In Artsakh, the already scarce stocks of medicines and medical supplies are decreasing day by day. Ministry of Artsakh

 19:31,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Due to the complete blocking of the Lachin Corridor by Azerbaijan, it was not possible to organize the planned transfer of 102 medical patients and their relatives (52 from Artsakh to Armenia, 50 from Armenia to Artsakh) during the two days, ARMENPRESS reports, the Artsakh Ministry of Health said in a message.

“Due to the Azerbaijani provocation that took place on the Artsakh-Armenia border on June 15, near the Hakari bridge, at the illegal Azerbaijani checkpoint in the Kashatagh (Lachin) corridor, among all humanitarian transportation, the two-way movement of Artsakh medical patients under the mediation of the International Committee of the Red Cross has been banned since yesterday, as a result of which within two days, it was not possible to organize the planned transfer of 102 people (52 from Artsakh to Armenia, 50 from Armenia to Artsakh),” the message states.

The Artsakh Ministry of Health reminded that on June 15 ICRC vehicles were transporting 25 medical patients and their relatives to Armenia, but at the illegal checkpoint operating in the Kashatagh corridor, the Azerbaijani side prohibited their further movement, as a result of which the vehicles returned to Stepanakert, at the same time not being able to organize a trip from Goris to Stepanakert, preventing the return of 25 medical patients and their relatives to Artsakh. And on June 16, it was also planned to transfer 27 medical patients and their relatives to Armenian professional medical centers to receive immediate medical care, as well as the return of 25 medical patients and their relatives to Artsakh.

The Artsakh Ministry of Health also notes that due to the disruption of all humanitarian shipments, naturally, the limited supplies of medicine and other medical supplies to Artsakh, which were carried out exclusively by the Red Cross, have also completely stopped.

“As a result, the already scarce supplies in medical facilities are being reduced day by day, putting the proper medical care of citizens at additional risk,” the message says.

Ex-Armenian PM warns against handover of ‘enclaves’ to Azerbaijan

Panorama
Armenia – June 6 2023

There is no legal ground for the handover of “enclaves” to Azerbaijan, Armenia’s former Prime Minister Vazgen Manukyan claims, warning it would clear the way for renewed war within Armenia’s territory.

“The existence of the enclaves was not stipulated by any Soviet law. They were once handed over to Azerbaijan by the consent of the local leadership. Accordingly, it has no legal force. They are de-jure Armenian territories,” the politician said in a statement on Tuesday.

“The handover of enclaves to the enemy will create more favorable conditions and temptation for them to continue the war on Armenia’s territory. As a result, the peace treaty will become a war treaty,” Manukyan warned.

Separately, he rejected the “absurd” claims that surrendering Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to Azerbaijan would open up an era of peace in the region.

“The mere fact that Armenia, regardless of the principle of territorial integrity, does not defend and promote the Artsakh people’s right to self-determination and independence humiliates us before the whole world. How can we live like this?” the politician wrote.

Manukyan urged the military and law enforcement authorities to protect the state.

“You did not take an oath to protect Nikol Pashinyan, but to protect the homeland, state, Constitution and laws. Nikol Pashinya’s activities and plans, first of all, run counter to the Armenian Constitution and laws, thus his rule is already illegitimate,” the former PM said, accusing Pashinyan of treason.

“I urge the law enforcement agencies to keep a close eye on the developments in the country and to stop the state crime in time to be ready to join the larger part of the people who are resisting the national and state crime and are trying to prevent a national disaster and disgrace,” reads the statement.

Azerbaijani, Armenian and Georgian will meet again in Berlin – the series "Dolma Diaries" continues

June 2 2023
  • JAMnews

New episodes of the Dolma Diaries

Work has begun on new episodes of the comedy web series Dolma Diaries.

It tells about three young men – an Armenian, an Azerbaijani and a Georgian – living in a jointly rented apartment in Berlin. They are in Germany to study having received a scholarship, one of the prerequisites of which is “coexistence with an opponent.”

“I don’t see why we should not mock the mindset that makes war even an option” – Oliver Mueser, a producer for the web series „Dolma Diaries“

The series is filmed by a group of South Caucasian and German civic activists and media producers who see it as their task to ridicule stereotypes.

The pilot was released with the support of Friedrich Ebert Stiftung in the fall of 2022. And here are the main characters during filming:

“An online entertainment series is more likely to reach the hearts and minds of young people. Thus the idea arose to create a joint Armenian-Azerbaijani-Georgian comedy series that would resist the images of the enemy and show people with each other. Why not ridicule the mindset that allows for war as a possible solution to problems?” Oliver Muser, producer of the web series, says.

“The German Foreign Ministry liked the idea. They financed the development of the script, which we are working on together with Georgian, Armenian and Azerbaijani writers – Fazil Aliyev, Artem Petrosyan and Giorgi Javakhadze.”


