AW: ANCA California community leaders consult with Congressman Schiff on breaking Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh

Over 40 ANCA national and local leaders consulted with Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) on ramping up efforts to break Azerbaijan’s Artsakh blockade during a virtual town hall held on February 27th.

GLENDALE, Calif. – Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) leaders from across the State of California held a virtual briefing with Congressman Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) to discuss the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Artsakh as a result of Azerbaijan’s blockade – now in its third month. The briefing included the participation of a broad number of ANCA stakeholders – along with ANCA grassroots leaders across the country – to urge the Biden administration to take immediate steps to pressure Azerbaijan to end its genocidal campaign against Artsakh’s indigenous Armenian population.

“The blockade of the Lachin Corridor, an unconscionable act of aggression by Azerbaijan, has created a humanitarian crisis,” said Congressman Schiff. “Since the beginning of the blockade more than two months ago, innocent men, women, and children in Artsakh have suffered through freezing temperatures and rolling blackouts. The United States must use every diplomatic and economic tool at its disposal to end this illegal blockade, and cut off all aid to Baku.”

Congressman Schiff continued, “The work of the ANCA, its local chapters, and the many members who volunteer their time and dedication is so important, and ensures their voices are heard in the halls of Congress. I look forward to continuing to work closely with the Armenian National Committee of America to stand with the people of Armenia and Artsakh, as well as the members of the diaspora, and speak out against this violence, demand real action from the US, and bring peace and prosperity to Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Congressman Adam Schiff represents the single largest Armenian-American constituency in the United States and has been a stalwart friend and ally of the community throughout his tenure. Having fought over decades for US recognition of the Armenian Genocide, H.Res.296 – authored and introduced by Rep. Schiff in 2019 – was passed with overwhelming bipartisan support in the House, with an identical measure adopted in the Senate by unanimous consent shortly after. In his role as chairman of the influential House Intelligence Committee, Congressman Schiff also championed the inclusion of language in successive National Intelligence Authorization Bills mandating the US Government to conduct assessments of the threat Azerbaijan posed to Armenia and Artsakh, and the impact of US military assistance on the balance of power in the region. Congressman Schiff is the first member of US Congress to have called for the recognition of Artsakh’s independence, and at President Biden’s last State of the Union address invited Artsakh’s Permanent Representative Robert Avetisyan to attend as his guest in order to draw attention to Artsakh and Azerbaijan’s ongoing blockade.

Over 30 leaders from ANCA chapters across California, including the ANCA’s San Francisco, Silicon Valley, Fresno, San Fernando Valley, Glendale, Burbank, La Crescenta, Pasadena, Hollywood, Orange County, and San Gabriel Valley chapters, participated in the meeting, which also included insights by ANCA National Board Members Zanku Armenian and Aida Dimejian, along with ANCA Government Affairs Director Tereza Yerimyan and Programs Director Alex Galitsky.

ANC Artsakh Executive Director Gev Iskajyan, who moved to Artsakh from California a year ago, provided a briefing from the ground on the latest dire humanitarian crisis unfolding in Artsakh. “What we are witnessing in Artsakh is nothing short of a genocide by attrition,” remarked Iskajyan. “As Azerbaijan seeks to starve the Armenian people to the brink of extinction, it is vital the U.S. take tangible action to hold Azerbaijan to account. Congressman Schiff has championed efforts to hold Turkey and Azerbaijan accountable throughout his career, and we look forward to working with him to maximize pressure on the Biden Administration to ensure this blockade is lifted.”

In addition to his powerful advocacy to secure Congressional, and ultimately Presidential, recognition of the Armenian Genocide, Congressman Schiff has recently led efforts to condemn Azerbaijan’s ongoing detention and torture of Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) through the introduction of H.Res.240 – as well as the condemnation of Azerbaijan’s assault on Armenia in September 2022 with the introduction of H.Res.1351. As co-chair of the Congressional Armenian Caucus, Congressman Schiff is also one of the lead co-authors on H.Res.108 – the ANCA-backed bipartisan resolution condemning Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh and calling for an immediate end to U.S. military assistance to Azerbaijan.

During the virtual town hall with Rep. Schiff, ANCA San Francisco’s Roxanne Makasdjian drew attention to the dire implications of Azerbaijan’s state-sponsored anti-Armenian hate speech in the U.S., citing the hate crimes perpetrated against the Armenian community in the Bay Area.

