RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/20/2020

                                        Tuesday, 
Russia, France Vow More Joint Efforts For Karabakh Peace
France - French President Emmanuel Macron, right, welcomes Russian President 
Vladimir Putin at the Elysee Palace in Paris, December 9, 2019
Russian President Vladimir Putin and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron 
pledged on Tuesday to continue coordinating their efforts to stop the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh and restart Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks.
In a statement, the Kremlin reported that during a phone conversation they 
discussed “in detail” the latest developments in the Karabakh conflict zone.
It said Putin briefed Macron on Russia’s efforts to “prevent a further 
escalation of hostilities and quickly resume negotiations aimed at a 
politico-diplomatic settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh problem.”
They “emphasized the importance” of the conflicting parties’ compliance with 
ceasefire agreements that were brokered by Russia and France on October 10 and 
October 17 respectively, read the statement. It added that the two leaders also 
pledged to continue the “close coordination” of their peace efforts.
France, Russia as well as the United States lead the OSCE Minsk Group tasked 
with helping to find a solution to the Karabakh conflict.
The conflicting parties accuse each other of not respecting the ceasefire 
agreements. They both reported on Tuesday continued heavy fighting between 
Armenian and Azerbaijani forces at frontline sections south of Karabakh.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov spoke, meanwhile, of continuing international 
efforts to stop the fighting and kick-start the peace process. He did not go 
into details.
Speaking to journalists in Moscow, Peskov refused to comment on speculation that 
Moscow is trying to organize a meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.
In interviews with the official Russian TASS news agency, both Pashinian and 
Aliyev expressed readiness on Monday to hold face-to-face talks in Moscow.
Pompeo To Meet Armenian, Azeri FMs
        • Tatevik Lazarian
U.S. -- U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks during a news conference at 
the State Department, in Washington, October 14, 2020
Armenia and Azerbaijan confirmed on Tuesday that their foreign ministers will 
separately meet with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Washington later 
this week for talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Citing “U.S. government documents,” Politico.com reported that Pompeo’s meetings 
with Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian and his Azerbaijani 
counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov are scheduled for Friday.
The Armenian Foreign Ministry confirmed the information. The ministry 
spokeswoman, Anna Naghdalian, said preparations for Mnatsakanian’s visit to 
Washington are already underway.
Naghdalian would not say whether Mnatsakanian and Bayramov could also meet with 
each other in the U.S. capital.
“I have no information about a meeting in a different format or preparations for 
it,” she told RFE/RL’s Armenian service.
According to Politico.com, Azerbaijan’s ambassador to the United States did not 
rule out the possibility of face-to-face talks between the two ministers.
Bayramov and Mnatsakanian most recently met in Moscow on October 9-10. The 
11-hour talks mediated by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov resulted in an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani agreement to stop fighting around Karabakh and resume 
“substantive” peace talks.
The hostilities have continued since then, however, with the conflicting parties 
accusing each of not respecting the ceasefire deal.
Joe Biden, President Donald Trump’s Democratic rival in the November 3 
presidential election, last week expressed deep concern over the “collapse” of 
the ceasefire and accused the Trump administration of being “largely passive and 
disengaged.”
Pompeo has repeatedly called for an end to the Armenian-Azerbaijani war that 
broke out on September 27. He has also criticized Turkey’s military support for 
Azerbaijan in the conflict.
The United States, Russia and France have long been leading international 
efforts to end the Karabakh conflict in their capacity as co-chairs of the Minsk 
Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe.
Armenia Calls For Wider Ban On Drone Technology Sales To Turkey
Nagorno-Karabakh -- An Armenian Defense Ministry photo that purportedly shows a 
fragment of a Turkish-manufactured combat drone shot down in Nagorno-Karabakh, 
.
Armenia on Tuesday urged more Western nations to suspend the export of drone 
technology to Turkey as it publicized purported evidence of Turkish unmanned 
aerial vehicles (UAVs) used by Azerbaijan in the ongoing war over 
Nagorno-Karabakh.
The Armenian Defense Ministry released photographs of what it described as 
fragments of a Turkish-made combat drone Bayraktar TB2 allegedly shot down by 
