Armenia Foreign Ministry condemns violation of ceasefire by Azerbaijan and calls for mirror withdrawal of troops

NEWS.am
Armenia –

We strongly condemn the flagrant violation of the ceasefire by the Azerbaijani armed forces on on the South-Eastern border of the Republic of Armenia, which resulted in the death of Armenian soldier Davi Vahan Vardanyan, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said, commenting on the case of an Armenian serviceman killed as a result of yesterday’s shelling by the Azerbaijani armed forces.

It is notable that this provocation was preceded by destructive, bellicose statements of the President of Azerbaijan of 27 May which included insults to the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia.

Since May 2021, the Azerbaijani armed forces have illegally encroached upon the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia in the Sotq-Khoznavar segment, occupying over 45 square kilometers of territory.

Similar provocations and incidents, both on 28 May and earlier, regular violations of the ceasefire once again substantiate the need for the withdrawal of troops from the borderline and the deployment of an observer mission, as the Armenian side has repeatedly stated.

Also considering the fact that the Security Commission on Border Demarcation and Delimitation between Armenia and Azerbaijan has already started its work, this incident should be duly investigated and assessed by the Commission.

At the same time, we recall the consequences of the previous gross violation of the statement of 9 November 2020, as a result of which the Azerbaijani Armed Forces invaded the village of Parukh in Nagorno-Karabakh, which is within the zone of responsibility of the Russian peacekeeping mission, have still not been eliminated.

We consider important the proper and targeted assessment by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair countries, the European Union and the entire international community of Azerbaijan’s provocative actions and statements, aggressive rhetoric aimed at breaking the efforts to achieve peace in the South Caucasus.

We urge the Azerbaijani leadership to refrain from provocative actions and rhetoric and fulfill its commitments on establishing security and stability in the region, taken on the basis of trilateral statements and meetings in Brussels,” the statement from the Armenian Foreign Ministry reads.

Discussion on relationship between homeland and diaspora takes place on France Square

NEWS.am
Armenia –

Today there is a discussion on “The Homeland-Diaspora: Current Failures and Future Reconstruction” on  France Square in Yerevan.

Today, the resistance movement will not hold any acts of disobedience or rally.

Tomorrow, at 11:00 a.m., members of the movement will gather in the square and, divided into groups, they will go to different places to understand the position of different structures and political forces.

The Resistance Movement has been holding disobedience actions and rallies since 2 May, demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Discussion on ‘Political Prisoners in Democratic Bastion: Law and Permissiveness’ takes place on France Square

NEWS.am
Armenia –

Today the members of the Resistance Movement organized discussion on ” Political Prisoners in Democratic Bastion: Law and Permissiveness” on France Square

Today, the resistance movement will not hold any acts of disobedience or rally.

Tomorrow, at 11:00 a.m., members of the movement will gather on the square and, divided into groups, they will go to different places to understand the position of different structures and political forces.

The Resistance Movement has been holding disobedience actions and rallies since 2 May, demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Sports: Armenia’s Rafael Hovhannisyan is in the final

NEWS.am
Armenia –

Armenia has the first participant in the final of the European Boxing Championship.

Rafael Hovhannisyan, the first Armenian participant to enter the ring on the 6th day of the European Championships in Yerevan, competed in the 86 kg weight category semifinals with Poland’s Tomasz Niedzwiecki and celebrated a brilliant victory, securing at least a silver medal.

In all three rounds, the referees awarded the victory to the representative of Armenia.

Sports: Artur Bazeyan and Hovhannes Bachkov to fight for the title

NEWS.am
Armenia –

Artur Bazeyan and Hovhannes Bachkov reached the final of the European Boxing Championship in Yerevan.

Artur Bazeyan (57 kg) celebrated an impressive victory in the semifinals. The opponent was Javier Diaz Ibanez from Bulgaria. In Bazeyan’s fight, the referees gave the advantage to the Armenian boxer in three rounds.

The bronze medalist of the Tokyo Olympics Hovhannes Bachkov competed in the semifinals of the 63.5 kg weight class with the Hungarian Richard Kovacs and did not give any chance to his opponent with a score of 5-0.

The boxers met for the second time in the ring. The first fight took place in the quarterfinals of the 2017 European Championship in Kharkov, Hovhannes Bachkov won.

FP: Azerbaijan Stands to Win Big in Europe’s Energy Crisis: That spells trouble in Nagorno-Karabakh.

By Gabriel Gavin, a British journalist covering Eurasian politics and society.

On March 9, the gas went off in Nagorno-Karabakh. “I remember waking up to find there was no heating and no breakfast,” said Irina Safaryan, a 29-year-old translator living in Stepanakert, the largest city in the disputed region. “We had been celebrating International Women’s Day,” she added sarcastically, “and this was the best present Azerbaijan could come up with for us.”

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Nagorno-Karabakh’s majority ethnic Armenian population has effectively governed itself as the unrecognized Republic of Artsakh, despite being inside Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized borders. In 2020, after a brief but bloody war that ended with a Moscow-brokered peace deal, the region’s Yerevan-backed separatists were forced to give up control of a number of towns and cities, but the core of their self-proclaimed state, including Stepanakert, remains under their control.

Although the war has ended, officials in Stepanakert have accused the Azerbaijani government of trying to freeze them out by cutting off their only natural gas pipeline, which runs through Baku’s newly captured territory. As temperatures in the mountain city plummeted below freezing, and without any heating, more than 100,000 people were left to stave off the icy cold as best they could over the two weeks that followed until supplies were restored. Many residents, like Safaryan, collected wood and burned fires in their homes, grilling meat and vegetables over the flames after their stoves stopped working. Others piled into basements to stay warm as the snow fell, their children in tow.

Baku has branded Stepanakert’s claims of turning off the taps as “baseless,” but amid a spate of clashes in recent weeks that have reportedly left Armenian service members dead, it is clear that the decades-long standoff is entering a dangerous new phase where energy could become part of the war of attrition. With the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh increasingly under pressure, Baku seems eager to resolve the issue of the disputed territory once and for all, sparking fears that new fighting could see the separatists lose yet more ground and displace civilians across the border to Armenia.

Now, as much of Europe plans to sanction energy exports from Russia in the wake of its invasion of Ukraine, Azerbaijan has set its sights on exporting more gas to the continent. For decades, the European Union has depended on Russia for cheap gas, even after its 2014 annexation of Crimea. Boasting colossal Caspian Sea gas fields, connected to Italy and Greece via the Southern Gas Corridor pipeline network, Baku is in a prime position to help fill the gap left by Moscow.

Last month, as residents of Stepanakert were thawing out from around a dozen days without heat, Azerbaijan’s state-owned oil company SOCAR announced that it planned to increase exports of natural gas to Europe by 30 percent this year and had already delivered 2.6 billion cubic meters in the first quarter alone. “This adds value to Azerbaijan’s economy,” a SOCAR spokesperson said, “at the same time cementing the country’s standing as Europe’s reliable gas supplier.”

Baku is in a prime position to help fill the gap left by Moscow.

For Brussels, the offer could hardly come at a better time. Although negotiations among the 27 EU member states over a ban on all Russian fossil fuels have run aground because countries such as Hungary are holding out for exemptions on cheap crude oil imports, gas is one area in which almost every state agrees it is time to divest. This is in no small part due to the fact there is a wide availability of alternative providers.

On May 18, the European Commission presented its REPowerEU plan to wean its energy network off dependency on Moscow once and for all, admitting that “[h]igh amounts paid for Russia’s fossil fuels are helping Russia sustain its war against Ukraine.” As part of that, Brussels is pushing for a 30 percent reduction in gas consumption by 2030 across member states while also redoubling efforts to secure alternative providers as it phases in renewables.

Meanwhile, disruption has already caused shortages and rising costs for consumers across Europe, driving a wave of populism, protests, and unrest, as well as a burgeoning cost of living crisis. The shortages even became a defining issue in April’s French presidential election, as incumbent Emmanuel Macron faced criticism from far-right challenger Marine Le Pen over the price ordinary people are paying for sanctions on Russia.

Against that tense backdrop, this month at a meeting in Brussels, Elnur Soltanov, Azerbaijan’s deputy energy minister, held talks with Cristina Lobillo Borrero, the EU’s energy policy director. “A dedicated meeting took place to discuss ongoing gas cooperation and prospects for increasing export volumes of Azerbaijani gas to the EU,” the European Commission’s official readout concluded.

The potential benefits for Baku, whose oil and gas revenues made it the fastest-growing economy in the world from 2000 to 2014, are enormous. According to the Finland-based Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, Moscow has received almost $25 billion in payments by EU nations for gas alone in the months since Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine. That sum, now effectively on offer to other nations that can meet demand, is roughly 10 times Azerbaijan’s total gas revenues in 2019.

