As Europe Unveils Armenia ‘Action Plan,’ Yerevan Warns of More Azerbaijani Threats

Council of Europe official Bjørn Berge meets with Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan on Feb. 16


The Council of Europe on Thursday launched its “Action Plan” for Armenia, official Yerevan warned of threats of more imminent attacks by Azerbaijan.

The Council of Europe Deputy Secretary General Bjørn Berge was in Yerevan on Tuesday at an official “Action Plan” presentation, during which Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan warned that the threat for renewed escalation by Azerbaijan remains high.

“We live in a region full of security threats. It’s more than two months that the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno Karabakh continues as a result of Azerbaijan’s blockade of Lachin corridor,” Mirzoyan said in his speech at the event.

He said that Azerbaijan continues to keep Armenian prisoners of war and civilians captive and the fate of many missing persons and victims of forced disappearances remains unknown.

Sovereign territories of Armenia continue to remain under Azerbaijani occupation as a result of attacks in May and November of 2021 and September of 2022. “And the danger of Azerbaijan instigating a new escalation remains high,” Mirzoyan said.

In his presentation, Berge, the Council of Europe official, explained that the so-called “Action Plan” represented a crucial part of the overall cooperation between the Council and Armenia.

He said that Armenia has been a member of the Council of Europe for more than two decades and has continually made important contributions in the organization, and at the same time benefited from the organization’s expertise and joint cooperation.

Berge added that it has been interesting to follow the evolution of the relationship and new initiatives over the years, including major reforms.

“The Council of Europe has very much appreciated the excellent cooperation with Armenia and the progress made in several areas, at least through the most recent joint action plan which concluded last year. What has been achieved within that framework is substantial and significant,” Berge added, citing Armenia’s new judicial and criminal codes, as well as Yerevan’s anti-corruption strategy and other reforms of key importance.

“The new action plan we are launching today is designed to help Armenia take further steps forward in dealing with them,” Berge added.

The action plan includes new areas of cooperation in the plan, such as freedom of _expression_, also for the media, measures to protect personal data, social and labor rights, environment, good governance, local government reforms, joint fight against cybercrime and other areas.

“Overall it is intended to make life better for the people of this great country, underpinned by the commitment from the Armenian authorities and with the support and cooperation of the Council of Europe. Looking back, much has been achieved in this country in recent times, but together we can achieve yet more. I am very grateful to the Armenian authorities for their firm determination and political commitment , as well as to the EU and all the partners and donors who are providing the financial support required,” Berge said.

The Armenian people are facing crisis once again

Jan 25 2023

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Azerbaijan has blocked the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh (known as Artsakh in Armenian) to Armenia and the outside world since December 12. This most recent aggression leaves 120,000 people in Artsakh under siege, unable to access medical supplies, food and fuel as the region experiences harsh winter conditions.

This is the second time in just two years that Azerbaijan has committed a clear violation of human rights. It must be condemned by the international community yet again.

In 2021, we celebrated with our Armenian sisters and brothers when President Joe Biden formally recognized the Armenian Genocide after 106 years. The announcement was to be the beginning of expanded support as the president pledged for the first time that the promise of “Never Again” included the Armenian people.

Now is the time for the Biden Administration to hold up to that promise.

Jewish World Watch calls for an immediate end to unprovoked aggression and for the Biden Administration to take decisive action and halt United States military assistance to Azerbaijan until the blockade is lifted. The international community must protect the safety and well-being of the Armenian people in Artsakh, and Azerbaijan must be held accountable for its actions.

Please sign this emergency letter to President Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken urging them to take action.

https://jww.org/site/artsakh-crisis/ 

Asbarez: France Views Armenia as Buffer to ‘Neo-Colonial Russia’

French President Emmanuelle Macron addresses the Munich Security Conference on Feb. 17


President Emmanuel Macron of France, speaking at the Munich Security Conference, said that Armenia can play role in buffering what he called Russia’s “Neo-colonial” aspirations adding that France will continue to stand by Armenia.

In his remarks, coming on the eve of the first anniversary of the Russia-Ukraine war, Macron was clearly attempting to pit Armenia against Russia. The French leader also doubled-down on his criticism of Russia, by saying that his country will support Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, whom Macron believes can curtail Russia’s effort of “spreading instability,” including in the Caucasus.

“In a few days it will be the anniversary of the illegal Russian aggression against Ukraine, and although we cannot make final conclusions, we can summarize this year and share certain perspectives. Naturally, the core of my speech will be the war unleashed by Russia against Ukraine, but I must mention that we do not forget the ongoing wars in the Caucasus, the Middle East, Africa, the fight against terrorism, nuclear security and other issues,” said Macron.