Karabakh Armenian forces on Monday.
The ministry spokeswoman, Shushan Stepanian, said one of the photos depicts the 
drone’s largely intact imaging and targeting system manufactured by a 
Canadian-based firm, L3Harris Wescam.
“It was manufactured by the Canadian company Wescam in June 2020 and installed 
on Bayraktar TB2 in September 2020,” she said.
The Canadian government temporarily banned the sale of such equipment to Turkey 
October 5 just over a week after the outbreak of the worst hostilities in the 
Karabakh conflict zone since the early 1990s.
Nagorno-Karabakh -- An Armenian Defense Ministry photo that purportedly shows a 
fragment of a Turkish-manufactured combat drone shot down in Nagorno-Karabakh, 
.
The move was hailed by Yerevan but criticized by Ankara. It followed a statement 
by Canadian arms control group Project Ploughshares saying that video of air 
strikes carried out by Azerbaijani army drones indicates that they are equipped 
with imaging and targeting systems manufactured by L3Harris Wescam.
A Turkish company manufacturing Bayraktar reportedly also buys components from 
other Western countries.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian claimed that Karabakh’s Armenian-backed 
Defense Army has shot down about a dozen such UAVs so far.
“None of the destroyed drones fell on territory controlled by the Defense Army 
[until Monday.] We now seem to finally possess fragments of Bayraktar,” he wrote 
on Facebook.
UKRAINE – A Turkish-made Bayraktar combat drone purchased for Ukraine's Armed 
Forces, March 20, 2019
Pashinian described the publicized photos as further proof of Turkey’s “direct 
involvement” in the war. “Based on this fact, those countries that supply Turkey 
with necessary parts of Bayraktar should follow Canada’s example and suspend 
further supplies,” he said.
Armenia has also accused Turkey of deploying Turkish military personnel and 
Syrian mercenaries to Azerbaijan ahead of the war. The Turkish and Azerbaijani 
governments deny that.
Baku has admitted heavily using Turkish as well as Israeli drones against 
Armenian targets. But it insists that they belong to and are operated by the 
Azerbaijani army.
According to exports data cited by the Reuters news agency, Turkey’s military 
exports to Azerbaijan have risen six-fold this year, with sales of drones and 
other military equipment rising to $77 million last month alone. Most of the 
purchased drones, rocket launchers, ammunition and other weapons were delivered 
after July.
UN Security Council Again Discusses Karabakh
        • Armen Koloyan
The United Nations Security Council meets at UN headquarters in New York, 
February 28, 2020.
The United Nations Security Council again discussed the continuing war over 
Nagorno-Karabakh late on Monday at a meeting initiated by France, Russia and the 
United States and, the three world powers trying to end the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
conflict.
Vasily Nebenzya, the Russian ambassador to the UN who chaired the closed-door 
meeting, said it discussed ways of ensuring the conflicting parties’ compliance 
with ceasefire agreements.
“It is now necessary to ensure the implementation, this is the most pressing 
issue because a relevant agreement was reached but not respected,” the TASS news 
agency quoted Nebenzya as saying. “The main question remains how to ensure a 
verification of its implementation.”
“This issue was certainly discussed during the consultations, and the council 
was quite unanimous in its approach,” he told reporters in New York.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said earlier on Monday that Moscow keeps 
pressing Armenia and Azerbaijan to work out a ceasefire “verification 
mechanism.” He said the Russian Defense Ministry is also involved in these 
efforts.
Lavrov suggested last week that such a mechanism would involve the deployment of 
“military observers” to the conflict zone.
Nebenzya did not exclude that the observers would be deployed by and operate 
under the aegis of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe 
(OSCE). “The questions of who will be there and in what capacity remain open and 
under discussion,” said the Russian diplomat.
The OSCE’s Minsk Group co-headed by Russia, France and the U.S. has long been 
the main international body trying to broker a solution to the Karabakh 
conflict. All three co-chair nations are permanent members of the UN Security 
Council.
The council already discussed the situation in the Karabakh conflict zone on 
September 29 two days after the outbreak of the war. It called for an immediate 
end to the fighting.
The fighting in and around Karabakh reportedly continued on Monday night and on 
Tuesday. The Armenian Defense Ministry said in the morning that Karabakh’s 
Armenian-backed army is trying to repel a continuing Azerbaijani offensive at a 
frontline section south of Karabakh.
The Azerbaijani military said, for its part, that Armenian forces shelled its 
frontline positions overnight.
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.
 

