Foreign Ministry Secretary General receives international expert delegation

External policy17:35, 26 March 2026
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The Secretary General at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia, David Karapetyan, received a delegation of international experts specializing in foreign policy, international security, and democratic governance.

The experts visited Armenia from March 23 to 26 as part of a program organized by the Bucharest office of the German Marshall Fund of the United States, in cooperation with the Yerevan-based Foundation for Culture and Civilization Studies.

During the meeting, the parties exchanged views on key regional and international developments.

Karapetyan highlighted the importance the Government of Armenia attaches to continuous engagement with civil society and the sustainable development of democratic institutions.

He also invited the members of the delegation to participate in the third international forum “Yerevan Dialogue,” scheduled to take place in Yerevan on May 5–6, 2026.

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Armenian Defense Minister pays official visit to France

Military18:25, 26 March 2026
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Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan is on an official visit to France, the ministry said in a statement.

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Defense Minister Papikyan meets French President’s military advisor

Military19:32, 26 March 2026
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As part of his official visit to France, Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan on March 26 met with French Army General Vincent Giraud, the Chief of the Personal Staff of the French President and his chief military advisor.

Papikyan reported about the meeting in a post on Facebook.

The Armenian Defense Minister is in France on an official visit.

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Armenpress: Defense Minister Papikyan meets representatives of French defense

Military21:43, 26 March 2026
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Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan met with representatives of French defense companies at the Mouvement des Entreprises de France (MEDEF), Papikyan said in a post on Facebook.

Suren Papikyan is on an official visit to France on March 26.

Earlier on March 26, Papikyan met with French Army General Vincent Giraud, Chief of the Personal Staff of the French President and his chief military advisor.

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Armenia faces 25 new cases at ECHR, report finds

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 26 2026

A total of 25 new cases concerning Armenia were brought before the European Court of Human Rights in 2025, according to the latest annual report published by the Council of Europe Committee of Ministers.

The report assesses how member states are implementing rulings from the Strasbourg-based court, which oversees compliance with the European Convention on Human Rights.

Across all member states, the number of new judgments requiring supervision by the Committee of Ministers saw a slight decrease in 2025. A total of 921 new cases were registered, compared to 992 in 2024.

Ukraine recorded the highest number of new cases at 159. It was followed by Azerbaijan and Italy, each with 75 cases. Hungary (70), Turkey (69) and Poland (58) also ranked among the countries with the most new rulings.

The 25 new cases concerning Armenia represent an increase from 15 in 2024, though slightly lower than the 28 recorded in 2023.

According to the report, the cases largely relate to police conduct during mass protests, alleged discrimination against members of the LGBT community, the lack of adequate respons to serious domestic violence cases and dismissal of judges.

Sports: Armenian pair advance to free skate at World Championships

Panorama, Armenia
Mar 26 2026

Armenia’s Karina Akopova and Nikita Rakhmanin have qualified for the free skate at the ISU World Figure Skating Championships in Prague after a strong performance in the short program.

Competing to “Artsakh”, a composition by Ara Gevorgyan, the pair scored 67.12 points, placing eighth among 21 teams and securing a place in the next round. The free program is scheduled for 26 March.

The duo previously earned 66.27 points at the Winter Olympics qualification event held in Italy in February.

Armenia is also represented in the men’s event by 19-year-old Simyon Danilyants, who is set to compete in the short program on 26 March, with the free skate to follow on 28 March.

The World Figure Skating Championships are being held from 24 to 29 March.

Ancient alphabets, new insights: Researchers uncover hidden links among the le

Eurekalert
Mar 26 2026

SDSU researchers used AI to compare writing systems across distant regions.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

San Diego State University

 

image: 

From left, characters in the Ethiopic (portions only), Armenian, Georgian and Caucasian Albanian alphabets. 

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Credit: Daniel Zemene, Esatu Zemene, Atharv Sankpal, Eskinder Sahle, Vyshak Athreya Bellur Keshavamurthy, Samuel Kinde Kassegne, Machine learning techniques for exploring influence, commonalities, and shared origin of scripts: cases of Ethiopic, Armenian, Georgian, and Caucasian Albanian scripts, Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, 2026;, fqag029, st1yle=”box-sizing:border-box;margin:5px 0px 15px”>With artificial intelligence (AI) as an essential tool, San Diego State University researchers have discovered surprising similarities among ancient writing systems from Africa and the Caucasus region of Eurasia. Their study suggests the Armenian alphabet may be more closely related in structure to the ancient Ethiopic writing system than linguists and historians previously thought.

For many years, historians noticed some Armenian, Georgian and Caucasian Albanian letters look similar to letters from Ethiopic, also known as Ge’ez, a writing system developed in the Horn of Africa more than 1,600 years ago. 

Most of these early studies, however, relied on scholars’ own visual inspection of the letters to determine whether they appeared alike.

Researchers from the Department of Mechanical Engineering in the College of Engineering tested this idea using AI instead of human judgment. They trained a computer program to study more than 28,000 images of Ethiopic characters so it could learn the basic shapes and patterns in the writing system. The program learned to recognize curves, straight lines, angles and the overall structure of each letter.

Importantly, the computer had no data on history, religion, geography or culture. It only looked at shapes. After learning the Ethiopic characters, the program compared them to letters from the Armenian, Georgian and Caucasian Albanian alphabets. It then calculated how similar the shapes were.

The results, published March 25 in Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, were striking. 

Among the three alphabets tested, Armenian letters showed the strongest similarity to Ethiopic letters. Caucasian Albanian letters showed a moderate level of similarity, while Georgian letters showed some similarities but were less consistent. As a comparison, the researchers also tested the Latin alphabet — the one used in English — and found it showed much lower similarity.

“Our aim was to move beyond visual impressions that are difficult to test or replicate,” said Sam Kassegne, a professor of mechanical engineering and lead investigator. “By making our criteria explicit and mathematical, we introduced an objective computational approach that is easily reproducible. We believe that this reproducibility is the key contribution of our method.”

New findings

One of the most surprising findings was that the Armenian alphabet appeared almost as similar to Ethiopic as Ethiopic is to its own earlier version. That suggests the resemblance may not be accidental.

The Armenian alphabet was created around 405 CE. Around that same time, the Ethiopic writing system was expanding and becoming more widely used. Historical records show people from Ethiopia traveled to such places as Jerusalem, Egypt and Syria during this period. The creator of the Armenian alphabet, Mesrop Mashtots, also traveled through parts of the Middle East. While the study does not prove one writing system copied the other, it suggests cultural contact and influence between these regions may have been possible.

The study also shows how modern technology can help answer ancient questions. 

We are already familiar with AI being used for self-driving cars and medical imaging. In this case, it was used to study the shapes of letters from ages ago revealing some level of historical cultural interactions. By teaching a computer to carefully measure similarities, researchers were able to move beyond the limitations of visual impressions and provide numerical evidence.

Daniel Zemene, an SDSU graduate student and AI and machine learning researcher at SDSU’s NanoFAB Lab, emphasized the broader implications of the findings.

“What makes the research significant is that computational geometry and historical scholarship converge on the same scripts and time period,” said Zemene, the study’s first author. 

“The model had no access to historical records, yet it learned purely from visual and structural data and identified Armenian as the closest structural match to Ethiopic within the very timeframe historians have long debated. That convergence between computation and history is powerful.”

The researchers emphasize similarity does not automatically mean direct borrowing. However, the findings make it more reasonable to consider that these cultures may have influenced one another. Throughout history, societies have shared ideas, including systems of writing. Greek, Roman, Persian and Arabic civilizations all influenced one another in different ways.

This new research suggests Ethiopia’s ancient writing culture may also have played a meaningful role in the exchange of ideas across regions. It also shows AI is not just about modern technology, but a tool that can help us understand literary heritage with a new level of precision.
 


Armenpress: Magnitude 6.2 earthquake rocks Japan’s Honshu

World21:07, 26 March 2026
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An earthquake of magnitude ‌6.2 struck off the east coast of ⁠Japan’s largest island, Honshu, on Thursday, the German Research Centre for Geosciences ‌said.

The quake occurred at a depth of 10 km m(6.2 miles), the agency said.

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Putin says Middle East conflict consequences could be comparable to Covid pand

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has said it is hard to predict the consequences of the conflict in the Middle East, but “could be comparable to those of the Covid pandemic.”

“The consequences of the conflict in the Middle East are still difficult to accurately predict,” Putin told business leaders in Moscow. 

He added that some estimates suggest they “could be compared with the coronavirus epidemic.”

He said the conflict is disrupting global supply chains and putting pressure on energy, metals and fertilizer sectors.

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