Armenian army chief meets with U.S. top brass in Washington D.C.

 11:55,

YEREVAN, JULY 19, ARMENPRESS. The Chief of the General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces, First Deputy Minister of Defense, Lieutenant General Edward Asryan held meetings on July 18 with United States Navy Admiral,  Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Christopher W. Grady and United States Air Force General,  Chief of staff of the Air Force Charles Q. Brown Jr. in Washington.

The current course of the Armenian-American defense partnership, upcoming programs, joint events, introduction of a professional sergeant system and the Mission Command concept, as well as possibilities for broader cooperation in the air force sector and a number of issues related to regional security were discussed, the ministry of defense said in a readout.

Artsakh calls for tribunal for Azeri regime, international recognition based on Remedial Secession to prevent genocide

 13:39,

YEREVAN, JULY 19, ARMENPRESS. The Speaker of Parliament of Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) Artur Tovmasyan has called on the international community to launch a special criminal tribunal for the leadership of Azerbaijan regarding their unprecedented violence and crimes against humanity in Nagorno Karabakh.

“By creating the most sophisticated concentration camp in a territory of nearly 3000 square kilometers, Azerbaijan has been testing the latest achievements of science on the citizens of the Artsakh (NKR) Republic since 12 December 2022, aimed at dehumanizing an entire nation, the population of the Republic of Artsakh,” Tovmasyan said in a statement.

“The population of 120+30 (forcefully displaced) thousand of a freedom-loving country is being subjected to humiliation, famine and threats of physical extermination every day for eight months, living without electricity, gas, fuel and medication. After WWII, when the international community condemned and stipulated provisions in international law ruling out the Nazi Germany’s crimes in the future, it was difficult to imagine that our people would face the threat of physical extermination in the 21st century with new methods, and that it wouldn’t even receive an intervention by the international community to prevent a great human tragedy,” reads the statement addressed to the international community.

“At the same time, taking into account the provisions of international law related to violence and aggression by an aggressor country against self-proclaimed independent countries, we call on responsible and relevant international intergovernmental institutions to launch the process of international recognition of the Artsakh Republic, as the most practical way to prevent genocide and the forced displacement of our people from our homeland,” he added.

Tovmasyan called on international intergovernmental institutions to launch a special criminal tribunal to try the Azerbaijani leadership for creating a modern concentration camp in the territory of the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) and regularly destroying the indigenous people of Nagorno Karabakh.

The Speaker expressed hope that his statement will receive a response and that the international community and intergovernmental organizations will not surrender to aggressors and murderers, but will support the people of Nagorno Karabakh. The only way to avoid the abovementioned dangers is through the recognition of Artsakh’s independence based on the principle of Remedial Secession, Tovmasyan said.

Lyle Shelton of ADH TV Interviews Armenian National Committee of Australia Executive Director on Artsakh Blockade

     
Thursday,

SYDNEY: On Friday, 14th July 2023, ADH TV, co-hosted by renowned Australian radio broadcaster Alan Jones and high-profile Christian advocate Lyle Shelton, covered Azerbaijan's over 200-day siege of the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) in an interview with the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU) Executive Director, Michael Kolokossian.

Shelton interviewed Kolokossian in a 12-minute segment covering the Australian-Armenian community’s disappointment over the Australian Government's harrowing silence as 120,000 Christian Armenians remain trapped and under siege at the hands of brutal petro-dictatorship Azerbaijan.

Shelton, the National Director of Family First, also shared to his audience the details of ANC-AU’s Parliamentary Petition calling on the Albanese Government to speak out against Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh.

Following a brief background to the roots of the conflict, Kolokossian praised the people of Artsakh for their commitment to upholding their human right to self-determination.

“The people of Artsakh have lived on this land for so many centuries, and they refuse to leave their homes and property… no matter what the Azerbaijani regime tries to throw at them… the people of Artsakh remain committed to that right to self-determination which is upheld under Article 1 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights," Kolokossian said.

