US Embassy in Yerevan: We join with Armenians mourning, acknowledging all who lost their lives in Sumgait in 1988

 NEWS.am 
Armenia – Feb 27 2022

Today, we join with Armenians mourning and acknowledging all who lost their lives in Sumgait in 1988. This is written Sunday on the Facebook page of the US Embassy in Yerevan. 
Thirty-four years ago, on February 27-29, the massacres of the Armenian population in Sumgait, Azerbaijan, were carried out—with the planning of the Azerbaijan SSR authorities and the consent of their law enforcement agencies—during which hundreds of Armenians were killed and thousands of others were forcibly displaced.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 25-02-22

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 17:23,

YEREVAN, 25 FEBUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 25 February, USD exchange rate up by 2.34 drams to 482.12 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.51 drams to 539.06 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.09 drams to 5.78 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.44 drams to 644.98 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 633.11 drams to 30013.65 drams. Silver price up by 20.57 drams to 392.4 drams. Platinum price up by 237.09 drams to 17066.07 drams.

Nuri Kino: Christians in Armenia battle for their history

Sweden, Feb 2022

Independent investigative reporter, activist and minority rights expert Nuri Kino reports from the country with an extremely long Christian history.

Nuri Kino reports on the Christian presence, on location in Armenia. (Nuri Kino: Transparent Armenia Charitable Foundation: Haik Kazarian)

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25 februari 2022 11:30

ARMENIA. It was the fall of 2020, and many of us felt we were re-living the attacks on Christians, Yazidis and moderate Muslims in Iraq and Syria during the summer and fall of 2014 by the terrorist group Isis. Just like then, videos of panicked fleeing Armenian families with children left many of us sleepless. We could not sit still and watch. My organization A Demand for Action (ADFA), raised funds used for food for tens of thousands of people. We also collected and sent 40 tons of winter clothing that the local charity Transparent Armenia Charitable Foundation helped distribute.

But was it really a religious war?

Armenia was the first country in the world to adopt Christianity as its state religion in the year 301 AD, while Azerbaijan is a Muslim country. Political scientists and other researchers believe that religion was a secondary cause of the war. That it is about natural resources and geopolitical location. However, a large part of the population on both sides see it as a religious war.

At the end of December 2021, I was finally able to go to Armenia to better understand the conflict with its neighbouring countries of Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Two people I spent time with were journalist Raffi Elliott and activist Haik Kazarian. They claim that Christianity in Armenia gained momentum as early as 50 AD. The apostle Judas Thaddeus is the one who first exposed Armenians to Christianity. It is extra exciting for me, a Syriac Orthodox Christian, as it is claimed that Judas Thaddeus was from northern Mesopotamia, maybe from the Turabdin region, where I have roots. This is among the places where historians believe that Christianity had its origins, and from where it spread.

Judas Thaddeus is said to have been clubbed to death or beheaded. The manner of his martyrdom is disputed but he was buried in 66 AD. The church that marks his tomb is called the Black Church and is located in today’s northwestern Iran, on the border with Armenia.

“Armenia is so much more than Christianity and religion, we are a people who have fought for our existence for thousands of years. For example, we have our very own alphabet, language and culture”, says Kazarian emphatically.

My two companions suggest that we go to Garni, a temple in Armenia from 700 BC, which a few months ago ended up on a Belgian magazine’s list of the 51 most beautiful historic buildings in the world from Roman times. Garni was a temple where the Armenian sun god Mihr was worshipped.

When we get there, a few days after New Year, the Swedish pop group ABBA’s “Happy New Year” is playing loudly from the sound system. I am filled with pride in our Swedish pop wonder, and can’t help laughing at the meeting of cultures. Sweden meets Armenia. Pop culture meets history.

Outside the temple, there are stalls selling sweets and souvenirs. We buy Gata, an Armenian speciality, a kind of soft cake that has a faint and smooth taste of vanilla. It is considered sacred and served fresh during Candlemas. Elliott insists we eat one. I also buy pomegranate juice rolls. It is a delicacy eaten at Christmas and Easter in most Christian communities in the Middle East and the Caucasus. Pistachios rolled in dried pomegranate or various fruit juices; a sour and full-bodied taste.

We get in the car to drive to our next destination. Between bites of the sweets, Elliott asks me to look out the window. Along the road, in towns and villages, there are graves, new and old. They are dedicated to those who fell as martyrs during the various wars. They are adorned with a mixture of plastic roses that look real and fresh flowers that are replaced daily.

