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Azerbaijani servicemen have been inspired by statements of their top officials while conducting torture – Ombudsman

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 11:40,

YEREVAN, JULY 15, ARMENPRESS. At the July 12, 2021 session of the 47th session of the UN Human Rights Council a special video message of Armenia’s Human Rights Defender was broadcast setting forth the following:

Authorities of Azerbaijan continue to deepen the policy of Armenophobia, continue to encourage enmity towards Armenians. Analysis of their actions and public messages prove existence of institutional racist policy clearly amounting to fascism.

Evidence-based reports of Armenia’s Human Rights Defender confirm that the organized Hate Speech and Animosity have become Root Causes of widely spread Ethnically-Based Torture and Inhuman Treatment by the Azerbaijani military during the September-November 2020 war. Currently, this policy is reflected in the actions of Azerbaijani military illegally present near the bordering villages and on the roads between communities of Armenia.

Thorough analyses of over 300 videos of torture and cruel treatment by the military of Azerbaijan have revealed their inspiration by Azerbaijani high ranking officials through use of same words and expressions while beheading, executing, torturing Armenian civilians and military servicemen.

All of these have been confirmed with opening of a so-called trophy park of wax figures of killed Armenians and their helmets in the capital of Azerbaijan.

It is a park of chained people held as hostages. It is a museum of human sufferings; a museum that is designed to promote racism.

All these facts confirm the genocidal policy of Azerbaijan against the population of Artsakh and Armenia.



EU official: Armenia has no economy to waste anymore

Panorama, Armenia
July 9 2021

The European Union continues to be a key partner for Armenia be it the implementation of the reforms or other parts of the reform agenda, EU Commissioner for Neighborhood and Enlargement Olivér Várhelyi told a joint news conference with Armenia’s caretaker Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan in Yerevan on Friday.

He highlighted the commitment of the Armenian government to continue with the reforms.

“These are essential reforms not only for Europe to see but also for the people of Armenia to see,” he said.

The commissioner underlined that last year the EU mobilized over €100 million to help Armenia to fight the coronavirus pandemic.

“We are now working hard to further support the resilience of the healthcare sector and to ensure safe and effective vaccines for everyone,” he said.

“No one is safe until everybody is safe.  No one is safe until everybody gets vaccinated. And this pandemic will not end until everybody gets vaccinated,” he stressed, adding all the efforts would be in vain if a fourth or a fifth wave of coronavirus began.

“Armenia has no time to waste, Armenia has no economy to waste anymore,” Várhelyi said, urging everyone to get vaccinated.

Separately, the commissioner said the EU has mobilized first €6.9 million and later €10 million in humanitarian aid for families of the 2020 Artsakh war victims, which is to be delivered very soon.

“The EU is ready and committed to take a very active role in the post-hostilities situation both as a facilitator of the confidence-building measures, especially to first overcome the humanitarian crisis, and later on as a key partner in the economic recovery in the crisis-hit region and the surrounding regions,” Várhelyi said.

The EU official said he has brought along a package “as a present”, which outlines an economic and investment plan for the economic recovery after the Covid crisis.

OSCE CiO, Secretary General discuss Nagorno Karabakh conflict

Public Radio of Armenia
 

OSCE Chairperson-in-Office, Swedish Foreign Minister Ann Linde discussed the Nagorno Karabakh conflict with ISCE Secretary General Helga Schmidt.

“Excellent meeting with my colleague Helga Schmid in beautiful Hofburg. Many important topics were on the agenda – such as Ukraine, the Nagorno-Karabach conflict and other security challenges,” Mrs. Linde tweeted after the meetng.

Turkish press: Armenian troops fire at Azerbaijani military posts

An Azerbaijani soldier fixes the national flag on a lamp post in the town of Lachin, Azerbaijan, on Dec. 1, 2020. (AFP Photo)

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said on Sunday that Armenian soldiers violated last year’s cease-fire agreement inked after Nagorno-Karabakh clashes and opened fire on Azerbaijani military posts at the border near the Tovuz region.

“On June 27, at about 20:40, the Armenian armed forces units in positions located near Kolagir village of the Berd region using small arms subjected to fire the positions of the Azerbaijan Army in the direction of Garalar village of Tovuz region,” the statement said.

It added that no Azerbaijani military personnel had been wounded or lost.

“Currently, the situation in this direction is stable. Our units control the operational situation,” it noted.

Nagorno-Karabakh lies within Azerbaijan but was under the occupation of Armenian forces since a war there ended in 1994. That war left Nagorno-Karabakh itself and substantial surrounding territory in Armenian hands.

