Armenia is working to turn its fragile peace with Azerbaijan into a stable and structured framework, Security Council Secretary Armen Grigoryan said.
Speaking at the Delphi Economic Forum, Grigoryan emphasized that Yerevan’s priority is to “institutionalize” the peace achieved after the August 8, 2025 Washington summit. “Given the developments in our region… we are now focused on institutionalizing that peace,” he said, noting that while “there is real peace now,” it remains fragile.
He said this process includes concrete steps such as signing and ratifying a formal peace treaty and reopening regional transport and economic links — measures he described as essential for long-term stability. “Peace does not eliminate challenges, but it allows countries to better address them,” he added.
Grigoryan also linked progress in the peace process to Armenia’s broader resilience amid global instability. “Thanks to this active work… we reached the Washington Declaration… which has brought real peace to our region. This has also increased our ability to confront challenges stemming from the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East,” he said.
He noted that global tensions continue to affect Armenia, including disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz that have contributed to rising fuel prices. He added that agriculture has also been impacted, prompting government subsidies.
Despite these pressures, Grigoryan stressed the importance of advancing regional connectivity, while cautioning that the peace process remains delicate. “Peace is like a newborn baby that needs care,” he said.
On the sidelines of the forum, he also met with former Turkish President Abdullah Gül, where the sides “exchanged views on issues of mutual interest.”
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Armenia Marks Genocide Anniversary with Focus on Statehood and Peace
Armenians worldwide commemorated the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide on April 24, honoring the memory of an estimated 1.5 million victims.
In a statement, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan linked remembrance of the 1915 tragedy to a broader political vision centered on statehood and peace. “The Medz Yeghern is the greatest tragedy that has befallen our people,” he said, adding that commemoration is also about “reflection… and a determination to prevent the recurrence.”
Pashinyan argued that the long-term security of Armenians depends on strengthening the Republic of Armenia within its internationally recognized borders. He warned against narratives focused on “historical justice,” suggesting they could undermine stability. “Our people’s greatest aspiration has been fulfilled: we have a state, and we have peace,” he said.
The Foreign Ministry also highlighted the global significance of the genocide, linking it to international efforts such as the 1948 Genocide Convention and Armenia’s ongoing role in UN initiatives on prevention.
At the same time, the ministry stressed the importance of addressing ongoing risks of “racial and ethnic intolerance” and reaffirmed Armenia’s commitment to a peace-based foreign policy.
Opposition figures also issued statements. Former President Robert Kocharyan emphasized the importance of continued international recognition, while Samvel Karapetyan criticized authorities for downplaying the issue and called for preserving historical memory alongside regional normalization.
Commemorations included large public gatherings at the Tsitsernakaberd memorial in Yerevan.
https://caucasuswatch.de/en/news/armenia-marks-genocide-anniversary-with-focus-on-statehood-and-peace.html
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EU Details New Civilian Mission to Strengthen Armenia’s Resilience
The European Union has outlined plans for a new civilian mission in Armenia aimed at strengthening the country’s ability to respond to modern security threats.
The EU Partnership Mission in Armenia (EUPM), launched under the Common Security and Defence Policy, will focus on enhancing democratic resilience and crisis management capacity.
According to the Council of the EU, the mission will help Armenian institutions address “multi-layered threats,” including disinformation, cyber-attacks, and illicit financial flows. It will provide both strategic and operational support to government bodies.
“Armenians are facing massive disinformation campaigns and cyber-attacks,” said EU High Representative Kaja Kallas, stressing the importance of protecting electoral integrity. She added that the mission aims to ensure that “when Armenians go to the polls in June, they alone should choose their country’s future.”
The mission will have an initial two-year mandate and be headquartered in Armenia. Stefano Tomat will serve as Civilian Operation Commander, while a Head of Mission will oversee activities on the ground.
A dedicated project unit will identify and implement specific initiatives in coordination with international partners.
The mission is separate from the EU Monitoring Mission launched in 2023, which focuses on border stabilization, and reflects broader efforts to deepen EU–Armenia cooperation.
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Armenian Students’ Association remembers Armenian Genocide on 111th anniversa
By Delilah Brumer
April 25, 2026 6:16 p.m.
More than 100 people gathered for a vigil at the base of Janss Steps on Friday evening to commemorate the 111th anniversary of the start of the Armenian Genocide.
The Armenian Students’ Association hosts the vigil annually for students and community members to remember the more than 1 million Armenians killed by the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century.
Faculty and ASA leaders delivered speeches at the Fowler Museum at 7 p.m., sharing stories of their grandparents and great-grandparents, many of whom were killed or deported during the genocide. The United States formally recognized the Armenian Genocide in 2021.
