PACE Resolution Highlights the Success of IFES’ Work in Armenia

March 16 2022

PACE RESOLUTION HIGHLIGHTS THE SUCCESS OF IFES’ WORK IN ARMENIA
IFES, members of parliamentary factions and representatives of prominent CSOs meet to discuss reform priorities in a consensus building manner.

Emerging democracies often face internal and external conflicts that may push them off course in their development. In recent years, the Republic of Armenia encountered many of these simultaneously, starting with the peaceful Velvet Revolution in 2018 and following snap elections, the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. These events were followed by the near collapse of the democratically elected government in 2021, which shook the population, damaged confidence in its leaders and contributed to the call for snap elections in June 2021. Occurring in relatively short succession, these events threatened constitutional order and the security of Armenian democracy. Despite these challenges, Armenia continues to make substantial progress in its democratic transition, particularly towards increasing the transparency and legitimacy of its elections.

The Parliamentary Assembly from the Council of Europe (PACE) adopted a resolution on Jan. 27, 2022 that commended Armenia for the high-quality elections held in 2018 and 2021 in the wake of these challenges. The resolution described the elections as “free of the irregularities that had tainted many elections in the past” and highlighted the impactful reforms to the electoral framework undertaken in the same time period, which represent a “marked improvement […] both in terms of the legislation on political parties and the funding of electoral campaigns, and in terms of the voting system.” Specifically, the PACE statement highlighted for praise:

  • “…The efforts made to safeguard the integrity of the system of political finance and enhance political parties’ transparency and accountability…”
  • “…The lowering of the threshold of votes required for a political party to receive public funding”
  • “…The package of amendments adopted in April and May 2021 which addressed the majority of recommendations raised in previous Venice Commission opinions and OSCE/ODIHR election observation missions’ final reports”
  • “…The inclusive and transparent procedure for adopting these amendments and the fact that the amendments of April and May 2021 had been discussed and prepared for a long time, even though they were voted in very shortly before the elections”

Under the USAID-funded Strengthening Electoral Processes and Political Accountability (SEPPA) Program, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) provided direct support to the government of Armenia, election management bodies (EMBs) and other stakeholders to navigate a number of these challenges. In particular, IFES played a critical role in the drafting, review and passage of amendments to the Political Party Law and revised Electoral Code in 2021 through moderating a novel consensus-building forum within the National Assembly. IFES’ moderation of this forum contributed to inclusive high-quality discussion and decision-making around electoral reform efforts that led to the introduction of first-of-its-kind measures to strengthen political and campaign finance oversight in Armenia.

IFES also provided direct support to the Armenian Central Election Commission (CEC) and lower-level EMBs in preparation for snap parliamentary elections in December 2018 and June 2021, as well as local self-government elections in October to December 2021. Both the snap parliamentary and local elections in 2021 were held following the passage of new electoral legislation and a new electoral system. IFES’ support contributed to the smooth conduct of both election cycles, which were highlighted in the PACE resolution and observer reports.

These are meaningful developments that show that Armenians with different political affiliations are willing to work collaboratively towards a common goal of strengthening Armenian elections. Despite this impressive list of accomplishments, the report notes Armenia’s journey toward a thriving democracy is not complete and pitfalls still remain, including a closing media space, proliferation of disinformation and intense political polarization. Nonetheless, if recent history is any indication, there is a consensus that inclusive and transparent democracy is a shared value that disparate political interests will work towards, for the collective betterment of all the Armenian people.

Published on March 16, 2022.


Local nurse helping train people in Armenia while maintaining its culture

March 17 2022

(WXYZ) — We’re continuing to celebrate women making a difference in local communities and beyond as part of Women’s History Month.

Nairi Karapetian has spent the last two decades trying to improve the quality of life for people in Armenia. The country has a long history of genocide and unrest.

Karapetian is a nurse at Beaumont Royal Oak and a proud grandchild of four Armenia genocide survivors. Despite being born here, she’s been traveling back for years to bring aid and provide medical care to her people.

Since 2020, they’ve been at war with Azerbaijan, a conflict similar to the one going on in Ukraine.

St. Sarkis in Dearborn is where Karapetian got married. It’s also where two of her kids were baptized. There’s a lot of meaning within these walls, but what she loves most about being there is how connected she feels to her roots.

“Although I wasn’t born there, Armenia was part of my identity, it was part of my soul and we all felt a commitment to honor the survival of our ancestors, of our grandparents,” she said.

An estimated 1.5 million people died in the Ottoman-era Armenia genocide. Turkey, the ultimate heirs of the Ottoman Empire, denied the massacre.

Last year, President Joe Biden declared April 24 National Armenian Remembrance Day. Karapetian and others living in the U.S. waited a long time for that acknowledgment.

“There are more people living in the diaspora Armenians than there are people in Armenia, but all of us are magnetized back,” Karapetian said.

She said that pull got stronger in 2020 when violence erupted between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Republic of Artsakh.

Both ex-Soviet neighbors claim the territory belongs to them. Mind you, this was all happening during the height of the pandemic.

“Ukraine is getting a lot of attention, which is what it should be, but Armenia should have gotten attention too and so should a lot of other countries when they were being brutally attacked in a very similar way. There are lots of parallels,” she said.

As a long-time nurse, Karapetian knew she could help injured civilians. She collected over 280 boxes of medical supplies and headed for Armenia’s front lines

“We’ve got this ongoing genocide right now and our history is just so sad and it just seems to never end. It is just an ongoing trauma,” Karapetian said.

A nation that was once a large empire is now the size of Maryland. Karapetian fears Armenia will one day be no more, which is why she weaves tradition, language and culture into everything she does.

“I told my daughter, whether it’s in my lifetime or yours, if Armenia is gone, it needs to exist in our hearts and we need to keep it going,” she said.

Karapetian is going to Armenia next month to start a pilot program for nurses. She wants to empower them to take more initiative by the bedside and bring them up to date on CPR and other life-support training.

https://www.wxyz.com/news/local-nurse-helping-train-people-in-armenia-while-maintaining-its-culture

Watch the Video at
https://news.yahoo.com/local-nurse-helping-train-people-114526839.html

A boost for Armenia and international justice

March 17 2022
                                                                                  


      

Canada and its minister of foreign affairs, Mélanie Joly, must ensure that Azerbaijan complies with the International Court of Justice.


by Vrouyr MakalianMarch 17, 2022

A year and a half after the signing of a fragile ceasefire and the end of active hostilities between Azerbaijan and Armenia, it is difficult not to see a heavy defeat of multilateralism in the military offensive launched by Azerbaijan in the autumn of 2020. Azerbaijan was certainly unable to reach all of its territorial aims – the Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh, though fragilized and amputated of important swaths of its territories, continues to exist and remains staunchly Armenian. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, however, did achieve another one of his objectives: to withdraw from the peace process established in 1992 under the auspices of the Minsk Group, co-chaired by the United States, France and Russia.

Since November 2020, both Turkey, which offered considerable and enthusiastic military support to its Azerbaijani “brothers” during the war, and Russia, which seized the opportunity provided by the war to place its own peacekeepers, were able to expand their influence in the South Caucasus, practically eliminating that of the established multilateral framework.

Canada, by the voice of its successives ministers of foreign affairs, has since reiterated its support for the Minsk Group-led peace process, but its words – like those of France and the United States – are ringing more and more hollow in light of a whole new geopolitical reality in the region.

Armenia, short of options, seemingly attempted to reverse this trend by bringing the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) as an ultimate attempt to force the international community to pay attention – however unwillingly – to the crisis still raging in the Caucasus. In its application starting proceedings and request for interim measures, filed in September 2021, Armenia explained that it feared imminent and irreparable harm to the rights and the survival of Armenians inhabiting Nagorno-Karabakh, and the deliberate destruction of Armenian cultural heritage sites. Azerbaijan replied the following week with its own counter-claim.

Credit : EmreculhaNagorno-Karabakh war map (2020)CC BY-SA 4.0

Prior to deciding on the merits of the case, the ICJ delivered its provisional measures, aimed at both Armenia and Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan was thus orderered to “[p]rotect from violence and bodily harm all persons captured in relation to the 2020 Conflict  […] and ensure their security and equality before the law” and “[t]ake all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration affecting Armenian cultural heritage.” Both parties must also “[t]ake all necessary measures to prevent the incitement and promotion of racial hatred” and “refrain from any action which might aggravate or extend the dispute before the Court or make it more difficult to resolve.”

