Moscow considers possibility of organizing Armenia-Russia-Azerbaijan foreign ministerial meeting

 10:49, 9 October 2023

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 9, ARMENPRESS. Moscow considers the possibility of organizing a meeting between the foreign ministers of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan within the framework of the upcoming CIS summit on October 12 in Kyrgyzstan, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin told RBC in an interview.

“The dialogue between Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia around the entire complex of the issues of resolving the Armenian-Azerbaijan conflict never stopped. We hope such contacts continue. We are discussing the possibility of holding such discussions at the foreign ministerial level within the framework of the upcoming CIS summit in Bishkek on October 12 this year. The Azerbaijani side has already given its principled agreement. And we expect the Armenian side to also approach this issue responsibly and agree to participate in such negotiations,” Galuzin said.

Approximately 1000 people registered every hour, non-stop: Number of forcibly displaced reaches 70,500

 16:37,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. The number of forcibly displaced persons from Nagorno-Karabakh who have crossed into Armenia reached 70,500 as of 14:00, September 28.

The intensity of the influx hasn’t decreased, the Prime Minister’s spokesperson Nazeli Baghdasaryan said at a press conference.

50,866 of the 70,500 have already been registered, while the registration process of the rest is in process.

Approximately 1000 people are registered and taken care of every hour.

First refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh arrive to Armenia

 15:49,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS. The first group of the evacuated persons from Nagorno-Karabakh has arrived to Armenia, a local official in the Tegh Municipality of Syunik Province, Arshaluys Avetisyan, told ARMENPRESS.

The refugees are being met in the International Committee of the Red Cross center in Kornidzor.

“Right now, a registration process is underway, their priority needs are being assessed,” Avetisyan added.

According to preliminary information there are approximately 30 evacuees in the first group, but the number can be specified only after the registration process is completed.

The Tegh Municipality is ready to receive, accommodate and provide essential means to the evacuees, Avetisyan said.




The effect of "positive and negative shock" on Armenia’s economy. Opinion

Sept 5 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Impact of Russian capital on the Armenian economy

About 60% of Armenia’s economy is concentrated in the capital. The positive effect of “the shock caused by the flow of re-locations and capital inflows from Russia” is more pronounced in Yerevan. This is the opinion of economist Narek Karapetyan.

“At the same time, uneven territorial development across the country and income distribution is a serious problem. The bad news is that economists have no recipes on how to fight it either,” he says.

The expert analyzed the situation in the country’s economy, touched upon the distribution of labor force in Yerevan and regions, inflation, the size of salaries, economic activity in certain sectors and its causes.

Armenia’s economic activity index increased by 10.4% in January-July 2023 compared to the same period last year. According to the data published by the Statistical Committee

  • the volume of industrial production increased by 0.5%,
  • construction volumes increased by 17.2%,
  • volumes of services provided increased by 14.9%.

The consumer price index increased by 3.6% compared to January-July 2022, while the price index of industrial products remained unchanged.


  • “A blow to microbusiness in Armenia”: experts on the abolition of tax incentives
  • “Armenia’s economic growth potential is not infinite.” Opinion
  • “Positive momentum for investors” – Armenian economist on Moody’s rating

According to economist Narek Karapetyan, an expert at the Amberd think tank, it is in the capital that new IT companies are opening, while important organizations of the financial sphere are located here, which ensured a significant increase in salaries last year.

He warns that the gap between Yerevan and the regions is getting deeper, but experts assess the situation differently:

“Some believe that more investments should be made in the regions. But there are also those who cite counterarguments and many examples that large investments have gone to zero because the regions turned out to be unattractive for economic activity.”

Karapetyan said that the Armenian government “will have a difficult homework” to find “the right recipes” and achieve an even territorial distribution of resources.

According to the expert’s assessment, this year’s agricultural products are slightly cheaper than last summer. But prices in general still remain at a “high level, as in 2019, 2020 and 2021”.

He reminds that the main sphere of activity in the regions is agriculture, as well as the public sector and industrial enterprises. According to Karapetyan, it is the rural population that faces economic problems due to regional security factors:

“For example, when there are problems with the operation of the Sotq mine [which is located in the zone bordering Azerbaijan and is subject to shelling], it is the regions that are affected, the people who work in Gegharkunik m and Ararat regions, where raw materials are processed.”

In the event of logistical problems at the Upper Lars checkpoint, the only land road connecting Armenia to Russia, once again the residents of the regions where agricultural products are produced and processed suffer.

About the latest developments – according to the stories of ordinary people. Also, an expert’s commentary on support for socially vulnerable segments of the population and uneven distribution of income

Narek Karapetyan said that the growth of the average salary was ensured by the index for paying new employees who appeared in the country, and this “significantly raised the index”. Speaking of “new employees,” he is referring in particular to IT specialists who moved to Armenia from Russia:

“We are talking about 10-15 thousand workers who are non-residents. Their average salary is 1-2 million drams [$2600-5200]”.

The economist notes a certain decrease in prices when considering the indicators of the last 12 months. But emphasizes that the factor of the “high bar” of the previous year should also be taken into account. Then the prices, for example, for agricultural products were unprecedentedly high:

“Prices continue to remain at a high level. Inflation in the services sector also continues. Compared to last year we have about 4% growth”.

Karapetyan says the Central Bank is in no hurry to lower prices, although it has the appropriate tools to do so:

“The Central Bank Council is cautiously approaching the issue. The structure believes that the reason for high prices is the inflationary pressure of the still persisting demand. Perhaps, some deflationary phenomena are caused by the underlying factor [refers to the unprecedented high prices of previous years]”.

Over the past five years, the construction of residential complexes has noticeably intensified in the capital of Armenia.

Commenting on the situation in the industrial sector, the expert notes the impact of “one positive and two negative shocks”. He considers the opening of new Russian markets as positive:

“These are markets of great demand. Some industrial organizations are working beyond their capabilities to take advantage of this demand and get additional income, as well as to strengthen their place in these markets in the future”.

But, given the fact that we are talking about exporting organizations, immediately declares a “negative shock” in the form of the exchange rate:

“It affects the competitiveness of industrial enterprises, especially in European markets. Last year the dram appreciated by 18% against the dollar and almost 40% against the euro”.

According to him, another negative factor was “the shock experienced by the mining industry due to the decline in prices and exchange rate fluctuations, as well as the situation in the regions bordering Azerbaijan. In this regard, he again recalls the events in Sotk.

Karapetyan believes that in certain cases, such as in the manufacturing industry, government intervention and policies are very important. In particular, he advises to direct certain resources to those spheres, which have long-term importance, in this case he speaks about the manufacturing industry.

