Tehran: Iran urges Armenia to be serious about Aras pollution

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Jan 25 2021

TEHRAN, Jan. 25 (MNA) – Iranian energy minister announced on Mon. that Iran-Armenia third power transmission line is to be inaugurated soon adding, "we expect Armenia to be more serious about removing pollution from Aras River."

Reza Ardakanian made the remarks on the sidelines of his meeting with the Armenian Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan.

"Today and in this meeting, the issue of completing the third power transmission line between the two countries was discussed, and although the work was interrupted due to the widespread outbreak of Coronavirus, it will be operational in the first half of this year," he said.

Ardakanian also noted that "One of the issues is the pollution of the Aras River, which we expect from Armenia to be more serious in this regard."

"We expect Armenia to be more serious about removing pollution from the river."

The Armenian minister vowed that his country will do its best in removing the pollution of the river.

Kerobyan added that before traveling to Iran, he went to the region and was closely acquainted with the progress of the actions and expressed hope that this issue would be resolved as soon as possible.

According to agreements between Iran and Armenia at the 16th session of the Joint Intergovernmental Commission in Tehran in July 2019, it was decided that the third electricity transmission line project between the two countries should be completed by the end of 2020, deputy energy minister for international affairs said.

HJ/IRN84198550

Tehran: Dark side of the deal [about the transport links between Azerbaijan and the exclave of Nakhchivan]

Mehr News Agency, Iran
Jan 25 2021
Dark side of the deal
January 25, 2021 – 21:43

TEHRAN – The war between Azerbaijan and Armenia came to an end when the two countries agreed to a Russian-brokered deal on November 10. The deal brought an end to more than six weeks of deadly clashes that killed thousands of people on both sides but it created new concerns about the future of Nagorno-Karabakh and the geopolitics of the broader region.

Although the November deal was welcomed by regional countries as a positive development toward peace and security, it sparked confusion and concerns in some countries in the region that need to be addressed as soon as possible.

The war over the Nagorno-Karabakh region broke out in late September when Armenian and Azerbaijani forces exchanged fire along the contact lines in the disputed region. Initially, the clashes appeared to be an evanescent moment in the decades-long sporadic clashes between the two South Caucasus nations. But over time, it became increasingly obvious that things will be different this time around. While Azerbaijan used a variety of state-of-the-art weapons, especially combat drones, Armenia heavily relied on decrepit weapons that failed to prevent Azerbaijan’s armed forces from retaking large swathes of territories in the disputed region.

The Armenia-Azerbaijan war lasted for 44 days. In the final days of the war, Russia succeeded in bringing both sides of the conflict back to the negotiating table and convincing them into signing a deal to put an end to the deadly war.

On November 10, President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin issued a joint statement declaring that they have signed a 9-article deal on ending the war.

According to the deal, Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to “a complete ceasefire and termination of all hostilities in the area of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” with Armenia admitting to return several districts to Azerbaijan such as Aghdam, Kalbajar and Lachin in a few weeks.

The ceasefire deal allowed Russia to deploy peacemaking forces in the region concurrently with the withdrawal of the Armenian troops for a period of five years, which will be automatically extended for subsequent five-year terms unless either Party notifies about its intention to terminate this clause six months before the expiration of the current term.

The deal established a new route connecting Armenia to the Armenian enclave in the Nagorno-Karabakh region. It also included an article stipulating that “new transport links” between Azerbaijan and the exclave of Nakhchivan Autonomous region, a move that caused huge debates – and in some cases concerns- in the region as the war was being fought far away from Nakhchivan.

The last article of the ceasefire deal vaguely stipulates, “All economic and transport connections in the region shall be unblocked. The Republic of Armenia shall guarantee the security of transport connections between the western regions of the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic in order to arrange unobstructed movement of persons, vehicles and cargo in both directions. The Border Guard Service of the Russian Federal Security Service shall be responsible for overseeing the transport connections. As agreed by the Parties, new transport links shall be built to connect the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic and the western regions of Azerbaijan.”

This article was apparently left out of public discussion intentionally given the sensitivity of the issue. The deal speaks of “new transport links” between mainland Azerbaijan and Nakhchivan but it does not say where and when these links will be established. Will they be constructed near Iran’s border with Armenia? If yes, how will they affect border movements between Iran and Armenia?

Iranian officials were under pressure from public opinion to give a clear-cut answer to these questions. They have tried to soothe concerns in this regard by saying that the Iranian government will defend the country’s national interests. But they did not -or maybe they were unable to – provide any details about the Nakhchivan-Azerbaijan route.

Upon his arrival in Baku on Sunday evening, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said he will discuss with the leaders of Azerbaijan the situation around the Nagorno-Karabakh region as well as transit routes and corridors but he didn’t say whether these corridors include those connecting Nakhchivan and the western territories of Azerbaijan.

During his visit to Baku, Zarif met with several high-ranking Azerbaijani officials including Ilham Aliyev and Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov.

Zarif discussed with Bayramov issues related to the East-West and the North-South corridors, according to two statements issued by the foreign ministries of Iran and Azerbaijan.
 
“The Iranian foreign minister finally described the establishment of calm in the region as a great opportunity for mutual cooperation in the transit industry and bringing into operation the East-West and the North-South corridors,” the Iranian statement said.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry confirmed that the two ministers discussed the issue of corridors while implying that the Nakhchivan-Azerbaijan corridor was also discussed.

“During the meeting, the ministers discussed the current situation in the region, the implementation of the trilateral statements of November 10, 2020 and January 11, 2021. It was noted that new opportunities for cooperation have been opened up in the region, including the prospects for the development of North-South and South-West transport and transit corridors,” Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Monday.

The last article of “the trilateral statements of November 10, 2020” deals with the issue of Azerbaijan-Nakhchivan transport links so this issue was likely a part of the two minister’s discussion.

Church on sale on the Internet belonged to the Armenian Catholic Church

Asia News, Italy
Jan 25 2021
by Marian Demir

After the Armenian genocide, the church passed into private hands and is now up for sale to make it a cultural centre or a hotel in Bursa. For Levon Zekiyan, head of the Armenian Catholic Church of Turkey, “the Armenian community does not have the financial means to buy this church”.

Istanbul (AsiaNews) – The church put up for sale on the Internet almost a week ago belonged to the Catholic Armenian Church, the head of the Armenian Catholic Church of Turkey, Archbishop Levon Zekiyan, said. With regret, he noted that “the Armenian community does not have the financial means to buy this church”.

More than a week ago, an ad appeared on the Internet offering for sale an ancient Armenian church in Bursa, a large city on the southern shores of the Sea of Marmara (north-western Turkey) on the slopes of the Uludağ (Great Mountain), the ancient Mysian Olympus (Mount), a famous tourist site.

The ad noted that the church had become “private property following the [city’s] demographic shift in 1923, and was used afterwards as a tobacco warehouse, then as a weaving factory.”

The reference to “demographic shift” is a vague allusion to the Armenian genocide, which resulted in the emptying of Armenian communities in the early 20th century.

The ad suggested that the church could be used as a cultural centre, a place for art, a museum or a hotel.

The church in question is dedicated to Saint Gregory the Illuminator (Surp Krikor Lusavoriç), and is located in Bursa’s Setbaşi district.

“Turning the church into a cultural venue serving the public won’t bother us,” said Archbishop Levon Zekiyan, stressing again that the Armenian community does not have the money to buy the church.

“We hope to have the authorisation to celebrate Mass at least once a year. I plan to discuss this in the coming days with local authorities.”

The Armenian Apostolic Patriarchate of Turkey issued a statement saying that “it is a very sad thing that some people perceive a church as a commercial asset or a source of income.”

Garo Pylan, an ethnic Armenian who is a Member of Turkey’s Grand National Assembly for the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), slammed the sale.

“An Armenian church for sale in Bursa?” he asks. “But is it ever possible to put a place of worship up for sale? How can the state and society allow all this? Shame on you!”

‘We didn’t prepare for 5th generation war in time’ – Armenian ex-MoD

JAM News
Jan 25 2021
    JAMnews, Yerevan

Former Minister of Defense of Armenia David Tonoyan gave an interview with Armenian outlet Mediamax, analysing the situation in which the country’s Armed Forces found itself during the second Karabakh war.

