Azerbaijan tightens blockade as Armenia calls for assistance

Aug 30 2023

The situation in Nagorno-Karabakh still remains uncertain three years after the 2020 war. While Azerbaijan has enforced a blockade of the disputed territory, Armenia increasingly fears a renewed conflict. The international community must now act to bring both sides back to the negotiating table.

- Mark Temnycky

Nagorno-Karabakh has once again caught the attention of international headlines as tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan continue to flare. According to recent reports, Azerbaijan has yet to lift its blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh. For more than 200 days, Azerbaijani officials have blocked the Lachin Corridor, “the only road that links the … region to Armenia.” Ethnic Armenians are being forced to withdraw from the region, and those who wish to stay are being told that they must take up Azerbaijani citizenship. Additional reports have stated that the region is running out of food and fuel. There is also a medicine shortage. Unfortunately, no one knows when the blockade will end.

These events are just the latest developments in a series of ongoing quarrels between Armenia and Azerbaijan. For decades, the two countries have fought over this territory. While several ceasefires have been signed, they have been constantly violated, and thousands have perished throughout the ongoing conflict.

To counter these ongoing disputes, the European Union established a mission to Armenia. The programme seeks to “observe and report on the security situation along the Armenian side of the international border with Azerbaijan. It will contribute to human security in conflict-affected areas in Armenia and build confidence between Armenia and Azerbaijan”.

The mission officially launched in February 2023 but European officials have struggled to make an impact. For example, while the EU announced that it would send a delegation to observe and monitor the situation, the programme was swiftly rejected by Azerbaijan. To Azerbaijani officials, they viewed the EU mission as an opportunity for Armenia to “procrastinate on negotiations” over Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijani leaders also see it as a “biased operation” as the programme discusses how it will protect Armenians in the region. It also does not include a mandate for “contain[ing] potential Armenian attacks or provocations against Azerbaijan”.

Meanwhile, the United States has also attempted to de-escalate the situation. In a recent statement issued by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the group stated that now was the time “for the US & its allies to exert pressure” on the Azerbaijani government to lift its blockade. US Senator Alex Padilla also introduced a resolution condemning Azerbaijan’s blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh. Finally, several senators have called on the Biden administration to impose sanctions on Azerbaijan in order to lift the blockade. Despite these condemnations and calls to action, very little has been done to force an end to the blockade.

Given these recent and unsuccessful attempts, Armenian authorities are now concerned that a new war is likely with Azerbaijan. In a recent statement issued by Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the leader noted that “So long as a peace treaty has not been signed and such a treaty has not been ratified … a [new] war [with Azerbaijan] is very likely.”

It is therefore imperative that a deal be reached between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Russia and Turkey previously attempted mediation following the renewed fighting in 2020. While a ceasefire was implemented, it was immediately broken. Since then, tensions have flared between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces, and several people have been injured or killed. Furthermore, Russia and Turkey have become preoccupied with their own internal affairs, which have prevented them from serving in greater intermediary capacities. Russia’s illegal and unnecessary war in Ukraine has distracted the Russians from other international events, and Turkey’s ongoing economic crisis has prevented that country from serving in a greater role as well.

This leaves the EU and the United States with the important role of mitigating the situation. However, thus far both parties have failed to make an important impact. Given the rising stakes, it is crucial that both parties increase their involvement to try and broker a settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. They must change their strategies as previous attempts have failed. Sending millions of US dollars in financial and humanitarian assistance is helpful, but creating a format where Armenian and Azerbaijani officials can meet and speak willingly would be an essential step forward. The EU and the United States must also discuss long-term strategies with the Armenians and Azerbaijanis on how they will resolve the blockade, how they can provide assistance to those in need, and how they can ensure that the conflict does not flare up again after the conclusion of renewed discussions.

The globe is already preoccupied with the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, and the international community is working hard to stop Russia’s war. The world is also carefully monitoring China’s involvement in Asia, fearful that the Chinese may perform a similar act in Taiwan. With the international community determined to prevent further international conflicts, and with the continued uncertainty of what lies ahead, it is therefore imperative that negotiations be agreed between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Otherwise, the globe might be faced with yet another international conflict.

Mark Temnycky is an accredited freelance journalist covering Eastern Europe and a nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center. He can be found on Twitter @MTemnycky

UK Prime Minister Urged to Prevent Nagorno-Karabakh Genocide in Open Letter From Church Leaders

UK – Aug 30 2023
 

Senior Christian leaders have called on UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to intervene urgently to prevent the genocide of 120,000 Armenian Christians in besieged Nagorno-Karabakh.

They warn that “mass starvation is likely in the coming months” as a result of Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin Corridor – the only land route into the beleaguered Christian enclave – that began on 12 December 2022.

The appeal to the UK government to stop “an act of cruelty and aggression that is leading to suffering and deaths” was issued in a letter delivered to Downing Street on 23 August. The letter can be read here as a PDF and is reproduced below in full.

Bishop Hovakim Manukyan was among the church leaders who signed the letter calling on the UK government to protect Nagorno-Karabakh Christians 

It was signed by Bishop Hovakim Manukyan, Primate of the Armenian Church of the UK and Ireland, and ten other senior Church leaders.

The letter describes the desperate conditions inside Nagorno-Karabakh, which is cut off from receiving any food, medicine, gas and other vital supplies.

“Hospitals are severely affected and cannot carry out planned surgical procedures; miscarriages and stillbirths have risen by a reported 30 per cent. Malnutrition is widespread, and cases of death by starvation are being reported.

“All evacuations of the critically ill have been suspended, and dialysis machines stand idle for want of necessary blood products.”

Lives of 30,000 children in danger

Warning that widespread starvation is imminent, the Church leaders add, “Our fears are also increasing for the lives of the 30,000 children, and pregnant women, affected by this unjustifiable and intolerable situation.”

The letter pleads, “Prime Minister, we urge you and His Majesty’s Government to take decisive action to open the Lachin Corridor to prevent the genocide of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“We trust that your actions will be timely to save the lives of tens of thousands of people on the verge of dying as a direct result of the current blockade.”

The Azerbaijan blockade violates the ceasefire agreement signed in November 2020 by Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russian that ended the 44-day war of that year.

The letter points out that the UN Security Council has confirmed that Azerbaijan recently prevented the International Red Cross from entering the region, and has blockaded a track that was being used for emergencies and to deliver medical supplies.

The Azerbaijan government has ignored calls to lift the siege from the International Court of Justice, the European Court of Human Rights and other international organisations, as well as UN Security Council member states, including the UK.

A former prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in August described starvation as “the invisible genocide weapon” and warned that without immediate change to the Azerbaijan blockade “this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks”.

Furthermore, a “Red Flag Alert for Genocide” has been raised about the conditions in Nagorno-Karabakh by the Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention, while Genocide Watch which issued a “Genocide Warning” as early as September 2022.

Pray that the appeals of the Church leaders will be heard, and that the siege of Nagorno-Karabakh will be lifted soon. Ask that our brothers and sisters will remain strong in their love of the Lord as they endure their ordeal.

The full letter to UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak from 11 Church leaders:


The Rt Hon. Rishi Sunak MP
Prime Minister
10 Downing Street
London
SW1A 2AA
23rd August 2023

Dear Prime Minister,

We write to you to seek the urgent intervention of His Majesty’s Government in stopping an act of cruelty and aggression that is leading to suffering and deaths of Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh.

Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin Corridor, now in its ninth month, has created a situation described earlier this month by a former Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court as follows: “Starvation is the invisible Genocide weapon. Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks.” The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention has a “Red Flag Alert for Genocide” about the current situation, and Genocide Watch issued a “Genocide Warning” as early as September 2022.

Since 12th December of last year, 120,000 Christian Armenians, including elderly people, women and 30,000 children, have been suffering the consequences of the devastating blockade imposed by Azerbaijan in violation of the terms of the ceasefire agreement signed in November 2020 by Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Russia, which ended the 44-day war of that year.

For many months now, and throughout the harsh winter and hot summer of the Caucasus mountains, food, medicine, gas, and other vital supplies have been prevented from reaching Nagorno Karabakh. Hospitals are severely affected and cannot carry out planned surgical procedures; miscarriages and stillbirths have risen by a reported 30%. Malnutrition is widespread, and cases of death by starvation are being reported. All evacuations of the critically ill have been suspended, and dialysis machines stand idle for want of necessary blood products. Mass starvation is likely in the coming months. Our fears are also increasing for the lives of the 30,000 children, and pregnant women, affected by this unjustifiable and intolerable situation.

Moreover, as was confirmed at the recent meeting of the UN Security Council, Azerbaijan has recently prevented the International Red Cross from entering the region and has blockaded a dirt track from Armenia to Nagorno Karabakh, which was being used for emergencies and to deliver medical supplies. The government in Baku has ignored calls from the International Court of Justice, the European Court of Human Rights, and other international organisations, as well as calls from the UN Security Council member, states, including the United Kingdom, to restore freedom of movement across the Lachin Corridor. There are no supplies of any sort (including of food and medicine) entering Nagorno Karabakh.

The Gospel says, “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me” (Matthew 25:40). As Christians and religious leaders, we are deeply alarmed by the worsening humanitarian crisis.

Prime Minister, we urge you and His Majesty’s Government to take decisive action to open the Lachin Corridor to prevent the genocide of the population in Nagorno Karabakh. We trust that your actions will be timely to save the lives of tens of thousands of people on the verge of dying as a direct result of the current blockade.

As church leaders we come to you to place this crisis in its humanitarian context and hope that you will use your good offices to relieve our Armenian sisters and brothers who are being deprived of any assistance.

Yours sincerely,

BISHOP HOVAKIM
Primate of the Armenian Church of the United Kingdom and Ireland and Pontifical Legate

ARCHBISHOP ANGAELOS
Archbishop of London Coptic Orthodox Church and Papal Legate to the United Kingdom

THE RT REVD CHRISTOPHER CHESSUN
The Lord Bishop of Southwark (Church of England)

THE RT REVD DR CHRISTOPHER COCKSWORTH
The Bishop of Coventry (Church of England)

The Rt REVD DAVID WALKER
Bishop of Manchester

ARCHBISHOP NIKITAS
Archbishop of Thyateira and Great Britain
President of the Conference of European Churches

ARCHBISHOP KEVIN MCDONALD 
Archbishop Emeritus of Southwark (Catholic Church)

BISHOP MIKE ROYAL
General Secretary, Churches Together in England

ARCHBISHOP ABRAHAM MAR STEPHANOS
Metropolitan of UK- Europe-Africa Diocese of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church

ARCHBISHOP ATHANASIUS TOMA
Syriac Orthodox Archbishop in the UK

THE RT REVD AND RT HON DR ROWAN WILLIAMS
The Lord of Oystermouth (Church of England)

https://www.barnabasaid.org/us/news/uk-prime-minister-urged-to-prevent-nagorno-karabakh-genocide-in-open-let/

Russia MFA spox: Lachin corridor situation is result of Armenia’s recognition of Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan

NEWS.am
Armenia – Aug 30 2023

The situation created in the Lachin corridor was the result of Armenia recognizing Nagorno-Karabakh as part of the territory of Azerbaijan. Maria Zakharova, the official representative of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA), stated this during Wednesday’s press briefing. She noted this when asked what the Russian side was doing to release the Armenians captured by Azerbaijan in the Lachin corridor, who had arrived there accompanied by Russian peacekeepers.

"This was recorded at the end of the summit with the participation of the leaders of the two countries under the auspices of the European Union, in October 2022, May 2023. This is clearly said in the statement of the Russian foreign ministry on July 15, regarding the situation created around Nagorno-Karabakh. In this context, I believe that placing accountability on the Russian peacekeeping contingent [in Nagorno-Karabakh] is inappropriate, incorrect, and unjustified.

"We see the issue of the contingent in such a way that, I repeat, in the new conditions that have emerged as a result of the recognition—by the authorities of Yerevan and Armenia—of Nagorno-Karabakh as belonging to Azerbaijan, it has all possible effects on the ground to ensure the rights and security of Karabakh Armenians, including in the context of a direct dialogue between Baku and Stepanakert," said the official representative of the Russian foreign ministry.

https://news.am/eng/news/777839.html

Three more Armenians detained at Azerbaijan’s Lachin checkpoint

Aug 29 2023
Lilit Shahverdyan Aug 29, 2023

On August 28, Azerbaijani border guards detained three young Karabakh Armenian men during their passage through the Lachin corridor en route to Armenia. 

They had been among the roughly 170 Karabakh residents being transported from Karabakh to Armenia that day under Russian peacekeeper escort.

The Azerbaijani General Prosecutor's Office released a statement saying the men were arrested for insulting state symbols and "inciting national, racial, social or religious hatred and enmity."

Azerbaijani media reported that they were members of a football team in the Nagorno-Karabakh town of Martuni that are seen stepping on an Azerbaijan flag in a video released in 2021.

It was later reported that the criminal charges against the three men were dropped "considering the age of the accused individuals, their sincere remorse, and compliance with the requirements of procedural legislation." The three will serve 10 days in administrative detention and then be expelled from Azerbaijan, according to APA news agency.

The Office of Human Rights Ombudsman of Nagorno-Karabakh named the three men as Alen Sargsyan, Vahe Hovsepyan, and Levon Grigoryan and said that all of them were students of educational institutions in Armenia.

The arrests recalled the July 29 detention of Vagif Khachatryan, a 68-year-old veteran of the First Karabakh War in the early 1990s who Azerbaijan accused of committing "war crimes." Khachatryan remains in custody in Baku.

"The abduction of Vagif Khachatryan and Alen Sargsyan irrefutably proves that the so-called checkpoint has turned into a tool for serving the Azerbaijani criminal arbitrariness, through which Azerbaijanis arbitrarily kidnap and deprive civilians of their freedom," the Karabakh Ombudsman's statement read.

The arrests of the three young men will boost apprehensions among Karabakh Armenians that their entire male population could be vulnerable to prosecution by Azerbaijan, which is intent on establishing sovereignty over the entire region.

The majority of the adult male population of Nagorno-Karabakh have links to the local army – they either fought in the first or second war (in 2020) or fulfilled mandatory military service at the age of 18.

Protests in Stepanakert

Following the news of the three young men's arrest, spontaneous demonstrations erupted in the de facto capital city of Stepanakert and in Martuni demanding explanations. 

Karabakh's de facto president Arayik Harutyunyan held a 6-hour Security Council session at the National Assembly in the evening of August 28 while thousands protested outside the building. 

The issues discussed included the fate of the arrested men, as well as possible solutions to the humanitarian issues the population has been experiencing particularly acutely since mid-June.

Responding to demands by some of the protesters for his resignation, Harutyunyan reportedly said: "Today, the question was also discussed: Should I be President? Tomorrow, the day after tomorrow we will decide everything in a narrow group, and if necessary, I will resign."

Discontent with the current de facto government in Nagorno-Karabakh has been growing steadily over the past 8.5 months of Azerbaijani blockade, which was made near-total in mid-June though loosened somewhat in mid-August. 

Karabakh refuses aid from Azerbaijan

There is no end in sight for the blockade, which has resulted in shortages of foodstuffs and other necessities that in turn have caused an increase in the miscarriage rate, as well as deaths from malnutrition. 

In late July Baku refused to allow an Armenian government convoy carrying 360 tons of humanitarian goods over the border and into Nagorno-Karabakh.

Azerbaijan has offered to supply the population through its own territory, a proposal backed by the EU and Russia but strongly opposed by the local population, which views it as an effort to legitimize the blockade and subjugate them.

On August 29, Baku unilaterally sent a convoy of Red Crescent vehicles to Nagorno-Karabakh reportedly carrying 40 tons of humanitarian goods. 

The Karabakh authorities are refusing to accept it.

"If the Azerbaijani authorities are really interested in eliminating the worst humanitarian catastrophe of the people of Artsakh and stopping the genocide, then they should not play false philanthropy, but simply not prohibit the restoration of supplies to Artsakh through the Lachin corridor, as planned in the statement of November 9, 2020 and the decisions of the International Court," said Lusine Avanesyan, press officer of Karabakh's president.

Lilit Shahverdyan is a journalist based in Stepanakert. 

https://eurasianet.org/three-more-armenians-detained-at-azerbaijans-lachin-checkpoint

Paris mayor escorts humanitarian cargo bound for Karabakh

NEWS.am
Armenia – Aug 30 2023

Anne Hidalgo, Mayor of Paris, posted a photo taken in Armenia and made a respective note on X—former Twitter.

"[I am] in Armenia with the elected officials of Paris and other communities. 120,000 Armenians of Artsakh [(Nagorno-Karabakh)], including 30,000 children, have been isolated, starving, and deprived of everything for nine months. Due to this humanitarian catastrophe, we are providing them with emergency aid. There is little time left," Hidalgo wrote.

The Armenian government has sent 361 tons of humanitarian aid to Nagorno-Karabakh, but the convoy of trucks carrying this aid has been waiting at the entrance to the Lachin corridor since July 26 because Azerbaijan is blocking their entry into Nagorno-Karabakh.

The first truck with humanitarian aid from France had joined the aforesaid convoy on August 9.

The mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, arrived in Armenia Wednesday to visit the starting point of the Lachin corridor, and to accompany the convoy with humanitarian cargo from France.

Why have Armenian women started marrying foreigners more often? Stories of three families

Aug 28 2023
  • Gayane Sargsyan
  • Yerevan

Mixed marriages in Armenia

Residents of Armenia have the impression that the number of mixed marriages has recently increased. This may be due to the influx of a large number of Russians since the spring of 2022, after the outbreak of war in Ukraine. However, there are no statistics to support this assumption.

The Statistical Committee does not yet provide data for 2022. In 2021, 17,165 marriages are registered in Armenia, of which only 135 are mixed marriages. In 2020, 12,179 marriages are registered, and only 97 of them are with foreigners.

These numbers were even slightly higher in the previous two years. In 2019, 520 marriages with foreigners were registered (out of 15,561), and in 2018, 495 (out of 14,822).

Interestingly, marriages between Armenian women and foreign men dominated the statistics in all years.

They accounted for 56 per cent of mixed marriages in 2021, 63 per cent in 2020, 55 per cent in 2019 and 52 per cent in 2018.


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“Young girls and unmarried women often say that it is difficult to find a suitable man to marry in Armenia today. Men, by the way, also complain that it is difficult for them to find a suitable soul mate. And this is not the opinion of one or two people, it is a widespread point of view. And people think that if they can’t find a suitable person in Armenia, they can find one abroad,” says psychologist Mirdat Madatyan and emphasises that creating a strong family with a foreigner is a more complicated process, which is not for everyone:

“In case of mixed marriages, there are much more contradictions and differences in the couple. They are conditioned by language, religious peculiarities, traditions. When a person takes this step, he should be ready to face these difficulties. And over time he should form his own family traditions – linguistic, religious, which will be acceptable to both”.

The psychologist emphasizes that many mixed marriages were created in Soviet Armenia as well. He believes that even now the majority of Armenian society has a favorable attitude towards mixed marriages.

Pankaj Singh from India does not share the psychologist’s view of the positive attitude towards mixed marriages in Armenian society. He agreed to the interview on the condition that the conversation would take place only with him and without a camera. He explained his position by a previous negative experience:

“Once we had a TV interview with our whole family. When I saw the aggressive comments that appeared under the video, I was very upset. They showed how little tolerance people have. From that day on, I decided that I will never allow my family to be shown on video again. I have to protect her. I don’t want people’s aggression to affect my children’s quality of life.”

Photo from the family archive

Pankaj Singh first came to Armenia in 2003, when he was 18. He received his medical education in Armenia and returned to his home country. However, after a few years he returned to Armenia to specialize.

In parallel with his studies he worked in several medical centres, where he met Ani, his future wife, a nurse.

Pankaj Singh’s parents took a favorable view of their son’s desire to marry a foreign woman. But there was tension in the girl’s family initially.

“Ani’s family accepted me well as a person, but they had issues with me. Several times I went to their house literally for interviews. Her family talked to me the way they do job interviews.

The issue that bothered them the most was the question of religion. They said to me, “You’re not a Christian, you’re of a different religion. If you have children, what religion will they adopt?” I said I had no intention of forcing my child to be a Christian or a follower of Hinduism. They will grow up and decide for themselves, but I will accept whatever they decide.”

Eventually the family agreed and the couple got married.

“Since I am not a Christian, we could not get married in a church. One day I told Ani: we have a few days off work coming up, let’s get married. We gathered 10-15 people, had fun, and that was it.”

Later, the couple had a lavish wedding ceremony in India according to local traditions.

Pankaj Singh emphasizes that despite religious, cultural and other peculiarities, Armenians and Indians have the same attitude towards family matters.

“It was very important for me to have a strong family. Studying the family models of the two nations, I realised that the Armenian and Indian family models are almost identical. That’s why it’s not difficult for both of us to live in this model.

And the peculiarities of the peoples complement each other. For example, in India they cook spicier food, and I like it. When Ani started living with me and trying different Indian dishes, she liked it. And now she cooks like that too,” he says.

“There are different threads that bind me to Armenia. This country gave me an education, gave me a family. I built my home here. And I am indebted to this country. I do everything to be useful to Armenia. If life happens so that I go somewhere else, I will definitely come back,” he assures.

German Ricardo Bergman and Louise Naslian met for the first time in 2016 in Yerevan, during the European Heritage Days event. They remembered this fleeting encounter years later, looking at each other’s photos when fate brought them together again.

After a year of volunteer work in Armenia, Ricardo returned home. But after a few years he decided to return, this time permanently. He settled in Dilijan. In 2021, Ricardo met Luisa again by chance in Yerevan. She was planning to open an art studio in Dilijan. At first, this became a common theme for them.

After a while, Ricardo asked her mother for Luisa’s hand in marriage. She agreed, expecting a traditional Armenian wedding. Instead, the couple soon announced their decision to start a life together.

“My mum woke up one morning and saw me packing my things, as Ricardo and I would be living together, having rented a flat. It was a shock for her, but I left because it was normal for me. I know couples who broke up a year after a lavish wedding. So the wedding didn’t matter to me. Ricardo didn’t have a stable job at that time, he couldn’t take on such expenses,” says Luisa.

Nevertheless, her relatives warmly welcomed the groom. Luisa thinks this was due to Ricardo’s charisma and the fact that the family had already accepted another foreign son-in-law before him.

“My sister’s husband is Ukrainian. One day my aunt said: “What imported sons-in-law we have.” There were no other conversations about foreign sons-in-law,” says Luisa.

Ricardo was always treated well in the community too. Luisa surmises that this is due to language skills. Her husband speaks Armenian perfectly – and immediately became “one of our own” to everyone.

“Our couple has never been criticized, not even slanted glances. But I know mixed families who are regularly criticized,” says Luiza.

She has her own opinion on why Armenian women have been marrying foreigners more often in recent years:

“In many Armenian families, girls are oppressed and boys are privileged. As a result, boys do not learn anything, their mothers do everything for them. And girls are the opposite: they do household chores, study and work. Being abroad within the framework of various programmes, they acquire a broader outlook and become more self-confident.”

Photo of Luisa and Ricardo, a family holiday

Her husband’s German poise and equanimity and her Armenian emotionality have had a positive effect on both of them, Luisa notes:

“I am a very warm person by nature, and now Ricardo has changed, he has become more sociable, more cordial to people. And thanks to him, I have become even more tolerant, more balanced and calm.”

The spouses came to a common denominator on issues of faith and religious values.

“Ricardo doesn’t particularly believe in God, but he goes to church with me,” Luisa says.

“I don’t think religion is important. If you want to do something good, you can do it without religion. There are many people who say they are Christians, but they don’t act according to their conscience, they lie,” Ricardo explains.

Luisa, who has two years of a harmonious relationship with her husband under her belt, advises girls who are faced with the choice of whether to marry a foreigner:

“If you consider any element of public opinion in your choice, you are being dishonest with yourself. Your choice should be based solely on the dictates of your mind and heart”.

Australian Len Wicks and Armineh Hakobyan got married 12 years ago. For many years they lived abroad, but in 2018 they bought a plot of land in the south of Armenia, in the village of Areni and moved permanently.

Arminet and Len

“It was never a matter of principle for me that I should marry an Armenian. I always thought the main thing was that he should be a good person. The only contradiction we had to overcome, perhaps, was the difference in attitude towards the problems that arose.

We Armenians prefer not to talk about them, we think it is better to keep silent at that moment and the problem will solve itself. Len doesn’t think so. He thinks it is necessary to talk about the problem in order to find a solution. Over time, I realised that silence is not the answer. If there is a problem, you should talk about it,” says Armine.

She lives with her foreign mother-in-law. She says there is a surprising and pleasant feature in her relationship with her husband’s mother:

“It manifests itself in female solidarity. Mothers-in-law in Armenia mostly protect the interests of their sons, try to do everything to make them feel good. And my mother-in-law tries to support and protect me more. She says to me, “Make it good for you, not only for my son”.

Фото Арминэ и Лена в армянской национальной одежде

As for her foreign husband, she says everyone around her has always treated him very well:

“And my mum was just fascinated by him. When I first met Len, she told me it was a Cinderella story. I’ve been through a lot of difficulties and meeting Len was a God blessing for me.”

Meanwhile, her husband’s friends were ambivalent about Armine marrying Len, a sought-after and highly paid professional.

“There are women who marry foreigners for the sake of obtaining citizenship or for money. In those years, this often happened. Some of Len’s acquaintances thought I had chosen him that way too. But marriages like that can’t last long. When they saw our relationship and got to know me better, over time they realised that they were wrong,” says Armine.

“The type of Armenian woman became a discovery for me, thanks to Armineh. I started to study the history of Armenia and found out for myself that the Armenian woman is a force that connects the society, its different layers. And I wonder why the role of Armenian women in Armenia is underestimated.”

Armineh conveyed to her foreign husband her love for Armenia. Inspired by this sentiment, Len published a book, “Origins: a Discovery.” He now runs a blog and speaks weekly to English-speaking audiences on the programme “Straight Talk from the Motherland”. He talks about the most important news and issues in Armenia.

The T-shirts say “I am Armenian” in Armenian.

“There are many mixed families who stick to traditions, are bearers of Armenian values and patriots. We also try to be like that and be useful to our country,” says Armineh.

Len, who has extensive experience working with the governments of various countries, has even expressed his willingness to cooperate with the leadership of Armenia and the unrecognized NKR. However, he has not yet received a response.

https://jam-news.net/mixed-marriages-in-armenia/

Armenian Photographer Seeks Default Judgment Over Attack on Jewish Diners

Aug 30 2023

A judge says she will hold a hearing in December regarding the possible finding of default judgments against two men who allegedly were part of a group dressed in black that attacked Jewish men and a non-Jewish photographer outside a Beverly Grove restaurant in 2021.

Photographer Mher Hagopian, an Armenian-American, is suing Samer Jaylusi and Xavier Pabon in Los Angeles Superior Court, alleging civil rights violations, assault, battery, conspiracy to commit assault, negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Hagopian’s attorneys filed court papers on June 30 seeking default judgments against the defendants for ignoring the civil litigation.

On Monday, Judge Lynne M. Hobbs, having taken notice of the default court papers, set a hearing for Dec. 7.

Representatives for Jaylusi and Pabon could not be immediately reached.

A cell phone video was recorded of the May 18, 2021, attack, which took place about 9:45 p.m. outside Sushi Fumi, a Japanese restaurant on North La Cienega Boulevard. A group of cars with Palestinian flags arrived with about two dozen passengers and megaphones, the suit states.

“The convoy was there simply to seek out Jews,” the suit states. “Indeed, the area of Los Angeles adjacent to Sushi Fumi is widely known to be one of the centers for Jewish life in Los Angeles.”

Hagopian was hired to take photos at the upcoming wedding of his Jewish friend, so the two of them and two Jewish friends of the future groom met for dinner outside at Sushi Fumi to discuss the wedding plans, according to the suit filed in March 2022.

Most of the convoy passengers’ identities were obscured by hooded sweaters or other garb that partially or fully covered their faces, the suit states. They yelled out antisemitic remarks, including “dirty Jew,” “Are you Jewish?,” “Are you Israeli?” and “Be ashamed of yourselves,” the suit states.

“Refusing to be intimidated, Hagopian’s friends responded that they were Jewish,” the suit states.

At least one bottle thrown from the convoy hit Hagopian in the head and one other glass object shattered on the sidewalk near dining patrons, according to the suit.

“All hell broke loose,” the suit states.

Other diners ran inside the restaurant or away from the area, but Hagopian and his friends were quickly targeted because they did not have the chance to escape, the suit states.

“At this point, Hagopian and his friends truly feared for their lives,” the suit states.

The plaintiff grabbed a nearby stanchion that had roped off Sushi Fumi’s outdoor dining area and tried to fend off the attackers and protect his friends, the suit states.

At least four men, including Jaylusi and Pabon, overtook Hagopian, slammed him against a vehicle and began beating him with their fists and arms while also spraying him with an aerosol chemical, the suit states.

“Hagopian’s selfless conduct saved others from suffering severe injury” and led to Jaylusi, Pabon and the others leaving, the suit states.

“In the aftermath of this chaos, Hagopian and his friends, and their fellow diners, were left physically and emotionally beaten,” the suit states.

Hagopian suffered emotional distress, embarrassment, humiliation and injury to his reputation because of the attack, the suit states. The attack was condemned by many faith leaders as well as then-Mayor Eric Garcetti.

https://mynewsla.com/life/2023/08/30/armenian-photographer-seeks-default-judgment-over-attack-on-jewish-diners/

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https://vigourtimes.com/armenian-photographer-pursues-default-judgment-for-assault-on-jewish-diners/

Baku again detains Armenians at the Lachin checkpoint

Aug 28 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Detention of Armenians at checkpoint on Khakari Bridge

A young man who was travelling from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia accompanied by Russian peacekeepers has been detained at the Azerbaijani checkpoint in the Lachin corridor.

The Armenian side officially reports “the kidnapping of 22-year-old Alen Sargsyan, a citizen of Artsakh who was travelling to Armenia for studies.” According to Azerbaijani media, three people have been detained and the young men are facing 10-day imprisonment for “insulting the Azerbaijani state flag in 2021”.

According to political observer Hakob Badalyan, in the current situation it is necessary to find “interim solutions to eliminate the blockade and ensure the security of Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh”. He suggests using “diplomatic mobilisation”. In particular, he speaks about the need to bring together the positions of the United States and Russia on the Karabakh issue.

On 23 April 2023, Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint in the Lachin corridor, the only road connecting the unrecognised NKR with Armenia and the outside world. Since then, Armenians have travelled along it only when accompanied by Russian peacekeepers and staff of the International Committee of the Red Cross. However, even so, there are occasional incidents when crossing the checkpoint.

The detention of young people is not the first such case. On 29 July, 68-year-old Vagif Khachatryan, who was on his way to Armenia for medical treatment accompanied by the Red Cross, was detained here. Azerbaijan accuses him of “participation in the 1991 Meshala pogroms”. Khachatryan’s relatives claim that he has nothing to do with the offences of which he is accused.


  • Internal political situation in the unrecognized NKR. Forecast from Yerevan: what to expect
  • “The future belongs to Armenia more than Azerbaijan” – Armenian analyst
  • “Waiting for a resolution”: details of the UN Security Council meeting at the request of Armenia

The local information headquarters reports:

“There is no reliable information about the reasons for the kidnapping of Alen Sargsyan yet. Azerbaijan continues its genocidal policy towards the people of Artsakh, once again violating the norms of international humanitarian law”.

Tigran Petrosyan, chairman of the anti-crisis council, said during a live stream on social media that more than one student who was travelling to Yerevan to continue their studies has been detained:

“At the moment one has been taken away, the other is being interrogated. Lentsov [commander of the Russian peacekeeping forces] left, it turns out there was a reason for this. Everything was planned: he left, and the Azerbaijanis used this opportunity.”

Le Figaro reports about France’s intention to submit to the Security Council a resolution on assistance to 120 thousand Armenians on the verge of starvation due to the blockade by Azerbaijan

The Armenian Ombudsman considers reprehensible and unacceptable “the abduction by Azerbaijan of people who are transported to Armenia through the mediation of international actors”, including Russian peacekeepers.

“In this case we are dealing with gross violations of human rights on the part of the Azerbaijani authorities, I mean that international legal guarantees and standards generally recognised in the modern civilised world regarding interference in fundamental human rights are not respected,” Anahit Manasyan said.

“Alen Sargsyan was kidnapped and taken to an unknown direction with the use of force and coercion by representatives of Azerbaijani border and other services,” NK Ombudsman Gegham Stepanyan said.

According to him, 170 people were travelling to Armenia. Azerbaijani border guards and employees of other services took five more people to a special room near the checkpoint for interrogation. Two of them, Vahe Hovsepyan and Levon Grigoryan, who are also students, have not crossed the checkpoint and cannot be contacted.

“The cases of abductions prove that the checkpoint has become a tool to serve Azerbaijani criminal arbitrariness, through which civilians are arbitrarily abducted by Azrerbaijanis and deprived of their freedom. The international legal and political guarantees of both the Red Cross and Russian peacekeepers are actually insufficient to protect the rights of the people of Artsakh, including ensuring free and safe movement,” Stepanyan said.

The human rights defender demanded that both international mediators take all possible measures “to ensure the safety of the humanitarian movement of people and the immediate return of the abductees.” He believes that without security guarantees the transport of civilians should be stopped.

The Ombudsmen of Armenia and MK stated that they will continue to collect facts and after summarizing them will present them to international organisations with a mandate to protect human rights.

Azerbaijan’s Trend news agency reported:

“In 2021, videos showing Armenian football players committing insulting actions against the Azerbaijani state flag were circulated in some media outlets and on various pages on social networks. In this regard, the General Prosecutor of Azerbaijan initiated a criminal case”.

The publication suggested that the detained young men would be subjected to administrative punishment and deported to Armenia.

The Armenian segment of social networks is no less active in discussing “the fight at the Azerbaijani checkpoint with the symbols of the NKR”. In addition to incidents with detentions, during the inspection Azerbaijani border guards found one of the Armenians in possession of backgammon with the image of the coat of arms of the unrecognised republic and the monument “We are our mountains”. It is more popularly known as “Grandfather-Grandmother”. The Azerbaijani Border Service confiscated the backgammon.

Confiscated backgammon

Azerbaijani border guards forced the removal of a banner with the inscription “Hotline of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Artsakh”, which also featured the coat of arms, from the ambulance.

“Meanwhile, during other discussions Azerbaijan cites examples such as Quebec or Catalonia, where national symbols are freely and widely used. It is time to realise that Azerbaijan’s goal is not peace and coexistence at all,” Gegham Stepanyan said.

A banner with the coat of arms is being peeled off an ambulance.

“The Azerbaijanis have taken away the entire Lachin corridor from the Russian peacekeepers. What is it for them to take away a person they are transporting along the corridor? It is still a question, if, for example, they think of taking someone from the corridor from the Russian peacekeepers, will the Russian peacekeepers be able to prevent this,” says political observer Hakob Badalyan

According to him, the main question in the current situation is what the Armenian side is doing, especially after the incident with Vagif Khachatryan. He does not rule out that “after today’s kidnapping, talks about some international or Scandinavian peacekeepers will start again”. He believes that under no circumstances will international forces appear in the region:

“International [partners] will say, ‘Tear your throat out, tear yourselves apart to come to an agreement with Azerbaijan’.” And this is said quite openly”.

“The emphasis of our diplomatic work should be directed to [ensuring inhabitants’ safety], to do everything possible to bring their positions on our issues as close as possible, to take them out of the mode of creating problems and interfering with each other into the mode of working with each other.”

According to the analyst’s assessment, in order not to face the need for a general military mobilisation tomorrow, the will for a general diplomatic mobilisation must be shown today:

“The political authorities are obliged to be the initiator of this process, and the rest should be ready to mobilise.”

https://jam-news.net/detention-of-armenians-at-checkpoint-on-khakari-bridge/


Sports: Armenian Government approves hosting of 2023 World Sambo Championships

Aug 30 2023

  •  

  •  Monday, 28 August 2023

The Armenian Government has approved the country’s hosting of the 2023 World Sambo Championships during a Cabinet meeting.

The Championships were awarded to Armenia by the International Sambo Federation (FIAS) after Egypt withdrew its interest due to "changed circumstances."

They are due to be held in Yerevan from November 10 to 12.

Following the approval of an agenda item at the Cabinet meeting on ensuring the organisation of the World Sambo Championships, Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said: "Yet another major international tournament will take place in Armenia in autumn."

He added: "Good luck to our athletes", as reported by Armen Press.

Explaining their decision to move the Championships to Yerevan, FIAS said they were impressed with Armenia’s hosting of the 2022 World Cadets, Youth and Junior Sambo Championships.

The 2022 World Sambo Championships was held in Bishkek in Kyrgyzstan with neutral athletes finishing top of the medal table with 14 golds, five silvers and 10 bronzes.

FIAS allowed Russian and Belarusian sambists to compete under a neutral banner at last year’s Championships.

The move led to Ukraine boycotting the event and at the time was against International Olympic Committee (IOC) recommendations.

The IOC changed its recommendations to International Federations in March, to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes to return to international competitions as neutrals, provided they did not support the war in Ukraine and were not affiliated to the military.

Anahit: The Armenian Goddess of fertility, healing and wisdom

Aug 30 2023
by LIANNA AGASYAN

In Armenian mythology, Anahit was the Goddess of fertility, healing, wisdom and water. By the 5th century BC, she was the main deity in Armenia along with her father, Aramazd (equivalent to Zeus). Historians and scribes have identified her with her Greek counterparts, Aphrodite or Artemis.

The Armenian goddess Anahit is related to the similar Old Persian goddess Anahita. Anahit, In early times, symbolised war until the Armenian goddess Nane took the domain.

According to the historian Agathangelos, the Armenian King extolled Anahit as the "great Lady Anahit, the glory of our nation and vivifier…"

She was considered the mother of all chastity and issue of the great and valiant Aramazd.

The annual festivity of the month Navasard, held in honour of Anahit, was the occasion of great gatherings, attended with dance, music, concerts and competitions.

The symbol of ancient Armenian medicine was the gilded bronze statue of the goddess Anahit.

Anahit was known as Golden Mother, and many statues were pure gold or bronze.

A fragment of the statue, the bronze head of the goddess Anahit, was found.

The statue may date to Tigranes the Great, King of Armenia (97-56 BC), whose rule saw prosperity throughout the region. The thin-walled casting of the bronze head suggests a late Hellenistic date.

The bronze head of Anahit was taken to England, and then it ended up in the British Museum.

You can follow Lianna Agasyan on X.

https://greekcitytimes.com/2023/08/30/anahit-the-armenian-goddess/