Culture: Off the Beaten Path: The Caves of Armenia

Armenian Weekly
July 6 2017

Special for the Armenian Weekly

Armenia is known for its ancient monasteries in the mountains, its historic brandy, and its warm-hearted hospitality—a small country in the southern Caucuses bridging Europe and Asia. It is a land of undiscovered natural beauty both above and below the ground.

Getting There

Most visitors to the country, fly into the capital city, Yerevan. Several reputable tour companies based in Yerevan offer rough-road and off-road touring and guiding.  Since I was traveling without equipment or transportation, DA Tours (Discover Armenia Tours) was an excellent choice to lead my personalized trip to one of the best caves in Armenia: Mozrov Cave.

Mozrov Cave along with Arjer (meaning “Bear”) Cave and several others in the area are located in the Vayots Dzor province, in the southern part of Armenia, located near the village of Areni, about a two-and-a-half-hour drive from Yerevan. A great way to enjoy the region is to stay at the Areni Wine Art Bed and Breakfast (options for lunch and dinner) with some of the tastiest home-cooked food in all of Armenia.  Its knowledgeable owner, David Simonyan is always eager to lead sightseeing and hiking trips in the area.

Mozrov Cave along with Arjer Cave and several others in the area are located in the Vayots Dzor province (Photo: Carolyn Rapkievian)

Mozrov Cave

Vladimir Grigoryan, owner of DA Tours, provided hard-hats, head-lamps, and flashlights and we turned off the Yerevanyan Highway near the village of Arpi, crossed the Arpa River and ascended a dirt road to around 1560 meters with spectacular views of the valley along the way.

Vladimir Grigoryan, owner of DA Tours, provided hard-hats, head-lamps, and flashlights (Photo: H. Tadevosyan/AMAP)

Mozrov Cave was discovered in 1965 during road construction. The entrance partially collapsed due to heavy snowfall in 2012 but the cave is still accessible. This karst cave is about 300 meters in length and is one of Armenia’s most decorated caves.

Mozrov Cave was discovered in 1965 during road construction. (Photo: Carolyn Rapkievian)

We carefully descended, slipping under the protective tin plates covering the entrance and sliding down the dry, loose rubble.  We soon encountered flowstone, stalactites, stalagmites and columns, pristine popcorn, cave coral, active soda straws, bacon-rind, and draperies.  I was heartened to discover that there was very little evidence of vandalism or damage.  The cave is ideal for intermediate-level recreational cavers on their own and novice cavers with a guide.

Mozrov Cave (Photo: H. Tadevosyan, AMAP)

Mozrov Cave (Photo: H. Tadevosyan, AMAP)

Mozrov Cave (Photo: H. Tadevosyan, AMAP)

Mozrov Cave (Photo: H. Tadevosyan, AMAP)

Mozrov Cave (Photo: H. Tadevosyan, AMAP)

Mozrov Cave (Photo: H. Tadevosyan, AMAP)


Underground and Beyond

Many other caves in Armenia are known for their historic and prehistoric habitation and religious uses. Nearby, in the Areni-1 cave complex, archeologists discovered the world’s oldest known shoe (5,500 years old) and the world’s earliest-known (6,100 years old) wine making. The human remains, fermentation vats, a wine press, and storage jars clearly point to a sacred religious use of the cave.  Tourists are not allowed in the cave but are welcome to explore the ancient cave settlement of Khndzoresk, located near the town of Goris and UNESCO World Heritage Site Geghard, a medieval monastery carved out of a mountain cave with a sacred spring that still flows inside the ancient sanctuary.

in the Areni-1 cave complex, archeologists discovered the world’s oldest known shoe (5,500 years old) and the world’s earliest-known (6,100 years old) wine making. (Photo: Carolyn Rapkievian)

Many of the local wineries still practice the ancient Armenian tradition of wine-making and are happy to take visitors to see their underground cellars–and of course celebrate a great day of caving with a toast!

Many of the local wineries still practice the ancient Armenian tradition of wine-making. (Photo: Carolyn Rapkievian)

