Armenia: “I Was Born in a Body That Was Not Mine”

March 31 2022

Country’s most prominent transgender activist describes her struggle to protect her community from discrimination and violence.

by Mania Israyelyan

Lilit Martirosyan was barely five when she realised she was happier playing with jewelry than the tractors and cars she routinely got as presents. Her family thought she was an oddity, but Martirosyan knew she was simply different, although she did not have the language to express how.

“I was born in a boy’s body, but my gender identity is of a woman, I want society to accept me as a woman, I want to live as a woman as all other women,” Martirosyan told IWPR. “You can never persuade a person against their feelings. I felt like I was living in a different world. The body I was born in was not mine.”

Now 48, Martirosyan has become Armenia’s most prominent transgender activist. In 2015 she was the first Armenian to legally change her gender and first name on a new passport. In 2019 she became the first representative of Armenia’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex community (LGBTI) to speak in parliament, where she denounced the discrimination her community was subject to in the deeply conservative South Caucasus country.

“You live just because you were born,” she said, describing how such treamtnet had made her feel. “You feel lonely and abandoned, useless. It is as if you are not human, you do not exist. You both live and don’t live.”

Martirosyan said that she had experienced huge amounts of prejudice growing up, with continuous family conflict as her parents tried to steer her towards more typically masculine spaces, and constant bullying at school.

Amidst immense pressure, she left home at 13 and, with the help of a friend, went to live on her own. With no family support, Martirosyan focused on one goal – to earn enough to start hormonal therapy.

Although she found work as a waiter and a cook, her wages were not enough to survive on and she turned to sex work to support herself and save enough money for treatment. She went through hell, she said, recalling how she had been beaten up and kidnapped multiple times. 

By the time she turned 18, Lilit had saved up enough to begin hormonal therapy, followed by nine surgeries.

“It doesn’t matter who I was in the past,” she said. “I don’t want to be asked about my previous name. I am what I am now and here. I changed my name, I changed my gender…it was an extensively complex process.”

In 2016, Martirosyan founded the Right Side NGO to raise awareness and advocate for the rights of transgender people and provide them with support, including free legal and psychological aid.

“My mission in life is to help people. It keeps me alive,” she said.

On April 5, 2019, she addressed the Armenian parliament’s human rights committee where she called for her “tortured, raped, burnt, stabbed, killed, banished, discriminated,” community to be protected.

She noted that transgender people in Armenia were subjected “to stigma and discrimination in social, medical, legal, economic areas, and … [are left] unemployed, poor and morally abandoned”.

Armenia decriminalised homosexuality in 2003 but intolerance against LGBTI people remains rife. In December 2021, the Council of Europe called on Armenia to adopt anti-discrimination legislation adding sexual orientation and gender identity to the prohibited grounds for discrimination.

After her speech Martirosyan received death threats on social media and some parliamentarians’ verbal attacks included calls for her to be burned alive. The UN and the European diplomats condemned the reaction and, fearing for her life, supported her to temporarily leave the country.

When Martirosyan returned the discrimination continued. In late 2019 she was dragged out of a taxi with a friend and beaten in front of the constitutional court and in 2020 while with another friend they were kicked out of a restaurant.

“Society has turned us into nocturnal beings. We leave home at night, when there is no one in the street,” Martirosyan said. “[At least people] have stopped calling me ‘the boy with the wig,’ and started using the term transgender.”

Discriminated against at home, Martirosyan is hailed abroad: in 2020 she received the Human Rights Tulip, an annual Dutch government award for outstanding activism.

And she is determined to stay in Armenia and contribute to making it a more tolerant country. 

Martirosyan said that what kept her going was her faith in God and her mother’s optimism. Over the year, broken ties with her family were mended.

“If God hadn’t given me the strength I would have been over long ago,” she said, adding that relations with her family evolved naturally. “I never told them it is up to you to accept me or reject me. It took time, hard work and a respectful attitude to fix things.”   


With Russia tied down in Ukraine, other frozen conflicts are thawing

March 31 2022

From the Caucasus to the western Pacific, Russia’s opponents are eyeing their chances of redressing the balance of power.

By Gabriel Gavin

However, that peace is looking increasingly fragile. Just across the border lies the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, formally inside Azerbaijan but held by Armenian separatists since the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and run as a de facto part of Armenia. Two years ago, a brief but bloody conflict broke out, with Azerbaijan’s forces capturing swathes of territory in the breakaway province and evicting the ethnic Armenians who had lived there. Now, despite a Moscow-brokered ceasefire, there are fears the fighting could start up again.

“Honestly, it was hell,” Tigran, a 32-year-old handyman from Yerevan said of his time on the front lines during the 2020 war. “But if I need to go back, I’ll go back. To defend my wife, my kids, my mum – my country.” He proudly carries his military service card with him everywhere and takes out his phone to show me pictures of him and his friends in army fatigues. “He’s dead now,” Tigran added, pointing to one. More than 4,000 Armenian troops lost their lives defending Nagorno-Karabakh, with Azerbaijan deploying fearsome attack drones provided by its long-standing ally, Turkey.

