Protesters block 134 Freeway in Glendale to call attention to crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh

 10:41,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. Several hundred protesters blocked one side of the 134 Freeway in Glendale, California Wednesday night to call attention to the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from Azerbaijan’s blockade of Lachin Corridor.

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Using a big rig, protesters blocked off the eastbound side of the freeway at Central and Brand avenues, ABC7 reports.

Protesters then gathered on freeway lanes and unfurled signs calling for support from U.S. Congressman Adam Schiff, a staunch supporter of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Protesters have also been showing up at Schiff’s local office in recent days, calling on the Democratic congressman to do more to support their cause, according to ABC7. 

In the past, Schiff has issued statements condemning the blockade and calling for the Biden Administration to take action. He also has authored a House resolution calling for recognition of Artsakh’s sovereignty and condemning Azerbaijan’s aggression.

In a statement released August 7, Schiff said, “With Azerbaijan’s refusal to allow the International Committee of the Red Cross to deliver lifesaving humanitarian aid in, and transport patients requiring urgent medical attention out of Artsakh, the need for the international community to take action and find a lasting solution to the conflict grows with each passing day. I’ve persistently called for Azerbaijan to lift the blockade and allow humanitarian aid to move freely via the Lachin Corridor, and I have urged President Biden to take immediate action to address the dire situation in Artsakh.”

On Wednesday, he issued a new statement which read:

“I stand with the people of Armenia, Artsakh, and the Armenian-American community – not only my constituents but those around the world. I hear and see your pain over the inhumane situation your brothers and sisters are facing.

From condemning ceasefire violations, to advocating for the release of Armenian prisoners of war, to calling for sanctions and accountability for Azerbaijan, I’ve always been, and will continue to be, steadfast in my commitment to ensuring the protection of fundamental rights for the people of Artsakh.”

I am in communication with the Biden Administration, the State Department, and my Congressional colleagues and am advocating for using all tools at our disposal, including pushing for U.S. humanitarian aid to Artsakh, cutting off military and other assistance to Azerbaijan, and imposing sanctions on those responsible for this crisis.

I will be with you every step of the way and will always stand with the people of Armenia and Artsakh.”

Armenpress: Foreign Minister of United Arab Emirates briefed on humanitarian crisis in Nagorno- Karabakh

 21:36,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 11, ARMENPRESS. On August 10, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan had a telephone conversation with Minister of Foreign Affairs of UAE Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

Minister Mirzoyan briefed his counterpart on the deepening humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade of the Lachin Corridor which has been going on for about 8 months, the foreign ministry said in a readout.

Minister Mirzoyan emphasized that since June 15, Nagorno-Karabakh has been under total blockade as a result of which 120,000 people of Nagorno-Karabakh are facing an acute shortage of food and medicine, and people with serious health problems as well as 9,000 pregnant women are deprived of urgent medical assistance.

Ararat Mirzoyan emphasized that Azerbaijan does not comply with two Orders of the International Court of Justice regarding the restoration of movement along the Lachin corridor and ignores the targeted calls of international partners and various bodies. Therefore, in current conditions, clear steps are needed that will result in the immediate lifting of the blockade of the Lachin corridor.

During the phone call, the sides also touched upon the bilateral agenda and expressed readiness to take steps towards the development of collaboration between Armenia and the UAE, noting the importance of high-level mutual visits.

Secretary of Security Council, French Ambassador highlight need for eliminating blockade of Lachin Corridor

 17:34,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan has met with the new French Ambassador Olivier Decottignies.

During the meeting on August 10, Grigoryan congratulated Decottignies on assuming office and expressed confidence that the ambassador will contribute to the deepening and strengthening of bilateral cooperation in all sectors between Armenia and France, Secretary Grigoryan’s office said in a readout.

Secretary Grigoryan attached importance to the further development of the special relationship with France. In this context, the sides discussed prospects for intensifying and enhancing Armenian-French cooperation in a number of areas of bilateral interest.

Grigoryan and Decottignies also discussed the ongoing, deteriorating humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and underscored the need for eliminating the blockade of the Lachin Corridor.

