Armenian military to hold live-fire, command-staff exercises

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 17:14,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. The Acting Chief of General Staff of the Armenian Armed Forces Lt. General Kamo Kochunts will lead a command-staff military exercise from May 17 to May 21 under the scenario of “preparing and engaging in defensive operations with existing forces and means in conditions of simulated threat of enemy aggression.”

Live fire brigade-level tactical exercises will be held as part of the drills, the ministry of defense said.

The army corps personnel will be deployed to the designated areas.

Police in Yerevan unlawfully detain around 30 opposition Homeland Party activists

Panorama
Armenia – May 3 2022

Police officers used excessive force to unlawfully detain some 30 members of the opposition Homeland Party protesting in Yerevan on Tuesday morning, Arsen Babayan, a senior member of the party, said in a Facebook post.

“Among the detained activists are Khachik Galstyan, Sos Hakobyan, Babken Harutyunyan, Vardan Minasyan and Azat Zakaryan,” he wrote, accusing the police of grossly violating their right to peaceful assembly.

Armenia’s opposition groups began a large-scale civil disobedience campaign on Monday in a bid to oust Nikol Pashinyan and his cabinet, blocking streets and street intersections in central Yerevan.

‘We are losing our country’: Women hold march in Yerevan

Panorama
Armenia – May 7 2022

A women’s march started from Yerevan’s central France Square on Saturday afternoon.

Many of the women participating in the march of the Liberation Movement brought their children with them.

Marianna Ghazaryan, the spouse of former Armenian Ambassador to Poland Edgar Ghazaryan, is confident that the opposition campaign in support of Artsakh and demanding Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation as Armenian prime minister will yield results.

“We want to restore our dignity and have a vision for our children’s future, so we have stood up to fight and will go to the end,” she said, urging all to join the protest movement.

“The future of Armenia and Artsakh is at stake now. We are losing our country, thus all should put aside their political differences and join the struggle,” the woman said.

Anzhela Elibegova, an expert on the South Caucasus geopolitics, says it’s important for the women taking part in the march to show their value system.

She denounced the offensive gesture of the Armenian parliament speaker’s mother at opposition protesters in Yerevan on Friday.

“You realize that we don’t show the middle finger from balconies, we don’t spit on people, don’t you? On the contrary, we are trying to instill in our children a caring attitude towards the homeland, love and the right values, including respect for parents of fallen soldiers, war veterans, state symbols… Armenian women have to educate generations with the right system of values, so that we can get rid of a number of vicious phenomena, which, unfortunately, are widespread in our society,” she said.

The march was escorted by female police officers.


Gazprom fully suspends gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland

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 13:26, 27 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. Gazprom has fully suspended gas supplies to the Bulgarian company Bulgargaz and the Polish PGNiG due to their failure to pay in rubles in due time, TASS reports citing the statement of the Russian holding.

“Gazprom Export has notified Bulgargaz and PGNiG of the suspension of gas supplies from April 27 until the payments are made according to the procedure outlined in the Decree”, Gazprom said. Gazprom Export has not yet received from those companies payments for the gas supplied in April, which were to be made in rubles as prescribed by the Russian President’s Decree dated March 31, 2022, as of the end of the working day on April 26, the Russian gas company added.

Bulgaria and Poland are transit states, Gazprom noted. “In case of unauthorized offtake of Russian gas from the volumes intended for transit into third countries, the transited supplies will be reduced by the volume that was offtaken,” the statement said.

The price of gas in Europe gained 21% following the statement, surpassing $1,370 per 1,000 cubic meters at some point.

President Vladimir Putin ordered on March 23 that unfriendly states must pay for Russian gas in rubles, saying that Moscow would refuse to accept payments under gas contracts with those states in “compromised” currencies, particularly meaning dollars and euros.

Azerbaijan’s False Shot at Biden on the Armenian Genocide

April 28 2022
Nisan Ahmado

“The attempts to misrepresent the events that happened a century ago and politicize the so-called ‘Armenian genocide’ are unacceptable.”

Source: Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry, April 24, 2022
FALSE

On April 24, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry protested remarks made by U.S. President Joe Biden on Armenian Remembrance Day.

Biden issued a statement commemorating the 107th anniversary of the start of the genocide, in which between 600,000 and 1.5 million Armenians died though various atrocities during World War One, including executions, forced migration and abuse and neglect in concentration camps.

More than 20 countries worldwide officially recognize the Armenian genocide, including the United States, Argentina, Brazil, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany and Russia.

