RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/26/2022

Tuesday, 
U.S. Ready To Work With Russia On Karabakh, Insists Envoy
        • Heghine Buniatian
Armenia - U.S. Ambassador Lynne Tracy is interviewed by RFE/RL in Yerevan, July 
26, 2022
The U.S. ambassador to Armenia, Lynne Tracy, on Tuesday reaffirmed Washington’s 
stated readiness for renewed cooperation with Russia on facilitating a 
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. “We have said that we are ready to use the [OSCE] Minsk Group as a platform,” 
Tracy told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service in an interview. “That offer remains open. We have not seen our Russian colleagues responding to that offer.”
The United States, Russia and France have for decades spearheaded international 
efforts to end the conflict in their capacity as the Minsk Group’s co-chairs. Moscow says Washington and Paris stopped working with it in that format 
following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Karen Donfried denied this during a visit to 
Yerevan last month. She insisted that the Minsk Group remains a “very important 
format” for Washington. The Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed Donfried’s assurances. Russian Foreign 
Minister Sergei Lavrov claimed later in June that “the Minsk Group stopped its 
activities at the initiative of the American and French co-chairs.”
In the words of Tracy, the U.S. still hopes that Russia will “re-engage in this 
format.”
“We certainly continue to the see the Minsk Group as a forum, a platform that 
has an international mandate to address the situation of Nagorno-Karabakh,” said 
the ambassador. “We will continue to look for ways to use that forum. We will 
also work bilaterally with the parties in the region.”
Armenia - CIA Director William Burns and U.S. Ambassador Lynne Tracy at a 
meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, July 15, 2022. Washington, she went on, is coordinating its Karabakh peace efforts with the 
European Union, whose top official, Charles Michel, has hosted three meetings of 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev 
in Brussels since December. U.S. Secretary of State Blinken spoke with Aliyev and Pashinian by phone on 
Monday. He tweeted afterwards that he sees a “historic opportunity to achieve 
peace in the region.”
According to a U.S. State Department spokesman, Blinken told the two leaders 
that the U.S. government is ready to help Armenia and Azerbaijan restore 
cross-border transport links. “Some of what we are exploring with the governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan is 
some technical support, some technical assessments that are ultimately aimed at 
unblocking regional transportation connections,” explained Tracy. She did not 
elaborate. The Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh 
commits Armenia to opening rail and road links between Azerbaijan and its 
Nakhichevan exclave. Aliyev has claimed that it calls for an exterritorial land 
corridor that would pass through Syunik, a strategic Armenian province that also 
borders Iran. He has threatened to take military action to open the corridor. Armenia has rejected Aliyev’s demands, saying that it must retain full control 
over all transit links on its territory. Armenia - A cargo terminal at a border crossing with Iran, November 29, 2018. (Photo by the State Revenue Committee of Armenia)
Iran has likewise signaled strong opposition to the idea of the “Zangezur 
corridor” advanced by Azerbaijan as well as Turkey. Its supreme leader, 
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned last week that Tehran “will not tolerate” 
attempts to block the Armenian-Iranian border. “Because of its location Syunik has been a very strong and appropriate focus of 
concern for its security,” Tracy said in this regard. “But at the same time I 
would just note, based on a number of trips that I’ve made, that I also see 
positive things happening there.”
The diplomat pointed to socioeconomic development projects implemented in Syunik 
by the Armenian government and the provincial administration. Asked how the U.S. would react to a possible attack on Syunik, Tracy said: “I 
don’t want to get into hypotheticals or speculate. I think this is why we are so 
focused on the diplomatic track and maintaining these direct conversations of 
encouraging progress on a number of fronts: peace negotiations, the 
[Armenian-Azerbaijani] border commission, unblocking regional transportation 
linkages. That is, I think, one of the best safeguards for the security of all 
in the region."
The USA is discussing with Armenia and Azerbaijan the issue of de-blocking the region 
the possibility of providing technical support
July 26, 2022
        • Heghine Buniatyan
The USA is discussing with Armenia and Azerbaijan the issue of de-blocking the region 
the opportunity to provide technical support, given to "Azat". 
United States Ambassador to Armenia Lynn Tracy stated in an interview.
"Freedom". - Yesterday it was announced that US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken 
had telephone conversations with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan and, like himself 
wrote on Twitter, "an incident resulting from bilateral negotiations 
the positive momentum." Վերջին 30 տարիներին մենք տարածաշրջանում դրական տեղաշարժերի մասին 