Ann Karagozian, the director of the Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA, said in a speech that she and her grandfather rarely discussed the genocide when she was a child because of the pain it caused him. Karagozian’s great-grandfather, great-grandmother and grandfather’s sister were all killed in massacres against civilians, she said.
“Besides his teaching me the meaning of the word genocide, my grandfather shared some very important additional lessons with me,” Karagozian said. “Don’t gloss over the past. State it as it is, remember it. But importantly, you judge people not by their ethnicity or seemingly outward appearance, but by their character.”
Mikayel Hovasyan, the ASA president, said in a speech that he has seen the resilience of the Armenian community throughout his four years at UCLA.
Hovasyan’s goal is to honor his community’s past by raising awareness about it, not just remembering it, he added.
“Our history has demonstrated with devastating clarity what occurs when the world chooses indifference, and that is precisely why we cannot,” he said in a speech. “We stand here today because those who came before us were not given the chance.”
Vigil organizers invited speakers to raise awareness about the genocide and its impacts, said Lucine Ksajikian, the external vice president of ASA.
“(At UCLA) I found myself constantly explaining that I’m Armenian and that there is this thing called the Armenian Genocide, and in those moments, I realized something that deeply shifted my perspective,” Ksajikian, a fourth-year psychobiology student, said in a speech. “The story that shaped my entire identity was something so many people had never even heard of.”
Diego Bollo, the president of the Undergraduate Students Association Council, said in a speech that he was proud to fight for remembrance alongside UCLA’s Armenian community.
Students and community members read poems and prayed in a circle surrounding a replica of the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial complex – which is located in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia – during the vigil. The complex features 12 large stone slabs, representing the 12 lost provinces of Armenia, that surround a flame of mourning.
The University of Southern California’s Armenian Student Association worked with UCLA’s chapter to hold the vigil, said Lori Gaboudian, the president of USC’s ASA.
Vigil attendees converse with each other at the Fowler Museum. Students and community members also read poems and prayed in a circle during the event. (Joice Ngo/Daily Bruin staff)
The event allowed the two universities to bridge gaps in Los Angeles’ Armenian community, Gaboudian said. LA County has the largest Armenian community in the world outside of Armenia, according to the Armenian consulate.
Gaboudian said her parents and grandparents were born in Iraq and her great-uncle escaped the genocide. She added that she is inspired by the resilience of the Armenian community.
“You always find your way, coming back to organizations like this,” Gaboudian said. “Having a place on campus that represents your culture and fights to maintain the culture’s presence is a really telling, meaningful thing.”
ASA’s focus on outreach to Armenian and non-Armenian communities alike has helped students understand the genocide on a deeper level, Ksajikian said.
“We, at this point, are now seeking more recognition and more support from non-Armenians, because we really need people to know (about the genocide), in order for us to continue fighting and for us to continue to make change,” Ksajikian said. “Stop thinking you need to be Armenian to care, because you don’t.”
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Genocide and the promise of ‘never again’
April 24, 1915: the legacy of the Armenian genocide and all those that have followed
April 24 is not simply a date. It marks a beginning and a warning.
In 1915, in the final years of the Ottoman Empire, Armenian intellectuals and community leaders were arrested in Constantinople. It was the opening act. What followed was the Armenian Genocide: a systematic campaign of deportation, death marches, starvation and mass killing that destroyed the Armenian presence across much of the empire and devastated an entire people.
For decades, the world struggled to name what had happened.
Raphael Lemkin, the jurist who later coined the term “genocide”, was shaped in part by the Armenian case. He posed a simple question: why is the murder of an individual a crime, but the destruction of a nation not?
The precedent did not go unnoticed. On the eve of the Second World War and while finalising the Nazi attack on Poland, Adolf Hitler reportedly asked, “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?”— a chilling reflection of an assumption that has proved enduring: that the world forgets, and that such forgetting enables repetition.
The answer to Raphael Lemkin’s question, after the catastrophe of the Jewish Holocaust, was the creation of a new legal and moral category – genocide – and the promise that followed: Never again.
That promise has defined international discourse ever since. It has also been repeatedly tested – and too often found wanting.
Following the Holocaust came Cambodia, Rwanda, Srebrenica, Darfur and, more recently, the Yazidi genocide in Iraq and the genocidal campaign against the Rohingya in Myanmar – alongside contemporary conflicts in which allegations of mass atrocities against civilians and of crimes against humanity remain subject to intense international disagreement and competing narratives. Different contexts. Different actors. A recurring logic.
