The Opiate of the Armenian Masses

“The Ant and the Grasshopper” from Aesop’s Fables, Illustrated by Milo Winter (1886-1956) (Wikimedia Commons)

While Mayr Hayastan stands high overlooking the hills and valleys of our beloved homeland, Snoop Dogg and his entourage will be sharing the tropes that made him famous in West Coast rap with the people of Armenia in a concert on September 23. Snoop Dogg has faced criticism for his objectification of women and his use of derogatory terms which perpetuate the negative stereotypes that are pervasive in Armenia’s often chauvinistic and sexist society. The Doggfather’s shameless use of chauvinistic lyrics like, “B*** ain’t shit but hoes and tricks,” combined with derogatory and dehumanizing visuals of women performing the most demeaning sexual acts, are often overlooked with his catchy beats and danceable songs. I doubt that the majority of the Armenians in Armenia who love hip hop have deconstructed the meanings and subtext of much of Snoop’s lyrics.

Let me preface this with the fact that I actually appreciate hip hop – it is the discourse of a generation, and I use it in the classroom in my lessons on register and code. To many generations of African Americans, hip hop is a genre that has complex meanings and implications related to their experience as Black Americans. There are numerous researchers who explore raciolinguistics, and there are even more hip hop artists who have become vehicles to express the oppression and plight of Black Americans.  Pulitzer Prize-winning Kendrick Lamar, Alicia Keys, Mary J. Blige, Tyler the Creator, Jay-Z and our once pessa now “he-who-must-not-be-named” Kanye West have all woven the fabric of the rich genre of hip hop, which has propelled social change with its revolutionary undertones. Hip hop has overtaken rock and roll as the most popular musical genre, and I would be lying if I didn’t say that I have Lauren Hill and Rakim on my iTunes list. It’s clear that Snoop Dogg is a brilliant entrepreneur with cookbooks, wine branding, numerous philanthropic projects and many other talents.

But this is not what this piece is about.

Seeing social media posts about Snoop Dogg’s concert in Yerevan has made us, in many ways, wake up to the metaphorical opiate that has been nefariously pacifying the people of Armenia.  It was Karl Marx who stated, “Die Religion…ist das Opium des Volkes,” which means, “religion is the opiate of the masses.”  The new religion of Armenia is one of pacifism and apathy, blinding the people with the idea that “all is ok” – send over 50 Cent, Kanye and now Snoop Dogg. Give the baby a pacifier, placate your people, and you can guarantee a few hours (in this case a few years) to do the dirty work of rotting a country at its core. It is the stuff of a dystopian novel – burn the books, use rhetoric, make photo ops with famous pop figures and you have yourself a lovely little ochlocracy. “So what? We get drunk. So what? We smoke weed. We’re just having fun. We don’t care who sees. So what we go out? That’s how it’s supposed to be – living young and wild and free.” I never thought I would quote Snoop Dogg and Wiz Khalifa in an article about my homeland.

As a teacher, I am generally focused on all things education related. When you study a country’s educational system, it gives you a glimpse of a disease that can be diagnosed and hopefully healed. Armenia’s education system is in a desperate situation. There is a lack of opportunity for students, not only in Yerevan, but also in rural Armenia. Armenia’s education system is not future oriented. Many band-aid programs have mushroomed focusing on robotics, and of course we have the amazing TUMO program. Yet as for the daily educational system, Armenia lacks the momentum to move away from Soviet-dominated pedagogical strategies that integrate critical thinking. I had the opportunity to learn about this firsthand last year at the Teach for Armenia conference held at UCLA, from educators such as Dr. Serop Khachatryan, director of the Children of Armenia Fund. Many of the speakers stressed the need for building infrastructure. I watched the Minister of Education take copious notes and agree that the failure was systematic in the schools of Armenia. Wendy Kopp, the CEO of Teach for All and one of my personal heroes, stated that programs such as Teach for Armenia create a collective purpose, and that we must cultivate leadership by teaching marginalized communities, a transformative process for students and teachers. Meeting teachers like Ninelle, a Teach for Armenia instructor from Artsakh, was inspiring. Now, I am devastated to see her social media posts as she reports from blockaded Artsakh. That spark of hope is still in her eyes, but there are other needs at stake. Pedagogy is placed on the back burner when you’re focused on picking the last of your tomatoes and don’t have the ability to shower.