In response to Congressman Schiff’s decades of advocacy on behalf of Artsakh – ANCA Government Affairs Director Tereza Yerimyan remarked, “this is a bipartisan Congressional wake-up call for the Biden Administration to end its unconscionable military assistance program with Azerbaijan. American taxpayers should not be subsidizing Baku’s attempts to ethnically cleanse Artsakh’s Armenians. Thanks to Rep. Schiff’s leadership over the years, the will of Congress is clear. It is long overdue for the Administration to stand with the freedom-loving people of Artsakh, and hold Azerbaijan accountable for its brazen aggression.”

During the virtual town hall with Rep. Schiff, ANCA San Francisco’s Roxanne Makasdjian drew attention to the dire implications of Azerbaijan’s state-sponsored anti-Armenian hate speech in the U.S., citing the hate crimes perpetrated against the Armenian community in the Bay Area.

During the call, Congressman Schiff fielded a range of questions from local chapter leaders on a number of pressing community priorities. Roxanne Makasdjian of ANCA San Francisco drew attention to the dire implications of Azerbaijan’s state-sponsored anti-Armenian hate speech in the US, citing the hate crimes perpetrated against Armenian community property and school in the Bay Area where the community center was set on fire and the school was vandalized and shot at with guns. ANCA Hollywood’s Lara Yeretsian noted the failure of successive administrations to deliver reports mandated by statute on the impact of US military assistance to Azerbaijan. ANCA Orange County representative Haig Minasian spoke of how USAID has failed to deliver any direct assistance to Artsakh since the 2020 Artsakh War despite congressional mandates, and the community’s disappointment with the Administration’s and USAID’s Samantha Power’s refusal to characterize the blockade as a humanitarian crisis.

During the virtual town hall with Rep. Schiff, ANCA San Francisco’s Roxanne Makasdjian drew attention to the dire implications of Azerbaijan’s state-sponsored anti-Armenian hate speech in the U.S., citing the hate crimes perpetrated against the Armenian community in the Bay Area.

“Not a single member of our community is untouched by the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Artsakh today,” remarked ANCA National Board Member Zanku Armenian. “Much of our community are descendants of survivors of the Armenian Genocide, and see what is happening today as a direct continuation of that crime because Turkey and Azerbaijan have not been held accountable. Our community’s extensive grassroots, led by our ANCA local chapters, remain united in common purpose to ensure our government acts immediately to hold Azerbaijan’s dictatorship to account – and we look forward to continuing to work with Congressman Schiff to ensure the Biden Administration honors the pledge he made when he recognized the Armenian Genocide to prevent atrocities whenever and wherever they occur.”

Since the first day of the blockade, the ANCA has been working with the White House, State Department, and Congressional leaders – urging them to stop U.S. military assistance to Azerbaijan and to send emergency humanitarian assistance to Artsakh. Thousands have already used the ANCA online portal to call, tweet and write the White House and Congressional leaders to immediately address this growing Artsakh humanitarian crisis.

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


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 03/03/2023

                                        Friday, March 3, 2023


Baku Accused Of Ignoring UN Court Order On Karabakh Corridor


Nagorno-Karabakh - Customers visit an almost empty food store in Stepanakert, 
January 7, 2023.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on Friday urged the international community to 
press Azerbaijan to comply with a UN court order to reopen the sole road 
connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia.

In a “provisional measure” requested by Yerevan, the International Court of 
Justice (ICJ) acknowledged on February 22 that the land link was “disrupted” by 
Azerbaijani protesters more than two months ago. It said Baku should “take all 
measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and 
cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.”

The Azerbaijani government afterwards stood by its claims that traffic through 
the lifeline road was never blocked.

“Unfortunately, despite the decision made by the International Court of Justice, 
Azerbaijan has still not reopened the Lachin corridor,” Pashinian told members 
of the German parliament’s foreign relations committee during a visit to Berlin.

“I think that this is a situation that needs to be discussed at the 
international level because it is unacceptable to leave the decision of the ICJ 
without reaction amid the continuing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh,” 
he said. “An international response is imperative.”

On Thursday, the Vienna-based Permanent Council of the Organization Security and 
Cooperation in Europe discussed the matter at a meeting initiated by Armenia. 
Armen Papikian, the Armenian ambassador to the OSCE, accused Baku of showing 
“contempt” for the ICJ order.

