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Armenian journalists improve their reporting of violence against women and domestic violence

Council of Europe
Dec 3 2021
YEREVAN 26-27/11/2021

Within the 16 days of activism against gender-based violence, a two-day online training seminar for journalists representing different TV channels, online and print media of Armenia was organised.

This was the third training organised for media representatives of Armenia to enhance their knowledge and skills on the principles of media reporting on the topics of violence against women and domestic violence on how media can help raise awareness about violence against women and domestic violence. Topics included techniques for  interviewing victims/survivors of violence, use of background information and statistics to present violence against women as a societal problem rather than as an individual or personal tragedy, facts and reality vs. myths and stereotypes, existing national legislation, policies and practices, as well as international instruments, such as the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Domestic Violence (known as the Istanbul Convention).

Sophie Bostanchyan, Head of the Human Trafficking and Women issues Department of the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs of Armenia said: “It is of utmost importance that all institutions, including the media, unite their efforts to ensure true and unbiased attitude to the victims of violence against women. Coverage of this topic requires a sensitive approach, proper awareness raising of the legal framework and facts, as well as avoiding secondary victimisation”, added Ms Bostanchyan.

The training was organised within the framework of the Council of Europe project “Path towards Armenia’s ratification of the Council of Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence” in partnership with the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs of Armenia.



VP confirms Turkish intelligence was involved in Karabakh war

PanArmenian, Armenia
Dec 4 2021

PanARMENIAN.Net – Turkey’s vice president Fuat Oktay has said the country’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT) played an active role in the Nagorno-Karabakh war in 2020, helping shape the balances in the field, Nordic Monitor reports.

Oktay made a presentation on the annual activities of state institutions operating under the Presidency at parliament’s Planning and Budget Committee on November 26. Stating that MİT is a “source of pride” for the country, Oktay told deputies that the organization renders great service to Turkey’s interests with the operations it carries out abroad.

“In many regions such as Syria, Libya, Upper Karabakh and most recently Afghanistan, the organization has carried out important work that protects our national interests and shapes the balances in the field in favor of our country, in line with our state policy,” he said.

It is no secret that Turkey supported its ally Azerbaijan militarily, but no official statement has ever been made regarding the involvement of Turkish intelligence in the war.

In the war against Artsakh (Karabakh), Turkey supported Azerbaijan militarily, also by transferring terrorist mercenaries from the Middle East to fight against Karabakh. Armenia was the first to report on Turkey’s deployment of thousands of Syrian fighters to Azerbaijan. International media publications followed suit, as did reactions from France, Russia, Iran and Syria. The Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army has already unveiled footage from the interrogation of two such terrorists captured on the front.

Armenian medals featured at international art exhibition in Tokyo

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 2 2021

Armenian Ambassador to Japan Areg Hovhannisyan participated in the opening ceremony of the International Art Meda Exhibition (FIDEM) in Tokyo, the Embassy of Armenia in Japan informs.

Works by Armenian medalist Gurgen Hakobyan are also represented at the exhibition.

Held at Hotel Gajoen Tokyo, the exhibition will continue through December 16.

FIDEM’s – International Art Medal Federation – aims to promote and diffuse the art of medals at international level, to make the art known and to guarantee recognition of its place among other arts by increasing awareness of the art, history and technology of medals.

FIDEM organizes a congress every two years and an international exhibition of the art of medals in order to promote exchanges among artists and to make their work known internationally.

FIDEM publishes the magazine ‘Médailles’, which contains information on FIDEM activities and the minutes of each congress. FIDEM members also receive The Medal magazine, which is normally published twice a year.


‘I will not rest until we return many Armenian captives home’ – US Congressman

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 12:07,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. During the congress of the Armenian National Committees and Offices, US Congressman Adam Schiff said in a video message that currently thousands of people in Armenia and Artsakh continue living under the continuous and dangerous threats from their neighbors.

