168: Security Council convenes session led by PM Pashinyan

Category
Politics

The session of the Security Council was held led by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

PM Pashinyan said this is the first session of the Security Council since the formation of the new Cabinet and stated: “You know that after April 9 the functions of the Security Council have become more specific and according to the Article 155th part 2 of the Constitution, the Security Council defines the main directions of the defense policy. Our today’s session also aims at discussing these issues and future actions”.

During the session issues relating to the Armed Forces development plan and upgrading and military equipment development state program, as well as increase of efficiency of the combat duty of the Armed Forces were discussed.

Defense minister Davit Tonoyan reported on the introduction of more effective ways and methods for the organization of active defense in the ministry.

Arrest warrant issued for remanded MP’s wife

Category
Society

The Special Investigative Service has issued an arrest warrant for Nazik Amiryan, the wife of Member of Parliament Manvel Grigoryan – the influential former general who is currently remanded in custody pending trial for grand theft and illegal possession of firearms.

Earlier on June 18, anti-corruption officers of police discovered two vargo vehicles loaded with military food supplies in a Yerevan parking lot. The drivers of the vehicles, members of the Yerkrapah Volunteer Union – an NGO formerly chaired by the general – have claimed that they loaded the supplies – canned meat made for the military and not available for sale anywhere – at the instruction of Nazik Amiryan from the headquarters of Yerkrapah Volunteers Union on June 16. About 3000 cans were found in the cars.

An investigation is underway.

Aram Danielyan resigns

Category
Politics

Aram Danielyan, mayor of Hrazdan, a town 45 kilometres northeast of the capital Yerevan, has resigned. The news was confirmed to ARMENPRESS by Hrazdan City Hall spokesperson Alvina Zakaryan.

“Aram Danielyan has convened a special sitting of the city council for early termination of his powers on July 2. Aram Danielyan will recommend city council members to vote in favor of his resignation,” she said.

Danielyan has served as mayor of Hrazdan since 2002.

National Security Service detains former security official

Category
Society

The National Security Service (NSS) has detained Vachagan Ghazaryan, the former first deputy chief of the state protection service, NSS confirmed to ARMENPRESS.

“That’s true, I confirm the information. We will issue a statement later,” NSS Press Center director Samson Galstyan told ARMENPRESS.

Vachagan Ghazaryan held a top position in the security detail of third President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/25/2018

