Nagorno-Karabakh not under blockade, Azerbaijan insists

POLITICO

Statistics compiled by Baku’s border service and seen by POLITICO record a total of 1,927 people passing through the checkpoint between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh since it opened in April, while more than a hundred cargo vehicles have been waved through in each direction.

The EU and U.S. have repeatedly warned that the installation of the checkpoint could trigger a “humanitarian crisis” in the war-torn region, as tensions flare across the former Soviet Union.

“As is demonstrated by free and unimpeded passage of Armenian residents, allegations the checkpoint prevents movement and is a ‘blockade’ are completely baseless,” said Aykhan Hajizade, spokesman for Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry.

Inside Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized borders, the area has been controlled by its Armenian population since a war that followed the collapse of the USSR. In 2020, Baku launched an offensive to take back swathes of land, leaving the region’s estimated 100,000 residents connected to Armenia by a sole highway, known as the Lachin corridor.

A Moscow-brokered cease-fire saw Russian peacekeepers deployed to oversee the road. However, Baku claims Armenia was using it to bring in weaponry and export resources. Last December, Azerbaijani activists, backed by the government, staged a sit-in on the Lachin corridor, preventing civilian traffic from passing.

Since then, Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians have been dependent on Russian peacekeeper convoys and Red Cross aid workers to bring in supplies. The demonstrations ended in April after Azerbaijan installed the border post on the corridor.

Many of those using the checkpoint appear to have done so under escort by Russian peacekeepers or with the Red Cross. According to Yerevan, three people with registered addresses inside Armenia have been denied entry.

However, according to Tigran Grigoryan, a political analyst from Nagorno-Karabakh who heads Yerevan’s Regional Center for Democracy and Security, local Armenians are only crossing the border in emergencies.

“The majority of the population isn’t using it — it’s dangerous, nobody knows what will happen there. But it’s also a matter of principle — nobody in Karabakh wants to legitimize this new status quo,” he said.

Grigoryan believes local Armenians will be pressured to register for Azerbaijani passports. “For the majority of people, this is unacceptable. If the choice is to accept the passports or leave the territory, the majority of people will choose to leave.”

Armenia has claimed Azerbaijan’s efforts to tighten control over Nagorno-Karabakh could lead to “ethnic cleansing.” Yerevan has accepted Baku’s sovereignty over the region, but insists an international mechanism should be put in place to guarantee the rights of Armenians living there in peace talks mediated by the EU, U.S. and Russia.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, meanwhile, has said the region is an internal issue and any reference to it in a peace deal is “unacceptable.” He has offered “amnesty” to the Karabakh Armenian leadership, provided they accept being governed from Baku.

A series of bloody clashes on the shared border in recent days have left several injured on the Armenian side and reignited concerns over the prospect of a renewed conflict. On Thursday morning, Azerbaijan claimed the checkpoint itself had come under attack, leaving one border guard injured.

Later the same day, Artak Beglaryan, a senior Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian official, said that Russian peacekeepers and Red Cross convoys had been prevented from crossing through the checkpoint in the wake of the reported incident.

This article has been updated.


Sports: Euro 2024 qualifying: Wales humiliated 4-2 at home by Armenia

UK –
Euro 2024 qualifying: Wales humiliated 4-2 at home by Armenia
By Dafydd PritchardBBC Sport Wales at Cardiff City Stadium

Wales suffered one of their most embarrassing and damaging defeats in recent memory as they lost at home to Armenia in a chaotic and foul-tempered Euro 2024 qualifier.

The hosts seemed to be on course for a comfortable evening when Daniel James fired them in front from Brennan Johnson’s low cross, but the home crowd were soon silenced by an exquisite volley from Armenia’s Lucas Zelaryan.

There were then gasps of disbelief as Grant-Leon Ranos was given the freedom of the Cardiff City Stadium to head the visitors – 71 places below Wales in the world rankings – into a first-half lead which was as deserved as it was shocking.

Wales had several chances to equalise but their wasteful finishing was punished after the break as Ranos hit a fine first-time shot from the edge of the area to send Armenia’s small contingent of travelling fans into raptures.

Harry Wilson pulled a goal back for Wales with a little under 20 minutes remaining, only for Zelarayan to curl in a superb second to restore Armenia’s two-goal advantage.

  • Chaos in Cardiff – match reaction and analysis
  • The state of play in Euro 2024 qualifying

Any hopes Wales had of salvaging something from this game were then dealt another blow when striker Kieffer Moore was sent off for an off-the-ball clash with Armenian goalkeeper Ognjen Chancharevich.

That final calamity set the seal on a nightmarish evening for Wales, who squandered the chance to go top of Group D with previous leaders Croatia instead in Nations League action.

Rob Page and his Wales players must now try to recover from this humiliation in time for Monday’s trip to face new leaders Turkey, touted by many as their closest rivals for qualification behind group favourites Croatia.

Wales were heavily criticised for last year’s World Cup, where their first appearance at the tournament since 1958 was spoiled by three dismal performances which saw them knocked out in the group stage.