Papikian’s U.S. opposite number, Michael Carpenter, welcomed the order and 
reiterated Washington’s calls for the lifting of the Azerbaijani blockade.

“Secretary [of State Antony] Blinken raised this in his engagement with Prime 
Minister Pashinian and with President Aliyev in Munich on February 18,” 
Carpenter said during the Permanent Council meeting. “The Secretary underscored 
the need for free and open commercial and private transit through the Lachin 
Corridor, and we reiterate that today.”

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has also called on Azerbaijan to comply 
with the UN court’s decision.



Russian Group To Build Two Power Plants In Armenia


Armenia - Russian-Armenian businessman Samvel Karapetian inaugurates an energy 
lab at the National Polytechnic University in Yerevan, 5Jun2017.


A Russian business conglomerate owned by Armenian-born billionaire Samvel 
Karapetian announced on Friday plans to invest at least $150 million in the 
construction of two thermal power plants in Armenia.

In a statement, Karapetian’s Tashir Group said one of those gas-fired plants 
will be built near Noyemberian, a small town close to the Armenian-Georgian 
border.

The 126-megawatt facility will generate electricity not only for Armenia but 
also Georgia, it said, adding that Tashir will upgrade dozens of kilometers of 
high-voltage transmission lines in both countries for that purpose.

“Work on the thermal power plant will start this year and last for about two 
years,” said the statement.

It said the other, much smaller plant will be built in the central Armenian town 
of Hrazdan by the end of 2024.

Both facilities will be equipped with German turbines that will “reduce 
emissions into the atmosphere and minimize the impact on the environment,” 
according to Tashir.

Karapetian’s group headquartered in Moscow already owns Armenia’s largest 
thermal power plant also located in Hrazdan. The obsolete plant has been 
reportedly decommissioned in recent years.

Armenia’s electricity distribution network and second most important 
hydroelectric complex are also owned by Tashir. Speaking at a Russian-Armenian 
business held in Yerevan in 2021, Karapetian pledged to invest up to $600 
million in the Armenian energy sector in the coming years.

Karapetian, 57, was born and raised in Armenia. He moved to Russia in the early 
1990s, making a huge fortune there in the next two decades.

His Russian conglomerate comprises over a hundred firms engaged in construction, 
manufacturing, retail trade and other services. With total assets estimated by 
the Forbes magazine at $3.8 billion, Karapetian is apparently the richest ethnic 
Armenian in the world.



Karabakh Lauds Germany’s Scholz

        • Karlen Aslanian
        • Gayane Saribekian

Nagorno-Karabakh - Thousands rally in Stepanakert to protest Azerbaijan's 
blockade of Karabakh's only land link to Armenia, December 25, 2022.


Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership on Friday praised German Chancellor Olaf Scholz 
for advocating an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace deal that would respect the 
Karabakh Armenians’ right to self-determination.

Scholz called for a “peaceful settlement based on the territorial integrity of 
Armenia and Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh citizens’ right to 
self-determination” after holding talks with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian on 
Thursday.

“These principles are equally applicable,” he told a joint news conference in 
Berlin.

“We welcome Olaf Scholz’s statement that the conflict should be settled 
peacefully on the basis of equal principles of [territorial] integrity & right 
to self-determination of the Nagorno-Karabakh people,” tweeted Arayik 
Harutiunian, the Karabakh president. “Settlement is impossible without fully 
considering our fundamental/collective rights.”

Peace plans jointly drafted by the United States, Russia and France prior to the 
2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war upheld the Karabakh Armenians’ right to 
self-determination, which would be exercised through a referendum.

Successive Armenian governments for decades championed that principle in peace 
talks with Azerbaijan. Pashinian effectively stopped doing that a year ago. He 
and other senior Armenian officials have since spoken instead of the need to 
protect “the rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Germany - German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian shake hands during a news conference in Berlin, Mar 2, 2023.

Pashinian repeated that phrase and did not comment on Scholz’s remark when he 
addressed the German Council on Foreign Relations, a Berlin-based think-tank, 
after his talks with the chancellor. He again called for an “international 
mechanism” for discussions between Baku and Stepanakert but shed little light on 
that negotiating format sought by Yerevan.

