COAF embarks on Child and Family Center construction in Armavir

Rendering of the COAF Child and Family Center being built in the village of Myasnikyan, Armavir province

ARMAVIR, Armenia—A groundbreaking ceremony on January 17 marked the commencement of the construction of the Child and Family Center by the Children of Armenia Fund (COAF) in the village of Myasnikyan, Armavir province. The Center is funded by the American-Armenian philanthropist Hagop Youredjian and stands as the inaugural phase of the SMART Armavir Campus, aligning seamlessly with the strategic development goals outlined by the Armenian government for the Armavir province. 

The event was attended by the Deputy Minister of Labor and Social Affairs of the Republic of Armenia, Tatevik Stepanyan; Governor of Armavir Province, Davit Khudatyan; Mayor of Armavir, Varsham Sargsyan; Founder of the Youredjian Family Charitable Foundation, one of the largest benefactors of COAF, Hagop Youredjian; Global Executive Director of COAF, Ara Barsam; and Managing Director Liana Ghaltagchyan.

COAF’s Child & Family Center (CFC) aims to provide a comprehensive array of services, including early childhood education programs, speech therapy, and psychological and social work support for children and their families across 14 communities, impacting 3,000 children. The CFC will also host parenting workshops, personalized educational and developmental approaches, and multifaceted outreach initiatives to ensure every child receives the necessary support to overcome obstacles.

In his opening remarks, newly-appointed Governor Khudatyan expressed his enthusiasm, stating, “This project marks the most inspiring start for me as the head of the community. I am thrilled to collaborate with COAF, and this megaproject is more than just a connection.”

Stepanyan emphasized, “Every initiative focused on children directly contributes to the development and strengthening of the Republic of Armenia.”

Ghaltagchyan underscored the significance of the COAF Armavir CFC, stating, “COAF works in close collaboration with governmental and local authorities to assure the fulfillment of regional needs. We envision this center to become a resource hub, empowering local communities with the skills and tools to advance Armavir province.”

Youredjian, a devoted COAF friend and philanthropist, expressed his connection with the foundation, saying, “My collaboration with COAF started right here in Armavir. When I first visited the COAF Karakert Center, I was deeply impressed. It brought me immense joy, and I am confident that this center in the village of Myasnikyan will play a vital role for children in local and nearby communities.”

The Children of Armenia Fund is a non-profit, non-governmental organization founded in 2003. Our community-based, comprehensive approach to reducing rural poverty has helped Armenian village youth access the resources to achieve and in turn, give back to their communities and the world.


Armenian Foreign Minister expresses concerns over Azerbaijani reversal in peace talks

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan (RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs, January 22, 2024)

YEREVAN—Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan voiced concerns during a January 23 news conference regarding Azerbaijan’s unexpected backtrack in the ongoing peace talks with Armenia. 

While the December 8 Armenia-Azerbaijan prisoner exchange suggested a positive development, Mirzoyan highlighted Azerbaijan’s failure to maintain a constructive stance since then. This shift was evident in Azerbaijan’s recent proposals on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty and President Ilham Aliyev’s latest interview on January 10, marking a significant regression in the peace process on crucial issues.

“Unfortunately, after this positive step of December 8, we saw that Azerbaijan is not continuing with its constructive stance, to say the least,” Mirzoyan said. “That manifested itself through both the seventh Azerbaijani proposals on the treaty and the Azerbaijani president’s latest interview. There was a significant regression and even a blow to the peace process on a number of key issues.”

During a January 19 discussion in Croatia, Mirzoyan emphasized Armenia’s conscientious commitment to fostering lasting peace in the region. While acknowledging challenges arising from Azerbaijan’s lack of reciprocity, Mirzoyan highlighted Armenia’s active participation in negotiations, supported by the European Union and other stakeholders. However, he lamented Azerbaijan’s reluctance to resume talks on existing platforms.

Mirzoyan stressed the foundational principles guiding the negotiations, including territorial integrity, recognition, indivisibility of borders and mutual acknowledgment of sovereignty. He said these principles form the bedrock for a comprehensive peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and Armenia remains steadfast in its pursuit of a negotiated settlement that respects these principles.

