Armenia: new low emission buses arrive in Yerevan with EU support


Low floor, low emission buses have arrived in Armenia’s capital Yerevan, thanks to the European Union, its member states and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD).

The new greener, environmentally friendly fleet of 87 buses will improve the service for citizens and guests to the city by increasing the reliability, safety and efficiency of public transport.

Buses working on compressed natural gas were purchased for the city as part of the EU Economic and Investment Plan for the Eastern Partnership, launched in 2021 to stimulate jobs and growth, support connectivity and the green and digital transition in the region.

The donation was supported by the multilateral ‌E5P fund where the EU is the largest donor.

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Yerevan police officers get electric cruisers, bikes and Segways

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 11:32,

YEREVAN, MAY 26, ARMENPRESS. The Yerevan police force is now also using motorcycles, electric vehicles and Segway personal transporters in addition to its existing means of transportation.

The Patrol Police announced on May 26 that the use of the personal transporters allows officers to swiftly respond to any situation, especially in crowded areas.

[see video]

Armenian Military delegation visits Kansas

KSNW Wichita

WINFIELD, Kan. (KSNW) — Representatives from the Armenian Ministry of Defense were in south-central Kansas Friday.

They were guests of the Kansas National Guard touring the Kansas Veterans’ Home and Kansas Veterans’ Cemetery in Winfield. The group was there to learn about the Kansas Commission on Veterans Affairs Office (KCVAO) and its mission to serve Kansas veterans.

The group learned how the facility operates and the services they provide. They also attended a presentation from the KCVAO Mobile Services Unit, which travels across Kansas to assist veterans with VA benefits and claims.

Wichita Army veteran oversaw parts and equipment in Afghanistan

“The KCVAO was privileged and proud to share information about how we continue to pay tribute to and honor our Veterans through the many services we provide here in Kansas,” says Agency Director, Retired Brigadier General William Turner in a news release.

The delegation has spent the past four days in Kansas including a visit with Kansas Secretary of Agriculture Mike Beam; Kansas State University Research and Extension, Kansas AgrAbility Project; and several area Veterans Service Organizations. For more information about the Kansas – Armenia State Partnership Program, click here.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/armenian-military-delegation-visits-kansas/ar-AA1bKtqw

Armenia to host main EBRD event in 2024

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and government of Armenia have signed a Memorandum of Understanding, which lays the foundations for the 2024 EBRD Annual Meeting to take place in Yerevan on 14-16 May 2024.

The event will be the EBRD’s 33rd Annual Meeting and is the most important event in the Bank’s calendar. A central part is the meeting of the Board of Governors, the Bank’s highest decision-making body, assessing the Bank’s performance and setting future strategic directions.

The conference also includes the Business Forum, a gathering of business representatives, investors, government officials and media who engage in panel discussions and networking events. In addition, the Annual Meeting comprises a civil society programme, a donors’ meeting and other auxiliary events.

The event in 2024 is expected to attract up to 2,000 participants to Armenia.

The EBRD is one of the leading institutional investors in Armenia. It has invested around €2 billion across 206 projects, supporting private sector development and the energy, infrastructure, telecommunications, and financial sectors.

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Armenpress: Armenian Prime Minister arrives in Moscow

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 01:28,

YEREVAN, MAY 25, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his wife Anna Hakobyan have arrived in Russia.

They were welcomed at Moscow’s Vnukovo airport by Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin and other officials.

The Armenian Prime Minister will participate in the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council meeting on May 25, the Prime Minister’s Office reported.

During the visit PM Pashinyan will have a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. A separate trilateral meeting with Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev is also scheduled.

The Deadly Gap: Genocide Education and Artsakh’s Right to Survival

Papik and Tatik, Artsakh – (Photo: Eric Nazarian)

Special Issue: Genocide Education for the 21st Century
The Armenian Weekly, April 2023

Genocide education can have many purposes. Whatever the level and type of education (elementary school, graduate school, public education through events or museums), the most essential purpose cuts across all forms: to foster a conceptual framework in members of society that is sensitive to genocide in general and helps those members perceive emergent or occurring genocides when there is enough time to do something about them, especially cases that are being ignored or misconstrued by the media, political leaders, academics, and others. It should equip people with tools to recognize and reject denialism.

