Russia in favour of full normalization of Armenia-Azerbaijan ties: Lavrov

YEREVAN: Russia will help normalise relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

Lavrov stressed the importance of continuing to push ahead the process of normalising Armenia-Azerbaijan ties during a joint press conference with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan after their meeting on Thursday as per reports.

"We all believe, in my opinion, that the process is moving forward. It's possible that a faster approach would be preferable "Russia would attempt to contribute to the process in every way possible, said the visiting Russian Foreign Minister. He praised the Armenia-Azerbaijan Line Commissions' efforts to demarcate the border, stating Russia is willing to provide consulting assistance in this regard.

Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov pledged that any agreement to improve economic and transportation communications in the South Caucasus will fully respect Armenia's sovereignty. 

For his part, Mirzoyan praised Russia's contribution to sustaining peace in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.  He said that Armenia is interested in reactivating the Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship of the OSCE (Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe).

Lavrov arrived in Armenia on Wednesday for a working visit.

https://english.newstracklive.com/news/russia-in-favour-of-full-normalization-of-armeniaazerbaijan-ties-lavrov-sc57-nu318-ta318-1233541-1.html

Residents of a Karabakh village in limbo brace for handover

Lilit Shahverdyan Jun 10, 2022



After the first war, Aghavno was rebuilt with money from Armenian diaspora organizations. (Photos by Lilit Shahverdyan)

After the war, signs of life have come back to Aghavno. Plants are sprouting in gardens, and children’s voices ring from the schoolyard.

But also visible from the village is a new road, now under construction by Azerbaijani workers. Once that road is finished – likely within a matter of months – Azerbaijan says it will take control of the village. And when that happens the current residents, all Armenians, will have to decide whether to stay or go.

Aghavno occupies a uniquely strategic place in the complex geopolitics of post-war Karabakh. Before the first war between the two sides in the 1990s, it was populated by Azerbaijanis and known as Zabukh. During that war it was destroyed, and ended up under Armenian control, along with the entire surrounding Lachin district. 

It was rebuilt with heavy financial backing by Armenian diaspora organizations, renamed Aghavno, and settled by Armenians, some from Armenia itself and others from Armenian communities in Syria and Lebanon.

It lies along the road known as the Lachin Corridor, the narrow tether connecting Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh. According to the ceasefire agreement that ended the more recent war, the entire district of Lachin was supposed to be handed over to Azerbaijan on December 1, 2020, except for a five-kilometer buffer along the corridor road. That ribbon of land was to be patrolled by Russian peacekeepers so that Armenians could continue to travel safely between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Ahead of the December 2020 handover the de facto Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh told residents of the villages along the road to leave, but a handful in Aghavno defied the orders and stayed

Now that handful has grown: Of the village’s pre-war population of 270, 185 have come back. The village has become a symbol to many Armenians for its defiance and its people’s determination to hold their ground.

Living here now requires navigating “constant obstacles,” the mayor, Andranik Chavushyan, told Eurasianet. 

"We never had gas, so we use gas cylinders. We had power outages, so we brought generators. Water shortages? Fortunately, we have a river in the village,” Chavushyan said. "We believed in ourselves, not in the government, and refused to leave the village. We are living here today because we relied on ourselves.” 

The village’s story has inspired various patriotic Armenian organizations to help support the residents who have stayed. "Mshakutamet," an initiative in which young teachers from Armenia volunteer to hold weekly classes like sewing, piano, traditional dances in rural areas, has set up a program in Aghavno. Teach for Armenia, an organization placing teachers in villages in Armenia and Karabakh, sent an English teacher to Aghavno’s school for the most recent academic year, a relatively rare opportunity for Karabakh village schoolchildren. 

The school, which had 48 students before the war, now has even more, headmaster Poghos Aghabekyan told Eurasianet. About half of the current 55 students now come from the district capital of Lachin (which Armenians call Berdzor) and other neighboring communities, where the schools remained closed following the war.

But Aghavno’s fate over the next few months is not clear. Azerbaijan has said that when it finishes the new road it is constructing, which will bypass Aghavno, it will take control of the territory along the current road. The Russian peacekeeping forces protecting the road – including a detachment just outside Aghavno – will relocate to the new road. 

“We [Azerbaijan] will be able to rebuild the villages in the Lachin region and in this corridor,” military analyst Adalat Verdiyev told the pro-government Azerbaijani news site Yeni Sabah. “The Azerbaijani flag will be raised in the center of the Lachin region.”

In April, Azerbaijani media published the first images of the construction of the new route. It will start from the Armenian border near the village of Kornidzor, then pass through the settlements of Gaygi in the Lachin region, Kirov (Hin Shen in Armenian) and Metskaladeresi (Mets Shen in Armenian) in the Shusha region before reaching Stepanakert.

The construction of the new Lachin Corridor was stipulated in the ceasefire agreement that ended the 2020 war. According to that agreement, a new route connecting Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh will be outlined “within the next three years” and that when it is completed, “the Russian peacemaking forces shall be subsequently relocated to protect the route.”

But Azerbaijan appears to be working well ahead of schedule. The head of the Azerbaijan state road agency, Saleh Mamedov, told reporters in April that the new road would be ready to use by July.

Armenian, Russian, and Nagorno-Karabakh officials have had little to say on the construction of the new road. But the ombudsman in the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, Gegham Stepanyan, in May urged the residents of the villages along the border to stay.

“According to my information, it [the new road] will bypass Berdzor and Aghavno,” he said. “There is no final decision on the Armenian population of these settlements yet. We insist that the Armenian population lives there.” 

In Aghavno, as rumors swirl about the potential impending handover, there are mixed feelings.

Anna Arakelyan, the history teacher at the school, said that the mood among her students darkened during the war, but that things have been gradually returning to their pre-war rhythm. Still, they know that the situation is precarious. “Sometimes I hear things like, ‘If we happen to come to school in September…’ or, ‘If we are still here this summer…’,” she told Eurasianet. “But I am sure we will not leave until the very last minute." 

Arakelyan’s parents were among the first Armenians to settle here in 1992, after fleeing their home in Maragha, a village in far eastern Nagorno-Karabakh that remained under Azerbaijani control. She was the first child to be born in Aghavno after the war, in 1994.

When the 2020 war broke out, she was pregnant, and fled to Armenia. She gave birth there, but moved back to Aghavno as soon as the war ended. “We decided that we would stay regardless of what the authorities decided," she told Eurasianet.

But there are plenty of signs of people who are less determined. Some houses in the village remain empty, their previous inhabitants apparently deciding to make new lives elsewhere.

And the mayor, Chavushyan, criticizes what he calls the “suitcase mood” of some current residents thinking of leaving. But he insists that a strong core will remain. “The quantity does not matter. What matters is being strong,” he said. “I have only dozens of people around, but I trust and rely on them. If some are surrendering, then they are free to go, we will still do our job.”

Chavushyan, who is himself from Qamishli in Syria, moved to Lachin in 2014 and then to Aghavno in 2016. During the 2020 war, he organized a volunteer detachment of soldiers and got weapons from the government, he said. The village itself, far from the front lines, saw little fighting and only two houses and the school were partially damaged by Azerbaijani shells. But Chavushyan’s unit did have to defend the village from looters who came from Armenia to take advantage of the emptied-out villages. 

Now, residents are ready to defend the village again, Chavushyan said. “We are responsible for our future generation. We defended ourselves in the ‘90s, we did it in 2020, and we are ready to fight again. We only need will and faith in ourselves,” he said.

Lilit Shahverdyan is a journalist based in Stepanakert. 

https://eurasianet.org/residents-of-a-karabakh-village-in-limbo-brace-for-handover








Iran seeks to increase trade turnover with Armenia to $1 billion

PanARMENIAN
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net - Iran wants to increase trade turnover with Armenia to $1 billion annually, Tehran's ambassador to Yerevan Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri has told ISNA News Agency (via Pars Today).

"Although Armenia is a country bordering East Azerbaijan, we have not been able to exceed half a billion dollars in our trade with this country, so we must make efforts to increase this volume to $1 billion," Zohouri was quoted as saying.

The envoy said Armenia serves as a bridge between Iran and the Eurasian Economic Union and the European Union.

"Given that Armenia has preferential customs duties with EU countries, we can use that potential to export our goods, and steps should be taken by the [Iranian] provinces bordering Armenia to improve that," he said.

"Many of Armenia's neighboring provinces have excellent climate conditions, so we can use the new agricultural technologies acquired in Iran in this country."

Armenia and Iran are currently working on the the expansion of the gas for electricity swap deal between the two countries. The two sides have repeatedly stressed the importance of boosting cooperation in the trade and economic sphere, which would enable the sides to increase turnover to $1 billion.
https://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/300825/

Top U.S. diplomat meets opposition MPs in Armenia

PanARMENIAN
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net - U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Kara C. McDonald on Thursday, June 9 met with opposition lawmakers in Armenia to discuss the situation in the domestic political situation, as well as the spheres of judiciary, law enforcement, press and freedom of speech in the country.

Lawmakers from Armenia bloc Aram Vardevanyan, Anna Grigoryan, Gegham Manukyan, as well as MP from the "I have honor" bloc, Chairwoman of the Standing Committee on Protection of Human Rights and Public Affairs Taguhi Tovmasyan participated in the meeting initiated by the American side, Armenia bloc said in a statement.

The bloc said "violence perpetrated by the law enforcement agencies during the peaceful demonstrations", and all the violations that have been registered in the judiciary in recent years in the field of human rights and fundamental freedoms were on the table.

"A reference was made to the pressure on the press, the government's steps to limit the activities of the media through numerous legislative changes," the statement added.

In recent months, protesters demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan have taken to the streets to block major roads in the capital Yerevan and call on the population to commit acts of civil disobedience. Pashinian has come under fire after he and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev agreed to start drafting a bilateral peace treaty to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and set up a joint commission on demarcating the borders.

