Asbarez: Dr. Arman Tatoyan Appointed Full Time Professor at AUA

Dr. Arman Tatoyan


YEREVAN (AUA Newsroom)—The American University of Armenia announced the appointment of Dr. Arman Tatoyan as full time professor in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, effective July 2022.

Having joined AUA in 2011 as an adjunct lecturer, he has taught courses on human rights and international criminal law, and has supervised master’s papers of students in the AUA Master of Laws (LL.M.) program. Starting in the 2022-23 academic year, Dr. Tatoyan will be teaching new courses in addition to his current ones.

Dr. Tatoyan has served as the human rights defender of the Republic of Armenia (RA) and head of the National Preventive Mechanism (2016 to 2022) elected by the RA National Assembly. He has also served as an ad hoc judge in the European Court of Human Rights (2016 to 2019). His first mandate for the Council of Europe Committee of Ministers, European Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT), was as member in respect of Armenia in 2011 to 2013. He was re-elected to the CPT in 2019.  

Dr. Tatoyan holds an LL.M. degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School and is the recipient of the Distinguished Member Award of the LL.M. class of 2013. Prior to receiving his Ph.D. from the Yerevan State University (YSU) Faculty of Law, he completed the Wharton Business School Executive Education Program in Business and Law at the University of Pennsylvania. He also holds an academic rank of docent.

Dr. Tatoyan has served as RA deputy minister of justice (2013-2016) and as deputy representative (deputy agent) of Armenia in the European Court of Human Rights (2013 to 2016). He has extensive professional experience in the RA Constitutional Court and Cassation Court, as well as in civil society and international organizations, including the United Nations (UN), the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), the Council of Europe (CoE), and the United States Agency for International Development.

On the occasion of his new appointment, Dr. Tatoyan noted, “AUA’s vibrant community is linked to a record of scholarly and professional achievements in all disciplines. My primary goal at AUA is to teach legal knowledge, legal reasoning, and legal thinking to create models for the shaping and further development of human rights and legal systems through effective solutions and overcoming challenges. Knowledge-based analytical probing is prevalent in teaching as a foundation for a democratic and rule-of-law-based state”.

In turn, LL.M. Program Chair, Assistant Professor Adelaida Baghdasaryan remarked, “I am excited for the extensive opportunity Dr. Tatoyan’s appointment affords our students to learn volumes of knowledge and professionalism from Dr. Tatoyan. Knowing him personally and professionally, I could not be more proud and happy for our students and the program.”

Founded in 1991, the American University of Armenia is a private, independent university located in Yerevan, Armenia, affiliated with the University of California, and accredited by the WASC Senior College and University Commission in the United States. AUA provides local and international students with Western-style education through top-quality undergraduate, graduate, and certificate programs, promotes research and innovation, encourages civic engagement and community service, and fosters democratic values.

AW: “The Future of Things Passed” celebrates contemporary Armenian art

Collectors Preview of The Future of Things Passed (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

NEW YORK, NY—The future of the Armenian community was on display at the opening reception of “The Future of Things Passed” exhibition in Manhattan on May 19th.

The exhibition features celebrated women artists of Armenian descent Eozen Agopian, Melissa Dadourian, Linda Ganjian and Judith Simonian. It is the first developed by the Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice, co-founded by Christopher Atamian and Tamar Hovsepian. Part of the proceeds from art sales at the exhibition will be donated to the New York Armenian Students’ Association Scholarship Fund.

Eozen Agopian, Christopher Atamian, Judith Simonian and Tamar Hovsepian (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

Atamian and Hovsepian launched the practice to promote representation of contemporary artists from marginalized backgrounds.

“We identified that we want to show marginalized groups—Armenian, women, LGBTQ+, people of color,” Hovsepian told the Armenian Weekly.

Hovsepian has previously worked with all of the artists featured in “The Future of Things Passed” in former galleries she has curated. She laments that while artists like Simonian, who gained renown within the downtown Los Angeles art scene of the 1980s, are internationally acclaimed, they are not as well known among Armenians. Through her joint curatorship with Atamian, she hopes to educate and cultivate a new generation of Armenian art collectors. 

“Larry Gagosian is one of the wealthiest, most famous art dealers, and he doesn’t have a single Armenian artist that he represents,” she offered as an example of the absence of support for contemporary Armenian art. “Why is there not a single art gallery in Chelsea that shows Armenian artists?”

