The Armenian MFA denies the information about the alleged participation of a serviceman of the Armenian army in Ukraine

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 17:49,

YEREVAN, 26 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia denies the information spread on social networks about the alleged participation of a serviceman of the Armenian Armed Forces in Ukraine, ARMENPRESS reports Foreign Ministry spokesman Vahan Hunanyan wrote on his Twitter page.

“The information about the alleged participation of a serviceman of the Armenian Armed Forces in Ukraine is completely misinformation,” Hunanyan wrote.

The Telegram channels reported that an Armenian soldier was allegedly taking part in operations against Ukraine in Kharkov.




Armenia is ready to receive other refugees apart from its citizens from Ukraine – MFA

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 19:08,

YEREVAN, 26 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. The citizens of the Republic of Armenia who intend to return to Armenia in the light of the events in Ukraine, will not be required to obtain a visa in advance (Schengen visa in the case of Schengen countries) for crossing the borders of Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and Moldova, ARMENPRESS reports the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia said.

“Other options for evacuating them from Ukraine are being considered.

At the same time, we inform that the Republic of Armenia is ready to receive our compatriots, their family members, as well as other refugees.

As previously reported, the Armenian Embassy in Kyiv, the Consulate General of the Republic of Armenia in Odessa, as well as the Consulate General of the Republic of Armenia in Rostov-on-Don continue their work in full scale,” reads the statement issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia.

Phone numbers:

Embassy in Kyiv

+380442349005:

+380671090506:

+380689602524:

+380685000782:

Consulate General in Odessa

+380487039176:

+380487039178:

Consulate General in Rostov-on-Don

+79614084423.

PM Pashinyan holds phone talk with Vladimir Putin

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 21:58,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, ARMENPRESS. A telephone conversation took place between the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin on February 26, ARMENPRESS was infomred from the Office of the Prime Minister. 

The leaders of the two countries discussed issues related to the activities of the Eurasian Economic Union and the Collective Security Treaty Organization, touched upon the agenda of the upcoming official visit of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia to the Russian Federation expected in April.

The interlocutors also exchanged views on the implementation of trilateral statements signed by the President of the Russian Federation, the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia, the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan on November 9, 2020, January 11, 2021 and November 26, 2021.

Armenpress: Armenia, Artsakh Ombudsmen issue statement on the occasion of the 34th anniversary of the Sumgait massacres

Armenia, Artsakh Ombudsmen issue statement on the occasion of the 34th anniversary of the Sumgait massacres

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 23:33,

Ombudsmen of Armenia and Artsakh Kristine Grigoryan and Gegham Stepanyan issue statement on the occasion of the 34th anniversary of the Sumgait massacres. As reports Armenpress statement runs as follows:

“The February 20, 1998 decision of the Council of People’s Deputies of the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast to combat through peaceful means for the right to life of the Armenians of Artsakh, and their right to live free in dignity and security in their own homeland, few days later found its response in the city of Sumgait, located in the distance of 27 kms from Baku. On February 27-29, at the direct provocation of the Azerbaijani authorities and organized by them, the Armenian population of the city was subjected to torture, mutilation, arson of people (both alive or after death), gang rape, while their property was destroyed and looted.

As a result of the massacres committed on the grounds of nationality the rights of the 20.000 Armenian residents of Sumgait, to life, to be free from torture and discrimination, to freedom and security, to private property, to fair trial, other rights were directly and irrevocably threatened. 

Although the Sumgait massacres were documented by the relevant Soviet authorities, the perpetrators and the organizers of the crime have not been brought to justice.

The anti-Armenian massacres of Sumgait instigated a series of crimes against humanity committed by Azerbaijan- a practice which continues to this day. Within the context of this consistent policy during the period of 1988-1991, thousands of Armenians were killed, while another 500,000 thousand were forcibly displaced from the cities of Gandzak (Kirovabad), Baku, and other cities in Azerbaijan, as well as in the Nagorno Karabakh Autonomous Oblast.

Aiming to forcibly suppress the right to self-determination of the population of Artsakh, and to annihilate them, Azerbaijan  launched a war against the Armenian population lasted 1991-1994, during which the  vivid evidence of the genocidal actions of the Azerbaijani authorities is the massacre of the Armenian population in the village of Maragha in the region of Martakert in April 1992, as a result of which more than 50 peaceful civilians were killed and  Armenians were completely annihilated from the village. 

The Republic of Azerbaijan fully inherited, further improved the policy of Armenophobia of Soviet Azerbaijan, aimed at the forceful displacement of Armenians from Artsakh, and the annihilation of the Armenian people in its cradle. The practice of glorifying murders purely on ethnic grounds, which was instigated with the Sumgait massacres, became the signature of the Azerbaijani authorities. As a result, the region “was enriched” with “heroes” such as Ramil Safarov, Mubariz Ibrahimov, and others who were taking revenge against the civilian population during the April war of 2016 and were beheading and dismembering Armenian servicemen in the style of terrorist organizations, and as a result were encouraged at the highest levels of the Azerbaijani state. 

The Armenophobia disseminated in the Azerbaijani society by their authorities over the years got its worst manifestation during the September 2020 war unleashed by Azerbaijani against Artsakh, during which the peaceful civilians, kindergartens, schools and hospitals became the primary targets of Azerbaijani army. 

The war crimes committed by Azerbaijan during the 44-day aggression, the gross violations of international humanitarian law and human rights are documented in the reports of the Human Rights Defenders of Armenia and Artsakh, in the reports of several human rights organizations, and have been raised by the representatives of various international organizations.  

Impunity breads and perpetrates new crimes based on ethnic hatred.

The Armenophobia of the Azerbaijani authorities does not bypass Armenian cultural and religious heritage: An attempt is made to apply the methodology of complete displacement of Armenians and the destruction of the medieval Armenian heritage of Nakhichevan in the regions of Artsakh that have fallen under Azerbaijani control. A working group has even been officially set up with the clear aim of destroying Armenian religious, historical and cultural monuments and falsifying their identities.

Armenophobia, the evidence of which is growing daily, is being implemented by the authorities of Baku as a method to form the collective identity of the Azerbaijani population. However, history has repeatedly demonstrated that an identity based on hatred on ethnic and national ground firstly destroys its bearers, it threatens the normal, peaceful and secure life of the people of the region and disrupts the development and progress of societies. 

As a first step  to quit this policy, we call on the Azerbaijani authorities to show political will, to assess with credibility the anti-Armenian massacres in Sumgait, Gandzak (Kirovabad), Baku, and other places, and to refrain from a policy of denial; to bring to justice those who committed violations during and after the 44-day war against the civilian population, and those who committed and organized the torture and mutilations of captured and killed Armenian servicemen, to release immediately the Armenian POWs and other captives still held in Azerbaijan, and to stop the acts of vandalism committed against the Armenian historical and cultural heritage of Artsakh. 

We call on the international community to give a proper legal assessment of the violence committed in Sumgait in February 1988, based on fundamental principles of international law and international norms, as well as take effective measures to assess and stop the continued policy of Armenophobia in Azerbaijan.

We pay tribute to the memory of the innocent victims of the massacres of  Sumgait and other  settlements, and stress that impunity for commitment of human rights violations and crimes leads to new and more heinous crimes.”

War in Ukraine: reactions from the South Caucasus

Feb 24 2022

24/02/2022 –  Marilisa Lorusso

The secessionists of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, historically supported by Russia, celebrated the recognition of Donetsk and Lugansk. On 23 February, the “Day of the Defender of the Fatherland” was celebrated, as in Russia. On this occasion, Abkhazian President Bzhania made a short public speech while South Ossetian President Bibilov attended a ceremony during which he reiterated all the accusations made by Russian President Vladimir Putin against NATO.

South Ossetia and Abkhazia had already recognised the two Ukrainian breakaway areas in 2014. In addition to political support, South Ossetia has made itself available to host the orphans of the conflict and has put its defence on alert. Bibilov had a series of meetings with the Minister of Defence of South Ossetia in relation to the Ukrainian crisis to verify the state of the forces and means of defence, military equipment, weapons, personnel as well as the willingness to respond to possible provocations from Georgia, should regional tension spread.

A first group of 51 refugees from the “Lugansk People’s Republic” was evacuated to the Russian Federation today and a transfer is planned to Abkhazia. According to reports from local authorities, “Abkhazian Emergency Minister” Lev Kvitsinia personally supervised the transfer from Lugansk. About a hundred refugees are expected to arrive.

In addition to political support, therefore, South Ossetia and Abkhazia will provide active assistance in favour of the invasion.

The recognition of Donetsk and Lugansk was received very differently in Tbilisi. In recent days, many have drawn a parallel between war and Russian recognition of secessionist areas in Georgia in 2008 and what is happening in Ukraine. If it is true that there are common elements, that is military coercion and political recognition, it is equally true that there are also big differences. In Georgia, the recognition took place after a brief war on a very limited area (even if the strategic bombing had extended beyond the area of the invasion by land). In the case of the attack on Ukraine, however, the recognition provided the pretext for much larger military operations. But also, as Georgian President Salome Zourabishvili noted: “Russia in 2008 was not exactly like Russia in 2022 […] Russia is moving directly towards annexation even without the pretext of war, which means that we are a step higher in the level of conflict”.

The Georgian parliament recently approved a Resolution in support of the territorial integrity of Ukraine  , much criticised by the opposition because at no point is Russia openly mentioned. In the reactions of the entire ruling class of Tbilisi today, however, Russia is indicated as an aggressor without the reticence of the past which, according to Zourabishvili, was due to the precarious Georgian security situation.

Until a few days ago, Armenia was the only country in the Caucasus to be linked to Moscow by an alliance pact. Nevertheless, like Belarus, Armenia has not officially recognised the political choices of the last 14 years of Russian wars, and therefore does not recognise either Abkhazia or South Ossetia, or the annexation of Crimea. As regards the recognition of the two new secessionists in Donbas, and the crisis in general, questioned by the press, the Armenian Foreign Minister  replied: “We certainly want the existing issues between our two friendly states to be resolved through diplomatic dialogue, negotiations and in accordance with the norms and principles of international law and the Charter of the United Nations. We hope that the necessary steps are aimed at reducing the tension and resolving the situation peacefully”. Asked whether Armenia would recognise Donetsk and Lugansk, he replied that recognition is not on the agenda.

Today’s Russian military aggression puts Armenia in a very difficult situation, not only because Armenian-Ukrainian relations are good, but also because an important Armenian community resides in Ukraine – in Donetsk alone, more than 50,000 Ukrainians of Armenian origin and Armenians who emigrated to Ukraine. The Armenian Embassy   is operational in the country and a possible evacuation plan for the Armenians is being prepared.

The reaction of the de facto president of Nagorno Karabakh Arayik Harutyunyan was far more enthusiastic. Karabakh is not recognised by any country, including Armenia and Russia, although the latter is stationed there with a military garrison of peace-keepers, similarly to what happens in Transnistria, a separate region of Moldova. Harutyunyan was quick to compare the situation in Karabakh with that of Donetsk and Luhansk, thus hoping for recognition for the de facto entity he chairs.

On 22 February, Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev travelled to Moscow, just shortly after Russia recognised the independence of Donetsk and Luhansk. The meeting between Putin and Aliyev lasted about 5 hours and led to the signing of a Declaration of Allied Interaction which takes collaboration between the two countries to a higher level. During the meeting, Putin took care to inform Aliyev that Russia’s non-recognition of Ukrainian sovereignty does not concern the other post-Soviet republics. On 14 January. as the crisis was mounting, Aliyev went to Ukraine   where he signed a Declaration of Deep Strategic Cooperation with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy which establishes the willingness to provide mutual support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the two states within internationally recognised borders, also against hybrid threats, for stability in the Black-Caspian region and beyond. The Allied Integration Declaration   signed by Azerbaijan with Russia instead provides for mutual military support but within the framework of the United Nations Charter or separate international agreements.

On 23 February, Aliyev then talked on the phone with his true great ally, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, after the latter had had a telephone exchange with Putin during which he had condemned the recognition of Donetsk and Lugansk. There is no doubt that Azerbaijani and Turkish policy in reaction to the ongoing invasion – which directly threatens the interests of the two countries because it puts the security of the entire Black Sea region at risk – will be coordinated.

The Armenian Ceramicists That Changed the Face of Jerusalem

The Media Line
Feb 26 2022

Hagop Karakashian, third-generation survivor of Armenian genocide, preserves unique hand-painted craft

Sitting in the studio of his shop in Jerusalem’s Old City, Hagop Karakashian holds a paintbrush gingerly in one hand as he carefully paints a bird onto a large white plate.

Hagop Karakashian works on a hand-painted plate in his shop. (Maya Margit/The Media Line)

Surrounded by a colorful medley of plates and tiles, Karakashian, in his mid-50s, is intent on preserving this unique craft that has been practiced in Jerusalem for over a century.

Beautifully hand-painted pottery, tiles and street signs decorated with delicate floral patterns and animals adorn “Jerusalem Pottery,” his shop in the Armenian Quarter.

Karakashian is a third-generation Armenian ceramicist and member of one of the three founding families of Armenian ceramicists in the Holy Land. While both he and his father were born and raised in Jerusalem, his grandfather Megerditch Karakashian came from the Turkish city of Kütahya, a place that was once replete with Armenian artists.

The amazing journey of these three families – the Ohannessians, Balians, and Karakashians – begins in 1919. Sir Ronald Storrs, the then-British military governor of Jerusalem during Mandatory Palestine, invited them to Jerusalem to help restore the Dome of the Rock and replace some 48,000 tiles.

“[There are] two reasons why they leave Turkey: there’s a job in Jerusalem and there’s the Armenian genocide going on back home,” Karakashian told The Media Line. “They leave just in time because back in their city the governor, who was pro-Armenian, was replaced by one who was going to carry out the deportation and the massacres.”

But the Dome of the Rock project did not go as planned; the Waqf, the local Muslim authority, decided that they were not pleased with the idea of Christian Armenians working on one of Islam’s holiest sites.

Despite it getting scrapped, the three Armenian families decided to stay in Jerusalem and found their own art studio.

A hand-painted ceramic plate from Karakashian’s studio. (Courtesy)

“The three artists work together and start producing Armenian pottery in Jerusalem for the first time,” Karakashian recounted. “That’s the important point: it didn’t exist before they came.”

While the Ohanessians left in 1948 due to the Arab-Israeli War, Neshan Balian and Megerditch Karakashian continued to work together until 1964. During this period, they did tile work for several notable sites around Jerusalem, including an impressive façade for the Cathedral of Saint James, a 12th-century Armenian church in the heart of the Old City.

In 1964, the second generation of Karakashians split from the Balians and opened their own workshop.

“In 1966, they got a commission from the Jordanians in Jerusalem to make all the street signs in the Old City,” Karakashian related. “They made them in Arabic and English.”

After Israel reunified Jerusalem following the Six-Day War in 1967, then-Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek requested that Hebrew be added to all the street signs. To this day, a line separating the Hebrew from the English and Arabic names is visible on many signs around the Old City, clearly demarcating the pre- and post-1967 periods in Israeli history.

A street sign made by the Karakashian family in Jerusalem’s Old City in three languages. A line separates the Hebrew from the Arabic and English, indicating the pre- and post-1967 eras. (Courtesy)

Armenian art takes on Jerusalem flavor

The street signs were not the only thing that changed.

Under Islamic law in Turkey, Armenian potters were forbidden from portraying living creatures; however once they took root in Jerusalem their art was able to flourish in new and exciting ways. From focusing almost exclusively on floral patterns, ceramicists began to depict an array of intricate compositions featuring animals. One of the more popular motifs, according to Karakashian, is the peacock, a traditional symbol of longevity.

An array of ceramic paints sits next to an unfinished tile depicting a traditional peacock motif. (Courtesy)

Hagop’s wife Tzoghig, an artist herself, has also taken on the mantle and developed a modern style of painting.

“I started by chance because I love the colors,” she told The Media Line. “When I saw the first plate I said, ‘wow it’s very nice,’ so I started doing it.”

Jerusalem’s ancient Armenian community experienced a revival in the early 20th century as thousands of survivors of the genocide fled to the city in search of refuge. The community has declined for a number of reasons over the decades, with many members of the younger generation having immigrated to places like Canada, the United States, or Australia.

These days only about 1,200 Armenians remain in the Holy Land, Karakashian estimates, with the majority living in the Armenian Quarter.

“I have many friends that have left,” Karakashian affirmed. “I have two sisters who live in California. It’s not easy being here as an Armenian.”