In the 44 days of fighting that began in late September and killed more than 5,600 people on both sides, the Azerbaijani army pushed deep into Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing Armenia to accept a peace deal that saw Azerbaijan reclaim much of the region along with surrounding areas. Russia deployed nearly 2,000 peacekeepers for at least five years to monitor the peace deal and to facilitate the return of refugees. Under the agreement, which leaves Karabakh’s future political status in limbo, Armenia lost control of parts of the enclave as well as the seven adjacent districts that it seized during the 1990s war.

Armenia denies Azerbaijani defense ministry’s statement on firing at Azerbaijani positions

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 11:13,

YEREVAN, JUNE 28, ARMENPRESS. The Defense Ministry of Armenia denies the statement of the Azerbaijani defense ministry according to which the Armenian armed forces opened fire towards the Azerbaijani positions in the border area of Tavush province.

“The Azerbaijani defense ministry is spreading another disinformation, claiming that in the evening of June 27 the Armenian armed forces’ units have opened fire at the Azerbaijani positions, this time in the border section of Tavush province. This information as well has nothing to do with the reality, as the units of the Armenian Armed Forces didn’t fire a single shot at the Azerbaijani positions”, the Armenian defense ministry said in a statement.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

2021 summer draft kicks off in Armenia

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 17:37, 21 June, 2021

YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS. The 2021 summer draft kicked off in Armenia on June 21, the defense ministry told Armenpress.

The first conscripts will leave for mandatory military service on June 21.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

One Of The Oldest Wine Producing Countries Growing Grapes In Conflict Zones; The Reemergence Of Armenia

Forbes

Cathrine Todd, Contributor
A storyteller who focuses on wine and the people who make it.



For many wine producers, harvesting the grapes is the most stressful time period as it can make or break the future of potential wines. Some harvests are easier than others with enough time to gather the grapes with the days and nights going exactly as planned and making it a truly wonderful celebration of gathering ideally ripened fruit under easy circumstances. Yet there are other harvests where each step is trying, terrifying and at times exhausting as Mother Nature paints the skies grey with the gloom and doom of either too much rain or devastating hail. Neither an easy nor tough harvest is an absolute guarantee that the wine will be great as sometimes the cruelest vintages, with regards to weather, can produce incredible wines but those same wines will still send a chill up the spine of the winemaker as the memories of relentless stress are conjured by the very smell and taste of it.

The stresses and pressures that are faced during harvest can be very different in certain wine regions in Armenia – dodging bullets while carrying small boxes full of wine grapes to the car and some being forced to use their tiniest vehicle to harvest the grapes so they are not noticed by hostile military forces across the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Many of these wine grape growers have survived so much; from the repression of the Soviet Union to being placed into an unknown limbo after its dissolution in 1991 and now in a conflict zone where each harvest can become a literal life or death situation, especially in the Berdavan community in the North East province of Tavush. But remarkably, people somehow are able to give a lot of attention to their vines to grow grapes for quality wine as there has been an escalating interest in quality wines from Armenia.

In 2010, archaeologists “unearthed a wine press for stomping grapes, fermentation and storage vessels, drinking cups, and withered grape vines, skins, and seeds” which all together are “evidence of the world’s oldest known winery” in the Areni village in the famous Vayots Dzor wine province located in the southeastern part of Armenia. These discoveries are traced back at least 6,100 years and they were located in a cave now known as Areni-1 which proves humans produced wine “systematically” 1,000 years earlier than what had been previously noted. Armenia is home to over 400 native grape varieties and one can imagine since systematic winemaking had been there for so long with a wealth of grapes as well as a range of varying terroirs that it was on its way to becoming a well-established winemaking country until everything came to a screeching halt when the Soviet Union took it over in 1922.

Armenia made brandy for the Soviets and its neighboring country Georgia made wine and so many of the vineyards were managed for quantity, mixing all of the grapes without any concern for _expression_ of grape variety or vineyard site as well as being removed from the world of wine with no reference point except for what the Soviet Union demanded.

It makes sense that the world discovered the ancient winemaking from Georgia sooner since their wine production never stopped as opposed to Armenia which has stayed longer as a hidden gem of an ancient winemaking land. But there would have had to be a pioneer that would be able to teach the people of Armenia how to manage vineyards, how to make wine that would be at the level of international high-quality standards, who knew people from the outside who could bring interest from the rest of the world; since many parts of Armenia are still a conflict zone surely it would take a warrior to set up such infrastructures within such a tumultuous place… but no, the man who is pioneering the reemergence of Armenia is a lover not a fight, a man who through it all has never stopped dreaming the romantic dreams of walking on the wine path.

