Activity of Armenia’s 4th largest taxpayer under threat, economist says

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 27 2020

The activity of Armenia’s 4th largest taxpayer, GeoProMining Gold company exploiting the Sotk gold mine, is under threat, economist Suren Parsyan warns.

"Even after so many losses, it is at least strange to see the carelessness of the incumbent authorities and their continuous attempts to mislead the public. Many eyewitnesses sounded the alarm about the invasion of the Sotk mine by the Azerbaijani troops, but the authorities, as always, are inactive, thinking only of extending their grip on power,” the economist wrote on Facebook.

“Regardless of who will remain in power, control over that mine is of strategic importance. GeoProMining Gold company operating the Sotk mine is one of the largest taxpayers in Armenia with a large number of jobs,” he said.

In January-September 2020, the company paid 16.3 billion drams in taxes ($34 million) to the state budget, up by 30.4% or 3.8 billion drams from the same period of 2019, the economist said.

“The government must take steps to ensure the smooth operation of the Sotk mine, as every day of non-operation causes great and irreversible damage to our country's economy and population. Besides, the reduction of tax revenues will cause serious problems in attracting much-needed loans in the future,” Parsyan added.


Middle Eastern Churches want protection for Nagorno-Karabakh’s self-determination

The Herald, Malaysia
Nov 27 2020
The Middle East Council of Churches issued a statement in defence of the Christian population of Artsakh, who must be protected from possible abuse and reprisals, whilst ensuring their freedom of worship. The agreement reached does not guarantee a true and lasting peace. Churches call for a "new regional order" to meet everyone's aspirations.
By Fady Noun

The Middle East Council of Churches (MECC) issued a statement on Monday calling for the Nagorno-Karabakh region (Artsakh) to have the right to a lasting settlement and, ultimately, self-determination.

In the meantime, the Council demands that the population of this region be protected from abuses and reprisals, that their Christian heritage be protected, and that they enjoy freedom of belief and worship.

According to the statement, “six weeks of bloody armed conflict in Artsakh – the Armenian name for the Nagorno-Karabakh region – ended with a ceasefire, which took effect at midnight, on 9-10 November. In reality, this agreement leaves the region without a clear and lasting peace. The settlement remains fragile and allows at most the maintenance of a state of tense coexistence [. . .].

“As a religious and humanitarian organisation whose objectives are reconciliation and rapprochement between peoples and groups at war [. . .], the Middle East Council of Churches calls on the protagonists of the conflict and the international parties concerned to ensure the continuation of the cease-fire in Artsakh.

"This guarantee is likely to establish a state of calm at the regional level, which would benefit all parties to the conflict, and provide an opportunity to clarify Artsakh’s legal status whilst protecting the thousands of people who are still currently in danger.

“Armenian Churches were the cornerstone of the Middle East Council of Churches and are among its founding members. They are at the heart of Artsakh’s suffering and of the concern that its people feel for its fate.

“Therefore, the MECC feels deeply concerned about religious freedom and freedom of worship, as well as the plight of those who may be subject to various types of reprisals.

“We would also like to express our concern about the fate of the Christian heritage in this region, including churches, monasteries, monuments and museums, which are threatened with destruction or risk being wiped off the map altogether.

“We therefore call on all international organisations to participate in the protection of people and religious and heritage assets in Artsakh. Artsakh has the right to self-determination like any other nation or people in the world.

“We also stress the importance of establishing sincere dialogue between all parties concerned, out of compassion for the citizens of this region. This approach would pave the way for taking the necessary steps to establish a new regional order that meets the aspirations of all parties to the current conflict, with a view to achieving the desired peace.”––Asia News


The Armenia-Azerbaijan Ceasefire Terms: A Tenuous Hope for Peace

Just Security
Nov 27 2020




The Russian-brokered ceasefire deal on Nov. 9 that ended 44 days of warfare in Nagorno-Karabakh appears to be holding. That’s in large part because the dominant power this time, Azerbaijan, achieved significant gains, and because at least some Armenian-majority areas will get protection secured by the rapid deployment of 2,000 Russian forces to implement the military terms of the agreement.