we have heard many times, but the situation on the ground is not positive 
to change. Is there any reason to believe we'll have a different outcome this time?
Lynn Tracy. - I think you are right when you focus, Secretary of State 
On Blinken's phone call. It was a very warm telephone conversation. The Secretary of State emphasized 
is his perception, and I think that's the perception of the United States, that we 
we have a historic opportunity to make progress, very long lasting in the region 
in the direction of achieving a stable and comprehensive peaceful settlement of the conflict. That 
does not mean that it will be easy. You are right about looking back 
to a lot of hard work and subsequent disappointments. I think they are 
are caveats we should heed. But at the same time 
we see no alternative but to pursue and support Armenia and 
Azerbaijan's efforts to directly negotiate and try to reach a peaceful solution to the conflict 
regulation. And we're going to stay focused on that.
There is a lot of diplomatic involvement, and not just from the United States. 
Our partners in the European Union are also involved, as well as others. And 
I think it's very helpful to keep this momentum going, and to understand that 
these are complex issues and the solutions will not be easy. But we must persevere.
"Freedom". - The State Secretary during the conversation with the Prime Minister of Armenia 
offered United States support in the region for transportation and 
in facilitating communication links. Can you elaborate on what the help is? 
suggests Washington. Can we expect more involvement from the US? 
as we see with the EU or Russia participating 
trilateral meetings.
Lynn Tracy. - What we discuss about Armenia and Azerbaijan 
with governments, some technical assistance is some technical 
estimates that will contribute to transport links in the region 
unblocking. We attach great importance to that goal. I should mention that the other topic to which 
referred to by the Secretary of State, it was related to Turkey and Armenia 
the regulation of relations. That direction is also very important to us 
consider. We welcome the steps that Armenia has taken so far 
Turkey, and we call on both sides to make progress. Because we are 
we see that many of these questions are ultimately interrelated and as we see 
positive steps in one direction, it can build momentum to achieve 
broader peace in the region.
"Freedom". - Referring to Armenian-Turkish relations, both sides 
and agreed to go ahead without preconditions, however, Ankara 
continues to connect the process with Armenian-Azerbaijani relations. This 
Do you consider reconciliation realistic under the circumstances?
Lynn Tracy. - I think we should continue to test the proposals and 
engagements, let's try the areas that were highlighted in Armenia and 
by Turkey. We have also seen good negotiations with special envoys 
level, as a result of which some agreements were reached 
regarding the opening of border points. We have seen some agreement 
regarding direct shipments. Details to be worked out and I think 
that is where we will continue to encourage both Armenia and Turkey 
make progress and see that progress here can ultimately be positive 
to contribute to Armenian-Azerbaijani discussions.
The full version of the interview will be published tomorrow, July 27.
[see video]
Erdogan Links Turkey-Armenia Normalization To Azerbaijan
        • Artak Khulian
TURKEY - Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan during the signing ceremony of: 
an agreement to unblock grain exports from Ukraine, Istanbul, July 22, 2022. Echoing a statement by his foreign minister, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip 
Erdogan has linked the normalization of Turkish-Armenian relations to Armenia 
accepting Azerbaijan's key demands. “Azerbaijan has been our red line right from the beginning,” Erdogan told 
Turkish media on Monday. “We have said that we will open our doors [to Armenia] 
after problems with Azerbaijan are solved.”
“I am glad that [Prime Minister Nikol] Pashinian shares our view on regional 
peace and partnership,” he said. “We now expect that apart from making 
statements Yerevan will take concrete steps in the settlement process.”
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu likewise demanded such steps last week 
when he commented on prospects for normalizing Turkish-Armenian relations. He 
said Yerevan should specifically negotiate a peace accord sought by Baku and 
open a land corridor to Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan exclave. Pashinian, his political allies and members of his government say they want an 
unconditional opening of the Turkish-Armenian border and establishment of 
diplomatic relations between the two neighboring states. Their political 
opponents claim that Pashinian is ready to make sweeping concessions to both 
Ankara and Baku. Erdogan and Cavusoglu reaffirmed the Turkish preconditions for normalizing ties 
with Armenia after four rounds of negotiations held by Turkish and Armenian 
envoys this year. During their last meeting held in Vienna on July 1, the two sides agreed to open 
the Turkish-Armenian border to citizens of third countries and to allow mutual 
cargo shipments by air. The Turkish and Armenian foreign ministries said this 