https://jam-news.net/impact-of-russian-capital-on-the-armenian-economy/

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/30/2023

                                        Wednesday, 
French Aid Convoy Barred From Entering Karabakh
        • Tigran Hovsepian
Armenia - French officials escort a humanitarian aid convoy to the Lachin 
corridor, .
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo and other French local government officials escorted a 
convoy of trucks to the Lachin corridor on Wednesday in a failed attempt to 
provide humanitarian aid to Nagorno-Karabakh’s population increasingly suffering 
from the Azerbaijani blockade.
The ten trucks carried food and other essential items provided by the municipal 
administrations of several French cities and regions. Azerbaijan refused to let 
them proceed to Karabakh through a checkpoint which it controversially set up in 
the corridor in April.
“Here, at the Lachin Corridor, we can testify that no humanitarian aid can enter 
Artsakh, a gross violation of human rights. Our 10 humanitarian aid trucks are 
blocked,” Hidalgo tweeted from an Armenian border area adjacent to the 
corridor’s starting point.
The Armenian government also tried unsuccessfully to send 360 tons of flour, 
cooking oil, sugar and other basic foodstuffs to Karabakh in late July. Its aid 
convoy remains stuck at the entrance to the corridor.
Armenia - Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo gestures during a news conference in Goris, 
.
Hidalgo likened the eight-month blockade to genocide when spoke to reporters in 
the nearby Armenian town of Goris.
“What is happening in Nagorno-Karabakh is something that resembles genocide 
perpetrated by an authoritarian regime against people seeking to exercise their 
rights,” the Socialist mayor told a joint news conference with other members of 
the French delegation headed by her.
Bruno Retailleau, a conservative French senator who also joined the delegation, 
accused Baku of turning Karabakh into an “open-air concentration camp.”
“This attempted ethnic cleansing and genocide targets 120,000 people, including 
30,000 children,” Retailleau said.
Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, joined the news conference via video 
link from Stepanakert. He thanked the French municipalities for their initiative 
strongly encouraged by leaders of France’s influential Armenian community.
Armenia - A French humanitarian aid convoy is stuck at the entrance to the 
Lachin corridor, .
Harutiunian said the Azerbaijani leadership hopes that the severe food shortages 
resulting from the blockade will help it “bring Artsakh to its knees.” “But it 
will not succeed,” he said.
The visiting French officials called on French President Emmanuel Macron to 
urgently draft a resolution against the blockade and try to push it through the 
UN Security Council. France’s Le Figaro daily reported last week that Paris is 
“preparing to submit” such a resolution to the Security Council.
Macron pledged on Monday to seek stronger international pressure on Baku. French 
Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna said the following day that the blockade is 
aimed at forcing the Karabakh Armenians to leave their homeland. The Azerbaijani 
Foreign Ministry rejected those statements as pro-Armenian and untrue.
Macron spoke with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev by phone on Tuesday.
Russia Blames Pashinian For Karabakh Crisis
Russia - Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova gestures during 
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov's annual news conference in Moscow,, January 18, 
2023.
The deepening humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh caused by Azerbaijan’s 
blockade of the Lachin corridor was made possible by Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian’s decision to recognize Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan, Russia 
said on Wednesday.
The Russian Foreign Ministry pointed to Pashinian’s controversial move as it 
responded to Armenian criticism of Moscow’s failure to unblock Karabakh’s sole 
land link with the outside world and prevent recent Azerbaijani arrests of four 
Karabakh men travelling to Armenia through the corridor.
“I would like to remind that the current situation in the Lachin corridor is a 
consequence of Armenia’s recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as part of the 
territory of Azerbaijan,” said the ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova. “This 
was formalized as a result of summits attended by the leaders of the two 
countries under the aegis of the European Union in October 2022 and May 2023.”
“We believe that placing the blame in this context on the Russian peacekeeping 
contingent is inappropriate, wrong and unjustified,” Zakharova told a news 
briefing.
The Russian Foreign Ministry already stated on July 15 that Pashinian’s decision 
to recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh “radically changed the 
underlying conditions” in which the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan 
negotiated an agreement to end the 2020 war in Karabakh. The truce agreement 
committed Baku to ensuring unhindered commercial traffic through the Lachin 
corridor.
The Armenian opposition has likewise said that Pashinian’s far-reaching 
concession to Baku emboldened the latter to tighten the screws on the Karabakh 
Armenians. Opposition leaders have also pointed out that Azerbaijan remains 
reluctant to recognize Armenia’s own territorial integrity.
Pashinian complained on August 3 that Baku is seeking to sign the kind of peace 
treaty with Yerevan that would not preclude Azerbaijani territorial claims to 
Armenia. A senior Russian diplomat criticized the following day what he 
described as Western attempts to “artificially” speed up the signing of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani treaty.
Karabakh Armenians Block Supply Route Sought By Azerbaijan
        • Susan Badalian
        • Astghik Bedevian
Nagorno-Karabakh - Parliament's speaker Davit Ishkhanian visits Karabakh 
protesters blocking the road to Aghdam, .
Residents of Nagorno-Karabakh have set up a tent camp on a road leading to the 
Azerbaijani town of Aghdam to prevent the delivery of Azerbaijan humanitarian 
aid which they say is aimed at legitimizing Baku’s blockade of the Lachin 
corridor.
They pitched the tents late on Tuesday near a Russian military checkpoint 
separating the conflicting sides and spent the following night there after two 
trucks carrying 40 tons of flour provided by the government-linked Azerbaijan 
Red Crescent reached Aghdam.
“We don’t want to get anything from our enemy,” said Hamlet Apresian, the mayor 
of Askeran, a Karabakh town close to Aghdam, who joined the protesters at the 
blocked road section.
“We will never accept any aid from them,” Hasmik Andrian, a resident of the 
nearby village of Khramort, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. She said Azerbaijani 
troops have regularly opened fire at local farmers trying to harvest wheat.
Karabakh’s leaders reaffirmed support for this stance, saying that the proposed 
aid is part of Azerbaijani efforts to deflect international attention from the 
blockade and regain full control over the Armenian-populated region. They 
insisted that Baku comply instead with the Russian-brokered 2020 ceasefire that 
commits it to guaranteeing unfettered commercial and humanitarian traffic 
through the Lachin corridor.
“There is a clear decision to keep that road [to Aghdam] closed,” Davit 
Ishkhanian, the Karabakh parliament speaker, told reporters in Stepanakert. He 
visited the Karabakh protesters camped out on that road later in the day.
Ngorno-Karabakh-- Karabakh protesters block the road to Aghdam, .
Baku pushed for an alternative, Azerbaijani-controlled supply line for Karabakh 
after tightening the blockade in mid-June. Russian peacekeepers and the 
International Committee of the Red Cross have since been unable to ship any 
food, medicine or other basic necessities to Karabakh residents.
A senior aide to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev told the BBC on Wednesday 
that renewed humanitarian traffic through Karabakh’s blocked land link with 
Armenia is conditional on the opening of the Aghdam road. Aliyev reportedly 
underlined this condition on Tuesday in a phone call with French President 
Emmanuel Macron whose government is increasingly critical of the blockade.
The European Union, the United States and Russia have also repeatedly called for 
the immediate lifting of the blockade. The Azerbaijani side has dismissed their 
appeals. It has also ignored a February order by the International Court of 
Justice to “take all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of 
persons, vehicles, and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.”
The Karabakh Armenians remain adamant in rejecting the Aghdam route despite 
struggling with growing shortages of food. The Karabakh authorities admitted on 
Tuesday that the region is running out of flour. They said that from now on each 
family in Stepanakert and other Karabakh towns will be allowed to buy only one 
loaf of bread a day.
Former Armenian Defense Chief To Remain In Jail
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia - Former Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan testifies before pro-government 
lawmakers, Yerevan, August 1, 2023.
A court in Yerevan on Wednesday again refused to release Davit Tonoyan, a former 
Armenian defense minister facing corruption charges, from custody pending a 
verdict in his long-running trial.
Tonoyan was arrested two years ago in a criminal investigation into supplies of 
allegedly outdated rockets to Armenia’s armed forces. The National Security 
Service charged him, two generals and an arms dealer with fraud and embezzlement 
that cost the state almost 2.3 billion drams ($5.9 million). All four suspects, 
among them former army chief of staff Artak Davtian, have denied the accusations 
during the trial that began in January 2022.
The Anti-Corruption Court ruled to keep Tonoyan under arrest one day after a 
three-hour hearing on yet another petition to free him submitted by his lawyer. 
The lawyer, Avetik Karapetian, was not optimistic about his client’s release 
when he spoke to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service after the hearing.
“It would be naïve to expect a just decision from the court given its decisions 
made before,” said Karapetian.
This and other courts had rejected at least five such petitions, citing witness 
tampering concerns expressed by prosecutors. Karapetian dismissed those 
concerns, arguing that all witnesses in the case have already testified during 
the ongoing trial behind the closed doors.
The lawyer said that Tonoyan, who was sacked in the wake of the disastrous 2020 
war with Azerbaijan, remains behind bars for political reasons. But he stopped 
short of explicitly accusing the Armenian government of ordering law-enforcement 
authorities to fabricate the charges.
Tonoyan likewise claimed shortly before the start of the trial that he is being 
made a scapegoat for Armenia’s defeat in the six-week war. He he too avoided 
pointing the finger at Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
In early August, Tonoyan agreed to testify before an ad hoc parliamentary 
commission tasked with examining the causes of the defeat. The two opposition 
blocs represented in the National Assembly have been boycotting the work of the 
commission. They say that it was set up last year to whitewash Pashinian’s 
wartime incompetence and disastrous decision making.
Tonoyan called for an end to the opposition boycott when he appeared before the 
commission made up of only pro-government lawmakers. Some opposition figures and 
other critics of the government scoffed at the appeal, saying that the 
ex-minister is desperate to get the authorities to set him free.
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.
 