Asbarez: Do More

October 20,  2020



The author, Sosé Hovannisian, volunteered for Armenia Fund

BY SOSÉ HOVANNISIAN

On the last night of AYF Camp in the summer of 2016, all of Director Moushig Andonian’s campers locked arms with one another in an emotional singing of Arabo Ispiryan’s “Bid Bashdbanem” (I must defend). Armenian juniors as young as 8 shared tears and heartfelt emotions as they sang in one large and unbreakable circle.

Today more than ever, I understand the depth of the lyrics and how they aren’t just words in a songbook. Rather, they represent the true grit, spirit, and resolve of our beloved soldiers and other Gharabaghtsis. Those very lyrics are being played out on the battlefields of Hadrut, Martuni, and other regions of our ancestral lands. We sang “Bid Bashdbanem” then, and today those brave young men and women stand ready at every moment to give their lives to protect what is rightfully theirs and ours.

 Thousands of miles removed, we in the diaspora keep informed of the latest news from the front lines; we donate; we sign petitions. But then what? At the end of the day, we sleep in our comfortable beds, enjoy our food, and busy ourselves with our daily routines. Yes, we hurt and pray for our brothers and sisters, and do occasional good deeds to help the cause, but that only goes so far.

So I write this to say that the time is now to break through and do even more to make a real and tangible change. We can’t let up. We must act now.

 Without the Diaspora’s help, our country will not pull through. Like more than 150,000 Armenians chanted on the streets of LA last week, to win we are But in order to make these chants our reality, we must do more.

For the past three weeks, my friends and I have volunteered at Armenia Fund, fielding hundreds of phone calls from donors. This has been a very rewarding experience, and we’ll continue to devote as much time as possible to this cause. Though we receive hundreds of calls a day, the best, in my opinion, are those from the East Coast. Picking up a phone call from Tenafly, New Jersey or Hartford, Connecticut reminds me that our Armenian footprint is wide and deep in this country. The other day, I answered a call for a donation from a Massachusetts Armenian, and the call turned into a conversation about all of the efforts the East Coast Armenian community is making, from rallying at Heritage Park in Boston to shutting down the I-95 in Philadelphia. It feels good to know that Armenians near and far are doing their part. But we can do more.

My school, Holy Martyrs Ferrahian, organized a supply drive with Code3Angels, successfully arranged a car-wash, sold hundreds of Artsakh T-shirts, and is now working on a “manti fundraiser” to add to the $50,000+ the school already has collected for Artsakh.  But we all can do more.

Elsewhere, Armenians continue to raise funds, some by selling handmade jewelry, homemade harissa, and baked goods. I encourage all business owners to take part in this movement of sending their proceeds to the Armenia Fund, as done by Hawaiian Hot Chicken and Raffi’s Place. But we can do more.

The ANCA, which has always been a frontrunner in providing resources for the Armenian community in America, has released several petitions for us to sign. Though you may not find them effective at first, it’s imperative to sign not one, but all of these petitions, become a rapid responder, and always be active for our homeland.  We can still do more.

 As a young student, I always wondered if the genocide would have happened if social media existed in 1915. And now the answer is clear to me: Yes. Despite our efforts to undermine Azeri and Turkish lies and propaganda as well as one-sided media coverage, and notwithstanding our pleas for assistance and peace, the murders and other atrocities continue in Artsakh.

We’ve grown up singing Hayer Miatsek, believing one day we’ll have the power to take back our lands from the Turks. But how will we reach that point if we are currently witnessing history repeat itself and not taking action? We sing Mer Hayrenik, pledge Hay Em Yes, and pray the Hayr Mer. Is Artsakh exempt from these? Do they not belong to Artsakh as much as they do Armenia?

Artsakh has been Armenian land since the days of the Urartu Kingdom. Take a look at its flag, for one. The white zig-zag pattern symbolizes two things: the region’s mountains, hence Mountainous Artsakh, and the separation from the rest of the motherland. That white section leaves the puzzle incomplete as the two lands seek to unite. It is in our hands to make their union a reality.  But to do so, we must do more.

In the end, it’s your centuries of history on the line. It is up to you to stand up and say “Bid Bashdbanem.” It’s up to you to continuously be active at protests, spread awareness on social media to your non-Armenian peers, and donate. While our brothers and sisters are giving their blood and lives for Artsakh, the least we can do is Do More!

Sosé Hovannisian is a senior at Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School and an intern at Asbarez.




French Lawmaker Boyer to Introduce Measure Recognizing Artsakh

October 20,  2020



French lawmaker Valérie Boyer

Paris Mayor, Anne Hidalgo, Also Supports Artsakh Recognition

A French lawmaker and the mayor of Paris—two powerful female politicians in France—separately said they would support the recognition of Artsakh as an independence republic.

Long-time Armenian issues supporter Valérie Boyer said Monday that she would introduce a resolution in the French Senate for the recognition of Artsakh. A similar measure was introduced in the France’s Lower House of Parliament last week.