“They fundamentally believe that they have the right to live in their land, to live in a democracy and are not willing to allow a regime like Azerbaijan, which has been run by the same family for three decades now, to threaten them with an iron fist.”

In response to queries over the Albanese Government’s reluctance to speak out against the crisis, Kolokossian spoke out against Canberra's silence, saying: “The reasons for that [the government silence] are not justifiable, you said it, it's a humanitarian crisis, we’re not asking for the Australian Government to comment on the territorial dispute between the Republic of Artsakh and the dictatorship of Azerbaijan.”

Kolokossian added, “We’re asking the Australian Government to do one simple thing, stand with the International Court of Justice, the top judicial organ of the United Nations, which has ordered provisional measures on Azerabaijan to open the corridor. It's as simple as that.”

Kolokossian urged viewers to join the Armenian-Australian community in signing the Parliamentary Petition, calling on the House of Representatives to urge the Australian Government to stand in line with the ICJ and prevent a second Armenian Genocide.

The full interview can be viewed by clicking here.


https://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/Lyle-Shelton-of-ADH-TV-Interviews-Armenian-National-Committee-of-Australia-Executive-Director-on-Artsakh-Blockade

Armenia and Azerbaijan: A blockade that never ended and a peace deal hanging by a thread

Empty store shelves, people on the brink of starvation, and a region on the brink of yet another massive humanitarian crisis. Nagorno-Karabakh and its residents have once again been cut off from essential supplies after Azerbaijan suspends road traffic on the only road linking Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. For months, between December 2022 and April 2023, environmentalists from Azerbaijan — allegedly linked to the government — were blocking the Lachin Corridor, the only route connecting Armenia to Karabakh across the territory of Azerbaijan. Then on April 28, 2023, the so-called “eco-activists” suspended their blockade following the installation of an Azerbaijani border checkpoint on the corridor. However, since mid-June, no supplies have been allowed past the Azerbaijani checkpoint, and gas supplies have been once again cut off from the region. Azerbaijan has also blocked International Red Cross vehicles from entering the region, citing “contraband” prevention measures. On July 14, thousands of Armenians gathered in Stepanakert (Khankendi in Azerbaijani), Nagorno-Karabakh's capital, and marched to the ICRC office in the city and the Russian peacekeeper base on the city’s outskirts, reported OC Media. 

Armenia and Azerbaijan may have fought a war two years ago and signed an agreement to end hostilities, but tensions between the two countries over the Karabakh region linger. When the blockade began in December, at first, the protesters demanded Armenia stop the illegal mining in Karabakh and prevent the transfer of minerals into the country. However, in the following days, the demands changed. According to reporting by Radio Liberty at the time, the protesters’ demands changed to “Baku establish control over the Lachin Corridor.”

The border checkpoint set up by Azerbaijan is viewed as a way to better facilitate the blockade of Nagorno Karabakh. Azerbaijan holds the upper hand in screening any vehicle traveling between Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. Reports that residents were being screened by the Azerbaijani border troops emerged on May 1. According to reports, footage appeared to show Armenian vehicles passing through the checkpoint, with Azerbaijani border control officers inspecting their vehicles and documents.

“The people are from villages near the checkpoint under double blockade and were traveling with the support of peacekeepers, with guarantees of not being bothered,” wrote Artak Beglaryan, an adviser to the State Minister, on Twitter at the time when the checkpoint was set up.

The most recent blockade has left some 120,000 local Armenians cut off from supplies, causing severe shortages:

According to reporting by Eurasianet, since July 18, “public transportation services were cut to a bare minimum — only 2.4 percent of the pre-blockade volume.”

On July 15, leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia met in Brussels in talks mediated by the European Council. This was the sixth such meeting that has taken place since the two nations fought a 44-day war in 2020. In June, their foreign ministers convened at a meeting in Washington, DC.