  • “It would be funny if not for the war” – comedy series “Dolma Diaries” in Armenia
  • “Quality does not match the mission” – Azerbaijani opinions about “The Dolma Diaries”
  • “People want to get to know each other”: what Armenians and Azerbaijanis discuss in Caucasian Crossroads Facebook group
  • “They should know that we have an enemy” – children and the Karabakh conflict

The scriptwriters are at on several new episodes, which will appear by the end of 2023. All news will be on Instagram.

The team that is working on the series say that they would be very happy to receive any advice, suggestions and ideas from anyone who is interested. “We are looking for partnerships,” they say. You can send your messages on Instagram or by this email: 

AW: Magnificent Vision

The great bass horn of the steamship thundered over the din of the busy port city of Smyrna (lzmir, Turkey). A slight young woman, back straight, eyes tearing, was waving down to her family on the quay. It had been a long and difficult journey to reach this place and time.

Tokvor Topalian was the trainmaster of all Smyrna. He was a respected, powerful and wealthy man since Smyrna was the largest port city in the country, and nothing moved in or out of the port without his signature.

The third of Topalian’s five children was, as they say, the apple of his eye. Little Dicranouhi preferred to “read” and play with the books in her father’s library rather than with dolls like the other little girls. This disturbed her mother, for it was accepted that while a father’s place was to train the sons to be men, a mother’s role was to prepare the daughters to be homemakers and mothers themselves.

Members of the Topalian family, circa 1914-1915, including Dicranouhi’s father Tokvor, her mother and her three sisters. Her mother and the youngest sister pictured on the left, along with her brother (not pictured) were the only Genocide survivors who made it to the US.

The most education for girls in turn-of-the-century Smyrna was six to eight years. This was enough to keep the accounts of the household and supervise the servants. By the time Dicranouhi completed six years of elementary school, she was not only above and beyond all of the boys, she was at the top of the class. Topalian looked down at his daughter on that day asking, “What now, Dicky?”

“I would like to go to the French school, the Gymnasium,” she replied.

Four years later, upon returning home after graduation from this institution with honors, she presented the diploma to her stern, but proud, father.

“What now, Dicky?” he asked.

“I would like to go to the American University in Smyrna,” she responded.

“Daughter, your mother is going to be angry with us,” said her father.

Four years later, Dicranouhi, now a young woman, stood once again before the great oaken desk in her father’s library. They had just returned from the graduation ceremony where Dicky had delivered the valedictorian address.

“What now, Dicky?” came the familiar query.

“I would like to help people,” she told her father. “I would be a doctor.”

The portly patriarch stroked his Vandyke and rose behind the desk gazing at his dark-eyed daughter replying, “Well then, I suppose I will have to deal with your mother, won’t I?”

Topalian expended a great deal of his influence and power, not to mention some of his wealth, and the time arrived when he was standing in his carriage waving his gold-headed walking stick at his third child, sailing to a foreign land. Tears stole from his eyes into his trimmed beard as he thought of the cold, damp climate of England. The board of directors of the medical school of Manchester University had granted admission, contingent on performance.

Dicranouhi Topalian, Manchester University Medical School, circa 1915-1917

One day, at the very end of the second year of medical school, the housemistress at the residence handed Dicranouhi a letter from home. It was written by a longtime assistant to her father. Some two hours later when a classmate shook her and asked the reason for her sobbing, the house was filled with the wail of mourning. 

The Turks had gone on the rampage of ethnic cleansing. The Christian Armenians were put to the sword – the first genocide of the 20th century. All of her family was gone, dead. Her father was killed fighting at the front gate so that his family could flee from the rear. They were caught, beaten, raped, stabbed and shot. In that moment, the wealthy young woman became a penniless orphan.

Some weeks later, when the heat of the soul-shattering news cooled to the ashes of reality, Dicranouhi took stock of her prospects. Pressed by the demands of her limited assets, months later the arrangements were made. The authorities of the medical school, based on the training she had completed, granted her a license as a registered nurse. Some personal effects, such as jewelry, books and a microscope, were sold, and a second-class steam ticket to New York was purchased.

Dicranouhi pictured with her fellow nursing students (second from the right), circa early 1920s

When the ship dropped anchor in New York’s harbor, the young woman was ferried to Fort Clinton (Castle Clinton) at the base of Manhattan. It was the Battery for the first- and second-class passengers; Ellis Island for the lower classes, steerage.

It was good luck, or Providence, when a kindly old immigration officer, after hearing her tragic tale told her, “Lass, you get yourself up to the northern end of this island. On 187th Street around the corner of St. Nicholas Avenue, you will find an Armenian church. Those that you find there will help you.”

Many hours later, she found herself standing before an Armenian church. After leaving her baggage in the vestibule, she staggered up the aisle and, exhausted, collapsed into a pew. The sight of the familiar Eastern Orthodox altar and the comforting scent of incense swept over her like a soft blanket. Shortly after the beginning of a prayer of gratitude, she was draped over the back of the pew in front, sound asleep.

A gentle hand on her shoulder roused her. Seated at her side was a priest. No. Upon closer inspection of his hooded robe, there sat the bishop! Dicranouhi clutched his hand, kissed the ring and apologized for disturbing the holy man.

He listened to her story, and having learned her name, with a twinkle in his eye said, “If you can stand, take my arm and come with me.” They left the church, walked to the comer and crossed the broad expanse of St. Nicholas Avenue. A few feet to the south, he led her into a small shop. The tinkle of the little bell at the top of the door brought a man from the back room. For a moment, the two were frozen in silence, and then they flew into each other’s arms. It was her brother Michael. The happy noise brought yet another miracle from the back room: her mother and baby sister. Michael had been able to reach the waterfront with them and bribe his way onto a ship about to leave for New York. In the midst of the reunion, the hooded cleric boomed, “I expect to see you all in church, often, to thank God. He has surely smiled upon you this day.”

Within days of her taking up residence near her newly-found family, she was working as a nurse at the Jewish Memorial Hospital only two subway stops to the north. Making a new life settled down to working long hours, family, the church and the social life that came with it.

Dicranouhi, circa mid-1920s

Several years later, while sitting on the grass in Van Cortlandt Park watching a group of young men from the church playing soccer, one of them caught her eye. He was not the fastest nor the biggest nor the best. He was, however, the most persistent. Every time he was knocked down, he sprang up and charged his opponent once again. Over the following months, she learned that his drive to reach a goal was not limited to the soccer field; this man never quit. With this trait he pursued her, until she caught him.

I am the product of their union. It is my very good fortune that when each of them fled the Genocide, they both chose America as their new home and to wed. I can picture, even today, my mother striding forth in the traditional uniform of the registered nurse: the white dress, hose and shoes, the white cap – hers with the two black stripes of a supervisor – and, of course, the navy blue cape with the red piping. A magnificent vision that would have made her father proud.

George and Dicranouhi Kutnerian on their honeymoon in Atlantic City, NJ, 1933

Raffi G. Kutnerian was born (1936) and raised in NYC where he attended the city’s public schools and NYS Community College. Kutnerian joined the Army National Guard at age 17 ½ with the written permission of his parents. He was awarded a four-year scholarship to Columbia University School of Painting and Sculpture, from which he graduated in 1959. Kutnerian married his childhood sweetheart Louise Spodick at age 21; they were married for 62 years until her passing on September 17, 2020. After a career as a photo engraver, Kutnerian entered the court reporting business and retired after 25 years. He still resides in the home he shared with Louise in the Village of Rye Brook for the last 53 years and is learning to “play solo after playing duet for a lifetime.”


Armenia, Azerbaijan won’t sign peace treaty in Chisinau on June 1 — Pashinyan

 TASS 
Russia –
Nikol Pashinyan also commented on some statements by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, adding that Yerevan was starting to doubt Baku’s commitment to the agreements that were reached in Brussels on May 14

YEREVAN, May 29. /TASS/. Armenia and Azerbaijan haven’t yet agreed on a peace treaty that could be signed on the sidelines of the European Political Community summit in Chisinau on June 1, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the country’s parliament on Monday.

There was a discussion if the peace treaty could be signed when the European Council president, the French president, the German chancellor, the Azerbaijani president and Pashinyan meet in Chisinau, the Armenian prime minister said.

“I must say we haven’t received answers to the fourth package of our proposals to Azerbaijan. To date, there’s no agreed package that could be signed,” he said.

The Armenian prime minister also said that he was dissatisfied with the results of talks with Russia that took place in Moscow on May 25 regarding the lifting of the Lachin corridor blockade.

“I would like to note that one of the issues of the discussion was related to the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and the illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor. We discussed this issue with our colleagues from Russia. I cannot say that the results of this discussion are satisfactory. It is a very sad situation that the closure of the Lachin corridor occurred in the presence of Russian peacekeepers. We will continue negotiations with our Russian partners to resolve this situation,” he said.

Pashinyan also commented on some statements by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, adding that Yerevan was starting to doubt Baku’s commitment to the agreements that were reached in Brussels on May 14.

Putin hopes to discuss economic matters at meeting with leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan

 TASS 
Russia – May 25 2023
Conditions are in place “providing the basis to believe that relevant agreements, including as regards transport lines, can be reached between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” the Russian leader said at the meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council

MOSCOW, May 25. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin hopes that agreements “in the interests of economic development” will be reached at a trilateral meeting with Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev.

Conditions are in place “providing the basis to believe that relevant agreements, including as regards transport lines, can be reached between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” the Russian leader said at the meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council.

“I believe we can discuss all that today at the trilateral meeting. I hope [we] will manage to agree on what is resting – absolutely obviously – in the sphere of economic development for Azerbaijan, for Armenia, and for the entire region,” Putin said.

“It seems to me we will have time to discuss all that in the trilateral format,” the head of state stressed.

Armenpress: PM Pashinyan attends the foundation stone laying ceremony of the technological center to be constructed in Yerevan

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 20:35,

YEREVAN, MAY 23, ARMENPRESS.  Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan attended the groundbreaking ceremony of the “Dalan” technology center in Yerevan. The investment program is implemented with the support of the Armenian government and Enterprise Armenia Investment Support Fund, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister.

Those in charge for the project noted that the technology center will have 158,000 square meters. total area, will offer 3,000 jobs, will consist of 22 floors and will include 34,000 square meters of office space. The center will also include a scientific and educational center, an exhibition hall, a conference hall, an event hall, a hotel, etc. The investment program is estimated at 125 million USD.

TechnoPark is being built in accordance with BOMA International (Building Owners and Managers Association) standards, and the design and construction works are carried out in compliance with LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) requirements. The complex is a technologically well-equipped multifunctional center.

The representatives of the project thanked the Prime Minister for the support of the Government and the Enterprise Armenia Investment Support Fund and for the smooth implementation of the project.




No Azerbaijanis detained in Armenia for accidental trespassing after getting lost, says PM

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 15:04,

YEREVAN, MAY 22, ARMENPRESS. Armenia is not holding any Azerbaijanis who’ve trespassed into the country after getting lost, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said.

“I confirm that there is an understanding that soldiers and citizens who’ve appeared on the opposite side as a result of getting lost must be returned through a speedy procedure,” Pashinyan said at a press conference, referring to the agreements reached in Brussels. “But I also confirm that as of this moment there are no Azerbaijanis in Armenia who’ve appeared here as a result of getting lost. All Azerbaijanis who are now in Armenia have crossed the border consciously, knowing that they are trespassing the Armenian border,” Pashinyan said.

Any Azerbaijani crossing into Armenia as a result of getting lost will be released back to Azerbaijan through a speedy procedure, he added.

Asked whether or not he rules out releasing the two Azerbaijani servicemen currently jailed in Armenia for trespassing, one of whom is also accused of murdering a civilian in Syunik, Pashinyan said that the normalization of relations envisages difficult and important decisions, but not unilateral.

“Yes, we are ready to discuss, certainly after making legal procedures. Because on the other hand we can’t simply ignore the fact that a citizen of Armenia has been killed, but we are not violating anyone’s presumption of innocence too. The issue is under investigation,” Pashinyan said.

After a court verdict various solution are envisaged under legal proceedings, he said.

Police receive report on attempted kidnapping of Prime Minister’s son

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 16:42,

YEREVAN, MAY 17, ARMENPRESS. Police received a report on May 17 that an attempted kidnapping targeting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s son Ashot Pashinyan took place on Wednesday, a police spokesperson confirmed to ARMENPRESS.

“The police have received a report with that content. The documents will be sent to the Investigative Committee,” a police spokesperson told ARMENPRESS when asked to validate the newspaper reports.

The Armenian Times newspaper reported that Ashot Pashinyan suffered injuries in the attempted kidnapping. 

The attempted kidnapping happened near Ashot Pashinyan’s residence in Yerevan, according to the report.  

Ashot Pashinyan managed to escape.

According to the report, the kidnappers were members of an NGO called Call of Sons. They reportedly forced Ashot Pashinyan into their vehicle and drove off. At one point, when the vehicle stopped, the PM’s son jumped out of the vehicle and was hit by a car which was travelling behind, also belonging to members of the same organization.

China’s special envoy urges building of trust in two-day Ukraine visit

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 10:13,

YEREVAN, MAY 18, ARMENPRESS. A Chinese special envoy has stressed the need to build trust among all parties to the “Ukraine crisis” and create conditions for peace talks during a two-day visit to the country, Chinese state media reported citing a foreign ministry statement.

Li Hui, special representative of the Chinese government on Eurasian Affairs, met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and held separate talks with Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and other senior officials in Ukraine from Tuesday to Wednesday, CGTN reported citing a statement from the Chinese Foreign Ministry released on Thursday.

“There is no panacea to resolve the crisis,” said Li.

He called on all parties to make their own due efforts to build up mutual trust and create conditions for “ceasing the hostilities” and securing peace talks, CGTN reported.

The Chinese envoy is now on a trip to five countries – Ukraine, Poland, France, Germany and Russia – in a bid to “engage with various parties on the political settlement of the Ukraine crisis”.

The trip comes about two weeks after a phone call between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Zelenskyy, in which the Chinese leader renewed Beijing’s commitment to standing on the side of peace.