Last weekend, one of those drones carried out a strike on an Armenian position, killing three servicemen and injuring several others. At the same time, Azerbaijani soldiers were accused of having rolled past Russian outposts to take a village in the demilitarised zone, sparking evacuations and fears that a return to full-scale hostilities could be on the cards. Yerevan has accused Moscow of doing nothing to stop the incursion, with the Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan calling the Kremlin to “stress the need for Russian peacekeepers to return the Azerbaijanis to their starting positions”.

[See also: How will the war in Ukraine end?]

Baku denies it is launching a new effort to retake the region, but insists it has the right to position its forces wherever it chooses “within its internationally recognised borders”, while top politicians call for action against “separatist terrorists”. Azerbaijani officials say no country would accept foreign forces on its sovereign soil, and that they have a right to defend their territory.

The timing could not be worse for the Russian president Vladimir Putin, already bogged down in his catastrophic invasion of Ukraine and now being forced to decide whether to commit personnel and equipment to maintain the status quo in the Caucasus. Kyiv has even welcomed the distraction, with the secretary of its security council, Oleksiy Danilov, saying that “things seem to really be escalating in Nagorno-Karabakh… if second fronts open up for the Russian Federation, as a result of the decisions it has made throughout its short history, these will have a measurable effect in helping us.”

In theory, Moscow is obliged to protect Armenia, as a member of its Collective Security Treaty Organisation defence pact. But with the reputation of its armed forces shattered as a result of its botched offensive in Ukraine, it is looking like a less reliable partner with each passing day. Gegham Stepanyan, the human rights ombudsman for the self-proclaimed Republic of Artsakh – as Armenians refer to Nagorno-Karabakh – told the New Statesman that “a peacekeeping mission based only on Russia’s political influence is vulnerable”. According to him, “the Azerbaijani side is trying to question the reputation of the Russian peacekeepers and their mission.”

Putin’s woes, however, present an opportunity for another regional power looking to assert itself. The Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has presented himself as a mediator between Moscow and Kyiv, with a series of peace talks being held in Istanbul and Antalya. However, simultaneously, he has openly provided Ukraine with the same advanced Bayraktar attack drones that Azerbaijan has used in Nagorno-Karabakh, helping them to take out vast numbers of Russian tanks and troop transports. Across eastern Europe and the Caucasus, Erdoğan is unpicking the webs of Russian influence that have held fast for more than a century and is moving in to fill the gaps.

The threat of war now looms large in Armenia, a country where almost everyone knows a soldier who lost their life in Nagorno-Karabakh or a family displaced by the fighting. For the Kremlin, though, this could just be the start of a series of problems on its doorstep, with once-frozen conflicts beginning to thaw as a result of Russia’s army having spread itself so thin over Ukraine.

In nearby Georgia, a series of videos have been shared widely online calling for an assault on Abkhazia, a region of the country occupied by Moscow-backed rebels since the country’s war with Russia in 2008. Hundreds of Georgian fighters are believed to have gone to fight in Ukraine against Russia and, in one clip, armed volunteers near the front lines told those back home: “we urge you to take up arms and strike at the enemy. We will never have such a chance again.”

On the other side of the globe, just a week after the invasion began, Japan doubled down on its claims to the Kuril Islands in the western Pacific Ocean. The archipelago has been governed from Moscow after it was captured by the Soviet Union at the end of the Second World War, despite Tokyo’s claims to sovereignty. With Moscow increasingly isolated on the world stage, the Japanese foreign minister Yoshimasa Hayashi sought to secure support for reopening the row, saying Russia’s control of the islands contradicted “international order”.

Putin’s miscalculation might have begun in Ukraine but, with foes from the Zangezur Mountains to East Asia smelling weakness and desperation, it is unlikely to end there.

Armenia’s Minister of Emergency Situations arrested over alleged corruption

March 31 2022
 31 March 2022


Armenia’s Minister of Emergencies Andranik Piloyan and over a dozen employees of the ministry have been arrested for alleged corruption. 

Earlier this week, Armenia’s law-enforcement bodies searched the ministry’s building. Piloyan’s detention was made public on 30 March. 

The same day, a  motion to arrest him has been submitted to the court.

According to a press release published by the Anti-Corruption Committee, an investigation into allegations concerning Piloyan and over a dozen of his subordinates revealed alleged acts of bribery, abuse of office, embezzlement, as well as receiving and granting of illegal payments․

Additionally, during the preliminary investigation, firearms and ammunition were reportedly found and confiscated from the house of the Minister’s adviser Ashot Hakobyan.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan spoke about the case in a government session on Thursday, commenting that ‘the situation is unpleasant, but the rule of law and equality before the law is more important’. 

‘We have publicly undertaken zero-tolerance for corruption and it is important to keep this principle’ he stressed.

