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Armenian, Russian FMs discuss issues of regional security

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 14 2021

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan had a meeting with Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov on the sidelines of the sitting of the CIS Council of Ministers in Minsk, Belarus.

The Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Russia discussed issues related to the Armenian-Russian multifaceted cooperation and the further development of allied relations.

The interlocutors exchanged views on issues related to international and regional security and stability. Ararat Mirzoyan and Sergey Lavrov also discussed issues related to the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

FUSD Vote Renames First School for Member of the Armenian Community

Oct 14 2021

(Photo courtesy – Fresno State)

[KMJ) – For the first time in its history, the Fresno Unified School Board votes to rename one of its schools for a prominent Valley Armenian-American.

In a unanimous vote Wednesday, the Fresno Unified School Board voted to rename Forkner Elementary School to Roger Tatarian Elementary.

Tatarian, a Fresno native, was considered a world-renowned journalist. He was the former editor-in-chief at United Press International, where he worked for 34 years. And he also taught journalism at Fresno State.

Tatarian was recently considered — but was passed over — when naming was being considered for Fresno Unified’s newest campus, now under construction in Southeast Fresno.

But, Fresno Unified says this name change will not take effect immediately Instead, the District will not be able to begin using the name Tatarian Elementary until the 2022-23 school year, at the soonest.

IN PICS: EAM Jaishankar shares ‘Mahabharata in Sanskrit’ at Armenia’s National Gallery

Republic World, India
Oct 13 2021
Written By

Srishti Jha

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘Paintings of the caves by noted Armenian Artist Sarkis Khachaturian at National Gallery of Armenia in Yerevan’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘Ajanta in Armenia. Paintings of the caves by noted Armenian Artist Sarkis Khachaturian at National Gallery of Armenia in Yerevan’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘First Armenian newspaper and constitution that were published in Madras(Chennai)’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘Armenia -India connect so visible in the Matenadaran library in Yerevan’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘Armenia -India connect so visible in the Matenadaran library in Yerevan’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘First Armenian newspaper and constitution that were published in Madras(Chennai)’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘Ajanta in Armenia’ EAM Jaishankar shared on Twitter. 

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘Also at Matenadaran library, a copy of the Mahabharata in Sanskrit’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

EAM S Jaishankar_Twitter

‘Also at Matenadaran library, a copy of the Mahabharata in Sanskrit’ EAM Jaishankar shared.

Oscars best international feature 2022: all the films submitted so far

Screen Daily
Oct 11 2021
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SOURCE: THE MATCH FACTORY

‘DRIVE MY CAR’

Entries for the 2022 Oscar for best international feature are underway, and Screen is profiling each one on this page.

The 94th Academy Awards will take place on March 27, 2022 at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. This is the first time since 2018 that the ceremony will take place in March, having moved to avoid conflicting with the Winter Olympics.

An international feature film is defined as a feature-length motion picture produced outside the US with a predominantly non-English dialogue track and can include animated and documentary features.

Submitted films must have been released theatrically in their respective countries between January 1, 2021 and December 31, 2021.

The deadline for submissions to the Academy is November 1, 2021. A shortlist of 15 finalists is scheduled to be announced on December 21, with the final five nominees announced on February 8, 2022.

The 2021 awards saw 93 submissions, with nominations for Bosnia and Herzegovina’s Quo Vadis, Aida?, Hong Kong’s Better Days, Romania’s Collective, Tunisia’s The Man Who Sold His Skin and eventual winner Another Round from Denmark.

Croatia’s pick comes arguably as something of a surprise, ahead of Antoneta Alamat Kusijanovic’s Cannes Camera D’Or winner Murina; although it is possible that the latter title did not qualify on language grounds. Tereza37 also has festival prowess, having premiered at Warsaw Film Festival in 2020 and gone on to win best film, director and script, then the audience award, at native events in Pula and Zagreb. The film centres on a woman who is shaken out of a rut in her life by the idea that she may be sexually incompatible with her husband. Croatia has one of the longest runs without any form of international feature representation: this is the country’s 30th submission, and it has yet to reach the nomination stage.