A promising start to their Euro 2024 qualifying campaign in March – drawing in Croatia and beating Latvia at home – seemed to suggest Wales had purged themselves of their experience in Qatar, but this display against Armenia suggested otherwise.

It could, or more pertinently should, have been straightforward. Within 10 minutes, the pace of Johnson and James overwhelmed Armenia as they combined to put Wales ahead.

Instead of seizing control of the match from that point, however, Wales surrendered it.

Armenia’s first goal was a gem, Zelarayan’s sweet volley the kind that you could write off as just one of those things, a moment of individual class – even if Wales’ defenders were sloppy in tracking their runners.

But there was no justifying the second. Joe Rodon tried carrying the ball out of defence but lost it carelessly and then his colleagues did nothing to reduce the masses of space afforded Ranos to head in.

Wales did not learn their lesson. As players rushed forward in the desperate hope of getting themselves back into this game, they instead fell further behind as Ranos struck again.

The porous Welsh midfield practically invited their Armenian opponents into their penalty area, while the home defence was passive and, at times, statuesque.

But it is not only the players who should shoulder the responsibility for this horror show.

Just as he did against the United States and Iran at the World Cup, Page got this game horribly wrong.

Wales still have five games left to revive their hopes of qualifying for Euro 2024 but this result could have long-lasting and serious ramifications for Page and his players.

While Wales wallow in the humiliation of this result, Armenia can bask in the afterglow of one of their greatest victories.

They had lost nine of their previous 10 competitive matches, conceding 29 goals in the process and sliding down to 97 in the world rankings.

In Cardiff, however, they made a mockery of those statistics, harrying their opponents and counter-attacking astutely.

Their goals were no flukes. Indeed, they could have scored more and, apart from the occasional wayward shot, the visitors’ finishing was supreme.

This was also a moment to savour for their manager Oleksandr Petrakov, who had stood by the same touchline a year ago as his then Ukraine side were beaten by Wales in their World Cup play-off final.

The pain of that rain-soaked Sunday afternoon may now have eased for Petrakov, while the jubilation of World Cup qualification seems like a distant memory for Wales.

  • Line-ups
  • Match Stats
  • Live Text
Home TeamWalesAway TeamArmenia
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Home56%
Away44%
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Away11
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Sports: Wales left with plenty to prove after painful throwback defeat to Armenia [+Links]

Ben Fisher



Home loss to team ranked 97th in the world adds to poor run of form making Monday’s game in Turkey feel make-or-break

The inquest into Wales’s humbling by Armenia began in earnest on Saturday morning, a few hours before an afternoon flight to Samsun, the Turkish city on the Black Sea where suddenly it all feels rather make or break when it comes to qualifying for Euro 2024.

The grave mood in the stands at full time in Cardiff, as the remnants of a sold-out crowd wondered whether they had inadvertently been teleported back to the bruising days when Wales were nestled below Guatemala and Guyana in the Fifa rankings, married with what is now a bleak forecast.

In recent years Wales have never had it so good, but Friday provided an unwanted and brutal throwback to more testing times. The nation has simply, owing to the team’s unprecedented recent success, come to expect much better.

The last time Wales conceded more than three goals in a competitive home game a 17-year-old left-back by the name of Gareth Bale scored his first of 41 goals for his country, a stunning free-kick in a 5-1 defeat by Slovakia.

In isolation, being picked off 4-2 at home to Armenia is unquestionably one of the worst results this millennium for Wales but burrow a little deeper and the cold reality is that it had been coming. Since qualifying for the World Cup 12 months ago, via a deflected Bale free-kick, they have won one of their 11 matches.

A blinding result in Split in March, when Nathan Broadhead salvaged a 1-1 draw with Croatia on debut with Wales’s only shot on target, in the third minute of second-half stoppage time, masked a poor performance. Wales edged past Latvia a few days later and at that point all appeared dandy.

Perhaps that was what Rob Page, the Wales manager, was getting at when he said everybody was getting starry-eyed as he tried to explain the humiliating defeat. Page insists Wales did not underestimate their opponents and before the game Aaron Ramsey, the Wales captain, alluded to the goal Armenia scored in defeat to Turkey in March as evidence of how they can hurt teams.

As Wales discovered to their detriment. Ramsey spoke of a streetwise side who would likely sit in a low block and prove awkward opponents but Armenia were not plucky winners. They were strong and sharp, incisively carving Wales open time and again, and scored four fine goals.

The thing is, should anyone really have been surprised? A quick sift through Wales’s team is a revealing exercise. Of the starting lineup only Ben Davies and Harry Wilson finished the season as first-choice starters in the Premier League. The goalkeeper Danny Ward lost his place at relegated Leicester and the centre-backs Chris Mepham and Joe Rodon spent much of last season playing second fiddle at Bournemouth and Rennes, respectively.

