Security of the country and inviolability of its borders not subject to negotiation, Armenian President says

Public Radio of Armenia
Security of the country and inviolability of its borders not subject
to negotiation, Armenian President says
President Armen Sarkissian says the situation in Syunik is extremely
worrying and attaches importance to finding a soonest solution.
According to the President, it is urgent to take all necessary
measures to unconditionally protect the interests of the Republic of
Armenia, the security of the citizen of the Republic of Armenia.
The President and the President’s Office is in constant contact with
the relevant state bodies and receive information directly from Syunik
region.
The President’s position is that the security of the country and the
inviolability of the borders are not negotiable, any encroachment is
condemnable and must be met with a clear and sharp reaction, as well
as an international response.
“The Azerbaijani side bears all the responsibility for further
aggravation of the situation, disruption of the already sensitive
situation in the region,” the President says.
 

Vazgen Manukyan announces meeting of Homeland Salvation Movement Council on May 14

Panorama, Armenia

Vazgen Manukyan, a joint interim PM candidate of the Homeland Salvation Movement, which demanded the resignation of Nikol Pashinyan and his cabinet, on Thursday announced a meeting of the movement’s Council amid the security challenges in Armenia’s Syunik Province.

“The developments in Syunik point to serious threats facing our country. Until the [snap parliamentary] elections, we may lose new territories of our homeland under this government,” he said in a statement.

“I invite the members of the Council of the Homeland Salvation Movement to a meeting tomorrow, May 14, at 5pm, to discuss our further steps,” Manukyan said. 

Live transmission cameras expected to be installed at polling stations

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 16:20,

YEREVAN, MAY 11, ARMENPRESS. The Central Electoral Commission (CEC) is working to install video cameras for live transmission in at least 1500 polling stations at the snap election of parliament scheduled for June 20, the CEC Chairman Tigran Mukuchyan said when asked by reporters on the issue.

“Work is underway at this phase. The installation of cameras during elections is done through an organization selected by the government. We are aware that at this phase works are being done,” he said.

Mukuchyan said that during the last election cameras were installed in 1500 out of 2009 polling stations where the overwhelming majority of voters cast their ballots.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

US breaks taboo on Armenian genocide, Turkey angered

May 8 2021

Major-General Arkady Ter-Tadevosyan posthumously named National Hero of Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
May 8 2021  

According to a decree signed by President Armen Sarkissian, Major-General Arkady Ter-Tadevosyan (also known as Commandos) was posthumously awarded the Order of Motherland for his exceptional services in the establishment and development of the Armed Forces, the establishment, defense and security of the homeland.

The Order of Motherland is awarded for exceptional services of nationwide importance rendered to the Republic of Armenia in the spheres of the defense of the state and strengthening of law and order, as well as for creation of significant national values.

The recipient of the Order is considered a National Hero of Armenia.

Lavrov forecasts greater trade turnover between Russia, Armenia as pandemic ebbs

TASS, Russia
May 6 2021

YEREVAN, May 6. /TASS/. The decline in foreign trade turnover between Russia and Armenia is temporary, and the volumes will increase once the coronavirus pandemic dies out, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Thursday at a press conference following the talks with Armenia’s top diplomat Ara Ayvazyan.

“There is no doubt that as we get out of the epidemiological situation, [our] trade turnover will increase, and at a rapid pace,” he predicted. The Russian minister recalled that the decline amounted to 9.6%, but the remaining volume of $2.3 bln still remains very solid.

He also shed light on “the opportunities that are opening up thanks to the work of the tripartite group of deputy prime ministers to unblock economic and transport links in the region.” “When these agreements are undoubtedly reached, they will significantly boost both Russian-Armenian [trade] volume and overall interaction between Armenia and its neighbors in the region,” Lavrov forecasted.

As hatred festers, some Armenians and Azerbaijanis fight for friendship

EurasiaNet.org
April 30 2021
Joshua Kucera Apr 30, 2021
Mountains in Karabakh (Ogannes/Creative Commons)

In the months following last year’s war, hatred between Armenians and Azerbaijanis has only grown. Interethnic friendships have been severed, former liberals have turned nationalist and Caucasus social media has become a wasteland of insults and racism.

