Top Iranian, Armenian Diplomats Hold Talks

Tasnim News, Iran
Dec 28 2020

  • December, 28, 2020 – 16:41
  • Politics news
– Politics news –

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and his Armenian counterpart Ara Aivazian held a telephone conversation today.

The two senior diplomats discussed issues relating to bilateral and regional cooperation.

They also talked about regional security and stability, calling for closer cooperation between Tehran and Yerevan for addressing new regional challenges.

In the conversation, Zarif offered condolences to Armenia and expressed solidarity with the people of Armenia for the casualties of the recent war in the Nagorno-Karabakh region, according to the Republic of Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Zarif and Aivazian also emphasized the importance of promoting the contacts and dialogue at various levels between the two neighbors based on their centuries-old friendly relations.

The two ministers also reiterated readiness to deepen the close cooperation in bilateral and multilateral formats.



ANN/Armenian News Conversation with ARF’s Arthur Khachatryan – 12/19/2020

Armenian News Network / Armenian News

Conversation on Armenian News: Conversation with ARF’s Arthur Khachatryan

ANN/Armenian News

December 19, 2020


Guest

  • Arthur Khachatryan

  • Hovik Manucharyan

  • Asbed Bedrossian

Hello and welcome to the Armenian News Network, Armenian News. We’ll be talking about the demands of the political opposition in Armenia for a provisional government to lead the country out of the crisis following the catastrophic loss in the war in Artsakh. 

This episode was recorded on Thursday, December 17, 2020.

Following the trilateral Karabakh ceasefire of Nov 9, the Armenian opposition has nearly universally condemned Nikol Pashinyan’s agreement to the deal. 

The largest opposition grouping, called Movement of the Salvation of the Homeland (Հայրենիքի փրկության շաժում in Armenian), composed of 17 political parties including the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), Prosperous Armenia, and the Republican Party, are demanding Pashinyan’s immediate resignation and the appointment of their unified candidate, Vazgen Manukyan as interim PM. 

This group has been holding regular protests featuring a growing number of participants, with the latest gathering Wednesday, December 17, estimated to be 20K in size. 

Today, we’ll be talking with a representative of one of the political forces behind the movement, to better understand the internal political developments in Armenia and specifically the goals of the Movement of the Salvation of the Homeland.

To talk about these issues, we are joined by:

 

Arthur Khachatryan, who is a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF Dashnaktsutyun) Supreme Council in Yerevan. In the past, he held government posts such as Deputy Minister of Territorial Administration and Development, Governor of Shirak, and Minister of Agriculture. Currently, Arthur is a professor of finance at the French University of Armenia and lectures on Leadership at the Public Administration Academy of the Republic of Armenia.

 

 

 

 

What made the ARF Dashnaktsutyun join forces with the 16 other political parties and what is the broad position of the movement, and the ARF specifically?

Especially during the earlier days of the protest, we heard that many of the organizers of the protests were being detained by police and national security forces. Can you say that police intimidation is still taking place and how has it affected the leadership of the protests?

Nikol Pashinyan criticized this movement for being an “elitist protest”, not representative of the entire Armenian populace. How would you respond to that?

How does the ARF differentiate from the wider opposition goals, especially during the “provisional” 6-12-month period that you suggest? Specifically, we’ve heard Vazgen Manukyan express a position on foreign funding of Armenian NGOs for instance. Is that position also shared by the ARF?

What do you think of the government’s proposal and effort to change the electoral code? Is this a change that should be prioritized in the interim period?

The Alliance settled on Vazgen Manukyan as the interim Prime Minister to head a provisional government and lead to preterm elections. As the politics evolve in Yerevan, if the situation requires that a different potential candidate be nominated, would the ARF support that? What are the red lines for the ARF about who might or might not be acceptable as an interim Prime Minister?

During the 2018 elections the ARF didn’t receive sufficient votes to gain any seats in the parliament. What are your party’s plans for becoming a relevant political force, represented in the parliament in Armenia? What is your party’s vision for Armenia over the next 5-10 years?

That concludes this Conversation On Armenian News. We hope it was helpful in your understanding of some of the issues involved. We look forward to your feedback, including your suggestions for Conversation topics in the future. Contact us on our website, at Armenian News.org, or on our Facebook PageANN – Armenian News”, or in our Facebook Group “Armenian News – Armenian News Network.

Special thanks to Laura Osborn for providing the music for our podcast. On behalf of everyone in this episode, we wish you a good week. Thank you for listening and we’ll talk to you soon.

YouTube           Apple           Google         Spotify       Facebook

Armenia, Artsakh, Karabakh, Opposition, Salvation of the Homeland, ARF, Armenian Revolutionary Federation, Dashnaktsutyun, Arthur Khachatryan, Stepanakert

Artsakh continues searching for bodies of war victims

Save

Share

 12:02,

STEPANAKERT, DECEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS. The bodies of 8 killed servicemen were found during search operations in Martuni, Hadrut, Jabrayil and Fizuli, the State Service of Emergency Situations of Artsakh said.

So far, a total of 1047 bodies have been retrieved.

The search operations continue in Hadrut, Jabrayil and Shushi directions.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Three members of Yerevan municipal council leave majority faction

News.am, Armenia
Dec 22 2020
 
 
 
 
 
YEREVAN. – The Yerevan Council of Elders convened its regular session Tuesday.
 
As Mayor Hayk Marutyan was late, the session started without him, and it is chaired by First Deputy Mayor Hrachya Sargsyan.
 
At the beginning of the session, Sargsyan announced that Hayk Tsirunyan and Mesrop Papikyan, members of the Council’s majority My Step faction, had submitted petitions to terminate their powers as members of the Council of Elders. Before that, Arsen Karapetyan also had submitted a similar request.
 
According to the relevant protocols of the Central Electoral Commission of Armenia, the aforesaid mandates of the My Step faction of the Yerevan city council were given to Sergey Gyozalyan, Vahe Ohanjanyan, and Karine Panosyan.
 
But Panosyan also submitted a petition to terminate her powers as a member of the Council of Elders, and her respective mandate was given to Gevorg Achemyan.
 
In addition, Ernes Avanesov and Sergey Gyozalyan, members of the My Step faction, have submitted requests to leave the faction, but they will continue to be members of the Yerevan municipal council.
 
In its turn, the opposition Prosperous Armenia Party faction resigned—in writing—from the post of Deputy Chairman—held by Markos Harutyunyan—of the Standing Committee on Urban Development and Land Use Affairs of the Yerevan Council of Elders.
 
 
 

Former army generals and officers join call of Armenia National Security Service high-ranking officials

News.am, Armenia
Dec 18 2020

16:12, 18.12.2020

Armenia’s Pashinyan thanks Russia for assistance in fighting against COVID-19 pandemic

TASS, Russia
Dec 11 2020
Earlier, Russia’s consumer rights watchdog Rospotrebnadzor handed over to Armenia a mobile laboratory for identifying the pathogens of infectious diseases and making PCR-tests for the novel coronavirus

YEREVAN, December 11. /TASS/. Armenia is grateful to Russia for the assistance provided in the struggle against the coronavirus pandemic, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during a video conference of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council on Friday.

“We are grateful to Russia for its invaluable assistance in resisting the pandemic and warding off the challenges that we were confronted with this year,” he said.

Earlier, Russia’s consumer rights watchdog Rospotrebnadzor handed over to Armenia a mobile laboratory for identifying the pathogens of infectious diseases and making PCR-tests for the novel coronavirus. Russian Health Minister Mikhail Murashko shared with his Armenian counterpart Arsen Torosyan samples of Russia’s anti-coronavirus vaccine Sputnik V.

Last April, Russian military specialists arrived in Armenia under an agreement between the two countries’ defense minsters to provide assistance in the struggle against the coronavirus pandemic. A Russian diagnostic laboratory has operated in Armenia since April. During the pandemic Rospotrebnadzor provided Armenia with equipment free of charge. Russian businesses operating in the country transferred large donations to the government fund for struggle against the infection.

Armenian protesters converged on parliament, demand PM resigns

PBS
Dec 9 2020
World D ec 9, 2020 2:05 PM EST

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — Thousands of protesters converged on the parliament building in Armenia’s capital Wednesday to push for the resignation of the ex-Soviet nation’s prime minister over his handling of the fighting with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Nikol Pashinyan’s opponents are angry at a peace deal that ended six weeks of fighting over the separatist region but saw Azerbaijan take over wide areas that have been controlled by Armenian forces for more than a quarter-century.

Armenia’s opposition parties gave Pashinyan an ultimatum to resign by Tuesday, but he has ignored the demand, defending the peace deal as a bitter but necessary move that prevented Azerbaijan from overrunning the entire Nagorno-Karabakh region.

About 15,000 protesters marched through downtown Yerevan to the parliament building, chanting “Nikol go away!”

The opposition has been pushing for Pashinyan’s resignation since the Russia-brokered peace deal took effect on Nov. 10. Protests have grown over the past days, with demonstrators blocking traffic in various sections of the capital, and also rallying in other cities.

The Armenian Apostolic Church and all three of the country’s former presidents have joined the demand for Pashinyan to step down.

Undeterred, the prime minister told lawmakers in parliament Wednesday that the nation needs consolidation in the current difficult period. “Voices of different groups mustn’t be mistaken for the people’s voice,” he said.