We stop at one of the graveyards and read the inscriptions on the tombstone. I notice a difference between these graves and others. On some of them, the epitaph is a short story of the heroic deeds of the one buried there. It becomes obvious how proud Armenians are of soldiers and volunteers who are all called “war heroes”.

In the fall of 2020, up to 100,000 ethnic Armenians were forced to flee Nagorno-Karabakh, or Artsakh, as they call it. During the 44-day war, 6,000 soldiers, both Azeris and Armenians were killed. After six weeks of deadly clashes, Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefire agreement brokered by Russia. On January 12 this year, the peace agreement was temporarily broken, and three Armenian and two Azeri soldiers were killed in the fighting.

It is overcast, cold and raw outside, as we go on to the Geghard monastery. The name means “spear” in Armenian. It is supposed to be one of the world’s oldest monasteries and according to myth, the spearhead that Longinus, the Roman soldier who pierced Jesus in the side with his lance, was taken there. The soldier, after perceiving miracles while stabbing Jesus, became one of Christ’s first followers. There are other places on earth where it is claimed that the spearhead exists. Either way, it’s a magnificent environment. Part of the monastery is carved out of the mountainside rock. About a hundred visitors brave the cold.

Five young Armenians from the USA throw pebbles towards a carved mountainside. “If a pebble gets stuck in one of the carved pits, you can wish for something,” says Kazarian, throwing up some stones expectantly. He does not succeed. Elliott and I also try and fail. A young woman in her twenties gets it right on the first try. The rest of us join in her cheers.

Although it is a fairly large crowd that wander around all parts of the monastery, they are quiet and respectful. Visitors light candles and pray for the sick and others in need of prayer. They sing hymns and they drink holy water that flows down from a spring in the mountain. Some of them also fill bottles to take home.

“Many people are convinced that this spring water can cure the sick. Taste it, it has a special freshness“, Elliott whispers to me. I drink it. He’s right.

When we leave the monastery, we see more stalls. Here, they also sell crucifixes and icons. While we browse, Elliott, who has written at least a dozen articles about the 2020 war and who has contributed to articles in media outlets such as Reuters, says that it is important to have all the facts when writing about the situation in the Caucasus. He believes that this area of the former Soviet Union is one of the least reported on, and for which reporters often lack the knowledge to report adequately.

Kazarian drives into a small village. Khash, an Armenian speciality, is served here. He and Elliott want me to taste it while they explain the war to me. It is cold inside the small cottage where the food is cooked and served. Hot mint tea along with flat Armenian bread and several different kinds of cheese and fresh herbs are served before the main course and warms us up a bit.

“It was on September 27 that the Azerbaijani army attacked Nagorno-Karabakh, which we Armenians call Artsakh. It is an enclave within the borders of Azerbaijan with an almost entirely Armenian population. It has its own government and its own parliament. The area with its 150,000 inhabitants may at first glance seem small and insignificant “, Elliott explains, as he puts herbs and cheese in a flatbread, which he hands over to me.

Kazarian elaborates on his point.

“However, it is of great importance, both for Azerbaijan, for Artsakh’s own population and for the state of Armenia,” he says. For us Armenians, no matter where in the world we live, we remember our roots which have been tied for centuries to these lands. There are more than double the number of Armenians living abroad as in Armenia and many are attached to Artsakh in one way or another”.

The hot food arrives, meat, bone and fat in heavy broth. You can then season it yourself, with garlic, salt and spices. It’s a little too heavy for me, so I stick to the delicious homemade cheeses, bread and herbs.

When we finish eating, we drive towards the capital Yerevan. Elliott leaves for an interview. Kazarian drives me to the home of Hayk Azadian Izgi, an acquaintance of mine, a relative of my relatives, from Sweden, who is in Armenia for New Year and Christmas. Izgi wants to be with me when I visit the world’s largest genocide memorial monument. He is a good friend of many Armenian writers, journalists and researchers. I jumped out of the car. We cheek kissed, hugged and sat in the car again.

“Dear Nuri, for Azerbaijan and its big brother Turkey, it is about the geopolitical situation, the proximity to natural resources such as gas. For Armenians in general, the area has historical and religious significance. Most of Artsakh and its surroundings have always been inhabited by Armenians. Towns and villages are full of historical and religious heritage. A large number of these were destroyed during the 44-day war in the fall of 2020 and continue to be destroyed as we speak”, he says, then interrupts himself as we reach Tsitsernakaberd, the genocide monument.

Both Kazarian and Izgi are visibly moved by the moment, although they have visited the place countless times. Hundreds of trees are planted and strategically placed in front of the entrance. It is the governments of many countries but also individuals who paid to have a tree in their name in memory of the victims of the Seyfo genocide, also known as the Armenian genocide.

Many world leaders and celebrities have been here. It is a place in Armenia that all visitors feel they must-see. Over 1.5 million Christians; Armenians, Assyrians / Syriacs and Greeks were massacred during the 1915 genocide in the Ottoman Empire. I’ve spent thousands of hours researching it. In the years 1999–2000, I interviewed about fifty of the survivors. The brutality they witnessed is impossible for most of us to comprehend.

The next day, I focus on the religious aspects of the 2020 war. Armenian social and traditional media take the fact that jihadists from Syria joined the Azeri army, something the Washington Post reported, as proof that it was a religious war. For the Syrian jihadists, it was a war against infidels. A large number of churches and monasteries were also destroyed during and after the war, which is also considered as proof that it was a religious war.

I get in touch with the doctoral student and historian Simon Maghakyan. He is a visiting scholar, a lecturer in international relations at two USA-based universities, and a PhD student in heritage crime at Cranfield University in the United Kingdom. Maghakyan writes to me that it was not a religious war.

“The Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict is not a religious one but Azerbaijan targets all indigenous Christian sites in disputed regions because of their intertwined association with Armenian culture. For example, in 1997-2006 Azerbaijan eradicated every medieval Christian cultural property in Nakhichevan, but preserved Armenian castles and bridges because their secular nature allowed for such structures to be much more easily appropriated. In some ways, this is an extension of the genocide of 1915, an intent to make Armenians extinct. In this process, one of the world’s oldest Christian civilizations is being erased, even though religion is not Azerbaijan’s motivation.”

I write to a Facebook friend’s acquaintance. She lived near the Green Church in the city of Shushi, lost to Armenians in the 2020 war. She was abroad at work when the war broke out. She would like to talk to me and says I can quote her, but anonymously.

“I lived just a stone’s throw away from the Green Church, it has great historical and religious value to us. Now it’s a cafe. It hurts, hurts very much. The holy place where we were baptized, married, and which we visited at least once a week is gone. Not only that, everything in my apartment was stolen or destroyed. Photographs of my grandparents, everything I owned that had any sentimental value are gone. With it also my city, my neighbourhood, everything I loved, my neighbours, everything. What they hate is the combination of our ethnicity and religion. This can best be described as Armenophobia.”

English translation edited by Canadian journalist Susan Korah.

Nuri Kino är undersökande journalist, aktivist och entreprenör. Han skriver gästkrönikor på Dagens ledarsida.

 

Heathrow Airport: Travel advice for Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan as Russia invades Ukraine

Get Reading, UK
Feb 25 2022

The three Caucasus countries sit to the south of the Russian Federation – which recognises the breakaway republics of Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia

Russian forces continue their advance into neighbouring Ukraine after President Vladimir Putin ordered an invasion of the Eastern European state.

Tanks, troops and helicopter gunships are advancing on key cities including the capital city of Kyiv, with explosions reported across the country.

The invasion comes after Russia recognised the independence of the breakaway republics of Donetsk and Luhansk, which declared independence from Ukraine in 2014 and have waged a civil war ever since.

Read More: Heathrow Airport: What to do if you had a flight booked with Russian airline Aeroflot

It is not the first time Russia has invaded a neighbour while recognising breakaway states however.

In 2008 Russia fought a short war with neighbouring Georgia and recognised the independence of the Caucasian country’s two breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

We looked at the latest Foreign Office travel advice for Georgia and the neighbouring countries of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Tbilisi, the Georgian capital, is an increasingly popular city break destination for travellers from the UK – boasting many attractions, great food and excellent value for money.

The latest UK Foreign Office travel advice for Georgia states: ” For security reasons, the FCDO advises against all travel to the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, and against all but essential travel to areas immediately adjacent to the Administrative Boundary Lines with Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

“The British government does not recognise the unilateral declarations of independence made by the de facto authorities in the breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Consular support is not available in parts of Georgia where the FCDO advise against all travel.”

Armenia fought a brief but bloody war with neighbouring Azerbaijan in 2020 as part of an ongoing dispute over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.

The latest UK Foreign Office travel advice for the country states: ” The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) advise against all travel: within 5km of the full eastern border between Armenia and Azerbaijan [and] along the M16/H26 road between the towns of Ijevan and Noyemberyan.

“Armenia was engaged in widespread military activity along the Line of Contact in Nagorno-Karabakh during 2020. Protests sometimes take place in central Yerevan and other major cities. These are usually organised by opposition political parties or activist groups highlighting topical social and political issues.

“Although protests tend to be peaceful and usually pass off without incident, you should avoid large crowds and demonstrations, follow the advice and instructions of the local authorities, monitor the media and remain vigilant.

“The border between Armenia and Azerbaijan is closed. There have been many instances of military clashes across the border during the last 12 months, resulting in a number of deaths and casualties. We advise against all travel within 5km of the border.”

The oil-rich Azerbaijan sits on the Caspian Sea.

The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) advises against all travel to: Nagorno-Karabakh, The rayons of Zengilan, Jabrayil, Qubadli, Lachin and Kelbajar. Western areas of Khojavand, Fuzuli and Aghdam rayons [and] within 5km of the border with Armenia

“A ceasefire agreement was signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan in November 2020 to end the military action in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone. Some territory under Azerbaijani control post-conflict is currently closed to the general public and may contain high amounts of unexploded ordnance (UXO) and landmines.

Putin, Armenian PM discuss implementation of agreements on Karabakh, bilateral issues

TASS, Russia
Feb 26 2022
Additionally, the conversation of the two leaders “touched upon some pertinent issues of the bilateral agenda.”

MOSCOW, February 26. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a phone conversation, the Kremlin website reported on Saturday.

“An exchange of opinions continued on the practical aspects of the implementation of agreements enshrined in trilateral statements by the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia on Nagorno-Karabakh of November 9, 2020, January 11 and November 26, 2021, including the issues of ensuring stability and security on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border,” the statement said.

Additionally, the conversation of the two leaders “touched upon some pertinent issues of the bilateral agenda.”.

Armenia stands alone in support for Russia in Council of Europe

Feb 26 2022
 

The Council of Europe headquarters in Strasbourg. Official photo.

Armenia was the sole country in the Council of Europe to join the Russian delegation in voting against a decision to suspend Russia from the organisation over their invasion of Ukraine.

The decision was adopted by the Council’s Committee of Ministers on Friday, two days after Russia’s invasion. 

As a result, Russia will lose representation in the Committee of Ministers and in the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe. It will remain subject to the European Convention on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights.

The proposal, which was tabled by Poland and Ukraine, was reportedly supported by 42 of 47 members.

Georgian authorities have confirmed that they voted in favour of Russia’s suspension. 

Several international media outlets, citing diplomatic sources, reported that Azerbaijan did not attend the vote while Turkey abstained.

The President of the Committee of Ministers, Italy’s Luigi Di Maio, called the Russian military aggression against Ukraine ‘unacceptable’.

Russia has been a member of the Council of Europe since 1996 and was previously suspended in the wake of their annexation of the Crimean Peninsula in 2014.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry and other officials have remained widely silent on the vote to suspend Russia, as well as developments in Ukraine in general. 

The ministry did put out a statement on Wednesday, a day before the invasion, insisting that Armenia was not planning to follow Russia in recognising Donetsk and Luhansk as independent states. 

Richard Giragosian, the director of the Regional Studies Center, a Yerevan-based think tank, said the Armenian government was adopting a policy of ‘strategic silence’,  designed to do no more than the bare minimum not to defy Moscow. 

‘But there are limits to such “strategic silence” by Armenia, as demonstrated by Armenia’s reluctant vote in the Council of Europe against the move to suspend Russia from that body’, Giragosian told OC Media

‘And although Armenia’s position, as the only other country besides Russia to oppose that move, dangerously isolates Armenia, there was little choice and even less of an alternative for Armenia’. 

‘[Armenia has] struggled to maintain a strategic “balance” between its security partnership with Russia and its interest in deepening ties to the EU and the West for over the past twenty years’, Giragosian said, adding that the situation had become ‘more difficult’ since the 2020 Second Nagorno-Karabakh.

[Read on OC Media: The EU and Armenia, partners in reform?] 

Giragosian warned that Russias’s demands for greater support and more open loyalty posed a danger to Armenia diplomatically.

‘Any sense of diplomatic balance may be lost, threatening to push Armenia into a vulnerable and isolated position on the wrong side of history.’