Armenpress: Armenian serviceman killed in Azeri cross-border shooting

 23:08, 21 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 21, ARMENPRESS. An Armenian serviceman was killed Monday when Azerbaijani troops opened cross-border gunfire, the Ministry of Defense said in a statement.

“On August 21, at around 3:30 p.m., the units of the Azerbaijani armed forces opened fire against the Armenian combat outposts nearby Akhpradzor, in the wake of which a serviceman of the N military unit of the Republic of Armenia Ministry of Defence Vanik Aram Ghazaryan was fatally wounded. The Ministry of Defence extends its deepest condolences to the next of kin, relatives, and co-servicemembers of V. Ghazaryan,” the ministry said.

Talks Underway between Iran, Armenia to Adjust Transit Fees

Tasnim News Agency, Iran
Aug 26 2023


August, 26, 2023 – 09:54 Economy news

TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Talks are ongoing between Tehran and Yerevan on adjusting customs tariffs for t entry of transit trucks and streamlining customs activities electronically at the border with Armenia, an official said.

Speaking at a meeting on Friday with the chairman of the State Revenue Committee of Armenia, Hojjatollah Abdolmaleki, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme Council of Free Trade-Industrial and Special Economic Zones said, “In line with the agreements made between presidents of the two countries, free industrial-trade and special economic zones are seeking to boost trade exchanges with the Republic of Armenia.”

Turning to efforts to increase the trade and transit exchanges with Armenia through the borderline located in Aras Free Zone, he called the streamlining of customs activities electronically at the border and adjusting customs tariffs for entry of cargo trucks as the two main topics discussed at the meeting.

The chairman of the State Revenue Committee of Armenia, for his part, said amicable relations and sound cooperation between Iran and Armenia are longstanding.

He added that increasing trade exchanges has great significance for Yerevan.

Armenia attaches great importance to its relation with Iran in all fields, he emphasized.

The California Courier Online, August 24, 2023

The California
Courier Online,

 

1-         Armenia’s
Incompetent Actions at the UN

            Did More
Damage Than Good

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Azerbaijani
Protesters Arrested after

            Assaulting
Armenians Outside UN Headquarters in NY

3-         Artist Haro
Istamboulian Featured in

            ‘Let’s
Paint Sherman
Oaks’ Utility Box Project

4-         ‘Between Two
Worlds’: Moving story of Armenian-American trauma, pride

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************

 

1-         Armenia’s
Incompetent Actions at the UN

            Did More
Damage Than Good

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

           

The United Nations Security Council is composed of 15 member
states: Five are permanent members with veto power (China,
France, Russia, the United
Kingdom, and the United States), and the other 10,
have a term of two years, on a rotational basis.

The Security Council’s powers include establishing
peacekeeping operations, enacting international sanctions, and authorizing
military action. It is the only UN organ with the authority to issue binding
resolutions on member states.

With such extensive responsibilities, the Security Council
is the right UN body to deal with Azerbaijan’s blockade of 120,000
Artsakh Armenians which risks their starvation resulting in genocide, according
to the UN definition of that term.

Regrettably, the Armenian government, due to the
mismanagement of its approach to the Security Council, mishandled this unique
opportunity to get the UN body to adopt a resolution urging Azerbaijan to
immediately unblock the Lachin Corridor. Otherwise, it would impose severe
sanctions.

The proper way to have handled the petition to the Security
Council would have been for Armenia
to prepare the text of a draft resolution, meet with all 15 members, and try to
get them to agree to the proposed resolution. Since the blockade has been going
on for eight months, the Armenian government had plenty of time to do this
work.

Without any preparations, petitioning the Security Council
and expecting a positive outcome is unrealistic and self-defeating. The
ambassadors of the 15 member countries always receive advance instructions from
their foreign ministries on what to say during the UN meetings and if there is
the pre-prepared text of a proposed resolution, they are told how to vote.
Nothing is decided on the spot during the meeting and no action can be taken
that has not been agreed upon in advance.

The Armenian government should have known these basic facts
and have taken the proper steps before requesting a Security Council meeting in
order to ensure a successful outcome. In this absence of such a preparatory
work, it is not surprising that the Security Council did not adopt a resolution
to warn Azerbaijan
that unless it unblocks the Lachin Corridor immediately, severe sanctions will
be imposed.

During the meeting, all 15 member states delivered speeches,
many of them urging Azerbaijan
to unblock the Lachin Corridor and resolve the issue through peaceful
negotiations. The French Ambassador delivered the most favorable speech for Armenia, while
the Russian Ambassador’s remarks were disappointing. When the meeting was over,
everyone got up and went home without adopting a resolution and resolving the
blockade. Azerbaijan and Turkey, which
are non-members of the Security Council, repeated their myriad of lies about
the Lachin Corridor, denying the obvious facts known to the whole world. To
counter Turkey’s remarks,
why didn’t Armenia arrange
to have Cyprus or Greece attend
the meeting to support its position?