Speaking outside parliament Wednesday, Artur Vanetsyan, the former head of the National Security Service who leads the Homeland opposition party, argued that Pashinyan should step down to allow opposition forces to “normalize the situation” in the country. “Each day he stays on the job raises a new threat to the nation,” Vanetsyan said.

Nagorno-Karabakh lies within Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994. That war left Nagorno-Karabakh itself and substantial surrounding territory in Armenian hands.

In 44 days of fighting that began in late September and left more than 5,600 people killed on both sides, the Azerbaijani army forged deep into Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing Armenia to accept the peace deal that saw Azerbaijan reclaim much of the separatist region along with surrounding areas.

Azerbaijanis have celebrated it as a major victory, and the country is set to hold a massive military parade Thursday — to be attended by visiting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Turkey strongly backed Azerbaijan during the conflict, which it used to expand its clout in the region.

Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.

Watch groups: Christians in Turkey face suppression, exploitation

Dec 8 2020

.- Christians in Turkey are being systematically suppressed or exploited for political gains, warns a new report from two human rights watch groups, International Christian Concern and Middle East Concern.

The report examined challenges facing Christians between 2016 and 2020, finding that Christians in Turkey frequently experience suppression of their legal status as citizens, as well as the legal status of their religious sites and institutions. Furthermore, rather than being granted full rights because they are Turkish citizens, their religious and civil rights are exploited as international political “bargaining chips.”

“The institutionalized use of religious freedom as a political bargaining chip should prompt caution amongst human rights advocates,” the report states.

“Another point of caution is the cultural perception within Turkey of how these issues are discussed within the international community,” the report adds.

Christians are a small minority in the country of Turkey. They account for roughly 160,000 citizens, or roughly 0.2% of the total population. A strong majority of the country’s population – roughly 90% – is Muslim. According to the report, the prevalent “competing narratives” of Islam and Kemalism (a kind of Turkish nationalist secularism) in the country push Christians and their institutions and history to the margins.

“Unless this framework is reformed, religious freedom abuses will perpetuate regardless of political leadership,” the report states. “These problems have become more visible following the 2016 coup attempt against President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who responded by accelerating the implementation of an Islamic-nationalist agenda. This agenda appealed to both the religious and the Turkish nationalist sections of society, but increasingly isolated more moderate and democratic voices.” The report identified several key areas in which Christians experience repression or abuse of their religious freedom, including through a strong emphasis on the Turkish identity being an Islamic identity, through the suppression of the legal status of Christian citizens and their institutions, the neglecting of the place of Christians in the country’s heritage and even the telling of a revised history, the intimidation of acts of cultural or ethnic _expression_ of Christians, and the abuse of Christians for international and domestic political bargaining power, among others. In one example of the use of Christians for political bargaining power, the report notes that several international political leaders have called for the reopening of Halki Seminary in Istanbul. The seminary was founded in the 1800s by the Greek Orthodox Holy Trinity Monastery, but closed in 1971 when the law prohibited privately owned houses of religious education. For the past 10 years, Erdoğan has said he will reopen the seminary once certain concessions are made for the ethnic Turks in Thrace, Greece. In that time, Greece has opened multiple mosques and increased benefits for ethnic Turks, and yet Halki Seminary has yet to be reopened. The fair treatment of ethnic Turks in Greece is a “laudable” goal, the report notes, but when it is tied to the conditional fair treatment of Christian citizens of Turkey, it is exploitation and a failure on the president’s part to “uphold the religious liberty of Turkish citizens.” Another act of disregard for Christians in Turkey came this year, the report noted, when the Hagia Sophia, a one-time cathedral that had been functioning as a UNESCO-recognized museum and symbol of peaceful coexistence, was converted into a mosque in July.

“Throughout this series of events, many asked Turkey to respect the country’s pluralistic heritage by protecting the secular nature of Hagia Sophia,” the report noted. “Concerns were raised about how changing the museum status of Hagia Sophia could impact its designation as an UNESCO World Heritage site. The calls were ignored.”

Other important Christian sites in the country have been vandalized, or neglected and then demolished. In the education system in Turkey, students are taught to perceive anything that is not Islamic as being anti-Turkish and a threat. Violent aggression against these perceived threats is not punished, and in some cases is celebrated, the report noted. “A pastor living in southern Turkey shared about his daughter’s experience: ‘My daughter was in a social studies class. (The instructor) was teaching that what the crusades couldn’t do, the missionaries are now trying to do. ‘They’re working on getting our land,’ she said. So then, there were three middle school students who during the break beat my daughter to the point of being unconscious and needing to be taken to the hospital. For the next year and a half, my daughter had weekly fainting spells.’” In another example of religious freedom violations included in the report, a small Protestant church serving Christian refugees from Iraq and Syria was raided and closed by Turkish police for not having a proper registration, even though the church’s leader had attempted to register the space as a church with the government and was told that there was no legal framework in which to do so. Furthermore, the report notes, people who are part of initiatives to preserve the history of Christian genocide in Turkey are charged, imprisoned, and otherwise silenced by the government for anti-government crimes.

