“A historic event”: SIOP Asia 2023 XV Congress opens in Yerevan

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 14:29, 19 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 19, ARMENPRESS. The official opening ceremony of the SIOP (International Society for Pediatric Oncology) Asia 2023 XV Congress took place Friday in Yerevan.

Armenian Healthcare Minister Anahit Avanesyan said that the event is an excellent opportunity for Armenian specialists to present their achievements of the recent years.

“This is a historic event for us,” Avanesyan said at the opening ceremony. “Because for the first time ever, such a major specialized event is being held in Armenia, and this is a very good occasion to get to know the new methods of treatment constantly developing around the world and the possibilities and important scientific work,” she said, adding that authorities will work to host such global congresses on cancer in the future again.

She said that the 75% treatment rate of pediatric cancer in Armenia is a truly a big achievement for a developing country.

Avanesyan noted the allogeneic stem cell transplant as an achievement of Armenian specialists.

The minister noted that children from abroad are among patients who are in Armenia to receive the allogeneic stem cell transplant, a rather difficult procedure.

Lawrence Faulkner, pediatric hematologist-oncologist and stem cell transplantation specialist from Italy, said that 5 children have received the transplantation treatment and 4 of them have been successfully treated.

“This means that we have success in 80% cases, and the team carrying out the transplant in Armenia is successfully implementing this treatment process and can expand this service and treat more patients. I plan to speak about stem cell transplant in developing countries with limited resources during the congress because it is an expensive service and regrettably it is unavailable in many countries,” he said.

Faulkner praised the holding of the congress in Armenia as a big achievement, highlighting the fact that experts from many countries will come together and jointly discuss diagnosis and treatment of diseases.

Armen Muradyan, the Rector of the Yerevan State Medical University, the venue where the congress is held, said that it is a great achievement to have a hematology center where such advanced methodologies and technologies are used.

“I am happy and especially proud that our country was able to have such a high result and that this didn’t go unnoticed. A number of renowned experts from 60 countries have gathered here today, who will discuss their achievements and get to know how Armenia, a small developing country, was able to achieve such success,” Muradyan said.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 19-05-23

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 17:31, 19 May 2023

YEREVAN, 19 MAY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 19 May, USD exchange rate down by 0.61 drams to 386.42 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 1.39 drams to 417.14 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.01 drams to 4.83 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 0.76 drams to 480.36 drams.

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

Gold price down by 213.90 drams to 24354.16 drams. Silver price down by 2.51 drams to 292.21 drams.

PACE representatives to visit Armenia

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 19:02, 19 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 19, ARMENPRESS. Paul Gavan, the rapporteur of the PACE Committee on Migration, Refugees and Displaced Persons, the author of the report “Addressing the Humanitarian Consequences of the Lachin Corridor Blockade” and Tatiana Termacic, the Head of the Committee, will arrive in the Republic of Armenia, ARMENPRESS reports, Public TV of Armenia informed.

It is noted that they will conduct a fact-finding mission from May 30 to June 2.

Turkish Press: Russian FM hosts Azerbaijani, Armenian counterparts for talks

DAILY SABAH
Turkey –

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hosted Azerbaijani Counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov and Armenian Counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan in Moscow on Friday to discuss a roadmap to normalize ties between the two neighboring countries.

Opening the meeting, Lavrov said he expects his interlocutors to inform him about steps that Russia should take to contribute to the implementation of the trilateral agreements, which ended the Second Karabakh War.

“We met quite a long time ago, and a lot of new topics have appeared. I hope that today’s meeting will take place in a constructive atmosphere and that your direct dialogue will help achieve additional results,” he said.

Lavrov suggested focusing in the trilateral format on the possibilities that Russia has that can be used to define steps for normalization between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“We are entirely interested to have stability and peace in this region (South Caucasus), where Russia’s interests are directly involved, we will pursue implementation of the solutions that will lead to the stabilization,” he said.

Lavrov called on the two diplomats to address humanitarian issues, unblock transport and economic ties, and agree on a text of a future peace treaty.

Ahead of the meeting the minister also held separate bilateral meetings with Armenian and Azerbaijani top diplomats.

With Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Bayramov, Lavrov suggested discussing issues related to arranging a presidential meeting.

For his part, Bayramov thanked Russia for preserving the memory of Azerbaijani leader Heydar Aliyev and organizing events to commemorate his 100th anniversary.

He also invited Lavrov to discuss the bilateral agenda, which is “always very intense” due to the close cooperation between Azerbaijan and Russia.

At the talks with Armenian Foreign Minister Mirzoyan, Lavrov urged to find solutions for three “key” issues – a peace treaty, unblocking communications and border delimitation.

For his part, Mirzoyan said Yerevan is committed to the trilateral agreements of the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia.

However, he accused Baku of violating the accord, naming as such the establishment of a border checkpoint on the Lachin road.

Yerevan has grown increasingly frustrated over what it calls Moscow’s failure to protect Armenia in the face of a military threat from Azerbaijan.

With Russia bogged down in Ukraine and unwilling to strain ties with Azerbaijan’s key ally Türkiye, the United States and European Union have sought to steer the talks.

On Sunday, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met in Brussels for a new round of talks hosted by European Council President Charles Michel.

PODCASTS The 30-year genocide: When Turkey destroyed its Christians

Greece – May 19 2023
PODCASTS
On May 19 we commemorate the genocide of the Greeks of Pontus, a chapter of a broader genocide perpetrated by the Turkish state in the early 20th century against its Christian inhabitants that resulted in the deaths of more than 2.5 million Armenians, Greeks, and Assyrians. Professor Dror Ze’evi, the co-author of the book “The Thirty-Year Genocide: Turkey’s Destruction of Its Christian Minorities, 1894-1924,” joins Thanos Davelis to look into how Turkey’s Greek, Armenian, and Assyrian communities disappeared as a result of a staggered campaign of genocide. 

Listen to the podcast at  

Opposition MP: Artsakh leaders continue to help Pashinyan surrender it to Azerbaijan

Panorama
Armenia – May 16 2023

Opposition MP Tigran Abrahamyan accused the Artsakh leadership of supporting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s efforts to give away Artsakh to Azerbaijan.

The Artsakh Foreign Ministry on Monday reacted harshly to European Council President Charles Michel’s remarks following the latest talks between the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders in Brussels.

“The EU leadership continues to ignore the legitimate rights and interests of the people of Artsakh and is guided solely by their own geopolitical and short-term interests in the region to the detriment of the values of democracy and human rights declared by the European Union,” it said in a statement.

Pashinyan stopped championing the Artsakh Armenians’ right to self-determination last year and has spoken instead of the need to protect their “rights and security” since then.

Meanwhile, the Artsakh statement contained no criticism of Pashinyan and his government.

“Charles Michel’s remarks only indicate the current agenda and the talks that were held, Meanwhile, the Armenian authorities, at least, have not stated otherwise,” Abrahamyan, the secretary of the opposition Pativ Unem faction, wrote on Facebook on Tuesday.

He stressed neither the Artsakh president nor any of the Artsakh officials who held a rally in Stepanakert on Monday refrained from criticizing Pashinyan’s “disgraceful policy of surrendering Artsakh to Azerbaijan.”

“Despite harsh criticism of Pashinyan from various groups of Artsakh’s society, the Artsakh authorities continue to support Pashinyan in his efforts to surrender Artsakh [to Azerbaijan],” the deputy stated.

Over 100 Artsakh patients deprived of access to media care in Armenia

Panorama
Armenia – May 16 2023

Russian peacekeeping forces on Tuesday facilitated the transfer of nine severely ill patients from Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to Armenia, the Artsakh Health Ministry said.
Medical evacuations were previously carried out by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

The ICRC had to suspend them on 29 April after Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint in the Lachin Corridor, the sole road in or out of Artsakh. The supply of medicine to Artsakh has also been suspended.

“More than 100 patients have been deprived of access to medical aid in Armenia due to the impossibility of their transportation in recent weeks. 25 of them require urgent transfer to Armenia,” the Health Ministry said in a statement.

Asbarez: Artsakh is Governed by its People’s Mandate, Says Foreign Minister

Sergey Ghazaryan is Artsakh’s foreign minister


Artsakh’s Foreign Minister Sergey Ghazarian on Tuesday said his government is guided by the mandate it has received from its citizens, when they overwhelmingly voted for independence in 1991.