                                        Monday, 
Ex-General’s Son Also Charged With Embezzlement
Armenia - Mayor Karen Grigorian (second from left) joins his supporters 
rallying in Echmiadzin, 16 June 2018.
The former mayor of Echmiadzin has been charged with embezzling aid donated to 
the Armenian military together with his arrested father, retired General Manvel 
Grigorian.
Grigorian was arrested on June 16 when Armenia’s National Security Service 
(NSS) raided his properties in and around Echmiadzin. An official video of 
searches conducted there showed NSS officers finding large amounts of weapons, 
ammunition, medication and field rations for soldiers provided by the Armenian 
Defense Ministry.
They also discovered canned food and several vehicles donated by Armenians at 
one of Grigorian’s mansions. The private donations were made during the April 
2016 fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Karen Grigorian resigned as Echmiadzin mayor immediately after the embarrassing 
video was aired by Armenian TV channels and widely shared on social media on 
June 17. He governed the town located about 20 kilometers west of Yerevan for 
almost ten years.
The Special Investigative Service (SIS), which is conducting the high-profile 
investigation, said Karen Grigorian was charged on Friday with helping his 
father misappropriate three military vans that were contributed by the Armenian 
Diaspora in Russia in 2016.
The SIS did not arrest Grigorian and instead had him sign a formal pledge not 
to leave the country until the inquiry is over. It was not immediately known 
whether the former mayor will plead guilty to the accusation carrying between 
four and eight years in prison.
Armenia - Retired General Manvel Grigorian speaks at a congress of the 
Yerkrapah Union in Yerevan, 18 February 2017.
Manvel Grigorian, 61, has denied the more serious charges levelled against him. 
According to his lawyers, he has told investigators that the supplies found in 
his property were shipped to and from there by other senior members of the 
Yerkrapah Union of Karabakh war veterans without his knowledge.
Grigorian, who was a prominent field commander during the war, has headed the 
union linked to the military for almost two decades. Its governing board 
decided on Saturday to suspend Grigorian as Yerkrapah chairman and convene an 
emergency congress of the once powerful organization.
Grigorian, who served as deputy defense minister from 2000-2008, has held sway 
in Echmiadzin and surrounding villages for more than two decades. He strongly 
supported former President Serzh Sarkisian throughout the latter’s decade-long 
rule. Armenian media outlets have long accused the ex-general and his family 
members of corruption, violent conduct and other abuses.
New Charge Brought Against ‘Violent’ Mayor
Armenia - Davit Hambardsumyan, Mayor of Masis, Yerevan, 2 Jun, 2018
Law-enforcement authorities have filed another criminal charge against the 
embattled mayor of an Armenian town stemming from violent attacks on opposition 
supporters who protested against the country’s longtime leader, Serzh 
Sarkisian, in April.
Mayor Davit Hambardzumian of Masis, who is affiliated with Sarkisian’s 
Republican Party (HHK), was detained and charged late last month with 
organizing one such assault in Yerevan on April 22.
The incident occurred just hours after Nikol Pashinian, the main organizer of 
mass protests against Sarkisian’s continued rule, was detained by security 
forces. Hundreds of Pashinian supporters demonstrating there were attacked by 
several dozen masked men wielding sticks and even electric shock guns.
Hambardzumian denied any involvement in the attack. A Yerevan court refused to 
allow investigators to keep him and four other suspects in pre-trial detention. 
They all were set free three days after their arrest.
Armenia’s Investigative Committee said on Monday that it has collected “factual 
evidence” of the Masis mayor’s involvement in another violent incident reported 
later on April 22. Residents of the southern Ararat province encompassing Masis 
were attacked by a smaller group of other individuals as they marched to 
Yerevan to take part in an anti-government rally.
According to an Investigative Committee statement, four protesters sustained 
major injuries as a result. One of them was shot and wounded.
The law-enforcement agency claimed to have identified the shooter. It said the 
suspect, a Masis resident, is now on the run.
The statement insisted that Hambardzumian was also among the attackers. He was 
formally charged with grave “hooliganism” on Sunday, it said. If convicted, the 
mayor will risk between four and seven years in prison.
Hambardzumian, 32, was elected mayor in 2016 with the help of the HHK. Eight 
senior parliamentarians representing the former ruling party called for his 
release from custody following his arrest a month ago.
Armenia Continues To Back Russia At UN
U.S. -- A session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, December 
21, 2017.
Armenia has again sided with Russia at the United Nations General Assembly, 
underscoring its new government’s intention not to change the country’s 
traditional foreign policy orientation.
Armenia was among 15 nations -- including Russia, Belarus, Iran and North Korea 
-- that voted against a General Assembly resolution calling for the withdrawal 
of Russian troops from the breakaway Transdniester region of Moldova.
The nonbinding resolution was adopted late on June 22 by a vote of 64 to 15, 
with 83 abstentions in the 193-nation assembly. It was co-sponsored by Britain, 
Moldova, Georgia, Ukraine and seven other mostly eastern European countries.
Transdniester is considered one of the many "frozen conflicts" in the former 
Soviet Union. The mainly Russian-speaking region declared independence from 
Moldova in 1990 over fears that Chisinau would seek reunification with 
neighboring Romania. Moldovan forces and Moscow-backed Transdniester fighters 
fought a short but bloody war in 1992.
The conflict ended with a cease-fire agreement after Russian troops in the 
region intervened on the side of the separatists. Some 1,400 Russian troops 
remain in Transdniester guarding Soviet-era arms depots, and Moscow has 
resisted numerous calls over the years to withdraw its troops.
Armenia’s decision to vote against the resolution on Transdniester was 
consistent with its voting record at the UN and other international 
organizations. Yerevan has usually opposed measures critical of Russia, the 
South Caucasus state’s leading ally. Those include a 2014 General Assembly 
resolution that that condemned Moscow’s annexation of Crimea and upheld 
Ukraine’s sovereignty over the Black Sea peninsula.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has repeatedly pledged to keep his country 
allied to Russia since he swept to power in a democratic revolution last month. 
“Nobody … will cast doubt on the strategic importance of Russian-Armenian 
relations,” he told Russian President Vladimir Putin at their first meeting 
held in Sochi on May 14.
For his part, Putin expressed hope that Yerevan and Moscow will continue to 
cooperate in the international arena. He singled out the UN, noting that 
“Armenia and Russia have always supported each other” there.
Sarkisian’s Brother, Top Bodyguard Detained
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his chief bodyguard Vachagan 
Ghazarian, 11 July 2015.
A controversial brother and the chief bodyguard of Armenia’s former President 
Serzh Sarkisian were detained on Monday.
It was not immediately clear whether law-enforcement authorities will press 
criminal charges against them.
A spokesman for the Armenian police, Ashot Aharonian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
service (Azatutyun.am) that Aleksandr Sarkisian was detained on suspicion of 
illegal arms possession. A short amateur video posted on Facebook showed masked 
policemen hauling him and his bodyguards out of their cars in downtown Yerevan.
Sarkisian was set free several hours later. Aharonian said the police are now 
checking the legality of weapons possessed by him and his men.
Sarkisian, who is better known to the public as “Sashik,” has repeatedly caused 
controversy in the past with his flamboyant behavior and insults addressed to 
critics of Armenia’s former governments.
The 62-year-old is thought to have made a big fortune in the past two decades. 
Unconfirmed reports in the Armenian press have said that he spent millions of 
dollars buying real estate in Europe and the United States.
Armenia - Aleksandr Sarkisian.
Tax inspectors raided on Saturday the offices of a real estate company in 
Yerevan at least partly controlled by Serzh Sarkisian’s second, youngest 
brother Levon and his family. The State Revenue Committee (SRC) accused the 
company of failing to pay 300 million drams ($625,000) in taxes. Nobody has 
been arrested yet as part of that criminal case.
Earlier on Monday, the National Security Service (NSS), detained Serzh 
Sarkisian’s longtime chief bodyguard, Vachagan Ghazarian. An NSS spokesman 
declined to say whether that is connected with more than $1.1 million and 
230,000 euros ($267,000) in cash confiscated from Ghazarian’s Yerevan apartment 
late last week.
The money was found during a joint operation conducted by the police and 
another law-enforcement body, the Investigative Committee. The committee said 
Ghazarian and his wife failed to disclose it in their income and asset 
declarations submitted to an anti-corruption state commission.
Such declarations are mandatory for Armenia’s high-ranking state officials and 
their close relatives. Ghazarian was such an official until Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian dismissed him last month as first deputy head of a security 
agency providing bodyguards to the country’s leaders.
Armenian Coup Suspect Freed For Now
        • Anush Mkrtchian
Armenia - Former Deputy Defense Minister Vahan Shirkhanian is released from 
custody, .
A veteran Armenian politician accused of plotting to seize power together with 
members of a clandestine militant group was released from custody on Monday 
pending the outcome of their ongoing trial.
Vahan Shirkhanian, a former deputy defense minister, is one of the 20 
individuals who went on trial on coup charges in December 2015. Most of them 
were detained in a dawn raid on their hideout in Yerevan. Armenian security 
forces found large quantities of weapons and explosives stashed there.
Those arrested in that raid were apparently led by Artur Vartanian, a 
36-year-old obscure man who reportedly lived in Spain until his return to 
Armenia in April 2015.
Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) claims that the core members of 
Vartanian’s group called Hayots Vahan Gund (Armenian Shield Regiment) underwent 
secret military training in an Armenian village in August-September 2015. It 
says that Vartanian and his associates drew up detailed plans for the seizure 
of the presidential administration, government, parliament, Constitutional 
Court and state television buildings in Yerevan.
According to the prosecution, Shirkhanian agreed to participate in the alleged 
plot and suggested in 2015 that the armed group assassinate then President 
Serzh Sarkisian, instead of focusing on the seizure of the key state buildings. 
Shirkhanian denies the accusations as politically motivated,
A Yerevan judge presiding over the high-profile trial on Monday agreed to free 
him for now after two members of the Armenian parliament guaranteed in writing 
that the 71-year-old will not attempt to escape justice. Both lawmakers are 
affiliated with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s party.
Armenia - An alleged 2015 photograph of members of an Armenian militant group 
arrested on coup charges.
As he walked free in the courtroom Shirkhanian said his provisional release was 
made possible by the recent change of Armenia’s government. “I congratulate all 
of you on the end of the rule of evil in Armenia,” he told reporters.
The case against Shirkhanian is based in large measure on his conversation with 
Vartanian which took place in his home and was secretly recorded. The trial 
prosecutors publicized the transcript of that conversation during a court 
hearing in December 2017.
According to that text, the two men seemed to discuss ways of achieving a 
violent overthrow of the government. In particular, Shirkhanian was quoted as 
saying that then Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian “hates” Sarkisian’s and the 
presidential entourage and “will do what we say” immediately after the 
president is eliminated. In that context, he spoke of a possibility of the 
presidential plane “taking off and falling down.”
Speaking to RFE/RL’s Armenian service earlier in 2017, Shirkhanian’s lawyer, 
Hayk Alumian, said the wiretap is “illegal” and its content is “equivocal and 
can be interpreted in different ways.”
Press Review
(Saturday, June 23)
“Zhamanak” looks at the new Armenian government’s anti-corruption efforts, 
saying that they must also lead to new legislative measures that would prevent 
corrupt practices in the country. The paper says it is also essential that the 
Armenian society becomes more intolerant of corruption and “shames” anyone who 
abuses their powers.
“Aravot” says that notorious figures like Manvel Grigorian and Arakel Movsisian 
stopped using abusive language in public after being interrogated by the 
National Security Service (NSS). “They now have to be more restrained and 
humble because nobody stands by them anymore,” writes the paper. “But it would 
be a gross exaggeration to claim that this mentality has been eliminated 
because if you are not part of a rejected team you may still not give a damn 
about the law.” It points out that members of an armed group that seized a 
police station in Yerevan in July 2016 remain unrepentant about their violent 
“feats” after being released from custody.
“168 Zham” comments on a new Armenian law on benevolence that prompted strong 
objections from businessman Gagik Tsarukian and members of his political force. 
“Of course, everyone realizes that this was a way of demonstrating force,” 
writes the paper. “This knee-jerk reaction not only highlighted the fact that 
in our country benevolence has pronounced political implications but also 
showed what kind of resistance there will be if the National Assembly is 
presented with a bill really limiting the impact of money and capital on 
political processes.” Only fresh parliamentary elections can enable Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian to make good on his pledge to separate business from 
politics, concludes the paper.
(Tatev Danielian)
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2018 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org

The California Courier Online, June 28, 2018

The California Courier Online, June 21, 2018

1-         Commentary

            US State Department Slams Turkey

            In its Annual Religious Freedom Report

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Genocide Memorial Vandalized in San Francisco

3 –        Smithsonian Folklife Festival Featuring Armenian Culture Underway

4 –        George Deukmejian: A Celebration of His Political, Armenian Life

5 –        Commentary: Tip of the Spear

            By Rostom Sarkissian

6 –        Saint Stephen’s Fifth Grade Students Make Pilgrimage to Armenia

7-         Linking Language: A Brief History of Armenian American Newspapers

            By Rachel Barton

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

1 –        US State Department Slams Turkey

            In its Annual Religious Freedom Report

            By Harut Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

The U.S. State Department just issued its 2017 report on International
Religious Freedom in about 200 countries, including Turkey,
Azerbaijan, and Armenia. This week, we will focus our attention on the
section on Turkey.

In general, all religious groups that are not Sunni Muslim suffer from
discrimination and persecution in Turkey. Alevis, who constitute over
a quarter of Turkey’s population of 81 million, are viewed by the
state as “Heterodox Muslims” whose houses of worship are not
recognized. Anti-Semitic articles vilifying Jews are frequently
published in Turkish newspaper. Pres. Erdogan constantly provokes the
public by his Anti-Israel rhetoric.

The State Department reports that “Religious minorities said they
continued to experience difficulties obtaining exemptions from
mandatory [Islamic] religion classes in public schools, operating or
opening houses of worship, and in addressing land and property
disputes. The government restricted minority religious groups’ efforts
to train their clergy…. [Islamic] religion classes are two hours per
week for students in grades four through 12. Only students who marked
‘Christian’ or ‘Jewish’ on their national identity cards may apply for
an exemption from religion classes. Atheists, agnostics, Alevis or
other non-Sunni Muslims, Bahais, Yezidis, or those who left the
religion section blank on their national identity card may not be
exempted.”

Approximately 90,000 members of the Armenian Apostolic Church live in
Turkey, of which 60,000 are citizens and 30,000 are migrants from
Armenia without legal residence. The U.S. Report states that “children
of undocumented Armenian migrants and Armenian refugees from Syria”
could attend public schools. “Because the government legally
classified migrant and refugee children as ‘visitors,’ however, they
were ineligible to receive a diploma from these schools.”

The Turkish government, as required by the 1923 Lausanne Treaty,
grants a special status to “non-Muslim minorities” (Armenian Apostolic
Christians, Jews, and Greek Orthodox Christians). However, according
to the U.S. Religious Report, the government does not acknowledge “the
leadership or administrative structures of non-Muslim minorities, such
as the patriarchates and chief rabbinate, as legal entities, leaving
them unable to buy or hold title to property or to press claims in
court. These three groups, along with other minority religious
communities, had to rely on independent foundations they previously
organized, with separate governing boards, in order to hold and
control individual religious properties. The foundations remained
unable to hold elections to renew the membership of their governing
boards because the government, despite promises to do so, had still
not promulgated new regulations to replace those repealed in 2013 that
would have allowed the election of foundation board members.”

Nevertheless, “The Armenian Apostolic Patriarchate and the [Greek]
Ecumenical Patriarchate continued to seek legal recognition, and their
communities operated as conglomerations of individual religious
foundations. Because the patriarchates did not have legal personality,
associated foundations controlled by individual boards held all the
property of the religious communities, and the patriarchates had no
legal authority to direct the use of any assets or otherwise govern
their communities,” the U.S. Report states.

The Turkish government also obstructs the election of a new Patriarch
for the Armenian Church in Turkey to succeed the incapacitated
Patriarch. The U.S. Report states that “in March [2017] the Istanbul
governor’s office suspended a decision by the Spiritual Assembly of
the Armenian Patriarchate to elect a trustee to start the process for
the election of a new patriarch. Incumbent Patriarch Mesrob II
remained unable to perform his duties because of his medical
condition, and an acting patriarch continued to fill the position.
Some members of the community criticized the governorship’s
notification as interference in the internal affairs of the church.
Patriarchate sources said the government later recognized the March
election to elect a trustee. In July the elected trustee applied to
the government to hold the patriarchal election in December. At year’s
end, the community had not received a response from the government
about how to proceed with the patriarchal election.”

According to the U.S. Report, “Religious communities continued to
challenge the government’s 2016 expropriation of their properties
damaged in clashes between government security forces and the
terrorist group Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK). The government
expropriated those properties for their stated goal of ‘post-conflict
reconstruction.’ By the end of the year, the government had not
returned or completed repairs on any of the properties, including the
historic and ancient Sur District of Diyarbakir Province, Kursunlu
Mosque, Hasirli Mosque, Surp Giragos Armenian Church, Mar Petyun
Chaldean Church, Syriac Protestant Church, and the Armenian Catholic
Church. In April the Council of State, the top administrative court,
issued an interim decision to suspend the expropriation of Surp
Giragos Armenian Church.”

Armenian and other religious minority foundations had submitted 1,560
applications since 2011 for the return of their properties confiscated
decades ago. The government returned only 333 properties and paid
compensation for 21 others.

The U.S. Report also states that “various self-defined Islamist groups
continued to threaten and vandalize Christian places of worship. In
September an unidentified group threw stones at the Armenian Surp
Tateos Church in the Narlikapi neighborhood of Istanbul, breaking
windows. Some witnesses said the attackers shouted anti-Armenian
slogans while a baptismal ceremony took place inside. In September the
president of the Surp Giragos Armenian Church Foundation said
unidentified looters had burglarized the church in Diyarbakir multiple
times, despite a continuing curfew in the area.”

 As expected, the Turkish Foreign Ministry rejected the U.S Report of
the violations of religious rights calling it “a repetition of certain
baseless claims.” However, the repetition confirms that there has not
been an improvement in the protection of the religious rights of
minorities. The Turkish government has continued to blatantly ignore
the rights of Armenian, Assyrian and Greek religious minorities, as
well as Jews and Alevis.

As an indication of the reign of terror prevailing in Turkey under
Pres. Erdogan, the religious leaders of the Jewish, Armenian
Apostolic, Armenian Catholic, and Syriac communities felt obligated to
issue congratulations last Sunday for the re-election of Erdogan, the
tyrant of Turkey!

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

2-         Genocide Memorial Vandalized in San Francisco

(PanArmenian)—San Francisco’s Mt. Davidson Memorial Cross—one of the
oldest landmarks in the city and a memorial to the 1.5 million victims
of the Armenian Genocide—was recently vandalized, SFGate reports.

As the conversation around the treatment of migrant children at the
border gets more heated, hostility toward the immigration-enforcement
arm of the U.S. government has become visible.

Someone appears to have spray-painted a message of solidarity with
immigrant families on the cross.

“No more violence. This blessing is for the families in detention
centers, for the families experiencing U.S. funded wars. Blessings for
the queers,” the red lettering reads. A visitor to the park, Toby
Morgan, photographed the graffiti.

The enormous concrete cross, which has stood atop San Francisco’s
highest hill since 1934, was erected to commemorate all those who were
killed in the Genocide under the Ottoman Empire.

A representative from the Council of Armenian American Organizations
of Northern California said they are “saddened” by the incident and
have reached out to law enforcement.

“We are notifying the police and will have it painted today,” a
representative said Friday. “We understand peoples need for
self-_expression_, vandalism such as this is never appropriate.”
**************************************************************************************************

3 –        Smithsonian Folklife Festival Featuring Armenian Culture Underway

Visitors to the National Mall Get a Taste of Unique Food, Craft and
Community Through the “Armenia: Creating Home” Program; Free Festival
June 27–July 1, July 4–8

The 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival explores the creativity,
hospitality and resilience of the Armenian people and its extensive
diaspora through a rich slate of vibrant programming that celebrates
the role handmade traditions can play in preserving culture and
supporting enterprise. Throughout the 10 days of the festival, dozens
of artisans, designers, cooks and performers share their skills and
stories through workshops, demonstrations, participatory experiences,
interactive installations and discussion sessions all highlighting the
importance of cultural-heritage enterprise in the face of change.

The Festival will be held June 27 to July 1, and July 4 to July 8 on
the National Mall between Seventh and 12th streets. Admission is free
and accessibility services are provided. Festival hours are from 11
a.m. to 5 p.m. each day, with evening concerts beginning at 6:30 p.m.
and a special fireworks display June 30. The Festival is co-sponsored
by the National Park Service.

“‘Armenia: Creating Home’ reflects the indomitable spirit of Armenians
to create home wherever they are,” said Halle Butvin, one of the
program’s curators. “Through sharing the traditions that have shaped
their cultural identity, like feasting, winemaking or craft, they
creatively carve new pathways for exchange both within Armenia and
across its many diasporas. They recognize and continually reinvent the
ways cultural heritage can have value as not just an economic
enterprise, but also a way to make meaning of who they are.”

Foodways and Wine: Because feasting is an important pillar of Armenian
culture, there will be ample opportunities at the Festival to observe
cooking demonstrations, participate in cooking classes and taste
regional specialties like Ghapama (stuffed pumpkin) and Gata (Armenian
cake) in between wine tastings and cheese-making classes. This year’s
festival also features special collaborations between notable local
and Armenian food experts, like renowned Armenian American Chef Carrie
Nahabedian and Washington, D.C.’s Zaytinya restaurant.

Innovation: Select signage at this year’s festival can be activated by
the Arloopa app, which will animate the subject to show artisans
actively at work in their environment in augmented reality. Two
immersive, 3D, virtual-reality tours give visitors unprecedented
access to two of Armenia’s most prominent historical sites, the
Areni-1 Cave Complex, site of the oldest evidence of winemaking, and
the Noravank Monastery.

Performance: There are 7 to 11 million people in the Armenian
diaspora, and the festival features a selection of musical groups that
span a diversity of musical styles from traditional to contemporary.
The Nur Qanon Ensemble, the Samvel Galstian Group and the MVF Band are
among the many groups performing, and two of the free evening concerts
on the Mall present Armenian chamber and jazz music performances.
Seven different groups comprise the The Handes Armenian Dance Summit
during the second weekend of the festival, which also showcases
wedding and celebration dances.

Craft: The revitalization of Armenian craft illuminates the
intersection between technology and handmade traditions. Workshops,
demonstrations and participatory experiences offer visitors the
opportunity to engage with artisans as they share their techniques
while getting hands-on experience designing, carving, carpet weaving,
embroidering, creating calligraphy and making jewelry and musical
instruments, among others.

Holiday: The final day of the festival, July 8, happens to fall on the
traditional holiday of Vardavar, which Armenians celebrate during the
hot summer season by throwing water on each other to cool off.

“Armenia: Creating Home” is produced by the Smithsonian’s Center for
Folklife and Cultural Heritage in partnership with the Institute of
Archaeology and Ethnography in the National Academy of Sciences of
Armenia, the My Armenia Cultural Heritage Tourism Program, funded by
USAID and implemented by the Smithsonian Institution, the U.S. Embassy
in Armenia and the Embassy of Armenia to the United States of America.
It is also produced with the support of sponsors: AGBU, Hovnanian
Foundation, HIKE Armenia, Birthright Armenia, Armenian Volunteer
Corps, ANCA Endowment Fund, Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, IDeA
Foundation, Armenia Tree Project and Armenian Assembly of America.

“The ANCA Endowment Fund is pleased to serve as a major sponsor of
this summer’s Smithsonian Folklife Festival’s Armenia: Creating Home
programs exploring the global role of cultural heritage, remembrance,
and rebirth in building resilience and ensuring survival in the wake
of genocide, war, and forced displacement,” said the ANCA Endowment’s
Aram Hamparian. “These universal themes speak powerfully to all those
around our world who – like the Armenians – have drawn heavily upon
cultural traditions to survive and thrive in new homes.” The ANCA
Endowment Fund #KeepThePromise initiative serves as a major sponsor of
the Folklife Festival and, along with the Aurora Humanitarian
Initiative, is supporting narrative sessions, presentations, and film
screenings around the theme of food, music, crafts, and the arts
contributing to cultural resilience and survival.

The Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly) and the Armenia Tree
Project (ATP) will sponsor the opening reception to welcome the
President of the Republic of Armenia, among other dignitaries.

“Having worked with the Smithsonian over the past year and more, it is
truly an honor and privilege to welcome President Armen Sarkissian on
his first official presidential visit to Washington, D.C. to be part
of this once-in-a-lifetime event,” said Assembly Co-Chair Anthony
Barsamian. “Armenia is celebrating a transformative moment in its
history and this is an exciting time to share Armenia’s rich culture
and hospitality on the world stage in Washington, D.C.”

For more information on the 2018 Smithsonian Folklife Festival, visit
and follow the festival on Facebook, Twitter,
Instagram and YouTube.
*********************************************************************************************

4 –    George Deukmejian: A Celebration of His Political, Armenian Life

The following were remarks made by Ken Khachigian, a longtime friend
of the late Governor George Deukmejian who also served as a senior
campaign strategist, at the memorial in honor of Deukmejian that was
held in Long Beach, Calif., on June 9.

Growing up, there was a very short list of famous Armenian-Americans.
We could cite William Saroyan, Ara Parseghian, Mike Connors and a just
a few others. But thanks to the Armenian newspapers, another Armenian
began achieving prominence—a young legislator named George Deukmejian.

It seemed like a week did not go by that they didn’t prominently
feature “the Duke” in one article or another. And for young Armenian
political junkies like me, the Duke was a role model. So, 50 years
ago, it was easy to recognize him sitting in front of me on a shuttle
ride to the Miami Republican Convention Hall, and I walked up and
tapped him on the shoulder to introduce myself.

Instead of brushing me off, George introduced me to Gloria and invited
me to breakfast with them.

None of that would have taken place without George connecting my
heritage to my political interests. It was my first insight into
George’s Armenian identity.

George’s parents immigrated to America escaping the genocide committed
against the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turks. The better and
secure life they found here—with hope and opportunity—gave passion to
his first inaugural address as Governor.

I strongly believe that George’s lifelong determination to fight crime
and injustice here at home was defined by his heritage—because of the
lawlessness, disorder, social chaos and terror that drove our families
from their homeland. It’s the belief that civilized society won’t
survive if its citizens cannot trust its government to protect them
from harm.

So, Duke’s career blossomed with his “tough on crime” positions and
thoughtful legislation…while his fellow Armenians played a prominent
role along the way.

But George carried far more than his civic duties. With his celebrity
status came requests to speak at Armenian charity picnics and dinners,
attend church dedications, oversee openings at the Old Folks’ Homes,
appear at meetings of youth groups, and serve as Master of Ceremonies
at dozens of assorted gatherings of his fellow Armenians. He almost
never said, “no.”

Now, like many of us first generation Armenian-Americans, George’s
native language skills were not exactly pristine. But, remember, his
first name is Courken, not George. So, because of that there were
times when he was surrounded by Armenians who were unaware of—let me
say…his linguistic challenges. And they would crowd around him
chattering away in our native tongue. Finally, George would hold up
his hand in protest, and then say—in perfect Armenian, “Hyerenes
sosgali tjvar gookah.” Which means: “My Armenian language comes
exceptionally difficult to me.”

It was a phrase he had memorized, and for a moment, they mistakenly
applauded his Armenian language skills as fluent. But then everyone
realized George was underscoring his limitations, and had a good laugh
and we went back to English. And he was appreciated all the more for
his honesty.

Unsurprisingly, each Duke campaign had a strong share of Armenian
contributors. But what happened in 1970 speaks a great deal about our
friend. His was a very long shot for Attorney General, since he was
still a little-known State Senator. Still, countless Armenians came
forward to contribute. George lost that race by a wide margin, but he
did something I have never known another politician to do. He refunded
his leftover campaign funds instead of keeping them for the next
election.

George was not consumed by ambition and never really intended to run
for Governor. When I broached the subject early in his Attorney
General career, he replied that being A.G. was the only job he ever
wanted. He only ran because his actions as A.G. were repeatedly
blocked by the Governor, the Courts, and the Legislature. And the only
way he could change this would be to run for Governor.

Once again, we turned to Armenians to raise a good part of our
financing—with a strong role played by our friend, Karl Samuelian.
Folks like Jimmy Kayian, the Parnagians and Richard Peters loaned us
their airplanes. George took great pride in the way all of them
stepped forward, along with the thousands of other loyal supporters.

But with three weeks to go, there was an explosion in our campaign
when we lost our campaign manager to unforeseen events. George was
behind, we had our backs to the wall, and we were short on money.

Karl set up a meeting for us with an elderly Armenian farmer in the
San Joaquin Valley. After visiting for an hour, the gentleman talked
about the bigoted attacks on his heritage which had deeply wounded him
as a young man. And then he quietly handed George a check for $50,000.
In today’s media and communications, that would be worth close to a
half million dollars, and it was critical to our success.

We barely won that election by just over 1 percent of the vote. George
once observed that the only reason the victory margin was so small was
because he managed to keep his charisma under control.

What a great celebration that first inauguration was in the Armenian
community! I think we had Shish Kebab at the inaugural ball!

There is an aftermath to the story of that election. I know it may
come as a surprise to many of you….but Armenians have a reputation for
being thrifty. Greg Kahwajian reminded me about someone coming up to
George after he was in office and saying: “Now, let me get this
straight. You just spent $8.5 million for a job that pays $48,500 a
year. Are you sure you’re Armenian?”

In 1983, I helped George arrange a visit for several prominent
Armenian-American leaders with President Reagan. As I led them into
the room, President Reagan practically knocked me over, saying:
“Where’s Duke?” George was his favorite governor. But more
importantly, that meeting provided a forum to help the President
understand the Armenian Genocide. It was done so through the poignant
memory of Genocide survivor, Archie Dickranian, who came with us that
day.

Now, a couple of anecdotes to share.

