Artsakh Army Thwarts Further Advances by Azerbaijani Forces

Azerbaijani forces stand guard near Shushi on Jan 17, 2023


Artsakh Defense Army units on Monday thwarted further attempts by Azerbaijani forces to advance into Artsakh proper, as their campaign to breach the line of contact continued.

At around 9 a.m. local time on Monday Azerbaijani forces again attempted to advance toward the heights around the Stepanakert-Ghaibalishen-Lisagor road, the Artsakh defense army reported.

The Artsakh army is pushing back Azerbaijani attacks to ensure safe passage on the mountain roads adjacent to the Stepanakert-Ghaibalishen-Lisagor road, which was attacked by Azerbaijani forces on Saturday in clear violation of the ceasefire and the November 9, 2020 agreement.

The Russian peacekeeping forces took note of the attack and called on the Azerbaijani forces to retreat to their positions.

The Russian peacekeepers have positioned themselves in the area that was seized by Azerbaijani forces on Saturday and are controlling the area, the Artsakh information center reported on Monday.

The Artsakh authorities are in constant contact with the command staff of the peacekeeping contingent of the Russian Federation in order to take all possible measures towards the settlement of the situation.

Azerbaijani forces on Sunday fired at farmers working in pomegranate orchards in Artsakh’s Martakert region, continuing their breach and violation of the ceasefire.

The orchard, which is managed by the Artsakh State Inspections Management Committee came under Azerbaijani fire at around 11:30 a.m. local time, forcing the suspension of all activities. No injuries were reported.

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan, who chaired an emergency session of the national security council, said the complexities of the situation resulting from Saturday’s attack was being assessed in order to better coordinate the response.

He said he was confident that Artsakh’s vital interests will be protected.

Asbarez: GenEd Welcomes New Education Director

Kerri Flynn

The Genocide Education Project announced the appointment of Kerri Flynn as their new Education Director.

Flynn has been a high school social studies educator for 25 years. She teaches Modern U.S. History and has also created a Human Rights and Genocide course at her school, Washington High School, near St. Louis, Missouri. She received the University of Chicago Outstanding Educator award in 2022 and serves as Executive Secretary for the Missouri Council for the Social Studies. She also teaches Sociology and Psychology at East Central College.

Flynn is one of GenEd’s first GenEd Teacher Fellowship Program participants and has also taken part in numerous other, in-depth professional development programs for teachers related to human rights, the Holocaust and other genocides, and WWII. “We welcome Kerri as she assumes this new leadership role in the GenEd Teacher Fellowship Program and the opportunities it has created for greatly increasing the number of teachers equipped to teach about genocide and the Armenian case,” said Executive Director, Roxanne Makasdjian.

The 2023 GenEd Teacher Fellows gathered for the first time in March via video call, where they got to know each other and GenEd team members

“I am so excited to join GenEd and continue helping educators learn about the Armenian Genocide and gain the skills they need to take this information back to their students. Becoming the Education Director is such a great opportunity as I am passionate about human rights and genocide education. With GenEd, I can continue learning and teaching after retiring from the classroom,” said Flynn.

Fifteen secondary school educators from 14 U.S. states have been selected to participate in the one-year GenEd Teacher Fellowship Program, including a 10-day intensive professional development trip to Armenia in July, based at the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, after which the GenEd Teacher Fellows will lead their own teacher training activities for their peers.

Brenda Boehler

Brenda Boehler (Tucson, AZ) teaches World History, Western Civilization, IB Theory of Knowledge, and she serves as Social Studies Chair at Cholla High School. Brenda has lived and taught in England, Ukraine, and Russia. She says her passion is empowering students with new possibilities.

Sarah Dixen

Sarah Dixen (Winona, MN) teaches AP World History, Human Geography, AP Government, and Service Learning at Winona Senior High School. She also serves as Social Studies chair. Having taught and developed a Master of Education program for 10 years, she returned to high school teaching to work more closely with students and her content area. 

Misty Ebinger

Misty Ebinger (New London, OH) An educator for 21 years, Ebinger teaches history and government courses, as well as a course in Holocaust and Genocide Studies. She serves on the board of Ohio’s Holocaust and Genocide Education Network, representing small, rural school districts. 

David Green

David Green (Acton, MA) In his 28-year tenure, Green has taught World history, United States history, and Psychology and is in his 8th year as Acton Boxborough Regional High School’s Social Studies chair. After travels to Armenia and the Middle East, Green says he plans to formalize those experiences with new insights from this fellowship.

Leigh-Ann Hendrick

Leigh-Ann Hendrick (Chautauqua, NY) is the director of the Holocaust and Social Justice Education Program of Chautauqua, a co-founding director of the Chautauqua County Summer Institute for Human Rights and Genocide, and a US Holocaust Memorial Museum Fellow. As a 24-year social studies teacher, Hendrik says she strives to empower students and educators to take an active role in our shared humanity.