“We did not manage to prepare for a ‘contactless’ war with the use of 5th generation weapons”, he said, noting that there had been an ‘insufficient assessment of the risks of direct involvement in military operations of Turkey, the massive involvement of mercenaries and the complete blocking of supply routes’ to Armenia.

David Tonoyan resigned on November 20 – 10 days after the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan signed a trilateral agreement on the cessation of hostilities. He was replaced by main adviser to the prime minister of Armenia, Vagharshak Harutyunyan, who in 1999-2000 had already served as defense minister.

David Tonoyan spoke about his sensational statement “new war – new territories” which caused outrage in Azerbaijan back in March 2019, about readiness for war and about his personal shortcomings in the course of the hostilities.

“The statement ‘new war – new territories’ was a response to Azerbaijan about the intention to solve the Artsakh problem by military means.” This is how the former Minister of Defense commented on the accusation that his statement played the role of a trigger for the start of the second Karabakh war.

He made the comment in March 2019, right after the Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting in Vienna. The minister was then on an official visit to the United States.

“As Minister of Defense, I say that I have paraphrased the formula ‘ territories for peace into the formula ‘new war – new territories,’ Tonoyan said then.

The minister also stated that the Armenian side would not yield anything to Azerbaijan.

“No matter how much Aliyev and some Armenian politicians repeated, this statement could not have been the reason for the failure of the negotiations and the start of the war. By the same logic, the war could start any day, since the Azerbaijani leadership was constantly talking about a military solution to the conflict. Moreover, for decades the world has ‘ignored’ President Aliyev’s statements that Yerevan is a historic Azerbaijani territory”.

Army readiness

“We didn’t have time to prepare for a ‘contactless’ war using 5th generation weapons,” Tonoyan said during an interview.

Meanwhile, in April 2019, the minister said that “if necessary, we can create chaos behind enemy lines.”

The former minister argues that the creation of such units and their training in operations on enemy territory, the replenishment of weapons with high-precision missile systems and other undertakings could lead to conceptual changes in the army:

“In my vision of the development of priorities in the defense and Armed Forces […] I noted that a large-scale process of rearmament of the Armed Forces […] had begun, but we were at the beginning of the road.”

All statements, according to the minister, were made taking into account the predictability of possible enemy actions and regional developments:

“The Armenian side yielded in an unequal confrontation in all respects. But this does not give anyone the right to play with the national dignity of our people. This psychologically exhausting political nightmare should be stopped and instead of imposing an inferiority complex on people, mistakes should be analysed, lessons learned and worked out. We paid a very high price, thousands of young people gave their lives for the Motherland and the protection of our interests, and defeatist speeches defile their memory.”

Main mistakes

“During the war, I did not manage to overcome the ambiguity in the organization of the command vertical between the Prime Minister – the Ministry of Defense – the General Staff and the resulting obstacles. In particular, in those issues related to mobilization, the role and functions of the Security Council, functions and official relations between the Armed Forces of Armenia, the Defense Army and the President of Artsakh, the organization of self-defense in Artsakh and the evacuation of the population.”

Tonoyan explained that according to the new 2015 Constitution, during a war, the Minister of Defense is actually excluded from the planning and conduct of hostilities, since these powers are vested in the Commander-in-Chief and Chief of General Staff:

“Nevertheless, as I said in my message of November 20, I am ready to bear my share of the responsibility.”

About the statement of the chief of the General Staff

David Tonoyan also commented on the statement of Chief of General Staff Onik Gasparyan, who, on the fourth day of the war, at a meeting of the Security Council, warned that in two or three days it would be necessary to take measures to end the war, otherwise Armenia’s military resources would soon be exhausted and the conditions for the negotiation process would become less favorable:

“The Armenian Ministry of Defense and the Armed Forces sincerely and selflessly did more for the sake of victory than they could. And the analysis of the General Staff, made on the basis of cold calculation, was agreed upon with me.”

Photo taken during the second Karabakh war


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System Of A Down Announce Livestream Fundraiser For Armenian Soldiers

Genre is Dead
Jan 25 2021

System of a Down have announced a livestream fundraising event to benefit wounded soldiers of the Defense Army of Artsakh and Armenia.

