Sports: Armenia’s Hripsime Khurshudyan wins gold at IWF Grand Prix

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 14 2023

Hripsime Khurshudyan of Armenia has captured a gold medal at the IWF Grand Prix II in Doha, Qatar

The athlete lifted a total of 232kg (106kg in snatch and 126kg in clean and jerk) to win the gold medal in the women’s 87kg weight category on Wednesday.

The 87kg bronze went to Tatev Hakobyan who lifted 230kg (107kg in snatch and 123kg in clean and jerk).

Armenia's Aleksandra Grigoryan earned a bronze medal at the IWF Grand Prix earlier last week.

The IWF Grand Prix II Weightlifting 2023, a Paris 2024 Olympic qualifier, is being held in Doha from December 4 to 14.

India to facilitate Chabahar Port access for Armenia

 14:24, 5 December 2023

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 5, ARMENPRESS. India will simplify the possibility of using the Chabahar Port for Armenia, Ambassador of India to Armenia Nilakshi Saha Sinha has said.

The Ambassador said that the Indian government has made a key decision to make investments to develop the Chabahar Port given the importance of regional connectivity.

“Not only is this a transit commercial hub, but it also contributes to the transfer of humanitarian aid. Armenia has expressed interest regarding the port. Armenia’s Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures and the Deputy Foreign Minister recently participated in the Global Maritime India summit. We will simplify the possibility of using the port for Armenia to overcome the challenges given that Armenia is a landlocked country,” the ambassador said at the New Regional Reality and the Crossroads of Peace forum.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 12/05/2023

                                        Tuesday, December 5, 2023


Ruling Party Completes ‘Power Grab’ In Armenian Town

        • Karine Simonian

Armenia - Ruling party and opposition figures argue during a session of the 
Alaverdi local council, December 5, 2023.


Armenia’s ruling Civil Contract party replaced the opposition mayor of a major 
community in northern Lori province by one of its members on Tuesday through a 
vote of no confidence condemned by its political opponents as illegal.

The party led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian lost control of the community 
comprising the formerly industrial town of Alaverdi and over two dozen other 
towns and villages as a result of local elections held in September 2022. It 
fell just short of an overall majority in the 27-member local council empowered 
to appoint the community head.

The opposition Aprelu Yerkir party, which won 13 council seats, installed its 
member Arkadi Tamazian as mayor after teaming up with former President Levon 
Ter-Petrosian’s Armenian National Congress (HAK) party. The HAK controls only 
one seat.

One of the council members representing Aprelu Yerkir, Simon Zakharov, 
unexpectedly defected from Aprelu Yerkir in July. Despite denying media reports 
that he was co-opted by his 13 pro-government colleagues, Zakharov backed last 
week a Civil Contract motion to oust Tamazian.

The incumbent mayor and his supporters said the motion is illegal because 
Armenian law stipulates that no-confidence votes cannot take place more than 
once a year. They argue that Aprelu Yerkir already initiated a tactical motion 
of censure in October.

Civil Contract representatives counter that the initiative is null and void 
because the Alaverdi council did not make a quorum needed for a formal debate on 
it. They have also dismissed opposition calls for a snap local election.

Scores of riot police surrounded the Alaverdi municipality building on Tuesday 
morning as the 14 pro-government council members gathered for an emergency 
session and voted to replace Tamazian by Civil Contract’s Davit Ghumashian. The 
latter used to be affiliated with former President Serzh Sarkisian’s Republican 
Party.

Armenia - Arkadi Tamazian, May 20, 2022

Tamazian and Aprelu Yerkir’s Yerevan-based leader Mesrop Arakelian broke through 
the police cordon to enter the municipality building and condemn the vote as 
“illegal.”

“Shame on you!” the ousted mayor shouted before trading insults with Civil 
Contract figures. Police officers intervened to prevent a violent clash between 
them.

Addressing about a hundred supporters protesting outside the building, Tamazian 
said that he and his party will challenge his ouster in court. Several 
protesters were detained by the police.

