Asbarez: Remembering the Old Glendale


Catherine Yesayan

BY CATHERINE YESAYAN

The Coronavirus lockdown has generated some creative vibes for some of us. With some extra time on my hands, I ventured into writing about the old days, when we first arrived in Glendale.

Over the past several years, I’ve written stories for Asbarez Daily Newspaper about Armenian communities in different parts of the world. However, I’ve neglected to write about my own city, Glendale – home to a large number of Armenians.

Let me begin by telling you my story. I came to Glendale in 1979. Our move to America was not planned. In December of 1978, my husband and I, with our 4-year-old daughter, left Iran because we sensed there was unrest brewing in the county. We thought we would spend a few weeks in London, where we planned to spend Christmas, then return home. However, the day we chose to leave, the opposition got a handle on the regime and the political landscape changed overnight.

Stuck in London and unable to return, we looked into different options. We had friends in London who advised us that it would be a better idea to seek residency in the United States rather than England. A logical choice was New York City, because my uncle lived there. From London, we flew to New York. There, my uncle suggested that starting a new life would be easier in California. On January 6, 1979, we arrived in Glendale, where a few friends had already made their homes.

The Sears building on Central Ave

All these memories rushed to my mind when, recently, Sears department store in Glendale, after 85 years in business, shut down. The news brought a wistful sadness.

When we first arrived 40 years ago, after a brief hotel stay, we rented our first apartment in Glendale. With the advice of our friends, we furnished it with furniture and appliances from Sears. We bought our first refrigerator, our first washer-dryer and other smaller pieces – all from Sears.

The years melted away. Today, as I look back at the last 40 years,it truly doesn’t seem so long ago. However, back in the day, when I learned that the Sears building had been firmly rooted in Glendale for 45 years – since 1935 – it seemed ancient.

The Sears building on Central Ave

The Sears building, from the outside, reflected a stylized Art Deco aesthetic. Its middle tower was a staple of department stores built in that era in the United States. The inside looked tired; however, there were two sets of “grand” staircases on opposite sides of the store. They made a great impression and told me that, once, the department store was bustling with customers.

At the time, our friends had also suggested we shop at the local Kmart. One day, while shopping there, I heard a sales promotion from the store’s loudspeakers. I followed the rotating and twinkling blue light to the corner of the store. There, I saw a rack of women’s dresses for two or three dollars each. It was a ten-minute special. I bought three dresses. I jazzed up one of the dresses by pulling a corner of the skirt up. Underneath, I wore a petticoat with frills, which I had from before.  I guess that alteration made a dramatic statement, because people often stopped me to ask where I had bought it.

I later learned that the “Blue Rotating Light” was a staple of Kmart stores. The tagline said, “Attention Kmart shoppers…” That very Kmart was one of the first to close down – about 20 years ago. The purchase of that dress was one of my sweetest memories of our early days in Glendale.

In those days, Downtown Glendale looked like a ghost town. The buildings on the sides of the main streets were either one story or, at most, two story, with outdated store fronts. Having been to the crowded and vibrant Downtowns of European cities, and having just arrived from New York City, it was astonishing to see the empty streets of Glendale, devoid even of foot traffic.

Among those bare streets stood Glendale’s shopping mall, the Glendale Galleria, which, with its enclosed all around red-brick walls and windowless façade, looked like a fortress. There was nothing exposed from the inside. It was another surprising sight for us. The Galleria was built in 1976, about three years before we arrived in Glendale. Although the outside of the Galleria looked somber, from its opening years to this day, it has been one of the most successful shopping centers in the entire United States.

Once we arrived in Glendale, we enrolled our daughter, who was four at the time, at St. Mary’s Armenian preschool. The school was founded only a few years earlier, in 1975, with only eight registered students. The school was connected to a small church, which was purchased the same year the preschool opened.

A concept design of the Tufenkian Preschool and Kindergarten modernization project

The church served the community with full-throttle Sunday liturgies and other religious ceremonies, Christenings, and marriages. However, by 1985, the building seemed to be too small for the fast-growing community. As a result, another, much larger church on Central Avenue was purchased. After some refurbishing, it began serving the community in July of 1988.

Less than a year after our arrival, several other Armenian families moved to Glendale. The Board of Directors of St. Mary’s school felt an urgency to seek out a bigger campus to move the kindergarten and the higher grades to. Soon after, the Board located a vacant campus within the boundaries of the La Canada school district, about four miles north of Glendale. Our daughter started kindergarten at the new location on Palm Drive.