But is the agreement (in English translation here and here) sufficient to create a bridge to a lasting peace, or will its weaknesses reignite the fighting? 

Strengths of the Deal (For Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Armenia)

Armenian forces had been poised to lose the entire territory of Nagorno-Karabakh by the end of November. Accepting the deal allowed continued habitation of the remaining areas under their control under Russia’s security umbrella. With the deal, Armenians in the region preserve autonomy and protect some local civilian populations despite military defeat, so that they retain the opportunity to rebuild and pursue more favorable conditions in the areas they control.

Armenia also secures an end to Azerbaijan’s economic blockade that has been in place since 1991. Cutting its losses allows the Armenian government of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to survive domestic backlash to fight another day instead of facing total defeat and certain loss of power at home. However, amid calls from opposition parties in parliament and from protesters for the government’s resignation and even an alleged assassination plot, Pashinyan, 45, appears unlikely to last without significant offsetting action to meet demands of the opposition, such as appointment of hardliners to his cabinet or a unity government.

In Azerbaijan, President Ilham Aliyev now believes he has secured sufficient gains to call for peace and reconciliation on his terms, having led his nation back from humiliating losses in the last Karabakh war in the 1990s. As Azerbaijani forces advanced, the cost of the offensive in lives and resources had been rising, with thousands of their troops and hundreds of civilians believed to have been killed (Azerbaijan has refused to release casualty figures). If the conflict had proceeded into Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, the resulting brutality could have damaged Azerbaijan’s political position even further, especially among Azerbaijan’s gas customers in the West, who had expressed concern about Aliyev’s human rights abuses and were already contemplating sanctions on arms exports to Azerbaijan.

With Russia’s brokering of the ceasefire and the broader terms it contains, Russian President Vladimir Putin reasserted his country’s centrality in the conflict as the undisputed power-broker in the region, becoming Armenia’s best and sole ally willing to act tangibly on the ground, if only in defense of Armenia’s internationally recognized borders. Russia also sidelined Turkey, which is not party to the agreement, forcing Ankara to negotiate its role as a security guarantor for Azerbaijan with Russia in ongoing follow-on negotiations regarding a joint Russian-Turkish ceasefire monitoring center.

Russia also retains its position as a strategic partner for Azerbaijan, giving Aliyev a win that neither he nor Azerbaijani citizens will soon forget – as Azerbaijan has long based its post-Soviet identity around its loss of, and desire to re-capture, Nagorno-Karabakh. Most critically, Russia and Turkey’s shuttle diplomacy sidelines the United States and France, co-chairs of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s “Minsk Group” that previously had largely managed diplomacy over Nagorno-Karabakh. That upended the diplomatic order established in the region following the breakup of the Soviet Union.

Even though Turkey wasn’t central in the ceasefire deal, the regional behemoth’s support remains critical, and that makes it the ultimate powerbroker; it was, after all, the catalyst of the renewed fighting in supporting the Azerbaijani leadership’s decision to commence offensive operations in Karabakh in September. Turkish diplomatic backing, arms, and military advisors were relatively low cost, and secured Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan a win with his domestic audience amid Turkey’s worsening economic outlook.

The Nov. 9 deal also includes a profitable corridor between Baku and Ankara that does not pass through Georgia or Iran. Turkey will immediately leverage this as a transportation and energy passage, as well as an opportunity for Erdoğan-aligned construction and military technology companies to secure contracts related to the reconstruction of the areas of Karabakh captured by Azerbaijan. Furthermore, the military prowess of Turkish weapons – specifically Bayraktar TB2 drones and electronic warfare systems it had supplied Azerbaijan in recent years that strengthened that side’s hand – likely will increase demand for Turkish drones and arms.

Erdoğan’s role in the conflict also demonstrates continued willingness to internationalize his military power to simultaneously counter Russia and cooperate with Putin to secure shrewd agreements reshaping the region’s geopolitics based on a populist-nationalist outlook that aims to push aside the United States and the European Union. Aliyev put a fine point on his readiness to disregard the United States — unthinkable even a decade ago — by refusing to end hostilities following the U.S.-brokered ceasefire on Oct. 30. In a Nov. 1 speech explaining his position, Aliyev noted that he sends “delegations to negotiate…but relies on his fists to change the status quo.” As such, ongoing negotiations between Russia and Turkey — nations willing to use force in the region — will continue to shape the conflict, absent efforts by the Minsk Group to commit resources to the conflict zone.

Weaknesses of the Deal

Armenia and Azerbaijan likewise remain willing to use force once again if the terms of the deal are not implemented, interpreted differently, or if redlines such as the targeting of civilians or widespread destruction of cultural heritage are crossed on the ground. Now the question remains whether the leadership in both countries can avoid crushing nationalist pressure to continue pursuing prosecutorial, xenophobic, and maximalist positions in any negotiations stemming from the Nov. 9 deal. Should those talks collapse, the ceasefire may yet fail. Many of the flashpoints that existed before continue to be a source of animosity.

Russia and Turkey, too, are likely to pursue their own maximalist interpretations of the text. That may set up conflicts over personnel and equipment deployed to the region, over the operations of the Russo-Turkish joint ceasefire monitoring center (“Joint Rus-Türk Center”), and over the legal status of Karabakh itself. Overland transportation and energy corridors to Karabakh through Azerbaijani territory from Armenia and through Armenian territory to the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhichevan, to be established by 2023, will also become points of contention.

Additionally, Azerbaijani nationalists continue to argue that Karabakh’s capital Stepanakert (Khankendi in Azerbaijani) and the remaining areas controlled by Russian forces and local Armenians are part of Azerbaijan. Khojaly, the site of a massacre of Azerbaijanis by Armenian forces in 1993, is set to be controlled by Armenians, a dynamic that is sure to generate militaristic calls by Azerbaijanis for its “liberation.” As such, Azerbaijan will continue to press its military advantage and disregard the autonomous status of Armenians in Karabakh, issuing Azerbaijani passports and citizenship status while enforcing trade and finance with the region in the Azerbaijani currency, the Manat, over time. Azerbaijani and Turkish nationalists are also deeply suspicious of having Russian forces within areas they believe should be controlled by Azerbaijan alone, recalling the massacres of Azerbaijanis in Baku by Soviet troops in “Black January” in 1990.

On the Armenian side, the military defeat may spur some nationalists to exploit the situation with an attempt to overthrow Pashinyan, who Putin and Aliyev label in their state propaganda as “weak, naive, and close to the West.” Armenian nationalists likely will press to enhance the country’s military strength, and some may attempt to conduct asymmetrical, paramilitary attacks aimed at raising the costs of Azerbaijan’s presence in strategic areas such as the Nakhichevan corridor in southern Armenia and in ethnic Armenian villages that Azerbaijani forces captured in October. Skirmishes are likely to occur between Armenian forces in Karabakh and new Azerbaijani positions there, as well as between the Armenian military in Armenia proper and the Azerbaijani units newly repositioned along its eastern border. Armenian information operations will be designed to take advantage of fault lines in Azerbaijani society related to energy infrastructure, the presence of Russian troops, corruption, or ethnic and religious minorities.

Armenia also is likely to seek an expanded role for Russian peacekeeping forces and a minimalist interpretation of the territories it agreed to cede. That tendency is already evident in Armenian requests for protection of the Dadivank monastery in Kalbajar, which will continue to host a detachment of Russian peacekeepers despite the region being transferred to Azerbaijan on Nov. 25, 10 days after the original date noted in the ceasefire deal. As Armenian nationalists reject the deal, they will seek to expand security corridors and limit Azerbaijani access to the land bridge to Nakhichevan, as well as support leadership that restores Armenia’s military and international standing.

In Azerbaijan, Aliyev, who is 59, is likely to see his domestic political position as increasingly unassailable as he seeks to keep the presidency in his family for decades to come. His position becomes insecure only if he fully resolves the conflict and no longer retains a security-hardened case for his continued authoritarian rule. In future crises, if the conflict with Armenia becomes less central to domestic politics, Aliyev may find himself once again facing opposition protests against his harsh civil rights record and kleptocratic regime, like the demonstrations he suppressed in 2011. Pro-war protests in Baku that occupied parliament in July 2020 likely encouraged his authorization of the war.