“Right now thousands of people in Armenia and Artsakh live under constant and dangerous threats from their neighbors, at the same time mourning the loss of their loved ones – their neighbors, family members, who are being killed, captured, displaced, tortured and illegally arrested. As co-chair of the Congressional Armenian Caucus I will not rest until we return numerous captives, refugees to their homes and bring final and fair peace to the region”, the Congressman said in his remarks.

He stated that they will continue to cooperate with the Armenian National Committee of America to support and strengthen democracy in Armenia and Artsakh and deepen the ties between the peoples of Armenia and the United States.

“I will always stand by the people of Armenia and Artsakh”, the Congressman said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

The Conflicts of Nagorno-Karabakh: Armenia and Azerbaijan

Nov 29 2021

by Nicholas Dawson, Forecast International.

Armenia–Azerbaijan border. Image – – Wikimedia Commons

Historically there have been multiple regions that have been contested by various powers. Such examples include Alsace-Lorraine between Germany and France as well as Kashmir Province between India and Pakistan. In Eurasia, there is a conflict that has brought about a regional rivalry which has led to multiple armed conflicts. In 2020 there was recently a major conflict again in the region, which has led to an Azeri victory and Armenia’s forces receiving heavy losses. This November tensions between the two have grown again as Azerbaijan has begun using its territorial gains from the 2020 conflict to create more outposts and checkpoints which has hurt transportation of supplies and citizens. This has led to aggression between both forces as Azeri soldiers have moved and taken Armenian outposts while Armenian dissenters have attacked Azeri checkpoints and even used explosives against them.

Before observing the current conditions of the conflict, it’s important to understand why this all started and the importance of Nagorno-Karabakh. Nagorno-Karabakh is located in south-western Azerbaijan and is the home of both Armenians and Azeris. The region has been suffering from ethnic tensions between the two groups which eventually led to their first conflict. The first event that would lead to disagreement on the region would be the fall of the Ottoman Empire during World War I. This disagreement led to the first war which took place in 1920. At this point, the First Republic of Armenia warred with the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic and were at the time newly formed nations.

The war started when Armenian secessionists tried to declare independence which put the Azeri population on high alert. The Armenians would have the advantage throughout the war, but eventually, an intervention by the British would start negotiations on a potential agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The plan was to have an initial deal for a ceasefire with continued negotiations at the Paris Peace Conference. The delay between the negotiations led to the Shusha massacre conducted against the Armenians, killing between 500 to 20,000. The attack was done after the Armenian half of the police force killed the Azeri half during holiday celebrations. During this time the Soviet Army had beaten the White Army in Russia and marched down to Azerbaijan. Since the war would weaken both nations severely, communists would take over both countries and have them become Soviet satellite states in 1920. Nagorno-Karabakh would be assigned and demarcated to Azerbaijan by the Soviet Union, despite the majority Armenian population. The region would eventually be an autonomous region within communist-run Azerbaijan.

Right before the Soviet Union’s collapse, the two rivals would go on to start another war in 1988 over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh once again. At first, there was once again another peaceful protest and resistance with the Enclave voting to unite with Armenia after a parliamentary referendum. This was boycotted by the Azeris in the region who instead wanted independence. The resulting protests and discrepancy between the ethnic groups would eventually escalate to ethnic cleansing, despite initial attempts by the Soviet Union to work the issues out and find a compromise. Full-scale fighting would begin in 1992 and escalate due to the Soviet MVD’s withdrawal from Armenia and Azerbaijan. This withdrawal led to large amounts of munitions being left and given to the countries, heavily arming both sides. By the end of the war, Armenia had a clear path to Baku after several major victories which led Azerbaijan to seek a ceasefire using the new Russian Federation to help mediate. It would be successful and in 1994 the Bishkek Protocol, which was a provisional ceasefire agreement was signed. While the first war was more of a stalemate between the two powers, this conflict was a complete Armenian victory that resulted in significant territorial gains as well as a de facto unification of Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Nagorno-Karabakh suffered multiple attacks and ethnic targeting, sometimes the violence nearly broke out into war, including the period of 2008 to 2010 which saw 74 soldiers killed on both sides as stated by a policy briefing by the International Crisis Group. The United Nations during this time also demanded that Armenia withdraw their occupying forces from Nagorno-Karabakh since at that time Nagorno-Karabakh was known as the Republic of Artsakh and declared itself independent, albeit very close to Armenia in geopolitics. More soldiers and civilians would be killed up until the war in 2020, with hundreds of soldiers dead over that time for both sides. Everything would boil over into the recent 2020 conflict which would last for six weeks, with the ceasefire being signed in November.

The war started as an Azerbaijani offensive looking to take back territories lost from the 1988-1994 war, using the reasoning that those territories are internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan. What started as artillery bombardments between both sides would later become a bloody six-week war that would be an outstanding Azerbaijani victory. This would be due to the success of new Bayraktar TB2 UAVs being used by the Azeri Armed Forces which were easily able to avoid the older air defenses in Armenia, which were still using older Soviet weapons. Azerbaijan would be able to regain its lost territory but also control the region around Nagorno-Karabakh. According to the Military Balance for 202, Armenia has far less manpower than their rival Azerbaijan, with an estimated 44,800 troops compared to Azerbaijan’s nearly 67,000 troops. Defense spending is also in the Azeri’s favor, as between 2020-2021 the Azeris spent an estimated $966 million in defense while the Armenians only had $600 million. This discrepancy in spending and manpower allowed Azerbaijan to have the upper hand.

The war was influenced by three major parties: Russia, Israel, and Turkey. Russia technically had a neutral stance during the war, but multiple times it was seen that Russia was trying to broker peace while also silently assisting Armenia, which would lead to one of Russia’s Mi-24s being shot down by the Azeri Army. More importantly, Turkey was a major factor that led to Azerbaijan’s victory. Turkey helped arm the Azeri Army by supplying them with the Bayraktar TB2 UAV.

Turkey has always been a close ally to Azerbaijan, and even during the previous wars Armenia always guarded their border against Turkish aggression. Part of the hostility between Turkey and Armenia stems from the Armenian genocide during World War I. The TB2s would be devastating against the Armenian forces due to their outdated anti-air defense. The dominance of the UAVs led to many Armenian losses in their tank divisions, artillery, armored fighting vehicles, and electronics. While there are no definitive statistics on their losses, estimated losses include 253 tanks destroyed, 78 armored vehicles destroyed, 83 IFVs destroyed, 275 artillery pieces destroyed, and 17 radars destroyed. This does not count the equipment that was damaged. Armenian losses were devastating and the Azeri Army didn’t lose nearly as much.

Israel has been a major Azerbaijanian ally since 1992, which has recently flared up tensions with Iran due to Israeli influence being close to their border. This relationship between Israel and Azerbaijan is one of the few relationships between Israel and a Muslim majority nation that has led to strategic and economic cooperation. One important development that also helped in Azerbaijan’s overwhelming victory in the recent war was their purchase of Elbit Systems Sky Strikers. This marked the first time Israel sold the Sky Striker as an export to a foreign nation. Along with the Sky Striker, Azerbaijan also purchased the “Harop”, which is a suicide drone made by the Israel Aerospace Industries and uses a warhead that weighs 23kg.

After negotiating a ceasefire with Russia once again acting as the mediator, both sides attempted to start working together to come up with a solution to this issue regarding the region. The price of loss was heavy for the Armenians as many started to distrust their government, and protests erupted in the country. It got so far as the Armenian populace would occupy the parliament, leading to various arrests including a potential assassination plot against the Prime Minister, and resignations from government officials. In Azerbaijan, celebrations took place as the government started planning to return displaced Azeris back to the regained regions.

The peace wouldn’t last long, as during 2021, nearly a year later, violence would once again escalate between both sides. While the governments have been trying to work together, geopolitical problems have led to rising tensions. Azerbaijan and Iran had a major disagreement as Iranian trucks traveled through Azerbaijan to get to Nagorno-Karabakh. Iran has traditionally been friendlier with Armenia than Azerbaijan, and it led to the Azeri outposts arresting and detaining Iranian truckers. As tensions rose between the two, insofar as Iran holding military exercises right on the Azeri border, the Azeris created more outposts and border checkpoints which led to civilians and supply chains being disrupted and harassed. The reason for this expansion is that Armenia is once again being aggressive and that creating these checkpoints are needed. This would lead to more violence, as explosives would be thrown at one such checkpoint in Nagorno-Karabakh, and there are supposedly videos of Azeri troops going into territories and taking Armenian outposts. The skirmishes have been the deadliest since the 2020 war, and both Armenian and Azeri Ministries of Defense have had a war of words.

Once again the region potentially sees conflict, but at this point, both governments have condemned the attacks and are reportedly close to reaching an agreement on demarcating their border while opening up new transportation routes. Additionally, both sides agreed to a ceasefire on the border as they try to de-escalate the situation. This is an important time for both countries as they have a chance to potentially come to agreements that can calm hostilities and potentially lead to the normalization of relations. Such an achievement would greatly help the Eurasian region as a geopolitical hotspot would finally begin to cool down. The main question remains how the regional partners of those countries: Georgia, Israel, Russia, Turkey, and Iran will handle the situation and what they will do in the region. Geopolitics along with ethnic hostilities could once again bring about conflict between the two battered nations. It will be up to their respective governments to ease the scars of war and try to maintain peace, or else there is a potential for continued violence and escalation.

Armenpress: COVID-19: Armenian health authorities confirm 517 new cases

COVID-19: Armenian health authorities confirm 517 new cases

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 11:07,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 27, ARMENPRESS. 517 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the last 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 337,552, the Armenian Ministry of Healthcare said Saturday morning.

The total number of recoveries reached 314,020. (1403 in the last 24 hours).

6631 tests were administered.

26 patients died, bringing the death toll to 7485. This number doesn’t include the deaths of 1438 other individuals infected with COVID-19 who died from co-morbidities, according to health authorities.

As of November 27 the number of active cases stood at 14,579.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Azerbaijani press: "Democracy" summit or clear example of double standards

By Ayya Lmahamad

The “Summit for Democracy” initiated by U.S. President Joe Biden is scheduled for December 9-10 in the virtual format.

As Biden himself said he wants to gather the leaders of “various democratic countries of the world” on a single platform for a virtual summit in support of democracy. He stated that his goal is to “set a positive agenda for democratic renewal around the world”, adding that the defining question of the modern era is whether democratic countries can come together to achieve real results in a rapidly changing world.

It is worth noting here that democracy is a form of government in which the people have the authority to deliberate and decide legislation (direct democracy), or to choose governing officials to do so (representative democracy). Such a system of government is based on three pillars: the power of the people, freedom, and the rule of law.

The question is raised of how a country like Armenia, where human rights are grossly violated, is invited to the summit, and countries like Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Hungary are not.

A few days ago, UN Human Rights Committee experts expressed concern about undue legal restrictions on the freedom of peaceful assembly, unjustifiable police interference in peaceful demonstrations as well as arbitrary and prolonged detention of demonstrators.

Summit – clear example of double standards

In an interview with the local media, Azerbaijani MP Vugar Iskandarov said that it is ridiculous that countries such as Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Hungary are not invited to the summit, where the level of democracy is much higher than that in the majority of invited countries.

The MP noted that the organization of such a summit by the U.S. is itself already absurd. He stated that by organizing it, the U.S. wants to present itself to the world as a “patron of democracy”.

“By organizing such a summit, the U.S. wants to present itself to the world as a ‘patron of democracy’, as if the U.S. is the guardian of democracy and not all the countries of the world. While we all remember what happened in the last U.S. presidential election when Joe Biden tried to beat Trump. Opinion polls show that U.S. citizens still favor Trump over Biden, and Trump is still saying in his statements that he will not accept Biden’s results. So where is democracy?” he said.

“Divide and conquer” policy

Political scientist Shabnam Hasanova told the local media that the U.S-organized summit amid growing problems of democracy in this country is aimed at dividing the world into camps based on the “divide and conquer” policy.