Don Jenkins

Don Jenkins (Oak Harbor, WA) is a teacher at North Whidbey Middle School. He has been teaching social studies for 30 years and included the Armenian Genocide in his courses on Pacific Northwest history and United States history.  Last summer, he traveled to Poland with the Pilecki Institute with teachers from all over the world to learn about the impact of totalitarianism during the 20th century.

Cynthia Martinez

Cynthia Martinez (Felton, CA) has been teaching Social Studies for 26 years. She currently teaches 12th-grade Economics & AP Government and 10th-grade World History at San Lorenzo Valley High School. She serves as Social Studies department chair, is leading the creation of her school’s ethnic studies program, and is drafting a GenEd curriculum unit on Armenian Genocide resistance.

Regina Bouroudjian Odishoo

Regina Bouroudjian Odishoo (Libertyville, IL) is a special education teacher and certified speech/language pathologist. With a doctorate in Reading, Language, and Literacy, she co-teaches U.S. History and teaches Literacy at Libertyville High School. Her Armenian/Assyrian heritage was the catalyst for incorporating genocide into her curriculum to help students build a more inclusive and accepting society. 

Mary Ellen Richichi

Mary Ellen Richichi (Jupiter, FL) teaches Holocaust and Genocide Studies, World Geography, and Global Perspectives, and brought the Holocaust elective course to Independence Middle School. She also runs the Culture Club and the UN Club where her students connect with students around the world in real time. 

Jennifer Sepetys

Jennifer Sepetys (West Bloomfield, MI) teaches AP US Government and Politics, Global Studies of Genocide, and Positive Psychology and serves as Social Studies chair at West Bloomfield High School. She was honored as 2022-23 Teacher of the Year by the Michigan Department of Education for Region 9. Sepetys is pursuing her Ph.D. in Educational Leadership at Oakland University.

Katherine Todhunter

Katherine Todhunter (Northampton, MA) has been teaching about the history of genocide for twenty-one years at Northampton High School. She is also a History lecturer at Smith College and is the program supervisor for its History student teachers. Todhunter, who has participated in numerous study tours, has a BA in Peace and Global Studies with a focus on Russia and graduate degrees in Geography and International Development and in Education.

Debra Troxell

Debra Troxell (Winston-Salem, NC) is a National Board Certified Teacher. She teaches AP Human Geography, International Relations, and World History at West Forsyth High School.  She also serves as the Social Studies department chair, the District Coordinator for National Boards, and has extensive experience providing professional development training for teachers. 

Kristi Ugland

Kristi Ugland (Mt. Pleasant, SC) is an English teacher at Palmetto Christian Academy. She teaches World Literature, AP English Literature, and Senior Thesis Seminar. Ugland has created and taught courses on Holocaust and Genocide History, 20th Century History and Literature, and Collective Memory. She is a US Holocaust Memorial Museum Teacher Fellow, works with South Carolina Council on the Holocaust, and holds an MA in Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 

Emily Wardrop

Emily Wardrop, Ph.D. (Oklahoma City, OK) teaches interdisciplinary studies and several advanced topic history seminar courses (including a Genocide seminar) at Casady School. In addition to teaching, Emily serves as the History department chair, a member of the school’s Academic Leadership team, and as a co-advisor to Casady’s Youth in Government club.

Michael Xiarhos

Michael Xiarhos (Warwick, RI) teaches Philosophy, Genocide Studies, and AP Psychology at Pilgrim High School. He also teaches Theological Studies at Salve Regina University. Xiarhos has degrees in Education, Modern European History, and Philosophy. He has written several articles for academic journals on ethics, religion, and the importance of student travel and has taken students to more than 20 countries during his 19-year teaching career.

AW: Providence community supports Syrian earthquake relief efforts

Hrag Arakelian, chairman of the Providence ARF Kristapor Gomideh, discussed the devastating aftermath

PROVIDENCE, RI—On Sunday, March 12, the Providence Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), Armenian Relief Society (ARS) “Arax” Chapter, ARS “Ani” Chapter, Homenetmen, Hamazkayin and Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) “Varantian” Chapter hosted a fundraising luncheon for the Syrian earthquake.

Over 75 members of the community attended the luncheon at Sts. Vartanantz Church. Hrag Arakelian, chairman of the Providence ARF Kristapor Gomideh, discussed the devastating aftermath of the earthquake that struck western Syria on February 6. “It’s unfortunate that we gather here yet again to discuss a crisis Armenians in Syria have experienced, but it is fortunate that we continue to gather to raise our own awareness and to provide a helping hand,” said Arakelian.

Taline Mkrtschjan, ARS Central Executive Board member, delivered an in-depth presentation on the relief efforts and the work of the ARS on the ground in Syria. “During the month following the earthquake, the ARS provided food to all who were sheltered in our Armenian centers, as well as opened their health center to all, Armenian and non-Armenian, to treat non-life threatening injuries.”