“Our task today is to explain, to make it clear that Russia is a force that spreads instability and chaos, which it does not only in Ukraine, but also in the Caucasus, the Middle East, Africa,” added Macron.

“How can we believe that the challenges of the Caucasus can be overcome by the neo-colonial Russia that I described a moment ago? I am saying this in the presence of my friend, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, with whom we will continue to stand and act,” Macron said.

President Emmanuel Macron of France meets with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Munich on Feb. 17

Macron and Pashinyan held an informal meeting on the margins of the Munich Conference, where the two exchanged view on regional security matters, the prime minister’s office said.

Pashinyan also held a similar meeting with President of the European Council Charles Michel, who also held a similar meeting President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan.

Photo gallery: 240 attend La Jolla gala celebrating first anniversary of St. Sarkis Armenian Church

La Jolla Light
San Diego, CA – Feb 17 2023

San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria joined more than 240 other guests Feb. 4 at the San Diego Marriott La Jolla hotel to celebrate the first anniversary of St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church in San Diego.

“I was honored to join the Armenian American community to celebrate the one-year anniversary of their magnificent building here in San Diego” (at 13925 El Camino Real), Gloria said. “The Armenian community is a vibrant, productive part of San Diego’s multicultural population, and I congratulate them on realizing their goal of building a new sanctuary.”

The black-tie-optional dinner and dance featured the Allen G Orchestra and live and silent auctions.

Proceeds from guests raised $142,000 for the church, and St. Sarkis benefactors David and Lois Butterfield donated $200,000.

“The church’s goal is to expand the church’s facilities and create a space for community and young people’s events,” said Kathy Kassardjian, who co-chaired the gala with Melina Ounjian. “It was gratifying to see so many people rise to the challenge and give so generously.”

— La Jolla Light staff 

See all photos at https://www.lajollalight.com/news/story/2023-02-16/photo-gallery-240-attend-la-jolla-gala-celebrating-first-anniversary-of-st-sarkis-armenian-church

Families evicted from former Armenian Defence Ministry HQ

Feb 17 2023
 17 February 2023

Police have reportedly evicted over 150 families from the former headquarters of Armenia’s Defence Ministry on the outskirts of Yerevan. Residents protested outside the building, which they are being evicted from ahead of its renovation for use by the State Revenue Committee. 

The 13-storey building, located northwest of the city on the Yerevan-Ashtarak highway, was given to Armenia’s State Revenue Committee in April 2022. 

On Thursday, Yerevan police evicted residents of the building who, according to the authorities, were living there illegally. Twenty-six residents were detained while resisting eviction. 

At the end of the day, a few dozen residents gathered in front of the building to protest the evictions and remained there overnight. 

According to residents, around 150 families lived in the building, some since 2019, although most had moved in in 2021. 

Armenia’s former Defence Ministry building. Photo: CivilNet

One of the residents told Hetq that she and her family had previously rented a flat in Yerevan, but could no longer afford skyrocketing rents in the city. After being told by an acquaintance that they could live in the former Defence Ministry building for free, the family of eight had moved a few months ago. 

Other residents told reporters that they had moved into the building because they were homeless, and had restored and renovated the rooms they chose to stay in. 

Responding to accusations that the police had ‘invaded’ the homes of those living in the building and forcefully removed them, an official from the Interior Ministry stated that they had not invaded, but ‘eliminated the invasion’. 

Speaking to journalists, Deputy Head of Public Order Protection Gevorg Azizyan claimed that residents had been warned of the eviction, and were given ‘reasonable deadlines’ in August 2021 which expired on 12 February. 

‘They were warned many times that they were in the area illegally’, stated Azizyan. 

Armenia’s Ministry of Social Affairs announced that they would take steps to provide evicted citizens with temporary housing, and were considering implementing a rent compensation programme for those eligible. 

No officials have clarified how residents were able to occupy rooms in the building without permission until yesterday’s evictions, in some cases for over four years. 

After initially refusing to allow them to reenter the building, residents said police eventually allowed them to enter for a few minutes to gather their belongings.

The building has been vacant since 2008, when the Defence Ministry moved to its current location in a northern suburb of Yerevan. 

The government plans to renovate the site, and move all facilities of the State Revenue Committee currently operating across the city there by 2027.

https://oc-media.org/families-evicted-from-former-defence-ministry-headquarters/

How the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh is hurting the families it divides

             Feb 17 2023

As Azerbaijan continues its blockade of Karabakh for the 68th day, Artak Beglaryan can’t meet his wife and daughters

Siranush Sargsyan

Artak Beglaryan and Armine Vardanyan with their daughters

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Government of Artsakh Republic

“Why don’t the Azerbaijanis understand that we want you to come home so we can hug you?” four-year-old Nane asked her father Artak Beglaryan, the advisor to the Armenian state minister of Nagorno-Karabakh (known to Armenians as Artsakh).

Since 12 December, Azerbaijanis who claim to be eco-activists have, with the support of their government, blocked the only road connecting the unrecognised republic of Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia and the world beyond.

Azerbaijan has also attacked local infrastructure, cutting off electricity and gas. This has left 120,000 ethnic Armenians, including 30,000 children, under siege. Shortages of food, fuel and medical supplies are deepening.

Beglaryan travelled to Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, in early December with the intention of returning home a few days later. But the blockade, now in its second month, has kept him separated from his family, leaving his wife to care for their two young daughters alone.

In their small apartment in Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armine Vardanyan, Beglaryan’s wife, rushes to finish the laundry and other household chores before the electricity is cut, all while trying to get her one-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Arpi, to sleep.

In the first days of the blockade, Vardanyan criticised mothers who were panic-buying baby food and diapers. Now, she says, as she nears the end of her diaper supply, she realises they acted wisely. She is breastfeeding Arpi, but struggles to find essential food for Nane.

[My daughter] remembers me from that time only on the internet

Artak Beglaryan

Every day, Nane asks for yoghurt, but her mum can’t find it in stores. “Of course, it’s upsetting when you can’t find the simplest thing your child wants,” Vardanyan said.

Nane, like 5,500 other children in the region, is also no longer able to attend kindergarten. Schools and kindergartens have shut because of the worsening shortage of food and unreliable heating and electricity.

Beglaryan estimates more than 3000 people – including 400 children – were separated from their families at the beginning of 2023.

For children who remember the 2020 war, thousands of whom lost parents or close relatives, the blockade has reignited fears that the Azerbaijanis will attack again. Nane was two-and-a-half during the last war. What she remembers most is being separated from her parents when she was sent to stay with her grandmother in Yerevan to escape the bombardments.

“It was quite hard for her,” Beglaryan recalls. “She remembers me from that time only on the internet, from a distance.” Beglaryan said this “digital kinship” is also a problem for children who are separated from their families for long periods of time. “It changes the relationship between parents and children.”

We’re passing our responsibility towards the motherland to future generations

Armine Vardanyan

“Depending on their age, children may experience confusion, anxiety, fear, and the lack of a basic sense of security,” Ruzanna Mkrtchyan, a psychologist in Stepanakert, explained. “[Younger children] may struggle to interpret the sudden absence of a parent. They can go as far as blaming themselves and thinking they did something terribly wrong, which made their parents not want to see them any more.”

During the 2020 war, Beglaryan, who at the time served as the Human Rights Ombudsman of Nagorno-Karabakh, played an active role in raising awareness and calling for accountability against war crimes, often appearing on the international news.

“My wife told me that, one day, Nane saw me on TV and started to cry, saying: ‘Dad, stop talking to others, look at me!’” he said.

Now that they are separated again, the two have returned to video calls, though Beglaryan is visually impaired. When he was six, he was playing outside with his friends when one found an unexploded mine and detonated it with a hammer, causing him to lose his eyesight.

What’s next for the Azerbaijani blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh?
An Azerbaijani journalist examines his government’s actions as the blockade of the disputed territory tightens

“Sometimes Nane boycotts me,” Beglaryan said. “She doesn’t want to talk to me, and then an hour later she calls back. ‘How come Santa Claus can come on New Year’s but not you?’, she asked. Again, it was hard to explain.”

On 17 January, Russian peacekeepers helped to escort a group of teenagers back to Nagorno-Karabakh. The teenagers had travelled to Yerevan for the Junior Eurovision contest, only to be separated from their families by the blockade. At a roadblock, Azerbaijani agents boarded their bus and began to shout at them and harass them, causing one child to faint. The Russian peacekeepers eventually removed the Azerbaijanis.

“We prioritise the reunification of parents with minor children and people with disabilities and special needs. So far we have transported over 200 people for this purpose,” Eteri Musayelyan, spokesperson of the Red Cross in Nagorno-Karabakh, told openDemocracy.

The crisis has gained little attention in the international media. Although the US, the EU and international bodies such as the UN have called for Azerbaijan to reopen the Lachin Corridor – the one road that connects Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh – no real progress has been made.

Beglaryan staged a round-the-clock sit-in outside the UN office in Yerevan for a week, and presented his demands and proposals to UN officials.

But Vardanyan is sceptical. “If there is no action, the appeals have no value,” she said. “Why is it possible to apply sanctions against Russia, but not against Azerbaijan?”

Despite the difficulties and the uncertainty ahead, the couple are determined to remain in Nagorno-Karabakh. At the end of the war in 2020, after the loss of so many young soldiers and existing uncertainties, they decided to have a second child.

