Upper Lars additional lanes to be ready by June 15 – Russian PM

 17:11, 7 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 7, ARMENPRESS. The reconstruction of the new lanes in the Upper Lars checkpoint will be completed on June 15, Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin said at a meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

“Yesterday I met with Russian Minister of Transport Vitaly Savelev, we discussed issues in detail, including the issues of reconstructing the Upper Lars checkpoint, he promised that all works will be completed by June 15. As I understand it’s about the construction of an additional four lanes,” Mishustin said.

The checkpoint will have a total of 39 lanes, 15 of which designed for cargo vehicles.

The daily clearance capacity will increase as a result.

PM Pashinyan thanked the Russian PM, and added: “I know that whenever you promise something it gets done, and I am very happy for that. Thank you very much.”

Azerbaijan Continues to Occupy Territories in Armenia, Local Officials Warn

Armenia's Gegharkunik Province after Azerbaijani attacks in September, 2022


The governors of three provinces of Armenia bordering Azerbaijan warned that Azerbaijan continues to occupy the sovereign territories of Armenia since its aggressive breach of Armenia’s borders beginning in May, 2021.

“Azerbaijan must pull back from our sovereign territory. This is an unequivocal stance,” Syunik Governor Ghukasyan said at a press briefing Tuesday.

He added that as a result of Azerbaijan’s breach of Armenia’s sovereign borders, local farmers have lost their farms near the Tegh village.

Tegh City Councilmember Massis Zeinalyan told Azatutyun.am on Wednesday that residents of the Tegh region have not been able to return to their homes since Azerbaijan launched an aggressive attack there in late March of this year.

After that attack, residents were taken aback to find that Azerbaijani forces have set of military posts on their wheat field. Zeinalyan said that despite assurances by some government officials, the fact remains that residents of Tegh have not been able to return to their lands and they remain occupied by Azerbaijanis.

The Tavush Province governor Hayk Ghalumyan echoed the same concerns when speaking to reporters on Tuesday, explaining that some 950 hectares (more than 2,300 acres) continue to remain under Azerbaijani control.

The governor of the Gegharkunik Province, Karen Sargsyan, told reporters on Tuesday that sporadic Azerbaijani attacks on Armenian positions continue on a daily basis.

Similar attacks were reported on Tuesday by Armenia’s Defense Ministry.

Sargsyan said that the Sock Gold Mine, the main source of employment for local residents, has ceased operations in the exposed section of the mine due to safety concerns.

“Work in the mine’s open section is suspended due to safety precautions, but the work continues in the closed section. The Sotk mine is working partially,” Sargsyan said.

Pashinyan attends Erdoğan’s swearing-in ceremony

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu and Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan (RA Prime Minister)

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan attended the inauguration of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who extended his two-decade rule by another five years.

Pashinyan was quick to congratulate Erdoğan on his electoral victory. “Looking forward to continuing working together towards full normalization of relations between our countries,” Pashinyan tweeted on May 28, the day of the runoff elections in Turkey.

Erdoğan won with 52-percent of the vote, defeating Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, leader of an opposition coalition, who earned 48-percent of the vote. The newly reelected president did not secure a majority vote in the first round of election on May 14, triggering a runoff. Erdoğan’s faction, which includes the Justice and Development Party and the Nationalist Movement Party, won a majority of seats in parliament, securing 322 of 600 seats. 

Erdoğan’s swearing-in ceremony was held in Ankara on June 3. It was also attended by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, Georgia’s Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili, Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro and Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif. Pashinyan was joined by Ruben Rubinyan, special envoy for the ongoing negotiations on normalizing relations between Armenia and Turkey. 

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (front row) and Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan (second row) at Turkish President Erdogan’s inauguration (Twitter)

Pashinyan’s attendance was met with mixed appraisal. Former Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian criticized Pashinyan’s presence and said Armenia had “nothing to lose” by not attending the swearing-in ceremony. 

“Pashinyan does not understand that he cannot woo Turkey on the matter of the settlement of Armenia-Turkey relations by providing aid after the earthquake in Turkey and attending Erdogan’s swearing-in ceremony,” Oskanian wrote. 

“Pashinyan did not represent the Armenian people in Ankara, but rather himself,” he continued

Aslı Aydıntaşbaş, Turkish journalist and visiting fellow at the Brookings Institute, called Pashinyan’s attendance a “very bold and smart move by the Armenian leader, who is trying to preserve the fragile peace with Azerbaijan and keep the momentum on normalization with Turkey.” 

Armenia and Turkey have been engaged in talks to establish bilateral relations since December 2021. On July 1, 2022, special envoys appointed for the normalization process announced the first major breakthrough in negotiations. The envoys agreed to “enable the crossing of the land border between Armenia and Turkey by third-country citizens.” They also agreed to commence direct air cargo trade between the two countries. 

Pashinyan and Erdoğan had their first ever phone call that month and three months later held their first meeting in Prague on October 6 on the sidelines of a pan-European summit.

Negotiations seemed to gain new momentum after the Armenia-Turkey border reopened briefly in February this year for the first time in three decades. Armenia sent several trucks of humanitarian aid and rescue workers to Turkey following the devastating 7.8-magnitude earthquake on February 6. 

Former Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said at the time that the humanitarian assistance would bolster negotiations on restoring diplomatic ties and opening the shared border. Çavuşoğlu and his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan announced an agreement to jointly repair the Ani bridge and restore other infrastructure along the Armenia-Turkey border. 

Yet progress stalled when Turkey closed its airspace to Armenian flights after a monument was unveiled in Yerevan commemorating Operation Nemesis.

Operation Nemesis was a mission organized in the 1910s and 1920s by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation to assassinate the Ottoman leaders who orchestrated the Armenian Genocide. Deputy mayor of Yerevan Tigran Avinyan called the monument “a clear record of the fact that the crimes of history do not go unpunished, regardless of how the international community reacts,” during its unveiling ceremony on April 24, the annual day of remembrance of the Armenian Genocide. 

The Turkish Foreign Ministry released a statement condemning the monument and warning that it would “negatively affect the normalization process.” 

“Such provocative steps, which are incompatible with the spirit of the normalization process between Türkiye and Armenia, will in no way contribute to the efforts for establishment of lasting and sustainable peace and stability in the region,” the statement reads.

Çavuşoğlu later announced that Turkey had closed its airspace to Armenia in response to the monument. Chair of FlyOne Armenia Aram Ananyan said that Turkish aviation authorities had prohibited the airline from operating flights to Europe through Turkish airspace. A FlyOne Armenia plane operating a flight from Paris to Yerevan was forced to land in Moldova. 

Pashinyan called the erection of the monument a “wrong decision.” 

“The government did not make that decision, and one of the biggest flaws of democracy is that the government or head of government doesn’t control everything and everyone, including our team,” Pashinyan said during an interview with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. 

The Armenia-Turkey border has been closed since 1993, when Turkey closed its border with Armenia in solidarity with Azerbaijan during the first Artsakh War. In 2009, the countries signed two bilateral protocols brokered by France, Russia and the United States. The Zurich Protocols would have opened the border, established diplomatic relations and created a joint historical commission to study the Armenian Genocide. However, the protocols were never ratified or implemented under pressure from Azerbaijan, which opposed normalization of relations without a resolution of the Artsakh conflict.

Armenian authorities have insisted that the current normalization process must remain separate from ongoing talks with Azerbaijan on the Artsakh conflict. However, Turkish authorities have said that Turkey is coordinating its decisions with its close ally Azerbaijan.

According to Turkologist Ruben Safrastyan, Erdoğan will likely strengthen Turkey’s support for Azerbaijan and “seek to resolve the Karabakh conflict in accordance with the interests of Azerbaijan” during his new presidential term. He will also set further preconditions on normalizing relations, including “demand that Armenia renounce seeking international recognition of the Armenian Genocide” and “open communication through the Syunik region of Armenia, which is called the ‘Zangezur corridor’ in Azerbaijan and Turkey,” Safrastyan told Eurasianet.

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian's first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/07/2023

                                        Wednesday, June 7, 2023


Armenian FM Phones New Turkish Counterpart


Turkey - New Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan stands during a press conference where 
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan announced the new cabinet, Ankara, June 3, 2023.


Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his newly appointed Turkish counterpart 
Hakan Fidan discussed efforts to normalize Turkish-Armenian relations in a phone 
call on Wednesday.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said Mirzoyan congratulated Fidan, who had been 
Turkey's intelligence chief since 2010, on the appointment.

“The sides expressed their readiness to continue working on the full 
normalization of relations between the two countries,” it added in a short 
statement.

No other details were reported. The Turkish Foreign Ministry did not immediately 
issue a statement on the call that took place four days after Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian attended the inauguration of Turkey’s reelected President Recep 
Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara.

Mirzoyan visited Turkey and met with Fidan’s predecessor Mevlut Cavusoglu in 
February in the wake of a powerful earthquake in the country’s southeast. He 
said after that trip that Yerevan and Ankara agreed speed up efforts to 
normalize bilateral ties.

The Turkish government has since continued to voice full support for Azerbaijan 
and make the establishment of diplomatic relations with Armenia and the opening 
of the Turkish-Armenian border conditional on Yerevan meeting Baku’s key demands.

Ankara reacted angrily after municipal authorities in Yerevan unveiled in late 
April a monument dedicated to Armenians who had assassinated masterminds and 
perpetrators of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey. It banned Armenian 
airlines from flying over Turkey to third countries and threatened “new 
measures” against Armenia if the monument is not removed soon.

Pashinian described the erection of the monument as a “wrong decision” when he 
spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service last month. Armenian opposition leaders 
condemned his presence at Erdogan’s inauguration ceremony and accused him of 
humiliating Armenia.




Armenia Tightens Controls On Electronics Exports To Russia

        • Robert Zargarian

A silicon wafer containing chips made with IBM Corp's 2-nanometer transistor 
technology, May 6, 2021.


Bowing to apparent Western pressure, Armenia’s government has moved to seriously 
restrict the re-export of electronics products and components to Russia which 
has skyrocketed since the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Armenia’s trade with Russia, its longtime ally and main trading partner, doubled 
last year and in the first four months of this year amid a barrage of sanctions 
imposed on Moscow by the United States and the European Union. This is the main 
reason why the Armenian economy grew by over 12 percent in 2022.

According to Armenian government data, Armenia’s exports to Russia almost 
tripled in 2022 and nearly quadrupled in January-April 2023. Goods manufactured 
in third countries and re-exported by Armenian firms are believed to have 
accounted for most of that gain.

They include consumer electronics as well as other hi-tech goods and components 
which the Western powers believe could be used by the Russian defense industry. 
The New York Times reported last fall that Armenian imports of processors and 
microchips from the U.S. and the EU rose sharply in January-September 2022. As 
much as 97 percent of those items were re-exported to Russia, it said.

Also, Armenian companies shipped some 53,000 smartphones to Russia in the first 
half of 2022, up from only 745 in the year-earlier period.

U.S. - U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo mees Armenian Deputy Prime 
Minister Mher Grigorian, Washington, April 11, 2023.

These re-exports appear to have prompted serious concern from EU and especially 
U.S. officials. The latter pressed the Armenian government to comply with the 
sanctions during a series of meetings held earlier this year.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on May 22 that despite its “strategic” 
relations with Russia Armenia “cannot afford to be placed under Western 
sanctions.” “Therefore, in our relations with Russia we will act on a scale that 
allows us to avoid Western sanctions,” he told a news conference.

A few days later, Pashinian’s government announced that local exporters will now 
need government permission to deliver microchips, transformers, video cameras, 
antennas and other electronic equipment to Russia. The Armenian Ministry of 
Economy, which proposed the measure, cited the need to prevent the use of such 
items by foreign defense industries.

The Moscow daily Kommersant reported on Wednesday that for the last two weeks 
commercial banks in Armenia as well as Kazakhstan and Hong Kong have frequently 
blocked payments for such supplies wired by Russian buyers.

The Armenian Central Bank essentially confirmed this, saying that the “terms for 
foreign transactions set by all regional banks are being significantly 
tightened.” It claimed that Armenian banks are doing that “on their own.”

“As part of that process, the number of refusals to carry out a certain type of 
transactions may increase if commercial banks … assess those transactions as 
risky,” the Central Bank said in a statement to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Russia - Russian Prime Ministers Mikhail Mishustin meets his Armenian 
counterpart Nikol Pashinian in Sochi, June 7, 2023.

Pashinian and his Russian counterpart Mikhail Mishustin made no mention of these 
restrictions in their opening remarks at a meeting held in Sochi on Wednesday. 
They praised the soaring Russian-Armenian trade.

“It is important to maintain this positive momentum and achieve new record 
levels in mutual trade,” Mishustin told Pashinian.

“And this, by the way, helps the Armenian economy a lot because we are having a 
very good economic activity,” Pashinian said for his part.




Armenian Official Warns Azerbaijan

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia -- Parliament deputy Arsen Torosian.


There will be no peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan unless Baku agrees to 
address “the rights and security” of Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian 
population, a senior member of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s party said on 
Wednesday.

Arsen Torosian, a former health minister who now represents the ruling Civil 
Contract party in the Armenian parliament, responded to Azerbaijani Foreign 
Minister Jeyhun Bayramov’s claims that Yerevan maintains military presence in 
Karabakh and hampering Baku’s dialogue with the Karabakh Armenians.

Bayramov said on Tuesday that these are the main remaining obstacles to the 
signing of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. The Armenian Foreign Ministry 
did not react to those claims made ahead of a new round of negotiations which 
Bayramov and his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan will start in Washington 
on June 12.

Torosian brushed aside them, insisting that Armenia has no troops in Karabakh 
and is on the contrary pressing for an “international mechanism” for the 
dialogue between Baku and Stepanakert. He said that Armenian and Azerbaijani 
sides have still not agreed on the “parameters” of that mechanism despite making 
major progress towards the peace deal.

“If we, the mediators and Azerbaijan want a lasting peace, then this issue has 
to be addressed,” Torosian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “If the rights and 
security of our compatriots are not ensured in their homeland before or after 
the peace treaty, there will simply be no peace.”

Asked whether or not the planned treaty will make reference to that mechanism, 
Torosian said: “I can’t answer this question. But one thing is clear: if that 
issue is not addressed, then … what’s the point of signing it?”

Pashinian has made clear that Yerevan is ready to recognize Azerbaijani 
sovereignty over Karabakh through the treaty. The Armenian opposition and 
Karabakh’s leadership have denounced this policy change. They maintain that the 
Karabakh Armenians cannot live safely under Azerbaijani rule and would leave 
their homeland in that case.




Kocharian Trial Prosecutors Resign

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- Former President Robert Kocharian and three other former officials 
stand trial in Yerevan, September 17, 2019.


The two lead prosecutors in the marathon trial of former President Robert 
Kocharian have stepped down for unknown reasons.

Gevorg Baghdasarian and Petros Petrosian on Wednesday gave no reason for their 
resignation. Baghdasarian refused to say whether they have disagreements with 
Prosecutor-General Anna Vardapetian, who was installed by Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian last September.

Baghdasarian and Petrosian have presented evidence in support of coup and 
corruption charges leveled against Kocharian throughout the trial that began in 
2019.

Kocharian and three other former officials were first prosecuted in connection 
with the 2008 post-election unrest in Yerevan. Anna Danibekian, a district court 
judge presiding over their trial, acquitted them of “overthrown of the 
constitutional order” in early April 2021 ten days after Armenia’s 
Constitutional Court declared these charges unconstitutional. The prosecutors’ 
appeals against her decision were rejected by higher courts.

Danibekian also ruled at the time that Kocharian and his former chief of staff, 
Armen Gevorgian, will continue to stand trial on separate bribery charges which 
they reject as politically motivated. Court hearings on that case are still 
going on.

Vardapetian has not yet named the new trial prosecutors. One of Kocharian’s 
lawyers, Hayk Alumian, pointed out that they will need some time to familiarize 
themselves with details of the criminal case.

“That’s a great deal of work,” Alumian said, adding that the resignations could 
therefore further drag out Kocharian’s trial.

Kocharian, who is highly critical of Armenia’s current leadership, was first 
arrested in July 2018 shortly after the “velvet revolution” that brought 
Pashinian to power. He was set free on bail in June 2020.

The 68-year-old ex-president is the top leader of the opposition Hayastan 
alliance that finished second in parliamentary elections held in June 2021.


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.

 

Peace deal with neighbouring Azerbaijan possible by end of 2023 suggests senior Armenian official

FIRST POST
June 5 2023

According to Russia’s TASS news agency, a senior Armenian official suggested on Sunday that a peace deal with neighbouring Azerbaijan might be concluded by the end of 2023, putting an end to a decades-long war.

Moscow, Washington, and the European Union are all working individually to aid Azerbaijan and Armenia, who have fought two wars in the previous 30 years over the Nagorno-Karabakh territory.

According to TASS, Armen Grigoryan, secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, said on national television that the conversations were intense.

“If we can maintain this intensity and there is strong support from the international community to achieve progress, then there is a chance to have a peace treaty by the end of the year,” he said.

Azerbaijan took control of regions controlled by ethnic Armenians in and around Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020. The enclave is internationally accepted as a part of Azerbaijan, however, it is mostly populated by ethnic Armenians.

Both sides constantly accuse the other of violating a 2020 ceasefire agreement.

Estonian experts join European Union civilian missions in Armenia and Moldova

EUROPEAN INTEREST
June 6 2023

Käsper Kivisoo will become the Strategic Adviser on Hybrid threats and/or Cyber Security in the European Union’s new civilian mission in Moldova (EUPM Moldova), and Enn Kooskora will join the European Union’s new civilian mission in Armenia (EUMA Armenia) as an observer.

EUMA Armenia will monitor the security situation on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan to contribute to the stability of Armenia’s border regions. Estonian expert Enn Kooskora has worked on numerous missions, including the OSCE mission OSCE SMM in Ukraine.

The focus of EUPM Moldova will be on strategic expertise and operational support to reinforce Moldova’s internal security. Käsper Kivisoo, who will work as a short-term expert, previously worked as an adviser at the Government Office.

Estonia is posting experts to international civilian missions to help prevent and manage international conflicts. Estonian experts are posted to European Union missions in Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Iraq and Somalia, and the UN mission in Kosovo. Eight experts posted by Estonia are currently working with various international civilian missions. The civilian missions are coordinated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Canada’s Trudeau meets Catholicos Aram I, expresses support for enduring peace in Nagorno Karabakh

 10:41, 7 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 7, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Canada Justin Trudeau has met with Catholicos Aram I of the Great House of Cilicia.

“The Armenian Canadian community is strong and vibrant – and when His Holiness Catholicos Aram I and I met today, we spoke about that. We also spoke about the atrocities committed during the Armenian genocide, and our support for enduring peace in Nagorno-Karabakh,” PM Trudeau tweeted on June 7.

Armenian airline launches direct Yerevan-Tehran flight

MEHR News Agency
Iran – June 6 2023

TEHRAN, Jun. 06 (MNA) – Flyone Armenia national airline launched Yerevan-Tehran roundtrip flights on June 6.

Yerevan-Tehran roundtrip flights between Yerevan Zvartnots International Airport and Tehran Imam Khomeini International Airport will be operated on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

Flyone Armenia Chairman of the Board Aram Ananyan personally visited Zvartnots airport early on Tuesday for the ribbon cutting ceremony marking the first flight to Tehran.

The new flights will create a convenient transport choice between Yerevan and Tehran, enabling to promote the strong cultural, economic, and tourism ties, Ananyan said at the ceremony.

TM/IRN85131705

Kariné Poghosyan to Honor Aram Khachaturian’s 120th Anniversary on Wednesday

June 3 2023
Kariné Poghosyan to Honor Aram Khachaturian's 120th Anniversary on Wednesday

(NEW YORK, NY) —  There such a sense of joy, even ecstasy as she plays." This is how NY1's Stephanie Simon describes the Armenian-American concert pianist Kariné Poghosyan's performances.

Praised for her "Bewitching Detail and Thunderous Power" (New York Music Daily), the award-winning powerhouse pianist will present a one-night-only tribute to her beloved compatriot Aram Khachaturian (1903-1978), in honor of the composer's 120th Anniversary this year.

The concert will take place at the beautiful Cary Hall at the DiMenna Center on 450 West 37th Street, on Wednesday, June 7, at 9:00pm. The concert is presented by the Permanent Mission of Republic of Armenia to the UN.

The concise 45-minute program is comprised of two solo works – the vivacious Toccata and the Ms. Poghosyan's own solo transcription of the delicate Lullaby from the ballet Gayaneh. The grand event of the evening will be the performance Khachaturian's iconic Piano Concerto in D-flat Major, for which Ms. Poghosyan will be joined by her long-time colleague, Maestro Jason Tramm and the MidAtlantic Philharmonic Orchestra.

Please Note:

* The concert will be filmed, so the audience will be on camera.

* Seating Extremely Limited so Advance Ticket purchase recommended.

* No Ticket sales at the Entrance.

* Doors will open at 8:45pm, and there shall be No Late Seating, after 9:00pm

Award-winning Armenian-American pianist, Kariné Poghosyan, has been praised on the world stage for her "ability to get to the heart of the works she performs." Since her orchestral debut at the age of fourteen, Kariné has been enchanting concert audiences around the globe, with her masterful artistry and exceptional performances that leave them forever transformed.

Kariné's most recent concerts include 3 sold-out recitals at Carnegie Hall, one of which was a CD Release concert of her "Rachmaninoff and Stravinsky" recording on Centaur Records. This recording garnered rave reviews, with Gramophone Magazine praising its "masterly textural layering and resounding climaxes," and the American Record Guide stating that "a more heroic program would be hard to find, and few could play as well as the Armenian-American Poghosyan." She was also featured in WQXR's "Chopin Marathon" concert and live webcast, and was interviewed by David Osenberg on his award-winning program on WWFM, Cadenza.

The renown pianist and WWFM radio host Jed Distler described her performance in the following way, "This is big piano playing, but big in the sense of being in the moment, being present, and totally owning her vitality and imagination." Oscar-winning screenwriter Alex Dinelaris said, "Listening to and watching Kariné Poghosyan play fills one with life and energy. The combination of her formidable skill and her unchecked passion is an experience I recommend for anyone who needs to be reminded of the artist and art within themselves."

In February 2023, Ms. Poghosyan released her third album Folk Themes on Parma Recordings' classical label Navona Records, available now on Amazon, AppleMusic, Spotify, and other platforms. 

https://www.newjerseystage.com/articles/getarticle2.php?titlelink=karine-poghosyan-to-honor-aram-khachaturians-120th-anniversary-on-wednesday&utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=facebook&utm_source=socialnetwork&fbclid=IwAR2cQbSiPDd3VVRkZttSRBuRPLVw4ChByBW7a-jdEYEszCd__Xa0OfgmVw4

Residents will be armed if necessary, says provincial governor of Armenia’s Syunik

NEWS.am
Armenia – June 6 2023

The residents will be armed if necessary. Robert Ghukasyan, Governor of Syunik Province, told this to reporters Tuesday at the National Assembly of Armenia.

Asked whether there were all the conditions for arming, the Syunik governor responded: "The MoD should be asked if everything is there. Naturally, I can't have all that information."

When asked how many residents of Tegh village cannot go to their arable lands, he answered: "We are talking about two things. One that the MoD tells the resident it’s not desirable; that is, it is a dangerous area. About 50 business owners, families have a problem there. On the one hand there is their [i.e. the Azerbaijanis’] advance, on the other hand there are deployments related to our army. Between the two there is a fallen area. On the other hand, how close they can stand, there are defensive things there."