The stream will premiere on January 30th and will include the premiere of the music video for the band’s recent single “Genocidal Humanoidz.”

“The freedom fighting soldiers of Artsakh and Armenia have suffered war crimes at the hands of Azerbaijan, later abetted by Turkey. Even after the ceasefire signed on November 10, 2020, those heroes wounded in the recent conflict remain in dire need of prosthetics, advanced treatment, and medical care,” System of a Down write.

“We are hosting a fundraising livestream event in order to raise money to rehabilitate and outfit the nearly 1,000 soldiers who have lost arms and legs with life-changing prosthetic limbs. The funding will also benefit the introduction of groundbreaking laser therapy for the treatment of white phosphorous chemical burns and the reduction of scarring and agonizing pain. All proceeds from the livestream will be donated to this cause.”

The livestream will include guests like Armenia Fund USA representative Maria Mehranian; Armenian-American musician Sebu Simonian; Good Day LA’s Araksya Karapetyan; Harvard Clinician Dr. Lilit Garibyan; Armenian Parliamentarian Narek Mkrtchyan; and Adam Mason, director of the animated “Genocidal Humanoidz” music video.

Tune in to the event on the band’s YouTube channel at 12 PM ET on January 30th. The music video will premiere at 2 PM ET. There will be opportunities to make donations throughout the stream.

For Armenians in Israel, a Sad Holiday and an Identity Crisis Following Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict

Ha'aretz, Israel
Jan 25 2021

The recent conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh has left many Armenians in Israel angered by their adopted homeland’s reported role in helping arm Baku and its ongoing refusal to recognize the 1915 Armenian genocide as a holocaust


Harout Baghamian and Diana Galstyan in the Armenian compound in Jerusalem's Old City, January 2021.Credit: Emil Salman

On January 19, when the Armenian Orthodox-Christian community traditionally celebrates Christmas in Israel, a decorated tree stood tall but abandoned in the Armenian compound in Jerusalem’s Old City. This year, it seems, no one wanted to celebrate following the brief but bloody war with Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The entire Armenian community is in national mourning,” says Harout Baghamian, 39, head of the Armenian National Committee in Jerusalem. “The most recent war is over, but thousands of our people are dead, many more thousands are wounded and we have lost part of our homeland.”

Christine Movsesyan, 35, says she feels as if she has lost a part of herself. Born in Armenia, she moved to Israel when she was 9 years old. She served in the Israel Defense Forces and now lives in the Tel Aviv suburb of Bat Yam, where she manages a nongovernmental organization. “I’m an Armenian and an Israeli – and both parts of my heart are broken,” she tells Haaretz via Zoom.

Then, smiling into the camera, she adds forcefully, “Armenians are lions, and even a wounded lion is still a lion. And now, at Christmastime, we received a gift: Our NGO, the Union of Armenian Communities in Israel, was legally registered this week. Now we will be able to help our people.”


A clergyman walking through the Armenian compound in Jerusalem's Old City, January 2021.Credit: Emil Salman

‘Still shooting at night’

Nagorno-Karabakh is a 4,400-square-kilometer (about 1,700-square-mile) enclave, completed surrounded by Azerbaijan. Its residents are overwhelmingly Christian Armenian. The vast majority of Azerbaijan’s 10 million population is Muslim, along with tiny Christian and Jewish communities. Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but defines itself as the independent Republic of Artsakh and is allied with Armenia.

According to most media reports, the fighting was brutal with extensive use of suicide drones and other attacks on civilians. The 44-day conflict began last September and ended with a Russian-brokered cease-fire on November 9. Under the agreement, Azerbaijan will keep control of the areas it captured, including Shusha (the region’s second-largest town), while Armenia will also return the surrounding territories it first occupied in 1994. Azerbaijan will also gain land access to its additional enclaves bordering Turkey and Iran.

