

Sports: Yura Movsisyan appointed Armenia’s football Ambassador to North America

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 1 2021

Former Armenian national team striker Yura Movsisyan, who made a decision to retire, made an announcement with important messages included in it.

Throughout my career, I have always been aware that this day will come for me too, and thought mine will be easier than what many of my retired friends were telling me, but man they were not kidding. For the past year,  given everything that was happening with my injuries and  leaving RSL, I made my mind up to better retire now with a few good offers on the table than try pushing it for another couple of years. Every time I have stepped on the field to play,  I have given nothing less than a 100% and knowing right now that I won’t be 100% I would never disrespect my teammates and lie to them.

I’ve had 14 great years of doing what I love doing, and doing it all over the world. My family and I have lived in some of the best cities in the world. Denmark, Russia, Armenia, Sweden and the United States. I am thankful to all my club teammates and coaches. I am really happy to have played alongside some great players in great clubs.

Every football player that starts playing from a young age knows that representing your country is the biggest honor you can accomplish in your career. I decided to represent my home country of Armenia instead of the US National Team. Although playing for the US team would have given me a better chance to play in a World Cup, for me it was a bigger honor to be able to make a difference for my country Armenia. I joined the Armenian National Team in my 5th year of playing professional because I wanted to actually make a big difference when I arrived. I wanted to make a big difference and help change Armenian football when i arrived and i think I can proudly say that I brought change to Armenian Football. Being part of probably one of the best generations in football history in Armenia that has brought soo much joy to our people, is probably my biggest accomplishment in my 14 year career.

Summarizing it all I want to thank all my teammtes in the national team. Without them my career would never be what it was like.  A big thank you to all the coaches and staff, both of the national team and the FFA, to all those people who had an important role during my career. Special thanks to our amazing fans, who were by my side during the most difficult times for me. I hope and I am sure that we will meet soon, whatever my status will be.”

FFA president Armen Melikbekyan appointed Yura Movsisyan as the FFA ambassador in North America.

“Yura Movsisyan is one of the best Armenian players after independence. I am sure his knowledge, experience and enthusiasm will be very useful for the cooperation we are going to start. Yura Movsisyan will be the bridge which will help to make the links between FFA and our compatriots in North America stronger,- Armen Melikbekyan, FFA president said.

Yura Movsisyan: “I am very honored to be appointed as the ambassador. After retiring from football I want to be as helpful to our football as I can. A lot of Armenians live in USA and in North America. This is the reason it’s important to have good links between the diaspora and Armenia, have a contribution in solving the problems faster and development of the football.”

Can the Minsk Group on the Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict Reinvent Itself? (Part Two)

Jamestown Foundation
Feb 1 2021

Russia, not the Minsk Group, will reinvent the Minsk Group, and is working on it (see Part One in EDM, January 28). The object is not the 12-nation Minsk Group Conference (this has been inactive since the mid-1990s), but its triple co-chairmanship of Russia, the United States and France, in which Russia seized the leading role from 2010 onward, ultimately to discard this setup through unilateral Russian action in November 2020. Usurping the Minsk Group’s collective mandate, the Kremlin unilaterally mediated the armistice between Armenia and Azerbaijan; and breaking that mandate, which had envisaged international peacekeeping, Russia deployed its own troops to Karabakh. The absentee Western players made it easy for Russia to fill the vacuum; and that made it inevitable for Azerbaijan and Armenia to accept, or even seek, Russia’s arbitration for lack of other options.

Western diplomacy failed yet again to counteract Russia’s method of working both within multilateral bodies (such as the Minsk Group) and around those bodies at the same time, using bilateral channels to circumvent the multilateral process.

In the next stage, Moscow intends to use the Minsk Group’s triple co-chairmanship to legitimize Russia’s faits accomplis on the ground. The Kremlin is prepared to let the co-chairs return to the region in support of Russia‘s initiatives. President Vladimir Putin, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, and Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabov continue briefing Washington and Paris about Moscow’s initiatives regarding Armenia and Azerbaijan. Those are basically post factum notifications of Russian actions; they are neither a trilateral negotiation among the co-chairs, nor the co-chairs’ mediation between Baku and Yerevan as per the group’s mandate. Such briefings amount to a pretense that the Minsk Group’s co-chairmanship continues to operate. Washington and Paris seem to go along, partly out of face-saving considerations and partly in the hopes of climbing back into the process. On January 30, in an interview with Dozhd TV, the US ambassador in Moscow, John Sullivan, said that such briefings are “yet another example of an area where the United States and France cooperate with the Russian government as Minsk Group co-chairs, and we wish to continue our cooperation” (RIA Novosti, January 30).

Putin and Lavrov (TASS, November 18, 2020 and December 17, 2020) have made clear all along that they would confine the co-chairs to humanitarian and economic assistance functions in Karabakh for the time being. Moscow expects Washington and Paris to help mobilize international financing for post-conflict reconstruction. Along these lines, Putin told the Davos Economic Forum on January 27 that the Minsk Group’s co-chairing countries “face the task of helping the war-affected areas to resolve humanitarian problems, restore damaged infrastructure, [and] assist the return of refugees” (Kremlin.ru, January 27, 2021).

