Philos Project Leads Delegation to Armenia Amid Crisis

1:08 PM EDT

WASHINGTON /PRNewswire/ — Today, the Philos Project concluded a three-day trip that introduced American Christian and Jewish thought leaders to Armenia's rich history and the existential threats that face this Christian country from its neighbors. The trip, which comes nearly six months after Azerbaijan initiated a blockade of Armenian Christians in the adjacent Nagorno-Karabakh region was led by Philos Project President Robert Nicholson and former Ambassador-at-Large for International Religious Freedom Sam Brownback.

Participants included leaders of Christian advocacy groups, like David Curry, President and CEO of Global Christian Relief; Carlos Duran, Founder and President of the National Association of Hispanic Pastors of America; Travis Weber, Vice President for Policy and Government Affairs at Family Research Council; and Denise Bubeck, Deputy Director of the Church Ambassador Network at THE FAMiLY LEADER, among others. They were joined by Jewish leaders and experts from several think tanks, including Michael Ruben, Greg Schaller, and Gregg Roman, as well as journalists from both secular and religious publications.

Since December 12thAzerbaijan's blockade of the Lachin Corridor has cut the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, largely Armenian Christians, off from the outside world. The siege has created a humanitarian disaster that may soon become untenable for the 120,000 residents, precipitating what some have warned may be a Second Armenian Genocide. Constant, aggressive rhetoric from Azerbaijan's president Ilham Aliyev, a self-proclaimed ally of the United States, seems to lend credence to such warnings. 

That same month Nicholson began examining the challenges Armenians face in an in-depth series on his podcast, The Deep Map. In January he stepped up his advocacy, sending a letter to President Bidenurging his administration to help lift the blockade, provide humanitarian aid, and work toward a lasting and just resolution of the long-standing dispute. In May, he appealed to the House Committee for Foreign Affairs, yet the blockade remains.

Nicholson and Brownback co-led this trip to help American thought leaders better understand the crisis in the region and consider how Christian and Jewish communities might contribute to potential solutions. Participants visited medieval monasteries, conversed with local residents affected by Azerbaijani aggression in the city of Jermuk, and met with Armenia's President, Vahagn Khachaturyan. In a video statement, Ambassador Brownback expressed his gratitude to the president for spending "a huge amount of time" with the delegation discussing the "breadth of the issues," confiding that "central to all of this is the building of the relationship" between Armenia and American Christians that so far "hasn't been fully actualized."

"We cannot allow the crisis in Armenia to be dismissed as a simple territorial dispute," said Philos Project Founder Robert Nicholson. "This is a dispute about values." Adding further, Nicholson said. "Advocates for human rights, Christians concerned about preserving their historic roots, and Jews who know all too well the struggle against genocidal forces, all have a stake in advocating for Armenia's Christians. "

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Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 15-06-23

 17:26,

YEREVAN, 15 JUNE, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 15 June, USD exchange rate down by 0.06 drams to 386.54 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.37 drams to 419.13 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.02 drams to 4.62 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.93 drams to 489.67 drams.

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

Gold price up by 13.63 drams to 24305.80 drams. Silver price down by 4.58 drams to 296.09 drams.

Armenia’s banking system had record high profit in 2022. PM Pashinyan

 18:45,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. In 2022, the banking system of Armenia had the largest profit in its history, ARMENPRESS reports, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced at the session of the National Assembly.

"In 2022, the banking system had the largest profit in history. Do we have a role here or not? Of course, we have, because since 2018, the banks of the Republic of Armenia operate only and only on commercial logic. Since 2018, no one can say that he gave a loan to someone or did not give a loan to someone, because he was told by the Government to give a loan to this person, not to give a loan to that person. There cannot be such a case," stressed the Prime Minister.

According to Pashinyan, all this has increased the attractiveness of the banking system.

"The banking system is aggressively developing services in the best sense of the word, and these services are becoming attractive, including in the context of the Government's decisions," concluded Pashinyan.

“Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders” connects with an appreciative audience at opening reception

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023, Armenian Museum of America (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

WATERTOWN, Mass.—The Armenian Museum of America held an opening reception last Wednesday, June 7, for its newest exhibit, “Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders.”

Oshagan expressed deep appreciation for the turnout. “It was wonderful to have such a large number of people, which also was a very diverse group and… artists coming from different places is really special,” he told the Weekly in an interview the following day.