  • 'I’m Jewish and Armenian. Israeli weapons are killing my people'
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  • Recognizing the trauma of the Armenian genocide doesn’t diminish the Holocaust
  • Armenia signs 'painful' deal with Azerbaijan and Russia to end Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

David Saghyan, 36, was born near Shusha and moved to Israel as a young adult. Today, he lives in Haifa and works as personal trainer. “All of my father’s family is in Artsakh,” he says. “Two of my friends are missing; another has been killed. Supposedly things are calmer now and the Russians are preventing the Azerbaijanis from murdering us all. But I’m in constant contact with my friends and family, and they tell me there’s still shooting at night.”


Burnt vehicles and a damaged building on the outskirts of Shusha in Nagorno-Karabakh following the cease-fire between Azerbaijan and Armenia, November 13, 2020. Credit: STRINGER/REUTERS

Baghamian says that while the fighting is over, the situation now is much worse for the Armenian-Christian residents of Nagorno-Karabakh. “The conflict brought Armenian defeat and loss of territory, the deaths of thousands of Armenian soldiers and civilians. We’ve lost much of our homeland. We are afraid of the Azerbaijani occupation.”

Born in Jerusalem, Baghamian sees both Armenia and Israel as his homelands. “We’re like Jews who live in the Diaspora but feel very closely and very personally connected to Israel,” he says. “They have family and friends here, and Israel is part of who they are. That is how we feel.”

The Armenian community in Israel is estimated to be about 5,000 to 6,000-strong. Widely believed to be the oldest diaspora in the world, the community has had a presence in Jerusalem at least since the fourth century, after Armenia accepted Christianity. However, some believe an Armenian presence in the region dates back much further – to the time of Tigranes the Great (140-55 B.C.E.), who extended his empire over the northern areas of what is now known as the Middle East.

The local community is made up of three groups: those who trace their history specifically to Jerusalem over several centuries; those who are the descendants of the orphan survivors who were brought to Ottoman and British Mandatory Palestine after the 1915 Armenian genocide; and the more recent arrivals, who came to Israel after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.



The Armenia Quarter in Jerusalem's Old City. Armenians have lived in the city since the fourth century, and possibly even centuries earlier.Credit: Emil Salman

The largest community can be found in Jerusalem – almost all of whom reside in the Old City’s Armenian Quarter – along with other communities in Jaffa, Bat Yam, Haifa and Petah Tikva.

The Armenian compound, within the Armenian Quarter, is the local community’s religious, social and administrative center. This large area features private homes and residences for the clergy and Patriarchate, meeting rooms and clubhouses, schools, a library and offices. It’s generally closed to visitors unless they’re accompanied by a member of the community, and the compound’s heavy gates are shuttered at night.

In Jerusalem, most of the community’s children attend the Armenian School, where lessons are taught in English. Baghamian was enrolled there too, but because the curriculum was British, he was accepted as a foreign student when he chose to study international relations at the Hebrew University.

“Most of us speak Armenian and some Hebrew at home, and when we grow up most of us are part of Israeli-Jewish society,” Movsesyan explains. “Very few of us speak any Arabic at all, and most of us don’t feel part of the Arab or Palestinian community. My children were baptized in church and we celebrate Armenian holidays, and they attend ‘regular’ Israeli secular schools. Their friends and teachers know they’re Christian, but it really doesn’t matter to anyone and I’ve never experienced any discrimination.”

Ongoing tensions

The 1915 Armenian genocide – which Armenians in Israel refer as the Armenian holocaust, in both Hebrew and English – is a central part of the Armenian identity. “The last survivors of the holocaust are long gone, yet every child feels as if he or she ‘remembers’ those horrible events,” Baghamian says. “My father thought of himself as a second-generation survivor, just as Jewish children of Holocaust survivors think of themselves.”

Turkey’s support for Azerbaijan thus increases Armenian fear of and rage at Azerbaijani control over the disputed region. Indeed, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has made statements alluding to “finishing the job of our grandfathers.” Like many Armenians, Baghamian believes that, given the chance, Erdogan would conquer Armenia and attempt to annihilate its Armenian-Christian population.

Israel’s strategic relationship with Azerbaijan and its continued refusal to recognize the Armenian holocaust are therefore a constant source of tension between the community and the state.

