Lebanese-Armenian freed from Azerbaijani prison lands in Beirut after four months in jail

Middle East Eye
March 12 2021
Maral Najarian left Beirut after last year’s port blast, only to be caught up in the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict 

By Kareem Chehayeb
in Beirut, Lebanon

A Lebanese-Armenian woman who spent four months in an Azerbaijani prison following last year’s conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh has landed in Beirut.

Maral Najarian, who went missing on 10 November following a Russian-brokered ceasefire between Armenia and Azerbaijan, landed in the Lebanese capital late on Wednesday.

“Up until I got on the plane [to Beirut], I could not believe any of this was real,” a distraught Najarian told Lebanese-Armenian radio station Voice of Van.

“I kept thinking ‘they’re going to come and kidnap me again’.”

Lebanese-Armenian family searches for woman who disappeared in Nagorno-Karabakh

Lebanon’s caretaker Foreign Minister Charbel Wehbe thanked the Armenian, Azerbaijani and Russian governments, as well as the International Committee of the Red Cross for facilitating her release following weeks of negotiations.

Born and raised in Lebanon, Najarian moved to Armenia in August 2020, just weeks after the devastating Beirut Port explosion.

She claimed her Armenian citizenship, and moved to the Artsakh Republic in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

After hostilities flared between Armenia and Azerbaijan, she temporarily moved back to the Armenian capital for the duration of the six-week conflict.

More than 5,000 combatants and at least 143 civilians were killed in the fighting. Tens of thousands of people were displaced. 

Upon returning to Nagorno-Karabakh the day of a Russian-brokered ceasefire, Azerbaijani forces arrested both Najarian and family friend Viken Euljekian. 

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry told MEE on 11 February that Euljekian was being held on a number charges including “terrorism”, but did not respond to questions about specific accusations against Najarian or details of the charges against her.

They confirmed she was detained, adding that she had an “unofficial marriage” with a family friend.

On 13 February, Hagop Pakradounian, the president of the Lebanese-Armenian Tashnag Party, contacted the Lebanese foreign ministry to enquire about Najarian and help facilitate her release.

According to the party, the Lebanese foreign ministry called on ambassadors in Armenia, Russia, and Iran for information on her case. They said she would be released within the following two days, although that failed to transpire. 

Najarian, 49, said on Thursday that she had contemplated self-harm after seeing several razor blades in one of the bathrooms at the prison.

Meanwhile, Najarian’s sister, Sossi, feared she would return in a “worse condition”.  

“When her [Maral’s] daughter told me Wednesday morning that she was coming home while I was at work, I was so overwhelmed with emotion – my manager told me to take the day off,” she told MEE.

“We burst into tears when we saw each other. It’s a miracle that she’s home.”

Najarian’s family said she had been transferred to a hospital to run medical tests and see a therapist. 

The United Nations has expressed concern about alleged mistreatment of both military and civilian captives in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Amnesty International has also documented torture and extrajudicial killings of captives. 

ICC Partners with Armenian Assembly of America to Host Event on Nagorno-Karabakh

March 12 2021

03/15/2021 Washington, D.C. (International Christian Concern) – International Christian Concern (ICC) will be hosting a virtual event on Wednesday, March 17th at 10am EST entitled, Anatomy of Genocide: Karabakh’s Forty-Four Day War. The event will be hosted with the Armenian Assembly of America, covering the aggressions of Azerbaijan and Turkey last Fall in Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenian: Artsakh) against Armenia. Robert Avetisyan, the Permanent Representative of Artsakh to the United States, will deliver remarks, joined by representatives from ICC and the Armenian Assembly.

Last September, Azerbaijani forces attacked Nagorno-Karabakh without warning with the support and endorsement of Turkey. What followed was forty-four days of bloodshed, which included various war crimes committed by Azerbaijani forces and Turkish-paid Syrian mercenaries, concluding with a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement. The conflict resulted in Armenia ceding control of Artsakh to Azerbaijan, despite the majority Armenian population of the region.

However, this conflict was about more than mere territorial control of Artsakh; the Turkish and Azerbaijani messaging of the brief war paint a much broader picture. Both states continually used symbolic narratives that promoted their shared Pan-Turkic identity, with an intention to eliminate the Armenian identity completely from Artsakh. The degrading treatment of Armenian Christians illustrates this desire, remnant of the treatment of Armenians during the genocide of the early 20th century. For this reason, Turkish and Azerbaijani ambition still threatens the mere existence of Armenians on account of their ethnicity and religion.

ICC recently published an in-depth report outlining these details and the broader issues of the conflict, entitled, The Anatomy of Genocide: Karabakh’s Forty-Four Day War.

This event is meant to further delve into the conflict itself, while also highlighting the problems that face Armenians moving forward and providing recommendations for U.S. policymakers on how to address these issues. The event will be held on Zoom and recorded for viewers who are unable to attend live.

VoA: Armenia’s President Said to Be Back at Work After Report of COVID-19 Complications

Voice of America
March 12 2021

Armenian President Armen Sarkissian was diagnosed with coronavirus in January and was briefly hospitalized in London.

Armenian President Armen Sarkissian returned to work after undergoing a medical exam, his press office said Friday, following reports that was admitted to a hospital because of COVID-19 complications.

Sarkissian was diagnosed with coronavirus in January and was briefly hospitalized in London.

Russian news agencies cited local media reports Friday, saying Sarkissian was undergoing treatment for heart problems as well as COVID-19. 

However, the president’s press office said Sarkissian underwent an examination at Astghik Medical Center, then went back to his usual work. 

It was reported on Jan. 5 that Sarkissian showed symptoms of coronavirus when he underwent leg surgery. The reported symptoms included high fever and double pneumonia.

One of Armenian opposition leader says ready to meet with PM Pashinyan

TASS, Russia
March 12 2021
According to Gagik Tsarukyan, a meeting at the president’s should be attended by journalists as well and its agenda may include issues of the prime minister’s resignation and organization of early elections

YEREVAN, March 12. /TASS/. Leader of the Prosperous Armenia opposition parliamentary faction Gagik Tsarukyan said on Friday he is ready to meet with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

“I am ready to meet with Nikol Pashinyan and I think such a meeting will soon be held,” he told journalists. “As for a meeting at the presidential office, it should be held under certain conditions and with a clear agenda. Otherwise there will be no point in it.”

According to the politician, a meeting at the president’s should be attended by journalists as well and its agenda may include issues of the prime minister’s resignation and organization of early elections.

“The situation in the country is catastrophic. If no measures are swiftly taken to respond to it, the country is doomed to collapse. These authorities are unable to do anything to save the country. A new government is needed,” he stressed.

On March 9, Armenian President Armen Sarkissian invited Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the Homeland Salvation Movement leaders, and the leaders of the three parliamentary factions to meet on March 13 to discuss possible ways out of the current political crisis. Leader of the Bright Armenia faction Edmon Marukyan said he was ready to take part in such a meeting as the situation required concrete solutions.

The Homeland Salvation Movement, which has been organizing street protests since November 9, 2020 when a statement on ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh was signed, said that the agenda of such a meeting should include Pashinyan’s resignation, formation of an interim government and snap parliamentary polls. Any other agenda has no sense, the opposition insists.

Armenian Community, State Department Split Over California Release of Turkish Diplomat Assassin

GV WIRE
March 12 2021

An Armenian immigrant, who has served 38 years in state prison for the 1982 assassination of a Turkish diplomat, could soon be freed.

Hampig “Harry” Sassounian — a Lebanese immigrant of Armenian descent living in Pasadena nearly 40 years ago — was convicted for the murder of Turkish Consul General to Los Angeles Kemal Arikan in 1982. Sassounian, now 58, was initially sentenced to life in prison at his 1984 trial, but a federal court reduced it to 25 years-to-life in 2002.

After a Los Angeles County judge last month overruled Gov. Gavin Newsom’s attempt to block Sassounian’s parole, Newsom will no longer stand in the way. His office has waived any further appeals.

“Judge (William) Ryan vacated the Governor’s parole reversal on February 24, 2021. The Governor has carefully weighed the factors in this case and will not pursue an appeal,” his media office told GV Wire℠.

The killing was called “an apparent act of terrorism” by then-President Ronald Regan.

The move received praise from the Armenian community.

“We are truly grateful to Governor Newsom and his team for keeping the lines of communication open with us, for listening to our concerns, and for making the humanitarian decision to allow Hampig Sassounian’s parole to stand. We look forward to witnessing his long overdue release from prison,”  ANCA-WR Chair Nora Hovsepian told Asbarez — a Los Angeles-based newspaper covering Armenian issues.

Sassounian’s attorney Susan Jordan referred comment to another lawyer, Caspar Jivalagian. Jivalagian declined when reached by GV Wire℠.

Sassounian has been up for parole six times. The Board of Parole denied Sassounian of early release four times (2006, 2010, 2013, 2015) before a 2017 approval. That was reversed by then-Gov. Jerry Brown.

In December 2019, the board again granted Sassounian parole. According to the hearing transcripts, Sassounian and an accomplice, identified as Krikor Saliba who is still at large, wanted revenge on a Turkish official for the Armenian Genocide.

“Why are we thinking about going to Europe to kill a Turkish officer over there while, Mr. Arikan, you know, he’s a Turkish official and he’s doing exactly the same thing here in LA,” Sassounian testified.

Sassounian said he felt no remorse at the time. He does not feel the same way now.

“That no matter what anybody does, that murdering a human being is never justified no matter what they did as a human being or as government, regardless, that, uh, I am deeply ashamed and remorseful for what I did,” he said.

The two parole commissioners, Dianne Dobbs and Edward Taylor, granted parole.

“You represent a low risk for violence,” Dobbs said. “You have clearly demonstrated positive change over the last 35 years when we look at your entire record.”

Dobbs said at the time there was a chance Sassounian could be returned to Armenia after parole.

But five months later, Newsom reversed the parole board’s decision.

Newsom blocked parole on May 25, 2020.

“I commend Mr. Sassounian for his rehabilitative efforts in prison, but I find they are outweighed by negative factors that show he remains unsuitable for parole at this time,” Newsom wrote in his letter.

“Mr. Sassounian may feel ‘done with politics’ but because he chose to commit a political crime and targeted a high profile victim, Mr. Sassounian’s actions will always carry outsized political import and be subject to manipulation for political purposes,” Newsom wrote.

But, on Feb. 24, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge William Ryan reversed Newsom’s decision. Ryan said the governor did not provide support that Sassounian “is not suitable” for parole.

“The Governor used an improper standard upon Petitioner when considering both the ‘import’ of his offense and the notoriety of his victim,” Ryan wrote in his 19 page ruling.

Anthony Blinken, the U.S. Secretary of State, issued a statement opposing Sassounian’s release.

“The Department of State is deeply disappointed by the expected grant of parole in the State of California of Hampig “Harry” Sassounian, who was convicted of the 1982 murder of Turkish Consul General to Los Angeles Kemal Arikan.

“Attacking a diplomat is not only a grave crime against a particular individual, it is also an attack on diplomacy itself.  To ensure the safety of the dedicated U.S. diplomats serving around the world, it has been the longstanding position of the United States to advocate that those who assassinate diplomats receive the maximum sentence possible, and that they serve those sentences without parole or early release.

“We again offer our deepest condolences to the family of Mr. Arikan and our colleagues at Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs for their loss,” Blinken said.

The Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs criticized Newsom’s decision against appealing the court’s action.

“We strongly condemn this approach, that deeply hurts the conscience of the Turkish nation. This grave decision, that could not be reversed despite all attempts of the US Administration, is in conflict with the universal principles of law and the understanding of justice,” a news release posted on Twitter said.

Azerbaijan, a Turkish ally, also condemned the decision.

“Releasing admitted & unreformed terrorist H.Sassounian convicted of murdering a diplomat would send a very wrong message & surely harm interests of diplomacy, especially in a state w/one of the world’s largest diplomatic corps,” the nation’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs wrote on Twitter.

State Sen. Andreas Borgeas, R-Fresno, who is a member of the California Armenian Legislative Caucus, said Sassounian’s release is proper.

“The genocide of the Armenians by the Ottoman Turks is a haunting example of unaccountable injustice,” Borgeas said in an email. “In this unfortunate instance, Mr. Sassounian has served his time and paid his debt to society under our criminal justice system. His eligibility for parole is therefore appropriate.”

Sassounian is currently housed at San Quentin State Prison. The date of his release is unclear.

Armenian who Killed Turkish Consul in LA to Walk Free

The Middle East
March 12 2021
Friday, 12 March, 2021 – 07:00
Asharq Al-Awsat

An Armenian man jailed in California for the 1982 murder of the Turkish consul in Los Angeles will be released on parole, the governor’s office confirmed Thursday.


Hampig Sassounian, who is now 58, was jailed in 1984 for opening fire on Turkish diplomat Kemal Arikanwhen after he had stopped at a traffic light on January 28, 1982.


Sassounian, an Armenian immigrant who was living in the suburbs of Los Angeles, was initially sentenced to life behind bars with no chance of parole, but an appeals court overruled that judgment.


In 2002, he signed a declaration renouncing terrorism and was sentenced to life in prison, and to serve a minimum of 25 years.


He had applied for parole on several occasions, unsuccessfully until now.


But a Los Angeles judge recently granted it and a spokeswoman for California Governor Gavin Newsom, who had previously opposed the measure, said Thursday he had decided not to challenge the ruling.


“The governor has carefully weighed the factors in this case and will not pursue an appeal,” the spokeswoman said.


The US State Department issued a statement saying it was “deeply disappointed” about the forthcoming release.


“Attacking a diplomat is not only a grave crime against a particular individual, it is also an attack on diplomacy itself,” it said.


“To ensure the safety of the dedicated US diplomats serving around the world, it has been the longstanding position of the United States to advocate that those who assassinate diplomats receive the maximum sentence possible, and that they serve those sentences without parole or early release,” it said.


Dispatch from Stepanakert: Karabakh’s Armenians await uncertain future

EurasiaNet.org
March 11 2021
Ani Mejlumyan Mar 11, 2021

In last year’s war, Karabakh’s Armenians lost three-quarters of the territory they used to control, and the safety of the remaining population now depends on a Russian peacekeeping mission whose mandate expires in 2025.

For many here, the fate of Karabakh and its Armenian population seems to be hanging by a thread.

“The future is unclear,” said Tsovinar Barkhudaryan, a newscaster at the public broadcaster Artsakh TV. “People are thinking about staying or leaving. We don’t even know what’s going to happen in a week, let alone in four years.”

During the 44-day war, Barkhudaryan sent her children into Armenia for their safety and her husband fought on the front lines. She covered the war as a journalist. Her family is now back together and they try to focus on the day-to-day. “I’m still in hell,” she said. “I wish I had other news to report.”

After the war she did a story about a man in the village of Tomashen who lost a son during the fighting and whose home is now so close to the new front line that he can see Azerbaijani soldiers from his window. And yet he is staying and even brought his grandchildren there to live. “People like that are the backbone of Artsakh who will make us rise again,” she said, using the Armenian name for the territory. “Now, knowing his story and that my house is safe in Stepanakert, my husband is back from the war, and I have a job and children, how can I leave?” she asked. “What reason do I have to leave? It would be a betrayal to leave these people.”

During the war, well more than half (estimates vary) of Karabakh’s roughly 150,000 people fled into Armenia. Since then, many have returned, though estimates vary widely. Armenia’s minister of social and labor affairs, Mesrop Arakelyan, said in January that 95,000 had returned. The Russian peacekeepers have been facilitating the return of residents, and say that thus far 52,712 have returned.

But many locals doubt those relatively rosy figures. “The numbers are exaggerated,” said Yana Avanesyan, 26, who teaches international law and works with an NGO helping those displaced by the conflict. (International agencies working on the issue use more modest figures; the United Nations has calculated that about 68,000 people who fled from the fighting remain in Armenia.)

And the future will only get murkier. The November 10 ceasefire agreement that ended the fighting provides for a 2,000-strong Russian peacekeeping force to separate the remaining Armenian-controlled areas from the new Azerbaijani positions. But that Russian presence has to be renewed every five years, and either side could veto it. An Azerbaijani veto in 2025 could effectively mean the end of Armenian rule in Karabakh.

“If the Russians weren’t here, most people would have already left,” said sixty-something Lilia Matevosyan, who lives with her family in Martakert, a city to the east of Stepanakert. Before the war they grew pomegranates and grapes but their farmland has been handed over to Azerbaijan. “We want to stay but the land here isn’t as good, and there are problems with irrigation,” her husband, Kamo Balasanyan, said. “We’re left with nothing now.”

Many people look at the substantial infrastructure that the Russian peacekeepers have already built and come to the conclusion that the Russians are here to stay. Especially for older Karabakhis, that is comforting.

“It’s good that the Russians are here, it’s calm,” said Irina Parsadanova, an elderly woman selling dried fruit and honey in Stepanakert’s market. Still, she is stressed by the uncertainty. “We go to sleep at night not knowing what’s going to happen in the morning,” she said. “Where could we go? There’s nowhere to run.”

Many of the young people Avanesyan works with “don’t know what to do – stay or leave, and you don’t really have the moral right to ask them to stay,” she said. “The situation is chaotic now, people are dealing with day-to-day stuff and we aren’t really comprehending the full extent of what happened.”

The uncertainty of the situation was captured in a recent report from the UN, which found that 85 percent of the households who had fled the fighting and remain in Armenia “did not intend to move or were unable to communicate their intentions.”

Avanesyan herself hopes to stay. “I don’t think that my house someday won’t be mine,” she said.

But she is critical of the government’s efforts to attract people to return, including subsidizing rent and utilities and compensating them for lost homes, which amounts to “buying people with incentives, instead of coming up with a long-term strategy of recovering from the effects of the war,” she said. “I see a future here, but the government needs to bring some clarity.” 

Like many younger people in Karabakh, she mistrusts the Russian presence and assumes that they are just a temporary fix to a longer-term problem. “This is a bleeding wound,” she said. “As long as we have what we have, people on both sides are not satisfied. For me, war is not a question of ‘if’ but of ‘when’,” she said. 

Stepanakert’s landmark pub, Bardak, has acquired some new decorations since the war: an unexploded Smerch rocket, a TV set donated by a friend from Hadrut – a town lost during the war – who took it as he fled, and a door from the ancient fortress in Tigranakert, another site lost during the war. “This door has to go back where it came from,” said Azat Adamyan, Bardak’s owner. “It’s our responsibility, even if our generation doesn’t do it then some other one needs to.”

He fought in the war, and has scars from a cluster bomb on his face and legs to show for it.

In spite of the uncertainty over the territory’s future, he said he is committed to staying. He’s even building a new restaurant in Stepanakert. “People say, why do you invest so much, what if the Russians or Azeris take it?” he said. “I don’t care, because if that happens then I also will have to leave my ancestors’ house, where I was born, and that would be even more painful.”

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Founder of Armenian DASARAN educational platform named 2021 Young Global Leader by World Economic Forum

Public Radio of Armenia
March 12 2021

World Economic Forum has honored global recognition to the CEO and Founder of DASARAN Educational Platform, Mr. Suren Aloyan’s for his unique professional and societal contributions. The Forum has honored Suren Aloyan as a Young Global Leader 2021.

Suren Aloyan is the first ever Armenian national to be honored this title by the WEF. As a World Economic Forum Young Leader Suren Aloyan will represent Armenia in the diverse community of world-renowned young leaders.  

YGL forum is an accelerator for a dynamic community of exceptional people with the vision, courage, and influence to drive positive change in the world. The growing membership of more than 1,400 members and alumni of 120 nationalities includes civic and business innovators, entrepreneurs, technology pioneers, educators, activists, artists, journalists, and more.

Aligned with the World Economic Forum’s mission, YGL seeks to drive public-private co-operation in the global public interest. The Forum is united by the belief that today’s pressing problems present an opportunity to build a better future across sectors and boundaries.

The World Economic Forum is an International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation. The Forum engages the foremost political, business, cultural and other leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry agendas.

With an average budget of 300 million Swiss francs, the World Economic Forum is partnered with such large organizations as Google, Nestle, Barclays, Credit Suisse, Deloitte, Deutsche Bank, ABB.

Aliyev makes provocative statements about internationally recognized territories of Armenia – Tatevik Hayrapetyan

Public Radio of Armenia
March 12 2021

Aliyev makes provocative and inadmissible statements about the internationally recognized territories of the Republic of Armenia, Tatevik Hayrapetyan, member of the “My Step” parliamentary faction, said at today’s sitting of the PACE Committee on Migration, Refugees and Displaced Persons.

Humanitarian aspect of the Nagorno Karabakh war were on the agenda of the meeting.

“The reality is that Azerbaijan, a member state of the Council of Europe, launched an aggression against the civilian population of Artsakh with the obvious support of another member state, Turkey. Although a trilateral statement on ceasefire was signed on November 9, 2020, Azerbaijan continues to fail to fulfill its obligations,” Hayrapetyan said.

She noted that many Armenian prisoners of war are still being held in Azerbaijan, which is unacceptable. At the same time, she said, humanitarian issues are difficult to overcome unless there is a political solution.

“Yes, Azerbaijan has taken the path of aggression, which is not a political solution,” the MP stated.

She drew attention to the fact that Azerbaijan continues to use hate speech and threatening language.  

“President Aliyev of Azerbaijan makes provocative and inadmissible statements about the internationally recognized territories of the Republic of Armenia. This is inadmissible. It must receive an adequate response from the international community,” said Tatevik Hayrapetyan.

Armenian FM briefs Austrian counterpart on humanitarian situation in Artsakh following Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression

Public Radio of Armenia
March 12 2021

Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian had a telephone conversation with Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg.

The sides praised the positive dynamics in bilateral relations and reaffirmed mutual readiness to make practical efforts to intensify the political dialogue, to expand and enrich the agenda of cooperation.

The Armenian and Austrian Foreign Ministers also exchanged views on issues related to the Armenia-EU partnership and the schedule of upcoming EaP events. Minister Aivazian emphasized that the effective implementation of the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement will create new opportunities for deepening cooperation with both the EU and EU member states and outlining new directions.

In the context of regional security and stability, Minister Aivazian briefed his Austrian counterpart on the humanitarian situation in Artsakh following the Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression, Azerbaijan’s failure to fulfill its obligations under the November 9 statement, in particular the repatriation of prisoners of war and other detainees. In terms of improving the humanitarian situation in Artsakh, the need for the involvement of international partners was stressed.

Ministers Aivazian and Schallenberg attached importance to taking steps to preserve historical and cultural heritage and places of worship in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone.

Referring to the security challenges in the OSCE region, including in the context of conflicts, both sides expressed concern over the involvement and transfer of armed terrorists and mercenaries. Cooperation within regional and international organizations was emphasized in this regard.

The Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Austria addressed the issues of the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group co-Chairmanship format.