Levon Zurabian, The HAK’s deputy chairman and Ter-Petrosian’s right-hand man, 
also denounced the power grab, saying that it makes mockery of government claims 
about Armenia’s democratization.

“This is Nikol Pashinian’s idea of democracy … Pashinian brags about his 
democratic achievements, but what is happening in Alaverdi testifies to the 
opposite. Elected people are pressured by police and other law-enforcement 
bodies,” Zurabian told reporters. He claimed that Pashinian’s political team 
wants to also get rid of other opposition mayors in a similar fashion.

In July, two defections allowed Pashinian’s party to unseat the opposition head 
of a local community in northwestern Shirak province encompassing the town of 
Akhurian and surrounding villages.

In local polls held across Armenia in 2022 and 2021, Civil Contract was also 
defeated in key urban communities, notably the country’s third largest city of 
Vanadzor. Some of those ballots were won by jailed or indicted figures at odds 
with the government. One of them was set free right after deciding not to become 
a town mayor.

In Vanadzor, the leader of an opposition bloc, Mamikon Aslanian, was arrested in 
December 2021 just days after winning the municipal ballot. Aslanian remains in 
detention, standing trial on corruption charges rejected by him as politically 
motivated.




EU Signals ‘Non-Lethal’ Military Aid To Armenia

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Defense Minister Suren Papikian (2nd from L) meets with Vassilis 
Maragos, head of the EU Delegation in Armenia, Yerevan, December 1, 2023.


The European Union is considering providing “non-lethal” military aid to 
Armenia, the head of the EU Delegation in Yerevan, Vassilis Maragos, confirmed 
on Tuesday.

Maragos said that the EU will send later this month or early next year a 
“technical mission” to Armenia that will assess the country’s security needs and 
come up with “concrete proposals” regarding such aid.

“We are going to present details in the coming weeks,” the diplomat told 
journalists. He did not specify items which the 27-nation bloc could deliver to 
the Armenian military.

The issue was apparently on the agenda of last week’s visit to Yerevan by a team 
of officials from the EU’s executive body, the European Commission, and External 
Action Service. An EU statement on their trip said they looked into 
“possibilities to deepen and strengthen EU-Armenia relations in all dimensions,” 
including defense and security.

“The EU will, for instance, further explore non-lethal support to the Armenian 
military via the European Peace Facility,” added the statement.

The facility is a special fund designed to boost EU partners’ defense capacity. 
Armenian parliament speaker Alen Simonian revealed in July that Yerevan 
requested “technical assistance” from the fund but was rebuffed by Brussels.

Earlier in November, the foreign ministers of EU member states approved a 
proposal to expand a monitoring mission deployed by the bloc along Armenia’s 
border with Azerbaijan in February. It remains unclear how many additional 
monitors will be sent to the country.

The mission currently consisting of 100 or so observers and experts was launched 
at the request of the Armenian government and with the stated aim of preventing 
or reducing ceasefire violations along the border. Maragos said that it has 
already succeeded in bolstering the ceasefire regime.

Russia, Armenia’s increasingly estranged ally, has disputed such claims made by 
other EU officials and echoed by the Armenian government. It says that the 
mission is part of broader U.S. and EU efforts to drive Moscow out of the South 
Caucasus.




Iran, India Promote New Trade Route Through Armenia

        • Tatevik Lazarian

Iran - Workers watch a ship as it sails during an inauguration ceremony of new 
equipment and infrastructure at Shahid Beheshti Port in the coastal city of 
Chabahar, February 25, 2019.


Iran’s and India’s ambassadors in Yerevan on Tuesday stressed the importance of 
Armenia’s involvement in a new transnational transport corridor planned by their 
countries.

“We believe that the communication corridor from India to the Iranian port of 
Chabahar and on to Armenia and further north, the Black Sea, is a reliable route 
for transporting goods to the north and to Europe,” the Iranian envoy, Mehdi 
Sobhani, said during an international conference in Yerevan. “The development of 
this path will protect our countries against external harm.”