The Minsk Group, Iran, and the Biden Administration

Negotiations ongoing between Russia and Turkey will continue to shape dynamics in the region – and the extent to which the Nov. 9 ceasefire deal is implemented. If Russia and Turkey fail to reach agreement on key issues, conflict could reemerge.

The sidelined Minsk Group will likely attempt to reassert a role in the conflict, and the conflict zone requires humanitarian aid and funding for demining and reconstruction from international organizations, as neither Russia nor Turkey will want to bear these costs on their own.

As Russo-Turkish geopolitics have reshaped the region, it has often come at the expense of other regional players, such as Iran, which has recently found itself on the margins in discussions regarding the future of its own northern border. Iranian leaders called for a ceasefire, fearing widening conflict. But they found themselves with little to offer at the negotiating table amidst U.S. sanctions, a pandemic, and leadership that may have also feared alienating Iran’s ethnic Azerbaijani population, many of whom remember waves of Azerbaijani refugees from the last war in Karabakh.

The Nov. 9 deal leaves Iran fearful that an eventual Turkish land-bridge between Turkey and Central Asia could constrain Iranian access to its land border with southern Armenia. As a result, Iran is likely to support Armenian efforts to reassert sovereignty over this southern border zone and Nagorno-Karabakh. Iran may also use its existing outreach programs and extremist networks aimed at spreading pro-Iran sentiment within Azerbaijan to increase its leverage for negotiations with its northwestern neighbors. That will be especially true as Iran prepares for negotiations with the incoming Biden administration that may ease the ability of Iran to do business in the South Caucasus.

The Biden administration will likely seek to re-engage multilaterally, leveraging U.S. allies in the region and Minsk Group Co-chair France. The U.S. may also make foreign aid contingent on anti-corruption and democratization efforts in Armenia and Azerbaijan as the two nations seek closer relationships with the EU and stronger partners abroad to counterbalance Russia’s newly enlarged presence in the region.

But overall, Russia and Turkey, absent efforts to challenge their actions or leverage disagreements between them into strategic de-coupling, will continue to use proxy conflicts like this one to violently reshape conditions in their favor. After all, both have demonstrated they are willing to disregard international norms and enact high-risk policies to reshape regional and global order.



RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/27/2020

                                        Friday, 

Armenian Businessman Named Economy Minister

'
Armenia - Businessman Vahan Kerobian at a news conference in Yerevan, January 
17, 2019.

The founder and chief executive of Armenia’s largest food delivery company has 
been appointed as economy minister in a government reshuffle announced by Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian following the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The 44-year-old businessman, Vahan Kerobian, is the sixth new cabinet member 
named by Pashinian over the past week. The five others are the ministers of 
defense, foreign affairs, labor, emergencies and education.

Pashinian announced the cabinet shakeup on November 18 amid anti-government 
demonstrations sparked by significant Armenian territorial losses suffered 
during the war. He has since continued to reject opposition demands for his 
resignation and snap parliamentary elections.

Kerobian set up the Menu.am company together with his wife and a friend in 2012. 
He previously managed an Armenian supermarket chain that went bankrupt and was 
purchased and rebranded by other investors.

Kerobian has publicly supported the current government and Pashinian in 
particular. Still, he criticized government policies during the prime minister’s 
meeting with a group of entrepreneurs held this summer.

Pashinian recalled this fact when he introduced Kerobian to senior Ministry of 
Economy officials on Friday.

“He now has an opportunity to carefully listen to business and the private 
sector and not only raise the sector’s problems with the government but also 
personally address them,” said Pashinian.

Kerobian said, for his part, that the war and the continuing coronavirus 
pandemic have created new economic challenges for Armenia. He also said that the 
Armenian economy could grow by 10 percent annually in the near future, an 
ambitious target set by Pashinian earlier this year.

The economy is now projected to shrink by about 7 percent in 2020 after three 
consecutive years of robust growth. The government forecast a less drastic GDP 
contraction before the war with Azerbaijan that broke out on September 27 and 
was stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire on November 10.

In its budget bill submitted to the Armenian parliament early this month, the 
government said economic growth will resume and reach a 4.8 percent rate already 
next year. The International Monetary Fund offered last week a less optimistic 
outlook for the Armenian economy.