The stakes can be very high. Effective genocide education in the 1970s and 1980s could have supported a North American and European population that was ready to recognize the genocides in Bosnia and Rwanda for what they were and were committed to stopping them as soon as possible. It would have prepared that population for the denials, obfuscations and political maneuvering that in actual history meant the deaths of hundreds of thousands unnecessarily. 

With this in mind, I turn to Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh). The facts are simple. As Soviet Interior Minister, Stalin put the Armenian area within the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic, but gave it autonomy, as part of his architectural destabilization of minority groups in the Soviet Union as a means of ensuring all groups’ reliance on Moscow. Over the next six-plus decades, Azerbaijan made a major effort to de-develop Artsakh and reduce its Armenian population. By the mid-1980s, the Artsakh Armenian situation grew so dire that independence was the only path to survival. In 1988, this movement was met with wide-scale violence and repression of Armenians, including two massacres of Armenians in Azerbaijani cities outside Artsakh. With the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991, Azerbaijan launched a military attack on Artsakh in order to ethnically cleanse it of Armenians. Armenians resisted and by 1994 had reached a stalemate, with Artsakh in Armenian hands. The situation was relatively stable until the September 2020 invasion of Artsakh by Azerbaijan, with the results we are all familiar with. Most notable of the current facts is that Turkey was a full and decisive participant in the war, which was executed by a combined Turkish-Azerbaijani military force and extensive weapons, logistical and financial support from Turkey (for instance, in supplying thousands of mercenaries from among radical Islamists in Syria and Libya).

Why does genocide education matter in this case? Even if one looks at the facts, they do not convey the seriousness of Azerbaijani intentions and the potential impact for Armenians.  Proper genocide education includes both specific knowledge of the Armenian Genocide and an understanding of the processes that lead to genocide, how to evaluate genocidal rhetoric and intent and more. If education about the Armenian Genocide and genocidal processes were firmly in place in 1988, in 1991 and especially in 2020, then the well-funded and effective Azerbaijani disinformation campaign presenting itself as a victim and Armenians as demonic perpetrators would have been met with genuinely critical evaluations rather than almost mechanical parroting by political leaders and media outlets. The propaganda of think-tank journalists such as Thomas de Waal would have been met with skepticism rather than the credulity that has greeted his biased writing even in Armenian circles. Most importantly, the active military participation of Turkey in killing 5,000 Armenians, including many civilians, and drone attacks on civilians across Artsakh would have been met with international outrage as a reinitiation of unrepentant Turkey’s 1915 genocidal project, instead of being completely ignored and even supported in many circles. The clear statements from Turkish and Azerbaijani leaders of the intent to eliminate Armenians, not just from Artsakh but from the entire region, would not have been dismissed with the “politicians will be politicians” mantra or that such extreme rhetoric is just for domestic consumption and doesn’t really confirm in no uncertain terms genocidal intent. The brutality of attacks on Armenian civilians in conjunction with this rhetoric, and a proper framework for understanding Turkish-Azeri-Armenian relations, would have made it impossible not to see these as clear steps on the path to genocide, which would have triggered early-warning mechanisms and global attention to stop the impending genocide against Armenians. A blockade “[d]eliberately inflicting on the [the Armenians of Artsakh] conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part” (Method c of genocide execution as defined in the UN Genocide Convention) would be recognized as an act of genocide without any question.

We know how devastating the results have been of the lack of proper genocide education on the fate of Artsakh Armenians. Let us hope that in the future more effective genocide education will prevent these harms to Armenians and other future groups subjected to the risk of genocide.