will be done “at the earliest date possible.” But they set no concrete time 
frames. The Turkish envoy, Serdar Kilic, reportedly, visited and inspected over the 
weekend a Turkish checkpoint on the Armenian border. Eduard Aghajanian, a senior Armenian lawmaker from Pashinian’s Civil Contract 
party, on Tuesday described Kilic’s trip as “good news.” “This is welcome and 
shows that [Turkish-Armenian] arrangements are already entering a practical 
stage,” he said. Aghajanian said late last week that Cavusoglu’s latest statement on 
Turkish-Armenian relations should not be seen as preconditions. Another Armenia-Azerbaijan Summit Planned
        • Naira Nalbandian
Belgium - European Council President Charles Michel, Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev begin a trilateral 
meeting in Brussels, April 6, 2022. Preparations are underway for another meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, a senior Armenian 
parliamentarian said on Tuesday. “As far as I know, negotiations are in progress on another meeting of the 
leaders of the two countries, which should take place some time later,” Eduard 
Aghajanian, the chairman of the parliament committee on foreign relations, told 
reporters. “I can’t give any concrete dates [for the meeting.]”
“There is quite a bit of activity on the diplomatic front,” added Aghajanian. Aliyev and Pashinian met twice in Brussels this spring for talks hosted by 
European Council President Charles Michel. The latter said in May that they 
agreed to meet in the Belgian capital again in July or August. Michel phoned Aliyev on July 4 to discuss “all issues on the Brussels agenda for 
the Azerbaijan-Armenia dialogue.” He said the European Union will continue to 
mediate peace talks between the two conflicting sides. Russia has denounced the EU’s mediation efforts, saying that they are part of 
the West’s attempts to hijack Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks and use the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in the standoff over Ukraine. Incidentally, Pashinian 
spoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin by phone on July 6. Both Aliyev and Pashinian held phone calls with U.S. Secretary of State Antony 
Blinken late on Monday. The U.S. State Department spokesman, Ned Price, said 
Blinken “encouraged” Baku and Yerevan to continue their dialogue and reaffirmed 
U.S. support for their “productive EU-brokered discussions.”
He also reiterated that the United States “stands ready to engage bilaterally 
and with likeminded partners to help Armenia and Azerbaijan find a long-term 
comprehensive peace,” added Price. Blinken Talks To Armenian, Azeri Leaders
US - US Secretary of State Antony Blinken gathers papers after a Senate Foreign 
Relations Committee hearing in Washington, DC, on April 26, 2022. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke of a “historic opportunity to 
achieve peace in the region” after holding separate phone calls with the leaders 
of Armenia and Azerbaijan on Monday. “I commend the positive momentum resulting from bilateral talks and urge further 
progress towards peace and stability in the region,” Blinken said in a tweet on 
his conversation with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. He also wrote: “Good discussion with [Prime Minister] Nikol Pashinian on 
Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s historic opportunity to achieve peace in the region. I commend Armenia on its positive steps forward with Azerbaijan [and] Turkey.”
According to the official Armenian readout of the call, Pashinian “reaffirmed 
his commitment to the peace agenda,” while Blinken expressed Washington’s 
readiness to assist in the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the 
opening of Armenian-Azerbaijani transport links and the release of Armenian 
prisoners of war remaining in Azerbaijan. Blinken was quick to welcome unmediated talks held by the Armenian and 
Azerbaijani foreign ministers in Tbilisi on July 16. The ministers reported no 
concrete agreements after the talks. They both spoke with U.S. Assistant 
Secretary of State Karen Donfried by phone on July 17. In what may have been a related development, CIA Director William Burns made a 
surprise visit to Yerevan on July 15. Pashinian’s press office said he discussed 
with Burns “processes taking place in the South Caucasus.” Washington has not 
commented on the purpose of the visit. Earlier in July, Pashinian phoned Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss 
the implementation of Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements brokered by Moscow. The 
Kremlin said they focused on “ensuring security on the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border” and “restoring economic, transport and logistics ties in the South 
Caucasus.”
The United States, Russia and France have for decades jointly tried to broker an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accord in their capacity as the co-chairs of the 
Minsk Group. Moscow says Washington and Paris stopped working with it in that 
format following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Visiting Yerevan last month, Donfried insisted that the Minsk Group remains a 
“very important format” for Washington. The Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed 
Donfried’s assurances. Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

