Asbarez: Assemblymember Holden Presents $2 Million for AYF Camp Revitalization

Assemblymember Chris Holden visits AYF Camp and inspects renovation plans


PASADENA – Assemblymember Chris Holden this week announced a huge budget victory which will impact two Armenian Youth Federation Camps that have been active in the 41st District since 1977.

The $2 Million will allow for the renovation of both Big Pines and Twin Valleys camp sites, creating a safer and more efficient space for the children and volunteers, while repairing residual damage from storms and natural disasters.

“I have long stood beside the Armenian community here in our district and abroad, and it is my honor to be able to assist the youth in this community. The success of our future depends on our young people having the resources, support, and representation that they need to be the best that they can be, and these camps serve as a space for mentorship and comaraderie. It will be a pleasure to see this funding aid in important renovations and to witness these camps continue to thrive,” said Assemblymember Chris Holden. 

The renovation at the first camp Big Pines will include updating bathrooms and cabins, installing energy efficient doors and windows, rebuilding the fireplace, replacing septic tanks, and upgrading the kitchen to meet county building codes. The renovation at the second camp Twin Valleys will include conducting wild fire mitigation, rebuilding the lodge and kitchen, replacing three septic tanks, rehabilitating the water system, and rebuilding the bathrooms.

“We are incredibly thankful for the partnership with Assemblyman Holden, and his monumental efforts to secure this level of funding for our Camp,” said Serop Chalian, Chairman of the AYF Camp Management Board.

“Not only will this allow us to make renovations to our camps, but it also reinforces the value that our camp brings to the Armenian Community in California,” Chalian added.
 
“This past weekend while visiting the camps, I heard the incredible stories of how the experiences at camp have led to life-long friendships, marriages, families, and generations of attendees. I watched the kids sing the Armenian songs with pride and jubilance. That is something special. That should be preserved and I’m just glad to help,” said Holden.

As USAID Calls for Opening Lachin Corridor State Dept. Urges ‘Compromises’ for Peace

A convoy of trucks carrying 400 tons of humanitarian aid is blocked from entering Artsakh


The United States Agency for International Development called for the resumption of free movement along the Lachin Corridor, while the State Department said the “difficult compromises” were required to attain peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

USAID Administrator Samantha Power said food insecurity and shortage of medical supplies in Artsakh are “very troubling.”

“Food insecurity & shortages of medical supplies in Nagorno-Karabakh are very troubling. The Lachin corridor is critical for getting lifesaving supplies to the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. I join Secretary Blinken’s call for the free transit of commercial & humanitarian supplies through the corridor,” Power said in a social media post on Monday.

The State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said United States wants “difficult compromises” from Armenia and Azerbaijan in order to achieve peace, yet he continued to ignore the ongoing aggression by Azerbaijan against Armenians both in Armenia and Artsakh, including the blocking of 400 tons of humanitarian assistance that has been stuck at the Hakari Bridge for seven days.

“We continue to talk about a peace agreement and we continue to believe that a peace agreement is within reach. However, we have always said that for it to be within reach both parties have to make difficult compromises, and that’s why the Secretary has been remained engaged in talking to the leaders of both Armenia and Azerbaijan to encourage them to make those difficult compromises so they can reach an agreement,” Miller said at a press briefing on Monday.

The U.S. Embassy in Armenia said the Special Envoy to the Caucasus Louis Bono will visit the region later this week to discuss “U.S. support for the peace process and the best way to achieve a lasting and dignified peace.” It did not elaborate.

The Armenian Service of Voice of America reached out to the State Department for comment about the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Artsakh, as well as the recent kidnapping and detention of Artsakh patient, Vagif Khachatryan, who was abducted while on a Red Cross medical transport mission on Saturday.

“The United States is aware of the detention of Vagif Khachatryan at the Lachin corridor checkpoint, who was being transported to Armenia for treatment under the escort of an international humanitarian organization,” the State Department told Voice of America
“The United States remains deeply concerned about Azerbaijan’s continued closure of the Lachine corridor to commercial, humanitarian, and private vehicles,” the State Department added, saying that “halting humanitarian movement further worsens the humanitarian situation and undermines efforts to build confidence in the peace process.”

“The free movement of commercial, humanitarian and private vehicles through the Lachine corridor must be restored immediately,” the State Department’s said. “We consistently claim that peace in the region must include the protection of the rights and security of the people of Nagorno Karabakh. We welcome dialogue guided by this goal.”

Meanwhile the Senate Foreign Relations Committee urged the U.S. and its allies to exert pressure of President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan as the humanitarian in Artsakh worsens.

“The ICRC has served as a lifeline to Nagorno Karabakh. Then Azerbaijan cut off its last remaining source of essential food & medicine.   More than 7 months into Azerbaijan’s blockade, the time is now for the US & its allies to exert pressure on Aliyev. Lives hang in the balance,” a post on Monday on the committee’s social media platforms said.

Former Senator Sam Brownback called for U.S. sanctions on Azerbaijan.

“It is getting progressively worse for Christians in Nagorno-Karabakh. The Lanchin [sic] Corridor is closed, in spite of an agreement to keep it open. Azerbaijan must be sanctioned for their humanitarian abuses before it gets even worse. #SaveKarabakh,” Brownback, who now serves as at-large ambassador for International Religious Freedom group, said in social media post.

Artsakh is Ready for Dialogue with Baku Through International Mediation

Artsakh resident block the road connecting Askeran to Aghdam on Jul. 18 (Facebook photo by Arshak Abrahamyan)


A day after Baku reportedly canceled a planned Western-mediated talk with Artsakh representatives, official Stepanakert reiterated its willingness to hold discussions with Azerbaijan with an “agreed international format.”

The Artsakh Foreign Ministry told Armenpress on Tuesday that it would be “inappropriate” to comment about the talks that were scheduled to take place on Tuesday in Bratislava, Slovakia, because it was Azerbaijan that opted to cancel the meeting.

Official Baku has not provided an explanation for pulling out from the meeting.

“We would like to emphasize that the authorities of the Republic of Artsakh have always been open to discussing reasonable proposals aimed at facilitating dialogue between representatives of Artsakh and Azerbaijan,” said the Artsakh Foreign Ministry, adding that Stepanakert, for its part, 
“has consistently put forward initiatives and proposals aimed at arranging meetings between representatives of Artsakh and Azerbaijan, with the involvement of mediators.”

The foreign ministry said that Artsakh believes that dialogue would be successful only when there is “sincere willingness and good faith of both parties to resolve their differences.”

“There is such willingness on our part,” said the Artsakh foreign ministry. “If the Azerbaijani side also demonstrates the same willingness, this will pave the way for the beginning of the dialogue.”

Official Stepanakert emphasized, as it has done in the past, that dialogue between Artsakh and Azerbaijan “must take place within an agreed international format, supported by an appropriate mandate.”

“This approach will facilitate increased engagement by the international community in the negotiation process, bolster legitimacy and sustainability of the process, and ensure reliable guarantees for the implementation of potential agreements between the parties,” the Artsakh foreign ministry said.

In announcing the cancelation of the Tuesday talks, Tirgan Petrosyan, Artsakh’s anti-crisis task force director said that the Azerbaijani side wants such talks to be held in Baku or another Azerbaijani city, something which is unacceptable to Artsakh’s leadership. Western mediators will visit Yerevan in the coming days to discuss the issue with Karabakh officials, he added without elaborating.

Asbarez: WATCH: Euronews Asks Pashinyan and Aliyev Same Questions. See How they Respond

Euronews interviewed Pashinyan and Aliyev for a special report that aired on Aug. 1


Europnews chief international correspondent Anelise Borges recently traveled to Lachin and Armenia and interviewed Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan individually.

She posed the same questions to both leaders and presented the responses in a special report that aired on the influential European news channel on Tuesday.

“We have been negotiating for months to get the opportunity to meet with two of the leading politicians of the countries involved in one of the longest conflicts in the world. We offered to ask the same questions to Ilham Aliyev and Nikol Pashinyan and give them the opportunity to express their point of view on the conflict  and  on perspectives of the world,” Borges said in her introduction.

While Pashinyan was interviewed in the prime minister’s palace in Yerevan, it appears that Aliyev was interviewed in the occupied Artsakh city of Shushi, on the margins of a media conference the Azerbaijani leader hosted there a few weeks back.

Borges also traveled to Lachin on an Azerbaijani military helicopter and filed a separate report from there, also speaking to Stepanakert-based journalist Marut Vanyan.

“Perhaps the most interesting thing during my trips to Azerbaijan and Armenia was what I saw and heard, talking not with politicians, but with locals — from both sides. Resentment, pain and that inextricable connection with the land of Karabakh that they feel, all this unites and divides them equally,” Borges observed in her report.

“Whether diplomats in Europe, the United States or Moscow agree, efforts to achieve peace must be done with an eye on the people and for the people.This will take generations, but only in this way it will be possible to build a new reality for the inhabitants of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia and Azerbaijan,” she concluded.

Below is a close transcription of the interview, the YouTube video of which is provided below.

“Not a Peace Treaty”
Euronews:
  Mr. President Aliyev, Mr. Prime Minister Pashinyan, thank you for this conversation. Nagorno-Karabakh has become the scene of one of the most violent conflicts in the recent history of Transcaucasia. And after the signing of the peace agreement in 2020, tensions are not decreasing. How do you explain this unrelenting hostility?

Ilham Aliyev:  Declaration signed on November 10*, 2020 ( the document entered into force on the night of November 9-10, 2020 – Euronews), did not really provide for the establishment of a lasting peace. A ceasefire declaration is not a peace treaty. This declaration was a de facto act of surrender on the part of Armenia. Therefore, we began to put forward initiatives for the final settlement of the conflict with Armenia on the basis of such principles as mutual recognition of territorial integrity, sovereignty, international borders, delimitation of borders, non-use of force or renunciation of the threat of use of force. And we put this proposal on the negotiating table. It is we, a country that has suffered from occupation for 30 years and that has restored justice by force, who have become the founders of a new peace process. I wouldn’t say it’s going very smoothly. But we do not lose optimism, because very active negotiations are now underway at the level of foreign ministers of both countries.

Nikol Pashinyan: The document signed on November 9, 2020 is not a peace treaty or a peace agreement as you called it. Moreover, it is not such in a legal sense, and not that de facto: a number of its provisions are grossly, maliciously violated. 
I agree with you: this is rather a certain concept of a future peaceful architecture that can be implemented. 

Unfortunately, many provisions are regularly violated by Azerbaijan. This is happening now. You see, you asked a question about Nagorno-Karabakh, and everyone understands this, but Azerbaijan, for example, continues to assert that there is no Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Closely from intermediaries?
Euronews: 
You have just returned from Brussels, where another round of discussions was held under the auspices of the European Union , and you met several times with the President of Azerbaijan. These peace talks gave hope for a lasting peace in the region, but judging by what you say, these hopes are in vain. So is it possible to achieve peace? What can you say about the results of these negotiations?

Nikol Pashinyan: Peace is not only possible, but necessary. This is my belief, my position. This is what I believe in. But for that to happen, it is important that the international community understands the important nuances, that it clearly understands why we are not moving forward at a rapid pace. Let me return to our penultimate meeting in Brussels, which was attended by the President of the European Council, Charles Michel. Then the President of Azerbaijan and I agreed, or rather, reached an understanding that Armenia and Azerbaijan recognize each other’s territorial integrity: the territory of Armenia is 29,800 km², the territory of Azerbaijan is 86,600 km². Mutual recognition of territorial integrity. So far, the President of Azerbaijan has not publicly confirmed our agreement. But he didn’t refute it either. This is a detail that does not contribute to creating a trusting atmosphere.

Ilham Aliyev: I think it’s right to have hope. In fact, these meetings allow touching on very sensitive issues: what will the border look like? After all, the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan has not yet been defined. As soon as the Soviet Union collapsed, we faced this aggression. So, the main thing is the border. What will be the real situation on the ground? What will happen to transport links? Let me remind you that following the results of the Second Second Karabakh War, Armenia undertook to provide access to our Nakhichevan exclave. But so far this has not happened. Therefore, the main work on specific clauses of the peace treaty is being carried out by the ministers. The meetings between the leaders of the two countries simply create, it seems to me, a favorable background. But if we see a constructive approach from the Armenian side, and most importantly,

Euronews: What does the EU offer at the negotiating table?

Ilham Aliyev: Initially, the EU did not participate in the mediation process during the period of occupation, when we have been negotiating since 1992. It was an initiative of the President of the European Council, Charles Michel, who invited us to the negotiations, and we supported this process, because, given the level of cooperation between Azerbaijan and the EU, Armenia and the EU, I think that the EU can be the best mediator, because our relations based on mutual respect, mutual trust and mutual interest. So this initiative is now developing into a very active dialogue format. And we meet not only in Brussels, but also, for example, on the sidelines of the last summit of the European Political Community in Chisinau. It seems to me that this is important, because we do not allow the situation to stagnate, because if there is a stagnation, if a kind of respite is taken again, then we are not immune from any dangerous scenario.

Nikol Pashinyan: First of all, I would like to emphasize that the benefits of mediation have long been known to everyone. But such discussions also have certain disadvantages. And if I may, I’ll tell you about one of them. I proceed from the premise that effective mediation is when non-fulfillment of agreements is followed by at least a demonstration of an appropriate political attitude towards those who have violated their obligations. On the Brussels site, for example, we do not observe this. I raise this question all the time. I’ll tell you a secret, we even prepared a document, which we called an “audit”, which lists all the agreements that were reached in Brussels, but subsequently were not implemented. And it’s a pretty impressive package. This cannot but be alarming.

Euronews: Do you think that the traditional regional mediator, Russia, is annoyed that the West (we are talking about the US and the EU) is playing an increasingly significant role in the region? Or has the fact that Russia got bogged down in Ukraine worked in favor of other players who are now also trying to help you and the Azerbaijanis find a common language?

Nikol Pashinyan: Let me remind you that all this rivalry between powers is not directly related to us. You are aware of the work of the OSCE Minsk Group, which was created to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. But since February 24, 2022, the co-chairs of the group simply stopped interacting. Individual countries have decided that they no longer want to interact with other participants in the process, hence all the problems.

Ilham Aliyev: Well, Russia mediated a ceasefire agreement or declaration on November 10, 2020. It was not the United States or the European Union. And our first meetings with my Armenian colleague were organized by Russia on Russian territory. After the outbreak of the Russian-Ukrainian war, the situation has changed, and we have seen the United States and Europe become more active. In fact, for us there is no significant difference who will lead the process or, let’s say, who will appropriate the laurels of mediation. It’s important to get results.


[SEE VIDEO]

Euronews: I understand that you have a long and complicated relationship with Russia. In your opinion, does Russia retain its influence in the region?

Ilham Aliyev: As for Azerbaijan’s position, little has changed here, because our relations with Russia will remain balanced. They are based on the recognition of each other’s national interests and, of course, territorial integrity and sovereignty. Russia is our neighbor and partner.

Nikol Pashinyan: Of course, due to the events in Ukraine, the interest of not only Russia, but also other geopolitical players in our region is declining, since in practice all international attention is focused on Ukraine. This is one of the factors.
Lachin: man-made crisis?

Euronews: Let’s talk about the situation on the ground, shall we? Both the EU and the US demanded free passage through the Lachin corridor. What happens on this road, which is of vital importance for the population of Nagorno-Karabakh?

Nikol Pashinyan: What is happening in Nagorno-Karabakh is a humanitarian crisis. What is a humanitarian crisis? Food is not supplied to Nagorno-Karabakh, there is not enough food. Foreign food supplies have been cut off. A number of essential goods are not supplied. Baby food is not supplied, there are no medicines. There are no hygiene products. There are no other essentials. Natural gas supplies to Nagorno-Karabakh were interrupted by Azerbaijan. The supply of electricity to Nagorno-Karabakh was interrupted by Azerbaijan. Fuel supplies were also interrupted by Azerbaijan. So there is a real threat of famine, we are also facing health problems and so on.

Euronews: You know Azerbaijan denies this. They say in Baku that the route through Aghdam is open.

Nikol Pashinyan: I don’t know what you mean, because I’m talking about a statement that I myself signed and which has the status of an international document. It clearly states that the Lachin corridor is under the control of Russian peacekeepers, and this is not only a road, but a 5 km wide zone, which should be beyond the control of Azerbaijan, it is this corridor that should provide a connection between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

Ilham Aliyev: Freedom of movement is not blocked. Since we established a border post on April 23, more than 2,000 residents of Karabakh have freely crossed into and out of Armenia. On June 15, Armenia committed another military provocation, wounding one of our border guards, and the road was blocked for the duration of the investigation. But then it was reopened. The Red Cross has resumed the transportation of medicines and the evacuation of patients in need of treatment in Armenia. But, unfortunately, illegal goods such as cigarettes, iPhones and gasoline were found in the Red Cross trucks during the check. The Red Cross acknowledged this and told us that they were not responsible for the smuggling. At the same time, the emblem of the organization was depicted on the trucks and on the uniform of the drivers.

Armenians of Karabakh before the “choice”
Euronews:
 About 5,000 people died on both sides in 2020. I came to Nagorno-Karabakh and met with many mothers of the dead Armenian soldiers. I was also able to observe pain and suffering from a different perspective, thanks to the work of my colleagues in Azerbaijan. I remember a conversation with a woman who said that she blamed politicians for the war and the death of her sons. According to her, politicians should resolve issues through diplomacy, and not fall into the traps of war. What do you think your mission is? Establish a lasting peace or win the war?

Ilham Aliyev: Well, to win the war was the mission of my life, or at least my political life, and I successfully coped with it. We have won the war. We have restored justice, we have restored our territorial integrity. And now we’re talking about the world. If Armenia wants peace, we will achieve it, because we have no territorial claims against Armenia, and we do not want them to have territorial claims against us. I mean, the people who live in Karabakh, on the territory that is now temporarily controlled by Russian peacekeepers, are in Azerbaijan. They have to make a choice: stay here to live as our citizens and ethnic minority – you know, we have a lot of them – or leave.

“Demanding peace from politicians”
Nikol Pashinyan: 
You know, in any case, war is wrong. If there is a war going on, then someone somewhere has done something wrong or a group of people have made mistakes. But on the other hand, what is the reason for the war? The reason for the war lies in the impossibility of achieving a lasting peace or maintaining peace. But is this reason genuine? Infallible? Isn’t this slyness? This is another question. My son was also in the war. And my wife was in the war. And now you are asking a very serious question. But I think it has many different levels of meaning. Throughout its existence, mankind has been talking about the need to avoid wars, about the need to strive for peace …

Euronews: Do you have something you would like to convey to the other side? It’s not about the politicians you meet during negotiations, but about ordinary people?

Nikol Pashinyan: I think that all the words have already been said. People usually say: we have lived on this earth for a long time and will continue to live here. Although, perhaps, there is still something that I would like to address to the public of Armenia and the public of Azerbaijan, because in both countries people should demand peace from their governments. This should be formulated precisely as a social requirement. And it must be carried out with competence, peacefulness and flexibility.

“We offer them a normal life”
Ilham Aliyev: I never thought about it, because for the first time in my life I am asked such a question. My message to the Armenians in Armenia: we want peace with your state. Another call is to clearly understand the current geopolitical situation and the alignment of forces. For many years, the leaders of Armenia have been convincing their people that they have the strongest army in the world, that if a war starts, they will come to Baku, the war broke this narrative. We don’t want another war. Not today, not ever in the future. As for the Armenians in Karabakh, they should not follow their so-called leaders. They lied to them all the time. Karabakh Armenians must understand that, being part of the Azerbaijani society with security guarantees and rights, including educational, cultural, religious, municipal, they will be able to live a normal life, they will no longer be manipulated. We offer them a normal life. And I think that if they hear me, they should understand it. And they know that I wouldn’t say it just like that.

European Rights Court Gives Baku 1 Week to Provide Information About Kidnapped Artsakh Patient

Artsakh resident Vagif Khachatryan before being kidnapped by Azerbaijani forces on Jul. 29


The European Court of Human Rights has given Azerbaijan until August 8 to provide information about the Artsakh patient who was kidnapped by Azerbaijani border guards on Saturday while on a Red Cross medical evacuation to Armenia.

According to Armenia’s representatives for international legal matters, Azerbaijan must provide information about Vagif Khachatryan’s location, detention and health conditions, as well as details about any medical treatments he has received.

Since being kidnapped on Saturday, Khachatryan has been detained in Baku on charges of “committing genocide” in 1993.

Soon after the kidnapping, Armenia’s legal representative applied to the ECHR to apply provisional measures against Azerbaijan.

The ECHR last month reaffirmed its earlier ruling calling on Azerbaijan to open the Lachin Corridor, which has been under a blockade since December. A similar reaffirmation was made by the International Court of Justice, which in February ordered Azerbaijan to immediately ensure “unimpeded movement” along the Lachin Corridor.

Azerbaijan has scoffed at both international legal rulings, despite calls from the United States, European Union and other countries to open the road.

Visit Armenia with Paros in October!

PRESS RELEASE
The Paros Foundation
2217 5th Street
Berkeley, CA  94710
Contact:  Peter Abajian
Tel:  310-400-9061
E-mail:  [email protected]
Web:  

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“I am excited for our upcoming Journey Through Armenia trip.  This trip allows participants to witness the best of Armenia including tour sites, restaurants and accommodations, while visiting meaningful Paros projects that have been implemented over the years,” said Peter Abajian, Executive Director.  “There is no better way for people to understand the impact the diaspora is having on Armenia and its development other than an eyewitness visit with an enjoyable group of Paros friends.”  

 

The exciting 10-day itinerary will include visits to major historical sites and project sites located in Armenia’s Shirak, Lori and Tavush Regions.  Participants will also get to experience some of Armenia’s rich culture through special planned performances.  Finally, participants will be able to “get their hands dirty” doing a bit a service work during their visit with children from the Yerevan Children’s Home and at the Debi Arach Children’s Center in Gyumri. 

 

Registration is open to both single and double occupancy. For more information about trip pricing and other details, please feel free to contact Peter Abajian, (310) 400-9061 or via email [email protected].

 

The Paros Foundation was launched in 2006 and has implemented more than $13 million worth of projects in Armenia through its unique model of philanthropy and community partnership.  These projects are located throughout the country with focus on Gyumri and in communities along the border with Azerbaijan.  Thanks to the generous support of the Strauch Kulhanjian Family, all administrative expenses are underwritten, allowing 100% of donor contributions to be allocated in their entirety to the projects. To learn more about The Paros Foundation, or to support a project, please visit  or contact Peter Abajian, Executive Director at (310) 400-9061 or via email, [email protected]

 

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Executive Director
The Paros Foundation
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RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/01/2023

                                        Tuesday, August 1, 2023


U.S. Envoy To Again Visit Armenia, Azerbaijan

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenian trucks carriyng humanitarian aid for Nagorno-Karabakh are seen stranded 
not far away from an Azerbaijani checkpoint set up at the entry of the Lachin 
corridor, July 30, 2023.


A U.S. special envoy for Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations will visit Yerevan 
and Baku again this week amid the worsening humanitarian crisis in 
Nagorno-Karabakh which seems to be prompting growing concern in Washington.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken again called for an end to Azerbaijan’s 
blockade of the Lachin corridor when he telephoned Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev over the weekend. Blinken said he expressed “deep concern” over the 
resulting severe shortages of food, medicine and other essential items in 
Karabakh.

Samantha Power, the head of the U.S. Agency for International Development 
(USAID), described the situation in the Armenian-populated region as “very 
troubling.” “I join Secretary Blinken’s call for the free transit of commercial 
and humanitarian supplies through the corridor,” she tweeted on Tuesday.

On Monday, an official in Stepanakert claimed that the Azerbaijani government 
has cancelled a U.S.-mediated meeting with Karabakh representatives which was 
due to take place in Slovakia on Tuesday. He said Western mediators will visit 
Yerevan in the coming days to discuss the issue with Karabakh officials.

The U.S. Embassy in Yerevan did not confirm or deny this. “We are ready to 
support any process that will bring peace and stability to people of the South 
Caucasus,” it said in written comments to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Armenia - U.S. envoy Louis Bono (left) at a meeting with Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian, Yerevan, March 7, 2023.

The embassy also announced that the U.S. envoy, Louis Bono, will visit the 
region later this week to discuss “U.S. support for the peace process and the 
best way to achieve a lasting and dignified peace.” It did not elaborate.

Washington has repeatedly said that the Azerbaijani blockade is complicating 
international efforts to broker a peace deal between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The 
State Department spokesman, Matthew Miller, insisted on Monday that the deal is 
“within reach.”

“However, we have always said that for it to be within reach both parties have 
to make difficult compromises,” Miller told reporters.

According to the State Department, during his conversation with Aliyev, Blinken 
“emphasized the need for compromise on alternative routes so humanitarian 
supplies can reach the population of Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Baku says that food and other basic necessities should only be supplied to 
Karabakh from Azerbaijan proper. The European Union’s foreign policy chief, 
Josep Borrell, countered last week that the Azerbaijani-controlled supply line 
“should not be seen as an alternative to the reopening of the Lachin corridor.”




Jailed Former Defense Minister Testifies Before Armenian Parliament Panel

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Former Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan testifies before a parliament 
commission, Yerevan, August 1, 2023.


Former Defense Minister Davit Tonoyan was allowed to testify before Armenian 
pro-government lawmakers on Tuesday despite being held in detention and standing 
trial on corruption charges strongly denied by him.

Tonoyan appeared before an ad hoc parliamentary commission tasked with examining 
the causes of Armenia’s defeat in the 2020 war with Azerbaijan. The two 
opposition blocs represented in the National Assembly boycott the work of the 
commission, saying that it was set up last year to whitewash Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian’s wartime incompetence and disastrous decision making.

Tonoyan called for an end to the opposition boycott in his opening remarks 
accessible to media. He also said that his decision to testify before the panel 
made up of Pashinian’s political allies should not be construed by the 
opposition as a sign that he has cut a “deal” with the Armenian government.

Gegham Manukian, a lawmaker representing the main opposition Hayastan alliance, 
was quick to reject his appeal. “We continue to insist that Nikol Pashinian and 
his regime cannot impartially examine their own actions,” Manukian wrote on 
Facebook

Manukian noted that Tonoyan criticized the opposition for trying to oust 
Pashinian in the immediate aftermath of the six-week war stopped by a 
Russian-brokered ceasefire. At the same time, he described the ex-minister as a 
government “hostage.”

Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks at a meeting with Defense 
Minister Davit Tonoyan (L) and top Armenian army generals, Yerevan, July 18, 
2020.

Over the past year, the commission has questioned dozens of current and former 
government officials, including Pashinian, as well as military officers. 
Testifying before it in June, the prime minister again defended his handling of 
the 2020 war and effectively shifted blame for its outcome onto Armenia’s top 
military brass. Onik Gasparian, the wartime army chief of staff, disputed some 
of his claims.

Tonoyan confirmed Gasparian’s earlier assertion that two days after the outbreak 
of large-scale hostilities in September 2020 the latter warned the country’s 
political leadership to stop them because the Armenian side is headed for 
defeat. He also said that Turkey’s direct military intervention in the war 
proved decisive for Azerbaijan’s victory. That intervention, he said, was 
unexpected for the Armenian military which had calculated that it could “fight 
back Azerbaijani aggression.”

“We had not calculated that the Turkish armed forces could appear only 25-45 
kilometers away from the Artsakh theater of war and carry out flights there,” 
added Tonoyan.

Tonoyan was sacked as defense minister in the wake of the war and arrested in 
2021 in a criminal investigation into alleged supplies of faulty ammunition to 
the Armenian Air Force. He, two army generals and an arms dealer went on trial 
in 2022. They all deny fraud and embezzlement charges leveled against them.




More Torture Allegations Revealed Against Armenia’s Top Investigator

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - The head of the Investigative Committee, Argishti Kyaramian, speaks 
during a cabinet meeting in Yerevan, January 19, 2023.


Three more men have accused the head of Armenia’s Investigative Committee, 
Argishti Kyaramian, of torturing them during an ongoing criminal investigation 
into a controversial video blogger based in the United States, prosecutors said 
on Tuesday.

Another suspect in the case, Tigran Arakelian, alleged on June 22 that Kyaramian 
and the chief of the Investigative Committee’s Yerevan division, Azat Gevorgian, 
beat him up in the latter’s office during his initial, brief detention. 
Arakelian was moved to house arrest earlier in June after being charged with 
blackmailing state officials. Kyaramian dismissed through a spokesman his 
“baseless” allegations before prosecutors ordered another law-enforcement 
agency, the National Security Service (NSS), to investigate them.

The Office of the Prosecutor-General revealed that the three other suspects also 
claimed to have also been ill-treated by Kyaramian in custody.

A lawyer representing one of the suspects, Artak Mkrtumian, said his client 
first alleged such violence when representatives of Armenia’s Office of the 
Human Rights Defender visited him shortly after his arrest.

“He said he doesn’t want to file a complaint for fear of further torture and 
also because he fears for the safety of his relatives,” the lawyer, Levon 
Baghdasarian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

According to Baghdasarian, such a complaint was lodged by another suspect, Artak 
Galstian. The latter is the nominal head of a small party set up by the blogger, 
Vartan Ghukasian.

A screenshot of YouTube video posted by Vartan Ghukasian, May 25, 2023.

A former police officer nicknamed Dog, Ghukasian is notorious for using 
profanities to attack both Armenia’s current leaders and their political foes in 
videos posted on YouTube. The Investigative Committee charged Ghukasian with 
extortion, calls for violence and contempt of court before a Yerevan court 
issued in May an international arrest warrant for him. The U.S.-based blogger 
denies the accusations.

The committee arrested Arakelian again and had him remanded in pre-trial custody 
last week after brining more criminal charges against him. It claimed, in 
particular, that he helped Ghukasian discredit a judge who allowed investigators 
to hold the other suspects in detention. Their torture allegations are also 
denied by the law-enforcement agency.

“With baseless and ludicrous allegations, they are trying to undermine public 
trust in the objectivity of the ongoing criminal investigation into the case 
involving them and facts uncovered by it,” a spokesman for Kyaramian said in 
written comments to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

He expressed hope that the NSS will assess their behavior accordingly. The NSS 
has not indicted Kyaramian or any other law-enforcement official so far.

“I have the impression that they are investigating [the torture claims] just for 
the sake of investigation,” Baghdasarian said in his regard.

Zaruhi Hovannisian, a human rights campaigner, was also worried about an 
official cover-up of the alleged torture. Hovannisian and other activists say 
that ill-treatment of criminal suspects remains widespread in Armenia despite 
sweeping law-enforcement reforms promised by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
government.

Kyaramian, 32, is widely regarded as one of Pashinian’s trusted lieutenants, 
having held five high-level positions in the Armenian security apparatus and 
government since 2018.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

India donates medication for thalassemia patients in Armenia

Kazakhstan – Aug 1 2023
Редактор:  
Kudrenok Tatyana

YEREVAN. KAZINFORM – India has donated 20,000 pills of an expensive medication used to treat thalassemia to the Armenian healthcare authorities, ARMENPRESS reports.

The medication was officially handed over to First Deputy Healthcare Minister Lena Nanushyan by Ambassador of India to Armenia Nilakshi Saha Sinha at the Yolyan Hematology Center in Yerevan.

Nanushyan commended the healthcare partnership between Armenia and India and underscored the importance of this donation, thanks to which the expensive drugs are given to ill children for free.

All 130 patients who are suffering from thalassemia will be given the medication for free.

Nanushyan and the Indian Ambassador also discussed new directions of cooperation between Armenia and India in the healthcare sector.

https://www.inform.kz/en/india-donates-medication-for-thalassemia-patients-in-armenia_a4096140 

Will the meeting between official Baku and representatives of Karabakh Armenians take place in Bulgaria?

  • JAMnews
  • Baku

“A potential meeting between Baku and representatives of Khankendi is being organized in a European country, possibly in Bulgaria.” This was announced by the historian Arif Yunusov, who lives in the Netherlands. Commenting on this information, political observer Haji Namazov said: “It is clear that Azerbaijan will not enter into negotiations with the separatist regime with the participation of international mediators without acceptable conditions.”


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Political historian Arif Yunusov told Turan that a meeting between representatives of Baku and Khankendi (Stepanakert) could take place in Bulgaria. According to Yunusov’s sources in European organizations, American mediators play a significant, though less well-known role in the Karabakh process, pushing for a meeting on neutral ground. While the Azerbaijani side is reportedly dissatisfied with the prospect of the meeting, it is difficult for them to openly refuse the participation of American mediators.

“The United States used various levers to put pressure on Baku and even proposed the idea of building a road through Aghdam. It is noteworthy that they called on Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan to comply with Baku’s demands. However, the success of the meeting remains uncertain due to potential stumbling blocks,” he says.

Yunusov points out that the Armenians now have a convenient excuse to avoid negotiations with Baku. “The recent arrest of Vagif Khachatryan in Lachin has complicated the situation, as he has close ties to Samvel Babayan, who is considered by Azerbaijani media to support a peaceful settlement of the conflict with Baku. Khachatryan’s previous support for Babayan complicates matters.

At the Lachin checkpoint of Azerbaijan, a resident of the unrecognized NKR was detained, who was transported to Armenia by the Red Cross to receive urgent medical care

Chairman of the United Motherland Party (Khankendi) Samvel Babayan publicly announced the acceptance of the consequences of the defeat in the 2020 war. However, during the first Karabakh war of 1991-1994, he led the illegal armed formations of Karabakh Armenians, who, together with the Armed Forces of Armenia, participated in actions that led to the destruction of Azerbaijani settlements, violence and ethnic cleansing.”

“The meeting between representatives of Baku and Khankendi was supposed to be held on August 1 in Bratislava. At least such a meeting was lobbied by Western circles.” However, the Turan agency notes that, as it became known to them from informed sources, the Azerbaijani authorities refused to meet with representatives of Khankendi.

Earlier, Baku invited representatives of Karabakh Armenians for a dialogue on reintegration in the Azerbaijani capital twice. But the Armenians ignored these invitations, after which President Ilham Aliyev stated that “they will no longer be invited to negotiations, and they must disband the separatist structures and obey the laws of Azerbaijan. Only in this case, they can count on an amnesty.”

At a meeting with the residents of Lachin, the President of Azerbaijan talked about his vision of solving the problem of the Armenian population of Karabakh

From other sources it became known today that Baku offered the Karabakh Armenians negotiations in the Azerbaijani city of Yevlakh, but Khankendi refused this proposal.

“Information about supposedly upcoming negotiations between official Baku and Khankendi in Bulgaria appeared in previous days in Armenian sources. So far, no one has announced this in Azerbaijan,” political observer Haji Namazov commented on the news for JAMnews.

According to him, perhaps the last conversation between Antony Blinken and Ilham Aliyev last weekend was devoted to this topic:

“It is clear that without acceptable conditions, Azerbaijan will not enter into negotiations with the separatist regime with the participation of international mediators. And the message about the construction of a road linking Agdam with Khankendi fits into this scenario quite well.

What can be negotiated? It is clear that the connection between Khankendi and Armenia is clearly interrupted – from now on, all transportation will be carried out through the territory of Azerbaijan, not from Armenia. What will the Karabakh Armenians demand in return? It is still difficult to judge this.

The President of Azerbaijan called the disarmament of the Armenian military formations in Karabakh one of the conditions for resolving the situation

The Armenian population of Karabakh has always had a maximalist approach to issues, but it is clear that Baku will not comply with them. But they can offer the Karabakh Armenians some kind of autonomous system of self-government – the organization of municipalities, for example.”

Namazov added that US mediation in this matter plays into the hands of official Baku:

“The State Department, as you know, welcomed Aliyev’s statement about a possible amnesty for the leadership of the separatist regime. In other words, the States accept the part of Karabakh, where the Armenian population lives, as an integral part of Azerbaijan, and it is normal for Baku to ensure its sovereignty over this part of the country.”

https://jam-news.net/will-the-meeting-between-official-baku-and-representatives-of-karabakh-armenians-take-place-in-bulgaria/

WHO and EU launch Health Literacy Corner to improve health education in Armenia

Aug 1 2023
1 August 2023 

News release

 

Reading time: 1 min (398 words)

WHO in Armenia has launched the first Health Literacy Corner in Yerevan, with financial support from the European Union (EU) and in coordination with the Yerevan Municipality. The Health Literacy Corner is located at the city’s No. 55 school and will serve as a resource centre, providing a wide range of WHO materials and tools to enhance children’s knowledge about health-related topics. More than 1300 students will benefit from the centre, and plans are underway to establish more health literacy centres in Yerevan, in line with the Healthy City initiative that promotes health awareness and education.

Commenting on the initiative, the Head of the EU Delegation to Armenia, Ambassador, H.E. Mrs Andrea Wiktorin, said, “In cooperation with WHO, the EU is supporting multilevel health education in Armenia, providing a variety of capacity-building opportunities for young people. Empowering them to act on health matters and become agents of change is crucial for a positive impact both on people’s lives and on communities”.

From informative brochures to Immune Patrol, an interactive game-based learning platform, the resource centre is designed to foster understanding and encourage healthy lifestyles. It also serves as a training hub for educators, and WHO will continue to enhance their skills and expertise, particularly in the field of infection prevention behaviour. Additionally, the Health Literacy Corner has been equipped with laptops to ensure continuous and seamless education, both in person and via distance learning. This will enable educators to be better prepared and effectively disseminate accurate health information to parents and students.

Dr Marthe Everard, Special Representative of the WHO Regional Director to Armenia, said, “All students and educators should have access to quality health information. We hope that the health literacy corners will contribute to the country’s efforts, providing access to information on health and well-being, including immunization.”

The initiative is part of an EU-funded project titled “Vaccination saves lives: supporting the deployment of COVID-19 vaccines and strengthening routine vaccination systems in the Eastern Partnership”. Within the framework of the project, WHO Armenia has been partnering with the Ministry of Health and Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports in building health literacy and awareness related to vaccine-preventable diseases among school principals, teachers and students in Armenia. Since 2021, WHO has provided training for over 2000 teachers across the country and piloted an online module on the immune system and immunization in several primary schools.


https://www.who.int/europe/news/item/01-08-2023-who-and-eu-launch-health-literacy-corner-to-improve-health-education-in-armenia