Before Armenians flourished in Bombay and Calcutta, they found a thriving home in Surat

Scroll, India
March 1 2022
HISTORY REMEMBERED

Turkey, Armenia Vow to Continue Normalizing Relations

Voice of America
2:30 AM
  • Agence France-Presse

Turkey and Armenia have pledged to pursue the normalization of ties in what the Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu described as a “productive and constructive” meeting on Saturday.

After talks with his Armenian counterpart, Ararat Mirzoyan, Cavusoglu said that Azerbaijan also “supports the process” of normalization.

Armenia and Turkey have no diplomatic relations, a closed land border and a deep-seated hostility rooted in the mass killing of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire during World War I.

But in December, the two countries appointed special envoys to normalize relations, spurred by support from regional powerbroker Russia and Armenia’s arch-foe Azerbaijan.

The push came a year after Azerbaijan used the help of Turkish combat drones to recapture most of the territory it lost to ethnic Armenians in a 1990s war in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

A Russian-brokered truce that ended the second conflict removed Turkey’s main objection to talking to Armenia — namely, Yerevan’s support for the local Nagorno-Karabakh government’s claim of independence from Azerbaijan.

The first commercial flights for two years resumed in early February between Turkey and Armenia, but the land border between the two countries has remained closed since 1993, forcing trucks to transit through Georgia or Iran.

 

Turkish, Armenian FMs discuss ways to end decades-old hostilities

Global Times, China
Published: Mar 13, 2022

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu met his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan on Saturday in Antalya, a southwestern resort city of Turkey, to discuss ways of ending decades-old hostilities.

The two ministers attended a joint press conference after they met on the sidelines of the ongoing Antalya Diplomacy Forum, which has gathered around 2,000 politicians, diplomats, journalists, and scholars from more than 70 countries since its opening on Friday.

The Turkish minister told the press that said his meeting with Mirzoyan was “very productive and constructive,” noting special representatives of the two neighbors have conducted two rounds of talks trying to normalize their ties.

Turkey strives for stability and peace in the South Caucasus, said Cavusoglu, adding “Azerbaijan also supports this process.”

“Stability and peace in the region are for the benefit of all of us,” he noted.

Mirzoyan, for his part, said the Armenian side will continue to normalize ties with Turkey “without preconditions.”

“Armenia has a decision for peace and harmony in our region,” the Armenian minister said.

Turkey and Armenia severed the diplomatic ties in 1993 after Turkey chose to support Azerbaijan when the Caspian country was fighting a war with Armenia over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Xinhua

    

The world failed to act in 2020 when Azerbaijan attacked Armenia. Now history repeats itself in Ukraine

OPINION

A country led by an authoritarian launches an unprovoked war claiming sovereignty over historical lands. Thousands of innocent lives are upended. Fathers leave children behind to defend their country. Churches and hospitals are bombed. War crimes are committed.

Sound familiar? While this might depict events currently unfolding in Ukraine, it also describes what happened to Armenians living in their ancestral homeland of Nagorno-Karabakh when Azerbaijan started a war in the fall of 2020.

But unlike Ukraine, where worldwide condemnation of Russian aggression has been swift and severe, the world stayed mostly silent when Armenians were desperately asking for support and help. For millions of Armenians living around the world, this story is all too familiar. As victims of the first genocide of the 20th century, when more than 1.5 million Armenians were systematically exterminated by the Ottoman Turks, an event Turkey denies to this day, Armenians have come to expect that their suffering and pain is not worthy of comparable attention.

The events taking place in Ukraine and the imbalance of coverage that the Nagorno-Karabakh war received has only crystalized those feelings of frustration and exasperation. Wars are not a competition. And the people of Ukraine deserve all the help and support that the world can give them to stop Vladimir Putin’s quixotic campaign to revive the Soviet Union. But focusing on just one group undermines what other countries have endured in similar conflicts, wars, and wanton acts of violence. It gives despots cover to commit acts of violence at will and without restraint.

Strongmen like Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey and Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan share contempt for the rule of law. Had the world acted on behalf of Armenia in 2020 — or, for that matter, during the Armenian genocide in 1915 — then maybe that would have sent a stronger message to autocrats like Putin whose actions demonstrate that they believe they can carry out acts of aggression against other nations with impunity. What’s happening to Ukrainians is similar to what happened to Armenians. These are not mutually exclusive events. The parallels could not be starker.

