Foreign Ministries of Armenia and Tunisia hold the first political consultations

 19:33, 6 December 2023

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. On December 5-6, on the sidelines of his working visit to Tunisia, Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Vahan Kostanyan had a meeting with Nabil Ammar, the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Migration and Tunisians abroad of the Republic of Tunisia. During the meeting, the Deputy Foreign Minister touched upon the relations between the two countries, briefed on the current situation in the South Caucasus, and also conveyed to Minister Ammar the invitation of Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan to visit Armenia, the foreign ministry said.

Following the meeting, the first Armenian-Tunisian political consultations took place between the delegations headed by Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Vahan Kostanyan and Mounir Ben Rjiba, the Secretary of State to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Tunisia.

According to the source, During the consultations, the interlocutors thoroughly touched upon bilateral political and economic relations. Agreements were reached on deepening cooperation in the spheres of education, culture, tourism, civil aviation, healthcare, high technology and other areas of mutual interest.

The sides also touched upon issues on regional and international security.

It is noted that Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanyan briefed his counterparts on the vision of the Government of the Republic of Armenia on achieving stability and peace in the South Caucasus, the "Crossroads of Peace" project aimed at stimulating regional communications, as well as the actions of the Government of Armenia to address the rights of people forcibly displaced resulting from the ethnic cleansing in Nagorno-Karabakh.

During the working visit, the sides signed a memorandum on political consultations between the Foreign Ministries of Armenia and Tunisia, as well as an agreement on the establishment of a visa free regime for diplomatic passport holders.




Armenpress: Nane Asatryan reinstated as Deputy Governor of Vayots Dzor Province

 20:40, 6 December 2023

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. According to the decree signed by the Prime Minister of Armenia, Nikol Pashinyan, Nane Asatryan has been reinstated as the Deputy Governor of the Vayots Dzor Province of the Republic of Armenia since December 6.

The Prime Minister's decision is based on the ruling of the Administrative Court in case VD/9814/05/21,  website informs.



https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1125696.html?fbclid=IwAR09qwym8hEOP7kRU3V37-EQhPkG2HrQzNUZKcoJo1iV3tQ8bAFQw-3a_iQ

Border delimitation process with Azerbaijan will be complex and lengthy, says Deputy Prime Minister

 19:38, 6 December 2023

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS. Border delimitation process between  Armenia and Azerbaijan will be complex and lengthy, Deputy Prime Minister of Armenia, Mher Grigoryan said during the question-and-answer session with members of the government in the National Assembly.

“The delimitation process will be quite complex and prolonged; this is obvious. There seems to be a mutual understanding that the delimitation process will be carried out solely on the basis of documents having legal significance. Additionally, we will work with maps that are not pictures or map-like diagrams, but actual topographic maps. For example, the 1975 map, which should be carefully studied. There will not be a single meeting after which we will come and declare that the delimitation process is completed. This is simply impossible,” said the Deputy Prime Minister.

Grigoryan emphasized the importance of the fact that the parties share a common understanding of the process, its significance and the approach to work.

 Addressing the outcomes of the latest working meeting between the commissions of Armenia and Azerbaijan on delimitation issues, the Deputy Prime Minister mentioned that they had  agreed to establish a working protocol that would outline the institutional process of the work.

The Deputy Prime Minister didn’t provide substantive details from the latest meeting, as it wasn't discussed, including matters related to enclaves and exclaves.

Asbarez: Armenian and U.S. National Security Chiefs Meet in Washington

Armenia's national security chief Armen Grigoryan meet with his U.S. counterpart Jake Sullivan


Armenia’s National Security chief Armen Grigoryan met with his American counterpart Jake Sullivan at the White House on Tuesday.

According to a statement from Grigoryan’s office, he and Sullivan discussed issues of mutual interest in the areas of security and the economy, “and lauded the steady dynamics of development of Armenia-U.S. bilateral relations.”

“Secretary Grigoryan reiterated Armenia’s commitment to continue the Armenia-Azerbaijan normalization and peace process,” the statement said.

Grigoryan is in Washington to meet with U.S. officials, among them Laura Cooper, a deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia, at the U.S. Department of Defense.

During their meeting the two reportedly discussed defense cooperation between the two countries and emphasized the need to ensure the stability of Armenia’s region.

“They exchanged views on the implementation of bilateral joint programs, and stressed cooperation within peacekeeping activities and the deepening of interaction between the armed forces of Armenia and the U,S.,” a statement from Grigoryan’s office said.

Asbarez: Young Yerevan Man Donates Stem Cells to Help Save Fellow Armenian’s Life

The stem cell donor during the harvesting procedure, at ABMDR’s Stem Cell Harvesting Center, in Yerevan, with ABMDR Medical Director Dr. Mihran Nazaretyan, left; Dr. Andranik Mshetsyan, who performed the procedure; and ABMDR nurse Knarik Pashanyan.


The harvesting of the donated stem cells is the 41st such procedure performed by ABMDR

LOS ANGELES—A young man in Yerevan donated bone marrow stem cells on Tuesday to help save the life of a fellow Armenian.

The harvesting of the donated stem cells was the 41st such procedure to be performed by the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry. The painless, non-invasive harvesting took place at ABMDR’s Stem Cell Harvesting Center, in the Armenian capital.

Thanks to the procedure, the donated stem cells were to be used for an urgent transplant that could help a patient, himself an Armenian young man, survive a life-threatening blood-related illness.

“More than two decades ago, when ABMDR was being established, our overarching goal was to find donor matches for patients living anywhere in the world,” said ABMDR Executive Director Dr. Sevak Avagyan and continued, “Today, the significant increase in the number of such donor matches speaks to the fact that ABMDR, thanks to its pool of close to 34,000 potential donors, is able to secure a level of genetic diversity that is essential for patients for whom matched donors can’t be found in their immediate families.”

On December 5, ABMDR’s latest donor said that years ago, when he joined the ranks of the Registry as a 19-year-old, he hadn’t given much thought to the possibility that one day he could actually be identified as a match for a patient. “But now I am overjoyed for having been given the opportunity to donate stem cells, thanks to the great ABMDR team,” the donor said.

The harvesting procedure was performed by Dr. Andranik Mshetsyan, the Stem Cell Harvesting Center’s resident physician. Also present at the procedure were ABMDR Medical Director Dr. Mihran Nazaretyan and other lab personnel.

Commenting on the harvesting procedure and the transplantation that was to follow, ABMDR President Dr. Frieda Jordan said, “Every transplant is a challenge, involving the work of many specialists. But once the process is set in motion, everyone involved focuses on a single goal, which is to get the donated stem cells to the patient as quickly as possible for helping them survive a potentially fatal illness.”

Anyone in good health between the ages of 18 and 50 can register with ABMDR as a potential bone marrow stem cell donor, for a chance to save someone’s life. Given the unique genetic makeup of ethnic Armenians, ABMDR needs to maintain a robust global registry of Armenian donors.

Established in 1999, ABMDR, a nonprofit organization, helps Armenians and non-Armenians worldwide survive life-threatening blood-related illnesses by recruiting and matching donors to those requiring bone marrow stem cell transplants. To date, the registry has recruited over 33,500 donors in 44 countries across four continents, identified over 9,000 patients, and facilitated 41 bone marrow transplants.

Azerbaijan’s Aliyev calls snap election after Karabakh victory

Reuters
Dec 6 2023

Paolin Ahangari biography: 13 things Miss Earth Armenia 2023

 Conan Daily
Dec 7 2023
Elliany Capellán, Paolin Darbin-Ahangari, Selene Bublitz, Drita Ziri (©Miss Earth)

Paolin Darbin-Ahangari is an Armenian model and beauty queen from Yerevan, Armenia. Aside from Armenia, she frequently visits other countries including Hungary, Iran and Italy.

Aside from modeling, Darbin is also into dancing. Here are 13 more things about her:

  1. On July 7, 2017, she was in Nur, Iran.
  2. On September 28, 2019, she was in Tehran, Iran.
  3. On January 1, 2020, she was in Interlaken, Switzerland.
  4. On December 2, 2020, she was at the BME Sport Center in Budapest, Hungary.
  5. On March 11, 2021, she was in Budapest.
  6. On April 13, 2021, she was in Tehran.
  7. On May 17, 2021, she was in Rome, Italy.
  8. On January 1, 2022, she was in Tehran.
  9. On March 3, 2022, she was at the Piazza del Duomo in Milan, Italy.
  10. On June 22, 2022, she was in Venaria Reale, Turin, Italy.
  11. On September 9, 2022, she had a photo shoot in Yerevan with Albert Harutyunyan.
  12. On November 30, she was officially appointed Miss Earth Armenia 2023.
  13. She was 23 years old when she represented Armenia at Miss Earth 2023 and competed against 87 other candidates at the Saigon Exhibition and Convention Center in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam on December 22, 20223 in Vietnam.
https://conandaily.com/2023/12/07/paolin-ahangari-biography-13-things-miss-earth-armenia-2023/

Bulgaria Extends Aid to Armenia Amid Humanitarian Crisis

Novinite, Bulgaria
Dec 6 2023

The Council of Ministers has greenlit a decision to extend humanitarian aid to Armenia in response to the country's plea for assistance through the European Union’s Civil Protection Mechanism.

A humanitarian grant of BGN 59,440 (around 30,000 EUR), facilitated by the Bulgarian Red Cross, has been allocated to support the population displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh.

These individuals sought refuge in Armenia following the escalated hostilities in the region in late September 2023.

Armenian Catholics inspire by their faith and resilience

Dec 7 2023
Viken Abassian, a seminarian preparing to serve the Armenian Catholic Church in the US, speaks about his faith journey and how it is tied to Armenian history.

“Despite our history enduring the longest night, I want the world to not see us as simply victims… I want them to see and be inspired by our resilience.”

These words of hope and strength about the Armenian Catholic Church come from someone who is himself a sign of hope — Viken Abassian, seminarian and subdeacon of the Our Lady of Nareg Armenian Catholic Eparchy of the US and Canada. He is the first American-born Armenian who has continued in his formation thus far as a seminarian for the Armenian Catholic Church in the United States.

Viken’s story of faith is inextricably tied not only to the persecution of the Armenian people, but also to the long history of Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Viken was born in the United States for the same reason as many Armenian Americans — because his family was fleeing persecution.

His ancestors came from Adana and Mersin in historical Armenia (modern-day Eastern Turkey). In order to survive genocide, his family sought refuge in both Lebanon and the Holy Land. He recounts that from Jerusalem, “They escaped the Holy Land with the growing radicalism and aggression between Israel and Palestine and came to the US to build a new life.”

The suffering of his Armenian people is not covered heavily by secular media, yet is a striking story of repeated injustice. In his own words, Viken shares:

The history of our nation is saturated with suffering, which has been provoked by ethnic and religious persecution from many empires who wished to either subjugate us or eradicate us altogether.

This persecution has taken the form of two genocides, over one hundred years apart, but both targeted at destroying Armenian Christians.

[First came] the 1915 Genocide (the first of the 20th century) perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire, which stripped 1.5 million souls from our people. The most recent is the ethnic cleansing by the Islamic regime of Azerbaijan. This country, which is a Soviet-Union fabricated state, initiated the cleansing of the ethnic majority of Armenians from the city of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabagh) over the past three years, affecting the lives of 120,000 people.

This aggression, he explains, is motivated by a desire to create a two-nation state. Christians’ only “crime” is existing in these ancient lands for thousands of years.

Yet, in the midst of terrible suffering, there are signs of God’s accompaniment of Armenian Catholics. Viken’s eparchy has been a recent development — it became an eparchy is 2005, after being established as a mission in 1896 and an Apostolic Exarchate in 1981.

Vocations, as in the Latin Rite, have suffered somewhat in the modern era. “These were tumultuous years for the Armenian people, enduring the recent genocide, and then the subsequent rebuilding of our diaspora nation. Besides our ‘infancy,’ we too have been combating militant atheism and modernism — be it in our motherland as a post-soviet country, or the diaspora facing the growing anti-religious sentiment in their cultures.”

But here Viken is, in his 8th year of studying in Rome, preparing to serve the Armenian Catholic Church in America as a priest. He came from a devout Catholic family and says that he has always been drawn to the priesthood. Where he grew up in Fresno, California, there wasn’t a local Armenian Catholic Church, so he assumed he would discern becoming a Roman Catholic priest. Yet, when he was ready to apply for seminary, he was told that as an Armenian Catholic, he’d need to seek a dispensation from the Armenian Catholic Bishop.

Instead, the bishop encouraged Viken to consider becoming a priest in the Armenian Catholic Church. “He encouraged me to put my trust in God and take the leap of faith. Thanks be to God; I took that chance.”

God-willing, Viken will serve the faithful, suffering Armenian people. The story of his people, and of the Armenian people, is a tragic one. At the same time, their hope and faith is incredibly strong. Viken touches on the reason for their faith:

Even though we have been confronted by countless legions sent by Satan to extinguish the light of Christ, we have always known that to truly be defeated is to abandon the Holy Cross. In humility, we wear Christ’s admonishment on our shoulders, “Fear not those who kill the body; rather fear him who can destroy the soul and body in hell.”

https://aleteia.org/2023/12/07/armenian-catholics-inspire-by-their-faith-and-resilience/

Geopolitical Echoes of the Karabakh Conflict

Switzerland – Dec 7 2023

Risk and Resilience

The capture of Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijani forces in September 2023 signaled a regional power shift. The Armenian military stayed out of the conflict, and Russian troops stationed on the ground to maintain peace failed to prevent hostilities. As Russian influence declines, Armenia is reassessing its relationship with Moscow. Prospects for peace are uncertain and fears of renewed conflict persist.


07.12.2023

by

Sophie Berdoz

The Karabakh conflict, which has its roots in the great power struggles of the early 18th century, has escalated whenever the imperial control of the surrounding great powers – including Safavid Persia, the Russian Empire, and the Soviet Union – waned. In 1921, after the Red Army had conquered the entire South Caucasus, the Moscow controlled Caucasus Bureau of the Communist Party declared Armenian-populated Nagorno-Karabakh an autonomous region. However, this region was administratively part of the newly created Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan, which led to frequent tensions between Karabakh Armenians and Baku. The current phase of the conflict began during the perestroika era in
1987, when Karabakh Armenians attempted to join Soviet Armenia, prompting a violent response from Azerbaijan. Full-scale war broke out after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. Tens of thousands died on both sides, and hundreds of thousands were displaced. When a cease-fire was reached in 1994, the Karabakh Armenians emerged victorious, controlling territories well beyond the original borders of the Soviet Autonomous Region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The search for a resolution to the conflict within the OSCE Minsk Group, co-chaired by the United States, Russia, and France, began almost simultaneously with the outbreak of the war in 1992. By the mid-2000s the sides had agreed on basic principles of conflict resolution, including ones for the non-use of force, Karabakh’s self-determination through a future referendum, and Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. The latter included the return to Azerbaijan of territories captured by Armenian forces outside of Nagorno-Karabakh during the war, with the provision of a land corridor linking Armenia to Nagorno-Karabakh, the return of displaced persons, and the deployment of an international peacekeeping force. 

None of these proposals has ever been implemented. For more than two decades, an asymmetrical military balance maintained relative peace. While Azerbaijan was the larger power overall, the Armenians benefited from a strategic geographic advantage, holding the higher ground. However, this balance was increasingly disrupted in Azerbaijan’s favor. One factor was the support Azerbaijan received from Turkey. Under their “one nation, two countries” formula, Turkey and Azerbaijan signed a comprehensive military agreement in August 2010 and have since held regular joint military exercises. An increasing number of Azerbaijan’s military officers are trained in Turkey – reaching approximately 85 percent by 2020. Ankara has also played a significant role for Azerbaijan in operational planning and military intelligence, and Turkey emerged as a key supplier of arms to Azerbaijan. In particular, the latter includes the supply of “Bayraktar” drones,which diminished Armenia’s strategic geographic advantage. Other major arms suppliers to the Azerbaijani military include Israel, Russia, and the United States.

https://css.ethz.ch/en/center/CSS-news/2023/12/geopolitical-echoes-of-the-karabakh-conflict.html