Netherlands court sentences head of Azerbaijani-Turkish Association for hate propaganda against Armenians

 19:13,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS.  The Hague District Court has sentenced the head of the Azerbaijani-Turkish Association in the Netherlands for hate propaganda and public insults against Armenians, the Armenian Ambassador to the Netherlands and Luxembourg Tigran Balayan said on social media.

 “Following separate complaints by the Armenian Embassy in the Netherlands and the Federation of Armenian Organizations in the Netherlands, the Hague District Court sentenced the head of Azerbaijani-Turkish Association in the Netherlands for hate propaganda and public insults against Armenians,” Balayan posted on X, formerly known as Twitter.

Asbarez: AMAA to Celebrate Armenian Evangelical Education and Honor Legacy of Benefactor Edward Avedisian

Pamela and Edward Avedissian with the Architectural drawing of Avedisian School


BY PHYLLIS DOHANIAN

As children we were often asked what we wanted to be when we grew up. The answers usually spread across a wide range of fantasies – the president, a princess, or even an astronaut.

Ribbon cutting ceremony of Avedisian School. From l to r: AMAA Executive Director/CEO Zaven Khanjian and Pamela & Edward Avedisian

Fortunately for the Armenian community, one young man in Pawtucket, Rhode Island dreamed a very different dream. Observing his parents’ words and many selfless deeds reaching out to care for the needy, Edward Avedisian embarked upon a lifetime of helping others. Through many years of helping his own community, Ed developed a vision of how best to impact the well-being of Armenians into an action plan which would play a pivotal role for the future of Armenia. By providing the poorest and most deprived of children in Yerevan with the highest quality education from pre-kindergarten through secondary school at no cost, Ed wished to empower them to lift themselves to a level where they could not only obtain a good job, but also raise their own families within Armenia, assist other neighbors in need, and uplift their community and country.

A drafty and derelict building in Yerevan was the perfect place for Ed and his wife Pamela to make his dream a reality. In Melanya Geghamyan, principal of the Avedisian School from its inception, he found the perfect partner. Melanya listened as Ed told anyone who was within earshot that a true Armenian patriot should see the future of Armenia in an educated generation and should give the nation educated children. Melanya worked diligently day and night to make this shared mantra a reality.

Beginning in 1999 with kindergarten, adding one grade with each successive year with a middle school and a high school to follow and then, in conjunction with AUA, a university education for those eager children with the drive and skills to work hard to capture the future, the Khoren and Shooshanig Avedisian School came to be.

Providing the highest quality education to these young people was only one part of Ed’s vision. Ed’s dream also included working tirelessly to build the first LEED building in Armenia, introducing a more ecologically sound construction standard by finding and educating Armenia’s construction leaders as they built a facility with significantly reduced operating costs. The Avedisian School continues its growth with a greenhouse, each of which provides a strong future for Armenia.

Ed walked the school grounds, listened to the teachers, met with the students, and observed the needs of the community and Armenia on every visit. Quietly, humbly, but tenaciously, Ed continued to expand upon his original vision, considering what the next project should be to continue addressing vital needs of Armenia and be an inspiration for young people currently pondering what their own dreams will be for the benefit of all Armenians.

Pamela Avedisian delivering her message at the 2023 Graduation Ceremony of Avedisian School
Avedisian School Princiopal Geghamyan addressing the students and guests at the 2023 Graduation Ceremony of Avedisian School

Armenian Evangelicals have a long tradition supporting education. In our historic Homeland, in the Near East, wherever our ancestors settled in Diaspora, we have planted schools near our churches to help our Armenian community grow ever stronger which has proved to be a blessing to us all.

Speaking at the Avedisian School graduation this June, Pamela Avedisian reminded the graduates, their families and all the students and teachers present of the pride she and Ed shared in celebrating the personal successes of each Avedisian student and graduate. “It is deeply gratifying knowing all Ed and I have contributed has impacted the lives of so many…, and our projects will further impact Armenia for decades to come. I hope that all of you get to the point where you can give back, as enriching the lives of others is what it is all about.”