Ethan Ampadu, fresh from suffering the third relegation of his career, as Spezia tumbled into Serie B last Sunday, was fighting a losing battle at the base of midfield alongside Ramsey, who was easily bypassed. Daniel James will be in the Championship with Leeds next year. And let’s not forget this is Page’s first senior manager role since being sacked by Northampton.

Of course, if Wales beat Turkey on Monday, the picture will not look anywhere near as bleak. Page knows Wales need a win to repair the damage. “If we win, we go back into a position of power,” said the winger David Brooks, who was given a standing ovation as he came on against Armenia for his first Wales appearance in two years after treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma.

“I think people will be starting to doubt us, but we have got to go and try and put in a performance to prove all those people wrong. We all want to get to a major tournament, so nothing has changed.”

Page maintained afterwards that this is a team in transition in the post-Bale era. That much is true. Brennan Johnson, who laid on James’s opener, is surely Wales’s most exciting talent, while the 18-year-olds Luke Harris and Jordan James, of Fulham and Birmingham, respectively, will likely be integrated in the coming months.

It is too easy to point to the absence of Bale as a factor in Wales’s return to type, not least because by the end he was in effect a mannequin. Nevertheless, Bale unmistakably carried Wales at times and came to the fore when his country needed him most. Was the harrowing Armenia episode a one-off or is this what Wales are now? Time will tell.

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2023/jun/17/wales-euro-2024-qualifying-turkey-armenia

ALSO READ OTHER REPORTS:
Wales stunned by Armenia in Euro blow – Times of India (indiatimes.com)
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Wales’s embarrassing defeat by Armenia puts pressure on Rob Page (thetimes.co.uk)
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Euro 2024 qualifying: Wales humiliated 4-2 at home by Armenia – BBC Sport
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Wales 2-4 Armenia: Rob Page’s side slump to a shock home defeat in Euro qualifiers | Daily Mail Online
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Cymru shocked by Armenia – FAW
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“It really shocked me,” says Wales manager Robert Page after 4-2 loss to Armenia (aninews.in)
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US threatens Nagorno-Karabakh delegates, forces meeting with Baku

Al Mayadeen

Russia expresses concerns over US attempts to impose mediation in the dialogue between Stepanakert and Baku, including through threats of the use of force.

US officials are pressuring delegates from the Nagorno-Karabakh region to hold a meeting with Azerbaijani representatives in a neutral location. They have given them an ultimatum, stating that failure to comply will result in Azerbaijani forces carrying out a “counterterrorism operation” against them, a source in Washington told Sputnik.

“Washington is forcing the representatives of Nagorno-Karabakh in an ultimatum-like way to agree in the near future to a meeting with the Azerbaijani side in a third country with the participation of an American curator. The goal is to introduce the United States into the region,” the source revealed.

On its part, Russia expressed concerns about US attempts to impose mediation in the dialogue between Stepanakert and Baku, including through threats of the use of force, the Russian Foreign Ministry told Sputnik on Thursday.

“We are concerned about the information that has appeared in the media that the US is trying to impose its mediation services now also in the dialogue between Baku and Stepanakert, including through threats to use force,” the ministry said.

This information comes after Azerbaijan and Armenia both expressed their willingness to recognize others’ territorial integrity and made progress to normalize relations through Russian-hosted talks in late May.

At a meeting of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe’s Permanent Council, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said Baku and Yerevan are “on the threshold of peace.”

“The two countries [Azerbaijan and Armenia] for the first time after the restoration of their independence are on the threshold of peace, pledging to mutually respect sovereignty, territorial integrity and inviolability of borders.”

“Despite the suffering, deprivation, and destruction that the Azerbaijani people have undergone for many years, Azerbaijan is actively working to ensure a lasting peace with Armenia. There are opportunities and real prospects for establishing peace, strengthening stability, ensuring peaceful coexistence, advancing the peace agenda, investing in economic development and cooperation,” Bayramov emphasized.

In the past year, the US’ sphere of influence over regional politics has diminished, underlined by its absence from the Iranian-Saudi rapprochement which was mediated by China on March 10. 

In the case of Baku and Yerevan, the US attempts to put its foot back into the region as Moscow headlined the peace talks between the two parties back in May.

Armenian genocide: US recognition of Turkey’s killing of 1.5 million was tangled up in decades of geopolitics

SFGATE
San Francisco – June 14 2023
June 14, 2023
(The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.)

Eldad Ben Aharon, Leiden University

(THE CONVERSATION) Armenian communities across the globe mark the murderous history of state violence in Turkey with the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day on April 24.

That commemoration marks the period between 1914 and 1921, when the Ottoman Empire carried out an extended campaign to expel or kill the Armenians living in Turkey and its border regions. From massacres to death marches, 1.5 million of Turkey’s historic Armenian population was murdered.

Since 1923, Turkey has denied perpetrating what came to be called the Armenian genocide. It has pressured its allies to refrain from officially declaring the events a “genocide,” which the United Nations defines as acts committed with the “intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group.”

