Armenia Detains 180 Protesters Calling on Pashinyan to Quit x

May 2 2022

Police in Armenia’s capital have detained 180 anti-government demonstrators that were blocking streets to protest against the country’s prime minister.

Police clash with demonstrators during a protest rally, in Yerevan, Armenia, Monday, May 2, 2022. Police in Armenia’s capital on Monday detained 125 anti-government demonstrators that were blocking streets to protest against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. (Vahram Baghdasaryan/Photolure via AP)

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — Police in Armenia’s capital on Monday detained 180 anti-government demonstrators that were blocking streets to protest against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Protests demanding that Pashinyan step down reignited in Armenia last month, after he spoke in the country’s parliament about the need to sign a peace agreement with Azerbaijan.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a decades-old conflict over the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is part of Azerbaijan but has been under Armenian control since early 1990s. In a six-week war in the fall of 2020, Azerbaijan was able to reclaim control over large swaths of land in and around the region before signing a Russia-brokered truce with Armenia. Pashinyan has faced backlash at home for agreeing to the deal.

As Armenia and Azerbaijan edged closer to reaching a proper peace agreement this year, opposition forces in Armenia have resumed protests against Pashinyan. Rallies in the capital, Yerevan, are being held almost daily since April 17.

On Sunday, demonstrators in the center of Yerevan set up tents for a round-the-clock protest and said they wouldn’t leave until Pashinyan and his team step down. The Interfax news agency reported that barricades were erected from garbage cans and street benches, and that traffic on France Square, a major road connecting four main avenues of the Armenian capital, stopped.

Demonstrators — including opposition lawmakers — chanted “Armenia without Nikol!” Protest leader and deputy parliamentary speaker Ishkhan Sagatelyan told reporters that protesters would clear the streets by Monday afternoon, so that another rally could gather on the square in the evening.

Some of the detentions on Monday were carried out with the use of force, and journalists covering the protests were reported to have been pushed around by the police. Police spokespeople told Interfax the demonstrators were detained on charges of refusing to obey police officers.

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2022-05-02/armenia-detains-125-protesters-calling-on-pashinyan-to-quit

Book: Bedross Der Matossian, "The Horrors of Adana: Revolution and Violence in the Early Twentieth Century"

JADALIYYA
April 25 2022




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By : Bedross Der Matossian  

Bedross Der Matossian, The Horrors of Adana: Revolution and Violence in the Early Twentieth Century (Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 2022).

Jadaliyya (J): What made you write this book?

Bedross Der Matossian (BDM): More than one hundred years ago, the province of Adana, in the southern section of the Ottoman empire and modern-day Turkey, witnessed two waves of violence that took the lives of thousands of people. More than twenty thousand Christians (predominantly Armenian, as well as some Greeks, Syriacs, and Chaldeans) were massacred by Muslims, and around two thousand Muslims were killed by Christians. Despite the massive bloodshed of the Adana massacres, most of the major books on late Ottoman and modern Middle Eastern history fail to even mention these events. Where the massacres are considered in the historiography, the contested nature of the events has led to competing narratives. Starting from the premise that no such horrendous act happens in a vacuum, the aim of this book is to understand the full complexity of these massacres. The book attempts to interpret these events through a thorough analysis of the primary sources pertaining to the local, central, and international actors who were involved in the massacres as perpetrators, victims, or bystanders—something that has not been done yet in the academic or journalistic universe. Unlike other works on the topic, this book analyzes the events through the lenses of both Ottoman and Armenian history and with an interdisciplinary approach. The book is based on extensive research carried out in the past decade, consulting more than fifteen archives and primary sources in a dozen languages.

… the book suggests that scholars should examine how and why a rationalized society suddenly erupts at a particular juncture in history to produce massacres.

J: What particular topics, issues, and literatures does the book address?

BDM: Through a consideration of the Adana massacres in micro-historical detail, I offer a macro-cosmic understanding of ethnic violence in the Middle East and beyond. Events such as the Adana massacres do not occur sui generis; they are caused by a range of complex, intersecting factors that are deeply rooted in the shifting local and national ground of political and socioeconomic life. The book does not privilege one factor over another in explaining these massacres. The most important factors leading to the Adana massacres were the Young Turk revolution of 1908, discussed in my first book, which shook the foundations of the “fragile equilibrium” that had existed in the empire for decades; the emergence of resilient public spheres after three decades of despotic rule in which the public sphere was largely repressed; and the counter-revolution of 13 April 1909. 

The book refutes the claim that certain cultures and religions are predisposed to violence—an idea that was and remains prevalent in the way some Western scholars and orientalists view Islam. The literature on genocide and massacres in recent decades has demonstrated that, in particular circumstances, ordinary men and women from many different religious and cultural backgrounds are capable of barbaric crimes. Instead of perpetuating the idea that certain human beings have a biological predisposition to commit crimes, the book suggests that scholars should examine how and why a rationalized society suddenly erupts at a particular juncture in history to produce massacres. 

The dichotomy of Muslims versus Armenians encourages vast essentializations of the parties involved in the conflict and obfuscates a sound analysis of the socioeconomic and political factors that led to the massacres. By analyzing the changes in the sociopolitical, religious, and economic structures in the region, this book provides multi-causal and multi-faceted explanations of the events that unfolded in Adana. The book examines the violence and struggles for power in terms of failures and successes in the public sphere and more generally in relation to the 1908 revolution, using primary sources in a dozen languages. The Adana massacres are considered not as part of a continuum of Armenian massacres leading to the Armenian Genocide but as an outgrowth of the ethno-religious violence that was inflicted on the region in the second half of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. While much work has been done on understanding ethnic violence in the Ottoman Balkans and the Arab Middle East prior to World War I, there is a lacuna in such studies in the region of Anatolia. This project aims to fill this gap. This book analyzes the history of the massacres through four interrelated themes: dominant and subaltern public spheres, rumors, emotions, and humanitarianism and humanitarian intervention. 

J: How does this book connect to and/or depart from your previous work?

BDM: This book is part of a trilogy that I have been working on. In my first book, Shattered Dreams of Revolution: From Liberty to Violence in the End of the Ottoman Empire, I analyzed the ambiguities and contradictions of the 1908 Young Turk revolution’s goals and the reluctance of both the leaders of the revolution and the majority of the empire’s ethnic groups to come to a compromise regarding the new political framework of the empire. This was done by concentrating on three diversified groups (Armenians, Arabs, and Jews) representing vast geographic areas, as well as a wide range of interest groups, religions, classes, political parties, and factions. The book demonstrated how the revolution with its contradictions and ambiguities led to a substantial upsurge in inter- and intra-ethnic tensions in the Empire, culminating in the counter-revolution of 13 April 1909 and leading to drastic upheaval in the capital and a spiral of violence in the provinces. The Horrors of Adana starts when the Shattered Dreams of Revolution ends by concentrating on the most horrendous event that took place at the beginning of the twentieth century. By focusing on the provinces of Adana and Aleppo, the book examined the impact of the revolution on these provinces and demonstrated the factors and the reasons for the deterioration of the conditions leading to the massacres. There is no doubt that the revolution of 1908 opened a Pandora’s box of simmering political and socioeconomic tensions in the Empire. The post-revolutionary period demonstrated how the level of ethno-religious tensions in the empire was so high by the beginning of the twentieth century that any crisis, whether due to internal or external factors, had the potential to explode in a cataclysmic spiral of violence. 

J: Who do you hope will read this book, and what sort of impact would you like it to have?

BDM: I hope that the book will attract students and scholars from a variety of disciplines that includes but is not limited to students and scholars of Turkish/Ottoman and Middle East studies, and scholars and students working on genocide, violence, massacres, and ethnic conflict. Due to its interdisciplinary approach, the book would also be of interest to the disciplines of history, political science, sociology, and anthropology. One of the important goals of the book was to emphasize the necessity of understanding the history of this grim page in history going beyond essentialization and dichotomies by showing the complexities of the political and socioeconomic transformations and their impact on shaping the region of Adana. The book, with its inter-disciplinary and global approach, would be a useful addition to the vast literature on ethno-religious conflict, massacres, genocide, and ethnic conflict. The crimes perpetrated in the past century have revealed that no society in the world today is immune to mass violence. To prevent these types of violent episodes, it is crucial that we learn from the past.

J: What other projects are you working on now?

BDM: Currently I am working on the last volume of the trilogy on the Balkan Wars (1912-1913). This study will examine the reaction of non-dominant groups to the wars as well as the attitude of the Ottoman governments towards them. In addition to this, a new edited volume of mine, Denial of Genocide in the 21st Century, will be published next year by the University of Nebraska Press.

J: How do you view the position of Armenian studies in the larger context of Middle Eastern and Turkish/Ottoman studies?

BDM: For decades Armenian studies has been marginalized in Middle Eastern, Turkish, and Ottoman studies due to political and ideological reasons. Ignorance and reluctance to understand the field too have contributed to this marginalization. Some scholars viewed the field as an archaic one remote from the two above mentioned fields. Others did not want to be associated with Armenian studies due to the Armenian Genocide, as they were concerned that any such association might endanger their access to the Ottoman archives or be tainted as advocating an Armenian “point of view.” However, in the recent two to three decades the situation has begun to improve. We are seeing more young scholars start examining the history of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. Although the concentration is on the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, this should be considered a welcome step. Armenians of the Ottoman Empire—representing diverse, complex, and stratified groups—have left a plethora of primary sources pertaining not only to the history of their own groups, rather about the history of the Ottoman Empire in general. Hence, it is time that Western Armenian be considered as one of the key languages in Ottoman and Middle Eastern studies. In addition, it is also high time that we consider these subjects as overlapping and intersecting fields and not as “area studies.” Similar to hybridity of identities, I would like also to promote here the idea that these “area studies” are hybrid and cannot and should not be studied in isolation. 

 

Excerpt from the book (from the Introduction, pp. 1-5)

Excerpted from The Horrors of Adana: Revolution and Violence in the Early Twentieth Century, by Bedross Der Matossian, published by Stanford University Press, ©2022 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. All Rights Reserved. 

On the night of Thursday, September 19, 2019, Turkish locals in the Seyhan District of Adana Province attacked and looted shops belonging to Syrian refugees in response to rumors that a Syrian man had tried to rape a Turkish boy. The rumor had spread very quickly on social media. The mob yelled, “Down with Syria, damn Syria!” The police later caught the suspect, who according to the Adana governor’s office, was a fifteen- year-old Turkish citizen with thirty-seven past criminal offences. The police detained 138 subjects for causing extensive damage to Syrian businesses, or instigating such acts on social media, and contained the situation. This was not the first time that Syrian businesses were targeted in Turkey; for example, in July of the same year, dozens of Syrian shops were looted by an angry mob over rumors that a Syrian boy had verbally abused a Turkish girl. With the arrival of 3.5 million refugees since the beginning of the Syrian civil war, intercommunal tensions in Turkey have been high.

Such violent outbursts are not solely the result of rumors; they represent underlying political and socioeconomic anxieties. Furthermore, they are endemic in more than just one society, religion, culture, or geographical region. In the course of history, similar acts of violence have taken place— in the form of blood libels, riots, pogroms, massacres, or, in extreme cases, genocides—in different parts of the globe. From the St. Bartholomew’s Day massacre (1572) to the pogroms of Odessa (1905) and from the Sabra and Shatila massacre (1982) to the Gujarat massacres (2002), history is rife with such violent episodes. These acts of violence share similar societal stressors that become heightened due to major political or economic crises or upheavals. The outcome of these stressors is conditioned by local exigencies. The factors leading to the escalation of these tensions include, but are not limited to, competition over resources, xenophobia, wars, nationalism, influxes of refugees, land disputes, economic envy, and the proliferation of rumors. Specific events—minor or major, fabricated or true—can then become catalysts that mobilize dominant groups against vulnerable minorities.

More than one hundred years ago, the province of Adana, in the southern section of the Ottoman Empire and of present-day Turkey, witnessed a major wave of violence that took the lives of thousands of people. More than twenty thousand Christians (predominantly Armenian, as well as some Greek, Syriacs, and Chaldeans) were massacred by Muslims, and around two thousand Muslims were killed by Christians. Starting from the premise that no such horrendous act happens in a vacuum, the aim of this book is to understand the full complexity of these massacres. However, I would like to stress at the outset that this is not a definitive history of the massacres. The enormity and the complexity of crimes such as massacres and genocides make it impossible to write a definitive history; any scholar who claims to do so would do no justice to history. Each village, town, and district that was struck by the massacres could itself be the topic of a monograph. Hence, this book attempts instead to interpret these events through a thorough analysis of the primary sources pertaining to the local, central, and international actors who were involved in the massacres as perpetrators, victims, or bystanders. Unlike other works on the topic, this book analyzes the event through the lenses of both Ottoman and Armenian history and with an interdisciplinary approach. As Jacques Sémelin argues in his seminal work Purify and Destroy, “‘massacre’ as a phenomenon in itself is so complex that it requires a multidisciplinary examination: from the standpoint of not only the historian but also the psychologist, the anthropologist and so on.”

Adana, located on the Mediterranean coast in southern Anatolia, was one of the most significant economic centers in the Ottoman Empire at the beginning of the twentieth century. With a diverse population of Muslims (Turks, Kurds, Circassians, and Arabs) and Christians (Armenians, Greeks, Syriacs, Chaldians, and Arabs) and a large population of seasonal migrant workers, it was the hub of cotton production in the Ottoman Empire. At the end of April 1909, in a period of two weeks, brutal massacres shook the province of Adana and its capital, the city of Adana. Images of Adana after the massacres show unprecedented physical destruction of a once prosperous city. Local Armenian businesses, churches, residences, and living quarters were totally destroyed. The violence that began in the city of Adana soon spread across the province and poured beyond its borders eastward into the province of Aleppo. In terms of the number of victims, this was the third-largest act of violence perpetrated at the beginning of the twentieth century, following only the Boxer Rebellion (1899–1901) and the genocide of the Herero and Nama between 1904 and 1907 in the German colony of Southwest Africa. The central Ottoman government immediately sent investigation commissions and established courts-martial to try the perpetrators of the massacres. However, these courts failed to prosecute the main culprits of the massacres— a miscarriage of justice that would have repercussions in the years to come. 

Despite the massive bloodshed of the Adana massacres, most of the major books on late Ottoman and modern Middle Eastern history fail even to mention these events. Where the massacres are considered in the historiography, the contested nature of the events has led to competing narratives. While the Armenian historiography broadly argues that these massacres resulted from a deliberate policy orchestrated by the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), the leading Young Turk party, Turkish historiography generally claims that these events were the result of a well-planned Armenian uprising intended to reestablish the Kingdom of Cilicia. Many Armenian and European historians have agreed that the Adana massacres represent a “dress rehearsal” for the Armenian Genocide (1915–23). The prominent historian Raymond H. Kévorkian, in his monumental volume on the Armenian Genocide, discusses the background of the Adana massacres and, based on circumstantial evidence, incriminates the CUP. He concludes by saying:

Who gave the order? Who told high-ranking civilian and military officials, as well as the local notables, to organize these “spontaneous riots”? Was it the authorities, the state, the government, the CUP? Everything suggests that it was only the sole institution that controlled the army, the government, and the main state organs—namely, the Ittihadist Central Committee—that could have issued these orders and made sure that they were respected. In view of the usual practices of this party, the orders must have been communicated, in the first instance, by means of the famous itinerant delegates sent out by Salonika, whom no vali would have dared contradict.

Kévorkian’s assessment of the massacres takes into consideration the viewpoint of the Armenian intelligentsia at the time. Many Armenian scholars adhere to his approach. This consensus notwithstanding, it is important to keep in mind that Armenians were not passive objects who lacked agency; on the contrary, they were active subjects in their own history, a perspective that is usually sidelined in the Armenian Genocide historiography.

With this book, I offer a necessary corrective to these narratives. Through a consideration of the Adana massacres in micro-historical detail, I also offer a macrocosmic understanding of ethnic violence in the Middle East and beyond. Outbreaks like the Adana massacres do not occur sui generis; they are caused by a range of complex, intersecting factors that are deeply rooted in the shifting local and national ground of political and socioeconomic life. In addition, I do not intend to privilege one factor over another in explaining these massacres. The most important factors leading to the Adana massacres were the Young Turk Revolution of 1908, which shook the foundations of the “fragile equilibrium” that had existed in the empire for decades; the emergence of resilient public spheres after three decades of despotic rule in which the public sphere was largely repressed; and the counterrevolution of April 13, 1909. The contestation of the legitimacy of the state’s power during the counterrevolution resulted in intense social violence that fed directly into the massacres. A major question that this book strives to answer is how and why public spheres in postrevolutionary periods become spaces in which underlying tensions surface dramatically, creating fear and anxiety about the future that manifests in violence.

Official narratives often attempt to explain such events as manifestations of “ancient hatreds.” They argue that these “ancient hatreds” manifest themselves in times of crisis when political or socioeconomic tensions ignite. In the case of the Middle East, rudimentary explanations of conflicts hinge on tropes such as sectarianism, Muslim-Christian conflict, or the clash of nationalisms. Such dull “explanations” only serve to perpetuate what authorities would like to hear. A question that every historian of this region should ask is, if “ancient hatreds” were the reasons behind conflicts and massacres, why did these episodes of violence begin in the nineteenth century? It is only in the second half of the nineteenth century, in the wake of internal and external transformations, that we see ethno-religious or “sectarian” violence manifest itself in the Ottoman territories. Hence, the “ancient hatreds” approach— as in the case of Yugoslavia—does not hold water in the case of the Ottoman Empire or the modern Middle East.

Furthermore, this book refutes the claim that certain cultures and religions are predisposed to violence—an idea that was and remains prevalent in the way some Western scholars and Orientalists view Islam. Even a prominent scholar of the Armenian Genocide did not shy away from certain Orientalist tropes in explaining the Armenian Genocide. The literature on genocide and massacres in recent decades has demonstrated that, in particular circumstances, ordinary men and women from many different religious and cultural backgrounds are capable of barbaric crimes.11 Instead of perpetuating the idea that certain human beings have a biological predisposition to commit crimes, I suggest that scholars should examine how and why a rationalized society suddenly erupts at a particular juncture in history to produce massacres. Having said that, it is important to highlight that scholars should be cautious about normalizing violence as an inevitable process in such cases.

Armenian Foreign Minister to visit US from May 2-6

BIG NEWS NETWORK
April 2 2022

ANI
2nd May 2022

Yerevan [Armenia], May 2 (ANI/Sputnik): Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan will pay a working visit to the United States from May 2-6 to meet with government officials and participate in a bilateral strategic dialogue session, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said on Monday.

“Mirzoyan will arrive in the United States on a working visit to participate in Armenia-US strategic dialogue meeting. In Washington, Mirzoyan will hold meetings with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, US Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Samantha Power, Special Assistant to President Amanda Sloat and other counterparts,” the ministry said in a statement.

Meetings with senior US Congress officials and a speech at the Atlantic Council think tank are also on the diplomat’s agenda. (ANI/Sputnik)

Armenia Opposition Demands PM Resign Over Karabakh

International Business Times
May 2 2022

Opposition parties in Armenia on Monday staged protests to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resign over his policy on the long-contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Arch-foe Caucasus neighbours Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a dispute since the 1990s over the mountainous enclave in Azerbaijan predominantly populated by ethnic Armenians.

Karabakh was at the centre of a six-week war in 2020 that claimed more than 6,500 lives before it ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement.

Opposition parties now accuse Pashinyan of plans to give away all of Karabakh to Azerbaijan after he told lawmakers last month that the “international community calls on Armenia to scale down demands on Karabakh”.

Opposition parties in Armenia staged a second day of protests on May 2, 2022 over allegations that the prime minister plans to cede a disputed region to arch-foe Azerbaijan Photo: AFP / Karen MINASYAN

Waving Armenian and Karabakh flags and shouting demands for Pashinyan to step down, some 5,000 protesters marched on Monday evening in central Yerevan.  

“We are launching a popular protest movement to force Pashinyan to resign,” parliament vice speaker and opposition leader Ishkhan Saghatelyan told AFP ahead of the rally.

“He is a traitor, he has lied to the people,” he said, accusing the 46-year-old leader of wanting to hand over the contested region to Azerbaijan. “He has no popular mandate to do so.”

Saghatelyan said “protests will not stop until Pashinyan goes.”

On Sunday (May 1, 2022), thousands of protesters gathered in Armenia’s capital to protest against concessions to Azerbaijan over the long-disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region Photo: AFP / Karen MINASYAN

One of the demonstrators, 53-year-old dentist Hripsime Mkrtchyan, said: “Nikol must resign. His poor policy has led to territorial and human losses.”

“Our people have never been in such a depressed mood. We don’t see a light at the end of the tunnel.”

‘We are launching a popular protest movement to force (Prime Minister) Pashinyan to resign,’ parliament vice speaker and opposition leader Ishkhan Saghatelyan told AFP ahead of the rally Photo: AFP / Karen MINASYAN

Earlier in the morning, public transport was disrupted in Yerevan as small groups of protesters attempted to block traffic in the city centre.

Police intervened, briefly detaining dozens of protesters.

The Union of Journalists, a media advocacy group, criticised police tactics as heavy-handed, saying there were several instances of officers punching journalists covering the protests.

On Sunday, several thousand protesters rallied in central Yerevan to demand Pashinyan’s resignation.

Under the Moscow-brokered deal, Armenia ceded swathes of territory it had controlled for decades and Russia deployed some 2,000 peacekeepers to oversee the truce.

The pact was seen in Armenia as a national humiliation and sparked weeks of anti-government protests, leading Pashinyan to call snap parliamentary polls which his party, Civil Contract, won last September.

In April, Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met for rare EU-mediated talks in Brussels after which they tasked their foreign ministers to “begin preparatory work for peace talks.”

The meeting came after a flare-up in Karabakh on March 25 that saw Azerbaijan capture a strategic village in the area under the Russian peacekeepers’ responsibility, killing three separatist troops.

Baku tabled in mid-March its set of framework proposals for the peace agreement that includes both sides’ mutual recognition of territorial integrity, meaning Yerevan should agree on Karabakh being part of Azerbaijan.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan sparked controversy at home when he said — commenting on the Azerbaijani proposal — that for Yerevan “the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is not a territorial issue, but a matter of rights” of the local ethnic-Armenian population.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. The ensuing conflicts claimed around 30,000 lives.

https://www.ibtimes.com/armenia-opposition-demands-pm-resign-over-karabakh-3491850

Armenian protesters call for PM to resign over Karabakh ‘concessions’

May 2 2022
Opposition parties in Armenia on Monday staged protests to demand Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s resign over his policy on the long-contested region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Arch-foe Caucasus neighbours Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a dispute since the 1990s over the mountainous enclave in Azerbaijan predominantly populated by ethnic Armenians.

Karabakh was at the centre of a six-week war in 2020 that claimed more than 6,500 lives before it ended with a Russian-brokered ceasefire agreement.

Opposition parties now accuse Pashinyan of plans to give away all of Karabakh to Azerbaijan after he told lawmakers last month that the “international community calls on Armenia to scale down demands on Karabakh”.

Waving Armenian and Karabakh flags and shouting demands for Pashinyan to step down, some 5,000 protesters marched on Monday evening in central Yerevan.

“We are launching a popular protest movement to force Pashinyan to resign,” parliament vice speaker and opposition leader Ishkhan Saghatelyan told AFP ahead of the rally.

“He is a traitor, he has lied to the people,” he said, accusing the 46-year-old leader of wanting to hand over the contested region to Azerbaijan. “He has no popular mandate to do so.”

Saghatelyan said “protests will not stop until Pashinyan goes.”

One of the demonstrators, 53-year-old dentist Hripsime Mkrtchyan, said: “Nikol must resign. His poor policy has led to territorial and human losses.”

“Our people have never been  in such a depressed mood. We don’t see a light at the end of the tunnel.”

Earlier in the morning, public transport was disrupted in Yerevan as small groups of protesters attempted to block traffic in the city centre.

Police intervened, briefly detaining dozens of protesters.

The Union of Journalists, a media advocacy group, criticised police tactics as heavy-handed, saying there were several instances of officers punching journalists covering the protests.

On Sunday, several thousand protesters rallied in central Yerevan to demand Pashinyan’s resignation.

Under the Moscow-brokered deal, Armenia ceded swathes of territory it had controlled for decades and Russia deployed some 2,000 peacekeepers to oversee the truce.

The pact was seen in Armenia as a national humiliation and sparked weeks of anti-government protests, leading Pashinyan to call snap parliamentary polls which his party, Civil Contract, won last September.

In April, Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met for rare EU-mediated talks in Brussels after which they tasked their foreign ministers to “begin preparatory work for peace talks.”

The meeting came after a flare-up in Karabakh on March 25 that saw Azerbaijan capture a strategic village in the area under the Russian peacekeepers’ responsibility, killing three separatist troops.

Baku tabled in mid-March its set of framework proposals for the peace agreement that includes both sides’ mutual recognition of territorial integrity, meaning Yerevan should agree on Karabakh being part of Azerbaijan.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan sparked controversy at home when he said — commenting on the Azerbaijani proposal — that for Yerevan “the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is not a territorial issue, but a matter of rights” of the local ethnic-Armenian population.

Ethnic Armenian separatists in Nagorno-Karabakh broke away from Azerbaijan when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. The ensuing conflicts claimed around 30,000 lives.

(AFP)

https://www.france24.com/en/asia-pacific/20220502-armenian-protesters-call-for-pm-to-resign-over-karabakh-concessions

AP: Armenia detains 180 protesters calling on Pashinyan to quit


May 2 2022



YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) — Police in Armenia’s capital on Monday detained 180 anti-government demonstrators that were blocking streets to protest against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

Protests demanding that Pashinyan step down reignited in Armenia last month, after he spoke in the country’s parliament about the need to sign a peace agreement with Azerbaijan.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a decades-old conflict over the separatist region of Nagorno-Karabakh, which is part of Azerbaijan but has been under Armenian control since early 1990s. In a six-week war in the fall of 2020, Azerbaijan was able to reclaim control over large swaths of land in and around the region before signing a Russia-brokered truce with Armenia. Pashinyan has faced backlash at home for agreeing to the deal.

As Armenia and Azerbaijan edged closer to reaching a proper peace agreement this year, opposition forces in Armenia have resumed protests against Pashinyan. Rallies in the capital, Yerevan, are being held almost daily since April 17.

On Sunday, demonstrators in the center of Yerevan set up tents for a round-the-clock protest and said they wouldn’t leave until Pashinyan and his team step down. The Interfax news agency reported that barricades were erected from garbage cans and street benches, and that traffic on France Square, a major road connecting four main avenues of the Armenian capital, stopped.

Demonstrators — including opposition lawmakers — chanted “Armenia without Nikol!” Protest leader and deputy parliamentary speaker Ishkhan Sagatelyan told reporters that protesters would clear the streets by Monday afternoon, so that another rally could gather on the square in the evening.

Some of the detentions on Monday were carried out with the use of force, and journalists covering the protests were reported to have been pushed around by the police. Police spokespeople told Interfax the demonstrators were detained on charges of refusing to obey police officers.


https://apnews.com/article/business-europe-azerbaijan-armenia-yerevan-b17508a4b06eab9459e055834511ec0d



Turkey hints possible border commission with Armenia

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – May 2 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu has spoken about the possibility of establishing a commission to clarify the border between Armenia and Turkey.

According to Cavusoglu, the special representatives of Yerevan and Ankara will meet in Vienna on May 3 to discuss various steps that can be taken within the Armenia-Turkey dialogue process.

“There was an agreement to redefine the border. How will it be done? For example, will there be a joint commission?” Ermenihaber.am cited the Turkish diplomat as saying.

Turkey and Armenia last December named special envoys to discuss the normalization of ties. Two rounds of talks followed on January 14 and then February 24.
https://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/300011/Turkey_hints_possible_border_commission_with_Armenia

Armenia says re-demarcation of Turkish border not on the table

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – May 2 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Yerevan said on Monday, May 2 that there was no discussion or agreement on the re-demarcation of the Armenian-Turkish border, something announced earlier by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Vhan Hunanyan said no such issue was on the table.

Turkey and Armenia last December named special envoys to discuss the normalization of ties. Two rounds of talks followed on January 14 and then February 24.

IMF completes final review under Stand-By Arrangement with Armenia, allows authorities to draw $35 million

Public Radio of Armenia
May 2 2022

 The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) completed the sixth and final review under the Stand-By Arrangement with Armenia. The completion of the review will allow the authorities to draw SDR 25.716 million (about US$35 million), bringing total disbursements to SDR 308.8 million (about US$415 million) under Armenia’s three-year SBA. The SBA was approved by the IMF’s Board on May 17, 2019 and augmented on May 18, 2020. The Executive Board’s decision was taken without a meeting. 

The 3-year Stand-By Arrangement, approved in May 2019, comes to an end on May 16, 2022, after the conclusion of this review. Notwithstanding various domestic and external shocks that hit the economy over the past three years, program performance has been satisfactory and important structural reforms have been advanced.

Armenia’s economy continued to recover in 2021 and early 2022, largely thanks to the authorities’ economic management efforts. They persevered with strong policy implementation and remained proactive to adjust policies appropriately to unforeseen developments. More generally, over the three-year program, the authorities advanced important structural and institutional reforms, including on improving tax compliance, refining the budget process, strengthening the inflation targeting framework and supporting financial sector stability, as well as implementing reforms to strengthen governance, foster transparency, and combat corruption. A flexible exchange rate is more entrenched within the country’s policy framework. The authorities have also developed an ambitious medium-term reform program that, if successfully implemented, could lead to stronger and more inclusive growth.

The economic outlook for 2022 is subject to high uncertainty due to the spillovers from the war in Ukraine. Despite the strong momentum in early 2022, economic growth is projected to slow down to about 1.5 percent this year, primarily owing to lower consumption and contraction in trade. Inflation is expected to remain elevated on account of higher import prices, particularly food and oil, and the current account is expected to widen as the economy adjusts to shocks. In this regard, the CBA’s recent policy tightening signals its strong commitment to contain inflationary pressures and anchor inflation expectations. Its ongoing supervisory initiatives would also help preserve financial stability. Fiscal space should be used prudently to mitigate the adverse impact of the war in Ukraine on the economy, while continuing to support the authorities’ medium-term fiscal consolidation efforts.

https://en.armradio.am/2022/05/02/imf-completes-final-review-under-stand-by-arrangement-with-armenia-allows-authorities-to-draw-35-million/