Russia is the only actor participating in—and dominating—all the existing platforms and formats in the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict theater. Besides its near-monopoly in the Minsk Group, Russia is the sole “peacekeeper” with troops on the ground; it is Armenia’s official ally and security guarantor; it is the unrecognized Karabakh “republic’s” security guarantor and de facto protector; it is Turkey’s exclusive partner in the Joint Center for Ceasefire Monitoring (inaugurated on January 30); it is the mediator between Azerbaijan and Armenia in the border-demarcation processes in Karabakh and Syunik; and it is the initiator and convener of region-wide strategic transportation projects involving Azerbaijan, Turkey and Armenia, alongside Russia itself (see EDM, January 12).

All this is a tribute to Russia’s diplomatic agility, regional expertise and non-ideological pragmatism. It has managed to maintain conflict-free relations with all regional players, work with any and all of them, and gain unmatched leverage in all directions. Russia effectively postures as upholding international law through support of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity; as providing security guarantees via “peacekeeping” to the Armenian population of Karabakh; and as promoting region-wide economic development through Russia’s role as convener of strategic transportation projects. In all of this, Russia capitalizes on the disengagement of the United States and the European Union from the region.

At this stage and going forward, Turkey is the only player in the region that can at least in part offset Russia’s influence, mainly by guaranteeing Azerbaijan’s full independence and sovereignty. The Turkey-Azerbaijan tandem protects Georgia also. Washington and Paris are prone to viewing the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict—and the situation in the region overall—through the prism of the US’s and France’s own strained relations with Turkey on issues unrelated to the South Caucasus. The multifaceted task before them, however, is to learn to compartmentalize, encourage Turkey’s newfound role in the South Caucasus, and solidify the Turkey-Azerbaijan-Georgia alignment.

FOOD: An Indie Musician Pivots by Serving Armenian, Palestinian, and Persian Food

Chicago Eater
Feb 1 2021

Isfahan is from a musician who’s played with stars like Jeff Tweedy and Steve Gunn

by Naomi Waxman Feb 1, 2021, 3:27pm CST         

Chicago musician Liam Kazar had broken through after spending the past decade as a member of Wilco frontman’s Jeff Tweedy’s backing band. He’s also collaborated with the likes of Steve Gunn and the late Daniel Johnston, Kazar reached a point in his career many only dream of: making music full time.

That all changed in March 2020 when the pandemic hit. In January, Kazar opened Isfahan, a virtual restaurant in both Chicago and Kansas City that’s traces his family’s journey from Armenia to the United States by way of Iran, Lebanon, Syria, France, Australia, and Turkey.

Kazar isn’t new to the service industry. When there weren’t enough gigs to cover his bills, he picked up bartending shifts in Kansas City (where he lives part time). COVID-19 negated that revenue stream too, and when bars partially reopened, Kazar didn’t feel comfortable with the risk. By the summer, his savings had nearly run out. In the face of a creeping sense of desperation, Kazar — like many other creatives displaced and underemployed during the pandemic — looked inward toward to his heritage, family, and the thread that connected him to his past: food of the Armenian diaspora. 

Isfahan Opens With Armenian, Palestinian, and Persian Food in Chicago – Eater Chicago

With Isfahan, Kazar wants to highlight the multicultural nature of Iranian and Armenian cuisines, drawing attention to the impact of immigrant populations on the food, in much the same way as Lebanese immigrants invented tacos arabes in Mexico.

That means that locals won’t find his versions of menu items, such as aashe-e dogha (yogurt soup, lamb meatballs) and mussakhan (Palestinian roast chicken, sumac, caramelized onions) at other Persian restaurants in town. Other offerings include a whole roasted trout (sumac, lemon, tarragon), khoresh fesenjan (beef stew, pomegranate, walnut), and desserts like fereni (rose water pudding, fig preserves, pistachio).

Kazar delivers the meals family-style for groups of two to 10, and encourages patrons to choose a few appetizers, a main dish, a “carb” of abzi polo with tahdig (Persian crispy rice, fresh herbs, saffron) or mashed potatoes (dill, brown butter), and a dessert. Patrons can place online orders by email and pay via cash, check, Venmo, or PayPal.

What began as a bid for financial survival has become an exciting exploration of self for Kazar. “If you’re able to make food and share with people, you’re tapping into one of the best parts of living,” he says. To leave the cooking to someone else is to miss out on a beautiful thing — “a truly essential human thing.”

Isfahan Opens With Armenian, Palestinian, and Persian Food in Chicago – Eater Chicago

His transition from one ailing industry to another hasn’t always been smooth: “I sort of failed my way through it at the start,” he says, acknowledging that he’s never cooked in a restaurant before. Though he had plenty of experience cooking for family and friends, “cooking with consistency for something that’s about to get transported is a whole other ballgame.” His Kansas City operations are a currently a one-person show (though local chef friends have offered advice), but his sister Sima Cunningham helps coordinate the Chicago portion of the business.

Though it’s not how he imagined spending the past year, Kazar says Isfahan has kept him busier than he ever imagined. He’s even at work on plans to expand, aiming to open a pop-up by March. Still, he’s looking forward to a future where he can get back on stage: “With COVID, I got tired of playing in the mirror,” he jokes.

Time Out Chicago first reported this story.