Contemporary Armenian artists lack visibility both within the Armenian community and the broader contemporary art world, according to Hovsepian. She recalled the “Armenia!” exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which displayed the artistic achievements of Armenian people up until the 17th century. 

“You can’t title an exhibition ‘Armenia!’ and stop and then not talk about what’s happening now. Where is the contemporary Armenian art?” Hovsepian asked. “Outside of Arshile Gorky, who do we have at the Museum of Modern Art?”

“The Future of Things Passed” explores how art can “deconstruct and uncover elements of the past through sense memory and found objects, while making lasting statements through these interpretations,” as stated in an essay presented to visitors at the gallery door. The orientation of the gallery toward the future is inspired by Armenian Futurism, defined by Sylvia Alajaji as “a realm in which re-imaginings and re-claimings of queer and otherwise marginalized Armenian pasts give way to futures of possibility and wonder.”

Atamian says that Armenian Futurism, theorized by artists like Kamee Abrahamian, Mashinka Firunts Hakopian and Hrag Vartanian, can inspire creativity and visionary thinking beyond pain and hardship. 

“How do we create an inclusive vibrant forward-thinking Armenian community that thinks about its future and being progressive and being at the cutting edge?” Atamian posed. 

Atamian, a celebrated writer, editor and translator, noted how the artwork on display repurposes memories and found objects from the past. For instance, Ganjian’s series “Map of Her Prayers, No. 1-6,” incorporates inscriptions from a prayer book her grandmother carried with her through Der Zor during the Armenian Genocide. 

Map of Her Prayers #5 by Linda Ganjian (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

“How do you take something from the past and make something beautiful that’s forward thinking and that people want to collect?” Atamian said of the impact of Ganjian’s artwork.

Atamian believes that Armenians should support contemporary Armenian artwork, not only because it is beautiful, but also because it can promote Armenian political causes, such as Armenian Genocide recognition and the peaceful resolution of the Artsakh conflict, by generating an emotional investment in these issues. 

“People need to know who Armenians are,” Atamian said. “Americans and people in Europe don’t have a gut reaction to it, because they don’t know about it. If you have a piece of art or a book that is Armenian, you have an emotional connection rather than just a policy paper.”

K Sherbetdjian attended the opening reception and was struck by the emotional intensity of Ganjian’s artwork. 

“I’m looking at each individual component, and I’m wondering what the story is behind it and what the significance is for the artist, and then also what the significance is for me. The text that’s incorporated is in Armenian. I don’t speak Armenian. I just wonder what the passages are. It looks like there’s doorbells. I’m wondering if that is a signal to God or a signal for help. I like pieces where there’s a lot to think about,” Sherbetdjian reflected on “Map of Her Prayers.” 

As an artist, Caroline Gates recognized her own art studio within Studio Ballou, a painting of an art studio by Simonian. Gates wandered into “The Future of Things Passed” after a painting by Simonian near the door caught her eye. 

“Even in the abstraction you can hold onto something concrete. It does a really good job of taking us back through spaces that are familiar, but we could see it through every lens of the different times that we were there,” Gates said while studying Studio Ballou. “I feel very placed. I could stare at this forever.”

Studio Ballou by Judith Simonian (Photo: Atamian Hovsepian Curatorial Practice Facebook page)

Atamian and Hovsepian plan to continue curating exhibitions to place artwork by artists from marginalized backgrounds within institutions like museums and galleries. They hope Armenians will support their fellow artists by collecting contemporary art. 

“This is as beautiful as the art you find in any museum and community, so why not represent it?” Atamian posed. 

“The Future of Things Passed” will be on display until May 29, 2022 from 11 A.M.-7 P.M. on the ground floor of 138 West 25th Street, New York, NY 10001. 

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.


Iran plays its cards in the South Caucasus

Iranian Minister of Energy Ali Akbar Mehrabian in a meeting with Minister of Environment of Armenia Hakob Simidyan, May 11, 2022 (Photo: IRNA News Agency/Twitter)

In recent months, Iran has engaged in active foreign policy in the South Caucasus to push its geo-economic interests forward. Meanwhile, Western-led economic sanctions have pushed Russia to realize the significance of the North-South trade route. Iran defused and refreshed its relations with Azerbaijan and by engaging with Armenia it decreased Baku’s political pressure on Yerevan. The following analysis will highlight the recent events and the role Armenia and Azerbaijan play in Iran’s regional trade and economic interests. 