Armenpress: 631 new cases of coronavirus have been registered in Armenia, 20 people died in a day

631 new cases of coronavirus have been registered in Armenia, 20 people died in a day

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 13:28,

YEREVAN, 26 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. 631 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in Armenia in the last 24 hours, bringing the cumulative total number of confirmed cases to 419,423, the Ministry of Healthcare reported.

20 people died from COVID-19 complications, bringing the total death toll to 8433.

4183 tests were conducted on February 21.

1463 people recovered (total 399,704).

As of February 26, the number of active cases stands at 9681.

The Police and Russian peacekeepers are in Khramort (Artsakh), negotiations are underway. Hunan Tadevosyan

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 15:42,

YEREVAN, 26 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. The calls from the Azerbaijani side to leave the Khramort community in the Askeran region through loudspeakers are, in fact, intended to create panic, ARMENPRESS reports the head of the public relations department of the State Emergency Service of the Artsakh Republic Hunan Tadevosyan wrote on his Facebook page.

At the moment, the officers of the Askeran regional police department and the officers of the Russian peacekeeping mission are in Khramort. Negotiations are underway with the enemy, the results of which we will publish.

I would like to inform you that there is no panic in Khramort, no one is going to leave the village, on the contrary, there are 12 families displaced from other settlements living next to the locals,” Tadosyan wrote.

Earlier, information was spread in the media that the Azeris have been demanding through loudspeakers from the residents of Khramort village of Artsakh’s Askeran region for two days now to leave the village.




It is important for Russia that Armenia feels safe – Ambassador Kopirkin

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 16:10,

YEREVAN, 26 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. Russia is not going to occupy Ukraine. The Russian side is interested in having an independent, including independent from foreign governments, prosperous neighbor which will represent the interests of all segments of Ukrainian society, Russian Ambassador to Armenia Sergey Kopirkin said in an exclusive interview with ARMENPRESS.

Touching upon the fear that given the situation around Ukraine, Azerbaijan may use the opportunity to escalate the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, the Ambassador reminded that Russia values the relations with Armenia. According to him, it is important that the Armenian people feel safe, and the guarantor of that is the Armenian-Russian allied relations.

“You know very well that we value the relations between the two countries, we see them as an important factor for maintaining security and peace in the region. Particulraly because it allows Russia to play a mediating role in resolving existing and emerging issues.

We use this factor in our active efforts to normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, including the settlement of border issues and the creation of conditions for the peaceful and secure development of the region. Naturally, it is very important that these efforts be strengthened by the political will of both sides, by their willingness to seek mutually acceptable solutions and agreements. We are actively working with Yerevan and Baku on this.

And, of course, it is important for us that Armenia and the Armenian people feel safe. It is guaranteed by our allied relations, the tendency of our countries to deepen and strengthen them”, the Russian Ambassador said.

Answering the question of what impact can the western sanctions and declining Russian currency have on  bilateral economic relations, Ambassador Kopirkin said, “I want to emphasize that Russia does not recognize unilateral sanctions. We consider them illegal, contrary to the spirit and letter of international law, according to which only the UN Security Council can take coercive measures.

At the same time, the leadership of the Russian economic and financial system, soberly assessing the “rage of sanctions” in which many Western politicians are, took timely counter-measures. Stable banks, commercial-financial information exchange systems, active import substitution program. Much has been done over the years since our Western partners first thought that they could force us to relinquish our sovereign right to defend our national interests through sanctions. Let me just remind you that the package of sanctions recently adopted by Washington has become the 101st “post-jubilee”. And a lot will be done in this direction.

The developed toolkit is also about the protection of trade and economic relations with our foreign partners, especially with those with whom we are united by common integration mechanisms. By the way, it is symbolic that the new stage of “sanctions rage” coincided with the regular successful session of the Eurasian Intergovernmental Council in Kazakhstan, in which, in particular, the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Mishustin announced a new integration project, the Eurasian AgroExpress, which aims to simplify and speed up logistics processes in the trade of agricultural products between the member states”, said the Russian Ambassador.

The US State Department advises its citizens to leave Belarus immediately

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 16:29,

YEREVAN, 26 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. , ARMENPRESS reports the US Embassy in Minsk said in a statement.

“The State Department advises US citizens not to travel to Belarus and urges US citizens in Belarus to leave the country immediately,” the embassy said.

It is noted that the country can be departed from the Minsk airport in certain international destinations, the land borders with Lithuania, Latvia, Poland are open, they work as usual.