On January 31, 2022, Canada took notice of the ICJ’s orders and called on “the respective governments to fully abide by [them].” Three days later, Azerbaijan announced the creation of a working group made up of so-called specialists of Caucasian Albanian history and mandated with the task of “remov[ing] the fictitious traces written by Armenians on Albanian religious temples.” Azerbaijan has been promoting for the last 60 years a theory, devoid of any scientific basis, that any Armenian construction, inscription or relic on the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh is actually the work of the ancient Christian Albanian Kingdom (no relation with the present state of Albania in the Balkans) that reigned over the territory from the 5th to the 9th century. Azerbaijan’s army also destroyed, 15 years ago, dozens of churches and thousands of cross stones, Armenian cultural jewels, in the city of Julfa, Azerbaijan.

The idea behind this new working group – which was denounced by the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom and the European Parliament, which strongly condemned Azerbaijan’s continued policy of erasing and denying the Armenian cultural heritage in and around Nagorno-Karabakh – was thus not particularly novel. Today, however, it appears to be a deliberate slight toward the ICJ, from a government that has never hesitated to openly defy human rights and the relevant international normative framework. In fact, by multiplying its breaches of the ceasefire these last few weeks while the Ukrainian tragedy monopolizes media attention, Azerbaijan has shown the respect it gives to the court’s final order regarding the obligation not to aggravate the dispute.

Can a country like Canada allow such a brazen attempt to render the ICJ toothless? The mandate letter of Minister of Foreign Affairs Mélanie Joly – who has in the past shown herself to be quite sensitive to the fate of Nagorno-Karabakh – outlines many reasons why Canada should act, and offers potential courses of action.

As such, intervening to ensure that Azerbaijan complies with the ICJ’s orders is entirely coherent with Minister Joly’s responsibility to work to ensure that the UN, of which the ICJ is one of six primary bodies, be “more effective, efficient, relevant and accountable [and] supports a rules-based international system.” It is worth remembering that the ICJ’s orders are mandatory, though it has no means to execute them.

Nothing further erodes trust in a judicial system than an unenforceable judgment, however well-founded it may be. Canada’s reaction will be all the more important as the ICJ may soon impose emergency provisional measures on Russia, which has decided to boycott the hearings rather than contesting Ukraine’s application. The rule of law and the appearance of an impartial international justice system would be severely undermined if its most ardent defenders decide to deliberately allow some ICJ decisions to go unnoticed while demanding that others be respected.

Canada’s responsibility in the Nagorno-Karabakh crisis

In the Karabakh crisis, Canada must support rules-based international order

Of course, the suggestion here is not to deploy the Canadian army in the Caucasus. Canada’s diplomatic corps, however, can be more engaged, particularly within the UN’s bodies. UNESCO’s director general proposed as early as October 2020 to “carry out a preliminary field mission, in order to draw up an inventory of the most significant cultural assets, as a prerequisite for effective protection of the region’s heritage.” The urgency of such measures need no longer be demonstrated, and Canada should not shy away from demanding it.

In the same spirit, UN experts called for the release of all captives in February 2021. The call provoked mixed reactions due to its textbook diplomatic neutrality, by which no distinction was made between the handful of Azerbaijani captives and the hundreds of Armenian captives, many of whom were being tortured live on social media. This false equivalence, already shaky in early 2021, is simply indefensible today, as evidenced by the ICJ order. It is vital for the very credibility of the UN that it exert all the pressure required to ensure that this order be respected. Canada and its likeminded partners can no longer continue to fall back on the International Committee of the Red Cross to justify their inaction.

The ICRC’s work on the ground remains essential, but its mandate requires it to be neutral and independent. It is now long overdue to add a robust diplomatic dimension to the issue by requesting the UN Secretary-General and High Commissioner for Human Rights to establish a commission of inquiry to ensure that Armenian captives in Azerbaijan are protected or, better yet, released.

If serious diplomatic efforts fail, Canada and its key partners have a highly useful legislative tool to reply to despots everywhere, the Justice for Victims of Corrupt Foreign Officials Act, more commonly referred to as the Sergei Magnitsky Law, which Minister Joly is also tasked with using and promoting.

A decision to apply targeted sanctions to Azerbaijani officials, including President Aliyev, would be entirely coherent with sanctions imposed by Canada in response to human-rights violations against the Rohingyas in Myanmar in 2018, and gross violations of internationally recognized human rights and acts of significant corruption in Venezuela in 2017. The plight of Armenian captives, detained in terrible conditions and dragged before the court for show trials, is also eerily reminiscent of Sergei Magnitsky’s own tragic fate, whose treatment during his investigation and pretrial detention led to targeted sanctions by Canada against dozens of Russian officials.

Ilham Aliyev, who inherited the presidency from his father almost 20 years ago, has a long track record containing many other grounds for sanctions. One need only think of the blogger Mahammad Mirzali, now in hiding in France, where he was nevertheless stabbed and shot after a warning to stay quiet by none other than the deputy speaker of Azerbaijan’s Parliament. Fearing for his life, the NGO Reporters without Borders has asked France to provide him with additional security. Here, too, one can’t help but remember the tragic story of Jamal Khashoggi, whose murder led to the imposition of Canadian sanctions against 17 Saudi nationals in 2018.

Seeing the South Caucasus as it really is

Time for Canada to intervene as World Court tackles the Rohingya crisis

Canada can help with the Rohingyas’ legal needs

High-ranking Azerbaijani officials have earned the reputation of being both corrupt and corrupters, as the misappropriation of national resources pervades the country’s economy, and the corruption of foreign politicians and academics is an integral part of the country’s foreign policy. Canada must indeed pay close attention to the case of Henry Cuellar, a member of the United States House of representatives, whose home and office were both raided by the FBI in what is believed to be an investigation about Azerbaijan. It would be naive to imagine that our country and parliamentarians are shieled from such manoeuvres.

Given Canada’s traditionally cautious approach to the region, it would be highly optimistic to believe that it will take the lead on this file. It is also true that such sanctions are much more effective when applied multilaterally. The conversation, however, deserves to take place, and nothing should prevent Minister Joly from instigating it – quite to the contrary. In fact, if the eyes of Canada and its allies are riveted on the Ukraine today, and if some were looking toward Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, to develop an alternative plan to Russian oil, the announcement of a new strategic alliance between Russia and Azerbaijan on the eve of the attack on Ukraine certainly sets the record straight. But beyond geopolitical interests, which may vary from one day to another, it is the pursuance of the rule of law as an objective in and of itself that should motivate Canadian action as the closest thing to a guarantee of predictability in a region and a world that, today, is sorely lacking.

Vrouyr Makalian is a public law attorney and former policy advisor in the Senate of Canada.


Turkish Press: Armenian PM Pashinyan discusses Karabakh with Putin via phone

Yeni Safak, Turkey
March 17 2022

 Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke by phone with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Wednesday.

They discussed the implementation between the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan of trilateral agreements on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement.

Particularly, the two leaders considered issues related to observing the cease-fire and restoring transportation and logistical links in the South Caucasus, the Kremlin said in a statement following the call.

“Nikol Pashinyan also informed the President about his recent contacts aimed at normalizing Azerbaijani-Armenian and Armenian-Turkish relations,” it added.

The leaders also reaffirmed their shared intention to further strengthen the strategic partnership and alliance between Russia and Armenia and agreed that the prime minister of Armenia would visit Russia in the near future, it said.

Armenian students win 3 gold, 1 silver medals at Caucasus Math Olympiad

March 17 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian students have won three gold and one silver medals at the seventh Caucasus Mathematical Olympiad, which was held in Maykop, Republic of Adygea (Russia) on March 11-16.

About 150 representatives from 9 countries took part in the competition, and each team had 4 members.

Armenia in the online competition for juniors was represented by the students of Yerevan’s PhysMath School (the Physics and Mathematics Specialized School named after Artashes Shahinyan). In particular, 10th grade students Areg Mkrtchyan, Vahan Baghdasaryan and Hayk Andreasyan won gold, while Kamo Mirakyan took silver as he lacked just one point to snatch gold as well.

The Armenian national team took the first spot in terms of the number of gold medals among the participating countries.

Armenia raises Azerbaijan’s destruction of Karabakh heritage with UNESCO

March 17 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay have discussed the deliberate destruction of Armenian heritage sites in the territories that came under the control of Azerbaijan after Baku’s aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh.

The two met in Paris on Wednesday, March 16, and Mirzoyan drew Azoulay’s attention to the establishment of a state working group for the distortion of the Armenian monuments’ identity. It was also emphasized during the meeting that such actions go against decision of the UN International Court of Justice on the protection of the Armenian historical, cultural and religious heritage.

The Armenian Foreign Minister stressed the need for the urgent intervention of UNESCO to prevent the vandalism of the historical and cultural monuments of Artsakh, which are part of the universal cultural heritage. He also called prioritized the arrangement of fact-finding mission to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone proposed by the UNESCO Secretary-General.

Mirzoyan also stressed that Armenia is expanding cooperation with UNESCO in the fields of education, science and communication. He noted that Armenia, as a member of the Executive Board of UNESCO, continues to be committed to the promotion of world peace, development and multilateralism, which are the pillars of the Organization.

Armenia’s first father’s blog

  • Grigor Harutyunyan
  • Yerevan

Armenian journalist Grigor Harutyunyan started his father’s blog a few months ago. In this video blog, he explains why he decided to create it.

“I saw that there are mom bloggers. They talk about their children, their upbringing and give very little space in their blogs to fathers. One gets the impression that fathers do not participate in the upbringing of children, do not care about them. In fact, this is not the case”, says Grigor Harutyunyan.

Watch video at 

Armenia PM Congratulates Leader of Islamic Revolution, Iran’s President on Nowruz

IQNA – Int’l Quran News Agency – Iran
TEHRAN (IQNA) – Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent congratulatory messages to Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei and Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi on the occasion of Nowruz.

Every year, Iranians and some other nations in the region celebrate the Persian New Year, Nowruz, that begins on the last day of winter.

In harmony with the rebirth of nature, the Nowruz festivities begin on the last day of solar year.

In his message to the Leader of the Islamic Revolution, Pashinyan wrote:

“Your Majesty,

I cordially congratulate you and the friendly people of the Islamic Republic of Iran on the occasion of Nowruz. I wish the coming year to be marked by exceptional fertility and peace for the people of friendly Iran.

We can happily state that the Armenian-Iranian relations, which have a history of thousands of years and are formed in an atmosphere of mutual trust and respect, continue their normal course of steady development.

We attach great importance to the implementation of new programs with the Islamic Republic of Iran, the expansion of the multidimensional Armenian-Iranian agenda for the benefit of the development of bilateral relations and regional peace.

Taking the opportunity, I wish you good health and permanent well-being to the people of Iran.

Please accept, Your Majesty, the assurances of my highest consideration.”

The Armenian prime minister’s message to the Iranian president is as follows:

“Your Excellency,

I warmly congratulate you and the people of Iran on the occasion of the awakening of nature and flowering, Nowruz. I wish the new year to marked by unbreakable peace and new achievements for the neighboring and friendly Islamic Republic of Iran.

The Armenian-Iranian relations, which have centuries-old history, based on strong and mutual intercultural respect, continue their path of uninterrupted development.

I am confident that due to tireless joint efforts, a new quality will be given to the diverse agenda of the Armenian-Iranian relations, bringing to life new programs which are in the implementation stage, as well as new programs for the benefit of bilateral and regional cooperation.

Taking this opportunity, I wish you success, prosperity, prosperity and lasting peace to the friendly people of the Islamic Republic of Iran,

Please accept, Your Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration.”

 

Askeran Administration: Activities carried out near line of contact do not constitute concession of positions

NEWS.am
Armenia –

These days in some villages near the line of contact our armed forces together with the Russian peacekeeping forces deployed in Artsakh are carrying out additional measures to ensure full security of the local civilian population, the administration of the Askeran province of the Republic of Artsakh.

“These measures do not mean concessions and evacuation of settlements. On the contrary, they are aimed at increasing the level of security in these settlements.

“We urge you to refrain from baseless accusations and speculations so as not to provoke panic in the society,” the statement reads.

What Is Going On at the Armenia Fund?

The National Interest

A charity dedicated to promoting economic development has a long history of corruption, criminality, and even abetting military affairs. Now, people are asking questions.

by Aleksandar Srbinovski

The black clouds continue to hang over the Hayastan All Armenian Fund—also known as “Himnadram” to Armenians. The organization, established back in 1992, aims to connect the international Armenian diaspora with their mother country, all for the sake of raising money to support the economic development of Armenia proper. Overall, in the course of its existence, approximately a million Armenian citizens have benefited in some way from a total of around $400 million raised.  

Himnadram, as promised, came to Armenia’s help when the country was embroiled in a conflict with its neighbor, Azerbaijan, in the fall of 2020. The fund had one of its most successful years in its history, raising a bit under $200 million through global telethons. Around 750,000 individuals from the United States, Europe, Australia, and other parts of the world contributed to the fund to assist Armenians in the war effort against Azerbaijan. Even though the fund’s charter clearly states that the Armenian government cannot be a direct recipient of funds, about 60 percent of the raise amount was transferred straight to the state budget due to “urgency.”

When the war ended, however, the emotional high gave way to rationality, and donors sought to know how and in what form the $200 million was spent. In the postwar Armenian political milieu, this issue has gone beyond simple curiosity and become a matter of what can only be described as political blackmail. The current Armenian government stands accused of squandering finances and embezzlement by its political opponents, notably former president and Himnadram board member Robert Kocharyan.

To put an end to the dispute, former Armenian president Armen Sarkissian requested an independent audit from Himnadram and offered to repay all donations if the audit revealed a violation. Haykak Arshamyan, the fund’s executive director, agreed to this resolution. However, the contents of the resulting audit have yet to be made public. Furthermore, Arshamyan believes that claims have been artificially politicized, even claiming that attacks against Himnadram were carried out by some circles using an “online troll army.”

A Troubled History of Misuse  

Despite Himnadram’s own claims that it has nothing to do with politics, the known facts tell an entirely different story. Himnadram has been involved in politics since its conception. When the fund was founded in 1992, it was headed by Manushak Petrosyan, a longtime friend and ally of then-President Levon Ter-Petrosyan. It wasn’t just Petrosyan’s personal ties to the president or her concurrent resignation with him that made her famous: the wealth she somehow accrued over the six years she was in charge—including an assortment of luxurious houses, stores, and restaurants she managed to acquire—all made the news. To top it all off, Petrosyan’s relationship with the fund did not end with her resignation. After leaving Himnadram, she founded a  construction company named “Spectrum,” which was subsequently—out of all possible companies—handed a contract by the fund to build the Gyumri Children’s Art Center.

When Raffi Hovannisian—a diaspora Armenian who led the nationalist Dashnak Party’s youth federation in California—was appointed as the fund’s new executive director, he was tasked with mending relations between diaspora Dashnaks and the Armenian government, which had deteriorated under Ter-Petrosyan’s tenure. In a 1999 interview with Azg Daily, Hovannissian acknowledged Himnadram’s politicization, explicitly stating that “Of course, there was a certain amount of politicization.” He even gave a concrete example of how such politicization hampered diaspora Armenians’ ability to complete projects. “A few years ago the Greek-Armenian community had raised 300,000 dollars for donating to Armenia. The donation was being constantly postponed due to political reasons.” 

The concern over Himnadram goes beyond examples of the fund’s partisanship; it’s also a question of how its funds have been spent. For example, in 2007, Himnadram funded the construction of a windsurfing center in the Kaputak Sevan resort complex on the beaches of Lake Sevan. The resort is coincidentally owned by Bella Kocharyan, former President Robert Kocharyan’s wife. The fund also paid for the acquisition of the required equipment for the facility. What is now being questioned is the very fact that the construction budget of the center was officially explained by the fund quite differently. One can go as far as to even speculate how much Kocharyan’s personal windsurfing hobby influenced the construction of such a center.

Other instances of impropriety abound. After the fund’s annual telethon in 2013, it was revealed that luxury service cars were acquired for the Armenian-backed separatist regime in Karabakh, and the personal bank loans of people linked to the regime were paid. Separately, Ara Vardanyan, another executive director of Himnadram, was arrested in 2018 by Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) on suspicions of embezzlement and misuse of money. Vardanyan admitted to using a Himnadram credit card with a limit of 20 million drams (about $41,500) for online gambling, according to NSS. He then replenished the credit card account with donated cash. Vardanyan then made a personal cash infusion to cover up the missing money, according to his own testimony.

Then there is the matter of potential money laundering. Armenia, one of the world’s largest tax evaders, with an annual black-market worth about $300 million, and Karabakh, a legal gray zone where international inspection has been impossible for decades, have long been safe havens for what is allegedly the Himnadram’s extensive and sophisticated money-laundering network. Remember that the Himnadram’s branches in sixteen countries are tax-exempt due to being part of a charity organization. For many years, some Armenian oligarchs have exploited this tax-exempt status extensively. Investigative journalists exposed one such case:

The investors intended to construct a hotel in Nagorno-Karabakh. Given the unrecognized republic’s poor economic situation, this was a dangerous venture. They realized the deal as follows: the investors donated a large sum of money to the “Hayastan” All-Armenian Fund in the United States and received it in Artsakh; they left a certain percentage to the Fund, which was significantly less than the amount of income tax they would have to pay to the United States. 

The Himnadram in Karabakh

The Karabakh region, which is internationally recognized Azerbaijani territory but was under the effective control of Armenian military forces until the war in 2020, has been at the center of Himnadram’s thirty years of activity—something which has been actively endorsed by celebrities like Kim Kardashian and Serj Tankian.

Himnadram has funded the construction of two highways connecting Armenia and Karabakh: one that runs through the depopulated Azerbaijani districts of Shusha and Lachin, and another that runs through Kalbajar. Several other roads in Karabakh were paved as well, including the North-South Road, which connects the southernmost banks of the Aras River with the Republic of Armenia—and was previously used primarily for drug and arms trafficking.

Though these roads are ostensibly beneficial to all, in that they make it easier for people and goods to travel in both directions, they were also designed to ensure the de facto unification of Armenia and Karabakh into a unified economic space. In others, these roads assist in Armenia’s de facto annexation of internationally recognized Azerbaijani territories.

Then there are the military-strategic implications of these projects. Following Armenia’s victory in the first Nagorno-Karabakh war in 1994, the Armenian armed forces, which had faced numerous logistical challenges during the war, began to construct roads in areas under their control that were primarily intended for military use. It was the Himnadram that funded most of those roads: the fund’s second, third, fifth, sixth, seventh, sixteenth, and seventeenth telethons were all dedicated to raising funds for road construction, and around $67 million was raised in this manner.

Himnadram’s actions in Karabakh, however, are not confined to road construction. As part of the “Re-population of the villages of Artsakh” project, it sponsored illegal resettlement in Karabakh. The fact that repopulation efforts have taken place, particularly in places where Azerbaijanis historically inhabited, indicates that the project was about more than merely providing homes for the homeless: the goal of preventing the return of Azerbaijanis to their homes, creating a new demographic situation on the ground and imposing a fait accompli.

Where Did the Money Go?

Given Himnadram’s decades-long efforts in Karabakh—which were de facto intended at bolstering Armenia’s military occupation and obstructing the implementation of internationally-backed peace proposals—it is only reasonable to ask how exactly the fund’s donations collected during the 2020 Karabakh War were spent. According to Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan, Himnadram’s donations to the Armenian government covered roughly half of the government’s war expenses—again, a move of questionable legality that goes directly against the fund’s charter. In response to questioning from media, Finance Minister Vazgen Harutyunyan stated that his ministry oversaw routing cash via various government departments to provide medical help to military soldiers and crucial infrastructure maintenance throughout the war.

The Himnadram’s previous activities, as well as the remarks by Pashinyan and Harutyunyan, make it impossible to believe that “not a cent collected by Himnadram was spent for military purposes.” If “roughly half” of Armenia’s war expenses were covered by international donations, then some of that likely involved not only the purchase of military equipment, but also the maintenance of the Armenian artillery troops’ deployment bases that targeted Azerbaijani cities during the war, as well as the repair plants that repaired war-damaged military equipment.