A year later, another opportunity presented itself. A school in the neighboring city of La Crescenta was up for sale. The visionaries on the Board of St. Mary’s school were quick to make a decision to purchase the campus, knowing that they would be able to put it to good use. Around the same time, philanthropist Vahan Chamlian from Fresno, California fully paid off the school’s loan. To express their gratitude, members of the Board decided to name the school Chamlian Armenian School.

Here, I’d like to interject and say that our daughter, who we enrolled at St. Mary’s preschool in those early days, had classmates at the school who she is friends with to this day.

The preschool campus has remained at its primary location, where it had its humble beginnings, at the corner of Carlton and Chevy Chase. However, the campus has expanded since then, as the preschool acquired additional properties, adjacent to its grounds.

In 1990, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph and Savey Tufenkian made a generous donation of $250,000 in memory of their beloved son, Richard. In honor of its benefactor, the preschool was renamed St. Mary’s Richard Tufenkian Armenian Preschool.

This year, on February 8, more than 600 dedicated community members, parents, alumni, dignitaries, and supporters of St. Mary’s Richard Tufenkian Preschool and Kindergarten attended the school’s 45th Anniversary Gala, where $535,000 was raised in support of the Tufenkian school’s Modernization and Expansion Project, to be completed by the year 2025.

The historic Glendale train station’s Larry Zarian Transportation Center

Today, 670 students attend Chamlian school (K to 8th), and over 200 children are enrolled in the nursery and kindergarten at Tufenkian preschool.

In 1985, the Armenian Sisters Academy opened its doors in La Crescenta, CA. Today, ASA serves 260 students in grades pre-kindergarten to 8th, the Roman Catholic Church being its religious affiliation.

There are several Armenian preschools and kindergartens. However, Chamlian school and the Armenian Sister’s Academy remain, in Glendale, the only schools with middle schools. Similarly, there are several Armenian churches, but St. Mary’s church is the largest.

In 1987, the Davidian & Mariamian Educational Foundation was established, with a mission to teach our youth the Armenian language and cultural heritage. The Foundation created an after-school program for elementary students in public schools. The program is conducted in Glendale, Burbank, North Hollywood, and Los Angeles areas. I personally attest to the wonderful and efficient programs they offer.

There are currently around 10,000 Armenian students enrolled in K to 12th grades in the Glendale Unified School District. Due to the large number of Armenian students, in the 2016 to 2017 school year, the School District began to commemorate the Armenian Genocide with an official school holiday on April 24. Glendale is the first school district in the nation to do so.

Today, the Superintendent of the Glendale School District is an Armenian – Dr. Vivian Ekchian. Additionally, four out of five members of the school district Board are Armenians. We should be very proud of that fact. Three out of five city council members are Armenian, as well.

I assume that, around the time we arrived in this neck of the woods, perhaps only a few thousand Armenians had made Glendale their homes. However, through the course of the upcoming four decades, massive waves of Armenians moved to Glendale – largely due to conflicts and civil unrest, including the Lebanese Civil War, the Islamic Revolution in Iran, other Middle Eastern wars and, of course, the breaking away of Armenia from the Soviet Union. Today there are an estimated 80,000 Armenians living in Glendale.

In the early days, the Iranian Armenian Society was another hub that brought the community together. The Society was founded in 1956, originally in Hollywood. In 1978, the Society purchased a building on Brand Avenue in Glendale. That same building on Brand was purchased by the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Glendale in 2003. In 2011, the Armenian Society moved to its final location, to the newly built and well-appointed three story building on Louise Ave in Glendale.

I have a fond memory of a Christmas bazaar that the women’s chapter of that society had organized during the first year of our stay in Glendale. The talented women had artistically created exquisite Christmas decorations and ornaments for sale. We bought some trimmings for our home and our Christmas tree, which I treasured and reused year after year.

One of the important components of the society was to conduct language classes on Saturdays for Armenian kids to learn how to read and write in Armenian. Other chapters and activities included: music, choir, dance instructions, and various activities for seniors. The society had a sizable hall, where many events such as weddings, christening, and other celebrations took place.

Back in those days, alongside of the Iranian Armenian Society, there was also Homenetmen, the worldwide Armenian institution that promotes sports and scouting activities. Originally established in 1918 in Istanbul, Turkey, the aim of Homenetmen is to provide youth with strong bodies and minds. In addition, Homenetmen exposes our youth to the wealth of Armenian culture and heritage.

The Glendale chapter of Homenetmen was established in 1978, with only seven volunteer members. The organization experienced tremendous growth during the surge of Armenian migration in 1980s. Today, the Glendale chapter is the largest in the United States, with nearly 2,300 members. Homenetmen provides family-oriented scouting, athletic, cultural, and educational programs for Armenian youth. My children took part in the organization’s scouting program.

Today, in Glendale, at the corner of Broadway and Brand Avenues, there is a Marshalls store. But in 1979, an Armenian restaurant stood at that very spot. The owner, I assume, was an Armenian from Iran – I say so, because the restaurant offered Persian-style yogurt soup, aash maast. We ate there often. I remember one day, when I was pregnant and had a cold, I was craving that yogurt soup. I felt much better after consuming a large bowl my husband brought me. That restaurant closed years ago. I remember it fondly.

Phoenicia Restaurant, which offers Armenian-Lebanese food, was another place we frequented in those days. I recently met with the proprietor of the restaurant, Ara Kalfayan, and asked him about what inspired him to open a restaurant. “While I was a university student in San Francisco, I worked at a restaurant,” he said. So, when the business minded Kalfayan moved to Southern California, he thought he would start a business that he knew something about. Estblished in 1978, Phoenicia still stands in its original location on Central Avenue and has expanded its grounds to outdoor patios and banquet rooms. Kalfayan is the epitome of a good restaurateur. You will always spot hi,m attending to his customers with a genuine smile and a warm handshake.

Avakian Grocery was the first Armenian grocery store in Glendale. Mr. Avakian and his wife started the business in 1975 on the southeast corner of Chevy Chase Boulevard and Glendale Avenue. I remember in those early days, Avakian’s Grocery would donate generous gifts to a number of banquets and gatherings we attended. In 1980, Mr. Avakian sold the business to a family from Iran who had recently migrated to Glendale. The new owners kept the name “Avakian” and, for nearly 40 years, offered the best services to their customers until they closed the business. Today, there are countless Armenian grocery stores, but most of Glendale’s Armenians still remember the Avakian Grocery with special affection.

Today, aside from thenumerous grocery stores, I can count close to 30 Armenian bakeries in Glendale. Other Armenian businesses include multitudes of doctors’ offices, pharmacies, flower shops, hairdressers, mechanic shops, and dance studios.

I cannot end this story without mentioning Larry Zarian, a former mayor and the first Armenian-American to be elected to public office. In 1983, Zarian became the first Armenian elected to the Glendale City Council, where he served for 16 years and earned the nickname “The People’s Mayor.”

Zarian died at age 73, in October of 2011, from an aggressive blood cancer. He was an admirable member of Glendale’s Armenian-American community and an inspiration to many. He used his time to advocate for numerous causes and served on many boards within our city and throughout the state.

His tireless efforts set an exemplary precedent for the next generation of Armenians to become active in the city’s politics. His love for Glendale and for Armenian causes was evident in the actions he took. After his death, the historic Glendale Train Station was dedicated to him, and was named as the “Larry Zarian Transportation Center.” Today, we are blessed to see the many young, Armenian elected officials who have followed in his footsteps, leading the way for both Armenians and all the other minorities that now reside together in Glendale.

I hope I was able to give you a good idea of what our Glendale looked and felt like in the old days.

Asbarez: ANCA Welcomes State Department’s Confirmation of Adjusting COVID-19 Aid to Armenia


The ANCA has, since the start of the COVID-19 crisis, consistently advocated for the reprogramming of the U.S. aid program to help Armenia deal with this health emergency.

Progress toward ANCA’s $25 Million Reprogramming Request

WASHINGTON—The Armenian National Committee of America, which since the start of the COVID-19 crisis has consistently advocated for the reprogramming of the U.S. aid program to help Armenia deal with this health emergency, welcomed formal confirmation that the U.S. State Department has directed the U.S. Embassy in Armenia to examine how existing assistance programs can be adjusted to match Armenia’s priority needs in the midst of this pandemic.

“We welcome, as a first step, our Department of State’s confirmation that the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan is open to adjusting the existing U.S. aid program to help Armenia meet its urgent priorities related to the COVID-19 crisis,” said ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian. “The ANCA looks forward to learning more about how these repurposed funds can be smartly allocated to help Armenia deal with this health emergency and its economic aftermath,” Hamparian added.

The Administration’s confirmation came in response to ANCA Chairman Raffi Hamparian’s April 3, 2020, letter calling on U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to reprogram “at least $25 million from the Congressionally-appropriated aid package for Armenia as part of an expanded U.S. assistance program to help fight the COVID-19 pandemic.” The Department of State’s response to the ANCA, written on behalf of Secretary Pompeo, was signed by the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for the Caucasus and Eastern Europe, George Kent.

To date, the U.S. government has dedicated $1.7 million in health assistance to Armenia to support COVID-19 response efforts, including preparing laboratory systems, activating case-finding and event-based surveillance, assisting technical experts for response and preparedness, and bolstering risk communication.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 04/22/2020

                                        Wednesday, 
Another Armenian Town Sealed Off Due To Coronavirus Outbreak
        • Narine Ghalechian
Armenia -- Police officers enforcing a coronavirus lockdown check cars leaving 
Yerevan, April 1, 2020.
Authorities blocked on Wednesday all roads leading to Vartenis, a small town 160 
kilometers northeast of Yerevan, after registering 47 cases of coronavirus there 
in recent days.
Acting on a government order, Armenia’s police and National Security Service 
(NSS) set up roadblocks early in the morning to prevent people leaving or 
entering Vartenis. Only vehicles carrying food, fuel and medicine as well as 
individuals having special permissions issued by the regional administration 
were allowed to pass through the checkpoints.
Gnel Sanosian, the governor of the surrounding Gegharkunik province, told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian service that 21 of the infected people are employees of the 
local hospital and policlinic. He said one of them, a policlinic doctor, was the 
primary source of the COVID-19 outbreak recorded late last week.
“We still cannot establish where the disease entered Vartenis from,” said 
Sanosian. “But have we have ascertained the circle of the infected people’s 
contacts.”
Sanosian confirmed that some of the other local residents who tested positive 
for coronavirus are members of a non-traditional religious group. He did not 
deny rumors that the group, which he refused to name, has held religious 
services despite a ban on any gatherings imposed by the Armenian government last 
month.
“If necessary, relevant bodies will deal with that and we will find out where 
those people went and in which gatherings they participated,” added the 
governor. “Our main task right now is to treat and take care of everyone.”
As part of the one-week lockdown, the authorities quarantined 150 other Vartenis 
residents who came into contact with the infected people. They will spend the 
next two weeks in hotels in other parts of the country. Dozens of other locals 
were ordered to self-isolate.
Another small town, Maralik, was sealed off for on Monday after 18 doctors and 
other employees of a local hospital were diagnosed with the potentially lethal 
disease. Three other Maralik residents are among 24 people who have died from 
the virus in Armenia so far.
The Armenian Ministry of Health reported 72 new coronavirus cases across the 
country in the past day. The total number of such cases thus reached 1,473. 
According to the ministry, a total of 633 people recovered from COVID-19 to date.
Sarkisian’s Son-In-Law Indicted On Corruption Charges
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Armenia -- Mikael Minasyan.
Armenian tax authorities have brought corruption charges against Mikael 
Minasian, former President Serzh Sarkisian’s son-in-law and reputed confidant 
highly critical of the current government, it emerged on Wednesday.
The State Revenue Committee (SRC) gave no details of the accusations of illegal 
enrichment, false asset disclosure and money laundering which were leveled 
against him one month ago. Minasian’s lawyers rejected them as unfounded and 
politically motivated.
Minasian served as Armenia’s ambassador to the Vatican from 2013 to 2018. He was 
sacked in November 2018 six months after Sarkisian was toppled in the “Velvet 
Revolution” led by Nikol Pashinian, the current prime minister.
Minasian, 42, enjoyed considerable political and economic influence in the 
country throughout Sarkisian’s decade-long rule. He is also thought to have 
developed extensive business interests in various sectors of the Armenian 
economy.
One of the defense lawyers, Amram Makinian, said the money laundering charge 
stems from large sums of cash which Minasian transferred from one of his bank 
accounts to another in 2017-2018. He declined to specify the total amount of 
that money.
“The investigating body has noted that documents at his disposal prove the legal 
origin of the money and that money resulted from the sale of his stake in a 
property,” Makinian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service. “The transfer of the 
proceeds from the totally legal sale of those assets is now deemed money 
laundering. This is one of the most pathetic accusations I have ever seen.”
The lawyer also insisted that the other accusations are based on a “technical 
error” committed by the employee of a private firm which drew up and filed 
Minasian’s income declarations. He said that SRC investigators are refusing to 
summon that person for questioning.
“The investigating body and prosecutors realize that the criminal case will 
collapse if they are interrogated,” claimed Makinian.
Vatican - Armenian Ambassador Mikael Minasian (R) speaks at an event during 
President Serzh Sarkisian's visit to Rome, 19Sep2014.
In his first income declaration filed with a state body in 2013, Minasian said 
that he owns an apartment in Yerevan, four villas and shares in two companies in 
addition to having more than $2.5 million in cash in his bank accounts. He also 
declared ownership of an expensive collection of more than 200 artworks.
In Makinian’s words, the investigators have asked a court in Yerevan to allow 
his client’s arrest.
Minasian apparently left Armenia shortly after his sacking. Since then he has 
increasingly attacked Armenia’s current leadership and Pashinian in particular 