“The world has witnessed in recent years that U.S. intentions to ‘embrace democracy’ in Syria, Yemen, Iraq, Libya, other Muslim states in the Middle East have led to tragedies and bloodshed,” she said.

The invitation of Armenia, which at the state level supports terror, to the summit, and the absence of Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Hungary from the upcoming event, create a clear idea of the criteria by which the event’s participants were selected, the analyst added.

Biased approach

Commenting on the absence of Azerbaijan and Turkey in the list of guests invited to the summit, American analyst Paul Goble considered such a decision by Biden strange.

“As for the criteria of inviting [countries] to the upcoming summit, I do not have much understanding. I think the U.S. bases its decision on the assessments of human rights activists from different countries, mainly those opposed to Azerbaijan and Turkey,” the analyst told the local media.

He noted that this summit is not the best way to promote democracy, given that there are no countries in the world without problems in this direction. Goble added that promoting democracy and supporting countries on this path is laudable, but it is not easy to implement this in practice.

“In the early 1990s, the U.S. held a summit like this in the hope that it would encourage countries to move in what the U.S. believed was the right direction. This year, the number of countries participating is comparatively smaller, indicating a decline in interest in the event. I don’t think that such meetings are the best way to promote democratic values, given that there have always been and always will be problems with democracy,” he said.

Armenian diaspora

The Baku-based news website Day.az stated that how Armenia ended up among democracies is not a difficult question.

“No need to go deep into the previous years, it is enough to see what has been happening and continues to happen in Washington-Armenian diaspora relations over the past year. The curtsies of American diplomacy towards Yerevan, the endless anti-Azerbaijani discussions and decisions made at the insistence of the Armenian lobby speak for themselves,” the website stated.

Another Baku-based news website noted that the fact that, for example, Iraq and Congo received invitations to the summit, but Hungary, Azerbaijan and Turkey did not is absurd.

“It turns out that if the leadership of a country pursues a foreign policy that disagrees with the U.S. position, it automatically becomes an outcast and has no right to its own, different from the U.S. opinion. Those countries that pursue independent policies aimed at protecting their national interests are put on the list of ‘undeserving’ and ‘undemocratic’ ones,” the website said.

The selective choice of countries participating in the Biden-led “democracy” summit suggests that America and its leader are fundamentally distorting the concept of democracy by forcing it to certain limits.

Members of European Parliament condemn “borderisation” attempts observed since Azeri incursion into Armenia

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 17:20,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. The European Parliament’s Chair of the Delegation for relations with the South Caucasus, MEP Marina Kaljurand, the European Parliament’s Standing Rapporteur on Armenia, MEP Andrey Kovatchev, and the European Parliament’s Standing Rapporteur on Azerbaijan, MEP Željana Zovko released a joint statement following the Azerbaijani attack on Armenia on November 16. 

“We are seriously concerned by yesterday’s heavy fighting, which followed the recent increase in tension on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The military operation launched by Azerbaijan in response to alleged provocations amounts to the worst violation to-date of last year’s 9 November ceasefire agreement, leaving an as yet unconfirmed number of killed, wounded and captured soldiers. We urge the rapid de-escalation of the situation and welcome the engagement of European Council President and the reported Russian-mediated ceasefire. We reiterate that any possible disagreements about the border must be addressed through negotiations in a border delimitation and demarcation process, not through the use of force and unilateral actions. We condemn any attempts at “borderisation”, as observed since the incursion of Azerbaijani troops into Armenian territory on 12 May. We support and call for the opening of economic and transport connections as foreseen in the 9 November ceasefire agreement, which would be highly beneficial for the entire region. This includes the connection between the western regions of Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic. To succeed, the parties should follow the text of the agreement and avoid a too extensive interpretation. Moreover, we are concerned by reports of hindered traffic on roads that connect Armenian towns and villages through Azerbaijani territory and believe that such behaviour contradicts the spirit of this agreement and unduly hampers the lives of local citizens. We also regret that despite numerous calls from the international community, including the European Parliament resolution of 20 May 2021, many Armenian detainees held in connection with the conflict have yet to be released, and we renew our appeal to the Azerbaijani authorities on this issue. We also reiterate our call to exchange all up-to-date maps of minefields to permit civilians to return to former conflict regions Once again, we recall the EU’s commitment to support confidence-building measures and to address any issues at the negotiating table, in particular through the resumption of negotiations on a lasting conflict settlement and the future status of the Nagorno-Karabakh region in the process led by Minsk Group Co-Chairs,” the MEPs said in the statement.

