Armenia delegation meets with Catholicos-Patriarch Krikor Bedros XX in Lebanon

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 12:59,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government delegation comprised of High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan and other officials met with Catholicos-Patriarch of Cilicia of the Armenian Catholic Church His Beatitude Krikor Bedros XX in Lebanon.

Armenian Ambassador to Lebanon Vahagn Atabekyan also attended the meeting, the High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Office said in a news release.

Krikor Bedros XX presented to the officials the situation of the Lebanese-Armenians and the human and material losses as result of the August 4 explosion in Beirut.

High Commissioner Zareh Sinanyan thanked for the reception and stressed that Armenia is providing assistance to the Government of Lebanon, the brotherly people of Lebanon, as well as the Lebanese-Armenian community. “The purpose of the visit is to have a deeper understanding on how we can assist our Lebanese-Armenian compatriots,” Sinanyan said.

In his remarks, His Beatitude stressed that Armenians around the world have two hearts – Armenia and the Diaspora, and was happy to note that finally the Armeian people have a free and independent fatherland. He also attached importance to the assistance they received from the Government of Artsakh. “Our brothers are with us, and this was a very beautiful gesture”, he said.

Sinanyan mentioned that two more planeloads with humanitarian aid will be delivered to Lebanon from Armenia.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Treaty of Sevres was key to just regional peace – Armenian Ambassador to France

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 12:28,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. The Treaty of Sevres would’ve allowed reducing the serious consequences of the Armenian Genocide, according to Armenian Ambassador to France Hasmik Tolmajian, who posted a tweet on the 100th anniversary of the Treaty of Sevres today, on August 10.

“100 years ago on this day, the Allied and Associated Powers, including France and Armenia, signed with Turkey the Treaty of Sevres,” the ambassador tweeted. “It was perceived as the key to establishing a just regional peace which would have also made it possible to reduce the serious consequences of the Armenian Genocide,” she said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia repatriation law in final phase of development

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 13:40,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government delegation led by High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan in Lebanon held a meeting with Rev. Megerdich Karageozian, the President of the Union of the Armenian Evangelical Churches in the Near East, and Paul Haidostian, the President of Haigazian University in Beirut. Armenian Ambassador to Lebanon Vahagn Atabekyan was also present at the meeting, the High Commissioner’s Office said.

Rev. Megerdich Karageozian welcomed the delegation and emphasized that it is an honor to receive them during the difficult days of the Beirut blast aftermath. “When I saw the relief plane with Armenia written on it, with Ararat in the background, I honestly got emotional,” he told the delegation. Karageozian presented the Armenian community situation, the pre-explosion economic crisis and its impact on the Lebanese-Armenians. He said that the August 4 explosion had also a huge emotional and psychological impact on Lebanese-Armenians.

Sinanyan presented details on the humanitarian mission and the scheduled additional planeloads of assistance from Armenia. He then addressed the Armenian government’s actions in the direction of repatriation process. The High Commissioner highlighted the creation of the Repatriates Integration Center by end of 2020 and the adoption of the Law on Repatriation, which is currently in the final phase of development.

After the meeting a tour was held at the Armenian Evangelical Church, where its famous stained-glass cross was completely destroyed from the blast. The delegation also visited the Haigazian University, which also suffered damages.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Deputy Chief of Police Tigran Yesayan fired

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 14:09,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. President Armen Sarkissian has approved Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s petition on dismissing Deputy Chief of Police Tigran Yesayan, Sarkissian’s Office said in a news release.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

CivilNet: Clashes Break Out Between Protesters and Security at Amulsar Gold Mine

CIVILNET.AM

11:14

By Mark Dovich

Clashes continue at the controversial Amulsar Gold Mine in Armenia’s Vayots Dzor region between environmental activists and security guards hired by Lydian Armenia, the company that operates the mine. The most recent incident took place on August 4.

Tensions grew after Lydian security guards used cranes to replace the cabins used to house security staff with new facilities. Lydian has repeatedly stated that the cabins are located on its property, a claim disputed not only by activists, but also by Vardan Hovhannisyan, the mayor of the nearby town of Jermuk, representatives of the Jermuk police department, and the Center of Geodesy and Cartography NGO in Yerevan.

The protest escalated into pushing, yelling and rock throwing. Police were dispatched to the scene, resulting in the arrest of 10 protesters and two security guards. The activists have accused the police of using excessive force in detaining protesters.

Daily protests have continued at the Amulsar site since August 4 and have largely remained peaceful.

Lydian has threatened to initiate legal action against the activists over their blockading of the mine entrance.

The entrance to the Amulsar Gold Mine has been continuously blockaded by environmental activists and residents of nearby towns since the summer of 2018. The activists and their supporters believe that the mining project, if put into full operation, will cause serious environmental damage.

The protesters have raised concerns that acid drainage from the project will likely leak into two major rivers nearby, the Vorotan and the Arpa, the latter of which flows into Lake Sevan, Armenia’s largest single source of freshwater. Sevan also plays a key role in Armenian agricultural and energy production, irrigating about 70 percent of the country’s agricultural lands and generating about 15 percent of the country’s total electricity via a complex of hydroelectric power plants located along the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade.

The activists have also expressed apprehension about the planned use of cyanide at the mine, which is located only one kilometer (about half a mile) away from the nearest village of Gndevaz and less than 15 kilometers (about 9 miles) away from the town of Jermuk, a major tourist attraction known for its clean air and natural mineral water. Cyanide, which is highly toxic, is commonly used in gold mining in a mineral extraction process called heap leaching, and exposure to the chemical can cause serious health problems and even death.

Finally, activists have opposed the project due to the mine’s proximity to the natural habitat of several endangered animal species, including the Caucasian Leopard, of which fewer than 15 are believed to remain in the area.

The roughly $500-million Amulsar Gold Mine project has a long and controversial history in Armenia. Construction at the site began in 2016 during the administration of President Serzh Sargsyan, despite local and environmental protests. Emboldened by the change of government following the Velvet Revolution in the spring of 2018, residents of nearby towns and environmental activists set up a blockade at the entrance of the mine in the summer of 2018, which remains in place.

The company with the rights to operate the mine, Lydian Armenia, functions as a subsidiary of Lydian International, a multinational mining company registered in the British tax haven of Jersey, one of the Channel Islands located between the UK and France.

Amulsar is Lydian’s only active project. The mine covers an area of roughly 65 square kilometers (about 25 square miles), and Lydian forecasts that the mine will produce about 2.1 million ounces of gold (roughly 66 tons) over an initial 11-year period of operations. The company claims that the Amulsar mine will provide employment for about 1,300 workers during the construction phase and nearly 800 workers during the operational phase. Additionally, Lydian expects to pay at least $50 million in taxes to the Armenian government annually throughout the operational period, which would represent roughly two percent of total taxes collected in the country each year. 

Lydian has been unable to access the mining site and finish construction since the blockade began in 2018, reportedly losing up to $100,000 a day. In February 2020, the company was delisted from the Toronto Stock Exchange and filed for court-protected restructuring, which was later approved.

A June investigation by the London-based media platform openDemocracy revealed that the UK and U.S. governments have lobbied extensively on Lydian’s behalf and have repeatedly pressured the Armenian government to greenlight the project since 2018.

The Amulsar question has emerged as a highly contentious issue in Armenian domestic politics, with the government caught between the need to attract international investment and encourage economic development, on the one hand, and the need to answer to its citizens, who overwhelmingly oppose the Amulsar project, on the other hand. A poll conducted by the Caucasus Research Resource Centers think tank network in February and March of this year found that only 19 percent of Armenians were in favor of the Amulsar mine going into operation.

Following his election as prime minister in May 2018, Nikol Pashinyan ordered inspections of Armenia’s mines. As part of those audits, the government arranged for an environmental impact assessment on Amulsar to be conducted by ELARD, a Beirut-based environmental consultancy group. ELARD’s report, published in August 2019, proved inconclusive, finding the design concepts put forward in Lydian’s own environmental and safety impact assessment “reasonable and appropriate,” but also pointing out that “a number of the measures and plans are partial, not sufficiently protective, and/or unreliable with a high degree of uncertainty.”

Citing ELARD’s assessment, Pashinyan announced in August 2019 that Lydian may restart construction at Amulsar, though he also urged the company to comply with “unprecedentedly high environmental standards that have not been applied in Armenia until now.” In a Facebook Live video the following month, Pashinyan clarified that “there is simply no legal basis to block construction and excavation of the Amulsar mine.”

Nonetheless, environmental activists continue to block the mine’s entrance, and the Armenian government has so far shown no willingness to forcefully disperse them, effectively leaving Amulsar at a stalemate.

In similar fashion, Lydian has repeatedly threatened to bring the case to an international arbitrage if the blockade continues, but so far has not taken any steps to do so.

The recently-appointed Minister of Environment, Romanos Petrosyan, has gone on the record stating that he needs time to fully assess the situation at Amulsar, since he has not been involved with the issue prior to his appointment late last month. Petrosyan also refused to comment on the recent clashes at the site, saying that the incident does not fall under the Environment Ministry’s jurisdiction.

Armenia has considerable deposits of copper, gold, and molybdenum, and the mining industry forms a major sector of the country’s economy, employing roughly 9,000 people. Upwards of 60 percent of Armenia’s total annual exports are in ore concentrates, metals, and gems. However, much of the benefit from mineral exploitation leaves the country, since Armenia only exports ores, and does not process or refine them in-country. Social science research on multinational mining companies operating in developing countries has found that mining’s “greatest social and environmental costs fall on the local population…while economic and political benefits are concentrated at the…international scale.”

Lebanese Cabinet member Vartine Ohanian demands government resignation

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 15:28,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. Lebanon’s Minister of Youth and Sports Vartine Ohanian has announced that she is demanding the government’s resignation in connection with the August 4 Beirut explosion and the aftermath.

Ohanian, a Lebanese-Armenian, said she will formally submit her demand at the upcoming Cabinet meeting.

On August 4, a major explosion in the Port of Beirut sent an immensely powerful shockwave across the Lebanese capital, killing at least 220 people, injuring 7000 and causing massive destruction. Around 300,000 people were left homeless. It resulted in US$10–15 billion in property damage.

Among the victims are 13 Lebanese-Armenians who died in the blast, and 300 other representatives of the community were injured.

The blast has been linked to a port warehouse where about 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate were stored in unsafe conditions. The cause of the explosion is under investigation.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

UEFA Europa League qualifier draws reveal competition facing Armenian clubs

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 15:39,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, ARMENPRESS. The UEFA Europa League draws in the Swiss town of Nyon have revealed the competitors that Armenian clubs face in the 2020/21 season’s qualifier.

Yerevan’s Noah FC will compete with the Kairat Almaty FC, with the Kazakh team hosting the first match.

Yerevan’s Alashkert FC will face the Macedonian KF Renova, and Gyumri’s Shirak SC will play against FCSB (ROU) with the latter slated for August 27 in Bucharest.

 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Forget Sykes-Picot. It’s the Treaty of Sèvres That Explains the Modern Middle East.


Ninety-five years ago today, European diplomats gathered at a porcelain factory in the Paris suburb of Sèvres and signed a treaty to remake the Middle East from the ashes of the Ottoman empire. The plan collapsed so quickly we barely remember it anymore, but the short-lived Treaty of Sèvres, no less than the endlessly discussed Sykes-Picot agreement, had consequences that can still be seen today. We might do well to consider a few of them as the anniversary of this forgotten treaty quietly passes by.

In 1915, as British troops prepared to march on Istanbul by way of the Gallipoli peninsula, the government in London printed silk handkerchiefs heralding the end of the Ottoman empire. It was a bit premature (the battle of Gallipoli turned out to be one of the Ottomans’ few World War I victories) but by 1920 Britain’s confidence seemed justified: With allied troops occupying the Ottoman capital, representatives from the war’s victorious powers signed a treaty with the defeated Ottoman government that divided the empire’s lands into European spheres of influence. Sèvres internationalized Istanbul and the Bosphorus, while giving pieces of Anatolian territory to the Greeks, Kurds, Armenians, French, British, and Italians. Seeing how and why the first European plan for dividing up the Middle East failed, we can better understand the region’s present-day borders, as well as the contradictions of contemporary Kurdish nationalism and the political challenges facing modern Turkey.

Within a year of signing the Treaty of Sèvres, European powers began to suspect they had bitten off more than they could chew. Determined to resist foreign occupation, Ottoman officers like Mustafa Kemal Ataturk reorganized the remnants of the Ottoman army and, after several years of desperate fighting, drove out the foreign armies seeking to enforce the treaty’s terms. The result was Turkey as we recognize it today, whose new borders were officially established in the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne.

Sèvres has been largely forgotten in the West, but it has a potent legacy in Turkey, where it has helped fuel a form of nationalist paranoia some scholars have called the “Sèvres syndrome.” Sèvres certainly plays a role in Turkey’s sensitivity over Kurdish separatism, as well as the belief that the Armenian genocide — widely used by European diplomats to justify their plans for Anatolia in 1920 — was always an anti-Turkish conspiracy rather than a matter of historical truth. Moreover, Turkey’s foundational struggle with colonial occupation left its mark in a persistent form of anti-imperial nationalism, directed first against Britain, during the Cold War against Russia, and now, quite frequently, against the United States.

But the legacy of Sèvres extends well beyond Turkey, which is precisely why we should include this treaty alongside Sykes-Picot in our history of the Middle East. It will help us challenge the widespread notion that the region’s problems all began with Europeans drawing borders on a blank map.

There’s no doubt that Europeans were happy to create borders that conformed to their own interests whenever they could get away with it. But the failure of Sèvres proves that that sometimes they couldn’t. When European statesmen tried to redraw the map of Anatolia, their efforts were forcefully defeated. In the Middle East, by contrast, Europeans succeeded in imposing borders because they had the military power to prevail over the people resisting them. Had the Syrian nationalist Yusuf al-‘Azma, another mustachioed Ottoman army officer, replicated Ataturk’s military success and defeated the French at the Battle of Maysalun, European plans for the Levant would have gone the way of Sèvres.

Would different borders have made the Middle East more stable, or perhaps less prone to sectarian violence? Not necessarily. But looking at history through the lens of the Sèvres treaty suggests a deeper point about the cause-and-effect relationship between European-drawn borders and Middle Eastern instability: the regions that ended up with borders imposed by Europe tended to be those already too weak or disorganized to successfully resist colonial occupation. Turkey didn’t become wealthier and more democratic than Syria or Iraq because it had the good fortune to get the right borders. Rather, the factors that enabled Turkey to defy European plans and draw its own borders — including an army and economic infrastructure inherited from the Ottoman empire — were some of the same ones that enabled Turkey to build a strong, centralized, European-style nation-state.

Of course, plenty of Kurdish nationalists might claim that Turkey’s borders actually are wrong. Indeed, some cite Kurdish statelessness as a fatal flaw in the region’s post-Ottoman borders. But when European imperialists tried to create a Kurdish state at Sèvres, many Kurds fought alongside Ataturk to upend the treaty. It’s a reminder that political loyalties can and do transcend national identities in ways we would do well to realize today.

The Kurdish state envisioned in the Sèvres Treaty would, crucially, have been under British control. While this appealed to some Kurdish nationalists, others found this form of British-dominated “independence” problematic. So they joined up to fight with the Turkish national movement. Particularly among religious Kurds, continued Turkish or Ottoman rule seemed preferable to Christian colonization. Other Kurds, for more practical reasons, worried that once in charge the British would inevitably support recently dispossessed Armenians seeking to return to the region. Some subsequently regretted their decision when it became clear the state they had fought to create would be significantly more Turkish — and less religious — than anticipated. But others, under varying degrees of duress, chose instead to accept the identity the new state offered them.

Many Turkish nationalists remain frightened by the way their state was destroyed by Sèvres, while many Kurdish nationalists still imagine the state they might have achieved. At the same time, today’s Turkish government extolls the virtues of Ottoman tolerance and multiculturalism, while Kurdish separatist leader Abdullah Ocalan, apparently after reading the sociologist Benedict Anderson in prison, claims to have discovered that all nations are merely social constructs. The governing Justice and Development Party (AKP) and the pro-Kurdish HDP spent much of the last decade competing to convince Kurdish voters that a vote for their party was a vote for peace — competing, that is, over which party was capable of resolving Turkey’s long-simmering conflict by creating a more stable and inclusive state. In short, as many Americans still debate the “artificial” nature of European-made states in the Middle East, Turkey is fitfully transcending a century-long obsession with proving how “real” it is.

Asbarez: Armenian Government Delegation Assesses Situation in Lebanon

August 10,  2020


An Armenian government delegation headed by Diaspora Commissioner Zareh Sinanyan met with Catholicos Aram I in Antelias on Aug. 9

In addition to sending the first humanitarian shipment of emergency aid to Lebanon, an Armenian government delegation also arrived in Beirut to become acquainted with the situation there following last week’s massive explosion that has rocked the country and forced the resignation of its government on Monday.

Heading the delegation is Armenia’s High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan, who is accompanied by chief of staff, Sara Anjargholian; Varag Siserian, the chief of staff of Deputy prime minister Tigran Avinyan; head of the Armenia-Lebanon Parliamentary Friendship group Hrachyan Hakobyan and director of the Hayastan All Armenian Fund Haykak Arshamyan.

Upon arriving in Lebanon on board the humanitarian flight, the delegation visited Antelias and attended a special mass officiated by His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia at the St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral.

Following the church services, Aram I met with the Armenian government delegation, which was briefed by the pontiff about the scope of the destruction and the damage to Armenian institutions and individual residences and businesses.

Community officials have reported that 13 Armenians died from last week’s blast that has leveled a swath of Beirut and has left hundreds of thousands homeless.

The Catholicos emphasized the importance of prioritizing the needs of the Armenian community and said that a commission involving all community institutions is working on this matter.

Sinanyan explained to the pontiff that he and the delegation were on the ground to evaluate and assess the situation and to meet with members of the Armenian community to gain first-hand information about its needs.

In his remarks, the Catholicos spoke about the need to strengthen the Diaspora as it has played a vital role in the strengthening of Armenia.

According to Sinanyan’s office, the sides reiterated that the homeland’s doors would always be open for Diaspora Armenians.

Sinanyan reiterated this sentiment during an interview on Monday with Radio Liberty in Beirut, highlighting the role Lebanon has played in the post-Genocide Armenian reality

“We are grateful to Lebanon for the humane treatment of the Armenian people after the Genocide. We are ready to help our compatriots no matter what decision they make,” Sinanyan said.

“We will help those who want to remain and will tell those who wish to come to Armenia that the homeland is waiting for all Armenians with open doors,” added Sinanyan, explaining that about 300 Lebanese Armenians had already returned to Armenia for permanent residence before the blast with 37 returning on the humanitarian flight.

The government delegation met with Armenian Catholic Catholicos-Patriarch His Beatitude Krikor Bedros XX.

The discussion of assisting the Lebanese-Armenian community continued during a meeting with Armenian Catholic Catholicos-Patriarch His Beatitude Krikor Bedros XX.

After hearing Krikor Bedros XX’s briefing, Sinanyan explained that Armenia is providing assistance to the Government of Lebanon, the brotherly people of Lebanon, as well as the Lebanese-Armenian community.

“The purpose of the visit is to have a deeper understanding on how we can assist our Lebanese-Armenian compatriots,” Sinanyan said.

In his remarks, the pontiff stressed that Armenians around the world “have two hearts – Armenia and the Diaspora,” and was happy to note that finally Armenians have a free and independent homeland.

High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan met with Armenia media representatives

He also emphasized the importance of the assistance that was received from the Government of Artsakh. “Our brothers are with us, and this was a very beautiful gesture,” he said.
Sinanyan mentioned that two more planeloads with humanitarian aid will be delivered to Lebanon from Armenia.

On Monday, Sinanyan met with representatives of media outlets in Lebanon, among them the Aztag, Zartonk, and Ararat newspapers, Radio Sevan, Voice of Van radio stations, and representatives from AGBU’s media department.

Armenia’s Ambassador to Lebanon Vahagn Atabekyan hosted the gathering at the Embassy where Sinanyan and the journalists discussed a wide range of issues, including strengthening Armenia-Diaspora relations, enhancing inter-community ties, activating communication networks. The state of the press in the aftermath of last week’s explosion, as well as prioritizing targeted areas of support for the Lebanese-Armenian community were also discussed.

Asbarez: Humanitarian Aid from Armenia, Artsakh Reaches Lebanon

August 10,  2020


Aid from Artsakh was part of the humanitarian flight to Lebanon

A plane carrying humanitarian assistance from Armenia and Artsakh to Lebanon, to assist in the massive destruction that was caused by last week’s explosion in Beirut, arrived in Lebanon.

“The shipment ‘From the People of Artsakh to Lebanon’ has already arrived in Beirut,” said Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan is a social media post on Sunday.

“The assistance is in the form of food,” President Harutyunyan said. “And this isn’t the end of it, because I am going to convene a meeting on this issue tomorrow and I will report on our decisions. Artsakh stands by Lebanon in overcoming this difficult challenge.”

“From #Armenia’s heart and Artsakh’s people to Lebanon. First 2 airlifts of humanitarian assistance have been sent to Lebanon,” said Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in a Facebook post.

“We will continue providing assistance based on needs of Lebanon’s government and the Armenian community. #StayStrongLebanon,” added Pashinyan.

Armenia’s foreign minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan also announced the arrival of the Armenia’s first shipment of humanitarian assistance to Lebanon in a Twitter post.

“First of the three airlifts of assistance from Armenia to brotherly Lebanon arrived in Beirut,” Mnatsakanyan tweeted. “From Armenia’s heart to Beirut”.

Two more flights carrying humanitarian aid will be sent from Armenia to Lebanon this week.

Armenia’s High Commissioner for Diaspora Affairs Zareh Sinanyan, other government officials and lawmakers made the trip to Lebanon on board the flight.