Electricity fees increase in Armenia as of today

  News.am  
Armenia – Feb 1 2022

As of Tuesday, the residents of Armenia will have to pay an average of 4.7 drams more for one kilowatt of electricity.

The respective decision by the Public Services Regulatory Commission—and which was made at the end of last year—enters into force today.

The main reasons for the increase in electricity prices in Armenia are the $270-million loan taken for the upgrading of the country nuclear power plant and Armenia’s unfulfilled obligations to the Russian Gazprom company.

To note, the fee for water supply has already risen in Armenia as of January 1, and the natural gas tariff is also expected to increase in the country—and most likely as of April 1.

USA and its allies discuss deployment of additional forces in Eastern Europe – CNN

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 20:03, 26 January, 2022

YEREVAN, 26 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. The United States and its allies are considering the possibility of deploying additional troops of 1,000 manpower to NATO’s Eastern European countries before Russia’s predicted invasion into Ukraine, ARMENPRESS reports CNN informed, citing its sources.

According to the TV channel, the additional troops may be deployed in Romania, Bulgaria and Hungary, but no final decision has been made yet.

According to CNN, not all of the 30 NATO member states are ready to take such a step.

Armenia reports daily Covid-19 cases of 2594

Jan 29 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The number of confirmed coronavirus infections in Armenia grew by 2594 to reach 364,348 on Saturday, January 29 morning, according to information provided by the Health Ministry.

Fresh figures also revealed that 235 more people recovered, 6 patients died from Covid-19, while two others carrying the virus died from other causes in the past 24 hours.

A total of 7342 tests have been performed in the past day, the National Center For Disease Control and Prevention said.

So far, 335,462 people have recovered, 8041 have died from the coronavirus in the country, while 1529 others carrying the virus have died from other causes.

Armenia, Spain celebrate 30th anniversary of establishment of diplomatic relations

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 17:25,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 27, ARMENPRESS. Armenia and Spain are celebrating the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations.

On this occasion, Armenia’s Foreign Ministry reaffirmed Yerevan’s readiness to develop and strengthen the relations with Spain.

“Today we celebrate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and Spain. We reaffirm our firm will to continue strengthening both our bilateral relations and international cooperation, as well as the friendly ties of our nations”, the Armenian MFA tweeted.

Pashinyan congratulates Indian counterpart on Republic Day

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 14:30,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan sent a congratulatory letter to Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi on the national day of the country, the PM’s Office said.

The letter runs as follows:

“Your Excellency,

I warmly congratulate you and the good people of India on the national day – the Republic Day.

This year we mark the 30th anniversary of the establishment of the diplomatic relations between Armenia and India, and I must praise the fact that the centuries-old traditional warm relations and mutual support between our countries and peoples continue strengthening, and the interstate exchanges and ties continues expanding and deepening.

Armenia attaches special importance to the stable progress of the relations with friendly India. I am convinced that ahead of that important jubilee, with joint efforts it would be possible to give a new quality and content to the comprehensive and continuous development of the Armenian-Indian cooperation in all areas of bilateral interest.

I wish you good health and success, and to the good people of India – peace and welfare.

Your Excellency, please accept the assurances of my highest respect”.

How Jackie Speier elevated the Armenian community

Jan 20 2022

Rep. Jackie Speier, who has represented the Peninsula on the local, state and federal level for more than 40 years, will be remembered for many things long after she retires this year. But to Armenian Americans, it will be that she was one of their own —that she was able to elevate issues important to them and serve as a role model for youth.

She is one of just two Armenian members of Congress, the other being Rep. Anna Eshoo.

“The pipeline hasn’t grown as much in Congress,” Speier told the Examiner. “But there’s a whole generation of Armenian Americans who are in elected office on the local level and in state legislatures. Over time, I think their voices are going to be heard. Meanwhile, there’s a lot of allies in Congress for the Armenian story to be told.”

Speier’s district is home to the Krouzian-Zekarian-Vasbouragan Armenian School, a bilingual private K-8 school by Lake Merced, two Armenian churches and a senior Armenian community center. Besides Speier, who is Armenian through her mother’s side, the Bay Area is home to an estimated 50,000 Armenians, many in San Mateo County, and a few dozen Armenian American community organizations.