Asbarez: SAS Awards Travel, Research Grants to Graduate Students for Fall 2021

Society for Armenian Studies logo

The Society for Armenian Studies has selected its awardees for its Graduate Research and Conference Grants Program for M.A. and Ph.D. Students for Fall 2021. Established in 2019, the aim of the Grants Program is to provide resources for graduate students to conduct research and present papers at conferences. Grants of up to $1000 are awarded semi-annually to eligible graduate students. The Fall 2021 group of applicants was chosen by a selection committee composed of members of the SAS Executive Council.

Haley Zovickian is an M.A. student in the Department of Sociology at Columbia University, N.Y., working on Armenian-American identity as seen through critical race theory. “I am so grateful to the Society for Armenian Studies for their support of my research on critical race theory and Armenian racialization,” said Zovickian. “Thanks to the Society, I will be able to bring the experiences of the Armenian community into academic discourse on race in the United States. I am truly humbled and honored to receive this generous opportunity.”

Daniel Ohanian is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History at the University of California, Los Angeles working on dissertation titled: “Church of Armenia, Church of Rome: Faith, Print, and Power in Ottoman-Armenian History, 1688–1717.” “I am pursuing a PhD in history from UCLA, where my dissertation is supervised by Dr. Sebouh Aslanian,” said Ohanian. “The SAS Graduate Research Grant is helping me fund a three-month research trip to France, where I will be investigating Ottoman-Armenian history in various archives and libraries. Specifically, I will be looking into the Armenian and French missionaries who worked to spread Roman Catholicism among Ottoman Armenians around the year 1700 and the various reactions to their work. French institutions are home to some of the richest collections of letters and reports about this history, and I am grateful to the Society for Armenian Studies for helping me access them,” he added.

Aram Ghoogasian is a doctoral candidate at the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University working on the reading culture across the Armenian world in the mid-nineteenth century. “The grant from the Society for Armenian Studies will allow me to visit the Mardigian, Boyadjian, and Demirjibashian libraries in the Greater Boston area this coming spring,” said Ghoogasian. “My work in these institutions will contribute to my dissertation research on the effects of the industrialization of printing on Armenian language and culture. I am incredibly grateful for the SAS’s support – especially coming off a year in which travel was difficult and uncertain – for my own work and that of other early career scholars in the field.”

Hazal Ozdemir is a doctoral student in the Department of History at Northwestern University. Her dissertation explores Armenian circular mobility between the Ottoman Empire and the United States between 1896-1908. “It is a great honor to be a recipient of the SAS Grant,” remarked Ozdemir. “The generous assistance of the SAS will enable me to travel to Paris. Due to this significant grant, I can carry out research in the AGBU Nubar Library for my dissertation project, titled “They Vowed to Never Return: Photographic Documentation and Ottoman Armenian Mobility at the End of Empire.” Financial support of the SAS is very important for graduate students to pursue their academic goals.”

Ruben Davtyan is doctoral candidate at the International Max Planck Research School for the Anthropology, Archaeology and History of Eurasia (IMPRS ANARCHIE) working on the impacts of the Near East and Eurasian nomads in the South Caucasus and the representation of local elites during the Middle Iron Age. He was awarded the Nina G. Garsoïan Graduate Research Grant for Ancient and Early Medieval Armenian History.

“I would like to thank the SAS for supporting my research,” said Davtyan. “My Ph.D. thesis focuses on the Iron Age tombs of the well-known necropolis of Lori Berd, in the north of Armenia. Kings of Urartu waged several military campaigns against Etiuni, an administrative confederation, which Lori Berd presumably belonged to. I examine the impact on the material assemblage from burial context, where not only separate objects of Urartian repertoire did reach Lori Berd, but also items and even practices of Urartian origin were locally imitated. These phenomena were, however, limited to the obviously large and rich burials. Since the majority of the objects are not published, my work will contribute to the archaeology in Armenia of Urartian period,” he added.

Lori Pirinjian is a doctoral student in the Department Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at the University of California, Los Angeles working on how Armenia’s “anti-gender” movement uses national rhetoric as a stage for the struggle for regional political power between the Russian Federation and the West. “It is an honor to receive the SAS Travel Grant,” said Pirinjian. “I will be putting the funds toward my upcoming summer travel to Armenia in order to gain valuable face-time with my research constituents. These types of in-person, on the ground interactions are an irreplaceable part of my research, and it is thanks to the generosity of the SAS that I will be able to see this through.”

“This year we had the largest pool of applicants,” noted SAS President Bedross Der Matossian. “Due to our tight budget, we were not able to support all of them. The awardees are conducting novel research in the field of Armenian Studies in the general understanding. We are extremely happy that we are able to support our graduate students in these difficult times. I would like to specifically thank the Armenian Chairs and Programs Directors and other Armenian Institutions for supporting us in fulfilling this objective. We hope to raise more money in the future in order to fund more graduate students.”

The next application cycle will have a deadline of April 15, 2022.

The SAS Graduate and Research Grant was made possible through the generous institutional support of the Armenian Studies Program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; the Meghrouni Family Presidential Chair in Armenian Studies, University of California, Irvine; the Hovannisian Chair of Modern Armenian History, University of California, Los Angeles; the Arthur H. Dadian and Ara Oztemel Chair of Armenian Art & Architecture, Tufts University; the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR); the Armenian Communities Department, Gulbenkian Foundation; the Armenian Studies Program, California State University, Fresno; the Institute of Armenian Studies, University of Southern California; the Krikor and Clara Zohrab Information Center, and the AGBU Nubar Library, Paris. The Nina G. Garsoïan Graduate Research Grant for Ancient and Early Medieval Armenian History is supported by Dr. Levon Avdoyan.

The Society of Armenian Studies is an international body, composed of scholars and students, whose aims are to promote the study of Armenian culture and society, including history, language, literature, and social, political, and economic questions; to facilitate the exchange of scholarly information pertaining to Armenian studies around the world; and to sponsor panels and conferences on Armenian studies.

For membership information or more information on the Society for Armenian Studies, please visit the SAS website. If you are interested in helping the SAS Graduate Research and Conference Grants Program please contact Bedross Der Matossian @ [email protected].

Sports: Thomas Müller handed Germany captaincy as Hansi Flick eyes seventh straight win ahead of Armenia clash

Bayern Munich News and Commentary
Nov 13 2021


Having dismantled 10-men Liechtenstein in a nine-goal fest, Germany prepare to conclude the year with a victory over Armenia.

Photo by Matthias Hangst/Bongarts/Getty Images

Germany boast a perfect record in World Cup qualifiers so far and given the recent form of upcoming opposition Armenia, they look all but set to cruise to another win on Sunday. Bundestrainer Hansi Flick, nevertheless, remained cautious of Henrikh Mkhitaryan-led team’s ability to score on the break.

“Armenia are very strong on the counter attack, so we’ll need to be very alert in defence,” said Flick (as captured by DFB’s twitter account). “Our aim is to end this year with a win, of course.”

While the majority of the Bayern Munich contingent has returned home, Flick will still have his MVP pulling the strings for Die Mannschaft on Sunday. The 56-year old confirmed that Thomas Müller, who now sits ninth in Germany’s all-time goalscoring charts, is set to wear the captain’s armband in Manuel Neuer’s absence.

“Thomas isn’t someone to push himself into the spotlight, he prefers to support the team and fire the lads up,” praised Flick as he performed his customary duty of promoting the #MullerMafia agenda. “He’s a really important player for us, and he’ll captain the side against Armenia.”