Khoren and Shooshanig Avedisian School in Yerevan, Armenia

Together we have rejoiced with Ed and Pamela in each success of the Avedisian School. Today we share the opportunity of fulfilling the last stage of Ed Avedisian’s dream, that we honor his memory and vision by continuing to support the Avedisian School so it may continue to be a beacon of exceptional education serving the needs of our children and Armenia.

Berj Karazian, a distinguished and Honored Artist of Armenia, a major Soloist of the Yerevan National Academic Opera and Ballet Theater will perform the musical selections during the Banquet. This celebrated outstanding tenor, Karazian, has performed all over the world in famous concert halls of more than 25 countries. Karazian will be accompanied by Soprano Armine Vardanyan, an esteemed artist who recently had her debut in Carnegie Hall, and in the Opera Magic Flute as the Queen of Night in Opera America of New York.

Please join me in celebrating Armenian Evangelical Education at the AMAA’s Annual Banquet on October 21st at the San Francisco Airport Marriott Waterfront in San Francisco, CA. For more information you may visit the AMAA website at amaa.org

Phyllis Dohanian of Belmont, Mass. is an AMAA Board member




Former ICC Chief Prosecutor Warns of Armenian Genocide in Nagorno-Karabakh

Aug 9 2023

NEWS PROVIDED BY

Luis Moreno Ocampo 

09 Aug, 2023, 08:12 ET


  • Luis Moreno Ocampo, first prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, calls on world powers to prevent a genocide starvation of 120,000 Armenians
  • Nagorno-Karabakh has been blockaded by Azerbaijan for months, blocking food and other supplies
  • Report notes the blockade constitutes genocide according to the Genocide Convention in “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction.” 

MONTROSE, Calif.Aug. 9, 2023 /PRNewswire/ — Luis Moreno Ocampo, who as the International Criminal Court’s Prosecutor obtained arrest warrants for Genocide in Darfur against then Sudan President Omar Al Bashir, has issued an alarming report. He warns that the 120,000 ethnic Armenians living in the blockaded enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, cut off from food and other supplies by Azerbaijan, are victims of genocide by starvation. 

“Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks,” Ocampo wrote in the pro bono report (read it here), entitled “Genocide against Armenians in 2023.” 

He noted that Article II(c) of the Genocide Convention determined that “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction” constituted genocide. The blockade is therefore not just a humanitarian catastrophe but a genocide against an ethnic group: the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, a region known by Armenians as Artsakh.

“You will find no crematoria in Nagorno-Karabakh, nor machetes, but genocide by starvation is no less devastating for being silent,” Ocampo said. “It was the same deadly method used against Armenians in 1915, against Poles and Jews in 1939, and against the people of Srebrenica in 1993. And unless we intervene right now, we’ll have a group of Armenians exterminated by year’s end.” (genocide already happens. It is to create the conditions, it is not requiring the deaths)

Scathingly noting past world indifference, Ocampo wrote: “The U.S., Russia, members of the European Union, all state parties of the Genocide Convention, and UN members have a rare historic opportunity to stop genocide against an Armenian group in 2023.”

The report has been delivered to the President of Nagorno-Karabakh, Arayik Harutyunyan, to Armenia’s Ambassador to the United Nations Mher Margaryan, and to the Armenian Foreign Ministry in Yerevan. 

The enclave, which lies inside Azerbaijan’s official borders but which has operated as a self-governing entity for decades, is connected to the outside world by the Lachin Corridor. On December 12, 2022Azerbaijan blocked the road, allowing only intermittent passage by the Red Cross and Russian peacekeepers – and since June 15 all passage has been entirely blocked.

Ocampo, who began his legendary career by helping to liberate his native Argentina from military dictatorship, also references a recent ruling by the International Court of Justice that found “a real and imminent risk” to the “health and life” of the Armenians in the enclave.

Prior to the release of the report, on July 31, Ocampo wrote to Azerbaijan’s president, Ilham Aliyev, demanding explanations about his intentions and cautioning that his behavior could be investigated as a Genocide. He did not receive a reply.  Ocampo said Aliyev should be investigated by the ICC, but the priority now is to prevent the physical elimination of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Ocampo noted that since December 2022, Aliyev deliberately blocked the provision of life’s essentials to the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, openly disobeying the specific orders of the International Court of Justice “to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles, and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.”

