Asbarez: ARF Western U.S. Central Committee Announcement

July 14,  2020

Armenian Revolutionary Federation Western U.S.

Azerbaijan, only weeks after being warned by the United States Department of State about conducting large scale military exercises with its new multi billion dollar advanced weaponry near the border of Armenia, on Sunday launched large scale attacks on Armenia’s peaceful civilian rural population in its northern Tavush region. This attack also comes as the United Nations has called for a global ceasefire during the deadly coronavirus crisis.

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation Western United States Central Committee calls for the universal condemnation of Azerbaijan’s violation of international law and attack on Armenia and calls on nations of the world to institute a moratorium on the sale of military equipment to a corrupt dictatorship in Aliyev, which has proven to be belligerent, reckless and unwilling to peacefully resolve its differences around a negotiation table rather than at the end of a gun.

The ARF Western U.S. stands with the people of Armenia and condemns the vicious attack on Armenian civilians and unequivocally supports Armenia’s right to self defense and the protection of its citizens against such aggression which is reminiscent to the ethnic hatred which was utilized by Ottoman Turkey a little over a century ago which led to the loss of three quarters of the Armenian homeland and the destruction of more than two thirds of our people.

This hatred was mirrored by Azerbaijan during the pogroms it implemented against its own peaceful Armenian population in Sumgait in 1988 and Baku in 1990, during the indiscriminate shelling of the Armenian civilian population throughout Nagorno Karabakh in the 1990’s, and full scale attack on the Republic of Artsakh in April of 2016.

It is not a coincidence that Turkey’s Erdogan this last weekend announced the rebranding of Christendom’s largest and oldest church—the Hagia Sophia—into a mosque, and soon after Baku’s unprovoked attack on Armenia, Turkey pledged its support for its ethnic brethren in Azerbaijan and warned Armenia not to respond in self defense. We remember, and the world cannot forget that Turkey till today still hasn’t atoned for its genocidal past against the Armenian nation.

We stand by Armenia’s heroic Armed Forces who demonstrated resolve and precision in battle and their sacred mission of defending our Nation. It is incumbent upon all of us to band together and do our part as activists both socially and politically. As such, the region’s decade-old “With Our Soldiers” campaign initiated by the Armenian Youth Federation will, once again, be on the frontlines here to ensure that our soldiers and their families are supported during the current situation. In addition the ANCA supports placing limits on Azerbaijan’s use of US defense assistance.

We call on all Armenian Americans regardless of political affiliation to join us in the defense of the Republics of Armenia and Artsakh through these and other upcoming campaigns

Ruling faction head of Armenian Parliament meets with Russian Ambassador

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 17:09,

YEREVAN, JULY 10, ARMENPRESS. Head of the ruling My Step faction of the Parliament Lilit Makunts and MP Alexei Sandikov met with Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergei Kopyrkin.

Makunts said on Facebook that they have discussed with the Ambassador issues relating to the development of the Armenian-Russian relations.

“As head of the My Step faction I introduced the Ambassador on the ongoing domestic political developments in our country. The meeting touched upon the ongoing legislative changes. In the context of promoting the bilateral ties we highlighted the role of the parliamentary diplomacy. We also highlighted the importance of joint efforts of Armenia and Russia in fighting the novel coronavirus”, Lilit Makunts said.

She added that during the meeting they also exchanged views on the actions taken to ensure the return of the Armenian and Russian citizens to their home countries under the absence of regular flights these days.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Human rights activist on Firdusi District construction plan: ‘This is a very sad precedent after the revolution’

Panorama, Armenia

A study was conducted on the legal processes concerning Yerevan’s Firdusi (33rd) District, based on which the Transparency International Anti-Corruption Center filed a crime report to the law enforcement agencies last week, Hayk Martirosyan, a legal expert of the center, told a press conference on Friday.

He expressed hope that the preparation of materials on the matter will undergo a proper legal procedure.

“The legal processes concerning the 33rd District started in 2006-2007. In 2008 by the decisions of the government it was taken for state needs, but the project failed to be implemented. At that time many citizens complained that the sales project violated their property rights,” he said.

