Sports: Juventus Took a Close Look at Touted Armenian Forward

Oct 13 2023
 Enrico Passarella


Juventus are attentively keeping tabs on a few young talents, and their emissaries were spotted in Rigas to watch the game between Latvia and Armenia to monitor Eduard Spertsyan. He’s high on their list should they make an addition in his role, Tuttomercatoweb informs.

He can play as a no.10 and on either flank. He has starred 13 times with Krasnodar so far this season, scoring 5 times and providing 3 assists. The 23-year-old has spent his entire career at the Russian club, becoming a regular in 2021/2022.

Juventus wish to add some young guns to their squad, and Spertsyan would fit the mold. He’d be a gamble à la Khvicha Kvaratskhelia for former Napoli director Cristiano Giuntoli. His team rejected a €10M offer from Ajax in June. His valuation might be around €15M. Instead, there’d be no issue with his wages.

Milan, Inter, and Fiorentina have watched him lately as well. He’s open to transferring to Italy. There have been some contacts already, but he’s an extra-EU player, which forces teams to carefully weigh whether to sign him considering the restriction.

They are being suspiciously active on wingers and no.10s for a side using a 3-5-2 formation. Rolling the dice on a foreign starlet would be a nice change of pace for them. Giuntoli will pull the trigger once he finds somebody who combines potential with an affordable price tag.

Russian government seeks to expand petroleum product supplies to Armenia

 12:09,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. The Russian government has submitted to parliament amendments to the agreement with Armenia on cooperation in supplying natural gas, petroleum products and uncut natural diamonds, TASS reports.

The protocol submitted for ratification was signed on June 1, 2023. It envisages the substitution of the option of supplying petroleum resin without exports customs duties with an option of supplying bitumen without exports customs duties.

Kidnapped Red Cross evacuee to stand trial in Azerbaijan on fabricated charges

 12:21,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. A Baku court has held a preliminary hearing in the show trial of Vagif Khachatryan, an elderly Nagorno-Karabakh man who was kidnapped by Azeri border guards during his ICRC-mediated medical evacuation on July 29. 

In Baku, the Azeri authorities pressed fabricated charges against Khachatryan. Khachatryan has since been jailed in Azerbaijan. 

The hearing in the show trial will continue on October 17.

The Armenian foreign ministry earlier said that the arrest of the Red Cross-protected patient from Nagorno-Karabakh amounts to war crime.

Prominent lawyer Siranush Sahakyan earlier said that the kidnapping constitutes extraordinary rendition in terms of international law and a due process is therefore ruled out.

The kidnapped man’s daughter, in a plea to the UN to ensure the safe release of her father, said that all charges pressed by the Azeri prosecution are fabricated and her father is innocent.

Issue of enclaves to be resolved during delimitation and demarcation of borders, says Armenian Cabinet minister

 13:17,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosyan has said that all issues related to the enclaves between Armenia and Azerbaijan will be resolved during the delimitation and demarcation process.

As difficult as the contentious issue of enclaves may seem in the Armenian-Azeri talks, the issue is actually simple because there are maps and legal grounds in place pertaining to these areas, he said.

Any territory constituting an enclave must have some legal base, the minister said.

“When two given countries recognize each other’s territorial integrity, this must be followed by the delimitation and demarcation process, as a result of which the borders will be determined in all regards. It’s not the name that matters, but the legal documents. Speaking about enclaves, don’t forget Artsvashen, which is big in size and substantiated with legal regulations. When the delimitation and demarcation process starts, all issues pertaining to the enclaves will be resolved as part of that,” Sanosyan told reporters.

Harvard professor calls for prevention of cultural genocide in NK after ‘annihilation of millennia of Armenian life’

 13:47,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. A Harvard University Professor has called on the world to prevent the “cultural genocide” in Nagorno-Karabakh and to protect “what Armenian culture remains” there.

Christina Maranci, Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies in the Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilizations and the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at Harvard University, in an article published in Time magazine, warned that ethnic cleansing tends to be followed by all kinds of cultural destruction, from vandalism to complete effacement from the landscape. Maranci warned that the Azeri authorities would carry out falsifications to erase the Armenian heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Below is the full article published in Time magazine.

“September 2023 saw the tumultuous and traumatic departure of over 100,000 Armenians from Nagorno-Karabakh. This mass exodus of an indigenous people from their homeland followed nine months of starvation-by-blockade, which culminated in a murderous military assault on Sept. 19.

“These men, women, and children, terrified for their lives, left behind entire worlds: their schools and shops; their fields, flocks, and vineyards; the cemeteries of their ancestors. They also left behind the churches, large and small, ancient and more modern, magnificent and modest, where they had for centuries gathered together and prayed. They also left behind bridges, fortifications, early modern mansions, and Soviet-era monuments, such as the beloved “We are Our Mountains” statues. What will happen now to those places? There is no question, actually.

“We know well what happened in Julfa, in Nakhichevan: a spectacular landscape of 16th-century Armenian tombstones was erased from the face the earth by Azerbaijan over a period of years. We know what happened to the Church of the Mother of God in Jebrayil and the Armenian cemetery in the village of Mets Tagher (or Böyük Taglar)—both were completely scrubbed from the landscape using earthmoving equipment like bulldozers. And we know what happened to the Cathedral of Ghazanchetsots in Shushi, which was, in turn, shelled, vandalized with graffiti, “restored” without its Armenian cupola, and now rebranded as a “Christian” temple. The brazenness of these actions, as journalist Joshua Kucera wrote in May 2021, “suggests a growing confidence that [Baku] can remake their newly retaken territories in whatever image they want.”

“The annihilation of millennia of Armenian life in Arstakh was enabled by the inaction and seeming indifference of those who might have prevented it. The United States and the European Union speak loftily of universal human rights, but did nothing for nine months while the people of Arstakh were denied food, medicine, fuel, and other vital supplies. They did nothing to enforce the order of the International Court of Justice demanding back in February 2023 that Azerbaijan end its blockade. That inaction clearly emboldened Azerbaijan to attack—just as it will encourage others to do the same elsewhere.

“It’s important to understand the stakes of this kind of cultural erasure: These monuments and stones testify to the generations of Armenians who worshipped in and cared about them. To destroy them, is to erase not only a culture, but a people. As art historian Barry Flood observed in 2016 about the destruction of cultural heritage by the so-called Islamic state since 2014, “the physical destruction of communal connective tissues—the archives, artifacts, and monuments in which complex micro-histories were instantiated—means that there are now things about these pasts that cannot and never will be known.” The Julfa cemetery is a tragic example of such loss. If history is any indication, ethnic cleansing tends to be followed by all kinds of cultural destruction, from vandalism to complete effacement from the landscape. The latter tactic will be used with smaller, lesser-known churches. It will be a sinister way to remove less famous Armenian monuments, which will serve the narrative that there were no Armenians there in the early modern period to begin with.

“Falsification will also occur, in which Armenian monuments are provided with newly created histories and contexts. The 13th-century monasteries of Dadivank (in the Kalbajar district) and Gandzasar (in the Martakert province), both magnificent and characteristic examples of medieval Armenian architecture, have already been rebranded as “ancient Caucasian Albanian temples.” Expect these and other sites to become venues for conferences and workshops to highlight “ancient Caucasian Albanian culture.” As for the countless Armenian inscriptions on these buildings, khachkars, and tombstones: these, as President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev announced in February 2021, are Armenian forgeries, and will be “restored” to their “original appearance” (presumably through gouging, sandblasting, or removing of Armenian inscribed stones, as was done in the 1980s).

“Finally, there will be a celebration of the “multiculturalism” of Azerbaijan. “Come to Karabakh, home of ancient Christians,” people will say. “Please ignore the gouged-out letters on that stone wall, for it is not an Armenian inscription. There were never Armenians here!" Except for soldiers and invaders, like the ones depicted in a reprehensible museum in Baku, featuring waxen figures of dead Armenian soldiers—a sight so dehumanizing that an international human rights organizations, including Azerbaijani activists, cried out for its closure.

“This is how cultural genocide plays out. A little more than 100 years ago was the Armenian Genocide waged by the Ottoman Empire, followed by largescale looting, vandalization, and destruction of Armenian sites across what is now modern-day Turkey. The prospect of a second cultural genocide is now on the table. Except now, Armenians will watch the spectacle unfold online, enduring the trauma site by site and monument by monument.

In 2020, Armenian activists called for international monitoring of vulnerable sites in Nagorno-Karabakh by UNESCO and other heritage organizations. Nothing happened. Now is the time for the world to protect what Armenian culture remains in Nagorno-Karabakh. If we don’t, what culture will be next to go?”

Russia ready to support Armenia, Azerbaijan in signing peace treaty, says Putin

 14:22,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. Russia is ready to support Armenia and Azerbaijan in signing a peace treaty, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said.

Speaking at the CIS summit, Putin said that Russia is ready to host the Armenian-Azerbaijani talks.

“The preparation of the peace treaty [between Armenia and Azerbaijan] is on the agenda to finally put an end to the many years of conflict. The Russian side is certainly ready to provide all possible assistance to its colleagues in this issue. We are particularly ready to organize negotiations in Moscow, in any format necessary,” Putin said.

“We will certainly help in order for the talks to be completed with a signed peace treaty by the leaders of that countries,” he added.

President Putin said that Russia made significant efforts during the past three years to prevent escalation of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and end the hostilities.




“Mockery of European Convention”, senior diplomat lambasts Azeri kangaroo court against kidnapped Nagorno-Karabakh man

 15:13,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. Ambassador-at-Large Edmon Marukyan has called on Azerbaijan to stop the treatments that degrade people’s fundamental freedoms and human dignity and release all prisoners from Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh immediately.

Marukyan made the comments after a court in Azerbaijan started a sham trial of Vagif Khachatryan, the elderly resident of Nagorno-Karabakh who was kidnapped by Azeri border guards during his ICRC-mediated medical evacuation.

In a statement on X, Marukyan said that all existing proceedings in Azerbaijan are a farce, a mockery of the European Convention and a violation of all universally accepted international norms in the context of all obligations undertaken by Azerbaijan itself.

“The trial of Vagif Khachatryan, abducted from Nagorno Karabakh, has started in Azerbaijan today. He, of course, has nothing to do with the crime, he is merely punished for being born in Nagorno Karabagh and for living on his ancestral land. I want to make this very clear, in Azerbaijan, where the government has not changed for more than 20 years, during which 5 presidents were elected in Nagorno-Karabakh, which Freedom House rated as partially free with 37 score by all indicators, and Azerbaijan – Not Free, with 9 scores, there cannot be a fair trial, fair court and/or fair accusation. All existing proceedings are a farce, a mockery of the European Convention and a violation of all universally accepted international norms in the context of all obligations undertaken by Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan must end the treatments that degrade people’s fundamental freedoms and human dignity and release all prisoners from Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh immediately. P. S. In the video you can see a crying man in the fake court hearing,” Marukyan said on X.

A Baku court has held a preliminary hearing in the show trial of Vagif Khachatryan, an elderly Nagorno-Karabakh man who was kidnapped by Azeri border guards during his ICRC-mediated medical evacuation on July 29. 

In Baku, the Azeri authorities pressed fabricated charges against Khachatryan. Khachatryan has since been jailed in Azerbaijan. 

The hearing in the show trial will continue on October 17.

The Armenian foreign ministry earlier said that the arrest of the Red Cross-protected patient from Nagorno-Karabakh amounts to war crime.

Prominent lawyer Siranush Sahakyan earlier said that the kidnapping constitutes extraordinary rendition in terms of international law and a due process is therefore ruled out.

The kidnapped man’s daughter, in a plea to the UN to ensure the safe release of her father, said that all charges pressed by the Azeri prosecution are fabricated and her father is innocent.

Russia sends 6 tons of humanitarian goods to Armenia

 14:40,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. A Russian humanitarian mission has delivered 6 tons of humanitarian aid to Armenia, the Russian Center of Science and Culture in Yerevan said in a press release.

Specialists from Russia will deliver the humanitarian goods to the forcibly displaced persons of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The humanitarian goods include personal hygiene products, household chemicals and food.

Netherlands expresses readiness to continuously support reforms in Armenia

 15:42,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 13, ARMENPRESS. On October 13, Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan received the  chargé d'affaires of the Embassy of the Netherlands in Armenia Jaap Frederiks.

Simonyan said that Armenia is interested in further deepening and strengthening the Armenian-Dutch friendly relations, stressing the development of the parliamentary relations between the legislative bodies, the parliament’s press service said in a readout.

Touching upon the regional issues, he emphasized that Armenia does not stop making great efforts for establishing long-term peace in the region.

Alen Simonyan underscored that Armenia is ready for signing a treaty on peace and establishment of relations with Azerbaijan, remaining faithful to agreements reached in Brussels on 14 December 2021, in Prague 6 October 2022 and in May 2023.

Frederiks said that to establish peace in the region it is important that Azerbaijan also recognizes the territorial integrity of Armenia.

Reference was made to a number of issues regarding the further fate of the forcibly displaced Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh, prioritizing the unconditional exercise of security and rights. The opportunities of imposing international sanctions on Azerbaijan were discussed.

Jaap Frederiks commended the ratification of the Rome Statute by the Armenian parliament, describing it as highly important move. He also mentioned that his country is ready to continuously support the sectoral reforms being implemented in Armenia.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 13-10-23

 17:01,

YEREVAN, 13 OCTOBER, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 13 October, USD exchange rate up by 4.50 drams to 402.21 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 0.71 drams to 423.00 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.03 drams to 4.13 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 0.35 drams to 489.33 drams.

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

Gold price up by 306.29 drams to 24233.35 drams. Silver price up by 4.10 drams to 286.30 drams.