One of George’s most prominent traits was speaking his mind. Stu
Spencer told me the story that when George first contemplated
statewide office, Stu took George to Los Angeles to meet with a
political reporter. That particular reporter—a sort of loud mouth and
know-it-all—chattered away and lectured George. George listened very
politely, thanked him and left. When they got in the car, Stu said:
“What do you think.” George looked at him and said: “That guy is
nuts!”

Then there were those situations when George was displeased with
people. The Armenian word for being naughty is “char”. There were many
occasions when staff members or legislators crossed the line, or were,
in our language, “char.” Like Larry Thomas, Willie Brown, and my
brother. And when that happened, George often would not say a word,
and then only give them what we famously called: “The Armenian Head
Wag.” George just shook his head back and forth as if to say: “How
could you disappoint me like that?” There is more than one person in
this room who has received the “Armenian Head Wag. Some might be
sitting in the front row today!

As I look out in the audience I see hundreds of you whose careers were
literally transformed by George Deukmejian. But he gave you far more
than that. He called you to dedicate yourselves, as he said in his
First Inaugural Address, “to achieving a Common Sense Society—where
principle is not passe, and the qualities of truth, honor, honesty,
sacrifice, morality and hard work have meaning and respect.”

And that’s why what we said in the re-election campaign of 1986, will
always be his legacy: “Great State. Great Governor.”

Ken Khachigian is an Armenian-American political consultant,
speechwriter and attorney. He is best known for being a longtime aide
to President Richard Nixon and chief speechwriter to President Ronald
Reagan. ***************************************************************************************************

5 –        Commentary: Tip of the Spear

            By Rostom Sarkissian

On June 16, Armenia’s National Security Services raided the home and
summer residence of retired general Manvel Grigoryan on suspicion of
possessing illegal weapons and embezzling army supplies. What they
found shocked the Armenian Nation, not because of how much he had
supposedly plundered, but what he had stolen: guns, ammunition, rocket
launchers, SUVs, an ambulance, clothing and foodstuff that was meant
for the troops serving in Artsakh.

People were repulsed when the NSS raid uncovered that canned meat
meant for the soldiers on the front line was being fed to his tigers
and bears. Oh my! You can’t make this stuff up. The revulsion spread
across Armenian society—even to the initially disbelieving Republic
Party of Armenia which he belonged—as the NSS uncovered handwritten
letters accompanying the donated items from students across Armenia.
While these idealistic children thought they were contributing to
Armenia’s national defense, they were actually being robbed by one of
Armenia’s smaller oligarch thieves.

So, is Grigoryan’s arrest and subsequent lifting of his Parliamentary
immunity a one-off event meant to show the people of Armenia that
corruption is being confronted head on, or is it truly the opening act
to a longer struggle which will bring down the remnants of Armenia’s
pre-revolutionary oligarchic state and institutions? Was the NSS’
decision to go after an Echmiadzin based figure a coincidence as well,
or was it a dual message to the political and religious ruling elite
that corruption is unacceptable at any institution which should enjoy
the public trust?

When the Justice Department went after the politically connect and
diffusely organized mob in America, they did not start at the top.
They started by arresting people convicted of minor crimes like petty
theft and gambling and then got those people to provide insight and
evidence about the structure of the lager system and the criminals who
ranked above them. If Armenia is lucky, the NSS will employ a similar
approach with the arrest of Grigoryan, using him as the first piece of
a larger investigative effort.

As of this writing, Public Radio of Armenia is reporting that former
President Serzh Sargsyan’s brother, the infamously corrupt Alexander
“Sashik” Sargsyan has also been detained on suspicion of carrying
illegal weapons, the same charge that underlay the Grigoryan raid. Is
Sargsyan’s detention a coincidence as well, or is it a sign that the
spear is beginning to rip into the flesh of Armenia’s old, corrupt,
oligarchic regime? Stay tuned.

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

6 –        Saint Stephen’s Fifth Grade Students Make Pilgrimage to Armenia

This May, fifth grade students from St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary
School (SSAES) traveled to Armenia for two weeks, in what most will
remember as the capstone of their Armenian school experience. This is
the fifteenth consecutive year that SSAES has taken graduating
students to Armenia to internalize their understanding of Armenian
history by experiencing their ancestral homeland, to connect with
fellow Armenian students, and to contribute to the development of
modern Armenia. “The trip to Armenia has become a significant part of
the SSAES experience for our families,” says principal Houry Boyamian.
“Students look forward to it from the time they start Kindergarten.”

Students experience the cultural and religious sites that many have
only seen in pictures: the Mamik and Babik monument in Artsakh, the
cathedral of Etchmiadzin, the Datev monastery, the battle site of
Sardarabad, the Genocide Memorial at Dzidzernagapert.  “I think that
waking up the first morning in Yerevan and seeing Mt. Ararat looming
over them was one of the most memorable moments for each of my girls,”
shared Heather Krafian, a former SSAES parent and co-founder of the
annual SSAES Armenia trip. “The program cements an emotional bond
between the students and their homeland starting on Day 1.” Ardemis
Megerdichian, Armenian language and culture teacher for SSAES
elementary school, and the faculty leader for the SSAES Armenia trip
each of the last 15 years, emphasizes the power of the shared
experience on the students, as well: “Each student or parent has the
opportunity to go to Armenia or Artsakh separately, but being on
Armenian soil with one’s classmates has a totally different flavor.”
However, the program is not simply a tour of Armenian heritage sites.
While in Yerevan, SSAES students participate in music, robotics, and
other activities with local students at the Tumo Center for Creative
Technologies, an afternoon technology and recreation center. The
fifth-grade students also partner with the Avedisian School on a
project, including a Skype meeting prior to arrival. This year
students from both schools worked with the Armenia Tree Project (ATP),
a longtime partner of SSAES, on a joint environmental reforestation
project which incorporated Abaran, the resting place of General Dro,
in commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the First Republic. At
the elementary school in Shushi, Artsakh, the students performed
songs, poems, and dances for each other as a symbol of diversity and
union in Armenian culture.

The idea of Armenia was not always so tangible for SSAES students.
From its inception, the SSAES Armenia trip has taken students to
Artsakh, allowing participants to witness the transformation of both
the town and the schools of Shushi. Megerdichian recalled of her first
time taking SSAES students to Shushi: “The city was dark and brooding,
but at the same time proud and free. The tank which stood at the
entrance to the city served as a reminder of those brave heroes who
liberated this historic Armenian land.” Adds Krafian, “The first years
there was only one hotel in Shushi, and it was two families to one
room. The local school looked nothing like the modern facility our
students visit today.” During the last fifteen years the impact of
SSAES partnership with ATP has also become visible, along the road
from Yerevan to Stepankert, for example. In recent years, SSAES has
begun a formal educational partnership with the Avedisian school in
Yerevan that extends beyond the annual fifth grade visit.

For many students, the SSAES Armenia trip sets the precedent for
taking the leap to travel to Armenia, not just to vacation, but to
engage with modern Armenia. Over time, many find ways to pair their
passions with their homeland. For Krafian, this impact has been
personal. Last year her daughter Nairi, a pre-veterinary student at
Tufts University, founded Oknooshoon, a nonprofit which leverages
animal therapy to improve the lives of people in Armenia, and
correspondingly educates the people about animals to improve the lives
of dogs in Armenia, as well. “For students formulating their Armenian
identity in a diaspora, what could be more powerful than reframing
their expectations of being Armenian, now that we have an independent
country. Our students learn that Armenia is an opportunity, not just a
dream.”

For more information, email [email protected].

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

7-         Linking Language: A Brief History of Armenian American Newspapers

            By Rachel Barton

We create community in a variety of ways. A community can be the
familiar faces and houses you pass on your daily walk, or the swirl of
shared language in the air. Sometimes, it takes the form of ink on
paper. As physical communities are changed or taken away, communities
based on interpersonal connection and commonality are reinforced to
maintain a sense of home in a tumultuous world.

The first wave of Armenian immigration occurred in the 1890s. These
families, largely fleeing violence, settled mostly in the northeastern
United States, and many moved west to California. Shortly after that
wave, newspapers for Armenian Americans began publishing news and
covering community events. Most of the publications were connected to
political parties from the Diaspora or from Armenia for support and
funding. Although some have shut down, many of these publications are
still circulating today.

Most of these newspapers began publishing in Armenian, and a few
originated in English. The Armenian Mirror, founded in 1931 in
Watertown, Massachusetts, with the goal of bridging the generational
gap, became the first English-language Armenian newspaper in the
United States. It later merged with The Spectator in 1939 and
publishes today as The Armenian Mirror-Spectator.

For 35 years, editor Harut Sassounian has written weekly content for
The California Courier, founded in 1958 and originally published in
English as a way to connect the community.

“The California Courier was published in English for the simple reason
that there were no English-language newspapers for the Armenian
community in California in 1958,” he explained. “Since there were no
Armenian Day schools at the time, many Armenians did not know how to
read in Armenian.”

In fact, The California Courier emerged during a difficult time for
Armenian Americans. In order to escape discrimination, many
individuals Americanized their last names; even the Courier’s founder,
George Elmassian, changed his surname to Mason.

Of those papers that originated in Armenian, many have expanded to
include English-language sections or publications to address the
growing population of English-speaking Armenian Americans. Baikar
(meaning “the struggle”), founded in 1922, serves as a sister
publication to The Armenian Mirror-Spectator. Asbarez of Fresno began
as a wholly Armenian publication in 1908 but added an English section
in 1970 that has continued to grow in popularity. In 1981, Massis of
Pasadena began publishing in Armenian only, but added an English
section in order to connect to younger readers. As a bilingual
publication, most of Massis’s content is the same in both Armenian and
English, especially news items relating to political development in
Armenia. As readership for the English section increased, Massis added
an online publication, which is even more popular than the print
version. A similar process occurred on the east coast. Hairenik
(meaning “fatherland”), the first Armenian American newspaper founded
in 1899 in Watertown, launched an entirely English publication less
than two years after receiving a wave of positive feedback towards the
English column they began in 1932. However, the growth of the paper
and the inclusion of new readers can be traced to less positive
influences. In the 1930s, Armenian Americans were under tremendous
pressure to speak English and further assimilate into American life.
Many children simply wanted to fit in and strayed away from the
Armenian language, both written and spoken.

Rupen Janbazian, editor of the Armenian Weekly, can see these
influences in the results of a questionnaire from the time.
“Hairenik’s Questionnaire to the Armenian Youth of America” asked
questions like: Are you conscious in your daily life that you are an
Armenian? Do you read Armenian books, magazines, or newspapers? Do you
see the necessity of publishing an English paper, weekly or monthly,
for our young generation?

Overwhelmingly, the responses confirmed that the Armenian American
youth were interested in participating in Armenian life and news as
long as they could do so through the language they preferred—the
language that helped them fit in.

Nowadays, Armenian Americans consume their news in a variety of
languages. Many households identify themselves as multilingual,
speaking and reading in any combination of Armenian, English, French,
Arabic, Spanish, and Turkish. As Krikor Khodanian, chairman of the
Social Democratic Hunchakian Party that publishes Massis, explains,
his parents consumed media in Armenian, himself in English, Armenian,
and Arabic, and his children in English online.

As Armenian American newspapers and the communities they serve become
more linguistically diverse, some express concern for the language
being left behind.

“[The community] cannot ‘feel Armenian’ or ‘maintain Armenian spirit’
by merely speaking Armenian,” Janbazian said. “It is also essential to
be conscious of the necessity to keep the mother tongue alive as a
warranty of survival. It is through the Armenian language that
Armenian literature, culture, and identity are preserved and kept
alive.” In either language, the Armenian newspapers in America still
fulfill their original purpose of connecting the community, but they
have also stretched beyond our borders to reach Armenians and others
around the world.

Rachel Barton is a media intern at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife
and Cultural Heritage. She is a rising senior at Rowan University,
double majoring in English and writing arts.

This article appeared in The Smithsonian on June 15, 2018.

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

California Courier Online provides viewers of the Armenian News News Service
with a few of the articles in this week’s issue of The California
Courier.  Letters to the editor are encouraged through our e-mail
address, However, authors are
requested to provide their names, addresses, and/or telephone numbers
to verify identity, if any question arises. California Courier
subscribers are requested not to use this service to change, or modify
mailing addresses. Those changes can be made through our e-mail,
, or by phone, (818) 409-0949.

Opposition party official, two supporters killed at Turkey election precinct

News.am, Armenia
Opposition party official, two supporters killed at Turkey election precinct
Sunday’s parliamentary and presidential elections in Turkey were
blood-spattered.
At an election precinct in Erzurum Province, the MP candidate from the
ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) had started an argument
with the chairman of the regional office and several other members of
the opposition Good Party, reported Cumhuriyet newspaper.
But the argument became more heated, whereupon the AKP members fired
shots at the said opposition party official and his supporters.
The Good Party official and two fellow party members were killed on
the spot, while three others were injured and rushed to hospital.
Numerous cases of electoral fraud were recorded during Sunday’s voting
in Turkey.
As reported earlier, six candidates are running for president. But the
top contenders are incumbent President and AKP Chairman Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan, and opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) candidate
Muharrem İnce.
And even though eleven political parties are running for parliament,
solely four of them have a real chance to win parliamentary seats.
Four Armenians are running for the legislature, and Istanbul Armenian
MP and vice-chairman of the opposition pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic
Party (HDP), Garo Paylan, has the best chance to be reelected. The
next likely Armenian to win a parliamentary seat in Turkey is ruling
Justice and Development Party’s (AKP) serving MP, Markar Esayan.

Armenia MPs prevent young person’s suicide attempt

News.am, Armenia
Armenia MPs prevent young person’s suicide attempt
13:46, 24.06.2018
National Assembly of Armenia “Tsarukyan” Faction MPs Naira Zohrabyan
and Vahe Enfiajyan on Sunday have prevented a person from committing
suicide at Victory Bridge, in capital city Yerevan.
Enfiajyan informed about the aforementioned on Facebook.
“Early in the morning today at around 6:30am, my colleague Naira
Zohrabyan called [by telephone] and informed [me] that she
noticed—right at the moment when crossing Victory Bridge—a young
person who was attempting to commit suicide. She asked [me] to come
quickly so that we together help the young person. I was at the scene
of the incident after a few minutes from the call,” the MP wrote, in
particular. “Thank God, Naira Zohrabyan succeeded in persuading the
young person to cross to this side of the bridge. After personally
speaking with the young person, it became clear that his desperate
move is due to right and justice issues. We were able to come to a
common agreement with the young person that he will no longer resort
to such a move. Subsequently, I personally accompanied him home by
car.”

Mt. Davidson cross vandalized with anti-government message

Infosurhoy
June 23 2018
 
 
Mt. Davidson cross vandalized with anti-government message
By Denis Bedoya on June 23, 2018 News
 

As the conversation around the treatment of migrant children at the border gets more heated, hostility toward the immigration-enforcement arm of the U.S. government has become visible, most recently in the case of two vandalism incidents, one of which targeted the enormous concrete cross atop Mount Davidson in San Francisco.
 
MORE: Billboard on 880 vandalized to read ‘We Make Kids Disappear — ICE’
 
The same week that an Emeryville billboard was altered to read “We Make Kids Disappear — ICE,” someone appears to have spray-painted a message of solidarity with immigrant families on the cross.
 
“No more violence. This blessing is for the families in detention centers, for the families experiencing U.S. funded wars. Blessings for the queers,” the red lettering reads.
 
A visitor to the park, Toby Morgan, photographed the graffiti about 8 p.m. Thursday.
 
The cross, which has stood atop San Francisco’s highest hill since 1934, was erected to commemorate the 1.5 million Armenians who were killed in the Armenian Genocide under the Ottoman Empire. It is also the setting for an Easter sunrise mass each year.
 
A representative from the Council of Armenian American Organizations of Northern California said they are “saddened” by the incident and have reached out to law enforcement.
 
“We are notifying the police and will have it painted today,” a representative said Friday. “We understand peoples need for self-_expression_, vandalism such as this is never appropriate.”
 
Filipa Ioannou is an SFGATE staff writer.
 

Azerbaijan: The glorious May victory

Andover Caller

The Azerbaijani army once again demonstrated and proved that it is able to successfully carry out all the tasks assigned to it. A clear example of this is the April 2016 battles, when the Azerbaijani Armed Forces liberated the heights near the village of Talysh, the point of Seysulan, and also took control of the strategic height of Lele Tepe, located aligned with  Fizuli region.

However, victories in the April battles ignited the beginning of the liberation of Azerbaijani lands from the Armenian occupation. And one of these days, in the last days of May, the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan, after 26 years, freed  the village of Gunnut in the Sharur region of the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, occupied by the Armenian armed forces in 1992.

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In the course of fierce battles, the Azerbaijani army took a more favorable position, freeing the mountain “Hunut,” the hill “Agbulag” and then the mountain “Gyzylgaya” and “Mehridag” from the occupation. The village of Arpa moved to Daralayaz where the Armenians renamed it “Areni.”

The liberation of Azerbaijan’s strategic position – the “Gizilgaya” hill, allows the Azerbaijani army to control the Yerevan-Yeghegnadzor-Gerus-Lachin-Khankendi highway. In total, about 11 thousand hectares of territory have been taken under control, over eight thousand hectares of which are suitable for farming, especially for dry farming.

Going back  to history; it is worth noting that in the 90s of the last century, not only the village of Gunnut, but also the other Sharur villages of Sadarak, Khavush and Shahbulag were subjected to a continuous attack of the enemy. In 1992, the Armenian army destroyed houses, many social facilities, schools, a medical center, a library, a cemetery and a mosque in the village of Gunnut. Local residents were forced to leave their homeland  and settle in other localities.

Today, 26 years later, local residents returned to their native village of Gunnut and visited the graves of their relatives. Soon, large-scale work will begin to restore the village. It is well remembered that when the Azerbaijani Armed Forces liberated the village of Jodzhug Marjanli from Armenian occupants, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev signed an order on measures for the restoration of the village.

As a result, new roads were built in the village, dozens of individual houses and other social facilities were built.

I note that this is the second defeat of Armenia in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict since 2016. The first defeat is the April four-day war in 2016, the second defeat, the Victory of May  2018. Perhaps, for official Yerevan, it may be interesting why Armenia lost another battle to Azerbaijan.

Firstly, on the basis of the 5th Army Corps there is a unit known as the United Army Group (Special Forces). It was created recently. Secondly, in Nakhchivan new anti-aircraft defense systems, rockets and artillery, including the Smerch, T-300 Kasirga and T-122 Sakarya missile complexes are quartered.

Currently, Azerbaijan does not focus on quantity, but on quality, that is, the number of personnel has not changed, and the purchase of new and modern weapons that can disable most of the enemy’s manpower continues. Thirdly, joint military exercises with Turkey are held annually. Fourth, Azerbaijan’s military budget has increased 30 times , today it exceeds the entire state budget of Armenia.

What does it say?

The fact is, is that Azerbaijan today can afford to buy any modern weapon, in contrast to Armenia.

Should this be measured by force?  Isn’t it the time for Yerevan to stop and think about returning the occupied lands to Baku – Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent regions.

The ruling regime of Armenia should understand two things:

1) as long as the Azerbaijani lands are under Armenian occupation, Azerbaijan will continue to purchase weapons.

2) Azerbaijan reserves the right to restore its territorial integrity.

Generally speaking, the fighting in April and May demonstrate the amount of  attention paid by the Azerbaijani president, supreme commander-in-chief of the Armed Forces Ilham Aliyev to the army, the high fighting efficiency of the Azerbaijani army, and the ability of the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan to liberate the occupied territories at any time.