At the same time, Pashinian deplored the “growing aggressiveness of Azerbaijan 
towards Nagorno-Karabakh.” He accused Baku of seeking to subject Karabakh’s 
population to “ethnic cleansing,” citing the Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin 
corridor connecting the region to Armenia.

Karabakh’s leaders and main political groups have repeatedly criticized 
Pashinian over the past year. They were mostly recently irked by his January 10 
claim that the international community has always regarded Karabakh as an 
integral part of Azerbaijan and that the Armenian government must only deal with 
Armenia’s problems.

Pashinian’s political opponents in Armenia have been even more critical, 
accusing him of planning to recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh. The 
Armenian opposition staged daily street protests in Yerevan for several 
consecutive weeks after the prime minister signaled in April 2022 his readiness 
to “lower the bar” on Karabakh’s future status.



Russian, Armenian FMs Meet In India


India - Foreign Ministers Sergei Lavrov of Russia and Ararat Mirzoyan of Armenia 
meet in New Delhi, March 3, 2023.


Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called for a quicker implementation of 
Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements brokered by Moscow during talks with his 
Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan held in India on Friday.

The two ministers met in New Delhi on the sidelines of a conference on 
international security attended by many foreign leaders.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said they discussed Russian-Armenian relations as 
well as “regional issues” and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in particular. It 
said Lavrov stressed the importance of “intensifying efforts on all tracks of 
the Armenian-Azerbaijani normalization in accordance with the agreements between 
the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan.”

The Armenian Foreign Ministry likewise reported that Lavrov and Mirzoyan 
reviewed progress towards the normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, 
the restoration of transport links between the two South Caucasus states and the 
demarcation of their long border. Azerbaijan’s continuing blockade of the sole 
road connecting Karabakh to Armenia was also on the agenda, it said in a 
statement.

The Russian readout of the talks made no mention of the blockade. Russia has 
repeatedly called for its lifting as have the United States and other Western 
powers.

Visiting Baku earlier this week, Lavrov also indicated Moscow’s opposition to 
Azerbaijan’s desire to set up a checkpoint at the Lachin corridor. He said this 
would run counter to the 2020 ceasefire agreement that placed the corridor under 
the control of Russian peacekeepers.

Azerbaijan -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Azerbaijani 
counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov hold a joint press conference in Baku, February 28, 
2023.

Speaking after talks with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov, Lavrov 
also reaffirmed his readiness to host talks between his Armenian and Azerbaijani 
counterparts. He noted that Yerevan “has not yet given its final consent.”

The three ministers were scheduled to meet in Moscow in late December. The 
Armenian side cancelled the meeting in protest against the Azerbaijani blockade. 
Moscow criticized the move.

Russian-Armenian relations have soured in recent months because of what Yerevan 
sees as Russia’s reluctance to support its main regional ally locked in the 
protracted conflict with Azerbaijan. Armenian leaders have also accused the 
Russians of doing little to unblock the Lachin corridor.

Russian officials have strongly denied that. They have chided Yerevan for asking 
the European Union to send monitors to Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan.

The Russian Foreign Ministry has claimed that the EU’s monitoring mission 
launched last month is part of the West’s efforts of squeeze Russia out of the 
South Caucasus and use the Karabakh conflict in the standoff over Ukraine.

The ministry said that Lavrov’s latest meeting with Mirzoyan took place “in a 
friendly and trusting atmosphere.”

While in New Delhi, the Armenian minister also met with the EU’s foreign and 
security policy chief, Josep Borrell. His press office said both men praised the 
recent deployment of some 100 EU monitors to Armenian border areas.

The EU’s top official, Charles Michel, is now understood to be trying to host a 
fresh Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in Brussels.


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.

 

Pashinyan in Germany – "The EU is one of Armenia’s main partners"

March 3 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Pashinyan on Armenia-EU partnership

An agreement is expected to be signed in the near future regulating the presence of an EU civilian mission on the border of Armenia, according to Prime Minister of Armenia Nik Pashinyan at a press conference with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

“Now the presence of the EU monitoring mission is regulated by mutual official letters. But we also have an agreement that the agreement regulating the presence of the mission should be agreed upon and signed,” Pashinyan said.

Since February 20 a new EU civilian mission has been operating in Armenia according to a preliminary plan of two years. Like the previous two-month mission, it is monitoring the Armenian-Azerbaijani border from the territory of Armenia. The mission includes a hundred unarmed observers. According to the EU, its goal is “to promote stability in the border areas of Armenia, to build confidence and security, and to provide an environment that will facilitate efforts to normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan.”