In 2019, the U.S. Congress passed a resolution “affirming the historical facts of the Armenian Genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire, and honoring the memories of its 1,500,000 victims.”

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said the White House distorted history.

“The attempts to misrepresent the events that happened a century ago and politicize the so-called ‘Armenian genocide’ are unacceptable.”

That is false. There is no misrepresentation.

Biden was the first U.S. president to officially use the term genocide in reference to the massacres of Armenians in that era. Previous presidents refrained from using it to avoid complicating relations with Turkey, a NATO defense member allied with the U.S. and European nations.

Turkey maintains that the mass killings and treatment of Armenians of 1915-17 are exaggerated or the result of armed conflict and were not a systematic campaign of extinction.

The Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry’s statement is in line with Turkey’s view. Turkey also rejected Biden’s April 24 statement, saying it was “incompatible with historical facts.”

The genocide, however, has been thoroughly documented.

Armenians are an ethnic group native to Armenia region, which is comprised of northeastern Turkey and the neighboring republic of Armenia. Mostly Christian, they faced historic religious persecution during Russian campaigns against the Persians and Turks in the 18th and 19th centuries.

In the start of the 20th century, about 2.5 million Armenians lived in the once-dominant Ottoman dynasty. The centuries old regional power was crumbling after a series of military defeats, and in 1908, a group of army officers, the Young Turks, seized power and started taking measures against Armenians.

By 1914, the Young Turks had sided with Germany during World War I against Britain, France and Russia. They portrayed the Armenians as a pro-Russian “fifth column” and inside threat.

By scholarly and many other accounts, the genocide began in April 1915 with the arrests of Armenian intellectuals and politicians, followed by mass executions and the systematic deportation of Armenians, who were sent in convoys on a 600-mile journey to camps in Syria.

The Armenian Film Foundation archive contains testimony from 400 Armenian genocide survivors, recorded between 1972 and 2005, including the story of Haroute Aivazian, who was age 10 when the genocide began.

His account, recorded in 1993 in Britain, was archived by the University of Southern California Shoah Foundation, a nonprofit that compiles audio-visual interviews with survivors of the Holocaust and other genocides.

Aivazian said that even though his father had served in the Ottoman army, authorities still confiscated his family’s vineyard in the town of Marash and deported the family. His mother, knowing they might be marched to their deaths, dropped off Haroute and his brother in an orphanage built by German missionaries for Armenian children.

Later, Haroute’s father returned to Marash to learn that his wife had been deported to Iskenderun in Turkey. Many didn’t survive the harsh winter conditions, though Haroute’s mother was an exception.

“Even though I did survive, we lost something very precious, something which is the birthright of every person, childhood. We lost our childhood, and even now I have nightmares about it,” Haroute says in his account.

Descendants of survivors also have documented their families’ stories.

In 2016, Nouritza Matossian, a British-Armenian, told the BBC that her family was among those deported from Gaziantep in Turkey to Deir ez-Zour in Syria. “Driven across these deserts starving, without water, stripped naked, their clothes were torn off their backs everything was taken from them,” said Matossian.

About 100,000 descendants of deported Armenians still lived in Syria before the 2011 civil war broke out between rebels and the Bashar Assad regime.

Hundreds of news articles reporting on the Armenian genocide were published between 1915 and 1923, including in U.S. newspapers like The New York Times and The Washington Post. Many of those articles described the horrific treatment of Armenians.

In the 1916 Oregon Journal report, the paper’s correspondent wrote that men were simply assassinated en masse, while the elderly, women and children were dispatched to the Syrian desert.

“The tortured progress of these unfortunates, at the mercy of their brutal gendarme escorts who attacked them on the road, affords one of the most poignant pages in history,” the story said.

An archive of photographs, most collected by the Armenian National Institute in Washington, visually documents the atrocities Armenians suffered.

In 1920, after the Ottomans’ demise, the Soviet Red Army invaded Armenia and local communists took power. Only after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in late 1991 did Armenia gain independence.

Now, Azerbaijan has close ties with Turkey and a hostile relationship with neighboring Armenia due to a dispute over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

In a breakout of armed hostilities between Azerbaijan and Armenia two years ago, hundreds of soldiers have been killed on both sides. Nagorno-Karabakh officials said 1,177 of their troops and 50 civilians were killed. The United Nations children’s agency said 130,000 civilians have been displaced.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a predominantly Armenian area. The Soviets had established the region as autonomous, but in 1988 the region’s legislature decided to join Armenia.

