Armenian FM meets with Saudi counterpart in Munich

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 15:13,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 19, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan had a meeting with the Saudi Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud on February 19 in Munich.

The foreign ministers exchanged views over the prospects of establishing relations and cooperation between Armenia and Saudi Arabia, expressing readiness to work over the development of bilateral and multilateral agendas, the Armenian foreign ministry said in a press release.

FM Mirzoyan expressed conviction that there is potential to develop cooperation in the fields of information and high technologies, healthcare, tourism and culture.

Ararat Mirzoyan and Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud stressed the importance of intensifying the commercial-economic ties, implementation of investment projects and contacts between business circles.

ARMENPRESS acknowledged for promoting books and literature

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 15:23,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 19, ARMENPRESS. The Antares Publishing House awarded the Book Friend award to ARMENPRESS News Agency for promoting books and literature.

The awarding ceremony was held on February 19 on the occasion of Book Giving Day. Other media outlets, journalists and organizations also received the award.

 “We want to say, continue what you are doing, write about books, help to promote books, create the right environment. This all will brighten tomorrow’s light,” said Armen Martirosyan, director of Antares.

He added that book sales increased twice after the 2020 war, and they were trying to understand what was making people buy more books and read more.

“It turns out the demand has equally increased for different books, but I have to say that today people are reading more thought-provoking books.”

Russian forces of strategic containment complete drills

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 15:44,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 19, ARMENPRESS. The Russian forces of the strategic containment have successfully completed the exercises, RIA Novosti reports citing the Kremlin.

During the drills the reliability of the strategic nuclear and non-nuclear armaments of the forces were checked.

The Kremlin said the drills are completed, and all missiles hit the simulated targets, confirming the weaponry’s characteristics.

Armenpress: Armenian, Iranian FMs hold meeting in Munich

Armenian, Iranian FMs hold meeting in Munich

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 17:05,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 19, ARMENPRESS. On February 19, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan held a meeting with Foreign Minister of Iran Hossein Amir Abdollahian in Munich, the Armenian foreign ministry said in a press release.

The Ministers commended the positive dynamics of the relations based on historical ties and understanding between the two peoples, expressing readiness to raise the Armenian-Iranian cooperation in the spheres of security, trade and economy, energy, transport, tourism and culture to a qualitatively new level.

The Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Iran stressed the need for finalizing and signing of the agreement on the establishment of the “Persian Gulf-Black Sea” international transport corridor, in this context emphasizing the importance of joint efforts towards organizing the 6th meeting of experts.

Ararat Mirzoyan and Hossein Amir Abdollahian touched upon a wide range of issues on regional and international security and stability.

Minister Mirzoyan presented to his counterpart the situation resulting from the Azerbaijani aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh and its people, as well as from the infiltration of the Azerbaijani armed forces into the sovereign territory of Armenia. He highly appreciated Iran’s position on Armenia’s territorial integrity and border inviolability. The need for a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict under the mandate of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship was also stressed.

Taner Akçam to lead UCLA’s Armenian Genocide Research Program

UCLA Newsroom
Feb 18 2022
It will be the first university research program in the U.S. specifically focused on the genocide
UCLA Newsroom | 

The Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA has selected Taner Akçam as the inaugural director of its Armenian Genocide Research Program. The program will provide a home for scholarly activities relevant to the genocide, including opportunities for institute-affiliated postdoctoral scholars, graduate students and visiting researchers.

Akçam is the Kaloosdian and Mugar Professor in Modern Armenian History and Genocide at the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies of Clark University in Massachusetts. He is widely recognized as one of the first scholars of Turkish descent to write extensively on the Ottoman-Turkish Genocide of Armenians in the early 20th century, according to the institute. Many of Akçam‘s publications constitute an unprecedented examination of secret documents that show the deliberate nature of the Armenian Genocide.

“Taner Akçam has a demonstrated track record of groundbreaking research and mentored some of the most remarkable young scholars in the field of Armenian Genocide studies,” said Ann Karagozian, the inaugural director of the Promise Armenian Institute and a distinguished professor of engineering.

“His dedication and passion for advancing this field make him the ideal person to establish and carry out this new research program at UCLA.”  

Read the news release about Akçam’s appointment.

 

Fragile promise: The prospects for Turkish-Armenian normalization

Feb 17 2022




Just over a year ago, Armenia suffered a bitter defeat in a war against the Azerbaijani army, which was supplied, trained, and supported by Turkey. Ankara not only sold drones and other military equipment to its ally, Baku, but also sent over 1,000 Syrian mercenaries to fight for Azerbaijan in the conflict over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region. Now, after decades of animosity, Turkey and Armenia are taking steps to normalize ties, and the prospects for restoring relations and reopening the border have never been brighter.

Turkey and Armenia have had no diplomatic or commercial ties since 1993, when the former closed the two countries’ shared land border in solidarity with Azerbaijan, following Armenian forces’ occupation of the Azerbaijani region of Kalbajar. Recently, however, Ankara and Yerevan named special envoys to lay the groundwork for normalization. The two countries’ envoys held their first round of talks in Moscow last month and agreed to meet again without preconditions. The next round of talks is scheduled to be held in Vienna on Feb. 24.

This effort to restore relations between Turkey and Armenia is the first since 2009, when the parties signed protocols to establish diplomatic relations, only to suspend them six months later. Several factors led to the failure in 2009. Key among them was Baku’s opposition to establishing diplomatic ties and opening the border before Yerevan withdrew from the occupied territories. Another factor was the nationalist backlash against the protocols in Turkey. Finally, then-Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan worried that, if the process succeeded, Turkey’s then-President Abdullah Gül — who led the normalization efforts — would score political points at his expense.

Circumstances are different this time around

The current initiative has a better chance at success. This time around, all opposition parties are in favor of repairing ties. Even Erdoğan’s hard-right allies in the Nationalist Action Party (MHP), who severely criticized the previous effort, seem to be on board. Azerbaijan’s recapturing of the seven districts around Nagorno-Karabakh and one-third of Nagorno-Karabakh itself in the latest war played a big role in the nationalists’ change of heart. The prospect of Turkey’s deeper cooperation with the Turkic republics through the transportation connectivity opportunities that normalization with Armenia would offer ensures the nationalists’ continued backing. They are particularly excited about the cease-fire agreement signed by Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia, following the latest Nagorno-Karabakh war in 2020, that seeks to connect Azerbaijan proper to its exclave, Nakhchivan, on Turkey’s border. They hope that such a corridor could help Ankara’s ongoing efforts to cultivate closer ties to the Turkic republics in Central Asia. Opening the Turkish-Armenian border would further boost these relations by enhancing trade between China, Central Asia, and Turkey.

Restoring ties with Armenia would also help Ankara improve its badly frayed relations with the West. Although Western countries have been sidelined in the post-Karabakh war arrangements, they would welcome the rebuilding of ties between Turkey and Armenia in the hopes that such a move would reduce Russia’s influence in the South Caucasus and decrease Armenia’s dependence on Iran. In a sign of Western support, President Joe Biden recently urged President Erdoğan to open the country’s borders with Armenia.

Repairing relations with Turkey would be beneficial for Armenia as well. The country has been isolated since Turkey and Azerbaijan closed their borders in the 1990s. It has been excluded from regional energy and transportation projects like the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway and has had to rely on lengthier trade routes, through Georgia and Iran, to reach world markets. The 2008 Russian invasion of Georgia, which disrupted the latter’s rail communication, underscored Armenia’s dependence on its northern neighbor. The delays in Armenian exports to Russia, which go through Georgian ports, did considerable damage to the country’s already struggling economy. More recently, the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war also showed that Armenia could not count on Russia, either.

Hemmed in on all sides by closed borders with its eastern and western neighbors — and dependent on Georgia, Iran, and Russia — Armenia desperately needs to open the border with Turkey. It would break Armenia’s isolation by offering a direct route to Black Sea ports and boost bilateral trade with Turkey. Armenian nationalists and opposition have been critical of the government’s efforts to normalize ties with Ankara, but given the economic challenges the country faces, their resistance is not as intense as it once was.

But there are still concerns in the region

Georgia is worried about the possibility of a reopened Armenia-Turkey border. Its closure over the past three decades has enabled Georgia to serve as a vital transit hub in the South Caucasus. If new transport connections are built, Tbilisi might lose that status. Another concern is a change in the status quo concerning the country’s relations with Armenia. Georgia hosts a sizable Armenian diaspora. For many years, due to its dependence on Georgia, Armenia pursued a cautious policy vis-à-vis the Armenian community there. Tbilisi worries that restored ties with Turkey would embolden Armenia to be more responsive to its community in Georgia. However, Yerevan is unlikely to dramatically change its Georgia policy. And, in the long run, it is in Georgia’s best interest for its southern neighbor to be less dependent on Russia.

Iran is equally concerned about what it has to lose from any potential new transport connections. Currently, Iran provides the only land bridge between Azerbaijan proper and its exclave of Nakhchivan, and a vital route for Turkish goods destined for Azerbaijan.

From Erdoğan’s perspective, both domestic and regional dynamics have aligned to make now the perfect time to restore ties with Turkey’s historic foe. Opening the border offers him economic, political, and geostrategic benefits. Baku seems to have softened its stance as well, with several Azeri officials expressing support for normalization efforts. Whether that support will endure is far from certain. Although the 2020 hostilities changed the dynamics on the ground in Azerbaijan’s favor and the cease-fire ended the fighting, troops still exchange fire and there are unresolved issues, including over Nagorno-Karabakh’s political status. The continued tension between Armenia and Azerbaijan poses a risk to Ankara’s normalization efforts.

Russia is another wild card. Russian officials expressed support for Turkey-Armenia normalization, yet Moscow has benefited greatly from the status quo. The Nagorno-Karabakh dispute has provided Moscow leverage over both Yerevan and Baku, and Armenia’s isolation has increased its reliance on Russia. These considerations translated into a Russian diplomacy that voiced support for 2009 Turkey-Armenia talks, but preferred them to continue ad infinitum without producing any tangible results. The post-Nagorno-Karabakh war dynamics provide Russia further incentive to maintain the status quo and keep Armenia-Azerbaijan relations tense. The Russian-brokered cease-fire following the latest war enabled a Russian military presence in Nagorno-Karabakh — and Russian President Vladimir Putin wants his peace-keeping troops to stay there. This new dynamic strengthens Russia’s ability to complicate any normalization effort.

The potential for Turkish-Armenian normalization has never been more promising, but it is also fragile. Russia’s and Azerbaijan’s calculations will determine whether this will be another failed attempt or a historic step that will benefit both countries.

 

Gönül Tol is the founding director of MEI’s Turkey Program and a senior fellow with the Frontier Europe Initiative. The views expressed in this piece are her own.

 Gönül Tol

Hexact: Armenian data company makes Google BigQuery accessible and launches an API marketplace

Feb 19 2022

Hexact data company marked the 3rd year of its operations with a new strategy, which promises cutting-edge innovations in the tech world. 

The startup has made tomorrow’s world of cloud technology far more accessible to all its 40,000+ registered users with some exciting new updates. Google BigQuery is the largest data warehouse in the world. From now on, public datasets including the US Census, USPTO, and Google Trends data can be accessed through Hexomatic, the flagship product of the Hexact ecosystem, without any programming knowledge or coding requirement. 

“We make Big data and AI universally available so that anyone, regardless of their technical expertise can use cloud technologies, make complex automations and operations. That is to say, we are creating an operating system to facilitate work and daily life in the coming years,” said Stepan Aslanyan, Hexact’s Founding CEO.

At the same time, Hexomatic is becoming an API marketplace, where other companies can showcase their products, in addition to Hexact’s own. From now on, any startup or specialist can integrate their AI tools in Hexomatic, sell, generate revenue and develop their business.

The new corporate identity and strategy of Hexact was presented at a special event. The logo is a minimalist hexagon that reflects equality, technology, and data. The idea is that global data can be accessed with no programming knowledge required to use it. 

Hexact concluded last year with 400% growth, a new and improved product, 40,000+ users in 160 countries. The startup plans to increase the team to 100 employees by the end of the year.

The Hexact ecosystem consists of three core platforms: Hexomatic is a no-code, work automation platform that enables you to harness the internet as your own data source, leverage the most sophisticated AI services, and a crowdsourced team of human assistants to automate time-consuming tasks. Hexowatch is your AI sidekick to monitor any website for visual, content, source code, technology, availability or price changes. Hexometer provides proactive website monitoring. 

Source link

https://bbg.life/index.php/2022/02/19/hexact-armenian-data-company-makes-google-bigquery-accessible-and-launches-an-api-marketplace/

Appeal Made For UNESCO To Ensure Protection Of Nagorno-Karabakh’s Historic Christian Sites

Feb 19 2022

Dadivank, an Armenian Apostolic Church monastery in the Kalbajar District 

of Azerbaijan. | Armen hay via Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 3.0).

By CNA

A British human rights campaigner asked the U.N.’s culture agency this week to ensure the protection of historic Christian sites in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Caroline Cox (Baroness Cox), an independent member of the British House of Lords, made the appeal in a Feb. 15 letter to Audrey Azoulay, the director-general of UNESCO.

“I write to express my deep concern about the fate of Armenian Christian churches, Khachkars (carved stone crosses), and cultural heritage sites in Nagorno Karabakh, which are now under Azerbaijan’s control,” she wrote.

“The sites include 161 churches, including the historic monastery at Dadivank, Ghazanchetsots Cathedral in Shushi, the ancient city of Tigranakert, Azokh Paleolithic Cave, and the Nor Karmiravan tombs.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan, neighboring countries in the South Caucasus region, engaged in a 44-day war in 2020, resulting in thousands of deaths and tens of thousands of people fleeing their homes in the disputed region of Nagorno Karabakh.

Azerbaijan regained control of a number of cities, towns, and villages before a ceasefire agreement was signed on Nov. 10, 2020.

Armenia, the world’s oldest Christian nation, has a population of almost three million people, 92% of whom belong to the ancient Armenian Apostolic Church.

Azerbaijan is a country of 10 million people, 99% of whom are Muslim.

The region of Nagorno Karabakh lies within Azerbaijan close to the Armenian border. The area is recognized by the U.N. as belonging to Azerbaijan but is administered by ethnic Armenians.

Cox, the founder and president of the Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust, said that UNESCO had repeatedly sought access to the historic sites since the ceasefire, but without success.

“In December 2021, the International Court of Justice said Azerbaijan should ‘take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration affecting Armenian cultural heritage, including but not limited to churches and other places of worship, monuments, landmarks, cemeteries, and artifacts,’” she wrote.

“Yet in February 2022, Azerbaijan set up a new working group to ‘remove fictitious traces written by Armenians on Albanian religious temples.’”

“This is historical revisionism — a campaign of appropriation that dates back to the 1950s, whereby Azerbaijani authorities continue to rewrite history and replace the word ‘Armenia/Armenian’ with ‘Caucasian Albania/Caucasian Albanian.”

Local media reported on Feb. 3 that Azerbaijan’s culture minister Anar Karimov announced the creation of a working group to restore what the government claims are “Armenianized” Albanian places of worship.

ACI Stampa, CNA’s Italian-language news partner, explained that the claims relate to a theory advanced by the Azerbaijani historian Ziya Bunyadov in the 1950s that Armenian inscriptions on churches in Azerbaijan date back only to the 19th century.

According to the theory, the churches are the remnants of the ancient kingdom of Caucasian Albania, which existed in the territory of present-day Azerbaijan until the beginning of the 9th century.

The thesis is rejected by most historians, but championed by the Azerbaijani government.

In her letter, Cox described the creation of the working group as a “serious cause for concern,” given what she said was the “previous systematic erasure of centuries-old Armenian religious sites” in Nakhichevan, an exclave of Azerbaijan located to the west of Armenia.

“I was present in Nakhichevan in the early 1990s when Azeri military forces were driving tens of thousands of Armenians from their homes in their ancient homeland, a policy of religio-ethnic cleansing that was revived in the autumn of 2020,” she wrote.

“Between 1997-2006, Azerbaijan destroyed tens of thousands of UNESCO-protected Armenian monuments in Nakhichevan. Every visible evidence of their presence was eradicated so there is now no visible testimony to their existence.”

Azerbaijani officials reject suggestions that they are failing to safeguard historic sites. ACI Stampa said that the Ministry of Culture has criticized “biased foreign media” reports and stressed that Azerbaijan has always “treated its historical and cultural heritage with respect, regardless of its religious and ethnic origin.”

Cox concluded her letter by asking Azoulay to “raise these urgent concerns with your network and supporters.”

“I would also be grateful for your advice about how we could work together to ensure the protection of these historic Christian sites,” she wrote.

https://www.eurasiareview.com/19022022-appeal-made-for-unesco-to-ensure-protection-of-nagorno-karabakhs-historic-christian-sites/

Armenian, Saudi Foreign Ministers meet in Munich

Feb 19 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – On February 19, the Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan held a meeting with the Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia Faisal bin Farhan Al-Saud in Munich.

Armenia and Saudi Arabia have no diplomatic relations.

The two exchanged views on the perspectives of establishing relations and cooperation between Armenia and Saudi Arabia, expressing their readiness to undertake works for the formation of bilateral and multilateral agendas between the two countries.

Mirzoyan expressed conviction upon the reciprocal potential for the development of cooperation in the fields of information and high technologies, health care, tourism, and culture.

During the meeting, the Foreign Ministers emphasized the importance of promoting trade and economic ties, implementing investment programs, and establishing contacts between the business circles.

Azerbaijan opens fire, damages civilian homes in Karabakh

Feb 19 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Azerbaijani military on Friday, February 19 opened fire on civilian homes in the Nagorno-Karabakkh village of Taghavard, the Prosecutor General’s office of Artsakh said in a statement.

The walls of several houses in the community were damaged, while a bullet even pierced through the window of one of them and landed on the floor.

According to the statement, the Russian peacekeeping contingent has been notified of the incident.

The Russian peacekeepers were deployed in Artsakh immediately after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Russian and Azerbaijani Presidents Vladimir Putin and Ilham Aliyev on November 9, 2020 signed a statement to end the war in Karabakh. Under the deal, the Armenian side returned all the seven regions surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, having lost a part of Karabakh itself in hostilities.