Taline Mkrtschjan, ARS Central Executive Board member, delivering her presentation

The program concluded with remarks and a prayer from Sts. Vartanantz Church pastor Rev. Fr. Kapriel Nazarian.

Rev. Fr. Kapriel Nazarian offering closing remarks

The community raised $10,000 to support the Armenian community of Syria.




AW: The ICRC at Work Under Blockade

Azerbaijan continues to resort to provocations and “measure” the patience of Artsakh’s residents, this time blocking the only road connecting Artsakh to Armenia and the outside world. Artsakh has been under a total blockade since December 12. Residents call it “The Road of Life,” because Artsakh depends on Armenia as a child depends on his parents. It is from Armenia that all kinds of food reach Artsakh, from fresh fruits and vegetables to rice and sugar. Medicine and other necessities also enter the region through that route.

The people of Artsakh are very connected to mother Armenia and make frequent trips back and forth for doctor’s appointments, visits with relatives and sightseeing. By closing the road, Azerbaijan has also prevented many people who were on the “wrong side” of the road at the wrong time of the right to return home.

(Photo provided by the ICRC)

More than three months have passed since the first day of the blockade, and only two bodies have had the opportunity to use the road: the Russian peacekeeping mission located in the Lachin Corridor and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The latter is probably the only organization with a physical representation in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Artsakh. The activities of the ICRC in the region have been going on for 30 years.

In the context of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the ICRC’s work is aimed at responding to the needs related to the consequences of the conflict. The organization focuses on border residents and missing persons, which has been relevant since the 1990s and now again after the 2020 Artsakh War.

During the current blockade, the organization is trying to react as quickly as possible. They have always indicated that they are ready to provide support in humanitarian issues. 

An ICRC truck waiting to enter blockaded Artsakh (Photo: Lika Zakaryan)

“Sometimes people think that if the Red Cross is an international organization and has the mandate to carry out humanitarian activities in the region, then all doors are open. Of course, in terms of the mandate, we are very happy that there is understanding and respect from the parties regarding our activities, and we hope that this will continue for the benefit of the people. But, naturally, each action has its own circumstances and details that must be agreed upon. We are constantly in touch with the authorities to understand the needs and the extent to offer our support,” says Zara Amatuni, ICRC communication and prevention manager in Yerevan.

Negotiations are confidential and ongoing with all parties: Artsakh authorities, Azerbaijan and Russian peacekeepers. Amatuni finds that it is precisely because of this approach that ICRC has never encountered any obstacles during transportation and everyone feels safe with them. 

Negotiations have yielded some results, allowing the organization to transport critically ill patients. Since December 19, the ICRC has carried out at least 33 medical evacuations through the blockaded Lachin Corridor in its role as a neutral humanitarian intermediary and managed to ensure the passage of 184 patients together with their accompaniers, as well as the delivery of medicine for local health structures (as of March 14). 

The ICRC is not in a position to share any information about the number of lives saved since its role is restricted to safe transport. Patients then go under the care of professional medical services in Armenia.

Eteri Musayelyan, the communication and prevention manager of Stepanakert’s ICRC office, reports that her team is helping in the transport of patients in need of urgent medical assistance to Armenia via the Lachin Corridor, reuniting families and providing humanitarian aid to various institutions and population groups.

The ICRC has also facilitated the reunion of almost 400 people with their families across the Lachin Corridor. Residents must register for the opportunity to travel to the other side and return home. The organization does not decide who should be transferred. Those issues are decided by the relevant bodies and the authorities of the country. ICRC employees welcome people, register and transfer their data to the authorities and help recruit people. Then the authorities, relevant ministry or healthcare department provide the information based on need and priority. ICRC does not possess such information, and it does not decide who has priority on the list. 

“Indeed, we register people, but only those people who have been separated from their family members due to the situation (e.g. if someone went to Armenia for a medical examination and stayed there, while the rest of the family is on this side of the Lachin Corridor or someone from Armenia left Nagorno-Karabakh and stayed here.) To make it clear, we do not register those people who just want to go to Armenia or Nagorno-Karabakh,” elaborated Musayelyan.

Ramella Ghazaryan is back home with her husband and young son in Artsakh with the help of the ICRC. She left for Yerevan on December 9 to help her mother recover from cancer surgery.

Ramella Ghazaryan reunited with her husband and son (Photo: Vadim Balayan)

“One day I read a post on Facebook, where it was said that the people left on this side of the road will gather in front of the International Committee of the Red Cross to appeal for support,” recalled Ghazaryan. “I also joined them, because by then I was hopeless that it would be possible to return home before the road is unblocked, and it was necessary to find other ways. We were greeted kindly by the Red Cross employees; they explained that not everything depends on them, and they assured us that they are doing everything to reunite the families.”

The ICRC staff registered the data of the visitors, but representatives warned that there was no transportation agreement yet. The organization started the process to prepare for potential clearance and immediate action. After waiting for nearly a month, Ghazaryan received a call at the end of January. She was told that it was their turn to go home.

“We reached home safely. On the way, Azerbaijanis filmed us in cars when we were passing by, which was very unpleasant. When I arrived in Stepanakert and got out of the car, I saw my son and my husband. Imagine, the child didn’t recognize me from the beginning and put his hand on my face to understand if I was real or not. But he realized that it was indeed his mother. Until today, he hasn’t left me for a minute. He missed me so much. My son slept only on my pillow, as if surrounded by my scent. My mother came home from medical supervision to a cold house; the gas and electricity are constantly cut off by Azerbaijanis. There is not much food or vitamins, but still, we are so happy to be back home,” described Ghazaryan.

On several occasions, ICRC trucks have transported medicine, baby food and appropriate medical care to Artsakh institutions. In January, the ICRC donated food packages and hygiene items to eight hospital canteens, a childcare boarding school, a physical rehabilitation center and over 300 single elderly care facilities for further distribution. Since January, they have started providing the same assistance to more than 700 pregnant women.

“We are here as much as needed, and we are ready to be next to the people. Our organization takes all the issues that concern people quite seriously. The ICRC is closely monitoring the situation and continues to discuss humanitarian needs with all relevant decision-makers as they arise,” concluded Musayelyan.

Photo provided by the ICRC

Lika (Anzhelika) Zakaryan is a freelance journalist from Stepanakert. She studied political science at Artsakh State University and holds a master's degree. She then graduated from the Peace Work Institute organized by YMCA Europe with a non-formal education degree in two years, where she studied in-depth conflict management and peacebuilding methods. Lika worked in a rehabilitation center as a social worker, as well as in the Artsakh Ministry of Culture, Youth and Tourism as a project manager and social media manager. She's also worked at a Montessori school in Würzburg, Germany, as a coach on conflicts and peacebuilding. At the same time, she received a year of training at the local Jubi Grenzenlos organization on conflicts and peacebuilding. She returned to Artsakh and took civic journalism courses for 10 months, during which time she started working for CivilNet. Lika is the author of the book 44 Days: Diary From An Invisible War.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/26/2023

                                        Monday, 


Russia Issues Stern Warning To Armenia


RUSSIA -- A view of Kremlin' Grand Kremlin Palace, center, Towers, Churches and 
frozen Moskva river in Moscow, February 14, 2018


Russia on Monday bluntly warned Armenia against ratifying the founding treaty of 
the International Criminal Court (ICC) following the “illegal” arrest warrant 
issued by it for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Moscow has notified Yerevan that such a move would have “extremely negative” 
consequences for Russian-Armenian relations, a Russian diplomatic source told 
the official TASS and RIA Novosti news agencies.

“Moscow considers absolutely unacceptable official Yerevan’s plans to join the 
Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court against the backdrop of the 
recent illegal and legally void ‘warrants’ of the ICC against the Russian 
leadership,” said the unnamed source.

The unusually stern warning came three days after Armenia’s Constitutional Court 
paved the way for parliamentary ratification of the treaty signed by a former 
Armenian government in 2004. The court ruled that the Rome Statute conforms to 
the Armenian constitution.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government has not yet clarified whether it 
will now send the treaty to the Armenian parliament for ratification. Armenian 
law gives it up to three months to make such a decision.

The government had asked the Constitutional Court to pass judgment on the ICC 
treaty in December after indicating plans to appeal to The Hague tribunal over 
Azerbaijan’s military attacks on Armenian territory launched since May 2021.

Some opposition figures in Yerevan have linked the court ruling to the ICC’s 
recent decision to issue the arrest warrant for Putin over war crimes allegedly 
committed by Russia in Ukraine. They claim that Pashinian wants to score points 
among the Western powers amid unprecedented friction between Moscow and Yerevan.

Russian-Armenian relations have deteriorated in recent months because of what 
the Armenian government sees as a lack of Russian support in the conflict with 
Azerbaijan.

Legal experts believe that recognition of the ICC’s jurisdiction would commit 
Yerevan to arresting Putin in case of his visit to Armenia.

Earlier this week, a Russian law-enforcement agency opened a criminal case 
against an ICC prosecutor and judges who issued the “illegal” arrest warrant.




Bypass Road In Karabakh Not Used After Azeri Advance

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Nagorno-Karabakh - A Russian roadblock on a road outside Stepanakert, December 
24, 2022.


Azerbaijani forces continued to occupy on Monday a strategic hill near the 
Lachin corridor seized by them at the weekend, further complicating 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s communication with Armenia and the outside world.

They advanced into that area on Saturday in what the Russian Defense Ministry 
called a violation of the ceasefire that stopped the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani 
war. The ministry said Russian peacekeepers demanded that the Azerbaijan pull 
back its troops to “their previously occupied positions.”

The Azerbaijani military said, for its part, that it “took necessary measures” 
to stop Armenia sending weapons and military personnel through dirt roads 
running parallel to section of the Lachin corridor blocked by Baku since 
December.

Yerevan as well as Karabakh’s leadership strongly denied any military supplies. 
They said the Azerbaijani advance constitutes a gross violation of the truce 
accord brokered by Moscow.

According to the authorities in Stepanakert, Russian peacekeepers deployed to a 
part of the strategic hill later on Saturday to stop the Azerbaijani forces from 
advancing further and try to get them to retreat from the area.

Artur Harutiunian, a senior Karabakh lawmaker, said on Monday that the Russians 
are continuing to negotiate with them. He said the high ground occupied by 
Azerbaijani soldiers overlooks the barely passable bypass road leading to the 
Armenian border.

“That road is very visible from the height occupied by them and it cannot be 
used now for security reasons,” he told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “They can 
shoot or shell.”

The Karabakh Armenian army said, meanwhile, that it took “preventive measures” 
on Monday morning to thwart an Azerbaijani attack on another hill located in the 
same area. It did not elaborate.

The Karabakh authorities also accused the Azerbaijani army of continuing to fire 
at Karabakh Armenian villagers cultivating land in their communities located 
along “the line of contact.” Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry claimed that its 
troops opened fire on Saturday to stop Karabakh forces from digging trenches 
“under the guise of agricultural work.”

Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, discussed the worsening security 
situation at an emergency meeting with local officials and political leaders. He 
complained that “international actors” content themselves with making 
“declarative statements” instead of forcing Baku to respect the ceasefire.

“Therefore, we need to soberly assess the whole gravity of the situation … and 
draw necessary conclusions,” Harutiunian’s office quoted him as saying. It gave 
no other details.

Earlier in the day, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s office said that it is 
again inviting “representatives of Karabakh’s Armenian community” to visit Baku 
for talks on Karabakh’s “reintegration” into Azerbaijan and “infrastructure 
projects.”

The Karabakh leaders rejected the same offer made by Baku two weeks ago, saying 
that the talks should take place at the Karabakh headquarters of Russian 
peacekeepers and focus on “humanitarian, technical and humanitarian issues.”




Yerevan Noncommittal On Recognizing Hague Court Jurisdiction

        • Artak Khulian

Netehrlands -- The building of the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The 
Hague, November 23, 2015


The Armenian authorities declined to clarify on Monday whether they will press 
ahead with recognizing the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court 
(ICC) despite its arrest warrant issued for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Constitutional Court on Friday paved the way for parliamentary ratification 
of the ICC’s founding treaty signed by Armenia in 2004. It said the treaty does 
not run counter to the country’s constitution.

The ruling came one week after the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Putin over 
war crimes allegedly committed by Russia in Ukraine. Legal experts believe that 
a possible recognition of the ICC’s jurisdiction would obligate the authorities 
in Yerevan to arrest Putin and extradite him to The Hague tribunal if he visits 
the South Caucasus country.

It remains unclear whether Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s government will 
submit the treaty to the National Assembly for ratification. Armenian law gives 
it up to three months to make such a decision.

Armen Khachatrian, a senior lawmaker from the ruling Civil Contract party, said 
its parliamentary group has not yet discussed the issue. He did not rule out the 
possibility of putting the ratification process on hold.

“Armenia will do what is required by its national interests,” said Khachatrian. 
“We must take into account the fact that the Russian Federation is our strategic 
ally and we have strategic treaties with Russia. The whole world understands 
that.”

Kyrgyzstan - Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian meet in Bishkek, December 9, 2022.

Parliament speaker Alen Simonian called for the ratification when he spoke to 
journalists last week before the announcement of the Constitutional Court 
ruling. Simonian said Armenia must be able to appeal to the ICC over “war 
crimes” committed by Azerbaijan during and after the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

Opposition lawmakers warned, meanwhile, that Pashinian’s administration risks 
further damaging Russian-Armenian relations which they believe are critical for 
Armenia’s national security.

“Given the existing circumstances, Armenia had a perfectly legitimate excuse to 
not even raise the [ratification] issue,” said Gegham Manukian of the main 
opposition Hayastan alliance.

Another Hayastan lawmaker, Andranik Tevanian, claimed that Pashinian engineered 
the court ruling to try to “please the West” at the cost of “ruining 
Russian-Armenian relations.”

“A rhetorical question arises here: by what right can the Armenian people expect 
assistance from Russia after Nikol Pashinian has taken an obvious anti-Russian 
step, trying to please the West?” Tevanian said in a Facebook post. “Who will 
pay the price for all this?

Most of the current Constitutional Court judges have been installed by 
Pashinian’s political team. The government asked the court to pass judgment on 
the ICC treaty in December.

Russia has long been Armenia’s main ally and trading partner. Relations between 
the two countries have soured in recent months because of what the Armenian 
government sees as a lack of Russian support in the conflict with Azerbaijan.




Armenian Government Faces Questions Over Legality Of Procurement Deal

        • Heghine Buniatian
        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Businessman Khachatur Sukiasian arrives for the government's 
question-and-answer session in parliament, Yerevan, March 22, 2023.