“This week I will submit to the Senate a proposal to recognize Nagorno-Karabakh and condemn the actions of Turkey and Azerbaijan,” Boyer wrote on social media Monday.

On Tuesday, Boyer took to social media again calling all parties represented in the French Senate to support her proposal to recognize Artsakh and condemn Turkey and Azerbaijan for their joint aggression and attacks against Artsakh and Armenia.

“I have asked all the groups of the Senate to join my proposal of recognizing the independence of the Republic of Artsakh and condemning the actions of Azerbaijan and Turkey. Lives are endangered, genocide is taking place in front of us. It’s time to act,’’ Boyer wrote on her Facebook page on Tuesday.

“If the only solution to the current conflict is the recognition of Nagorno Karabakh, we should not hesitate,” said Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo in an interview with Nouvelles d’Armenie, excerpts of which were published by Armenpress. She was commenting on the bill introduced by 22 members of parliament in France’s lower house.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo

Saying she personally supports people’s right to self-determination, Hidalgo explained the her government is opting to advance a settlement to the Karabakh conflict through the Minsk Group co-chairs. France being one of the co-chairing countries, Hidalgo believes, that its foreign ministry is working effectively and in a pragmatic way to stop the conflict.

“The goal is for Armenians to be able to live securely and safely in Nagorno Karabakh and Armenia. I share the priorities of the French government, which, together with the other Co-Chairs of the Minsk Group, is seeking to end the clashes and return to negotiations,” said Hidalgo. “We must support Armenia in this ordeal and fight.”

Hidalgo said that it is obvious that the Turkish-supported Azerbaijan is the aggressor.

“Therefore the Baku regime bears a lot of responsibility. The future of Karabakh and its people must be decided with the support of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs – France, USA and Russia. I hope they’ll be able to stop the conflict as soon as possible and start negotiations for achieving lasting and just peace in the region. I hope the humanitarian ceasefire that was reached over the weekend will hold unlike the previous one that was violated numerous times. War is never a solution,” she said.

Hidalgo also singled out Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose regime she said is inciting nationalism, is denying the fact of the Armenian Genocide and is encouraging the attempts of ethnic cleansing of the people of Nagorno Karabakh

“Every time I visit Yerevan, I pay tribute to the memory of millions of victims,” said Hidalgo who added that it still amazes her how people can plan and commit such heinous crimes.

Unfortunately, Hidalgo said, Turkey’s involvement in the conflict against Armenians evokes the memory of the genocide both in Armenia and the Diaspora.

EU Says Armenia’s Airspace is Safe

October 20,  2020



Armenia’s air traffic control room

The European Union’s Aviation Safety Risk Assessment Group said Tuesday that it deems Armenia’s airspace as safe and manageable, give the ongoing military aggression by Azerbaijan, the Armenian Civil Aviation Committee said.

The committee said it has taken measures to ensure the safety of Armenia’s airspace for civilian and humanitarian flights during the war in Artsakh.

The committee said it has published three “notes to airmen,” which in aviation circles are commonly know as NOTAMs addressed to all airlines. The first notice advises pilots to carry out extra risk assessment before flights in conditions of the ongoing military actions at the border. The second warns pilots about the possibility of drones flying in Armenian airspace given the several airspace breaches by Azerbaijan using UAVs during the course of the past three weeks.

The third NOTAM informs pilots about certain restrictions in the airspace, with some parts declared as no fly zones as safety precaution.

EUROCONTROL and EASA have expressed their confidence in the Armenian aviation authority’s measures regarding implementation of obligations and ensuring safety.

Armenian President expressed his gratitude to Canada for suspending Turkey’s export permits for acquisition of military gear

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 20 2020
Armenian President expressed his gratitude to Canada for suspending Turkey’s export permits for acquisition of military gear

President Armen Sarkissian sent a congratulatory message to the Governor General of Canada Julie Payette on the occasion of her birth anniversary. President Sarkissian expressed confidence that through the joint efforts Armenia and Canada will develop and deepen their cooperation in bilateral and multilateral formats.

The President noted the September 27 resumption of military aggression of Azerbaijan against the Republic of Artsakh and said in particular, “As you know, Azerbaijan has unleashed an unprecedented in its scale, brutal and inhumane attack on the Republic of Artsakh, targeting also civilians and civilian infrastructure. All this is done with one purpose only: to cleanse Artsakh of Armenians once and for all. The inspirer and direct participant of Azerbaijan’s barbaric behavior is Turkey which is purposefully trying to carry out the scheme adopted more than one hundred years ago – to erase Armenians as a nation.

Canada, which is well-aware of the fact and recognized the Armenian Genocide, today too manifested its principled and human nature and suspended Turkey’s export permits for acquisition of military gear. I take this opportunity to express my gratitude to you and the government of Canada for that decision.”


Armenia MOD: The situation remains stable and in our control

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 20 2020

Early this morning, the Azerbaijani armed forces once again launched offensives from the north and south, representative of the Ministry of Defense of Armenia Artsrun Hovhannisyan said during today’s briefing.

“Our army engaged in particularly pitched battles with the adversary in the south before pushing them back towards their original battle lines.

Yesterday, our air defence managed to down a number of Azerbaijani UAVs, including several Turkish-manufactured Bayraktar UAVs”, he mentioned.

The current situation remains tense as hostilities continue, however the level of intensity has decreased compared to that during the day, Hovhannisyan said.

“Azerbaijani commando units have managed in some places to infiltrate behind Armenian lines in small groups for photo opportunities in long-abandoned settlements simulating the capture of territory designed for consumption by a domestic audience. However, this propaganda footage has also been spread in Armenian circles” , representative of the Ministry of Defense of Armenia said.

Artsrun Hovhannisyan said, that the situation remains stable and in our control.

“The proliferation of diversionary actions by Azerbaijan is in no way indicative of any battlefield success or advances by their troops”, he added.


Turks and Armenians Reconcile in Christ. Can Azeris Join Them?

Chirtsianity Today
Oct 20 2020
Confessing the genocide, Turkish evangelicals seek forgiveness on behalf of their nation. With ongoing war in Nagorno-Karabakh, is there a path forward also with Azerbaijan’s believers?
|
Image: Maja Hitij – Getty / Mallory Rentsch – Christianity Today
The Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan, Armenia

Bahri Beytel never thought he would find Turkish food in Armenia.

An ethnic Turk and former Muslim, the pastor of Bethel Church in Istanbul skipped McDonalds and KFC in Yerevan, the capital city, in order to complete a spiritual mission.

Six years ago, prompted to take a journey of reconciliation, he went in search of an authentic Armenian restaurant—and found lahmajun, a flatbread topped with minced meat, vegetables, and spices.

One letter was off from the Turkish spelling. Smiling, he ordered it anyway, in English.

“Are you a Turk?” snapped the owner—in Turkish—after Beytel pronounced it incorrectly. “God spare me from becoming a Turk.”

The owner’s family hailed from Gaziantep, near Turkey’s border with Syria, which before the genocide was a mixed religious city with a thriving Armenian community. Ignoring the insult, the pastor explained he was a Christian, not a Muslim, and had come to ask for forgiveness on behalf of his ancestors.

Up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed between 1914–1923, as the Ottoman Empire crumbled. Once home to many diverse Christian communities, the modern state was built on a secular but ethnic Turkish foundation.

No Turk can be a Christian, the restaurant owner scoffed. He demanded the secret sign made centuries ago by believers in the catacombs.

Beytel drew the fish.

By the end of the conversation, the man gave him a hug, with a tear in his eye.

“If Turkey takes one step, the Armenians are ready to forgive,” said Beytel, of his time at a conference in the Armenian capital. “It was amazing to hear them call me brother.”

There was more to come. One year later, Beytel was 1 of about 15 Turkish Christians to apologize at the Armenian Genocide Memorial in Yerevan.

“As a Muslim, I wouldn’t say I hated Armenians. But I would have called them the enemy, and that they were bad,” Beytel said.

“When I came to Jesus, everything changed.”

But the implications took time.

Beytel became a Christian in 2000. But it was not until 2009 when he met Jacob Pursley, an American minister to Turkey, that he began to wrestle with his share in the national responsibility.

The spiritual growth of the church is hindered by the unconfessed sin of genocide, Pursley implored the believers. He urged Turkish Christians to seek reconciliation with Armenians, on behalf of the nation.

“It was a terrible event,” Beytel recalled thinking. “They killed us, we killed them. But what does that have to do with me?”

But over the next four years, Beytel researched the actual history of the genocide, realized his faulty education, and prayed. Eventually, he found his way to Armenia.

It was not easy to convince others.

In 2013, Pursley wrote a book in Turkish to promote his conviction. Distributing it in the churches, several thought he was an American spy. One member of a nearby congregation threatened to take him to court. Many recognized the historic atrocity, but feared Muslims would reject them more than they already do.