But in this toxic environment, some Armenians and Azerbaijanis are fighting back. A handful of new social media initiatives have emerged allowing people from both sides to talk to one another with the goal of dialogue and understanding rather than winning arguments.

“During the war I ‘met’ Azerbaijanis on social media for the first time and I realized that I don’t know anything about these people, I was just automatically afraid of them,” said Anahit Baghdasaryan, a 30-year-old tour guide in Dzoraghbyur, just outside Yerevan. “Then, obviously, it was impossible to have conversations.”

But after the war she got more curious about the Azerbaijani perspective, and a friend invited her to a closed Facebook group, Kavkazskiy Perekrestok (Russian for “Caucasus Crossroads”). Created in January, it now has more than 1,000 members and features multiple posts a day ranging from serious discussions about the conflict to self-deprecating memes and simply pretty pictures from Baku and Yerevan, which gather dozens of likes from users of both nationalities.

“I immediately jumped at the chance” to join the group, Baghdasaryan told Eurasianet. “Every day the group has more and more people, and the tone is more and more calm and friendly. This group is a break from the rest of Facebook, where it’s only hate and insults.”

The friendly tone isn’t a given. The group has eight moderators, evenly distributed between Armenians and Azerbaijanis, and there is a long list of rules. Members can only invite people “whom you know personally and whose peaceful approach is certain.” Users are required not to quibble about place names or flags in profile photos: “There was just a war, and people support ‘their’ side. This is normal.” Comments are required to be respectful, and avoid “insults, vulgarity, personal attacks, and stoking nationalism.”

Facebook even shut down an earlier version of the group because comments got out of control. The earlier group also was the subject of a hit piece on Sputnik Armenia that accused its Armenian participants of being too solicitous toward Azerbaijanis. But a new group of organizers and moderators reformed it.

“It’s not easy to make sure all the rules are being followed in such a complex group and at the same time remain impartial,” the moderators said in a joint response to written questions from Eurasianet. “People get tired and burnt out” and new moderators regularly replace them.

The efforts have paid off, though.

“This group is the only place on the social networks where both Armenians and Azerbaijanis can free themselves from any prejudices towards each other,” said another active user, Elchin Karimov, a 32-year-old Azerbaijani now living in Canada and working as a business consultant. He joined because he is “tired of this conflict, of this hatred towards Armenians and their hatred towards my people,” he told Eurasianet.

“After the war, I finally overcame any last prejudices toward our neighbor and seeing Armenians craving peace and friendship made me believe even more that our two nations are 99 percent the same,” Karimov said. “I hope my children, who are born abroad, will witness this peace as I am trying to raise them without hate or prejudice towards anyone – something that no one taught me in school and I still have to learn myself.”

A meme about Kavkazskiy Perekrestok

There are few illusions about the group contributing to a broader peace between the two sides; users instead describe it as therapeutic for them personally. Sergey Harutyunyan, a 55-year-old living in Yerevan, said the group allows him “to maintain a grain of optimism – outside this group is so hateful that it wears down any decent person.”

Another new initiative, Bright Garden Voices, also was launched in January and also is run by a mixed group of volunteers. They have put on a series of Zoom discussions, also broadcast on YouTube, featuring young scholars and activists from each side of the conflict. While the topics are serious, the organizers strive to orient them more to “regular citizens” than the usual think tank events that have proliferated since the war.

Those events “were interesting to watch for those who wanted to learn more about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, but at some point we noticed that it was always academics, many times the same people, talking about the same stuff with a very political focus, and also, mostly men,” the organizers said in a joint response to written questions from Eurasianet. “What about the regular citizens? What about other aspects of the conflict other than the war, Putin, Erdogan, and whoever? What about women?”

