Cavusoglu Says Discussed With Lavrov Normalization Of Ties Between Armenia, Turkey

April 7 2023

 (@ChaudhryMAli88) 

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Friday that he discussed with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov the normalization of ties between Ankara and Yerevan and the conclusion of a peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia

ANKARA (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 07th April, 2023) Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Friday that he discussed with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov the normalization of ties between Ankara and Yerevan and the conclusion of a peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

"We also discussed the normalization of Ankara's relations with Yerevan, as well as the situation in Transcaucasia. We hope that a comprehensive peace agreement will be concluded between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which will contribute to stability in the region," the Turkish minister added.

The sides also discussed the situation in Libya, stressing the importance of uniting disparate groups into a single security force, the minister added.


https://www.urdupoint.com/en/world/cavusoglu-says-discussed-with-lavrov-normaliz-1672796.html

Armenia’s top security official to visit Iran

 TEHRAN TIMES 
Iran – April 7 2023

TEHRAN – The Secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigoryan, will pay a visit to Iran on Sunday to meet his Iranian counterpart.

“On April 9, the Secretary of the Security Council, Armen Grigoryan, will be in Tehran on a working visit,” the Security Council of Armenia said in short statement on Friday. 

According to the statement, “He will meet with Ali Shamkhani, Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council of the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

The visit comes after Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Political Affairs Ali Bagheri Kani paid a visit to Yerevan amid rising tensions in the South Caucasus region. Bagheri Kani’s visit was done at the invitation of his Armenian counterpart.

Iran has recently appointed a seasoned diplomat as its new ambassador to Armenia. The public relations office of the Iranian Foreign Ministry said Iran’s Ambassador to Syria Mehdi Sobhani will be dispatched to Yerevan, as Iran’s new envoy, after serving in the Middle Eastern country. 

Sobhani is a seasoned diplomat, according to the Iranian foreign ministry. 

Tensions have been on the rise in the South Caucasus region over a range of issues including military frictions between Yerevan and Baku. Also, Azerbaijan’s decision to open an embassy in Tel Aviv has exacerbated tensions between Tehran and Baku. In addition, in recent days, the Republic of Azerbaijan has taken a set of measures that heightened tensions with Iran. In its latest move, Azerbaijan declared four Iranian diplomats in Baku as persona non grata.

Earlier, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanaani demanded explanations from Azerbaijan regarding remarks by Israel’s foreign minister that Tel Aviv and Baku have formed a united front with Azerbaijan against Iran. 

Kanaani described the remarks as yet another piece of evidence proving the Zionist regime’s evil intentions to turn the Republic of Azerbaijan’s territory into a threat against the national security of Iran. He strongly condemned the statements, according to a statement by the Iranian foreign ministry. 

Kanaani described the statements of the Zionist regime’s foreign minister regarding the formation of a “united anti-Iranian front,” as well as the statements of the Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan regarding the content of the talks and a “new stage of strategic partnership” between Azerbaijan and the Zionist regime as an implicit approval of the anti-Iran orientation of their cooperation, demanding an explanation from the Azeri authorities in this regard.

Emphasizing the unbreakable historical and religious bonds between the people of Iran and Azerbaijan, he added that Iran has always tried to thwart the attempts of ill-wishers to divide the two neighboring countries, and that the government of Azerbaijan is also expected to avoid the trap that the enemies of relations between the two countries have set.

Obstacles to the reintegration of Karabakh Armenians into Azerbaijan

April 7 2023

By

 Cavid Veliev

On March 27, the Office of the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan proposed once again to hold a meeting in Baku in the first week of April for the purpose of reintegration of the representatives of the Armenian public of Karabakh Economic Region (KER) as well as to discuss the implementation of infrastructure projects in Karabakh. In the last two years after the Second Karabakh war, the Republic of Azerbaijan has spoken about the intention to reintegrate Karabakh’s Armenian, however, the first official meeting between the parties was held in the headquarter of Russian peacekeeping forces in Khojaly in Karabakh on March 1 2023. After the first meeting, the Azerbaijan President’s Office issued another invitation on March 13 for the Karabakh Armenians to visit Baku but left unanswered.

Azerbaijan announced earlier in 2021 that the process of Karabakh Armenian reintegration is internal matter. However, within the international negotiations some discussion held such as on 27 September in Washington between assistant to the President of Azerbaijan Hikmet Hajiyev and Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan. According to the document leaked to the press later Azerbaijan will nominate a representative to work with a similar representative designated by the Armenian ethnic community in Karabakh to conduct discussions and the process will not prejudice to Azerbaijan’s sovereignty.

Ruben Vardanyan, Russian oligarkh of Armenian origin, who was exported to Karabakh from Russia before the Washington meeting, settled in Karabakh to sabotage the process of dialogue. The Azerbaijani side declared that it was ready to hold a dialogue with the indiginous representatives who have the right to represent the Armenian residents, and declined to receive outsiders. On Azerbaijan’s insistence after five monthes Ruben Vardanyan, has been removed from his duties by local Armenians. Shortly after that Azerbaijan appointed a special reptesentative – Ramin Mammadov, Member of Parliament, to meet with the Armenians public of  KER, and on March 1, a meeting was held in Khojaly between the parties.

Official Baku, however, want to have direct talk without a mediator in negotiations with the Karabakh Armenians, whom it considers its own citizens. For this reason, the Presidential Administration invited the Karabakh Armenians to Baku two times for the continuation of the next talks. But Karabakh separatists declared that they are ready to meet only with the mediation of the command of the Russian Peacekeeping Contingent. The insistent of the separatists to have the mediation of the Russian peacekeepers stems from influence from Moscow – to control the situation in Karabakh, and the whole process. During his meeting with Ararat Mirzoyan in Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov gave the example of Donbas and Kosovo models for the Armenians of Karabakh. Moscow wanted the Karabakh issue to be excluded from the peace agreement to be signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In short, Moscow favors the preservation of the status quo in the region.

Besides, Moscow tries to solidify the continued presence of illegal Armenian armed forces in the KER in violation of the terms of the 10 November 2020 Tripartite Declaration and facilitates or connives the transportation of weapons and military personnel from Armenia to KER. On 5 March two Azerbaijani soldiers killed by illegal Armenian gunmen while the Azerbaijan Army Units attempted to stop and inspect the vehicle of the Armenian military formations transporting illegal military supplies thorugh Khankendi-Khalfali-Turshsu dirt road. After that, the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan announced several times that Armenians were using dirt roads for illegal purposes. These statements were actually a call to the international community to react the illegal use of this road. After the Azerbaijan`s MOD statements Russian peacekeeping forces started to accompany illegal Armenian formation to use dirt roads for military purposes. On 11 March the presented video footages by Azerbaijani MOD clearly demonstrated that the movement of military vehicles of the Armenian armed forces units and illegal Armenian armed detachments along the above-mentioned route was accompanied by a BTR-82A fighting vehicle belonging to the Russian peacekeeping contingent. At the same times military aircraft belonging to Iran made a non-stop flight along the Azerbaijan-Iran state border at a distance of 3-5 km from the state border, and in some cases over the state border.

Furthermore, ignoring the warnings of the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan, the Russian peacekeeping forces started to accompany the Armenian armed forces for the expansion of dirt roads – Azerbaijan defense ministry released a related video on March 24. Although the Armenian side claimed that these roads were used for humanitarian purposes the video footage circulated clearly revealed that the vehicles here were military ones. With this development, the Azerbaijani side voiced again the opinion about the necessity to put a checkpoint on the Lachin road. While there is such a checkpoint at the entrance from the Armenian side, the absence of such a checkpoint from Azerbaijan makes situation non-transparent. It shlould be noted further that the installation of checkpoints at the border is inherent rights of the states, according to international law.

As a result, on March 25, the Azerbaijani army was deployed at some heights, preventing the use of dirt roads for military purposes by Armenian illegal military forces. But in parallel, all roads are open to meet the humanitarian needs of Karabakh Armenians.

To summarize, despite the efforts to reach peace agreement after the Second Karabakh War and calls for the launch of the Karabakh Armenians reintegration process, as per the agreement reached in Washington on September 27 2022, the transportation of weapons from Armenia to the KER and the misuse of the roads leading to Karabakh, in violation of the Tripartite Declaration of 10 November 2020, increases the military tension in the region.

https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2023/04/07/obstacles-to-the-reintegration-of-karabakh-armenians-into-azerbaijan/

Armenian PM, Putin discuss situation in Lachin Corridor, Nagorno-Karabakh

 TASS 
Russia – April 7 2023
Nikol Pashinyan and Vladimir Putin also discussed ways to restore transport links in the South Caucasus

YEREVAN, April 7. /TASS/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone call on Friday to discuss the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and the Lachin Corridor, the Armenian cabinet said in a statement.

"The ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh, caused by Azerbaijan’s unlawful blockade of the Lachin Corridor, was discussed during the phone call. When speaking about dealing with the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh, Prime Minister Pashinyan highlighted the importance of consistent steps by the Russian peacekeeping mission," the statement reads.

Pashinyan and Putin also discussed ways to restore transport links in the South Caucasus. "The parties considered issues pertaining to the implementation of the trilateral statements the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan adopted on November 9, 2020, on January 11 and November 26, 2021, and on October 31, 2022, including the unblocking of the regional transport infrastructure. The parties also touched upon Armenian-Russian relations," the statement added.

Russia hopes no one will impede settlement in South Caucasus — Lavrov

 TASS 
Russia – April 7 2023
Russia is in favor of deepening cooperation among countries in the region

ANKARA, April 7. /TASS/. Russia expects that non-regional actors will not interfere with the settlement in the South Caucasus, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov told a news conference following talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu on Friday.

"We hope that some of our extra-regional colleagues will not interfere with these processes (settlement in the South Caucasus – TASS) and orient the parties towards the strict implementation of the trilateral Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements," he said.

He stressed that these agreements "remain the main basis for further work."

Russia is in favor of deepening cooperation among countries in the region.

"We welcome the process of normalization between Armenia and Turkey, launched with our support. We welcome efforts to unblock transport links in the region and, of course, to promote the post-conflict restoration of the South Caucasus," Lavrov said.

Turkey calls for early conclusion of peace agreement between Baku, Yerevan — top diplomat

 TASS 
Russia – April 7 2023
"We discussed issues related to the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. We will continue to hold consultations on the matter, particularly with Russia," Mevlut Cavusoglu said

ANKARA, April 7. /TASS/. Ankara believes that a peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia needs to be concluded as soon as possible, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said following talks with his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov on Friday.

"We discussed issues related to the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. We call for an early conclusion of a peace agreement between the two countries. We will continue to hold consultations on the matter, particularly with Russia," he pointed out.

Last year, Azerbaijan and Armenia started discussing a peace treaty with the mediation of Russia, the European Union

Putin discussed with Pashinyan situation around Karabakh, Baku-Yerevan peace treaty

 TASS 
Russia – April 7 2023
The press service of the Armenian government also reported that Pashinyan and Putin discussed the unblocking of transport communications in the South Caucasus

MOSCOW, April 7. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan discussed over phone on Friday the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh and the preparation of a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Kremlin press service reported.

"Discussions on various aspects of the current situation around Nagorno-Karabakh continued," the statement said. The Kremlin noted that the importance of implementing the 2020-2022 agreements of the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, "including those related to ensuring security and stability on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, restoring economic and transport ties in the North Caucasus and preparing a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan" was reaffirmed.

"In addition, some topical issues of bilateral relations were touched upon," the press service of the Russian leader reported after the conversation, which took place at the initiative of the Armenian side.

The press service of the Armenian government also reported that Pashinyan and Putin discussed the unblocking of transport communications in the South Caucasus.

This is Putin and Pashinyan's fourth phone conversation since the start of this year, the previous one being held on March 13. The last telephone conversation between the Russian president and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev took place on March 16.

The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the highland region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union break-up, but primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. Russia has repeatedly acted as a mediator in resolving the situation between Baku and Yerevan, including hosting talks between the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan. With the mediation of Moscow in November 2020, a statement on the full cessation of hostilities in Nagorno-Karabakh was adopted. According to the document, the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides stopped at the occupied positions, a number of areas came under Baku's control, and Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the line of contact and in the Lachin corridor. Subsequently, the leaders of the three countries adopted several other joint statements on the situation in the region.

Armenia Says Preparing To Possibly Open Land Transit Route On Border With Turkey

April 6 2023

 (@ChaudhryMAli88) 

The Armenian authorities are preparing for a possible opening of the land border with Turkey for citizens of third countries in accordance with a prior agreement on the issue, Rustam Badasyan, the head of the Armenian State Revenue Committee, said on Thursday

YEREVAN (UrduPoint News / Sputnik – 06th April, 2023) The Armenian authorities are preparing for a possible opening of the land border with Turkey for citizens of third countries in accordance with a prior agreement on the issue, Rustam Badasyan, the head of the Armenian State Revenue Committee, said on Thursday.

In March, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said that Yerevan and Ankara had reaffirmed their readiness to open the land border for citizens of third countries and people with diplomatic passports by the start of the 2023 tourist season.

"You know about the adopted decision and ongoing talks as regards citizens of third countries and those who possess diplomatic passports. Together with other government departments we are now getting prepared so that the border checkpoint (with Turkey) could start working as soon as possible if such a decision is taken," Badasyan told journalists.

In July, the two countries agreed to open the land border for the movement of citizens of third countries and decided to initiate the necessary process on the matter, following a meeting of the special representatives of Turkey and Armenia on the process of normalization of relations in Vienna.

Turkey and Armenia currently do not have official diplomatic relations. The border between the two countries has been closed on Ankara's initiative since 1993. Tensions between the nations arose over a range of issues, including Turkey's support for Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue and its opposition to the process of international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Empire.

Press Release: Groundbreaking New Akian BioScience Lab Slated to Open at AUA Led by Dr. Narine Sarvazyan

YEREVAN, Armenia — The American University of Armenia (AUA) is proud to announce the launch of the future Akian BioScience Laboratory, to be established through a generous gift to the University by major benefactors Zaven and Sonia Akian. The Akian BioScience Lab will be a modern science laboratory equipped with the necessary research equipment and resources to expand the University’s endeavors within the field at AUA. With the upcoming construction of the new AUA Science & Engineering building, funded through the Build a Better Future with AUA capital campaign, the Lab will be the first of many other endeavors to lead technological and scientific advancement in a rapidly evolving landscape taking hold in Armenia.

In their role as supporters of the sciences with the founding support of the Akian College of Science and Engineering (CSE), the Akian family have also contributed to the 200 ChangeMakers of AUA campaign, with their children Lori, Lena, and Haig investing in the effort to nurture a culture of research and innovation among AUA students and faculty. This new initiative of creating the Akian BioScience Lab will further bolster their commitment to fostering advanced research in the field. 

Speaking of what has inspired them to fund the inception of this groundbreaking new lab, Zaven Akian says, “I have always been interested in expanding CSE’s programs beyond computer science, data science, and engineering. Indeed, the field of bioscience was a target to introduce in CSE’s list of prospective disciplines, especially following the devastating pandemic the world experienced starting in 2020.”

The Akian BioScience Lab will serve as an experimental platform for both research and educational activities and will be led by Dr. Narine Sarvazyan, who was recently appointed to the position of the William Frazer Endowed Professorship, established with funds donated to the University by the late visionary philanthropist and AUA benefactor Edward Avedisian

With her husband, Arthur Petrosian, Dr. Sarvazyan is among the 100 Pillars of AUA, through which she continues to support AUA students and is committed to investing in their future through education. “I feel a great responsibility to utilize my expertise and knowledge to teach and inspire many talented AUA students, making it possible for them to develop their own careers in bioscience without having to leave the country,” she says. In her outstanding research career, she has focused on the basic mechanisms of cardiac arrhythmias, cardiotoxicity of cancer drugs and environmental contaminants, stem cell therapies and new imaging modalities to visualize ablation lesions and other pathophysiological tissue states. Her extensive experience in the field will be instrumental in leading the new Akian BioScience Lab at AUA.


Dr. Sarvazyan will play a major role in the Lab, developing and teaching several hands-on life science courses with the ultimate goal of training a new cadre of young scientists to lead research in the field in Armenia. “In the United States, over 60% of all scientific research occurs in university labs. These labs play a crucial role in fostering innovation, providing hands-on learning opportunities, facilitating collaboration, and elevating the standing of universities. I hope that creating a similar environment at the AUA Akian BioScience Lab will contribute to bringing a research-oriented culture to Armenia's higher education ecosystem. The ultimate goal is to facilitate interdisciplinary collaborations among different AUA programs, as well as to engage AUA faculty and students in collaborative research with other academic and educational entities in both Armenia and abroad,” Dr. Sarvazyan remarks.  

AUA students will be exposed to a “wet-lab” environment where they will be enabled to apply their theoretical knowledge to conduct hands-on experiments, which will in turn help them to innovate and develop advanced practical skills advantageous to their future career endeavors. Dr. Sarvazyan adds that “studies conducted at the lab will eventually lead to the development of new life sciences technologies in Armenia. This will help to form local spinoffs and startups in a variety of disciplines, including agriculture, medicine, environmental protection, and other related fields.”

In addition, the Akian BioScience Lab will provide grounds and open doors for partnering with local industry and collaborating with foreign institutions. “Most importantly, the research activities of this lab will be conducted in compliance with Western principles of ethical research, including the proper treatment of animals and human subjects, as well as observation of safety standards,” Dr. Sarvazyan confirms. 

“Sonia and I were delighted to support Professor Sarvazyan’s mission with the Akian BioScience Laboratory, which is essential to her research. We are looking forward to her leadership and the impact she and her associates will have in Armenia in this exciting field, eventually establishing a Ph.D. program in biosciences and bioinformatics. We believe that one day in the near future, Armenia will be at the forefront of research and discovery,  even production of medications, vaccines or other genetically modified products for human consumption,” Akian adds. 

In her research experience over the course of three decades, Dr. Sarvazyan’s laboratory, currently at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, has been continuously supported by funding from the United States National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the National American Heart Association, and other major funding agencies. Speaking of funding, Dr. Sarvazyan states, “The Akians’ gift will be a wonderful start for creating such a lab, and more donor and grant support will be sought to finance the procurement of additional equipment required for the lab.” 

The Akian BioScience Lab will provide AUA students with various opportunities to learn and experiment, playing a crucial role in their intellectual and academic development. The launch of the Lab will be a significant step forward in the advancement of research at the University, further improving its institutional visibility and reputation.

Founded in 1991, the American University of Armenia (AUA) is a private, independent university located in Yerevan, Armenia, affiliated with the University of California, and accredited by the WASC Senior College and University Commission in the United States. AUA provides local and international students with Western-style education through top-quality undergraduate, graduate, and certificate programs, promotes research and innovation, encourages civic engagement and community service, and fosters democratic values. 


Bella Karapetyan | Communications Manager

Բելլա Կարապետյան | Հաղորդակցության մենեջեր

+374 60 612 514,  

bkarapetyan@


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