“From 1914 to 1923, the Christian population of modern Turkey decreased from 20-25% to less than 2%. Millions of native Armenian, Greek, and Assyrian Christians were forcibly deported, massacred or displaced during the First World War (1914-1918) and the Turkish War of Independence (1919-1923),” the report states.
“Civil activists who promote the protection of cultural heritage, encourage dialogue about the genocide, and promote diversity in Turkish society, are targeted by ultra-nationalist elements within the Turkish state and society,” the report notes.

The Turkish government specifically targets Protestants, the report noted, because it is more familiar and therefore more comfortable with the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. It views Protestantism – particularly missionaries from other countries – as a threat, and pastors or missionaries face forced expulsion from the country.

“The upheaval of deportation involves the trauma of enforced separation from family, friends and loved ones. The injustice and lack of any clear explanation for the termination of residency and issuance of the N-82 code is confusing,” the report noted. The code dictates that foreigners must seek permission prior to entering the country, which “is almost never given in practice”, and foreigners must therefore go to court to seek this permission. Effectively, the report said, the code is used to ban Protestant missionaries from the country. “Meanwhile, the financial burden of legal costs and the frustration of pursuing the case through the courts adds another layer of exhaustion. For every individual and family, the issuance of the N-82 code has been a painful experience.” Furthermore, the presence of Turkey’s military in Iraq, Syria, and other countries in the Middle East and northern Africa has come with frequently reported “human rights abuses against ethnic and religious communities committed by Turkish soldiers and mercenaries employed by Turkey, some of whom previously fought with extremist groups engaging in different regional conflicts,” the report notes. In October, Christian human rights leaders called on the Trump administration to issue sanctions on Turkey in response to its actions in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War, and warned that Turkish actions were guided by “animus” against Christians.

“Turkey has an obligation under national and international law to uphold Freedom of Religion or Belief (FoRB). The authorities must provide a legal framework to accommodate its religious minorities and develop a national narrative that promotes social cohesion,” the report stated. “Given the new executive powers of Turkey’s president, the position holds the necessary authority to make needed changes to the legal framework which protects religious minorities. This obligation for religious freedom extends to those territories under Turkish military control.” The report included multiple questions at the end of each section to prompt a “transparent dialogue” about religious freedom and the situation of Christians in Turkey. It called on the Turkish government as well as the international community to uphold the full rights of Christians in the country.

“Through this report, it is our earnest desire to encourage an open dialogue between the international community and Turkey, aimed at restoring trust and relationship. We hope a transparent dialogue will contribute to policies which recognize, uphold, protect, and promote the rights of Christians living in Turkey. It is through these small yet important steps of honoring the other that true reforms can ultimately be brought about.”



Armenian philologist: History and culture war begins

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 7 2020

From a scientific point of view, Azerbaijan’s viewpoint regarding the presentation of the churches in Artsakh as Afghan will not stand a chance against criticism, but the Armenian side has a lot of work to do, Director of the Institute of Literature after Manuk Abeghyan at Armenia’s National Academy of Sciences, Doctor of Philology Vardan Devrikyan told a news conference on Monday.

“We must present our well-grounded viewpoint to the world. It is possible to do it through interdisciplinary means, which entails specific efforts by the Institutes of History and Archeology, as well as ethnography,” he said.

According to the philologist, Armenia lost the information war during the recent war with Azerbaijan, and the country is factually losing the cartographic war now.

“Azerbaijan also takes a favorable position over our country in the cartographic war. I announce that a war of history and culture is starting. Under these conditions, if the draft law “On Higher Education and Science” is adopted, it will push us to a direct defeat in this war.

“Why is such a bill introduced to the National Assembly? Do the people who submitted the bill realize this or do they contribute to our new defeats?” he asked.

Vardan Devrikyan. who took part in the Artsakh liberation war and the April 2016 war, but not in the recent war, found it hard to outline the reason for the defeat of the Armenian side.

“We heard different contradictory statements. In any case, the atmosphere in our country was not favorable in any way for us to win the war and show more effective resistance. The split in society, the self-confidence in many issues… History is the greatest judge, it will raise those issues, but in any case now we must be able to take a sober look, we are in the process of defeats every day.

“We must stand firm at one point and try to move forward. All our efforts today must be aimed at it. If it is not done, I will reserve myself the right to think, like many others, that this defeat was premeditated,” Devrikyan added.