The conference used the metaphor of the national dance of Armenia, the Kochari, the archetypal symbol of unity for our people. It focused on our own Kochari, the 2050 promise – a declaration to deliver the kind of education needed to be a leader in Armenia.

But that Kochari has been broken. In Artsakh, 120,000 Armenian souls are on the brink of starvation and blockade – that in itself is the pus-filled infection of the last few years, caused by a prime minister ransacking the country of its health. Meanwhile, PM Nikol Pashinyan and his “gangstas” are “Rollin’ down the street, smokin’ indo/Sippin’ on gin and juice/Laid back with (their) minds on their money and (their) money on (their) minds.”

Perhaps the nation should go back to our own children’s storyteller—Atabek Khnkoyan (Khnko Aper)—whose rhyming versions of Aesop’s fable “The Ant and the Grasshopper” ring true every time I see a post about Snoop. “You didn’t work in Summer? Tell me, what was the reason?” (You didn’t work all summer…tell us the reason), and the dancing grasshopper, full of hubris, answers. “So talk, Sanamer, who had time for that? In the fragrant grass, we were singing with our…” (Who had time for that? We were too busy dancing with each other in the fields). (Sippin’ on Gin and Juice…)

Forcing the country into a state of unresolved grief and blowing smoke into the faces of the Armenian nation has led to the kind of numb disconnectedness that opens the portal to the dangerous state of apathy that our homeland has now embraced.

Nobody is saying that our brothers and sisters in Armenia shouldn’t have fun. Fun has its place and time, and we are a country that is experiencing its dark ages. Just last summer, as I watched the mother of one of our soldiers tear at the granite of her son’s gravestone in the village of Akhpradzor, it became clear that our country is in a shared “brow of woe.” Grief is cyclical, and a person experiences a long list of a range of emotions while grieving. Yerevan had an aura of paralysis – people walked in the streets, cafes were full, but everyone was in an anesthetized state. Forcing the country into a state of unresolved grief and blowing smoke into the faces of the Armenian nation has led to the kind of numb disconnectedness that opens the portal to the dangerous state of apathy that our homeland has now embraced.  It was Noam Chomsky who stated, “All over the place, from the popular culture to the propaganda system, there is constant pressure to make people feel that they are helpless, that the only role they can have is to ratify decisions and to consume.” We are not helpless. Armenian schools are growing in the diaspora; Armenian camps are full of the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of genocide survivors; internships and non-profits in Armenia have proliferated; the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is actively engaged in nation building; Teach for Armenia, the Hidden Road Initiative, AYF Youth Corps, the Armenian Relief Society and programs to build Armenia’s infrastructure are still actively engaged in nation building. We refuse to be patronized, infantilized and shamed into silence.

It is my hope that the people of Armenia will look up to Mayr Hayastan, reminding themselves that we are the people of stone, of women who raised arms to fight, of mothers who gave their sons to fight for our lands. We are not to be infantilized by puppet shows that attempt to distract us from the nation building (in and outside Armenia) that calls us to work. Almost 4,000 souls were sent to their graves in a war for Artsakh – and their mothers and families refuse to be silenced by the almighty pacifier that Pashinyan attempts to force into their (and our) mouths.  Enough.

My writing of this may reach the eyes of some. I hope you, dear reader, feel the same kind of angst that so many of us do. I hope you are doing something – anything – while our homeland experiences the most catastrophic existential threat of our lifetime.

Nothing against you Snoop – we love your famous song, “Who am I (What’s My Name)?” However, the Armenian nation knows who we are. We have known for thousands of years. Even as we watch enemies, foreign and domestic, attempt to gaslight us into thinking otherwise, we must remind ourselves that the first line ever written in our ancient language was, “To know wisdom and gain instruction; to discern the words of understanding…” and refuse to close our eyes to the smoke that attempts to blind that understanding.