Piloyan was appointed as a minister in the summer of 2020. During the Second Nagorno-Karabakh war, he was awarded the title of National Hero of Armenia for his actions during the war. 

https://oc-media.org/armenias-minister-of-emergency-situations-arrested-over-alleged-corruption/

Azerbaijan Adds Fuel to Armenian Concerns in Karabakh

March 31 2022
With Russian peacekeepers distracted by war, Armenian activists, clergy, and officials debate how best to secure ancient churches and human rights in Artsakh.
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Suffering freezing temperatures during the long winter cold in the Caucasus Mountains, this month Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh had no heating for three weeks. The natural gas “malfunction,” stated Azerbaijan’s state-run energy distribution company, has now been repaired.

It is not often that pipeline maintenance draws international concern.

The European Union and Freedom House both called for quick resumption of the supply in order to avert a humanitarian crisis. Over 100,000 residents in the contested enclave rely on Armenian natural gas that passes through Azerbaijani territory.

Nagorno-Karabakh, which Armenians call Artsakh, lies within the internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan. Armenians accused Azerbaijan of deliberate disruption, prevention of repair, and installation of a new valve with which they can shut off gas flow at will.

Secured by Armenians backed by Armenia’s military following the fall of the Soviet Union, Artsakh sought independence for three decades while controlling six buffer zones in depopulated Azerbaijani lands. Negotiations failed to resolve the dispute, until Azerbaijan launched a 44-day war in 2020 that recovered significant territory.

A Russian-brokered ceasefire ended active hostilities.

Yet skirmishes continue, and Azerbaijan accuses Armenia of instigation. Last November, Armenia stated an Azerbaijani incursion occupied 15 square miles of sovereign territory. Christianity Today was reporting from one of the liberated buffer territories at the time.

Image: Christianity Today

Nagorno-Karabakh

And in the month prior to the pipeline issue—with the world’s attention focused on Ukraine—Russia officially accused Azerbaijan of breaking the terms of the ceasefire. Monitors recorded at least four incidents of firing toward Armenian villages. Three soldiers were reportedly killed by an Azerbaijani drone; another was shot by a soldier across the border.

After years of holding the upper hand in Nagorno-Karabakh, the reversal suffered in the war has Armenians fearful of genocide. Now victorious, Azerbaijan President Ilham Aliyev has pledged to develop the area economically and to treat Armenians as equal citizens.

The recent conduct makes many doubt these promises.

“They openly can’t go for a full-blown war today since Russian peacekeepers are deployed here,” stated an Armenian journalist. “So they do everything to disrupt normal life and make people leave their homeland.”

But it goes beyond “Artsakh.”

To emphasize its sovereignty over the region, Azerbaijan has mandated that the designation “Nagorno-Karabakh” no longer be used. Armenians see this as erasure—similar to what they allege is being done to their nation’s cultural heritage.

The ninth-century Dadivank Monastery, called Khudavan by Azerbaijan, is now labeled to be Caucasian Albanian, a defunct Orthodox sect traced to the Udis, a tiny Christian minority group still present today. Priests from this recently revived church were appointed to administer the monastery, with several other worship sites delinked from their Armenian origins.

After the war, the Armenian Apostolic Church created a department to preserve its historic churches in the territories that changed hands. Monitoring satellite imagery and Azerbaijani social media feeds to document violations, the department also tracks examples of pilgrims denied access to once-active religious sites.

“We call on the international community, and give them the facts,” said Garegin Hambardzumyan, head of the Department for Preservation of Cultural and Spiritual Values of Artsakh. “The world needs to know the truth.”

An Apostolic priest, Hambardzumyan works with institutions such as UNESCO, which has still not been granted investigative access to the contested territories by Azerbaijan. He informs the widespread Armenian diaspora, which plays an active role in lobbying foreign governments. And his department’s reports also go to the Armenian government, whose lawyers determine the best course of action.

International outcry led to Azerbaijan backtracking last month on an announced committee to remove alleged Armenian forgeries from historic churches. Armenia also won a provisional judgment from the International Court of Justice, calling on Azerbaijan to prevent and prosecute incidents of vandalism and desecration.

But is this enough?

Some Armenians have floated the controversial idea of remedial secession, a theory in international law in which a nation loses its right to territory if it oppresses the resident people. Bangladesh (from India) and Kosovo (from Serbia) are sometimes given as examples.

The legal strategy is being considered at the highest levels.

“When the life of a people in a larger entity is no longer possible because there is an existential threat,” said Maria Karapetyan, a member of Armenia’s parliament, “the only way to secure their existence is secession, to live as a separate entity.”

While the idea has not been adopted as official policy, Karapetyan, also the English-language spokeswoman for Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party, stated that Artsakh has been a human rights issue from the beginning. In 1991, an independence referendum was overwhelmingly approved amid a boycott by its Azerbaijani minority and met with violent rejection by authorities, she said.

Mutual ethnic atrocities followed for the next three years, as thousands were killed and over 1 million people displaced from their homes.

Since then, the general strategy for peace—though never enacted—was for Armenians to trade the buffer zone territories in exchange for Azerbaijan granting special status, even independence, to Nagorno-Karabakh. The 2020 war voided this option.

Today, the Civil Contract party holds to the necessity of negotiations, while insisting on a formal demarcation of borders and the removal of military forces from the frontlines. Communications must be resumed with Azerbaijan, which can then open paths for trade.

