Asbarez: As Berdzor (Lachin) Falls, Aliyev and Ankara Rejoice

Aghavno residents gather their belongings to leave the village in Artsakh's Berdzor region (Armenpress photo by Tatev Duryan)

The Armenian residents of the Aghavno village in Artsakh Berdzor left their homes and evacuated the area ahead of the August 25 deadline, and thus Berdzor (Lachin) fell under Azerbaijani occupation.

Images and videos of desolate Armenian leaving Berdzor with only their belongings and the undignified manner they were forced out of their homes peppered social media.

However, President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan and the Turkish government rejoiced at this indignity.

“We returned to Lachin,” Aliyev proclaimed in a Twitter post.

“Today we, Azerbaijanis, returned to the city of Lachin and the Azerbaijani army are positioned in Lachin. The villages of Zabukh (Aghavno) and Sus are under their protection,” Aliyev said in his post.

Artsakh authorities on Thursday said the road linking Armenia to Artsakh through Berdzor is open and safe passage was being guaranteed by the Russian peacekeeping contingent.

Meanwhile, Turkey expressed hope that the “return” of Aghavno and Berdzor will benefit Azerbaijan in its efforts to normalize relations with Armenia.

“We are happy that the city of Lachin and the villages of Zabukh [Aghavno[ and Sus have returned to Azerbaijan under the provisions of the tripartite declaration of November 9, 2020,” the Turkish foreign ministry said in a statement on Friday.

“We hope that this important step in the direction of establishing peace and stability in the South Caucasus will contribute to the improvement of regional, as well as Azerbaijani-Armenian relations,” said added official Ankara.

The Turkish foreign ministry also stated that “Ankara has defended and will continue to defend the territorial integrity and sovereignty of brotherly Azerbaijan.”

Asbarez: StopOz Video Hits 1,000,000+ Views

ANCA-HALC Tweet Educates Voters about Dangers of Oz Senate Candidacy

WASHINGTON—A hard-hitting video – posted by the Armenian National Committee of America and the Hellenic American Leadership Council – has been viewed over 1,000,000 times in its first 48 hours online – educating the American public and Pennsylvania voters about the dangers of Dr. Mehmet Oz’s controversial candidacy for an open Senate seat from the Keystone State.

The video is produced by the Really American PAC.

“We’re seeing growing alarm across Pennsylvania – driven in large part by ANCA coalition advocacy with the Hellenic American Leadership Council – over Dr. Oz’s troubling ties to Turkish dictator Recep Erdogan,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “It was encouraging to see our most recent video reach 1,000,000 views so quickly among Democrats, Republicans and independents who share our commitment to the integrity of the U.S. Senate.”

“Dr. Oz’s candidacy has been defined by false pretenses – pretending to be a Pennsylvanian when he actually lives in New Jersey, pretending to dispense medical advice when he is actually peddling snake oil,” said Hellenic American Leadership Council Executive Director Endy Zemenides.  “That serial dishonesty is what raises the red flags with regards to Oz’s ties to the Erdogan autocracy. The Washington Post first raised these issues in February, and the fact that Oz has failed to address them is alarming.  People all over America – who know full well what influence a single senator can have – are rightly asking: Who Is Oz?”

The video is part of a broader Hellenic and Armenian American national and Pennsylvania grassroots efforts to raise awareness about Dr. Mehmet Oz’s ties to Turkey’s repressive Erdogan regime, the national security implications of having a dual Turkey-US citizen elected to the U.S. Senate, and Dr. Oz’s disconcerting connections to deniers of the Ottoman Turkey’s genocide committed against its Armenian and other Christian populations.  

These concerns have been spotlighted in news coverage by NBC News, the New York Post, Forbes, Daily Wire, Daily Caller, and Breitbart, among others.  

“For Americans of Armenian heritage – having spent the better part of the past century working, successfully, to end U.S. cover-ups of Turkey’s genocidal crimes – it would represent a betrayal of the worst kind, a shameful rollback of America’s commitment to human rights, to send to the U.S. Senate an ally of Erdogan, the world’s foremost Armenian Genocide denier,” explained Hamparian, in an op/ed in The Washington Times. 

The ANCA has also called for a US Department of Justice investigation into whether Oz may be in violation of the Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA) of 1938 for his endorsement agreement with Istanbul-based Turkish Airlines, through which Oz provides “consulting services, certain media, and in-flight film appearances.”

On the local level, the ANC of Pennsylvania continues its statewide grassroots campaign to ensure voters know the truth about Oz’s ties to the Turkish government and Erdogan-aligned stakeholders and can make informed choices at the ballot box.

“The ANC of Pennsylvania has expressed its concerns over Oz’s candidacy from the very beginning. Deeper ties to the Turkish government and its interests are uncovered every day. Pennsylvanians deserve a senator who will represent our interests – not those of dictator Recep Erdogan,” explained ANC of Pennsylvania co-chair Nora Kzirian.

AW: Ooster, Woostah Olympic Memories

Old headlines of Worcester “Aram” Olympic victories from the Hairenik Weekly

Worcester has a proud and exceptional Armenian history beginning in the late 1800s, having been referred to as “Little Kharpert” and in the late 1880s becoming home to the first Armenian Apostolic church and the first Armenian Protestant church in the United States. With so many Armenian immigrants drawn to the city because of substantial manufacturing work opportunities paying $1.75 a day, Worcester became the heart of Armenians in the United States and was often referred to as “Little Armenia.”

Based on how old you are and where you live, you have a different pronunciation of this proud Armenian community city in the heart of New England.

The very first Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) chapter in the United States and the chapter that won the first Olympics in 1934 is back in the spotlight. This is its year.

Finally, after a 48-year absence with COVID tossed in, “Worcester,” a profile in significant Armenian history, heritage and AYF dynamics, is the site of an AYF Olympics.

The Aram community is hosting an AYF Olympics for the fifth time.

Though not in the forefront in the recent past, the Worcester AYF in past Olympics competitions yielded five wins, including winning the first AYF Olympics in 1934, followed by wins in 1938, 1939, 1960 and 1961.

“We won the very first Olympicstruly part of our history, AYF history. Leo Siroonian, Pete Eknoian and Tony Margosian were Worcester Olympic standouts,” recalls Debbie Kachadoorian Salerno.

Let us add Deb’s father Jack Kachadoorian to that roster.

Jack Kachadoorian, 1941

“It has been many years, but we still maintain a respect for our early days. We looked up to them as those who helped establish our community for us to grow up in,” stated Kachadoorian Salerno, herself a many-time standout peerless swimming gold medalist in the 60s, recording a nifty 61 points.

“In those days, the Worcester community was a family, whether we were related or not,” shared Barbara Goshgarian Berberian.

“We were walking distance from each otherAustin Street, Main Street, Chandler Street, Park Avenue, Belmont Street,” she adds with a fondness of recall.

Worcester and the AYF Olympics share a proud past.

The late 30s and the years following were formative Olympic years, and Worcester was in the thick of matters.

In the 60s and 70s, the strength and growth of the annual event saw Providence-Worcester duels that became the heart of Olympic competition.

“It was war. It was intense,” said Providence’s Garry Giragosian, a standout dash gold medalist and a longtime basketball coach.

Leo Derderian, who holds third place among men’s all-time scoring, summarized: “In those days, winning against Worcester was not easy with the likes of Armen Harootian and the Teshoians. Fraternalism was on hold over Labor Day. It took a lot of practice as these ultimately longtime friends took Olympics very seriously. Nish was outstanding in the weights. Gary Gosh in the dashes. We forged special relationships and lifetime friendships.” 

Over many years, the Worcester AYF saw the likes of not-to-be forgotten participants wearing the Aram colors.

Worcester’s Olympic Royalty

Worcester Olympic standouts included three true athletes as kings and a truly classy athletic queen: Jack Kachadoorian, Leo Siroonian, Armen Harootian and Lucy Oulohojian Almasian.

Kachadoorian was the first ever Olympic king, picked in 1952 at the only Olympics held in neighboring Springfield, Massachusetts.

He was a top notch sprinter from 1938 to 1941 and a top scorer in 1939, partnering with Siroonian against defending Olympic champ, Brockton. Kachadoorian’s winning duels in the dashes with future brother-in-law Varad Varadian showed competition at its best, even at that point in time.

“Jack was a tremendous athlete, a natural. He hit the track with ultimate natural skill, raw talent. Jack was an AYF leader, not just in sports,” recalls Levon Barsamian.

It’s important to include that Jack’s wife, the former Maro Varadian of Providence, was a dominant Olympic participant for the Varantians, winning gold medals in the long jump and dashes in the 1940s. She was chosen Olympic queen at Providence Olympics in 2015. Her participation for so many years across many areas of the community could be a chapter of its own in Worcester and Providence history books.

Jack and Maro motivated their childrenHarry, Levon and Debto participate in AYF. 

Siroonian was chosen king at the Boston games in 1955.

Siroonian had participated in the Olympics from 1934 to 1938, winning dashes on five occasions and placing second four times for a total of 37 points.

Siroonian had been a truly dominant dash man in Worcester’s first win in 1934 and again in 1938, being top scorer and creating a team momentum that led to the Aram’s repeat win in 1939.

Siroonian was an outstanding athlete at South High School in football, track and basketball, earning all-scholastic recognition as a speedy halfback in football.

His parents and Barsamian’s parents were good friends.

“Leo Siroonian was one of our very first true AYF athletes. He was a natural with a lot of heart,” Barsamian recalls.

From the Hairenik Weekly, September 15, 1955

In an article written for the Weekly on the 1955 Olympics, Haig Varadian stated: “Leo had a victorious AYF spirit from 1934 to 1938. Worcester was one of the chapters constantly leading athletically, educationally and spiritually. Leo was one of the active and respected leaders.” He was referring to the roles of Kachadoorian, Siroonian, Peter Eknoian and Margosian as Aram chapter members, not just as athletes.

In 1974 (the last time Worcester hosted the Olympics), the Aram community honored Harootian and Oulohojian as king and queen.

Seventh on the all time men’s scoring list with 127.5 points, Harootian was high scorer five times. In 1960, he shared high scorer honors with all-time men’s scoring king Haig Bohigian. 

“Armen was a natural athlete in the dashes, hurdles, long jump, high jump, mile,” described Goshgarian Berberian.

A Fitchburg State College varsity soccer and track standout and captain, Harootian motivated others to participate in the Olympics.

“Armen was one of our coaches. We did what he said. Gary Gosh was also really supportive, and he would pick us up to go to practice,” remembers Michelle Abladian Fashjian, who participated in dashes.

Pictured left to right: Michelle Abladian Fashjian, coach Armen Harootian and Barbara Goshgarian Berberian, 2022

“There was not a lot of money then, and we used to share one pair of track shoes,” added Goshgarian Berberian.

The former “Debbie Kach” was quick to point out, “This was serious stuff with Armen and GaryOlympic practices and Olympic weekend curfewsnot just participation at the games.”

Ironically, the ladies agreed on the same favorite memory of Harootian and Olympics: “One year, we were talking about the next events under the stands when a gun went off. Armen went to the starter and asked if the event was the mile. Indeed it was. We had not heard the call. Others had started. Armen just took off and finally caught the others, winning the mile.”

In typical Armen Harootian manner, he remembers the special winning occasion with his trademark laugh: “Well, it was a great win, but if I had been trying to catch Haig Bohigian, it would have been different.”

Harootian’s soccer and track achievements brought him college conference all-star recognition and election to Fitchburg’s Athletic Hall of Fame for both those sports.

With Harootian a most suitable king in 1974, Oulohojian Almasian was clearly a most suitable queen.

“Class, a lot of class,” Barsamian recalls. Oulohojian Almasian finished with a total of 81 points, and after all these years, is still sitting comfortably in the top tier of alumni women’s competition. Her skill in shot put and the jumping events was unchallenged.

With Harootian and “Gary Gosh,” she was a team motivator.

Oulohojian Almasian is not only remembered for Olympics, but also her community activity and being the first female Camp Haiastan director.

Apples do not fall far from the tree.

Her daughter Ani stands firmly in fifth place among alumni women with 138 points. Her son Joe  is ninth in men’s ranking with 111 points and paired up with Ken Topalian in the bobsled competition representing Armenia on the world stage in the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Olympics.

Today, granddaughter Melanie Almasian is collecting Olympic medals for North Andover AYF!

Worcester’s Olympic Standouts

It takes a team.

In the 1960s-70s, top point getters for the Arams included Gary Goshgarian (dashes), Cathy Harutunian (dashes, high jump), Nish Teshoian (field events), Louise Barsamian (dashes), the Kach kidsDeb, Harry and Levonand Gil Markarian (100, 200 dashes).

Jack and Maro Kach’s kids carried on the family name in the games.

Debbie and Harry Kachadoorian were truly dominant in swimming.

Debbie was undefeated in her 25- and 50-yard swimming events. She finished with 61 points and was a high scorer in the 1966 games.

Her brother Harry won many gold medals in the 50 and 100 freestyle competitions.

Levon Kachadoorian added his name to the Aram scoreboard with Deb and Harry, earning   medals consistently in the sprints—a skill which also brought him conference recognition as a receiver in football at Dean Junior College and Worcester State.

A few years later, Richie Tashjian dominated the distance events, and a balanced Worcester team also had Rich, Bob and Larry Ovian gaining medals in field events and middle distance eventstypically competing against strong, consistent Providence competition. 

Tashjian later became a consistent regular in the Boston Marathon.

From the Armenian Weekly, 1974

Not a natural but a hard worker, Nancy Cotter would enter events so that Worcester would have participation at the games.

John Hoogasian was a gold medal force in field events and went on to coach field events at Holy Cross.

In the rain marred 2002 Philadelphia games, Worcester finished third, led by first year participants and top scorers Chris Tutunjian, who swept the distance events, and Meredith Davis, who collected golds in the dashes.

The following year at the 70th annual games in Providence, the host Green Machine won with the Arams taking their first runner-up trophy in 38 years and putting up a show with an astounding five athletes notching 15 points each.

They included newcomers Caitlin Shooshan in dashes and jumps; sprinter Nicole Chatelian; Nicole Taraverdian’s dominance and record breaking in the pool; and Kevin Kardian in men’s distance events.

Taraverdian’s 25-yard butterfly record stands today.

Add Justine Douvadjian’s pentathlon win, and Worcester was in one large spotlight with one of the chapter’s most significant Olympics achievements over the years.

In the 2004 first-time-ever Chicago held games, Chris and Lynne Tutunjian became the first sisters to each score 15 points in an Olympics, both in swimming dominance.

Lynne set the 25-yard freestyle mark and joined her mother Shooshan Kassabian Tutunjianwho held the 1600 meter run mark for women for many years—as the only parent-child simultaneous record holders of the Olympics.

Olympics and then some…

There have been many firsts for the Armenian community in Worcester over the years, an unbroken thread of nationalism, no matter the size of the community.

There’s no better person to close this portrait than Varsenig “Dusty” Dostourian Cotter, the chairperson of the first AYF chapter in the United States. 

To this day, “Dusty” has been a high-energy spirit in the community for decades. Her contributions in the AYF, ARS and in the church over the decades have been immeasurable.

“We are thrilled to finally have Olympics back,” said Dostourian Cotter. “We have an incomparable history as an Armenian community and an AYF community. We are proud of our community, and you will feel that when you come to our Olympics. Veratartz!”

Harry Derderian is a native of Indian Orchard, Mass and resident of S. Lyon, Mich. He is a member of the marketing faculty at Eastern Michigan University as well as an adjunct professor of business at Schoolcraft Community College.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/26/2022

                                        Friday, 


Russia, Armenia Tout Surge In Bilateral Trade


Kyrgyzstan - Prime Ministers Nikol Pashinian (left) of Armenia and Mikhail 
Mishustin of Russia meet in Cholpon-Ata, .


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his Russian counterpart Mikhail Mishustin 
have touted a sharp increase in Russian-Armenian trade which reached a record 
high of more than $1.6 billion in the first half of this year.

Meeting with Pashinian on Thursday, Mishustin said it soared by 42 percent 
despite the Western economic sanctions against Russia.

“These are record indicators in our mutual trade,” Mishustin said during the 
talks held in Kyrgyzstan on the sidelines of a meeting of prime ministers of 
Eurasian Economic Union member states.

Pashinian also hailed the “good news” in his opening remarks at the talks. “The 
figures mentioned by you are a very concrete result of our joint work,” he said.

Armenian government data shows an even sharper rise in bilateral trade: 50 
percent. According to it, Russia accounted for almost one-third of Armenia’s 
first-half foreign trade, solidifying its status as the South Caucasus country’s 
number one trading partner.

Armenia was initially expected to be hit hard by the barrage of sanctions 
imposed by the United States, the European Union and other Western powers 
following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Russian-Armenian trade fell in March 
but recovered in the following months as the Russian economy proved more 
resilient than expected.

“Together with our Armenian partners, we are making prompt decisions aimed at 
protecting our trade and economic cooperation in the face of, among other 
things, illegal sanctions against the Russian Federation,” Mishustin told 
Pashinian.

The Russian premier said that Moscow wants to “accelerate work” on more Russian 
investments projects in Armenia. He also announced that one of his deputies, 
Alexei Overchuk, will lead a “business mission of Russian companies” in Armenia 
in September.

“We are also doing a lot of work to expand the use of national currencies in 
bilateral trade. I am sure that this will contribute to the growth of our trade 
turnover and, what is very important, the diversification of its structure,” 
added Mishustin.

Yerevan announced in April this year that Armenia has technically started paying 
for Russian natural gas in Russian rubles, rather than U.S. dollars. The switch 
was in tune with Moscow’s broader efforts to minimize the impact of the Western 
sanctions.



Yerevan Reaffirms Support For OSCE Minsk Group

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - The Foreign Ministry building in Yerevan.


The Armenian government reaffirmed support for the OSCE Minsk Group on Friday in 
response to Azerbaijani criticism of apparent U.S. plans to continue using that 
mediation format for a resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

“The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group have an international mandate to assist 
in a lasting and comprehensive resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, and 
nobody has invalidated this mandate,” Vahan Hunanian, the Armenian Foreign 
Ministry spokesman, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

A senior American diplomat, Philip Reeker, was appointed on Wednesday as the new 
U.S. co-chair of the group that has long been led by the United States, Russia 
and France. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that in his new capacity 
Reeker will strive for “direct dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan” aimed at 
a “long-term political settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.”

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry denounced Blinken’s statement, saying that the 
U.S. risks being left out of the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process with its 
attempts to “revive” the group. It again claimed that Azerbaijan’s victory in 
the 2020 war with Armenia put an end to the Karabakh conflict.

Commenting on the Azerbaijani criticism, a U.S. Statement department spokesman, 
Vedant Patel, underlined later on Thursday Washington’s “commitment to 
facilitating peace in the South Caucasus.”

“As a country, we are committed to facilitating direct dialogue between 
Azerbaijan and Armenia bilaterally, multilaterally, and in cooperation with 
likeminded partners to achieve a comprehensive peace settlement between the two 
countries,” Patel told a news briefing in Washington.

Russia says that the U.S. and France stopped working with it in the Minsk Group 
format following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. U.S. Assistant Secretary of 
State Karen Donfried denied that when she visited Yerevan in June. She said the 
Minsk Group remains a “very important format” for Washington.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov insisted afterwards that “the Minsk Group 
stopped its activities at the initiative of the American and French co-chairs.”

In recent months, Armenian leaders have repeatedly called for kick-starting the 
work of the mediating troika.



Four Arrested Over Yerevan Market Blast

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia - Firefighters and rescue teams work at the Surmalu market in Yerevan 
rocked by a powerful explosion, August 14, 2022.


Armenian law-enforcement authorities on Friday made their first arrests in a 
criminal investigation into the August 14 explosion at a market in Yerevan that 
left at least 16 people dead and dozens of others injured.

The Investigative Committee said the suspects include the deputy director of the 
Surmalu market and three other individuals who used one of its warehouses. The 
committee did not name any of them.

A spokesman for the law-enforcement agency, Vartan Tadevosian, said the deputy 
director and another suspect, who rented the warehouse laden with fireworks, 
were charged with a grave violation of fire-safety rules. The two other suspects 
are facing accusations of negligence and involuntary manslaughter, he told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Prosecutors have already asked a Yerevan court to allow the investigators to 
hold them in pre-trial detention, added Tadevosian.

It remained unclear whether the investigators will also bring criminal charges 
against the market’s owner, Razmik Zakharian. The latter has still not been 
interrogated by them.

Armenia - A man is rushed to hospital after a powerful explosion at the Surmalu 
market in Yerevan, August 14, 2022.

The first arrests in the probe came two days after the Armenian Ministry of 
Emergencies ended search and rescue operations at the sprawling market located 
south of the city center. Rescue teams managed to extract 10 survivors and 16 
dead during the ten-day operations. But they failed to find the last person 
still listed as missing following the powerful explosion.

The investigators believe that the blast occurred in a market area where large 
quantities fireworks and other pyrotechnics were stored.

Right after the accident, the Investigative Committee urged businesses and 
individuals who bought fireworks at Surmalu recently to provide their samples to 
the Armenian police. Many of the buyers heeded the appeal, Tadevosian said, 
adding that the samples are now being examined by forensic experts.

In a statement released on Thursday, the Office of the Prosecutor-General 
pointed out that last year fire inspectors identified two dozen violations of 
safety rules at Surmalu. It said they did not carry out a follow-up inspection 
to see whether the violations were eliminated.

Tadevosian would not say whether the inspectors could also be charged with 
negligence. “Employees of the inspectorate have been questioned but they 
currently have the status of a witness [in the case,]” explained the 
Investigative Committee spokesman.


Reposted 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.

  

​Azerbaijan reclaims key city near Nagorno-Karabakh (with several links)

Aug 26 2022
Azerbaijan reclaims key city near Nagorno-Karabakh
The leader of Azerbaijan says the country has reclaimed control of a strategic city on the edge of Nagorno-Karabakh

By The Associated Press
, 6:24 PM

MOSCOW — Azerbaijan has reclaimed control of a strategic city on the edge of Nagorno-Karabakh, the leader of Azerbaijan said Friday.

President lham Aliyev said Azerbaijani forces have moved into the city of Lachin and two nearby villages. “I congratulate Lachin residents and the entire people of Azerbaijan,” he tweeted.

Lachin sits on a road that has served as the main link between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan has reclaimed control of the city and the “Lachin corridor” after building an alternate route in line with a Russia-mediated truce that ended a 2020 war between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan and Armenia have been locked in a decades-old conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, which is part of Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

During a six-week war in 2020 that killed more than 6,600 people, Azerbaijan reclaimed large parts of Nagorno-Karabakh and surrounding areas that had been controlled for decades by the Armenia-backed separatists.

The cease-fire in 2020 was mediated by Russia, which deployed about 2,000 troops to the region to serve as peacekeepers.

https://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/azerbaijan-reclaims-key-city-nagorno-karabakh-88895905

ALSO READ

Azerbaijan reclaims key city near Nagorno-Karabakh – KRDO
https://krdo.com/news/ap-national-news/2022/08/26/azerbaijan-reclaims-key-city-near-nagorno-karabakh/
Armenian Investigators Say Surmalu Markets Deputy Director Arrested Over Deadly Blast – UrduPoint
https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/armenian-investigators-say-surmalu-markets-d-1552940.html
Azerbaijani troops stationed in Lachin city of Karabakh: Aliyev – Islamabad Post
https://islamabadpost.com.pk/azerbaijani-troops-stationed-in-lachin-city-of-karabakh-aliyev/
Azerbaijan takes over Lachin city in line with Armenia peace deal | Conflict News | Al Jazeera
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/8/26/azerbaijan-takes-over-lachin-city-in-line-with-armenia-peace-deal

U.S. responds to Azerbaijan, defends Minsk Group appointment

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – Aug 26 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - The United States has responded to Azerbaijan's threats to remove Washington from the process of normalization of the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations.

On Wednesday, August 24, U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken appointed Ambassador Philip Reeker as Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations and Minsk Group Co-Chair. Blinken noted that Reeker’s appointment reaffirms Washington's commitment to peaceful resolution of conflicts in the South Caucasus.

Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesperson Leyla Abdullayeva took to Twitter to respond to Blinken's appointment and repeat Azerbaijan's narrative that "the Karabakh conflict has been resolved" and that "Karabakh is an integral part of Azerbaijan."

"Attempts to 'resuscitate' the de-facto non-functioning Minsk Group may result the USA to be estranged from the process of normalization of the Azerbaijani-Armenian relations," the spokesperson wrote.

However, Vedant Patel, Principal Deputy Spokesperson Bureau of Global Public Affairs, later defended the appointment, maintaining that Blinken appointed Reeker to serve as the senior advisor for Caucasus negotiations to underscore the United States' commitment to facilitating peace in the South Caucasus.

"As a country, we are committed to facilitating direct dialogue between Azerbaijan and Armenia bilaterally, multilaterally, and in cooperation with likeminded partners to achieve a comprehensive peace settlement between the two countries," Patel added.

Armenia responds to Russian complaint over market blast

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – Aug 26 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - The Armenian Foreign Ministry has formally responded to a complaint lodged by the Russian embassy in Yerevan rejecting rumors of Russian involvement in the large explosion that ripped through Yerevan’s popular Surmalu shopping strip earlier this month.

“We have responded to the note from the Russian embassy in the prescribed manner,” Vahan Hunanyan, a spokesperson for the Armenian Foreign Ministry, told CivilNet Thursday, August 25. “The content of the note is part of the internal diplomatic record and, accordingly, we do not consider its publication to be appropriate.”

He did not elaborate further.

The Russian embassy in Yerevan announced last week it had made a formal complaint over the rumors, saying it was “outraged” by them and calling them a “direct provocation aimed at undermining Russian-Armenian allied relations.”

Days later, Ivan Nechaev, a spokesperson for the Russian Foreign Ministry, said Moscow “expects a response” to its complaint.

Allegations that Russia was somehow involved in the explosion, which started at a warehouse storing fireworks, have been spreading on Armenian social media.

Armenian officials have ruled out terrorism as a cause of the blast, but it remains unclear what caused the fireworks to detonate. The explosion left at least 16 people dead and scores more wounded.

Safaryan: Opponents of Armenian-Russian friendship and alliance are trying to denigrate Armenia`s participation in the EAEU

ARMINFO
Armenia – Aug 26 2022
Marianna Mkrtchyan

ArmInfo. Eurasian economic integration is an important direction for Armenia's policy, which occupies one of the key places in the development of the Armenian  economy, and the country is obliged to more closely, deeply and  proactively follow the processes within the framework of the EAEU.

On August 26 at a press conference in Yerevan, presenting the seventh  economic study of the Eurasian Expert Club, Coordinator of the Club,  head of the Integration and Development NGO Aram Safaryan expressed a  similar opinion, regarding the Armenian economy in H1 2022 in the  context of the country's membership in the EAEU,.

In this vein, he stated that H1 2022 was an unprecedented year for  Armenia in terms of economic growth in the post-Soviet space.  "Economic activity in H1 2022 increased by 10.5%. This is a very  high, unexpected and surprising indicator. It was unexpected, since  the largest international financial organizations, such as, the World  Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the European Bank for  Reconstruction and Development, the Eurasian Bank, forecasted much  more modest forecasts for the first half of the year at the end of  last year and at the beginning of the current year," Safaryan said,  recalling that at the beginning of the year the Armenian government  projected a possible economic growth of 7.5%, which was also expected  last year.

According to the expert, the economic indicators of Armenia are  supported by the dynamics of GDP, which increased by 8.5% compared to  the same period last year. "But we state that the growth, which was  mainly based on industry, construction and trade, gives rise not only  to a sense of satisfaction, but also causes paradoxes and  uncertainties," Safaryan noted.

At the same time, he stressed that the EAEU market is the most  favorable for the sale of Armenian finished products. Moreover,  according to him, the role of the Eurasian market in the context of  the last three years has been growing for Armenia from year to year,  with the exception of the pandemic one-year period.  "With proper  work and positioning itself, our country can reach even more  favorable indicators, expand economic contacts with the integration  Union, crossing the threshold of 30% by the end of the year," the  expert added. At the same time, Safaryan stated that there is a  specific situation when the unprecedented development and growth of  the economy gave rise to parallel processes, the most dramatic of  which is the growth of poverty.

"Yes, by the end of the year, the country will see some reduction in  the level of extreme poverty. But, at the same time, the World Bank  and rating agencies warn that, along with double-digit economic  growth in Armenia, the level of poverty will also rise significantly  by the end of the year. Thus, the poverty rate may reach 48% by the  end of the year, from 27% at the beginning of the year. This is a key  message to the Armenian authorities, the political field, public  activists, in particular the research community, by joining efforts  to try to mitigate the manifestations of these bad indicators as much  as possible," Safaryan said.

As a positive light, the expert noted that in the first half of the  year, compared to the same period last year, the volumes of exports  and imports in the direction of the EAEU increased. "Russia continues  to be the largest investor and economic partner of Armenia. The  Russian market is the largest for Armenian finished products. Russia  continues to be a country from which cheap gas is supplied to Armenia  and wheat is imported. The presence of Russian companies in Armenia  has increased many times, etc. Our trade and economic cooperation  with the Russian side is the largest contribution to ensuring and  strengthening the security of the Republic of Armenia," Safaryan  noted, emphasizing this is due to the fact that anti-Russian  propaganda has recently increased in the Armenian socio-political  field.

According to him, opponents of the Armenian-Russian friendship and  alliance are also trying to denigrate Armenia's membership in the  EAEU, falsifying reality and spreading the news that Yerevan was  forcibly thrown into the trap of the Eurasian Economic Union in  2013"We claim that this is not the case, moreover, we can confidently  state that the EAEU market is indispensable for the Armenian economy,  and the resources of this integration Union and the growth of trade  not only with Russia, but also with Belarus and Kazakhstan (which are  impressive) allow us to confidently notice that "this vector of  cooperation will continue to be the most important not only for our  trade and economic, but also political contacts and security issues,"  he concluded.

Shushi-Berdzor-Goris section to function until August 31

ARMINFO
Armenia – Aug 26 2022
Alexandr Avanesov

ArmInfo.The Shushi-Berdzor-Goris road section of  the interstate highway connecting Artsakh with Armenia will function  until August 31, the Artsakh Ministry of Interior said in a  statement.

"Russian peacekeepers will ensure the free and safe passage of  citizens entering the Republic of Artsakh or departing to the  Republic of Armenia in the abovementioned period of time. The  Ministry of Interior will issue additional information regarding the  new alternative road," the ministry said.

Also, President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev left the following Twitter  message: 

"Today, on 26 August, we – the Azerbaijanis – have returned to the  city of Lachin.

"Azerbaijan's Army is now stationed in the city of Lachin. The  villages of Zabukh and Sus were taken under control.

U.S. committed to facilitating direct dialogue between Azerbaijan and Armenia – U.S. Department of State

ARMINFO
Armenia – Aug 26 2022
Alexandr Avanesov

ArmInfo. Vedant Patel, Principal Deputy Spokesperson, Bureau of Global Public Affairs at the US State Department, referred to the harsh response by the  Azerbaijani foreign ministry to the appointment of Philip Reeker as   US OSCE Minsk Group Co-chair.

 "And on your other question – on your question about Armenia and Azerbaijan and the appointment of Ambassador Reeker, look, the Secretary appointed him to serve as the  senior advisor for Caucasus negotiations to underscore our commitment  to facilitating peace in the South Caucasus. As a country, we are  committed to facilitating direct dialogue between Azerbaijan and  Armenia bilaterally, multilaterally, and in cooperation with  likeminded partners to achieve a comprehensive peace settlement  between the two countries. His selection underscores our commitment  to the Geneva International Discussions, where we're going to  continue to hold Russia accountable to the commitments it made under  the 2008 ceasefire. Also, as part of his diplomatic advisor role,  Ambassador Reeker will also represent the U.S. both at the OSCE Minsk  Group and at the Geneva International Discussions as I mentioned",  Patel said.

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken appointed Ambassador  Philip T. Reeker as Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations, who  will also serve as U.S. OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair.

"Attempts to 'resuscitate' the de-facto non-functioning Minsk Group  may result the USA to be estranged from the process of normalization  of Azerbaijan-Armenia relations. Karabakh conflict has been resolved  & Karabakh is an integral part of Azerbaijan," Leyla Abdullayeva,  Spokesperson for Azerbaijan's foreign office, tweeted.