Israel is a leading exporter of arms to Azerbaijan. While Israel’s Defense Ministry did not respond to questions from Haaretz for this report, in 2016 Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said his country had bought $4.85 billion in defense equipment from the Jewish state, including, according to some sources, cluster bombs and suicide drones (which are banned internationally). Israel also purchases approximately 40 percent of its oil from resource-rich Azerbaijan.

Haaretz columnist Yossi Melman reported that four Ilyushin-76 planes, operated by an Azerbaijani airline, touched down and took off from the Uvda air base in southern Israeli during the recent conflict. According to Israeli political scientist Emmanuel Navon, speaking on I24 News, Israel has sold cutting-edge technology, including Iron Dome air defense systems and attack drones, to Azerbaijan, and has taught its military how to use them.

Israeli officials have said they have no knowledge of or involvement in how Azerbaijan uses any weapons it acquires.

Katrin Gougassian, an Israeli-born housewife from the Armenian community in Jaffa, scoffs at the Israeli response that it’s not responsible for how the Azerbaijanis use those weapons. “The world has seen the footage: Israeli weapons have killed Armenian civilians. Now we know – Israel is responsible too.”


The Armenian Quarter in Jerusalem's Old City, January 2021.Credit: Emil Salman

Diana Galstyan, 33, is a graduate student in film studies at Tel Aviv University says she is “living in a painful dissonance. I am Jewish-Israeli; I came to Israel as a Jew from Armenia. I served as a weapons technician in the IDF, and now I feel as if the weapons I helped develop have killed my family and friends. I’m in mourning for one of my countries; I’m furious with the other.”

The reported sale of weapons to Azerbaijan has also heightened decades-old anger at Israel over its nonrecognition of the atrocities of 1915, when an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed in events that scholars widely believe were the first genocide of the 20th century. Turkey denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been inflated and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest..

Despite repeated debates in the Knesset and pressure from Jewish groups in Israel and abroad, Israel has constantly maintained that because of the importance of its relationship with Turkey, Israel does not want to offend Ankara by recognizing it. More recently, its strategic relationship with Azerbaijan has increased tensions for local Armenians.

In 2001, then-Foreign Minister Shimon Peres denied “Armenian allegations” regarding the 1915 genocide, denouncing them as efforts to create a parallel with the Holocaust in World War II. “Nothing similar to the Holocaust occurred. What the Armenians went through is a tragedy, but not genocide,” he said at the time.

“Sometimes, I think that Israeli officials want to hold onto the exclusivity of the Holocaust for their own cynical reasons,” Movsesyan tells Haaretz. “And every time there’s new [diplomatic] trouble with Turkey, some Israeli official ‘threatens’ to recognize the Armenian holocaust as a way to punish Turkey. They should recognize it because it’s true and because we shared in this fate – not because we are pawns in some cynical game.”

Kevork Gougassian, 47, notes that a memorial to the Armenian genocide was recently built in Petah Tikva. “It’s good to have a memorial. But it was established by contributions from the community. I wish that the Israeli government, even if it doesn’t formally recognize the holocaust, would recognize the pain by creating a public memorial.”


Kevork Gougassian next to a Christmas tree. Armenians in Israel traditionally celebrate Christmas on January 19. Credit: Meged Gozani

During the fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh, local Armenian organizations and ad hoc groups organized demonstrations, and the Azerbaijani-Turkish-Armenian conflict spilled over into Israel: During one incident, Azerbaijani supporters, waving Turkish and Azerbaijani flags, attacked a convoy of Armenian flag-wielding protesters who were returning from a demonstration in Jerusalem.

Baghamian says the events of recent months have forced him to question his own identity. “I have started to ask: What makes me Armenian? What makes me Israeli? I’m safe, warm and happy here – why should I care what happens over there? On the other hand, my people are from over there – so why should I feel attached to here? I’m angry at Israel. I’m angry at the Armenian government, too, because it hasn’t been able to build our nation the way Israel has.

“I feel disappointed and betrayed by all sides,” he says. “I wonder if, in some very small way, I understand how my grandfather felt when the Armenians were abandoned by everyone.”