“After all this, in March 2018, the area was again taken for state needs, acquired by a company founded by Eduard Melikyan, the founder of those organizations involved in previous failed projects. The government refuses to publish the financial guarantees that the companies have provided for the implementation of the project. Based on these processes, the Transparency International Anti-Corruption Center has reported a crime about abuses by officials in the implementation of relevant transactions.

“In particular, the State Committee for Urban Development, which was to announce tenders for the redevelopment of the area with the best urban development solutions, has taken no action in this regard; the government has not reacted to the official negligence of the relevant organization in any way. Taking note of these processes, today the government should have make every effort to make the deals transparent and exclude the involvement of the organizations previously caught in corruption schemes, but we are witnessing the opposite process,” Martirosyan stated.

Human rights activist Nina Karapetyants said she does not have high expectations from the law enforcement agencies. She deplored the attitude of the authorities on the historical habitat, in particular the remarks that “it’s of no cultural value and there are only sheds there.”

“I have heard this statement since the beginning of North Avenue [construction]. What do they compare it to when they claim that, for example, the 100-year-old historical buildings in Yerevan are sheds? If they compare it to the houses of the newly-emerged oligarchs, yes, these are sarays, because these houses do not have gilded toilets or gilded door handles,” said the human rights activist.

Tigran Amiryan, the co-author of the “Firdus: The Memory of a Place” book, its editor-in-chief and a member of an initiative for the protection of the district, said that he has studied the Firdus Destruct for many years, has worked with its residents and various specialists to understand the identity and history of the district. According to him, the district has not only self-made buildings, but also buildings designed by architects, as well as a building of constructivist architecture, which has never received any care.

Executive Director of the Human Rights Research Center, human rights activist Anahit Simonyan said that it is not a matter of one district, but rather a state policy and attitude.

“If the state and state bodies are guided by the protection of the builder’s interests in decision making, especially a builder with whom there are a number of problems, including suspicions of corruption risks, irregularities in the process, this cannot be the policy line offered by the Armenian government,” she said.

In Simonyan’s words, the state should pursue an urban development policy stemming from the right to adequate housing, sufficient social conditions and the right to social protection, as well as protection of cultural rights. She emphasized that urban development is not a business, it is a very important sphere of state policy concerning a number of human rights.

She said they have submitted a letter to lawmakers and the National Assembly committees, as each committee has something to do with the issue.

“I call on the government to restore the legality and human-centered approach of this process, because it has to stop. This is a very sad precedent after the [spring 2018] revolution,” she stressed.

Art worker, Firdusi resident Ara Shahumyan said that everyone took part in the velvet revolution, hoping to build a rule of law country.

“It is simplly absurd for the state to disturb so many people for 200 million drams, especially after the velvet revolution, and keep the wave of injustice high,” he stressed. 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/07/2020

                                        Tuesday, July 7, 2020
Aliyev Slams Karabakh Mediators
        • Heghine Buniatian
Azerbaijan -- President Ilham Aliyev speaks in Ganja, June 25, 2020.
Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev has lambasted the U.S., Russian and French 
mediators trying to broker a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and said 
the most recent Armenian-Azerbaijani talks were fruitless.
In an interview with Azerbaijani television aired on Tuesday, Aliyev denounced 
the mediators co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group for reiterating last week that 
“there is no military solution to the conflict.”
“Their main point is that the problem cannot be solved militarily,” he said. 
“Who said that? We expect more serious, clear and targeted statements from the 
mediators.”
“In essence, no negotiations are held right now,” claimed Aliyev. “The video 
conferences of the [Armenian and Azerbaijani] foreign ministers are meaningless 
and are only leaving the impression that the Minsk Group exists.”
“As I have said before, we will not negotiate for the sake of negotiating and we 
want substantive negotiations without any change in their format. In that case, 
we will participate in them. Otherwise, I see no need for pointless 
negotiations.”
Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian and Elmar Mammadyarov as well as the three 
mediators most recently talked via video link on June 30. They reported no 
progress towards a Karabakh settlement.
In a joint statement issued right after the talks, the Minsk Group co-chairs 
said they urged the conflicting parties to “take additional steps to strengthen 
the ceasefire and to prepare the populations for peace.” They also said the two 
ministers agreed to hold another video conference in July and to meet in person 
“as soon as possible.”
Yerevan and Baku traded bitter recriminations both before and during the latest 
round of peace talks. Speaking at a June 25 meeting with Azerbaijani army 
officers, Aliyev described Armenia’s post-Soviet history as “shameful,” saying 
that his country’s arch-foe was for decades ruled by “criminals and thieves.” He 
also said that the 2018 popular protests that brought Nikol Pashinian to power 
were not a democratic revolution.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry hit back at Aliyev, saying that he leads one of 
the world’s most corrupt and repressive regimes which feels threatened by 
“democratic changes taking place in Armenia.”
Lack Of Quorum Prevents High Court Hearing On Kocharian Case
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- The main meeting room of the Constitutional Court, Yerevan, September 
3, 2019.
Armenia’s Constitutional Court did not make a quorum on Tuesday to start 
hearings on the legality of coup charges brought against former President Robert 
Kocharian.
The court has been in limbo since the Armenian parliament passed late last month 
constitutional changes calling for the immediate dismissal of three of its nine 
judges. They also stipulate that Hrayr Tovmasian must quit as court chairman but 
remain a judge.
Tovmasian and the three ousted justices have rejected the changes as 
unconstitutional, filing relevant appeals in the European Court of Human Rights 
(ECHR).
In what appeared to be a related development, Tovmasian and another remaining 
judge, Arevik Petrosian, went on vacation last week.
Consequently, the majority of the Constitutional Court members did not show up 
for a court session which was due to discuss the case against Kocharian along 
with several other issues.
Kocharian is prosecuted under Article 300.1of Armenia’s Criminal Code dealing 
with “overthrow of the constitutional order.” The accusation rejected by him as 
politically motivated stems from the 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan that 
left ten people dead.
The current code was enacted in 2009. Kocharian’s lawyers maintain that the 
article in question cannot be used retroactively against him. They argue that 
the previous code, which was in force during the dramatic events of March 2008, 
had no clauses relating to “overthrow of the constitutional order” and contained 
instead references to “usurpation of state power.”
Prosecutors say that there are no significant differences between the two 
definitions of a crime allegedly committed by the man who ruled Armenia from 
1998-2008.
Kocharian’s legal team last year asked the Constitutional Court to declare the 
coup charge illegal. A Yerevan judge who initially presided over the 
ex-president’s trial likewise asked the court to pass judgment on the legality 
of the accusation.
The Constitutional Court in turn decided in July 2019 to request an “advisory 
opinion” on the matter from the ECHR as well as the Venice Commission of the 
Council of Europe. The Strasbourg-based court’s Grand Chamber released a lengthy 
and complex opinion in May, while the Venice Commission offered its assessment 
in June.
One of the six remaining Constitutional Court judges, Vahe Grigorian, was 
earlier barred by his colleagues from dealing with the Kocharian case. They 
argued that Grigorian cannot make impartial decisions on the matter because he 
had represented relatives of nine of the ten people killed in March 2008.
One of their current lawyers, Tigran Yegorian, demanded on Tuesday that 
Tovmasian and three other justices be also excluded from the high-profile case 
because of what he described as a conflict of interest and political bias. A 
lawyer representing Kocharian dismissed the demand, saying that Yegorian is not 
in a position to voice such demands.
Another Armenian Nursing Home Hit By COVID-19 Outbreak
        • Satenik Kaghzvantsian
        • Susan Badalian
Armenia -- The entrance to a nursing home in Gyumri, July 7, 2020.
At least 55 elderly people living in a nursing home in Gyumri have been infected 
with the coronavirus following similar outbreaks of the disease reported at 
Armenia’s two other elderly care centers.
A spokeswoman for the state-funded institution, Nune Grigorian, said on Tuesday 
that 37 of them have been hospitalized.
“We also have 12 infected personnel, one of whom was also taken to hospital,” 
she told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “The 18 other [infected residents] are 
asymptomatic and have been isolated along with the [infected] personnel.”
Grigorian did not deny reports that one of the elderly persons has died. “We 
don’t yet know whether [the death] was connected with the coronavirus because 
the patient suffered from a severe pre-existing disease: cancer,” she said.
The Gyumri nursing home has 160 residents and 66 employees looking after them. 
Grigorian insisted that its administration has followed anti-epidemic guidelines 
issued by the health authorities.
Armenia has only three nursing homes where a total of 580 retirees live and 
receive care and, if necessary, medical assistance. All of them were placed in 
strict lockdown in late February even before the authorities registered the 
first coronavirus case in the country.
One of these care centers located in Yerevan was the first to be hit by a 
COVID-19 outbreak in mid-May. At least ten of its residents infected with the 
disease reportedly died as of June 25. The Armenian Ministry of Health said on 
Monday that all others have already recovered and been discharged from hospital.
The other care home, also located in the Armenian capital, reported two dozen 
infections late last month.
Meanwhile, the total number of confirmed coronavirus cases in Armenia rose by 
349 to 29,285 on Tuesday morning. The Ministry of Health also reported that 17 
more people infected with the virus died in the past day.
The ministry said COVID-19 was the primary cause of 12 of those deaths. The 
country’s official death toll from the epidemic thus rose to 503.
Armenia Launches Production Of Kalashnikov Rifles
Armenia -- A worker shows Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian a Kalashnikov AK-103 
rifle assembled at the Neitron company plant in Abovian, July 7, 2020.
An Armenian company has started manufacturing advanced models of Russia’s famous 
Kalashnikov assault rifles which are due to be supplied to Armenia’s armed 
forces and sold abroad.
The Neitron company launched the production operations this month in line with 
an agreement reached by Russia’s Kalashnikov Concern and another Armenian-owned 
firm, Royalsys Engineering, two years ago.
A follow-up deal signed by the Russian small arms manufacturer and Neitron in 
May this year granted the latter a 10-year license to produce Kalashnikov’s 
AK-103 models designed in 1994.
Neitron executives told Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Tuesday that their 
company will assemble 50,000 such guns annually as they showed him around their 
new production facility located near Abovian, a town 15 kilometers north of 
Yerevan.
One of those executives, Igor Gordienko, told the Sputnik news agency last month 
that Neitron will initially use rifle parts supplied by Kalashnikov but plans to 
manufacture them as well in the future.
An Armenian government statement cited Pashinian as welcoming the development 
and saying that it was made possible by Armenia’s close military ties with 
Russia. The Russian ambassador in Yerevan, Sergey Kopyrkin, was among officials 
who accompanied the prime minister during his visit to the new Neitron plant.
Armenia -- An Armenian soldier shoots a Kalashnikov rifle during a military 
exercise in Vayots Dzor province, April 16, 2020.
According to the statement, the AK-103 rifles will be delivered not only to the 
Armenian army but also foreign buyers.
Kalashnikov’s older AK-74 rifles and PK machine guns have long been the army’s 
principal light weapons. The launch of Neutron’s new production operation 
suggests that the Armenian Defense Ministry plans to replace all AK-74s in its 
arsenal with the more modern AK-103 model.
The government statement also revealed that Neitron will pay $24 million to buy 
new Russian equipment for modernizing and expanding its separate production of 
Kalashnikov cartridges. In addition, it said, the company will start producing 
night-vision gun sights and surveillance devices for the Armenian military later 
this year.
Kalashnikov Concern opened an official representation in Yerevan in 2014 at a 
ceremony attended by then Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian. The latter stressed 
the importance of Russian-Armenian agreements allowing Armenian and Russian 
defense companies to supply each other with equipment, assembly parts and other 
materials needed for the production, modernization and repair of various weapons.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Armenian MP compares Nikol Pashinyan with Navalny

News.am, Armenia
July 2 2020

17:58, 02.07.2020
                          

Independent deputy of the National Assembly of Armenia Tigran Urikhanyan has posted the following on his Facebook page:

“When a person who had introduced a parliamentary bill on Armenia’s exit from the Eurasian Economic Union, had considered the Collective Security Treaty Organization a nonsensical organization and had proclaimed Russia as the country to blame for the Four-Day Artsakh War of April 2016 came to power, it was necessary to realize that an Armenophobic nationalist like Navalny would appear on Armenian Public Television someday. It is clear that this is not only a manifestation of contempt towards a strategic partner, but also Armenia’s national and state interests, and balanced manifestation at that. And this is just the beginning.”

Asbarez: ANCA Supporters Host Nationwide Virtual Reception Honoring Sen. Menendez

July 2, 2020

Friends, supporters and leaders of the ANCA joined together virtually to honor Senator Robert Menendez

WASHINGTON—Friends, supporters, and leaders of the Armenian National Committee of America joined together virtually on Sunday, June 28 with U.S. Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) to honor his long-standing legislative leadership on Armenian American issues.

Consistent with Covid-19 health guidelines, the virtual reception was hosted on Zoom by ANCA National Board Member Ani Tchaghlasian, ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian, distinguished attorneys and ANCA supporters John Shahdanian from Old Tappan, New Jersey, Joseph Ariyan from northern New Jersey, as well as ANC of New Jersey activists James and Maral Sahagian.

“It’s an honor to support Senator Menendez, a man who has done so much for Armenians in the United States and in Armenia. We, as a community, must support the public servants who understand history, are on the right side of it, and are not afraid to fight for it,” said Ariyan who co-hosted the event.

“As a proud Armenian-American and grandson of a Genocide survivor, it was my honor to support the Armenian community’s greatest advocate in the U.S. Senate. The fact that he is my home state Senator makes it all that more meaningful. I look forward to Senator Menendez continuing to lead the charge on all issues that are important to Armenians,” said Shahdanian.

Senator Menendez, who has consistently scored an “A+” rating on his ANCA Report Card, serves as the Ranking Democrat on the influential Senate Foreign Relations Committee. A staunch supporter and a long-time friend of the ANCA, his unwavering leadership led to the unanimous passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution (S.Res.150), a bi-partisan measure led by Senators Menendez and Ted Cruz (R-TX).

Senator Menendez was direct and uncompromising in his calls on the Senate to end U.S. complicity in Turkey’s Genocide denial. “The simple threshold question for this body comes to this: Do we recognize a clear case of genocide when it happens, or do we let a country like Turkey determine our own views, determine our own sense of history, determine our own moral obligation, and determine the public record,” said Senator Menendez. “At what point do we say enough is enough? At what point do we simply move forward and acknowledge the truth? The truth is that the Armenian Genocide happened. It is a fact. To deny that is to deny one of the monstrous acts of history. This denial is a stain on the Senate and our country. We have an opportunity to right that wrong and put the U.S. Senate on the right side of history,” continued Senator Menendez, who took to the Senate floor four times in as many weeks to secure the unanimous consent passage of the resolution on December 12, 2019.

Attendees joined the virtual reception on Zoom where they heard from the Senator about his work past and present including his support of U.S. aid to Artsakh for the life-saving de-mining work that the HALO Trust has been doing as well as the re-purposing of $25 million in already appropriated U.S. aid to bolster Armenia’s battle against the COVID-19 pandemic for the Fiscal Year 2021 foreign aid bill.

Attendees engaged with the Senator through a question and answer period during which long-time ANCA leader and public health expert Kim Hekimian, PhD, told the touching story of her mother who was undergoing surgery during Senate consideration of S.Res.150, and whose first question upon awakening was whether the landmark human rights legislation had passed. Hekimian spoke about the importance of the historic vote to not only the generations who were represented on the virtual reception, but for the older generations who had long-awaited for the U.S. government to take a principled position on the issue.

“For over three decades – the ANCA has built a strong and durable relationship with Senator Menendez – based on mutual respect and a shared commitment to justice,” remarked ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian. “From his days as the mayor of Union City, to his service in the New Jersey Legislature and up and until today with his work in the U.S. Congress – Senator Menendez has blazed a brilliant and productive track record championing the Armenian Cause on Capitol Hill.”

“The Senator’s bold leadership last December in passing the Armenian Genocide resolution in the Senate was just the latest example of why the ANCA consistently awards him with our highest rating – an A+. Frankly, if the ANCA had a higher rating – I would urge Senator Menendez get it – because we have no better ally in the U.S. Senate fighting for Armenia and Artsakh,” added Hamparian.

Senator Menendez’ commitment to Artsakh safety and security has been a hallmark of his tenure in both the Senate and House. Most recently, he was joined by 30 Senate colleagues in calling for continued life-saving U.S. demining and rehabilitation assistance for Artsakh.   Alarmed by a U.S. military aid program to Azerbaijan that has “skyrocketed” to more than $120 million over the past three fiscal years, Senator Menendez formally requested that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) provides the Senate Foreign Relations Committee with a detailed report on this assistance program and its compliance with Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act. Enacted in 1992, Section 907 places statutory restrictions and requirements on U.S. taxpayer funding to Azerbaijan until that government takes “demonstrable steps to cease all blockades and other offensive uses of force against Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.”

“It is a great honor to support a brave and principled leader like Senator Menendez who relentlessly fights for justice for all people. His unwavering determination and purpose is a force to be reckoned with – a true champion of all Armenians,” added Maral Sahagian, who along with her husband James, were co-hosts of the event.

Senator Menendez, whose outstanding track record of support on key Armenian American community concerns began with his election as mayor of Union City in 1986, continued through his time in the New Jersey state legislature from 1988 to 1992, and flourished on a national scale following his 1992 election to the U.S. House of Representatives. As a member of the House International Relations Committee, then-Congressman Menendez voted in favor of the Armenian Genocide Resolution in 2000 and 2005, setting the stage for future House consideration of the measure. During his years in the U.S. House, he is best remembered for his leadership in maintaining Section 907 restrictions on U.S. assistance to Azerbaijan in 1997.

He continued to elevate Armenian American priorities when he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2006. Whether he is scrutinizing U.S. ambassadorial nominees to Turkey and Azerbaijan regarding their positions on the Armenian Genocide or mediating a lasting peace for the Republic of Artsakh, Senator Menendez has been a stalwart leader on Armenian American concerns.

Azerbaijani press: Azerbaijani Community of Nagorno-Karabakh sends letter to UNHCR Special Envoy Angelina Jolie

  •  

  • NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT

Head of the International Relations Department of the Azerbaijani Community of the Nagorno-Karabakh Region of Azerbaijan Aybaniz Ismayilova has addressed a letter to UNHCR Special Envoy for Refugees Angelina Jolie on behalf of the community’s women on the occasion of the World Refugee Day which was marked on June 20. 

The letter reads:

“We have been watching and witnessing your dedicated service to the cause of refugees as a humanitarian, philanthropist and a Goodwill Ambassador for many years now. The way you care and support these people affected by displacement as you visit different conflict regions, areas of famine, ecological catastrophes, and offer helping hand in easing their plight, advocate for their rights is highly commendable and noble. It was those efforts and your engagement that inspired us to write this letter to you.

Our story is about Sarabayim Mustafayeva, a 96-year-old lady who currently lives in Baku, the capital city of Azerbaijan. Since March of this year, Baku has grown quiet – mostly the wind walks the streets of this “City of Winds”, eagerly searching for people among buildings, who shelter themselves at their homes to protect themselves in these trying times of the pandemic.

Sarabayim watches the streets from her window with a calm look – her relationship with confinement has a three-decade long history by now. She spent almost 70 years of her life admiring a different scenery: lush forests of mountains and grazing cattle. Life in her native village of Baharli, in the Zangilan region of Azerbaijan, had a unique pace, feel, touch and smell, and not a day goes by without her mentioning it. Although the memories fade away in her aging mind with every passing year, the determination to return home only gets stronger. Her days end with watching the evening news on the TV, putting her hand to her ear, not to miss the long-awaited headline about the end of the illegal occupation of Zangilan. In her other hand Sarabayim squeezes the key to the house she left there.

The disruption brought by the current pandemic is not the first in Sarabayim’s life. A mother of seven children – five of her own and two from the previous marriage of her husband, Sarabayim’s life got turned upside down at the age of 38, when she became a widow. It meant raising the kids and educating them all by herself.

By the time that mission was accomplished, and she was ready for her well-deserved peaceful retirement, another disruption came in the form of a forced exile. In 1993 she joined hundreds of thousands of other Azerbaijanis, who were expelled from their homelands, the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.

Sarabayim moved in with her son’s family who already lived in Baku at the time. But, as much as she tried, she couldn’t find a place for herself pacing all day between the concrete walls of her new residence. She never unpacked her bags, never let herself get comfortable, and never made peace with her “sophisticated cage” without the orchard, trees, and the mountains of Zangilan.

For us here, Sarabayim Mustafayeva is a symbol of longing, expectation, and hope. The symbol of the tens of thousands of displaced grandparents, who spend their days, months, and years in confinement waiting for the day of return to their homeland, and houses which they locked “for a bit” till the speedy return. For them, what they left behind wasn’t just the houses. Because for them, a “house” is more than just four walls, stone and wood – it has a metaphysical meaning, what we, here in Azerbaijan, call an “ocaq”- a “hearth”, the basis that spreads warmth, light and life to us and our descendants, the place where the guardian spirits of ancestors come to check on us, the fire that we keep going with our values, beliefs and prayers.

Sarabayim is waiting to return to that “hearth”, refusing to adapt to city life. Many of her contemporaries passed away in exile, laying the foundation for “the IDP cemeteries” wherever they were scattered. But she sees herself as their Ambassador, resilient and determined to lay foot again on the soil of her Zangilan. Only then the spirits, just like the people, will find peace, and Sarabayim will finish her fight.

Until then, she calmly watches the streets of Baku overtaken by pandemic, not worrying about the virus and determined to “save up her death” till the day she returns to her occupied village.

Nearly a million people in Azerbaijan share Sarabayim’s fate in one way or the other. These people are united by their plight of becoming IDPs and refugees as a result of the Armenian aggression and illegal occupation for nearly 30 years. Although a ceasefire was signed 26 years ago, this conflict keeps taking lives in occasional clashes on the contact line. These shootings also kill civilians residing along the contact line.

During the first five years of the war, about one million people were displaced. They ended up scattered across the country living in tents, box cars and dugouts. In those inhumane conditions’ babies were born, seniors died, kids matured fast and two entire generations struggled with hunger and poor living conditions. Hundreds of thousands of children were deprived of normal nutrition, education and childhood. The tent camps lacked basic medical care, people contracted various diseases, died of sunstroke, cold, starvation or even snake bites in the open fields.   

Their sufferings have faded in the background of the international media agenda. They live patiently, still having faith in the justice of the international community. Meanwhile, they are turning simply into unfortunate statistics of the refugees around the world. This life of displacement, which has been lasting for three decades now, shaped the destiny of several generations. But enough is enough!

Our plea to you is to help us make our voices heard in this politics-driven world, where humanity deserves a fighting chance. We would very much like you to hear our stories and convey to the world community where we left our childhoods, youths, homes and memories, the graves of our loved ones, and our peace.

More than 10 years ago, you made a short remark to an Azerbaijani TV correspondent promising to come to Azerbaijan. We were thrilled to hear that a celebrity of your caliber will travel all the way here to see our truth. We are hoping once the pandemic is over, you can make that trip, and see the beautiful region of Caucasus and Azerbaijan return its peace and prosperity it has been known for over the centuries.”

EPP regrets approval of constitutional amendments by Armenia’s ruling majority

Panorama, Armenia

The European People’s Party (EPP) regrets that Armenia’s ruling majority passed the constitutional amendments running counter to the recommendations of the Venice Commission.

“EPP regrets that the ruling majority in Armenia has voted on the proposal for constitutional amendments in spite of the Venice Commission underscoring that it is not in line with its recommendations,” the party said on Twitter.

In another tweet, EPP expressed hope that Armenia, by reforming the country, will strengthen cooperation with the Venice Commission and strengthen the rule of law, democratic standards and protect the independence of the judiciary.

 

Ex-President Kocharyan to be released on bail

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 17:39,

YEREVAN, JUNE 18, ARMENPRESS. The Criminal Court of Appeal approved the appeal of attorneys of 2nd President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan on changing the precautionary measure selected against the ex-President.

Kocharyan will be released on bail in the amount of 2 billion drams.

Robert Kocharyan has been remanded into custody on June 25, 2019. Kocharyan is charged with overthrowing the Constitutional Order during the 2008 March protests in Yerevan.

Police in Armenia detain dozens at rally after MP Gagik Tsarukyan summoned for questioning

Public Radio of Armenia