“I always say that my children are my legacy. We’re passing our responsibility towards the motherland to future generations”, Vardanyan said. “This is my way of fighting,’’ she added.

“It is our homeland,” said Beglaryan, who finds strength in his responsibility to past generations. He was Nane’s age when he lost his father in the first war with Azerbaijan, after the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. One thing that hit him particularly hard during the blockade was not being able to visit his father’s grave on the anniversary of his death.

When Nane last asked him why the Azerbaijanis were stopping her from hugging him, he told her not to worry, that they would find a solution so that he could return home soon to hug both his children.

“I try to show my children that I am not lying to them. I am doing my best, together with others,” he said.

He finds strength in the memory of his father. “I am sure that my father, among many others who were killed, was fighting in order to give me and thousands of other children a chance to live, and that he would love to see the next generation happy. I am doing my best for my children and others’ children, for that purpose, too.”

Armenpress: We will continue to stand by Armenia and my friend Nikol Pashinyan. Emmanuel Macron

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 21:12, 17 February 2023

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. In his speech at the Munich Security Conference, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that he will continue to stand by Armenia and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

ARMENPRESS reports, the main part of Macron’s speech was related to the Russian-Ukrainian conflict, but the leader of France also referred to the situation in the South Caucasus.

“In a few days it will be the anniversary of the illegal Russian aggression against Ukraine, and although we cannot make final conclusions, we can summarize this year and share certain perspectives. Naturally, the core of my speech will be the war unleashed by Russia against Ukraine, but I must mention that we do not forget the ongoing wars in the Caucasus, the Middle East, Africa, the fight against terrorism, nuclear security and other issues.

Our task today is to explain, to make it clear that Russia is a force that spreads instability and chaos, which it does not only in Ukraine, but also in the Caucasus, the Middle East, Africa.

How can we believe that the challenges of the Caucasus can be overcome by the neo-colonial Russia that I described a moment ago? I am saying this in the presence of my friend, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, with whom we will continue to stand and act,” Macron said.

ICRC contributes to alleviating and solving various problems arising from the humanitarian crisis in NK – PM Pashinyan

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 21:29, 17 February 2023

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 17, ARMENPRESS. In the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had a meeting with Mirjana Spoljaric, President of the International Committee of the Red Cross, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister.

The Prime Minister emphasized the importance of close cooperation between the Armenian Government and ICRC. Nikol Pashinyan noted that the ICRC is the only international organization operating in Nagorno-Karabakh, which, especially given Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade of the Lachin Corridor, significantly contributes to alleviating and solving various problems arising from the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh by providing humanitarian support. According to the Prime Minister, the ICRC has key importance in the South Caucasus region.

The President of the ICRC stated that they will continue to contribute to the solution of the humanitarian problems of the NK population according to their mandate. Mrs. Spoljaric also mentioned the fact of effective cooperation with the Armenian government.

The Prime Minister thanked the ICRC for providing communication between the Armenian captives illegally held in Azerbaijan until now and their families.

Sports: Underdog high school basketball team in Canoga Park in semifinals

Feb 17 2023

They are looking to clinch their division and take the state championship.

A high school basketball team thought to be underdogs is making big headlines and exceeding expectations this season.

The players attend the Armenian General Benevolent Union Manoogian-Demirdjian School in Canoga Park. In the past three years, the AGBU Titans have moved up three divisions.

There are 11 players on the team – eight seniors, two sophomores, and one freshman. They say they don’t see themselves as the most talented players, but their preparation, determination, and resilience have been on a winning streak.

Nareg Kopooshian has been coaching at the school for the past five years, but he’s been coaching the group of players since they were 8 years old.

“The part that I think makes us love basketball the most is the fact that we get to play with all our friends…  there’s no nervousness around that. There’s no one to impress,” senior Avand Dorian said.

“I was once the tallest person in the room, and now I’m not,” Kopooshian said.

Coach Kopooshian emphasizes “student” in the phrase student-athletes. The whole team works hard on and off the court and cumulatively has a 4.0 GPA. Academic studies come first and they also practice six days a week for two hours, and an hour of film.

They play in the semifinals Friday night. By the end of the season, their goal is to clinch their division and take the championship.

https://www.foxla.com/news/canoga-park-agbu-titans-baskeball-team-in-semifinals?fbclid=IwAR0wRY8HWZip7IwW90-GJe7T1GED1mQKg1iOy66WmVH6wPcq5r92V7Hec0M

MSC2023: Pashinyan-Aliyev-Blinken meeting concludes

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 17:52,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 18, ARMENPRESS. The meeting between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Munich has ended.

Later tonight, the Armenian Prime Minister will also participate in a panel discussion alongside Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Garibashvili and the Secretary General of the OSCE Helga Schmid at the Munich Security Conference.