More Aid Pledged By Armenian Diaspora For Karabakh


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- The Mayor of Martakert Misha Gyurjian inspects a house 
destroyed by shelling in Martakert, October 19, 2020.

A pan-Armenian charity has raised over $26 million in fresh funds in the United 
States and France for humanitarian and economic aid to Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund said on Friday that it attracted the bulk of the 
donations pledges, worth almost $23 million, during an annual telethon broadcast 
from Los Angeles. The remaining $3.1 million was raised by its French branch in 
an annual phonethon held on November 22.

“In light of recent developments in Artsakh (Karabakh) and Armenia, all proceeds 
of Telethon 2020 will be directed to supporting 100,000 displaced individuals 
and families of our fallen soldiers who lost their lives to protect the 
sovereignty of both republics,” the head of the fund’s U.S. branch, Maria 
Mehranian, said in a statement.


Nagorno-Karabakh - Rita Khachatryan, 50, whose husband and son were sent to the 
front line, walks in a basement shelter in Stepanakert, October 23, 2020.

Hayastan launched an international fundraising campaign immediately after the 
outbreak of the Armenian-Azerbaijani war in and around Karabakh on September 27. 
Hundreds of thousands of Armenians from around the world responded to its appeal 
for urgent aid to Karabakh and its population severely affected by the fighting.

Hayastan collected $170 million from them before its latest fundraisers in the 
U.S. and France. It emerged earlier this month that the charity headquartered in 
Yerevan redirected more than $100 million of those proceeds to Armenia’s 
government.

The Armenian Finance Ministry said on Tuesday that the hefty contribution will 
finance the government’s “infrastructure, social and healthcare expenditures” 
necessitated by the war.

The six-week hostilities, halted by a Russian-brokered truce on November 10, 
displaced most of Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population and destroyed or 
seriously damaged much of its civilian infrastructure. Encouraged by the 
deployment of Russian peacekeeping troops, tens of thousands of refugees have 
returned to Karabakh in the last ten days.

Hayastan has implemented $370 million worth of various infrastructure projects 
in Karabakh and Armenia since being set up in 1992. Its board of trustees mostly 
comprises Armenia’s political leaders and prominent Diaspora philanthropists.



Pashinian Blasts, Warns Armenian Opposition


Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian delivers a televised address to the 
nation, 

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian lashed out at his political opponents on Friday, 
saying they want to “spread chaos” in Armenia in a bid to oust him from power in 
the aftermath of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Pashinian insisted that most Armenians continue to support him and his 
government despite Azerbaijan’s victory in the war stopped by a Russian-brokered 
ceasefire on November 10.

“In Armenia and outside it, there are people and groups who are trying to create 
a semblance of anarchy and spread chaos in our country,” he said in a televised 
address to the nation. “They want to bring the war into Armenia and, using 
assault rifles and criminal groups, leave the country in a state of freefall in 
order to ensure their return [to power] as saviors.

“I want to state clearly and unequivocally that we will not allow that to 
happen. Not because we are clinging to power but because the people do not want 
that.”

“Yes, the people have questions and are sometimes bitter and angry, sometimes 
disappointed and sometimes hopeless. But I see in all this the people’s trust 
[in the government] and want to thank the people for that trust,” added 
Pashinian.

The embattled premier thus pointed the finger at Armenia’s former leaders but 
did not name any of them. Nor did he specify “external forces known to you” who 
he suggested are helping the former regime topple him.

Pashinian’s latest speech came amid continuing calls for his resignation made 
not only by opposition forces but also President Armen Sarkissian, some public 
figures and media commentators. They blame him for significant territorial gains 
made by Azerbaijan during the six-week war.

The opposition criticism intensified on Thursday amid media reports that 
Azerbaijani soldiers entered a large gold mine on Armenia’s border with the 
Kelbajar district west of Karabakh which was handed back to Azerbaijan on 
Wednesday in line with the truce agreement. Some opposition figures accused 
Pashinian of ceding Armenian territory to Baku.