On March 1, the mission opened its headquarters in the city of Yeghegnadzor in southern Armenia.

Pashinyan is in Germany on a working visit and met with Chancellor Scholz, visited the German Foreign Policy Society (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik – DGAP), and took part in a discussion on the topic “Security and Stability in the South Caucasus: Prospects for Armenia”. During a joint press conference with the German Chancellor and discussions of Armenia’s foreign policy in the DGAP, Pashinyan talked about the importance of hosting an EU monitoring mission in Armenia and deepening bilateral relations with the European Union.


  • “The EU mission in Armenia is not directed against anyone” – Toivo Klaar
  • “Attack on Baku and Moscow”: a new EU monitoring mission in Armenia
  • “There is no point combining the EU and CSTO missions on the border of Armenia.” Opinion

The Prime Minister of Armenia considers the role of the EU mission conducting monitoring on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border vital, one which will play a decisive role in ensuring security and stability in the region, as the observers will “timely and reliably” report on the situation to partners from the EU.

Assessing the work of the first observer mission deployed in Armenia for two months at the end of last year, he said that it was an important step “to de-escalate the situation.” Pashinyan thanked all EU member states, including Germany, for responding to Armenia’s request and sending a new, already long-term mission.

“I am very proud of this mission as a whole. It is a great contribution, we will develop this mission and we will see what happens,” the German Chancellor said during a joint press conference, answering a question from journalists whether an increase in the number of observers can be expected.

Olaf Scholz said that Germany supports the mediation efforts of European Council President Charles Michel to bring stability to the region, including by involving its staff in the observer mission. He said that the new EU mission in Armenia will be headed by an officer of the German federal police.

Pashinyan also talked about the current geopolitical “tectonic shifts”. According to him, Armenia came into contact with the “first sprouts” of today’s challenges and “a devastating blow to the European security architecture in the region” back in 2020, during the 44-day war. He also commented on “the latest military aggression of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces on the sovereign territory of Armenia” in September 2022, when Azerbaijani troops “occupied more than 150 square kilometers” of Armenian territory.

“Deepening geopolitical instability, growing tensions and unpredictability weaken the world order and the international security system, creating even greater challenges, especially for Armenia. They make a democratic country more vulnerable in this difficult region,” he stated.

What can be expected from the EU mission given the experience of Georgia, where EU observers were deployed after the Russian-Georgian war in 2008

During discussions at the German Foreign Policy Society, Pashinyan stated that the European Union is one of Armenia’s main partners in completing democratic reforms in the country, underlining that “according to the latest indicators of the Eastern Partnership Evaluation Index”, Armenia had topped the “Democracy and Good Governance” rating table.

The prime minister also touched upon the role of the “Velvet Revolution” that took place in Armenia in 2018 and the early parliamentary elections in 2021. He believes that these political events proved “the irreversibility of Armenia’s democratic path of development.”

According to Pashinyan, Armenia is now an internationally recognized democratic country, but one facing serious questions:

“Is the Armenian democracy able to provide security? This is an issue that legitimately worries the Armenian society today, and a problem that our government must solve.”

Yet dspite all the challenges, the Armenian government believes that “the country’s security architecture cannot be comprehensive without respect for human rights, the rule of law and democracy.” In Pashinyan’s words, “democracy is the strategy” of official Yerevan.

https://jam-news.net/pashinyan-on-armenia-eu-partnership/

Russian, Armenian top diplomats note importance of Yerevan-Baku normalization — statement

 TASS 
Russia – March 3 2023
"The talks were held in a friendly and trusting atmosphere. It was agreed to continue contacts through diplomatic channels," Sergey Lavrov and Ararat Mirzoyan pointed

MOSCOW, March 3. /TASS/. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan at a meeting in New Delhi on Friday on the sidelines of the international geopolitics and geoeconomics conference ‘Raisina Dialogue’ pointed to the urgency of intensifying efforts on all tracks of Armenian-Azerbaijani normalization, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

"There was an exchange of views on regional issues. The parties stressed the necessity of stepping up efforts on all tracks of Armenian-Azerbaijani normalization in accordance with the agreements of the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan dated November 9, 2020, January 11, November 26, 2021 and October 31, 2022," the Foreign Ministry said.