Vahe Keushguerian

Vahe Keushguerian is one such man who admits to winemaking not being a “rational business” but he is a man who has lived his life based on the beauty of connecting to people and having experiences that feed the heart and soul with love, excitement and fun. Although he was raised in the Armenian culture he has been a wandering soul from an early age with his family first moving from the western part of Mount Ararat, once Armenia but today Turkey, to Syria and then from Syria to Lebanon, growing up in Lebanon and going from Italy to various cities in the U.S. to eventually back to Italy and then to Armenia.

He initially got into the wine business in 1985 when he started a restaurant in Berkeley, California, and he has thought recently of those times again as one of his regular customers, Jim Clendenen, winemaker and owner of Au Bon Climat and famous original founding member of the “Rhône Rangers”, passed away a little over a month ago. Vahe can remember how fascinating it was to hear many of the Rhône Rangers’ founders come in and talk about their wines, as many times he would set up special menus with them. As Vahe’s obsession and reverence for fine wine grew, in 1994 he started a wine import company in California bringing in wines from Italy and France. Four year later he and his family moved to Tuscany as he said during that time it was an economically depressed area and so he was able to buy 87 acres “almost for free” and that is where he took a very romantic approach to learning how to become a winemaker as he knew what great wine tasted like; through trial and error he would eventually start making wines that he had loved to drink for years.

“It was really risky,” Vahe noted about jumping into winemaking in Tuscany but he is a man that leads with his heart and luckily he said that the demand for Tuscan grapes went up the following year after he purchased the vineyards. Then in ‘97 his life took an unexpected turn that would even surprise a free spirit like Vahe as that year he met a friend in Paris for a fun trip that ended up taking a detour to Armenia. Vahe was shocked to learn how long wine was made in Armenia and as he spoke to winemakers in the area, as well as visiting some of the top vineyard sites, he realized that Armenia was a special winemaking place to be discovered by the world.

Vahe said with a big laugh, “If I had to write it 20 years ago I would have still been making wine in Tuscany, end of story, and living happily ever after but over 15 years later I am making wine in Artsakh here in Armenia” – Republic of Artsakh is a territory that sits between Armenia and Azerbaijan and it doesn’t officially belong to either country as it is a conflict zone.

At first, Vahe flew back and forth to Armenia helping to lay a foundation of improving the wine industry and then in 2009 he decided to move with his family – wife and two kids, to live in Armenia for a “gap year” as his children were going to high school in Maine. He would eventually live in the western area of Armenia, bordering Turkey, in the Armavir province and he has been there for the last 12 years and his daughter, Aimee, moved there full-time six years ago with 2015 being her first Armenian harvest.

Aimee founded Zulal in 2017, introducing the 2015 Zulal Areni Reserve and 2017 Zulal Voskehat wines with the red grape Areni and white grape Voskehat being two well-respected native grapes from Armenia and representing her mission of expressing these grapes and terroirs in single varietal wines – she has, since Zulal’s inception, started working with other native varieties as well.

Aimee discussed how the wine culture is exploding in Armenia as within a short amount of time, the first wine bar, In Vino, opened in 2015 and two years later the first wine focused restaurant opened, Wine Republic, and that each year she can see people getting more comfortable, especially women, drinking wine in communal settings as the old ways of the Soviet Union of drinking vodka or brandy in private rooms is fading.

This change in lifestyle was observed by Zack Armen, co-founder and president of Storica Wines – a U.S. import company bringing in Armenian wines, when he visited Armenia in 2017. Born and raised in the U.S., Zack who is 100% ethically Armenian, went back and forth to Armenia with his family every year as they were very involved in helping the Armenian community with his father’s charity, Children of Armenia Fund (COAF). “For some reason that year seemed to be an inflection point where all of a sudden we were drinking a lot of wine,” noted Zack and he continued, “as we either drank a lot of Russian vodka or Armenia brandy in the past but wine was never part of the things we would order” and he was also surprised that there wasn’t just lots of wine but good wine and wine bars and wine stores popping up all over the place. Zack was already involved in a venture fund where they were investing in agricultural technology and he had been already applying the knowledge to help Armenian vegetable farmers to work in a more sustainable way with his father’s charity but he never thought about wine until that visit in 2017.

Vahe was a friend of his father and they had partnered in different aspects of helping the COAF and once Zack spoke to Vahe and Aimee, learned more about the vineyards and tasted more wines, he knew that he had to find a way to start importing these wines into the U.S. and so he started with Aimee’s Zulal wines and Vahe’s Keush wines which are an _expression_ of Vahe’s love for Champagne.  