In Brussels, following the meeting between the leaders of both countries, the President of the Council of Europe, Charles Michel, said in a statement, “I commended the leaders for their strong commitment to the peace process and encouraged them to take further courageous steps to ensure decisive and irreversible progress on the normalization track.”

But while the leaders discussed some of the pressing points of reaching a final peace deal, there has been little sign of progress on the “most difficult issue — the fate of ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh,” wrote Olesya Vartanyan, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, an independent organization that works to prevent wars and shape policies.

The Nagorno-Karabakh area has been under the control of its ethnic Armenian population as a self-declared state since a war fought in the early 1990s, which ended with a ceasefire and Armenian military victory in 1994. In the aftermath of the first war, a new, internationally unrecognized, de facto Nagorno-Karabakh Republic was established. Seven adjacent regions were occupied by the Armenian forces. As a result of that war, “more than a million people had been forced from their homes: Azerbaijanis fled Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and the adjacent territories, while Armenians left homes in Azerbaijan,” according to the International Crisis Group. Following the second Karabakh war in 2020, Azerbaijan regained control over much of the previously occupied seven regions. Azerbaijan also captured one-third of Karabakh itself during the war. On November 10, 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefire agreement brokered by Russia.

According to Vartanyan, although significant progress was made in talks between the two nations in light of Armenian leadership's “significant concessions” since the end of hostilities in 2020, the fate of ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh remains unclear. “Armenia is insisting it includes special rights and ensures the security of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenian population. International mediators also want special measures due to decades of conflict and the recent 2020 war that claimed over 7,000 lives in just six weeks,” wrote the analyst.

Azerbaijan has yet to produce a document outlining its next steps regarding the ethnic Armenian population. Speaking to Reuters, Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said guarantees for ethnic Armenians were not negotiable as this would amount to interfering with Azerbaijan's internal politics. “This is an internal, sovereign issue. The Azerbaijan constitution and a number of international conventions to which Azerbaijan is party provide all the necessary conditions in order to guarantee the rights of this population,” said Bayramov.

In an interview with Politico, Tigran Grigoryan, a political analyst and the director of the Regional Center for Democracy and Security in Yerevan, said if faced with a choice, the local Armenian population will “choose to leave” rather than “accept [Azerbaijani] passports.”

A recent International Crisis Group report published in May 2023 explains how the new checkpoint is viewed among the local Nagorno Karabakh residents:

[Ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh] worry that the checkpoint’s imposition represents a form or muscle flexing that could be the precursor to ethnic cleansing. This move unsettles the ethnic Armenians, who cite a violent history – in particular, Azerbaijani-orchestrated attacks on ethnic Armenians in the late 1980s – that leads them to equate Azerbaijani control with oppression. Indeed, both Azerbaijanis and Armenians harbor bitter memories of being forced to flee areas controlled by the other group in the wake of conflict and for fear of additional bloodshed.

The new round of blockade has given Azerbaijan an upper hand at the negotiation table over peace agreements as well. Speaking to Eurasianet, Zaur Shiriyev, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, “Simply put, Baku controls the Lachin road, meaning everything is in their hands, and while it remains a priority, it seems that there is no immediate urgency to reaching a peace agreement.”

Despite the repeated international calls to end the blockade, official Baku is reluctant to lift the blockade. Meanwhile, reports of deadly clashes continue. And prospects for peace remain hanging by a thread.

Backlash in Armenia as EU backs Nagorno-Karabakh aid via Azerbaijan



 

Proposals to send humanitarian aid to Nagorno-Karabakh from Azerbaijani-controlled land appear to have been backed by the EU, causing outrage in Armenia.

Supplies to the region have repeatedly been cut off since the blockade of the Lachin Corridor began in December, with the situation again deteriorating since mid-June.

On Saturday, EU Council President Charles Michel appeared to back proposals by Azerbaijan to send supplies via Aghdam.