Digital Julfa Network to be launched during Orion Summit 2022 in Yerevan

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

The Digital Julfa Network – an initiative bringing together the pan-Armenian intellectual, technological, commercial and cultural potential – will be officially launched during Orion Summit 2022. 

Mark Chenian, a veteran of investment banking, and a member of the board of directors of the Armenian Society of Fellows, is the keynote speaker at the Orion Summit 2022 which will address the final panel discussion on “Standing up Digital Julfa Network of the 21st Century․” Mark Chenian is a veteran of over 50 years in Investment Banking, primarily in Asset & Wealth Management.

The panel will bring together BAJ Accelerator and Orion Worldwide Innovations Founding Partner Emma Arakelyan, Director of the Matenadaran Vahan Ter-Ghevondian, BAJ Accelerator Co-Founding Partner Dr. Armen Kherlopian, and Souren Israelian, head of Law Office of Souren A. Israelyan.

Digital Julfa network’s cultural significance will be presented during the panel. The summit will be followed by the reception during which classical pianist and composer, author of “Jazzical Komitas-Passion of Fire” CD Joel A. Martin will perform the works of Komitas with jazz interpretation.  An art exhibition of contemporary art works will also be held during the summit.

Orion Summit 2022 will take place on June 22, 2022, in Yerevan, Matenadaran. The event will bring together world-class founders, investors, advisors, and professionals in technology, finance, business, and other fields.

Orion Worldwide Innovations (“Orion”), is a startup growth and ecosystem acceleration hub and offers a full-service package to make companies investable to enter the US market, enhance their customer acquisition strategies, stay competitive and protect their innovation. Orion is a U.S.-based company formed in 2017, with offices in New York City, U.S., and Yerevan, Armenia, though Orion partners with companies and investor networks worldwide.

Newspaper: International organizations were alarmed by Armenia ex-President Kocharyan’s possible victory

News.am
Armenia –

YEREVAN. – Hraparak daily of Armenia writes: One of the older coworkers of the MFA system told noteworthy details in connection with the 2021 snap parliamentary elections.

He was in contact with international organizations and foreign ministries of European countries due to his work, and says that during that time there was a lot of attention toward Armenia. They were interested—around the clock—in the outcome of the elections, asked for information from them, did studies, and did not hide their concern in connection with the rise of the opposition, especially with [second President] Robert Kocharyan's [election] campaign.

Our interlocutor says that he will never forget the joy that the European partners experienced after the publicizing of the results of June 21. They openly congratulated each other; the impression was that it seemed they were the ones who achieved victory, not [PM] Nikol Pashinyan.

Newspaper: New, scandalous arrests expected at Armenia MoD

News.am
Armenia –

YEREVAN. – Iravunk daily of Armenia writes: Before the [parliamentary] committee of inquiry begins its work, “evil tongues” say that it has already found culprits. Moreover, some of those guilty are being summoned for active questioning these days in various cases exposing the circumstances of the [44-day Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)] war [in the fall of 2020].

According to the rumors circulating among the authorities’ circles, new, scandalous arrests are expected at the MoD soon. According to rumors hanging in the air, the staff considered close to Artak Davtyan [the former Chief of the General Staff of the Armed Forces] have especially been taken into consideration.

Armenia parliament deputy speaker from opposition: We will lose road to Berdzor (Lachin)

News.am
Armenia –

An alternative road is being built by Azerbaijan, to which it seems that [Armenian PM] Nikol [Pashinyan] and [Azerbaijani President Ilham] Aliyev have a conspiratorial agreement that we will lose today's Berdzor (Lachin) road. Resistance Movement coordinator Ishkhan Saghatelyan—the National Assembly deputy speaker from the opposition "Armenia" Faction and a representative of the Supreme Body of the opposition Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Dashnaktsutyun Party of Armenia—stated this during Friday’s press conference at France Square in downtown Yerevan.

"That is, a bypass road is being built to [Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) capital] Stepanakert, which is being built now and will be put into operation in 2-3 months. If that road works, it means that we will completely lose the Berdzor region (…). Most importantly, all our utilities—that is, [natural] gas, electricity—will fall under the control of the enemy. This means we will be in complete dependence, and what we were saying the 'de-Armenianization of Artsakh,' we also mean this. This is another conspiratorial plan," Saghatelyan said.

Baku deporting Sputnik Azerbaijan chief editor

News.am
Armenia –

The State Migration Service of Azerbaijan has not permitted Belarusian citizens Veronika Antonova-Trizno and her husband Anton Pavlov to continue working in Azerbaijan, Haqqin.az reported.

"It is worth noting that Veronica Antonova-Trizno holds the position of Editor-in-Chief of Sputnik Azerbaijan [news] agency. Her husband held the position of producer in the same agency.

This information was also presented to reporters by the head of the public relations department of the State Migration Service, Elnur Kalantarli. He noted that the applications to extend the work [in Azerbaijan] of the noted persons were denied. This automatically nullifies as well the right of residence in the country," Haqqin.az added.