with articles posted on his Facebook page and disseminated by Armenian media 
outlets believed to be controlled by him. He has accused the government of 
incompetence and misrule.
For his part, Pashinian has repeatedly accused Minasian of illegally making a 
huge fortune during Sarkisian’s rule. Pashinian most probably referred to 
Sarkisian’s son-in-law when he pledged, during a November 2019 visit to Italy, 
to bring to justice Armenia’s “best-known corrupt individuals” who he said are 
“hiding in Vatican basements.”
In a January 11 article, Pashinian’s “Haykakan Zhamanak” daily accused Minasian 
of masterminding a smear campaign against the prime minister family.
Minasian’s father Ara is a renowned doctor who ran a state hospital in Yerevan 
until the Armenian Health Ministry accused him of embezzlement in July 2018. Ara 
Minasian strongly denied the allegations. He apparently fled Armenia before 
being formally charged in November 2018.
Sarkisian, who still leads the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia, is 
also facing embezzlement charges which he rejects as politically motivated. The 
ex-president’s trial began in late February.
Moscow Dismisses Complaints About Russian Gas Price For Armenia
Switzerland -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov attends the Human Rights 
Council at the United Nations in Geneva, February 25, 2020.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has defended Moscow’s reluctance to cut 
the price of its natural gas supplied to Armenia and criticized Armenian 
criminal investigations into major Russian companies operating in the country.
The Armenian government effectively requested a price cut in a letter to 
Russia’s Gazprom giant sent late last month. The letter argued that 
international oil prices, which essentially determine the cost of Russian gas 
supplied to Europe, have fallen sharply due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian also discussed the matter by phone on March 31 
with President Aleksandr Lukashenko of Belarus, which is also heavily dependent 
on Russian gas. According to Lukashenko’s press office, the two men agreed that 
the current gas prices set for their countries are “inflated.”
Lukashenko has since repeatedly complained that European Union member states are 
now paying less for Russian gas than Belarus or Armenia, which are part of the 
Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU).
Kazakhstan - Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko (L) and Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian talk at a CSTO summit in Astana, 8 November 2018.
Lavrov dismissed such complaints during a video conference on Tuesday. He argued 
that unlike EU consumers, Armenia and Belarus buy Russian gas at fixed prices 
that had been set well below international market-based levels.
“When the existing price for Armenia and Belarus was two or three times lower 
than the international price this was taken for granted and nobody said that 
it’s politics,” he said.
While acknowledging that the two ex-Soviet states allied to Russia are entitled 
to privileged treatment by Gazprom Lavrov stressed that they must also honor 
their “contractual obligations.”
Lavrov also said that internal gas prices set by Armenian utility regulators 
make it harder for Gazprom to agree to a deeper discount. He complained that 
this “chronic” problem is “not being solved for several years running.”
The retail prices have remained unchanged since Gazprom raised its wholesale 
tariff for Armenia from $150 to $165 per thousand cubic meters in January 2019. 
Armenia’s Gazprom-owned gas distribution network has incurred additional losses 
as a result.
Last month the Gazprom Armenia network formally asked the Public Services 
Regulatory Commission (PSRC) to allow a roughly 11 percent rise in the gas 
prices set for Armenian households and businesses. The commission has to approve 
or reject the application by June 19.
Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian said on April 15 that in response to his 
letter Gazprom Chairman Alexei Miller indicated that it is up to the two 
governments to agree on the new wholesale price. Pashinian discussed the issue 
with Russian President Vladimir Putin in an April 6 phone call.
Lavrov mentioned that conversation, saying that Putin and Pashinian “see ways of 
developing our alliance and strategic partnership.” But he did not clarify 
whether the two leaders reached any agreements on the gas issue.
Armenia -- A commuter train at Yerevan's railway station, February 27, 2018.
The Russian minister promised that Moscow will continue to take into account 
“our allied relations” in deciding the gas price for Armenia. But, he said, 
Yerevan too should demonstrate its commitment to the Russian-Armenian alliance 
by dropping “inappropriate” criminal proceedings launched against major Russian 
corporations.
Lavrov singled out Armenia’s railway network managed by the Russia Railways 
(RZD) giant.
An Armenian law-enforcement agency effectively accused the network called South 
Caucasus Railway (SRC) of investment-related fraud after raiding its offices and 
confiscating company documents in August 2018. Both SRC and its Russian operator 
denied any wrongdoing.
Russia’s Deputy Transport Minister Vladimir Tokarev said last September that the 
continuing criminal investigation has effectively disrupted RZD’s operations in 
Armenia. He warned that the state-run company managing Russia’s vast network of 
railways is therefore considering pulling out of a 30-year management contract 
signed with the former Armenian government in 2008.
In late 2018, Armenian law-enforcement authorities also launched a fraud inquiry 
into Gazprom’s Armenian subsidiary. They have not indicted any senior executives 
of the gas and railways operators so far.
Armenian Opposition Demands Explanations On Karabakh Talks
        • Ruzanna Stepanian
Germany -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian (R) and Azerbaijani President 
Ilham Aliyev meet in Munich, February 15, 2020.
Armenian opposition leaders demanded on Wednesday that Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian personally comment on Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s claim 
that Yerevan and Baku are “actively discussing” peace proposals calling for 
Armenian territorial concessions to Azerbaijan.
Lavrov said on Tuesday that he presented them to his Armenian and Azerbaijani 
counterparts at a trilateral meeting held in Moscow a year ago. He said the 
proposals envisage a phased settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict which 
would start with Armenian withdrawal from “several districts around Karabakh.”
Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian implicitly denied this. He insisted that 
for the last two years the conflicting parties have only exchanged views on 
“some elements” of peace deals put forward by the Russian, U.S. and French 
mediators in the past.
Mnatsakanian’s assurances did not satisfy the two opposition parties represented 
in the Armenian parliament. Their top representatives said Lavrov’s statement 
runs counter to Pashinian’s repeated claims that no Karabakh peace accords have 
been on the agenda of Armenian-Azerbaijani talks held during his rule.
“With all due respect for my good friend Zohrab Mnatsakanian, I must say that 
his response was absolutely inadequate,” said Naira Zohrabian of the Prosperous 
Armenia Party. “He did not answer the most serious and important question: what 
active negotiations are they talking about?”
Armenia -- Edmon Marukian, the leader of Bright Armenia Party, talks to RFE/RL, 
Yerevan, March 21, 2020.
“It is very important that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian also reacts,” said 
Bright Armenia Party leader Edmon Marukian. “Our officials are saying that there 
are only discussions, not negotiations, while Lavrov is saying that there are 
negotiations and they center on a particular document.”
Marukian told RFE/RL’s Armenian service that Yerevan should not only “provide 
explanations to our public” but also “demand explanations from the Russian side.”
Ruben Rubinian, the pro-government chairman of a parliament committee on foreign 
affairs, insisted, however, Mnatsakanian’s response was good enough. “The 
Armenian foreign mister told the truth yesterday,” he said.
In a joint statement issued in March 2019, the mediators reiterated that a 
Karabakh settlement must involve “return of the territories surrounding 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control; an interim status for Nagorno-Karabakh 
providing guarantees for security and self-governance; a corridor linking 
Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh; future determination of the final legal status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh through a legally binding expression of will.”
This formula has been at the heart of various framework peace accords drafted by 
the U.S., Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group since 2007.
Armenia, Azerbaijan Pledge To Keep Karabakh Peace Process Alive
Switzerland -- Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian of Armenia and Elmar 
Mammadyarov of Azerbaijan and international mediators meet in Geneva, January 
30, 2020.
Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s foreign ministers pledged to continue looking for 
ways to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict despite the coronavirus pandemic 
during a joint video conference with international mediators held late on 
Tuesday.
“Considering the great challenges now confronting all populations without regard 
to political boundaries … the Foreign Ministers and the Co-Chairs [of the OSCE 
Minsk Group] expressed the hope that the resolve seen in the global pandemic 
response will bring a creative and constructive impetus to the peace process,” 
read a joint statement issued by them.
“The Foreign Ministers and Co-Chairs agreed to remain in close contact and to 
continue negotiations in person as soon as possible,” it said.
The statement said that the worldwide spread of the virus has delayed not only 
such talks but also confidence-building “humanitarian measures” previously 
agreed by the conflicting parties. “Nevertheless, the necessary work to prepare 
these activities continues,” it stressed.
During the discussion, the U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading the 
Minsk Group also renewed their calls for the parties to “strictly” observe the 
ceasefire in the conflict zone and “avoid provocative actions in the current 
environment,” according to the statement.
Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Elmar 
Mammadyarov most recently met in the mediators’ presence in Geneva on January 30 
for two days of what they called “intensive discussions.” In a joint statement, 
they said they focused on “possible next steps to prepare the populations for 
peace” and “principles and elements forming the basis of a future settlement.”
Two weeks later, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijan’s 
President Ilham Aliyev held a brief meeting before participating in a panel 
discussion on Karabakh held as part of an annual security conference in Munich.
Earlier on Tuesday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that the two 
sides have been actively discussing a peace plan which he presented to 
Mnatsakanian and Mammadyarov at a trilateral meeting held in Moscow a year ago. 
Lavrov said the plan calls for a phased settlement that would start with 
Armenian withdrawal from “several districts around Karabakh.”
Mnatsakanian implicitly denied this at a news conference held in Yerevan shortly 
afterwards. He insisted that for the last two years Baku and Yerevan have only 
exchanged views on “some elements” of a possible peace deal.
Mnatsakanian said that any deal must allow the Karabakh Armenians to exercise 
their right to self-determination through a “free expression of will” that would 
involve no “limitations.”
Azerbaijan has repeatedly ruled out any settlement that would fall short of 
restoring Azerbaijani control over Karabakh.
In a joint statement issued in March 2019, the mediators said “any fair and 
lasting settlement” must involve “return of the territories surrounding 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Azerbaijani control; an interim status for Nagorno-Karabakh 
providing guarantees for security and self-governance; a corridor linking 
Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh; future determination of the final legal status of 
Nagorno-Karabakh through a legally binding expression of will.”
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.
 