The country is unlikely to ever be able to match Russia’s vast total output, according to Gubad Ibadoghlu, an Azerbaijani economist and senior visiting fellow at the London School of Economics. “At best, in five years, the country will be able to transport 20 billion cubic meters of gas to Europe within the second phase of the Southern Gas Corridor,” he said. That’s just an eighth of the 155 billion cubic meters the EU bought from Russia in 2021. Still, Baku’s ability to ramp up production shows it stands to increase its share in the lucrative market.

The energy arrangement may be mutually beneficial for both the EU and Azerbaijan, but it comes just two months after the European Parliament voted in favor of a resolution “strongly condemn[ing] Azerbaijan’s continued policy of erasing and denying the Armenian cultural heritage in and around Nagorno-Karabakh.” According to the motion, which passed in a 635-2 vote, this includes “historical revisionism and hatred towards Armenians promoted by the Azerbaijani authorities, including dehumanisation, the glorification of violence and territorial claims against the Republic of Armenia which threaten peace and security in the South Caucasus.”

Those condemnations, however, were shelved during the most recent round of high-level energy talks this month. In Nagorno-Karabakh—where accusations that Azerbaijan has been using its control over energy to push its political priorities and pressure its opponents have reached a fever pitch in recent months—the idea that Baku could strengthen its influence in the West is cause for consternation.

“We are concerned that Europe is deepening its dependence on authoritarian Azerbaijan, which is perpetrating crimes against humanity,” Artak Beglaryan, the state minister and de facto leader of the self-declared Republic of Artsakh, told Foreign Policy. By failing to take action against Baku over the alleged gas shutoff in Nagorno-Karabakh, he said, “the international community has turned a blind eye to continuous and harsh human rights and humanitarian law violations, just so as not to have difficulties with its own gas and oil supply.”

“If democracy and human rights, as well as regional stability, matter to the West, there should be conditions set as part of gas negotiations with Azerbaijan,” Beglaryan said. He admitted that this may be unlikely given the pressures European nations are facing but believes even outside of energy talks that “a minimum should be having genuine international guarantees on preventing new aggressions and crimes.”

This month, European Council President Charles Michel held renewed talks with both Azerbaijan and Armenia on the prospect of a peace treaty that would finally put an end to the conflict. Writing on Twitter, he said that “[t]angible progress” had been made on issues including the humanitarian situation. Despite that, few in Stepanakert are hopeful that such talks will lead to a lasting settlement.

For the time being, energy exports are enabling Azerbaijan to bankroll its ambitions to become a major regional power. A year on from capturing swaths of territory in Nagorno-Karabakh, Baku has continued to plow funds into its armed forces, allocating around $2.6 billion for defense and national security in 2022. That’s more than 5 percent of its GDP—the fifth-highest figure of any country in the world. It has also become a major buyer of advanced hardware such as Turkey’s Bayraktar TB-2 drones, which have gained a fearsome reputation in Ukraine targeting Russian troops. The spending is matched by increasingly tough rhetoric about the need for Azerbaijan to resolve the status of its border with Armenia and eliminate the “separatist terrorists” in charge in Stepanakert.

“They are increasing the money allocated from the state budget for the military to help with the restoration of liberated territories and strengthen defense capacity,” said Ibadoghlu, the Azerbaijani economist. Yet although the EU is helping to fund this expansion, Ibadoghlu is skeptical that it will become too politically dependent on Azerbaijani gas. “When it comes to alternatives to decrease its dependency on Russian gas, Azerbaijan’s capabilities seem weak compared to the U.S., Qatar, Algeria, and even Iran,” he added.

That list of states that stand to gain from the collapse of Russia’s reputation as a reliable energy provider is growing, and, like Azerbaijan, many have had turbulent relationships with the West in the past.

While the Kremlin has shown it is ready and willing to use energy as a weapon, it is clear that it may not be the only fossil fuel exporter to come up with the strategy of leveraging Western dependency to forestall its critics and drive its military ambitions. As Ukraine can attest, access to cheap energy can go a long way toward helping the world turn a blind eye to territorial ambitions and human rights transgressions. Now, many in Nagorno-Karabakh fear the same mistake is being made once again.