Despite the military defeat in 2020, Karapetyan’s party overwhelmingly won a majority share of parliament in early elections last June, running on a platform of peace. With its mandate renewed, Pashinyan’s government has surged forward with the controversial task of normalizing relations with neighboring Turkey—which strongly backed Azerbaijan during the war.

Karapetyan dismissed, however, Aliyev’s promise to integrate the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, calling it a “fairy tale.” Others are looking at strategies to intervene.

Clerics at Hamdarzumyan’s conference last September heard a geopolitical rationale. The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principle, adopted by the United Nations in 2005, seeks to ensure the international community never again fails to prevent war crimes and ethnic cleansing—such as in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

“If you can frame the destruction of cultural heritage as a war crime,” said Sheila Paylan, an international lawyer, “there’s no reason why we can’t push forward the R2P envelope.”

It is warranted, said Eric Hacopian, an Armenian analyst. In the early 2000s, Azerbaijan destroyed thousands of ornate funeral khachkar cross-stones in Nakhchivan, erasing the historic marker of Armenian residence.

The only comparable modern precedents, he said, are the Taliban’s demolition of Buddha statues, the Islamic State’s damaging of Palmyra, and the Chinese government’s desecration of Uighur mosques.

“This is the league that Aliyev is in,” said Hacopian. “You’re dealing with a state that systematically destroys cultural sites in Europe.”

But regardless of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh, many Armenians are worried simply by the terms of the ceasefire. Point 9, the final one listed, called for the unblocking of all economic and transportation routes.

While consistent with Pashinyan’s mandate, a key application pertains to a southern corridor connecting noncontiguous Nakhchivan with the rest of Azerbaijan. It would be overseen by Russian peacekeeping forces, who currently monitor the Lachin corridor between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

The idea has been championed by Turkey, where President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sees it as a way to connect the entire Turkic world. Armenia is the only interruption, which worries those who fear for more than a mountainous enclave.

The proposed corridor would pass through Armenian sovereign territory, and it puts some residents ill at ease.

“If they are going to take my village for peace, that already is not peace,” said Alen Avedisyan, who lives near Meghri, 230 miles southeast of Yerevan on the Iranian border. “Erdoğan wants to be Saladin, ruling from the Mediterranean to China.”

A history teacher and father of three daughters, he recalled the day three decades earlier, when the 12 Azerbaijani families in his village fled. Armenians, with tears in their eyes, helped them load their worldly goods into trucks. The wives who stayed behind changed their Azeri names.

His province of Syunik, also known as Zangazur, is only 25 miles across at its narrowest point. In January 2021, a joint Armenian-Azerbaijani-Russian committee was formed to reopen routes per the ceasefire agreement, but little progress has been made.

Aliyev has threatened to take it by force, if necessary. But his rhetoric goes further. He has highlighted Zangazur as Azeris’ ancestral land—to which they will definitely “return.” He even described Yerevan as a “political and strategic goal,” which Azeris “must gradually approach.”

Some analysts have posited that such language is meant to give Azerbaijan domestic room to negotiate over Nagorno-Karabakh or Lachin, in order to “trade” these historical claims in any future settlement.

“We want communication, not land,” said Mubariz Qurbanli, chairman of Azerbaijan’s state committee on religious associations, when CT asked about Zangazur in December. “We will recognize each other’s boundaries.”

But for many Armenians, Aliyev’s statements prove the problem is far deeper than a pipeline.

And whether the solution lies in lobbying, arbitration, or even remedial secession, it is clear to them that Nagorno-Karabakh must be made an international issue.

“With all we have gone through in the world today, we should be done with war,” said Avedisyan. “But small countries are in the hands of big countries, and big countries must play a role for peace.”

https://www.christianitytoday.com/news/2022/march/nagorno-karabakh-war-armenia-azerbaijan-artsakh-fuel-russia.html

Tensions mount in Karabakh as parties exchange blame

March 31 2022

It has been a tense month in the disputed territory of Karabakh, an area of 4,400 square kilometers in the South Caucasus after accusations that Azerbaijan violated a ceasefire agreement and reignited tensions since early March. Some analysts point to the renewed tensions in Karabakh as a spillover of the war in Ukraine.

In 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a 44-day war over Karabakh. The area has been under the control of its ethnic Armenian population as a self-declared state since a war fought in the early 90s, which ended with a 1994 ceasefire and Armenian military victory. In the aftermath of the first war, a new, internationally unrecognized, de facto Nagorno-Karabakh Republic was established. Seven adjacent regions were occupied by the Armenian forces. As a result of that war, “more than a million people had been forced from their homes: Azerbaijanis fled Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and the adjacent territories, while Armenians left homes in Azerbaijan,” according to the International Crisis Group, an independent organization that works to prevent wars and shape policies.

Following the second Karabakh war in 2020, Azerbaijan regained control over much of the previously occupied seven regions. Azerbaijan also captured one-third of Karabakh itself as a result of the second war.

On Nov. 10, 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefire agreement brokered by Russia. Among several points of the agreement, Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to a presence of 1,960 Russian peacekeeping forces in those parts of Karabakh “not recaptured by Azerbaijan and a narrow corridor connecting with Armenia across the Azerbaijani district of Lachin.” There are 27 Russian peacekeeping posts inside Azerbaijan.

Since the signed November 2020 agreement, there have been multiple reports of ceasefire violations, with each side blaming the other for flare-ups. But the advance of the Azerbaijani army since February and seizure of a strategic village Farrukh, in the east of Karabakh, protected by the Russian peacekeepers, on March 25, 2022, has led to accusations of ceasefire violation leveled against Azerbaijan by both official Yerevan and Moscow.

At least fifteen Armenian soldiers have been wounded, and three killed since March 24, according to BBC Azerbaijan service reporting, citing the information released by Karabakh self-defense army. The self-defense army also claimed there were casualties from the Azerbaijan side, which Azerbaijan Ministry of Defense has refuted. Meanwhile, in a statement issued on March 25, the Azerbaijan Ministry of Foreign Affairs said, there was no need for hysteria while referring to escalated tensions on the line of contact, and that Azerbaijan was clarifying “the positions and locations [of its armed forced] on the ground.”

Earlier this month, “the de facto authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh accused Azerbaijan of cutting natural gas supplies to the territory in Nagorno Karabakh for the second time,” in one month according to reporting by Eurasianet. The gas to Karabakh is supplied via Armenia, but the pipeline transits through now, Azerbaijan-controlled territory it regained during the second war. The first disruption was reported on March 8 and although it was reportedly restored on March 19, the supply was disrupted again on March 21. The disruption was caused by damage to a gas pipeline supplying Karabakh on March 5. “We have sufficient grounds to assume that during the gas pipeline repairs, the Azerbaijani side installed a valve that stopped the gas supply a few hours ago,” the de facto Karabakh government said in a statement according to reporting by Eurasianet. Baku has denied accusations. In a statement issued on March 25, Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry said, Armenia was “intentionally using the situation as an instrument of political manipulation,” blaming gas supply issues on cold weather and technical problems instead.

On March 26, in a statement, Russia’s Foreign Ministry urged both Armenia and Azerbaijan to exercise restraint. The statement also referenced the Russian Ministry of Defense news bulletin, dated March 26, 2022, in which Russia’s MoD said, “Azerbaijan’s Armed Forces have entered the zone of responsibility of the Russian peacekeeping mission in Nagorno-Karabakh and launched four strikes on the Nagorno-Karabakh armed formations, using a Bayraktar TB2 drone, near the village of Furukh,” accusing Azerbaijan of violating the November 10 ceasefire.

In its response, Azerbaijan Ministry of Defense said the statement was one-sided, repeating official Baku’s commitment to the joint declaration signed on Nov. 10, 2020.

On March 27, the Russian defense ministry said Azerbaijan withdrew its military presence from Farrukh, which was quickly refuted by the Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense confirming that the positions remain unchanged. “We notify with regret that the Russian defense ministry’s statement of March 27 is untrue. The positions of the Azerbaijani armed forces in the village of Farrukh and nearby heights, which are an inseparable part of our country, are unchanged,” said the statement released by Azerbaijan Ministry of Defense.

In a statement issued on Monday, March 28, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said it expected the Russian contingent of peacekeeping troops to take concrete steps to stop and secure the return of Baku’s forces to the original positions, reported Russian state-owned news agency TASS.

This was the second time since the November 2020 agreement that Russia has accused Azerbaijan of violating the ceasefire in Karabakh.

Meanwhile, according to state news agency APA, the AzeriGaz said it will restore the supply of natural gas in the Karabakh economic region by March 29. The Armenian language service for Radio Liberty confirmed that the gas supply to Khankendi [Stepanakert in Armenian] was restored on March 29.

Armenian PM says will meet Azerbaijan leader in Belgium on April 6

Al-Arabiya, UAE
March 31 2022

AFP – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Thursday announced a meeting with Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev next week in Belgium amid renewed tensions over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“I plan to meet on April 6 in Brussels with… the Azerbaijani President,” Ilham Aliyev, Pashinyan told a cabinet meeting, adding that he hoped “to agree on all the questions related to the start of peace talks” with Baku.

https://english.alarabiya.net/News/world/2022/03/31/Armenian-PM-says-will-meet-Azerbaijan-leader-in-Belgium-on-April-6-
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https://www.clintonherald.com/region/armenias-prime-minister-announces-meeting-with-azerbaijans-president-on-april-6-for-talks-amid-recent/article_cd209be9-7c4b-5ba7-a134-7f38625b1b34.html
https://www.inquirer.com/wires/ap/armenias-prime-minister-announces-meeting-with-azerbaijans-president-april-6-talks-amid-recent-fighting-20220331.html

Armenian American Museum Announces Historic $31 Million Milestone at Sold Out Legacy Gala

Press Contact:

Shant Sahakian, Executive Director

Armenian American Museum and Cultural Center of California

(818) 644-2214

[email protected]

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

ARMENIAN AMERICAN MUSEUM ANNOUNCES HISTORIC $31 MILLION MILESTONE AT SOLD OUT LEGACY GALA

 

Glendale, CA (March 31, 2022) – The Armenian American Museum and Cultural Center of California announced that the landmark center has surpassed the historic $31 million fundraising milestone at the sold out Legacy Gala on Sunday, March 27, 2022. More than 1,100 donors, supporters, public officials, and guests were in attendance at the signature event of the year at the JW Marriott Los Angeles L.A. LIVE.

 

The Legacy Gala program kicked off with welcoming remarks by Executive Director Shant Sahakian who served as the Master of Ceremonies for the event.

 

“We have come together this evening on a historic occasion to celebrate a world class institution that was once an idea and is now under construction and becoming a reality in the heart of the Armenian Diaspora and Southern California,” stated Executive Director Shant Sahakian.

 

The National Anthems were performed by the renowned Allen G. Orchestra.

 

The Invocation was conducted by the museum’s Board of Trustees Co-Chairs including Primate of the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Prelate of the Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church Bishop Torkom Donoyan, Minister of the Armenian Evangelical Union of North America Reverend Hendrik Shanazarian, and Bishop of the Armenian Catholic Eparchy of the United States and Canada Bishop Mikael Mouradian.

 

Gala Co-Chair Aleen Baran Oruncakciel remarked on the significance of the cultural and educational center for the next generation and recognized the sponsors who contributed to the success of the event.

 

“The Armenian American Museum will be a guarantor for the study, appreciation, and preservation of Armenian culture and heritage for future generations,” stated Legacy Gala Co-Chair Aleen Baran Oruncakciel.

 

Major Sponsors included Ron & Kourtni Arakelian, Jack & Maro Kalaydjian, Keghon & Alexia Kevonian, David & Margaret Mgrublian, The GASKA Alliance Foundation, Bank of America, Vartan & Janet Barsoumian, Fred Bonyadian, Sako & Aida Gharakhani, Gloria and Armen Hampar Family Foundation, Berdj & Mary Karapetian, LIZ General Partnership, Nora Tertzag Hampar Charitable Trust, SAMKO, and Sarkis & Nune Sepetjian.

 

Gala Co-Chair Dr. Alexia Kevonian remarked on the opportunity for the landmark center to build bridges between diverse communities and recognized the members of the Legacy Gala Committee.

 

“Our vision for the Armenian American Museum is about sharing our culture with our neighbors and in so doing discovering our similarities while delighting in our differences,” stated Legacy Gala Co-Chair Dr. Alexia Kevonian.

 

The Legacy Gala Committee includes Mayda Altounian, Aida Askejian, Angela Bedoyan, Ani Bekarian, Araxie Boyamian, Garine Depoyan, Aida Gharakhani, Silva Hameline, Marie Jean Harmandayan, Christine Hovnanian, Hermine Janoyan, Mary Karapetian, Lilian Khanjian, Margarit Mardirosian, Margaret Mgrublian, Narine Mouradian, Dzovig Zetlian, and Elizabeth Zoryan.

 

U.S. Congressman Adam Schiff remarked on his experience witnessing the incredible progress at the construction site during a recent visit. He announced to the capacity crowd that his efforts to secure $950,000 in support of the museum in the FY2022 federal government funding legislation was successful and signed by President Joe Biden.

 

Executive Chairman Berdj Karapetian acknowledged the museum leadership, staff, committee members, volunteers, donors, and supporters as well as the corporate, foundation, and government partners who have generously contributed to the success of the Armenian American Museum project and the Legacy Gala event.

 

“The Legacy Gala is a tribute to the visionary benefactors, supporters, and friends who together are building a legacy of education, preservation, and cultural enrichment for generations to come through the creation and construction of the Armenian American Museum,” stated Executive Chairman Berdj Karapetian.

 

Karapetian announced that the museum has officially formed a new Young Professionals Committee to promote the mission of the museum, connect young professionals throughout the community, and empower the next generation of leaders. The inaugural members of the Young Professionals Committee and Committee Chair Aleen Ohanian were welcomed to the main stage and introduced to the public for the first time.

 

During dinner, guests enjoyed a special musical performance by Allen G. Orchestra and a special video presentation featuring prominent figures in Armenian and Armenian American history.

 

Curator Ara Oshagan, who serves as a member of the museum’s Permanent Exhibition Committee, presented the work of artists Ruby Vartan, Vera Arutyunyan, and Anna Kostanian. The trio provided guests with a live painting experience in the foyer during the reception. In his remarks, he described the museum as a lighthouse and beacon of light for art, culture, and history.

 

Mayor Paula Devine remarked on her pride that the cultural and educational center is being built in the City of Glendale and how the institution will be a “jewel” in the Jewel City. Mayor Devine was joined by her colleagues on the Glendale City Council including Councilmember Ara Najarian, Councilmember Vrej Agajanian, Councilmember Ardy Kassakhian, and Councilmember Daniel Brotman.

