Russia extends UK flight suspension until February 1

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 12:16, 12 January, 2021

YEREVAN, JANUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Russia will keep flights to and from the United Kingdom suspended until February 1, 2021, TASS reports citing the anti-coronavirus crisis center.

Russia suspended flights to and from the UK on December 22.

According to the World Health Organization, a new, more contagious strain of the coronavirus, initially found in the UK, has been recorded in more than 40 countries. Russia detected the new strain in late 2020. Head of the country’s sanitary watchdog Anna Popova said that Russian testing systems were capable of detecting the new variant of the virus.

British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on December 14 that the country’s researchers had discovered a new strain of COVID-19, which could be the reason behind a rapid rise in infections in the country.

Turkish press: President Erdoğan urges party grassroots for hard work until 2023 – Turkey News

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Jan. 13 urged his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) members to work hard as if “every day is an election day” until 2023 when the country is scheduled to run for presidential and parliamentary elections.

“My biggest expectation is for you to see each day as an election day and work until 2023,” he said, addressing the provincial congresses of the AKP in the provinces of Kırşehir, Kırıkkale, Yozgat, and Sivas via video link.

“It means that those who do not work day and night to win the hearts of the nation aspire to the wrong duty in the wrong place,” he stated.

The AKP will be victorious in the 2023 elections, “as it did” in every other election in the past 20 years, the president said.

“Hopefully, we will be represented in parliament with an overwhelming majority in the 2023 elections and we will win the presidential election again. As the People’s Alliance, both as the AK Party, as the MHP, and as the BBP, the People’s Alliance is getting stronger and marching to the future,” Erdoğan said.

Turkey will go to presidential and parliamentary polls in June 2023, both Erdoğan and his ally, Devlet Bahçeli, leader of the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), said many times despite the opposition parties’ suggestion that the government will call snap elections before 2023.

Expressing pride in the increasing number of members of the AKP, Erdoğan said in 2020 alone, the party increased its membership by one million despite the difficult circumstances due to the pandemic. He said this proves that people are putting their trust in the AKP.

His party is the one with the highest capacity to rejuvenate itself, the president added.

Calling on the AKP members to knock on the door of everyone, he said, “Media and social media channels are of course important. However, the main determinant in politics is face-to-face encounters.”

Erdoğan also slammed main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, recalling a recent statement of the latter which identified Erdoğan as “so-called president.”

The president said Kılıçdaroğlu was “not aware of the responsibilities granted to the president,” while the president assumes political identity at the same time.

He was referring to a constitutional change that paved the way for the presidents to keep the helm of their political parties.

Erdoğan said Kılıçdaroğlu “lost every election” and if he had “dignity and a little respect for himself,” he would quit the leadership of the CHP.

“I believe they will eliminate this mentality as soon as possible,” Erdoğan stated.

Kılıçdaroğlu on Jan.10 referred to Erdoğan as a “so-called president” while criticizing the president for targeting opposition newspaper daily Sözcü. Erdoğan filed a lawsuit against the CHP leader on Jan. 11 for his remarks.

Putin, Erdoğan discuss outcomes of trilateral summit on Karabakh

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin and President Erdoğan on Jan. 13 had a phone conversation on the trilateral meeting held on Nagorno-Karabakh in Moscow.

According to a statement from the Turkey’s Communications Directorate, the two leaders discussed steps for strengthening relation between Turkey and Russia.

The formation of Turkey-Russia Ceasefire Monitoring Center and all military actions taken in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict were evaluated during the conversation.

Turkey would provide the necessary support and contributions on behalf of peace in the new era, Erdoğan told his Russian counterpart.

Stating that they want to create the conditions that will enable Azerbaijanis and Armenians to live together in Nagorno-Karabakh without the need for peace forces or observation activities, President Erdoğan said that when this happens, they would once again show the world the constructive results of the Turkish-Russian partnership.

On Jan. 11, the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan held their first meeting since a Russia-brokered deal ended hostilities in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed a joint declaration after the meeting held in Moscow. They signed an agreement to create new transportation infrastructure aimed at “unblocking” the region’s many closed borders.

The agreement of Nov. 10 between the three countries ending the 44-day Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have generally been fulfilled, Putin said, adding that Russian military units in the region were carrying out their duties temporarily.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Upper Karabakh, also known as Nagorno-Karabakh, internationally recognized as Azerbaijani territory, and seven adjacent regions.