India has built and operates two terminals at Chabahar to bypass Pakistan in 
cargo traffic with Iran, Afghanistan and central Asian countries. It has 
proposed the Gulf of Oman port’s inclusion in the International North-South 
Transport Corridor (INSTC) project initiated by Russia, Iran and India in 2000. 
The project calls for a 7,200-kilometer-long network of maritime and terrestrial 
routes stretching from Mumbai to Moscow.

The Armenian government suggested in 2021 that Indian companies use Chabahar for 
cargo shipments to not only Armenia but also neighboring Georgia, Russia and 
even Europe. Senior Armenian, Indian and Iranian diplomats explored the 
possibility of creating such a trade route during first-ever trilateral talks 
held in Yerevan in April this year.

Speaking at the conference organized by the Armenian government, the Indian 
ambassador to Armenia, Nilakshi Saha Sinha, welcomed the South Caucasus nation’s 
interest in the INSTC.

“We are ready to work with Armenia to understand how the country can benefit 
from the opportunities of this corridor,” she said, adding that the Indian side 
will make it easier for Armenian firms to ship cargo to and from Chabahar.

Armenia - Senior Armenian, Indian and Iranian diplomats meet in Yerevan, April 
20, 2023.

Armenia has long maintained a cordial relationship with Iran and has deepened 
its ties with India in the last few years, notably through a series of contracts 
signed with Indian arms manufacturers. New Delhi has effectively sided Armenia 
with in its ongoing border disputes with Azerbaijan. For its part, Tehran has 
repeatedly warned against attempts to strip it of the common border and 
transport links with Armenia.

Azerbaijan’s recent takeover of Nagorno-Karabakh raised more fears in Yerevan 
that Baku will also attack Armenia to open an exterritorial land corridor to its 
Nakhichevan exclave passing through Syunik, the sole Armenian province bordering 
Iran. Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reportedly told a visiting Azerbaijani 
official in October that the so-called “Zangezur corridor” sought by Baku is 
“resolutely opposed by Iran.”

Later in October, the Armenian government contracted two Iranian companies to 
upgrade a 32-kilometer section of Syunik’s main highway leading to the Iranian 
border. Iran’s Minister of Roads and Urban Development Mehrzad Bazrpash attended 
the signing of the $215 million contract in Yerevan, underscoring its 
geopolitical significance for the Islamic Republic.

Sinha said that Indian firms are also interested in “participating in 
infrastructure development projects in Armenia.”




Armenian Nuclear Plant Safe Enough, Insists IAEA Chief


Armenia - The head of the IAEA, Rafael Grossi, meets Foreign Minister Ararat 
Mirzoyan, Yerevan, October 4, 2022.


Armenia’s Metsamor nuclear plant is safe enough to continue its operations in 
the years to come, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), 
Rafael Grossi, said on Tuesday.

“The Armenian Nuclear Power Plant is following the safety recommendations and 
guidance from the IAEA,” Grossi told the Armenpress news agency. “This is very 
important. There have been important refurbishments done at the facility which 
were found to be indispensable. So we can continue operating.”

Grossi already praised those safety upgrades monitored by the IAEA when he 
visited Armenia and inspected Metsamor in October 2022. He said the UN nuclear 
watchdog will continue to “help the plant provide low-carbon energy safely and 
securely.”

Metsamor generates roughly 40 percent of Armenia’s electricity. Its sole 
functioning reactor went into service in 1980 and was due to be decommissioned 
by 2017.

Armenia’s former government decided to extend the 420-megawatt reactor’s life 
after failing to attract funding for the construction of a new and safer nuclear 
facility. In 2015, Russia allocated a $270 million loan and a $30 million grant 
to Yerevan for that purpose.

Armenia - The reactor of the Metsamor nuclear plant undergoes modernization and 
safety upgrades, August 5, 2021.

Russian and Armenian specialists essentially completed Metsamor’s modernization 
in 2021. Armenian officials now say the plant, located 35 kilometers west of 
Yerevan and just 16 kilometer from the Turkish border, can safely operate until 
2036.