But in a milestone vote in late 2019, both the U.S. House and Senate defied that pressure and the weight of over 40 years of precedent.

They passed a bill declaring that the killing of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks was, in fact, a genocide.

Since 1975, numerous effortswere made to pass an Armenian genocide bill. The decades-long struggle involving Turkey, Israel, Armenian-Americans, the American Jewish community and the U.S. government over the commemoration of the Armenian genocide resulted in failure to pass a bill every time – until 2019.

Setting the table

I am a historian of international relations. I am currently writing a book that focuses on Israeli-Turkish-American relations and the contested memories of the Armenian genocide.

The political struggle over U.S. recognition of the Armenian genocide was set in motion during the presidency of Jimmy Carter in 1976. Carter came to the job with a commitment to protecting human rights. That commitment was soon tested by the longstanding strategic relationship between the U.S. and Iran, which was ruled by the Shah with an iron fist. By late 1977, U.S.-Iranian relations were deteriorating after Carter sent mixed signals about the Shah’s dictatorship and his abuse of Iranians’ human rights.

In 1978, Carter’s fraught relations with the Shah weakened the Iranian leader’s hold on power. Popular protest movements mounted, culminating in the Shah’s overthrow in 1979, the Iranian fundamentalist revolution and the American hostage crisis.

The criticism at home about the Carter-Shah relationship and American Jews’ reluctance to support Carter’s administration convinced the president and his staff members to re-promote human rights through American foreign policy.

Their strategy: Use the Holocaust as a universal lesson for genocide prevention to help reinforce ties with Jewish voters.

Holocaust remembrance

While the Iran crisis was playing out, on Nov. 1, 1978, Carter launched the President’s Commission on the Holocaust. Carter requested that the commission submit a report addressing the “establishment and maintenance of an appropriate memorial to those who perished in the Holocaust.”

The commission included American Holocaust survivors like Elie Wiesel and Benjamin Meed. The commission’s September 1979 report recommended special days of remembrance for the Jewish victims of the Holocaust, a dedicated education program, and the establishment of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum as a national memorial.

The museum, the report said, should be focused on one specific aspect of the Nazis’ many crimes: the “unique” and unprecedented nature of the murder of the Jews – even over other Nazi victims.

“Millions of innocent civilians were tragically killed by the Nazis. They must be remembered. However, there exists a moral imperative for special emphasis on the six million Jews. While not all victims were Jews, all Jews were victims, disdained for annihilation solely because they were born Jewish,” wrote the commission.

This approach clashed with Carter’s views on the universal lessons of the Holocaust. It also aroused the opposition of representatives of other victims of the Nazis, such as the Roma and the gay community, who pressed for inclusion in the Holocaust museum.

A ‘campaign to remember’

Another heated debate was taking place about who should pay for the museum, which was estimated to cost US$100 million.

The land allocated on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., was a contribution by the federal government. But the remaining funds to build the museum were to be donated mainly by the American public through a “Campaign to Remember.”

This was the moment – the convergence of Carter’s vision of human rights protection and the “Campaign to Remember” – that the organized American-Armenian community believed could bring the almost-forgotten memory of the Armenian genocide back to public consciousness.

California Gov. George Deukmejian, an Armenian-American, pressured museum leaders to appoint Set Momjian as its American-Armenian community representative. The Armenian community in the U.S. made a donation of $1 million, aiming to be able to include the Armenian genocide in the museum’s focus.

In August 1983, the Armenian expectations became reality when the museum commission reached a decision to include the Armenian genocide in the exhibition narrative. Although the decision about the 1915 genocide was informal, it was still a commitment that later would be difficult to reverse.

Turkey looks to Israel

The Turkish government was extremely anxious about the museum. It turned for help to its regional and Cold War ally, Israel. Turkey pressured Israel to influence the concept of the museum and to make sure the Armenians were left out of the memorial.

As part of an oral history project, I interviewed Gabi Levy, who served as Israeli ambassador to Turkey from 2007 to 2011. Levy told me that throughout the history of Israeli-Turkish relations, whenever Turkey had an urgent concern in the U.S., “the Turks carried assumptions regarding the ‘magical power’ of Israel’s foreign policy,” especially their purported ability to use the American Jewish lobby for influence the U.S. political arena.

Israel capitalized on presumptions about the Israeli/Jewish “magic power” to convince Turkey that they were taking all “possible measures.” Israeli diplomats tried to persuade the relevant American players to prevent the Armenian experience from being incorporated into the museum, requesting influential Jewish congressmen such as Tom Lantos and Stephen Solarz to convince the museum commission to exclude the Armenian genocide. Lantos and Solarz believed this would serve U.S. interests in the Middle East that included Israel and Turkey maintaining good relations.

Ultimately, as a key U.S. NATO ally, it was Turkey’s own pressure on the U.S. Congress and the Reagan administration’s Cold War fears that forestalled any presence of the Armenian genocide in the museum as well as resulted in the failure to pass the Armenian genocide bill.

When the memorial finally opened its doors in 1991, its focus was the Holocaust and Jewish victims.

What changed in 2019?

Internationally, a number of developments supported the dramatic changes in U.S.-Turkish relations in 2019. They include Turkey’s July purchase of a Russian-made air defense system, which angered the Americans, and the October military offensive by Turkey in Northern Syria against the Kurds, who were U.S. allies.

In the U.S., the unprecedented condemnation by both Democrats and Republicans of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan for his attack on Kurds in Syria, as well as the impeachment process against Erdogan ally Donald Trump, weakened Congress’ adherence to the longtime official position favoring Turkey.

Congress passed powerful sanctions against Turkey. The Armenian genocide bill was part of the package.

Importantly, the bill passed by the U.S. Congress states the U.S. will “commemorate the Armenian Genocide through official recognition and remembrance.”

The U.S. is thus committed to allocate federal resources to build a U.S. memorial to commemorate the 1915 genocide – just as with the the 1978 President’s Commission on the Holocaust. Practically speaking, building a U.S. Armenian genocide museum or memorial will have further negative implications for U.S.-Turkish relations, which might take another 40 years to rebuild.

Editor’s note: This is an updated version of an article originally published on March 20, 2020.

[Expertise in your inbox. Sign up for The Conversation’s newsletter and get a digest of academic takes on today’s news, every day.]

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconversation.com/armenian-genocide-us-recognition-of-turkeys-killing-of-1-5-million-was-tangled-up-in-decades-of-geopolitics-129159.

Reprinted also in

https://www.leadertelegram.com/news/nation-world/armenian-genocide-us-recognition-of-turkeys-killing-of-1-5-million-was-tangled-up-in/article_35f5c815-ebe3-5b91-b69f-b01e67b1d048.html

Sports: Armenian Basketball Classic heads to LA for first time

 FOX 11 

The players of the Armenian National Basketball Team have been holding intense practice sessions around the clock as they count down to tip-off with a big game ahead against France this weekend.

It’s a major milestone as this marks the first time the Armenian National Basketball Team will be playing in the United States.

The team is being coached by Rex Kalamian who is also the assistant coach for the Detroit Pistons and was once an assistant coach for the LA Clippers. Next season, he will be part of Monty Williams’ coaching staff who was named the NBA’s Coach of Year in 2022 during his tenure with the Phoenix Suns. 

“I’ve been in the NBA as an assistant coach for over 25 years and [winning] last year’s gold medal in a championship game in Malta was probably the most proud I’ve been of a team that I’ve been with,” Kalamian said. 

He continued to say, “The resilience that they showed and just the professionalism – the respect that these guys have for each other, for the game, for the staff, and for our fans is amazing.”

Detroit Pistons Assistant Coach Rex Kalamian. (Photo by Mark Brown/Getty Images) (Getty Images)

The matchup against Team France marks the Armenian National Team’s opening game of the 2023 season. It’s also the team’s first game back since their come-from-behind Finals victory over Malta that secured them a gold medal in the FIBA European Championship for Small Countries last July.  

My attitude going into this is very positive. I think that what we built last year with our team and what we are building now and with the foundation we’re trying to build, it’s been very good, and our players are amazing,” said Kalamian.

Players are coming in from all over. In addition to the five local players, like 18-year-old Avand Dorian – a recent graduate from AGBU who was selected to represent the team. Dorian says he is thrilled to have this opportunity to play under Coach Rex. 

I feel so honored to be working with a basketball mastermind like him – he is teaching me so many new things. I have been playing for so long – but some of the basics he is reteaching me, Dorian said. 

“We’re really bringing 14 guys together that have never played together, essentially, but in hopefully a short amount of time, four or five practices, we’re going to be able to get a team together that can compete and beat France,” said Kalamian.

France is ranked fifth in the world—but that’s not discouraging Coach Rex or the players.

“None of it should be about intimidation – we’re Armenia [and] everyone always has counted us out. Armenia never looks at the ranking, not in terms of basketball, but in terms of life in general. Armenia is always the smallest, we just have to compete – compete until the end—compete until the final whistle, that’s just my mentality,” Dorian added.

“It’s going to be a very big challenge for us. We don’t have a huge team. I would say the strength of our team is in the guard play, so we’re going to have to beat France a different way,” Kalamian said. 

He added just because they’re smaller doesn’t mean they are counting themselves out.

“We’re not going to beat them with our size and physicality. I think we’re going to have to show not only France but the rest of the world that we can beat teams based on guard play, based on pace of play and shooting a lot of three-point shots,” said Kalamian.

In addition to those factors — the passionate support from the community adds to the team’s strength.

“The support is huge. We’ve already had a tremendous amount of support from Armenian businesses and individuals who are supporting our team financially. The resources are huge. All the things that have been given to us and afforded to us by the diaspora here is amazing,” said Kalamian.

The team will play back-to-back games against France at Cal State Northridge on Friday, June 16 and Saturday, June 17.

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announces 50-mln-USD donation to China’s drug center

 16:55,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced it would donate 50 million U.S. dollars to the Beijing-based Global Health Drug Discovery Institute (GHDDI) over five years.

The funds will support the development of drugs for infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis and malaria, that disproportionately affect people living in low and middle-income countries, thus working to improve global health, the foundation said.

A non-profit research organization in China, the GHDDI was jointly founded by the foundation, Tsinghua University and the Beijing municipal government in 2016, Xinhua reports.

The municipal government will provide financial support of the same scale, and Tsinghua University has pledged continued support for research platforms, achievement transformations and talent training.

Bill Gates with China’s President Xi Jinping on June 16 in Beijing.

Ongoing blockade, growing threats of force damage prospect of starting genuine dialogue, says Nagorno Karabakh

 15:52,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. The ongoing severe blockade of Artsakh, the growing threats of the use of force and ethnic cleansing, as well as holding of the 120,000 population of Artsakh in a hostage situation damage the prospect of starting a genuine dialogue to discuss ways of a political settlement of the Azerbaijan-Karabakh conflict, the Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) foreign ministry said in a statement.

Below is the full statement issued by the Artsakh MFA.

“In connection with the stirring media reports on attempts to establish dialogue between Stepanakert and Baku published recently in a number of Russian media outlets with reference to unnamed diplomatic sources, we consider it necessary to state the following:
 
The Republic of Artsakh is the most interested party in finding a comprehensive solution to the conflict with Azerbaijan through dialogue and peaceful negotiations aimed at establishing lasting and just peace in the region.
 
After the end of the 44-day war, there have already been attempts of such contacts to resolve a number of pressing issues. In particular, several meetings were held between the representatives of Artsakh and Azerbaijan through the mediation of the Russian Peacekeeping Contingent, during which humanitarian, infrastructural and other technical issues aimed at ensuring conditions for the normal and peaceful life of the people were discussed. Before the blockade of Artsakh by Azerbaijan, thanks to the meetings held with the mediation of the Russian Peacekeeping Contingent, specific results were achieved on issues of identifying the fate of the missing and searching for the remains of the dead, ensuring the normal functioning of vital infrastructures, organising agricultural work and others. The last meeting in this format was held on 1 March 2023, during which issues related to ending the transport and energy blockade of Artsakh were discussed. However, the Azerbaijani side first refused to implement the agreements reached during the meeting, and then resorted to various provocations and aggressive actions, consistently rejecting all subsequent proposals of the Republic of Artsakh to continue the meetings in this format.
 
The authorities of the Republic of Artsakh have repeatedly stated that for the resumption of the peace process, it is necessary to restore the internationally recognised negotiation format, within which it would be possible to discuss all disputes and differences based on the principles of good faith, co-operation and equal rights of the parties. At the same time, this mechanism must be inclusive and representative, and have the potential and authority to ensure the implementation of the agreements reached and the commitments undertaken by the parties.
 
We are convinced that the role of international mediators should not be limited to providing good offices, but should be aimed at more active involvement in the process of finding fair, balanced and viable solutions to existing problems, creating favourable conditions to conduct dialogue with dignity, as well as ensuring Azerbaijan’s compliance with the norms and principles of international law and the provisions of the UN Charter. In this context, we reiterate the importance of using the potential and experience of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship, as well as the effective co-operation of all major actors involved in the peaceful settlement of the conflict.
 
 In this regard, we attach primary importance to the collective and individual efforts of the international community aimed at creating normal living conditions in Artsakh, ending its transport and energy blockade, removing the illegally installed Azerbaijani checkpoint and ensuring the unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions, in accordance with the Trilateral Statement of 9 November 2020 and the Order of the International Court of Justice of 22 February 2023.
 
It is obvious that the ongoing severe blockade of Artsakh, the growing threats of the use of force and ethnic cleansing, as well as holding of the 120,000 population of Artsakh in a hostage situation damage the prospect of starting a genuine dialogue to discuss ways of a political settlement of the Azerbaijan-Karabakh conflict.”

Asbarez: ANCA Western Region Meets with Los Angeles County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath

ANCA-Western Region board and staff members with LA County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath


LOS ANGELES – Armenian National Committee of America Western Region representatives met with Los Angeles County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath on Wednesday to discuss the Armenian-American community and its current priorities. The meeting was held at Supervisor Horvath’s office at the Hall of Administration in Downtown Los Angeles.

The ANCA – Western Region delegation briefed Supervisor Horvath on the growing needs of the Armenian-American Community in Los Angeles County’s Third Supervisorial District. Supervisorial District Three extends across much of the San Fernando Valley, where a sizable portion of Southern California’s Armenian population resides. Topics of discussion included the various community initiatives that the ANCA Western Region has enacted to educate and ensure the Armenian-American community’s participation in all aspects of political and local advocacy, as well as opportunities for Supervisor Horvath to advance policy priorities of importance to her Armenian-American constituents.

Supervisor Horvath and ANCA-WR members discuss issues of importance to Armenian-Americans

The group thanked the Supervisor for co-authoring the county motion in February of 2023, which condemned Azerbaijan’s brutal blockade of Artsakh and called upon the Biden Administration to exert pressure on Azerbaijan to end the blockade. The blockade, which has continued for over six months, has deprived the 120,000 Armenians of Artsakh of their rights to access food, medicine, and other essential goods. The delegation also highlighted the importance of continued local support for Artsakh’s right to self-determination.

Supervisor Horvath expressed her solidarity with the Armenian people and her support for lifting the blockade. She also pledged to work with the ANCA Western Region to continue to raise awareness of the issue with her colleagues on the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors. “We are grateful to cultivate an impactful relationship with Supervisor Horvath, who has shown initiative to represent the needs and interests of her Armenian-American constituents,” said Nora Hovsepian, Esq. “Home to one of the largest Armenian diaspora communities in the world, Los Angeles County serves an important role in elevating the Armenian Cause and reverberating the calls of Armenian-Americans.” she concluded.

The Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA Western Region advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.

AW: Reconciling Our Collective Moral Dilemmas

I must admit from the very start of this column that participation in the Armenian community is not without conflict and internal stress. Most of our readers will immediately think of the organizational or institutional disagreements that often lead to disputes and the unfortunate exiting of valued individuals. I am referring, however, to the inner conflicts within ourselves that constitute moral dilemmas. These are much more difficult to resolve since they are based in a values conflict. There are times when our participation in our nation crosses paths with these dilemmas. My own experience has identified two, in particular, that deserve some level of analysis. 

We are a people who have suffered unspeakable horrors over our history. In modern times, the unpunished Genocide has cast a shadow over the inner peace of Armenians who are reminded of the murder of our ancestors and the resulting dispossession on a regular basis. We don’t want to forget. We consider it disrespectful, but it is particularly frustrating when the wheels of justice are slower than a snail. Unresolved crimes lead to stereotypes, anger and even hatred. These are generally unproductive emotions but are human reality. Wars have been started over such behaviors. As a result, the word “Turk” will usually draw an immediate negative response from nearly all Armenians. Is this productive? Is this morally correct given our Christian foundation? How do we reconcile this dilemma? Another moral crisis has been internal to our community, specifically the relationship of the diaspora with the Republic of Armenia’s policies. For many in the diaspora, the absence of an independent homeland was replaced with pictures of Ararat in our homes, displaying of the tri-color and advocacy. The diaspora carried the burden of Hai Tahd for decades, particularly after 1965. When Armenia became a sovereign state in 1991, the diaspora readily accepted the additional responsibility to assist in the nation building process. Three decades later, it is no secret that the diaspora has been underutilized, and it is frustrated by the level of progress. The leadership crisis and overt disagreements on policy have only heightened the tension. It is an odd dilemma. Most diasporan Armenians remain very patriotic and openly display their love for the homeland, yet the current policies have created an awkward reality. Should criticism of the government be discouraged or encouraged when there are policy differences? Does our disunity assist our enemies? For years, it was considered inappropriate to be publicly critical, but that was when the stakes were not as high and the relationships had more upside. How do we protect the diversity of thought in our global nation while adding value and stability to the homeland? Is it possible to be critical and strengthen the nation? Improving our behavior on these two issues will impact our effectiveness as a community.

Our relationship with Turks has multiple faces. At the core of our discontent is the lack of justice for the Genocide. The recognition campaign has been very effective with the Armenian Genocide now generally accepted as fact by scholars and governments. The focus has now moved into mandated genocide education in the United States and the very early phases of reparations. The Turks, of course, still deny the Genocide and why shouldn’t they? They have no problem lying since the ramifications are negligible. There has been no military or economic impact to denial. There has been some back door pressure applied which has resulted in an evolution of their position from outright denial to offering empathy for those Armenians killed during the war as “shared pain.” Of course, Turkey is the leader of duplicity with Erdogan offering disingenuous olive branches when it suits his needs and then referring to the diaspora as “remnants of the swords” – an insulting reference to the survivors. Foreign Minister Cavusoglu has led most of the efforts for normalization but is also notable for flashing the notorious ultra-nationalist racist Grey Wolves hand gesture to Armenian protestors during his visit to South America. Each of these incidents reinforces the longstanding racial intolerance of the Turkish leadership for Armenians and further increases the presence of angry and hate-driven responses. 

Yet, at the same time, we proudly profess to be a Christian nation with values rooted in love and forgiveness. I struggle with this and am guilty of emotional reactions to Turkish denial, racism and oppression of Armenians. Intellectually, I understand that anger and hatred offer no value to our sacred cause and that our Christian values should be the mechanism for keeping us balanced. Despite these rational thoughts, we don’t want to relate to anything Turkish despite the fact that most of us know very few Turks and most of our Western Armenian grandparents spoke Turkish (my Adanatzi grandmother spoke Turkish in her home with her brothers and sisters). The frustration with our Turkish “problem” is sometimes used as an excuse for our stereotypes. It should not be. If we are committed to our cause and our faith, then we need to be more disciplined. Our cause needs educated, focused and talented individuals who are not distracted by a few moments of relief by insulting Turks in general. Do we have empathy for the Turks that died in the recent earthquake? Is our faith strong enough that we can pursue our rights without hating a people? I know I always need to remind myself of this risk. We must come to the realization that our cause cannot be fueled by negative emotions because they are incompatible with the skills that will bring us success. One of the reasons that I admire the Aurora Initiative and the Future Armenian is because they are based on looking forward and shedding the victim mentality. This is a therapy needed in our global nation. The absence of ethnocentric thinking does not diminish our mission but refocuses it on results and not “feel good” activity. How many of our people come out on April 24, express their anger and return to political hibernation? There is a clear path of intersection for political activism and our  Christian values – maintaining an activist discipline focused on our goals and purging our thinking of hatred. There will be times when we stumble, but our quest for justice and our faith deserve our very best. We can honor our cause and not lower ourselves to their mentality.

The matter of criticizing other Armenian institutions, such as the government of the republic, is often rooted in emotion with a significant presence of power and egos. All democracies need diversity. Managing the diversity in a civil manner with the nation’s interest at heart is the challenge. Even the most successful democracy in the world, our United States, struggles at times with the partisan chaos in Washington. As has often been stated, democracy can be messy. I was fortunate to learn from mentors that in community or national life criticism should always be accompanied with commitment and solutions. We are raised in the Armenian community to love and respect all things Armenian, yet we find our adult lives consumed with judging others. What about our Christian values in communal life? Is our behavior in our communities exempt from our faith? Why is it so difficult for us to sustain respect? What I find discouraging is our wanton disregard for these principles, as our dialogue becomes about winning the argument with no path for improvement. 

Armenian politics currently lack civility with the objective seemingly to knock someone off the pedestal to be replaced by another. Thoughtful objections to current policies should never be discouraged. In the case of the government and its opposition, both parties have a sacred responsibility. Those in power have the responsibility to listen to all their constituents, even those with whom they disagree. Those in opposition have the responsibility to approach the issue with respect for the democratic institutions and to refrain from personal attacks. When a political process is dominated by personalities rather than policy, the focus becomes the individual and subject to rumor and gossip. Unfortunately, neither party today is fulfilling that responsibility. 

Given the current crisis, a national unity government with diverse factions would be a bold step to eradicate instability. Armenia must not cede territory, whether that be Artsakh or border regions, without a mandate from the parliament, the courts and even a popular referendum. Armenia may be making commitments beyond the agreement of the citizens, yet these changes can become permanent. Recents polls conducted clearly suggest an estrangement between the government and its citizens on matters of national security. The opposition has few legislative options but claims to have the hearts of the people. If that is true, then where are the people? In 2018 the people rallied publicly against corruption, and it resulted in a peaceful transfer of power. Give former President Sargysyan credit for at least that. The decisions of sovereign territory must be ratified through democratic processes. The absence of such will lead to an eroding of the people’s confidence in our institution. Giving up territory is a very serious decision that cannot be mandated by a few if they expect political stability. The church has suffered from this perception for years. There is a general feeling that the democratic institutions of the church are a veneer. Authority is very concentrated, and change in a diverse diaspora becomes nearly impossible. Leaders must understand that the base constituency has the final say in their participation. Adherents of the church can simply stop coming, as thousands have done for identity reasons. When the citizens of a nation disagree with its direction yet feel powerless to impact the direction, they become ambivalent. What is the point of sovereignty if it can be so easily bargained and people stop caring? Despite these difficult choices and painful conflicts, our leadership must be about unifying our small nation, and those seeking change must focus on the “what” and the “how” with less emphasis on “who.” Allowing the moral dilemma to run rampant creates division.

These are a few of the moral dilemmas for each of us. Each comment, action, decision and voice has implications. Governments come and go, but the nation is eternal. Whether we are leading organizations, countries, provinces or municipalities, we are merely the current caretakers. If we are on the outside looking to influence the outcome, we need to maintain civility for answers. The crisis in our nation today is significant. The Turkish alliance is enough for our small nation. We can overcome the distractions and negative impact of our moral dilemmas by subordinating our egos for our future.

Columnist
Stepan was raised in the Armenian community of Indian Orchard, MA at the St. Gregory Parish. A former member of the AYF Central Executive and the Eastern Prelacy Executive Council, he also served many years as a delegate to the Eastern Diocesan Assembly. Currently , he serves as a member of the board and executive committee of the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR). He also serves on the board of the Armenian Heritage Foundation. Stepan is a retired executive in the computer storage industry and resides in the Boston area with his wife Susan. He has spent many years as a volunteer teacher of Armenian history and contemporary issues to the young generation and adults at schools, camps and churches. His interests include the Armenian diaspora, Armenia, sports and reading.