Armenians Navigate the Horrors of the 2023 Artsakh War

Dec 6 2023

12/06/2023 Armenia (International Christian Concern) — It has been more than two months since Azerbaijan seized control of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2023. The military take-over followed nine months of brutal blockade on more than 100,000 ethnic Armenian Christians in the enclave. After the Azerbaijani take-over, the Armenian population fled to neighboring Armenia.  

The stories emerging from the refugees in Armenia paint a harrowing picture of the traumatic events they witnessed in late September of this year. As Azerbaijani armed forces advanced, reports surfaced of snipers targeting civilians hunkered down in bomb shelters in the city. Additionally, there are disturbing accounts of captured Armenian soldiers facing massacres, while several individuals are reported still missing and unaccounted for during the conflict. 

In the aftermath of the Nagorno-Karabakh war, the presence of profound trauma has become painfully evident as men, women, and children grapple with the devastating impact of the conflict.  

For women and children, the trauma extends beyond the immediate impact of the war. Suffering for nine months with such limited supplies, the chaos of fleeing Artsakh to Armenia in just 10 days, and the uncertainty of the future have left emotional wounds. Among this group, there are also new widows grappling with the pain of loss, unsure of the fate of their husbands and sons, who are either missing or confirmed dead in the conflict.  

The men, particularly those aged 18 and above, who served and fought in the army bear a unique burden of trauma. Their collective sense of brokenness and defeat is palpable after losing the war, their homes and farms, and the very national project of Artsakh itself. 

Amid the chaos and tragedy, personal stories of resilience and shattered faith are also emerging. Their collective sense of Christian identity – as the world’s first Christian nation – is evident. In the face of displacement from Artsakh, their primary plea to the outside world is a heartfelt request to defend not only their land but also the Christian faith of their people.  

https://www.persecution.org/2023/12/06/armenians-navigate-the-horrors-of-the-2023-artsakh-war/

Are India and Iran set to rope in Armenia in giant North South Transport corridor?

INDIA NARRATIVE
Dec 6 2023

The 7,200 km route charted by the International North South Transport Corridor

India is eyeing to develop a few infrastructure projects in Armenia with a view to boosting connectivity and seamless transfer of goods through Iran and then to the Black Sea region and finally to Europe. India and Iran which have pressed the pedal on boosting connectivity have evinced interest in including Armenia in supporting the Chabahar port project along with the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC).

“India and Iran are closely cooperating as part of the North-South international transport corridor initiative, which connects the Indian Ocean, the Persian Gulf with the Caspian Sea, towards Russia and Europe. We are ready to work with Armenia to understand how the country can benefit from the opportunities of this corridor,” Nilakshi Saha Sinha, Ambassador of India to Armenia said.

Sinha added that certain Indian companies are looking to participate in the infrastructure projects.

According to Mehr News Agency, the Armenian government suggested in 2021 that Indian companies use Chabahar for cargo shipments to not only Armenia but also neighboring Georgia, Russia, and even Europe.

The 7,200 km long INSTC is expected to boost trade between India and the Gulf and Central Asian countries.

India and Iran are also set to look at inking a Preferential Trade Agreement.

In August, Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a bilateral meeting with Iranian President Seyyed Ebrahim Raisi on the sidelines of the BRICS summit in South Africa to discuss matters of bilateral and regional importance including connectivity and trade.

Raisi underlined the need to take India-Iran ties to a “new level” especially with a focus on economic and commercial engagements.

Until 2018 – when the US sanctions kicked in, Iran was one of the primary oil suppliers for India. “For New Delhi, letting go of Iranian crude supplies was a difficult transition as it moved to other suppliers such as Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and as far as Nigeria and Angola to spread its energy import risk,” Observer Research Foundation said.

Meanwhile India and Armenia are recharting their bilateral ties. The two have also signed a memorandum of understanding during the Global Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) Summit held as part of G20 Digital Economy Working Group meeting held in Pune earlier. The MoU is intended to increase exchange of successful digital solutions for digital transformation.

“We have very long historical ties. I call this civilizational partnership… Some day we will turn this into a strategic partnership and I think that day is close. We share common interests and we have no contradictions. This must be institutionalised in a long-term cooperation between the two countries,” Armenian envoy in India Youri Babakhanian said earlier at a seminar organised by India Central Asia Foundation.

https://www.indianarrative.com/economy-news/are-india-and-iran-set-to-rope-in-armenia-in-giant-north-south-transport-corridor-153797.html

Jerusalem: Armenian Christians battle developer to keep control of their corner the city

SIGHT Magazine
Dec 6 2023

RNS

Amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip, another battle is playing out in Jerusalem among its small but storied Armenian Christian community, their own patriarch and an Australian-Israeli businessman who is said to be set on taking over the Armenian Quarter of the Old City. 

Last month, things escalated as Jewish settlers aided by dogs and bulldozers disrupted a long-running sit-in in a site known as the Cow’s Garden, currently a parking lot, where businessman Danny Rothman plans to build his latest hotel.

Rothman’s company, Xana Capital Group, made a secret deal in 2021 with the Armenian Christian patriarchate to lease a swath of the Armenian Quarter, including part of the Armenian Theological Seminary and several family homes. When the deal became public, the local community rebelled, a priest who oversees the church’s real estate was defrocked and Patriarch Nourhan Manougian’s leadership came under question.

“This is land that belongs to the Armenian community for centuries,” Levon Kalaydjian, a Jerusalem-born Armenian, told Religion News Service. “This does not belong to the patriarchate, nor is it for him, the Patriarch, to do whatever he wants to do with it.”

Armenians have had a presence in Jerusalem since the fourth century, when Armenia became the first sovereign state to convert to Christianity. Some of Jerusalem’s Armenians trace their heritage to pilgrims who came to the holy city nearly that long ago, while others arrived from the former Ottoman Empire, fleeing the Armenian genocide in 1915 and 1916.

Today the smallest of the four divisions of Jerusalem’s Old City, the Armenian Quarter is considered separate from the larger Christian Quarter, where Palestinian Christians speak Arabic and worship in Greek Orthodox or Catholic churches.

The 2,000 or so Armenians, who speak a unique Jerusalem dialect of Armenian and belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church, are represented by the Armenian Patriarchate and the monastic order of the Brotherhood of St James, which acts as a mini-welfare state: Most Armenians live in church-owned property and work in a church or monastery. 

In Jerusalem’s tense cultural politics, the Armenians are widely considered the most peaceful demographic in the Old City, maintaining good relations with both Jewish Israelis and Arab Palestinians. That unique status has been complicated by the fact that they are sitting on one of the Holy Land’s most valuable pieces of real estate. 

“The piece of land we’re talking about is one of the most important in the city, if not in the country and the world,” said Setrag Balian, one of the founders of the current protest movement. “Striking as it might sound, it is a fact.”

The Armenian Quarter occupies the highest point in the Old City and lies along the main path from the Jaffa Gate to the Western Wall and Jewish Quarter. It is also situated on one of the few vehicle-accessible roads in the Old City. The Cow’s Garden is one of the few undeveloped spaces inside the walls.

“The Armenian community used to feed off of that land, and Armenian pilgrims used to come camp there and put up their tents and caravans,” Balian said. “Other than the cultural and historic fact that this is the Armenian Quarter, it had economic importance; our life depended on that land.

“And today, even as parking, it depends on it. In modern times, in municipalities all over the world, one of the biggest problems is the matter of parking, so this should also not be underestimated,” he added. 

It’s not the first time someone has tried to wrest control of land from the Armenian community. Enver Pasha, the Ottoman minister of war who was an architect of the Armenian Genocide, once eyed the Cow’s Garden for a summer home, while Jerusalem’s five-time mayor, Teddy Kollek, also pressed for previous patriarchs to allow construction on the land, along with numerous other potential investors. 

None was successful until the deal with Xana, signed in 2021.

The 49-year lease deal will allow Xana to build a luxury hotel complex over not only the Cow’s Garden but the Patriarch’s private garden and the seminary’s main hall, where nearly all of the community’s celebrations are held, some 1.6 hectares in all. The deal also gives Xana the unilateral power to renew the lease for another half century after the initial term is up, for a total of 98 years.

The return for the patriarchate is a lump-sum payment of $US2 million and a yearly rent of just $US300,000 – less than previous offers and a paltry sum for one of the world’s most valuable properties, leading to accusations of bribery and corruption in the agreement. 

Exacerbating the community’s concerns is the developer’s profile. Though Rothman, who also goes by Rubinstein, has been involved in tourism in Israel for decades, little is known about his company, which is based in Dubai, making inquiries about its history and holdings difficult. 

The deal also came at a time when both Christians and Muslims in the Old City and east Jerusalem are under pressure by Jewish settler groups, attempting to take control of properties for the explicit aim of ‘Judaising’ the city.

Patriarch Manougian has claimed that the patriarchate’s real-estate manager, Baret Yeretsian, misinformed him about the deal, and he has defrocked and exiled him. Yeretsian had to be removed from the Old City under police protection in May, due to the community protests outside of the patriarchate.

In October, the Patriarch cancelled the deal, saying it was illegal because it had not been approved by the Synod of the Brotherhood of St James, but only after more than two years of internal pressure from the Armenian community.

Since the cancellation, the patriarchate has put out a statement stressing the danger to the Armenian character of the quarter, and the Patriarch has at times joined the protesters in the Cow’s Garden. 

“Better late than never,” Kalaydjian said.

The controversy has been compared to a 2005 scandal in the Old City, when the Greek Patriarch of Jerusalem was dismissed after signing a deal to give over Christian properties in the city to the far-right Jewish settler group, Ateret Cohanim, which some saw as a concession to Israeli designs on non-Jewish sectors of Jerusalem. Yeretsian pointed out that Rothman is a secular Jew, whose investment partner is a Palestinian Greek Orthodox Christian.

But on 5th November armed settler activists appeared with dogs and bulldozers demanding that construction begin on Rothman’s hotel. Balian accused Rothman and his partner of  “cheap intimidation tactics” using “settler groups that don’t even come from Jerusalem, or the Old City.”

The strategy didn’t work.

“We’re a 1,700-year-old presence at least in the Old City. We are not ready to give up just at the presence of armed people or bulldozers,” Balian said.

As important are the internal politics of the Armenian community. He questioned the dismissal of Yeretsian, saying defrocking him only forfeited the patriarchate’s ability to punish him. Before the deal had been formally cancelled, Balian said he rejected calls pushing for the resignation of the patriarch, as it would only set a precedent in which the patriarch can walk away from his responsibilities to the community.

Instead he believes the patriarchate, with its power and influence over the lives of Jerusalem Armenians, needs to bring in lay managers and integrate the community into its decision-making process, at least on mundane matters.

“We’re not saying that the community should decide on everything,” said Balian, “because you need that structure, you need that institution. It’s a religious institution, and we all belong to it. But let’s work together as a united front.”

In a divided Jerusalem, Balian said, what’s most important for his community is to stick together, no matter who is trying to encroach on their land.

“For us, it doesn’t even matter if it’s settlers or not, or if it’s Jews or Muslims or others. Our goal is to keep that land Armenian,” Balian said. 


https://www.sightmagazine.com.au/features/33543-jerusalem-armenian-christians-battle-developer-to-keep-control-of-their-corner-the-city

What are France’s Motives in the South Caucasus?

Dec 5 2023

As widely reported, France has recently agreed to sell an advanced air defence system, the Thales GM 200, to Armenia. In addition, the two countries have signed a memorandum of understanding according to which France will sell Armenia the Mistral short-range air defence system sometime in the future. Armenia, however, is already covered by a joint air-defence system with Russia. This was agreed between the two countries in 2015, and in 2016 the Armenian parliament ratified the agreement.

One might reasonably question why a NATO member is selling advanced technology to a member of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). Russia’s operational control over Armenia’s air defences makes it certain that the Russian military will scrutinize this technology and perhaps even appropriate it.

These relations raise the likelihood that the system will be inspected and reverse-engineered by Armenia’s (and Russia’s) ally Iran, which has already significantly penetrated Armenia’s military-industrial complex. Iran has also exported drones and drone-manufacturing capability to Russia for use against Ukraine.

One finds oneself asking, in colloquial terms: “What could France be thinking?” In fact, French diplomatic history sheds light on the situation, which has little to do with Armenia and everything to do with France’s centuries-long diplomatic conflicts and competition with Turkey on the one hand and, on the other hand, Britain.

 

French–British Diplomatic Rivalry over the Centuries

France’s historical geopolitical rivalry with Britain is an underestimated driver of its actions in the South Caucasus. Intense rivalries across multiple continents marked the opposition between the French and British Empires. Despite both countries today being NATO allies, Parisian diplomacy remains imbued with a sense of deep-rooted competition with London.

In North America, the French and Indian War (1754–1763) was part of the Seven Years’ War, a global conflict involving most of the European powers. In India, the 1757 Battle of Plassey meant the victory of the British East India Company over the French allies of a local hereditary ruler, paving the way for British dominance in the Indian subcontinent. The 1759 Battle of Quebec marked the end of New France and the ascendance of British rule in North America. In Southeast Asia, both powers sought to expand their influence through trade and territorial control: the British established strongholds in places like Singapore and Malaysia, while the French focused on Indochina.

The “Fashoda syndrome” compels France to oppose Britain geopolitically in regions wherever it detects the latter’s influence, regardless of the actual value of such regions to France’s direct interests. This is named after the Fashoda Incident, a late nineteenth-century military face-off between the two in Africa that turned into a major diplomatic defeat and national humiliation for France. The Fashoda syndrome continues to affect French foreign policy, influencing its actions in regions where it perceives the British to have significant interests.

France’s involvement in Armenia is, in addition to its other motives, also a manifestation of the Fashoda syndrome. France—unable to overshadow what it perceives to be Britain’s strong economic and political influence in the South Caucasus (through BP’s involvement in Azerbaijani energy development such as the offshore Shah Deniz natural-gas field)—seeks to establish a presence in neighbouring Armenia. Official Yerevan, by contrast, wishes to believe that France’s intentions in Armenia are driven by genuine concerns rather than by strategic rivalry with Britain.

 

French–Turkish Diplomatic Rivalry over the Centuries

From the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, the Ottoman Empire and France were dominant forces in the Mediterranean. Initially, they formed alliances against common adversaries but, as France’s colonial ambitions expanded over time, these began to conflict with Ottoman interests in North Africa and the Eastern Mediterranean.

The weakening of the Ottoman empire throughout the nineteenth century led to increased French colonization of North Africa, for example: Algeria, starting in 1830; Tunisia, in 1881; and Morocco, in 1912. France sought to assert its cultural and political dominance in these areas, diminishing any residual Ottoman influence as well as clashing frequently with the local populations.

In 1916, the Sykes–Picot Agreement divided much of the Ottoman-held Middle East between Britain and France. Paris gained control over large parts of the Levant, including the territories of present-day Lebanon and Syria.

In more recent years, the geopolitical landscape has shifted, as Turkey has sought to reassert influence in regions that were once part of the Ottoman Empire. France, meanwhile, continues to maintain significant political and economic interests in the Mediterranean and North Africa. Its moves in Armenia—besides ceding to pressure from its influential domestic Armenian lobby—reflect its longstanding and multifaceted hostility to Turkey.

Layered over the historical basis for the contradiction between French and Turkish interests in North Africa and in the Eastern Mediterranean, there is today a new economic element. That is the mutual opposition of their respective energy-development strategies. Each country has its favored national industrial “champions” as well as patron-client relations with different local elites in the regions. Via Armenia, France has simply devised a way to add the South Caucasus to its portfolio of anti-Turkish dossiers. It is using military sales rather than energy investment.

 

France and Armenia Today

France’s deepening security ties with Armenia diverge significantly from the policies of NATO and the EU, particularly considering Armenia’s entrenched security relationships with Russia and Iran. The idea that Armenia might leave the Russian sphere of interest has recently gained some currency. However, Armenia is a founding member of the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

Despite Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s absence from the November 2023 CSTO summit, and despite his critiques of the organization’s inaction about Armenia’s previous requests for assistance, Yerevan has not initiated any legal process to exit the CSTO. Indeed, Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanyan told journalists on November 9 that Armenia is not even discussing the legal process of leaving the CSTO.

If Yerevan really would wish to “Westernize” its security dependence, then it would have to end its security relationships with Russia and Iran; otherwise, all that is involved here is public relations. Indeed Armenia’s relations with Russia have been cemented over three decades and are hardly limited to its membership of CSTO. These relations include Yerevan’s economic dependence on Moscow through its membership in the Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union bloc as well as Russian state companies’ dominance in the Armenian economy as a whole, notably in the transport sector (one of them owns the state railroad company), the energy sector (owning the gas-distribution system and managing the Metsamor nuclear power-plant), and the banking sector.

Some Western observers have suggested that Armenia could reverse its military and security orientation and join NATO and the EU. This view ignores not only the Russian dominance of Armenia’s economy mentioned above, but also the Russian military base at Gyumri with 3,000 Russian soldiers, as well as another air base with a squadron of attack helicopters at Erebuni Airport five miles from central Yerevan. It likewise ignores the fact that the Border Guard Service of the Russian FSB has responsibility for nearly all of Armenia’s international borders.

Moreover, the bilateral agreement on stationing Russian troops in Armenia runs until 2044 and, by its terms, neither party has authority to renounce it unilaterally. Consequently, the idea of Armenia Westernizing its security dependence, even if at some level Pashinyan may wish to do this, is a non-starter.

 

Conclusion

France’s recent military sales to Armenia, besides playing politically to its influential Armenian diaspora, are less about promoting South Caucasus stability than about competing with and provoking its long-standing diplomatic rivals Turkey and Britain. With a foothold in Armenia, France can also thwart any budding Armenia–Azerbaijan rapprochement. This is in the line of a traditional French diplomatic tactic that the veteran French international-affairs observer Pierre Hassner once explained to me: when France observes other countries seeking mutual cooperation between themselves, it looks for ways to introduce obstacles to that cooperation; by exploiting and widening the rifts between the two parties, France is then able to draw closer to one of the them while alienating it from the other.

 

Robert M. Cutler was for many years a senior researcher at the Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, Carleton University, and is a past fellow of the Canadian Global Affairs Institute.

The views expressed in this article belong to the authors alone and do not necessarily reflect those of Geopoliticalmonitor.com.


Iran, India promote new trade route through Armenia

MEHR News Agency, Iran
Dec 6 2023

TEHRAN, Dec. 06 (MNA) – Iran’s and India’s ambassadors in Yerevan on Tuesday stressed the importance of Armenia’s involvement in a new transnational transport corridor planned by their countries.

“We believe that the communication corridor from India to the Iranian port of Chabahar and on to Armenia and further north, the Black Sea, is a reliable route for transporting goods to the north and to Europe,” the Iranian envoy, Mehdi Sobhani, said during an international conference in Yerevan. “The development of this path will protect our countries against external harm.”

India has built and operates two terminals at Chabahar to bypass Pakistan in cargo traffic with Iran, Afghanistan, and central Asian countries, Azatutyun reports.

It has proposed the Gulf of Oman port’s inclusion in the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) project initiated by Russia, Iran, and India in 2000. The project calls for a 7,200-kilometer-long network of maritime and terrestrial routes stretching from Mumbai to Moscow.

The Armenian government suggested in 2021 that Indian companies use Chabahar for cargo shipments to not only Armenia but also neighboring Georgia, Russia, and even Europe.

Senior Armenian, Indian, and Iranian diplomats explored the possibility of creating such a trade route during first-ever trilateral talks held in Yerevan in April this year.

Speaking at the conference organized by the Armenian government, the Indian ambassador to Armenia, Nilakshi Saha Sinha, welcomed the South Caucasus nation’s interest in the INSTC.

“We are ready to work with Armenia to understand how the country can benefit from the opportunities of this corridor,” she said, adding that the Indian side will make it easier for Armenian firms to ship cargo to and from Chabahar.

MNA/PR

Azerbaijan Seeks US Reassurances For More Armenia Talks

BARRON'S
Dec 6 2023
  • FROM AFP NEWS

Azerbaijan said Wednesday it wants reassurances from the United States on bilateral ties in order for Washington to continue mediating normalisation talks with arch-foe Armenia.

The Caucasus neighbours have been locked in a decades-long conflict the over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, which Azerbaijan reclaimed after a lightning offensive against Armenian separatists in September.

Both countries have said a peace agreement could be signed by the end of the year, but peace talks — mediated separately by the European Union, the United States, and Russia — have seen little progress.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said Wednesday that the United States had "nullified" strategic ties between Washington and Baku, adding: "We don't know why".

"If the United States says our relationship will no longer be the same, that means Washington is pulling out from mediating the Azerbaijani-Armenian peace process," he added, saying a change in posture from Washington would mean Baku could "restore" US-led talks.

The comments came as Assistant Secretary of State James O'Brien was expected in Baku for talks aimed at "strengthening ties" and "supporting the peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia".

Azerbaijan has refused to participate in talks with Armenia that were planned in the United States on November 20, over what it said was Washington's "biased" position.

O'Brien last month said Azerbaijan's operation to recapture Karabakh, displacing tens of thousands of people, had led Washington to cancel high-level contacts.

In October, Aliyev refused to attend a round of negotiations with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Spain, citing France's "biased position."

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz had been scheduled to join EU chief Charles Michel as mediators at those talks.

So far, there has been no visible progress in EU efforts to organise a fresh round of negotiations.

Turkish Press: Azerbaijan needs firm guarantees Armenia won’t try to turn back clock in liberated Karabakh: President

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Dec 6 2023
Burc Eruygur

ISTANBUL

In the wake of Azerbaijan liberating its sovereign territory of Karabakh, Azerbaijan wants firm guarantees neighboring Armenia will not try to seek “revenge” or retake land, the nation’s president said Wednesday.

“We need firm, verified guarantees that there will be no attempt at revanchism in Armenia. Why we need it, because we know what’s happening in Armenia, and also we know that Armenia has very bad advisers in some European capitals,” Ilham Aliyev said during an international forum in the capital Baku.

Saying that he need not mention the capitals he is referring to, as this is obvious, Aliyev said Armenia has so far received “provocative advice” but that in the future it might even get “destructive advice.”

Aliyev added said that peace on the part of Baku signifies guarantees that there will be no more wars between the two countries, that Armenia “totally agrees” with the current situation in the southern Caucasus region, and that Yerevan means what it says about Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

He also called on Armenia to “forget about the former ‘Nagorno-Karabakh republic’” and be constructive in delimitation talks between the two countries.

The current Armenian government’s ideology, which he said contests Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, remained the same despite Baku’s victory in the 2020 Karabakh war, he said.

He added that the government also understands Azerbaijan will “crush them again no matter who stands behind them” if they continue to do so, in contrast to the Armenian opposition.

Azerbaijan-Armenia peace deal

On a prospective peace deal between Azerbaijan and Armenia, Aliyev said that the agreement being discussed is some 6-7 pages and is made up of less than 20 articles.

The last remarks Baku sent on the document were on Sept. 11 and they got a response from Yerevan on Nov. 21, he said.

“For such a small document, Armenia needed 70 days … to respond to us. And they responded only after Azerbaijan’s foreign minister publicly disclosed that … So this shows that the side which is delaying the process isn’t Azerbaijan, it is Armenia. Why they delay it, I don’t know … I can only suspect,” he added.

He went on to say that the document is currently being evaluated by the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, and that once they comment on it, a meeting of the countries’ top diplomats will be “appropriate.”

He also said that he thinks they should not be preoccupied with the formal side of the peace deal based on cases such as Russia-Japanese relations, where he said the formal peace agreement was “not an obstacle for normal interaction.”

Relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

Azerbaijan liberated most of the region during the war in the fall of 2020, which ended with a Russian-brokered peace agreement, opening the door to normalization.

This September, the Azerbaijani army initiated an anti-terrorism operation in Karabakh to establish constitutional order, after which illegal separatist forces in the region surrendered.

https://www.aa.com.tr/en/world/azerbaijan-needs-firm-guarantees-armenia-wont-try-to-turn-back-clock-in-liberated-karabakh-president/3074659

ALSO READ

Villanova University’s Armenian Students Organization Hosts Teach-In

Dec 6 2023

As you read this, thousands of ethnic Armenians are fleeing their homes. News reports claim that the Artsakh territory will cease to exist a year from now, as indigenous Armenians leave their homeland. Villanova is home to a respectable Armenian population, filled with students passionate about preserving their culture, history and identity.

In an effort to spread awareness and cultivate a level of knowledge surrounding this ethnic conflict, Villanova’s Armenian Students hosted a teach-in on the happenings in Artsakh. The Teach-In was sponsored by the Department of Global Interdisciplinary Studies, the Center for Peace and Justice Education, the Center for Arab and Islamic Studies and the Student Government Association. Students also spread the word to a variety of academic departments like the Political Science Department and the History Department, as well as reaching out to various academic centers on campus.

Professor Samer Abboud played an influential role in helping the Armenian students organize this teach-in. As an Associate Professor of Global Interdisciplinary Studies and Director of the Center for Arab and Islamic Studies, Abboud has hosted successful educational events and teach-ins in the past that paved the way for the possibility of this one.

“We are hoping that this teach-in helps Villanovans develop a deeper understanding of the crisis through reference to the historical context as well as the immediate on-the-ground situation that many people are experiencing today,” Abboud said. “The teach-in will help Villanovans identify key questions and issues to think about as they pursue a deeper understanding of the crisis in Armenia and Artsakh.”

The teach-in featured three expert panelists specializing in Armenian history, humanitarian development and advocacy. Students coordinated with members of the greater Philadelphia community and beyond to pick advocates who could provide insight on the topic. The speakers included Khatchig Mouradian, Christine Momjian and Dr. Mark Schrad. At the beginning of the event, the leaders of the Armenian Students Organization, Taleen Postian and Isabella Balian, delivered the opening remarks.

Mouradian serves as a lecturer at Columbia University specializing in Middle Eastern, South Asian and Africana Studies. He also serves as an Armenian and Georgian Area Studies Specialist at the Library of Congress. In 2021, Mouradian won an Honorable Mention Award for his book, The Resistance Network: The Armenian Genocide and Humanitarianism in Ottoman Syria, 1915-1918. Other work of Mouradian’s covers civil war, ethnic cleansing, concentration camps, unarmed resistance, the aftermath of mass violence, midwifery in the Middle East and approaches to teaching history.

Momjian, a member of the larger Philadelphia Armenian community, served on the panel to contribute to the real-life experiences of refugees facing displacement. Momjian has served for the Armenian Missionary Association of America (AMAA), whose mission is to serve the physical and spiritual needs of people both at home and overseas. Over the past few years, AMAA has been committed to meeting the humanitarian needs of Armenians in Artsakh. Their programs reach families in Artsakh who choose to remain in their homeland or migrate to Armenia.

The last panelist, Mark Schrad, serves as a professor in Villanova’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Schrad specializes in Comparative Politics & International Relations regarding Russia, Ukraine, Eastern Europe & Former Soviet Union, International Organizations, International Law, Cold War, Communism and Post-Communism.

From a non-Armenian perspective, Schrad was able to contribute to the panel and describe aspects of history and build-up to the present humanitarian crisis. The organizers aimed to educate the Villanova community on this often-overlooked conflict and bring awareness and empathy to this issue.

“The conflict and humanitarian crisis in Artsakh today have a historical trajectory that is too often ignored in the brief reporting that appears in Western media,” Abboud said. “Like most other crises around the world, the situation in Armenia and Artsakh is presented in mostly sensational terms and appears on our collective radars for a moment before disappearing.”

“Though the teach-in centered on the Artsakh war, ethnic cleansing against Armenian people and their culture, and the resulting current refugee crisis, the conversations and questions covered are relevant to other current and future international conflicts and crises,” Postian said.

Postian also spoke to the importance of listening to perspectives discussing humanitarian aid.

“Listening to the stories of refugees fleeing Artsakh will make you more compassionate towards other struggles of migrants,” Postian said. “These issues are both extremely local and universal and that is why this event was curated for non-Armenians to attend and learn.”

Villanova’s Armenian Students are hopeful that attendees of the teach-in were able to grasp a deeper knowledge of the humanitarian crisis and spread awareness beyond this event.

https://villanovan.com/24330/news/villanova-universitys-armenian-students-organization-hosts-teach-in/

Sports: Former Ajax Star of Armenian Descent Aras Ozbiliz Applies to Head Armenia’s Football Federation.

Dec 6 2023

Aras Ozbiliz, the legendary former midfielder of the Dutch Football club Ajax applying to lead the Football Federation of Armenia.

YEREVAN, ARMENIA, December 6, 2023 /EINPresswire.com/ – Aras Ozbiliz, the legendary former midfielder of the renowned Dutch Football club Ajax has taken a significant step in his post-football career by applying to lead the Football Federation of Armenia. With a notable career spanning over 200 matches across nine different professional football clubs, Ozbiliz is dedicated to investing his extensive experience to the advancement and success of Armenian football.

“My aim is to elevate Armenian football, achieving remarkable accomplishments on the global stage. These achievements will instill pride in every Armenian for our national teams, local clubs, and for our bright talents involved in the sport. Taking on the presidency of the Federation offers me the chance to utilize all my expertise to foster Armenian football.”

Ozbiliz articulated his comprehensive strategy which includes enhancing youth football, bolstering professional leagues, empowering women's football, advancing coaching education, fostering infrastructure through investment initiatives, and implementing a wide national footballing model.

Despite the severe injuries throughout his career, a talented player of Armenian descent, left a lasting mark during his journey at AFC Ajax notably scoring a memorable goal against Manchester United at Old Trafford in 2012. He spent several brilliant seasons in the Russian Premier League and became one of the best football players in the history of the Armenian National Team. He amassed 42 international appearances, contributing significantly with 6 goals and 10 assists.

His journey continued across various clubs, including Kuban Krasnodar and Spartak Moscow, Turkey's Besiktas, and loan moves at Rayo Vallecano in Spain and Sheriff in Moldova, before moving to the Dutch club Willem II in 2018.

In the next year Ozbiliz joined Armenia’s Pyunik, took the role of team captain, and in 2022 he moved to FC Urartu.

The candidacy of Aras Ozbiliz for the presidency signifies his commitment to the Armenian football landscape. The Federation’s presidential elections are set for December 23, and Ozbiliz is one of two candidates for the position.

Tatevik Simonyan
SPRING PR
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"People’s expectations of justice have not been fully realized" – Pashinyan

Dec 6 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Pashinyan on the justice system in Armenia

“What is not institutionalized cannot be justice,” the Armenian Prime Minister said during a speech in Parliament about the 2018 Velvet Revolution and the expectations of the people of Armenia.

He asked himself the question, “What is the government doing to establish deep institutional justice in Armenia?” In his opinion, this question is answered by the 2024 budget, in which the government has outlined an increase in funding for the judicial system, in particular, an increase in the salaries of prosecutors, judges and investigators.


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Pashinyan compared the current year’s budget with the budget of 2018, when his team first came to power. He said that in 2023 the funding of the judicial system has doubled compared to 2018. In particular, the funding of the Constitutional Court, the Prosecutor General’s Office has increased, the salaries of investigators and judges have increased.

Prime Minister emphasized that these decisions were made by the government and the parliamentary majority, and all of them are of the opinion that reforms in the justice system should have an institutional character:

“We raise the salaries of judges, prosecutors, investigators not so much for their sake, but for the sake of the citizens to whom they provide services.”

In the list of steps already taken, Pashinyan recalled the creation of anti-corruption courts, the Corruption Prevention Commission and the Anti-Corruption Committee, and an increase in the number of judges.

“A citizen must be sure that if an injustice happened to him, he has the opportunity to restore justice through state institutions. This is extremely important from the point of view of the interests of the development of our state.”

Pashinyan said the government is making great efforts, but still people do not have confidence in the inevitability of justice:

“This is a serious problem that has deep and objective reasons. For example, scenes of suspects being arrested with noise and noise, masks and guns, and then the fact that a few days later people see these suspects enjoying a cup of coffee in a cafe, causes cognitive dissonance in the public mind.”

He believes that investigative and operational bodies should rely more on verdicts when reporting on their activities, rather than on preliminary actions, the outcome of which is not yet known.

Pashinyan believes that the people’s greatest expectation from the 2018 revolution was the restoration of justice and the eradication of corruption in Armenia:

“It is painful to state that expectations continue to remain in place, which means that they have not come true, at least not to the fullest extent.”

He went on that that many people expected “revolutionary justice: sentences in the squares, punishment of specific people in specific ways, what was called terror during the French Revolution.”

He explains that his team made “a revolution of love and solidarity” and promised that “there would be no vendetta.” In his view, justice must be done by institutions that are authorized and operate within the framework of laws and the constitution:

“Otherwise, one person can consider it justice to shoot another person in the entryway, another to break someone’s jaw, a third to take a share in someone else’s business, a fourth to take someone’s property.”

The prime minister said that there are no untouchable people in the country, and this is his personal position and the political will of the ruling majority — that all people should be equal before the law:

“In order to realize this political will, it is necessary to create appropriate structures, a system of responsibility, so that the subjective perceptions of the investigator, prosecutor and judge have neither negative nor positive influence on the course and outcome of the criminal case.”

According to Pashinyan, this has not been achieved so far, as the solution of the problem is also connected with “change of thinking”.

The Prime Minister assures that over the past 5 years the government has implemented enough reforms and has gone for serious personnel changes:

“These steps were taken in order to have the right to expect that justice and fairness will become cornerstone institutions in the Republic of Armenia. Now the ball is already on the side of the institutions implementing justice.”

https://jam-news.net/pashinyan-on-the-justice-system-in-armenia/