Former Mayor of Yerevan Hayk Marutyan announces re-election bid

 12:15, 8 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. Former Mayor of Yerevan Hayk Marutyan has announced that he will run again for mayor.

Citizens of Yerevan will head to the polls on September 17 to elect a City Council, which will then elect a mayor.

Marutyan served as Mayor of Yerevan from 2018 until 2021, when he lost a no-confidence vote.

The actor-turned-politician announced his re-election bid in a video message released Tuesday.

6 political parties have announced participation in the upcoming election. The ruling Civil Contract party’s candidate in the upcoming polls is Deputy Mayor Tigran Avinyan.

Viktor Mnatsakanyan, a former city official who oversaw the Kentron administrative district, is also running for mayor.

Other candidates include Mane Tandilyan from the Aprelu Yerkir party, MP Andranik Tevanyan from the Mother Armenia movement, Natalya Arzakantsyan and city councillor Davit Khajakyan.

U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee staffers witness Azeri blockade of Lachin Corridor during Armenia trip

 14:58, 8 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Senator Robert Menendez, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations has sent a delegation of two committee staffers to Armenia.

Senate Committee on Foreign Relations representatives Sarah Arkin and Damian Murphy conducted the visit at the instruction of Senator Menendez.

On August 7, Arkin and Murphy met with Syunik Governor Robert Ghukasyan and Goris Mayor Arush Arushanyan and became acquainted with the situation on the borders of Syunik Province, Azerbaijan’s encroachments against the sovereign territory of Armenia, the blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh and the resulting humanitarian disaster, the Syunik Governor’s Office said in a statement.

The delegation also visited the village of Kornidzor and witnessed the closed Lachin Corridor and absence of traffic.

The U.S. Senate representatives also inspected the Armenian humanitarian convoy which is unable to enter the Lachin Corridor and deliver emergency aid to the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since late 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. Moreover, Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations.

On July 26, Armenia sent a humanitarian convoy carrying emergency food and medication for Nagorno-Karabakh, but Azerbaijan blocked the trucks at the entrance of Lachin Corridor.

Armenian battalion blessed for war in Moscow in presence of organiser of groups inciting violence on Euromaidan

July 5 2023

In Moscow, the Armenian ARBAT battalion was “blessed” for the war against Ukraine, and the ceremony was attended by the person involved in the murder of Ukrainian journalist and Euromaidan participant Viacheslav Veremii.

Source: ZN.ua and Russian Telegram channels

Details: A blessing ceremony was held in the Armenian Apostolic Church in Moscow for the fighters of newly-created Armenian battalion ARBAT on their way to Donbas.

Russian Telegram channels posted photos and videos of the ceremony. The pictures were reposted on Facebook by Azerbaijani military expert Agil Rustamzade.

On them the crime lord Armen Sarkisian (Armen Horlivskyi), who is suspected of having organised the “titushky” [hired thugs used to incite violence on 2014 Maidan protests to get protesters arrested – ed.]. and “death squads” that hunted participants in the Revolution of Dignity in Ukraine.

Hayk Gasparyan and Armen “Horlovskyi” (in the middle) during the “blessing” of the Armenian ARBAT Battalion in Moscow

Armenian ARBAT Battalion blessed in Armenian Apostolic Church in Moscow

Since 24 February 2022, Sarkisian has been looting and extorting money from companies on the territory temporarily occupied by Russians. His main task was to create a new private military company, which was to be sponsored by the Russian-Armenian businessman Samvel Karapetyan, who was also at the ceremony.

Akhra Avidzba (Abkhaz), the commander of the so-called Wild Division of Donbas, said that it will be a full-fledged battalion that will fight under the Armenian flag.

Ahra Avidzba (Abhaz), Commander of “Wild Division of Donbas”

The commander of the Arbat battalion, Hayk Gasparyan (Abrek), admitted that he gained combat experience in the Wagner Group.

The investigation into the Veremii case named Sarkisyan as one of the organisers of the titushky gangs and death squads that hunted the participants of the Revolution of Dignity. Yuri Krysin, who was convicted for attacking the journalist, testified against him.

According to Krysin, he received US$20,000 from Sarkisian for terrorising the activists. He later recanted his testimony.

Armenpress: Armenian Secretary of Security Council to meet White House National Security Advisor in Washington D.C.

 09:56, 3 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 3, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan will visit Washington D.C. on July 4 to meet with White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and other U.S. government officials.

The Armenia-U.S. bilateral cooperation will be discussed during the meetings, Grigoryan’s office said in a press release.

Blinken Sees Progress In Armenia, Azerbaijan Talks

BARRON’S

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Thursday that Azerbaijan and Armenia made progress during three days of negotiations and voiced hope for an accord despite a flare-up in violence.

The adversaries’ foreign ministers met at a State Department office in suburban Washington and also went to the White House to see Jake Sullivan, the national security advisor, in the latest US-led mediation.

Closing the talks, Blinken said the two sides had made “further progress” on “the objective of reaching an overall final agreement in the weeks and months ahead” on Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway region under effective Armenian control.

“I think there’s also a clear understanding on everyone’s part that the closer you get to reaching an agreement, in some cases the harder it gets because by definition, the most difficult issues are left for the end,” Blinken said.

Blinken saluted the “candor, openness, directness” between Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov, who traveled to the US capital for the second time in as many months for talks.

The European Union has also been mediating at the level of leaders between the former Soviet republics, stepping into diplomacy where Russia has historically been the chief broker.

With Moscow bogged down by its invasion of Ukraine, Armenia has repeatedly accused Russian peacekeepers of failing to live up to promises to protect ethnic Armenians in line with a Kremlin-brokered ceasefire that ended major fighting in 2020.

While the foreign ministers were visiting in Washington, four Armenian separatist fighters died in renewed Azerbaijani firing, according to the rebels.

Tensions have soared over a months-long blockade of the only land corridor that connects Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, with accounts of food and medicine shortages.

Chess: Armenia wins European Pair Blitz Chess Championship

CHESSBASE
June 20 2023
by ChessBase
  
6/20/2023 – The Armenian team emerged victorious at the European Pair Blitz Chess Championship, which took place in Kraków on Monday. The Armenian pair, women’s tournament winner Elina Danielian and the open event runner-up Shant Sargsyan, finished ahead of the teams from the Netherlands (Elina Roebers and Benjamin Bok) and Azerbaijan (Gunay Mammadzada and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov). | Photos: Walusza Fotografia

Press release by the International Chess Federation

The Armenian team emerged victorious at the European Pair Blitz Chess Championship, which took place in Kraków on Monday. The Polish team of Oliwia Kiołbasa and Jan-Krzysztof Duda placed fourth. The Championship was an accompanying competition to the 2023 European Games and one of the biggest chess events of the year in Poland. 

The Armenian pair, women’s tournament winner Elina Danielian and the open event runner-up Shant Sargsyan, finished ahead of the teams from the Netherlands (Elina Roebers and Benjamin Bok) and Azerbaijan (Gunay Mammadzada and Shakhriyar Mamedyarov). The Polish duo tied for fourth place with Romania. They were followed in the standings by Spain, Israel and Ukraine.

Elina Danielian and Shant Sargsyan


Poland’s number one player, Jan-Krzysztof Duda, scored an impressive 5½/7 in the qualifying round but lost in both the semifinal and the final, finishing fourth in the open category. His compatriot Oliwia Kiołbasa came seventh in the women’s tournament.

“I cannot be happy with myself, as it evidently was not my day. It is a shame; I certainly expected more. I am glad so many fans came to the Kraków Opera House to support us. I am very grateful, and it was nice of them,” Kiołbasa said.

Indeed, the tournament was a real success, as hundreds of chess enthusiasts filled the audience in the Kraków Opera House. Many of them were young aspiring chess players, who came to observe the champions.

“It is a great moment, not just for Polish chess, but for the game on the European and global scale, for the tournament to be associated with the European Games. We believe chess will one day become part of the Olympic family; since we have no doubt that chess is a sport, and a very beautiful one. I am happy the event is taking place in Poland, as Polish chess is a part of the global elite. Poland loves the game; it is evident, and Jan-Krzysztof Duda is one of the faces of the 2023 European Games. Poland is a great chess nation, with competitors at a very high level,” said Dana Reizniece-Ozola, the Deputy Chair of the FIDE Management board and the first vice-president of the European Chess Union. Both these bodies greatly contributed to the organization of the Championship in Kraków.

Łukasz Turlej, FIDE Secretary General, believes that holding the European Pair Blitz Championships as an accompanying event to the European Games is an excellent opportunity for the game.

“It is a big deal for chess, not just in Poland, but also globally, since the Games in Kraków is the biggest sport events in the world this year. The chess championship held in conjunction with the Games and starting them off is a great distinction and an opportunity. It is special for a chess player to be one of the ambassadors of the Games. Jan-Krzysztof Duda is highly regarded in Kraków. Here he is very popular, which is a source of great joy for the entire chess community,” Turlej stated.

The tournament’s sponsors included Superbet, the Superbet Foundation and Mokate, all of which are strongly involved in promoting the royal game in Poland.

At the official opening, Janusz Kozioł, plenipotentiary of the mayor of Kraków for the development of physical culture and deputy CEO of the 2023 European Games, stated that Kraków wishes to present itself as a good host of major chess events. 

“It is no secret I am on good terms with the president of the European governing body and the secretary general of the global federation, and we are convinced it is necessary to take the next steps, organizing more major chess tournaments. It is much easier to make these decisions when you have a leader like Jan-Krzysztof Duda. That makes these decisions understandable to all,” Kozioł said.

Kamila Kałużna-Turcza, head of the Małopolska Chess Association and the main organizer of the Championship, echoed this sentiment:

The entire team has come a long way before we could meet in the Kraków Opera House. I am very satisfied looking at the end result. The European Pair Blitz Championship is the next step towards Kraków’s hosting more important chess tournaments. Yes, together with the city of Kraków and our friends from the Silesian Chess Association, we have plans. In 2024 we would like to host the World Team Championships.



Azerbaijan again fires at under-construction plant in Armenian village

Panorama
Armenia – June 20 2023

A smelting plant under construction in the Armenian border village of Yeraskh has again come under Azerbaijani fire, the Defense Ministry of Armenia reports.

“On June 20, at 4:30 p.m., the Azerbaijani armed forces opened fire from different caliber small arms targeting the metallurgical plant in Yeraskh, which is being built with foreign investment,” the ministry said in a statement.

Energy, Food Shortages In Karabakh As Baku Blocks Aid Convoys

BARRON’S
  • FROM AFP NEWS

With energy shortages worsening and store shelves going bare, concern grows over a deepening humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh after Azerbaijan blocked aid convoys to the breakaway region.

“Our road of life has been closed, we have no electricity,” Liana Atayan, a 47-year-old resident of the region’s main city, Stepanakert, told AFP.

“There is no gas, no food, what kind of situation is that?” said Atayan. “Our children, our elderly people and pregnant women don’t have access to fruit and vegetables.”

Locals reported new shortages of food and medicine after the International Committee of the Red Cross said Azerbaijan blocked access to Karabakh last week.

Azerbaijan’s Armenian-populated region of Karabakh has been at the centre of a decades-long territorial dispute between the Caucasus arch-foes.

Since last December Karabakh has been hit by a humanitarian crisis when Azerbaijani activists blocked a key road to protest illegal mining.

Azerbaijan insisted that civilian transport and aid convoys could go through the Lachin corridor unimpeded.

But on Monday the Armenian branch of the Red Cross said it could no longer bring humanitarian supplies to the disputed territory including medicines and transportation of ill patients had been also suspended.

Nelly Khachatryan, 62, said the city had not received any humanitarian aid for days.

“Things are very difficult,” she said.

Slavik Seinyan, a taxi driver, said he could no longer work and support his family due to shortages of fuel.

“What should I do? Tell me what I should do,” he said. “I am 70 years old.”

Authorities have introduced electricity rationing, and 28-year-old Ruzanna Tadevosyan fears the situation will deteriorate further.

“There is a possibility that we will spend even more hours without electricity,” she said.

“We have no gas and caring for children in these conditions is very complicated.”

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan  has claimed the blockade was aimed at forcing ethnic Armenians to leave Karabakh, describing it as part of Azerbaijan’s “policy of ethnic cleansing.”

The two former Soviet republics have fought two wars for control of Karabakh, in the 1990s and again in 2020.

Six weeks of fighting in autumn 2020 ended with a Russian-sponsored ceasefire that saw Armenia cede swathes of territories it had controlled for decades.

There have been frequent clashes at the two countries’ shared border despite talks between Baku and Yerevan under the mediation from the European Union and United States.

Marietta Avanesyan, 65, said she saw “no end in sight” for the mounting troubles of the Karabakh people.

“How can we overcome these difficulties?”

str-im/as/pvh

Armenian Film Society announces casting call

The Armenian Film Society has announced an open casting call for an Oscar-nominated writer/director and Oscar-nominated producers in search of Armenian actors for an upcoming feature film drama based on actual events.

The roles being cast are:

Mariam (Principal)

Mariam (Armenian-Iraqi, 50s) is a tough, resourceful woman who has experienced great loss, namely, the death of her two sons and husband in a tragic accident after the 2003 American invasion of Iraq. Before the war, Mariam was a high school literature teacher. She’s intelligent with a wry sense of humor and unfailingly direct/honest, perhaps to a fault. About her job, Mariam liked to say: “I love the books… but not the kids.” When we first meet Mariam in the story, the war is a week old, and she makes the best of it with her husband, two grown sons, and daughter, Nora, at their home – until tragedy strikes. We re-meet Mariam about fifteen years later, living in Glendale, California with her daughter and her children. She has slowed down considerably over the years. She finds the noise and motion of the house difficult to handle, often shushing the children or walking away inexplicably as someone speaks to her. Mariam passes the days knitting or reading scripture, anything to just keep going and forget her losses. But someone from her past reaches out and she must re-confront everything that happened in Iraq.

Note: Actors auditioning for Mariam must speak Western Armenian, Iraqi Arabic and English, and be able to play Mariam over the span of 15 years (early 50s in Iraq; mid 60s in US).

Nora (Supporting)

Nora (Armenian-Iraqi, late 20s / early 30s, daughter of Mariam) is a good-humored, resilient, if at times stubborn young woman. She is a deep well and has navigated the loss of her father and brothers with grace. When we first meet Nora, it’s the early days of the war and she is in her twenties. To pass the days, she helps her mother clean and cook, talks on the phone with friends and plays cards with her brothers. Nora is outspoken within the family and not afraid of a fight. She bickers often with her father, disagreeing with his decisions about how to handle the family’s life/affairs during wartime. When we re-meet Nora many years later, she is married and a mother of two boys. She and her husband fight often, but they like it this way. They are both equal-parts stubborn and playful. Nora is the center of her family’s new life in Glendale, filling a role that belonged to her Mom in Baghdad.

Note: Actors auditioning for Nora must speak Western Armenian, Iraqi Arabic and English, and be able to play Nora over the span of 15 years (early 20s in Iraq; late 30s in the US).

Submissions are being accepted from both actors and non-actors. All must be able to speak both Western Armenian and Iraqi Arabic. 

Please email [email protected] with a brief video introduction. This should be in English and up to one minute in length with a brief introduction about yourself to give the filmmakers a sense of who you are.