Speier’s long and storied political career somewhat overshadows her heritage. She survived being shot during the 1978 Jonestown massacre while working for Congressman Leo Ryan, who was assassinated. She served in the California state legislature, supporting its assault weapons ban and became the first in the governing body to give birth while in office. In Congress since 2008, she’s known for fighting against sexual assault in the U.S. military, supporting humanitarian causes and abortion rights — which includes talking about her own.

Along the way, Speier and Eshoo repeatedly advocated for the United States to recognize the Armenian genocide of 1915, when Ottoman authorities killed or forced ethnic Armenians from Turkey — including their family members.

“Typically, we spend quite a bit of time educating our public officials as to what the Armenian community is all about and what our concerns are,” said Roxanne Makasdijian, co-founder and executive director of the Genocide Education Project. “She came into office knowing all of those and fully willing to act on behalf of the Armenian community. You have a head start with Jackie Speier.”

Speier credits Eshoo with feeling the time was right in 2019 to shepherd the recognition through in Congress, assisted by the leadership of Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep. Adam Schiff, who represents the Armenian community of Glendale.

President Joe Biden followed in recognizing the genocide in April 2021, the first sitting U.S. president to do so.

It was a long time coming for the Armenian diaspora. It could have taken longer.

“It really, really helped for her and Congresswoman Eshoo to tell family stories,” said Aram Hamparian, executive director of ANCA, based in Washington D.C. “These are things that had not been possible when there weren’t Armenian American representatives in Congress. Personal testimony carries a lot of weight.”

Speier reflected on the impact the genocide had on her mother that she sensed growing up. Speier visited the Eternal Flame, a memorial to the genocide in Tsitsernakaberd, Armenia, to commemorate the 100th anniversary. There, she said she left a pin cushion, which her mother used to make using stuffed tuna cans, and a program from her mother’s funeral.

“There was always this cloud that she kind of carried around with her, of sadness,” Speier told the Examiner. “It speaks to the anguish about the Armenian genocide. In some respects, I feel that I have completed the journey for her that didn’t happen when she was alive.”

She also just discovered on Wednesday that her grandfather on her father’s side spent one month in a German concentration camp, making both sides of her family touched by genocide.

The effects of obscuring history and what happens in present-day Armenia continues to have ripple effects for the Armenia diaspora. In 2020, Bay Area churches and the KZV Armenian School were vandalized as deadly conflict emerged again in the Nagorno-Karabakh region in Azerbaijan — backed by Turkey. The area is known as Artsakh to the ethnic Armenians who governed it.

Rep. Jackie Speier hugs a group of schoolchildren at KZV Armenian School. (Courtesy KZV Armenian School)

Speier condemned Azerbaijan for “military aggression” at Artsakh, which she visited in 2019, and called out disparities in aid to Armenia compared to Azerbaijan. A border crisis between the two countries has been ongoing since April 2021.

“More than 100 years later, that hate is still being fanned and reaching us here in the farthest corner of the world from that region,” Makasdijian. “It really brought home the reality of the fact that if the international community does not hold each other accountable and responsible for their misbehavior [that] denial [was] allowed to foment over so much time.”

Speier also co-chairs the Armenian Congressional Caucus, which has helped bolster aid to the country, including $40 million for democracy assistance in 2019. The congresswoman added that while Turkey and former Soviet Union territories have become more authoritarian, Armenia’s democracy has strengthened and the United States must protect it.

“Congresswoman Speier has been an extraordinary advocate for Armenia and the Armenian community here in the U.S.,” said Eshoo in a statement. “She has strengthened ties between both nations, helped secure vital funding to bolster Armenia’s democratic institutions, and has grown the Armenian Caucus into a powerful force for change on Capitol Hill. As the only two Armenian-American Members of Congress, I’m losing my best partner with her retirement.”

Hamparian noted that Speier has been very eager to mentor and that the community will now lean more on Congresswoman Eshoo, who is also Assyrian and represents the district just south of Speier’s, to elevate Armenian issues and foster mentorship.