Ondricek’s sports drama had its world debut as the opening film of Karlovy Vary Film Festival in August. The story follows one of the most famous Czech athletes of all time, runner Emil Zatopek, as a friend travels from Australia to Prague in search of his assistance. The Czech Republic’s international Oscar peak came in 1997 when Jan Svěrák’s Kolya won the award; nominations came in 2001 and 2004, while Václav Marhoul’s The Painted Bird made 2019’s December shortlist

Cannes 2021 Competition best screenplay winner Drive My Car triumphs for Japan’s Oscar nod as one of two titles by Hamaguchi in 2021, after Berlinale Silver Bear winner Wheel Of Fortune And Fantasy. Following its Croisette debut – where it also finished top of Screen’s jury grid – the film has gone on to play Karlovy Vary, Toronto, San Sebastian, New York, Busan and London film festival among others. It has a good shot at reaching the nomination stage; Japan has excellent pedigree in the section, with 12 nominations from 68 previous submissions. Yojiro Takita’s Departures is the only one to have won the prize, in 2009; although three entries – Rashomon, Gate of Hell, and SamuraiThe Legend Of Musashi – received honorary awards in the 1950s. It is the first time Hamaguchi has represented his country for this award, with his 13th feature film.

Ayouch is Morocco’s Oscar veteran, representing his country for the fifth time from only 17 total entries. His titles are yet to make the longlist; the only one of Morocco’s to have reached the shortlisting stage was Roschdy Zem’s Omar Killed Me, for the 2012 awards. Cannes Competition title Casablanca Beats may represent the country’s best chance of progressing to date; it follows a former rapper, employed in a cultural centre, who frees his students from the weight of traditions and allows them to express themselves.

Read the full article here.

Read the full article here.

Memoria premiered in Competition at Cannes in July 2021 Weerasethakul won the jury prize. The film stars Tilda Swinton as a Scottish woman who travels to Colombia, where she begins to notice strange sounds. Indie darling Weerasethakul is entered to the international feature award for the second time, having previously represented his native Thailand with Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives in 2011, which was not nominated. With dialogue in English and Spanish, the film shot in Colombia in 2019. Colombia has been nominated once for this award from 30 submissions with the 2015 film Embrace of the SerpentBirds Of Passage made the shortlist in 2019; while 2020 entry Monos was hotly-tipped for success but ultimately edged out in a crowded field.

The crew of a narco submersible has to take desperate measures or else they’ll sink with their precious cargo. Submersible is Leon Leon’s second feature, after 2013’s Open Wound. It debuted at Bucheon International Fantastic Film Festival in July 2020. This is Ecuador’s 10th international feature entry since a first in 2001; none of the previous nine have reached the longlist stage.

Peru has one nomination from 27 previous international feature entries, for Claudia Llosa’s The Milk of Sorrow in 2010. Vallejo’s effort is a drama about a homeless man surviving in the city of Puno, taking unstable jobs to get by. It debuted at the country’s Lima Film Festival in August 2020. 

SOURCE: PIONEROS PRODUCCIONES

‘POWERFUL CHIEF’

Neang’s feature debut has its world premiere in the Horizons section of Venice Film Festival. It follows a 20-year-old man and his friends in a landmark tenement housing block in the Cambodian capital, who harbor dreams of dancing on television talent contests. Screen revealed the first trailer for the film, here. This is Cambodia’s 10th international feature entry, missing just one year since 2013; three of them have been directed by Rithy Panh, including the country’s only nomination, for The Missing Picture in 2014.

Based on Kyrgyz writer Chingiz Aitmatov’s novel The White ShipShambala centres a lonely, impressionable seven-year-old boy, whose exploration of the protected forest where he lives leads to a conflict between his world of myth and folklore and that of the adults and reality. It debuted at Shanghai International Film Festival in 2020, and has won awards at events in Russia and India. It is the country’s 14th international feature submission and eighth in a row; Kyrgyzstan is still awaiting its first longlist spot.

Hoping to carry on the success of the 2020 Oscars, in which Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite became the first Korean film to win an Oscar, is Ryoo Seung-wan’s Escape From Mogadishu. The action drama stars Kim Yoon-seok, Zo In-sung and Huh Joon-ho, and is based on a true story in which the embassies of North and South Korea are forced to cooperate in order to escape the outbreak of war in Somalia’s capital during the 1991 civil war. It has proven a box office success in South Korea, having had to delay its initial release due to Covid-19. Although admissions are still impacted by the pandemic, the feature is the most popular local release so far this year since it opened on July 28, attracting a cumulative audience of 3.1 million. The Korean Film Council (KOFIC) selected the title from a shortlist of six.

Chung’s latest feature had its world premiere in Horizons at Venice Film Festival in September. It follows the relationship between a mother and a daughter, which takes an unexpected turn while the pair are quarantining. The director also made Taiwan’s entry last year, A Sun, which made the shortlist. The country also made the shortlist three times with films directed by Ang Lee: The Wedding Banquet in 1993, Eat Drink Man Woman in 1994 and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, which won the Oscar in 2000.

Two Albanian filmmakers head to the award ceremony of Venice Film Festival; but after meeting two actresses from the adult film industry, the purpose of their trip changes. Jorgji’s debut feature premiered not on the Lido, but in his native country in 2020. It is the 14th submission to the international feature award from Albania; the country is yet to reach the longlist stage with its previous entries.

Armenian director Martirosyan’s debut feature was set for a prestige festival launch at Cannes 2020 before the pandemic put paid to that festival. Instead the film was awarded the Cannes 2020 label in the First Features section. It has still managed an impressive festival run, at events including Toronto, Tallinn, Thessaloniki and Jerusalem. Set in the war-torn disputed territory of Nagorno-Kabakh, the film centres on an engineer who must decide whether to open the local airport. Of nine previous entries since 2001, Armenia has no nominations so far. Indie Sales handles international sales. 

Read the full article here. Schrader’s film is her first to represent Germany and premiered in Berlin where Maren Eggert won the best actor Silver Bear for playing a scientist who agrees to live with a humanoid robot in order to fund her research. Germany’s last Oscar nominee was Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s Never Look Away in 2019. Fatih Akin’s In The Fade made the shortlist in 2017 ahead of the awards in 2018 and Maren Ade’s Toni Erdmann earned a nomination in 2017. The last time Germany won the Oscar was in 2007 with Donnersmarck’s The Lives Of Others. German films have won the Academy Award on two other occasions: Volker Schlondorff’s The Tin Drum in 1980 and Caroline Link’s Nowhere In Africa in 2003.

Grigorakis’ father-son drama won an impressive 10 out of 14 nominations at Greece’s Iris awards, the national film prizes given by the Hellenic Film Academy, in June this year. The film tells the story of a father-son reunion set against the backdrop of rural and environmental issues. Despite a strong local film industry, Greece has never won the international feature award from 40 previous entries; nominations came in 1963, 1964, 1966, 1978 and most recently in 2011 for Yorgos Lanthimos’ Dogtooth.

Péter Bergendy’s period horror Post Mortem follows a post-mortem photographer and a young girl who encounter ghosts in a haunted village after World War I. The film premiered at the Warsaw and Sitges film festivals last year, and went on to screen at more than 20 genre festivals, picking up prizes in Trieste, Fantasporto, Sombra and Parma. It also won prizes at this year’s Hungarian Motion Picture Awards for cinematography, editing, production design and make-up. The film is produced by Tamás Lajos and Ábel Köves of Szupermodern Stúdió, with NFI World Sales handling worldwide sales and Black Mandala acquiring distribution rights in North America.

Read the full article here.