Possibility of establishing Armenia’s trade representation in Poland being discussed

Save

Share

 11:43,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Minister of Economy Armen Arzumanyan received Ambassador of Poland to Armenia Pawel Cieplak to discuss the prospects of bilateral cooperation in economic sector, the ministry said in a news release.

The sides touched upon issues on boosting the commercial partnership, increasing the trade turnover volumes and improving the bilateral indicators in this direction.

During the meeting Armen Arzumanyan proposed to consider the possibility of establishing Armenia’s trade representation in Poland.

Issues relating to the holding of the session of the Armenian-Polish Inter-governmental Commission by yearend were discussed.

HayPost CEO Hayk Karapetyan resigns

Save

Share

 12:10,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. HayPost CEO Hayk Karapetyan announced his resignation.

In a letter published on social media, Karapetyan said he assumed the position two years ago to implement the digital transformation of the postal operator. 

He said that over the course of his tenure his team realized “huge changes in digital transformation, staffing, financial, tariff, commercial, service, post exchange modernization and international directions.”

Karapetyan added that he believes that this phase of the transformation is completed and therefore he is resigning.

He thanked for the trust and expressed gratitude to his team for working round-the-clock.

Neruzh professional repatriation program re-launched

Save

Share

 16:41,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. The Neruzh government program supporting technological startups of the Diaspora is returning after being re-branded following a 2-year hiatus.

The Minister of High Tech Industry of Armenia Robert Khachatryan said that the goal of the program is to promote professional repatriation, which would contribute to economic progress and the development of the startup eco-system in Armenia.

“Neruzh is the program which connects the innovative mind of Armenia and the Diaspora, becoming an important cornerstone for the possibility of future-oriented projects for our country. The program is a good opportunity for our compatriots living in various corners around the world to return to their homeland, launch their business, live here and have contribution in Armenia’s progress,” he said.

Neruzh 3.0 will take place September 26-30 in Dilijan, with 60 representatives of around 30 startups from around the world expected to attend.

The program is being implemented in partnership with the My Step Foundation.

The new website has been launched and applications are open from July 25 to August 22.

My Step Foundation Director Mkhitar Hayrapetyan said they attach great importance to consolidating the pan-Armenian human capital of the Diaspora in Armenia.

Photos by Hayk Manukyan




Asphalting launched at Kapan-Tchakaten bypass

Save

Share

 17:12,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. Asphalting works have launched at the M-17/M-2/ (Kapan)-Tsav- /M-2/, Kapan-Tchakaten bypass road, the Department of Roads said in a press release.

The 7,5km long road connects Tchakaten, Shikahogh, Srashen, Tsav and Shishkert.

 

 

Asbarez: Armenia and Iran Do Not Need Advice from Turkey, Says Prominent Iranian Lawmaker

A border checkpoint on the Iran-Armenia border in Meghri


Rejects a “Corridor” to Nakhichevan through Armenia

A prominent Iranian lawmaker on Friday slammed efforts by “third parties,” including Turkey against efforts to impose changes on the border between Iran and Armenia.

Speaking with the IRIB television channel, Shariar Harydari, the deputy head of the Iranian Parliament’s national security and foreign policy committee, said that Iran and Armenia don need advice from “any third party, including Turkey” about border issues.

This comes days after Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned the presidents of Turkey and Russia, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Vladimir Putin, against blocking the Iran-Armenia border, during meetings the chief cleric held with the two leaders on Tuesday in Tehran.

“As stated by the spiritual leader, the Islamic Republic of Iran will not allow the border between Iran and Armenia to be blocked,” Heydari emphasized.

“Iran has always believed that the two countries should settle the [Karabakh] issue through political means,” Heydari told Iran’s IRIB television channel. “Some forces outside the region want to create a corridor leading to Nakhichevan through the territory of Armenia in order to marginalize Iran, but Armenia and Iran emphasize that the territorial integrity of the countries of the region must be preserved.”

“We have a shared 47-kilometer border with Armenia, part of which is the border of the Arax River, and we will not allow any damage to those borders. The border of Iran and Armenia has always been safe, both countries strive for its security and prevent any illegal traffic and border encroachment, and we do not need the advice of any third party, including Turkey,” Shahriar Heydari stated.

Ayatollah Khamenei’s representatives reiterated his terse warning against efforts to block the Iran-Armenia border during Friday prayers throughout the country.

The IRNA new agency reported that during Friday prayer in Tehran, Imam Mohammad Hossein Abdutorabifard said: “At the meeting with the President of Turkey, the Spiritual Leader also touched on the communication path between Armenia and Iran. Iran is very sensitive to regional changes and will not allow damage to the road that is thousands of years old and is one of the factors of strength, security and peace of the peoples of the region.”

Mohammad Ali Ale Hashem, Khamanei’s representative in Iran’s Azerbaijan region and the Imam of Tabriz said during Friday’s prayers that “Iran will never tolerate any step that will lead to the blocking of the border between Iran and Armenia. Iran will resist it because it is a thousand-year-old communication route.”

Allahnur Kyarimitabar, Khamenei’s representative in the Ilam province said, that “During the visit of the presidents of Turkey and Russia, the issue of the Armenian-Iranian border was also emphasized. They should never think that they can threaten the thousand-year global highway and create an obstacle for Iran.”

IRNA reported that Imams in other regions of Iran also repeated Khamenei’s statement during Friday prayers.

UCI – Leading with language: For six UCI alumni, learning a new language launched their careers

UCI School of Humanities
July 15 2022


For six UCI alumni, learning a new language launched their careers



OFFICE of the Dean
Armenian Studies
Arabic
German
Japanese Language & Literature
Korean Literature & Culture

By Lilibeth Garcia

An entertainment entrepreneur. A field representative for a California State Assembly Member. A writer for one of the top healthcare websites. These are just a few of the career paths made possible for UCI alumni by studying languages other than English.

At UCI’s School of Humanities, students can take courses in 14 languages other than English, and major or minor in several languages.

Fluency in languages other than English has enabled our students and alumni to study and travel abroad, launch careers domestically and overseas, and deepen their connection to their own cultures and that of others.

These are the stories of six multilingual alumni.

Christopher Khachadour grew up speaking Western Armenian, an endangered language with only 200,000 native speakers and about a million second-language speakers.

Between 1915 and 1923, the Ottoman Empire systematically killed over a million Armenians in what is known as the Armenian Genocide. Khachadour’s great-grandparents were orphaned because of the war. His ancestors escaped to various parts of the Middle East and later to Los Angeles.

A hundred years have passed since the Genocide ended, but the Western Armenian language is still in peril. Western Armenian is rarely taught intergenerationally, with fewer descendants of genocide survivors who live outside of Armenia learning the language.

After three generations of expulsion due to violence, Khachadour’s family fought to keep the language alive. His parents enrolled him and his sister in an Armenian private school where he learned how to read and write Western Armenian.