Gabriel Gavin is a British journalist covering Eurasian politics and society. Twitter: @GabrielCSGavin


https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/05/27/azerbaijan-europe-energy-gas-exports-russia-war-ukraine-nagorno-karabakh/

Sports: Bottle-throwing protests over TKO decision for home super-heavyweight at European Boxing Championships in Armenia




Angry fans threw water bottles into the ring at the European Men’s Elite Boxing Championships in Yerevan, Armenia when the referee stopped the super heavyweight over-92 kilograms quarter-final bout between home boxer Davit Chaloyan and Spain’s Ayoub Ghadfa Drissi El Aissaoui.

The Spaniard was declared winner by technical knockout in the first round.

But Chaloyan was on his feet and appeared to be fit to continue fighting when the referee stopped the bout after giving him two standing eight-counts.

Chaloyan’s corner was visibly angry over the decision and his coach threw a water bottle at the referee, armenpress.am reports.

Fans began throwing water bottles into the ring as well, hitting the Team Armenia head coach Karen Aghamalyan.

In the meantime Team Armenia has already disputed the referee’s decision.

But home fans had cause for celebrations at this European Boxing Confederation (EUBC) event as four Armenian boxers guaranteed themselves a medal of some colour by winning their quarter-finals today.

Heavyweight Narek Manasyan progressed via a 5-0 verdict over Vahan Nanidsanyan of Greece in his under-92kg bout.

Also through to the last four are featherweight Arthur Bazeyan in the under-57kg category, cruiserweight Rafael Hovhannisyan and the strongest prospect of all the home boxers, light-welterweight Hovhannes Bachkov in the under-63.5kg class, who is seeking a third European title and has already set up a professional career.

Semi-finals will take place at the championships on Sunday (May 29) after tomorrow’s rest day, with finals scheduled for Monday (May 30).

Meanwhile eight British boxers have guaranteed themselves medals by reaching the last four in their respective weight categories.

England’s Kiaran MacDonald, Harris Akbar, Lewis Richardson, Lewis Williams and Delicious Orie, Wales’ Ioan and Garan Croft and Scotland’s Sam Hickey all progressed, although Scotland’s Reese Lynch suffered a unanimous points defeat against France’s Lounes Hamraoui.

MacDonald got the day off to a solid start when he earned a 4-1 decision over Ireland’s Sean Mari.

He will now seek a place in the flyweight final when he takes on Italy’s number two seed, Federico Emilio Serra, on May 29.

Sam Hickey earned Scotland’s first senior European medal for 16 years when he beat Serbia’s Almir Memic via split decision.

The middleweight put together a huge final round to guarantee his place on the podium.

“I’m buzzing, but that was tough,” Hickey told GB Boxing.

“I’ve been against two tough opponents so far who both want to come at me, and I had to have a good last round again, so I need to get rid of these slow starts and make sure I get to it right away.

“You can’t expect to get it all your own way at these Championships, you have to dig deep.

“That’s my fourth European medal from youth, under-22s and now senior so I’m really happy with that.”

He was swiftly followed into the ring by Richardson, who secured his first senior European medal through a unanimous verdict over Germany’s Kevin Schumann.

The two British middleweights and GB Boxing teammates, Hickey and Richardson, will now face each other in the semi-finals when action resumes on May 29.

Eight British boxers earned themselves medals at the EUBC Men’s Championships in Yerevan today after winning their quarter-final bouts ©GB Boxing

Concluding the afternoon session was super-heavyweight Delicious Orie.

Facing him was Turkey’s Berat Acar but he was no match for Orie who dominated all three rounds on his way to a unanimous victory.

Orie will next box Nelvie Raman Hess Tiafack, with the winner contesting the final on May 30.

“I’ve got myself a European medal – that’s the dream,” Orie said.

“We keep pushing now and this was just the first step.

“We’re going to change the colour of it to silver on Sunday and then to gold on Monday.”

Today’s evening session saw Ioan Croft become the first Welsh member of the team to secure a medal with a 3-2 verdict over Deniel Crotter of Germany.

He will now face Lasha Guruli of Georgia in his semi-final bout.

Light-middleweight Harris Akbar then eased past Italy’s Salvatore Cavallero via unanimous decision in his quarter-final bout.

The Bradford boxer will once again face Ukraine’s Yurii Zakharieiev, whom he boxed in last year’s World Championships.

Garan Croft joined his brother in the semis via a 3-2 decision over Necat Ekinci of Turkey.

Williams then ensured Britain’s boxers will leave Yerevan with eight medals following his 4-0 win over Serbia’s Sadam Magomedov, which has set up a meeting with Georgia’s Giorgi Tchigladze.

