AW: FSU grad Nyrie Iskandarian publishes children’s book, Maya’s Shot

Nyrie Iskandarian

Nyrie Iskandarian has been speaking fluent sports since she was a little girl. 

“Growing up, I was watching ESPN instead of the Disney Channel,” said the aspiring broadcast journalist from South Florida. “Sports became a part of my life. I grew up around it.”

At 21 years old, Iskandarian is a new graduate from Florida State University (FSU), where she majored in English, writing and media. She is now charting her professional career in the sports broadcast industry while celebrating the release of her first ever children’s book titled Maya’s Shot.

A page from Maya’s Shot by Nyrie Iskandarian

The motivational, 24-page story is about a young girl who discovers her passion and talents in the game of basketball through her introduction to the legacy of Los Angeles Laker Kobe Bryant.

This project has been three years in the making. Iskandarian said she was inspired by the NBA All-Star after his tragic death in January of 2020. “Kobe was one of the biggest inspirations in my life,” said Iskandarian, who recalled jotting down the Hall of Famer’s post-game statistics in a small notebook when she was around eight years old. “My dad was a big fan of his, so I became a big fan of his.”

The youngest daughter of the late Steve Iskandarian, Nyrie fondly remembers weeknights on the couch with her father watching the Miami Heat and rooting for the Dolphins during Sunday Night Football. “Moments like that I cherish forever,” she recalled. “I always think of those times. They are very special memories I keep close to my heart.” Iskandarian dedicated Maya’s Shot in memory of her father who shared in her love of sports. 

Iskandarian is an active member of her local Armenian community in Boca Raton, where she supports the events and activities of St. David Armenian Church. Like her father, she is also a proud member of Homenetmen. 

This past weekend, Iskandarian hosted a book launch party at her home for friends and family, who were surprised to see copies of Maya’s Shot on display as she had kept this project under wraps for almost three years. Sales of her book have already exceeded her expectations. “The response has been amazing. I still can’t believe it,” said the young author. “It warms my heart. I love it.”

Iskandarian has been making a name for herself since the fall of 2019 when she debuted her blog and sports media company Speak Sports. She spoke with the Weekly from her home studio, where she hosts and produces her own podcast under the same name. Behind her was a wall of sports memorabilia with trading cards, a signed football, a copy of The Mamba Mentality: How I Play and a growing collection of media passes. She said she will make room to proudly display a print copy of this article in the Weekly. 

Iskandarian, who has reported from the sidelines for ACC Network and FSU Athletics, has been dreaming of becoming a sports reporter since she was 14 years old. A confident and talented budding professional, Iskandarian has garnered a sizable audience on social media that appreciates her well-rounded knowledge and commentary on nearly every type of sport from baseball to boxing. On her podcast, she has chatted with former NFL players like Pittsburgh Steeler Bryant McFadden and Shawn Wooden (Miami Dolphins) and blogged about her predictions in the NFL and NBA playoffs. 

Unfortunately, Iskandarian has already run into some of the challenges involved with working in a male-dominated industry. She says she has received disrespectful and belittling comments from sexist social media users, but she remains undaunted. “I just use that as motivation,” explained Iskandarian. “I feel like I have the ability to open the door for the generation under me like those women in the generation above me, so I’m going to keep striving to do that.”

Iskandarian says she is committed to working hard to achieve her on-air dreams. In addition to promoting her new children’s book and producing consistent content for Speak Sports, Iskandarian is busy on the job hunt, writing cover letters and perfecting her reel. “No one should stop you from doing what you love,” she concluded. “You just gotta do it no matter what anybody says.”

Assistant Editor
Leeza Arakelian is the assistant editor of the Armenian Weekly. She is a graduate of UCLA and Emerson College. Leeza has written and produced for local and network television news including Boston 25 and Al Jazeera America.


Camp Haiastan celebrates 70th anniversary

2022 Camp Haiastan Staff

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Hundreds of campers, counselors, staff, alumni and community members gathered at Gillette Stadium’s Putnam Club on Saturday evening to celebrate the 70th anniversary of AYF Camp Haiastan. 

The evening began with a cocktail hour featuring a slideshow of past and present camp photos. Passed hors d’oeuvres and drinks were the backdrop of this unique family reunion.

First campers with Kenar Charchaflian (Photo: George Aghjayan)

The dining room was decorated with the camp’s new logo. Dinner included carving stations, pasta and salad stations, a very popular kids station and a surprise camp recipe: pilaf. As dinner music played in the background, the room was filled with friends catching up and sharing stories of their favorite camp memories. Among the attendees were four 1951 charter members—Shooshig (DerManuelian) Aghjayan, Barbara (Goshgarian) Berberian, Dorothy Melikian and Sylvia Simonian. There were also several three-generation legacy families—Alashaians, Alemians, Almasians, Altoonians, Apigians, Asbedians, Berberians, Boyajians, Dagdigians, Gharibians, Kaligians, Kushigians, Mangasarians, Manuelians, Papazians and Sogoians. Margo and Arev Dinkjian arrived from New Jersey as the only parent-child duo to have served as summer directors. Former executive and summer directors and Board of Directors members were also in attendance.

Mistress of Ceremonies Sarine Adishian (Photo: Arev Kaligian)

Sarine Adishian, a former camper, staff member and summer director and now a current Board of Directors member, served as the Mistress of Ceremonies. The program began with a quick round of losh kebab pickersa camper favorite at early morning exercisesand continued with a blessing from Reverend Father Mikael Der Kosrofian of St. Asdvadzadzin Armenian Apostolic Church of Whitinsville. Reminiscing on the variations of ice cream outings, bug juice and campouts that have been staples in over seven decades of Camp Haiastan, it was clear by the reactions that each guest in the room had their unique memories of what so many consider the “best place on earth.” While much has changed, the camaraderie that camp has given so many remains the same. 

Der Mikael Der Kosrofian (Photo: Arev Kaligian)

The first speaker of the night was Camp Haiastan’s current executive director, Kenar Charchaflian. Charchaflian is a former camper and staff member who shows her love for camp and the Armenian community through her unyielding dedication and work ethic. In her first public appearance as executive director after two years in this role, Charchaflian remarked not on the pandemic that closed the gates of camp, but on the community and volunteers who worked tirelessly to ensure they would open again as soon and as safely as possible. She also acknowledged those who made it possible for over 200 campers to experience a form of camp through “Camp Zoomastan” during such a difficult summer. Charchaflian also discussed the many improvements the camp has seen over the years and this year’s milestones, including a record number of Teen Session campers and a sold-out first session. 