But over time, others also began to encourage the idea of reconciliation, and more and more Turkish pastors joined Pursley on his Armenia trips. There was a cultural awakening also, as Turkish intellectuals began speaking positively toward their eastern neighbor. And politically, there was a period some thought the two nations might normalize relations.

“Today, we can hardly hear these voices,” said Hrayr Jebejian, the Armenian general secretary of the Bible Society in the Gulf. “And the war [in Nagorno-Karabakh], I am afraid, leaves very little room for peace and reconciliation.”

Turkey’s period of openness toward its neighbors gave way to military interventions, he said. And now, he says Ankara is driving its fellow Turkic people in Azerbaijan to ethnically cleanse Armenians from their enclave—just as Turkey did a century before.

“Christian theology is based on accepting, respecting, and living with the ‘other,’” Jebejian said. “Turkey needs to learn this lesson.”

But even as the idea gains traction in Turkish churches, they are reluctant to share it widely. Beytel’s desire to speak of the reconciliation efforts to the media was quashed.

“It is easy to confess in church; as Christians, they [Armenians] have to forgive us,” he said. “But if we do not lead, confession will be impossible for others.”

But perhaps there is another way for the spiritual hindrance to be removed?

“As long as Armenians keep cursing Turkey, fruit will not come out of Turkey,” said Fadi Krikor, the German founder of Father’s House for All Nations. “The curse can be removed by Armenia, even if Turkey does not ask for forgiveness.”

Born to an Armenian father, in 2019 Krikor led a German delegation to Etchmiadzin, Armenia’s fourth-largest city and seat of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church. Addressing their Christian “older brothers,” the Lutheran representatives asked forgiveness for their role in the genocide. It included the great grandson of Kaiser Wilhelm II, who was allied with Turkey at the time.

“We pray,” replied Archbishop Nathan, “and God gives forgiveness.”

Pursley was present, and now resides in Armenia. In 2017, the Turkish government began asking about his writing pseudonym, and with colleagues kicked out of the country he no longer felt he was welcome.

The Bethel Church has since ceased operations. Beytel now lives in the United States.

In the last three years, now missions pastor at the Yerevan International Church, Pursley has preached in nearly 100 evangelical churches in Armenia, founded a school for missions, and partnered in sending 300 Armenian missionaries to the Turkic world. Several of these were long-term, though few have been able to remain.

Pursley began bringing Turkish pastors to Armenia in 2008, and the seed has grown.

“The fruit of reconciliation is prayer and blessing,” he said, “and from this they reach out with the gospel.”

Arman Manukyan, pastor of Emmanuel Church in Etchmiadzin near the closed border with Turkey, developed a vision for reconciliation after the German initiative. Welcoming Turkish pastors to Armenia, he embraced them with tears.

“Reconciliation is not something that can be taught,” he said. “It has to be done through friendship, created in an environment of confession.”

When Manukyan accepted Christ 20 years ago, he lost his “hatred” for Turks. But while good relations can be possible between them and Armenians—many Turkish businessmen operate successfully in Yerevan—it usually ignores the elephant in the room.

“Denial [of the genocide] makes reconciliation impossible,” he said, making a comparison to Jews and the Holocaust. “How can you build a friendship upon a lie?”

Similarly, and per Archbishop Nathan’s reference to “God,” Pursley said in the current climate it is “impossible” for the Armenian Orthodox church to forgive Turkey. As part of the state, it is governed by geopolitical realities. This also makes it difficult for Armenians to speak out in favor of reconciliation, and some of his returning missionaries have been interrogated by their own government.

Armenian authorities are wary lest naïve citizens be “duped,” and create a security threat.

Such concerns are especially heightened now, with the outbreak of war within Azerbaijan. Nearly 700 Armenian soldiers have been killed so far. (Azerbaijan does not disclose military casualties.) Things are tense in Turkey also.

“Armenians in our country fear that hostility will be directed towards them,” said Soner Tufan, spokesman for the Association of Protestant Churches in Turkey.

“Nationalism has risen, and war has no winner.”

Indeed, demonstrations passed in front of Istanbul’s Armenian patriarchate as protesters hurled curses in support of Azerbaijan. The city has since placed security guards in front of its Armenian churches.

Armenian member of parliament Garo Paylan, who has “yearned for Turkish-Armenian reconciliation,” warned that hate speech could lead to hate crimes.

Tufan noted that the contested enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh is legally Azerbaijani territory. But Protestants want peace, no matter the political outcome.

“Writhing in sorrow,” he said, “we pray for the solution to come.”

Back in Armenia, the nation is praying. Every day, Pursley said, several church-connected small groups petition God for love to reach their Turkish and Azeri neighbors.