The International Association of Genocide Scholars reports that more than 1 million people were killed in the Armenian genocide, based on numerous studies.

“We want to underscore that it is not just Armenians who are affirming the Armenian Genocide but it is the overwhelming opinion of scholars who study genocide,” the IAGS wrote in 2005 in a letter to Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was then Turkey’s prime minister and is now president.

https://www.polygraph.info/a/fact-check-azerbaijan-armenia/31825356.html

Georgian FM, Armenian President discuss “close friendly ties”, positive cooperation dynamics

   AGENDA
    Georgia – May 1 2022

Agenda.ge, 1 May 2022 – 15:28, Tbilisi,Georgia

Georgian-Armenian friendly ties and positive dynamics in “all areas of bilateral cooperation” were discussed on Saturday in a meeting between the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Georgia Ilia Darchiashvili and the President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturian.

Darchiashvili thanked the Armenian President for the “high interest and actions” expressed concerning further deepening of relations between the two countries, the Georgian foreign office said.

Darchiashvili and Khachaturian praised the “close friendly relations” between the two countries in the meeting.

The top Georgian diplomat extended his gratitude to the President for his “unwavering support” for Georgia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and stressed the importance of peace and stability for the “sustainable development” of the South Caucasus region.

https://agenda.ge/en/news/2022/1522

David Babayan: The people of Artsakh are ready to establish good neighborly relations with Azerbaijan, but will never be under Azerbaijani slavery

ARMINFO
Armenia –
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. The people of Artsakh are ready to establish good neighborly relations with Azerbaijan, but they will never agree to be under Azerbaijani jurisdiction as slaves, and even more so to turn into a concentration camp. Artsakh Foreign  Minister David Babayan stated this in an interview with ArmInfo in  response to today’s statement by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev  that he considers the inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh to be citizens  of Azerbaijan.

Babayan drew attention to the fact that the population of the NKR has  always opposed being under Azerbaijani jurisdiction. Recalling that  Nagorno-Karabakh was forcibly annexed to the Azerbaijan SSR in the  Soviet years, the communist party leadership did not take into  account the opinion of the population, the Artsakh Foreign Minister  stressed that even then Stepanakert retained sovereignty on many  issues.

The head of the Karabakh Foreign Ministry noted that it was the  unwillingness to live under the jurisdiction of Azerbaijan that from  year to year raised a wave of discontent, which ultimately resulted  in the 1988 Karabakh liberation movement.

Meanwhile, when asked how he views Aliyev’s statement today that  allegedly “positive impulses are coming from the Karabakh Armenians  and initial contacts have already begun,” Babayan noted that speaking  about the Karabakh-Azerbaijani settlement, a number of important  aspects should be clearly fixed.

“The key one is that we do not consider this conflict as a conflict  between the Armenian and Azerbaijani peoples. It is clear that the  population of Artsakh does not have hatred for the Azerbaijani  people. The problem here is the policy of the Azerbaijani state,  which openly conducts anti-Armenian propaganda with elements of  fascism, sows hatred towards everything Armenian. We are well aware  that we will not be at war with Azerbaijan forever, and we are ready  to establish good-neighborly relations if the Azerbaijani authorities  give up their policy,” Babayan said.

According to him, one thing is now clear that the Azerbaijani  authorities are pursuing a genocidal policy aimed at the  dearmenization of our homeland – Artsakh.

“The shortest and best way to resolve the Karabakh-Azerbaijani  conflict on the part of Azerbaijan is to establish good-neighborly  relations, the opportunity to be good neighbors. However,  hatred  agains Armenians in Azerbaijan is cultivated at the highest level,  the Armenian spiritual and cultural heritage is being destroyed,”  Babayan said, noting that such a recent manifestation was the  desecration of an Armenian church in occupied Hadrut a few days ago.

It should be noted that today Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said  that Azerbaijan considers the Armenians living in Karabakh to be its  citizens. At the same time, he added that positive impulses are being  received from the Karabakh Armenians and primary contacts have  already begun. As Aliyev said, “within the framework of the  Azerbaijani state, Karabakh Armenians may develop economically, feel  more secure and comfortable.” However, i in his opinion n the first  place, it is necessary to give up “separatist sentiments and accept  the realities.” Aliyev also pointed out that in the near future  hundreds of thousands of Azerbaijanis will return to Kalbajar,  Lachin, Shushi, Aghdam and the Armenians should live with them “in an  atmosphere of neighborhood.” 