Genocide is not spontaneous. It is the end point of a process. It begins with language – with hate speech, the dehumanisation of a targeted group, the normalisation of exclusion and the redefinition of victims as threat. By the time violence begins, the moral and psychological barriers have already been dismantled. The pattern is familiar: war or crisis. Dehumanisation. Organisation. Execution. Silence – or indifference – beyond those directly involved.
“Never again” became an aspiration. Not a guarantee.
This is why April 24 matters. Not only as remembrance but as a warning of what follows when early signs are ignored.
Denial has played a central role in this story. It does not erase the past. It distorts the present. It endangers the future. It hinders reconciliation. It lowers the barriers to repetition. Denial is not neutral. It is consequential. When truth is contested, accountability becomes elusive. When accountability is absent, precedent hardens.
In diplomacy, one learns early that memory is not abstract. It travels with people, with states, with decisions.
I was reminded of this on March 18, 1992, in Moscow – and on other occasions before and after. As interim chargé d’affaires of Cyprus, I signed, together with Armenia’s deputy foreign minister, the late Arman Kirakosian, the Protocol on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations between our two countries.
It was a formal act. It was also something more. Armenia had just emerged as an independent state. The memory of 1915 was not distant history. It was present – quiet, dignified, but unmistakable. It informed identity. It travelled into diplomacy.
I later came to know Arman well as a colleague in London. A historian by training, he was a gentle presence – physically imposing yet measured in manner. He embodied the quiet resilience of Armenia’s diplomatic service.
What struck me then – and remains with me today – was the absence of bitterness, but the presence of clarity. A sense that history could not be undone, but must not be forgotten. That distinction matters.
For states, memory is not only about the past. It is about how the past informs conduct.
The international community has sought to build mechanisms to prevent recurrence of genocide: conventions, courts, doctrines of responsibility. These are necessary. They are also insufficient when applied selectively – or deferred.
The lesson of the Armenian Genocide is not that the world did not know. It did. It failed to act in time – and later failed to agree on how to remember.
The lesson of the Holocaust is not only that evil can reach industrial scale. It is that recognition and accountability must be integral, not optional.
The genocides that followed – across different regions and decades – reinforce the same pattern: knowledge without timely action, memory without consistent consequence – or worse, amnesia.
Together, they form the foundation – and the unfinished test – of what we call the post-war moral and legal order. Today, that order is under severe strain – and with it, the constraints that were meant to prevent the recurrence of atrocities. The warning of 1915 becomes more, not less, relevant.
Conflicts multiply. Norms are invoked selectively. Language is contested. Facts are politicised. The distance between principle and practice widens. The abnormal becomes normal.
In such an environment, the temptation is to treat memory as ceremonial – detached from policy, secondary to interest. That would be a mistake. Memory is not a substitute for strategy. But neither is it irrelevant. It shapes legitimacy, influences alliances, and defines red lines – when we choose to uphold them, and when we do not.
Strategy must be grounded in reality – but also anchored in clarity: of law, of principle, of narrative. Without that anchor, positioning becomes opportunistic; with it, it becomes credible. The lesson is not abstract but strategic: memory must inform judgment, clarity must guide action, and silence – whether through indifference or calculation – carries risk.
The Armenian Genocide is not only about remembrance. It is about recognition – of patterns, of warning signs and of the consequences of delay: the failure to act when early signs appear, allowing conditions to harden. The Armenian Genocide was not an isolated tragedy. It was a precedent. Others followed not because history repeats itself, but because the conditions that enable such crimes persist.
April 24 is not about revisiting the past for its own sake. It is about understanding it – and acting on that understanding. Not about assigning inherited guilt to later generations, but about recognising state and historical responsibility, and the necessity of truth and accountability in preventing repetition. Where recognition is absent, denial persists – and with it, the risk of recurrence.
“Never again” is not a conclusion. It is a test – of judgement, of consistency and of will. One that must be met before the pattern completes itself. Not after.
In memoriam Arman Kirakosian
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Sports: Batumi 2026: Karapetyan secures third European crown
The 21-year-old edged out Luis Lauret Rodriguez by just one kilogram to claim gold at the European Weightlifting Championships in Georgia. The Armenian star secured his third senior title in a high-stakes battle that went down to the final lifts.
The men’s 110 kg category was the only weight category in which medals were awarded on the seventh day of the competition. Four top athletes were among the gold medal contenders: double European champion Garik Karapetyan of Armenia; his teammate and double Olympic silver medallist, Simon Martirosyan; the returning European runner-up and former Pan American champion, Luis Lauret Rodriguez, who has represented Romania since 2024; and the 2022 European champion, Hristo Hristov of Bulgaria.