SOURCE: MARTIN MAGUIRE

‘SHELTER’

Kosovo’s nascent film industry continues to grow, with its eighth Oscar entry – all consecutively, since the 2015 awards – having premiered in the World Cinema Dramatic Competition at Sundance in January 2021. Basholli’s debut feature centres a woman whose husband has been missing since the Kosovan war, leaving her to set up her own business to provide for her children. With a small but expanding pool of film professionals, collaboration is key in Kosovo – Basholli was first AD on Norika Sefa’s festival title Looking For Venera. Kosovo is yet to receive a shortlist spot or nomination from its seven previous entries – this may represent its best hope yet. LevelK represents sales, with Kino Lorber having acquired US rights.

Tribeca premiere Do Not Hesitate is the second feature from Venezuela-born director Shariff Korver, after his 2014 debut The Intruder, which premiered at Toronto. The story follows a Dutch military convoy working on a peacekeeping mission in the Middle East. The convoy is forced to split up when the main vehicle breaks down, leaving three young soldiers to guard the vehicle. They come across a young local boy who refuses to leave – but after a series of disastrous events, can they really trust him? The film is written by Jolein Laarman and produced by Erik Glijnis, Leontine Petit and Emily Morgan for Lemming Film. TrustNordisk is handling international sales.

In early 1980s Poland, when the country is shaken by the fatal beating of a high school student by militia, the only witness becomes the primary enemy of the State overnight. Leave No Traces is Matuszynski’s third feature film after documentary Deep Love and drama The Last Family. It debuted in the Competition section at Venice Film Festival 2021. After a 26-year dry spell with no nominations, Poland has recently resurrected its Oscar success of the 1960s and 70s, securing five nominations since 2008, winning once with Pawel Pawlikowski’s Ida in 2015. This is the country’s 53rd entry overall, with 12 total nominations to date and Pawlikowski’s being the only win.

In Oasis, real people play fictionalised versions of themselves, depicting a love triangle set in a facility for intellectually disabled youth. The film premiered in Giornate degli Autori at Venice 2020; it is Ikic’s second feature film after 2014 Karlovy Vary entry Barbarians. As Serbia’s Oscar representative it will aim to break one of the longest winless runs in the section, with no nominations from 27 previous entries dating back to the 1995 awards. The closest the country has come was in 2008, when Srdan Golubovic’s The Trap made the shortlist. Heretic Outreach represents sales.

Slovenian stalwart Mandic’s sixth feature film is a love story in which fragmented memories are brought back to mind by a song. It debuted in the Official Selection at Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival in Estonia in November 2020; Italian company Coccinelle Film Placement handles sales on the film. 24 previous entries have brought no nominations or wins for Slovenia.

Fernando León de Aranoa’s black comedy The Good Boss, starring Javier Bardem, was selected from a shortlist that also included Pedro Almodóvar’s Parallel Mothers and Marcel Barrena’s Mediterraneo: The Law Of The Sea. Produced by The Mediapro Studio and Reposado P.C., The Good Boss premiered last month at the San Sebastián Film Festival, reuniting director Aranoa with Bardem 19 years after Mondays In The Sun, which represented Spain in the Oscar race back in 2003. Their new satire sees Bardem play the (not-so-good) boss of the title, an owner of a scales manufacturing company obsessed with controlling the work and private lives of his employees. International sales are handled by mk2.

Switzerland has twice won the international feature award, although not since Xavier Koller’s Journey of Hope in 1991; Richard Dembo’s Dangerous Moves was its other win, in 1985. It has not received a nomination since then either, with three prior to Dembo’s victory. Grappe’s debut feature is a sports drama about a 15-year-old Ukranian gymnast exiled in Switzerland, who is working to secure a place at the country’s National Sports Center. It debuted at Critics’ Week at Cannes 2021, winning the partner award given by French authors organisation SACD.

Bad Roads had its world premiere in Critics’ Week at Venice Film Festival in 2020, going on to play festivals in Hamburg, Thessaloniki, Vilnius and Brussels. Adapted from a Vorozhbyt’s play of the same name that was staged at London’s Royal Court in 2017, the film deals with Russia’s annexation of the Crimean peninsula, through depicting a panorama of incidents. Ukraine is yet to achieve a nomination or longlist spot in this category from 13 previous entries.

