Walter and Laurel Karabian Fellowship Program Now Accepting Applications

March 8, 2021



Deadline for Karabian Fellowship applications is March 19

The Armenian National Committee of America–Western Region announced the official release of the Walter and Laurel Karabian Fellowship Program application for the 2021 term.

The Walter and Laurel Karabian Fellowship is a nine-month experience that offers young Armenian-Americans the opportunity to enhance their leadership and professional skills. The purpose of this fellowship is to produce professionals in the public policy and political arena.

Walter and the late Laurel Karabian

“We are excited to offer young driven professionals with experience and potential job opportunities through the duration of this fellowship and thanks to the continued patronage of the fellowship’s benefactor Mr. Walter Karabian, Esq.,” stated Karabian Fellowship Selection Committee Member Nareg Kitsinian, Esq.

Components of the 2021 term of the Fellowship have been modified due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The first phase of the fellowship (April – September 2021), will include a full-time placement (virtual or hybrid system) at the ANCA-WR office where the fellow will gain first-hand public policy experience. During the second phase—October through December 2021—the fellow will be placed in a political or legal office in Los Angeles.

Prospective applicants may now learn more about the program by visiting ancawr.org/fellowship. Applicants must submit their resume and cover letter via email to [email protected] by 11:59 p.m. on March 19.

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region is the largest and most influential nonpartisan Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues in pursuit of the Armenian Cause.

March to Yerablur to Mark International Women’s Day

March 8, 2021



To mark International Women’s Day, the Homeland Salvation Movement organized a march to Yerablur National Cemetery

To mark International Women’s Day, the Homeland Salvation Movement organized march from Baghramyan Street, where protesters have been camping out for weeks, to the Yerablur National Military Cemetery on Monday.

The participants of the march stressed that they wanted to mark the day celebrating women’s rights with the mothers and sisters of who lost their sons, husbands and brothers during the Artsakh War.

The participants laid flowers on the graves of the those who heroically gave their lives in defense of the homeland.

“March 8 was supposed to be a celebration. But with our backs broken, our defeated country and an unclear future, there is no moral or psychological atmosphere of a celebration,” Armenian Revolutionary Federation Supreme Council of Armenia member Lilit Galstyan told reporters. “Today our capacity for our defeat, our pride and dignity is found at Yerablur.”

ARF Supreme Council of Armenia member Lilit Galstyan lays flowers on the graves of fallen soldiers

Galstyan said that the current chaotic state has brought the country to the brink of destruction, with Azerbaijani soldiers breathing down on the residents of Armenia’s Tavush Province. “The Turks [Azeris] are circling and we don’t know what is going on in Tavush,” said Galstyan to illustrate the despair plaguing Armenia and Armenians.

ARF Supreme Council of Armenia chairman Ishkhan Saghatelyan told reporters before the march that Armenia’s president bears all responsibility for the situation created in the country. He was referencing President Armen Sarkissian’s yet to be announced decision about how he will move forward on the issue of the Armed Forces Chief of Staff, the demand for whose resignation by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan he has rejected, with a pledge to direct the matter to the Constitutional Court.

Saghatelyan again repeated the Homeland Salvation Movement’s calls for Pashinyan’s resignation saying that the prime minister is holding the lawmakers of his My Step faction hostage.

The ARF leader said that Armenia’s stability is of utmost importance for the Homeland Salvation Movement, which does not want the country to experience further shocks. However, he said, this does not mean that the movement will retreat from its position, adding that they have come a long way with the people and are on the brink of victory.

Asbarez: ‘Nation, Army, Victory’ Rally Draws Thousands

March 8, 2021



Thousands gather for “Nation, Army, Victory” Rally in Yerevan on March 6

The Homeland Salvation Movement organized yet another rally Saturday under the slogan on “Nation, Army Victory,” which drew thousands to Baghramyan Street, where its supporters have been gathered for non-stop protests since last month.

The rally participants demanded the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and expressed their unequivocal support for the leadership of Armenia’s Armed Forces, who have come under attack by Pashinyan who accused them of attempting a coup d’etat in Armenia because they called for his resignation.

Armenian Revolutionary Federation member Gegham Manukyan told the protesters that those who have participated in the movement’s effort in the past several weeks have been strong, especially the youth, who, he said, have been the driving force of the protests. Most of them, Manukyan said, are so humble that they are not boasting that they have fought in the war.

Supporters of the Homeland Salvation Movement

Addressing the protesters, Sevak Nazaryan said that he and his group have been continuing their struggle for 10 days on Baghramyan Street, 24 hours a day, without any complaints and with the aim of creating the free, united and independent Armenia of their dreams.