Let’s hope Khnko Aper’s grasshoppers don’t become the ultimate metaphor for our nation…

Were you singing? 

very kind 

Now violent 

up and up 

Let the wind blow 

You dance!

(You were singing?

Oh how nice! 

Once the cold winds hit you,

let’s see how you dance.)

Sevana Panosian is a retired award winning AP English Instructor who will now be an instructional coach and middle school instructor at Krouzian Zekarian Vasbouragan Armenian School in San Francisco. Sevana is a native of San Francisco and an active member of the Armenian community.


Armenian policies in Karabakh threatening normalization process, regional peace: Azerbaijan

Turkey – July 31 2023


Azerbaijan, Türkiye positions are same as such a process should not be held hostage by Yerevan’s ‘occupation policy,’ says Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov

16:55 . 31/07/2023 Monday

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said on Monday that Armenia’s policies in the Karabakh region are among the most serious threats to regional peace and security.

“Armenia’s failure to withdraw its military units (from Karabakh) in contravention of its obligations, its obstruction of the opening of the Zangezur corridor with various excuses, its intention to interfere in Azerbaijan’s internal affairs under the guise of protecting the rights of Armenian residents in Karabakh… are among the most serious threats to peace and security in the region,” Bayramov said at a press conference with his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan in Ankara, Türkiye’s capital.

Bayramov said he and Fidan had the opportunity to exchange ideas on the process of Azerbaijani-Armenian normalization, adding that Baku and Ankara’s positions on it are based on international norms and principles.

Baku’s policies, he asserted, combined with Azerbaijan and Türkiye’s views and steps on the future of the region would ensure the safety and prosperity.

The positions of Azerbaijan and Türkiye on normalization with Armenia are “obvious,” he said, adding that such a process should not be held hostage by Yerevan’s “occupation policy” and occupation of Azerbaijani territory for many years.

He said Baku has openly supported Türkiye’s normalization process with Armenia, citing Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s statement in January 2021 about his country’s readiness to “turn the page of war” with Yerevan.

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

In the fall of 2020, Azerbaijan liberated several cities, villages, and settlements from Armenian occupation during 44 days of fighting. The war ended with a Russia-brokered peace agreement.

Despite ongoing talks on a peace agreement, tensions between the neighboring countries increased in recent months over the Lachin road, the only land route connecting Armenia to Karabakh.



– ‘Baku-Ankara cooperation strengthened’

During the meeting, Bayramov expressed his deep contentment to be in Türkiye, saying he and his Turkish counterpart had the opportunity to discuss a wide range of issues concerning bilateral engagements.

Reiterating that Azerbaijan and Türkiye bolstered their relations to the level of alliance with the Shusha Declaration of June 2021, the top Azerbaijani diplomat said talks between the two countries have intensified and cooperation has strengthened.

“Azerbaijan and Türkiye are main partners, both in terms of trade turnover and mutual investment,” he said.

Energy is one of the important examples of Azerbaijani-Turkish cooperation, he said referring to the Southern Gas Corridor as having “changed the energy map of Eurasia.”

The Southern Gas Corridor is a natural gas supply route established under the initiative of the European Commission to diversify European energy supplies through the Caspian Sea, which is made up of three pipeline projects, namely the South Caucasus, Trans-Anatolian, and Trans Adriatic pipelines.

Bayramov added that he and Fidan also underlined the importance of starting construction on the Igdir-Nakhchivan natural gas pipeline and finishing it by 2024.

He also spoke about tripartite cooperation with third countries, indicating that Azerbaijan and Türkiye are conducting “successful tripartite and quadripartite cooperation with Georgia, Iran, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan.”

“The platform of Azerbaijan, Türkiye, and Israel can also be useful for the development of our relations in a wider geography,” he said.

He also touched on the desecration of the Muslim holy book, the Quran, in Sweden and Denmark, saying Azerbaijan condemned the attacks as “unacceptable.”

“It’s pointless to explain this with human rights and freedom of _expression_. Playing with the emotions of nearly 2 billion people does not give anyone a reason to justify it under the umbrella of free _expression_,” he said, adding that countries should take “very serious and effective steps.”