Yet, at the same time, all those interviewed agree that the situation has led to energetic organizing within the community, culminating in the establishment and legal recognition of the Union of Armenian Communities as a nonprofit in Israel. The union, led by Movsesyan, is now planning to both participate in and raise funds for relief operations for Armenia, including sending prostheses for wounded soldiers, training Armenian medical rehabilitation staff, and rebuilding kindergartens and schools that were destroyed during the fighting.

“The Israeli people are offering their help to our nonprofit in so many ways,” Movsesyan says. “They recognize the connections between our two peoples, even if the Israeli government refuses to.”


 

School in Artsakh’s Shosh village opens doors to 65 students

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 25 2021
 January 25, 2021, 14:24

Less than a minute

The school in Artsakh’s Shosh village has opened its doors to 65 students, only 10 students less than before the war.

In 2004, the Hayastan All Armenian Fund with financing from Foundation Toronto built the Shosh village school.

Until November 9th Shosh was relatively secure in the center of Artsakh, but is a border village at just 350m from enemy lines.

Despite its critical location, as well as the significant damage to homes, most of the population has returned.

The school reopened last week after some reconstruction works. 

Armenia committed to principles and aims of the Council of Europe – FM

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 25 2021

Armenia has been faithful to the commitments undertaken at the accession to the Council of Europe, including the peaceful resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian said in a statement on the 20th anniversary of the country’s membership to the Council of Europe.

“By acceding to the Council of Europe, Armenia joined the family of European states, with whom it shares common history, values, and ideals, as well as a vision of a future Europe, where fundamental rights and freedoms are protected for all, without distinction or discrimination,” the Foreign Minister said,

He emphasized that Armenia acknowledges and values the input of this unique organization that has remained the main human rights and democracy watchdog in Europe for over 70 years of its existence.

“The two decades of Armenia’s membership to the Council of Europe were a period of active participation and sincere cooperation. Armenia has now joined over 70 Council of Europe conventions and partial agreements, essentially building legal bridges with the Member States of the organization. In 2013 Armenia held the Presidency in the Committee of Ministers, steering common European efforts for democratic action,” the Foreign Minister stated.

He noted that democratic reforms remain a key area of our interactions with the Council of Europe, where the organization, with its valuable expertise, has become a trusted partner of Armenia.

“The Council of Europe, its experts, its monitoring and specialized bodies, such as the Venice Commission, have all had a significant contribution in our efforts to build a just and democratic society, in devising policies that would better uphold human rights and the rule of law,” Minister Aivazian added  

“Armenia has been faithful to the commitments undertaken at the accession to the Council of Europe, including the peaceful resolution of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The recent war in Artsakh had a devastating impact on the fundamental rights and the livelihood of its people. We trust that the Council of Europe recognizes these challenges and will take steps within its mandate to protect the rights, the freedoms and the dignity of all people living in conflict zones, including in Nagorno-Karabakh,” the Foreign Minister stated.

On this special occasion of the 20th Anniversary, he reiterated Armenia’s dedication to the principles and aims of the Council of Europe.

Special flight from Germany transports 30 tons of humanitarian aid to Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 25 2021  

 

About 30 tons of humanitarian aid – medicines, medical equipment, various items necessary for the social sphere – were transported to Yerevan by a special flight of the German Federal Ministry of Defense, the Government reports.

The flight was carried out through close cooperation between the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia in Germany, the Prelacy of the German-Armenian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church and the “Silva Kaputikyan” Union of German-Armenian Women.

Chairs of two PACE groups raise the issue of Armenian POWs with CoE Secretary General – Marukyan

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 25 2021  

 

Leader of two political groups at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) have raised the issue of Armenian prisoners of war with Secretary General of the Council of Europe Marija Pejčinović Burić, member of the Armenian delegation to PACE Edmon Marukyan says.

“As a result of our work done during the discussions in the PACE political groups this morning and during the plenary session, the leaders of the two political groups Aleksander Pociej (European People’s Party) and Jacques Maire (Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe) raised the issue of releasing the Armenian prisoners of war held in Azerbaijan with the Secretary General of the Council of Europe,” Marukyan said in a Facebook post.

Earlier today the lawmaker staged a protest at PACE to call attention to call for international pressure on Azerbaijan.