KZV Armenian School takes “great pride” in being represented by someone also Armenian American, said principal Grace Andonian. Students have seen Speier in Washington D.C., at their school and many community events. Some alumni have also interned for her.

“We are fortunate to have Congresswoman Speier as a real-life representation of the type of person we want our students to be in the future,” Andonian said. “Our students, from our kindergarteners to our middle school students, are always excited to see Rep. Speier. She is a true role model who embodies what it means to be principled and compassionate leader.”

Senekeremian believes the foundation built by Eshoo and Speier, who said she will continue to use her voice and stay involved, will grow. And Hamparian sees great promise in upcoming Armenian American leaders to step in, like Michigan state legislator Mari Manoogian and Peter Koutoujian, a sheriff in Massachusetts and a former state legislator.

“We’ll just miss her terribly,” Hamparian said. “She’s been such a treasure and a role model and a leader for our community.”

 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/19/2022

                                        Wednesday, 
Yerevan Sets Terms For Armenian-Azeri Border Demarcation
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia - An Armenian soldier stands guard on the border with Azerbaijan, June 
17, 2021.
Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan confirmed on Wednesday that Armenia has set a 
number of conditions for starting the demarcation of its long border with 
Azerbaijan sought by Russia.
Russia as well as the United States and France, the two other co-chairs of the 
OSCE Minsk Group, believe that such a process would help to prevent deadly 
fighting that regularly erupts at various sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border.
The issue was high on the agenda of talks between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev hosted by Russian President 
Vladimir Putin in Sochi last November. Aliyev and Pashinian pledged to set up a 
joint commission on border delimitation and demarcation by the end of December. 
It was also agreed that Moscow will facilitate the commission’s work.
The commission has still not been formed, however. Russian Foreign Minister 
Sergei Lavrov said last week that Baku and Yerevan have not yet bridged their 
differences on the demarcation process.
Lavrov also said that Moscow has received new Armenian “proposals” regarding the 
commission’s activities and will communicate them to the Azerbaijani side. He 
did not disclose them.
Armenia - Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan speaks in the parliament, January 19, 
2022.
Mirzoyan confirmed those proposals but gave few details. He said only that they 
involve “a set of measures” designed to ease tensions on the heavily militarized 
border.
“We believe that as long as there are no concrete mechanisms and concrete steps 
to enhance stability and security in the border zone and to help prevent further 
clashes there … that commission will have trouble working,” Mirzoyan told the 
Armenian parliament.
The minister indicated that those steps should include a mutual withdrawal of 
Armenian and Azerbaijani troops from their border posts and the deployment of 
international observers there.
Pashinian has repeatedly advocated the idea of troop withdrawal in recent 
months. It has not been backed by Baku so far.
Armenian opposition politicians and the country’s human rights ombudsman, Arman 
Tatoyan, have voiced serious misgivings about the idea, saying that it could put 
the security of residents of Armenian border towns and villages at serious risk. 
Mirzoyan sought to dispel their concerns during his government’s 
question-and-answer session in the National Assembly.
Armenia’s Army Chief, Former Defense Minister Go On Trial
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia - Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan speaks at a news conference in Yerevan, 
February 12, 2019.
Armenia’s top army general, Artak Davtian, former Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan 
and several other men went on trial on Wednesday, accused of supplying the armed 
forces with faulty ammunition.
Armenia’s top army general, Artak Davtian, former Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan 
and several other men went on trial on Wednesday, accused of supplying the armed 
forces with faulty ammunition.
The defendants include two other generals and an arms dealer, Davit Galstian. 
The National Security Service (NSS) arrested them and Tonoyan in September on 
charges of fraud and embezzlement that cost the state almost 2.3 billion drams 
($4.7 million).
The accusations stem from thousands of air-to-surface rockets which a company 
owned by Galstian delivered to Armenia in 2011. The Armenian Defense Ministry 
refused to buy most of them at the time, saying that they are unusable.
The ministry re-commissioned them after Tonoyan was appointed as defense 
minister in 2018. Investigators claim that Tonoyan and the two arrested generals 
arranged the deal for personal gain.
All three men deny the accusations. Their lawyers maintain that the ammunition 
reportedly manufactured in 1991 was not outdated.
Prosecutors revealed last week that Lieutenant-General Davtian, the chief the 
Armenian army’s General Staff, was also charged with abuse of power as part of 
the criminal case.
Davtian has not been sacked despite the indictment. It remains unclear whether 
he will plead guilty to the accusations.
Davtian was absent from the opening session of the high-profile trial.
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan and 
Lieutenant-General Artak Davtian (right) attend a meeting in Yerevan.
The presiding judge, Manvel Shahverdian, accepted prosecutors’ demand that the 
trial be held behind the closed door because it will feature “state secrets.” 
Defense lawyers strongly objected to the decision. They argued, in particular, 
that the NSS and the Office of the Prosecutor-General have already released all 
details of the case.
“They have publicized everything that could be of interest to enemy states,” 
said Yerem Sargsian, a lawyer representing Avetik Muradian, the arrested former 
commander of the Armenian Air Force.
Tonoyan’s legal team claimed on Tuesday that by trying to bar journalists from 
the trial the prosecutors want to cover up the lack of incriminating evidence at 
their disposal.
The defense lawyers have also denounced the NSS for not test-firing the rockets 
in question during the investigation. They say that such forensic tests would 
have proved that the rockets are usable.
Armenia’s Leadership ‘Not Committed To Democracy’
        • Karlen Aslanian
Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian takes part in the virtual "Summit for 
Democracy" organized by U.S. President Joe Biden, December 9, 2021.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his political team are not committed to 
turning Armenia into an established democracy, according to a top aide to former 
President Levon Ter-Petrosian.
In an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service, Levon Zurabian, the deputy 
chairman of Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress (HAK) party, singled out 
ongoing crackdowns on opposition groups that did well in local elections held in 
December.
“Although the opposition won [in some local communities,] they don’t let it form 
its [local] governments, using police pressure and hoping that … they can coopt 
a few people and form their own government,” said Zurabian. “We saw what 
happened in Vartenis, Parakar and other places.”
“Everywhere it’s clear that these people [ruling Armenia] are not prepared for 
democracy,” he claimed.
Armenia - Levon Zurabian, deputy chairman of the Armenian National Congress, at 
a news conference in Yerevan, May 27, 2021.
In Vartenis, a small town 160 kilometers east of Yerevan, two opposition groups 
won 14 of the 27 seats in the local council, enough to install their joint 
candidate as head of the community that also comprises two dozen nearby villages.
The 14 opposition members of the new Vartenis council elected the candidate, 
Aharon Khachatrian, as community head on December 30. However, police did not 
allow Khachatrian to take office on January 4, citing a lawsuit filed by the 
ruling Civil Contract Party.
Another opposition figure in Vartenis was arrested on corruption charges last 
month. Opposition politicians and human rights campaigners in Yerevan condemned 
his arrest, saying that it is part of a government crackdown on political 
figures who defeated Pashinian’s party in some of the three dozen communities 
that elected their local councils on December 5.
Civil Contract suffered its biggest election setback in Vanadzor, Armenia’s 
third largest city. It won only 25 percent of the vote there, compared with 39 
percent polled by a local bloc led by former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon Aslanian.
Aslanian was thus well-placed to regain his post. But he was arrested on 
December 15 on corruption charges rejected by him as politically motivated.
Zurabian also condemned Aslanian’s arrest. “That is not justice. They are 
punishing him for defeating them,” he said.