As the ministry noted, the top diplomats discussed topical issues of the bilateral agenda. "Approaches to promoting cooperation on international platforms within the framework of common integration associations were coordinated," the Russian Foreign Ministry added.

"The talks were held in a friendly and trusting atmosphere. It was agreed to continue contacts through diplomatic channels," the diplomats pointed.

As it was previously reported, the Armenian top diplomat will stay in New Delhi until March 4.

Lavrov arrived in New Delhi on Tuesday evening to attend the March 1-2 G20 Foreign Ministers Meeting. The Russian top diplomat held a meeting with his Chinese counterpart on Thursday, and with the Foreign Ministers of Brazil, India and Turkey on Wednesday. Before the G20 events in New Delhi, Lavrov paid a working visit to Baku, where he met with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ceyhun Bayramov.

https://tass.com/world/1584541

Peacekeepers recorded three violations of ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh — Russian ministry

 TASS 
Russia – March 3 2023
According to the ministry, the command of the Russian peacekeeping force is conducting an investigation of these facts jointly with Azerbaijan and Armenia

MOSCOW, March 3. /TASS/. Russian peacekeepers have recorded three violations of ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh, according to a Russian Defense Ministry bulletin on the activities of the peacekeeping force that was released on Friday.

"Three ceasefire violations have been recorded in the Martuni and Shusha districts. No casualties," the statement said.

According to the ministry, the command of the Russian peacekeeping force is conducting an investigation of these facts jointly with Azerbaijan and Armenia.

"The command of the Russian peacekeepers continues negotiations to resume unimpeded vehicular traffic on the Stepanakert-Goris road," the ministry said.

Sports: Gymnastics World Cup: Armenia’s Artur Davtyan reaches final

Panorama
Armenia – March 3 2023

SPORT 16:02 03/03/2023 ARMENIA

Reigning world champion Artur Davtyan has advanced to the final of the FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup second leg in Doha, Qatar.

Davtyan, a European champion and a Tokyo 2020 Olympics bronze medalist, placed second in the vault qualification with a score of 14.766, the sports ministry said on Friday.

The athlete earned a gold medal in the first leg of the Gymnastics World Cup in Cottbus, Germany on February 26.

Two other Armenian gymnasts, Vahagn Davtyan and Artur Avetisyan, reached the World Cup final on Wednesday.

AGBU Announces ‘Women Shaping the World’ Conference in New York City

 

 

 

March 3 2023

For immediate release

 

NEW YORK To celebrate International Women’s Day, The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) will host ‘Women Shaping the World’ (WSTW) on March 11, 2023, in Manhattan’s Convene Center at One Liberty Plaza. The all-day conference will feature high-profile female keynote speakers and panelists who have made transformational change through their career, philanthropy, or volunteer work, including Shelby Scarbrough of Global School of Entrepreneurship, media personality Hagar Hajjar Chemali, and Zara Ingilizian of World Economic Forum, all moderated by TV producer Alexis Alexanian. The conference will feature EmpowerHour sessions ranging in topics from boundaries and balance to financial literacy and wellness, with a special focus on the themes of resilience and reflection. Breakfast and lunch are included. Proceeds will benefit AGBU’s EmpowerHer program, providing educational and psycho-social skills to support the women of Armenia achieving financial and social independence.

 

Who: The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU)

 

What: ‘Women Shaping the World’ (WSTW) Conference

 

When: March 11, 2023

             10:00 am – 4:30 pm (EDT)

 

Where:  Convene

               One Liberty Plaza

               New York, NY 10006

               United States

 

For more information, please visit https://agbu.org/women-shaping-world-2023 or contact:

 

AGBU Press Office

55 East 59th Street

New York, NY 10022-1112

 

The Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) is the world’s largest non-profit organization devoted to upholding the Armenian heritage through educational, cultural and humanitarian programs. Each year, AGBU is committed to making a difference in the lives of 500,000 people across Armenia, Artsakh and the Armenian diaspora.  Since 1906, AGBU has remained true to one overarching goal: to create a foundation for the prosperity of all Armenians. To learn more visit www.agbu.org.

This email was sent to [email protected]

AGBU, 55 East 59th Street, NY, New York 10022, United States

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A 10 Year Milestone

Dr. Razmik Panossian

February 2023 marked the 10th anniversary of my arrival at the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation to head the Armenian Communities Department. It’s been an incredible decade at the helm of one of the most important funding entities in the Armenian world. It is also an opportunity to take a step back from my daily routine, to reflect on the past and to think about the future.

2023 coincides with the start of a new strategic plan for the entire Foundation. In May 2022, Professor António Feijó assumed the presidency of the Foundation and soon after embarked on a process of strategic redevelopment and planning. After months of consultations and preparation, in which the Armenian Department participated fully, the 2023-27 Strategic Plan was adopted by the Board of Trustees in December. “Sustainability” and “Equity” emerged as the two core principles around which Foundation activities will pivot.

It will be a year of transition for the Armenian Communities Department. We will wrap up the previous Five-Year Plan and embark on the new one. Our revised mission statement is “To strengthen Armenian language, culture and education in the Diaspora, and foster research and critical thinking in Armenia.” There is both continuity and change in this statement. We remain focused on language, culture and education, especially Western Armenian, while we bring in new elements that are crucial for Armenians currently: sound research for better policy development and critical thinking to better engage with national problems.

The programming of the department reflects the duality of the Armenian world: Diaspora and Armenia. While we fully appreciate the interconnections between the two parts of the nation, we do, nonetheless, remain diaspora-centric in our approach. This is not only based on demographic facts – two-thirds of Armenians live outside of Armenia – but reflects a deeper philosophical perspective that the Diaspora is an inherent part of the nation, and that it must be nourished and supported in its own right. It is not a mere appendix to Armenia or just a source of resources for state building; rather the Diaspora is in itself a unique identity to be cherished.

The new Five-Year Plan addresses two fundamental problems: the sustainability of Western Armenian language and culture in the Diaspora and the lack of good research on current issues, based on critical engagement, in Armenia. More specifically, our programming henceforth will be based on the following four pillars:

  1. Ensuring the vitality of Western Armenian, from language acquisition and teacher development programmes to IT-based initiatives that reinforce the language.
  2. Cultural creativity support, whereby the emphasis is both on Western Armenian and on the transformative role of the arts in society and in the lives of individuals.
  3. Research support and translations which augment critical thinking in the social sciences and provide factual basis for policy development, particularly in Armenia.
  4. University scholarships, with a particular focus on Armenian Studies and contemporary issues, as well as on Armenian undergraduate students in developing countries.

Sustainability and equity are woven into all four priority areas. Unlike our previous strategic plan, the 2023-27 plan is thematically driven without making hard geographic distinctions between countries, reflecting the interconnected nature of Armenian communities worldwide.

We will soon be communicating the details of our new strategic plan through our updated websitesocial media and a series of in-person events in the Diaspora and in Armenia. We are currently finalizing the lists of projects we have supported since 2014 and the scholarships we have given. These will be posted on our website, in line with our policy of transparency. A detailed report of our activities during the last 10 years will also be made available.

I have looked ahead so far. As I mentioned, the 10-year milestone is also an opportunity to reflect back. I am often asked what I consider to be our greatest achievements since I joined the Gulbenkian Foundation. This is a difficult question. Short of listing specific initiatives, I would mention three broad tendencies that I believe the Armenian Communities Department has led, or significantly contributed to.

First, we have put Western Armenian “on the map.” While many speak of the dangers facing the language, we have actually put considerable resources into its revitalization: pedagogic tools, teacher development, spell checkers, digitization of literature, school aid, publications, culture support, children’s programs (in person and online), adult language courses and so forth. All these, cumulatively, have reinforced the language and created a newfound excitement about it, particularly among younger people. Western Armenian is an “endangered” language; it is not a dead language. This generation has the means to reverse the process, and we are pleased to be one of the leaders of the revitalization movement.

Second, through our research and translation related grants, we have played a key role in “modernizing” Armenian studies to cover more contemporary subjects on the one hand, and on the other, brought new thinking and approaches to Armenia through the translation of important social science texts. Much more needs to be done in this domain, and hence our explicit focus on these two aspects during the next five years. The Armenian Diaspora Survey, current issues in Armenia, as well as research grants on Armenian-Turkish relations, are prime examples of the former, while our translations series is an example of the latter.

Third, I cannot fail to mention our university scholarship program, which has benefited thousands of students around the world. It certainly is something to be proud of. Many of the new talents currently in the field of Armenian Studies have been recipients of Gulbenkian scholarships at one point. We grant over a dozen Masters, PhD and postdoc scholarships every year just in the field of Armenian Studies (outside of Armenia), not to mention scores of other scholarships to researchers and Armenian students in other fields of study, including a conference and travel grants to young researchers in Armenia.

I believe the Armenian Communities Department has played a transformative role in the last 10 years in these three areas. Our four programming pillars for the next five years will certainly build on these trends, always keeping in mind the wider socio-political context in which we operate and the many challenges facing Armenians both in Diaspora and in Armenia. Flexibility (being agile in the face of crises) is the key to successful grant making, which we had to show during the pandemic and the 44-day war, switching to humanitarian aid or drastically altering projects while remaining focussed on core priority areas.

At a more “internal” level, last year we redeveloped our website to a fully bilingual site, in English and Western Armenian. Even the “cookies policy” is in Armenian! We augmented our human resources by hiring an assistant director, Shogher Margossian. And we launched our own departmental Facebook page to engage directly with social media. Please do follow us!

My biggest challenge during the upcoming months is going to be managing continuity and change simultaneously, as we start implementing the new Five-Year Plan. Change entails letting go of some long-standing partners. It is difficult to say “no” after years of fruitful collaboration. But new challenges have to be taken on, new projects developed and new partnerships established and nourished.

Likewise, with continuing initiatives, we must always ask the “impact question” and show our Board of Trustees, and indeed the broader public, that our initiatives are having real impact in the Armenian world. We acknowledge that showing impact is difficult, especially when it comes to language, culture and education. We would have to work on this, in collaboration with our colleagues at the Foundation who are in other grant-making units.

We are excited about the next five years. We will continue funding projects, develop new programs, learn from the challenges we have faced and plow ahead. I always give the example of my grandparents’ generation. They built their lives, their communities, their culture and their language in the Diaspora after the Genocide. Mr. Gulbenkian himself played a role in this rebuilding process in the 1920s and 1930s. We can do the same. That, in a nutshell, is our philosophy at the Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation.




CivilNet: 2 dozen Armenian NGOs lambast government over gold mine deal

CIVILNET.AM

01 Mar, 2023 10:03

  • Representatives from Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan and the Russian peacekeeping contingent met again to discuss the restoration of unimpeded travel along the Lachin corridor.
  • More than two dozen non-governmental organizations and public figures in Armenia issued a joint statement lambasting the Armenian government’s decision last week to resume operations at the long-stalled Amulsar gold mine.

Armenpress: Horror train crash kills dozens in Greece

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 09:47, 1 March 2023

YEREVAN, MARCH 1, ARMENPRESS. At least 32 people have died and dozens more injured after two trains collided in northern Greece, BBC reported citing local emergency services.

[see video]
A train said to be carrying around 350 passengers hit a freight train travelling in the opposite direction near the city of Larissa late on Tuesday night.

The passenger train had been travelling from Athens to the northern city of Thessaloniki when it crashed head-on with the other train, leading to a fire in at least one of the carriages.

A representative of the Greek fire service, Vassilis Vathrakogiannis, confirmed 32 fatalities, in addition to some 85 injured. At least 25 of those injured are said to be in “serious condition,” according to the Greek broadcaster ERT News.

Thirty ambulances reportedly rushed to the scene to treat the victims, with multiple hospitals in nearby Larissa now operating on an “emergency basis,” local reports added. Fire crews battled a blaze that erupted in some cars, while the police and military have also mobilized rescue teams, RT reported. 

The cause of the crash is not known.

“It was a very powerful collision. This is a terrible night… It’s hard to describe the scene,” RT quoted Costas Agorastos, the regional governor of Greece’s Thessaly region as saying.  Agorastos added that around 250 survivors had been evacuated to Thessaloniki on buses.

One survivor described how the carriage he was in was engulfed in flames as it rolled over following the crash.

"We heard a big bang," passenger Stergios Minenis was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

"It was a nightmarish 10 seconds. We were turning over in the carriage until we fell on our sides and until the commotion stopped. Then there was panic. Cables, fire. The fire was immediate. As we were turning over we were being burned. Fire was right and left," Minenis said.

"For 10, 15 seconds it was chaos. Tumbling over, fires, cables hanging, broken windows, people screaming, people trapped."