He added that the Artsakh authorities cannot renege on the people’s _expression_ of free will.

Speaking to reporters, Ghazaryan also lamented that the European Council President Charles Michel did mention the current situation in Artsakh—Azerbaijan’s blockade, the illegal checkpoint and the ongoing aggression and the acute humanitarian crisis—in his statement following his meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan in Brussels on Sunday.

Instead Michel said he called on Aliyev to create security guarantees for the “Armenians of the Nagorno-Karabakh oblast,” a term used to describe Artsakh during the Soviet times, before Artsakh’s declaration of independence.

The EU leader also announced that Armenia and Azerbaijan “confirmed their commitment” to respect each other’s territorial integrity, specifying Azerbaijan’s 86,600 square kilometers, which includes Artsakh.

“The people of Artsakh declared their decision through free _expression_ of will on December 10, 1991. There have been various opinions since, but the authorities of Artsakh are guided by the mandate bestowed upon them by the people and cannot go against that _expression_ of will,” Ghazaryan told reporters.

While the Artsakh foreign minister did not directly address the territorial integrity issue and the ramifications of Michel’s statements on the future of status of Artsakh, he did fault the EU leader for ignoring the current realities on the ground.

“Most importantly, he [Michel] did not mention Azerbaijan’s non-compliance with the requirements of the International Court of Justice and the dire humanitarian situation established in Artsakh as a result of Azerbaijan’s provocative steps,” Ghazaryan said, referring to ICJ’s February 22 ruling ordering Azerbaijan to ensure “unimpeded movement” on the Lachin Corridor.

In a strongly-worded statement on Monday, Artsakh’s Foreign Ministry said “the EU leadership continues to ignore the legitimate rights and interests of the people of Artsakh and is guided solely by their own geopolitical and short-term interests in the region to the detriment of the values of democracy and human rights declared by the European Union.”

The Russian anti-Putin activists who continue their struggle from Georgia and Armenia

May 17 2023

When Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, tens of thousands of Russians fled to Georgia and Armenia. More than a year on, many have stayed, finding ways to fight Putin’s war from abroad. OC Media and CivilNet met some of them.

Published on 17 May 2023 at 11:56
  • Anya Eganyan, Tata Shoshiashvili – CivilNet (Yerevan) – OC Media (Tbilisi)

“Ineeded to do something”, says Anatoly Sobolev. The 36-year-old digital advertising professional moved to Georgia at the beginning of March 2022, not long after being arrested at an anti-war protest in Russia. Having begun as a volunteer with Volunteer Tbilisi, an organisation that provides support to Ukrainian refugees in Georgia, Sobolev is now the director of the organisation’s development department.

Many others have found new opportunities to put their time and effort to good use. Whether helping Ukrainians find housing and work, organising protests, or educating their compatriots about colonialism and imperialism, Russian activists are finding ways to push back against Vladimir Putin’s war from abroad.

“When I left […] I thought that it would all end quickly”, says Vasilisa Borzova. “It seemed so absurd and pointless, that it was hard to imagine that the war could last for a long time.”

Borzova, who was studying for a master’s degree in Political Science and International Relations at the Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences before she moved to Armenia. Instead, things only got worse. After an initial wave of Russians fled the outbreak of war and concomitant political crackdown, a second wave fled after the announcement of mobilisation in September 2022. 

Darina Mayatskaya similarly says that the move, and the fact that she remains in Armenia a year later, were entirely unexpected.

“I was making career plans, I had come up with a to-do list for 2022”, says Mayatskaya. In Saint Petersburg, Mayataskaya had worked as a lawyer at a real estate agency, while also helping independent political candidates to run and be elected as lawmakers. 

When she decided to leave, Armenia seemed the easiest option available to her: visa-free entry, direct flights from Russia, and Russians can enter with just an internal passport. She did not intend or expect to be in Yerevan over a year later. 

But some who migrated have found since their arrival that they were unable to leave. Alongside increasing restrictions on where Russian passport holders can travel, a large number of Russian activists and journalists have been denied entry into Georgia, driving unease amongst many émigrés that on leaving Georgia, they might not be able to return.