‘I emphasised the need to open the Lachin road. I also noted Azerbaijan’s willingness to provide humanitarian supplies via Aghdam’, Michel said.

His statement came after a round of talks with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev earlier that day.

The Lachin Corridor is the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint under its control at the start of the corridor in late April — a move seen as a violation of the November 2020 ceasefire agreement, which states that the Lachin Corridor falls under the control of the Russian peacekeeping mission in Nagorno-Karabakh.

As the region grappled with food and energy shortages under blockade, Baku has proposed sending humanitarian aid and supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh through Aghdam.

Stepanakert swiftly rejected Baku’s proposal.

Michel’s statement was condemned in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, with critics calling for the reopening of the Lachin Corridor instead of the establishment of alternative routes.

Azerbaijan dismisses claims of an ongoing blockade and humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh, despite local and international reports indicating food and medicine shortages in the region.

On Tuesday, fifteen Armenian organisations jointly stated that the Lachin Corridor ‘has no alternative’.

‘Instead of addressing the root cause of the humanitarian crisis, the discussion of “alternative” routes, such as Aghdam, diverts the attention of the international community from the source of the problem: the illegal blockade of the humanitarian corridor by the Azerbaijani government and the policy of ethnic cleansing’, read their response to Michel’s statement.

Several organisations in Nagorno-Karabakh also issued a more pointed statement on Monday.

‘We emphasise and remind that the support provided at the cost of trampling on the dignity of people in a humanitarian catastrophe cannot be accepted from a country that can offer nothing but hatred, suffering, and pain’, stated the organisations in Nagorno-Karabakh.

David Babayan, adviser to Nagorno-Karabakh’s president and a former foreign minister, condemned the EU Council President’s statement as ‘dangerous’.

‘There is a decision of the international court [of Justice], which says that the corridor should be [reopened]’, Babayan told Armenian media. ‘So where does Aghdam come from?’

Toivo Klaar, the EU’s special envoy to the South Caucasus, also backed Baku’s proposal to provide Nagorno-Karabakh with humanitarian aid through Aghdam, stating that ‘every offer should also be used, not as an alternative to Lachin but as a complement to it’.

The humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh has continued to deepens as the region remains under total blockade since mid-June, when Azerbaijan barred Russian peacekeeping forces stationed in Nagorno-Karabakh from using the Lachin Corridor to supply the region.

Currently, only the International Commitee of the Red Cross can use the corridor to transfer people requiring medical assistance to Armenia. Despite assistance provided by the Red Cross, local authorities have warned of an increase in mortality rates and miscarriages due to the lack of food and medicine. 

In an effort to save energy and food in the region, Stepanakert has introduced rolling blackouts and rationing across Nagorno-Karabakh, in addition to suspending public transport last week.

They have also called for ‘indefinite rallies’ in the hope of attracting international attention, with President Arayik Harutyunyan leading a sit-in protest in central Stepanakert.

[Read more: Thousands rally in Stepanakert against blockade]

 For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.

https://oc-media.org/backlash-in-armenia-as-eu-backs-nagorno-karabakh-aid-via-azerbaijan/

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 20-07-23

 17:26,

YEREVAN, 20 JULY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 20 July, USD exchange rate down by 0.99 drams to 386.29 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 1.65 drams to 432.76 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.01 drams to 4.26 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 2.09 drams to 498.16 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 58.52 drams to 24532.88 drams. Silver price up by 0.82 drams to 310.67 drams.

Celebrating Satenig Der Torosian’s Legacy with AUA

Satenig Der Torosian


GLENDALE—The American University of Armenia in January bid farewell to Satenig Der Torosian, later known as Jane Aaron Payne, a remarkable woman who dedicated her life to championing education. Throughout her adult life, she kept the AUA in focus, leaving a generous gift to be disbursed after her passing. 

Nee Satenig Der Torosian on October 26, 1938, in Fresno, CA, Jane grew up on the family ranch alongside her eight siblings. Her father, Nazaret Der Torosian, was born in 1891 in Yozgat, Turkey; most of his family members perished in the Armenian Genocide. Her mother, Ashken, nee Hamamjian, was born in 1902 in Harpoot (Kharpert) and immigrated to California with several other family members. 

Satenig Der Torosian

She was the eighth of nine children. Raised by her brothers and sisters after her mother’s untimely passing when she was three, Jane developed a strong sense of independence and determination. 

Love found Jane when she met Bill Aaron. They got married, and soon after their three sons, Chris, Tom, and Larry, were born, they relocated to Kentucky to be closer to her husband’s family. Jane, the first in her family to leave Fresno, held her Armenian heritage close to her heart and remained connected to her ancestral homeland.

Jane’s unwavering dedication to work and education was admirable. Over the course of 35 years, she excelled as a quality control manager at Omico Plastics in Owensboro, KY. Not only did she attain professional success, but she also mentored younger colleagues, embodying kindness and generosity. She encouraged, supported, and cherished her loved ones, celebrating everyone’s accomplishments and offering them assistance in any way possible.

After the passing of her husband Bill, “Jane became the matriarch and guiding light for her family, always encouraging education,” her son Tom recalls. She was proud that all her children and grandchildren received a college education. 

Jane Aaron Payne at Khor Virap Monastery, September 2018

Ten years later, Jane found love again and married Tom Payne, welcoming two stepsons, Mark and Perry, and stepdaughter Paula, along with Tom’s extended family. “She loved everything about being in a big and growing family, but most of all, she loved helping her family members and the larger community,” says Chris, adding, “Through her actions, we have seen and felt the power of mom paying it forward.” Upon her retirement, Jane volunteered in her community, transporting cancer patients and also providing pro bono tax preparation assistance through the AARP Foundation Tax-Aide program. 

Driven by her philanthropic spirit and love for education and Armenia, Jane chose to support AUA. “I knew she was trying to connect with Armenia and help out in any way she could,” remarks her son, Tom, as he recalls her conversations with him and his brothers in 2012 about giving to AUA.

In September 2018, Jane, accompanied by her son Chris and his wife Christie, visited Armenia for the first time. Exploring cultural and historical landmarks, she eagerly delved into her Armenian heritage. Chris fondly shared: “‘My people!’ Mom said when we stepped into the Republic Square of Yerevan. She was so excited and could not get enough of the open markets where a lot of people gathered. As we toured the museums, she would say softly, ‘Just like Papa described it.’ I believe she enjoyed the extended drives through the countryside the most. In some parts, the countryside was similar to where Mom was raised in central California. Mom always silently looked out the window staring at the rows of vineyards and apricot trees, Mount Ararat, brown rolling hills in the background, and Armenia. ‘Just like Papa said.’”

Satenig Der Torosian Satenig Der Torosian

Over a decade ago, Jane designated AUA as a beneficiary of her trust at a meeting with representatives from the AUA Office of Development. After her passing, the trust fulfilled her wish, disbursing the designated sum to the University. Her intention was clear: to ensure her legacy endures leaving a lasting and positive mark on AUA students. 

“Mom wanted her children and grandchildren to know our people (Armenians) are intelligent and vibrant. We have a great culture, which to this day carries on throughout the world by the descendants of greater Armenia. Mom’s vision was that her heritage would live on and that Armenia would one day claim its greatness and its people would witness the beauty of all Armenia,” her son Larry shared.

“Her numerous kind acts will continue to help her family into the future — the ultimate measure of a life well lived,” Chris concluded.

Jane Aaron Payne with son Chris Aaron in Yerevan, September 2018

To add to the initial planned gift, Jane’s children have decided to increase the contribution and establish the “Satenig Der Torosian Scholarship Fund” at AUA to ensure that her legacy carries on at the University, empowering many students with the gift of education. 

To learn more about AUA’s planned giving program, visit the website.

Founded in 1991, the American University of Armenia is a private, independent university located in Yerevan, Armenia, affiliated with the University of California, and accredited by the WASC Senior College and University Commission in the United States. AUA provides local and international students with Western-style education through top-quality undergraduate and graduate degree and certificate programs, promotes research and innovation, encourages civic engagement and community service, and fosters democratic values. AUA’s Office of Development stewards the University’s philanthropic efforts exclusively for educational purposes.

Communications in the times of polarizations: highlights from AxelMondrian’s CEO’s speech at EACD summit

 17:02,

YEREVAN, JULY 20, ARMENPRESS. In the last 5 years, 68.6% of businesses had at least one public crisis and 19.2% of these crises resulted in legal proceedings, shared the speaker, mentioning that only 16% of the companies that reported a crisis recovered their reputation.

This is a quote from the speech of Shushan Harutyunyan , Managing Partner, Chief Executive Officer of "AxelMondrian & Partners" was one of the invited speakers of the EACD summit held in Brussels this year.

Shushan Harutyunyan presented the growing precedents of "reputational laundering”. According to Shushan, there is no secret that litigation can harm a defendant’s reputation. However, litigation is often used by plaintiffs to enhance their own reputations in the court of public opinion.

"Contextually speaking, the court today is not only an official authority to make legal decisions, but yet another platform for directing public opinion, where businesses and leaders advance in the agenda of eliminating a competitor or restoring their own reputation. Moreover, in such cases, the court's verdict is no longer substantial in its public relevance and the public discourse is mainly driven by the narratives and emotions”, – said Shushan Harutyunyan, adding that today professional ethics is rediscovering its importance.

This year themes of the EACD Summit included Purpose in a polarized world, the future of communications and the digital agenda, Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance (ESG) topics, Communicating trust with different stakeholders, among others.

 

The EACD summit discussed the latest challenges in the communications industry and concluded that in the polarized times, now more than ever, public communication has an important mission. Founded in 2006, with representatives from 23 countries, EACD is one of the most trusted institutions in the European area, and this year's summit was the largest after the Covid-19 pandemic.

"Axel Mondrian & Partners" CJSC (AxelMondrian & Partners) is a qualified consulting company, a member of the European network, which opened its office in Yerevan in 2022. It is the first reputation management company in the region and provides services in public relations, branding and marketing communication, data processing and analysis and related fields.

AW: Handwoven kilims by students exhibited at Haigazian University

Workshop participants with their handwoven kilims during the exhibit at Haigazian University

BEIRUT—On Wednesday, July 19, an exhibit was held in the Haigazian University (HU) Arthur Matossian Gallery featuring the handwoven kilims of 35 students from various Lebanese Armenian schools. The event was attended by the students, along with parents, teachers and principals.

The kilims were the product of a nine-day-long “Weave your own kilim” workshop held at HU and organized by the Student Life Office in collaboration with the Hovhannes Sharambeyan Folk Arts Museum in Armenia.

Between July 5 and 18, students from the Armenian Evangelical and United Armenian Colleges, Armenian Evangelical Shamlian-Tatigian,  Armenian Evangelical Central High, Armenian Catholic Holy Cross, AGBU and Vahan Tekeyan schools participated in the workshop. They learned the skills of weaving the kilim and actually wove the pieces which were featured in the exhibition.

During the nine three-hour sessions, the students eagerly connected with carpet weaving and wove more than one kilim. Some even started their third kilim. Others created their own designs and chose the colors of the Armenia-made wool, while some began to weave their own names. The weaving process also continued after the sessions, as the students excitedly took their unfinished works to their homes.

Some of the handwoven kilims created by the workshop participants

Alongside the student sessions in the morning, a five-session weaving workshop was organized in the afternoons where 13 adults participated. Some of their kilims were also displayed.

In all, 75 kilims by all age groups were exhibited as products of the workshops.