As people filled the museum throughout the evening, it was clear that they shared a common understanding of displacement as they gazed at the pieces.

Disrupted, Borders entangles the past, present and future and considers the afterlives of visible and invisible borders across space and time,” Oshagan said in describing the exhibit. He uses photography, film and collage to represent his diasporic process and “the visible and invisible crossing of physical, cultural and linguistic borders.”

Artist Ara Oshagan speaking at the opening of Disrupted, Borders, Armenian Museum of America, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Daniel Ayriyan)

The gallery is divided into six sections: Traces of Identity the Armenian Diaspora in Los Angeles (2000-2010), Displaced (2013-2018), The Beirut Memory Project (2018-2021), Gather (2021), Shushi Portraits (2021) and That You May Return (2023). 

Each section represents a different aspect of Oshagan’s life and his journey to where he is today. “It’s about Los Angeles, Beirut and Armenia itself. It’s also about family, afterlives of dislocation, colonization memory and then the community collective history,” he explained to the crowd at the exhibit opening. “My relationships to various histories in places is complex, having inherited negative legacies of removal, of violence from genocide displaced from the route personally, and perhaps many of you have also been displaced from other places,” he continued.

His words clearly resonated with guests. A woman who became emotional as Oshagan spoke was the daughter of Holocaust survivors, and his work moved her as she thought of her family’s experiences. 

One of Oshagan’s missions through his work is to connect with others on their own terms through the artwork. “If somebody spends time and then really looks closely, they can see there’s this web of connectivity between different places, different works or different geographies, different times,” he told the Weekly. “It speaks to you, but it also speaks to everyone that comes in in a different way.” 

Guests, who spanned ages and generations, lingered around different images, staring at the complexity and relating through their own lives.

One man pointed out that he recognized a storefront in an image in The Beirut Memory Project. It was one he had remembered from his time in Beirut, and seeing it at the gallery brought him joy. 

In his remarks, museum executive director Jason Sohigian pointed out the thorough and thoughtful detail that went into the exhibit and gallery space. Oshagan worked on every aspect of designing this exhibit, including the layout of the art and the colors on the wall. For example, he chose to paint one wall in the museum a deep red, the red of the Armenian cochineal, (Porphyrophora hamelii), an insect indigenous to Armenia that was used to produce a dye used in Armenian rug-making. He decided to display the color on a wall of his exhibit because it “comes from that insect that’s indigenous to Armenia and very much part of the history of the space. What’s sad is that it is now endangered in Armenia.”

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

Oshagan spoke to the crowd about two specific sections of the gallery: The Shushi Portraits and The Beirut Memory Project. 

Oshagan undertook The Shushi Portraits in 2021 after being invited with several other artists to work on projects in Shushi, currently occupied by Azerbaijan following the 2020 Artsakh War. People had been displaced and there was a concern about repopulation. As he walked in the city, Oshagan noticed an empty building that had been abandoned for more than 20 years. He then decided what his project in Shushi would be.

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Daniel Ayriyan)

“I installed these images into the windows and doors of that building. I repopulated it with these portraits, but without the background, so they’re important without the manuscript,” he explained. “I took pictures of residents, and I populated that building with the residents of Shushi speaking about why this building was still abandoned.”

His goal with these pieces was to “imagine a future where the deracinated person, indigenous Armenian displaced from their indigenous lands, can come back together with that history to imagine a future like that.”

For the exhibit, Oshagan placed the images of the residents over ancient Armenian manuscripts from across Armenia. They hang in the gallery as large prints that cover the windows. Oshagan specifically designed these pieces for the gallery after he saw the windows and decided to optimize the space in the museum. 

Many people lingered by these large portraits, and questions arose about the manuscripts and the people in the images. Oshagan told the Weekly that he has kept in contact with some of his subjects. Some had fled Shushi, and others had lost family in the war. 

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

Oshagan then spoke about The Beirut Memory Project. He was born in Beirut and fled the country in 1975 with his family as they sped away from gunfire. The Lebanese Civil War displaced Oshagan and his family. He returned 40 years later to photograph his childhood city. The Beirut Memory Project is a collection of photographs he took on his recent trip to Beirut, collaged and overlaid with pre-war family photos. 

“I made a trip to Beirut because I decided I would go back to that space where I was born, where I fled injustice, issues of displacement and multi-generational trauma, and issues there, including recent wars and economic collapse and loss,” Oshagan recounted. “Then, I also bring my own history of displacement back to that space.” 

Members of the audience nodded as he spoke about this, including non-Armenians who could relate to the message of loss and displacement. 

Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Vani Hanamirian)

Oshagan intentionally placed a three-minute, three-channel film that can be viewed at the entryway of the gallery. As guests enter the gallery, they first see this video that shows Armenians in Beirut speaking Western Armenian. Almost all of the guests stopped by this video before entering the gallery. 

Oshagan created the video because “the sound of Western Armenian, which I grew up with, really resonated with me when I was there, because they speak a very specific type of really beautiful Western Armenian.” 

The theme continued into the gallery as there was an overlapping sound of Armenian being spoken amongst the guests. The connections between gallery attendees could be heard from outside the room, as familiar and unfamiliar faces gathered to celebrate the exhibit opening. 

Artist Ara Oshagan (center) pictured with Museum president Michele Kolligian, vice president Bob Khederian, executive director Jason Sohigian and finance director Berj Chekijian, June 7, 2023 (Photo: Daniel Ayriyan)

As the evening concluded, guests slowly made their way out of the gallery, but not before taking photos with Oshagan and the artwork. People were seen asking others to take their photo in front of various works, including the ‘That You May Return’ series.

“It was wonderful, and it was nice to see many people from the general public walking in, to see the work and talk to me. It was really, really special,” Oshagan told the Weekly about the exhibit opening. 

“Ara Oshagan: Disrupted, Borders” will be on display at the Armenian Museum of America until October 29, 2023.




AYF Camp Haiastan set to launch record-setting season

The newly-renovated Cabin Circle at Camp Haiastan, Franklin, Massachusetts

FRANKLIN, Mass.—AYF Camp Haiastan will launch its 73rd camping season on Sunday, June 25. This summer the Camp will welcome over 450 campers, a 16-percent increase from last year and a 24-percent increase from the pre-COVID year. 

This summer, the campers will enjoy the major renovations of the Cabin Circle area, the expansion and upgrade of the Under the Tree seating area, the benefits of all new kitchen appliances and the introduction of a revised contemporary program that challenges, entertains and educates today’s camper. 

Interim executive director Peter Jelalian

In preparation for the 2023 season, the Board of Directors has announced the appointment of Peter A. Jelalian as the interim executive director (ED) of the Camp. Current executive director Kenar Charchaflian will be on maternity leave this summer. Charchaflian and her husband Nareg Mkrtschjan are expecting their first child in late June. 

“Peter’s extensive knowledge of the Camp operation and his capability to manage made it easy for the Board to select him as the interim ED,” stated Hratch Najarian, chairperson of the Board of Directors. 

Jelalian, who has worked with all the executive directors, expressed his appreciation for their collective accomplishments. “I look forward to the challenge and working with the summer directors and staff to implement the revised program, enjoy the upgraded facility and most of all welcome a record-setting number of campers; it is an exciting time for Camp,” added Jelalian. The camp senior staff will report directly to Jelalian. Steve Mesrobian and Mimi Parseghian will assist him and have been assigned various duties. Ani Aroyan will continue her position as administrative assistant. 

The counselor staff will be led by summer director (SD) Nairi Koroghlian. She will be assisted by co-directors who will each serve a 2-week session: Hagop Soulakian, teen session; Garin Kaligian, first session, Nevart Mikaelian, second session and Nareh Mkrtschjan, third session. “I am grateful for the assistance of a co-summer director that will be on a rotating schedule – this will ensure that we are able to fully support all the needs of campers and staff members alike,” commented SD Koroghlian. 

The camp season will end with the one-week third session which gives an opportunity for children new to Camp Haiastan to acclimate. 

Program director Seran Tcholakian, who developed the revised Camp program, has been working with the summer director to map out the implementation of these new activities with the traditional ones that have defined the Camp experience. 

Ani Changelian has returned as day camp director. This year, the Board extended this program which serves children from 5-7 years old to include an additional week. A record number of staff members – 82 – have been hired to serve as cabin counselors, day camp counselors, lifeguards, Armenian school teachers, and staff-in-training. “We are quite pleased with the staff that we have assembled. They represent a wide age group, different levels of Camp Haiastan experience, geographic diversity and varied skill sets,” stated Charchaflian.

“Our dedicated staff has been actively preparing for an exciting 2023 summer season! New and returning ungers and ungerouhis are committed with maximum continuity and consistency to make for an engaging camper experience,” added SD Koroghlian. 

The Board of Directors invites all Camp supporters to visit on the following Sundays: June 25, July 9, July 23 and August 6 to see all the major improvements to the facility and to enjoy the unique atmosphere the Camp provides.

The AYF Camp Haiastan Board of Directors invites all camp families to join us on Sunday, July 23 for the official unveiling of the newly-renovated and expanded Under the Trees and Cabin Circle areas. This ceremony will commemorate the lives of three lifelong Camp alumni: Mark Alashaian, Vaghinag Koroghlian and Regina Najarian.

Located in Franklin, Massachusetts, AYF Camp Haiastan, was founded in 1951 and is the oldest Armenian camp in the United States. The Camp prides itself on providing a healthy and safe experience to Armenian-American youth to help them foster their Armenian identity and establish lifelong friendships.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/15/2023

                                        Thursday, 


Prominent Armenian Oppositionist Arrested

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - The deputy chairman of the Republican Party of Armenia, Armen 
Ashotian, speaks at a press conference, Yerevan, November 16, 2022.


Armen Ashotian, a prominent opposition politician, was arrested on Thursday 
eight months after being indicted on what he and his Republican Party of Armenia 
(HHK) call trumped-up charges.

Ashotian, 47, was an influential figure during HHK leader and former President 
Serzh Sarkisian’s rule, serving as education minister from 2012-2016 and 
subsequently heading the Armenian parliament’s foreign relations committee. He 
has been a vocal critic of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian since the 2018 “velvet 
revolution” that toppled Sarkisian.

Ashotian was charged last November with abuse of power and money laundering in 
connection with his past chairmanship of the Board of Trustees of Yerevan’s 
Mkhitar Heratsi Medical University. He was not taken into custody at the time 
and was only banned from leaving the country.

The accusations strongly denied by Ashotian stem from a number of property 
acquisitions carried out by the university administration on his alleged orders. 
Armenia’s Investigative Committee claims that those deals caused the state-run 
university substantial financial damage.

The law-enforcement agency also charged Ashotian with “waste” of public funds as 
it detained him on Thursday morning. It promptly asked a court in Yerevan to 
allow his pre-trial arrest.

In a statement issued later in the day, the Investigative Committee claimed that 
Ashotian must be held in detention because he illegally tried to gain access to 
testimony given by several other suspects in the case. It gave no details of the 
alleged interference in the investigation.

The HHK, of which Ashotian is a deputy chairman, voiced full support for him and 
condemned his arrest as an act of “political persecution.” In a statement, the 
former ruling party’s governing body said Armenia’s political leadership ordered 
it to “divert the public's attention from internal and external problems 
worsening day by day.” Representatives of other opposition groups added their 
voice to the condemnation.

Ashotian’s lawyer, Tigran Atanesian, described the accusations brought against 
his client as “ridiculous” when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“Money was not lost,” Atanesian said. “Money was converted into real estate, 
which now belongs to the Medical University and is worth twice as much as it was 
during the acquisition.”

The lawyer also said that Ashotian has not been questioned by investigators for 
almost eight months.




Jailed Election Winner Remains Defiant During ‘Political’ Trial

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Former Vanadzor Mayor Mamikon Aslanian (left) greets supporters during 
his trial in Yerevan, .


A former mayor of Vanadzor arrested in December 2021 after defeating Armenia’s 
ruling party in a local election continued to strongly deny corruption charges 
leveled against him during his yearlong trial on Thursday.

The victory of an opposition bloc led by Mamikon Aslanian was the most serious 
of setbacks suffered by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party in 
local polls held in 36 communities across the country on December 5, 2021.

Aslanian, who had governed Armenia’s third largest city for five years, was 
poised to regain the post of Vanadzor mayor lost in October 2021. But he was 
arrested on December 15, 2021, two days before the inaugural session of the new 
city council empowered to elect the mayor. He was charged with illegally 
privatizing municipal land during his tenure.

The 49-year-old ex-mayor rejected the charges as politically motivated both 
before and during his trial that began in June 2022.

Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service in the courtroom, Aslanian insisted that 
he was arrested “so that I don’t take over as mayor, which should have happened 
on December 17.”

“I was ‘coincidentally’ arrested on December 15, even though the criminal case 
was opened on September 10,” he said.

Also standing trial are two of Aslanian’s former subordinates. But unlike the 
ex-mayor, they have not been held in detention.

Aslanian’s supporters as well as opposition figures in Yerevan claim that 
Pashinian ordered the ex-mayor’s arrest and prosecution to make sure that the 
Vanadzor municipality remains under his control. They have accused the prime 
minister of effectively overturning the local election results.

Vanadzor’s new municipal council could have elected Aslanian as mayor despite 
his arrest. However, Armenia’s Administrative Council banned the council from 
holding sessions, citing an appeal against the election results lodged by 
another pro-government party.

In April 2022, Pashinian’s party swiftly pushed through the Armenian parliament 
a bill that empowered the prime minister to name acting heads of communities 
whose councils fail to elect mayors within 20 days after local elections. 
Pashinian appointed the following month a man with a criminal record, Arkadi 
Peleshian, as Vanadzor’s acting mayor.

Peleshian served as deputy mayor from 2017-2021. An obscure party led by him won 
less than 15 percent of the vote in December 2021.




Russia Again Slams EU Monitoring Mission In Armenia


Armenia - European Union monitors patrol Armenia's border with Azerbaijan.


Russia has accused European Union monitors deployed along Armenia’s border with 
Azerbaijan of failing to reduce tensions there and again claimed that the main 
purpose of their mission is to drive Moscow out of the region.

“There is no ‘added value’ from the dubious activity of EU ‘experts’ in the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border area. Moreover, they are incapable of ensuring 
security and compliance with the ceasefire agreements reached with the decisive 
role of Russian mediation,” Maria Zakharova, the Russian Foreign Ministry 
spokeswoman, said in written comments released late on Wednesday.

Zakharova reacted to the impending opening of three more EU monitoring “hubs” in 
the Armenian towns of Kapan, Ijevan and Yeghegnadzor close to the Azerbaijani 
border. She said the EU is thus keen to “strengthen its presence in Armenia” 
with the ultimate aim of “squeezing Russia out of the Transcaucasus.”

The EU mission countered on Thursday that it always planned to “operate from 6 
hubs with maximum 103 international staff.” “We aim to reach this full 
operability soon,” tweeted the mission, which has had three such “hubs” until 
now.

The EU’s special envoy to the South Caucasus, Toivo Klaar, voiced support for 
the mission, calling it an “important element” of EU efforts to facilitate 
regional peace.

The EU deployed the 100 or so monitors in Armenia in February. The Armenian 
government said the mission requested by it will reduce the risk of a serious 
escalation in the conflict zone. Its critics point out that ceasefire violations 
at various sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border have continued unabated 
since then.

The EU monitors’ assessment of those incidents is not known. Foreign Minister 
Ararat Mirzoyan said in March that Yerevan has no access to their confidential 
reports sent to Brussels.




Armenia, Azerbaijan Report More Truce Violations


A view of an Azerbaijani checkpoint set up at the entry of the Lachin corridor, 
Nagorno-Karabakh's only land link with Armenia, by a bridge across the Hakari 
river on May 2, 2023.


One Armenian and one Azerbaijani border guards were wounded on Thursday in 
continuing ceasefire violations reported from the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
Azerbaijan’s Border Guard Service accused Armenian troops of opening fire at its 
checkpoint controversially set up last month in the Lachin corridor connecting 
Armenia to Karabakh. It said that one of the servicemen manning the checkpoint 
was wounded.

Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) said, meanwhile, that its border 
guards stopped a group of Azerbaijani servicemen from advancing into Armenian 
territory from the checkpoint and placing an Azerbaijani flag there.

Later in the morning, fighting also erupted at a nearby section of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Armenian soldiers and border guards deployed there 
came under Azerbaijani mortar and small arms fire, the NSS said, adding that one 
of them was wounded early in the afternoon. Baku accused the Armenian side of 
provoking that skirmish.

Armenia - An Azeri military post just outside the Armenian border village of 
Tegh, April 4, 2023/

In a statement, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry condemned the Armenian 
“provocation” near the Lachin checkpoint, saying that Armenia is trying to 
thwart its “successful functioning.” It also claimed that Yerevan is “not 
interested” in the normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations.

Shortly after that incident, authorities in Karabakh reported that the 
Azerbaijan completely halted the movement through the Lachin corridor of 
humanitarian convoys organized by Russian peacekeepers and the International 
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). They said Red Cross vehicles carrying 25 
Karabakh patients and their family members were turned away from the checkpoint 
and had to return to Stepanakert.

Baku set up the checkpoint last month in what Yerevan and Stepanakert regard as 
a gross violation of a Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the 2020 war in 
Karabakh.

Armenia - A construction site in the border village of Yersakh, .
The latest skirmishes highlight tensions along the border between the two South 
Caucasus countries and the Karabakh “line of contact” which have been rising 
despite major progress made during recent Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks.

On Wednesday, two Indian workers building a new metallurgical plant in the 
Armenian border village of Yeraskh were seriously wounded in what the Armenian 
military described as cross-border fire from nearby Azerbaijani army positions.

“We are deeply concerned that two civilian employees of a U.S.-affiliated 
company in Armenia sustained injuries from gunfire from the direction of 
Azerbaijan,” the U.S. State Department spokesman, Matthew Miller, tweeted 
afterwards.

“We reiterate our call for restraint along the borders as the parties work 
toward a durable and balanced peace,” Miller wrote.

Several dozen foreign diplomats, including the Yerevan-based ambassadors of 
France, Germany and China, visited Yeraskh on Thursday.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Inflation in accommodation and food services is 8,7% – central bank governor

 10:31,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank doesn’t view the fight against inflation to have ended, Central Bank Governor Martin Galstyan told lawmakers.

“Inflation last year was due to both supply and demand. The main component of demand was of external origin, meaning we had an inflow of international visitors who developed the demand for Armenia’s goods and services, and as a result we see that even until now the inflation in accommodation and food services is 8,7%,” Galstyan said, adding that they don’t find the fight against inflation to be completed.

The Central Bank is forecasting 6,9% economic growth for 2023. “But we must understand that in long-term and mid-term the economy can’t endlessly keep on growing beyond its potential,” Galstyan warned.

No financial problems in Artsakh, says Central Bank governor

 10:53,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia maintains daily contact with its colleagues in Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh), the Governor of the Central Bank Martin Galstyan told lawmakers when asked about the state of the Artsakh financial system.

“We maintain daily contact with our colleagues in Artsakh. Without going much into details, I can say that whenever some problem occurs we react very swiftly. At this moment, according to my information, there is no problem related with financial issues in Artsakh,” Galstyan said.

Azeri troops attempting to advance into Armenia to raise flag pushed back by countermeasures – NSS

 10:41,

YEREVAN, JUNE 14, ARMENPRESS. Armenian security forces on Thursday morning took countermeasures to thwart the Azerbaijani military’s attempt to advance, authorities said in a statement.

The National Security Service Border Guards said that a group of servicemen of the Azerbaijani Border Guards attempted to advance into the territory of Armenia from the direction of the Hakari Bridge around 08:40, June 15 with the purpose of raising a flag in the territory of Armenia.

“As a result of measures taken by the Armenian side, the attempt by the Azerbaijani servicemen to advance and install a flag in the territory of Armenia was thwarted,” the NSS Border Guards said in a statement.

As of 10:00 the situation was relatively stable.

Nagorno Karabakh denies Azerbaijani accusations on breaching ceasefire

 12:07,

STEPANAKERT, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. Nagorno Karabakh has denied opening fire at Azeri positions. Nagorno Karabakh said Azerbaijan is again “distorting reality” by spreading false accusations.

“The statement released by the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry accusing the Defense Army units of opening fire around 08:45, June 15 at Azerbaijani positions deployed in the occupied territories of Martuni region of the Republic of Artsakh is yet another disinformation,” the Nagorno Karabakh (Republic of Artsakh) Defense Ministry said in a statement. “The Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan, trying to substantiate the fire by its units targeting civilians carrying out agricultural work, is once again distorting reality, once again claiming to have disrupted alleged engineering works in the Martuni region. As reported earlier, the Azerbaijani side opened small arms fire around 09:15 – 11:14, June 14, at civilians conducting agricultural work in the Matchkalashen and Tchartar communities of Martuni region,” the ministry added.