“I don’t see how it will happen, but God can do a miracle,” said Manukyan.

“Peace must come first. They will not accept the gospel from an enemy nation.”

In some sense, it could be easier—and harder—with Azerbaijan. Turkey must admit the genocide, the Etchmiadzin pastor said. With Baku, only a peace treaty is necessary.

But while in Turkey the Armenians were victims, with Azerbaijan both sides think the other has to apologize. Manukyan said it will need to happen at the same time. Current attention is elsewhere, however, helping the victims in Nagorno-Karabakh. But he is also asking for prayer, to stop a new genocide.

“Armenians are not only legitimately defending their homeland, but also their existence,” Jebejian said. “Is there a chance for reconciliation? I’m not so sure.”

Manukyan says part of the silence is out of concern. He believes it could make trouble for the Azeri church, if the government knew it had contacts with Armenians.

Sources in both nations confirmed there are few initiatives underway between the two evangelical communities. Nor were they aware of any strong friendships between them.

Direct calls would be viewed as a security threat, said Mushfig Bayramov, an Azeri believer. Once in the early 90s, he was questioned by police for his religious activity, but never for meeting with Armenians. But the Azeri church has other more pressing priorities.

“It is more important to reach out to our own people,” said Bayramov. “We are not a Christian nation, and [Azeris] might wonder where our allegiances lie.”

If they try to build bridges, they will be suspected as traitors and spies.

Bayramov has met Armenians at international church conferences, he said. While some have been friendly, others have given him the cold shoulder.

Formerly a secular Muslim, as a pastor Bayramov was once able to assist an Armenian woman in Uzbekistan to apply for asylum in Canada. But he admitted struggling with the thought: Why should I help her?

Armenians—as the Christian nation—bear the duty of reconciliation, Bayramov said, compared to the “Muslim” Azeri believers. He warned Armenians about Jesus’ statement in the Gospels on the secrets of the kingdom: Unless they act in accordance with their faith, “even what they have will be taken from them.”

Which is the very thing Armenians fear in Nagorno-Karabakh. And of Armenia itself, landlocked and surrounded by larger nations and Turkic peoples.

With Turkey, some are trying.

“You are only one person,” said the restaurant owner to Beytel. “The whole Turkish nation must come and apologize.”

“But one flower heralds spring,” he replied. “Perhaps a garden will grow.”

https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2020/october/armenia-turkey-christian-reconcile-genocide-nagorno-karabak.html

Fresno Community Steps Up To Send Needed Medical Supplies To Armenia

GVWire
Oct 20 2020

An annual medical mission to Armenia was not possible this year due to COVID-19 restrictions and a major conflict. But, that’s not stopping a dedicated team from Fresno from doing their part to help.

Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia in Fresno Berj Apkarian found another way to help by collecting medical supplies that are set to arrive in the war torn region this week.

Armenia and Azerbaijan reported more fighting on Tuesday over the separatist territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, where clashes have continued for over three weeks despite attempts at establishing a cease-fire.

According to Nagorno-Karabakh officials, 773 of their troops have been killed since Sept. 27, along with over 30 civilians. Azerbaijan hasn’t disclosed its military losses, but says 61 civilians have died so far and 291 have been wounded.

“We’re sending items that are needed. I am in constant communication with the minister of Health in Armenia.”Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia in Fresno Berj Apkarian

“We’re sending items that are needed,” explains Apkarian to GV Wire℠ by phone. “I am in constant communication with the minister of health in Armenia.”

Apkarian says he and others along with group of Fresno medical professionals packaged up over $50,000 worth of supplies. Among the items boxed up were first aid kits, surgical instruments, and coagulants to help stop bleeding.

According to Apkarian, there are 9 big boxes of just coagulants alone worth a wholesale price of $14,500.

“Based on requests, we will continue our efforts,” says Apkarian. “We have to do our part.”

The first shipment of humanitarian aid from Fresno is already on its way and should arrive in Armenia on either Thursday or Friday.

“They can use our help, and the problem with wounds and war is the use of equipment. Everything is used and used and used. And you run out so fast,” ENT Specialist Dr. Brien Tonkinson told KSEE24.

Apkarian tells GV Wire℠ he was so impressed with the outpouring of support from the whole community that he didn’t sleep last night.

“There are as many non-Armenian donors as there are Armenian donors,” he says.

He also says Community Medical Centers, a long time supporter of the cause, is also stepping up again this year.

“We will do this for any part of the world because we are blessed to live in the United States,” says Apkarian.

He says back in 2016, a team of 28 people from Fresno went to Jordan which had taken in the majority of Syrian refugees from the war there.

Community Medical Centers teamed up with the California Agricultural Leadership Foundation to donate and transport more than $200,000 in medical equipment and supplies.

Apkarian and the members of the Agricultural Leadership Class 46 delivered 28 suitcases and 14 backpacks filled with portable medical machines and equipment to the government-run Al Nadeem Hospital in Madaba, just 19 miles south of Jordan’s capital city Amman.

The group brought IV pumps, blood pressure cuffs, glucose monitors, dental instruments, surgical scalpels and scissors, pediatric scales /measures, four portable ultrasound machines, and six small electrocardiogram machines hooked to laptop computer monitors that can share results through secure intranet connections to cardiac specialists elsewhere.

If you would like to donate you can make your tax deductible donation to Advance Armenia Foundation.

2753 Quincy Ave., Clovis, CA 93619

(The Associated Press contributed to this story.)


https://gvwire.com/2020/10/20/fresno-community-steps-up-to-send-needed-medical-supplies-to-armenia/







Mayor of desolated Karabakh village vows to ‘rebuild everything’

CTV Canada
Oct 20 2020

AFP Staff

    

MARTAKERT– Dressed in military fatigues, the mayor of Martakert leans on his desk topped with coils of cables and two landline telephones in a makeshift basement office, his Kalashnikov rifle resting behind him.

His town in the northeast of the mountainous Nagorno-Karabakh region has come under regular shelling since fighting erupted between Armenian separatists and Azerbaijan forces last month, forcing most of its 5,000 inhabitants to flee.

Now, Misha Gyurjyan, thinning grey hair framing a round face, spends most of his days in his basement office, coming out only occasionally to assess the damage.

The 61-year-old accompanied AFP journalists on a tour of the deserted town, where only stray dogs and pigs searching for food could be seen wandering its streets.

More than 30 per cent of homes have been destroyed in fighting over the disputed province, the mayor estimates, cautioning that he can’t be sure of the figures until daily Azerbaijani shelling ends.

“The fighting needs to stop so we can go street by street to calculate the damage,” he says.

There are no bombing sirens in Martakert to warn residents of looming attacks, the mayor notes.

“We no longer have electricity,” he adds during a drive across town punctuated by the deep rumbling of shelling from the front line 10 kilometres (6 miles) away.

Gyurjyan pauses at a house he says was destroyed by shelling several days ago.

Ripped metal sheets from the roof are scattered around the garden, a bunch of black grapes hang from a trellis and the house’s charred walls have partially collapsed.

In the garden of another destroyed home nearby, flies swarm around the body of a dead dog.

Further on, the mayor stops in front of a large one-storey building he says was attacked on October 10, saying it used to be his own family home.

The walls withstood the attack, but the windows were all blown out. Trees in the garden are in disarray, their trunks blackened by fire.

“My son was here,” Gyurjyan says.

“He was coming back from the front to rest. He had time to get out before the airstrike,” hit, he adds, lighting one cigarette immediately after finishing another.

Gyurjyan’s wife has sought refuge in the Armenian capital Yerevan, while his two sons are serving in the military.

He checks his watch: 2:30 pm. “A bad time. They (the Azerbaijanis) could start bombing,” he explains, climbing back into his car.

Back in his three-room, dimly lit basement that serves as office, dormitory and kitchen, Gyurjyan is joined by members of his municipal team — half a dozen men, most of them in combat fatigues.

The former traffic police chief who became mayor in 2011 recalls that the new fighting over Karabakh could not have come at a worse time.

“We had just finished rebuilding a road, people were buying apartments, the (pomegranate) crops were ripening,” he says with regret.

Of the more than 800 people who have died since fresh fighting started just over three weeks ago, three were killed in Martakert, he notes.

“I didn’t imagine it would start again,” he says, referring to frequent flare ups over the disputed region since a post-Soviet war left 30,000 dead.

“But these are different weapons — aerial bombardments, drones. Before we fought with rifles,” says Gyurjyan, a veteran of the first war that ignited the decades-long conflict.

When one of his phones rings he immediately picks up. It’s a resident who fled, calling for an assessment of the situation in the town.

“It’s okay…it’s calm,” he says down the phone, again lighting a new cigarette after replacing the receiver.

“We will rebuild everything when it stops,” he says, his eyes red from hours of lost sleep.

https://www.ctvnews.ca/world/mayor-of-desolated-karabakh-village-vows-to-rebuild-everything-1.5152897