Father and Daughter Activists from Netherlands Denied Entry into Armenia

Massis and Suneh Abrahamian were barred from entering Armenia


The chairman of the Armenian National Committee of Netherlands and his daughter, a member of the Armenian Youth Federation of Netherlands were banned from entering Armenia on Sunday.

In a social media post, Suneh Abrahamian reported that after waiting at Zvartnots Airport in Yerevan for 12 hours, Armenia’s security officials told her that she was banned from entering the country and was considered a persona non-grata. On Monday, it was revealed that her father, Massis Abrahamian, was also shown the same treatment and both were told to return home.

Suneh Abrahamian, wrote on her Facebook page on Sunday that she had gone to Armenia to participate in a camp in Syunik organized by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Youth Office.

“Yesterday evening upon arriving at the airport in Armenia to participate in the ARF Youth Office voluntary camps in Syunik, I was immediately put in a small room and interrogated. After taking my passport and keeping me for 12 hours without any explanation, I was informed that my entry to my homeland was rejected and I am a persona non grata for the Armenian authorities. Words cannot describe the disappointment and pain I feel for being denied my homeland. Currently I am waiting at the airport to return to the Netherlands,” said Abrahamian in her Facebook post, adding that she is a member of the Garegin Njdeh Armenian Youth Federation chapter of the Netherlands.

The European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy, headquarters in Brussels, demanded that Armenia’s authorities to immediately stop this process and “put an end to the anti-national attitude toward Armenian Cause leaders and activists, especially the youth who are have their first experiences in that realm.”

With the Abrahamians ban, the Armenian authorities have thus far refused entry to three Diaspora Armenians.

On July 14, Mourad Papazian, a member of the ARF Bureau and a co-chair the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations in France (CCAF) was similarly turned back at Zvartonts International Airport.

Weeks later, the Armenian government explained that the reason for Papazian’s ban was his alleged active role in a protest against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan while he was visiting Paris in June 2021. Papazian had traveled to Armenia at least on four occasion since June 2021, the most recent of which was in May when he accompanied Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo to Armenia for an official visit.

On Thursday Papazian announced that a complaint has already been filed on his behalf to reverse the decision.

Upon Papazian’s dismissal from Armenia, the ARF Bureau, the CCAF as well as the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee issued statements condemning the government’s actions, with the latter emphasizing that the Armenian government does not have the right to refuse entry to any Armenian.

CivilNet: Azerbaijani forces attempt major incursion, Karabakh authorities say

CIVILNET.AM

01 Aug, 2022 10:08

By Mark Dovich

Azerbaijani forces attempted a major incursion across the line of contact into Karabakh Monday morning local time, the region’s authorities said.

“On August 1, starting at 9:00, Azerbaijani units in several sections of the northern and northwestern border zone of the Artsakh Republic resorted to provocations by making attempts to cross the line of contact, which were stopped by (Artsakh) Defense Army units,” the Artsakh Defense Army announced.

Karabakh forces suffered no casualties, though the situation along the line of contact remained tense into Monday evening, it said.

In a follow-up, the Artsakh Defense Army refuted “information circulating on the internet about heated battles in one part of Artsakh or another,” urging people to “exclusively follow official information.”

Karabakh Foreign Minister David Babayan echoed those sentiments in his own Facebook post, stressing that “everything is under the control of our armed forces” and calling on people to “rely exclusively on official sources of information.”

In its statement, the Artsakh Defense Army added that “the leadership of the (Artsakh) Republic, together with the command of the (Artsakh) Defense Army and the Russian peacekeeping contingent, is taking appropriate steps to resolve the situation” along the line of contact.

Earlier in the evening, Karabakh President Arayik Harutyunyan convened a meeting with his defense and security chiefs to review the “operational and tactical situation” in and around Karabakh, Harutyunyan’s office reported.

Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry has denied the incursions, saying the Artsakh Defense Army’s statements have “a provocative and misleading goal.”

Earlier in the day, Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry called on social media users in the country not to share footage of Azerbaijani troop movements in and around Karabakh.

Cabinet approves 2030 Education Development Program bill

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 12:19, 28 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS. The Cabinet approved the 2030 Education Development Program bill.

The last time an education development program was adopted was in 2011, and it is imperative to stipulate the conceptual provisions of human capital development – recognized as a priority by the government – in the document, according to Deputy Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport Artur Martirosyan.

“…financial means directed to education aren’t expenses, but rather necessary investments for the development of the state and the society,” he said. “The center of the program is the person, and revealing the capabilities of the person.”

The final goal of the program is to develop a competitive educational system.

The three strategic directions are defined as: development of a universal inclusive active-learning educational environment across Armenia, increasing effectiveness of education and internationalization and export of education services.

“Not a single child will be left out of the compulsory education system,” Martirosyan said.

The bill will be presented to parliament soon.

Azeri troops open fire at Armenia border positions

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 15:47, 28 July 2022

YEREVAN, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani Armed Forces opened fire from various caliber firearms around 12:00, July 28 in the direction of Armenian military positions deployed in the eastern section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, the Armenian Ministry of Defense said.

The Azeri fire was suppressed with countermeasures.

There are no casualties on the Armenian side.

Azerbaijanis destroy another Armenian cemetery in Karabakh

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – July 29 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Azerbaijanis have razed to the ground another Armenian cemetery in the occupied territories of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh).

Footage depicting the act of vandalism committed by Azerbaijanis has been shared on Telegram channels.

Azerbaijan, meanwhile, has been hindering the deployment of a UNESCO mission that would document the cultural and historical heritage of the region and prevent the destruction of significant monuments.

Since the end of hostilities in the fall of 2020, dozens of Armenian cemeteries, churches, monuments and memorials have been destroyed by the Azerbaijani military.

Opposition activist Avetik Chalabyan’s brother quits Central Bank

Panorama
Armenia – July 29 2022

Opposition activist and public figure Avetik Chalabyan’s brother, Ara Chalabyan, has stepped down from his position as head of the Armenian Central Bank’s Corporate Services and Development Directorate.

He announced his resignation on Facebook on Thursday without giving any reasons for it.

“Starting today I am no longer working at the Central Bank of Armenia, where I have been for quite a time, received and gave back a lot. I celebrate the freedom in my life and will conquer the world as one of my good colleagues likes to say,” he wrote.

Avetik Chalabyan was released from custody late on Wednesday more than two months after being arrested on charges rejected by him as politically motivated.

Opposition to bring "street" agenda into Parliament this September – politician

ARMINFO
Armenia – July 28 2022
David Stepanyan

ArmInfo. By promising to return to Parliament with its own agenda this September, the parliamentary opposition must mean bringing the “street” agenda into Parliament,  Suren Surenyants, Chairman of the Political Council, Democratic  Alternative party, said in an interview with ArmInfo. 

“In other words, they will be demanding the premier’s resignation in  Parliament. However, the difference between the street and Parliament  is that if you demand the premier’s resignation, it implies not only  shouting, but concrete steps, such as impeachment. But this  opposition has no necessary potential,” Mr Surenyants said. 

The very fact of the opposition returning to Parliament a year after  working there “with its own agenda” is rather absurd. Nothing less  can be supposed in this context than “returned” Ishkhan Saghatekyan  not any longer at the service of, for example, Robert Kocharyan. 

By and large, there is no united parliamentary opposition as there is  no parliamentary faction With Honor.  And the Armenia bloc is so  motley that it allows surprises to be expected this autumn, such as  its disintegration. However, the expert does not see any prospects  for opposition MPs’ resignations.

“In any case, if the demands for Pashinyan’s resignation will  continue to be accompanied with such slogans as ‘no Turkification’, I  do not see any special prospects for the re-organized parliamentary  opposition. With ‘street pressure’ lacking, the Parliament will not  adopt any statements or documents in favor of the renewed opposition  agenda this September,” Mr Surenyants said.

Pakistan envoy to Lebanon invites Armenian Catholicos of Cilicia to his country

NEWS.am
Armenia –

On Thursday, Catholicos Aram I of the Armenian Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia of the Armenian Apostolic Church received Pakistan’s ambassador to Lebanon, Salman Athar, accompanied by the Pakistani embassy’s political officials, the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia informs Armenian News-NEWS.am.

Aram I conveyed necessary information to the newly appointed ambassador about the problems and concerns related to the internal affairs of Lebanon, the nationwide mission of the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia, as well as the rights of the Armenian people of Armenia and Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).

Responding to the ambassador’s wish, Aram I reflected also on interreligious—especially Christian-Islamic—dialogue and cooperation.

The ambassador of Pakistan, for his part, emphasized the importance of giving a new impetus to the Christian-Islamic dialogue—and based on the principles of mutual respect and trust. He noted that his country is doing special work in this regard, and expressed a wish that the Catholicos of the Armenian Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia visit Pakistan on a suitable occasion and hold meetings and deliver lectures there.

Adventures of an Azerbaijani in Armenia




  • Iraj Iskenderov

Azerbaijant travels to Armenia

“In the passport control queue at the Yerevan Zvartnots airport, which looks very spacious and somehow festive, my anxiety raised its head. I peered into the faces of the border guards, trying to guess which one of them was kinder. Then I was directed towards one of them. He scrutinized my national Russian passport. I think he grimaced at the sight of my last name, Mamedov.

But finally, I did hear: “Welcome to Armenia.”

When Muscovite Arslan [name altered] decided to visit Yerevan, some of his friends tried to dissuade him, considering it a risky step. Even though after the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, thousands of Russians moved to Armenia, Arslan’s case is special. Despite his Russian citizenship, he is half Azerbaijani.

After the Karabakh conflict, which divided the societies of Armenia and Azerbaijan more than thirty years ago, citizens of both these countries visit each other only on official occasions. There are no diplomatic relations between the states, with Azerbaijan officially closing the border for Armenian citizens, while Armenia, though formally maintaining a visa-free regime for Azerbaijani citizens, only allows them to cross the border with a special permit. And were the borders open, it is unlikely for travel to become frequent, as the hostility in both societies is very high.

“My mother is a Moscow Tatar, and my father is an Azerbaijani who moved to Russia in the 1990s. He is quite a nationalist person.

Since childhood, my father’s worldview seemed alien and incomprehensible to me. Constant confrontations complicated our relationship. To me, the very idea of a conflict with the neighbours you had tea with only yesterday, seemed absurd, alien, and hostile since childhood.

When Russia declared war on Ukraine, it came as a shock to me, as it did to many others. I immediately decided to leave, assuming that a total purge of all living things would soon break out in Russia. Moreover, I am a journalist and have been involved in political activism for a long time. So the law “on fakes” adopted by the Russian authorities had a direct impact on me.

Besides, I thinks it’s high time to create some sort of an anti-war expat network, including in the South Caucasus.

That’s what I decided to do: unite all the anti-war initiatives that exist both among the expats and local residents. Unite activists, journalists, and people from the academic and creative spheres who oppose any wars and dictatorships.

The decision to go specifically to Armenia was a symbolic gesture of double denial.

My Russian citizenship seems to require me to be part of the war with Ukraine, and my ethnicity requires me to support Azerbaijan in the Karabakh conflict. I refuse to participate in conflicts and wars, because the identity of a “human” is more important to me than that of a “Russian”, “Armenian” or “Azerbaijani”.



“On our way from the airport, our taxi passed the Tsitsernakaberd memorial complex (dedicated to the massacre of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey, which in Armenia and many Western countries is recognized as the Armenian Genocide). I tried to strike a conversation with the taxi driver:

This is beautiful!” I said.

Beautiful?!” he was indignant. “There is nothing beautiful here. These people are dead.

It’s like tragic music, beautiful but sad.” I don’t think the taxi driver quite understood what I meant.

When we arrived, my friend, an immigrant from Russia, came to pick me up. He paid for the taxi, and we went to his hotel room.

I suggested we take a walk. But he said he would not wander the streets of Yerevan with me. And he didn’t advise me to go out without any need, they would immediately recognize an Azerbaijani and… Basically, I should introduce myself as a Dagestani.

I laughed it off, but he did manage to intimidate me a little. However, I did not leave Russia to sit in a hotel room.

I settled in a hostel provided by the Kovcheg (The Ark) organization, which helps Russian expats. I stayed in Yerevan for about a month, barring a short trip to Russia to get my international passport.

All this time I kept meeting people and looking for like-minded antimilitarists.

Even in conversations with casual acquaintances, I tried to mention as often as possible that my father was an Azerbaijani, but I didn’t support Azerbaijan in this conflict.

However, in these cases,  I tried not to mention antimilitarism, only checking if the stereotyped image of Azerbaijanis could be changed.

And for the most part, people responded well.

There were a few unpleasant moments when I tensed up. One guy very persistently asked me about national identity, and who I considered myself to be. It was not aggression, he was asking in good humor, not understanding how it was possible not to have a national or ethnic identity. And I, in turn, wanted him to get rid of these limitations.

Another time, a man on the subway kept staring at me throughout the trip. As if he guessed by my appearance I was an Azerbaijani, although I don’t understand how this is possible.

I often went to cafes where local Bohemia and political migrants from Russia gathered. They had poetry evenings on political motives, played the songs of the Beatles, Pink Floyd, something more modern, and sometimes even some old Soviet repertoire, on the piano.

During my three-week stay in Yerevan, I probably met about a hundred people. I even managed to agree with some to write a joint anti-war manifesto.

I think that as a result of this trip I moved one step closer to my goal — to create an anti-war network — and made dozens of new acquaintances.


Trajectories is a media project that tells stories of people whose lives have been impacted by conflicts in the South Caucasus. We work with authors and editors from across the South Caucasus and do not support any one side in any conflict. The publications on this page are solely the responsibility of the authors. In the majority of cases, toponyms are those used in the author’s society. The project is implemented by GoGroup Media and International Alert and is funded by the European Union


Asbarez: Young Dutch-Armenian Banned from Entering Armenia

Suneh Abrahamian

A young Armenian from the Netherlands reported that after waiting at Zvartnots Airport in Yerevan for nearly 12 hours, Armenia’s security officials told her that she was banned from entering the country and was considered a persona non-grata.

Suneh Abrahamian, wrote on her Facebook page on Sunday that she had gone to Armenia to participate in a camp in Syunik organized by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Youth Office.

“Yesterday evening upon arriving at the airport in Armenia to participate in the ARF Youth Office voluntary camps in Syunik, I was immediately put in a small room and interrogated. After taking my passport and keeping me for 12 hours without any explanation, I was informed that my entry to my homeland was rejected and I am a persona non grata for the Armenian authorities. Words cannot describe the disappointment and pain I feel for being denied my homeland. Currently I am waiting at the airport to return to the Netherlands,” said Abrahamian in her Facebook post, adding that she is a member of the Garegin Njdeh Armenian Youth Federation chapter of the Netherlands.

Abrahamian is the second Diapora Armenian whose entry has been banned to Armenia by the authorities.

On July 14, Mourad Papazian, a member of the ARF Bureau and a co-chair the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations in France (CCAF) was similarly turned back at Zvartonts International Airport.

Weeks later, the Armenian government explained that the reason for Papazian’s ban was his alleged active role in a protest against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan while he was visiting Paris in June 2021. Papazian had traveled to Armenia at least on four occasion since June 2021, the most recent of which was in May when he accompanied Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo to Armenia for an official visit.

On Thursday Papazian announced that a complaint has already been filed on his behalf to reverse the decision.

Upon Papazian’s dismissal from Armenia, the ARF Bureau, the CCAF as well as the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee issued statements condemning the government’s actions, with the latter emphasizing that the Armenian government does not have the right to refuse entry to any Armenian.