Regrettably, the UN Security Council member states preferred
to pursue their own narrow national interests rather than trying to save the
lives of 120,000 starving Artsakh Armenians, thus abdicating their humanitarian
responsibility and undermining the integrity of the United Nations
Organization. Shamefully, the Security Council did not even bother to back up
the two decisions of the International Court of Justice on unblocking the
Lachin Corridor.

Armenia’s
Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, who flew to New York on this occasion, gave a proper
speech, urging the Security Council “to act as genocide prevention body and not
as genocide commemoration, when it might be too late.” Mirzoyan asked that the
UN dispatch an interagency needs assessment mission to Artsakh, which was
ignored. Nevertheless, he failed to request that the UN Security Council order Azerbaijan to
open the Lachin Corridor and impose sanctions, if it did not comply. On the
other hand, the Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan, Jeyhun Bayramov, did not bother
to fly from Baku to New York, knowing full well that nothing
will happen at the UN meeting.

Azerbaijan’s
Ambassador falsely stated that since Artsakh is a part of his country’s
territory, it can do as it pleases and no one has the right to interfere. The
whole world knows that he is completely wrong. Human rights violations are of
universal interest. They are of serious concern to the whole world and are not
the internal issue of any one country.

While it is true that several Ambassadors urged Azerbaijan to
unblock the Lachin Corridor, regrettably, these requests were mere words which
fell on deaf ears. Azerbaijan
ignored all such requests, as it has rejected similar pleas from several heads
of states, foreign ministers, the European Union, European Council, European
Court of Human Rights, World Court,
and Secretary-General of the United Nations. Words without action are
meaningless.

To save face, Prime Minister Pashinyan told Armenians after
the UN meeting that now the whole world knows that Azerbaijan, contrary to its
denials, was blocking the Lachin Corridor. This is a meaningless statement as
everyone already knew that the Corridor was blocked. That was not the purpose
of the UN Security Council meeting. The purpose was to adopt a resolution and
impose sanctions on Azerbaijan.
Armenia
failed to accomplish that important objective.

The UN Security Council meeting was much more than a missed
opportunity for Armenia
and Artsakh. Having raised and then shattered the expectations of Armenians
that the Security Council will lift the blockade further demoralized Armenians
worldwide. It would have been far more preferable for Armenia to take
no action rather than make a half-baked attempt which caused more damage.

Since last week’s failed meeting, Azeri officials have
boasted that no one at the UN believed Armenia’s ‘baseless accusations,’
as a result of which no decision was taken. Regrettably, Azerbaijan is now emboldened more than ever to
take further aggressive steps against Artsakh and Armenia,
knowing full well that no one in the world will take any action against Azerbaijan.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         Azerbaijani Protesters Arrested
after

            Assaulting
Armenians Outside UN Headquarters in NY

(The US
Armenians)—Two Armenian activists were assaulted outside the United Nations
Headquarters in New York
on August 17 by Azerbaijani counter-protesters.

Mari Lucine Chobanyan and her mother Manik Karapetyan
described being harassed and assaulted by three Azerbaijani counter-protesters
(one male and two female) who tried to cover the Armenian signs with Azeri
flags; then tore the family’s posters apart; used the Azeri flags to stifle
Chobanyan and Karapetyan by covering their faces and heads; pulled Chobanyan’s
hair; shouted slurs at them in Russian—and then ultimately one of the
counter-protesters struck Chobanyan in the back with a flagpole leaving a large
red welt.

The two female counter-protesters were subsequently
arrested.

The entire incident was captured on video by an Instagram
user named “ma4stro_” and posted to The US Armenians page.

Chobanyan posted a comment shortly after the incident on one
of the videos informing that one of the women was released, while the other
woman was still in police custody. Chobanyan said the family would be pressing
charges.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
3-         Artist Haro Istamboulian
Featured in

            ‘Let’s
Paint Sherman
Oaks’ Utility Box Project

 

For the third time, the Sherman Oaks Chamber Foundation
chose artist Haro Istamboulian for a grant to paint a utility box in the city.
Istamboulian submitted his design—a number of honeybees flying throughout a
blue sky, gathering pollen from white and yellow flowers and taking them back
to their golden honeycombs dripping with fresh honey.

Istamboulian’s utility box is on the corner of Beverly Glen Drive
and Dickens Avenue
in Sherman Oaks.

The Chamber Foundation offers grants to local artists to
paint LADOT Utility Boxes in Sherman Oaks. In partnership with the Los Angeles
City Countil and Mayor Karen Bass, along with Council District 4—currently
helmed by Councilmember Nithya Raman—the grants offered by the foundation
include the cost of all materials. After painting, the utility boxes are
branded “Let’s Paint Sherman Oaks” and the Chamber Foundation covers all the
boxes with an anti-graffiti coating and cleans them monthly.

“I’m grateful to the chamber for having confidence in my
work, and for again giving me the opportunity to have my art become a lasting
part of making the city more beautiful for everyone,” said Istamboulian.

Throughout the last eight years, Let’s Paint Sherman Oaks
has beautified the city of Sherman Oaks, Calif., by sponsoring
the painting over 100 utility boxes.

The organization has hosted three community art walks;
created a public art installation at Westfield
Fashion Square in Sherman Oaks with over 200 local
students; and painted a public mural at Ventura
and Noble.

 

**********************************************************************************************************************************************

4-         ‘Between Two
Worlds’: Moving story of Armenian-American trauma, pride

By Larry Wilson

 

(Pasadena
Star News)—Southeast Altadena and Northeast Pasadena
have always — meaning, for well over a century — been Armenian neighborhoods.
Not entirely, but substantially.

Some immigrants came here even before the Armenian Genocide.
Why, former Pasadena police Chief Barney
Melekian’s grandparents ran a bakery in East Pasadena,
and he’s in his 70s now.

When I was a child in Altadena,
we defined neighborhoods by the attendance zone of the local elementary
schools. And you knew everyone for many blocks around you, because everyone,
almost literally, in my Baby Boom generation went to the public schools.

At Luther Burbank, the friendly rival to my far Northeast Altadena elementary, Arthur Amos Noyes, there
were plenty of kids from Armenian families. Avazians. Barmakians. Meymerians.

At more WASPy Noyes, not so many. But I suppose we always
knew that the Macer family — big house on Altadena Drive, father a prominent
physician — had ancestors from Armenia. And just didn’t have an “ian” at the end
of their name.

And we certainly knew that my classmate Jemela Macer, a
smart and popular yet “quiet” girl, had an unusual name. But I will swear on
whatever you consider holy that I never heard one person — and you know how
mean young children can be — make fun of the name or of Jemela herself in that
way kids will do when anything at all is considered out of the ordinary. Never.
And I have a good memory for those years.

But we also were told at some point that Jemela wanted to be
known by her middle name, Sue. OK, we said. But I could never quite get used to
it.

And now I find by reading a new book by Jemela — long a
clinical psychologist in La Canada Flintridge and Glendale — that there was a
kind of trauma associated with that name change, along with her father’s
decision in medical school to change the family name from Mahsereghian to
Macer. A lot of trauma, in fact.

And she details it all in her wonderful, moving “Between Two
Worlds: An Armenian-American Woman’s Journey Home.” I recommend it not only to
those of us interested in the Armenian diaspora, but to anyone interested in
what it means to be American here in California, with all of us excepting the
almost wiped out native Tongva descended from recent immigrants to this land.

The Armenian-Californian experience is a particular one,
filled with its own pains and joys. At the beginning of Jemela’s book, reading,
for instance, about her father’s decision to change the family name, I was
inwardly scoffing. My sister’s and my own pediatrician down on Pasadena’s
fancy-doctor East Green Street was Dr. Hovsepian, a properly beloved figure in
the community, twinkly, forever pulling the parlor trick of finding a hidden
nickel behind our ears. He did OK, keeping the “ian,” right?

As I continued through her book, and through her telling of
her family, marriage and career path after a childhood in which the name change
had an actually profound effect on her life, I now see that my scoffing was
part of a whitewashing of the Armenian experience in Southern
California.

Having the name Macer also opened her ears and eyes, as for
decades she’s suffered through weirdly anti-Armenian colleagues and
acquaintances, not knowing her background, openly expressing their prejudices
against the more newly arrived families in Glendale, where her therapy practice is.

There is so much in “Between Two Worlds” — so much of her
loneliness as a child considered chubby, which I’d never known of; so much
hard-won spiritual growth; an incredible story of her eventual trip of
rediscovery to Turkey and Western Armenia with other descendants of immigrants,
which she calls her “Genocide Tour.”

But for me the most telling story here is of the struggles
of her Glendale
patient Taline, daughter of Armenian immigrants, trying to be the perfect
child, graduating from USC, nominally engaged to a boy from an Armenian family,
actually in love with a brash and fun blonde girl called Erica.

“I understood,” Jemela writes, “that Taline was caught
between the old Armenian world of my grandparents and the new American world
that Erica represented. Whatever she chose, something would be lost, and
something would be gained.”

After travels into her past, after a struggle, Jemela
concludes: “I cast out shame, and remember where we have been, what we have
suffered, and who we are. On good days, I replace shame with pride.”

 

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The Armenian diaspora of Madras

India – Aug 20 2023

 

In this series, we take a trip down memory lane, back to the Madras of the 1900s, as we unravel tales and secrets of the city through its most iconic personalities and episodes 

Venkatesh Ramakrishnan

CHENNAI: One of the oldest streets in the black town of Madras is named after a central Asian country. No wonder because the Armenians have contributed immensely to the growth of this city apart from many cities across the world too. For the unversed, there are Armenian streets in at least 50 cities across the world. Even today, Armenians are spread across the world outside Armenia, three times more than within their nation. 

This is a painful joke played by history on the landlocked country with its own rich heritage. Sandwiched between empires like the Ottoman Turks and Russia, Armenia was always easily accessible to the invaders. The knowledgeable lot of the Armenians left their motherland to seek their fortunes elsewhere.
Several times, Armenia vanished from the political maps, but the Armenian diaspora added wealth to the cities they settled in. 

They came here even before Madras was established. They were a thriving community in the Portuguese Santhome, 100 years before the foundation was laid for Fort St George. When Santhome started shriveling, they moved three miles north. Other Armenians started moving in mainly from Persia and the Philippines. 

As their people were spread across countries, this helped them set up a network that could not be rivalled by any other trading power. When the East India company loaded its goods onto a ship for England, the goods would take six months to reach the shores of Britain, crossing the cape of good hope. But a lot of the goods would be sent by the company through the Armenian land network. The list would reach the company headquarters a solid month before the ship with the goods docked. This prior information helped the company to find the best buyer for their goods and increased their profit manifold.

Armenians also lent to the company when there was a shortage of funds. It was their trading and the resultant taxes that enriched the city. Importantly, unlike the Portuguese or the Dutch they had no colonial ambitions and did not offer any competition to the company. Even in trade they carefully kept away the goods the company was dealing in. They were into jade, garnet, diamond and pepper trades. 

Soon they started emerging as the richest community in the town. Once, a group of Armenians decided that they would move back to Santhome and revive it as a trade centre. This frightened the company so much that they were given rights, equivalent to the Britishers and were ordered to stay back. 

One of the earliest Armenian printing presses was established in Madras in 1772. The first Armenian newspaper was also published here. The publisher- a deep patriot, printed a republican constitution for the Armenian nation when it became free.

The philanthropic nature of the Armenians is what makes their stay in Madras memorable. The most important Armenian citizen, who had a right to own property within the fort was Petrus Uscan. He built the Marmalong( Mambalam) bridge in Saidapet replacing an erstwhile causeway on the Adyar. The bridge has now been replaced though Uscan’s plaque remains. He also paved the steps for St Thomas Mount to enable pilgrims to climb to the church on it easily. 

But his help to madras was much bigger than all these munificence. When Marathas or Golconda Sultans wanted to invade Madras, Uscan was sent as an envoy seeking peace and negotiating a truce. The very survival of Madras today may have been due to his negotiation skills. 

As time went by, the company lost interest in trading and turned its attention towards conquest and tax farming. Armenians started moving towards greener pastures.

A road leading to the fort was named after the Armenians and their church was built there. 350 burial stones are in the garden of the church. Their separate burial ground was on the island. Because there are only a handful of Armenians today in Chennai, the church is only open for visitors. But every Sunday morning the bells from a three-storied bell tower ring and black town remembers a colourful memory of a tribe which enriched the city. — The writer is a historian and an author

https://www.dtnext.in/news/city/the-armenian-diaspora-of-madras-731016#bypass-sw