 

Senator Anthony J. Portantino remarked on his excitement for the opportunity to educate the public and preserve Armenian culture and history for generations of Californians through the Armenian American Museum. He celebrated the State of California’s historic $9.8 million investment in support of the landmark center including his most recent successful effort to secure an additional $1.8 million in the 2022-2023 state budget.

 

Executive Director Shant Sahakian announced that the museum has launched its highly anticipated Naming Opportunities program to provide individuals, families, and organizations the unique opportunity to sponsor one of the museum’s iconic spaces and establish a lifelong association with the institution through a legacy gift. He welcomed museum leaders to the stage to introduce and honor the founding Naming Opportunities donors of the museum.

 

Board of Trustees Co-Treasurer Avedik Izmirlian representing the Armenian Cultural Foundation presented the Kevonian family and announced that the museum’s Gift Shop will be named the Kevonian Gift Shop in honor of the family’s generous gift. The Kevonian Gift Shop will serve as a marketplace of culture and will offer to the thousands of annual museum visitors a collection of unique gifts, books, souvenirs, and memorabilia that complement the museum’s diverse programming and uplifting mission.

 

Board of Trustees Co-Treasurer Talin Yacoubian representing the AGBU Western District presented the Arakelian family and announced that the museum’s Main Entrance Plaza will be named the Arakelian Plaza in honor of the family’s generous gift. The Arakelian Plaza will serve as the main entrance to the museum building from East Colorado Street and will feature the architectural metal cladding of the building facade overhead and Armenian-inspired basalt walls at each side with a floor-to-ceiling glass facade greeting patrons.

 

Board of Trustees member Dr. Nazareth E. Darakjian representing the Armenian Missionary Association of America presented the Mgrublian family and announced that the museum’s Archives Center will be named the Mgrublian Archives Center in honor of the family’s generous gift. The Mgrublian Archives Center will serve as a repository for Armenian heritage by preserving, conserving, and archiving rare artifacts, cherished artworks, historical documents and media, and special collections.

 

Board of Trustees representative Dr. Raffi Balian representing the Nor Or Charitable Foundation and Executive Vice Chairman Zaven Kazazian presented The GASKA Alliance Foundation and announced that the museum’s Alphabet Wall will be named The GASKA Alliance Foundation Alphabet Wall in honor of the foundation’s generous gift in the memory of Gagik and Knarik Galstian. The GASKA Alliance Foundation Alphabet Wall is the signature public art feature of the Grand Lobby towering to the upper levels as an homage to the Armenian alphabet and ancient Armenian architecture.

 

Board of Trustees member Gabriel Moloyan representing the Nor Serount Cultural Association and Executive Chairman Berdj Karapetian presented the Kalaydjian family and announced that the museum’s Auditorium will be named Kalaydjian Auditorium in honor of the family’s generous gift. The Kalaydjian Auditorium will provide engaging and memorable experiences for patrons and serve as an arts and cultural destination by hosting a wide range of programming including lectures, performances, film screenings, special events, and more.

 

During the grand finale of the event, the Board of Trustees, Board of Governors, Construction Committee, and Gala Committee welcomed the founding Naming Opportunities donors to the main stage with a roaring applause. Executive Chairman Berdj Karapetian concluded the event with the special announcement that the museum has surpassed the historic $31 million fundraising milestone through the generosity of the founding Naming Opportunities donors and the thousands of donors and supporters who have contributed to the landmark center.

 

The Armenian American Museum is a world class educational and cultural institution that is currently under construction in the museum campus at Glendale Central Park. The museum will offer a wide range of public programming through the Permanent Exhibition, Temporary Exhibitions, Auditorium, Learning Center, Demonstration Kitchen, Archives Center, and more.

 

The museum celebrated its historic groundbreaking and commenced construction on the project in Summer 2021.

 

For more information, visit https://www.ArmenianAmericanMuseum.org.

 

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Click here for all press photos: https://photos.app.goo.gl/LAUbc9WyH6SRCVJL6

Kindly,

Arsine Sina Torosyan
Communications Director
Armenian American Museum and Cultural Center of California
116 North Artsakh Avenue, Suite 205, Glendale, CA 91206
Office: (818) 351-3554, Ext. 706
Direct: (818) 644-2215
www.ArmenianAmericanMuseum.org
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Turkish press: Erdoğan urges Armenia to abide by trilateral deal with Azerbaijan

A service member of the Russian peacekeeping troops stands next to a tank near the border with Armenia, following the signing of a deal to end the military conflict between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces, in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Nov. 10, 2020. (Reuters File Photo)


Azerbaijan fully abides by the terms of the trilateral deal signed with Russia and Armenia, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said, as he called on Armenia to also abide by the terms.

In response to a question about recent tensions between Yerevan and Baku, Erdoğan told reporters in Khiva, Uzbekistan, that Azerbaijan is a valuable ally and a brotherly country.

“Azerbaijan fully abides by the terms of the Trilateral Agreement and has not violated it,” Erdoğan said, adding that the Azerbaijani military responded to an attack by Armenia.

He highlighted that Armenia needs to fully withdraw its troops from internationally-recognized Azerbaijani territory.