Eran Kolirin’s Let It Be Morning was selected after it won best film at the Israeli Film Academy annual awards. Kolirin adapted the mainly Arab-language feature from the 2006 novel of the same name by celebrated Palestinian writer Sayed Kashua. The film had a contentious festival launch in Cannes this July after most of the cast, including Bakri, Suleiman and Salim Daw, refused to attend the world premiere in Un Certain Regard in a protest aimed at highlighting the “decades-long colonial campaign of ethnic cleansing… against the Palestinian people”. The Match Factory handles international sales.

Voter turnout in Artsakh’s local elections 59.2%

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 09:54,

STEPANAKERT, OCTOBER 11, ARMENPRESS. 59.2% of eligible voters in Artsakh have participated in the local self-government elections on October 10, the data provided by the territorial election commission of Askeran, Martakert and Martuni shows.

“The voting ended at 20:00, and all polling stations were closed. 440 voters or 59.2% of the voters participated in the elections”, the Central Electoral Commission said in a statement.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenia participates in Anuga 2021, largest trade fair for food and beverage industry in Europe

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 10:33,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is taking part in Anuga 2021, the leading global trade fair for the food and beverage industry in Europe, in the German city of Cologne.

The trade fair opened on October 9 and will last until October 13.

Armenia is represented by eight companies engaged in herbal tea production, dried fruits and canned food production.

Armenia’s participation to the exhibition became possible on the sidelines of the “Eastern Partnership: Ready to Trade,” an EU4Business initiative, which is implemented by the International Trade Centre (ITC) with the support of the EU.

Anuga 2021 allows Armenian companies engaged in food processing to examine and introduce the best international practice and latest trends, starting from production to packaging, as well as to establish new partnering ties for boosting export.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Pope Francis receives Armenian President Armen Sarkissian

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 16:52,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 11, ARMENPRESS. Pope Francis received this morning in audience the President of the Republic of Armenia, His Excellency Mr. Armen Sarkissian, who subsequently met with His Eminence Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Parolin, accompanied by His Excellency Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher, Secretary for Relations with States, Vatican News reports citing the Holy See Press Office’s statement.

“During the cordial discussions, appreciation was expressed at the development and strengthening of bilateral relations between the Holy See and Armenia, a country of ancient Christian tradition.

The parties went on to focus on other matters of international and regional policy”, the statement says.

 

Turkish press: Azerbaijan rejects Iran’s terrorist presence claim as ‘baseless’

Azerbaijani men living in Turkey wave flags of Turkey and Azerbaijan during a protest following clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia, in Istanbul, Turkey, July 19, 2020. (Reuters File Photo)

Azerbaijan blasted Iran late Monday for its “smear campaign” and claims about the presence of terrorist groups in the Caspian country.

“Our advice to those who want to look for terrorists is to take a good look around themselves,” Leyla Abdullayeva, spokesperson for Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry, said in a statement.

Her remarks were a rebuttal to recent claims by Iranian leaders, including Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, about the presence of terrorists in Azerbaijan.

“Unfortunately, the Iranian Foreign Ministry does not give up its smear campaign against Azerbaijan. We categorically reject such accusations,” said Abdullayeva.

“We said this during the 44-day war and we emphasize once again that there were no terrorists in Azerbaijan. In general, as a country that has suffered due to terrorism, there has never been a place for terrorists in Azerbaijan.”

Referring to last year’s Karabakh conflict, she stressed that Azerbaijan and its army of more than 100,000 soldiers did not need mercenaries to defeat Armenia.

“Surprisingly, no such accusations were made by Iran during the war, and no such concerns were raised until a new government came to power (in Iran) after the war,” Abdullayeva said, adding that an “anti-Azerbaijan campaign” will not benefit Iran in any manner.

She said Tehran has been resorting to “these baseless accusations” because Baku prevents the “illegal entry of Iranian trucks into Azerbaijan” and managed to liberate its occupied territories from Armenian control.

