Asbarez: Saving Syunik: The Inception and Execution of KorniTun, Powered by All for Armenia, Miaseen

Rendered images of KorniTun

BY TAMAR TATOIAN

“Please tell me about where the idea for KorniTun originated.” This is the sentence that launched a fruitful, inspiring conversation between myself and one of the founders of All for Armenia, Matthieu Sahakian. Both of us stationed in front of our screens thousands of miles away from each other, we were brought together in conversation by the very thing that brought millions of Armenians together in September of 2020 – the visceral possibility of losing more of our homeland than we’d already lost. Little did we know that the Syunik region would come under fire yet again the very next day, making our subject – KorniTun – all the more relevant. 

All for Armenia was created at the beginning of the 2020 war, akin to Miaseen, out of urgent need. The organization is helmed by Matthieu and Araz Sahakian, both diasporans who repatriated to Armenia. During and following the war, over 50 volunteers from ten different countries came together under All for Armenia to provide food and necessities to approximately 1,000 families in the border villages of Armenia that connect us to Artsakh. The volunteers constantly traveled back and forth to the border from Yerevan to make deliveries, the gravity of their mission sustaining them throughout the day until the adrenaline subsided to reveal back pain and blisters at night, the physical marks of their efforts.

It was the challenge of traveling to and from the border that initially sowed the seeds of KorniTun, coupled with the evolving needs of the border population. “We are on the ground, active, and standing by the people of the border. Their needs moved from urgent humanitarian aid to long-term, sustainable projects,” Matthieu explained. “For this vision to be successful, we knew we needed to be established at the border and not in Yerevan. We asked the leaders of Kornidzor what we should do to support them, and they wanted a community center for their youth. We realized we could do two things in one – create a place to provide education and have a place for volunteers to stay.” All for Armenia swiftly bought a building with support from the AYO Asso and partnered with Miaseen to execute their vision. 

The community center, KorniTun, will function as an education and technology center on the first floor, with lodging on the second floor for volunteers. Kornidzor residents will be employed to handle the day to day operations of the center, creating valuable jobs for the village. Local children and young adults will have access to workshops that equip them with skills to provide for themselves and their families in the future, while also having a community hub to turn to in times of need.

All for Armenia already has a successful record of establishing technology centers in the crucial border towns of Goris and Tegh. Equipped with computers and Internet access at the tech centers, local children attend workshops held by diasporan volunteers, learning skills that we take for granted – Excel, HTML, CSS programming, resume building, photography and videography, among others. The education does not stop when the workshops adjourn, but continues with the relationship built between the youth and the volunteers. Matthieu described the communal bond created from the workshops as such: “The participants really value these workshops, it expands and changes their horizons. They contact the volunteers after the workshop to receive feedback on their resumes and other things they are working on. The relationships that are created are productive for the future of both the diaspora and the people of the village.” 

KorniTun will take the established concept of All for Armenia’s technology centers and elevate it by incorporating bed-and-breakfast style lodging for volunteers. “We want to establish a place where the diaspora can connect with the border and its people and realize the intensity of the everyday situation at the border. It is important for the volunteers to create relationships with the locals, and staying at KorniTun will help them do that.” Matthieu emphatically stressed that the key word to encapsulate the collaboration of KorniTun is experience. “We want to allow diasporans to experience the border and understand what is at stake, we are literally at the doors of Artsakh when we are in Kornidzor. We are completely related to what is happening on the ground, we are not from a disconnected diaspora. Why is the diaspora interested in coming here? Because they realized from the war that Armenia can disappear. We need to be active and save our homeland. Not from Yerevan, but from the border villages.” 

The intensity of the everyday reality at the border that Matthieu intimated is characterized by a constant, looming threat of attack on the region. Prior to the war, Kornidzor was 103 miles away from the border. Post-war, it is a scant half a mile away, with military posts clearly visible from the locals’ homes and the sound of gunshots ringing far too close. “Why focus on Kornidzor? It is because Kornidzor has strategical importance as the last road that remains toward Artsakh, one of the three villages before the Lachin Corridor. Securing borders means preventing depopulation, and how to prevent that? By fostering hope and opportunity there.” Kornidzor and the surrounding region is extremely underserved, yet it is the area that needs our support the most. “We are the only ones coming into Kornidzor. If we come here, if we create something here, it disturbs the narrative of people who want to give up, because there is still hope if people are coming to help,” Matthieu declared, and I found myself becoming emotional hearing the passion and energy intertwined in his message.  

When the community of Kornidzor heard that a building was purchased and architectural planning for remodeling had begun, it created a tangible reason for them remain in the area. They reasoned: “Why would we send our kids to Yerevan if they will have opportunities here at home?” As the news spread, “for sale” signs gradually began disappearing from the exterior of homes in the area. There are 580 children in the region, comprised of seven villages. In Kornidzor alone, there are 103 children and 100 young adults who need – and undeniably deserve – our support. We owe everything not only to our soldiers, but to the people in the border villages who stand their ground in their homes, protecting our borders by their mere presence. If it were not for them, our borders will be pushed back all the way to Yerevan. We owe them everything. Everything. 

Anyone who has been to the homeland understands the connection that one experiences when they set foot there, breathing in the air, taking in the sun shed our sacred soil. This need not be developed, but exists in every single one of us, ready to be felt in the depths of our hearts as soon as we arrive. An All for Armenia volunteer from Houston, Texas of the United States experienced exactly this in the aftermath of the war. As Matthieu described the amazement of the volunteer as she connected with Kornidzor, he explained that she felt a true sense of purpose there, that she now truly understood what is at stake. “Every centimeter of the homeland has an infinite value,” Matthieu stated with conviction. “We must value it and preserve it.” This is the ethos behind All for Armenia and Miaseen’s collaboration – that every centimeter of our homeland indeed does have infinite value, and we all must do everything in our power to protect every single centimeter of it. We cannot leave the people of Kornidzor, the people of Syunik, to fight for us all. We are collectively responsible for the sovereignty of our nation. Join the fight with us as we establish KorniTun. 

All for Armenia and Miaseen are on a journey to transform Kornidzor. More than ever, we need to work together to build a stronger and resilient Armenia. Contribute to build the KorniTun Community Center that will serve the people of Kornidzor and Syunik Marz. 

Join our capital campaign here.


 

Greek, Cypriot, Armenian Special Forces Complete Joint Military Exercises

Special Forces of Greece, Cyprus and Armenia held joint military drills

The Special Forces of Greece, Cyprus and Armenia completed what is being billed as the joint Close Quarter Battle 2021 military exercises, the Cypriot Defense Ministry reported.

The exercises were held from November 22 to 26 under the Greece-Cyprus-Armenia Tripartite Cooperation Program.

The purpose of the joint exercise was to increase combat capability and interoperability of the combined special forces in combat conditions.

The training included rapid reaction battle shots, moving shots, night shots, urban warfare and handling of the dead and wounded inside a residential area.

“Similar exercises, in combination with the Tripartite Cooperation Program between Greece, Cyprus and Armenia, reflect the excellent cooperation between the Armed Forces of the three countries,” the Cypriot Defense Ministry said.

German Court Finds ISIS Member Guilty of Genocide in Yezidi Killing

The defendant, Taha Al-J, covers his face at a court in Frankfurt, Germany

A man was sentenced to life in prison by a German court on Tuesday for crimes committed in Iraq which resulted in the death of an enslaved Yezidi girl, the German DPA news agency reported on Tuesday.

The Frankfurt Higher Regional Court found Taha Al-J, an Iraqi native whose full name was not released for legal reasons, guilty of genocide and a war crime resulting in death.

He must also pay damages of 50,000 euros ($56,391) to the girl’s mother. Presiding judge Christoph Koller said it was the world’s first verdict for crimes committed by the self-styled Islamic State terrorist militia against the Yezidi minority.

During the preliminary remarks on the reasons for the verdict, the defendant slumped in the courtroom and the session was interrupted.

Al-J was found guilty of having kept and abused a Yezidi woman and her daughter as slaves between July and September 2015. To punish the 5-year-old, he tied her to a window grate in the courtyard of the property in Fallujah in sweltering heat, where the child died, in agony, of thirst.

Islamic State systematically persecuted the Yezidi religious community during the conflict. Jennifer W, Al-J’s former wife, to whom he was married according to Islamic rites, was sentenced to 10 years in prison by the Munich Higher Regional Court in October. As a witness in the trial against Al-J, she had described her former husband as violent. Al-J himself has not commented on the accusations against him.

Asbarez: ‘No One Has the Right to Ignore Human Rights In Border Demarcation Process,’ Says Tatoyan

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan talks to residents, among them children, in Kapan

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan on Tuesday warned that human rights and humanitarian issues must be of paramount concerns when Armenia embarks on the proposed process of delimiting and demarcating its borders with Azerbaijan.

“No one has the right to ignore human rights and humanitarian issues in the border demarcation process,” said Tatoyan in an announcement posted on Facebook, which detailed his latest observation from a fact-finding mission to Armenia’s Syunik Province.

Tatoyan, who just returned from a working visit to Los Angeles, where he received the Human Rights Champion Award from the Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region, hit the ground running and led a fact-finding mission to Syunik, where Azerbaijani forces have set up border checkpoints on two main roads in the region, impacting the daily lives of residents in the area.

Tatoyan and his team observed that Azerbaijan armed forces are able to monitor residents from the newly-created customs checkpoint on the Kapan-Tchakaten road, adding that the only way to safeguard the residents of those areas is to remove the posts.

The alternative road from Kapan to six villages—Tchakaten, Shikahogh, Srashen, Nerkin Hand, Tsav, Shishkert—is being monitored by Azerbaijani forces. Therefore, Tatoyan said, it is imperative to eliminate the source of the problem.

Since Monday, Tatoyan and his team have worked with Kapan Mayor Gevorg Parsyan and traveled around the region, speaking to residents and hearing their concerns.

The residents are concerned that, as was the case in the 1990’s, Azerbaijani soldier can target civilians traveling on the alternate roads and threaten lives by sniper fire and other military actions.

Furthermore, the terrain of the alternate road is difficult to traverse, especially during the winter, which will make parts of the road impassable.

Tatoyan pointed out that because of the Azerbaijani checkpoints, residents are unable to tend to fundamental daily activities, such as going to school, agricultural commerce and access to basic necessities.

He praised the efforts of local authorities, the Armenian border troops and the National Security Service personnel stationed in the region for doing their utmost to make the lives of residents more palatable.

However, he said, the rise in Azerbaijan’s state-sponsored anti-Armenian approach and government-sown hatred can acutely impact the safety of residents.

“Therefore, the necessary solution is that Azerbaijani armed or other servicemen should not be stationed in the vicinity of Armenian areas or on roads connecting those communities, and a demilitarized security zone should be created,” said Tatoyan, adding the only way to restore and protect the rights of Armenian citizens is for Azerbaijani to leave the area.

Sochi trilateral statement denies propaganda theses about “corridor” – Armenia Foreign Ministry

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 09:57,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. With the statement signed on November 26 in Sochi, Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan reaffirm their commitment to the consistent and unconditional implementation of all the provisions of the 2020 November 9 trilateral statement, Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Vahan Hunanyan said in response to the questions of media outlets relating to the Sochi trilateral statement.

“This relates also to the commitments which have not been implemented by Azerbaijan till now, including point 8th of the November 9 statement relating to the return of prisoners of war, hostages and other persons held. The November 26th Sochi statement once again reaffirms the point of January 11 statement on unblocking all transportation routes and economic communications in the region and again denies the propaganda theses about the “corridor” or corridor logic”, the MFA spokesperson said.

He emphasized that according to the Sochi statement, the sides reached an agreement to take actions to raise the level of stability and security on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, and the priority and key step on this direction must be the implementation of actions aimed at reducing tension.

“We are also convinced that the complete implementation of the provisions of the trilateral statement will contribute to the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict under the mandate of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship”, Vahan Hunanyan said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian Space Program: Ministry of High Tech Industry presents details

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 10:18,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Ministry of High Tech Industry is dealing with the licensing of companies who are eager to be engaged in space activities, Minister Vahagn Khachaturyan’s advisor Ara Aslanyan told ARMENPRESS.

“This sector is perhaps the most developing one, having the most various applications,” he said. “For example, spaceflights amount to only 5% of the sector. A significant part of space activities finds its application on the surface of the Earth, be it agriculture, border protection, gadget maps and others, the list goes on and on. Engaging in space activities, Armenia seeks to not only meet domestic demand, but also offer services to other countries. For example, if our space activities lead to us obtaining data about Australia’s agriculture, it will turn out that we are rendering space services to the remote continent. Space activities can’t be an affordable luxury, and naturally we will cooperate with significantly experienced countries and companies. I find it worthy to note that with time the costs of space services are decreasing due to technological advancements, and for example the European Space Agency is launching into the orbit devices developed by university students, and this doesn’t require big expenses,” Aslanyan said.

Aslanyan said that the government’s strategy to develop the sector is effective, and that it starts from involving school children. Around 40 school children took part in a camp organized this year. Aslanyan expressed certainty that the children will be very inspired and excited with this project.

“We also have a grant program with a total budget of around 200 million drams. This will enable us to understand the existing potential in Armenia. We already have bids which are surprising in their variety of sectors. We will have the first results in a year,” the minister’s advisor said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia reports 398 daily COVID-19 cases

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 11:09,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. 398 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 338,518, the ministry of healthcare reports.

6462 COVID-19 tests were conducted on November 29.

977 patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 317,175.

The death toll has risen to 7567 (32 death cases have been registered in the past one day).

The number of active cases is 12,330.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Defense ministry neither denies nor confirms report on withdrawal of Azerbaijani troops from Ishkhanasar section

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 11:49,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The defense ministry of Armenia commented on the report according to which the Azerbaijani troops pulled back from Armenia’s sovereign territory in the Ishkhanasar section.

In response to the inquiry of ARMENPRESS, the defense ministry neither confirmed nor denied the report, urging to spread information about the border situation, the movement of the Armed Forces, their positions or other actions based on the official statements of the ministry, not on the remarks of the community leaders.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

ICJ to deliver its order on Armenia’s request to indicate provisional measures against Azerbaijan Dec. 7

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 11:57,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The International Court of Justice, the principal judicial organ of the United Nations, will deliver its order over Armenia’s request to apply provisional measures against Azerbaijan on December 7, the Court said in a news release.

“A public sitting will take place at 3 p.m. at the Peace Palace in The Hague, during which the President of the Court, Judge Joan E. Donoghue, will read out the Court’s Order. In view of the COVID-19 pandemic, only Members of the Court and representatives of the States Parties to the case will be present in the Great Hall of Justice”, the statement says.

The International Court of Justice held public hearings over Armenia’s request to indicate provisional measures against Azerbaijan on October 14-15.

On September 16, 2021, Armenia instituted proceedings against the Republic of Azerbaijan before the International Court of Justice with regard to alleged violations of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD).

Armenia also requested the Court to indicate certain provisional measures “as a matter of extreme urgency”, including the return of Armenian prisoners of war and civilian captives from Azerbaijan, as well as the closure of the so-called “Military Trophies Park” in Baku.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan