Asbarez: Peter Balakian Offers Keynote Address at Capitol Hill Commemoration of Armenian Genocide

From left: Peter Balakian, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, Dr. Khatchig Mouradian

Legislators Rally Support for Passage of ANCA-Backed Armenian Genocide Education Act

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Pulitzer Prize winning writer Peter Balakian and U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom Chair Nadine Maenza joined this week with Members of Congress on Capitol Hill in commemorating the Armenian Genocide, the first such in-person gathering since the U.S. Congress and President fully and formally recognized this crime. 

In eloquent remarks, Balakian expressed gratitude to Congressional leaders and President Biden for recognizing the Armenian Genocide, while forcefully challenging Turkey’s denials and obstruction of justice for this crime. “More than 30 nations have passed Armenian Genocide resolutions in Europe, in the Middle East, South America, and North America as statements of moral redress to Turkey for its failure to face its genocidal crimes,” stated Balakian. “Think of Germany’s restitutions and reparations for Israel and the Jewish people as the high moral ground. Reparations and restitution are always a necessity, as it is now in the Armenian case.” 

U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom Chair Nadine Maenza ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian

Balakian argued that Genocide recognition is also important in understanding our contemporary world. “The Turkish extermination marks the first time a modern government used its bureaucracy, parliament, advanced technology and communications, organized killing squads and extreme nativist ideology – Pan-Turkism – to target and destroy an ethnic group in a concentrated period of time,” explained Balakian. “We can learn from the Armenian case a good deal about what the Nazi regime did to the Jews and Roma of Europe; what Pol Pot did in Cambodia; what the Hutu did to the Tutsi in Rwanda; and, the fates of Bosnian Muslims, Rohingya, Uighurs and other ethnic groups in our time, who are being subjected to the same.” 

U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom Chair Nadine Maenza explained the pivotal role President Biden’s first Armenian Genocide acknowledgment played in 2021.

“As USCIRF said then, this step finally and firmly placed the United States on the right side of this terrible tragedy,” stated Maenza crediting the Armenian American community for its steadfast pursuit of recognition and justice. “As we reflect on this genocide of the past, let’s not forget the places where genocide is happening right now and other crimes against humanity. Let us renew our commitment to always stand together and stand against acts of hatred and intolerance wherever they may occur,” she concluded. 

A scene from the commemorative event at Capitol Hill

“Our community and coalition partners were honored to have Peter Balakian and Nadine Maenza at our first Congressional observance since the United States officially recognized the Armenian Genocide, and – of course – are gratified by the growing support for the Armenian Genocide Education Act,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We look forward to working with legislators from across the aisle to see this bipartisan measure – introduced by Representatives Maloney and Bilirakis and supported from the podium by so many of the speakers at this year’s Capitol Hill remembrance – enacted into law.” 

Dr. Khatchig Mouradian, the Armenian and Georgian Area Specialist for the Library of Congress and an internationally respected Armenian Genocide scholar, offered remarks at the solemn observance, as did Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Jackie Speier (D-CA), Armenian Genocide Education Act lead author Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), and Representatives Don Beyer (D-VA), Judy Chu (D-CA), Jim Costa (D-CA), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), Brenda Lawrence (D-MI), Susie Lee (D-NV), Katie Porter (D-CA), John Sarbanes (D-MD), and Brad Sherman (D-CA). Among others offering remarks were Republic of Nagorno Karabakh Representative to the U.S. Robert Avetisyan and the Armenian Ambassador, as well as, Maria Martirosyan, Chair of the Congressional Armenian Staffers Association.

Fr. Sarkis Aktavoukian of Soorp Khatch Armenian Church in Bethesda, MD offered the invocation for the evening.

Asbarez: Armenian EyeCare Project Founder Dr. Roger Ohanesian Receives Humanitarian Award

Dr. Roger Ohanesian

Thirty years ago, in 1992, Armenian-American ophthalmologist Dr. Roger Ohanesian took a trip to Armenia for the first time and subsequently founded the Armenian EyeCare Project (AECP), a non-profit organization dedicated to eliminating preventable blindness in Armenia and making quality eye care accessible to every resident in the country.

Three decades later, Dr. Ohanesian is being honored for his decades of humanitarian service through the AECP by the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgery (ASCRS). On April 24, 2022, Dr. Ohanesian accepted the coveted ASCRS Foundation’s Chang-Crandall Humanitarian Award during the ASCRS Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C.

In his acceptance speech, Dr. Ohanesian expressed his awe at how much the AECP has accomplished in Armenia during the organization’s 30-year history and service to the country.

“You have no idea when you start something what it’s going to turn out to be,” the AECP Founder and President said. “It has truly, though, for me, been the honor of a lifetime.”

AECP Founder Dr. Roger Ohanesian accepts his award from Dr. David Chang AECP Founder Dr. Roger Ohanesian during his acceptance speech

The AECP’s list of accomplishments in its 30 years of service to Armenia is vast. Over 100 volunteer physicians have visited during Medical Missions to Armenia to train local physicians and work on complicated cases; local ophthalmologists in Armenia have received advanced medical education and training both by participating in U.S. fellowships and being trained in-country; and numerous patient care programs and facilities have been developed in Armenia including the AECP’s Mobile Eye Hospital, Center of Excellence for the Prevention of Childhood Blindness, Regional Eye Centers and much more.

“Very few of us will leave a mark on this world as important as that of Roger Ohanesian,” Dr. John Hovanesian, a fellow ophthalmologist and volunteer physician with AECP, said. “For 30 years Roger has dedicated his life to helping people rise above blindness half a world away. He’s been passionate, he’s been persistent, and he’s been extremely efficient in gathering resources and recruiting like-minded volunteers through his contagious enthusiasm and folksy charm.”

AECP Founder Dr. Ohanesian sees patient in Armenia while local physicians observe

Dr. Ohanesian said he was honored to be recognized by his colleagues within ASCRS for his 30 years of service in Armenia but that this work would be impossible without the team of doctors who’ve volunteered with the AECP through the years.

“I, alone, should not be the sole recipient of this award,” Dr. Ohanesian said. “It should be shared by each of those who have repeatedly joined our trips, brought instruments and expertise which is then left with our Armenian colleagues who have accomplished so much.” 

Most of all, Dr. Ohanesian expresses an immense amount of gratitude for being able to see his vision for Armenia come to life: “I am in awe of what we have accomplished and immeasurably proud of how far this program has come. It’s quite a thrill to see and I’m just so thankful for all of it.”

The ASCRS Foundation’s Chang-Crandall Humanitarian Award is also endowed by a generous gift from Dr. and Mrs. David and Victoria Chang, which Dr. Ohanesian has earmarked for the Armenian EyeCare Project.

IALA’s second annual mentorship program supports emerging Armenian writers

The International Armenian Literary Alliance’s (IALA) second annual mentorship program will run from July 5 through August 30, 2022 with mentorships for writers of the novel, memoir, creative nonfiction, short story and poetry. Mentors will read and provide feedback on their mentee’s writing and speak virtually with their mentee throughout the program to discuss the writing life, the mentee’s work and how to navigate the publishing industry. At the end of the program, IALA will host an Emerging Writers Showcase to feature the mentees’ work.

Applications are now open through May 20, 2022. 

“It is exciting to spearhead the mentorship program for one great reason: the program will bring together aspiring Armenian writers with established Armenian authors,” says program director Shahé Mankerian. “The guidance from the experienced writer will be invaluable to the budding storyteller.”

“Our program provides emerging writers with a mentor who understands Armenian cultural perspectives and the richness and diversity of identities within our community,” says IALA founder Olivia Katrandjian. “‘Lifting as we climb,’ in the words of suffragist and civil rights leader Mary Church Terrell, is integral to IALA’s mission. Our mentorship program allows us to lift up the next generation of Armenian writers and help them thrive.” 

IALA’s inaugural mentorship program matched 11 writers with authors. Mentors included Aida Zilelian, Nancy Agabian, Armen Davoudian, Gregory Djanikian, Mashinka Firunts HakopianArminé IknadossianNancy Kricorian, Markar MelkonianLola KoundakjianAline Ohanesian and Alene Terzian-Zeitounian.

The International Armenian Literary Alliance is a nonprofit organization launched in 2021 that supports and celebrates writers by fostering the development and distribution of Armenian literature in the English language. A network of Armenian writers and their champions, IALA gives Armenian writers a voice in the literary world through creative, professional, and scholarly advocacy.


Inaugural Bay Area Armenian Community Day with the Oakland A’s a huge success

OAKLAND, Calif.  On Saturday, close to 200 Armenians gathered for the inaugural Bay Area Community Day with the Oakland Athletics. Guests arrived from Los Angeles, Fresno and Sacramento to cheer along with Bay Area Armenians. 

Members of St. Vartan Armenian Church in Oakland cooking during the tailgate (Photo: Kim Bardakian)

Two hours prior to the start of the ballgame, a “kef style” tailgate was sponsored and prepared by members of St. Vartan Armenian Church. Delicious tri-tip sandwiches along with food prepared by Armenian-owned companies including Caspers Famous Hot Dogs, ZaZa Chips, Haig’s Deli dips and Kareen Wines were served with love for all. Armenian music played while guests enjoyed catching up with new and old friends alike. 

Oakland A’s pitcher James Kaprielian (Photo: Kim Bardakian)

Oakland Athletics pitcher James Kaprielianthe only Armenian player in Major League Baseballstopped by. Guests took photos with him, and some even brought him Armenian gifts. One young boy asked Kaprielian how to throw a curveball, and he took the time to show him. 

Oakland A’s pitcher James Kaprielian showing a young fan how to throw a curveball

After lunch, guests headed into RingCentral Coliseum, home of the Oakland A’s. Nobody wanted to miss the ceremonial first pitch by Very Rev. Father Smpad Saboundjian, parish priest of St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church in San Francisco. After weeks of training, Hayr Sourp threw an impressive ball over home plate!

Fr. Smpad Smpad Saboundjian throwing out the ceremonial first pitch (Photo: Kim Bardakian)

Danielle Zaroukian, a freshman from Piedmont High School and a KZV Armenian School alumna, sang a beautiful rendition of the national anthem. 

Danielle Zaroukian singing the National Anthem (Photo: Kim Bardakian)

Throughout the game, Armenians cheered together, waved their Armenian flags and their rally towels which read, “Can’t Spell Armenian Without the A’s.” Two foul balls were even caught in the Armenian section. 

The Armenian section cheering all day! (Photo: Kim Bardakian)

A portion of all ticket sales supported Mt. Davidson Cross, one of the oldest and tallest landmarks in San Francisco. It serves as a memorial to the 1.5 million Armenians who perished during the 1915-1923 Armenian Genocide.




Gamavor Panag Harach – Volunteer Army Forward

Sune Hamparian, Washington, DC, April 24, 2022

Editor’s Note: The following remarks were delivered by the author during the March for Justice held in Washington, DC on April 24, 2022.

We here,
Each of us, immortals of a martyred race, Nahadag, Tzeghee Anmahner
Forsaken
Burned, by the fires, of our history
Resurrected from its ashes

Burdened, by the world
Here, we stand in opposition – in resistance

Proof,
That the deserts did not devour us
That the sword could not silence us

Today,
Faced, once again, with a challenge
A threat to our survival
An attack on our existence

So let our protests
Let our voices
Let our chants be what cements our solidarity
Let the beat of our anthem mark our march to justice

Their lies
Their denials
Their obstruction of justice
Behind closed doors,
Or amplified through expensive sound system
Will not deter us

We know,
That this is nothing new

Vadin sev aryun mer hoghn vorokets
Vadin sev aryun mer hoghn vorokets!
As they have
Time and Time again

Ararat – Avarayr – Ani – Artsakh

They call, to, us.

Harach, Harach
Harach Nahadag Tzeghee anmahner,
Mer Gamavor Banak  – Harach 

Sune Hamparian is a junior member of the AYF DC “Sevan” Chapter. She’s been a member of the AYF for over six years and was recently elected to serve as chair. Sune is in the tenth grade and spends her summers in Armenia with her family. She enjoys volunteering at the ANCA and learning about the world of politics.


Lav Eli: An Armenian Folk Rock Experience

Lav Eli performs in Watertown, Mass., April 30, 2022 (Photo: Knar Bedian)

In the last year or so, I have been on the search for Armenian bands and artists that not only revamp our traditional songs and melodies, but are inspired to create songs of their own. My search has led me to discover Garabala, Collectif Medz Bazar, The Bambir, Vigen Hovsepyan and others. The most recent, by complete chance, is Lav Eli, who treated our Boston community to two shows on Saturday evening as part of their first-ever east coast tour. 

As a 20 year old, I am a little embarrassed to say that this was my first concert. It didn’t take place at TD Garden or the House of Blues, but I’ll always remember it fondly because it was at the agoump—an intimate and familiar setting for me as an active member of my local Armenian community. I sat close to the band’s setup, anxious for them to start their set. Joining guitarists Gor Mkhitarian and Mher Manukyan was Ara Dabandjian of the Element Band. As they took their seats with their instruments and introduced themselves, I noticed the excitement I felt, reflected in the smiling and attentive faces of the small crowd around me. As they introduced their first song, “Godfather Tom,” I opened my little notebook, ready to jot down my thoughts so I wouldn’t forget them later.

Ara Dabandjian, Watertown, Mass., April 30, 2022 (Photo: Knar Bedian)

But, when the two acoustic guitars and accordion began to play, my mind went blank. I had flashbacks to my childhood, listening to Element Band and traditional songs by artists I was too young to remember. What surprised me, though, was that my mind also recalled music by The Beatles, which my father made me listen to as a young girl and I now listen to of my own accord. I couldn’t keep the smile off my face.

Mher Manukyan, Watertown, Mass., April 30, 2022 (Photo: Knar Bedian)

Seeing the passion and joy on the faces of the band, even through their more melancholy songs, showed me just how much they love their music. In an interview after the show, I sat down with Gor and Mher and asked them about what Armenian music meant to them alongside its cultural ties. Mher answered, “If your soul resonates to the music, then it is your music […] you feel it in yourself, it’s yours, it’s a part of you, and you are a part of that music.” 

John Berberian, Watertown, Mass., April 30, 2022 (Photo: Knar Bedian)

Throughout the concert, the band joked with the audience, commenting on how shy the crowd seemed to clap along to the music. They even encouraged the audience to sing along to their songs. An unexpected appearance by John Berberian, a longtime friend of Gor, delighted community members. The local legend accompanied the three-man band on the oud for two songs: “Yeraz (Dream)” and “Voch Me Ban (Not One Thing).” The audience was captivated by their seamless performance. Every song was a comfort to my soul. I was nostalgic for my Armenian school days when I was enveloped by my culture and language.

I was fascinated by the blend of Armenian folk music and soft rock. “We have so many different genres, so it’s really hard to categorize with one genre,” Gor told me. “But because we understand it has to be somehow categorized […] that’s why we call it Armenian alternative folk rock.”

Gor Mkhitarian, Watertown, Mass., April 30, 2022 (Photo: Knar Bedian)

Armenian, alternative, folk and rock: four genres of music I never thought in my wildest dreams could be blended together. So I did some exploring. I played their 2006 album “Lav Eli” on my car stereo and listened to some of the songs they had played that night on my drive back home. On Sunday afternoon, as I sat down to begin writing this article, I played their 1997 album “First Lav Album” and heard the influence of the early Beatles music. I marveled at the fact that I was hearing electric guitar and Armenian words together. Even my dad, who grew up listening to The Beatles, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin and Queen, got “The Train” stuck in his head when I played it for him. Lav Eli’s members say they were inspired by a few of these bands, but told me that they like to keep an open mind when it comes to music.

I cannot recommend Lav Eli enough. After hearing them perform and speaking with them, my need to find more Armenian musicians and my love for Armenian music have only grown stronger. Lav Eli has shown me that Armenian music is more than traditional songs and melodies. Of course, the history embedded in Armenian music is one of the most important aspects of our culture, but we can’t forget that someday our present will be our history, and I believe Lav Eli is one of the groups capturing our present beautifully, with a little flair for Armenian rock n’ roll, in their repertoire.

Beiyna Chaparian is a local vocalist and student at Clark University. She is an active member of the AYF Greater Boston “Nejdeh” Chapter.


AW: Commemorating the Genocide in Meghri

I was lucky enough to be in Armenia during the month of April and even luckier to be in Meghri, an Armenian town far from the glimmering lights of Northern Avenue and the raving nightlife of Yerevan. Meghri is one of the many cities in the region of Syunik that has hosted battles that shaped the current borders of the Republic of Armenia such as the 1727 Battle of Halidzor as well as the 1919 Battle of Zangezur and others.

Commemorating the Genocide in Meghri, April 2022

As the rest of Armenia was preparing to commemorate the 107th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) “Arevig” Gomideh in Meghri, with the help of the AYF Netherlands “Karekin Nejdeh” Chapter, organized a commemorative event which included an opening prayer at a local church and a march to a local genocide memorial for a candlelight vigil. It was an odd sight for a town commemorating a genocide as it is currently under the threat of annexation. After the event, we went to “Khachats Doon” where some of the Gomideh members and I spent the night singing “Kini Lits” over glasses of wine. It wasn’t the typical April 24 I had experienced as a Diasporan in Lebanon and the Netherlands.

Candlelight vigil at the Genocide memorial in Meghri.

After the Artsakh War, there has been this chilling feeling that Syunik, which is in the southern region of the Republic of Armenia, was going to be the next piece of territory to be handed over to the enemy. Tactical advances by Azerbaijan and constant artillery fire have solidified the intentions of the Aliyev regime. A few weeks ago, the Iranian government released a video stating that the border of Syunik is a red line that the Republics of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Armenia should refrain from shifting. Since the Iranian government maintains a firmer stance than the current government of Armenia on the matter, I can only see that it is up to us, individually, to make a change. 

Syunik is not just a culmination of mountains and beautiful landscape. The region and its people are an integral part of Armenia. They too have ambitions. They too want security. And they most certainly do not want to live under the constant threat of attacks. They too mourn the losses of the Armenian Genocide. They too remember and demand. 

Alek Elbekian is a Lebanese Armenian and a graduate student in theoretical physics at Utrecht University, specializing in quantum field theory and condensed matter. He also works at the Yerevan Physics Institute researching cosmic rays and naturally occurring radiation.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/03/2022

                                        Tuesday, May 3, 2022
Turkish, Armenian Officials Meet Again
-Ruben Rubinian (left) and Serdar Kilic.
Special envoys of Turkey and Armenia met in Vienna on Tuesday for the third 
round of negotiations on normalizing relations between the two neighboring 
states.
In identical statements, the Turkish and Armenian foreign ministries gave few 
details of the talks held by veteran Turkish diplomat Serdar Kilic and Ruben 
Rubinian, a deputy speaker of the Armenian parliament.
“The Special Representatives reaffirmed the declared goal of achieving full 
normalization between their respective countries through this process,” read the 
statements. “In this sense, they had sincere and productive exchange of concrete 
views and discussed possible steps that can be undertaken for tangible progress 
in this direction.”
“They reiterated their agreement to continue the process without preconditions,” 
added the statement.
Kilic and Rubinian held their first meeting in Moscow on January 14. Armenia’s 
Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan afterwards voiced cautious optimism over the 
success of the dialogue welcomed by Russia, the United States and the European 
Union.
Mirzoyan traveled to Turkey and met with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut 
Cavusoglu in March. Cavusoglu described the talks as “very productive.”
Ankara has for decades linked the establishment of diplomatic relations with 
Yerevan and the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border to a resolution of the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict acceptable to Azerbaijan. Cavusoglu has repeatedly 
said that his government coordinates the Turkish-Armenian normalization talks 
with Baku.
Anti-Government Protests Continue In Armenia
        • Narine Ghalechian
        • Karine Simonian
        • Artak Khulian
Armenia - Opposition supporters demonstrate in France Square, Yerevan, May 3, 
2022.
Major anti-government protests continued in Armenia for the third consecutive 
day on Tuesday, with opposition leaders vowing that there will be no letup in 
their efforts to oust Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.
Groups of opposition activists again briefly blocked streets across Yerevan in 
the morning and thousands of other people rallied in the evening in the city’s 
France Square where opposition forces set up a tent camp on Sunday. Protests 
also erupted in other parts of the country.
One of the opposition leaders, Ishkhan Saghatelian, said that the campaign is 
gaining momentum. “Our struggle is unstoppable,” he said at the evening rally.
As was the case on Monday, riot police were quick to forcibly end the street 
blockades in the Armenian capital, detaining more than 200 protesters in the 
process.
As security forces clashed with protesters disrupting traffic, a larger number 
of other demonstrators led by several opposition lawmakers marched through the 
city center to try to drum up greater support for their campaign. They entered 
one of the buildings of Yerevan State University to urge more students to 
boycott classes and demand Pashinian’s resignation.
“We have one goal: to stop this spate of defeats so that our country doesn’t 
fall apart,” said Artur Vanetsian, an opposition leader who headed Armenia’s 
National Security Service from 2018-2019.
Armenia - Police arrest an opposition protester in Yerevan, May 3, 2022.
The country’s two main opposition alliances, which organized the protests, 
accuse Pashinian of planning to let Azerbaijan take full control over 
Nagorno-Karabakh. Pashinian’s political allies deny this.
Some of the citizens who stood by and watched the morning protests were not 
convinced by the opposition push for regime change.
“In democratic countries governments are formed through elections. Period,” one 
man told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
“They didn’t get [a majority of] votes ten months ago. What do they want now?” 
he said, referring to snap parliamentary elections won by the ruling Civil 
Contract party.
“I’m not a big fan of Mr. Pashinian, but these guys must specify their first, 
second and third steps [after regime change,]” said another Yerevan resident.
The opposition took its campaign to other parts of the country on Tuesday. The 
Armenian police reported 14 arrests there.
News reports said that protesters blocked several regional highways. An RFE/RL 
reporter witnessed one such blockage outside Armenia’s third largest city of 
Vanadzor.
Armenia - An opposition rally in Vanadzor, May 3, 2022
Despite a lack of police intervention, the protesters reopened the 
Vanadzor-Yerevan highway to traffic shortly afterwards. As one of them 
explained: “We would have kept it blocked for five hours if we had wanted to, 
but we don’t need that because it’s Vanadzor residents who suffer from such 
inconvenience.”
Other opposition supporters marched through Vanadzor’s central avenue to voice 
support for the opposition demands. They repeatedly jostled with police officers 
escorting the crowd.
Meanwhile, the Armenian parliament speaker, Alen Simonian, insisted that the 
ongoing protests have not plunged the country into another political crisis.
“I respect the activities of our [opposition] colleagues, even though they 
frequently resort to insults and aggression,” Simonian said during a session of 
the National Assembly boycotted by opposition deputies.
Other pro-government parliamentarians again accused the opposition of exploiting 
the Karabakh issue in a bid to seize power. They reiterated that Pashinian’s 
political foes do not enjoy popular support.
Top Security Official Accused Of Attacking Journalists
        • Artak Khulian
        • Naira Bulghadarian
Armenia - Security forces disperse opposition protesters blocking a street in 
Yerevan, May 2, 2022.
Armenian press freedom groups have condemned the head of a security agency that 
provides bodyguards to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and other senior officials 
for reportedly assaulting two journalists during an opposition demonstration in 
Yerevan.
Sargis Hovannisian of the State Protection Service (SPS) was approached by a 
cameraman and a reporter for the news website Mediahub.am on Monday as he 
apparently issued orders to security forces confronting opposition protesters at 
a major street intersection.
Videos circulated online showed Hovannisian shouting at the female reporter, 
Nare Gnuni, before hitting her microphone. Gnuni said he also kicked the 
cameraman, Arman Gharajian.
“He said quite angrily, ‘Turn away the camera, don’t film me.’ At that point the 
cameraman simply replied, ‘I will film,’” Gnuni told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
The Mediahub.am crew was also threatened and shoved by another SPS officer who 
accompanied Hovannisian at the scene.
The incident was witnessed by an official from human rights ombudswoman Kristine 
Grigorian’s staff. Grigorian called the SPS chief’s actions unacceptable.
Eight media associations strongly condemned them in a joint statement release 
late on Monday. They said that Hovannisian, whose agency is primarily in charge 
of Pashinian’s personal security, must be investigated and held accountable.
Hovannisian was already caught on camera kicking an opposition protester in 
Yerevan last year.
Responding to the latest outcry, the Office of the Prosecutor-General instructed 
another law-enforcement body to look into a video of the incident and determine 
whether the high-ranking officer broke the law.
The prosecutors also ordered a separate inquiry into a police officer who 
repeatedly punched a protester as the latter was arrested in the city center on 
Monday.
Ombudswoman Grigorian criticized the policeman as well. She said the police also 
used disproportionate force against other participants of anti-government 
protests detained in recent days.
Blinken Lauds Pashinian’s ‘Flexible’ Karabakh Policy
U.S. - U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Armenia's Foreign 
MInister Ararat Mirzoyan in Washington, May 2, 2022.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken praised Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
conciliatory position on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict after holding talks with 
Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in Washington on Monday.
He also said that the United States and Armenia are now working to “strengthen 
and deepen” their relations through a “strategic dialogue” that was launched in 
2019 but subsequently suspended due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Blinken and Mirzoyan signed after their meeting a memorandum of understanding on 
“strategic civil nuclear cooperation” between their countries.
Speaking at the signing ceremony, Blinken welcomed “democratic reforms” 
implemented by the Armenian government as well as its ongoing dialogue with 
Azerbaijan. In that regard, he expressed “real appreciation for the vision and 
the courage and the flexibility that the prime minister and Armenia have been 
showing in this process.”
Addressing the Armenian parliament on April 13, Pashinian said said the 
international community is pressing Armenia to scale back its demands on the 
status of Nagorno-Karabakh and recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. He 
signaled Yerevan’s intention to make such concessions to Baku.
Belgium - European Council President Charles Michel, Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev begin a trilateral 
meeting in Brussels, April 6, 2022.
The European Union praised the “forward-looking” speech delivered by Pashinian 
one week after he met with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Brussels for 
talks hosted by the EU’s top official, Charles Michel. Blinken spoke with the 
Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders by phone on the eve of the talks.
Pashinian’s discourse stoked Armenian opposition allegations that he has agreed 
to restore Azerbaijani control over Karabakh. Armenia’s leading opposition 
groups launched late last week daily street protests aimed at toppling the prime 
minister.
According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Mirzoyan and Blinken discussed, 
among other things, planned negotiations on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty 
and the upcoming creation of a commission tasked with demarcating the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border.
These issues were also on the agenda of Mirzoyan’s separate meeting with U.S. 
Under Secretary of State Victoria Nuland held in Washington earlier on Monday.
ARMENIA - Police officers restrain participants of an anti-government 
demonstration in Yerevan, May 3, 2022.
“In this context, the Foreign Minister of Armenia stressed the importance of 
resuming the work of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship,” read a statement 
released by Mirozyan’s press office.
The group dealing with the Karabakh conflict has long been led by the United 
States, Russia and France. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on April 
8 that Washington and Paris stopped cooperating with Moscow in that format 
following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. U.S. and French officials have not 
denied that.
Lavrov also accused the West of trying to hijack Russian efforts to broker peace 
between Armenia and Azerbaijan as part of the ongoing geopolitical standoff over 
Ukraine.
Pashinian and Russian President Vladimir Putin reaffirmed Russia’s key role in 
the peace process in a joint declaration issued after their face-to-face talks 
held on April 19.
In a further sign that Moscow wants to wrest back the initiative in that 
process, Lavrov has reportedly offered to hold a trilateral meeting with his 
Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts next week. Mirzoyan accepted the proposal 
in an April 29 phone call with Russia’s top diplomat.
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.
 

CivilNet: Armenia’s foreign minister meets Blinken in Washington

CIVILNET.AM

10:05

  • Protesters of the Resistance Movement are continuing acts of civil disobedience in Yerevan and other parts of Armenia, calling for the resignation of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
  • Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced they would be relaunching the U.S.-Armenia Strategic Dialogue. The two also signed a memorandum of understanding on civil nuclear cooperation.
  • Armenia climbed to 51st place out of 180 countries, up from last year’s ranking of 63rd, in the latest update to the World Press Freedom Index published by Reporters Without Borders.

Turkish press: Bells to ring once again in Turkey’s historical Armenian church

Surp Giragos, the largest Armenian Church in the Middle East, Diyarbakır, Turkey, May 6, 2015. (DHA Photo)

After seven years, the bell will ring again at Surp Giragos, the largest Armenian Church in the Middle East, in Turkey’s Diyarbakır. With restoration works now complete, the church will reopen its doors to worshippers in May.

The restoration of the Armenian Surp Giragos Church in the Sur district of Diyarbakır has been completed. The first service will be held at the church on May 8 with the participation of the Armenian Patriarch of Turkey Sahak Mashalyan. The church’s foundation also submitted a request to the government to appoint a permanent clergyman to the church.

The interior and exterior restoration of the church, right behind the four minarets where lawyer and former Diyarbakır Bar Association Chairperson Tahir Elçi was killed, has been restored to its original state.

Surp Giragos, the largest Armenian Church in the Middle East, Diyarbakır, Turkey, Oct. 25, 2011. (Sabah Archive Photo)

The 600-year-old church was abandoned to its fate in the early 1990s after villages in the southeast were evacuated due to terrorist activity. An intense migration flow started to the cities, and in parallel, many non-Muslims immigrated to European countries.

Anton Zor, who ran an antique shop in Sur, did not abandon the church and claimed to “have a memory of every stone.” Zor guarded the church until the end of his life, living in two chambers whose columns were badly damaged, and walls and ceiling had collapsed. When he died in the Surp Pırgiç Hospital in Istanbul, the church was left completely derelict.

In 2008, the decision was made to restore the church, which was by then riddled with holes made by thieves hunting for gold.

The church’s restoration was launched through a project carried out by the Armenian Foundation and the Metropolitan Municipality. It was restored over three years and opened its doors to the Armenian community from all over the world in 2011.

Surp Giragos, the largest Armenian Church in the Middle East, Diyarbakır, Turkey, March 14, 2019. (AA Photo)

The original of the 100-kilogram (220-pound) onion-head bell in its collapsed tower was specially made in Moscow and brought to Diyarbakır. After 35 years of deep silence, the sound of bells rang through the streets every Sunday. However, the chiming stopped again after four years.

Surp Giragos Church was heavily damaged again in 2015 due to terrorist attacks. Some 24 security guards were killed in the neighborhood where the church is located. The church was again left in ruins over the course of three months.

Terrorists positioned in the church attacked security forces with rockets and bombs. They created escape tunnels in the church, where the wounded terrorists were treated and the walls were riddled with holes from heavy weapons. After peace was restored, a tender was made for the church’s restoration by the Ministry of Environment and Urbanization.

Surp Giragos, the largest Armenian Church in the Middle East, Diyarbakır, Turkey, March 14, 2019. (AA Photo)

Archbishop Aram Ateşyan, former deputy patriarch of the Armenians of Turkey, who visited the church right after the incidents, said: “This is the Christian Quarter. Churches and mosques, which were God’s houses of prayer, were destroyed. We cannot call those who do this human. I saw that they broke it all over with sledgehammers. Those hand-carved features and the places we call Horan were shattered,” he said.

Surp Giragos Armenian Church, which was the headquarters of the German armies during World War I and with a closed area of 3,000 square meters, was also used as a cotton warehouse of Sümerbank for a while.