Artsakh FM, students of Armenian Foreign Ministry’s Diplomatic School discuss Azerbaijani- Karabakh conflict

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 13:23,

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, ARMENPRESS. On April 26, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Artsakh David Babayan received the delegation of students of the Diplomatic School of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia headed by the School Director, Ambassador Vahe Gabriyelian, the Artsakh Foreign Ministry said in a news release.

Issues related to global and regional processes, the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict, the foreign policy of the two Armenian Republics and a range of other topics were discussed during the meeting.

The Minister highly appreciated the place and role of the Diplomatic School in training Armenian diplomats, noting with satisfaction that a large number of Artsakh diplomats also attended professional courses at the school.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/26/2022

                                        Tuesday, 
Families Of Fallen Soldiers Demand Pashinian’s Prosecution
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia -- The parents of Armenian soldiers killed in the 2020 war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh protest in Yerevan, .
The parents and other relatives of Armenian soldiers killed during the 2020 war 
in Nagorno-Karabakh demonstrated in Yerevan on Tuesday to demand criminal 
charges against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
The protest stems from remarks which Pashinian made in the Armenian parliament 
on April 13 in response to continuing opposition criticism of his handling of 
the devastating war that left at least 3,800 Armenian soldiers dead.
“They say now, ‘Could they have averted the war?’” he told lawmakers. “They 
could have averted the war, as a result of which we would have had the same 
situation, but of course without the casualties.”
The remarks angered the families of some of the fallen soldiers. They said that 
Pashinian publicly admitted deliberately sacrificing thousands of lives and must 
be held accountable for that.
A group of them submitted a formal “crime report” to Armenia’s Office of the 
Prosecutor-General on April 18. Prosecutor-General Artur Davtian said afterwards 
that although he does not think that the prime minister admitted to any crime he 
forwarded the report to another law-enforcement agency which is investigating 
senior government and military officials’ actions during the six-week war.
Davtian addressed on Tuesday more than a hundred relatives of fallen soldiers 
who rallied outside the prosecutors’ headquarters after marching through the 
center of Yerevan.
“If we had ceded parts of our homeland without a fight, should have there also 
been an indictment by the same logic?” he told the angry protesters, questioning 
their demands.
Armenia - Armenian flags fly by the graves of soldiers killed during the 2020 
war in Nagorno-Karabakh, January 28, 2022.
The protesters were not convinced by that argument. They jeered the country’s 
chief prosecutor as he made his way back into the building.
“None of us is satisfied with what we heard,” said one woman who lost her son 
during the war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire in November 2020.
“What was Pashinian afraid of [before the war?]” asked the father of another 
fallen soldier. “Of being called a traitor? They now say worse things about him.”
Virtually all Armenian opposition groups hold Pashinian responsible for 
Armenia’s defeat in the war with Azerbaijan. For his part, Pashinian has put the 
blame on former Presidents Robert Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian, who now lead 
two of those groups.
Kocharian ruled Armenia from 1998-2008, while Sarkisian, his successor, lost 
power more than two years before the outbreak of the hostilities.
Erdogan Accuses Turkish-Armenian Politician Of Treason
        • Tatevik Sargsian
Armenia - Garo Paylan, an ethnic Armenian member of Turkey's parliament, arrives 
for an Armenia-Diaspora conference in Yerevan, 18Sep2017.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has strongly condemned an ethnic Armenian 
member of Turkey’s parliament for demanding that Ankara officially recognize the 
1915 Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire.
Erdogan said that a corresponding parliamentary resolution drafted by the 
opposition lawmaker, Garo Paylan, amounts to high treason.
The resolution not only calls for a formal recognition of the genocide but also 
says that the Turkish authorities must rename streets bearing the names of 
Ottoman masterminds of the genocide and offer Turkish citizenship to Armenian 
descendants of its survivors.
Paylan circulated the measure ahead of the 107th anniversary of the slaughter of 
an estimated 1.5 million Armenians marked on Sunday. Speaker Mustafa Sentop 
refused to include it on the parliament agenda.
Paylan’s initiative provoked a storm of criticism from other senior Turkish 
officials as well as a spokesman for the ruling AKP party.
“We regard as clear treason the manifestation of such brazenness in this body 
symbolizing the expression of national will,” Erdogan said after chairing a 
cabinet meeting in Ankara on Monday.
Erdogan said that the Turkish authorities will take “appropriate actions” 
against Paylan. But he did not clarify whether the 49-year-old lawmaker 
representing the pro-Kurdish opposition party HDP will face criminal charges.
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan addresses the media after a cabinet meeting in 
Ankara, Turkey, December 20, 2021.
The authorities have for years tried to strip Paylan of his parliamentary 
immunity from prosecution.
Speaking to the CNN-Turk TV channel, Paylan described the furious reaction to 
his initiative as unprecedented. He said that similar resolutions drafted by in 
the past did not cause such a government outcry.
“I haven’t changed, which means that Turkey has,” he said, adding that Erdogan’s 
government is no longer willing to tolerate public actions challenging the 
official Turkish version of the events of 1915.
Turkey -- Human rights activists hold placards picturing Armenian intellectuals, 
detained and executed in 1915, during a rally in Istanbul, April 24, 2016
The HDP is the only major Turkish party to have recognized the World War One-era 
mass killings of Armenians as genocide.
Successive Turkish governments have denied a premeditated government effort to 
exterminate Ottoman Turkey’s Armenian population. Erdogan alleged in 2019 that 
Armenians themselves massacred Muslim civilians and that their mass deportations 
to a Syrian desert was “the most reasonable action that could be taken” by the 
Ottoman government.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu underscored Ankara’s stance on 
Saturday when he publicly made a hand gesture associated with the Turkish 
ultranationalist group Gray Wolves during a visit to Uruguay. Cavusoglu gestured 
to members of the South American country’s Armenian community demonstrating 
outside the Turkish Embassy in the capital Montevideo.
Armenia Said To Seek ‘Strategic’ Ties With Iran
Iran - New Armenian Ambassador Arsen Avagian hands his credentials to Iranian 
President Ebrahim Raisi, Tehran, .
Armenia has reportedly communicated to Iran its desire to turn relations between 
the two neighboring states into strategic partnership.
According to an Iranian government statement, Arsen Avagian, the new Armenian 
ambassador in Tehran, made this clear after handing his credentials to Iran’s 
President Ebrahim Raisi on Monday.
“Armenia is ready to raise relations between the two countries to the level of 
strategic relations,” Raisi’s office quoted Avagian as saying.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry said Avagian told Raisi that he will do his best 
to help deepen Armenian-Iranian ties. A ministry statement on their conversation 
made no references to Yerevan’s desire to make those ties “strategic.”
Raisi was cited by his office as noting “potentials for the development of 
friendly, long-lasting relations between Tehran and Yerevan.” He said that 
Tehran supports the territorial integrity of states.
Raisi emphasized that support in a January phone call with Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian. “In this regard, Tehran supports the sovereignty of Armenia over all 
territories and roads passing through that country,” he said at the time.
Armenia and Azerbaijan are to reopen their border to commercial and passenger 
traffic under the terms of a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped their 
six-week war for Nagorno-Karabakh in November 2020. The deal specifically 
commits Yerevan to opening rail and road links between Azerbaijan and its 
Nakhichevan exclave.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has repeatedly claimed that it envisages an 
exterritorial land corridor that would pass through Armenia’s Syunik province 
bordering Iran. Armenian leaders have dismissed his claims, saying that 
Azerbaijani citizens and cargo cannot be exempt from Armenian border controls.
Some Iranian officials accused Aliyev last fall of seeking to effectively strip 
Iran of a common border with Armenia. Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein 
Amir-Abdollahian likewise warned that any “changes in the region’s map” are 
unacceptable to the Islamic Republic.
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.
 

Armenian businesses invested $242m in Moscow over past 5 years

PanArmenian
Armenia –

PanARMENIAN.Net – Businesses from Armenia have invested $242 million in Moscow’s economy over the past 5 years, the Moscow City News Agency reports, citing official data.

According to Vice Mayor Vladimir Yefimov, investments from the EAEU countries in Moscow’s economy have grown 2.6 times over five years.

“According to the latest data from the Central Bank of Russia, the overall volume of investments from EAEU countries in the economy of Moscow amounted to $2.8 billion. Of these, $1.6 billion (almost 60%) came from Kazakhstan, $820 million from Belarus, $242 million from Armenia, $60 million from Kyrgyzstan,” Yefimov said.

For the period from October 2020 to September 2021, investments from Armenian businesses grew by 9.6%.

The EAEU (Eurasian Economic Union) is an economic union of post-Soviet states, which includes Armenia, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.