In September this year, Turkey renewed its demands for the closure of Metsamor. 
The Turkish Foreign Ministry claimed that the plant is “dangerous for the whole 
region” and pledged to continue seeking its decommissioning. Armenian officials 
dismissed the demands.

Speaking to Armenpress during the COP28 conference in the United Arab Emirates, 
Grossi downplayed Ankara’s stance.

“It’s not the only case,” he said. “In some other parts of the world where 
neighbors have certain issues, countries come to me and say 'what is happening 
in my neighbor?' So we take it seriously but give answers.”

“The most important thing is that Armenia continues to work seriously with us 
and reinforces the safety of the facility, and we are very confident,” added the 
IAEA chief.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenian President holds meeting with the UAE Armenian community

 20:50,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. Armenian President Vahagn Khachaturyan held a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community of the United Arab Emirates in Dubai.

As "Armenpress" correspondent informs, the President of Armenia emphasized that during his visits to various countries, he prefers holding meetings with representatives of Armenian communities, aimed at informing them about what is really happening in Armenia and around Armenia.

"Very often, even residents of Armenia lack comprehensive knowledge of the actual events occurring in our country because the information today is multi-content, and misinformation spreads very quickly. Therefore, in my opinion, meetings with government officials provide a good opportunity for you to receive accurate information about the situation in our country," stated the president.

The President presented the developments of the negotiation process regarding the peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, emphasizing that progress is hindered by Azerbaijan's destructive positions. President Khachatryan highlighted Armenia's constructive stance in the process, noting that Azerbaijan had recently been avoiding negotiations.

During the meeting, Vahagn Khachaturyan emphasized the importance of continuous democratic reforms in Armenia.

The President also addressed the security challenges facing Armenia.

‘’Armenia has problems in terms of security, due to the improper functioning of the security system that Armenia has had for many years,’’  said Khachatryan and mentioned that Armenia should diversify its security measures and not depend on a single center.

Vahagn Khachaturyan also emphasized the regulation of relations with neighboring countries, noting that there is no alternative to living in peace and solidarity with neighboring countries.

The President also presented the "Crossroads of Peace" project to the representatives of the Armenian community.

Clash Over Armenian Quarter Land Lease Deal Turns Physical

Nov 6 2023

Xana Capital Ltd. arrived at the Cows’ Garden parking lot, the main lot used by Armenians in the Armenian Quarter, to seize possession by digging it up. The community stood in their way.

The showdown over the land lease for the Cows’ Garden parking lot area moved from the courts into the lot itself on November 5, 2023.

Around 3:00 p.m., developer and majority shareholder Danny Rothman of Xana Capital Ltd. arrived at the site with about 15 armed settlers and two large leashed attack dogs, pepper spray, a bulldozer, and his business partner and Israeli citizen George Warwar (also known as George Haddad).

They set to work tearing up the parking lot pavement into large chunks.

The armed Xana men ominously formed a line to block community members from accessing the work site and were also filming them as they began protesting.

According to a press release issued by the local organization Save the ArQ, Warwar demanded the Armenians leave what he called their land. “Warwar threatened the community, claiming he’ll ‘get them one by one.’” The settlers were also active, announcing that the Armenians are all “‘Goys (non Jews) and we will kill you when the Messiah comes.’”1

A number of the settlers were dressed in civilian clothes and armed with assault rifles and stated that they were part of the Kitat Konenut First Response Team. This is the force that Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir has been building up lately—handing out assault rifles to hundreds of ragtag Jewish volunteers. When questioned by a reporter why this team needed to carry assault rifles into a peaceful situation, a police officer at the site answered on the live feed, “Half the country is armed.”2

One bystander with a gun was asked by journalist Nicole Schiavi Jansezian, a local journalist reporting live from the scene on Facebook,3 why he had it. “We just came to help out,” he said. “In my opinion when someone responds with a gun, it keeps everyone polite.” Moreover, he added, “The police told me I should not come into the Old City without a gun.”4


The community did not disperse; instead, the group summoned more neighbors and lawyers to stand down the threat. About 200 Armenians remained on-site into the night, after erecting a protest tent, large Armenian flags, and a flag of Artsakh, and singing the Armenian national anthem at the scene.

