Azerbaijan opens fire at citizens doing agricultural work in Artsakh

 12:11, 15 July 2023

YEREVAN, 15 JULY, ARMENPRESS․ The message spread by the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan about the fact that on July 15, around 10:00 AM, the units of the Defense Army of Artsakh tried to carry out fortification works in the Askeran region, which were allegedly disrupted as a result of the actions of the Azerbaijani side, is another disinformation, ARMENPRESS reports, the Defense Army of the Republic of Artsakh said in a message.

"In this way, the Defense Ministry of Azerbaijan is trying to justify the fire of its units in the direction of civilians doing agricultural work. On July 15, around 09:50, the Azerbaijani side opened fire from firearms in the direction of civilians doing agricultural work in the village of Nerkin Sznek of Askeran district”, reads the message.

The incident was reported to the command of the peacekeeping troops of the Russian Federation.

International Court of Justice rejects Armenia’s request for Azerbaijani troops to withdraw from border

 eureporter 

On 14 July, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) published its decision to unanimously reject Armenia’s request for Azerbaijan “to “[w]ithdraw any and all personnel deployed on or along the Lachin Corridor since 23 April 2023 and refrain from deploying any such personnel on or along the Lachin Corridor”. Armenia had made a request for the Court to modify its February 2023 Order in May this year. The request was rejected unanimously by the 15 ICJ judges.

See the statement issued by Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Deputy Foreign Minister Elnur Mammadov welcoming the Court’s and stating that “Azerbaijan has a right to control its own borders. The ICJ rejected Armenia’s request to issue an order that would deny our country an inherent aspect of our sovereignty. The below request by Armenia was unanimously rejected. The best response to Armenia’s falsehoods.”

Some key points from the Court's order are:

  • Armenia’s attempts to spin the Court’s decision into a “win” and “reaffirmation” of its position is a profound misstatement -“Affirmation” of the Court’s prior order does not suggest that the Court credits Armenia’s position. To the contrary, the Court rejected Armenia’s requested measure that would have required closing the Border Checkpoint. [paragraph 29]
  • Armenia’s obstructive conduct is why the Court in its 6 July Order has also reaffirmed its previous 7 December 2021 Order that both parties shall refrain from any action which might aggravate or extend the dispute before the Court or make it more difficult to resolve.
  • The Court also made clear in the Order itself that it is “without prejudice as to any finding on the merits concerning” both Parties’ compliance with its Order of 22 February 2023. [paragraph 32]

Since the Border Checkpoint was established at the end of April 2023, at least 1,927 Armenian residents have travelled through the checkpoint between Armenia and Karabakh and more than a hundred cargo vehicles have passed through in each direction, to provide residents with essential goods, food, and necessary medical services and supplies.

https://www.eureporter.co/world/azerbaijan-world/2023/07/17/international-court-of-justice-rejects-armenias-request-for-azerbaijani-troops-to-withdraw-from-border/

"The negotiation process should be an internal affair of Khankendi and Baku." View from Baku


  • JAMnews
  • Baku

Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations

“Despite Michel’s appreciation of the leaders’ commitment to the peace process and his call for further bold steps, little progress has been made since the Prague meeting last October.” This is how head of Turan news agency, Mehman Aliyev, assessed the latest Brussels meeting between the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia, mediated by the President of the European Council.

Commenting on the statement of the Russian Foreign Ministry, he noted that “neither Moscow, nor Brussels, nor any other intermediary capitals are no longer responsible for the situation in the region, and the negotiation process should first of all be an internal affair of Khankendi and Baku”

Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations


The meeting between the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia, Ilham Aliyev and Nikol Pashinyan, mediated by the head of the European Council, Charles Michel, took place in Brussels on July 15. At the end of the meeting, Michel made a statement following the talks.

“Our meeting was the latest in a series of intensive and productive high-level meetings involving the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan, deputy prime ministers and foreign ministers, which have been held since early May in Brussels, Chisinau, Washington, Moscow and on the bilateral border.

We are going through one of the most complete and energetic stages of negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan,” Michel said after the meeting.

He “commended” the leaders for their “strong commitment to the peace process” and called on them to “take further bold steps to ensure decisive and irreversible progress towards normalization.”

“We agreed that our teams will remain in close contact to ensure concrete development of what was discussed today.

Real progress depends on the next steps to be taken in the near future. First of all, violence and harsh rhetoric must be stopped in order to create the proper environment for peace negotiations and normalization.

I also reaffirmed my intention to invite the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan to another meeting in Brussels after the summer, as well as to another five-party meeting with the participation also of the leaders of France and Germany in Granada, within the framework of the next summit of the European Political Community (to be held in October),” he concluded.

Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations

Despite the optimism in Michel’s speech, Azerbaijani expert Mehman Aliyev believes that since the Prague meeting in October last year, nothing has been achieved in the Armenian-Azerbaijani talks.

“In Prague, Pashinyan agreed to recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, including the Armenian-populated territory of Karabakh (ANTK), on the basis of the 1991 Alma-Ata Declaration, which recognized the existing borders.

However, no significant progress was made in Brussels on any of the six agenda items, and some parameters even worsened. These include increased border restrictions between Azerbaijan and Armenia, especially in the Lachin corridor, continued problems with prisoners of war, lack of progress in delimiting the border and concluding a peace treaty, as well as increasing military incidents in Karabakh.”

Aliyev believes that the facts point to a stalemate in the negotiation process, “when both sides are reluctant to promote peace based on their respective interests.”

“Azerbaijan refuses to grant a separate status to the part of Karabakh where the Russian peacekeeping contingent is temporarily stationed, while Armenia hopes to separate this part from Azerbaijan. It seems that the EU, as demonstrated in Michel’s statement, is seeking to keep the part of Karabakh with an Armenian population as a potential time bomb by imposing the former status of the NKAR created by Stalin in 1923. This is evident from the mention of the term “NKAO” in Michel’s statement.

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

On the contrary, the statement of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, published on the same day as the meeting in Brussels, does not mention NKAR. Instead, it highlights the importance of guaranteeing the rights and security of Armenians in Karabakh, based on the November 9, 2020 statement. Moscow highlights Armenia’s public recognition of Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan, which it claims changed the terms under which the statement was signed, as well as the status of the Russian peacekeeping contingent.

The Russian Foreign Ministry states that the responsibility for the fate of the Armenian population in Karabakh should no longer be shifted to third parties. This suggests that neither Moscow, nor Brussels, nor any other intermediary capitals are anymore responsible for the situation in the region, and the negotiation process should first of all be an internal affair of Khankendi and Baku,” the expert says.

Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations

He also notes that in the light of these events, Russia expresses its intention to actively contribute to international efforts to restore normality in Nagorno-Karabakh:

“The Russian government proposes to hold a trilateral meeting of foreign ministers in Moscow in the near future to discuss the implementation of agreements at a high level, including negotiations on a peace treaty. It proposes to convene a Russian-Azerbaijani-Armenian summit in Moscow to sign the aforementioned document.”

According to Aliyev, this indicates that the Kremlin does not want to wait for the results of two European meetings scheduled for autumn.

“However, given the global confrontation with the West, it is unclear whether Moscow will be able to achieve the signing of a peace treaty between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Armenia may continue to drag out the process, relying on France’s recent assurances of solidarity with Armenians and the European Council President’s use of the term “NKAR”. Europe’s recent actions provide some justification for Armenia’s cautious approach,” Aliyev concluded.

Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations

On the same day, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement regarding Nagorno-Karabakh.

The statement notes that Armenia recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as part of the territory of Azerbaijan during the summits under the auspices of the European Union in October 2022 and May 2023.

“While the Russian government respected the sovereign decision of Armenia, it emphasized that this recognition fundamentally changed the conditions under which the Statement of the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia of November 9, 2020 was signed, as well as the status of the Russian peacekeeping contingent stationed in the region.”

Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations

The Russian Foreign Ministry stressed that the responsibility for the fate of the Armenian population in Karabakh should not be shifted to third parties. Instead, he called for immediate preparations for the signing of a peace treaty between Baku and Yerevan on the basis of previously agreed terms. The statement emphasized the importance of providing reliable and clear guarantees of the rights and security of Armenians in Karabakh as an integral part of the agreement. It also noted the need for strict implementation of comprehensive trilateral agreements between Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, which include the unblocking of transport routes and the start of the process of delimitation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

All information from the United States about the negotiations between the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan, the demand from Nagorno-Karabakh to stop them until a truce is established, as well as an expert’s comment

In light of this, Russia expressed its intention to contribute to international efforts aimed at restoring the normal situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. The Russian government has offered to organize a trilateral meeting of foreign ministers in Moscow in the near future to discuss the implementation of agreements at a high level, including negotiations on a peace treaty. The statement suggested convening a Russian-Azerbaijani-Armenian summit in Moscow to sign the aforementioned document.

The Russian side expressed concern about the negative trajectory of the development of the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. It highlighted the deepening humanitarian crisis in the region, with the local population facing severe shortages of food, medicine, basic necessities and basic services such as electricity and gas.

The leadership of Azerbaijan was urged to take immediate steps to unblock the Lachin corridor, which facilitates the unhindered movement of people, vehicles and goods in both directions. In addition, the restoration of energy supply to the region was emphasized as an important measure.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan expressed “perplexity” and “regret” about this statement by the Foreign Ministry of the Russian Federation.

“This statement of the Russian Foreign Ministry does not comply with the Declaration on Allied Cooperation between the Republic of Azerbaijan and the Russian Federation, as well as the speeches of the President of the Russian Federation V.V. Putin on supporting the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Azerbaijan, including the Karabakh region,” the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a comment.

The document points out the “unacceptability” of the attempts of the Russian Foreign Ministry to “comment on and condition the territorial integrity and sovereignty of the Republic of Azerbaijan in the context of the recognition of Karabakh as an integral part of Azerbaijan by the Prime Minister of Armenia, which for almost 30 years kept Azerbaijani territories under occupation” .

Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations

As further highlighted in the document, Baku also demonstrates commitment to the tripartite documents signed by the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia.

The statement notes that in order to prevent the illegal activities of illegal Armenian armed groups in the country and ensure the transparency of transportation, the Azerbaijani side established the Lachin border checkpoint, which was established in accordance with the legislation of Azerbaijan and international standards.

“Over the past few months, hundreds of Armenian residents have been allowed to pass through this checkpoint in an organized and transparent manner. Despite this, Armenia, which did not abandon military provocations against Azerbaijan, fired at this point on June 15, and in July made attempts to smuggle it through the cars of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). Despite this, the Azerbaijani side, through the ICRC, again created conditions for the passage of Armenian residents, and also announced the possibility of meeting the needs of Armenian residents using the Agdam-Khankendi route. In this context, the complete groundlessness of attempts to politicize the creation of the Lachin border checkpoint, which is the sovereign right of Azerbaijan, and to voice the thesis about the allegedly existing difficult humanitarian situation in the region, is obvious,” the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said in a comment.

https://jam-news.net/the-negotiation-process-should-be-an-internal-affair-of-khankendi-and-baku-view-from-baku/








Richard G. Hovannisian

Dear Friends, 

As we prepare to lay our father to eternal rest, with deep sorrow and gratitude, I share this notice, hoping that it may be helpful in letting people know, in case they would like to and can be present. Please feel free to share. Thank you.
Sirov,
Ani



PNG image


RGH 4.png

PNG image


RGH at UCLA.JPG

JPEG image


Papa and Mama Graduation.jpg

JPEG image

Armenpress: Azerbaijan opens gunfire at Armenian military positions

 09:50,

YEREVAN, JULY 17, ARMENPRESS. Armenian military positions in two different provinces have come under Azeri cross-border gunfire, the ministry of defense said Monday.

“On July 17, from 12:05 a.m. to 1:40 a.m., units of the Azerbaijani armed forces opened fire from small arms at the Armenian combat positions in the vicinity of Sotk and Nerkin Hand,” the Ministry of Defense of Armenia said in a statement posted on social media.

The ministry did not report casualties.

Masha Mnjoyan wins the Grand Prix at "Slavyansky Bazaar 2023" international competition

 10:28,

YEREVAN, 17 JULY, ARMENPRESS: The 32nd annual international competition of young performers "Slavyansky Bazaar 2023" took place in the city of Vitebsk of Belarus on July 14-16, and this year 15 countries participated in the contest. Armenia’s participant in this prominent competition was singer Masha Mnjoyan, who amazed everyone with her performance and stage presence during the two days of the competition.

ARMENPRESS reports, on the first day of the competition, Masha performed the song "Пообещай мне любовь" (Promise me love), composed by Yevgeny Krylatov, the lyrics written by Igor Voznesensky, and received 66 points from the jury. On the second day of the competition, she performed Aretha Franklin's "Respect" as an international hit and received 69 points.

As a result, Masha received 135 points during the competition, becoming the absolute winner of the prominent competition and receiving the Grand Prix award. For the first time, Armenia won in the "Slavyansky Bazaar" young performers competition.

In the "Slavyansky Bazaar 2023" competition, the representative of Belarus won the 1st prize, the representatives of Russia and Uzbekistan shared the 2nd prize, and the 3rd prize was awarded to the representatives of Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

Anahit Galstyan, 10-year-old representative of Armenia, became one of the favorites on the two days of the competition and won the 2nd place with 133 points in the "Slavyanski Bazaar 2023" children's song competition held on July 12-14.

Azerbaijan must ensure free movement of ill persons through Lachin Corridor, rules ECHR

 11:11,

YEREVAN, 17 JULY, ARMENPRESS: On July 12, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), after examining the request of the Armenian government to apply interim measures against Azerbaijan regarding the unblocking of the Lachin Corridor, decided to reaffirm the decision made on December 21, 2022, the Office of the Representative on International Legal Matters said in a statement on July 17.

The December 21 ruling ordered Azerbaijan to ‘take all measures’ to ensure safe passage through the “Lachin Corridor” of seriously ill persons in need of medical treatment in Armenia and others who were stranded on the road without shelter or means of subsistence.

With this decision, the European Court of Human Rights reaffirmed the need of implementing the decision made of December 21, 2022 in the current situation, and it must be implemented by Azerbaijan.

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since late 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. Moreover, Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations and the Red Cross has been facilitating the medical evacuations of patients.




Demonstrators in Yerevan ask UN intervention to save blockaded Nagorno Karabakh, call on Russia to take action

 12:23,

YEREVAN, 17 JULY, ARMENPRESS։ Hundreds of demonstrators, including children, gathered on Monday outside the UN Office in Yerevan to call on the international community to help lift the blockade of Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh).

The demonstrators included displaced residents of Nagorno Karabakh who lost their homes in the 2020 war.

"In 2020, when the war started, a week later I and my family realized that we could not stay there any longer and came to Yerevan. Now, with this rally, we demand to open the Lachin corridor and respect the rights of our peers," said 11-year-old Arman in an interview with journalists. Arman and his family are originally from Hadrut but are now living in Armenia.

One of the children participating in the rally said that he remembers his school, home, friends with whom he was playing every day. Gevorg's father is now in Artsakh, he is a police officer. Due to the blockade of Artsakh, he cannot meet his father.

The children participating in the rally wear T-shirts saying "No to the blockade of Artsakh", "We are Artsakh", "Open the way of life".

Dr. Aramayis Galumyan, a member of the professional council of the Artsakh Ministry of Health, noted in his speech that currently a ‘terrorist attack’ is being committed against Artsakh.

"It is terrorism by a state, which is not a private terrorist group, but a terrorist state. It is an unprecedented phenomenon; 120,000 people are surrounded, deprived of basic food and health services. What is this if not terrorism? All international organizations, all major powers that establish order in the world are responsible for this situation. We demand to provide the population of Artsakh with food, health services, free movement through corridor and everything [else]," Aramayis Galumyan told reporters.

Mariam Avagyan, coordinator of the Congress of Refugees from the Azerbaijani SSR mentioned in her speech that Armenians have not lost their hope that they can save Artsakh with soft power.

"The Yerevan office of the UN regularly reminds me personally that they do not deal with political issues. Now, I ask a question: Isn’t the death of 2 young children in the complete blockade a result of politics? Why has the Yerevan office of the UN not yet spoken out about the impending genocide against Artsakh, which is currently under complete blockade? Today, Artsakh is subjected to genocide through exhaustion." The UN office in Yerevan is obligated to act as a mediator between the UN office in New York and us and to convey to them that the UN needs to save its reputation. The UN should not forget that it is the successor of the League of Nations, which did not recognize Artsakh as a part of Azerbaijan. The UN should take control of its many conventions, according to which the Republic of Artsakh is a de facto and de jure established republic," Avagyan said.

He added that recently they sent letters to officials in charge at the UN, in which they reminded that at least 820 thousand Armenians became refugees from the first Artsakh war, and from the second war, as recorded by the UN, there are 26 thousand 750 refugees.

"We demanded the UN Commissioner for Refugees to come to Armenia and find out the concerns of Armenian refugees. With the second point, we requested that the Secretary-General’s adviser on the issue of genocide prevention provide information on what actions the UN is taking to stop the genocide carried out by Azerbaijan against the Armenians of Artsakh through exhaustion, and to prevent it in the future," said Mariam Avagyan.

The demonstrators then walked through downtown Yerevan to the Russian Embassy where they held the same rally.

The demonstrators called on Russia to take action to open the Lachin Corridor. 

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since late 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. Moreover, Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations and the Red Cross has been facilitating the medical evacuations of patients.

Nagorno Karabakh President to address the nation

 13:04,

YEREVAN, JULY 17, ARMENPRESS. President of Nagorno Karabakh Arayik Harutyunyan will address the nation on Monday.

In a statement posted on social media on July 17, the Nagorno Karabakh President said he’d speak about the ‘grave situation and upcoming actions’ amid the deteriorating security and humanitarian situation caused by the Azerbaijani blockade.

The address is expected to be televised at 22:00.

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since late 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. Moreover, Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations and the Red Cross has been facilitating the medical evacuations of patients.

In memoriam: Richard Hovannisian, 90, celebrated professor of Armenian history

UCLA
Hasmik Baghdasaryan | 

Richard Hovannisian, a renowned scholar of Armenian history who was a UCLA faculty member for more than a half century, died on July 10. He was 90 years old.

Hovannisian earned his doctorate at UCLA in 1966 and joined the history department as a full-time faculty member in modern Armenian and Near Eastern history in 1969. An illustrious researcher and educator, he made monumental contributions to the study of the history of modern Armenia and the Armenian Genocide.

In 1986, he became the first person to hold UCLA’s Armenian Educational Foundation Professor of Modern Armenian History endowed chair; the chair was later renamed in his honor.

“The whole of the Armenian studies family has suffered an irreplaceable loss and will be forever in Professor Hovannisian’s debt for the many sacrifices he made to build the scholarly foundation of modern Armenian history,” said Sebouh David Aslanian, director of the UCLA Armenain Studies Center and UCLA’s current Richard Hovannisian Professor of Modern Armenian History. “It was a truly magnificent feat, especially since he did so at a time when he was practically alone and had no shoulders to stand on.”

Hovannisian’s published works include Armenia on the Road to Independence (University of California, 1967) and his four-volume magnum opus“The Republic of Armenia” (University of California, 1971). He also edited the two-volume “The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times” (MacMillan, 1998)which has become a definitive textbook of Armenian history.

“The loss of our precious friend and mentor Richard Hovannisian is deeply felt at UCLA and around the world,” said Ann Karagozian, director of The Promise Armenian Institute and a UCLA distinguished professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering. “Even late in life, he remained actively engaged in The Promise Armenian Institute, speaking at an event just this April.”

Taner Akçam, director of the Armenian Genocide Research Program, said, “Richard Hovannisian was a giant in the world of Armenian Genocide historiography. Though an era has ended with him, he will continue to live with us through his vast research contributions and the scholars he mentored.”

A child of survivors of the Armenian Genocide, Hovannisian scholar dedicated his life to promoting the study of the genocide and the full sweep of Armenian history. In 1969, he launched the Armenian Genocide Oral History Project at UCLA, which aimed to preserve eyewitness testimonies of survivors in southern California. Together with his students, Hovannisian interviewed more than 1,000 genocide survivors during the 1970s and 1980s. The oral history collection was donated to the USC Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive in 2018 in order to make it available in digitized form to scholars worldwide. 

Another of his signature scholarly achievements was the conference series Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces, which ran from 2000 to 2021 and resulted in the publication of 15 edited volumes on the history and culture of historic Western Armenia and the global Armenian diaspora.

Hovannisian co-founded the Society for Armenian Studies 1974, and he served as its president three times. He was also an active member of the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research throughout his life, and he served on the boards of numerous national and international educational groups. He was the first social scientist living abroad to be elected to the Armenian Academy of Sciences.

Among the numerous awards and prizes he received were a Guggenheim fellowship; the Medal of St. Mesrop Mashtots, which was presented by His Holiness Karekin I; and the Movses Khorenatsi Medal, awarded by the president of the Republic of Armenia in 1998. 

Hovannisian was predeceased by his wife, Dr. Vartiter Kotcholosian Hovannisian, and he is survived by his four children, Raffi, Armen, Ani and Garo.