Second Generation of Pioneers

Vahe spoke of his excitement for his daughter and her generation when it comes to building the future for Armenian wines. Vahe started a custom crush facility called WineWorks that Aimee now helps to run that initially was to make it possible for him to produce his sparkling wines made in the Champagne-method (Méthode Champenoise) from vines that are over 100 years old that sit at an elevation around 5,800 feet in the famous Vayots Dzor wine region – making them some of the highest vineyards in the Northern Hemisphere – as well as making Aimee’s single varietal Zulal still wines. But over time WineWorks has also launched many Armenian wine producers as they help to get their feet off the ground during their first few years as well as being able to break barriers with placing indigenous variety names on the label such as the first time a grape variety was placed on an Armenian wine label with the Voskehat white variety on the 2013 inaugural vintage of Keush; today Voskehat is considered the white grape with the most potential for fine wine.

Then there is also their vineyard management company helping grape growers to produce more quality grapes leaving behind the Soviet practices of growing for quantity and their fight to establish legislation to help safeguard the future for quality wines in Armenia. And as if that isn’t enough, the EVN Wine Academy where Vahe is the co-founder is helping to give a formal winemaking education to the Armenian youth as well as give them opportunities to do internships in other countries so they can come back with that knowledge and experience to share with their community.

So there are many levels of how Vahe and Aimee are working to grow the Armenian wine industry to live up to its ancient winemaking heritage that ranges from the vineyards to the winery to branding and marketing showing the farmers and their children that there is a bright future for Armenian wines. Aimee was even part of a group that visited the Riedel wine glass factory in Kufstein, Austria, to design a glass for the Armenian native variety Areni; today the Riedel ‘Performance Pinot Noir’ glass lists Areni as one of the grape varieties that it is made for. And she has even connected to U.S. female winemakers through the Bâtonnage forum which brings women in the wine industry together to ask for advice when it comes to winemaking. It has been a tremendous amount of work and their wines show not only the solid infrastructure they have created but the incredible potential as the Keush and Zulal wines express something very distinctive and unique yet they are classic and stunning in their elegance and beauty.  

But even though Aimee is an impressive 28-year-old who has really had to take over and learn every aspect of the wine business, she credits her father Vahe as making any of what they are doing with wine in Armenia possible. Her hope is to take what her father has already built and through time bring in organic and biodynamic practices and design the vineyards with a mindset towards quality which is challenging because each acre is broken up between several farmers where each owns two rows of the vineyard; but even with their Soviet Union designed vineyards they are already producing impressive wines so that is a great sign for the future of Armenian wines.

The wine regions of Armenia have challenges like few other in the world and they needed someone desperately from the outside who was deeply emotionally invested in Armenia to come and discover what it had to offer and be willing to make that commitment, and that man is Vahe Keushguerian.

It was interesting to learn that the reason Vahe was moving to the Republic of Artsakh is because Armenians have recently lost 70% of their land there to a war last fall with Azerbaijan which included the loss of three incredibly important Armenian wineries, vineyards and forests that they used for Caucasian oak. And so Vahe, a man that has lived his life following his heart into wine, has gotten into politics and he has been appointed advisor to the Armenian Prime Minister on economic development. He is coordinating with all the international development companies, the donors and the fundraisers to focus help towards those in Artsakh and to try to protect what they have left of their vineyards and build a wine cooperative.

Standing Up For A Culture’s Rightful Place

Aimee exclaimed, “Our wine industry is so important as our grapes will give us a reason to stay and defend our land as we can’t and we won’t lose our vineyards!” And it just took an ethnically Armenian man, who like many immigrants belonged everywhere and nowhere, basing his life on the romantic visions of his wine dreams; he was supposed to live out his wine fantasy in Tuscany until he discovered to his surprise that in his own blood there was thousands of years of wine culture.

Many times throughout history Armenians have had to flee their home to find safety somewhere else leaving behind their land, their way of life and some of the most sacred things that were rooted in Armenian history, such as their winemaking and vines, and there have been times that they have been threatened to be wiped out if they didn’t give up everything and move to a distant land. Yet the time has come for them to stand up and protect their home, their vineyards and their native grape varieties so they can take their rightful place among ancient winemaking countries.

The wines below are from the famous Vayots Dzor wine province that has proof that wine has been made there for at least 6,000 years if not much longer. The vineyards are many times up high in the mountains, over 4,000 feet, and are planted with ancient indigenous varieties such as the white grape variety Voskehat and the red grape Areni that has vines averaging around 40 to 50 years old that reach up to over 100 years of age. Many of these vines were used for local homemade wine as the vines were not capable of producing large quantities for the Soviet Union and so the winemaking culture has never stopped in this area of Armenia.

NV Keush ‘Origins’, Méthode Traditionnelle Brut, Vayots Dzor, Armenia: 60% Voskehat and 40% Katouni coming from high-elevated (4,920-5,577 feet) volcanic and limestone soils with minimum 22 months lees aging. Lightly toasted bread notes with intense minerality and hint of lemon blossom and white flowers on the nose with marked acidity, lots of energy and finely creamy textured bubbled on the palate. Really impressively elegant all around! $26.

2019 Zulal, Voskehat, Vayots Dzor, Armenia: 100% Voskehat. White flowers and stony minerality makes me think that the indigenous variety Voskehat from Armenia typically has these qualities as the above sparkling had the same notes. Tangy and flavorful with green mango and juicy peach on the palate with crisp acidity and a lifted expressive finish. $20.

2018 Zulal, Areni ‘Reserve’, Vayots Dzor, Armenia: Uniquely pretty nose with spiced pickled cherries, cinnamon bark and lily of the valley wafting in and out with mouth watering acidity, soft tannins with bright red cherries and floral lift continuing on the finish. Wow! So unique yet also perfectly balanced – typically the two don’t go together. $22.

Armenia registers unprecedented growth in number of workplaces in May

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 11:46,

YEREVAN, JUNE 24, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has registered a new figure in the number of workplaces, Caretaker Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting today.

Chairman of the State Revenue Committee Edvard Hovhannisyan informed that the number of jobs with high income above zero comprised 635,000. “This is an unprecedented figure and passed the highest number registered in September 2020 which was 632,000. This is more from the figures of 2018-2020. In particular, it is more by 34,000 from the figure of May 2020, and by 37,000 from May 2019, and by 87,000 from 2018”, he said.

Pashinyan stated that the number of jobs increased by 15% or 86,962 in May compared to May 2018. “The wage fund increased by 38 billion drams or 39% compared to May 2018. Average wage per capita increased by 35,714 drams or 20.2%”, he said.

Pashinyan noted that there is an economic growth in construction sector, which led to the increase in the number of jobs. “We also have a slow, but a steady increase in tourism sector. The next biggest segment is in the catering sector where we have a growth in workplaces”, Nikol Pashinyan said.  

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Pashinyan receives president of Christian-Democratic party Levon Shirinyan

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 16:16,

YEREVAN, JUNE 22, ARMENPRESS. Caretaker Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan is holding political consultations with the leaders of several political forces. On this occasion, Pashinyan received today president of the Christian-Democratic party Levon Shirinyan, Pashinyan’s Office told Armenpress.

“I am happy to see you and thank you for accepting my invitation. I have followed your campaign as much as I managed, and I have a very good impression. I regret that your alliance hasn’t passed the required threshold in the elections, but the peculiarity of the elections is that they are always unpredictable, if they are reallt democratic and free elections. Today I would like to listen to your views on the further process of the domestic political life. I would like to know what you think about the possible platforms of the relations between the extra-parliamentary forces and the government”, Pashinyan said.

In response, Shirinyan stated: “Eventually, the attack was stopped. This is very important, in my view, where we have played a very major role. I can state that our alliance has worked with exclusive efficiency. The continuation of the Revolution, the stability of the state and the strengthening of independence were important. We have no problem here, will stand by your government”.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Vahe Hakobyan slams Pashinyan for taking with him over 1,500 police officers and special equipment to Syunik

Panorama, Armenia
June 15 2021

Opposition Reviving Armenia Party Chairman Vahe Hakobyan, an MP candidate of the Armenia bloc, on Tuesday slammed caretaker Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for taking with him over 1,500 police officers and special equipment to Syunik Province for election campaign rallies.

“Have you noticed that the flag of Armenia on the posters of the ruling party is disheveled? If they remain in power a little bit longer, there will be Turkish and Azerbaijani flags instead of the Armenian flag,” he said at a meeting with residents in the village of Avshar, recalling that June 15 is celebrated as National Flag Day.

Hakobyan stated that on this holiday Pashinyan headed to Syunik, taking with him more than 1,500 police officers and special equipment.

“Whom are you going to use this special equipment against, your people? I hoped that this army would eventually go to the Black Lake to finally drive the Azerbaijanis out of there, but no, he went with this army from Sisian to Goris, from there to Kapan, continuing to tour in Syunik,” Hakobyan said.

Addressing voters, he said that if they want their children to live in a strong and secure Armenia, they should vote for the Armenia alliance on June 20, since the members of the bloc have the “necessary will, skills and knowledge.”