Karapetyan set the pace early on in the snatch discipline, successfully lifting a new European record on his final attempt. However, he was later surpassed by Hristov and Lauret, who lifted 190 kg. Lauret, a former Cuban athlete, went on to finish with 195 kg and win the gold medal. Hristov attempted to tie the world record of 196 kg with his last lift, but failed.
Martirosyan successfully lifted 183 kg in his second attempt at the snatch, but failed to lift 190 kg and remained in fourth place.
The competition reached fever pitch during the clean & jerk session, in which both Lauret and Hristov had two successful attempts but failed on their third. Lauret eventually finished with 219 kg, while Hristov finished with 222 kg. This enabled Karapetyan to win the gold medal in this discipline and take the lead in the overall standings when he successfully lifted 226 kg on his second attempt.
Khas Magomed Balaev (Individual Neutral Athletes) won the silver medal in the clean and jerk event with a lift of 225 kg, while Hristov took the bronze.
The final classification was settled by the finest of margins. Karapetyan’s absolute total of 415 kg earned him a third consecutive European senior title, finishing just ahead of Lauret, who claimed the overall silver with 414 kg. Hristov’s consistency across both lifts earned him the absolute bronze with a total of 412 kg.
Martirosyan, struggled to match the pace of the leaders. He successfully registered 215 kg on his first attempt, and tried to edge out Hristov for third place, but ultimately failed to lift the 230 kg bar, instead settling for sixth overall.
The competition concludes on Sunday, with the superheavyweight category lifters taking to the platform.
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USUP leader lays wreath of loyalty at Sayfo and Armenian Genocide Memorials, r
BEIRUT — On the occasion of the 111th anniversary of the Armenian, Syriac and Kafno Genocide, the President of the Universal Syriac Union Party (USUP) Ibrahim Mrad headed a delegation to visit the Syriac Orthodox St. Ephrem Church in Achrafieh, seat of the Syriac Orthodox Archdiocese of Beirut. They were received by Archbishop Mor Daniel Gouwrieh and Father Charbel Bahi.
During the visit, a wreath was laid at the Sayfo Martyrs Memorial, and prayers were held for the souls of the martyrs. Archbishop Gouwrieh affirmed that the blood of the martyrs will remain a beacon of steadfastness, and that the people will stay rooted in their land, firm in their struggle for truth, justice, and existence. He also expressed his gratitude to the USUP and all those who faithfully uphold the cause of the Church and nation.
The delegation then headed to the Armenian Orthodox Catholicosate in Antelias, where they were received by Bishop Mor Dajad Ashekian, Head of the Catholicosate Chancellery of the Armenian Orthodox Church of Cilicia, along with officials from the Patriarchate’s institutions. There, the delegation laid a wreath at the Armenian Genocide Martyrs Memorial, and prayers were offered for the souls of the martyrs.
On this occasion, the USUP reaffirmed its steadfast commitment to continuing political and legal struggle in defense of the martyrs’ memory, upholding historical justice, and preserving the existence and dignity of the Syriac people in their homeland.
It is worth noting that the Zahle branch of the USUP had participated in commemorating the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, in response to an invitation from the Armenian Church in Zahle. A delegation from the branch, headed by Rabih Azouki, laid a wreath on behalf of the USUP at the memorial in the courtyard of St. Gregory the Illuminator Church, honoring the martyrs of the Armenian Genocide, and commemorating the martyrs of the Sayfo Genocide that targeted the Syriac people, as well as the martyrs of the Mount Lebanon famine, known as Kafno.
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Swedish Parliament commemorates 1915 Genocide against Armenians and Syriacs
STOCKHOLM — At an event held at Swedish Parliament on 23 April, lawmakers, diplomats, clergy, and many other participants commemorated the Genocide of 1915 against the Christian peoples of the Ottoman Empire. During World War I, the Syriac (Aramean-Assyrian-Chaldean), Armenian, and (later) Pontic Greek peoples of the empire were decimated.
Members of Parliament for the Sweden Democrats Björn Söder and Arin Karapet and the Ambassador of Armenia to Sweden, Anna Aghadjanian, held speeches, with musical performances by violinist Arsen Bedros and pianist Dennis Jie Xu.
MP Björn Söder stated on his Facebook page that the “genocide in the Ottoman Empire during World War I is often referred to as the 1915 Genocide, the Armenian Genocide or, by Assyrians and Syriacs, as Seyfo. During the genocide, around 1.5 million Armenians were killed, but other Christian minorities in the Empire — Assyrians, Syriacs, Chaldeans and Pontic Greeks — were also murdered.”