Defusing Relations with Azerbaijan

On March 11, 2022, Azerbaijan and Iran signed an agreement to establish new railway, highway and energy supply lines connecting the southern territories of Karabakh/Artsakh captured by Azerbaijan to the Nakhichevan exclave. According to the agreement, the new highway will be 55 kilometers long and start from Zankelan’s Aghbend. In addition to the highway, two railway bridges and a road bridge will be constructed over the bordering Arax River. The highway will eventually pass through northern Iran and connect to Nakhichevan’s Ordubad village. 

In his article “Construction of Highway and Railway Links Between Zangilan and Nakhchivan: The Views From Baku and Tehran,” Iranian political analyst Vali Kaleji highlights that this project has geo-economic importance for Azerbaijan and Iran. 

For Baku, the construction of this trans-Iranian Aghbend-Ordubad highway is essential for three reasons. First, it is a continuation of the Horadiz-Jabrayil (Cheragan)-Zankelan-Aghbend highway as this transit will push investors to invest in the southern regions of Karabakh currently under the control of Baku. Second, the 55-kilometer highway through Iran will be an alternative to the “Zangezur corridor” that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev was pushing for after the November 9, 2020 trilateral statement. With Iranian help, this alternative route will relieve some pressure off Armenia’s shoulders, as Baku was threatening to gain a corridor through the strategic Syunik region of southern Armenia and cut Armenia’s border with Iran. Moreover, Baku is also concerned that if PM Nikol Pashinyan’s government falls and the opposition comes to power, the new rulers will not provide any corridor to Azerbaijan through the Armenian territories. Hence, as Keleji noted, “Baku is deliberately pursuing another option should the Zangezur corridor not come to fruition.” Finally, Azerbaijan will establish a link with Nakhichevan through Iran, which will provide additional Iranian leverage over Azerbaijan in the future.

Iran, in turn, has its own considerations and interests for allowing the construction of a highway and railway between Zankelan and Nakhichevan across its own territory. In reaction to the expansionist narrative pushed by Azerbaijan over the “Zangezur Corridor” and Azerbaijani incursion over bordering villages in Syunik, Iran drew its red lines, and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps threatened to use military force to prevent any territorial change in its 44-kilometer border with Armenia. As such, Tehran sees the construction of a new highway and railway line between Zankelan and Nakhichevan via Iran as an appropriate alternative to the “Zangezur corridor” that will lower the military pressure on southern Armenia. For this reason, Ahmad Kazemi, an Iranian expert on the South Caucasus region, called the March 11 Iranian-Azerbaijani transit agreement “Baku’s reconciliation with geopolitical realities.” According to Kazemi, “the fact is that the Republic of Azerbaijan, after more than a year of efforts and adherence of Ankara’s and Tel Aviv’s approach in discussing of the fake Zangezur corridor or NATO Turan corridor, concluded that this corridor is imbued with historical aspirations, and territorial, security and political expectations will not be realized. Because the fake Zangezur corridor is basically a plan made and discussed in the think tanks of NATO, Turkey and the Zionist regime, which is aimed against the fundamental interests of Iran, Russia, and China. It is obvious that Iran, Russia and China will not allow geopolitical changes on the southern borders of Armenia to implement the fake Zangezur corridor in accordance with the UN Charter, which prohibits any change in the international borders.” In addition to this route, Iran is seeking to complete the construction of the Rasht-Astara railway to connect with Azerbaijan and access Russia and the Eurasian Economic Union market via a railway through Azerbaijan.

Meanwhile, with the ongoing war in Ukraine, Moscow has started to realize the importance of the North-South trade route. According to Kaleji, by strengthening this transit route, Moscow hopes to counter the tightening economic sanctions and transit restrictions on Russia that the West adopted in response to the war in Ukraine. In this regard, the Iranian Roads and Urban Development Minister Rostam Qasemi visited Moscow on April 30, 2022. Following his talks with Russian Transport Minister Vitaly Savelyev, the two officials signed a comprehensive agreement on cooperation in the field of transportation. Both ministers noted the importance of establishing a railway connecting both countries. The ministers also emphasized the need to complete the missing Rasht–Astara part of the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) as soon as possible. The 164 kilometer Rasht-Astara railway has faced years of construction and implementation problems. The main obstacle has been financing, particularly due to US sanctions on Iran. In 2016, the International Bank of Azerbaijan promised to allocate $500 million loans, however, the American side pressured Baku to give up the idea.