As for the Armenian potters in Kütahya, whose traditional craft dates all the way back to the 15th century, none are left.

Karakashian said he plans on visiting the city in the near future. Most of all, he hopes that his daughter – who is also a ceramicist – will keep the unique art of Armenian ceramics, which has become inextricably linked to Jerusalem’s history, alive.

“I am Armenian,” he stated. “I survived the genocide because my grandfather came here. He founded this art in Jerusalem and now I walk to work every day in the morning, look up at the walls and I see my father’s street signs.

“Yes, there is a deep connection and I want to share it with the rest of the world,” he said.

Hagop Karakashian painting a large work. (Courtesy)

Azerbaijani troops terrorize Karabakh civilians, demand them to flee

Feb 26 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Azerbaijani military has been threatening the residents of the village of Khramort, Nagorno-Karabakh for several days now, using loudspeakers to demand that they leave their homes and surrender the settlement to Azerbaijan.

According to journalist Tsovinar Barkhudaryan, a voice speaking in Armenian claims that if the villagers fail to leave the area voluntarily, the Azeris “will have to use force.”

The Azerbaijanis also say “Khramort is Azerbaijan, Kharabakh is Azerbaijan” to spread panic among the civilians.

Barkhudaryan revealed in a social media post on Friday, February 25 that a total 98 families, including 11 displaced during the Second Karabakh War, currently live in the village.

Armenian MP: Turkish-Azerbaijani tandem ready to inflict blows on Russia in case of favorable conditions

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 26 2022


Taking relations with Russia to an allied level, Azerbaijan has now launched an anti-Russian campaign using its propaganda means, according to Armenian MP Tigran Abrahamyan from the opposition With Honor faction.

“Moreover, given the importance of ensuring stability in the South Caucasus for Russia at this point, Azerbaijani is resorting to small-scale provocations at various parts of Artsakh,” he wrote on Facebook on Saturday.

Abrahamyan pointed to the incidents in the village of Khramort in the Askeran region, where the Azeris, in addition to depriving local residents of the opportunity to carry out agricultural work, have voiced threats of physical harm against them.

“Such incidents are of interest for us primarily in terms of the safety of our compatriots, and our task is to neutralize these threats, but it’s also a matter of burdening the Russian Federation with problems in the rear,” the lawmaker stated.

“In reality, the Turkish-Azerbaijani tandem is ready to inflict all sorts of blows on Russia should favorable conditions arise.

“Whether it will be political, military, propaganda or economic blows or all together, it’s hard to say yet, but Armenia and Artsakh must be prepared that the seemingly stable situation may change at some stage, and existential threats to our compatriots in Armenia and Artsakh may emerge.

“The incumbent Armenian authorities have simply no chance to counter the serious challenges facing Armenia and Artsakh because, first, they are not prepared for it, and second, they will simply abandon the political trench in a difficult situation and secure their place in the shelters provided by external supporters, while the public will be left alone,” Abrahamyan said.

Paris bridge lit up in colors of Armenian and French flags

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 26 2022


The Pont de l’Archevêché (Archbishop’s Bridge), a bridge crossing the Seine river in Paris, lit up in the colors of the Armenian and French flags on February 24, the Armenian Embassy in France reported.

The move, initiated by the Paris City Hall, marked the 30th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two countries.

Azerbaijani soldiers threaten civilians in Artsakh’s Khramort

panorama.am
Armenia – Feb 26 2022


The Azerbaijani troops have been terrorizing the residents of the village of Khramort in Artsakh’s Askeran region for several days now.

They are using loudspeakers to demand that the civilians leave the village voluntarily, threatening to “use force” otherwise, Artsakh Public TV reporter Tsovinar Barkhudaryan said in a Facebook post on Friday, adding the Azeris are making the threats in Armenian.

“The threats are followed by the claims that Khramort is Azerbaijan, and, in general, Kharabakh is Azerbaijan, that we have allegedly occupied their lands,” the reporter wrote.

She said a total 98 families, including 11 displaced during the 2020 war, currently live in the village.

“Can you imagine hearing that voice every half an hour, when going to school, working in the garden, hanging out the laundry or eating?” Barkhudaryan said, stressing the Azeris are spreading panic among the Artsakh civilians.