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Azerbaijani army soldiers sit atop of their military vehicle 
on a road in Kelbajar, 

A deputy chief of the Armenian army’s General Staff, General Tiran Khachatrian, 
denied those claims at a late-night news conference in Yerevan. But he said at 
the same time that the Armenian military agreed to pull out of a checkpoint set 
up near the Sotk mine after “lengthy negotiations” with Azerbaijani and Russian 
military officials.

More importantly, Khachatrian acknowledged that half of the gold mine, the 
largest in Armenia, is technically located on the Azerbaijani side of the 
internationally recognized border and will no longer be under Armenian control. 
He said the talks followed a brief standoff between Armenian and Azerbaijani 
servicemen deployed in the mountainous area.

Pashinian too insisted that the border cuts across the mine operated by a 
Russian company. He accused the opposition of spreading “disinformation” about 
the loss of territory in Armenia proper.


Armenia - A gold mine at Sotk.

Pashinian also faced late on Thursday more protests by parents and other 
relatives of Armenian soldiers who went missing during the war. They rallied 
outside the prime minister’s office before being received by Pashinian after 
midnight.

Pashinian’s press secretary, Mane Gevorgian, said afterwards that the premier 
“heard their demands” and briefed them on the Armenian side’s efforts to find 
the missing soldiers or recover their bodies believed to be lying on 
Azerbaijani-controlled territory.

Pashinian wrote on Facebook at around the same time that he has twice spoken 
with Russian President Vladimir Putin by phone over the past hour to discuss a 
wide range of issues relating to the implementation of the truce accord. He said 
they included the mutual search for and handover of dead soldiers’ bodies as 
well as the exchange of prisoners of war.



Karabakh Not Recognized By France


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Men walk along a street in Stepanakert, November 16, 2020

The French government has made clear that it does not recognize Nagorno-Karabakh 
as an independent republic despite a resolution adopted by France’s Senate on 
Wednesday.

The resolution calls on the government to “recognize the Nagorno-Karabakh 
Republic and use this recognition as an instrument of negotiations for the 
establishment of a sustainable peace.” It also urges the government to pursue a 
tougher European response toward Turkey, which has supported Azerbaijan in 
Karabakh the conflict, and an international war crimes investigation.

In a statement on the resolution issued late on Thursday, a French Foreign 
Ministry spokesperson said: “During the [Senate] debate preceding the vote, Mr. 
Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne, Secretary of State for Tourism, French People Abroad and 
the Francophonie, recalled the French government's position on this issue: 
France does not recognize the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.”

“Our responsibility as co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group is to work towards a 
negotiated solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, in particular on the issue 
of the future status of Nagorno-Karabakh, and the outcome of this negotiation 
cannot be determined beforehand and unilaterally,” added the statement.

“Our priority today must be to ensure the safe return of those displaced by the 
conflict of the past few weeks. In his address to the Senate, the Secretary of 
State further noted that no state has yet recognized Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Armenia was quick to welcome the resolution, with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
calling it “historic.”

Azerbaijan condemned the measure introduced by several pro-Armenian French 
senators. The Azerbaijani parliament on Thursday accused Paris of pro-Armenian 
bias and demanded an end to French co-chairmanship of the OSCE Minsk Group.

French President Emmanuel Macron criticized Azerbaijan’s military action in 
Karabakh shortly after the outbreak of the war on September 27. Macron has been 
even more critical of Turkey’s strong political and military support for Baku.

Earlier this week, the French government sent two planeloads of humanitarian aid 
to Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian residents displaced by the fighting.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Telethon 2020 raises $22.9m

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 26 2020

The 23rd Annual Thanksgiving Telethon took place in Los Angeles on November 26th with the slogan of Unity, Strength and Faith.

“Out of respect for the solemn mood of our nation and the lives lost in the defense of our Homeland the Telethon took place over 4 hours instead of the previous years’ 12. The Armenians of the US in their unity and commitment to the people of Artsakh raised $22,990,898,”  the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund said.

“In light of recent developments in Artsakh and Armenia, all proceeds of Telethon 2020 will be directed to supporting 100,000 displaced individuals and the families of our fallen soldiers who lost their lives to protect the sovereignty of both republics,” said Armenia Fund USA President Maria Mehranian.