Nevertheless, Tehran is eager to implement this important railway project, along with other railway projects in the region. The Iranian-Armenian railway line from Meghri in Armenia’s Syunik province could have been an alternative, but it suffers from high costs and has not seen any progress since 2009. Plans to restore the Soviet-era east-west railway in the South Caucasus following the November 9, 2020, trilateral statement have not been implemented as the Azerbaijani side has interpreted the opening of communication routes into a “corridor” with a certain status carving the Armenian-Iranian border. Hence, the construction and completion of the Rasht-Astara railway, for now, is the only practical and accessible short-term prospect for Iran to connect to the South Caucasus. This would further isolate Armenia from regional trade routes. For Iran, its implementation will complete the last remaining section of the INSTC and create a railway connection for Azerbaijan, Georgia and Russia to Iran’s Chabahar Port on the Oman Sea and Bandar Abbas on the Persian Gulf.

Engaging in Proactive Relations with Armenia

Armenia’s poor infrastructure, slow progress in the construction of the 556-kilometer North-South highway connecting Georgia with Iran and the conflict over Artsakh with Azerbaijan have further isolated and delayed its participation in the regional economic project. Over the past few months, both Iran and India have been pushing Armenia to take crucial steps to be part of this North-South transport project. Important meetings between Iranian and Armenian officials have taken place over the past three months to address trade, transit and energy issues:

  • On March 2, 2022, Reza Fatemi-Amin, Iranian Minister of Industry, Mining and Trade led a high-ranking delegation of trade officials and private entrepreneurs to Armeniathe first of its kind since President Raisi took office last summer. CEOs of 35 Iranian private companies also accompanied the delegation. Iranian and Armenian officials discussed the implementation of trade agreements, cooperation in free zones, commodity trade, transportation and customs.
  • On April 29, 2022, Iran’s Finance and Economic Minister Ehsan Khandouzi headed a delegation to Yerevan to meet Armenian officials and negotiate with the Armenian side over trade. The Iranian side argued that there is still great potential for further expansion of bilateral cooperation and bringing the trade turnover between both sides to $1 billion. The Iranian minister also stated that the Iranian side attaches great importance not only to the development of trade with Armenia but also considers it as a “gateway” to the markets of Russia and other Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) member countries.
  • On May 11, 2022, Iranian Energy Minister Ali-Akbar Mehrabian traveled to Yerevan to attend the 17th Iran-Armenia Joint Economic Committee meeting to discuss transit, transportation, trade and energy.
  • On May 16, 2022, the Iranian Minister of Transport and Urban Development Rostam Ghasemi met with the Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure of the Republic of Armenia Gnel Sanosyan to discuss the details of bilateral transit cooperation and joint infrastructural projects. Both sides expressed their willingness for reaching agreements that would facilitate transit and trade between the two countries and in the region. 
  • Also on May 16, 2022, during a virtual meeting with Armenia’s Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Gnel Sanosyan, Kheirollah Khademi, director-general of Iran’s Construction and Development of Transportation Infrastructures Company, pointed to previous negotiations and visits to Armenia for the implementation of the road route connecting Iran’s bordering city Nurduz to Yerevan. Khademi discussed Iran’s preparation in the construction of the southern part of the strategically important Tatev Road in Sisian connecting it to Nurduz (Iran is interested in the construction of a tunnel and the development of Nurduz Terminal). Khademi also added that Tehran is ready to export technical and engineering services to Armenia to finalize the construction of the route from the Iranian border to Yerevan. 
  • In 2021, 22,500 Armenian trucks and 24,000 Iranian trucks were recorded to have passed from the Armenian-Iranian border. Commenting on the increase of the regional transit, Javed Hedayati, the general director of Iran Transit and International Transportation Bureau at Iran’s Road Maintenance and Transportation Organization, proposed for commercialization of the Iranian-Armenian trade routes. Both sides attributed the increase in transit to the importance of the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) and newly signed Persian Gulf-Black Sea Agreement. For the rail connection, Miad Salehi, head of the Islamic Republic of Iran Railways, highlighted three possibilities for rail transit between Iran and Armenia. The first two rail connections are:
  1. The Jolfa-Nakhichevan-Yerevan
  2. The Jolfa-Nurduz (in Iran) and Yerevan-Nurduz (in Armenia) railroads were agreed upon seven years ago. They have yet to be realized. 
  3. The multi-modal transit from Yerevan to Jolfa by road and then southward to the Port of Bandar Abbas by rail. In October 2021, Khademi (Iran’s Deputy Transport Minister) headed a delegation to Armenia to consider the participation of Iran in completing the Tatev Road as an alternative route to Goris-Kapan Road, which would bypass the highway handed over to Azerbaijan by the Armenian authorities, due to the heavy tolls levied to Iranian fleets.
  • On May 17, 2022, the Iranian Oil Minister Javad Oji met with the Armenian Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Gnel Sanosyan in Tehran and expressed Iran’s readiness for swapping Turkmenistan’s natural gas with Armenia. Minister Oji also said the National Iranian Gas Company’s (NIGC) is ready to increase gas exports to neighboring Armenia. “Negotiations for gas swap from Turkmenistan to Armenia have started, and we will soon achieve good results in this regard due to the high capacity of the country’s gas network,” added the Iranian minister. In 2004, the two countries signed a gas-for-electricity barter deal in which Iran would export gas to Armenia’s power plants as Armenia exports electricity to Iran over a 20-year period.