Anti-Kremlin protesters look to Armenia for safety

BBC News

Preparations were under way for a pop-up Russian wedding in the courtyard of a disused textile factory in the remote Armenian town of Tumanyan. Most of the guests were artists and musicians who had fled Russia.

Bride and groom Yura Boguslavsky and Asya Kiselyova, both animation artists from Moscow, moved here to escape Russia’s crackdown on anti-war protesters.

“We got arrested together – Asya, our friends and even her parents,” said the bridegroom. “Everyone has relatives and friends in Ukraine. It’s crazy, and it’s not us who should have been arrested.”

Challenging Russia’s war has become a criminal offence, for anyone deemed to have spread “fake news”.

Since the invasion of Ukraine, an estimated 108,000 Russian citizens have come here.

With European destinations closed to Russian airlines, there are few options left. Armenia requires no entry visas and there are regular flights here from Moscow. The two countries have long-standing ties. Armenia is Russia’s strategic ally in the South Caucasus region and hosts a Russian military base as well as being part of the Russian-led security alliance CSTO.

Russians have also moved to Georgia or Turkey, or other destinations that will take them.

After his detention, strange, anti-government messages appeared on Yura’s phone as the couple were preparing to board their flight to the capital, Yerevan.

Yura was well aware that Russia’s FSB security service had been ordering people to unlock their phones to reveal personal messages and contacts. He feared the messages may have been an attempt to incriminate him, but he made it through security without being stopped.

As the guests brought out tables and erected gazebos, the bride’s mother, Valeriya Kiselyova, revealed that back in Russia her husband had stopped a car with the letter Z emblazoned on its windscreen – one of the propaganda symbols of the invasion.

“He took out a shovel and ordered them to rip it off. I realised then that we had to leave to avoid being imprisoned,” she said.

Wedding guest Polina Prokofyeva described spending 12 days in a prison cell for taking part in an anti-war rally in St Petersburg.

“The whole process was so humiliating, they try to make you feel that you are nobody and your voice means nothing,” she said. After a three-minute court hearing, she said she was convicted of taking part in resisting Russia’s so-called special military operation.

Many Russian emigres here are IT specialists who see Armenia as a practical place to resettle.

The arrival of tens of thousands of highly skilled Russian citizens will have a positive impact on Armenia’s economy, says Haykaz Fanyan of the Armenian Centre for Socioeconomic Studies.

“In March, Armenia’s accommodation and food services sector recorded growth of 230% and 30% compared with the same period last year. Relocated Russians established 1,500 enterprises, of which 300 are companies and the rest are private entrepreneurs.”

Among them was Dima, a 34-year Muscovite, who has just opened a cafe serving Israeli and Korean food. “At the beginning of March the centre of Yerevan looked like the centre of Moscow, there were so many Russians,” he said. “They looked lost and didn’t know what to do.”

He had been considering leaving Russia even before the war.

“We’ve been losing our freedom for some time, now it’s dangerous for me to go back because two years ago I posted some anti-government message on Facebook, I could be jailed for it now.”

Sitting at his cafe were a young couple.

“I served in a regular army for a year, and now I’d have to serve again as there was mobilisation,” says video games developer Sergei. “I didn’t want to be jailed for avoiding military service, but I also did not want to kill innocent people, so I decided to leave.”

He is ashamed of once voting for Vladimir Putin while serving in the army in return for more food: “I sold my country for two gingerbread cookies.”

His partner Anya, an English tutor, dropped out of her third year at university when her head of department declared that Ukrainians deserved what Russia was inflicting on them.

“It opened my eyes, I could not believe it that those responsible for teaching could say such things, that it was right to kill someone and that it was not right to say anything against it.”

Russian state TV has not just spread propaganda and disinformation about the war in Ukraine, it has also reported on riots in Armenia that never happened.

Anya said she had to reassure her mother that recent anti-government protests had been largely peaceful: “I checked the reports she was talking about and found out that Russian TV used footage from riots in France.”

Opposition protesters set up a tent city, demanding Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resignation over territory lost to neighbouring Azerbaijan during a 2020 war.

Here too, Kremlin disinformation has found a ready audience, as most Armenians speak Russian.

“We are for Russia, the Russians are our brothers,” said one female protester. Others gathered around, voicing their support.

Vardan Makhitaryan picks up the conversation: “We don’t want this democracy that destroyed the strong Armenian army, and Russia does not want it either. Why is the whole world looking at Russia with wolf eyes? Russia did not attack Ukraine, it is just defending itself.”