During his time at the ICC, in 2008, Ocampo obtained arrest warrants against Sudan’s then-President Omar al-Bashir for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes in Darfur. Bashir was deposed and is in jail in Khartoum.

MEDIA CONTACT:

Arda Nazerian: 1 (516) 457-5187 and [email protected]

SOURCE Luis Moreno Ocampo

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/former-icc-chief-prosecutor-warns-of-armenian-genocide-in-nagorno-karabakh-301896841.html?fbclid=IwAR1UV4WClIZMKQXsAlIiAH2Edx7X1mUNK9DXMuu–zzdUKyLLN9ms2F9cCI

Turkish Press: Azerbaijan-Armenia row in Lachin risks regional peace: Expert

DAILY SABAH
Turkey – Aug 9 2023


ince last year, a key transit road in the Karabakh region has been at the center of growing tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia, two countries struggling to strike a peace deal after their last major conflict in the fall of 2020 ended with a cease-fire brokered by Russia.

The Lachin road, which passes through its namesake district on the Azerbaijani side of the border, is Armenia’s only land route to Karabakh.

It is being monitored by a Russian peacekeeping contingent under the Nov. 10, 2020 truce, known as the Tripartite Declaration, and its control has been a major snag in relations between the two former Soviet nations.

Tensions grew significantly in December 2022 when Azerbaijani environmentalists staged protests demanding an end to what they said was Armenia’s illegal exploitation of mineral deposits in parts of Karabakh under the supervision of Russian peacekeepers.

The protests ended when Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint on the road, saying it took the step because of “threats and provocations” from the Armenian side and on the grounds that the road was being used by Yerevan to smuggle military arms and equipment into Karabakh.

Armenia has since accused Azerbaijan of causing a “humanitarian crisis” in the region. Baku has vehemently denied and pointed out that vehicles of the International Committee of the Red Cross can freely use the route.

For Turgut Kerem Tuncel, a senior researcher at the Center for Eurasian Studies of the Turkmeneli Cooperation and Culture Foundation, Azerbaijan’s steps in the region are justified in terms of international law, considering the problems that have emerged in the implementation of the cease-fire.

On negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the past three years, he said one of the major issues had been Armenia’s misuse of the article related to transportation along the Lachin road.

“The problem with Lachin is that … one of the articles in this declaration was the free access or transportation on the Lachin road. However, we see that this article … is abused by the Armenian side,” Tuncel said.

This prompted Baku’s decision to establish a border checkpoint at the road’s entrance, which “makes sense in terms of international law,” he said.

Armenia has raised concerns because it wants “unimpeded transportation,” he said. “But this unimpeded transportation is abused by the Armenian side because there is evidence that illegal military materials and equipment are transferred.”

He said there has been “very strong, very powerful propaganda” in the Western world, both by Armenian media outlets and members of the Armenian diaspora, claiming that Azerbaijan is pushing an “ethnic cleansing policy” against Armenian residents in Karabakh.

About Azerbaijan’s proposal to use the Aghdam-Khankendi road, Tuncel highlighted what he said were “questionable” claims pushed by Armenian media and diaspora.

“This (road) is still not under Azerbaijan’s control. So, Azerbaijan says that cargo could pass from Aghdam to Askeran and then reach Khankendi,” he explained.

“Very interestingly, while the Armenians are arguing that there is a humanitarian catastrophe going on in Karabakh, they, on the other hand, don’t accept this cargo transport from Aghdam.”

Armenia only wants cargo transportation through the Lachin road, which raises questions over its claims of a crisis in Karabakh, he said.

“If there’s such a big humanitarian crisis, why doesn’t the Armenian side allow the cargo coming from another road? If what is at stake is human lives? Then, I think all alternatives should be utilized,” he said.

The basis for Armenia’s opposition to this alternate route is that its use would mean the “integration of the Karabakh region to Azerbaijan,” he added.

“That is why they accept only the Lachin road because it directly connects the Armenian-populated parts of the Karabakh region to Armenia,” said Tuncel.

“All this discussion, all these disagreements are political, and at the core of this lies the approach of the Armenians in Karabakh to not integrate with Azerbaijan.”

Tuncel also touched upon the wider Zangezur corridor, where Azerbaijan has focused on planned connections, including motorways and a 43-kilometer (26-mile) railway.

This corridor is important for connectivity between Türkiye and Azerbaijan but must also be viewed from a regional perspective, he said.

The issue here then becomes the Middle Corridor, he added, referring to the transcontinental route, which begins in Türkiye, passes through the Caucasus via Georgia and Azerbaijan, crosses the Caspian Sea, traverses Central Asia, and reaches China.

For this corridor to materialize, there must be stability in the entire region, including the South Caucasus, which is why “we need normalization between Azerbaijan and Armenia,” he explained.

He said the Zangezur corridor significantly shortens the distance between Türkiye and the western shores of the Caspian Sea while adding “another alternative” for other regional routes, such as the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway.

Tuncel said Armenia, despite its obligations under the Tripartite Declaration, is doing “everything” to hinder transportation connections in the South Caucasus.

The Zangezur corridor could actually benefit Armenia, maybe even more than Türkiye and Azerbaijan, as it would end its regional isolation, he said.

“For this reason, I think Armenia should start thinking strategically and do its best to normalize its relations with Azerbaijan and Türkiye and be a part of the large, globally important infrastructure projects (in the region),” he concluded.

“A blow to microbusiness in Armenia”: experts on the abolition of tax incentives

Aug 9 2023
  • Gayane Sargsyan
  • Yerevan

Microbusinesses lose tax benefits

Micro-enterprises in Armenia have lost their important tax benefits. From now on they will have to pay monthly income tax at the rate of 20 percent for each worker instead of the previous 5000 drams [about $13] per month. This is a consequence of changes in the tax code that came into force on July 1, 2023.

According to experts, canceling the privileges used by micro-businesses can lead to negative consequences. In particular, to the reduction of workplaces at micro-enterprises, the reduction of employees’ wages, the growth of shadow activities, and even the closing of businesses.


  • People, money and the economy: an analysis of the situation in Armenia
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  • Modernization of old buildings in Armenia: energy savings and modern design

The previous regime of taxation of micro-entrepreneurship entered into force on January 1, 2020. It was introduced to replace the family business with the concept of “micro-entrepreneurial activity”. At the same time, the government offered the following benefits:

  • enterprises with an annual turnover of up to 24 million drams [about $62,500] were exempted from turnover tax,
  • The income tax for employees of micro-enterprises became fixed – only 5000 drams per month.

The government hopes this decision will help stimulate the development of the economy and the emergence of new jobs.

“These steps were taken in order for micro-enterprises to declare the real wages of their employees, as a result of which a decrease in shadow activity was expected. At the same time, microbusiness workers received their income legally, since the change did not involve large costs for the owner,” economist and director of the consulting company TEAM2b (TimTuBi) Vladimir Shatverov explains.

According to him, the privileges offered by the government “inclined many businessmen to respond to the government with a handshake”. As a result, the number of micro-enterprises in Armenia increased significantly over the last three years to more than 35,000.

Against the background of this boom, in 2022 the government said they did not foresee such a rapid growth in the number of micro-enterprises. And in August 2022, they introduced a draft law on tax changes. It was approved, which led to the cancellation, among other things, of the benefits of monthly payment of a small fixed income tax for each employee.

Considering this point as the most significant of the legislative changes, Vladimir Shatverov explains its meaning with a concrete example.

“For example, a micro-enterprise has three employees, each of whom receives a salary of 200 thousand drams [about $520]. The owner still paid three taxes in the amount of 15 thousand drams [about $39] per month. And since July of this year, he needs to pay 20 percent of their salary, which will amount to 120 thousand drams [about $312]. In annual calculation, this will amount to an even more significant sum.”

“Sunny Food” produces canned goods in the border village of Garibdzhanyan in Shirak region.

“Any additional tax liability is an additional burden for the organization. And the smaller the business, the more difficult it will be for it to cope with this tax burden”, director Anait Harutyunyan says.

She believes that the consequences of the change in the tax code will be manifested in different ways – from the increase in the prices of goods and services, the reduction of the number of employees, to the liquidation of businesses.

According to the young entrepreneur, these changes in the tax policy of the state can lead to greater caution among businessmen.

“When tax liabilities increase, businessmen are more cautious. They think longer whether it is worth making investments, starting a business, expanding the existing one, or it is very risky.”

Experts share the concerns of microbusiness owners.

“It is clear that as a result of the recent regulations, some new employees will be hired without registering. Or they will register, but with a lower salary than they will actually receive. This is the first obvious risk of this change.

Another risk is that micro-enterprises, which have already honestly declared the real salaries of their employees, try to gradually reduce the amount of paid salaries in order to save on taxes,” Vladimir Shatverov says.

However, he considers the loss of the government’s trust in private business the worst consequence:

“When a businessman sees that the state is constantly changing the rules of the game, he is much more cautious about all reforms. And in the future, when the government offers even something good, many will think longer and act more cautiously. As a result, it will be more difficult to implement possible subsequent reforms. One of the principles of the tax code is the construction of long-term and stable relations, which is actually violated by such actions.”

Experts find it difficult to predict the consequences of these tax changes. The government did not include in the bill any quantitative data or official statistics that could be the basis for calculations about possible developments.

“There should be numbers at the base of the draft law, so that the changes were convincing, so that the citizen understood why the state introduced them. But the government did not calculate or publish the number of microbusiness workers. The government did not publish its calculations and forecasts, which would allow us to understand the logic of the implemented changes,” the head of the Union of Employers of Armenia, Gagik Makaryan, says.

“Review of the tax burden on the part of employees of micro-enterprises aimed at establishing equal conditions of taxation”, the Ministry of Finance told JAMNews.

The mechanism of ensuring equal conditions for business, which the ministry refers to, experts consider “implausible”.

“To ensure equal conditions, it was necessary to change the size of the income tax, because everyone has to pay it to the state. At the same time, the state offers benefits in the field of information technologies. We are talking about the bill to reduce the income tax of IT companies to five percent. It turns out that the state, reducing the income tax of the IT sector, is trying to compensate for part of its losses due to taxes from micro-entrepreneurs who have employees,” Gagik Makaryan says.

Shatverov shares his opinion. He says that tax changes would be more acceptable for business if they were introduced gradually.

“For example, the monthly income tax of micro-enterprise workers could be set at the rate of five percent of wages in the first year, 10 percent in the second year, 15 or 20 percent in the third. A gradual increase in the tax burden would give business time and the opportunity to adapt to changes. And it would be useful to provide some alternative benefits for those enterprises for which the tax burden increases sharply.”

Makaryan says:

“The role of microbusiness for the country may be small from the point of view of the amount of taxes paid to the treasury, but large – in social terms. These enterprises provide employment not only for themselves, but also for a certain number of employees. Thus, they contribute to the reduction of unemployment. Their employees do not become a burden for the state as unemployed.”

This tax change just creates unequal conditions for microbusiness and IT workers, he adds.

“We create unequal conditions between economic sectors. If it’s about creating a level playing field for entrepreneurs, why do they make an exception for the field of information technology? In this sense, I don’t see logic in the actions of the government.”

https://jam-news.net/microbusinesses-lose-tax-benefits/

Armenia praises Iran’s contribution to regional stability

 TEHRAN TIMES 
Iran – Aug 9 2023

TEHRAN- Armenia’s Security Council secretary has lauded Iran’s contribution to regional security and stability.

Armen Valerii Grigoryan made the remarks on Tuesday in a meeting with Mahdi Sobhani, Iran’s ambassador to Yerevan.

Grigoryan emphasized the readiness of Armenia to advance comprehensive ties with Iran.

The continuation of political consultations, routine meetings of security officials, the importance of economic cooperation in fostering peace and stability in the region, as well as collaborative projects, were topics of discussion between the two parties.

For his part, Ambassador Sobhani said that mutual respect and trust are the cornerstones of ties between Iran and Armenia.

He also reaffirmed Iran’s will to improve ties with Armenia and contribute to regional peace and stability.

Iran and Armenia have a long history of cooperation dating back thousands of years, and they share a 44-kilometer-long border.

Armenia’s Grigoryan also held a phone call with Ali Akbar Ahmadian, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) Council on Monday.

In the phone call, Ahmadian said that diplomacy and conversation are the greatest ways to settle international crises.

Ahmadian also said that Iran firmly backs the consolidation of enduring peace in the Caucasus region.

The security officials of Armenia and Iran also talked about a series of issues ranging from economic connections to issues of common concern, including events in the region.

Grigoryan congratulated Ahmadian on his new job and wished him luck, hoping that it would be beneficial to the friendly people of Iran.

In a meeting in Tehran last month, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi also told Armenia’s Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan that Tehran respects the territorial integrity and sovereignty of all neighboring nations and vehemently opposes any geopolitical shift in the region.

“Any foreign intervention will only complicate issues. The Islamic Republic of Iran supports the peace talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan and hopes that these talks will help establish and strengthen peace and security in the region as much as possible,” Raisi pointed out.

The Iranian president also emphasized the value of strengthening ties with Armenia and declared that nothing could stop the development of ties.

Film: Variance Films Acquires Post-WWII Drama ‘Amerikatsi’ From Actor-Filmmaker Michael A. Goorjian

DEADLINE
Aug 8 2023

EXCLUSIVE: Indie distributor Variance Films has snapped up North American rights to the period drama Amerikatsi, written and directed by and starring Michael A. Goorjian, slating it for an exclusive theatrical release in New York and L.A. on Friday, September 8, with a national rollout to follow.

Shot in Armenia by People of Ar Productions, Amerikatsi centers on Charlie (Goorjian), who returns to the country in 1948 — decades after fleeing to the U.S. as a child, due to persecution by the Ottoman Empire. What he finds in doing so is a country crushed under Soviet rule. And after being unjustly imprisoned, Charlie falls into despair, until he discovers that he can see into a nearby apartment from his cell window — the home of a prison guard. As his life unexpectedly becomes entwined with the man’s, he begins to see that the true spirit of his homeland is alive in its passionate people. 

The tale is a personal one for Goorjian, the Emmy-winning actor known for Party of FiveSLC Punk! and his directorial vehicle Illusion, whose own grandparents fled the Ottoman Empire. He produced the film alongside R. Patrick Malkassian, Arman Nshanian and Sol Tryon, with Hovik Keuchkerian, Nelli Uvarova, Mikhail Trukhin, Narine Girgoryan and Jean-Pierre Nshanian rounding out the cast. Vartan Barsoumian and Serj Tankian served as exec producers, with Amadeus Entertainment now on board to handle international sales.

“Back in the 90s, I was fortunate enough to work on a lot of great indie films which inspired me to start writing and directing my own projects,” shared Goorjian in a statement to Deadline. “It takes time to find your own voice, but with AMERIKATSI, I have done my best to make something true to myself and my Armenian heritage in the spirit of independent cinema.”

Added Variance Films President Dylan Marchetti, “What Michael has crafted here is a powerful, life-affirming, and crowd-pleasing experience, and we can’t wait to share it with audiences across the country through its initial release and into awards season.”

Variance Films most recently handled the re-release of S.S. Rajamouli’s critically acclaimed Telugu epic RRR, leading up to the film’s Oscar and Golden Globe wins for Best Original Song “Naatu Naatu.” Other past and upcoming releases for the company, founded in 2008, include Ira Sachs’ Sundance-premiering romantic drama Passages for Mubi; Sideshow/Janus Films’ Silver Bear winner Afire, Cannes Jury Prize winner The Eight Mountains, and Oscar-nominated Jerzy Skolimowski pic EO; and Park Chan-Wook’s Decision to Leave for Mubi, which earned the filmmaker Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival last year. 

Watch the trailer for Amerikatsi at the below link