In a conversation with his French counterpart, Armenian FM highlights the importance of repatriation of Armenian POWs

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 18:19,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 24, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan had a telephone conversation with French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna on August 24.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, Minister Mirzoyan expressed condolences to the French side regarding the human casualties caused by the storm in Corsica on August 18. Minister Colonna, in turn, expressed condolences to the Armenian side regarding the human casualties as a result of the explosion in the "Surmalu" shopping center and wished the injured a speedy recovery.

Ararat Mirzoyan and Catherine Colonna expressed satisfaction with the high level of special Armenian-French relations. In this context, the sides expressed willingness to take active steps in the direction of further deepening of mutually beneficial cooperation and enrichment of the bilateral agenda through the implementation of specific projects.

During the telephone conversation, issues of regional security and stability were touched upon.

Minister Mirzoyan presented to his counterpart the approaches of the Armenian side regarding the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the establishment of regional peace.

The parties emphasized the role of France as the Co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group in promoting the process of peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Referring to the solution of the humanitarian problems caused by the 44-day war, the Armenian Foreign Minister stressed the need to repatriate the Armenian prisoners of war and civilians illegally held in Azerbaijan, and to reveal the fates of the forcibly disappeared and the missing and the missing.

Asbarez: Glendale City Council Establishes Sister City Relationship with Artsakh’s Martuni

The Glendale City Council, on Aug. 23, voted to become a sister city with Artsakh's Martuni


BY TONY ORDOUKHANIAN

GLENDALE—The Glendale City Council led by Mayor Ardy Kassakhian on Tuesday unanimously adopted a resolution to establish a sister city relationship with the city of Martuni in the Republic of Artsakh.

Glendale City Councilmember Ara Najarian, Elen Asatryan, Dan Brotman and Paula Devine voiced their support for the effort.

During the presentation of this resolution, Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region Government Affairs Coordinator Edward Barsoumian spoke in support of the initiative being taken by the City Council.

“This resolution will undoubtedly promote meaningful discourse on the humanitarian crisis and current situation in Artsakh, cultivating greater cultural exchange, and demonstrating the City of Glendale’s leadership in combating hate and promoting cultural understanding across the globe,” said Barsoumian.

Mayor Kassakhian had first proposed this collaboration to his fellow Council Members in June. Beyond establishing the sister city relationship with Martuni, the councilmembers underscored the importance of promoting the economic development of Martuni, the preservation of Armenian cultural heritage across Artsakh, and the strengthening of relations between the citizens of Glendale and the Armenian population of the Republic of Artsakh.

Councilmember Devine moved the item and Councilmember Najarian seconded it, allowing for Martuni to become the 10th city to establish sisterhood ties with the City of Glendale.

With the pending transfer of the cities of Aghavno, Berdzor and Nerkin Sus to Azerbaijan on August 25, ANCA-WR’s representatives highlighted the unfolding humanitarian catastrophe which has resulted in the displacement of hundreds of Armenian families from their indigenous lands. Moreover, they expressed the determination of Armenians to prevent cultural genocide through the removal of historical and cultural monuments (Khachkhars) from the three cities prior to their transfer to Aliyev’s genocidal regime which has waged a campaign of destruction and desecration against Armenian religious and cultural sites in territories occupied by Azerbaijan during and after the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh Conflict.

ANCA-WR Youth Committee Chairman Tony Ordoukhanian also spoke in high support of this new sister city relationship. “It is through this resolution that we as a collective society, regardless of our heritage, Armenian or not, and our creed that we firmly hold onto, that we can firmly stand against hatred, ethnic cleansing, and work to uplift the human rights that the people of Artsakh deserve.” Ordoukhanian expressed his hope that the passage of the sister-city resolution will spark an improved US foreign policy to Artsakh.

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region is the largest and most influential nonpartisan Armenian American grassroots advocacy organization in the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANCA-WR advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues in pursuit of the Armenian Cause.

Tony Ordoukhanian is the Chair of the newly-formed ANCA-WR Youth Committee and a member of the class of 2022 ANCA-WR Summer interns.




Asbarez: European Rights Court Rejects Azerbaijan’s Application on Berdzor

Berdzor was deemed the lifeline to Artsakh from Armenia


The European Court of Human Rights on Wednesday rejection an application by Azerbaijan regarding the city of Berdzor (Lachin) and its surrounding villages.

Azerbaijan had applied to the ECHR on August 18 urging the rights body to urge Armenia to immediately and unconditionally oblige the forces and structures under its control to stop the destruction of property in Berdzor city and surrounding villages, including the burning of houses, and to provide information on the on events,” according to Armenia’s representative on legal issues.

The court rejected Azerbaijan’s application saying there was no need to apply a new interim measure.

Last week, the ECHR warned against endangering the rights of the people of Berdzor and Aghavno communities by displacing them from their homes in response to an application from Armenia, which had appealed to the court for protection of rights of the people of Artsakh.

In last week’s ruling the ECHR also recorded its decision of September 29, 2020, which is still in force, “is applicable to the actions referred to by the Government of the Republic of Armenia, that is, armed attacks on peaceful settlements, threats of displacement of the population” of Berdzor and Aghavno communities.

The court also reaffirmed the rulings it made in September and November of 2020 urging Azerbaijan to comply with international law, especially the Geneva Convention. Then later in December of the same year, the ECHR reiterated its ruling, as it applied to Azerbaijan and its violations of international laws and conventions.

AW: Armenian Prime Minister criticizes Russia’s role in Artsakh

Russian peacekeepers (Photo: Dickran Khodanian)

Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan appeared to criticize Russia’s role in the Artsakh conflict in a statement marking the anniversary of Armenian independence.

“Independence is strong allied relations for us, but allies are not always allies of you, but of those who ally against you,” Pashinyan said in his August 23 message, not mentioning any specific country by name.

Pashinyan also said that Armenia is still fighting for its independence. “De facto, that process has not ended until today, not because we don’t have independence, but because independence is like health, which even if you have it, you have to take care of it every day,” the statement read. “Independence is security for us. The international structures that provide it are cracking in front of all of us, and one of the first cracks was unfortunately expressed in Nagorno-Karabakh.” 

The role of the Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh has come under scrutiny following the August 5 announcement by Armenian authorities that the Armenian residents of the villages of Aghavno and Nerkin Sus and the town of Berdzor, all located along the Lachin (Berdzor) corridor, must evacuate their homes by August 25. 

The Berdzor district was ceded to Azerbaijan after the 2020 Artsakh War, except for the Lachin corridor connecting Armenia and Artsakh. Under the terms of the ceasefire, Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to form a plan for the construction of an alternate route within the next three years, to which Russian peacekeepers would be redeployed. 

While the Armenian government announced that construction of the Armenian section of the route will commence this summer, the Azerbaijani government says that its portion of the road is nearly ready for use. 

Several critical pieces of infrastructure, including electric power lines, a gas pipeline and internet cable, are located on the Lachin corridor. It is unclear whether this infrastructure will be rebuilt along the new route or remain under Azerbaijan’s control. 

During a meeting with the leaders of the five political parties represented in the Artsakh parliament two days before the evacuation deadline, the leadership of the Russian peacekeeping mission said that the new route will have the same status as the Lachin corridor. 

The Russian peacekeeping force said that the “new route will have a legal status of the same corridor, and all security components will be kept, from the five-kilometer security zone to the deployment of Russian peacekeeping forces at checkpoints.”

The meeting followed an interview with Russian diplomat Maxim Seleznyov, during which he said that the Russian peacekeepers will not leave the Lachin corridor until the new route is complete.

“The Russian peacekeepers will not be deployed along the new corridor until it is put into operation, and there are agreements in this regard. The parties are in direct contact, and I assure you that the peacekeepers will not move a single centimeter until there is a new corridor,” Seleznyov told RFE/RL’s Armenian service on August 18.

Some commentators have questioned why the Armenian government agreed to cede communities along the Lachin corridor prior to the three-year deadline stipulated by the ceasefire agreement. 

“It can be firmly stated that Pashinyan’s government had given a certain agreement to hand over the city of Lachin to Azerbaijan, or at least to agree to the new route connecting Artsakh and Armenia before the three-year stipulation,” CivilNet editor-in-chief Karen Huartyunyan wrote in an August 8 article. 

“One can endlessly blame Azerbaijan,” Harutyunyan continued. “One can blame Russia, which, according to Armenia’s claims, does not properly fulfill its duties to protect the security of the Armenians of Artsakh. The fact, however, is that the Armenian government has failed to make a sober assessment of the situation that has led to the current deadlock and the loss of human lives.” 

The August 5 eviction notice for residents of Aghavno, Nerkin Sus and Berdzor followed incursions by the Azerbaijani armed forces on the northwestern part of the Martakert region of Artsakh and in the direction of the Lachin corridor on August 3 that left at least two Armenian soldiers killed and 19 injured. 

Pashinyan blamed the latest border attacks, as well as previous incursions, on the ineffectiveness of the Russian peacekeeping mission in Artsakh. 

“The capture of the villages of Khtsaberd and Hin Tagher and the capture of Armenian servicemen by Azerbaijan in the presence and with the permission of the peacekeepers of the Russian Federation on December 11, 2020, the capture of the village of Parukh in Nagorno Karabakh on March 24, 2022, again in the presence of the peacekeepers of the Russian Federation, the continuous and deteriorating violations of the ceasefire regime along the contact line, the cases of physically and psychologically intimidating the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh in the presence of the peacekeepers are simply unacceptable,” Pashinyan said in an August 4 cabinet meeting. 

He continued that it is necessary to “clarify the details of the peacekeeping operation” in Artsakh. 

On August 18, Seleznyov said that the peacekeepers “are doing the maximum that their mandate allowed.”

“One would like to see restraint on all sides: on the part of the Azerbaijani troops, and most importantly on the part of the Armenian public. Here in Yerevan and in Stepanakert everyone should know and understand that the Russian peacekeeping contingent is doing the maximum it can, that it is there to try to protect the civilian population from the horrors of war as far as possible,” he said. 

Armenian Weekly contributor Dr. Benyamin Poghosyan said that blaming the Russian peacekeeping mission after every escalation increases tensions in Armenia-Russia relations and stokes anti-Russian sentiment in Armenia.

“There is a perception that the Armenian government would like to shift the blame on Russian peacekeepers for surrendering Berdzor and surrounding villages to Azerbaijan, presenting this as a result of the Russia-Azerbaijan deal against Armenian interests,” Poghosyan said in an August 8 op-ed for the Weekly.

“Directing criticism against Russian peacekeepers and stoking anti-Russian sentiments in Armenia are in line with US and EU interests in the region, which would like to see less Russian in the South Caucasus, including no Russian troops in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Poghosyan continued.

Lillian Avedian is a staff writer for the Armenian Weekly. Her writing has also been published in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Hetq and the Daily Californian. She is pursuing master’s degrees in journalism and Near Eastern Studies at New York University. A human rights journalist and feminist poet, Lillian's first poetry collection Journey to Tatev was released with Girls on Key Press in spring of 2021.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/24/2022

                                        Wednesday, 


Government Increases Stake In Armenian Mining Giant

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia - A view of ore-processing facilities of the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum 
Combine in Kajaran, August 12, 2019.


Another private firm has ceded shares in Armenia’s largest mining enterprise, 
the Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine (ZCMC), to the Armenian government, it 
emerged on Wednesday.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian revealed that the obscure firm called AMP Holding 
secretly “donated” its 6.8 percent stake in March this year. Pashinian said AMP 
asked the government at the time not to publicize the transfer “because of 
commercial issues.”

He did not shed light on those issues or give a reason for the lavish donation. 
The government’s press office declined to comment on the unusual move.

“The main thing is that since March 24 the government of Armenia holds a 21.875 
percent stake [in ZCMC,] which is a very important development,” Pashinian told 
a weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan.

Pashinian’s government already got hold of 15 percent of ZCMC’s stock through a 
similar donation announced last fall. The Russian metals group GeoProMining said 
on October 1, 2021 that it has acquired 60 percent of the Armenian mining giant 
and “granted” a quarter of that stake to the government.

The transfer followed a government crackdown on ZCMC’s former owners and 
management. The company based in southeastern Syunik province was believed to be 
controlled by individuals at odds with Pashinian’s government. One of them, 
former Syunik Governor Vahe Hakobian, is a senior member of the main opposition 
Hayastan alliance.

Armenia - A copper ore-processing plant in Kajaran, 6Feb2016.
Campaigning for the June 2021 parliamentary elections, Pashinian pledged to 
punish ZCMC’s “corrupt shareholders” and make sure that their shares are 
“returned to the people.” In July 2021, Armenia’s National Security Service 
(NSS) raided ZCMC’s offices and detained thee company executives.

Pashinian said on Wednesday that the acquisition and subsequent increase in the 
government’s stake in ZCMC means he has fulfilled his campaign pledge.

According to the Armenian state registry of legal entities, AMP Holding, the 
company that transferred the 6.8 percent stake to the government, belongs to 
another firm called Stardust. The latter is in turned co-owned by two 
individuals. One of them is opposition politician Hakobian’s brother Karen.

The registry also shows that Stardust is managed by Mher Poloskov, ZCMC’s former 
chief executive. Poloskov faced criminal proceedings after tax and 
law-enforcement authorities accused the former ZCMC management of large-scale 
tax evasion last fall.

The authorities dropped the case earlier this year after Poloskov transferred 15 
billion drams ($37 million) in what they called unpaid taxes to the state. It is 
not clear whether the increase in the government’s ZCMC stake was also part of 
that settlement.

The mining giant employing about 4,000 people is Armenia’s leading corporate 
taxpayer. It paid almost 105 billion ($260 million) in various taxes in the 
first half of this year.



Rescue Operations At Site Of Yerevan Market Blast End

        • Narine Ghalechian

Armenia - Armenian emergency employees work at the Surmalu market in Yerevan 
partly demolished by an explosion, August15, 2022.


Armenian authorities announced on Wednesday the end of search and rescue 
operations at a market in Yerevan where a powerful explosion killed at least 16 
people and injured dozens of others on August 14.

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 explosion that partly demolished the sprawling Surmalu market.

“The works were carried out in full,” said Hayk Kostanian, the spokesman for the 
Ministry of Emergencies. “Unfortunately, the citizen's body or his remains were 
not found.”

The 55-year-old missing man, Vanik Amirkhanian, worked at Surmalu.

The deadly explosion and subsequent fire reportedly occurred in a market area 
where fireworks and other pyrotechnics were stored. It is still not clear what 
caused it.

Law-enforcement authorities were quick to launch a criminal investigation into 
the blast. But they have not arrested or charged anyone so far. The market’s 
owner, Razmik Zakharian, has still not been questioned by investigators.

Fire inspectors said on August 17 that they had identified two dozen violations 
at Surmalu and given the market administration until the end of 2021 to comply 
with city-planning norms and fire-safety rules. They admitted that no follow-up 
inspection was carried out there.

Irina Madatova, the manager of Surmalu, claimed that the administration 
addressed the violations. But she did not elaborate.

Meanwhile, the Armenian government made clear on Wednesday that while it is 
considering providing financial assistance to the families of the people killed 
or injured by the blast it will not compensate Surmalu traders for the loss of 
their goods and commercial space not covered by business insurance. Economy 
Minister Vahan Kerobian argued that the state is not responsible for their 
failure to buy insurance.



Armenian Government Raises Pensions Amid High Inflation

        • Robert Zargarian

Armenia - A weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan, .


The Armenian government approved on Wednesday a roughly 7 percent increase in 
pensions and other benefits which is designed to mitigate the impact of 
higher-than-projected inflation in the country.

The decision will benefit around 500,000 Armenians aged 65 and older. The 
average amount of monthly pensions paid to them has stood at 41,000 drams ($100) 
until now.

The government also announced similar rises in benefits for citizens with 
various disabilities. They too will take effect next month.

The government had earlier planned to raise the pensions in January 2023. Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian said the planned rises were brought forward to 
September because the State Revenue Committee collected more taxes than were 
projected in the first half of this year.

The higher pensions and benefits will clearly not offset the increased cost of 
living for the socially vulnerable citizens covered by the government’s decision.

According to government data, inflation in Armenia rose steadily in the first 
half, reaching an annual rate of 10.3 percent in June. It eased to 9.3 percent 
in July thanks to a seasonal drop in the cost of fruits and vegetables. Even so, 
overall food prices were up by an average of 13.5 percent year on year.



Pashinian Again Phones Putin


Russia - Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with Armenian Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian in his Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, April 19, 2022.


Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
again discussed the situation in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone on Wednesday 
when they spoke by phone for the third time in as many weeks.

The two leaders “continued the discussion of the situation around 
Nagorno-Karabakh,” the Kremlin reported in a statement on the phone call which 
it said took place “at the initiative of the Armenian side.” It said they 
reaffirmed the importance of “consistent implementation” of Armenian-Azerbaijani 
agreements brokered by Moscow during and after the 2020 war in Karabakh.

Putin and Pashinian also touched upon “some topical issues of further 
development of the relations of strategic partnership and alliance” between 
their countries, the statement added without elaborating.

The Armenian government’s press office released a virtually identical readout of 
the call.

The phone conversation followed reports that Putin is poised to host a fresh 
meeting of Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev. The Russian 
president’s most recent trilateral talks with them were held in Sochi last 
November.

Aliyev and Pashinian held three face-to-face meetings in Brussels in the 
following months. Russia has repeatedly accused the West of trying to hijack the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace process as part of the ongoing standoff over Ukraine.

Early this month, Putin and Pashinian spoke twice by phone in the space of one 
week amid an upsurge in violence in Karabakh. At least one Azerbaijani and two 
Karabakh Armenian soldiers were killed in fighting that broke out on August 3.

Pashinian complained on August 4 that Baku has been stepping up ceasefire 
violations in Karabakh “in the presence of” Russian peacekeeping troops deployed 
there. The Russian Foreign Ministry rejected the criticism.

According to the official readouts of Putin’s latest call with Pashinian, the 
Russian and Armenian leaders “noted the role of the Russian peacekeeping 
contingent in ensuring stability in the region.”


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.

  

CivilNet: Armenia proposes reduced military service for $60,000 fee

CIVILNET.AM

24 Aug, 2022 10:08

Armenia’s Defense Ministry proposed introducing shorter compulsory military service for a $60,000 fee.

The Armenian government will not compensate business owners affected by the Surmalu shopping strip blast, which left at least 16 people dead.

Azerbaijani specialists visited a major reservoir located within territory controlled by Karabakh Armenians, Stepanakert confirmed.

Yerevan to host 2023 session of Coordination Council of CIS Tax Investigation Agencies

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 12:48,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 23, ARMENPRESS. The delegation of the State Revenue Committee of Armenia participated in the session of the Coordination Council of CIS Tax Investigation Agencies in Minsk, Belarus, the SRC said.  

The session was attended by heads of tax investigation agencies of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan. The implementation of the CIS inter-state program in fighting crime was discussed. The sides presented their activities in ensuring the economic security of their countries and the accumulated experience, as well as the process of exchange of experience in revealing economic crimes and violations.

The sides also discussed other issues of multilateral interest.

The next session of the Coordination Council is expected to take place in Yerevan in 2023, with the chairmanship of the State Revenue Committee.

Armenian National Committee of America calls on Congress to investigate Biden Administration’s aid blockade on Artsakh

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 12:54,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 23, ARMENPRESS. In letters sent this week to Congressional leadership and rank and file members of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Chairman Raffi Hamparian called for Congressional inquiries into the Biden Administration’s effective blockade on humanitarian aid to Armenian families of Artsakh – an at-risk population facing aggression, ethnic-cleansing, the obstruction of access to food, water, fuel, and other vitally needed resources, ANCA reports.

Citing the “Azerbaijani government’s ambition to see Artsakh’s Armenians starved out of existence,” Hamparian underscored that “the Administration has sent almost no humanitarian assistance at all to help Armenian families living in Artsakh.” “America must not be complicit in the ethnic-cleansing of Artsakh by Azerbaijan,” he stressed.

The ANCA letter called on legislators to demand answers from the Biden Administration – via Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Samantha Power – to the following four questions:

— What specific actions has the Biden Administration taken to help at-risk Armenians living within Nagorno-Karabakh? (Please provide programs, partners, budgets, deliverables and other relevant information.)

— What specific plans does the Biden Administration have to help at-risk Armenians living within Nagorno-Karabakh? (Please provide programs, partners, budgets, deliverables and other relevant information.)

— Has the Biden Administration conducted a needs assessment of the humanitarian crisis facing the Armenian population of Artsakh?

— What budget range does the Biden Administration consider sufficient and appropriate to address the humanitarian crisis facing the Armenian population of Artsakh?

ANCA activists across the United States have sent tens of thousands of letters asking their U.S. legislators to appropriate robust U.S. aid to Artsakh, using the ANCA action portal: www.anca.org/aid.

President Khachaturyan addresses congratulatory message on 32nd anniversary of Declaration of Independence

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 13:15,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 23, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan addressed a congratulatory message on the 32nd anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence, the Presidential Office said.

The message reads:

“Dear compatriots,

Today we mark the day of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence of the Republic of Armenia.

On August 23, 1990, the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic Supreme Council adopted the Declaration of Independence, “expressing the united will of the people of Armenia”, as stated in the very first line of the Declaration, and made the first step on the path to creating an independent statehood. The Declaration of Independence outlined the landmark goals of our statehood to have a sovereign state, ensure the country’s internal and external security, set democratic freedoms and guarantee the fulfillment of the inalienable rights of the citizens of Armenia to work, create and build their own prosperous future.

This content of the Declaration of Independence is always relevant because it expresses our collective goals and dreams as a statement and a society.

And today, like three decades before, we must be ready to resist and overcome all the trials facing our homeland with joint efforts, having the Declaration of Independence and the idea of Independence as a guideline and belief.

I congratulate all of us on this important symbolic day”.