“For me, the Armenian language is a treasure, almost like a family heirloom passed down over generations,” Khachadour says. “While we cannot return to our ancestral homes in modern-day Turkey, we have this unbroken bond via the language.”

His early education ignited a passion that he continued to nourish at UCI, where he enrolled in all courses related to Armenian history and language. He took classes with Houri Berberian, professor of history & Meghrouni Family Presidential Chair in Armenian Studies, who founded UCI’s Center for Armenian Studies and has led the development of Armenian language instruction. He also studied under Talar Chahinian, who currently serves as interim director of the center.

“Armenian history and language courses took me back to my childhood years in Armenian school,” he says. “Many of us in the program had previously attended Armenian school, and Dr. Chahinian would give us advanced coursework to accommodate our capabilities and keep us engaged. She was a great teacher. Dr. Berberian always found a way to look at the greater picture and tie Armenian history to world history, reminding us that we did not develop in a vacuum of history.”

While a student, Khachadour served as the Armenian Students Association’s liaison to UCI’s Armenian Studies Program, where he encouraged his peers to enroll in Armenian courses and attend lectures organized by the program. He also worked as a tour guide, providing campus tours to Armenian middle and high school students in Southern California. His fluency in Armenian even enabled him to catalog a collection of about a thousand Armenian books at the UCI Libraries.

Khachadour double majored in history and political science, with a focus on the Middle East. While at UCI, he spent four years as a board member of the Olive Tree Initiative, through which he planned and led trips to Armenia, Turkey and Georgia in 2017 and to Boston, New York City and Washington D.C. in 2018 and 2019. There, he met with local Armenian and Turkish lobbying groups as well as journalists, NGOs, religious leaders, former ambassadors, the United Nation’s representatives and the State Department.

After graduation, he spent six months volunteering in Armenia with various organizations that required in-depth knowledge of the Western Armenian language and the region’s history, including the Eurasia Partnership Foundation, the Armenian United Nations Association and RepatArmenia.

Since returning from Armenia, he has worked part-time at USC’s Institute for Armenian Studies and full-time as a field representative for California State Assembly Member Laura Friedman, who represents the 43rd district, encompassing the cities of Glendale, Burbank and La Cañada Flintridge; the unincorporated communities of La Crescenta and Montrose; and a portion of Los Angeles, including Little Armenia and East Hollywood.

The 43rd district represents the largest Armenian constituency in the country. Khachadour, who works with 150,000 ethnic Armenian constituents, is the sole Armenian staffer.

“Having the ability to study Armenian is a privilege, as it’s not offered at many institutions. It is an ancient and unique language. I encourage everyone to study a second language, if not a third. And for those interested in engaging with the influential Armenian community of Southern California, I’d strongly recommend it.”

The School of Humanities offers a minor in Armenian studies and two years of Western Armenian language courses.

To read the five other stories, click at the link below

https://www.humanities.uci.edu/news/leading-language

Opposition outrage following Armenian film producer’s death in court

July 18 2022
 18 July 2022

Armenian opposition groups have accused the government of killing Armen Grigoryan, after the controversial film producer died in court.

Dramatic footage of Grigoryan’s death in the courtroom was spread widely online on Friday. Doctors on the scene announced the cause of death as a stroke, while the preliminary results for his autopsy have yet to be released.

The producer had been in pre-trial detention since May after being charged with inciting violence and ‘publicly humiliating national dignity’.

Grigoryan was known for his controversial statements, often calling for violence against supporters of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, and, in one instance, claiming that people from the Shirak Province and the Ararat Valley were offsprings of Armenian women ‘raped by Turks’ during the Turkish-Armenian war of 1920.

‘The people of Shirak and the Ararat valley have always been traitors, and the highlanders [from] Tavush, Syunik, and Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh] have always been true Armenians because they did not mix blood with Turks; half of them are Turks, they are bastards of Turks, how can they be Armenians?’.

Armenian authorities have stated that Grigoryan’s lawyers did not inform them of his medical history or request any special treatment, despite claiming that he had ‘apparent health issues’. 