Tsitsernakaberd Memorial to be closed on Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day

Save

Share

 16:27,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. The Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex in Yerevan will be closed for all visitors on April 24th, the 105th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, due to the coronavirus pandemic, Eduard Aghajanyan – the Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister’s Office – said at a news conference.

He said the entrance to the memorial will be sealed from today due to organizational and security issues.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




Armenian FM highlights recognition of Genocide in terms of preventing crimes against humanity

Save

Share

 16:29,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Zohrab Mnatsakanyan highlights the recognition of the Armenian Genocide in terms of preventing the crimes against humanity.

“The recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide is the united work of several generations and all Armenians. In this respect huge works have been carried out. Like in the previous years when we had difficulties, this year as well the difficulties exist, but we never stopped paying tribute to the memory of the victims and raising our united voice against genocides. This year all Armenians worldwide will have a chance to bring their participation and make that united voice heard that 105 years later the Armenian people continue fighting for the restoration of justice. The recognition of the Armenian Genocide is an important step in terms of preventing the crimes against humanity”, the FM said at a press conference today.

On April 24, the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, the participation of citizens to the events will be limited due to the current novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

Reported by Norayr Shoghikyan

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Armenian Genocide commemoration events go remote amid coronavirus lockdown

Save

Share

 16:48,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. As the traditional public commemoration events for the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day on April 24 are cancelled due to the coronavirus lockdown, other events are planned to take place to pay homage to the memory of the victims of the genocide.

At 21:00 on April 23, church bells will ring and simultaneously the street lights in Yerevan and other major cities will be switched off, Chief of Staff of the Prime Minister’s Office Eduard Aghajanyan said at a news conference.

“We will ask our citizens also to switch off the lights of their homes and use the mobile phone display light out of their windows to symbolize the united presence near the Eternal Flame. The luminous commemoration moment will have its symbolic response from Tsitsernakaberd, where Kamo Seyranyan and Liana Alexanyan will perform the Ari Im Sokhak song,” he said.

Starting 08:00 on April 24th, citizens in Armenia can send an SMS on the 1915 number, and on 0037433191500 for citizens sending from abroad, with their names to affirm their remote participation in the commemoration. “The names of people sending the messages will be screened on the pillars of the memorial,” he said.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




PM Pashinyan, His Holiness Garegin II and other officials to visit Tsitsernakaberd Memorial April 24

Save

Share

 16:58,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. On April 24, the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan, President Armen Sarkissian, Speaker of Parliament Ararat Mirzoyan and Catholicos of All Armenians His Holiness Garegin II will visit the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial, chief of staff at the PM’s office Eduard Aghajanyan said at a press conference today.

“On April 24, starting 10:00, the visits of the Prime Minister, the President, the Speaker of Parliament and Catholicos of All Armenians to the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial will begin. The visits will be accompanied by the performance of renowned pianist, Honored Artist Hayk Melikyan. The tribute will start with an artistic program at 22:00 and will last until dawn”, he said.

On April 24 the Armenian Genocide Memorial will be closed for all visitors aimed at preventing the spread of the novel coronavirus in the country.

Reported by Lilit Demuryan

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Mnatsakanyan reveals priority discussion issue in upcoming videoconference with Mammadyarov

Save

Share

 17:20,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Minister of Foreign Affairs Zohrab Mnatsakanyan presented the priority issue that will be discussed with Azerbaijani Minister of Foreign Affairs Elmar Mammadyarov during a videoconference.

“Yesterday I had a videocall with the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs. Today, a videoconference with participation of Armenia, Azerbaijan and the Co-Chairs will probably take place. Our present-day priority issue concerns one thing – when the region and the world is focused around the fight against the coronavirus pandemic – the preservation of ceasefire, ruling out any risks is more than a priority issue. We will work in this direction. The rest, later”, he said.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian FM reaffirms no decision on Artsakh can be made without its people

Save

Share

 17:28,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. Foreign minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan reaffirmed today the position of the Armenian authorities according to which no decision relating to Artsakh can be adopted without the consent of the Artsakh people.

“The Armenian authorities do not have a mandate from the Artsakh people to represent Artsakh in the peaceful settlement negotiations of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. A few days ago the Artsakh authorities received a mandate from the people through competitive, free and democratic elections. During these two years the Republic of Armenia has always consulted with the Artsakh side, the negotiation process was discussed in detail, we are working together, the same continued with the new leadership. No decision relating to the people of Artsakh can be made without them”, the FM said.

Artsakh held parliamentary and presidential elections on March 31. The voting in the second round of the presidential election took place on April 14, and based on the results Arayik Harutyunyan was elected President of Artsakh.

Reported by Norayr Shoghikyan

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan




Option proposed in 2014 is not a negotiation document: Armenian FM on Lavrov’s statement

Save

Share

 17:10,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. Armenian foreign minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan assures that the leadership of Armenia cannot state one thing in the negotiations for the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict and present another thing to the people, the FM said at a press conference today, commenting on the statement of Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov who said that the proposals presented at the meeting of the Russian, Armenian and Azerbaijani FMs last year in Moscow, which suppose settlement by stages, are being actively discussed.

“During the past two years our government, Prime Minister Pashinyan, we have been more than transparent. We have expressed our positions and approaches very clearly. That statement made a reference to many documents. Such approaches appeared in 2014, 2016, and they were not acceptable for the Armenian sides. Starting 2018 the discussions were limited to separate elements, on discussing, assessing the approaches of the sides. The option proposed in 2014 today is not a document of the negotiation table”, the Armenian FM said.

He said the Armenian sides clearly presented their positions where the priority for them is the security component.

“As for the territories, in addition to all it’s a security zone and defensive lines. No Armenian side can suppose that it’s possible to revise it by putting the security of the Artsakh people under danger. It’s impossible to suppose that any of the Armenian sides could go to concessions which can endanger the security of the Artsakh people”, he said.

He added that among the main principles the principle of self-determination exists which is a priority for the Armenian sides in this negotiation process.

“The peaceful settlement is possible through mutual concessions. There have not been concessions and will not be. The Armenian sides will not adopt such an approach in any case which will suppose undermining the security, creating a treaty to the NK people. That threat remains real. The _expression_ of the principle of self-determination in this negotiation process is more than a priority. The mutual concessions should be proportionate in which the Armenian sides see complete _expression_ of security and status elements. This has been and remains the approach of the Armenian side. We are talking about this during the negotiations. One is deeply mistaken if supposes that we can talk one thing during the negotiations, but present another thing to the people. This is impossible”, he said.

The Armenian FM said the process has no other alternative than the peaceful settlement. The Armenian sides will decisively protect their people and security. The FM added that the Armenian side will remain committed to this principle and will continue insisting it.

Reported by Norayr Shoghikyan

Edited and translated by Aneta Harutyunyan