Board of Directors, Gala Committee and Executive Director: Left to right: Susan Guzelian, Flo Bahtiarian, Michael Guzelian, Michael Bahtiarian, Hagop Soulakian, Melissa Simonian, Taline Badrikian, Nairi Khachatourian, Hratch Najarian, Sarine Adishian, Raffi Varjabedian, Mimi Parseghian, Kenar Charchaflian, Nareg Mkrtschjan, Alidz and Phil Nigon, Shant Saroukhanian (Photo: Arev Kaligian)

The program continued with Hratch Najarian, chairman of Camp Haiastan’s Board of Directors. Najarian has been serving on the Board of Directors for five years and is in his second year as chairman. His message to the guests was simple: pay it forward. He reminded those in the room that AYF Camp Haiastan and those who built it had a clear vision which has proven itself time and time again. It is now time to not only continue to support the camp, but also to encourage others to do the same. They will walk away with “more than what they could have imagined,” said Najarian. 

Najarian proceeded to announce the recipients of the first ever Forever Tornig award, recognizing individuals for their lifelong commitment to Camp Haiastan. Each of the honorees began their relationship with AYF Camp Haiastan as campers, proceeded to work as staff members, served a tenure on the camp’s Board of Directors and continue until today to volunteer their time toward the betterment of camp. Each honoree shared heartwarming memories of their days at camp as well as lessons learned throughout their experiences. 

Executive Director, Board of Director and Forever Tornig Honorees: Kenar Charchaflian, Hratch Najarian, Shant Saroukhanian, Mimi Parseghian, Hagop Soulakian, Richard Krikorian, John Mangassarian, Peter Jelalian, Phil Nigon, Sarine Adishian, Michael Bahtiarian, Taline Badrikian (Photo: Arev Kaligian)

Peter Jelalian of New Jersey served as summer director many times and continues to be a resource for incoming directors. He is also currently serving on the camp’s recruitment committee. 

Richard Krikorian, also of New Jersey, helped to establish the camp’s current endowment and investment strategies and continues to serve on the camp’s finance and investment committee.

John Mangassarian of Rhode Island is always willing to lend a hand and can be found at camp multiple times a week, ensuring the grounds are well-maintained. 

A surprise honoree was also announced that evening  Muriel “Mimi” Parseghian. Like her fellow honorees, Parseghian is a lifelong supporter of the camp; she was a former summer director and served on the board on multiple occasions, including on the current body. The dedication of the honorees is appreciated by all who love camp and serve as examples to current and future generations of campers, staff and supporters. 

Mike Bahtiarian (also known as Unger Nature Hike Mike) serves on the Board of Directors and chair of the infrastructure committee. He approached the stage to give an update on the current and upcoming projects at AYF Camp Haiastan. The featured projects included a two-phase upgrade, redesign and rebuild of the kitchen and mess hall, aesthetic improvements to the Cabin Circle and an expansion/replacement of the Under the Trees area. The Cabin Circle repairs will include improving the landscaping, grass coverage and walking paths, as well as adding new seating and lighting. The Under the Trees area, where campers gather multiple times a day, was originally constructed in 1982 and dedicated to Vaghinag Koroghlian. The new concept will include expanded seating for 150 people in two sections, new lighting and retaining walls. The project will be dedicated to the late Mark Alashaian, who could be found Under the Trees on any given Sunday during the camp season. Bahtiarian concluded his presentation by sharing the fundraising goals and overall plans of the infrastructure committee. 

These projects, set to be completed for the 2023 summer season, have a target fundraising goal of $1.5 million. The anniversary gala provided a wonderful opportunity to launch the campaign, which raised just over $400,000 in one night. The community can still show its support and dedication to the camp by donating online. Donations can also be mailed to the camp office (PO Box C, Franklin, MA 02038). 

The second raffle drawing also took place during the program. Charchaflian, who is also sometimes known as the “raffle girl,” returned to the podium to conduct the drawing. The winners were Laurie and Thomas Christopher from New Jersey.

Adishian concluded the program by remembering those who came before us with the vision to create “a little Armenia in Franklin” and reminding those in the room of their responsibility to “continue the positive impact of camp.” 

The evening concluded with musical performances by Michael Gostanian, Mal Barsamian, Richie Berberian, Bruce Gigarjian, Paul Mooradian and Ron Tutunjian. Guests danced the night away with old and new friends. 

A fun night of dancing to music by Michael Gostanian, Mal Barsamian, Richie Berberian, Bruce Gigarjian, Paul Mooradian and Ron Tutunjian (Photo: Arev Kaligian)

Guests are invited to email photos from the evening to [email protected]

Founded in 1951, AYF Camp Haiastan is the oldest Armenian residential camp in the United States. Camp Haiastan is located in Franklin, Massachusetts.


Azerbaijan is Turkey’s “red line” in its normalization talks with Armenia

Turkey is coordinating with Azerbaijan on negotiations to normalize its relations with Armenia, Turkish authorities said this week. 

“Azerbaijan has been our red line from the beginning. We have said that we will open our doors after problems with Azerbaijan are solved,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Turkish state television on July 25. 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Turkish state television broadcast (Presidency of the Republic of Turkey, July 25)

Talks between Turkey and Armenia to establish bilateral relations have been ongoing since December 2021. On July 1, 2022, special envoys appointed for the normalization process announced the first major breakthrough in negotiations. The envoys agreed to “enable the crossing of the land border between Armenia and Turkey by third-country citizens.” They also agreed to commence direct air cargo trade between the two countries. 

Turkey-Armenia border near Yereruyk (Photo: Wikimedia Commons/Yerevantsi/April 2016)

The Armenia-Turkey border has been closed since 1993, when Turkey closed the border in solidarity with Azerbaijan during the first Artsakh War. In the course of the current negotiations, Armenian authorities have been insistent that the normalization process must remain separate from ongoing talks with Azerbaijan on a resolution of the Artsakh conflict. 

On July 11, in another breakthrough, Erdogan and Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan held their first ever phone conversation, during which they “expressed their expectation for the early implementation” of the agreement to partially reopen the border. 

In his comments this week, Erdogan echoed Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, who several days earlier said that talks on normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia take place in a “tripartite format” with Azerbaijan.

“We coordinate every step with Azerbaijan. Whether Armenia likes it or not, this is the reality. We are one nation and two states. That is why if there is to be peace in the region, everybody needs to take steps, including Georgia and Central Asian countries,” Cavusoglu told Turkish state television on July 21. 

Erdogan and Cavusoglu also both suggested that Armenia has not taken “concrete steps” toward normalization of relations with Turkey.

“I am glad Pashinyan shares our view on regional peace and partnership. We now expect that apart from making statements Yerevan will take concrete steps in the settlement process,” Erdogan said. “We have the goal of full normalization and establishing good neighborly relations.”  

Cavusoglu blamed the lack of “concrete steps” from Armenia on pressure from the Armenian diaspora and domestic factions.

“We want to see in practice how sincere Armenia is. So far there are messages, and there are explanations. There’s also pressure, it’s true. The diaspora from the outside, fanatic groups from the inside,” Cavusoglu said.

“We don’t yet see clear steps from Armenia on the Zangezur and other projects or the peace treaty,” the Turkish foreign minister added. 