The Armenian opposition has raised concerns about Grigoryan’s pre-trial detention conditions, accusing the government of ‘killing’ the producer, whom they claimed was a ‘political prisoner’.

Following news of his death on Friday evening, the Resistance Movement, an opposition coalition, held a rally in Yerevan holding signs that read ‘Nikol [is a] murderer’.

However, Ruben Melikyan, a senior opposition figure and the former Human Rights Defender of Nagorno-Karabakh, said during the rally that they had not seen any mistreatment of Grigoryan in detention.

‘There were minor problems that were resolved. The problem is for what and on whose order he was arrested’, Melikyan said. ‘Armen Grigoryan was in prison solely for his political views’.

Kristine Grigoryan, Armenia’s Human Rights Defender, said that it was ‘unacceptable and worrisome’ that the ‘conditions of pre-trial detention and the right to health care are not guaranteed to a person’.

She also stated that she had requested ‘clarifications’ from the Prosecutor’s Office and the Ministry of Justice regarding Grigoryan’s diagnoses, and the measures taken by the authorities to treat them along with ‘other possible circumstances that led to his death’. 

‘I will be consistent in bringing the culprits to justice’, Grigoryan wrote on Facebook.

 

Aircompany Armenia and Georgian Airlines order three Boeing 737-800BCFs

July 18 2022

By Rebecca Jeffrey

Aircompany Armenia and its partner company Georgian Airlines have ordered three 737-800 Boeing Converted Freighters (BCF) as part of the group’s plan to add more dedicated cargo airplanes to its operations in the Caucasus region.

The first 737-800BCF on order will be delivered next year, with deliveries continuing into 2024, said Boeing. The converted freighters will be operated by Georgian Airlines, which already operates one 737-800BCF.

The 737-800s will be modified at Guangzhou Aircraft Maintenance Engineering Company Limited (GAMECO) and at Taikoo (Shandong) Aircraft Engineering Co. Ltd. (STAECO) in China.

“We are thrilled to bring more much-needed air cargo capacity to the region with the addition of three 737-800 Boeing Converted Freighters,” said Tamaz Gaiashvili, president of Georgian Airlines Group. “The 737-800BCF has the payload, range and capability to carry both e-commerce and general cargo.” 

Stephanie Pope, president and chief executive of Boeing Global Services, added: “We are pleased Aircompany Armenia and Georgian Airlines have selected the 737-800BCF to meet growing demand for air cargo in the markets they serve, and are honoured to continue to support their dedicated freighter operations’ expansion.”

The 737-800BCF carries more payload – up to 23.9 tons (52,800 lbs.) – and flies farther – 3,750 km (2,025 nautical miles) compared to 737 Classic freighters. The 737-800BCF has secured more than 250 orders and commitments from more than 20 customers, said Boeing.

In its recently published Commercial Market Outlook (CMO) for 2022-2041, Boeing predicted that over the next 20 years the global freighter fleet will grow by 80%, with conversions accounting for two third of deliveries.

https://www.aircargonews.net/services/freighter-conversions-mro/aircompany-armenia-and-georgian-airlines-order-three-boeing-737-800bcfs/

Armenian PM, chief of Russia’s Intelligence Service discuss processes taking place in the South Caucasus

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – July 18 2022

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan received the Director of the Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation Sergey Naryshkin.

The Prime Minister noted that Mr. Naryshkin’s visit is another good opportunity to discuss issues on the agenda of Armenian-Russian allied relations. Nikol Pashinyan emphasized that this year marks the 30th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the two countries and expressed confidence that joint efforts will make the cooperation more effective and stronger.

Sergey Naryshkin expressed gratitude for the warm reception and emphasized the high-level political dialogue between Armenia and Russia, which contributes to the development and strengthening of cooperation in various fields.

The interlocutors discussed issues related to international and regional security. Reference was made to the processes taking place in the South Caucasus region.

https://en.armradio.am/2022/07/18/armenian-pm-chief-of-russias-intelligence-service-discuss-processes-taking-place-in-the-south-caucasus/