The Armenian Patriarch, His Beatitude Archbishop Nourhan Manougian, also joined the protestors and sat in the protest tent along with other bishops.

Less than a week ago, Manougian released a letter stating his intention to cancel the ill-fated and despised land lease deal and filed a legal suit in Israeli courts to accomplish this, setting off a process that should proceed in the courts, not on the ground.

Apparently, this did not sit well with Rothman and his team. Two hours later, however, they departed—outnumbered for the moment.

“Right here what you see is a land war that goes on. It’s the kind of thing that goes on even when there are not rockets flying, there is always a battle for land here,” commented Jansezian.5

1

“Armenian Patriarch Joins Protestors of Land Deal,” Milhilard, accessed November 5, 2023.

2

Nicole Schiavi Jansezian, “The developer who leased the Armenian Quarter parking lot,” Facebook, November 5, 2023.

3

Jansezian, “The developer.” 

Armenpress: President of Iraq visits Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan

 10:14, 22 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS. President of Iraq Abdul Latif Rashid has visited the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

In Tsitsernakaberd, the Iraqi President placed a wreath at the memorial and laid flowers at the Eternal Flame in honor of the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

President of Iraq Abdul Latif Rashid arrived in Armenia on an official visit on November 21. The Iraqi President is scheduled to meet with President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan.

Armenian prime minister says Russia failed to supply prepaid arms deliveries, proposes debt reduction instead

MEDUZA
Nov 24 2023
5:47 pm,
Source: Meduza

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that Armenia had paid Russia “millions of dollars” for arms supplies as part of a bilateral contract, but has not yet received any.

Pashinyan said he realizes that Russia “needs arms itself” now, and suggested that the issue of arms supplies can be solved in a variety of ways, including the reduction of Armenia’s debt to Russia.

In May, the Secretary for the Armenian Security Council, Armen Grigoryan, said that Russia hadn’t supplied the weapons for which Armenia had already paid. Russia has not officially reported any recent military contracts with Armenia.

On November 22, the Armenian newspaper Zhogorvud referenced sources who said that the contract was for the delivery of Smerch missiles and that it was signed several years ago. According to the newspaper, the missiles were ready prior to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The Russian side reportedly offered to take the weapons out of the warehouses on three different occasions, but Armenia did not do so. After the start of the full-scale invasion, Russia started using the missiles itself.

https://meduza.io/en/news/2023/11/24/armenian-prime-minister-says-russia-failed-to-supply-prepaid-arms-deliveries-proposes-debt-reduction-instead

OPEC Provides €50 Million Loan to Armenia

Egypt – Nov 23 2023
Israa Farhan

This loan also aims to support Armenia's "Comprehensive and Sustainable Green Development Program."

Abdulhamid Alkhalifa, the Director-General of the OPEC Fund, emphasized the fund's commitment to supporting Armenia's climate adaptation program in collaboration with the World Bank, which has provided a parallel loan of €92.3 million.

The statement highlighted the importance of enhancing climate adaptation capabilities.

The OPEC Fund's statement explained that the "Comprehensive and Sustainable Green Development Program" supports Armenia's developmental aspirations and long-term national plans.

It helps Armenia achieve multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), improve environmental management, enhance energy efficiency, promote human capital development, and strengthen governance.

This loan signifies international support for Armenia's endeavors in addressing climate change and advancing sustainable development initiatives. 

DeSantis and Haley join Ramaswamy in calling out Azerbaijan for ethnic cleansing of Artsakh’s Christian Armenians

Republican presidential candidates Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, and Vivek Ramaswamy called out Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of Artsakh’s Armenian Christians in response to questions by The FAMiLY Leader CEO Bob Vander Plaats.