In a new flare-up of tensions in the region amid Russia’s military offensive in Ukraine, Azerbaijani troops on Thursday said their forces prevented a sabotage attempt by illegal Armenian armed elements in the Nagorno-Karabakh region of the country.

Armenia’s Foreign Ministry in a statement on Monday demanded an “investigation into the Russian peacekeeping contingent’s actions during the Azerbaijani incursion.”

“We expect Russia’s peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh to take concrete steps to put an end to Azerbaijani units’ incursion into the zone of responsibility of peacekeepers,” the statement said.

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said on Saturday that illegal Armenian forces in the region, which was liberated in the fall of 2020 from decades of Armenian occupation, took advantage of hazy weather to provoke the Azerbaijani army. It added that the Armenian forces had to retreat when “immediate measures” were taken, not specifying what form of provocation took place.

Azerbaijan said on Sunday that it had not withdrawn its forces and the area was its sovereign territory.

Earlier in March, Azerbaijan sent a proposal containing five conditions to normalize relations.

The Azerbaijani military routed the Armenian forces in 44 days of fierce fighting in the fall of 2020, which ended with a Russia-brokered peace deal that saw Azerbaijan gain control of a significant part of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Russia has deployed nearly 2,000 peacekeepers for at least five years to monitor the peace deal.

Following years of frozen ties, the neighboring countries of Turkey and Armenia have announced they seek to normalize relations amid efforts for regional integration and cooperation in the South Caucasus. In December, the two countries appointed special envoys to normalize relations.

The borders between the two countries have been closed for decades, and diplomatic relations have been on hold. Armenia and Turkey signed a landmark peace accord in 2009 to restore ties and open their shared border after decades, but the deal was never ratified and ties have remained tense.

Relations between Armenia and Turkey have historically been complicated. During the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict last year, Ankara supported Baku in its war that saw it liberate Azerbaijani territories from Yerevan’s occupation.

Asbarez: Prelate Announces Expansion of Holy Martyrs Church Complex In Encino

A street view of the Holy Martyrs Church in Encino

“The Western Prelacy is at the Beginning of a Great Dawn,” Said the Prelate

Western Prelate Bishop Torkom Donoayan on Tuesday presided over an important meeting during which he announced the purchase of the property adjacent to the Holy Martyrs Church in Encino.

The participants of the meeting were, Vahe Hovaguimian, Chairman of the Executive Council; George Chorbajian, Dr. Kaloust Agopian, Treasurer of the Prelacy Executive Council; Secretary of the Executive Council and Liaison Officer to the Board of Regents; Sarkis Ourfalian Esq., Chairman of the Board of Regents; Archpriest Rev. Razmig Khatchadourian, Pastor of Holy Martyrs Church in Encino; Hovig Bedevian, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Holy Martyrs Church; Vahe Benlian, Chairman of the Educational Board of Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School; and Sossi Shanlian, the Principal of Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School who joined the gathering via Zoom.

“We would like to inform you that the complex of the Holy Martyrs Church, where Ferrahian High school is located will more than double in size with this purchase,” announced the Prelate.

Western Prelate Bishop Torkom Donoyan announced the expansion of the Holy Martyrs Church complex at a special meeting

Under the auspices of the Western Prelacy and by the initiative and efforts of the local community members and benefactors, the property directly adjacent to the Holy Martyrs complex was acquired. The project is in escrow and will be confirmed within two weeks. Also, for months now, the Prelate, the Executive Council and the local bodies have been working diligently to bring this purchase to fruition.

“School construction is part of more than a half-century mission of the Western Prelacy, because the schools are the strongholds of our nation’s existence” stated the Prelate. “The Western Prelacy wants to inform the people and the community about this victorious and great dawn that will open in front of the Western Prelacy.

The Prelate stressed that the community will be pleased by this new achievement of the Prelacy. Benefactors are already expressing their readiness to generously support this costly project at various levels and in full.

Concluding his remarks, the Prelate added that as a gesture of support, the Prelacy is committed to donate the first one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) to be used as leaven on the way to the completion of this project.

Community Invited to Prayer Service ‘For the Sake of the Homeland’ on Sunday

The public is invited to join Primate of the Western Diocese Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Western Prelate Bishop Torkom Donoyan, Bishop Mikael Mouradian of the Armenian Catholic Eparchy of North America, and Very Rev. Hendrik Shanazarian who will lead a prayer and requiem service for the Homeland and in memory of fallen soldiers.

This special event being dubbed “For the Sake of the Homeland,” will take place on Sunday, April 3 at 7 p.m. at St. Leon Armenian Cathedral (3325 N. Glenoaks Blvd., Burbank, CA 91504).

“As Armenians around the world prepare to celebrate Feast of the Holy Resurrection, we renew our commitment to peace through collective prayer, especially in such turbulent times in our homeland and our ancestral land of Artsakh. It is our moral obligation to stand by our Motherland and our Republic spiritually,” said an announcement about the event.

“Therefore, let our collective prayer resoundingly echo in our hearts the call of our valiant ancestors —‘For the sake of faith, for the sake of the Homeland,’” concluded the announcement.