“Corridor” narrative a red line for Armenia, PM Pashinyan tells Al Jazeera – Transcript

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

The Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, who is in the State of Qatar, gave an interview to Al Jazeera on June 13, during which he touched upon the processes taking place in the South Caucasus, the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Armenian-Turkish relations and other topics.

Question, Al Jazeera – Let me start with the agreement you signed with Azerbaijan, because of which you were subjected to strong pressures, so that the demonstrators even arrived at your house. How do you evaluate this agreement now?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – I think you mean the trilateral statement signed by me, the President of Russia and the President of Azerbaijan. With that statement, the ceasefire came into force, all military actions ended, I think at that time it was a step aimed at ending the violence in Nagorno Karabakh. I should mention that this statement does not address the Nagorno Karabakh issue, but it is necessary to address the Nagorno Karabakh issue, we hope that in the near future we will be able to address the Nagorno Karabakh issue.

Question, Al Jazeera – Interrupting the talk about Nagorno-Karabakh, I want to note that this particular issue assumes that there is a border demarcation commission between the two countries that will look into this matter. What is hindering its work so far?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – In fact, we have communication with Azerbaijan in several dimensions, You are right, we have recently formed a delimitation commission between Armenia and Azerbaijan, it is very important to continue that work. Only one meeting has taken place, but we already have an agreement that the second meeting will take place in the Russian capital Moscow, and the third meeting in Brussels. We hope that with the support of our international partners, and of course, due to direct work, we will be able to carry out the delimitation of our borders.

Question, Al Jazeera – What if this committee came to a decision that the entire territory of Nagorno-Karabakh will belong to Azerbaijan, what would be your position then?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – In fact, the Delimmitation Commission has nothing to do with the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, because, as I said, we have different dimensions of communication with Azerbaijan, one of which is demarcation. It’s also very important to mention the issue of border security, which is also under the mandate of this commission, because we must maintain stability and security along the entire border.

The second dimension is the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. There is another dimension, which is about the opening of regional, transport and economic communications. But, of course, the most urgent issue between Armenia and Azerbaija and for the regional peace is the issue of Nagorno Karabakh.

Question, Al Jazeera – Interrupting the talks about peace with Azerbaijan, and this is exactly what angers the opposition. Russia, which is the sponsor of this agreement or the statement as it was called, is considered to be involved in a conspiracy against Armenia, and rather stands by Azerbaijan.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – You know that Russia is Armenia’s strategic partner and ally, but Russia is also a very close country for Azerbaijan. And in this context, we see the role of Russats as the guarantor of a trilateral statement, which, as I mentioned, was signed between the three parties.

Question, Al Jazeera – Since you referred to this close relationship with Russia and the alliances that bind you with it, what is your position on the war on Ukraine launched by Russia?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – Of course, we are very concerned about the situation around Ukraine, but I think all the countries of the world are concerned, because what do we see now? We see the collapse of the international order, and no one knows what the next international order will be like, and of course, we support the solution of all problems through dialogue and peaceful means.

Question, Al Jazeera – Yes, you say all countries are interested and are following with interest, but you are a bit different, your economy is closely linked to Russia’s economy, how will this be reflected, especially as it is subject to strong Western sanctions?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – Of course, the situation is not pleasant for us in terms of economy. But to be honest, in the first quarter we registered 8.6% economic growth, we hope we will be able to maintain this dynamic. After the events in Ukraine, many people and businesses have moved from Russia to Armenia because we have a neutral economic zone, and both Armenia and Russia are members of the Eurasian Economic Union. In this situation we hope, I think, we will be able to manage this economic situation. But, of course, not only the economic situation in Russia has directly affected the economy of Armenia, but also the global economic tension related to, for example, food supply, inflation and many other factors. But at the moment the economic indicators of Armenia are quite positive.

Question, Al Jazeera – Referring to the figures on the Armenian economy, are you in a better position than others? Are you subjected to any pressure, whether from Moscow or from the West, towards alliances or special relations that bind you to Moscow?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – I will not deny that the situation of our country and government is quite sensitive, but we try to be a direct, honest and reliable partner for Russia, our European and Western partners, our neighbors. It is not so easy, but I think the leaders are designed for the situations we have now, it is our duty to manage this situation and maintain proper relations with our partners, not to betray anyone.

Question, Al Jazeera – Interrupting the conversation, if relations are appropriate with your partners, what about relations with Turkey? Armenia and Turkey announced the opening of a new page of relations. Where is the path of normalization between Ankara and Yerevan?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – We have started a dialogue through the special representatives of Armenia and Turkey. The dialogue itself is already very positive, but we hope to record tangible results.

Question, Al Jazeera – Interrupting the conversation, are you talking with Turkey about mutual visits?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – I cannot say that we have not registered any results yet, because after the start of the dialogue, we started direct flights between Armenia and Turkey, but this is something that we had before. I hope that we will be able to establish diplomatic relations, open the border between Armenia and Turkey, which has been closed for 30 years.

Question, Al Jazeera – What is Armenia’s approach and stance towards the corridor that is supposed to link Azerbaijan and Ankara through your lands?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – You know, the wording, the narrative about the so-called corridor is unacceptable for us, it is a red line for us, because in our region, according to the trilateral statement I mentioned at the beginning of our conversation, we have one corridor, it is the Lachin corridor that connects Nagorno Karabakh to Armenia. But we have another provision in our trilateral statement, which is about opening communications. I mean railways, roads, and we are ready, in fact we are already discussing the issue of opening regional communications based on the principle of mutual respect for sovereignty and the inviolability of borders.

Question, Al Jazeera – You speak in a very positive language, while Armenia’s relationship with neighboring countries is generally bad with the exception of Iran, and some are actually surprised that Iran, the Islamic Republic, stood by you in the face of Azerbaijan, the Muslim country? How do you explain this situation?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – We have four neighbors, we have very good relations with two of them, I mean Georgia and Iran. Iran is a friendly country for us, which also has good relations with Azerbaijan, we do not intend not to have good relations with countries that have good relations with Azerbaijan. But now we have very close ties with Iran, by the way, we hope that by cooperating with Iran we will be able to expand our bilateral relations with Qatar as well. We are now working to develop communications between Iran and Armenia, and we are currently in the process of constructing a very strategic highway called North-South, which connects our border with Georgia to the border with Iran. We hope that as a result of this program, our economic relations with Iran will develop. By the way, the Eurasian Economic Union, I have already said that Armenia is a member of it, has a free trade agreement with Iran, which is very important in the context of our bilateral relations.

Question, Al Jazeera – Let me to conclude this meeting with a question about your tour in the Arab region, what is your expectation from the Arabs?

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – I should mention that there is a very warm attitude towards the Arab world in Armenia, because we have traditional relations. Now I hope for the growth of bilateral trade between Armenia and Qatar, because there is a very positive political environment in our bilateral relations with this wonderful country.

Al Jazeera – Thank you for the interview.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan – Thank you.

Armenia interested in expanding bilateral relations with Qatar – PM

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who is on an official visit in the State of Qatar, received Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs of the State of Qatar Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani.

During the meeting the interlocutors discussed issues related to the further development and strengthening of relations between Armenia and Qatar in the field of foreign policy.

Nikol Pashinyan emphasized the role of Qatar in the Arab world, stressed the interest of the Armenian government in expanding and deepening bilateral relations in various spheres.

Issues related to the processes taking place in the South Caucasus region were touched upon during the meeting.

Film: Aurora’s Sunrise: Armenian Genocide documentary to premiere at Annecy International Animated Film Festival in France

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

Aurora’s Sunrise – a historical animated documentary film about the life of Aurora Mardiganian – will premiere in France this week.

At only 14, in 1915, Aurora faced the horrors of the Armenian Genocide. Within a year, witnessing the deaths of everyone in her family, Aurora had lost everything, and was sold into a Turkish harem. But with extraordinary courage and luck, she escaped to America, where her story became a sensation. The Zoryan Institute’s objective with this film is to bring to life the ZI’s Oral History Testimonies onto the big screen, through animated documentary films, to relay the stories of the Genocide survivors to the younger generations, especially of girls and to empower them, and to represent their communities in the face of great adversity and violence. 

In 2015, on 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the Zoryan Institute, signed a partnership agreement with Bars Media of Armenia to produce the animated documentary based on the testimony of A. Mardiganian. Aurora’s Sunrise was made possible with the academic contribution of the Zoryan Institute Armenia, based on its oral history archives (filmed by the Zoryan Institute on January 29, 1984). 

The film is directed by Inna Sahakyan. It is produced by Bars Media, led by Vardan Hovhannisyan, Gebrueder Beetz Filmproduktion & Artbox Laisvalaikio Klubas, with the financial partnership of Eurimages, the Zoryan Institute Armenia & the National Cinema Center of Armenia, and with the contributions of the Lithuanian Film Center, ZDF/ARTE, Public TV Armenia, and LRT. 

The Zoryan Institute is thrilled that 40 years after the launch of the Armenian Genocide Oral History Project, which collected testimonies of survivors of the 1915 Genocide across 4 continents, the great-grandchildren of those who experienced the genocide are experiencing life before, during, and after the genocide through a film that seamlessly blends a mix of footage from the Zoryan Institute’s original live interview with Aurora and the brilliant animation of Bars Media and their German and Lithuanian co-producers, along with scenes from the 1919 silent film “Auction of Souls” (film starring Aurora Mardiganian prepared by Near East Relief). 

“Great credit goes to the Zoryan Institute’s founders and staff at the time (early1980’s), who contextualized and carried out the Armenian Genocide Oral History Project, collecting over 3000 hours of oral history testimony from over 780 survivors in their 70s to 90s. The project was a significant financial undertaking, with the audiovisual equipment alone costing the equivalent to nearly half a million USD in today’s dollars employing a work force to conduct interviews, in cities across Europe, the Middle East, and North America,” the Institute says.

Over 100 standardized questionnaires were utilized, developed by a multidisciplinary ZI team of experts, that allowed the Institute to extract information on social, economic, political, and cultural practices before, during, and after the genocide to capture commonalities and patterns. Since launching its Armenian Genocide Oral History Project, the Institute has worked continuously and systematically to protect, digitize, and index its archival collection of over 780 oral history testimonies, to ensure the quality of the footage is maintained and usable for films like Aurora Sunrise.

The world premiere of Aurora’s Sunrise, is taking place at the prestigious Annecy International Animated Film Festival in France this week. Annecy is a week-long global festival that brings together the biggest names in animation to celebrate creative and diverse animation styles and techniques.

Now, 40 years later, the Institute’s dream of utilizing the enormous power of film to connect future generations with their universal history and raise awareness about the phenomenon of genocide has become a reality. With the generous support of the Friends of the Zoryan Institute, this dream has become a reality. In addition to initial cost of the Oral History testimonies, Aurora’s Sunrise film had a budget of over USD $1,000,000.00, and is only the beginning of these invaluable stories of Armenian Genocide survivors.

Ongoing transcription and translation efforts currently underway in partnership with the American University of Armenia, will make these stories more accessible to scholars, filmmakers, authors, institutions, and schools around the globe who wish to use these stories, as source materials for education in edifying the tolerance and understanding needed in today’s world, more than ever.

CoE: High-level conference “The judiciary as a guardian of democracy” in Armenia

STRASBOURG 13/06/2022

A keynote address by the President of the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission), Ms Claire Bazy-Malaurie, focused on the role of the judiciary in preserving democracy and democratic values in society.

The high-level Conference served as a platform to facilitate dialogue between the Constitutional Court, courts of general jurisdiction and other branches of authority, alongside the international community and civil society concerning ways through which the independence of the judiciary could be strengthened and public trust increased, as well as ongoing reforms in the justice sector of Armenia.

The high-level Conference was organised in the framework of the EU/Council of Europe project “Support to judicial reform-strengthening the independence and professionalism of the judiciary in Armenia”.

 

More information:

  • Agenda of the conference 
  • Human Rights National Implementation
  • Venice Commission 

Ombudsman: Crimes against Shahumyan people were an act of ‘punishment’ for their free will

Panorama
Armenia –

Artsakh’s Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Gegham Stepanyan on Monday issued the following statement on the eviction of Armenians from the Shahumyan region by Azerbaijan in 1992:

“30 years ago, as a result of repressions, attacks and criminal acts by Azerbaijan, 20,000 people of the Shahumyan region of the Artsakh Republic were deported and  ousted from their homeland, more than 700 people were killed and disappeared, historical Armenian communities were emptied of Armenians and looted, the Armenian religious and cultural values of region were vandalized and destroyed.