DES MOINES, Iowa—Republican presidential candidates Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley joined with Vivek Ramaswamy in forcefully condemning Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of Artsakh’s 120,000 indigenous Christian Armenians at The FAMiLY Leader Thanksgiving candidate forum in Iowa, a high profile program co-sponsored by the 120,000 Reasons Coalition.

Their statements were made during a table-side talk led by The FAMiLY Leader President and CEO Bob Vander Plaats. Noting that Armenia is the first Christian nation and citing Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of 120,000 Armenian Christians, Vander Plaats asked the three candidates, “How would you ensure that this bastion of ancient Christianity is safeguarded?”

In his response, Gov. DeSantis noted, “I think the United States should be standing for the Christians in Armenia. I think that is a noble cause.”

Amb. Nikki Haley underscored in her response, “What happened in Azerbaijan is a travesty… we should be calling out Azerbaijan.”

Vivek Ramaswamy, offered the most detailed response, stating, “120,000 Armenians, the oldest Christian nation of the world, displaced. And, the even dirtier secret at the heart of that – we’re [the U.S. government] paying for it.” Ramaswamy criticized the Biden administration for waiving Section 907 restrictions, arming and abetting Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of Armenians.

Ramaswamy has been outspoken in spotlighting Azerbaijan’s forced displacement of Artsakh’s Armenians on the campaign trail, discussing the matter with Tucker Carlson and Piers Morgan, and attending a 120,000 Reasons protest organized by the ANCA Eastern Region and AYF Eastern Region on the eve of the GOP presidential candidates’ debate in Miami, Florida. He recently attended an Armenian reception at Armenian Estates in Genoa Township, OH, hosted by Tigran and Viola Safaryan and Steve and Erna Atikian. Longtime ANC-Ohio leader David Krikorian introduced Ramaswamy at the event, which was attended by Armenian Americans from across the Cincinnati, Columbus and Cleveland areas.

Vander Plaats and The FAMiLY Leader are part of the 120,000 Reasons coalition, which has been working on the ground in Iowa and across the U.S. to exert pressure on the White House, Congress and the 2024 presidential candidates to break the silence on the second Armenian genocide committed in Artsakh and to support the sovereignty and security of Armenia.

Watch the complete exchange between Vander Plaats, DeSantis, Haley and Ramaswamy during The FAMiLY Leader Thanksgiving presidential candidate forum on the ANCA YouTube channel.

The full response to Bob Vander Plaats’ question on Armenia and Artsakh at the Thanksgiving FAMilY Leader candidate forum is available at: https://youtu.be/MsRV2DLJhtY

Highlights of responses by Gov. DeSantis, Amb. Haley, and Ramaswamy are available at the links below:
DeSantis: https://youtu.be/Vy4bvd4ogzU
Haley: https://youtu.be/9ml97nMOdak
Ramaswamy: https://youtu.be/nS_o0Cvb71E

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


Film: Palestinian Filmmaker Earns Best Director Prize At IDFA; Armenian Documentary ‘1489’ Wins Best Film

DEADLINE
Nov 17 2023

Documentaries about the impact of war claimed two of the top prizes as the International Documentary Festival Amsterdam handed out awards Thursday night.

1489, directed by Armenian filmmaker Shoghakat Vardanyan, won Best Film in International Competition. The film revolves around the disappearance of the director’s 21-year-old brother, Soghomon Vardanyan, who went missing in the early days of the renewed fighting in 2020 between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, an area Armenians refer to as Artsakh. 

The award comes with a €15,000 cash prize. The jury members of the International Competition were Emilie Bujès, Francesco Giai Via, Tabitha Jackson, Ada Solomon, and Xiaoshuai Wang. 

Jurors called 1489, “A film that acts as a piercing light that makes visible the vast hidden interior landscape of grief and creates a tangible presence from unbearable absence. Cinema as a tool of survival—to allow us all, to look at the things we would rather not see. And ultimately, an unforgettable example of cinema as an act of love.”