Taking a page out of Putin’s playbook, President Aliyev used the pretext of historical revisionism to launch his unprovoked war against Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020. Claiming that large parts of Armenia’s territory were Azerbaijan’s “historic lands,” Aliyev defended this belief through incendiary language in numerous speeches leading up to the war and even went so far to say that Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, belonged to Azerbaijan. Nothing could be further from the truth. It is one of the reasons why he has embarked on a campaign to erase Armenia’s history and existence in the region by defacing, vandalizing, and destroying Armenian heritage and cultural sites, including churches and monasteries that have stood for hundreds of years.

Already we are seeing Russian forces try to engage in similar efforts. For instance, Moscow drew international condemnation after an airstrike hit Babyn Yar, a Holocaust memorial site where Nazis killed thousands of Jews during World War II. Whether or not it was intentional, the ultimate message that Russia sent was clear. Similarly, images surfaced during the Nagorno-Karabakh war showing a memorial dedicated to the victims of the Armenian genocide in Shushi being razed by occupying Azeri forces.

Despite these parallels, the world responded much differently to each event. While Russia has rightly been sanctioned economically and labeled a pariah, Azerbaijan didn’t even get a slap on the wrist. FIFA and UEFA, the world’s largest governing body for soccer, banned Russia but rewarded Azerbaijan by allowing it to host the 2020 European Championship games. Those same games were held next door to Azerbaijan Military Trophies Park, which glorifies and extols Azerbaijan’s victory in the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh War with Armenia, which basically represents a blatant disrespect for human rights as it celebrates its war crimes.

The park features a display of hundreds of helmets taken from Armenian soldiers killed during the war and wax mannequins of captured soldiers portrayed through exaggerated caricatures based on Armenian stereotypes and tropes like crooked noses and bushy eyebrows. Many of these mannequins are of people shown in their dying moments or chained to jail cells.

War should not be a zero-sum game when it comes to awareness. It is evil and represents the very worst of humanity. That is why all conflicts deserve attention. Human lives should not be measured by the size of a country or the natural resources it may have. In many ways, the Nagorno-Karabakh war in 2020 was a harbinger of Russia’s war in Ukraine. As with the lessons of the Armenian genocide, the world failed to learn from history. Sadly, that history is repeating itself once again.

Stephan Pechdimaldji is a communications strategist who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/03/14/opinion/world-failed-act-2019-when-azerbaijan-attacked-armenia-now-history-repeats-itself-ukraine/ 

South Caucasus Closely Watches Ukraine

MODERN DIPLOMACY
PUBLISHED BY

Emil Avdaliani

As the Russian invasion of Ukraine reverberates across the world, one region particularly susceptible to unfolding geopolitical changes is the South Caucasus. Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia are trying to maneuver trying to balance between potential Russian reprisals and the need, near necessity, to stand together with Ukraine. 

Georgia is on a knife-edge. It has sent mixed signals over the past two weeks. Tbilisi applied for EU membership but has also largely abstained from publicly criticizing Russia. Ordinary people, however, have been expressing support. With large gatherings in central Tbilisi, constant flow of humanitarian aid is flowing to Kyiv. It seems that Tbilisi tries to maintain a certain balance while it is still unclear how the war in Ukraine ends. Russia winning augurs trouble for Tbilisi. As the second country mentioned in Russia’s security demands addressed to NATO and the US, Georgia feels insecure and rightfully considers that a victorious Russia will have greater space to pressure Tbilisi into obedience regarding the latter’s NATO aspirations.

Russia’s retreat, on the contrary, will be a major boon for Georgia’s EU/NATO membership bids. Understanding the Georgian government’s logic, Russia has sent some positive signals to Tbilisi as the latter did not join the sanctions regime against Moscow. 

But the balancing game is turning increasingly untenable. Pressure from inside grows as do calls from international partners. Hopes that Russia might be changing its position on the occupied territories of Abkhazia and South Ossetia is premature at best. Yet one positive development for Georgia though is that two separatist territories are unlikely to see expanding international recognition. Moscow’s recognition of Donbas entities showed that the Kremlin purposefully fostered separatist regimes for geopolitical goals and that there is no ground for inter-ethnic problems Moscow has been arguing about. The end result is that Russia created too many entities for its foreign policy to gain credibility and expect wider recognition. 