Pashinian was among more than 100 world leaders invited to the virtual “Summit 
for Democracy” organized by U.S. President Joe Biden in December. Addressing the 
gathering, he pledged to “consolidate democracy” in Armenia.
Armenia - Former President Levon Ter-Petrosian at a press conference in Yerevan, 
June 10, 2021.
In written comments released over the weekend, Ter-Petrosian charged that 
“Pashinian’s regime” is trying to “hold on to power at all costs.”
The 77-year-old former president also hit out at Armenia’s leading opposition 
alliances led by two other ex-presidents, Robert Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian. 
He said that they are doing everything to “seize power” in the country.
Unlike those alliances, Ter-Petrosian’s HAK failed to win any seats in the 
Armenian parliament in snap elections held in June.
All three ex-presidents hold Pashinian responsible for Armenia’s defeat in the 
2020 war with Azerbaijan.
Zurabian insisted on Tuesday that Pashinian and his team lost the “moral right” 
to govern the country after the six-week war.
Paris, Baku Trade Barbs Over French Presidential Hopeful’s Trip To Karabakh
        • Lilit Harutiunian
Nagorno-Karabakh - French presidential candidate Valerie Pecresse (center) 
visits the Center for Francophonie in Stepanakert, December 22, 2021.
France’s government has denounced Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s angry 
reaction to a leading French presidential candidate’s recent visit to 
Nagorno-Karabakh.
Valerie Pecresse, a conservative politician emerging as French President 
Emmanuel Macron’s main challenger in a forthcoming presidential election, 
visited Karabakh and met with the territory’s ethnic Armenian leaders on 
December 22. She was accompanied by former French Foreign Minister Michel 
Barnier and Senator Bruno Retailleau of the opposition Les Republicains party 
that nominated her for the presidency.
The Azerbaijani government condemned the trip as a violation of “Azerbaijan’s 
sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
Aliyev went further last week, saying that Azerbaijani authorities would have 
prevented Pecresse from returning to France if they had prior knowledge of her 
arrival in Karabakh. He also criticized Russian peacekeepers stationed in 
Karabakh for allowing Pecresse to enter the Armenian-populated territory.
Pecresse, who heads the Ile de France region of greater Paris, and many 
lawmakers representing her party expressed outrage at Aliyev’s “threats” and 
criticized the French government for not swiftly reacting to them.
GREECE - French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian attends a news conference 
following his meeting with Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias in Athens, 
November 19, 2021.
One of those lawmakers, Eric Ciotti, deplored the government’s “deafening 
silence” during its question-and-answer session in the French National Assembly 
on Tuesday.
French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian responded by saying that Aliyev’s 
comments are “unacceptable in form and substance.” He said he has made this 
clear to Azerbaijan’s ambassador in Paris.
The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry was quick to reject the criticism and accuse Le 
Drian of breaching “diplomatic ethics.” A ministry spokeswoman defended Aliyev’s 
remarks, saying that “illegal visits to Azerbaijani territory” are a criminal 
offense and must be dealt with accordingly.
Pecresse travelled to Karabakh from Armenia where she met with President Armen 
Sarkissian, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and Catholicos Garegin II, the 
supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church.
Armenia - Armenian President Armen Sarkissian meets with Valerie Pecresse, a 
Fench presidential candidate and head of Ile de France region, December 21, 2021.
“In Armenia, a brotherly country for France, I come to plead for the return of 
peace in Nagorno-Karabakh and the strengthening of French support in the 
economic and cultural areas and protection of religious heritage,” Pecresse 
tweeted before flying back to Paris on December 23.
Another French presidential candidate, controversial far-right figure Eric 
Zemmour, visited Armenia earlier in December.
France is home to an influential Armenian community. It was instrumental in the 
December 2020 passage by both houses of the French parliament of resolutions 
calling on Macron’s government to recognize Karabakh as an independent republic.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Today marks death anniversary of Armenian National Hero Movses Gorgisyan

panorama.am
Armenia – Jan 19 2022

SOCIETY 12:27 19/01/2022 ARMENIA

Today, January 19, marks the death anniversary of National Hero of Armenia Movses Gorgisyan.

Movses Gorgisyan (1961-1990) was a politician and one of the leaders of the Nagorno-Karabakh movement. He was one of the founders of the Army of Independence. Widely known for his speeches on the independence of Armenia, he was also an active advocate of Artsakh’s independence campaign.

Born in Yerevan, Gorgisyan graduated from the Department of Culture of the Armenian State Pedagogical University in 1984, with the qualification of a stage director and producer. In 1986-1987 he worked at the Theatre of Goris. In 1987, he joined the national movement, becoming a member of the Union for National Self-Determination.

Gorgisyan led the demonstrations for independence in Yerevan, being jailed in 1988. He was also an editor of the Armenian edition of Glasnost magazine. Gorgisyan was the first person to hoist Armenia’s tricolor flag on 28 May 1988 for the first time. This was the same day the First Republic of Armenia was founded 70 years prior.

In late 1989, Gorgisyan and several other members of the Union for National Self-Determination founded the Army of Independence, an armed group which engaged in violent clashes with the Soviet and Soviet Azerbaijani authorities in the Armenian SSR and the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast.

Gorgisyan was killed in a battle with Azerbaijani forces attacking border villages in Ararat Province on 19 January 1990 and was buried at Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex.

He posthumously received the highest title in Armenia, the National Hero of Armenia award.

Between New York and Tehran

The Davidkhanian Mansion on Sepah Street, now owned by the Iranian government (Courtesy of H.D. Wright)

Nuclear negotiations between the US and Iran recently resumed. It is unclear if the talks will lead to a mutually beneficial agreement or come to represent yet another step backwards in the historically fraught US-Iranian relationship.

Far before these two great nations first sat down at the negotiating table in 2015, my mother’s family, originally from Armenia, served Persia. The Davidkhanians played a leading role in the modernization of the Persian state, occupying posts in politics, diplomacy, and the military since the Great Game. When the Pahlavis replaced the Qajars in 1925, my family continued to serve, setting aside partisan loyalties in service of the greater Persian nation.

At roughly the same time in history on the other side of the world, my father’s family set sail for the New World. Upon arrival, they built homes in New England. One ancestor, William Brewster, served as the religious leader of the Plymouth colony.

Over two centuries later, these two realities came into contact, a miracle only possible in the nation of immigrants. My great-grandparents left Iran for New York in 1944, my grandmother in tow. My mother was born just over two decades later and grew up in the New York apartment where Lois Lane interviews Superman, all the while dreaming of Iran. In 1991, she met my father, a recent graduate of Columbia University, on a blind date. Soon after, my twin sister and I were born, at the confluence of these two worlds.

Growing up, I visited the places that represent the American part of my identity, but Iran has always remained distant, invisible and unknowable.

I hope that one day I can see what my grandmother saw on Avenue Pahlavi as she was ferried out by a British military escort. I hope that one day I can visit the graves of my ancestors at St. George’s in the Armenian quarter of Isfahan.

I want to visit the portraits of my ancestors in the Vank Cathedral. I want to visit the house on Sepah Street where my great-grandparents lived. I want to see the baths behind the house, where thousands of Armenians came to bathe, free from the pollution of religious persecution. I want to walk around the lily pond where Reza Shah and Alexander Khan strode arm in arm, if it is still there.

I want to see it all.

I have tried to uncover what I can about the places my ancestors inhabited, but the vast majority of Iranian archives are inaccessible to the American expatriate. The US State Department has long cautioned Americans from visiting them in person.

All I have now are snapshots of history, moments frozen in time, that have led me to these dreams. Each generation, my family’s history slips closer to oblivion. If we fail to repair the fractured relationship, our shared history could be lost forever.

Amidst the chaos of international politics, it is easy to lose sight of the consequences of enmity. My family’s fragmented relationship with Iran is but one example of loss among many. The diaspora is enormous, and each family has lost something sacred.

Although the nuclear deal offers a rare opportunity for dialogue between the US and Iran, it will not bring us closer to recovering the history that is at risk of being lost, nor will it repair the relationship that has been damaged. The nuclear deal is yet another example of the US strong-arming Iran into serving national interests, just as they have done since 1953 when the C.I.A. deposed PM Mohammad Mossadegh.

Until the US sees Iran as a partner rather than an adversary to be manipulated and exploited, true progress will remain elusive.

H.D. Wright is a writer from New York City and the editor of Transnational Politics.


Working group on the restoration of the Yeraskh and Meghri sections of the railway set up by PM’s decision

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 18:42,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 14, ARMENPRESS. On January 14, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a decision to set up a working group for effectively implementing the reconstruction program of the Yersakh – border of Azerbaijan and Merghri sections of the Armenian railways, ARMENPRESS was informed from the website.

Artashes Tumanyan, Adviser to the Prime Minister Artashes Tumanyan has been appointed head of the working group.