Since September 27th the Armenian community of the United States has been one of the most active in fundraising for the support of the Homeland. Prior to the Telethon, the community had already raised close to $ 80 million and over 100tons of humanitarian aid including medical equipment and supplies as well as other essential items.

Fundraising Phonethons have also been taking place in various Armenian communities in Europe and will continue around the world through to the end of the year. On November 22nd the Annual Phonethon took place in France by the Hayastan All Armenian Fund’s partner organization Fonds Armenien de France which so far has raised over $3.13 million.

https://en.armradio.am/2020/11/27/telethon-2020-raises-22-9m/

France does not recognize Nagorno-Karabakh republic

112 International
Nov 27 2020

Source : 112 Ukraine

The Parliament's upper chamber passed the resolution, recognizing it, but the Foreign Ministry disagreed

In the view of the recent resolution passed by the Senate, French Foreign Ministry commented on the government's official stance in the regard of recognition of self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh republic. The commentary has been released by the press office of the Foreign Ministry.

"On November 25, the Senate passed the decree, which contains an urge to recognize the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh republic by the French government. During the debates followed by the vote, Mr. Jean-Batiste Lemoine, State Secretary for Tourism (…) reiterated the position of the French government on this question: France does not recognize the self-proclaimed republic of Nagorno-Karabakh", the Ministry reported.

Related: Upper chamber of Russian parliament approves use of troops in Nagorno-Karabakh

A representative of the Ministry claimed that France, the member of the OSCE Minsk Group co-organizer is bound to be working on solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, by the means of talks – specifically those about the further status of Nagorno-Karabakh. The result of these talks cannot be solved in advance and unilaterally.

Related: America must reshape its future with Nagorno-Karabakh

France struggles to retain Karabakh sway after Armenia defeat

Millennium Post
Nov 27 2020

Paris: President Emmanuel Macron faces a major challenge to retain France's influence over resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, needing to take account of the large Armenian minority in his country and accused by Azerbaijan of bias.
 Macron has expressed discomfort over the Russia-brokered ceasefire this month that ended weeks of fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia and allowed Baku to consolidate significant military gains.
 France is, along with Russia and the United States, the co-chair of the Minsk Group of countries that for almost three decades have sought agreement on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian-populated region of Azerbaijan which broke away from Baku in a war as the USSR collapsed.
 "We don't consider this ceasefire to be sufficient," Macron said in a meeting with French Armenians at the weekend.
 "It does not solve the political question and all the other issues," he added.
 Macron was a vocal critic of the military offensive launched by Baku in late September to regain control of Karabakh and in particular the backing of NATO member Turkey, which he accused of despatching Syrian jihadists to fight for Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijani soldiers filmed destroying more Armenian graves: video

AMN – Al Masdar News
Nov 27 2020

BEIRUT, LEBANON (9:40 A.M.) – On Thursday, two videos surfaced showing Azerbaijani soldiers desecrating graves belonging to Armenians in the recently handed over district of Karvachar (var. Kalbajar).

The first video, which went viral, showed the Azerbaijani forces destroying the grave of an Armenian couple that were buried side-by-side in the Karvachar District.

The Azerbaijani soldiers were seen stepping on the memorial flowers before repeatedly kicking the grave until it was removed from the site.

A second video has since been released, showing an Azerbaijani soldier being filmed breaking a headstone over another Armenian grave in the same district.

The soldier throws the headstone on top of another desecrated grave before turning around and walking away from the site.

The Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense has yet to comment on these videos, which have been posted by their soldiers on the social media app, TikTok.

Road condition

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 09:37,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. The Road Department SNCO of the ministry of territorial administration and infrastructure informs that today, as of 09:30, no precipitation is reported in Armenia.

All inter-state and republican roads are open.

Drivers are urged to use snow tires.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Minor earthquake detected near Georgia-Armenia border

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 09:50,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. The Seismological Network of the Seismic Protection Regional Service says it detected a magnitude 2,4 earthquake at the Georgia-Armenia border zone, 16km south-west from the town of Dmanisi at 04:45 local time November 26.

The tremors measured at MSK 3 at the epicenter.

The Seismological Network of the Seismic Protection Regional Service hasn't received any reports on residents having felt the tremors. 

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan