Final preparations underway for Armenian Festival in Worcester

Spectrum News 1
Oct 19 2023



By Meghan Parsons, Worcester


WORCESTER, Mass. - The kitchen at Armenian Church of Our Savior is buzzing as a group of volunteers is hard at work making and baking food and treats for the Armenian Festival. 

This year, they're expanding the event to people outside of the church. Organizers said there's a rich Armenian heritage in Worcester and they're inviting neighbors and friends to stop by this weekend and celebrate their culture, including a lineup full of traditional Armenian food. 

"We have a vegetarian herb bread, they have different types of kabobs, we have Armenian round bread, Armenian dumplings, Armenian meat pizza," said Father Tadeos Barseghyan. "The Armenian community is one of the oldest communities in the city of Worcester. In fact, the Armenian Church of Our Savior is the first Armenian church in America."

They are also offering tours of the church, selling goods from Armenia and giving presentations about the country. The festival runs Saturday from 12 to 6 p.m.

Trial of Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian for war crimes continues in Baku

Oct 19 2023
 

A Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian detained in July is on trial in Azerbaijan on charges of committing war crimes during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War. 

Vagif Khachatryan, 68, was arrested in July as he was being evacuated to Armenia by the Red Cross for heart surgery. He is accused of taking part in a massacre of Azerbaijani civilians in the village of Meshali, in Khojali district, on 22 December 1991. 

[Read more: Azerbaijan arrests Nagorno-Karabakh resident for ‘war crimes’]

A 1992 report by the Russian human rights group, Memorial, cited ‘severe violence against the civilian population’ in Meshali by ethnic Armenian forces in 1991.

According to Azerbaijan’s General Prosecutor’s Office, 25 Azerbaijanis were killed, 14 were injured, and 358 were displaced from their places of residence during the events in Meshali village.

Khachatryan is being tried on charges of genocide and deportation or forced transfer of the population. If found guilty, he faces 14 to 20 years or life imprisonment. 

Khachatryan has denied all charges against him and claimed that witness statements had been falsified. He claimed that the attack had been planned in Stepanakert (Khankandi) a day earlier, but that he only learnt about the attacks in Meshali a day after they happened, as he was working at the time. 

‘Someone comes and says they saw me at the bottom of the village, someone says that I was at the top of the village, someone says that I saw him near the pond. How is it that I was in all those places?’, asked Khachatryan. ‘I swear to God, I was not there’. 

He added that if he had been a participant in such a crime, he would not have attempted to enter Armenia at the Lachin checkpoint and ‘would have crossed illegally like others’. 

Witnesses interrogated on 18 October claimed that Khachatryan was one of the main perpetrators of the violence in Meshali, with some claiming to have directly seen Khachatryan, while others stated that their family members had told them of his participation in the attack. 

Fazil Hajiyev, one of the witnesses, stated that Khachatryan had been a leading perpetrator of the massacre.

Hajiyev described the events of the day in court, stating that inhabitants of the village were blocked from leaving. 

‘Five people were set on fire in one house. Imagine they set the house on fire and shot at the door so that they cannot leave the house. Five or six people were also burned alive in the school’, said Hajiyev. 

The case’s victims include the legal heirs of those killed in Meshali, those injured there, and the Executive Power of Khojali district. 

Khachatryan’s trial will continue on 24 October. 

Armenian authorities and Khachatryan’s family have been swift to condemn the trial, with one of his daughters telling RFE/RL that the accusations against him were ‘defamation’. 

‘He was neither a commander nor a deputy commander. He was a driver’, said Tsovinar Khachatryan. 

Vera Khachatryan, also Vagif’s daughter, told OC Media that the family was going through a very difficult and emotionally overwhelming time. 

‘We are upset because we don’t have any information, we get information from the internet like you. We only know that our father is innocent, but we don’t know why he is there now,’ said Vera. 

Vera added that the family had been in contact with Vagif Khachatryan only once through the ICRC since his arrest, prior to the start of his trial on 13 October. 

Armenia’s Human Rights defender Anahit Manasyan stated that the trial was a ‘blatant violation’ of Khachatryan’s ‘fundamental rights’, and called on international human rights organisations to respond. 

Manasyan had earlier dismissed Azerbaijan’s accusations, stating that no ‘international prosecution’ was registered in any international databases against Khachatryan. 

The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated after Khachatryan’s arrest that the ICRC had provided a list of patients to be transported in advance, and transported patients only after they had received agreement. 

It also claimed that the Azerbaijani Prosecutor General’s statement released shortly after the detention was ‘full of false narratives and accusations’, proving that Khachatryan’s arrest had been ‘thoroughly planned in advance’. 

The Ministry noted that Azerbaijan’s statement contained ‘an open threat to apply the same approach to other residents of Nagorno-Karabakh as well’.

In late August, Azerbaijani border troops detained three Nagorno-Karabakh Armenians at the Lachin checkpoint. They were released after ten days of administrative detention, allegedly for insulting the Azerbaijani flag in 2021. 

Araz Aliyev, a political commentator and member of the Board of Directors of the Azerbaijani pro-democracy NIDA Movement, told OC Media that it was important that the trial was held openly, with public access to ‘the issues and accusations’. 

He stated that while Azerbaijan should be interested in ‘uncovering the truth’ in Khachatryan’s trial and in the case of other historical crimes, media reports suggested that the authorities were attempting to use the judicial process ‘for the domestic audience’. 

He added that two Azerbaijani soldiers imprisoned in Armenia, one on charges of murdering a security guard in Syunik, should be tried in a ‘fair and legal manner’. 

‘The issue of the fair, objective, and legal trial of Khachatryan and prisoners of war can be an important step in the restoration of lasting peace and justice for both countries’, said Aliyev. 

 For ease of reading, we choose not to use qualifiers such as ‘de facto’, ‘unrecognised’, or ‘partially recognised’ when discussing institutions or political positions within Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and South Ossetia. This does not imply a position on their status.

https://oc-media.org/trial-of-nagorno-karabakh-armenian-for-war-crimes-continues-in-baku/

Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks at new crossroads

eurasianet
Oct 19 2023
Heydar Isayev 

The 35-year-old Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict could finally be coming to an end after last month's lighting offensive by Azerbaijan to retake Nagorno-Karabakh and the subsequent exodus of the region's Armenian population and dissolution of its de facto government. 

The fate of the Karabakh Armenians had long been the main sticking point in the peace talks underway since 2021. Now that that issue has been resolved, however crudely, and the sides have vowed to recognize one another's territorial integrity, it might seem that a conclusion could be at hand. 

But things aren't that simple. Apart from the actual content of a peace deal – chiefly border delimitation/demarcation and the opening of transit links – the sides are at odds over who should mediate.

Up to this point there have been two separate tracks of negotiations, one mediated by Russia and the other by the European Union with U.S. help.

Now, after Azerbaijan's takeover of Karabakh, Armenia is more dissatisfied than ever with its nominal strategic partner Russia and is increasingly positive on the West. Azerbaijan, meanwhile, has been expressing distaste with Western mediation and calling for a regional solution to the conflict, one that could involve Russia, Turkey and Iran, or, perhaps, just Georgia

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had been due to meet in the presence of European mediators on the sidelines of the European Political Community Summit in Granada, Spain, on October 5.  

But Aliyev backed out. The presence of France, an ally of Armenia that has offered to sell it defensive weapons, and the exclusion of Azerbaijan's strategic partner Turkey were the reasons, his advisor later explained

Pashinyan went anyway, and talked Armenia-Azerbaijan peace with President Charles Michel of the European Council, President Emmanuel Macron of France and Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany. 

Those four released a joint statement afterwards expressing commitment to the normalization of relations between Baku and Yerevan, and the two countries' mutual respect for one another's sovereignty and territorial integrity.

The statement also emphasized the importance of "strict adherence to the principle of non-use of force and threat of use of force." Concerns persist in Armenia that Azerbaijan could invade in order to force the establishment of a transit corridor, and the EU wants assurances from Baku that it won't do so.

A few days later, Armenia decided to skip a meeting of leaders and foreign ministers of Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) members in Bishkek. Aliyev criticized the move, as supposedly a separate meeting was to be held between Armenian, Azerbaijani and Russian foreign ministers on the sidelines of the event. 

"We perceive the mediation of the Russian Federation with gratitude because Russia is our neighbor and ally, as well as Armenia's ally. This country is located in our region, unlike those who are thousands of kilometers away. Naturally, the history of relations between our countries presupposes the mediation of the Russian side," Aliyev said while receiving security council heads of CIS state members. 

"Now, this invites the question: does Armenia want peace? I think not, because if it had wanted peace, it would not have missed this opportunity. The Armenian prime minister flies six hours to Granada and participates in an incomprehensible meeting there, where Azerbaijan is discussed without actually being present, but he cannot fly for two to three hours to Bishkek. He has other important things to do," Aliyev added.

After Aliyev met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Bishkek on October 13, Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov expressed a similar view. "Baku has a very constructive position on this [signing a peace treaty], while Yerevan has not quite decided yet," he said.

The rift between Armenia and Russia further widened when Pashinyan told the European Parliament on October 17 that Russia was trying to topple him. 

"When the 100,000 Armenians were fleeing from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, our security allies not only failed to help us, but were publicly calling for a change of government, overthrowing the democratic government in Armenia," he said.

Russian state media the following day quoted a "high-ranking" Russian official as calling Pashinyan's statement "provocative" and suggesting Armenia could suffer the same fate as Ukraine, which Russia has waged full-scale war against for the past 18 months. 

"We see that there's an attempt to turn Armenia into a Ukraine number three. If we consider that Moldova is Ukraine number two, Pashinyan is going by leaps and bounds down the path of [Ukrainian President] Volodymyr Zelensky," the unnamed official said.

Exclaves complicate border talks

When Armenia and Azerbaijan finally begin delimiting their common border, one of the more difficult issues is likely to be that of exclaves – the tiny islands of each country's territory that are surrounded entirely by the other's.

During the First Karabakh War in the 1990s all of these villages, most of which are actually far from Karabakh, were abandoned and taken over by the surrounding power. There are three Azerbaijani exclaves in Armenia and one Armenian exclave in Azerbaijan. There are also several bits of territory contiguous with contiguous with each country that the other sliced off during the first war.

After Pashinyan signed the statement affirming Azerbaijan's territorial integrity in Granada, Aliyev told European Council President Charles Michel by phone on October 7 that eight villages of Azerbaijan were "still under Armenian occupation, and stressed the importance of liberating these villages from occupation."  

Asked by Armenian Public TV about this claim in an interview on October 10, Pashinyan did not comment directly but said that Azerbaijan has likewise been occupying several Armenian villages since the 1990s.

"We proposed a solution to that issue back in 2021 and said let's decide what the delimitation map is, and pull back the troops simultaneously from the border line according to that map. These are very important nuances," he said.

Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry in response said that Baku does not occupy any Armenian villages and suggested that Pashinyan was making that claim in order to justify Armenia's occupation of Azerbaijani villages. 

(In June Pashinyan appeared to acknowledge the validity of Azerbaijan's claims on at least one village currently controlled by Armenia.)

Another issue that will need to be addressed in the border talks is the presence of Azerbaijani troops deep inside what's generally regarded as Armenian territory. 

Azerbaijan made several incursions into Armenia since the 2020 war and currently holds an estimated 215 square kilometers of its land.

Heydar Isayev is a journalist from Baku.

https://eurasianet.org/armenia-azerbaijan-peace-talks-at-new-crossroads

Local Armenians have contributed to Oakland’s identity, and vice versa

The Oakland Side
Oct 18 2023
With conflict in Azerbaijan, the grandson of an Armenian refugee reflects on the unique relationship between his community and the Town.

Members of St. Vartan Armenian Apostolic Church start wrapping sarma in May for their annual October food festival. 

Sarma—brined grape leaves stuffed with rice and spices—is more commonly called dolma in the U.S. I’ve always had an affinity for this mezze. In the 1960s, my grandmother, Ardemis, was profiled in The Trenton Times for her recipe. 

Like some of St. Vartan’s founders, Ardemis fled her birthplace of Istanbul. She spent most of her life in New Jersey and died years before I was born. I’ve relied on that old newspaper clipping from The Trenton Times to get a sense of who she was, and how she thought about her identity.

   

 Left: A 1965 newspaper clipping of an article about the author’s grandmother. Right: The author’s grandmother, Ardemis (center), with her mother and daughter in Istanbul. Credit: Courtesy of John Klopotowsky

Dolma” means “stuffed” in Turkish, which would normally be a fitting way to describe St. Vartan during their special weekend. Festivities take place in the church’s mid-century gymnasium, which transforms into a grocery store, mess hall, dance floor, auction house, and concert venue all at once. 

This year’s festival was different, though. It relied heavily upon last-minute planning due to events taking place thousands of miles away, and its story exhibits how Oakland’s Armenian community sees their historical identity vis-a-vis their life in the Bay Area: Instead of viewing their identity as one that needs preserving, local Armenians see their identity as Amerikatsis—the Armenian word for those in the American diaspora—as ever-changing.

Members of St. Vartan didn’t feel right about having a celebratory festival this year. In the final weeks of September 2023, conflict in Azerbaijan displaced over 100,000 Armenians from their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan’s borders that has long sought independence. Protestors in the Armenian diaspora liken this exodus to the Armenian Genocide of 1915, and violence at one such protest at the University of Southern California even made international news.

So, the Friday night dance party for all in attendance was canceled. Instead, groups performed short, traditional Armenian dances. Entrance fees for the event went to the church’s humanitarian fund, and there were tables around the grounds with information about the crisis.

During the event, even more impromptu action was needed. Friday evening, the church’s transformer blew, leaving everyone eating, standing, and talking in darkness. 

When the lights went out, there was a moment of confusion. But, as if it were planned, members of St. Vartan were on their feet, walking around with flashlights and passing out water to everyone in the food line.

Parishioners of St. Vartan in Oakland are left in the dark after a circuit shorted during their annual cultural festival. It didn’t stop one family from going ahead with their birthday celebration. Credit: John Klopotowski

Beth Rustigian, whose grandparents were founding members of St. Vartan in 1924, said that this year’s last-minute fundraising represents the attitude of the community in Oakland—and stands in contrast to an insularity within many Armenian communities in the U.S. that prevents them from engaging with their broader metropolitan communities.

For evidence, Rustigian cited the diaspora’s use of the Armenian word odar, meaning “other” in English, to refer to non-Armenians. “It’s derogatory,” she told me. 

Rustigian admitted that during her grandparent’s time, the Bay Area community was reluctant to welcome newcomers. But now, St. Vartan welcomes new faces to their church, regardless of their heritage, linguistic abilities, or sexual orientation—a rarity for most Orthodox parishes. 

Rustigian said that this openness to change helps in moments like this weekend, when church members need to think on their feet.

Steve Donikian, a deacon at the church, sees similarities between Armenians and Oakland, which both carry reputations as underdogs. “When I was a kid,” he told me, “the most important place outside of the church was the Coliseum.

“We’re always getting put down,” Donikian added. But he thought the festival would show people that “we’re still here.” I wondered, when Donikian said “we,” whether he was talking about Armenians or Oaklanders. He was referring to both.

“It was so cute to see the check-ins throughout the evening,” said Olive Mugalian on Saturday, recalling the blackouts. Olive’s brother, Gabe, joked that attendees who grew up in Soviet Armenia were probably used to blackouts.

The siblings grew up in Los Angeles, but have found the Bay Area community more welcoming. 

“As long as Armenians are persecuted in their homeland, the diaspora should stay faithful,” Gabe said. Olive quickly jumped in. “But we’re too proud and nationalistic.” They were both happy to see a large number of non-Armenians over the weekend.

Olive and Gabe Mugalian at the St. Vartan festival in Oakland. Credit: Courtesy of Olive Mugalian

One volunteer at the festival, Serli Höllüksever, is a student at UC Berkeley who grew up in Istanbul. Höllüksever lived in Southern California for two years before coming to Berkeley. “I felt like other Armenian students treated me a little differently when they found out I was from Turkey,” she said to me in Turkish. 

I wasn’t surprised to hear this. Some look down upon those, like Serli’s or my family, who stayed in Istanbul after the genocide. They’re cast as sympathizers to the violence, and therefore less Armenian. 

A few minutes later, I met Itır Yakar outside at a dining table. She is Turkish and has no Armenian heritage, though she has friends at St. Vartan.

After the 2006 assassination of Istanbulite-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, Yakar organized a discussion group for Turks and Armenians in the Bay Area. The purpose of the group was to brainstorm processes of reconciliation, and it met for over a decade. Today, a book club with a similar purpose exists.

This past summer, I visited Dink’s old paper, Agos, in Istanbul. It sits in a heavily fortified building, requiring visitors to pass multiple security checkpoints. In Oakland, Turks and Armenians don’t need metal detectors to organize to discuss the trauma of the past century that continues to weigh so heavily on us.

Steve Donikian, a deacon at the church, sees similarities between Armenians and Oakland, which both carry reputations as underdogs.

Krikor Zakaryan, the pastor of St. Vartan, offered remarks toward the end of the festival. He talked about politics and community with a passion one would have expected to hear at an altar. 

Zakaryan spoke slowly and rhythmically. He articulated every word so clearly that their individual syllables echoed throughout the gym. The audience was rapt. 

He thanked Oakland for providing a home for St. Vartan for a century. He wanted to give something to Oakland in return; as festival-goers shared their time and donations with St. Vartan, they presented Armenian culture to Oakland. 

Zakaryan ended his remarks with a passage by William Saroyan, a celebrated Armenian-American writer. As he read the words from a small notecard, the priest’s diction became even more precise.

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race…Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing, and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a new Armenia.”

Zakaryan emphasized, “new.”

I looked across the table at my mother, who was misty-eyed. I was transported to July, when she and I were in downtown Istanbul after visiting Agos. We stood outside of the house that Ardemis fled as a young girl.

“What a world they left behind,” mom said as we stood there. I wanted to comfort her, but I didn’t know what to say. 

What is there to say in the face of such a violent tragedy?

But, sitting in Oakland this past weekend—almost 7,000 miles away from my grandma’s house, in a gym with folks of any origin—I had an answer.

See if they will not create a new Armenia. And see if they will not share it with others.

AraratBank: General Partner of SIA Awards Armenia 2023

 13:10,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 19, ARMENPRESS. On October 17, Impact Hub Yerevan hosted a pitch event and an award ceremony for the participants of this year’s Social Impact Award Armenia. 

The award ceremony was organized as part of Collaborate for Impact program, funded by the European Union in Armenia and implemented by the European Venture Philanthropy Association (EVPA) in partnership with Impact Hub Yerevan.

Within its corporate social responsibility, AraratBank joined the SIA Awards, contributing EUR 6,000 for this purpose. The funds were allocated among four winning teams, EUR 1500 per team.

The top 10 startup teams of incubation stage pitched their business ideas incorporating social dimension, from plastic recycling to strawberry production, from creation of travel apps to production of clothing for disabled people.

Three of the four winning teams were announced Jury Award Winners, and the fourth, Refill, was selected through online Community Voting:

  1. Adapteon: production of comfortable yet stylish clothes for people with disabilities.
  2. Contests Labcreation of fun educational games and content for children and teens, as well as their parents and teachers.
  3. org: creation of an SME-oriented agricultural information and educational platform.
  4. Refillcreation of an app to help users find the nearest place to refill their water bottles free of charge, providing users with a valuable service while promoting sustainability and reducing plastic waste.

The winning teams received an exclusive invitation to participate in Social Impact Award Annual Summit, scheduled between November 27 and December 1 in Serbia.

Film: Armenian Haunting (2018) Reviews and free to watch on YouTube

Movies and Mania
Oct 19 2023

‘Denial is a hundred-year-old curse.’
Armenian Haunting is a 2018 horror film about a journalist who turns into an unwilling ghost hunter while researching the sudden deaths in her family and their connection to a paranormal mystery…

Written, produced and directed by Art Arutyunyan (director of Alpha Delta Zatan; producer of Dead by ChristmasBayou Ghost StoryReel Nightmare).

The Reel Nightmare Films production stars Vaneh Assadourian, Paul Mariskanish and Aneela Qureshi.

Reviews:
“The paranormal elements are brief and show up on just a handful of occasions, and elements like recorded footage getting glitches on it seemed pointless and unrelated to the haunting aspect, in general, the pacing all seemed a bit off. While it was interesting to find out a genocide of the Armenian people occurred, as a horror this just didn’t work.” 4 out of 10, The Rotting Zombie

“As events play out the genocide looms larger, given that the curse stems back to a perceived betrayal that occurred in its wake, but it’s difficult to remain engaged in the proceedings, even as they accrue real-life import, simply because a series of poorly-realized scenes (especially a couple of the purportedly “scary” ones) are so unintentionally comical that they literally take you out of the flow of events and turn your attention to shortcomings in the production’s execution.” Trash Film Guru

Armenian Haunting is available to Prime Video subscribers in the US, UK and Germany.

Cast and characters:
Vaneh Assadourian … Maro
Jay Dersahagian … David
Kyle Patrick Darling … Garo
Chris Green … Eva
Tamara Grigorian … Grandma/Tatik
Andrew DeVitre … Sevan
Aneela Qureshi …Aida
Paul Mariskanish … Arsen
Mona Arkin … Clara
Teneisha Campbell … Doctor Freedman
Carly Alyssa Thorne … Lena
Aida Arutyunyan … Ms Grigorian
Kevin Antonio … Skateboarder

Budget:
$30,000 (estimated)

Technical specs:
1 hour 18 minutes
Aspect ratio: 1.78: 1

Watch the trailer at 

Belgian businessmen visit Armenia to explore new opportunities for stronger ties

 14:08,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 19, ARMENPRESS. Belgian businessmen have arrived in Armenia to strengthen and enhance economic relations between the two countries.

Eric Bletard, Trade and Investment Counselor at Wallonia Export and Investment Agency said at a press conference on October 19 that the delegation includes businessmen from the areas of pharmaceuticals, construction, electronics and waste processing.

“Our businessmen have come to Armenia with concrete goals, they plan to visit a number of enterprises of Armenian partners. The Belgian businessmen are interested in both the Armenian market as well as the opportunities of accessing other markets through Armenia,” Bletard said. He said that the areas of healthcare and energy could also be considered.

According to Bletard, trade turnover between Armenia and Belgium grew significantly in 2021-2022, and they expect 50% growth in 2023.

“There are opportunities for cooperation in the service sector and technologies. I am highlighting the tech sector. Armenia has serious reputation abroad from this perspective. Belgium requires good specialists in the tech sector, and Armenia can help in this issue,” he said.

Ambassador of Belgium to Armenia Eric De Muynck said the two countries have big potential to develop economic relations in the most various sectors. He said that the newly opened embassy in Armenia can play an important role in this issue.

The Ambassador said he has proposed the Armenian officials to consider cooperation opportunities in pharmaceuticals and new technologies. All proposals are under consideration, he said.

Belgium-Armenia Chamber of Commerce President Valery Safaryan said they are trying to serve as a “unique bridge” for the businessmen of the two countries. The organization was founded 18 years ago.

Global Maritime India Summit 2023: Armenia expresses readiness to promote South Asia- Europe economic exchanges

 13:44,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 19, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosyan participated in the Global Maritime India Summit 2023 in Mumbai. He delivered a speech during a roundtable discussion as part of the event.

Sanosyan said that as a landlocked country, with the borders from the East and West in land blockade since the last three decades, Armenia is a staunch advocate of promoting inclusive and equitable regional and cross-border connectivity.

Below is the transcript of Minister Sanosyan’s speech.

“It is my great honor to participate and lead the delegation of Armenia at the Global Maritime Summit, organized by the Indian Government. This event indicates both the growing role of India in regional and global connectivity and the importance of discussing and outlining the options we can develop for our cooperation, economies and welfare.

“Historically, Armenia has always been at the crossroads connecting the North to the South and the West to the East, with all the political, economic and cultural features arising from this. Today as well, based on its geographical location, Armenia is ready to serve as a connecting hub for such interactions.

“As a landlocked country with the borders from the East and West in land blockade since the last three decades, Armenia is a staunch advocate of promoting inclusive and equitable regional and cross-border connectivity.

“In this regard, we are confident that the road network of Armenia holds a serious potential to contribute to this end. The Armenian government channels efforts towards reviving and modernizing the relevant infrastructures of the country by implementing the North-South Road Corridor Investment Program, which will upgrade Armenia’s capacities and enable it to fully participate in the International North–South Transport Corridor and other connectivity related initiatives.

“The Project is implemented by multi-tranche financing. It is subdivided into Tranches and separate loan agreements are signed in the framework of each Tranche. We invite Indian companies and banks to consider involvement in these investment projects.

“The implementation of the North-South Road Corridor Investment Program, in terms of capacity building, will enable Armenia to fully participate in the International North–South Transport Corridor. The construction of this highly important strategic road will ensure easier traffic from the Southern border of Armenia to the Georgian border and up to Black Sea ports and will allow more passenger and cargo transportation in accordance with international standards.

“During the last few years, the reconstruction of roads and necessary infrastructure in Armenia through state budgetary means have increased considerably. Only in 2021, at the expense of the state budget, the construction highways with a total length of about 388 km were carried out, whilst the same works were carried out for over 530 km of roads in 2022.

“Within the framework of the construction and development of new border infrastructures, in August of 2022 the 160-meter "Armenian-Georgian Friendship Bridge" was opened in the area of the Bagratashen-Sadakhlo border crossing between Armenia and Georgia, allowing doubling the transit capacity at the border. The Meghri checkpoint at the Armenia-Iran border will be modernized – worth 18.4 million Euros – with the support of the European Union and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development- construction works will be completed in 2026, as a result of which it is planned to have a modern checkpoint.

“Ladies and Gentlemen,

“The disruption of global supply chains triggered by the COVID–19 pandemic, accompanied by armed conflicts in several parts of the world and other challenges and complexities in the present-day international politics, as well as the increasing volume of cargo passing through the Suez Canal has brought up the necessity for states to look for alternative transport routes to conduct trade and other economic activities. Thus, nowadays, combining multiple communication projects in order to augment the economic benefits of each is crucial.

“Armenia is very much interested in advancing dialogue and cooperation within the framework of the International North South Transport Corridor project, the Chabahar port development project, as well as the Persian Gulf – Black Sea International Transport and Transit Corridor that can be successfully incorporated into the INSTC. In these initiatives great importance is attached to the development of the Chabahar Port Project, where Armenia has explicitly expressed its interest in getting involved. Moreover, we have established an inter-agency working group that will engage in direct discussions with partners on Armenia’s involvement in the Chabahar Port Project.

“India’s increasing trade with European and Asian countries, its involvement in the development of the Chabahar port fits well into the logic of creating a viable alternative route to Europe. The Persian Gulf-Black Sea International Transport and Transit Corridor can serve as an alternative route connecting Asia with Europe, that can boost connectivity and trade among the participating sides, by connecting India, through the Bandar Abbas and Chabahar ports in Iran, to Bulgaria, Romania, Greece and further. India's potential and prospective role in these projects is quite significant and once India is on board the Persian Gulf – Black Sea International Transport and Transit Corridor, it can make use of an economically more beneficial and competitive 2-week route to both Russia and Europe. The successful implementation of cooperation in bringing the Persian Gulf-Black Sea International Transport and Transit Corridor to life can prompt other partners in Asia to as well link to the project.

“Moreover, with Iran having a Free Trade Zone agreement with the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) and India negotiating a similar instrument, Armenia, as a member of the EAEU can serve as a direct bridge between India, Iran and the bloc, to which end the Persian Gulf–Black Sea International Transport and Transit Corridor creates an additional impetus for further enhancing trade and connectivity.

“Honorable Guests,

“Armenia, following its historical legacy, today as well can successfully promote the economic exchanges between South Asia and Europe. With this, realizing the crucial importance of the opening of all trade and transport communications in South Caucasus, Armenia has engaged constructively in dialogue and discussions, with the aim of ensuring prosperity and stability in the region, and introduced a new concept of the “Armenian Crossroads”, prompted by the discussions on the opening of communications in the South Caucasus, which in turn has a huge potential of  bringing about a serious change in international logistic chains, and restoring the region’s significance in terms of international cargo transportation.

“Armenia is interested in the unblocking of regional economic and transport connections with full respect for state sovereignty, territorial integrity and principles of equality and reciprocity and stands ready to implement this as soon as possible to boost international and regional passenger and cargo transportation, which will in turn further ensure security and stability in the region.

“Taking this opportunity, I would like to announce that the Government of Armenia together with United Nations Office of the High Representative for Least Developed States, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States (UN-OHRLLS) intends to organize a high-level thematic event to the Third Conference on the LLDCs. Invitations to all LLDCs, some transit countries and international partners will be sent out shortly, following the finalization of the detailed programme.

“In conclusion, let me reiterate that Armenia remains fully committed to work with all partners to jointly shape the way for more enhanced cooperation and coordination between international partners and other stakeholders to make meaningful progress on promotion of better regional and global connectivity. Thank you.”

Gardman-Shirvan-Nakhijevan Pan-Armenian Union appeals to Pope Francis

 14:12,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 19, ARMENPRESS. Gardman-Shirvan-Nakhijevan Pan-Armenian Union, an organization comprised of representatives of Armenians of the historical Gardman, Shirvan and Nakhijevan, has appealed to Pope Francis to make Azerbaijan embrace religious tolerance.

In a statement, the organization commended the Pope’s October 15 statement regarding Nagorno-Karabakh. Speaking after Sunday's Angelus, Pope Francis recalled the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh and the serious humanitarian conditions affecting the displaced. He also appealed for the protection of the monasteries and places of worship, expressions of faith and signs of fraternity.

“The Pope’s special call for the protection of monasteries and places of worship reports to the whole world that the entire Armenian Christian culture of Nagorno-Karabakh, the monasteries, churches and cemeteries are under the most real danger of destruction and desecration. This concern perhaps wouldn’t be this real and imminent if not for the bitter historic experience of the not-too-distant past,” Gardman-Shirvan-Nakhijevan Pan-Armenian Union said.

It said that over the course of 100 years, the Armenian ethnic element and Armenian cultural presence in Gardman, Shirvan and Nakhijevan was subjected to ethnic cleansing for at least three times through massacres, pogroms, forced displacement and cultural genocide.

The organization cited the massacre of 30,000 Armenians in Baku in 1918, the forced displacement and genocidal manifestations against Armenians in Baku, Sumgait and Kirovabad and other Armenian-populated settlements in 1988-1992, the destruction of the Armenian cemetery in Julfa, as well as the vandalism committed in Nagorno-Karabakh after Azerbaijan took control both after the 2020 war, as well as after September 2023 in the entire territory of NK.

“These crimes are aimed not only against the Armenian element, but the entire Christian World, because in this era of tolerance and mutual understanding, the religious and racial discrimination and hate should be unacceptable. We, as representatives of the Armenians of the historical Gardman, Shirvan and Nakhijevan, as those struggling for the restoration of our violated rights, are asking the Pope to use his good will and opportunities to force Azerbaijan to embrace the perceptions of religious tolerance and supreme legal and human values, because only that way it is possible to ensure interreligious dialogue and mutual respect in the civilized world," the union said.

Bodies of victims of Azeri attack in Nagorno-Karabakh have signs of torture and mutilation

 15:24,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 19, ARMENPRESS. Bodies of the victims in Nagorno-Karabakh in the September 19-20 Azeri attack have signs of torture and mutilation, the Armenian Human Rights Defender Anahit Manasyan said on October 19.

She said that her preliminary report on the ill-treatment and torture was used in the ICJ by the Armenian government as evidence. The report found torture and mutilations on numerous bodies that were evacuated from NK to Armenia, including bodies of civilians, including women and children.

Speaking about the former NK officials who are now jailed in Azerbaijan, the Ombudsperson said that the rights of the ethnic Armenians of NK are being restricted with explicit violations of international legal standards. “First of all the presumption of innocence of these persons is violated on all levels in Azerbaijan, because they are branded as criminals from the very beginning, both on the state level and by specific individuals,” she said, adding that it is impossible to guarantee due process in Azerbaijan given the state-sanctioned Armenophobia there.