Also speaking at the rally was the president of attorneys union, Ara Zohranyan, who explained that he was not there due to the position he occupies, but rather as a concerned Armenian, a lay citizen and a former soldier. He had come to Baghramyan Street from a demonstration in front of Armenia’s Defense Ministry, which was organized to show support for the Chief of Staff of Armenia’s Armed Forces, Onik Gasparyan.

Last month, Gasparyan and other high-ranking leaders of the Armed Forces called for Pashinyan resignation, prompting the prime minister to fire him. However, President Sarkissian did not sign the decree for his ouster, with his office saying that he will appeal to the Constitutional Court. The Homeland Salvation Movement has embraced Gasparyan and the Armed Forces leadership calling their actions heroic.

Residents of Artsakh joined the “Nation, Army, Victory” rally on March 6

“Fellow Armenians, there are three important institutions on this street—the parliament building, the presidency and the Constitutional Court,” Homeland Salvation Movement coordinator and chair of the ARF Supreme Council of Armenia Ishkhan Saghatelyan told the protesters.

“In the coming days, decisions from these three institutions will have important and detrimental impact for our country,” added Saghatelyan, saying that the people’s voices of protest will be heard from this street in the three institutions.

“We are patiently waging our struggle. This number of people demanding Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation is exponentially larger than those gathered here. I am calling on them: this is not only our homeland it is yours,” said the Homeland Salvation Movement’s candidate for prime minister Vazgen Manukyan. “If you want to join us, then join us. If you don’t want to join us then create your own movements and make decisions. It’s impossible to wait. Our country is dying in front of our eyes.”

At the end of the rally, the protesters began marching through the streets of Yerevan and urged passersby to join their movement.

The marches passed by the foreign ministry and later the prosecutor general’s buildings. When they reached the government building they turned their backs in protest. From there, the marchers went back to Baghramyan Street, where protesters have been camping out for more than 10 days.

“We have to keep this place strong. We have no room for retreat or disappointment,” said Saghatelyan when the crowd arrived back at Baghramyan Street. “On the hand we have the issue of the very existence of our homeland and on the other we have all the difficulties, which we must overcome together.”

Beginning a Marriage with Goodbye

March 9 2021
By ICC’s Country Correspondent

Taguhi at her dad’s grave.

03/08/2021 Armenia (International Christian Concern) – A military cemetery rests on a hilltop just outside of Yerevan, the capital of Armenia. Since 1988, Yerablur Pantheon has served as the burial place for ethnic Armenian soldiers who lost their lives defending Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenian: Artsakh). This small country located in the South Caucasus is predominately Armenian Christian, and has been for millennia. But decades of wars, religious genocides, and ethnic cleansing has threatened the existence of Karabakh’s Armenian Christians.

Yerablur is a reminder of this situation. When I asked Vahe Yeprikyan, a young lawyer and patriot of his country, the question “what kind of meaning does Yerablur have for you?”, his answer spoke volumes.

He replied, Yerablur for me is not just a cemetery, and it’s not the voice of death I hear in the silence of the air of this height here. It is the sanctuary of those who fell in love with our homeland for eternity. Fallen heroes like Ishkhan are buried here, but did Ishkhan die? …Who says that life ends when the heart stops beating? It is a lie; the heroes live as long as they are remembered…”

Iskhan Petrosyan was one of the 5 thousand martyrs who died protecting Karabakh from Azerbaijani-Turkish aggression last year. “It’s very hard to speak about my friend Ishkhan thinking he is not with us anymore,” Vahe says emotionally. “He was a man full of optimism with a cheerful and gentle soulseeing the positive side in evil, and always was smiling.”

“We met over dinner just days before the war began in September, had a couple of drinks or two, spoke about our country, statehood, and its future. After these long pleasant hours-long discussions, with a big smile on his face, Ishkhan said his daughter Taguhi (whose name means ‘Queen’ in Armenian) is getting married soon. He was always sentimental speaking about his daughters, and those sentiments became more visible in his eyes filled with a sad gleam: Ishkhan knew somewhere along the line his daughters will get married and move from their parental house,” he continued.

“To make a long story short, it was getting late, and next day was work for both of us, we said good bye promising to see each other over the weekend. Unfortunately, there was no next time. The next Sunday, the war broke out…”

Ishkhan, whose grandparents survived the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire (modern day Turkey), had served in the military decades ago during the first Karabakh war. With this new war, he would again throw himself into the frontline. He bravely went forward to protect his country and his daughters, their future, so that he would not inherit a war to his grandchildren. He wanted to leave for them a peaceful state.

He did not survive, and is buried at Yerablur Pantheon.

Just days ago, his daughter Taguhi was married to her beloved man, just as it was planned. She visited her dad’s grave at Yerablur Pantheon and asked his blessing before the marriage. The bride does not have a wedding bouquet in her hands, instead placing the flowers on her father’s grave under her feet. The smile on the bride’s face talking to her father certainly is not full: grief has fallen on her face and is frozen within her eyes.

“I am sure Ishkhan has the same big smile on his face, looking from above as he had at the night when I saw him the last time,” Vahe concludes.

Rest in peace dear Ishkhan. Your fallen blood will still flow in your grandchildren’s veins.

***

To learn more about how Turkey and Azerbaijan joined together to commit genocide against Armenian Christians in Karabakh, read the report Anatomy of Genocide: Karabakh’s Forty-Four Day War.

 

Armenia and Cuba promote cooperation in Eurasian economic framework

Prensa Latina
March 9 2021
 

Armenian opposition blockades parliament

Taiwan News
March 9 2021

Opposition demonstrators shout anti-government slogans as they rally to pressure Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to resign in Yerevan, Armenia, Wednesday, March 3, 2021. Thousands of opposition supporters are rallying in the Armenian capital to demand the resignation of the country’s prime minister amid a heavy presence of security forces. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has faced the opposition demands to step down since he signed a peace deal that ended six weeks of fighting over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, in which Azerbaijan routed the Armenian forces. (Hrant Khachatryan/PAN Photo via AP)

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — Thousands of opposition supporters blockaded the Armenian parliament building on Tuesday to press a demand for the country’s prime minister to step down.

Nikol Pashinyan has rejected the opposition’s demands to resign over a November peace deal that ended six weeks of fierce fighting over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, in which Azerbaijan routed the Armenian forces.

The political tensions escalated last month when the military’s General Staff demanded Pashinyan’s resignation, and he responded by firing the chief of the General Staff, Col. Gen. Onik Gasparyan.

On Tuesday, the opposition sought to build up pressure on Pashinyan by urging its supporters to blockade the parliament. Thousands of opposition demonstrators surrounded the parliament building and engaged in occasional scuffles with police.

Vazgen Manukyan, a veteran politician whom the opposition named as a prospective caretaker prime minister, predicted that the military will not accept Pashinyan’s order to dismiss the General Staff chief. “The army will not step back because it’s not just one man’s problem,” he said.

As part of maneuvering to defuse the political crisis, Pashinyan offered to hold a snap parliamentary vote later this year but rejected the opposition’s demand to step down before the vote.

Artur Vanetsyan, the former head of the National Security Service who leads the Homeland opposition party, emphasized that “we believe that that the elections mustn’t be held under Nikol Pashinyan’s rule.”

Pashinyan has faced opposition demands to resign since Nov. 10 when a Russia-brokered peace deal ended 44 days of intense fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh that killed more than 6,000. The agreement saw Azerbaijan reclaim control over large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas that had been held by Armenian forces for more than a quarter-century.

Pashinyan, a 45-year-old former journalist who came to power after leading large street protests in 2018 that ousted his predecessor, has argued that the peace deal was the only way to prevent the Azerbaijani army from overrunning the entire Nagorno-Karabakh region, which lies within Azerbaijan but was under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

Russia has deployed about 2,000 peacekeepers to monitor the peace deal.

Armenian Opposition Blockades Parliament to Demand PM Quits

US News
March 9 2021
More

Police wearing face masks to protect against coronavirus, block opposition demonstrators during a rally to pressure Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to resign in Yerevan, Armenia, Tuesday, March 9, 2021. Thousands of opposition supporters blockaded the Armenian parliament building and engaged in occasional scuffles with police on Tuesday to press a demand for the country’s prime minister to step down. (Stepan Poghosyan/PHOTOLURE via AP) The Associated Press

By AVET DEMOURIAN, Associated Press

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — Thousands of opposition supporters blockaded the Armenian parliament building on Tuesday to press a demand for the country’s prime minister to step down.

Nikol Pashinyan has rejected the opposition’s pressure to resign over a November peace deal that ended six weeks of fierce fighting over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, in which Azerbaijan routed the Armenian forces.

The political tensions escalated last month when the military’s General Staff demanded Pashinyan’s resignation, and he responded by firing the chief of the General Staff, Col. Gen. Onik Gasparyan.

On Tuesday, the opposition sought to build pressure on Pashinyan by urging its supporters to blockade the parliament. Thousands of opposition demonstrators surrounded the parliament building and engaged in occasional scuffles with police.

Vazgen Manukyan, a veteran politician whom the opposition named as a prospective caretaker prime minister, predicted that the military won’t accept Pashinyan’s order to dismiss the General Staff chief.

“The army will not step back because it’s not just one man’s problem,” he said.

As part of maneuvering to defuse the political crisis, Pashinyan offered to hold an early parliamentary vote later this year, but rejected the opposition’s demand to step down before the vote.

Artur Vanetsyan, the former head of the National Security Service who leads the Homeland opposition party, emphasized that “we believe that that the elections mustn’t be held under Nikol Pashinyan’s rule.”

Pashinyan has faced opposition demands to resign since Nov. 10 when a Russia-brokered peace deal ended 44 days of intense fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh that killed more than 6,000. The agreement saw Azerbaijan reclaim control over large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas that had been held by Armenian forces for more than a quarter-century.

Pashinyan, a 45-year-old former journalist who came to power after leading large street protests in 2018 that ousted his predecessor, has defended the peace deal as the only way to prevent the Azerbaijani army from overrunning the entire Nagorno-Karabakh region, which lies within Azerbaijan but was under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

Russia has deployed about 2,000 peacekeepers to monitor the peace deal.

____

Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow contributed to this report.

Pro-Azerbaijan American urges Armenia to close nuclear plant

EurasiaNet.org
March 9 2021

Mar 9, 2021

A storied American magazine has published a column by a “stealth lobbyist” for Azerbaijan calling on arch-enemy Armenia to shut off a major power supply.

The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists did not disclose Brenda Shaffer’s well-documented pecuniary ties with Azerbaijan in her March 5 essay arguing that Armenia should close its only nuclear power plant, the Soviet-era Metsamor near Yerevan. But regional media have reproduced the argument, while highlighting the gravitas of the Bulletin and ignoring the conflict of interest.

To Caucasus watchers intrigued and depressed by the way Baku uses its oil wealth to buy praise and influence abroad, Shaffer is infamous. A senior advisor at the hawkish Foundation for Defense of Democracies and a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council, she has defended Azerbaijan’s human rights record and endorsed regime change in neighboring Iran.

The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project in 2015 dubbed Shaffer a “stealth lobbyist” for Azerbaijan. The year before, the New York Times came under fire for publishing an op-ed by Shaffer about the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict without disclosing her ties to Azerbaijan’s state oil company, SOCAR.

This was her first publication for the Bulletin, a non-profit founded shortly after World War II to equip “the public, policymakers, and scientists with the information needed to reduce man-made threats to our existence.”

There are certainly many reasons to be concerned about Metsamor, which was commissioned in 1976. It is in a heavily seismic area and has been dogged by safety concerns. Foreign missions have nudged Armenia to close it. But Russia, the global leader in nuclear technology exports, has pushed to keep the plant open. In 2014, Moscow had agreed to loan Yerevan $270 million to repair the plant for operations through 2026, though that deal reportedly fell through last year.

During fighting last summer, an Azerbaijani official suggested that if Armenia attacked its civilian infrastructure, Azerbaijan could bomb the plant and create a “major disaster” for Armenians.

One of Shaffer’s arguments for closure is that “Armenia exports over half of Metsamor’s electricity to neighboring Iran. If these exports were ended, the remaining domestic needs could be met by building one additional thermal-powered electricity plant.”

In the context of her hardline past, it’s hard to tell if this is a plea for nuclear safety or another attempt to destabilize Tehran. 

Karabakh Conflict Far From Over and Could Explode Again

Jamestown Foundation
March 9 2021

Following the Moscow-brokered ceasefire and post-war declarations signed by Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan that ended the 2020 Second Karabakh War, the international community has generally concluded three things. First is that the Karabakh conflict is over; second, that the benefits of reopening transportation routes are so great that all sides will be interested in seeing the provisions of these declarations realized; and third, that the likelihood of any new fighting between the sides is minimal, not least because of the presence of Russian peacekeepers on the ground (see EDM, October 13, 2020 and December 16, 2020). Indeed, former Armenian foreign minister Vardan Oskanyan writes that this “stereotypical view” has spread so widely that it is distracting attention from the real situation. Namely, he argues, the benefits spelled out within these trilateral declarations are far less likely to be realized than most think, and the danger that more fighting may eventually break out is far greater (Hraparak, March 6; IA REX, March 7).

Oskanyan’s words deserve attention not only because they undoubtedly reflect the views of many in Yerevan but also because they challenge what is the received opinion in numerous world capitals. More than that, his argument finds support both in the current difficulties the parties face and the increasingly obvious fact that the economic carrots laid out in the declarations as the reward for regional cooperation will not be realized for several years at the earliest. This offers a virtual invitation for those opposed to the current settlement to engage in actions to torpedo it, even if they are not in a position to achieve their own alternative goals.

In his article, Oskanyan argues that when “stereotypes are formed in the international community, it is very difficult to dispel them” by arguments alone. Sometimes these stereotypes benefit one side, sometimes the other; but they often stand in the way of understanding what is in fact going on. In the past, the Armenian side benefitted from some stereotypes, and that is why relative stability in the South Caucasus was maintained from 1994 to 2020. But now, new stereotypes have arisen that threaten Yerevan’s interests and must be countered before they block Armenia from achieving any of its objectives, Oskanyan asserts (Hraparak, March 6; IA REX, March 7).

The former foreign minister points to three new stereotypes that he says have emerged in the last few months: 1) a belief that “the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh has been solved, 2)” a conviction that “Karabakh is Azerbaijani territory” and that the issues facing Armenians living there are only about human rights, and 3) a certainty that “the time has come to look to the future.” The train powered by such views, Oskanyan says, has left the station and is gathering speed. To stop it, Yerevan must work in “three directions: diplomatic, military and international-legal.” Otherwise, Armenia and Armenians will find themselves marginalized to the point of lasting defeat.

To prevent that from happening, Oskanyan continues, Yerevan must argue that the November 2020 ceasefire declaration did not “reflect the desire of the Republic of Armenia but was the result of a situation imposed on it by military force,” and that no “status quo imposed by military actions can ever be the basis for long-term peace in the region.” Moreover, he adds that “the Armenian side has never and will never aspire to lands that do not belong to it but will defend those that do.” Finally, “the achievement of the rights of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh to sovereignty on their land remains the chief task of the foreign policy of Armenia.”

According to Oskanyan, Yerevan must rebuild its military, launch an international diplomatic campaign by uniting Armenia, the Armenian diaspora and the people of Karabakh, as well as bring a maximum possible number of cases before international tribunals to challenge Azerbaijan’s most recent moves. Unless it does so, he says, “in the not-so-distant future, we will see the Nakhchivanization of the remnants of Artsakh [the Armenian name for Karabakh], the exodus of Armenians from Syunik [the Armenian name for the Zengezur corridor between Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan], and even the loss” of this region to Baku. That outcome would cut off Armenia from Iran and connect mainland Azerbaijan and Turkey by land.

However that may be, there are real and serious problems threatening both the ceasefire and the reopening of transportation links as detailed in the latter, January 2021, trilateral declaration. Ending a war is never easy. Problems always persist regarding the fate of casualties and prisoners, and questions are raised about compensation. But in this case, there are some more serious disputes that were not solved by real negotiations or a real agreement. Those outstanding issues, thus, call into question the optimism of the international community. Among the most critical of these is the continued role of Armenian military units in Karabakh. These units have entered into a symbiotic relationship with the Russian peacekeepers there (see EDM, December 8, 2020), even though Baku has demanded that they be withdrawn because, in its view, their continuing presence contradicts the November declaration (Doshdu, March 1, 2021).Yerevan has shown no interest in doing so, and Moscow is not pressuring the Armenians, thus leaving in place forces that could easily become another casus belli for Azerbaijan.

But an even more serious obstacle to any establishment of a lasting peace is the spreading fear that reopening transportation routes, something Moscow has promoted as central, is anything but a done deal. Earlier this month, for example, Armenia reacted with fury to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s use of the term Zengezur for the corridor that is slated to be opened between Azerbaijan and Nakhchivan. Armenia saw that formulation as a move toward Azerbaijan’s seizure of what the Soviets declared and the international community recognizes to this day as Armenian territory (Kavkazsky Uzel, March 5; Windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com, March 7). And the possibility of a new Armenian-Turkish railway seems farfetched given the attitudes of both sides at the present time (Stoletie, March 3).

Given all this, the risks that a new armed conflict will break out remain all too real, especially if the international community comforts itself with the notion that such an outcome is impossible.

https://jamestown.org/program/karabakh-conflict-far-from-over-and-could-explode-again/