Armenpress: Russian Foreign Ministry informs US, French Ambassadors about Putin-Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting

Russian Foreign Ministry informs US, French Ambassadors about Putin-Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting

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 20:14,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 14, ARMENPRESS. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Andrey Rudenko received Ambassadors of the USA and France to Russia John Sullivan and Pierre Levy and presented information about the results of the January 11 negotiations over Nagorno Karabakh, ARMENPRESS reports the Russian MFA informed.

”The Ambassadors were informed about the results of the January 11 negotiations of Russian President Vladimir Putin with Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. A comprehensive exchange of views on the future joint efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair countries took place”, reads the statement.

Iranian athlete hands over his gold medal to family of Armenian soldier killed in Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 14 2021
Iranian champion in Kyokushin karate Ahmad Bagheripoor, the gold medal winner of the 12th open championship in Armenia in 2017, has decided to hand over his gold medal to the family of Arthur Sukiasyan, an Armenian athlete who died during the 2020 Artsakh war, the Armenian Embassy in Iran reports.
 
Arthur Sukiasyan and Ahmad Bagheripoor were friends and participated in many tournaments together.
 
On January 13, the Iranian athlete handed his gold medal to Gor Shahverdyan, third secretary of the Embassy of Armenia in Iran to be presented to Sukiasyan family in Armenia.
 

Armenian PM expected to meet with Russian President Putin

Foreign Brief
Jan 11 2021
In Daily Brief
Mariah Franklin
 
 
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan may meet today in Moscow. Though Armenian and Russian sources have reported on meeting preparations, no official has confirmed its occurrence.
 
Last year’s conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno-Karabakh region concluded after Russian mediation resulted in a ceasefire. Yet implementation has proven contentious. Azerbaijani state media claims the Russian peacekeeping force has privileged Armenian interests while Pashinyan faces opposition from within his own government for making territorial cessions.
 
Expect Pashinyan to avoid explicit territorial forfeit in Meghri and pursue regional transport connections from Armenia through Azerbaijan. Still, both Pashinyan’s faltering domestic position and rancor with Azerbaijan threaten the ceasefire in the short-term. Aliyev will likely raise Russian peacekeepers’ perceived bias and also face Moscow’s ire regarding Azerbaijan’s wartime downing of a Russian plane.
 
Russia has historically maintained solid ties to both countries. Nevertheless, Azerbaijan’s deepening connections with Turkey provide Aliyev with leverage, with Turkey assuming a ceasefire observer role in Azerbaijani territory despite Russian resistance. Expect Turkey’s growing role to undermine a durable settlement by fueling Armenian resentment, increasing pressure on Pashinyan and promoting division of Nagorno-Karabakh into Russian/Turkish spheres of influence.
 

On Orthodox Christmas, somber Armenians look back on ‘the worst year’

Rudaw, Kurdistan Province, Iraq
Jan 5 2021

                                                                                                                                                                                              
Dilan Sirwan

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region  It’s Christmas for some Orthodox Christians on January 6, but Armenians in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh are not in the mood to celebrate.

The disputed region, known by Armenians as Artsakh, was just the scene of a deadly six-week battle between Armenia and Azerbaijan. A Russian-brokered ceasefire was struck in November, but not before over 100 civilians were killed and tens of thousands of people were displaced.

The streets of Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, are devoid of their usual festive sparkle, funds for New Year and Christmas decorations reportedly redirected towards relief for areas worst hit by  the war.“The lights will be brighter next year”, Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan promised in his New Year’s Eve message. In the Karabakh capital of Stepanakert, Christmas decorations put up by a charity organisation founded by the prime minister’s wife were taken down after complaints by locals, reported the privately-owned News Armenia outlet.

Among Stepanakert residents who aren’t celebrating Christmas this year is Irina Safaryan, a 28-year-old social activist originally from Hadrout, a city taken by Azerbaijan in the recent war.

Christmas celebrations would not be fitting for what was “the worst year for Armenia”, Irina told Rudaw English.

“Some families are celebrating it at home for the sake of their small kids, but generally speaking,  no one is in a festive mood,” she said.

Control of Karabakh has been a matter of dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan for decades. With the slow dissolution of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, the Armenian population of the region asked that it be put under control of Armenia. War between Armenia and Azerbaijan broke out in the early 1990s; by 1994, Armenia had taken control over a swath of the region, forcing Azerbaijan to enter negotiations and give up the land in a ceasefire brokered by Russia. The area was then administered by an Armenia-backed local government.

Ever-present tensions between the two countries escalated to an untenable level, and a fresh war over Karabakh broke out on September 27, 2020. Baku sent thousands of troops into the territory, looking to take back land many Azerbaijanis believe to be theirs. Stepanakert was among the towns subject to shelling by Azerbaijani forces.

Control of Nagorno-Karabakh as of January 5, 2021. Graphic: Maps4news, Sarkawt Mohammed / Rudaw

 

“We woke up early in the morning, around 7:15 am, and we were filled with uncertainty when we knew we were being attacked,” Irina recalled of the shelling.

Over the course of the six-week war, Armenia conceded much of Karabakh to Azerbaijan. Civilian death toll estimates say that 65 Armenians and 100 Azerbaijanis were killed. Armenia said 2,425 of its soldiers died in the war; Azerbaijan announced on December 3 that it had lost 2,783 of its soldiers. 

Irina believes that locals are still in “shock” over what happened.

“There are families who have no idea where their men are, or even if they are alive – the whole country is mourning”, she said. “I myself have lost lots of friends”.

There is one thing that Irina has been able to hold on to as Christmas approaches – visits to the ancient Armenian monastery of Dadivank, just north of Karabakh. The monastery is in territory under Azerbaijani control; Armenians can visit just once a week,  with permission from Russian peacekeepers deployed to Karabakh as part of the November ceasefire.

The fighting saw international human rights organizations report violations of war conventions by both sides. Human Rights Watch alleged that both Armenian and Azerbaijani used cluster munitions. Baku committed ‘apparently indiscriminate’ attacks on Karabakh, and a ‘possible war crime’ by bombing an Armenian church in October. 

Turkey played a vital supporting role to Azerbaijan, supporting its army with drones equipped with Canadian WESCAM sensors. Photos and videos showing Turkish-backed Syrian fighters in Karabakh sent to fight on behalf of Azerbaijan made international news. On December 10, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey arrived in Baku to attend nationwide celebrations marking Azerbaijan’s military triumph over Armenia.

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku on December 10, 2020. Photo: AFP

Irina and other Armenians say Turkey brought “mercenaries” and “terrorists” to Karabakh, and are now using them to instigate long term demographic change.

“Turks, Azeris, and Syrian mercenaries are now settling in Hadrout and areas around it,” she said. “Artsakh has been made a center for terror.” 

Irina said that “voice recordings of Azerbaijani officials and commanders offering $100 for each Armenian head the mercenaries managed to cut” were circulating on Armenian social media groups. After an examination of gruesome videos that included the decapitation and torture of captives  posted online, Amnesty International said both sides had committed war crimes. 

Some Armenian soldiers are still in hospital receiving physical treatment for war-inflicted wounds – among them 18-year-old Arthur Harutyunyan. 

Three months before the war began, Arthur, from Mertakert – one of the few cities given to Armenia in the peace deal – had begun his compulsory military training, which Armenians must undertake for  two years upon graduating high school. On September 27, when the Azerbaijani military began its attack on Karabakh, he and his comrades were called to duty, at the border city of Jabrayil.

Arthur Harutyunyan (center) with two other young men undertaking military training in the summer of 2020. Photo: submitted

 

The war started “alright” for Armenia, Arthur told Rudaw English from a hospital in Yerevan. But on October 10, he and around 20 other soldiers were attacked and surrounded by Azerbaijani soldiers. In an attempt to save their own lives, Arthur and five of his comrades sought hideout in a forest  the start of a 70-day flight for survival.

The six soldiers took to the roof of an abandoned house in a village near Hadrout. “At night when the soldiers would leave, we would sneak into the abandoned village and try to get food and drinks, there was no water so we would rely on juice we found,” Arthur said.

They spent almost three weeks on the roof, before deciding to find a way out.

“On December 6, we decided to try to cross the Aras lake into Iran,” he said, from where they would  try to enter Armenia on the other side. “On the way, we would stop on every mountain and every hill to see if we could get Armenian signal.”

“We had travelled almost 60 kilometers, when we finally got signal on December 17,” he said. “By that time, walking had become really hard for us because we were all suffering from frostbite.”

The six were rescued on December 20 and taken to Stepanakert hospital, then transferred to Yerevan on December 24. There, Arthur had all five of the toes on his left foot amputated  four partially, and one completely. He has been in hospital since then and looks back on what he witnessed during the war.  

“When we were being attacked on the mountains, we would hear a call of “Allahu Akbar” (God is the greatest) with every bomb thrown at us,” he said. “They would attack us with weapons much more advanced than ours. It felt like we were fighting against many countries.

Recovery from the trauma of war will take a long time, Arthur said.

“Armenia has wounds that need to heal… My family are now in Yerevan and we do not know if we can go back to our own city, because our safety is not ensured.”

Arthur Harutyunyan recovers at a hospital in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on January 5, 2021. Photo: submitted

 

From afar, members of Armenia’s diaspora say they too have felt the effects of the war  particularly Turkey’s involvement.

Ellada Ghukasyan, a 35-year-old Armenian journalist, moved from Yerevan 13 years ago to Paris,  a city home to a sizeable Armenian community. She is married to an Armenian man, with whom she has a five-year-old son. They want their child to maintain a strong bond with home, and visit Armenia often.

“When the war started, we found it unbearable, and we took to the streets to express solidarity,” Ellada told Rudaw English. “But when we blocked the streets in Lyon, Turkish nationalists came and attacked us.” 

When Armenians in France took to the streets of Paris and other French cities in a show of support for their country during the war, marches were met with resistance from members of the Grey Wolves, a Turkish ultranationalist group. 

Pro-Armenia demonstrators blocked a motorway near Lyon in solidarity with Armenians in Karabakh in October, members of the Grey Wolves headed to the scene and attacked protestors using hammers and knives. One of the injured had to be taken to hospital as a result. That night, supporters of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan roamed the streets of Decines, chanting “This is Turkey!” and “Where are the Armenians?”

A few days later, the Armenian genocide memorial center in Lyon was vandalized with anti-Armenian, pro-Turkey graffiti  the fourth time it had been vandalised in its 15-year existence.

Armenians protest in Paris in October 2020. Photo: Ellada Ghukasyan

 

Tensions between France’s Armenians, who number anywhere between 250,000-750,000, and parts of the one million-strong Turkish community had already been simmering before the conflict in Karabakh, and the Grey Wolves were among the main agitators. In July, a pro-Armenia protest in Decines against escalating tension in Karabakh turned violent, with four people of Turkish descent arrested.
  
The Grey Wolves were banned in France by the country’s interior ministry on November 4, a few days before the Armenia-Azerbaijan ceasefire, and the organization’s leader Ahmet Cetin was handed a four-month prison sentence for inciting violence towards Armenians and Kurds on social media.

But the move came too late for people like Ellada, who said she can no longer live in peace in France “because of Turkey.” 

“When the war ended, my five year old son came up to me and said, ‘are the Turkish people kind now?’ and I didn’t know what to say,” she said.

Ellada feels especially let down by the French government. French President Emmanuel Macron initially expressed strong support for Armenia, but over the course of the conflict, he tempered his statements until they matched  the ‘neutral’ stance of his government’s foreign ministry. 

Ellada said she was disappointed at “France and the world” for their lack of solidarity with Armenia.

“I did not see the value of humanity that France and many other countries claim to have”, she said.

With the majority of Karabakh now controlled by Azerbaijan, Ellada too will skip Christmas celebrations this year  the least she could do in solidarity with Armenians in Karabakh, she said.

“It was not an equal fight”, she said, her voice weary. With Turkey steadfastly supporting Azerbaijan, “we were fighting two countries all alone”. 

Armenian FM holds farewell meeting with Ambassador of Kazakhstan

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 15:04,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Aivazian received today Ambassador of Kazakhstan Timur Urazayev who is completing his diplomatic mission in Armenia, the Armenian foreign ministry told Armenpress.

The minister thanked the Ambassador for his contribution to the strengthening of the Armenian-Kazakh relations, wishing success to his further activities.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia’s Pashinyan outlines the options for calling early parliamentary elections

Public Radio of Armenia

Dec 27 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan insists on his invitation for consultations on early parliamentary election.

“I have spoken about snap elections on several occasions, including at the National Assembly. I have asked why the forces demanding the Prime Minister’s resignation do not demand early parliamentary elections,” the Prime Minister said in an interview with Public TV.  

“At the end of the day the fate of the authorities is to be determined by people, and parliamentary elections are one of the ways to demonstrate the _expression_ of people’s will, especially considering that it’s obvious that the _expression_ of people’s will in the square has failed despite the huge financial, informational and organizational resources the opposition possesses,” the Prime Minister said.