“Most of them died in the years 1915-1916, but the persecutions and killings continued until 1923. The victims constituted more than half of the Armenian population of the area, and most of those who survived were forced to flee the country. The Ottoman Empire was largely emptied of its Christian population.”
MP Arin Karapet stated that on his Facebook page: “The moment of remembrance reminded us of the importance of never forgetting one of history’s darkest chapters. Remembering is also taking responsibility. By acknowledging what happened, we can learn from history and work to ensure that such crimes are never repeated.”
Swedish Parliament officially recognized the genocide on 11 March 2010. At the same time, it called on the Swedish government to recognize the genocide of Armenians, Syriacs (Arameans-Assyrians-Chaldeans) and Pontic Greeks. To this day, the government has not done so.
The anniversary remains an annual occasion to reaffirm the importance of historical memory and justice. In MP Björn Söder’s words: “Let us always remember and never forget!”
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Bishops mark anniversary of Armenian Genocide
Soldiers round up Armenian civilians 1915
Bishop Nicholas Hudson, Chair of the Department for International Affairs and Bishop of Plymouth, and Bishop Jim Curry, Vice-Chair of the Department for International Affairs and Auxiliary Bishop of Westminster, have issued a statement to mark the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
Armernian Genocide Remembrance Day is held annually to commemorate the victims of the Armenian genocide of 1915, a series of massacres and starvation of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire.
In their statement, the bishops recall the role played by the Armenian Apostolic Church in providing sanctuary during the Genocide, and renew their prayerful support and solidarity with Christians living in the region.
Full statement
“On this occasion of the 111th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, we would like to assure the Armenian community, particularly the Armenian diaspora in England and Wales, of our prayers and remembrance at this time.
“As we remember the victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide of 1915, we also remember the crucial role played by the Armenian Apostolic Church in providing sanctuary, solace and hope in the midst of persecution and tragedy.
“In the face of current challenges, such as the ongoing conflict in the Nagorno-Karabakh region and the forced displacement of the Artsakh Armenian population, we continue to stand alongside our Christian brothers and sisters of the Armenian Apostolic Church in a spirit of friendship and solidarity.
“May the Holy Spirit guide all Christians and people of goodwill on the path to healing, reconciliation and communion.
“St Gregory the Illuminator, pray for us.
“St Gregory of Narek, pray for us.”
The Right Reverend Nicholas Hudson
Chair of the Department for International Affairs, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales
Bishop of Plymouth
The Right Reverend Jim Curry
Vice-Chair of the Department for International Affairs, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales
Auxiliary Bishop of Westminster
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Athens: National Defense Minister Dendias represented PM at event commemoratin
“The Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day is not merely a date, but part of the collective memory of humanity,” emphasized National Defense Minister Nikos Dendias on Sunday, at an event in Athens where he represented the Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis. The event, marking 111 years since the Armenian Genocide and 30 years since its recognition by the Hellenic Parliament, was organized at the Athens Conservatoire by the Armenian National Committee of Greece in cooperation with the Region of Attica.
In his speech, Dendias stressed that Greece “stands and will always stand by Armenia, with a sense of responsibility toward its own history.” He underlined that the events of April 24, 1915 marked the beginning of a systematic extermination of the Armenian people by the Young Turk leadership, which, in the name of national purity, violated every principle of humanity – starting with the arrest of intellectual, religious, and community leaders in Istanbul, then Constantinople.
He also placed the genocide in a broader historical context, referring to earlier atrocities such as the Herero and Namaqua Genocide, and noting the presence and awareness of German officers within the Ottoman military leadership at the time.
Dendias pointed out that modern Germany has officially recognized the Armenian Genocide, acknowledging historical responsibility. He stressed that the genocide was not a spontaneous outbreak of violence, but a fully organized and deliberate state plan – an essential criterion for its recognition as genocide by modern scholarship.
Honoring the Armenian people, he described them as a nation with deep historical, cultural, and spiritual roots, noting their shared historical path with Greeks. He recalled that Greece welcomed tens of thousands of Armenian refugees after both the genocide and the Greco-Turkish War, emphasizing that the Armenian community in Greece has since flourished and contributed significantly to society.
He also highlighted the role of the Hellenic Parliament in formally recognizing April 24 as a day of remembrance during the tenure of former Speaker Apostolos Kaklamanis, describing this act as one of justice, dignity, and truth.
Concluding, Dendias warned that humanity has not sufficiently learned from past genocides, citing later atrocities such as the The Holocaust and the Rwandan Genocide. He reaffirmed Greece’s solidarity with Armenia, honoring the victims and the resilience of the Armenian people, who endured and ultimately established a modern state.
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