“The houses of the Armenians were divided, and the “new masters” from Azerbaijan wrote their names on the gates with oil. The church was desecrated and turned into a sheep pen. The cross was broken, the bell was smashed with a rifle shot, and the fragments were scattered back and forth,” eyewitnesses say.

The crimes committed against the people of Shahumyan were an act of “punishment” for their free will, the realization of their right to live independently and with dignity in their homeland.

The issue of justice for the people of Shahumyan, deprived of their homeland on the basis of ethnic-religious affiliation and the restoration of their violated rights, was not clearly set on the agenda, the Azerbaijani authorities were not held accountable for the crimes committed against them. Moreover, this impunity continues to breed new crimes, which we witnessed during the Azerbaijani aggression unleashed against the people of Artsakh in April 2016 and September 2020, and continue to witness after the November 9 trilateral statement on the ceasefire.

The international community continues to show condemnable indifference to what is happening, which does not follow from the principle of the universality of the protection of human rights.”

Three arrested after driving into tent in central Yerevan

Panorama
Armenia –

Three people have been arrested after driving into a tent set up by the opposition in Yerevan’s central France Square.

The incident took place early on Tuesday morning. The vehicle broke through a police cordon and rammed into one of the tents, breaking it down, opposition Hayastan bloc MP Anna Mkrtchyan said. No injuries were reported.

Police officers chased the Mercedes-Benz car and arrested the three men who were in it.

“Reports are being prepared on the case,” the police told Panorama.am, refusing to say whether the arrested men were drunk or not.

Opposition MP reiterates need for sweeping army reforms

Panorama
Armenia –

Tigran Abrahamyan, a lawmaker from the opposition Pativ Unem bloc, on Tuesday reiterated the need for major reforms in the Armenian army as the summer conscription kicked off in the county.

In a public post on Facebook, he wished all draftees safe service.

“Sweeping changes are needed in the army, which experts have been talking about for a long time,” the MP wrote.

Abrahamyan outlined four key factors for the military which “have nothing to do with funds, Azerbaijani threats or technical problems”.

“These factors include the spirit, will, idea and discipline. Without them, the army will not be able to solve problems regardless of the armaments, equipment or means acquired,” he stated.

Armenian opposition to change protest tactics

Panorama
Armenia –

The Armenian opposition will announce new tactics of the protest movement aimed at toppling Nikol Pashinyan at a big rally to be held in Yerevan’s France Square on Tuesday evening, MP Gegham Manukyan of the Hayastan bloc said.

“The methods and steps may change, but the struggle will not stop,” Manukyan wrote on Facebook, urging people to join the rally.

He hinted at plans to attract all people in Armenia’s towns and villages to the civil disobedience campaign launched on May 2.

“We should make Armenia a big square and continue the struggle on June 15,” the MP said.

A march is panned in Yerevan after today’s rally.

Missing Armenian soldier’s mother gives birth to baby girl

Panorama
Armenia –

SOCIETY 16:05 14/06/2022 ARMENIA

The mother of Armenian soldier Ashot Sargsyan, who went missing during the 2020 war in Artsakh, has given birth to a baby girl.

Yerevan’s Shengavit Medical Center posted photos of the baby on its Facebook page on Monday, writing: “The baby in the photo is Arevik, who has become a new ray of hope for the family.”

The father of the family passed away a few months before the birth of the baby girl. She has a 20-year-old sister.

The 42-year-old woman’s pregnancy proceeded very smoothly and the baby is in perfect health.

Arevik and her mother are already home.

Court allows MP Armen Gevorgyan to leave for PACE summer session

Panorama
Armenia –

The Yerevan Court of General Jurisdiction has allowed Armen Gevorgyan, an MP from the opposition Hayastan bloc, to travel to Strasbourg to attend the summer plenary session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE).

Presiding judge Anna Danibekyan on Tuesday granted a motion filed by Gevorgyan’s lawyer Lusine Sahakyan to allow her client to leave for the session scheduled for June 19-25.

The prosecutors did not object to the request, leaving the decision to the discretion of the court.

Gevorgyan is standing trial for alleged corruption and money laundering.