Mirzoyan previously raised concerns on January 10 regarding the latest Azerbaijani proposals on a peace treaty, which he said show Azerbaijan’s reluctance to explicitly recognize Armenia’s borders. In response, during a January 10 interview, President Aliyev reiterated demands for Armenia to open an extraterritorial corridor to Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan exclave and insisted on Armenian withdrawal from “eight Azerbaijani villages.” Aliyev also dismissed Yerevan’s use of the most recent Soviet maps for border delimitation.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan rejected Aliyev’s demands, characterizing them as territorial claims. Mirzoyan reiterated on January 23 that Azerbaijan seeks to redraw its long border with Armenia, emphasizing that no one has the authority to unilaterally establish a new border. He affirmed Armenia’s commitment to reproducing borders drawn on legal grounds before the Soviet Union’s dissolution.

Despite the perceived risk of an Azerbaijani invasion of Armenia, Mirzoyan asserted that Pashinyan’s government remains dedicated to its “peace agenda.” On January 22, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, expressed serious concern about Azerbaijan’s latest territorial claims against Armenia. 

“The latest territorial claims by President Aliyev are very concerning. And any violation of Armenia’s territorial integrity will be unacceptable and will have severe consequences for our relations with Azerbaijan,” Borrell said during a news conference.

In response, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry swiftly rejected Borrell’s criticism, accusing him of distorting Aliyev’s statements and inciting an aggressive policy against Azerbaijan. 

Azerbaijani relations with the West have recently deteriorated, as Azerbaijan has accused the West of bias in favor of Armenia. Azerbaijan has proposed bilateral negotiations without mediators, a proposition that Armenia rejects. Meanwhile, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that while Azerbaijan is willing to sign a peace agreement on Russian territory, Armenia’s readiness remains uncertain.

The situation suggests a potential failure in the preparation of a peace agreement, with leaders of both countries evaluating the peace prospects differently. Russian expert Sergey Markedonov argued that while Baku leans towards a contained agreement without international guarantors, Yerevan insists on active external involvement in the peace project. With Brussels, Washington and Moscow distracted with other regions, a deadlock has emerged, hindering progress in various directions, including the formulation of the peace treaty’s text.

Amid the potential deterioration of the ongoing peace negotiations, PM Pashinyan has introduced a new perspective on a potential treaty with Azerbaijan. Speaking before members of his ruling Civil Contract party on January 19, Pashinyan said that Armenia needs a new constitution to reflect the “new geopolitical environment” in the region. “We must have a constitution that will make Armenia more competitive and viable in the new geopolitical and regional environment,” Pashinyan said.

Central to this discussion is the argument made by Pashinyan that constitutional reforms are imperative for any meaningful peace treaty with Azerbaijan. This perspective was articulated back in September 2022, when Pashinyan emphasized the need to revisit the declaration of independence. Pashinyan argued that changes to the constitution, including the annulment of the declaration of independence and a joint decision dating back to December 1, 1989, are essential. 

Pashinyan’s call for a new constitution has come under criticism from the opposition, which says that Pashinyan is submitting to a demand from Azerbaijan. On January 19, five members of the opposition Armenia Alliance released a joint statement accusing Pashinyan of “preparing the ground for meeting another of the nonstop Turkish-Azerbaijani demands.” They said that Pashinyan aims to remove the preamble of the constitution, which refers to the 1989 unification act adopted by Armenia and Artsakh and calls for recognition of the Armenian Genocide. 

During his January 23 news conference, Foreign Minister Mirzoyan admitted that while Azerbaijan takes issue with Armenia’s constitution, Armenia also has objections to parts of Azerbaijan’s constitution. “To say that the Armenia-Azerbaijan settlement process is the reason for the change of the constitution would be a gross exaggeration,” Mirzoyan said.

Armenian journalist Nairi Hokhikyan argued that manipulating the upcoming referendum in favor of constitutional changes is a pivotal move for Pashinyan’s political agenda. Hokhikyan said that Pashinyan faces a significant challenge in the upcoming elections. The ruling party has allegedly used strategies including changing governors and orchestrating local revolutions in communities to secure influence. 