Tensions between Azerbaijan and Iran have escalated after Tehran moved troops close to the Azerbaijani border and conducted nonstop military maneuvers in reaction to a joint military drill by Azerbaijan, Turkey and Pakistan.

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

When new clashes erupted on Sept. 27 last year, the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violated several humanitarian cease-fire agreements.

The two countries signed a Russian-brokered agreement in November 2020 to end the fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

The cease-fire was seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia, whose armed forces withdrew in line with the agreement.

Prior to this, about 20% of Azerbaijan’s territory had been under illegal occupation for nearly 30 years.

On Jan. 11 this year, the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a pact to develop economic ties and infrastructure to benefit the entire region. It included the establishment of a trilateral working group on Karabakh.

18th Golden Apricot International Film Festival Announces its Winner Films



Scenes from the 18th Golden Apricot International Film Festival’s closing ceremony

The closing ceremony of the 18th Golden Apricot International Film Festival was held at the “Ararat” Museum of the Yerevan Brandy Company on October 9. During the closing ceremony, the jury announced the winners.

Pebbles (dir. Vinothraj P.S., India) won Golden Apricot in International Full-Length Competition. The Silver Apricot was awarded to Downstream to Kinshasa (dir. Dieudo Hamadi, Congo/ France/ Belgium). A New Old Play (dir. Qiu Jiongjiong, Hong Kong/ France) gained jury’s special mention.

The FIPRESCI Award, named after Peter van Bueren, was awarded to Taming the Garden (dir. Salomé Jashi, Switzerland/ Germany/ Georgia).

From left: Hovig Hagopian, Christine Haroutounian, Ovsanna Shekoyan

Golden Apricot in Apricot Stone competition was awarded to The World (dir. Christine Haroutounian, USA/ Armenia). Silver Apricot in the same competition won Storgetnya (dir. Hovig Hagopian, France/ Armenia). Special Award after Gennadi Melkonyan was awarded Handstand (dir. Ovsanna Shekoyan, Armenia).

Cornell Mundruzo, Hungarian theater and film director, laureate of dozens of other prestigious film festivals in Cannes, Locarno was this year’s president of the Golden Apricot 18th Yerevan IFF jury. The jury of the feature film competition consisted of producer François D’Artemare, director of the Krakow International Film Festival Krzysztof Gierat, film critic Larisa Malyukova and composer Robert Amirkhanyan.

The Apricot Stone regional short film competition jury consisted of actress Romanna Lobach, author of this year’s “Golden Apricot” posters, visual artist Vahram Muratyan, and festival director Philippe Jalladeau.

The FIPRESCI jury consisted of film critics Alexander Melyan, Dominic Schmid, Mike Naafs.

Turkish Press: The privatisation of war in Armenia

TRT World, Turkey
Oct 6 2021

The privatisation of war in Armenia

Although last year’s war with Azerbaijan resulted in a defeat for Armenia, only a few Armenians believe that it will be the last conflict with their neighbouring country. 

One of them is Aram (not his actual name), a United States Air Force veteran of Lebanese-Armenian descent.

According to the Washington Examiner, Aram is now seeking to make sure that Armenia is prepared for the next war by organising armed training for children, teenagers and young men in Armash, an Armenian village just a few kilometres away from the border with Azerbaijan. 

Aram served in the US Air Force as a special forces officer for 13 years and was appointed to missions in Iraq, Afghanistan, Central Africa, and many other places. When the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia broke out on September 27 last year, he flew into Yerevan to deploy with a volunteer unit in southern Karabakh. 

While there, he wasn’t pleased with what he saw as Armenia was repulsed with Azerbaijani assaults. Thus, he adopted a purpose to raise well-equipped fighters for future wars against Azerbaijan.

“Most of the military personnel and volunteers had no idea how to fight,” said Aram. 

“They had no information about the enemy, nothing. Even the generals were fighting a war from the 1950s.”

During the conflict, Aram served with a unit in one of the most challenging fields, Karmir Shuka, also known as the Red Bazaar. But since he realised the unit was untrained, a defeat was inevitable amid the intense combat.

This file photo from December 20, 2020 shows an Azerbaijani tank along a highway, after the transfer of Kalbajar region to Azerbaijan’s control, as part of a November peace deal that required Armenian forces to cede Azerbaijani territories they held outside Nagorno-Karabakh, near Kalbajar, Azerbaijan. (AP)

“We had good positions to defend, but we lost about 3 kilometres because we didn’t have support — no artillery, no airstrikes,” he said. 

Those three kilometres became a game-changer in favour of Azerbaijan since it paved the way for its great advance on Sushi, the strategic city centred in Karabakh. Later on, Sushi signified the Armenian defeat. 

“Knowing that these people [in my unit] were almost untrained, I couldn’t put them on the sort of special operations tactics that would be required to retake that territory.”  

During this period, Aram met his fellow instructors that would later become part of the Phoenix School of Bravery, a private military organisation that was founded by himself.

The paramilitary organisation was established in January and by April, they were already on their second group of trainees as the first group had completed its three-month crash course. Aram stated that they train around 40 at a time at their Yerevan facilities.

In the near future, Aram plans to teach defensive tactics, strategies and warfare operations to villagers such that, if needed, they can employ themselves during a war.

“We’ll train the villages here first, and then move down to the south. Each village next to each other forms a chain, and we make sure that it’s an unbreakable chain.”

Making of militia groups

Phoenix has become an initiative that gained the appreciation of the border villages such as Armash. Now, locals are joining the paramilitary organisation in an attempt to defend themselves due to the fear of the army’s inefficacy in future. The organisation gets support from the city’s mayor as Aram and the others set up their daily plans in the mayor’s office. 

“We approached [Phoenix] for training because we’re so close to the enemy,” said village mayor Hakob Zeynalyan.

The people who join Phoenix vary from their mid-40s down to their early teens, and a few even younger. For instance, 12-year-old Amalya is the youngest trainee who is learning first-aid practices. 

Armenian soldiers gather at their fighting positions on the front line during a military conflict against Azerbaijan’s armed forces in occupied Karabakh, October 20, 2020. (Reuters)

Generally, trainers head towards a nearby hillside and reach the trenches for practice-oriented training. The tactical training they receive changes from time to time.

“We’re going to be practising something called the echelon tactic,” Raffi said, one of Aram’s fellow instructors.

“It’s a small-unit tactic, aimed at covering ground quickly while maintaining a large field of fire. It’s common among NATO and Israeli forces.”

Along with much tactical training like this, Aram thinks that strategies should be developed for modern warfare techniques. He realised the necessity of conducting training in this direction after the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict experience.

The most important of modern battlefield tactics presumably includes strategy development against Azerbaijan’s high-tech armaments. 

In this regard, Turkish-made TB2 Bayraktar UAVs are considered the most destructive weapon in Azerbaijan’s stockpile, which destroyed over 100 Armenian tanks alone during the conflict.

“On the very first day, they destroyed our air defence systems,” said Tigran Matevosyan, a veteran of the recent war. “After that, it was just rifles against Bayraktars.”

Bayraktar TB2 armed unmanned aerial vehicles, stationed at Naval Air Base Command in Turkey’s Aegean district of Dalaman, lands in the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC). (Muhammed Enes Yildirim / AA)

Matevosyan also highlighted the necessity of taking exercises against this threat by avoiding moving as a group, ”If this war taught us anything, it’s to stay spread out” he said.

”The entire war, people were always in groups of 50 or 60.” 

Aram desires to train over 2,000-3,000 locals a year, as well as part of the Armenian army’s special forces. In this way, he aspires to be prepared for the next war and have an advantage.

Armenian teenagers like Hayk and Armen, both 17, continue to participate in this organisation as volunteers with the same desire.

“We want to be ready when the next war comes,” said Hayk when asked about his motivation for attending the course. While Armen added, “As long as [Azeris] are our neighbours, there’ll be war.”