Conclusion

After November 9, 2020, Iran felt isolated from the region, but its absence didn’t last long. With the election of President Ebrahim Raisi, Tehran adopted a proactive foreign policy in the South Caucasus to secure its geo-economic interests. The so-called Zangezur corridor was a threat to Iran’s national security as it was going to bypass not only the Iranian territory and prevent Iran from gaining transit fees from the Azerbaijani trucks, but was also going to carve out international borders between Iran and Armenia. 

Iran had to play its cards and engage both Azerbaijan and Armenia to secure its interests. On one hand, Tehran fostered the construction of a railway with Azerbaijan to connect with Russia, and on the other hand started to increase its trade, energy and communication projects with Armenia. Iran’s engagement with Azerbaijan over the alternative “corridor” lifted the military and political pressure on Armenia regarding the Azerbaijani threat over Syunik, but at the same time kept Armenia isolated from regional communication and trade projects for the time being.

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: Shogher Margossian appointed assistant director of the Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation

The Armenian Communities Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation is pleased to announce the appointment of Shogher Margossian as assistant director. Margossian has been working with the Foundation since 2018 as an external consultant.

With a master’s degree in music and culture from London, additional graduate work in Brussels and undergraduate and postgraduate degrees in English and literature from Beirut, Margossian brings interdisciplinary approaches to her work. Multilingual and multicultural, she has worked with international and Armenian organizations in art, culture, history and education, including online publishing and design. She has developed strategies and managed projects that bring new approaches to issues pertaining to contemporary experiences, and specifically, Armenian experiences.

“We are keen to have Shogher Margossian as an inherent part of our team,” said Razmik Panossian, the director of the Armenian Communities Department, adding, “her skills, knowledge and enthusiasm will strengthen our programming and reinforce our holistic approach to Armenian culture and language.”

Margossian will assume her duties on June 1, 2022.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/27/2022

                                        Friday, 
Armenian Defense Chief Lauds Russian Peacekeepers
Armenia - Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikian meets with the commander of 
Russian peacekeeping forces in Nagorno-Karabakh, Major General Andrei Volkov, 
Yerevan, .
Defense Minister Suren Papikian praised Russian peacekeeping forces deployed in 
Nagorno-Karabakh when he met with their commander in Yerevan on Friday.
The Armenian Defense Ministry said Major-General Andrei Volkov briefed Papikian 
on the situation and “current developments” in the peacekeepers’ area of 
responsibility. They also discussed broader security in the region, the ministry 
said in a statement.
“The interlocutors praised the Russian Federation’s efforts to stabilize the 
military-political situation in the region as well as the course and 
effectiveness of the Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh (Karabakh),” read 
the statement.
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
likewise noted the peacekeepers’ “decisive contribution” to the security of 
Karabakh’s population in a joint declaration released after their talks held 
outside Moscow on April 19.
The declaration followed Armenia’s criticism of the peacekeepers’ failure to 
prevent Azerbaijani troops from seizing a village in Karabakh and nearby hills 
in March. Pashinian repeatedly called on Moscow to investigate the “inactivity” 
of its troops.
The peacekeepers were also criticized for refusing to allow Armenian opposition 
parliamentarians to visit Karabakh on April 12. The Armenian Foreign Ministry 
said the ban ran counter to the terms of the Russian-brokered ceasefire that 
stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war in November 2020.
The Russian Foreign Ministry insisted, however, the Russian soldiers acted “in 
strict conformity” with the truce accord.
Aliyev Again Rules Out Status For Karabakh
Russia - Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev speaks after a trilateral meeting 
with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian, Sochi, November 26, 2021.
Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev reportedly ruled out on Friday any 
negotiations with Armenia on the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.
Aliyev also said that the planned demarcation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border 
will uphold Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh.
In March this year, Azerbaijan presented Armenia with five elements which it 
wants to be at the heart of a peace treaty between the two nations. They include 
a mutual recognition of each other’s territorial integrity. Yerevan said they 
should be complemented by other issues relating to the future of status of 
Karabakh and the security of its population.
Baku effectively dismissed the Armenian counterproposals before Aliyev’s latest 
meeting with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian held in Brussels on Sunday. 
Pashinian indicated on Wednesday that the two sides continue to disagree on the 
agenda of talks on the peace treaty.
“Azerbaijan believes that the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is resolved while 
Armenia believes that it’s not,” he told the Armenian parliament.
The Russian news agency RIA Novosti quoted Aliyev as saying that “there can be 
no talk of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh.”
“This is Azerbaijani territory and the whole world recognizes this,” he said. 
“This is why the first session of the commission on the delimitation of the 
border between Azerbaijan and Armenia is very important.”
Aliyev claimed that the demarcation process is “automatically and officially 
putting an end to the territorial claims made against Azerbaijan by revanchist, 
fascist forces in Armenia.”
Some Armenian opposition leaders have likewise said that by demarcating the 
border Yerevan will recognize Karabakh as a part of Azerbaijan. Pashinian and 
his political allies deny this, saying that Karabakh’s final status is a 
separate issue.
Armenian and Azerbaijani government delegations headed by deputy prime ministers 
of the two states held the first round of demarcation talks on Tuesday. 
Armenia’s Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian said on Friday that they 
discussed “only organizational issues of further joint work.”
“In this sense, I consider the meeting totally constructive,” Grigorian told the 
TASS news agency.
He said the two sides have yet to agree on the date of their next meeting that 
will be held in Moscow.
Iran Reiterates Support For Armenia’s Territorial Integrity
        • Sargis Harutyunyan
Armenia - The Armenian flag is hoisted at a military base on the border with 
Iran, October 7, 2021.
Following further progress made towards the opening of Armenian-Azerbaijani 
transport links, a senior Iranian diplomat reaffirmed on Friday his country’s 
opposition to any exterritorial corridors that would pass through Armenia.
“All that should be done by respecting the internationally recognized borders of 
the countries,” said Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri, Iran’s ambassador to Armenia. 
“Iran will support all initiatives corresponding to international law and norms.”
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
reportedly reached major understandings on the issue at their May 22 talks in 
Brussels hosted by European Council President Charles Michel. The latter said 
they agreed on “principles of border administration, security, land fees but 
also customs in the context of international transport.”
Aliyev told his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan afterwards that he and 
Pashinian agreed to open a “Zangezur corridor” that will connect Azerbaijan to 
its Nakhichevan exclave through Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province bordering 
Iran. Armenian officials denied that, saying that Yerevan and Baku are 
discussing conventional transport links between the two South Caucasus states.
Aliyev had publicly demanded earlier that people and cargo using the corridor be 
exempt from Armenian border controls. Armenian leaders rejected his demands.
Armenia - Iranian Ambassador Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri visits a section of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border in Gegharkunik province, August 3, 2021.
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi backed Yerevan’s position in January, telling 
Pashinian that Tehran supports Armenian sovereignty over all roads passing 
through Armenia. Zohouri reaffirmed that stance when he visited Syunik early 
this month.
Syunik is the only Armenian province that borders Iran. Some Iranian lawmakers 
accused Aliyev last fall of seeking to effectively strip Iran of a common border 
with Armenia.
Zohouri on Friday called for stronger economic ties between Syunik and Iran’s 
East Azerbaijan province bordering Armenia.
“It is obvious that very close cooperation between the two border provinces can 
have great advantages,” he told reporters in Yerevan.
The Iranian ambassador also emphasized Russia’s involvement in the efforts to 
open the Armenian-Azerbaijani border to trade and other cargo shipments. He 
pointed to the work of a Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani task force dealing with 
practical modalities of the planned transport links.
Zohouri did not mention the European Union’s separate peace efforts criticized 
by Moscow.
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

Artsakh President receives the Mayor of Paris

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

On May 27, President of the Artsakh Republic Arayik Harutyunyan received the delegation led by Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo.

During a tête-à-tête meeting, the President expressed words of satisfaction to the Mayor of Paris for the initiative and courage, emphasizing that the Artsakh authorities highly appreciate the regular contacts with the French political circles.

Expressing gratitude for the warm reception, Anne Hidalgo noted that Paris is ready to exert the necessary efforts to support the people of Artsakh within the framework of humanitarian programs.

Thereafter, an extended meeting was held with the participation of representatives of the legislative and executive bodies of the Artsakh Republic, RA Ambassador to France Hasmik Tolmajian, members of the ARF Bureau, officials of the Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations of France, Governor of Syunik Robert Ghukasyan and other officials. A wide range of humanitarian issues were on the agenda.

The meeting was held in the town of Goris in Armenia’s Syunik Province.

Sports: European Boxing Championship: Armenia’s Hovhannes Bachkov makes it to the semi-final

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia –

Armenian boxer Hovhannes Bachkov made it to the semi-final of the European Boxing Championship under way in Yerevan.

The Armenian beat Petr Novak of Czech Republic in the quarterfinals of the 63.5 kg event.

Bachkov has thus secured at least a bronze medal. In the semi-final he will face the winner of the Richard Kavac (Hungary)-Ahmad Shdivin (Israel) pair.

‘Shushi: Amen’: History that will never be forgotten

Panorama
Armenia –

POLITICS 12:33 27/05/2022 NKR

A new documentary telling about Artsakh’s fortress town of Shushi, which fell under Azerbaijan’s control at the 2020 war, has been made.

“At the heart of the latest Artsakh war was, first of all, Shushi. Some Turkish nomadic tribe seized Shushi after all,” historian Hamlet Petrosyan, head of the expedition group which carried out excavations in Tigranakert, says in the documentary “Shushi: Amen”.

“Shushi was home to five large and seven small Armenian churches, the traces of which have been erased by the enemy over time. They are removing Armenian traces, trying to appropriate our history, heritage and autochthony,” says former Primate of the Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Archbishop Pargev Martirosyan, a hero of Artsakh.

According to the film cast, even the two mosques of the town were built by Armenian masters.

The film premiere is scheduled to be held at the grand hall of the Cinema House on Monday, May 30. Irrefutable facts about the Armenian identity of Shushi are presented. The film directed by Mariam Yegoryan is dedicated to the memory of filmmaker Ruben Grigoryan.

The documentary features footage from the first and third Artsakh wars before and after them.

Police use force against protesters blocking highway in Armenia

Panorama
Armenia –

Opposition protesters blocked the Yerevan-Sevan highway near the town of Charentsavan in Armenia on Friday as part of the ongoing civil disobedience campaign to topple Nikol Pashinyan.

Demonstrators paralyzed the road, chanting “Armenia without Nikol!” and “Nikol the traitor!”.

After some time, the police started to use force, pulling the activists off the road to restore traffic.

Addressing a rally on Thursday evening, deputy parliament speaker and opposition leader Ishkhan Saghatelyan said the acts of civil disobedience would resume in Yerevan on Friday morning, with protests also planned in Armenian regions. The opposition will not hold a rally this evening.

Video at 

Artsakh parliament speaker’s delegation meets with Catholicos Aram I

Panorama
Armenia –

POLITICS 15:16 27/05/2022 NKR

A delegation led by Artsakh National Assembly Speaker Artur Tovmasyan met with His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, in Antelias on Thursday, the parliament’s press office reported.

The meeting was also attended by Primate of the Armenian Diocese of Tehran, His Eminence Archbishop Sepuh Sarkissian.

Tovmasyan and his delegation members briefed Catholicos Aram I on the current situation in Artsakh, presenting the fair and unchanged demands of the Artsakh people and authorities.

In his remarks, Aram I highlighted that the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia is always ready to support the Artsakh people, including the _expression_ of the right to sovereignty.

In this regard, he reaffirmed the full support of the dioceses of the Catholicosate to the Artsakh Armenians.