The three main organizers – an Argentinian, an Armenian-American, and an Azerbaijani – first “met” one another on Twitter. (Twitter, too, has seen the emergence of a handful of new accounts amplifying cross-cultural understanding, including Karabakh Voices and Armeno-Azerbaijani Transformation.)

But for the most part, they said, “the conversations [on Twitter] would quickly be taken over by fanatics and one wrong word would derail the whole discussion. We figured that it was necessary to create a safe space for discussion where alternative voices could be heard.”

The series started gently, with an English teacher from Baku and an Armenian graduate student simply talking about how it is to be non-nationalist in their respective societies. But it has since taken on more sensitive issues, like national identity, the status of women in the Caucasus, and the fates of those displaced from their homes in the first conflict 30 years ago.

“We’re not really trying to start debates but rather creating the atmosphere for everyone to really listen to what the other has to say and to try to understand their positions and opinions,” the moderators said. “Bright Garden is intended as a platform for regular people to re-engage with and listen to each other.”

The grassroots origin of these new projects stands in contrast to the countless NGO-run peacebuilding projects that brought together Armenians and Azerbaijanis before the war in an attempt to reduce distrust between the two societies. Those efforts have become a common punching bag since the war broke out, as many former participants’ ostensible interest in peace was quickly revealed to be superficial and insincere.

“The liberal NGO model is not flexible enough for bringing together voices in a constructive way,” said Leon Aslanov, a UK-based scholar and activist who works on the Caucasus. “It’s a bureaucratic process and it doesn’t yield any results. People met at workshops once in a while [and then] during the war 95 percent of them went back to the nationalist discourse of their respective society.”

Aslanov is a founder of another new initiative, Caucasus Talks, which was created shortly before war broke out last year, in June. It was originally intended as a sort of Caucasus annex of a left-wing European movement, DiEM25, and not to specifically deal with the conflict. “But we were forced into it because of the events,” Aslanov told Eurasianet.

During the war Caucasus Talks organized a petition calling for peace that became the source of controversy, especially in Azerbaijan. Since then it has produced an eclectic range of output including podcasts, YouTube discussions and a series of interviews with anonymous people on both sides about their personal encounters with the other. “We’re trying to make this a more organic, open space for discussion,” Aslanov said.

That grassroots theme is one emphasized by all the new initiatives. “Don’t forget, we aren’t politicians or historians. We are people who want peаce,” the mission statement of Kavkazskiy Perekrestok explains. “So, leave history to the historians and politics to the politicians. We are just going to talk like normal people.”

 

Joshua Kucera is the Turkey/Caucasus editor at Eurasianet, and author of The Bug Pit.

 

Belichick’s spotlight on Armenian genocide pays off

Boston Herald
May 1 2021
  • May 1, 2021 at 5:38 a.m.

Forget Annapolis.

If any town wanted to honor New England Patriots Coach Bill Belichick with the key to the city it should be Yerevan.

Yerevan, population 1.1 million, is the capitol of Armenia. Although quite modern, it is one of the oldest, continuously inhabited cities in the world.

And while it has nothing to do with Thursday night’s NFL draft, Armenia owes Belichick.

Belichick, who grew up in Annapolis, and who played lacrosse at Annapolis High School, was honored last week at an Army-Navy lacrosse game. He was presented the award by Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley.

In accepting the key, Belichick, who earlier turned down former President Donald Trump’s offer to grant him the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award, said it was “an incredible honor. There’s nothing bigger than that.”

Well, there might be something bigger. And that is the normally reticent Belichick’s outspoken support of the decades-long campaign to get the United States to officially recognize the genocide committed against the Armenian people by Turkey during World War I.

That was when some 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children were systematically and horrifically murdered in a campaign of ethnic extermination by the Ottoman Empire, at the time an ally of Germany.

Hitler was reportedly inspired by the Armenian Genocide in launching the Holocaust that took the lives of six million Jews and others during World War II. “Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?’ Hitler asked upon invading the Soviet Union.

Many of those who survived the Armenian Genocide fled to the United States, and for years sought recognition, as well as accountability, for the atrocity.

The Turkish government, despite the historical record, has consistently denied the genocide, arguing that the Armenians revolted and sided with the invading Russians during the chaos of the war.

Many Armenian Americans, ranging from the late playwright William Saroyan to Cher, have long campaigned for such official recognition.

And while president after president has promised to officially recognize the genocide, even at the risk of alienating Turkey, a NATO ally, President Biden is the first president to come through.

Last week, on Armenian Remembrance Day, Biden fulfilled a campaign promise by officially declaring the Armenian massacres to be genocide.

“Over the decades Armenian immigrants have enriched the United States in countless ways, but they have never forgotten the tragic history that brought so many of their ancestors to our shores. We honor their story. We see their pain. We affirm the history. We do not cast blame but ensure that what happened is never repeated,” he said.

Turkey, whose relations with the U.S. has declined over the years, rejected Biden’s statement. Biden is expected to meet with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in June at the NATO summit in the U.K.

What does this have to do with Belichick?

Last year the normally wordless Belichick raised the issue of Turkish actions against Armenia, not only for the Armenian Genocide but for Turkish support of the attack on Armenia by neighboring Azerbaijan.

“I hope that our country will take action against Turkey and Azerbaijan for their unprovoked and deadly attacks on Armenians,” Belichick said.

He added, “We’ve seen when humanitarian crises and things like ethnic cleansing go unpunished, they just continue to happen. I hope we can put a stop to that.”

Belichick’s remarks were not widely reported. After all, while he is a great football coach, he is not a diplomat or a politician.

So, why would anyone pay attention to Belichick outside of football? Probably because Belichick knows something about ethnic cleansing.

Belichick is of Croatian descent and has visited Croatia, where he has relatives, many times.

If you are from Croatia, you know about ethnic cleansing. It was there where countless thousands of innocent Serbs and Croats fell victim to the ethnic cleansing madness that swept over the region upon the fractious breakup of the former Yugoslavia in the 1990s.

Belichick knows football all right. He also knows about ethnic cleansing. Somebody listened.

Peter Lucas is a veteran Boston political reporter and columnist.

Shots fired at residential home in Stepanakert presumably from Azeri-controlled territory

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 10:33,

STEPANAKERT, APRIL 22, ARMENPRESS. Shots were fired at a residential house in Stepanakert on April 20.  The shots were presumably fired from Azerbaijani-controlled territory.

Artsakh interior ministry spokesperson Hunan Tadevosyan told ARMENPRESS that the owner of the house in the Haykavan district made the 911 call around 15:00.

Damages to the roof showed that the shots were fired from small caliber firearms. “A bullet was found inside the house. Fortunately there are no victims. Children were inside the house when the shooting happened. An investigation is underway to determine the circumstances,” he said.

Tadevosyan said they are investigating whether or not it’s possible for a small caliber round fired from Shushi – now under Azeri control – to have reached the home in Stepanakert.

He said police did not receive 911 calls on the alleged similar shooting incidents in Shosh and Mkhitarashen villages, but given the media reports they are investigating it as well.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia President: Let them return our boys, girls first before talking to Azerbaijan about anything

News.am, Armenia

We are not on an equal footing because let them return our boys and girls first before talking about anything with Azerbaijan, and then we will think about the next step. Armenia’s President Armen Sarkissian on Friday stated this in Tbilisi, Georgia, speaking with Armenian reporters.

“The restoration or normalization of bilateral relations cannot be at the expense of one party—at our expense. I cannot forget the [Armenian] Genocide as history, put it all aside if the other side does not take any steps to recognize [it] or apologize [for it]. When that happens, then we will think, then it will be clear,” Sarkissian said.

And asked whether in his opinion US President Joe Biden will use the word “genocide” in his April 24 message, the Armenian President responded: “I have my analysis, and it would be wrong if the President of the Republic of Armenia says that he has expectations. After all, it will be the decision of the US president, not mine. We will give an assessment when the decision is made. I can analyze, but it would not be right for me to voice it.”