Armenpress: Armenia offers emergency response support to Georgia after deadly landslide

 21:12, 4 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 4, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan has phoned his Georgian counterpart Ilia Darchiashvili to offer the Armenian government’s support in emergency response to the Shovi landslide.

At least 11 people have died and 25 are still missing as a result of landslides and mudslides in the Georgian resort town of Shovi. 

The foreign ministry said in a readout of the call that “Ararat Mirzoyan once again expressed condolences to his colleague, the government and the friendly people of Georgia for the loss of life due to the landslides in Racha region.”

“Minister Mirzoyan offered the support of the Armenian government in fighting the disaster and eliminating its consequences,” the ministry added.

Fitch Upgrades Armenia to ‘BB-‘; Outlook Stable

 17:05, 31 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 31, ARMENPRESS. Fitch Ratings has upgraded Armenia’s Long-Term Foreign-Currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) to ‘BB-‘ from ‘B+’. The Outlook is Stable.

In a press release, Fitch Ratings said that Armenia has had a strong rebound from successive shocks in recent years since its downgrade in 2020, and Fitch expects this dynamism to continue in light of an extraordinary inflow of migrants. Since the start of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, an estimated 50,000-65,000 immigrants (equivalent to 2.2% of Armenia’s pre-conflict population) from Russia, Ukraine and Belarus have settled in the country. This supported strong growth of 12.6% in 2022, and Fitch expects the economy to grow by 7.2% in 2023, 5.9% in 2024 and 4.5% in 2025.

According to the report, consumption will remain solid while the outlook for goods-and-services exports is also positive despite a strong appreciation of the Armenian dram, mainly due to a resurgence in tourism and re-exports to Russia. If current economic trends continue, Armenia’s already favourable medium-term potential growth (estimated at 4.5%) could receive a further boost from expansion of the labour force and improvements in productivity. Fitch expects income per capita (at market exchange rates) to nearly double from 2021 levels by 2025.

Armenia’s ‘BB-‘ ratings are supported by a robust macroeconomic and fiscal policy framework, and credible commitment to structural reforms, and favourable per capita GDP. These factors are balanced against a high share of foreign-currency-denominated public debt, and relatively high (albeit reducing) financial dollarisation. Governance scores are slightly below the ‘BB’ median, and capture heightened geopolitical risks emanating from tensions with Azerbaijan.

Armenia benefits from strong support and technical assistance from a range of multilateral and bilateral creditors. As of May 2023, an estimated 78% of external public debt was owed to official lenders, offering favourable financing conditions. Armenia is also the beneficiary of a 36-month USD172 million stand-by arrangement with the IMF, although authorities are currently treating this as precautionary.

The Armenian banking sector has favourable profitability (return on equity of 18%), asset quality (non-performing loan ratio of 2.6%) and capitalisation (Tier 1 capital ratio of 18.7% as of May). Deposit dollarisation levels have been stable, at 52.3% as of May 2023, while loan dollarisation declined slightly to 34.8% as of May.

Armenia has an ESG Relevance Score (RS) of ‘5’ & ‘5[+]’ respectively for both Political Stability and Rights and for the Rule of Law, Institutional and Regulatory Quality and Control of Corruption.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 01-08-23

 17:16, 1 August 2023

YEREVAN, 1 AUGUST, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 1 August, USD exchange rate up by 0.04 drams to 386.18 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 2.08 drams to 424.03 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.02 drams to 4.21 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 2.46 drams to 494.19 drams.

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

Gold price up by 206.14 drams to 24467.54 drams. Silver price up by 1.64 drams to 302.39 drams.

1 dead, 1 injured in Azerbaijani weapons factory explosion

 13:51,

YEREVAN, JULY 24, ARMENPRESS. One person died and another sustained injuries in an ammunition explosion at a weapons manufacturing factory in the Azerbaijani city of Shirvan, local media reported.

The factory is owned by the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan.

“The explosion occurred during compression of the intermediate gearbox of the explosive in the Shirvan Araz Plant LLC of the Ministry of Defense Industry today, at about 12:00 (GMT+4),” Head of the Information Technology Department of the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan Yashar Isakov told Trend news agency. “One person was killed and one was injured in the arm. An investigation is currently underway. Additional information will be provided,” Isakov added.

Armenpress: Russian and Azerbaijani sides discuss the reconciliation process between Baku and Yerevan

 21:25,

YEREVAN, JULY 18, ARMENPRESS. On July 17, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation Andrey Rudenko and Azerbaijani Ambassador to the Russian Federation Polad Bulbuloglu met and discussed the situation in the South Caucasus, the process of reconciliation between Baku and Yerevan.

ARMENPRESS reports, the press service of the Russian Foreign Ministry informs that the Russian side has confirmed the need for the complete and immediate unblocking of the Lachin Corridor, the restoration of transport links in both directions along it, in accordance with the trilateral declaration of November 9, 2020, as well as the need to create conditions for normal life in Nagorno Karabakh.

The message also says: “The Russian side has confirmed its readiness to organize a tripartite meeting of foreign ministers in Moscow in the near future to discuss the ways of implementing the top level agreements, including the issue of agreement on the peace treaty, which will be followed by a summit of the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia in Moscow in order to sign the said document.”

Turkish Press: Moscow, Yerevan fail to fulfill obligations under Karabakh deal: Baku

DAILY SABAH
Turkey –

Russia and Armenia have failed to fulfill their obligations under the trilateral deal signed after 44 days of heavy fighting between Baku and Yerevan in the Karabakh region in 2020, the Azerbaijani foreign ministry said on Saturday.

“Since the first day of the signing of the aforementioned trilateral statement, Armenia has not fulfilled many provisions of the statement, and Russia has not ensured the full implementation of the statement within its obligations,” the ministry said in a statement.

Noting that Azerbaijan always “stayed true” to the trilateral deal, the statement said no measures were taken despite “repeated warnings by Baku on the use of the Lachin road for illegal activities.”

“Over the past few months, hundreds of Armenian residents have been allowed to pass through this checkpoint in a well-regulated and transparent manner. Despite this, Armenia has not ceased its provocations against Azerbaijan and opened fire on the checkpoint on June 15, as well as attempted smuggling using vehicles of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in July,” the statement added.

It added that attempts to politicize the establishment of the border checkpoint and statements made on the alleged humanitarian crisis in the region are “baseless.”

“Notwithstanding the above-mentioned facts, the complete withdrawal of the remnants of the Armenian armed forces existing in the territory of Azerbaijan has not yet been ensured contrary to the 2020 Trilateral Statement, to which the Russian Federation is a party. On the contrary, Armenian armed forces are supported under the supervision of the Russian peacekeeping contingent,” it further said.

It also said that an earlier Russian Foreign Ministry statement on the trilateral deal and the peace process between Baku and Yerevan caused “disappointment and misunderstanding,” as well as contradicts Moscow’s previous statements supporting the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Azerbaijan.

A statement by the Russian Foreign Ministry earlier on Saturday urged Armenia and Azerbaijan to immediately draft a peace treaty “based on the previously reached agreements,” expressing Moscow’s belief that “reliable and clear guarantees of the rights and security of the Armenians of Karabakh should become an integral part of this agreement.”

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

Clashes erupted on Sept. 27, 2020, with the Armenian Army attacking civilians and Azerbaijani forces, violating several humanitarian ceasefire agreements.

During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and around 300 settlements and villages that had been occupied by Armenia for almost 30 years.

The fighting ended with a Russian-brokered agreement on Nov. 10, 2020, which was seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia.

However, the ceasefire has been broken several times since then.

https://www.dailysabah.com/politics/moscow-yerevan-fail-to-fulfill-obligations-under-karabakh-deal-baku/news

Asbarez: Calif. State Senate Unanimously Calls for Protections for Artsakh


SACRAMENTO—The Armenian National Committee of America Western Region welcomed the passage by the California State Senate of a measure that calls for the protection and security of the Armenian population of Artsakh as it faces unrelenting attacks in Azerbaijan’s ongoing genocidal campaign of ethnic cleansing. 

The resolution, known as AJR-1, which was introduced by Assemblymember Chris Holden, passed in the Senate on Monday with a vote of 39-0 on.

The passage in the Senate follows the March 30 passage of the resolution in the State Assembly and becomes a unified position by the State of California calling for those protections for the people of Artsakh.

The Senators of the 25th and 26th California Senate Districts, Anthony Portantino and Maria Elena Durazo, both made impassioned statements on the Senate floor before the resolution was voted on. The resolution condemns Azerbaijan’s ongoing blockade of Artsakh and calls upon the United States Federal Government to use any and all tools to compel Azerbaijan to end the blockade. The resolution also calls on the federal government to end military assistance to Azerbaijan, provide humanitarian aid to the people of Artsakh, establish an international peacekeeping mission to ensure Artsakh’s safety and security, and support Artsakh’s self-determination.

Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh has continued for more than two hundred days. Since December 12, 2022, the Azerbaijani government has blocked the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Artsakh to the outside world. One hundred twenty thousand people have been deprived of essential goods, medicine, and food. With schools closed as a direct result of the scarcity of energy and resources caused by the blockade, more than 30,000 children have been deprived of their right to education. The continued terror imposed upon the people of Artsakh by Azerbaijan also extends to intermittent cuts of electricity, gas, water, and communications infrastructure. Further exacerbating the situation, Azerbaijan illegally installed a checkpoint on the Hakari Bridge. More recently, Azerbaijan banned the International Committee of the Red Cross from transporting critically ill patients to Armenia, as Artsakh’s hospitals are unable to provide medical care due to a lack of electricity, gas and medicine. The residents of Artsakh are also subject to daily targeting by Azerbaijani forces, with an ever-growing list of confirmed violations from the Azerbaijani side. The blockade of Artsakh continues to highlight the genocidal ambitions of Azerbaijan’s government in an attempt to force the Armenians of Artsakh from their rightful homeland.

Since the outset of the blockade, the ANCA Western Region has mobilized Armenian-American Community activists across the Western United States through initiatives, including legislative efforts, community campaigns, and town hall meetings. The Save Artsakh initiative was one of the first efforts to draw attention to the humanitarian crisis, which served as a community letter-writing campaign that called on the Biden Administration to take concrete steps to end the blockade immediately. Separately, the ANCA Western Region activated its coalition partners across several communities, who signed onto a similar joint letter, and spearheaded a letter to President Biden, cosigned by members of the California State Legislature, calling for the United States to exert pressure on Azerbaijan to end the blockade. The passage and adoption of AJR1 will help bolster critical amendments to the National Defense Authorization Act regarding the blockade of Artsakh, which are to be heard by Congress in the coming week.

The ANCA Western Region worked closely with Assemblymember Holden on AJR-1, providing research material, issuing formal letters of support, combating misinformation campaigns by the Consulate of Azerbaijan in Los Angeles, and conducting extensive outreach to members of the California State Assembly and Senate to vote in favor of AJR-1.

“We thank Assemblymember Holden for taking the lead on holding Azerbaijan accountable for its illegal blockade of Artsakh, and we are grateful to each of the co-authors in both the State Assembly and Senate who supported the resolution and to Senators Portantino and Durazo for their unwavering support of our community,” said Nora Hovsepian, Esq, Chair of the ANCA Western Region. “The passage and adoption of AJR1 further embodies California’s commitment to the Armenian Diaspora, but more importantly, it illustrates that the people of Artsakh are not alone in their struggle for freedom.”

The Armenian National Committee of America Western Region is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.

The Defense Army did not fire at the Azerbaijani positions in the occupied territories of Shushi region – MoD Artsakh

 14:43,

YEREVAN, 12 JULY, ARMENPRESS. The statement released by the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan claiming that [Artsakh] Defense Army units opened fire around 09:25, July 12 at Azerbaijan’s positions located in the occupied territories of the Shushi region is yet another disinformation, ARMENPRESS reports, the Ministry of Defense of Artsakh said in a statement.