Henry C. Theriault, Ph.D. is currently associate vice president for Academic Affairs at Worcester State University in the US, after teaching in its philosophy department from 1998 to 2017. From 1999 to 2007, he coordinated the University’s Center for the Study of Human Rights. Theriault’s research focuses on genocide denial, genocide prevention, post-genocide victim-perpetrator relations, reparations and mass violence against women and girls. He has lectured and appeared on panels around the world. Since 2007, he has chaired the Armenian Genocide Reparations Study Group and is lead author of its March 2015 final report, Resolution with Justice. He has published numerous journal articles and chapters, and his work has appeared in English, Spanish, Armenian, Turkish, Russian, French and Polish. With Samuel Totten, he co-authored The United Nations Genocide Convention: An Introduction (University of Toronto Press, 2019). Theriault served two terms as president of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS), 2017-2019 and 2019-2021. He is founding co-editor of the peer-reviewed journal Genocide Studies International. From 2007 to 2012 he served as co-editor of the International Association of Genocide Scholars’ peer-reviewed Genocide Studies and Prevention.


Kremlin to announce possible Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in advance

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 16:08, 19 May 2023

YEREVAN, MAY 19, ARMENPRESS. The Kremlin has said that they will announce the possible meeting between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in advance.

“Indeed, we will work on Eurasian integration issues next week. Both the Eurasian Economic Conference and the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council session will take place in Moscow. We expect both President Aliyev and Prime Minister Pashinyan to be in Moscow. We will inform about possible contacts in time,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters when asked on prospects of an Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in Moscow, TASS reports. 

On May 18, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that Russia offered to host a trilateral meeting between himself and Azerbaijani President Aliyev, under the mediation of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Pashinyan said he accepted the offer.

Why is France trying to play into Russia’s hands?

 eureporter 

By

 James Wilson

France is starting to supply weapons to Armenia. Initially, it involves the delivery of 50 armoured vehicles, but in the future, deliveries of French Mistral surface-to-air missile systems are also possible – writes James Wilson.

This information has been published by several Israeli and European media outlets and later was confirmed by the statement of one Rachya Arzumanyan, a former high-ranking official of the separatist administration in the Armenian enclave of Karabakh, situated on the occupied Azerbaijani territory. Arzumanyan, speaking to the Armenian channel 1inTV, stated that “significant changes would occur in the military sphere in Armenia in the next two months”. He also added, “I cannot openly talk about it yet… We need to forget about cooperation with Russia in the military sphere… We don’t have time to talk and wait.”

Earlier, several Ukrainian outlets and the state television channel of Moldova reported on the upcoming supplying of French weapons to Armenia, emphasising that “Western military equipment supplied to Yerevan could be used by Russians to counter the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ counteroffensive. This is apparent, considering the close military cooperation between Yerevan and Moscow.”

Commenting on the reports of Moldova’s state TV regarding the French arms supplies to Armenia, Ukrainian military expert Roman Svitan stated “If France carries out such deliveries, it is playing into the hands of Russia.”

Kyiv has feared all along that Western military hardware, delivered to Armenia, may be used by the Russians. This is why Ukrainian intelligence services have actively surveilled the developments within the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict zone since mid-2022. Their concerns primarily stem from the understanding that such equipment may be reverse-engineered to enhance Russian capabilities in countering the same weaponry supplied by the West to support Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russia’s invasion.

The probability of this outcome is very high, considering the close military collaboration between Yerevan and Moscow. After all, Armenia even allowed two Russian military bases to be established within Armenian territory.

Obviously, Russians are eagerly following any developments in direct military cooperation between France and Armenia. The partnership itself was announced during a visit by Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan to Paris in September 2022. Various sources, including  the U.S. analytical outlet on international security, Global Security Review, wrote about the supply of arms: “The pro-Armenian rhetoric of [French] President [Emmanuel] Macron could lead to an agreement regarding air defence.”  This May, Russian outlet REX reported that the military aid that France plans to supply Armenia “at the initial stage includes lethal weapons.”

In the wake of the discussions about French military aid to Armenia leading Western media outlets like The New York Times published various articles about the role that Armenia plays in aiding and abetting Russia to circumvent sanctions, including secret exports of chips and microcircuits for its military, as well as additionally serving as a trans-shipment hub for Iranian weapons sent to Moscow.

Those Iranian weapons, especially drones, are already very much in use by Russia in Ukraine, but also the same drones were used during clashes in April and May between the armed forces of Azerbaijan and Armenia. 

There is also a significant likelihood that French weaponry could potentially find its way into the possession of Iranian forces. Given Iran’s history of employing reverse engineering techniques, this strategy presents an opportunity for Iranian arms manufacturers to upgrade and enhance their own arsenal. Such advancements could then be channelled into the arms exported to various terrorist organisations, actively seeking to disrupt stability in the Middle East.

The timing of France’s weapon deliveries to Yerevan, coinciding with the upcoming presidential elections in Turkey is rather important. Over the past three years, Erdogan has consistently portrayed himself as a counterbalance to Macron, particularly concerning developments in the Eastern Mediterranean and the South Caucasus. This rivalry between the two leaders was notably amplified during the aftermath of Azerbaijan’s victory, with the backing of Turkey and Israel, in the Second Karabakh War in 2020.

Besides that, weapon deliveries from France to Armenia put France on a collision course with Israel, for whom Azerbaijan is a close strategic partner. Israel is also one of the of the main suppliers of weapons to Baku’s defence forces.

Prominent Israeli expert Ron Ben Ishay has issued a warning about the heightened threat posed by the modernization and improvement of Iranian munitions. He asserts that the utilisation of Russian weaponry in Ukraine will inevitably contribute to enhancing Iranian capabilities, thereby intensifying the danger for all powers currently opposing Iran’s aggressive military activities. This development, notably, includes Israel.

Should Erdogan face electoral defeat in Turkey, Israel could potentially emerge as the sole strategic ally for Baku, which consistently faces threats from Tehran. This shift in the political landscape could have significant implications, reshaping the dynamics of regional alliances in the ongoing geopolitical landscape.

Why are Armenian doctors in Madera County?

May 15 2023

FRESNO, Calif. (KSEE) – Valley Children’s Hospital is hosting a special delegation for the next two weeks: three pediatricians and one hospital administrator from Yerevan, Armenia.

The delegation comes from Wigmore Hospital for Children in Armenia’s capital city.  A 220-bed pediatric hospital that opened in December of 2022 serving a population of 1.5 million people. The visiting pediatricians say they came to Valley Children’s so they can learn to provide the best care for their patients at home.

“All the system, how it’s working here, and how I can use this system and make it more flexible in my hospital, ” says Armenian pediatrician Dr. Mariam Ghukasyan.

The day began with introductions and some background on the medical challenges facing the people of Armenia.

“The lack of high quality and advanced education is one big challenge for sure, and you may train your staff and invest in your own staff, but again the hospitals grow, and they need more staff.  You need a system working in a country, an education system that provides the quality that is needed,” says Wigmore Hospital’s Chief Development Officer Tatevik Koloyan.

Valley Children’s staff and administrators welcomed the visiting doctors with open arms.

“We’re really excited to host them here, show them what we do here in terms of both clinical care as well as quality, marketing, communications, some of our specialty services,” says Dr. Jolie Limon of Valley Children’s Hospital.

The visiting doctors got a tour of the hospital but will soon get a more hands-on look at state-of-the-art healthcare for children in the Central Valley, that they hope may someday be the standard of care in their home country of Armenia.

“I believe in my country.  If you want to change something, first, you have to start with yourself,” says Dr. Ghukasyan.

The doctor’s two-week visit is funded by donations to Fresno’s Advance Armenian Foundation and the medical mission of local doctors that visit Armenia every year.


Armen Grigoryan, Advisor to the German Chancellor discuss issues of the agenda of the expected five-party meeting

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 18:10,

YEREVAN, MAY 17, ARMENPRESS. On May 17, the Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan had a telephone conversation with Jens Plötner, Advisor on Foreign and Security Policy of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Security Council office, Armen Grigoryan presented to the interlocutor the details of the negotiations that took place in Brussels.

The parties discussed issues related to the agenda of the five-party meeting to be held in Chisinau.