Pashinyan noted that the existing legislation provides for only one mechanism for snap elections.

“The Prime Minister resigns, the Parliament fails to elect new PM twice, and this leads to parliamentary elections. For this to happen it’s necessary to reach a relevant agreement with parliamentary forces,” the Prime Minister further elaborated.

Another option, he said, is to implement amendments in the constitution to give the Parliament the authority to self-dissolve and call new elections.

“Why I invite political forces for consultations is simply to ensure that the decision is not made by the government or the parliamentary majority, but to form a certain understanding around the point,” the Prime Minister stated.


Armenian ombudsman submits reports on Azerbaijani war crimes to prosecutor’s offices of different countries

Panorama, Armenia

Dec 28 2020

Reports on war crimes committed by the Azerbaijani military during the recent war in Artsakh have been submitted to the prosecutor’s offices and police of the countries that have general jurisdiction, Armenia’s Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan said on Monday, adding the reports bear the ombudsman’s signature.

“These reports refer to the torture of our compatriots by the Azerbaijani armed forces, including beheadings, inhuman treatment, mutilation of the dead bodies, amputations, etc.

“Along with the reports, 223 pieces of objective evidence were presented to the law enforcement agencies of those countries: videos and photos, as well as detailed analysis of that evidence,” he wrote on Facebook.

In Tatoyan’s words, 103 videos were translated from Azerbaijani or Turkish into English and Russian, and translations with subtitles were added to the videos, with all possible identifications made in the videos. The logo of the Armenian human rights defender was attached to the videos to confirm their authenticity.

Moreover, 120 photos were analyzed, including those related to the illegal access to the social media accounts of Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) by the Azerbaijani military and their illegal management.

“The following main issues were included in the reports:

1) premeditated murder of civilians, prisoners and the wounded;

2) torture and inhuman treatment of prisoners of war, civilians;

3) mutilation of the bodies of victims;

4) the use of jihadists and terrorists in the war against Artsakh;

5) the use of weapons of mass destruction containing chemical elements;

6) illegal management of social media accounts of Armenian POWs by the Azerbaijani military,” he said, adding such reports have been presented by the ombudsman for the first time.

“This huge amount of work has been carried out through the efforts of our staff and experts,” Tatoyan said, thanking their partner Gurgen Petrossian for the support.



Syrian potter preserves centuries-old craft

Rudaw, Kurdistan Province, Iraq
Dec 20 2020

                                                 

                                                                                             

AFP @afp                                    

QAMISHLI, Syria  — Inside a dusty and dark workshop on the banks of the Jaghjagh river in northeast Syria, Misak Antranik Petros uses an ancient pottery wheel to throw different shapes from clay.

The 85-year-old Syrian potter of Armenian origin said his family has practised the craft for more than 450 years. 

“The profession was passed down from one generation to another like an inheritance,” he said. “Now, my son is taking it up.”

His workshop is located inside an ancient mud-brick house near the city of Qamishli, administered by Kurdish authorities who control much of northeastern Syria. 

It is cluttered with pots, tools and classically shaped vases, mostly covered in dust. 

Petros and his two sons spend most of their time in the humid space, heated by an old wood-burning stove.

“I dont like to clean the clay off my hands because I like the texture,” he told AFP from his workshop.

Petros was only a teenager when he had to take over for his sick father and become the main potter of the family.

He has since become a master of the craft, and is keen to pass his skills on. 

“I am happy when I see the door of the workshop open and my son working inside,” he said.

“This craft deserves to be preserved.”

Syria’s nine-year-long war has killed more than 387,000 people and displaced millions from their homes.

Petros and his family were largely spared with their home and workshop dodging damage.

Of Petros’s two sons — Anto and Yerevan — the former is likely to follow in his footsteps as a professional potter, especially after receiving training from his father.

“His hands need to be balanced,” Petros said of his son, like a trapeze artist “walking on a tight rope”.

Sitting at the pottery wheel, Anto, 43, moulds a clay vase with expert hands while his father watches.

The young man said he is just as enthusiastic about the craft.

“I can’t stop pottery for even two days because my hands miss it,” Anto said.

“If God blesses me with a child, I will teach them this craft the way my father taught me.”

Photos By DELIL SOULEIMAN

See all photos at