With Azerbaijan Russia will continue its highly successful transactional approach. The recent agreement on allied cooperation with Baku stressed this tactic. Moreover, it also means that Moscow has successfully laid ground for its likely presence in Azerbaijan post-2025. Baku has avoided openly criticizing Russia as it also fears potential Russian reprisals. In a way, Azerbaijan, sandwiched in between Russia and Iran, has little maneuvering room. Alliance with Turkey would not be saving the country from potential threats.

Armenia is perhaps least shaken by the war in Ukraine. The trauma of 2020 and how the West was largely absent from the conflict and the post-war period made many angry to the way the West has been responding to the Russian invasion. Armenia simply has little space to maneuver and its decision to support Russia in various votes in international settings since the war began underlines the growing limits Yerevan faces in the last years especially following 2020 war. 

The three countries nevertheless fear that if Russia wins it would be able to further close off the South Caucasus from the West, whose influence has already been declining in the region for some time. The Second Nagorno-Karabakh war and the subsequent 3+3 initiative covering all regional players highlights changing balance of power in the region. What Russia aspires is a greater acquiescence. Iran and to a certain extent Turkey will be critical in shaping the new order where hierarchy will be a dominating feature.

The South Caucasus states are also watching for any signs of potential shifts in Russia’s position over Ukraine. An outright Russian defeat is hardly possible at this stage, but withdrawal is quite possible. This could lead to unraveling of some of the aspects of Russia’s foreign policy in the South Caucasus. First, Georgia might be successful in its EU membership bid, while Azerbaijan could be pushing for the end of Russia peacekeeping mission in 2025. Shattered Russian military prestige would foretell issues for Moscow’s positioning vis-à-vis other regional powers.

Another potential result from Russia’s weakened position could be Armenia increasing its ability for foreign policy maneuvering. Through better ties with Ankara, Yerevan could be realistically aiming at gaining greater autonomy in the economic realm. Improved connectivity and greater trade ties with the neighboring countries will allow Armenia to diversify at least some elements in its foreign policy.

Hard power is the only tool Moscow has been able to use to maintain its clout in the region. This is well reflected in the growing number of military bases Russia has built in the South Caucasus over the past two decades. Therefore, a potential retreat in Ukraine will have a major impact on Moscow’s position among the South Caucasus states and the separatist entities.

Regional powers such as Iran will be also less intent on coordinating its moves with Moscow as willingly as they have tried to do so far. Another actor, Turkey, could become more assertive as it sees a less confident Russia. Moreover, there could be a return of the West in the South Caucasus especially as since the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the trans-Atlantic community has shown greater efficiency and willingness to work in unison.

Author’s note: first published in caucasuswatch

 

Turkish Press: HDP’s Paylan welcomes meeting of foreign ministers of Turkey, Armenia

BIAnet, Turkey
HDP’s Paylan welcomes meeting of foreign ministers of Turkey, Armenia

Peoples’ Democratic Party Diyarbakır MP Garo Paylan has expressed support in a social media message after Turkey’s Foreign Minister Çavuşoğlu and his counterpart Mirzoyan from Armeni̇a met in Antalya Diplomacy Forum.

Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) Diyarbakır MP Garo Paylan has welcomed the meeting of Armeni̇a’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Ararat Mirzoyan and Turkey’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu in Antalya Diplomacy Forum in southern Turkey on Saturday (March 12).

After the meeting was held, Minister Çavuşoğlu said that “it was a very efficient and constructive meeting” and recalled that special envoys have been appointed as part of the normalization process.

He has also shared the following message on Twitter:

————————-


Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu
@MevlutCavusoglu
Türkiye devlet görevlisi
#ADF2022to our contacts#Ruanda ve #Ermenistanwith the Ministers of Foreign Affairs#IKBY Başkanı’yla devam ettik.
Continued our meetings at
@AntalyaDF with Foreign Ministers @Vbiruta of #Rwanda, @AraratMirzoyan of #Armenia & @IKRPresident of #KRG.

————————-

As reported by the state-run Anadolu Agency (AA), Çavuşoğlu commented on this meeting with Mirzoyan at the closing speech of the Forum. 

Çavuşoğlu stated that Armenia’s Foreign Minister “voiced Yerevan’s willingness to launch peace talks with Azerbaijan,” underlining that “both Turkey and Azerbaijan are keen on the stability of the region”. Çavuşoğlu added that “Armenia should respond to this position.” 

“We are not talking about a conflict, a dispute, a mediation. Everyone, of course, should do their part for the stability of the region,” he noted.

Emphasizing that “Turkey supports all steps to be taken between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Çavuşoğlu further noted that “Ankara also supports the projects they agree to implement as soon as possible.”

After the meeting was made public, HDP MP Garo Paylan has also shared a social media message in Turkish, English and Armenian, defining the meeting as “a hopeful moment”. The MP has said:

 

Foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu and Ararat Mirzoyan have met in Antalya Diplomacy Forum for the first senior level meeting in the normalization process between two countries. A hopeful moment. Let’s keep the momentum!

————————-

Garo Paylan – Karo Paylan
@GaroPaylan
Foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia

@MevlutCavusoglu

and

@AraratMirzoyan

have met in Antalya Diplomacy Forum for the first senior level meeting in the normalization process between two countries.
A hopeful moment.
Let’s keep the momentum!

————————-

To develop the relations between Turkey and Armeni̇a, the “Protocol on the Development of Bilateral Relations” was signed by Turkey’s the then Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu and Armeni̇a’s the then Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbantyan on October 11, 2009.

Signed in Zurich in Switzerland, the “Protocol on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations” foresaw that the two states would recognize each other’s borders. But no progress was made and protocols became invalid.

In January 2022, Turkey and Armenia appointed special envoys to normalize relations. Serdar Kılıç, a former ambassador to the United States, has been appointed as Turkey’s envoy, according to a presidential decision published in the Official Gazette on January 11, 2022.

Shortly afterwards, a FlyOne passenger jet took off from Armenia to Turkey for the first time on February 2. The flight was carried out as part of the normalization process between Turkey and Armenia. Pegasus Airlines are also to operate flights between İstanbul and Yerevan thrice a week, according to Turkey’s Transport and Infrastructure Ministry. (RT/SD)

Armenia asks OSCE Minsk Group to initiate peace talks with Azerbaijan


ANI Yerevan | Updated: 14-03-2022 20:32 IST

Yerevan [Armenia], March 14 (ANI/Sputnik): Armenia appealed to the Minsk group of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) on Monday to initiate peace talks with Azerbaijan. Last week, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said he had sent Armenia a five-point plan on how to normalize relations after the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

“The Republic of Armenia responded to the proposals of the Republic of Azerbaijan and applied to the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship to organize negotiations on the signing of a peace agreement,” the Armenian Foreign Ministry said. The group is co-chaired by Russia, France and the United States. They have been spearheading the OSCE’s efforts to find a peaceful solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict over the past three decades. (ANI/Sputnik)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

https://www.devdiscourse.com/article/international/1962142-armenia-asks-osce-minsk-group-to-initiate-peace-talks-with-azerbaijan



Armenian Women’s Welfare Association Expands Senior Leadership


The following announcement was provided by the AWWA:

The Armenian Women’s Welfare Association (AWWA), a nonprofit health care organization dedicated to serving elders locally and internationally, and the sponsor organization of the Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, today announced an expanded senior leadership team at the top-rated skilled nursing center with the appointment of two experienced administrators: Greg Messina, Chief Operating Officer, and Jessica Brigham, Executive Director.

Messina and Brigham each bring more than a decade of health care experience to the 83-bed, nonprofit provider of high-quality long-term care and short-term rehabilitation. Messina will guide the Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center’s strategic and planning initiatives, including the development of new services and programs, oversight of finances and collaboration with key health care partners. Brigham will lead the day-to-day operations, including the clinical care of patients and residents, management of staff, and communication with families.

“With these important leadership appointments and our continued commitment to strengthen our programs, we are well positioned to grow our mission of providing high-quality, person-centered care to the communities we serve,” said Martha Mensoian, President of the AWWA Board of Directors. “Greg and Jessica bring new ideas and a record of success in running a long-term care center, which will serve us well in these quickly evolving times.”

Messina previously served as a regional administrator for Whittier Health Network, a group of acute rehabilitation hospitals and subacute rehabilitation and nursing homes in Massachusetts.  Prior to becoming a licensed nursing home administrator, he had a career in business and marketing. Messina earned a bachelor’s degree in history and an MBA from the University of Massachusetts Boston.

“I am thrilled to join a nonprofit organization with such a rich history in serving its beneficiaries both locally and internationally, and a strong tradition of collaboration in health care with Boston’s world-renowned medical centers,” Messina said. “I look forward to bringing my experience in managing multiple skilled nursing facilities and helping our team build toward the future.”