Vera Oleynikova, a 22-year-old activist and jazz musician, hadn’t planned to move to Georgia at all. She had frequently taken part in anti-Kremlin demonstrations and been arrested, once even having bones broken at a police station after carrying an anti-Putin poster at a protest. 

After the war broke out on 24 February 2022, she continued to take part in anti-war demonstrations, and was repeatedly arrested, fined, and even followed. In June of that year, a friend told her that a criminal case was about to be opened against her, and Oleynikova decided that it was time to leave.

She bought tickets to Armenia, but was told at the airport that she was not allowed to leave Russia. 

“They didn’t give me any reason why I was forbidden to leave the country. My mother took me to Minsk [the capital of Belarus] by car, and from there, I managed to fly to Tbilisi with the last money I had,” Oleynikova recalls.

A month after her arrival, Vera received the news that her mother had died suddenly. She did not return for the funeral, as her mother had told her. Both Vera and her mother knew that if she returned, it was likely that she would be arrested as soon as she crossed the border. 

On leaving Russia, all the activists we spoke with sought ways to continue their fight against the Kremlin from abroad.. 

Some, like Oleynikova, have taken action intermittently since their arrival: attending protests, posting on social media, and contributing to fundraisers for Ukraine. Others have taken on larger and longer-running projects.

When Vasilisa Borzova realised that Armenia was not going to be the transit point she’d initially expected it to be, she launched the Ethos project: an organisation which helps refugees from Ukraine and Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as people from Armenia’s border areas who have recently suffered in the conflict with Azerbaijan. 

She also notes how supportive Armenians have been, both to other Armenians affected by war and of Ethos’ work. She highlights the response to the September 2022 two-day war; after the initial attack on the country’s borders, Armenians immediately began to collect humanitarian aid. 

Darina Mayatskaya says the same is true of her experience. Mayatskaya is the Armenia project coordinator for The Ark, an organisation which helps people facing persecution because of their anti-war positions leave Russia and get settled abroad. 

Neither Mayatskaya nor The Ark have faced any obstruction in Armenia.

Now, the project is gradually shifting its focus to integrating Russians into a new environment and way of thinking, as well as hosting discussions amongst Russian émigrés on the factors that led to the war: colonialism, imperialism, and poor civic education. The organisation also partners with anti-war initiatives and independent projects around the world. 

More : Russian exiles get a chilly reception in Georgia

Victoria Krongard, a 25-year-old former medical student and activist, is similarly working to fill in the gaps her country’s education glossed over. 

Reforum Space, an organisation that provides support to foundations that help Ukrainians, as well as activists and journalists from Russia, runs free anti-war events and master classes. 

She says that many Russians are not familiar with the Georgian perspective on the 2008 August War, and that Reforum Space informs them of Russia’s continuing role in the conflicts in Georgia. 

“In [Russian] media, all this is positioned as [Abkhazia’s and South Ossetia’s] desire”, says Krongard. 

“[The war in Ukraine] is terrible. It is a crime. Putin’s fomenting of this conflict since 2014 is inhumane and unprincipled”, Krongard concludes. 

Despite reports that both countries had seen a rise in anti-Russian sentiment, in Georgia in response to waves of Russian immigration, and in Armenia following Russia’s failure to provide military assistance to its ally during and following the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, all our respondents said that they have only had good experiences in their new homes. 

“The people here are much kinder. They are always ready to help”, says Artur Asafiev, a freelance reporter with RFE/RL from Ufa, central-southern Russia, who has been living in Yerevan for over a year. 

He adds that because of their recent history, Armenians understand the actuality of war, and have previously dealt with influxes of refugees from the Nagorno-Karabakh wars. He admires the country’s desire to cooperate with the European Union, despite its current ties with Russia.  

“Armenia is a democracy that observes laws and regulations, where any form of _expression_ of one’s opinion is allowed, both for citizens and visitors. The police not only do not break up rallies, but also help if you turn to them․ There is a huge amount of official, accredited media covering all positions, ambulances arrive on time, and people do not show aggression toward each other”, says Mayatskaya. 