Sentiments like these may be of concern for recent Russian arrivals who oppose the war against Ukraine, and Polina Prokofyeva fears Armenia may not be the safe haven that dissidents need.

She points out that some hotels have been asked by police to hand over data of their Russian guests. “Just talking to people in Yerevan, I feel they don’t really get what’s going on and they’re on the side of my government which punished me and all my friends,” she said.

But Valeriya, mother of the bride, said she had nothing but gratitude for the welcome she had so far received. “Since leaving Russia, I’ve seen so much beauty. Had it not been for the war I would have died from happiness.”

California’s Oldest Armenian Church to Start Milestone Year on Memorial Day 2022

Reedley, CA
Armenian California

California’s oldest Armenian religious institution will inaugurate its Quasquicentennial year with a Memorial Day picnic at a matchless venue on the Fresno County Blossom Trail.

Members and friends of Fresno’s First Armenian Presbyterian Church will mark the start of their 125th Anniversary Year on Monday, May 30, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Hillcrest Tree Farm, 6943 South Reed Avenue at Adams Avenue in Reedley, California, 16 miles east of Freeway 99.

The public is invited to attend the event, which will include complimentary barbecue kebab and hot dog lunches, water slide bounce houses for children, a backgammon tournament, and steam train rides for all ages. Advance reservations may be made by calling (559) 237-6638 or visiting www.fapc.net.

Virtuoso musician Richard Avedis Hagopian and his band will join the celebrants for an afternoon of ethnic music and dancing. A native of rural Fowler, California and proficient in more than 50 musical instruments, Hagopian is best known as a Master of the Oud, a lute-like instrument. He gained fame as part of the Kef Time Band, which played a style of dance music popular among the Armenian-American communities throughout the United States for the past half century.

Hillcrest Farm is the oldest Christmas Tree Farm in the San Joaquin Valley of California. Founded in 1960 by Ed and Bonnie Toews, the Farm includes the Hillcrest & Wahtoke Railroad, a five-inch scale/15-inch narrow gauge railway with live steam locomotives and a host of gondolas and stock cars. U.S. Air Force Veterans Sean and Melissa Bautista are the current proprietors of the Farm, Shops, and 1.2 mile Railroad.

Forty immigrants from Marsovan chartered the First Armenian Presbyterian Church in a rented Fresno hall on July 25, 1897. Succeeding generations served in the United States military during World Wars I and II, the Korean conflict, and in Southeast Asia. The congregation’s picnic tradition began with turn-of-the-century Decoration Day gatherings at The Hills, Fresno Beach on the San Joaquin River, Tarpinian Ranch, and Chateau Fresno Park.

The custom of placing flowers on the graves of the war dead began on May 5, 1866 in Waterloo, New York. In 1868, General John A. Logan, Commander in Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, declared May 30 a day for decorating the graves of dead comrades with flowers. He closed his order by stating: “Let no ravages of time testify to coming generations that we have forgotten as a people the cost of a free and undivided Republic.”

The boyhood Church of Authors William Saroyan and A.I. Bezzerides, FAPC is a member congregation of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC) and the Armenian Evangelical Union of North America (AEUNA). Reverend Gregory Vahack Haroutunian is the Senior Pastor. The 2022 theme of the congregation is: “Love God. Love Others. Make Disciples.”

Fulton Street Church (1901-1985)First Armenian Presbyterian Church of Fresno

Armenia eyes on concluding agreement between Iran, EAEU

Iran –

TEHRAN, May 28 (MNA) – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in the Eurasian Economic Union Forum said that Yerevan is interested in concluding an agreement between Iran and the Union.

Suggesting the development of pilot projects and joint events with the aim of expanding and deepening trade and economic relations and establishing collaborations, Pashinian emphasized the importance of establishing relations with third countries, including Iran.

Stressing the importance of paying attention to Yerevan’s interest in concluding a full-fledged free trade agreement between Iran and the Union, Pashinian stated that the experience of the operation of the interim agreement with Tehran clearly shows the attractiveness of the Iranian market and the prospects of further deepening cooperation.

“We also want to start negotiations for an agreement between the Union and Indonesia,” he added.

Citing that eight years have passed since the signing of the agreement establishing the Eurasian Economic Union, the Armenian prime minister said that the union is very promising and attractive for other countries.

The first Eurasian Economic Forum was held in the Kyrgyz capital yesterday.

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