Sports: Eubank Jr vows to KO Abraham and give judges an easy night

The Argus (Newsquest Regional Press)
July 4, 2017 Tuesday
Eubank Jr vows to KO Abraham and give judges an easy night
Chris Eubank Jr is adamant there will be nothing for the judges to do
when he faces Arthur Abraham in London this month.
Brighton fighter Eubank Jr says he will halt former two-weight world
champion Abraham and confirm his status as the rising star of the
super middleweight division on July 15.
Eubank defends his IBO World super middleweight crown against Abraham
at The SSE Arena, Wembley, on ITV Box Office.
Last weekend's victory for Jeff Horn over Manny Pacquiao has again
raised questions over boxing's judging system - but Eubank says his
clash with Abraham will not go to points as he is going to flatten the
Armenian-born German.
Eubank Jr said: "I think Arthur Abraham has a great chin as he has
shown on numerous occasions against some of the best fighters in the
world, but I'm going in there to knock him out and knock him out cold.
"I have the tools in both fists to stop Abraham and I will have the
crowd on the edge of their seats.
"I'm faster than Abraham, I hit harder and I have quicker feet. I can
dance around him, peppering shots from all angles and I'm going show
just how lightning fast my fists are.
"It's going to be a tremendous night for me to stop Arthur Abraham
because I'll be doing what so many other fighters have been incapable
of doing. It will be a boxing masterclass."
Abraham has only ever lost once inside the distance, when his clash
against Robert Stieglitz in 2013 was halted by the ring doctor at the
start of the fourth round as his eye was completely closed. Abraham
avenged that loss two years later by stopping Stieglitz.
Abraham's other four defeats were all on points and the German has
racked up 46 wins in a glittering career which has seen his crowned
world champion at both middleweight and super middleweight.
But Eubank Jr reckons Abraham's granite jaw will not be able to stand
up to his speed and accuracy.
Eubank said: "Speed kills in this game and I'm only getting faster and
hitting harder. I'm so confident of winning.
"I know I have the game plan and overall speed to finish Abraham off
early. The judges won't be needed in this one.
"I'm going absolutely all out to KO Abraham and show the rest of the
world just who is the best 12-stone fighter out there. Loads of
fighters have tried to stop Abraham and I'm going to show them how
it's done.
"The crowd on the night are in for a treat. I'm going to take it all
out on Abraham. He isn't going to know what has hit him.
"He won't see the shots coming and when he is lying flat on his back
he will realise just how good I am."
Also on the Poxon Sports card is Lee Selby's third defence of his IBF
World featherweight title against Jonathan Barros, Kid Galahad versus
Jose Cayetano, Robbie Davies Jnr versus Michal Syrowatka and Martin
Ward versus Anthony Cacace.
Registration for the fight is now open at itvboxoffice.com.
 

Sports: Champions League: failed debut Kosovo, the success of Armenia and the Faroe Islands

www.MICEtimes.asia , Singapore
July 5 2017


Completed the first round of Champions League qualification 2017-2018 season.

The champion of Kosovo “Trepca” unsuccessful debut in the Champions League in the second leg of the Kosovars unexpectedly suffered devastating defeat from Faroe “Vikingur”, which is the first attempt managed to get to the second round of Champions League qualification.

Armenian “Alashkert” the second season in a row will play in the second round of the qualifying tournament. Victorious after a difficult duel with “Santa Coloma” a local champion of the Premier League and went out to meet Belarusian “BATE”.

Also successfully started in the Champions League, “Hibernians”, “new Saints,” and “Lynnfield”. For “Tallinn”, “Trepca”, “Europe”, “Piority” and “Santa Coloma” Champions League ended, and really started.

The results of return matches of the first qualifying round of the Champions League:

Tallinn (Estonia) — Hibernians (Malta) 0:1 (first match 0:2)
Goal: Jorginho, 88

Trepca (Kosovo) — Vikingur (Faroe Islands) 1:4 (the first match — 1:2)
Goals: Hasani 65 — angel, 37, Islami, 40 (goal), Watchlar, 52, 59


Europe (Gibraltar) — new Saints (Wales) 1:3 (first leg — 2:1)
Goals: Walker, 53 (penalty) — W. Fletcher, 37, Quigley, 41, 104

Fiorita (San Marino) — Lynnfield (Sat.Ireland) 0:0 (first match — 0:1)

Santa Coloma (Andorra) — Alashkert (Armenia) 1:1 (first match — 0:1)
Goals: Lima, 63 — Nenadovich, 28

The next round of Champions League qualification will be held 11/12 and 18/19 July.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 07/05/2017

                                        Wednesday, July 5, 2017
Mediators Concerned Over Fresh Fighting In Karabakh (UPDATED)
Nagorno-Karabakh -- Ethnic Armenian soldiers walk in a trench at an
artillery positions near the Nagorno-Karabakh's town of Martuni, April
7, 2016
A team of U.S., Russian and French negotiators on Wednesday urged the
parties to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to observe the ceasefire
following fresh skirmishes that reportedly left two Azerbaijani
civilians dead.
"The Minsk Group Co-Chairs urgently call upon the sides to cease
military action," the mediators said in a joint statement. "Violence
only begets further violence and accomplishes nothing."
"The only responsible and humane way to resolve this long-standing
conflict is for the sides to return to the negotiation table in good
faith," they added.
Azerbaijan's Defense Ministry said a 50-year-old woman and her
2-year-old granddaughter were killed on Tuesday evening by Armenian
shelling of their village of Alkhanli just southeast of
Karabakh. Another local resident, also a woman, was seriously wounded,
the ministry said, adding that the Azerbaijani side fired back at
Armenian forces stationed across the nearby section of "the line of
contact."
Azerbaijan -- An Azeri man points at a house damaged during clashes
between Armenian and Azeri forces in the settlement of Gapanli,
outside the frontline Azeri town of Terter, April 5, 2016
Karabakh's Armenian-backed Defense Army came up with a different
version of events, saying that Azerbaijani forces fired five rockets
towards one of its command points from an artillery position located
within Alkhanli.It said its frontline troops retaliated by targeting
that position.
In a separate statement, the Defense Army accused the Azerbaijani
military of using Alkhanli residents as a "human shield." It also
released a short video that purportedly shows two Azerbaijan rockets
landing near Karabakh Armenian trenches overlooking the Azerbaijani
village. It said it was the first time that the Azerbaijanis used
Turkish-made TR-107 multiple-launch rocket systems since the April
2016 hostilities in and around Karabakh.
"If the enemy really suffered casualties among civilians, then we have
to express regret," said the Karabakh army commander,
Lieutenant-General Levon Mnatsakanian. "At the same time I want to
make clear that the armed forces of Artsakh (Karabakh) # will continue
to fully exercise their right to defend themselves and, if need be,
respond to the enemy's offensive actions in a targeted and
disproportionate manner."
Mnatsakanian also warned Baku against resorting to "further military
adventures," saying that they would have "unpredictable consequences."
The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry claimed on Wednesday, however, that
the Armenians are deliberately targeting Azerbaijani civilians living
near the Karabakh frontlines. It said the deaths of the two villagers
"confirmed the terrorist nature" of Armenia. The ministry also said
the American, French and Russian mediators must now demand "the
immediate withdrawal of Armenia's armed forces from the occupied
territories of Azerbaijan and a change of the status quo."
Nagorno-Karabakh -- An Armenian man walks inside a destroyed building
in the village of Talish, some 80km north of Karabakh's capital
Stepanakert, April 6, 2016
Official Yerevan blamed the Azerbaijani side for the deadly
incident. Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian discussed it in phone
conversations with the Minsk Group co-chairs. Nalbandian's press
office said he briefed them on "the situation after the Azerbaijani
provocation."
The Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Tigran Balayan, said that in
order to prevent further bloodshed Baku should comply with
confidence-building agreements that were reached by Armenia's and
Azerbaijan's presidents last year.
Presidents Serzh Sarkisian and Ilham Aliyev specifically agreed to
allow the OSCE to deploy more field observers in the conflict zone and
investigate truce violations occurring there. The Azerbaijani
leadership has since been reluctant to implement these safeguards,
saying that they would cement the status quo in the absence of
progress in Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks.
The latest escalation comes ahead of a meeting of the Armenian and
Azerbaijani foreign ministers expected later this month. The Minsk
Group co-chairs hope that they will help to prepare for a fresh
Armenian-Azerbaijani summit. The mediating troika said after visiting
Baku, Yerevan and Stepanakert last month that Aliyev and Sarkisian
"expressed their intention to resume political dialogue in an attempt
to find a compromise solution for the most controversial issues of the
settlement."
The Interfax news agency quoted the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry
spokesman, Hikmet Hajiyev, as saying later in the day that Baku does
not plan to cancel the ministerial meeting that could take place as
early as next week. "We want substantive negotiations," he said.
Moscow Slams Azeri Travel Ban For Russian Armenians
Russia -- Aaerial view of central Moscow, with the headquarters of
Russian Foreign Ministry, one of the so-called Stalin high rises, in
the foreground, April 06, 2012
Russia publicly demanded on Wednesday Azerbaijan stop barring Russian
citizens of Armenian descent from visiting the South Caucasus country,
saying that the "blatant discriminatory practice" could hurt
Russian-Azerbaijani ties.
The Azerbaijani government has long maintained a travel ban for not
only Armenia's citizens but also ethnic Armenians from other countries
because of the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.It considers any
Armenian presence on Azerbaijani soil a security risk and an affront
to the country's honor and territorial integrity.
The TASS agency quoted an unnamed official at the Russian Foreign
Ministry as saying that 25 Russian nationals with Armenian surnames
have been detained and deported after attempting to enter Azerbaijan
so far this year. The official said Azerbaijani immigration officers
have also interrogated individuals with traditional Russian names
suspected of having Armenian ancestors.
"We have to conclude that Russian citizens arriving in Azerbaijan are
really discriminated against on ethnic grounds," said the official.
"We are continuing to demand an end to the blatant discriminatory
practice which is not compatible with friendly relations between the
two countries. We will certainly be drawing conclusions from the
existing situation."
According to TASS, the Russian Foreign Ministry has repeatedly
demanded explanations from the authorities in Baku and has been told
by them that the travel ban is needed for averting "undesirable
incidents." The ministry official dismissed the explanation as
unsatisfactory.
Commenting on the unusually strong Russian criticism later in the day,
a spokesman for Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry cited continuing
"Armenian occupation" of Azerbaijani territory. "Unfortunately, some
ethnic Armenian individuals display ethnically motivated hostility,
and that is why we take certain measures," the official said,
according to the Turan news agency.
Incidentally, Russia's longtime Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was
born to an ethnic Armenian father. Lavrov has visited Baku on a
regular basis.
The Azerbaijan ban also applies to presumed or actual ethnic Armenians
from Turkey, Azerbaijan's closest ally. In 2014, a Turkish
arm-wrestler called Zafer Noyan was reportedly barred from entering
Azerbaijan and participating in a major competition there because of
his last name which officials at the Baku airport felt is
Armenian. Noyan was forced to flow back to Istanbul despite his
assurances that he is not of Armenian origin.
Polish Envoy Expects New EU-Armenia Deal With `Fingers Crossed'
        
 . Sargis Harutyunyan
Belgium - Armenia's President Serzh Sargsyan (L) walks next to
European Council President Donald Tusk after a joint news statement in
Brussels, Belgium February 27, 2017
Poland's ambassador in Yerevan expressed hope on Wednesday that a new
agreement to deepen Armenia's political and economic ties with the
European Union will be signed as planned this autumn.
"We are waiting for the signing of the document," Jerzy Nowakowski
told reporters. "And as [EU] Ambassador Piotr Switalski has pointed
out, we are waiting not for promises but for concrete steps from our
Armenian partners."
The Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) is a less
ambitious alternative to an Association Agreement negotiated by
Armenian and EU officials in the summer of 2013. President Serzh
Sarkisian precluded the signing of that deal with his unexpected
decision in September 2013 to make Armenia part of the Russian-led
Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). The U-turn was widely attributed to
strong Russian pressure.
The alternative deal apparently contains the main political provisions
of the cancelled Association Agreement. It was finalized in Yerevan in
March and is expected to be signed in Brussels in November.
Armenia - Polish Ambassador to Armenia Jerzy Nowakowski gives a press
conference in Yerevan, 4May2015.
Asked whether he thinks the CEPA could be scuttled like the
Association Agreement was, Nowakowski said: "I cross my fingers and
say no [there is no such risk.] But I cross my fingers."
Speaking in the Armenian parliament last week, Deputy Foreign Minister
Shavarsh Kocharian insisted that the CEPA is "due to be signed this
autumn." "We'll talk about the results next year," he added with a
grin.
Naira Zohrabian, the chairwoman of an Armenian parliament committee on
European integration, said on June 21 that Armenia has "discussed" the
key CEPA provisions with Russia and that the latter does not object to
them. "Therefore, right now I see no risk that the Comprehensive and
Enhanced Partnership Agreement will not be signed in Brussels on
November 24," she told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am).
Press Review
Armenia -- Newspapers for press review illustration, Yerevan,
12Jul2016
"Aravot" pays tribute to Armenia's post-Soviet constitution on the
22nd anniversary of its adoption in a disputed referendum held in July
1995. The paper says that the constitution is one of the key state
symbols that should be respected by Armenians even if it has not been
enforced by successive governments in Yerevan. "Wrong things may be
written in the constitution," editorializes the paper. "Constitutional
provisions are not necessarily enforced, which is certainly the
case. Courts may be dependent [on the government] and corrupt. This
also happens often times. But to extend our cynicism and nihilism to
state institutions means to contribute to their being weak and
underdeveloped."
"Hraparak" quotes Mane Tandilian, a parliament deputy from the
opposition Yelk alliance, as criticizing the Armenian government's
decision to use more water from Lake Sevan for irrigation and power
generation. "We see serious corruption risks here," she says. "When we
speak of [the extra] 100 million cubic meters of water we are told
that only 40 million cubic meters will reach farmers for irrigation
purposes and that the remaining 60 percent will be lost. How did they
calculate that? There are concerns that those 60 million cubic meters
will benefit hydroelectric plants, resulting in extra profits that
will not be taxed."
"We really have a problem with serious oversight in the area of use of
water," Gagik Melikian, a senior lawmaker representing the ruling
Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), tells "Hayots Ashkhar," commenting
on an opposition argument that water losses have not decreased despite
substantial government sums spent on refurbishing Armenia's irrigation
networks. "On the other hand, I don't think that the losses are that
big," Melikian goes on. "I don't exclude that we may have losses in
the canals, but they are not large-scale. I am inclined to think that
water reaches villages but its entire volume is not recorded because
of a lack of necessary equipment. A lot needs to be done in that
area."
In an interview with "Past," political commentator Manvel Sargsian
says that popular demand for political changes in Armenia is not
strong enough. "Unlike previous elections, these latest
[parliamentary] elections were not followed by a wave of protests," he
says. "This is a very important fact. There may be different reasons
for that." The election outcome is viewed as natural by many
Armenians, he adds.
(Tigran Avetisian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2017 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

RA Minister of Diaspora Hranush Hakobyan received Egyptian-Armenian national-public figure Dr. Suren Bayramyan

Please find the attached press release of the Ministry of Diaspora.
Sincerely,
Media and PR Department:
( 374 10) 585601, internal 805
----------------------
Sincerely
Department of Press and Public Relations
( 374 10) 585601, extension 805


260 The RA Minister of Diaspora received the Egyptian-Armenian Ambassador Suren Byramyan.docx

application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document



JPEG image


IMG_0881.JPG

JPEG image


IMG_0883.JPG

JPEG image


IMG_0891.JPG

JPEG image

Turkey’s backing reinforces Azerbaijan’s non-constructive stance, political scientist says

Panorama, Armenia
July 5 2017

Azerbaijan knows Turkey has always been its adherent in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement.  Turkey even sacrificed rapprochement with Armenia for that end, political scientist Alexander Markarov told Panorama.am when asked to comment on Turkish former President Abdullah Gul’s recent statement Turkey would never reconcile with what he called ‘violation of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.’

“Turkey and Azerbaijan share one and the same approach in the Karabakh conflict settlement. With this respect, Azerbaijan enjoys Turkey’s economic, military and political support. Moreover, Turkey’s backing makes Azerbaijan even further reinforce its position and stick to a non-constructive stance that impedes the conflict settlement the whole civilized world is eager to see,” Markarov said.

In his words, Abdullah Gul realizes the falsity of his own statements, saying great powers pay no proper attention to Karabakh conflict. Moreover, he knows well what mechanisms are periodically introduced by international community to make progress in the conflict settlement. 

“The former president of Turkey knows Armenia, Artsakh, and Azerbaijan are the ones capable of resolving the conflict. He also knows the conflict settlement requires political will Azerbaijan fails to show. Azerbaijan also fails to come up with friendly gestures aimed at reducing tensions and establishing atmosphere of mutual trust between opposing forces, instead preferring constant ceasefire violations,” noted Alexander Markarov.

Artsakh Retaliates as Azerbaijan Attacks Using Civilians as ‘Human Shields’

Asbarez Armenian News
July 5 2017


Artsakh positions being shelled from residential areas in Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani Military Post Damaged, Soldiers Killed in Response to Heavy Shelling of Armenian Positions

STEPANAKERT—Artsakh Army responded to major shelling by Azerbaijani forces on Tuesday evening causing heavy losses for Azerbaijan that included fatalities as well as damage to a military post in the Azerbaijani village of Alkhanli, in the southwestern area of the Artsakh-Azerbaijan border, according the Artsakh Ministry of Defense.

Map shows close proximity of Azerbaijani forces to residential areas

According to the Artsakh Defense Ministry the retaliation resulted from an attack by the Azerbaijani forces, which used TR-107 rocket launchers, on Artsakh positions in Varanda, formerly Fizouli. The Artsakh Defense Ministry immediately reported the attack to relevant international bodies and warned that Azerbaijan was attacking Artsakh position from posts stationed within residential areas and using civilians as “human shields.”

On Wednesday, the Artsakh Defense Ministry released a video (see below) clearly showing Azerbaijan’s use of the TR-107 rocket launchers. Also on Wednesday, the Artsakh Defense Ministry refuted Azerbaijani media reports claiming that three Artsakh soldiers were killed during the July 4 attacks.

Another video released (see below) Wednesday by Arshak Zakaryan, a videographer who works with Armenia’s Defense Ministry, shows Azerbaijani attack on Artsakh from a residential area in the Alkhani village.

“Unlike Azerbaijan, the Artsakh Defnese Ministry Artsakh is committed to transparency and regularly provides information on the incidents taking place, whereas disinformation by the enemy is directed exclusively to a domestic audience,” said the Artsakh Defense Ministry.

In an audio recording (listen below), released separately by the Artsakh Defense Ministry on Wednesday, a conversation between Azerbaijani forces proves that the retaliatory fire from Artsakh forces were aimed at neutralizing Azerbaijani attacks. The audio recording also confirms that Azerbaijani forces regularly position themselves within residential areas, turning civilians into human shields.

Artsakh’s defense and foreign ministries on Wednesday touched on the Azerbaijani practice of using its civilian population as human shields with the foreign ministry issuing a statement saying, “in violation of all the norms of international humanitarian law, Baku does not disdain to use its civilian population as a human shield for shelling the territory of Artsakh.”

Artsakh Defense Minister Levon Mnatsakanyan told Interfax Wednesday that “Hiding behind its own people Azerbaijan grossly violates norms of international law.”

Mnatsakanyan also added that Baku’s leadership has legitimized the practice of deploying its firing posts within residential areas and conducting its attacks on Artsakh posts.

“By hiding behind its own people and making them human shields the enemy grossly violates the norms of international law. If the Azerbaijanis really suffered civilian losses, then we have to express regret. But at the same time I announce with full responsibility that today and in the future the Armed Forces of Artsakh will continue to fully utilize their right to protect themselves and will give targeted and disproportionate response to the Azerbaijani attacks if necessary,” Mnatsakanyan told Interfax.

He also dismissed Azerbaijani claims that the Artsakh retaliation resulted in civilian casualties calling it another effort by Baku to mislead the international community.

“First of all I want to say that the Artsakh Army has never been the attacker; however, it is always ready to counter any provocative action launched by the enemy,” said Mnatsakanyan.

As for the Azerbaijani claims of civilian deaths after the retaliation on Alkhanlu village on July 4 Mnatsakanyan said: “this is nothing more than a cynical way to mislead the international community at the expense of the blood of its own innocent people. The Defense Army of Artsakh has never targeted civilian settlements, as it is typical to our adversary, our target has been and will always be those military positions from where the enemy opens fires toward Armenian positions.”

Mnatsakanyan urged Azerbaijan to refrain from further military attacks and find a solution at the “negotiating table.”

Also on Wednesday, Armenia’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Tigran Balayan said in a tweet that in order to prevent further Azerbaijani provocations and losses, Baku must agree to implement the Vienna and St. Petersburg agreements. “To continue provocations on the LoC [Line of Contact], Azerbaijan’s [President] is blocking the establishment of investigation mechanism of incidents,” Balayan also tweeted. In a separate tweet, Balayan said that the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen were briefed on the situation by Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian.

This sentiment was echoed on Wednesday by Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan who said that Azerbaijan’s refusal to establish investigative mechanism serves its intention to put the blame for its continuous provocations on the Armenian sides.

“This is yet another crime committed by Baku’s hereditary regime, which is founded on hatred toward its neighboring nation and the blood of its own population,” Kocharyan said in the Orkarak program of Armenia’s Public Television.

“As long as Azerbaijan fails to implement its international commitments under the 1994 and 1995 trilateral agreements between Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia on a armistice and the ceasefire, and refuses to implement the Vienna and St. Petersburg agreements aimed at the consolidation of the ceasefire and continues to initiate military provocations against Artsakh and Armenia, then the same leadership of Azerbaijan bears full responsibility for all human casualties of those provocations, regardless of their nationality,” said Kocharyan.

Kocharyan also commented on the Turkish Foreign Ministry, which chimed in on Wednesday to offer its support to its “Azerbaijani brothers” and to accuse Armenians of violence.

“During the last April aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan Turkey not only failed to condemn the targeting of civilian population of Artsakh by Azerbaijan, including the killing of children, the barbaric mutilation of elderly people, as well as the ISIS-style beheading of captured Armenian soldiers, but in fact, encouraged those war crimes,” said Kocharyan.

“On the other hand, Turkey declares that it condemns the casualties among the Azerbaijani civilian population suffered as a result of the provocation initiated by the very same Azerbaijan, without even mentioning that the main reason for those casualties was the official Baku’s policy to use its civilian population as human shields. It seems that Turkey’s condemnation or sympathy is conditioned by the national identity, which is far beyond the remits of civilized commentary,” added Kocharyan.

 

 

Minsk Group co-chairman urge end to military action
The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs – Ambassador Igor Popov of the Russian Federation, Ambassador Stephane Visconti of France, and Ambassador Richard Hoagland of the United States – have received information of renewed violence late in the evening on 4 July at Alkhanli village of Fizuli region that resulted in casualties, including civilians.

The Minsk Group Co-Chairs urgently call upon the sides to cease military action. Violence only begets further violence and accomplishes nothing. The only responsible and humane way to resolve this long-standing conflict is for the sides to return to the negotiation table in good faith.

The Co-Chairs extend their condolences to the families of the victims.


Triple threat to Merkel’s G20 bump: Putin, Erdoğan, Trump

Politico
July 6 2017
 
 
Triple threat to Merkel’s G20 bump: Putin, Erdoğan, Trump
 
To make the summit a success, the German chancellor must find a way to stand up to the US president while avoiding a collision.
 
By JANOSCH DELCKER
 
7/6/1
 
BERLIN — For Angela Merkel, meetings like the G20 summit in Hamburg are usually an opportunity to shine. This one comes with a strong dose of trouble.
 
The longtime German leader is known as the “summit chancellor” — Gipfelkanzlerin — for her ability to turn powwows with world leaders into bumps in the polls. Repeating the feat this week will require a tricky balancing act.
 
Officials from the chancellor’s Christian Democratic Union (CDU) say they have identified “three critical variables” that could go badly wrong in Hamburg: Russian President Vladimir Putin, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and U.S. President Donald Trump.
 
Merkel’s challenge: standing up to this coterie of swellheaded strongmen while tamping down flare-ups, and — as host of the summit — herding 19 countries plus the European Union toward a presentable compromise for the summit’s final communiqué.
 
Failing on any of these counts risks leaving her looking weak in her last major appearance on the global stage before Germans head to the ballot box in September’s parliamentary election.
 
The Hamburg summit will mark the first time Trump and Putin encounter each other in person since Trump became U.S. president.
 
“We’re asking ourselves, ‘What if we have a summit that isn’t successful because Trump is blocking everything?’” said a high-ranking CDU official involved in Merkel’s campaign. “Then, the [Gipfelkanzlerin] bonus is gone, and everything will go down another road.”
 
Merkel looks on
 
Of the “three critical variables,” the easiest one to manage is likely to be Putin. Not long ago, the Russian president — who once famously exploited Merkel’s fear of dogs by bringing his large Labrador to a meeting — would have been a top cause of lost sleep among German officials.
 
Tensions between Russia and Germany have been high ever since the Kremlin annexed the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine in 2014. One year later, the European Union imposed sanctions against Moscow over its support for separatists in eastern Ukraine.
 
Merkel’s challenge: standing up to this coterie of swellheaded strongmen while tamping down flare-ups | Odd Andersen/AFP via Getty Images
 
But this time around, the concern is less about the Russian president than about whom he will be meeting. The Hamburg summit will mark the first time Trump and Putin encounter each other in person since Trump became U.S. president.
 
An official bilateral scheduled for Friday has the potential for fireworks. Interest is high, following allegations of Russian interference in the American election. And neither man is likely to accept being upstaged by the other.
 
Merkel’s problem: This is the one event at the summit over which she has the least control. Merkel spoke to both men on the phone recently, and she will meet with Trump in person before he sees Putin. But on the day they meet, she will largely be constrained to the sidelines. “We can’t do much else than just wait to see what’s happening, and then react to it,” another CDU official said.
 
What will Erdoğan do?
 
Handling Erdoğan could be more challenging. Merkel’s relationship with the Turkish president has been on a downhill trajectory since last summer, when the German parliament enraged Ankara by passing a resolution calling the 1915 massacres of Armenians by Ottoman Turks a genocide.
 
Tensions flared further in March after Berlin blocked several rallies in Germany in support of a constitutional referendum intended to strengthen Erdoğan’s powers. Germany is home to roughly 3 million ethnic Turks, almost half of whom are eligible to vote in Turkey, and Erdoğan regards the community as part of his political constituency. He reacted angrily to the ban, accusing Berlin of “Nazi practices.” Turkey also blocked visits by German MPs to its Incirlik airbase, used by German troops in the fight against ISIS.
 
Merkel’s relationship with the Turkish president has been on a downhill trajectory after the German parliament passed a resolution calling the 1915 massacres of Armenians a genocide | Adem Altan/AFP via Getty Images
 
A formal request, submitted by Ankara in June, for permission for Erdoğan to address Turkish citizens on the sidelines of the Hamburg summit, was perceived by Berlin as yet another provocation. The application was quickly rejected, but officials are concerned the Turkish president could nonetheless hold a rally inside a Turkish consulate in Germany, where Berlin has no jurisdiction.
 
ALSO ON POLITICO
 
Merkel’s campaign promise: ‘Prosperity and security for all’
 
VICTOR BRECHENMACHER
 
ALSO ON POLITICO
 
Ahead of G20 summit, EU sees itself as ‘global point of reference’
 
DAVID M. HERSZENHORN
 
“I hear and read rumors of potential appearances in the consulates via a video stream or something like that,” Martin Schäfer, a spokesperson for the German foreign ministry, said Monday. He emphasized “that appearances of such sort would need to be put forward to the German government with appropriate advance notice.”
 
The Trump dilemma
 
It’s the U.S. president who’s most likely to give Merkel heartburn. “Merkel needs to succeed in not going on a collision course with Trump, while at the same time sticking to her principles,” said Dennis Snower, the president of the Institute for the World Economy in Kiel, Germany.
 
The chancellor plans to hold a one-on-one meeting with Trump on Thursday evening, before the summit officially starts, a German government spokesperson confirmed on Monday.
 
She is expected to focus the conversation on areas where Trump has signaled he believes multilateral cooperation is important, such as combating terrorism. But the differences between the two leaders are likely to loom large.
 
The chancellor plans to hold a one-on-one meeting with Trump on Thursday evening, before the summit officially starts | Sean Gallup/Getty Images
 
Government officials in Berlin say they believe Trump will use his first visit to Germany to complain about the country’s trade surplus and demand Berlin spend more on defense — repeating criticisms he made on the campaign trail, in a meeting with Merkel in Washington D.C. in March and most recently in late May, when he told participants at a NATO summit in Brussels that “the Germans are bad, very bad.”
 
Such a confrontation would be doubly delicate for Merkel. Trump is highly unpopular among Germans — unlike his predecessor Barack Obama, who is still greeted by cheering crowds when he visits. And standing up to the U.S. president has become an important theme of the election campaign.
 
Few things would be more toxic to Merkel’s reelection efforts than being perceived as backing down before Trump on the global stage.
 
Walking the line
 
For months, Merkel’s Social Democratic rival Martin Schulz has been trying to capitalize on Trump’s unpopularity in Germany. Last weekend, he dialed up the pressure, stressing in an interview that “the German chancellor needs to have the courage to enter a conflict with the American president.”
 
To make the summit a success, Merkel must find a way to manage the inevitable distractions at a gathering of 20 of the world’s largest egos.
 
In response to pressure from Schulz, Merkel has toughened up her rhetoric. Last week, reacting to renewed criticism of Germany’s trade surplus, she snapped back by pointing out the jobs German companies have created in the United States. Two days later, she suggested Washington’s positions on trade and the environment were out of touch with an increasingly globalized world.
 
So far, her strategy has been successful: Support for the chancellor has surged in the polls, where her conservatives are more than 15 percentage points ahead of Schulz’ Social Democrats.
 
Activists of the “Attac” network demonstrate with an inflatable globe in Hamburg, ahead of a two-day Group of 20 summit | Daniel Reinhardt/AFP via Getty Images
 
In Hamburg, however, Merkel will have her hands tied. Instead of being on the campaign trail, she will be managing the theatrics of the summit — the culmination of which will be a joint communiqué representing the views of the assembled leaders. Failure to deliver something credible will put her leadership in a bad light. So much for the Gipfelkanzlerin.
 
To make the summit a success, Merkel must find a way to stand up to the U.S. president, while directing his attention, and that of the German electorate, toward areas of consensus — all the while managing the inevitable distractions at a gathering of 20 of the world’s largest egos.
 
It’s not likely to be an easy task.
 
7, 4:05 AM CET

Monument in memory of April war hero Ashot Shahbazyan unveiled on his birthday

Panorama, Armenia
July 5 2017

July 5 marks the birthday anniversary of Senior Lieutenant Ashot Shahbazyan, an Armenian solder heroically fallen at 2016 four-day April war. The lieutenant would turn 24 years old today.

A monument and fountain have been unveiled on Wednesday in Ashot Shahbazyan’s native village Akhurian inn tribute to the hero’s memory.

Born in 1993 in Akhurian village of Armenia’s Shirak Province, Ashot Shahbazyan studied at the local school, afterwards continuing his studies at Vazgen Sargsyan Military Academy. After graduating from the academy, Ashot went to Jabrail to continue his military service. While studying at the Military Academy, he stood out with his high academic progress and active public activity. Ashot had a wide range of interests and practiced sports, namely boxing and football.

Ashot Shahbazyan did not choose the military path accidentally. At the Artsakh war, his father  Karapet Shahbazyan, together with the latter’s cousins, left for Karabakh. His cousins lost their lives at the war, later on Karapet decided to name his two sons after the fallen brothers Ashot and Hunan.

Lieutenant Ashot Shahbazyan fell on April 2, 2016. During Azerbaijan’s sudden attack launched at the Armenian military posts, he did his best to defend the positions and repel the enemy. Ashot sustained an injury in the middle of heated battles, however refused to abandon the positions: he continued the combat and fell as a hero. Ashot Shahbazyan was posthumously warded with “For Service in Battle” medal and “Combat Cross” 2nd degree order of Armenia.

Overnight April 1-2, 19 Artsakh servicemen of that positions and the neighboring posts lost their lives. To note, two of the Artsakh Defense Army commanders – Hovsep Kirakosyan and Ashot Shahbazyan – were donors of the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry Foundation.

Armenian FM holds phone talks with OSCE MG Co-Chairs, presents consequences of Azerbaijani provocation

Panorama, Armenia
July 5 2017

Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian has held phone talks with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs and Ambassador Andrzej Kasprzyk, the Personal Representative of the Chairperson-in-Office, spokesman of the Armenian Foreign Ministry Tigran Balayan wrote on Twitter.

“During phone conversations with OSCE MG Co-Chairs and Kasprzik, FM Nalbandian presented the situation after Azerbaijani provocation,” Mr. Balayan tweeted, adding: “Publication of photos of victims of Baku’s provocation is proving the cynical and inhuman nature of Azerbaijani propaganda machine.”