Brigham has served as the licensed nursing home administrator for several nursing homes in Greater Boston, most recently as executive director of Brighton House Rehabilitation & Nursing Center. Prior to these leadership roles, she worked for many years as a nurse and nursing director in health care and in long-term care centers. Brigham earned a bachelor’s degree in nursing from Simmons University in Boston and is a registered nurse.

“I am excited to return to a nonprofit health care setting and to guide the high quality care and services that the Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center is well known for providing,” said Brigham. “As a nurse who has worked in many roles and settings during my career, I look forward to bringing my skills and experience in support of clinical programs during these highly complex times.”

The senior leadership appointments at the Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center followed the recent retirement of Scott Ariel, the AWWA’s Chief Executive Officer, from a decades-long career in health care administration, who was also serving as the interim administrator of the Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center. The AWWA Board of Directors credited Ariel for his steady management, particularly navigating the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic, and for his overall dedication and service to the mission of the AWWA and the Center.

About the Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center

The Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center is an 83-bed, nonprofit skilled nursing center located at 431 Pond St., next to Larz Anderson Park, in Boston’s Jamaica Plain neighborhood.  The Center offers long-term care with a person-centered approach in a highly skilled clinical setting, as well as comprehensive post-acute care and rehabilitation services including physical, occupational and speech therapy. The Center’s dedication to excellence has earned it an overall rating of high performing in “Best Nursing Homes” by U.S. News & World Report.

About the Armenian Women’s Welfare Association

The Armenian Women’s Welfare Association (AWWA) is a nonprofit membership organization dedicated to serving elders locally and internationally through the sponsorship of elder service programs. Founded in 1915 and drawing on the rich history of the Armenian community, the AWWA operates the Armenian Nursing & Rehabilitation Center in Boston and supports an elder clinic and outreach program that provides medical care, food, fuel assistance and social support as well as visiting nurse services for the homebound to hundreds of elderly people who are alone in the Republic of Artsakh.

For more information, visit www.awwainc.org.


The Izmirlian Foundation Continuous Supporting YSU Sarkis and Marie Izmirlian Library

The Izmirlian Foundation Continuous Supporting YSU Sarkis and Marie Izmirlian 
Library
Recognizing the role and impact of academic institutions in supporting 
development agendas of countries in transition as well as the paramount 
importance of public access to information, communication and research 
infrastructure, the Izmirlian Foundation in cooperation with Yerevan State 
University (YSU) is scaling up the project on “Transforming YSU Sarkis and Marie 
Izmirlian Library Infrastructure” aiming to upgrade Sarkis and Marie Izmirlian 
Library facilities serving a large community of students and researchers, in 
line with international standards. 
Among the first large-scale initiatives implemented by the Izmirlian Foundation 
in Armenia was the support to the Yerevan State University Library in its 
technical and content enhancement. In 1996 the Foundation played a crucial role 
in the reconstruction and technical upgrade of the library building, which was 
later named in memory of Sarkis and Marie Izmirlian. In 2018, Izmirlian 
Foundation supported the reconstruction of the main lobby of Sarkis and Marie 
Izmirlian Library. In 2019, the Izmirlian Foundation in cooperation with Yerevan 
State University supported the capital renovation of the Philology reading hall 
of the library transforming it into a quality-learning environment as per 
international standards and making it accessible for people with disabilities. 
The library has around 16,000 readers and the renovation of the reading hall has 
significantly increased the flow of students currently hosting from 300 to 400 
people on a daily basis.
With this latest initiative, the Izmirlian Foundation in cooperation with 
Yerevan State University aims at fostering an enabling environment for improved 
information literacy, learning and social cohesion by rehabilitating and 
furnishing Sarkis and Marie Izmirlian Library reading hall of Exact Sciences. 
Project direct beneficiaries include students, professors, researchers of YSU 
faculty of Exact Sciences, and YSU other students as well as students from other 
universities/institutes.
The Izmirlian Foundation has been implementing numerous charitable and 
development projects in education, healthcare, social, innovation and tourism 
sectors in Armenia and Artsakh since 1990 with the aim of supporting the 
socio-economic development of Armenia and Artsakh. The Izmirlian Foundation 
remains committed to continuing to implement varied philanthropic projects 
moving forward in line with Armenia’s ongoing challenges and developments.