In contrast to fears that Armenians might grow hostile to the increasing numbers of Russians in their country, Mayatskaya has faced negative reactions not from Armenians, but from Russian propagandists, who at some point found The Ark and began to write negative comments about their assistance to Ukrainians. 

More : Georgians defeat the “Russian Law”, though their path to Europe remains uncertain

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, many Georgians have expressed hostility towards the influx of Russians, and polling shows that a majority of the population supports the introduction of visas for Russian citizens.

But Krongard says she found only a sense of freedom in the county. 

“Here I have no fear of saying out loud that Putin and Lukashenka are bad. Here I have no fear that [for expressing my opinion] someone will report me to the security forces and I will have problems.”

Anatoly Sobolev similarly says that, since his arrival in Georgia, he has faced no hostility related to his nationality. 

“I have been living in Georgia for two years now. Here, I am given the opportunity to live, no one hits me on the street, I can [talk about] my opinions, to do something that, in my opinion, is very important,” says Sobolev. “That’s why, while I’m here, I’m grateful to [Georgia]. If they kick me out, I’ll still be grateful.”

The activists we spoke to all emphasised their commitment to resuming their activism in Russia given the opportunity. 

“If there is any chance to change the regime, I will return [to Russia] on the first flight”, says Sobolev, adding that he believes that Russia is not currently safe for anyone. 

“I miss Russia, it’s my country, which was stolen from me, and now people are being killed on my behalf. [At the moment] Russia is a big cockroach devouring its own [people]”, Sobolev explained.

Victoria Krongard similarly says that, while she does not know when she will return, she wants to return to Russia to help improve the lives of people living there. 

More : Russian imperialism, Georgia’s chronic viral infection

Viktoria Krongard also says that she has faced no issues in Georgia related to her nationality, despite having heard stories about conflicts at protests demanding that Georgia’s government ceases to let Russian citizens into the country.

Vasilisa Borzova, however, says that she wants to continue helping those in need from Armenia, and would like to deepen her organisation’s ties with its host country. She says she has an idea for a project dedicated to Armenia, teaching Russian-speaking audiences about Armenia’s culture and history. 

“I want somehow to thank Armenia, which sheltered us, accepted us and showed us how to live by supporting each other. It seems to me that Armenian culture can give us a lot and teach us how to be.”

This article was a joint production between CivilNet and OC Media.

https://voxeurop.eu/en/anti-putin-activists-georgia-armenia/

Turkish Press: Azerbaijan arrests at least 9 citizens allegedly working for Iran, Armenia

Turkey – May 17 2023


Azerbaijan has arrested at least nine citizens allegedly working for the special services of Iran and Armenia.


“Seven members of the ‘Revenge 313’ group, Elgun Agayev, Ruslan Aliyev, Yusif Mirzayev, Elvin Jafarov, Savalan Huseynli, Bilal Sujaddinli, Maharrameli Musayev, as well as other members of the group, were detained and submitted for investigation,” the Azerbaijani Interior Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.


It added that members of the group wrote radical religious slogans on the streets near government buildings, and shared their images on social media “with the aim of creating confusion among citizens.”


The ministry also mentioned Rufulla Akhundzade, and his son Almursal Akhundzade, who cooperated with the Iranian special services to organize armed riots in the country in order to “forcefully change the constitutional structure” of Azerbaijan.


The two people, it added, worked to organize assassination attempts, and devised a plan to establish gangs through secret groups on messaging apps such as WhatsApp, Telegram and others.


Akhundzade, it said, also planned to take the members of the group to Iran for “military training and illegal armed-extremist organizations in the name of receiving religious education.”


In a separate statement, Azerbaijan’s State Security Service said two other citizens, Rashad Ahmadov and Rovshan Musa Amirov, were arrested on charges of working for Armenia’s special services and committing treason.


Tensions have risen between Azerbaijan and Iran over a series of incidents, including an attack on the Azerbaijani Embassy in Tehran and military support to Armenia. Tehran, on the contrary, accuses Baku of cooperation with Israel.


Meanwhile, relations between Baku and Yerevan have been tense since 1991 when Armenia occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan and seven adjacent regions.


Most of the territory was liberated by Baku during a war in the fall of 2020, which ended after a Russian-brokered peace agreement. Dialogue for the normalization of ties, however, continues.