However, concerns persist about the risks associated with combining the referendum with parliamentary elections. Hokhikyan argued that the key to victory for the ruling party lies in a low turnout, which may be compromised by the simultaneous occurrence of a referendum. He added that organizing elections shortly after the referendum, when the electorate may be fatigued, could serve Pashinyan’s interests more reliably.

In the event that the opposition manages to sway public sentiment against Pashinyan’s proposed constitutional changes, the Prime Minister’s political standing could face significant challenges, Hokhikyan continued. The geopolitical dimension is also brought into focus, with contrasting expectations from Western nations and the Russian Federation regarding Pashinyan’s leadership and his alignment with regional partners. 

The unfolding political landscape in Armenia remains under scrutiny as these strategic maneuvers continue to shape the country’s future.

Hoory Minoyan was an active member of the Armenian community in Los Angeles until she moved to Armenia prior to the 44-day war. She graduated with a master's in International Affairs from Boston University, where she was also the recipient of the William R. Keylor Travel Grant. The research and interviews she conducted while in Armenia later became the foundation of her Master’s thesis, “Shaping Identity Through Conflict: The Armenian Experience.” Hoory continues to follow her passion for research and writing by contributing to the Armenian Weekly.


RFE/RL Armenian Service – 01/24/2024

                                        Wednesday, 


Pashinian Accused Of Accepting Azeri Demands For New Armenian Constitution

        • Shoghik Galstian
        • Ruzanna Stepanian

RUSSIA - Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev (L) and Armenia's Prime Minister 
Nikol Pashinian attend a an informal CIS summit in St. Petersburg, December 26, 
2022.


Opposition leaders and other critics of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian claim 
that he is seeking to enact a new constitution for Armenia at the behest of 
Azerbaijan.

Pashinian declared late last week that Armenia must adopt a constitution 
reflecting the “new geopolitical environment” in the region. He emphasized that 
in that context the country’s “external security” and “internationally 
recognized sovereign territory”.

Critics were quick to assert that he wants to get rid of a preamble to the 
current Armenian constitution enacted in 1995. The preamble makes an indirect 
reference to a 1989 declaration on Armenia’s unification with Nagorno-Karabakh 
and calls for international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide in Ottoman 
Turkey.

Five lawmakers representing the main opposition Hayastan alliance issued on 
January 19 a joint statement accusing Pashinian of “preparing the ground for 
meeting another of the nonstop Turkish-Azerbaijani demands.”

One of those deputies, Gegham Manukian, insisted on Tuesday that the main 
purpose of the planned constitutional change is to remove the preamble in 
question. Pashinian’s initiative would thus “tear down the pillars of modern 
Armenian statehood,” Manukian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Tatevik Hayrapetian, an expert on Azerbaijan and a former parliamentarian 
critical of the Armenian government, echoed those claims on Wednesday. 
Hayrapetian pointed out that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev openly demanded 
constitutional changes from Yerevan in 2021. Baku, she said, now wants to make 
sure that “in the future Armenia will refrain from claiming its rights to 
Nagorno-Karabakh under any government.”

Armenia - Tatevik Hayrapetian attends a session of parliament, April 30, 2019.
Aliyev said in early December that an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty would 
not be enough to preclude another war between the two countries. He said 
Azerbaijan also needs safeguards against Armenian “revanchism.”

Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan acknowledged on Tuesday that Baku voiced 
objections to the Armenian constitution during peace talks with Yerevan. But he 
downplayed this fact, saying that the Armenian side also has a problem with some 
provisions of Azerbaijan’s constitution.

“To say that the Armenia-Azerbaijan settlement process is the reason for the 
change of the constitution would be a gross exaggeration,” Mirzoyan told a news 
conference.

Mirzoyan, who is a leading member of Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, noted at 
the same time that the existing constitution inevitably has an impact on 
Armenian foreign policy.

The plans for the new Armenian constitution were announced after Pashinian and 
Mirzoyan complained about a toughening of Baku’s position on the peace treaty 
discussed by the two sides.

Manukian and three other opposition lawmakers were recently allowed by the 
Armenian Foreign Ministry to read recent Azerbaijani proposals regarding the 
treaty. They said afterwards that Aliyev is seeking the kind of agreement that 
would leave the door open to future territorial claims to Armenia.

“It is very obvious that the points and provisions contained in that document 
are directly related to the demand for the change of the constitution,” said 
Manukian.




340 Security Cameras Installed In Armenian Parliament

        • Shoghik Galstian

Armenia - Security cameras are seen in the parliament building in Yerevan, 
.


The Armenian authorities have increased to almost 340 the number of security 
cameras installed inside the parliament building in Yerevan, stoking opposition 
lawmakers’ concerns about government surveillance of their work.

Commenting on the measure, the press office of Armenia’s parliament said on 
Wednesday that some of the additional 120 cameras were placed in the building’s 
basement and storage rooms while others replaced older cameras installed over a 
decade ago. It insisted that this was done for solely security reasons.

“I counted six cameras in one small corridor, but I’m not sure I saw all of 
them,” said Taguhi Tovmasian, an opposition parliamentarian.

Tovmasian expressed serious concern over the “unprecedented” measure and brushed 
aside her pro-government colleagues’ periodical references to a 1999 terrorist 
attack on the parliament that left eight senior officials dead.

Armenia - Security cameras are seen in the parliament building in Yerevan, 
.

“Many years have passed since that day,” she told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. 
“There were multiple parliaments formed after that and none of them operated in 
the kind of atmosphere of fear that has been created by the current authorities. 
They are scared of everything and everyone.”

Tovmasian was particularly concerned that the cameras may be used for recording 
National Assembly members’ and staffers’ sensitive conversations and movements. 
The parliamentary press office said in this regard that although the cameras 
have audio capabilities they only record images. Opposition deputies were 
unconvinced by these assurances.

One of them, Artur Khachatrian, argued that an allegedly doctored footage of 
last April’s violent argument between two of his colleagues representing rival 
political forces was leaked to a newspaper belonging to Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s family.

Deputies from Pashinian’s Civil Contract party dismissed the opposition 
concerns. As one of them, Alkhas Ghazarian, put it, “This is done for everyone. 
This is what democracy is all about.”

Armenia - Security officers remove opposition deputy Gegham Manukian from the 
parliament podium, Օctober 26, 2021.

Security in and around the Armenian parliament compound was further tightened 
after the ruling party’s victory in the June 2021 snap elections. In particular, 
scores of officers of the State Protection Service (SPS), an agency tasked with 
providing bodyguards to Armenia’s top officials, were deployed inside the 
chamber.

On a number of occasions, the parliament’s pro-government leadership ordered SPS 
officers clad in camouflage uniforms to use force against opposition deputies. 
One of those deputies, Gegham Manukian, was dragged away from the parliament 
podium as he lambasted a Civil Contract colleague in October 2021.

Manukian was accused of breaching “ethnical rules” during his speech. The two 
opposition blocs represented in the parliament charged, for their part, that 
Pashinian’s administration has illegally restricted free speech on the 
parliament floor for the first time in Armenia’s post-Soviet history.




Turkey-Armenia Normalization Process Still On Hold

        • Nane Sahakian

Turkey - Foreign Ministers Mevlut Cavusoglu of Turkey and Ararat Mirzoyan of 
Armenia meet in Ankara, February 15, 2023.


Turkey is still not taking any steps to implement interim normalization 
agreements reached with Armenia in 2022, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said 
on Tuesday.

One of those agreements calls for the opening of the Turkish-Armenia border for 
holders of Armenian or Turkish diplomatic passport as well as citizens of third 
countries. Another agreement reached by Turkish and Armenian negotiators 
envisaged air freight traffic between the two neighboring nations. There have 
been no signs of its implementation, even though the Turkish government 
officially allowed cargo shipments by air to and from Armenia in January 2023.

“The Armenian side is ready for a quick opening of that border both in the 
political sense and in terms of infrastructure,” Mirzoyan told a news 
conference. “The only missing component is the decision of the Turkish side.”

“As we can see, either tangible steps in this directions have not been taken or 
there is no end result,” he said.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service last week that no 
fresh negotiations are planned between Ankara and Yerevan.

Mirzoyan sounded optimistic about prospects for the normalization of 
Turkish-Armenian relations as recently as in early November, two weeks after 
meeting with Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan in Tehran. “We may have some 
good news on this front in the near future,” he told Armenian lawmakers.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian similarly expressed hope at the time that the 
border agreement will be implemented soon.

Pashinian attended Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s inauguration in 
June. His domestic critics denounced the move, saying that Ankara will not 
unconditionally normalize Turkish-Armenian relations even after his unilateral 
concessions.

Speaking at a November summit of the leaders of Turkic states in Kazakhstan, 
Erdogan again demanded that Armenia open an extraterritorial corridor to 
Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan exclave. He said the corridor sought by Baku is 
important also because it would link Turkey to Central Asia which he described 
as “our ancestral homeland.” Ankara set this as a key precondition when it 
started normalization talks with Yerevan in early 2022.

Bagrat Estukian, an editor of the Istanbul-based Turkish-Armenian newspaper 
Agos, insisted on Wednesday that Erdogan is unlikely to change his policy on 
Armenia anytime soon.




Record-Low Unemployment Recorded In Armenia

        • Robert Zargarian

Armenia - A job fair in Yerevan organized for refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh, 
October 31, 2024.


Amid continuing economic growth, unemployment in Armenia fell to around 11 
percent in 2023, the lowest rate registered in many years, according to official 
statistics.

It was down from 13 percent reported by the Armenian government in 2022 and 18.2 
percent in 2020.

“I don’t remember Armenia ever having such a low unemployment rate,” Finance 
Minister Vahe Hovannisian said recently.

The South Caucasus country of less than 3 million has for decades suffered from 
high unemployment that has caused hundreds of thousands of its citizens to 
emigrate to Russia, the United States and other nations. The Armenian economy 
has grown at relatively robust rates during most of the past decade, translating 
into new jobs and higher incomes.

Some economists believe that the real unemployment rate is higher than what is 
shown by government data. But they do not deny that it has fallen in the past 
decade.

Government officials admit, for their part, that a considerable percentage of 
the country’s workforce remains jobless for various reasons.

“We have a large army of young people who do not work or study and are not 
integrated into the labor market,” Ruben Sargsian, a deputy minister of labor 
and social affairs, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service in late December.

“We have a large population, including women in the age range of 30-40, who do 
not integrate into the labor market or have difficulties with integration. We 
have a large number of beneficiaries who receive benefits while being able to 
work but not working for whatever reason,” Sargsian said, adding that the 
government needs to do a better job of helping such people find work.

Anecdotal evidence suggests that job vacancies in Armenia and especially Yerevan 
are at a record high these days. However, most of these are menial jobs which 
Armenians are now less willing to do than they were in the past and which 
increasingly attract migrants from low-income foreign countries, notably India. 
According to various estimates, between 15,000 and 30,000 Indians have moved to 
Armenia in the last few years.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2024 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenpress: Turkey approves Sweden’s NATO membership bid after 20-month delay

 10:52,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. Turkey's parliament ratified Sweden's NATO membership bid on Tuesday after 20 months of delay, Reuters reports. 

Turkey's general assembly, where President Tayyip Erdogan's ruling alliance holds a majority, voted 287-55 to approve the application that Sweden first made in 2022 to bolster its security in response to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

All NATO members need to approve applications from countries seeking to join the alliance. When Sweden and Finland asked to join in 2022, Turkey raised objections over what it said was the two countries' protection of groups it deems terrorists.

It endorsed Finland's membership in April last year but, along with Hungary, had kept Sweden waiting.

"We support NATO enlargement to improve the alliance's deterrence efforts… We hope Finland and Sweden's attitude towards fighting terrorism sets an example for our other allies," Fuat Oktay, head of parliament's foreign affairs commission and a ruling AK Party member, said during debate.

"I greatly appreciate the Turkish Parliament's decision to approve Sweden's entry into NATO today," U.S. Ambassador Jeff Flake said in a written statement on Tuesday.

He said Turkey's "commitment to the NATO Alliance clearly demonstrates our enduring partnership."

Swedish Foreign Minister Tobias Billstrom also welcomed the Turkish parliament's approval. "We now look forward to President Erdogan signing the ratification document," Billstrom said in a written statement.

Erdogan is expected to sign the legislation within days, leaving Hungary as the only member state not to have approved Sweden's accession.

Armenia, Europol to enhance partnership

 11:41,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. Armenia seeks to enhance cooperation with Europol by sending a liaison officer to the agency and strengthening information exchange.

On September 28, Armenian Minister of Internal Affairs Vahe Ghazaryan and Europol Executive Director Catherine De Bolle signed an agreement on establishing cooperation, which is aimed at enhancing partnership in fighting transnational crime.

The January 25 Cabinet meeting agenda includes an item on approving the signing of two related agreements with Europol seeking to create a secure communications line between the sides and deepen partnership.

The partnership agreement will become the basis for stationing an Armenian liaison officer in Europol, while the MoU will serve as the legal basis for creating a secure line for information exchange with Europol.

Ratification of EUMA status agreement on Cabinet meeting agenda

 12:15,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government will discuss at the January 25 Cabinet meeting the ratification of the agreement with the EU on the status of the EU Mission in Armenia.

On November 20, 2023, Armenia and the EU signed an agreement regarding the status of the European Union Mission in Armenia (EUMA).

Armenian Deputy FM Paruyr Hovhannisyan explained after the signing that the agreement on the status is about creating facilitated conditions for the monitors, ranging from healthcare to technical issues. “It’s similar to the authority that diplomats have in every country,” the Deputy FM had said.

Armenia to have military attachés in Czechia and Kyrgyzstan

 12:29,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. Armenia plans to have military attachés in Czechia and Kyrgyzstan.

The decisions on approving the new posts are included in the agenda of the January 25 Cabinet meeting.

The move is expected to strengthen bilateral partnership level.

The military attaché of the Armenian Embassy in Germany will cover Czechia, while the military attaché of the Armenian Embassy in Kazakhstan will cover Kyrgyzstan.

Cyprus President calls on European legislators to address humanitarian needs of NK Armenians

 16:01,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. President of Cyprus Nikos Christodoulides has called on European legislators at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe to address the long-term issues of the ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh who’ve been forcibly displaced.

“We witnessed another humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh which concerns tens of thousands of people. That deep humanitarian crisis led to the mass exodus of the Armenian population from the region. We must take all necessary measures to provide urgent humanitarian aid and address the long-term issues of the ethnic Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh. At the same time, the growing and urgent needs of Armenia resulting from the developments of last year’s September must receive proper and adequate solution,” Christodoulides said.

The Cypriot President said that his country supports the EU-mediated peace process between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Conference on preservation of NK cultural and religious heritage to be held in European Parliament

 16:34,

BRUSSELS, JANUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. A conference will take place in the European Parliament on the preservation of Nagorno-Karabakh’s cultural and religious heritage.

The Conference on Protecting Armenian cultural and religious heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh will be held at the initiative of MEP Miriam Lexmann.

Speaking at a press conference ahead of the event, Lexmann warned that the Armenian heritage in NK is being destroyed and Azerbaijan’s actions are left unpunished. “…yes, today the EU needs gas, for which it signed an agreement with Azerbaijan, but we don’t have the right to question or ignore the EU value system,” she said.

Pierre d’Argent, professor at the University of Louvain and a guest professor at the University of Leiden, Counsel for Armenia before the International Court of Justice (ICJ), in his remarks said that the Azerbaijani government is distorting the reality by denying the existence of the Armenian cultural heritage.

Armenia’s Ambassador to Belgium and Permanent Representative to the EU Tigran Balayan said that the Azeri authorities began the campaign of destroying Armenian cultural heritage back in 2005, when thousands of cross-stones were destroyed in Nakhijevan. “We’ve reached this point because nothing was done to prevent it,” he said.

The conference will take place on January 24.