Armenian regulators have launched an inquiry into an insurance company belonging 
to the family of a government-linked businessman that recently won another 
government contract without a competitive tender.

The move comes after an RFE/RL’s Armenian Service investigation raised more 
questions about the legality of the deal.

The influential businessman, Khachatur Sukiasian, was elected to the current 
Armenian parliament on the ruling Civil Contract party’s ticket in June 2021. 
Sukiasian and his extended family have reportedly expanded their business 
interests since the 2018 “velvet revolution” not least because lucrative 
government contracts won by their firms, including SIL Insurance.

It emerged last month that the Armenian Interior Ministry will pay SIL Insurance 
about $500,000 to buy yearly insurance coverage for some 2,000 vehicles used by 
the national police. The company was contracted for the so-called APPA package 
covering minimum insurance required by the law.

The ministry said it had checked with other insurance firms and found out that 
they would charge higher fees. Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian claimed 
afterwards that SIL Insurance offered 2.5 million drams less ($6.400) less than 
its competitors.

Armenia - Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian speaks in the parliament, Yerevan, 
March 1, 2023.

SIL told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, however, that the police never inquired 
about the cost of the company’s basic insurance service. Other insurance firms 
likewise insisted that they did not bid for the police contract officially or 
unofficially.

The APPA tariffs are set by Armenia’s Bureau of Auto Insurers, a public 
regulatory body. They are the same for all private insurers.

The Bureau confirmed that neither SIL nor any other company is allowed to charge 
lower APPA fees. It said that it has therefore launched disciplinary proceedings 
against SIL.

Even if Sukiasian’s firm is fined by the regulators its contract with the 
Interior Ministry will not be rescinded.

The Interior Ministry also signed with SIL a separate $300,000 deal for an 
optional broader insurance coverage for police vehicles. There was no 
competitive tender in that case as well.

Armenia - The Armenian police unveil their newly created Patrol Service in 
Yerevan, July 8, 2021.

Interior Minister Ghazarian commented on the dubious deals during a recent 
cabinet meeting in Yerevan chaired by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. The latter 
described the resulting media uproar as a “pseudo or not pseudo scandal.”

Pashinian pledged to separate business from politics when he swept to power in 
2018. He declared that Armenian entrepreneurs no longer need government 
connections in order to protect and increase their assets.

There are growing questions about integrity in public procurement in Armenia. 
This is one of the reasons why Transparency International downgraded the 
country’s position in its annual survey of corruption perceptions around the 
world released in January.

Armenian law allows the government not to put contracts for the delivery of 
goods or services out to competitive tender in some cases. The number of such 
government decisions has reportedly increased in recent years, prompting 
concerns from opposition figures and civil society activists.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

As the Met reclassifies Russian art as Ukrainian, not everyone is convinced

The Guardian, UK
March 20 2023
Edward Helmore in New York

New York museum is among institutions reattributing works by painters born in what is now Ukraine – to a mixed response

Questions of attribution are constantly under review by art scholars, but rarely are they so topical or heated as institutional efforts under way in the US and in Europe to reclassify art once described as Russian as Ukrainian.

In New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art has quietly changed the name of an 1899 painting by the French impressionist Edgar Degas from Russian Dancer to Dancer in Ukrainian Dress.

The Met also holds works by Arkhyp Kuindzhi and Ilya Repin, a 19th-century painter who was born in what is now Ukraine. The artists were previously listed as Russian and are now categorized as Ukrainian.

But the seascape painter Ivan Aivazovsky, whom the Met had also changed from Russian to Ukrainian, was abruptly relisted as Armenian on Thursday, after an outcry from New York’s Armenian community.

The Armenian-American news outlet Asbarez objected to the painter’s reattribution and noted that the Met had acknowledged that Aivazovsky was “born into an Armenian family in the Crimean port city of Feodosia on the Black Sea”.

Separately, an article in Hyperallergic described the Met’s attribution changes as “misguided”. “We should not replace the ignorance shown in the previous identification with a new type of ignorance,” its author Vartan Matiossian wrote.

The reattributions in New York follow moves at the National Gallery in London last year to change the name of another of Degas’s dancer series from Russian Dancers to Ukrainian Dancers, since the subjects of Degas’s work, judged by their costumes, probably came from what is now Ukraine, which was then part of the Russian empire.

The National Gallery told the Guardian last year that it was “an appropriate moment to update the painting’s title to better reflect the subject of the painting”.

Similar decisions have been made regarding other artists like Kazimir Malevich, Ilya Kabakov, Sonia Delaunay-Terk and Louise Nevelson, who were also born in modern-day Ukraine when it was under the control of the Russian empire.

The moves are described by some as part of an effort to correctly attribute the contribution of Ukrainian artists to art history. But they have also been denounced by others. Last week, Mikhail Shvydkoy, the international culture envoy to the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, hit out at the alterations, describing them as politically motivated.