Palestinian filmmaker Mohamed Jabaly won Best Director in International Competition for his film Life Is Beautiful, an account of how he became stranded in Norway while making his earlier film Ambulance. While in the Scandinavian country in 2014, the border to Gaza was closed, preventing his return. But when Jabaly went to apply for a visa to stay longer in Norway, there was a snag. The form he had to fill out by computer did not list Palestine as a country. 

“For me, I was a bit shocked when I realized that I’m stateless,” Jabaly told Deadline in Amsterdam earlier this week. “Coming to Norway, applying for a new visa and then like, hey, I cannot choose Palestine [from the drop-down menu]. And that’s for me, what does that mean?”

The directing award comes with a €5,000 prize.

Jurors described Life Is Beautiful as, “A timely cinematic _expression_ of the universal need to be recognized in our full humanity. A compelling indictment of the bureaucratic and political structures that deny that. A directorial tone that, almost impossibly, manages to find hope and humor amid unimaginable pain. An urgent call for freedom, freedom of movement, freedom of opportunity and the freedom to pursue our dreams.” [Scroll for full list of IDFA Awards winners].

The IDFA Award for Best Editing (recipient of a €2,500 prize) in International Competition went to Anand Patwardhan for The World Is Family.

“A vivid evocation of 100 years of history in less than 100 minutes of cinema,” jurors wrote of The World Is Family. “An intimate act of family portraiture whose spirited subjects are lovingly painted with humor and deep humanity. A facility with scale and whose fluidity in form beautifully reflects flow of life, death, and history.”

The IDFA Award for Best Cinematography in International Competition (along with a €2,500 prize) went to Flickering Lights, directed by Anirban Dutta and Anupama Srinivasan.

Jurors called the film, “A beautiful relationship between a vibrant community and the audience, created through the curious and patient gaze of the camera. An accomplished portrait of existence without electricity, of life without light, until a moment of transformation. With an unshowy but deeply effective sense of really being there.”

‘Canuto’s Transformation’Courtesy of IDFA

In the separate Envision Competition, a section devoted to daring cinematic approaches to documentary, Best Film was awarded to Canuto’s Transformation, directed by Ariel Kuaray Ortega and Ernesto de Carvalho. 

The award comes with a €15,000 prize. Envision Competition jurors included Annouchka de Andrade, Cao Guimarães, Kirsten Johnson, and Kivu Ruhorahoza. (Basma al-Sharif, a Palestinian director and artist, withdrew from the Envision jury in the midst of the festival, citing displeasure over how IDFA had handled a pro-Palestinian protest that interrupted the opening night ceremony).

‘Canuto’s Transformation’Courtesy of IDFA

The Envision jury said of Canuto’s Transformation, “With a decades-long commitment to the filmmaking process within community, a sense of humor, and a quest to move between worlds. This film embodies the many meanings of transformation.” 

In addition, Ariel Kuaray Ortega and Ernesto de Carvalho won the Award for Outstanding Artistic Merit for their film and a €2,500 prize.

Kumjana Novakova earned the Best Directing honor (and €5,000 prize) in the Envision Competition for her documentary Silence of Reason.

Jurors praised Novakova for her “rigorous presentation of forensic evidence and the incredible courage of women whose testimony meant that rape would be internationally recognized as a crime of war. Kumjana Novakova cinematically rendered these crimes unforgettable.”

In other categories, At That Very Moment directed by Rita Pauls and Federico Luis Tachella won the IDFA Award for Best Short Documentary. The award is accompanied by a €5,000 cash prize.  

The jurors said, “For its simplicity, spontaneity, and transparency in dealing with people, things, and small details, and for the depth of the questions raised in it that are profound despite their apparent simplicity, and for its smooth and intense cinematic work, especially photography and lyrical editing, the jury awards the IDFA Award for Best Short Documentary to At That Very Moment by directors Rita Pauls and Federico Luis Tachella.”

A special mention went to My Father directed by Pegah Ahangarani.  

“For this filmmaker’s ability to transform archival photographs and video recordings into a film that combine to form an intimate visual narrative, and restores a sensitive, realistic, and influential era – with the negative and positive that it entails—in both public and private history, the jury gives a Special Mention to My Father by Pegah Ahangarani,” the jury wrote. 

Jury members for the IDFA Competition for Short Documentary were Nadim Jarjoura and Brigid O’Shea. 

The IDFA Award for Best Youth Documentary (13+) went to Mariusz Rusiński for Sister of Mine. The award is accompanied by a €2,500 cash prize.  

The IDFA Award for Best Youth Documentary (9-12) went to Sebastian Mulder for And a Happy New Year. Cash prize: €2,500.

A special mention went to Boyz by Sylvain Cruiziat.   

The jury members for the IDFA Competition for Youth Documentary were Maria Vittoria Pellecchia, Ileana Stanculescu, and Pawel Ziemilski. 

Complete List of IDFA 2023 winners:

  • IDFA Award for Best Film – International Competition: 1489, dir. Shoghakat Vardanyan  
  • IDFA Award for Best Directing – International Competition: Life is Beautiful, dir. Mohamed Jabaly 
  • IDFA Award for Best Editing – International Competition: The World Is Family, editor Anand Patwardhan  
  • IDFA Award for Best Cinematography – International Competition: Flickering Lights, cinematographers Anirban Dutta and Anupama Srinivasan 
  • IDFA Award for Best Film – Envision Competition: Canuto’s Transformation, dir. Ariel Kuaray Ortega and Ernesto de Carvalho 
  • IDFA Award for Best Directing – Envision Competition: Silence of Reason, dir. Kumjana Novakova  
  • IDFA Award for Outstanding Artistic Contribution – Envision Competition: Canuto’s Transformation, dir. Ariel Kuaray Ortega and Ernesto de Carvalho  
  • IDFA DocLab Award for Immersive Non-Fiction: Turbulence: Jamais Vu, dir. Ben Joseph Andrews and Emma Roberts  
  • Special Jury Award for Creative Technology for Immersive Non-Fiction: Natalie’s Trifecta, dir. Natalie Paneng 
  • IDFA DocLab Award for Digital Storytelling: Anouschka, dir. Tamara Shogaolu  
  • Special Jury Award for Creative Technology for Digital Storytelling: Borderline Visible, dir. Ant Hampton  
  • Special Mention – IDFA DocLab Award for Digital Storytelling: Despelote, dir. Julián Cordero and Sebastian Valbuena
  • IDFA Award for Best Short Documentary: At That Very Moment, dir. Rita Pauls and Federico Luis Tachella  
  • Special Mention – Short Documentary: My Father, dir. Pegah Ahangarani  
  • IDFA Award for Best Youth Documentary (13+): Sister of Mine, dir. Mariusz Rusiński 
  • IDFA Award for Best Youth Documentary (9-12): And a Happy New Year, dir. Sebastian Mulder  
  • Special Mention – Youth Documentary Competition: Boyz, dir. Sylvain Cruiziat
  • IDFA Award for Best First Feature: Chasing the Dazzling Light, dir. Yaser Kassab 
  • IDFA Award for Best Dutch Film: Gerlach, dir. Aliona van der Horst and Luuk Bouwman 
  • Special Mention – Best Dutch Film: Mother Suriname – Mama Sranan, dir. Tessa Leuwsha 
  • Beeld & Geluid IDFA ReFrame Award: Selling a Colonial War, dir. In-Soo Radstake 
  • Special Mention – Beeld & Geluid IDFA ReFrame Award: Milisuthando, dir. Milisuthando Bongela 
  • FIPRESCI Award: 1489, dir. Shoghakat Vardanyan  
  • IDFA Forum Award for Best Pitch: Son of the Streets, dir. Mohammed Almughanni  
  • IDFA Forum Award for Best Rough Cut: Coexistence, My Ass!, dir. Amber Fares 
  • IDFA DocLab Forum Award: Turbulence, dir. Ben Joseph Andrews and Emma Roberts