Turkish leaders have reiterated Azerbaijan’s demand for the creation of a Zangezur corridor. The route would connect Azerbaijan to its exclave the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic through Syunik, the southernmost province of Armenia that also borders Iran. 

Civil Contract Party MP and chairman of the parliamentary committee on foreign relations Eduard Aghajanyan said Cavusoglu’s statement did not amount to a precondition to the normalization process.

“I think that statement was not a precondition. Turkey has always come out with this position, which obviously had never been acceptable to us,” Aghajanyan told reporters. 

Iranian leaders have been vocal in their opposition to the creation of a Zangezur corridor.

While Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei “expressed his satisfaction with Nagorno-Karabakh’s return to Azerbaijan” as a consequence of the 2020 Artsakh War during a meeting with Erdogan in Tehran on July 19, he also warned the Turkish president against blocking the historically significant Armenia-Iran border. 

“If there is an effort to block the border between Iran and Armenia, the Islamic Republic will oppose it because this border has been a communication route for thousands of years,” Khamenei said

Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council of Iran Ali Shamkhani previously affirmed Iran’s support of Armenian sovereignty over a route connecting Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan through Syunik during a meeting with Pashinyan in Yerevan on July 7. 

“Ali Shamkhani emphasized that Iran considers any attempt to change the geopolitical situation in the region unacceptable and noted that his country also supports the process of unblocking infrastructure within the framework of preserving the territorial integrity and sovereignty of states,” a statement released by the Armenian prime minister’s office reads

The United States has expressed strong support for the ongoing talks between Armenia and Turkey. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken “welcomed the telephone conversation” between Pashinyan and Erdogan and “expressed the readiness of the US to support the normalization of relations between the two countries” during a phone call with Pashinyan on July 25. 

Meanwhile, Turkish diplomat and special envoy appointed for Armenia-Turkey normalization process Serdar Kılıç visited the Armenia-Turkey border on July 24. Kılıç, accompanied by a delegation of Turkish leaders, visited the city of Kars, the Doğu Kapı border checkpoint and the ruins of Ani. An Israeli company has been conducting demining on the Turkish side of the border, according to Turkish media reports. The Armenian Defense Ministry said that Armenia has not been conducting demining on its side of the border. 

According to a recent report from the International Crisis Group, Armenian authorities want to “press ahead as fast as possible” with the negotiation process, “for fear that history may repeat itself and normalization grind to a halt.” 

“If Ankara can move quicker carrying out its final part of the first agreements on border crossings and air cargo, it will reassure Yerevan that there is more to come,” senior South Caucasus analyst Olesya Vartanyan wrote.

Yet Vartanyan added that Armenia should be patient, considering that even “small agreements on air cargo and border crossings for foreigners are significant” considering the current geopolitical context.

“The Armenian representatives are right to say that they need to seize the moment, as a lack of concrete steps now could doom to failure their hopes for eventual normalization at a time of rising conflict around the world,” Vartanyan wrote. “But a ‘small step’ strategy seems to be the only one possible at the moment.”

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in Journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian's first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.


Will Iran fight Azerbaijan if Baku seeks to invade Syunik?

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and President Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi of Iran (Photo: Twitter/@Rahbar_Khamenei)

In the last 10 days, the most discussed issue amongst Armenian media, experts and political circles was the statement of Iran’s Supreme Leader during his meetings with the Russian and Turkish presidents held in Tehran. The presidents of Russia, Iran and Turkey gathered together to discuss the future of Syria in the Astana format amidst the ongoing war in Ukraine and complete rupture of Russia-West relations. Few could imagine that the Supreme Leader would mention Armenia and, in particular, the Armenia-Iran border during the summit. However, the Iranian message was clear: Iran will not tolerate the closure of the Armenia-Iran border. 

It might seem that the main target of this message was not in the room. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev did not participate in the meeting. He has constantly threatened Armenia that if Yerevan is not going to forget about Nagorno Karabakh, then Azerbaijan would start to speak about Syunik. 

The declaration of parts of Armenia as historical lands of Azerbaijan is not new for President Aliyev. Only a few years after assuming office, President Aliyev ordered Azerbaijani historians to find proof that Nagorno Karabakh was ancient Azerbaijani land. After the victorious war of 2020, high-level Azerbaijani authorities frequently spoke about all of Armenia being historical Azerbaijani land that artificially separates the Turkic world. A few weeks ago, the Azerbaijani president signed a decree to commemorate the anniversary of the Azerbaijani theater in “Erivan,” as Azerbaijanis called the capital of Armenia. In this decree, there were a lot of words about “Erivan” being historical Azerbaijani land and about massacres of Azerbaijanis there. This rhetoric and overt threats against Armenia to invade parts of Armenian territories were noticed in Yerevan and other capitals involved in the regional geopolitics. 

Thus, one of the primary targets of the Supreme Leader’s message was President Aliyev. However, Iranians are wise enough to understand that any large-scale military attack against Armenia is impossible without Turkey’s direct endorsement and involvement. Armenia and Turkey are in the middle of the normalization process and even reached an agreement to open a land border for the citizens of third countries and start direct air cargo flights. However, Turkey always mentioned that the Armenia-Turkey normalization process is not only about these two countries. It is more about other actors, such as Azerbaijan, Russia, the US and Iran. In recent days, both the Turkish president and foreign minister made clear statements that full normalization is possible only if the issue of Azerbaijan is solved, which means that full normalization is possible only if Armenia agrees to sign a treaty with Azerbaijan based on Azerbaijani terms, effectively finishing with Armenians in Artsakh. Thus, as Turkey pushes Armenia to accept Azerbaijani demands, Turkey will be happy to assist Azerbaijan in any new war against Armenia.

Some wondered why the Supreme Leader mentioned the Armenia-Iran border issue during his meeting with the Russian president. One should have a powerful imagination and fantasy to argue that Russia is interested in the closure of the Armenia-Iran border or Azerbaijani control over the southern parts of Armenia. The Armenia-Iran border is the only land border between the Eurasian Economic Union and Iran. Iran and EAEU are close to signing a free trade agreement, and Russia seeks ways to expand its cooperation with Iran as the two face immense pressure from the US. Russia has no reason to be interested in the closure of the Armenia-Iran border, especially as the Russian border troops control the border itself. Russia established several military outposts in Syunik after the 2020 Karabakh war based on the requests of the Armenian government. Thus, most probably, the Supreme Leader just wanted to remind Putin that Iran is in line with Russia on this issue, and maybe he wanted to indicate that Iran was ready to support Russia by investing in Syunik and thus preventing the local population from leaving the region due to the lack of economic opportunities. Iran’s decision to open a consulate in Kapan, the capital of the Syunik region, is more proof of its intentions to keep the current status quo, where Armenia is under the Russian security umbrella and will not provide its territory for any anti-Iranian activities. 

Meanwhile, it should be obvious to Armenia that Iran’s categorical rejection of any control of Azerbaijan over Syunik does not mean that if Azerbaijan starts a large-scale war against Armenia with the apparent goal to invade Syunik, Vayots Dzor, and perhaps other territories of Armenia, Iranian troops will enter Armenia and start fighting against Azerbaijan. War with Azerbaijan will be a catastrophe for Iran. It will not only completely derail Iran-Azerbaijan relations, but it may also trigger Turkey’s involvement in the war. War with Ankara is the last thing that Iran may desire. Given the apparent deadlock over the negotiations to restore the Iran nuclear deal and the growing probability of Israeli military strikes against Iranian nuclear targets ahead of early parliamentary elections in Israel, Iran cannot avoid tensions and war with Turkey. Thus Armenia should welcome the clear-cut position of Iran that Tehran will not tolerate the occupation of Syunik by Azerbaijan, but Yerevan should clearly understand that Iran will not intervene militarily and will not start a war against Azerbaijan. Iran is ready to support Syunik economically, create new jobs, raise the population’s living standards, and thus strengthen the positions of Armenia. However, in the foreseeable future, the only military deterrence which will prevent Azerbaijan from launching a large-scale attack on Armenia to seize entire regions is the Russian military presence in Armenia. Thus, the strategy to prevent Azerbaijani attacks on Syunik and other border regions should combine Russian military and Iranian economic presence and assistance while simultaneously making genuine efforts to increase the Armenian army’s capabilities to repel any such attempt. 

Dr. Benyamin Poghosyan is the founder and chairman of the Center for Political and Economic Strategic Studies. He was the former vice president for research – head of the Institute for National Strategic Studies at the National Defense Research University in Armenia. In March 2009, he joined the Institute for National Strategic Studies as a research Fellow and was appointed as INSS Deputy Director for research in November 2010. Dr. Poghosyan has prepared and managed the elaboration of more than 100 policy papers which were presented to the political-military leadership of Armenia, including the president, the prime minister and the Minister of Foreign Affairs. Dr. Poghosyan has participated in more than 50 international conferences and workshops on regional and international security dynamics. His research focuses on the geopolitics of the South Caucasus and the Middle East, US – Russian relations and their implications for the region, as well as the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative. He is the author of more than 200 academic papers and articles in different leading Armenian and international journals. In 2013, Dr. Poghosyan was a Distinguished Research Fellow at the US National Defense University College of International Security Affairs. He is a graduate from the US State Department Study of the US Institutes for Scholars 2012 Program on US National Security Policy Making. He holds a PhD in history and is a graduate from the 2006 Tavitian Program on International Relations at Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.


A Slice of Home: D.C.’s Premier Armenian Café and Market, Yerevan

Yerevan market and café

In the heart of the Adams Morgan neighborhood in Washington, D.C. lies a café and market called Yerevan. An area deprived of our cuisine, Yerevan, teeming with life, is a staple for the Armenian community in D.C. and beyond. 

As a Los Angeles native, I have grown accustomed to my Armenian bubble: seeing storefronts written in Armenian, being greeted in our language unprompted, smelling a variety of pastries from an Armenian bakery on every corner…the list goes on. Now, I’m spending the summer on the east coast, where even the concept of “Armenia” — let alone “Armenian food” — is foreign. There are restaurants that are reminiscent of home, as D.C. has its fair share of Mediterranean food. However, it was not quite what I was looking for. So, I decided to dig deep and ask people around me where I can find a slice of home. I received the same response from anyone I asked: “You have to go to Yerevan.” 

You can imagine my relief when I stepped through the doors of Yerevan. The smell of soorj (coffee) and gata (cake) greeted me with a smile as did owner Stella Grigoryan, who invited me into the space with the proverbial Armenian hospitality that we all know and love, and even went further to ask, “Would you like a coffee? How do you take it?” 

Grigoryan and her husband are not restaurateurs by trade. In fact, Yerevan is the couple’s first time running a café. The two moved to D.C. from Yerevan in 2012 and were – like me – shocked at the lack of Armenian cuisine in the area. 

“We realized that there weren’t any Armenian cafés in the area,” says Grigoryan. “We wanted to change that. To my knowledge, we are the first ones.” 

Inside Yerevan market and café

The space is warm and cozy with Armenian art and pictures adorning the walls. There is also a “market” section, where customers are able to purchase Armenian goods straight from the source: Armenia. They offer various items, ranging from wines and juices to fruit preserves and books. The menu is stacked with favorites, including lahmajunzhingyalov hatskhachapuri and kufta. If you have more of a sweet tooth, you won’t be disappointed with the baklava and mikado. The café’s best offering is their Armenian coffee, prepared authentically with finely ground coffee beans in the traditional Armenian coffee pot, the jezveh

Zhingyalov hats from Yerevan market and café

“A lot of non-Armenians love coming to Yerevan,” remarks Grigoryan. “They appreciate our culture and cuisine and are interested in finding out more about the Armenian people.” 

The beauty of the space is that it connects Armenians to their culture. Beyond that, it introduces the intricacies of our cuisine to non-Armenians. Coming to Yerevan during my stay n the east coast was truly a highlight of my trip. Creating spaces for Armenians to sit around a table, eat their traditional foods, drink their traditional drinks and engage in thoughtful conversations is important; it drives us forward. We have a deep connection to our food. It is a way of preserving the essence of who we are…regardless of how far from the motherland we may be. 

Armenian pastries from Yerevan market and café

Melody Seraydarian is a writer from Los Angeles, California. She is an active member of the AYF Hollywood “Musa Ler” Chapter. Melody also interns for the Armenian Bar Association and volunteers for various political causes and campaigns, while working on other writing and design projects.


The South Caucasus and the “Great Game” of Energy Security

The Beginning of the Modern “Great Game” in the South Caucasus

The “Great Game” was a political and diplomatic confrontation that existed for most of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century between the British Empire and the Russian Empire over Afghanistan and Central Asia, aiming to control trade routes in India. Almost a century later, with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the “Game” returned, and a fierce competition arose between the Russians and the Americans and their Western allies to control the oil and gas fields and pipelines in the South Caucasus.

In 1998, the Washington Post (WaPo) published a series of articles about the importance of oil and gas security in the Caspian Sea. In the third article titled  “A British ‘Coup’,” WaPo reported that in September 1992, the former British PM Margaret Thatcher arrived in Baku and handed the Azerbaijani government two BP (British Petroleum) checks totaling 30 million USD. To the Azerbaijani government, which was waging a war against Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, a deal with BP was tantamount to a deal with the British government.

At first, the Americans were not interested in Azerbaijani oil due to pressure from American-Armenian lobbying groups. But after Heydar Aliyev took office in June 1993, US interest grew as Washington viewed the 70-year-old former KGB chief coming to power as a Moscow-engineered coup aiming to block major oil deals between Baku and the West. Ultimately, Aliyev turned out to be the leader who invited US oil companies to Azerbaijan.

On September 20, 1994, Aliyev and oil executives gathered in Baku for the ceremonial signing of what the Azerbaijani president called the “deal of the century.” A contract was signed between the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan Republic (SOCAR) and a consortium of 11 foreign oil companies from six nations for the development of an area that covered three major oil fields in the Azerbaijan sector of the Caspian Sea – Azeri, Chirag and Deepwater portion of the Gunashli field (ACG). As a result, American companies – Amoco, McDermott, Unocal and Pennzoil – collectively took a more than 40-percent share in investing in the Azerbaijani oil field, followed by BP with 17 percent.

Russia had signaled resistance against these projects. Back then, the Caspian landlocked resources could reach Europe either through Russia or Iran. To find an alternative route, during the summer of 1995 the Americans convinced the BP executive to finance 250 million USD in constructing a pipeline connecting Baku to Georgia’s Black Sea port of Supsa. It was during US President Bill Clinton’s era that the Americans supported the policy of “multiple pipelines.” However, this decision still had to be sold to Aliyev. US National Security advisor Anthony Lake privately asked Zbigniew Brzezinski, his predecessor in the Carter administration, to carry a letter from President Clinton to his Azerbaijani counterpart. The letter also mentioned US willingness to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Armenia.

Brzezinski was also serving as Amoco’s paid consultant in Baku and scheduled a private meeting with Aliyev to summarize the contents of the letter. The Russians, knowing of a “conspiracy” underway against their interests, were pressuring Aliyev to export all of Azerbaijan’s oil through Russia; Russian troops stationed in Azerbaijan were to remain there. On October 2, after a call from Clinton assuring a US-Azerbaijani tacit alliance, Aliyev approved the American plan. By early 1996, the Russians knew they were out of the deal. This was the beginning of American-Russian energy friction in the South Caucasus.

The American-British project led to the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil export pipeline. The BTC spans three countries and 1,768 kilometers from Azerbaijan through Georgia to the Mediterranean where a new marine terminal has been constructed at Ceyhan, Turkey. BTC’s throughput capacity has been increased from its design capacity of one million barrels per day to its current capacity of 1.2 million barrels per day. To date, the pipeline has carried a total of 3.6 billion barrels (about 482 million tonnes) of crude oil from the Caspian to the Mediterranean bypassing Russia and decreasing Europe’s energy dependence on Moscow. 

 Remember the “Nabucco” Pipeline Politics?

The “Nabucco” pipeline was a project of strategic importance. It aimed to connect Europe with the natural gas sources in the Caspian Sea and the Middle East regions. The project has been driven by the intention to diversify Europe’s current energy supplies and lessen the continent’s dependence on Russian energy, which is the biggest supplier of gas to Europe.

In June 2008, Baku signed the first contract to supply gas to Bulgaria. Later, the Turkish Minister of Energy confirmed that Turkey was ready to join the deal, provided that Turkey gets 15-percent of the natural gas to be carried through the new pipeline. In January 2009, the Nabucco Summit was held in Budapest followed by an intergovernmental agreement signed by the PMs of Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Austria. The idea was to establish a 2,730-kilometer pipeline connecting Eastern Europe to Georgia through the South Caucasus Pipeline, two more routes connecting Turkey to Iraq and the Ankara-Tabriz pipeline of Iran.

The potential suppliers for the original Nabucco project were considered to be Iraq, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Egypt. However, many experts criticized the project as uneconomic because there was no guarantee that there would be sufficient gas supplies to make it profitable. The Europeans were planning for pipeline construction even before securing the gas supplies. Meanwhile, it was during this period that Armenia and Turkey signed the Zurich Protocols; both the US and the European Union were pushing for border opening between the countries. There were even some ideas being circulated that Armenia was getting transit from the Nabucco pipeline. This factor antagonized Azerbaijan, which accused Turkey of betraying its “small brother” and used the energy card against Ankara and the West.

Russia, taking advantage of Baku’s resentment, made gas deals with Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan, which has been seen by some observers as an attempt to reserve potential Nabucco supplies. Azerbaijan gave priority to Gazprom to sell the second phase of the Shah Deniz deposit, which Europe was counting on to fill the Nabucco pipeline, to Russia.

Meanwhile, Russia was working on its own pipeline project. Moscow was able to safeguard its dominant market share in Central and Eastern Europe and then pressured most of these countries to support Gazprom’s South Stream pipeline, a rival to Nabucco. According to Judy Dempsey, an Irish journalist and international relations researcher, Russia, to try and prevent Nabucco from even being built, decided to construct the alternative South Stream pipeline. That would allow Gazprom to send its gas to Southern and Central Europe via a pipeline under the Black Sea. South Stream was all about undermining Nabucco’s ambitions and Moscow’s efforts to find suppliers to fill its own pipeline. Olgu Okumus, an affiliated lecturer in energy diplomacy at Sciences Po, said that by blowing off the Nabucco gas pipeline project, Europe was left more vulnerable to Russia’s energy monopoly than ever. 

Who is winning the “Great Game”? 

The war in Ukraine has increased Europe’s vulnerability against Russia when it comes to energy security. As Russia supplies 40-percent of Europe’s natural gas amid the western-backed sanctions, President Putin announced that “unfriendly” countries would have to pay for such deliveries in rubles. On April 26, the Russian state-owned energy company Gazprom announced that it had suspended gas deliveries to Poland and Bulgaria and would not restart them until payments were made in the Russian currency. This step triggered outrage in the EU, and officials accused Moscow of “blackmail” as Russia started using its energy card as a weapon, thus pushing the Europeans to search for alternative energy supplies.

President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev meets with President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen, July 18, 2022 (Photo: President of the Republic of Azerbaijan)

On July 18, 2022, the European Commission signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Azerbaijan to double imports of Azerbaijani natural gas to at least 20 billion cubic meters (bcm) a year by 2027. “The EU and Azerbaijan are opening a new chapter in energy cooperation. Azerbaijan is a key partner in the EU’s efforts to move away from Russian fossil fuels,” said European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stressed that “issues of energy security today are more important than ever before.” Azerbaijan started increasing natural gas deliveries to the EU from 8.1 bcm in 2021 to around 12 bcm in 2022 via the Southern Gas Corridor. It is worth mentioning that the Trans-Adriatic pipeline, the final link of the Southern Gas Corridor pipeline network linking the Caspian gas to Europe via Turkey, has brought more than eight bcm of Azerbaijani gas to Europe in 2021. The gas from Azerbaijan arrives in Europe via Turkey through the Trans Anatolian Pipeline, which is connected to the bloc’s Trans Adriatic Pipeline, supplying gas from Greece to Italy.

Already Moscow was aware of the agreement and on the same day, Gazprom told its European customers that it cannot guarantee gas supplied because of “extraordinary circumstances” where the Russian energy company said that the “Nord Stream 1” pipeline connecting Russia to Germany through the Baltic Sea, was not safe for operation because of doubt over the return of a turbine from Canada. Under a compromise, despite opposition from Ukraine, the Canadians agreed to send the turbine to Germany first. Berlin would later deliver it to Moscow, so Canada does not breach any sanctions.

Hence, Russia was playing a tit-for-tat with the West over the EU’s policies toward Ukraine. The Europeans fear that Moscow could keep the pipeline mothballed in retaliation for the western-imposed sanctions on Russia due to the war in Ukraine. This would cause an increase in gas and commodity prices, an energy crisis that could trigger an economic recession on the continent. This concern pushed the German Interior Minister to warn that the country may soon expect violent protests due to high energy prices. Such a move may have a political motive and would increase the popularity of right-wing political parties such as the Alternative for Germany Party, known for their pro-Moscow views and may shake up the rule of the Social-Democratic German Chancellor.

Meanwhile, Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Agency (IEA), warned that Europe’s efforts to secure and diversify gas suppliers will not be enough to get it through winter without Russian gas. In an article published in the IEA, Birol wrote, “It is categorically not enough to just rely on gas from non-Russian sources – these supplies are simply not available in the volumes required to substitute for missing deliveries from Russia.” Birol added that even if gas supplies from Norway and Azerbaijan flow at maximum capacity, and if deliveries from North Africa continue at the same level and domestic gas production remains at the same level, Europe will not close the gas gap. Moreover, what European officials failed to realize is that Russia’s Lukoil owns around 20-percent of the Shah Deniz II gas field from which the EU’s Trans-Adriatic pipeline originates. Hence, almost 20-percent of their payment will be heading to Moscow.

Commenting on the recent EU-Azerbaijan gas agreement, Harry Istepanian, an independent energy expert based in Washington, DC and Dubai, told the Armenian Weekly that Azerbaijan is not able to double its gas exports to the EU until 2027 or later via the Southern Gas Corridor. Even until then, Azerbaijan will be able to export only 20 bcm of gas annually, which is a fraction of what Russia is supplying Europe (155 bcm annually). Baku has its own domestic gas shortages; last year, Aliyev reached a swap agreement to import gas from Iran, which was allegedly received from Turkmenistan. Hence, Europe might end up indirectly buying Iranian gas through Azerbaijan. “Until next winter, Europe is not expected to receive more than 10 bcm from Baku for at least the next five years which will make little difference to replacing the Russian gas,” added Istepanian. Moreover, it is unclear whether Azerbaijan can meet its higher export targets, where according to some energy experts, Azerbaijan’s production has been declining in recent years and it would take time to turn that around. So when Murad Heydarov, chairman of TAP’s (Trans-Adriatic Pipeline) board of directors says it could double its capacity to 20 bcm per year in a few years, questions remain with what gas the Southern Gas Corridor will be filled.

Interestingly, in the meantime, Russia has doubled its oil export to the Saudi kingdom, where the Gulf monarch is using it for its own summer cooling demand but also to re-export. Reuters reports that Russia has been selling fuel to the kingdom at discounted prices after international sanctions left fewer buyers. While many European countries have banned or discouraged purchases from Russia, China, India and several African and Middle Eastern countries increased their imports. US President Joe Biden’s visit to Saudi Arabia should be viewed from this context during which the US asked the kingdom to increase its oil supply to the global markets to help to lower oil prices that have aggravated global inflation. For now, the Saudis seem to refuse the offer as there is little chance for the kingdom to increase its oil production in a short time.

Under the Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia has also been cooperating with Russia in the OPEC+ alliance, where both are de facto leaders of the respective OPEC and non-OPEC producers. Data obtained by Reuters through Refinitiv Eikon ship tracking showed Saudi Arabia imported 647,000 tonnes (48,000 barrels per day) of fuel oil from Russia via Russian and Estonian ports from April to June of this year. That is a 320,000 tonne increase from the same period a year ago. The Saudis have been buying Russian fuel oil for years, which can reduce their need to refine crude for products and cut the amount of oil it needs to burn for power, leaving it with more unrefined crude to sell to global markets at higher prices.

Moreover, another Reuters report stated that Russia is looking to complete an oil deal with Indian refiners using the United Arab Emirates’ local currency, instead of dollars. The moves signal Moscow is increasingly distancing itself from the US dollar as a way to minimize the impact of western sanctions. The dollar is typically the primary international trade currency, especially for commodities like oil. The use of USD in international transactions is to increase the US political and financial leverage over other nations. As Russia is looking to alternate currencies, it is already in talks with India to revive a Cold-War era currency pact to evade sanctions too. Additionally, in recent months trade volume between yuan and rubles has soared, hitting a six-month high in June, Bloomberg data shows. Spot trading between the two currencies hit $48 million in the interbank market last month.

On July 19, during a trilateral meeting between Russian, Turkish and Iranian leaders, Iran and Russia signed a contract of 40 billion USD, the largest investment ever in Iran’s oil and gas history. By doing so, Russia’s Gazprom gains control of Iranian resources, can delay the return of Iran’s oil to the market, and use it as part of an energy war against the West. Moscow has ensured that in a post-nuclear deal era, it will have an upper hand when it comes to decision-making in Iran’s oil export to the international markets.

Russia’s motives in the “Great Game” strategy show that Moscow is ahead of Europe when it comes to engaging in oil and gas deals in Eurasia. Russia is buying oil and gas from Caspian countries and selling to Europe. Istepanian believes that the Russians might proceed to block the Black Sea export route, through which most of Kazakhstan’s crude oil passes to Europe. Therefore, as next winter approaches, most likely the Europeans’ purchase of Russian hydrocarbon will be “business as usual” and will try to avoid any further sanctions on the Russian crude oil that will significantly curb its exports, which would in turn lead to a price spike.

Are we heading for another version of the Zurich Protocols?

The gas deal made between the EU and Azerbaijan will push Aliyev to increase his leverage over the EU and take a harsher stance toward Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. Prior to the EU-backed bilateral meeting between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in Tbilisi, Aliyev raised his aggressive tone and warned of new escalation against Yerevan and sent a message to Moscow. Aliyev brought up the issue of Armenian military withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh and accused Yerevan of sending Armenian forces to Nagorno-Karabakh – a “gross violation of the November 10, 2020 declaration.” He called on Armenia to withdraw its troops from the region and accused Russia of breaking its promise. He also warned, “If Armenia does not want to withdraw its armed forces from the territory of Azerbaijan, then let us know this clearly, and we know what to do next. What will be our answer? Perhaps it is inappropriate to say it now.”

In response, the next day, the head of the Armenian Security Council Armen Grigoryan announced that Armenia will withdraw its last military units from Nagorno-Karabakh by the end of September. “Due to the war, a number of units of the Armed Forces of Armenia entered Nagorno-Karabakh to help the Defense Army. After the establishment of the ceasefire, they are returning to Armenia,” stated Grigoryan.

According to Istepanian, Azerbaijan is trying to gain the maximum from its geopolitical location by committing to cooperation with the western countries, particularly with NATO and the EU and to slow down the Russian military presence in the South Caucasus, especially the military presence in Nagorno-Karabakh. Therefore, Baku is using the EU energy security in addition to strong ties with Turkey and Israel to balance the leverage of the Russian presence in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. On July 20, Azerbaijani media Haqqin.az quoting from “Minval” reported that Azerbaijani soldiers stopped the car convoy of Russian peacekeepers carrying weapons without permission. One “82A armored vehicle” belonging to Russian peacekeepers and three “Ural” cars were stopped for inspection at the checkpoint of the Azerbaijani army. During the inspection, five Kalashnikov assault rifles were found in one of the vehicles. Due “to gross violation of the rules and illegal transport of ammunition,” the car was not allowed to cross the checkpoint and sent back. This was an unprecedented incident and a direct signal to Moscow.

Arif Asalioglu, general director of the International Institute of the Development of Science Cooperation (MIRNAS), argues that the Ukraine crisis has changed the balance of power in the region. He believes that Moscow will throw other thorny issues into time. The question is, how much can Russia tolerate Azerbaijan? For Asalioglu, energy security has brought Russia closer to Azerbaijan. For this reason, Moscow is bringing Yerevan and Baku closer. “The establishment of a joint border commission, which has been on the agenda since the Armenia-Azerbaijan-Russia trilateral summit on November 26, 2021, was considered a success when the joint border commission, which was stated to be established for the delimitation and demarcation of the border, became operational at the end of April,” Asalioglu told the Weekly. Asalioglu argued that Moscow will continue to play a positive and balanced role in mediating between Yerevan and Baku and facilitating the border opening between Ankara and Yerevan.

From a Russian perspective, pushing for “normalization” between Armenia and Turkey will bring stability to the region. As long as Moscow is under control of the process and the conflict of Nagorno-Karabakh is frozen, it will continue to have leverage on Armenia’s policymaking. Interestingly, while the “Great Game” between Russia and the West is continuing in the region, both sides are backing the border opening that Turkey closed with Armenia in 1993. From the European and American perspective, by pushing for “normalization” between Ankara and Yerevan and gaining additional consensus from Yerevan on the issue of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, they would secure their energy security interests in the region and weaken Russia’s leverage on Armenia and the region. Viewed from Russia, the border opening facilitated by the Kremlin would guarantee Moscow’s power-broker role in the region and increase its diplomatic leverage over Ankara and Yerevan. The question is, will the intersection of the interests of the conflicting sides (Russia and the West) eventually pave the way for diplomatic success and the signing of a new version of the “Zurich Protocols” between Ankara and Yerevan? We should remember that one of the reasons for the failure of the US-EU-backed Armenian-Turkish protocols was Russia’s silent opposition behind the scenes and profiting from Baku’s reaction against the signed agreement in Zurich. Hence, the success of the Armenia-Turkey negotiations is dependent on the “political mood” in the Kremlin and the future outcome of the “Great Game” between Russia and the West.

Yeghia Tashjian is a regional analyst and researcher. He has graduated from the American University of Beirut in Public Policy and International Affairs. He pursued his BA at Haigazian University in political science in 2013. In 2010, he founded the New Eastern Politics forum/blog. He was a research assistant at the Armenian Diaspora Research Center at Haigazian University. Currently, he is the regional officer of Women in War, a gender-based think tank. He has participated in international conferences in Frankfurt, Vienna, Uppsala, New Delhi and Yerevan. He has presented various topics from minority rights to regional security issues. His thesis topic was on China’s geopolitical and energy security interests in Iran and the Persian Gulf. He is a contributor to various local and regional newspapers and a presenter of the “Turkey Today” program for Radio Voice of Van. Recently he has been appointed as associate fellow at the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut and Middle East-South Caucasus expert in the European Geopolitical Forum.


AW: Camp Season in Artsakh

Catmandoo participants witness a sunrise in Artsakh

Summer is always about having fun outside away from noisy city life and immersing oneself in nature. Summer camps are the best solution for these getaways. At camp, young people learn to be closer to nature and find themselves in such situations which they have to cope with on their own. Generally, attending camps during childhood is beneficial for personal growth and making lifelong friendships. It’s a stage that youth should pass in the school of life.

This year in Artsakh, there were a number of summer camps organized for elementary and university students alike. They are all different, but they have one thing in common: to make the younger generation of Artsakh happier and stronger and inspire them with new ideas for their futures. 

Catmandoo is a tourist camp established in the village of Patara in the region of Askeran in 2014.

Campground

“The main goal of this camp is to raise a generation which knows its country, its nature and history and to teach them the art of surviving and orienting in the wild and in nature with great ease,” says founder and camp director Albert Andryan. 

Albert Andryan

Over one-thousand young people from different parts of Artsakh and the world have attended this camp over the last eight years. 

David Arzumanyan

David Arzumanyan of Stepanakert has been attending Catmandoo since he was six years old. “I love the tranquility and happiness at this place. I made new friends, and I am also known as ‘David Photographer.’ I like taking photos and making these happy moments live forever.”

This year, there were more than 200 students who applied to participate in summer camp. Because of the demand, organizers decided to make two groups: one attended the camp from July 5 to 14. The other group would attend from July 15 to 24. Organizers did their best to accommodate as many students as possible, including children of displaced families and the sons and daughters of martyred soldiers during the 2020 Artsakh War. Participants from Aghavno were also excited to be at camp and interact with their friends from different parts of Artsakh.

Bonding around the campfire

There are a range of activities offered at the camp: hiking, excursions, art of survival, lectures on Artsakh history and geography, volleyball, table tennis, soccer, intellectual games, dancing, acting classes, singing and of course, engaging conversations around the campfire.

Former campers and current organizers Tamar Grigoryan (24) and Lusine Abrahamyan (23) arranged what they called Camp Quest. Campers had five hours to finish their assigned tasks to win one of the most desired prizes: a huge biscuit cake. Grigoryan and Abrahamyan mentioned that they wanted to make something good for the camp, because the camp gave them the best memories and friends over the years.

“This is how we wanted to express our gratitude to Catmandoo,” said Grigoryan. “The Quest will help participants develop creative and analytical thinking. They will have no choice but to work together as a team and spend quality time together.”

Camp is divided into five groups; each group has its own name and motto and they all compete with each other over the course of 10 days.

Nare Harutyunyan

This summer marked Nare Harutyunyan’s second time at Catmandoo camp. “I like spending my summer here with new, talented and amazing people,” said the 15 year old from Stepanakert. “There is something magical in this place which keeps us charmed and makes us come back again and again.”

Swimming in the river

Besides all the activities, the location of the camp itself is favorable as it is in one of the most beautiful forests of Artsakh, near the river where children can swim and have fun after lunch. Everything about this camp qualifies it as a piece of heaven on earth. 

Emilia Khachaturyan

Emilia Khachaturyan is an 11 year old from Moscow who visits Artsakh during the summer. “When I learned about Catmandoo camp, I decided to participate in it. That was the best decision, as I made new friends here. I had an amazing time. I liked the friendly atmosphere and delicious food. I will definitely come back next year.” 

The closing ceremony for Catmandoo Summer Camp 2022 took place on July 23. It was a celebratory event with traditional khorovats (Armenian barbecue), an award ceremony and dances until the morning. Both the organizers and the campers have already begun counting down the days for the next camp session and will work hard to make it even more unforgettable in 2023.

Catmandoo participants and staff

Irina Safaryan is a political scientist, translator and freelance journalist based in Stepanakert. She earned her master's degree at Yerevan State University's Department of International Relations; she's also studied at the Diplomatic School of Armenia. She was an intern at the European Parliament and is well-informed on EU-Armenia relations. Irina is the co-founder of the first Wikipedia Club in Artsakh, an author of more than 100 articles in Armenian Wikipedia. Irina is interested in politics, education, new technologies and everything connected to peace and sustainable development of Artsakh.


Birth and marriage rates increase in Nagorno-Karabakh




Lilit Shahverdyan Jul 25, 2022



Rates of births and marriages have increased in Nagorno-Karabakh so far in 2022, reversing declines seen in the aftermath of the COVID pandemic and the 2020 war with Azerbaijan.

In the first half of 2022, 864 children were born in Karabakh, the territory’s de facto authorities reported. That would be the highest per capita rate since before 2020.

The recent record year for births per capita in Karabakh was 2018, when 2,204 children were born in a population then estimated at 150,000, a birth rate of about 1.4 percent. That dropped to 1,614 in 2020 and then further to 1,463 in 2021. The 864 in the first six months of 2022 would outpace either of those years.

The per capita rate may be even larger than in 2018, given that the population’s territory has shrunk in the aftermath of the war. As a result of the war Armenian forces lost control of some territories where Armenians had been living, and many other former residents also fled to Armenia or elsewhere. In July 2021, the local authorities reported that the population remaining in the Armenian-populated territories was roughly 110,000.

Marriage rates, too, have spiked recently.

In the first half of 2022, the Ministry of Justice has registered 451 marriages. That compares to 899 in all of 2018 (a pre-war maximum for marriages, as well as for births) and 836 in 2019. The figure dipped to just 165 in 2020, as coronavirus restrictions and then the war made weddings nearly impossible, before rebounding to 1,314 in 2021

Demography has long been a concern among the Armenians of Karabakh. The issue was most memorably addressed by a 2008 mass wedding in which roughly 700 couples tied the knot. The endeavor was sponsored by a Karabakh-born Russian businessman, Levon Hayrapetyan, and supported by the local authorities. Hayrapetyan said he initiated the event to stimulate Karabakh’s birth rate, which he called its “weakest link.” Birth rates reportedly rose 25 percent following the mass wedding.

Also in 2008, the de facto government began giving aid to encourage marriages and births: It gave every newly married couple 300,000 drams (about $730) on their wedding day, and then grants of 100,000 drams ($245), 200,000 drams ($490), and 500,000 drams ($1,225) for their first, second, and third children, respectively. Fourth and subsequent children got 700,000 drams ($1,175) each and families with six or more children under 18 got a free apartment.

Following the war, the government further boosted those amounts: Now first and second children get 300,000 drams each, and parents with disabilities get even larger aid.

“Step by step, we are continuing to create the necessary conditions for living and development. The year 2021 should mark the beginning of a new vision of Artsakh, where the children of Artsakh will make a great contribution," the then de facto Minister of Labor and Social Affairs, Mane Tandilyan, said in announcing the new policy in December 2020. (Artsakh is an Armenian name for the region.)

Karabakh also is soon set to have a new maternity hospital, after construction was delayed as a result of the war. During the fighting in October 2020, Azerbaijani forces shelled the hospital, which was then under construction. That set back progress, but on July 19 the de facto Ministry of Urban Development announced that construction of the hospital, in Stepanakert, had been completed. They did not specify when it would open.

Lilit Shahverdyan is a journalist based in Stepanakert. 

 

Iran-Armenia joint industry, mining, trade working group holds meeting

TEHRAN TIMES
Iran –
  1. Economy
– 15:9
 

TEHRAN – Iran-Armenia joint industry, mining, and trade working group held a meeting on Monday in which the two sides discussed the implementation of agreements and memorandums reached in the last meeting of Iran-Armenia Joint Economic Committee.

Hosted by Iran’s Trade Promotion Organization (TPO), the event was attended by TPO Head Alireza Peyman-Pak, Director-General of the TPO's office of Central Asia, Caucasus, and Russia Rahmatollah Khormali, as well as Armenia’s deputy economy minister.

As reported by the TPO portal, the parties discussed issues such as Iran's export of engineering and technical services to Armenia, barter trade between the two countries, developing the north-south corridor, establishing joint industrial parks, and joint production of medicine and medical equipment in Iran as well as the exchange of pharmaceuticals.

While welcoming the idea of the joint production of medicine and medical equipment in Armenia, the Armenian side considered this project as an opportunity to enter international markets.

Also, referring to the 33 percent growth of trade exchanges between the two countries in the first five months of 2022, the Armenian deputy economy minister welcomed the establishment of Iran's trade center in Yerevan and requested to send business and pharmaceutical delegations from Iran to Armenia to get to know their counterparts and hold B2B meetings.

EF/MA

How Historic Sites Have Become Battlegrounds Around the World

Foreign Policy
July 24 2022

By FP Contributors
Green cladding surrounds the Ghazanchetsots, an Armenian Apostolic cathedral damaged in the war, during construction on the building in Shusha on Sept. 25. EMRE CAYLAK PHOTOS FOR FOREIGN POLICY

“There was a time, long ago, when Kabul sat at an axis of global power, its rulers enthroned in a vast citadel, surrounded by Buddhist monasteries, on the crossroads of trading routes that took wealth and learning to all points of Asia and beyond,” FP’s Lynne O’Donnell writes. “Today, the remains of that citadel tell the story of thousands of years in the history of what is now a very different Afghanistan.”

In this edition of Flash Points, we wanted to share our essays and reporting on historic sites around the world—from Afghanistan’s Bala Hissar to Laos’s Luang Prabang—and the stories they tell about their countries’ past and future as they’re being preserved, disputed, and destroyed.—Chloe Hadavas

Shusha was the key to the recent war between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Now Baku wants to turn the fabled fortress town into a resort, Liz Cookman writes.

————————

Armenian News note: For additional places and sites around the world, please click on the link below: