Armenia School Foundation Raises Money for Schools in Armenia at Successful Art Fundraiser

Armenia School Foundation Board and event committee members with Senator Portantino and Mayor Brotman


GLENDALE—Armenia School Foundation, a leading non-profit organization dedicated to supporting schools in Armenia, announced the resounding success of its recent art show fundraiser. The event celebrating ASF’s 20th anniversary, held on June 22 and 23 at the Tufenkian Art Gallery, exceeded all expectations, raised substantial funds for ASF and attracted esteemed dignitaries and a remarkable turnout from the community.

The art show fundraiser showcased an exceptional collection of works from local and renowned artists, creating a vibrant atmosphere that captivated attendees. From stunning paintings to sculptures, the exhibited artworks highlighted the beauty and diversity of artistic talent. This celebration of creativity served a noble cause, as all proceeds from the event directly contribute to the ongoing projects of the ASF.

Artists participating in the exhibition with Caroline Tufenkian (far right)

The overwhelming response from the community was truly heartening, with a remarkable turnout of art enthusiasts, philanthropists, and supporters of ASF. Their generous contributions, both financial and moral, have reinforced ASF’s mission to empower schools in Armenia and provide students with enhanced learning opportunities.

Moneh Der Grigorian, president of ASF, expressed her gratitude, stating, “We are immensely grateful for the incredible support we have received from our community, dignitaries, artists, and attendees. The success of this art show fundraiser has surpassed our expectations, and the funds raised will make a tangible difference in the lives of students and educators in Armenia. We remain committed to our mission and look forward to continuing our efforts to transform educational opportunities in the region.”

ASF extends its deepest appreciation to all sponsors, volunteers, artists, and attendees who contributed to the success of this event. Their collective efforts have brought the organization closer to their goal of fostering educational excellence in Armenia.

For more information about ASF, its projects, and future events, visit the website, or follow ASF on Facebook and Instagram.

New Video Details What Happened When Azerbaijani Forces Attempted to Plant Flag in Armenia

Azerbaijani forces attempt to raise a flag on Armenian territory


A video released on Friday on the Russian Telegram channels details the events of June 15 when Azerbaijani forces attempted to plant their flag on Armenia’s sovereign territory, after which Baku tightened its blockade of Artsakh by banning any travel on the road.

On June 15, Armenia’s National Security Service reported that its units prevented Azerbaijani forces from planting their flag on Armenian territory by firing shots. At the time a short video clip was circulated, prompting Armenian government officials to conjecture that Russian peacekeeping force were abetting the Azerbaijani forces in their effort to breach Armenia’s borders.

This resulted in a standoff between Yerevan and Moscow, with Armenia’s foreign ministry reporting that it had summoned Russia’s Ambassador to Armenia, Sergey Kopyrkin, and questioned him about the incident on the Hakari bridge.

Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova did not deny the involvement of Russian peacekeepers in the incident, telling reporters shorty after that the Russian forces were fulfilling their duties. She also shrugged off the incident by blaming it on the yet un-demarcated borders of Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The video released on Friday — three weeks after the incident — on pro-Kremlin media outlets’ Telegram channels chronicles the day’s event and shows that Azerbaijani forces made four attempts to raise or plant their flag on the Armenia-side of the Hakari bridge. Friday’s footage also shows that the Russian peacekeeping forces were attempting to deter the Azerbaijanis from advancing into Armenia’s territory.

The footage also shows that Armenian NSS units prevented Azerbaijani forces from planting the flag and after successfully downing the flagpole, they folded the flag and returned it to the Azerbaijani side, which would make three further attempts at planting its flag, with the final attempt resulting in the shooting down of the flag from the pole.

Officials from Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan have not commented about the video.

2 Armenian Soldiers Sentenced to 11.5 Years in Prison by Azerbaijani Sham Court

2 Armenian soldiers received an 11.5-year prison sentences during a sham trial in an Azerbaijani court


An Azerbaijani court in the city of Sumgait has handed a jail sentence to two Armenian soldiers kidnapped in May by Azerbaijani forces while they were delivering food and supplies to an Armenian Army unit in Syunik.

Harutyun Hovakimyan and Karen Ghazaryan appeared in the court on Friday and were sentenced to 11.5 years in prison on terrorism charges during a farce trial.

Armenia’s defense ministry reported on May 26 that Hovakimyan and Ghazaryan were ambushed by a group of Azerbaijani soldiers while on a routine delivery mission to one of Armenia’s military units.

The two were immediately charged with terrorism upon their capture.

Court proceedings began on Wednesday when prosecutors officially leveled the charges and identified four Azerbaijanis as “victims.”

Since the 2020 War, Azerbaijan has staged several sham trials and has sentenced Armenian prisoners of war illegally being held to various terms.

When the two soldiers were kidnapped, it was believed that Baku wanted to exchange them with two Azerbaijani soldiers who appeared on Armenia’s sovereign territory and were captured. One of them was charged with murder last month and sentenced to 11.5 years in prison for the killing of an employee at a gold mine.

Asbarez: International Court of Justice Reaffirms Ordering Azerbaijan to Open Lachin Corridor

The International Court of Justice on Feb. 22


Baku Says ICJ Ruling Justifies Illegal Checkpoint at Lachin Corridor

The International Court of Justice reaffirmed its February 22 ruling, in which it 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.”

The Friday ruling was in response to Armenia’s application regarding the illegal checkpoint Azerbaijan installed at the Lachin Corridor in April.

The ICJ said that at this moment it did need to amend its February 22 ruling.

The United States, European Union and Russia have all spoken out against the blockade and urged Baku to comply with the ICJ ruling. Yet Azerbaijan’s leadership not only has not heeded those calls, it has complicated matters by escalating the blockade, leaving the Artsakh population on the brink of a humanitarian crisis, which its authorities say is part of a systematic plan to ethnically cleanse the Armenian population there.

Baku on Friday reacted by welcoming the ICJ decision and declaring that the court opting not to issue a new ruling confirmed Azerbaijan’s right to control its “sovereign rights,” seemingly giving Baku the green light to tighten the blockade of Artsakh.

“We welcome the court’s ruling that has reconfirmed Azerbaijan’s right to control its borders, and that Armenia’s request on removal of the Checkpoint was unfounded. Thus, misinterpretation by the Armenian side of the latest decision is nothing more than a desperate attempt,” said a statement issued by Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry.

“Azerbaijan’s decision to establish its border checkpoint at the entrance of the Lachin road was in keeping with its sovereign rights to secure its border. (…) Azerbaijan (…) will continue to hold Armenia accountable for its ongoing and historic grave violations of international law,” the statement added.

AW: ANCA answers Ambassador Kristina Kvien

The ANCA’s Aram Hamparian issues a powerful response to U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Kristina Kvien’s reckless statements regarding Artsakh’s subordination to Azerbaijan.

WASHINGTON, DC – Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) executive director Aram Hamparian today challenged U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Kristina Kvien’s recent remarks recklessly supporting the forced subordination of democratic Artsakh to dictatorial Azerbaijan – a certain “death sentence” for more than 120,000 indigenous Christian Armenians.

Hamparian’s full statement follows:

Ambassador Kvien’s statement was not accidental.

It was, in fact, a calculated move – part of a broader Biden-Harris administration diplomatic effort to force democratic Artsakh under genocidal Azerbaijan.

The President is pursuing this reckless approach well aware that any settlement along these lines represents a certain death sentence for the more than 120,000 indigenous Christian Armenians of Artsakh. This inescapable truth explains why he and his team are striving so mightily – for both domestic and diplomatic reasons – to wash their hands of responsibility for backing Baku’s openly announced ethnic cleansing of Artsakh.

Such moral cowardice is unworthy of a country with America’s claim to moral standing, global leadership and military superiority.

The United States is under both moral and international legal obligations to proactively prevent and remedy ethnic cleansing. Azerbaijan’s own words and actions (blockades, attacks, blackouts, hate speech, outright threats, etc.) are more than ample evidence that the Armenians of Artsakh and the border regions of Armenia face genocidal danger.

The administration’s failure to take decisive preventive and preemptive action to protect Artsakh makes the United States complicit in Azerbaijan’s ethnic cleansing of Armenians. Even worse, the administration emboldens Azerbaijani aggression by continually flashing green lights to the Aliyev regime – continuing U.S. military assistance to Azerbaijan, denying U.S. humanitarian aid to Artsakh, and repeatedly failing to hold Azerbaijan accountable for its war crimes and rights abuses.

It is time for the Biden-Harris administration to meet America’s moral and legal obligations to prevent Azerbaijani genocide against Artsakh:

1) The U.S. should set a hard deadline for Baku to lift its blockade and cease all acts of aggression against Artsakh and Armenia.

2) The U.S. should impose Global Magnitsky and other sanctions on senior Azerbaijani officials for failing to meet this deadline, fully enforce Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act, and block all direct and third-party sales or transfers of U.S. weapons or defense articles to Azerbaijan.

3) The U.S. should immediately undertake concrete actions to prevent genocide in Artsakh by leading international efforts for the recognition of Artsakh’s status as self-governing, requiring 1) United Nations security guarantees, 2) a sustained international peacekeeping presence, 3) robust U.S. and international humanitarian and developmental assistance, 4) secure transportation, commerce and energy links to Armenia, 5) a strategic buffer zone and 6) food, water and energy security.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots organization. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters and supporters throughout the United States and affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


AW: Disney whitewashes genocidal Turkish dictator Kemal Atatürk

Atatürk to join the Disney family (Artwork courtesy of Vahagn Boudakian)

On October 29, 2023, Disney+ is set to release a mini-series titled Atatürk to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the proclamation of the Turkish Republic. According to IMDb, the series “tells the story of the life of the Great Leader Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.”  However, the use of the adjective “Great” in this description paints an overwhelmingly positive image of this highly controversial man. To many in Turkey, he is the ultimate hero and founder of the Turkish Republic; but to Armenians, Kurds, Greeks, progressive Turks, and all those who were subject to his genocidal agenda during and after World War I and the Armenian Genocide, he is nothing short of a mass murderer.

After the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) tweeted about the series on Wednesday, June 29, calling for its cancellation given Atatürk’s role in the death of hundreds of thousands, controversy around the series online has skyrocketed. The ANCA’s initial tweet—the start of what has become the #CancelAtaturk movement on Twitter—has generated over six million views, and upwards of ten media outlets have published articles furthering the conversation around whether Disney should cancel production and abandon this project.

During World War I, Atatürk served as a commander in the Ottoman military and worked closely with Talaat and Enver Pasha—the main orchestrators of the Armenian Genocide. After WWI ended, he continued communication with Enver and eventually rebelled against him to found the Turkish National Movement (also known as the ‘Kemalist’ movement) and create a “Turkey for Turks” in the wake of what he deemed the incompetence of the existing, crumbling Ottoman regime and to quell the rising power of the Empire’s ethnic minorities. As the Entente powers started appropriating Eastern provinces of the Empire to the newly-declared Armenian Republic, Atatürk retaliated in 1920 and declared war on the Armenians leading to the murder of up to 250,000 Armenians in less than three months.

Atatürk furthered his anti-Armenian policies by publishing a book in 1927 titled Nutuk (“the speech”) which he himself admitted to publishing for the purpose of writing (or rewriting) the official modern history of Turkey. In it, he wrote that the British imagined the idea of the Armenian Genocide to provide an excuse for their invasion of Istanbul in 1920. Moreover, he added that the Armenians were carrying out a policy of “extermination” against the Muslims of the Turkish Republic, not the other way around.

Atatürk’s “Turkey for Turks” not only excluded Armenians but also demanded the murder and systemic erasure from memory of every other ethnic minority that stood in the way of his vision. In 1922, Atatürk was responsible for the burning of the Greek city of Smyrna, killing over 600,000 Greek civilians and leaving 300,000 refugees with nowhere to turn. After World War I, Atatürk’s forces continued the Assyrian Genocide (Sayfo) that had killed upwards of 750,000 Assyrians in the Hakkari mountains and beyond, allowing his soldiers to rape young girls and sell others into harem slavery. Under Atatürk’s rule, 8,000 Christians were deported from Mesopotamia into the interior of Turkey, and by 1945, only 20,000 Assyrians lived in Iraq.

Then in 1937, Atatürk led his nationalist militia to the Kurdish-populated region of Dersim—a region occupied by the Kurdish people since the 16th century—and carried out an aggressive military campaign using aerial bombs and poison gas, leading to the murder of up to 45,000 Kurds. Just as Atatürk ensured that Smyrna was given the Turkish name “Izmir,” he renamed Dersim “Tunceli.”

Over the course of his 22-year reign, 28,000 topographic names were changed, as Atatürk made it his mission to “rewrite”  history as president of the new Turkish Republic and erase not only the genocides that he and his predecessors were responsible for from the historical record, but the very cultures and memory of the people they had slaughtered as well. If Atatürk didn’t destroy property formerly owned by ethnic minorities within the Ottoman Empire, he used it to compensate the génocidaires’ families, claiming that the property had been ‘abandoned.’

This policy of denialism continues in Turkey today with the Armenian and Greek genocides carved out of Turkish school history curricula and the very term “Armenian Genocide” banned within Turkish parliament. Atatürk’s complicity in cultural erasure was the consummation of genocide: the attempt to eliminate not only the physical presence of ethnic minorities but every remaining vestige of their existence and memory.

Online, many are arguing that Disney’s decision glorifies a historical villain with some comments comparing Atatürk to Hitler. Looking at the history of Nazism and its ties to Turkey and Atatürk, there is indeed historical basis to these claims. In 2014, historian Stefan Ihrig wrote a book published by Harvard University Press titled Atatürk in the Nazi Imagination outlining this relationship. Ihrig explains that during an interview in 1938 with Turkish politicians, Adolf Hitler said, “Ataturk was a teacher; Mussolini was his first and I his second student.”

While many Turkish Twitter accounts such as Turkish Archives have retaliated by tweeting about the supposedly positive mark that Atatürk left on the world, criticizing the ANCA and others for their condemnation of a figure so beloved by the Turkish people, Disney’s complicity in whitewashing the abuses of genocidal regimes is not without precedent and raises the question of why these seemingly misinformed production decisions continue to be made. In 2020, the corporation landed in hot water after it was discovered that the live-action movie Mulan had been filmed in the Chinese province of Xinjiang, the same region where approximately one to two million Uighur Muslims were forced into internment camps.

Given the negative press Mulan generated, will Disney reconsider the release of Atatürk? Since public disapproval of Disney’s filming in Xinjiang didn’t stop the multi-billion dollar corporation from releasing Mulan, signs are pointing to no. However, Disney’s complacency in conjunction with news that Emma Watson is believed to be starring in the series, is generating more and more online backlash daily. “Disney is known for its fairytales, but this one is beyond the pale,” Richard Ghazal, executive director of In Defense of Christians (IDC), said.

Ancestors of those killed by Atatürk’s policies are not holding back either. “I encourage Disney to do some basic research on the founding of the Turkish state, drenched in the blood of millions of innocent lives. Ethnic minorities like the Kurds are still paying the price of Atatürk’s racist and violent policies in today’s Turkey,” Diliman Abdulkader, president of American Friends of Kurdistan, said. Endy Zemenides, executive director of the Hellenic American Leadership Council added: “Disney’s impact on the American public gives it great responsibilities […] Atatürk is a historically significant figure for many reasons, and one of them is his culpability for Christians becoming an endangered species in Turkey. That HAS to be part of the story.”

In an effort to place direct public pressure on Disney, popular Armenian news outlet 301.am has posted a fully-drafted email for members of the public to send out, calling for the cancellation of the series, complete with the emails of 27 Disney executives on its website. Similarly, the ANCA is calling on Disney employees allied with “Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Kurds, Christians, journalists, rights advocates or other victim groups persecuted by Turkey” to send confidential notes to [email protected].

Ruby Topalian was born in a rural town in Wales but has lived in Maryland for the last ten years. She is entering her second year at Trinity College Dublin as part of Columbia University’s Dual Degree program. Her primary professional interest is journalism, and she works as the features editor of Trinity News and the opinion editor of Trinity International Affairs magazine, The Colloquium. She looks forward to a fulfilling journalistic career covering the Middle East with a specific focus on Armenia and the Caucasus. In 2023, she participated in the ANCA Leo Sarkisian Summer Program.


RFE/RL Armenian Service – 07/07/2023

                                        Friday, July 7, 2023


France Wants Security Guarantees For Karabakh Armenians


Azerbaijan - French Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna attends a joint news 
conference with Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov in Baku, April 27, 
2023.


A peace accord between Armenia and Azerbaijan must contain firm security 
guarantees for Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population, French Foreign 
Minister Catherine Colonna said late on Thursday.

Colonna and her Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan discussed ongoing 
Armenian-Azerbaijani talks on such a treaty in a phone call.

“The Minister confirmed France’s full mobilization in support of the 
negotiations under way between Armenia and Azerbaijan on all outstanding 
issues,” the French Foreign Ministry said in a statement on the call.

“She emphasized that only an agreement that respects international law, 
guaranteeing the opportunity for the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh to 
continue living there with their rights and culture respected, could lead to a 
just and lasting peace between the two countries,” added the statement.

Armenia maintains that such guarantees should be worked out through an 
“international mechanism” for a dialogue between the Azerbaijani government and 
Karabakh’s leadership. The Armenian Foreign Ministry said late last week that 
Baku and Yerevan continue to disagree on this issue. Azerbaijani Foreign 
Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said earlier that his government will not agree to any 
special arrangements for the rights and security of the Karabakh Armenians.

In recent months, Baku has repeatedly accused France’s President Emmanuel Macron 
and other officials of siding with Armenia in the conflict. Azerbaijani 
President Ilham Aliyev charged on Monday that Paris is fomenting “Armenian 
separatism” in Karabakh.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian rejected the Azerbaijani criticism and praised 
France on Thursday, saying that he hopes more countries will follow its example.

“The [Azerbaijani] propaganda against France is aimed at preventing other 
countries from adequately assessing the humanitarian crisis in 
Nagorno-Karabakh,” he said.

Pashinian himself has been accused by his domestic political opponents of 
jeopardizing Karabakh’s security with his recent pledge to recognize Azerbaijani 
sovereignty over the region.




Minister Defends Ouster Of Outspoken Judge

        • Narine Ghalechian

Armenia - Justice Minister Grigor Minasian, December 26, 2022.


Justice Minister Grigor Minasian on Friday defended his decision to initiate the 
dismissal of a prominent judge who accused Armenia’s government and state 
judicial watchdog of seeking to control courts.

The Armenian Ministry of Justice petitioned the Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) 
last month to take disciplinary action against the judge, Davit Harutiunian, 
after he claimed that the SJC arbitrarily fires his colleagues at the behest of 
a single person. The state watchdog headed by Karen Andreasian, a political ally 
of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, sacked Harutiunian on Monday.

Opposition figures and lawyers portrayed the move as further proof that 
Pashinian’s government is seeking to further curb judicial independence in 
Armenia under the guise of Western-backed “judicial reforms.”

“The Judicial Code stipulates that a judge has no right to criticize another 
judicial body, which in this case was the Supreme Judicial Council,” Minasian 
countered as he answered questions from Facebook users at the RFE/RL studio in 
Yerevan.

“If a judge … has been fine and happy with the judicial system for 12 years and 
started making statements only after disciplinary proceedings were launched 
against him or his friend, I see a conflict of interest here,” he said, accusing 
Harutiunian of “caring only about his own skin.”

Harutiunian’s ouster highlighted the Armenian authorities’ growing recourse to 
punitive measures against judges. The practice was facilitated by a 2021 law 
which Andreasian helped to enact in his previous capacity as justice minister. 
The number of disciplinary proceedings against judges has risen sharply in the 
last two years.

Last December, the SJC controversially fired a judge married to a vocal critic 
of the government. Another Yerevan judge, Zaruhi Nakhshkarian, openly criticized 
Anahit Pilosian’s sacking. Nakhshkarian lost her job as a result. Her removal 
was also initiated by the Ministry of Justice.

Andreasian terminated his membership in Pashinian’s Civil Contract party shortly 
before taking over as SJC chairman last October. Minasian succeeded him as 
justice minister. The two men are close friends, according to some media 
reports. They were spotted meeting at a café in Yerevan on June 23, after the 
formal launch of the disciplinary proceedings against Harutiunian.

The SJC is a supposedly independent body that nominates judges, monitors their 
work and can fire them.




Top Biden Aide Meets Armenian Official


U.S. - U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan speaks at a press briefing 
at the White House in Washington, April 24, 2023.


U.S. President Joe Biden's national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, met with a 
senior Armenian official in Washington late on Thursday for talks on regional 
security and U.S.-Armenian relations.

“We discussed the security situation and challenges in the region and the wider 
region,” Armen Grigorian, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, wrote on 
Facebook on Friday. “In this context, I presented to my interlocutor the 
Armenian side’s approaches to a number of important directions.”

In his words, bilateral ties were also on the agenda, with both men calling for 
closer U.S.-Armenian cooperation on “energy, economy and democracy.” Grigorian 
did not explicitly mention ongoing Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks or give 
other details of the meeting.

Neither Sullivan nor his office issued a statement on the meeting that came one 
week after the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers concluded a new round 
of U.S.-mediated negotiations on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty. The 
ministers held trilateral meetings in Washington with Sullivan and U.S. 
Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

Blinken said on June 29 that despite “further progress” made by them “there 
remains hard work to be done to try to reach a final agreement.” Armenian Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian likewise noted on Thursday that the progress “not 
significant.”

“Unfortunately, the text of the peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan is 
not yet ready for signing,” Pashinian said.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said on June 30 that the conflicting sides 
continue to disagree on mechanisms for delimiting the Armenian-Azerbaijan border 
and organizing a dialogue between Baku and Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership.

The U.S. ambassador to Armenia, Kristina Kvien, on Thursday reaffirmed 
Washington’s support for such dialogue. “The question of the rights and security 
of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh is central to the conflict between Armenia 
and Azerbaijan,” she said.





Captured Armenian Soldiers Sentenced In Azerbaijan

        • Robert Zargarian

Azerbaijan - Armenian soldiers stand trial in Sumgait, July 5, 2023.


A court in Azerbaijan sentenced two Armenian soldiers to 11.5 years in prison on 
Friday more than one month after they were captured by Azerbaijani forces in an 
apparent cross-border incursion.

According to the Armenian Defense Ministry, the soldiers, Harutiun Hovagimian 
and Karen Ghazarian, were ambushed and “kidnapped” on May 26 after delivering 
water and food to Armenian army units guarding the border with Azerbaijan. The 
ministry published photographs of their abandoned military truck found in a 
wooded area in in Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province.

The Azerbaijani side claimed that Hovagimian and Ghazarian were taken prisoner 
during a sabotage attack on an Azerbaijani army outpost. It brought a string of 
criminal charges, including “terrorism,” against them. They were convicted of 
these charges, strongly denied by Yerevan, at the end of a brief trial that 
began on Monday.

Artak Zeynalian, a human rights lawyer representing the families of dozens of 
other Armenian prisoners of war held in Azerbaijan, described the trial as a 
“farce.” Zeynalian said the Azerbaijani military “kidnapped” Hovagimian and 
Ghazarian in hopes of swapping them with two Azerbaijani soldiers who were 
detained in Armenia in April.

Baku has repeatedly demanded the release of the Azerbaijani conscripts, saying 
that they strayed into Armenian territory from the Nakhichevan exclave due to 
heavy fog.

One of them, Huseyn Akhundov, was charged with murdering a Syunik resident one 
day before his detention. An Armenian court sentenced Akhundov to 20 years in 
prison on June 21.

The other Azerbaijani soldier, Agshin Bebirov, was given a 11.5-year prison 
sentence in May. Both rulings were condemned by Baku.


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.

 

Armenpress: Armenia gears up for FIBA U16 and U18 Women’s European Championships

 09:20, 7 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian U16 and U18 women’s basketball teams are getting ready for the 2023 FIBA U16 Women's European Championship, Division C and FIBA U18 Women's European Championship , Division C tournaments this summer.

The FIBA U16 Women's European Championship, Division C is one of 16 youth events that will take place across the summer of 2023.

The tournament will take place in Andorra la Vella, Andorra from July 18-23, 2023.

And the 2023 edition of the FIBA U18 Women's European Championship, Division C will take place in Durres, Albania from August 1-6, featuring seven national teams from across Europe.

The Armenian U16 team will face Georgia, Malta, Gibraltar, while the U18 team will compete against Moldova, Kosovo and Albania.

“I don’t like to make predictions, but I think our team is in a normal shape,” Vahagn Harutyunyan, the head coach of the Armenian U16 and U18 women’s basketball teams told ARMENPRESS.

Four players from the U.S. will join the main squad, he said.  “But the players who participated in the national tournament will bear the main burden. I think we will be able to reach the finals,” Harutyunyan said.

Asked to assess the U16 team’s rivals Georgia, Malta and Gibraltar, the coach said: “As a rule, Malta competes in this kind of tournaments with a fine team. I don’t recall any round of tournament where they had a weak team. Meanwhile in Georgia, women’s basketball is developing rapidly because they are making large investments. For comparison, they virtually had no women’s teams in 2017, but just a few years ago they already won in one of their subgroups. Gibraltar’s team is below average. But they too have developed. Without exaggeration, our team won’t face easy opponents in this group.”

Speaking about Armenian basketball and the development of the sport in the country, coach Harutyunyan said the fact that national championships are being held already means that there is development. “We now have women players who meet European standards. We have Seda Gabrielyan in our team, who was named MVP in the previous tournament. But I think our problem is that we ought to organize annual trainings under clear schedules instead of calling up players from championship to championship, so that the players start hearing the voice of the coach and get to know each other better,” he said.

Harutyunyan said the U18 team includes experienced players who’ve been playing in the Division C for three years. Three experienced players from the U.S. will join the team. “But local players will be the core. If we were to compare with the men’s team, my vision is that our local players should get the chance to play, even if they play poorly. It’s easy to bring players from abroad and become champions.”

Coach Harutyunyan said the Armenian teams are still not ready for Division B. “Years ago we took the risk [of competing in higher division]. Those two participations were a good lesson for me that we are still not ready for Division B. We need years of experience and infrastructures, which, to be honest, we don’t have now. But this is not the federation’s problem, the problem is that we don’t have our own.”

Speaking about the U18 opponents Moldova, Kosovo and Albania, coach Harutyunyan said defeating Kosovo is going to be the main objective. “So far we’ve never surpassed them [Kosovo]. In this age group we participate exclusively with the goal to win. If both our teams reach the finals in the European championships, it will be considered a victory for us. And if the team wins gold it will be an excellent result,” the head coach said.

Interview by Varvara Hayrapetyan




Armenia Security Council Secretary meets White House NSA in Washington, D.C.

 09:33, 7 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan has met with United States National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan in the White House.

“We discussed the regional and broader extra-regional security situation and challenges. In this context, I presented to my interlocutor the approaches of the Armenian side around a number of important directions. We spoke about issues of bilateral interest, in particular we emphasized the development of bilateral cooperation within the framework of energy, economy and democracy,” Grigoryan said in a statement on social media.

Armenian Minister of Labor and Social Affairs meet with Prince Michael of Kent in UK

 11:18, 7 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 6, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Narek Mkrtchyan has met with Prince Michael of Kent at the Kensington Palace during his visit to the UK.

The programs and results of cooperation with NGOs and charitable organizations, associations and foundations working in the social protection sector of the two countries were discussed, the ministry said in a press release.

Stressing the importance of public-private partnership, Mkrtchyan presented the services rendered by Armenian organizations to children, persons with disabilities and others.

Prince Michael of Kent spoke about his involvement in nearly 100 charitable and other organizations, his public work, awareness campaign on the rights of vulnerable groups, a part of which is financed by his family. Services rendered to children with disabilities and children deprived of family environment, foster family care and alternative care types were discussed.

Both sides emphasized ensuring the best interest of the children to create a safer and better environment for them in the foundation of the reforms in the children rights protection system.