“This lame political gesture has trumped all legitimate cultural considerations,” Shvydkoy said in remarks obtained by Newsweek. “The history of renaming world-famous paintings and the disassociation of great artists from the word Russia, commenced a little less than a year ago, when the process of abolishing Russian culture was gaining momentum.”

In a statement, Max Hollein, the director of the Met, said: “The Met’s curators and experts are continually researching and examining objects in the collection in order to determine the most appropriate and accurate way to catalogue and present them.

“In the case of these works – which have been updated following research conducted in collaboration with experts in the field – scholarly thinking is evolving quickly, because of the increased awareness of and attention to Ukrainian culture and history since the Russian invasion started in 2022,” he added.

The question of whether Degas considered his subjects Russian or Ukrainian has also come into question. By some accounts, the Russian attribution was given by his dealer Paul Durand-Ruel, who bought one of the series from the painter in 1906.

The Met has reportedly been considering the update since last summer to align with “efforts to continually research and examine objects in its collection”. Degas’s The Russian Dancer was identified as “women in Russian costumes” in a journal entry in 1899.

“However, several scholars demonstrated that the costumes are, in fact, traditional Ukrainian folk dress, although it has not been established if the dancers were themselves from Ukraine,” the website entry says.

Regarding the Degas paintings, Shvydkoy said that “cultural, bureaucratic London justified its decision on the basis of its own ideas about beauty and the stance of the Ukrainian diaspora in the United Kingdom”, the outlet reported.

The dispute, Shvydkoy notes, could now travel farther into literature, pointing to the Russian poet Alexander Pushkin’s African ancestry, Mikhail Lermontov’s Scottish ancestry and German philosopher Immanuel Kant’s birthplace in Königsberg, now Kaliningrad, once a German city but later part of the Soviet Union and now of the Russian Federation.

At least some of reattributions are credited to Oksana Semenik, formerly a researcher at Rutgers University in New Jersey, who was in the Kyiv suburb of Bucha last March when it was attacked by Russian forces.

Semenik began a campaign to correct attributions of artists listed as Russian in the university collection that she considered Ukrainian. “I realized that a lot of Ukrainian artists were in the Russian collection. Of 900 so-called Russian artists, 70 were Ukrainians and 18 were from other countries,” she told CNN.

Semenik found a similar pattern at major US institutions. She complained and received noncommittal responses. “Then I got really mad,” she told the outlet. Semenik, who has since returned to Ukraine, was not immediately available for comment.

One person involved in the campaign told the Guardian that they had heard some institutions had come under pressure to maintain Russian attributions from the wives of oligarchs who sit on museum boards.

How far the campaign can go in reattributing Russian artists as Ukrainian, in some cases, is an issue better assigned to art scholarship than to whim of political gesture, given that it has long experience in reattributing works assigned to artists, or artists of certain nationalities, as more becomes known.

“As with so many rational decisions, making it more accurate also brings confusion,” notes Charles Stuckey, who has served as curator in major US museums including the Art Institute of Chicago.

“Museums change titles of their works all the time based upon investigations,” Stuckey said. “The timing is suspicious. Are they just doing this at this particular time?”

For the Degas titles to have been changed, he says, “someone would have had to have shown the Degas specialists that they hadn’t been as precise as they could have been over all those years”.

At the same time, he points out, it is unlikely that someone passing by the work who happened to be a specialist on costumes circa 1900 could say, “well, not exactly Russian, more likely Ukrainian” and convince curators on that basis.

“It has to be backed up by some kind of rationale to make the change. The field is already very familiar with situations like this because of reattributions of old master art. It does slightly complicate research but so what?”

EU helping to preserve biodiversity in Armenia

March 20 2023

On 17 March, an event was held in Armenia to launch work to promote the Emerald Network and the management of Emerald sites in the country.

This work, conducted by the World Bank as part of the EU-funded EU4Environment programme, aims to ensure the long-term conservation of natural habitats, preserve  biodiversity and promote sustainable interaction between people and the environment.

Project activities include developing recommendations for a National Emerald Action Plan to facilitate the emerald network, developing guidelines for the preparation of Emerald Site Management Plans, developing management plans for selected Emerald Sites, and capacity building.

The meeting gathered participants from different target groups including governmental organisations, public bodies, academia, NGOs, intergovernmental organisations, and other environmental organisations.

The Emerald Network is an ecological network made up of Areas of Special Conservation Interest, launched by the Council of Europe and supported by the European Union.

Find out more

Press release

Russia-Armenia-Azerbaijan Agreements Remain Key To Nagorno-Karabakh Settlement – Lavrov

March 20 2023

 

Russia has no doubt that trilateral agreements with Armenia and Azerbaijan remain key for the settlement of the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway region that proclaimed its independence from Baku in 1991, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Monday

MOSCOW (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 20th March, 2023) Russia has no doubt that trilateral agreements with Armenia and Azerbaijan remain key for the settlement of the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway region that proclaimed its independence from Baku in 1991, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Monday.

"We have no doubt that the trilateral statements of Armenian, Azerbaijani and Russian leaders remain the key for the implementation of all decisions to ensure the stabilization of the situation. In the economic, military-political and international legal spheres," Lavrov said during a meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan.

The decades-long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh flared up again in September 2020, marking the worst escalation since the 1990s. Hostilities ended with a Russia-brokered trilateral declaration of ceasefire signed in November 2020.

The two former Soviet countries agreed to the deployment of Russian peacekeepers in the region. Occasional clashes have since occurred on the border.

Since December 2022, the Lachin Corridor � a road which runs through Azerbaijani territory and serves as the only link between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh � has been blocked by a group of people from Azerbaijan described by Baku as environmental activists protesting alleged illegal Armenian mining in the area.

The United Nations' main judicial body ruled in February that Azerbaijan must ensure unimpeded movement along the Lachin Corridor. Armenia argued in the court filing that the activists were acting on Baku's command and demanded that it "cease its orchestration and support" of the blockade.

https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/russia-armenia-azerbaijan-agreements-remain-k-1662441.html

Armenia Calls For Involving Int’l Mission In Nagorno-Karabakh Settlement -Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan

March 20 2023

 

Armenia considers it necessary to engage an international fact-finding mission in the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement and hopes that Russia will assist, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Monday

MOSCOW (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 20th March, 2023) Armenia considers it necessary to engage an international fact-finding mission in the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement and hopes that Russia will assist, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Monday.

"Without any diminishing of the role of our Russian partners in the process of establishing a ceasefire in 2020, as well as the role of the Russian peacekeeping contingent … the current situation demonstrates the need for mechanisms to guarantee the rights and security of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh and international involvement in them. It is necessary to involve international mechanisms for the prevention of genocide, to send an international fact-finding mission to the Lachin corridor and Nagorno-Karabakh. We hope for cooperation with the Russian side on this issue," Mirzoyan said at a joint press conference after a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow.

Lavrov, in turn, expressed appreciation for Armenia's resolve on deployment of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) mission to the Armenian-Azerbaijani border amid rising tensions over the blocked Lachin corridor.

"I would like to express satisfaction with what Ararat Samveli (Mirzoyan) just said, specifically that Armenia has not refused to sign the decision on the CSTO mission deployment," the top Russian diplomat said.

Since December 12, 2022, the Lachin corridor, which runs through the Lachin district of Azerbaijan to link Armenia with the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, has been blocked by a group of people from Azerbaijan described by Baku as environmental activists protesting alleged Armenian illegal mining in the area.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has repeatedly said that the corridor's blockade violates the ceasefire declaration brokered by Russia between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020. The document delegated control of the Lachin corridor to Russian peacekeepers deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh. In late December 2022, Pashinyan alleged that the peacekeepers did not fulfill their obligations, a claim that was dismissed by Moscow.

https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/armenia-calls-for-involving-intl-mission-in-1662496.html

West Resorting To ‘Diplomatic Raid,’ Discrediting Russia On Lachin Corridor Issue – Lavrov

March 20 2023

 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Monday accused Western powers of resorting to "diplomatic raid" and trying to undermine trilateral agreements between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan on the Lachin corridor issue

MOSCOW (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 20th March, 2023) Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on Monday accused Western powers of resorting to "diplomatic raid" and trying to undermine trilateral agreements between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan on the Lachin corridor issue.

"They (the West) are basically engaged in what I would call 'diplomatic raid,' when they are trying to take over the trilateral agreements between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, trying to supervise all this work, directly undermining the key principles of these documents, which imply Russia's active participation in addressing both the unblocking of transport and economic relations and in delimiting the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and in helping the parties sign a peace agreement," Lavrov said at joint press-conference after a meeting with his Armenian counterpart, Ararat Mirzoyan, in Moscow.

According to the Russian minister, the United States, the European Union and NATO openly declare they want to discredit Russia, while Russia is seeking to reconcile the conflicting parties, taking into account the interests of each side.

Lavrov also called for the full implementation of all aspects of the trilateral agreements regarding the Lachin corridor, which, according to the minister, is the only solution to the existing problem. Russian peacekeepers are currently working on it, Lavrov added.

Since December 12, 2022, the Lachin corridor, which runs through the Lachin district of Azerbaijan to link Armenia with the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave, has been blocked by a group of people from Azerbaijan described by Baku as environmental activists protesting alleged Armenian illegal mining in the area.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has repeatedly said that the corridor's blockade violates the ceasefire declaration brokered by Russia between Armenia and Azerbaijan in 2020. The document delegated control of the Lachin corridor to Russian peacekeepers deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh. In late December 2022, Pashinyan alleged that the peacekeepers did not fulfill their obligations, a claim that was dismissed by Moscow.

https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/west-resorting-to-diplomatic-raid-discredi-1662632.html