Greece Will Give Aid to Nagorno-Karabakh Forcibly Displaced Persons
ATHENS – Residents of Nagorno-Karabakh who were forced out of the region after Armenia was defeated in a brief war by Azerbaijan after a short war in 2020 will be getting some financial assistance from Greece.
Greek Foreign Minister George Gerapetritis made the announcement in Armenia and said Greece “will soon support a program that will fund the forcibly displaced persons of Nagorno-Karabakh, to meet their needs, particularly accommodation. “It will also relate to the preservation of the Christian cultural sites in Nagorno-Karabakh. We are definitely in favor of preserving the Christian sites in Nagorno-Karabakh, and we want the UNESCO fact finding mission to be on the ground to reveal the damages that these sites have suffered or could suffer, ”he said, reported Armen Press.
The region’s Armenian population had to flee the region during the Azeri invasion in what the European Parliament said was an ethnic cleansing but whih Azerbaijan reclaimed property.
Greece supports the strengthening of the Armenia-EU ties and the deployment of the EU monitoring mission in Armenia, Gerapetritis said at a joint press conference with Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan.
“Greece has been working to strengthen EU-Armenia institutional dialogue, to offer our expertise acquired over the years as one of the oldest members o fteh EU,” the Greek FM said.
“There is a lot we can do about EU-Armenia relations. Armenia is an important part of Europe, and we will always be there for the Armenian people and the Armenian government,” the Foreign Minister stated.
Greek FM pays tribute to the memory of Armenian Genocide victims
He also laid flowers at the Eternal Flame and paid tribute to the memory of the 1.5 million victims.
The top diplomats of the two countries then held a tête-à-tête meeting at the Foreign Ministry.
George Gerapetritis will also be received by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
https://greekcitytimes.com/2024/01/10/greek-fm-pays-tribute-to-the-memory-of-armenian-genocide-victims/
The Armenian Quarter in occupied Jerusalem: ‘All Christians here are at risk’
Introduction
As the genocide in Gaza persists, Israeli efforts to ethnically cleanse and displace more Palestinians to replace them with settlers continue all over Palestine. One prominent and current example is the Armenian Quarter in occupied Jerusalem.
Jerusalem has the world's oldest Armenian diaspora community, going back 2,000 years. Nowadays, this historic quarter is under threat of demolition and confiscation. The hotel development company Xana Gardens Ltd. is claiming rights over property in the Armenian Quarter to develop a hotel over it. Israel has always been trying to change the demographics of the old city and impose a Jewish supremacy in the Muslim and Christian parts of the city in a variety of ways. The Israeli government relies heavily on settler organizations to take over land and property and on settlers who act as thugs to harass and intimidate residents to get them to leave.
Watch the report at
Greek Foreign Minister visits Armenian Genocide memorial in Yerevan
11:15,
YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Greece George Gerapetritis visited on Wednesday the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial in Yerevan to commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide a day after arriving in Armenia on an official visit.
Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan accompanied his Greek counterpart at the memorial.
FM Gerapetritis placed a wreath at the memorial and flowers at the Eternal Flame.
[see video]
Armenia expects Greece’s support in strengthening relations with EU
11:47,
YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. Armenia and Greece have a rich bilateral agenda in all sectors, Armenian FM Ararat Mirzoyan said at a joint press conference with his Greek counterpart George Gerapetritis.
Mirzoyan said that Gerapetritis’ visit to Armenia was highly important in this period of time.
“The friendship between the Armenian and Greek peoples stems from the depth of centuries and millennia, the Armenian and Hellenic states closely cooperated in various times throughout history,” Mirzoyan said.
He added that Armenia and Greece built strong, friendly ties over the course of the past thirty years. “Our agenda is very rich in all sectors. Today’s meeting is a very good opportunity to address this agenda, to boost our relations, and advance our intensive political dialogue by covering numerous issues, ranging from the economy, security, defense to culture. We also outlined the actions and roadmap for this year on mutual high-level visits and events in various sectors. The meeting of the intergovernmental commission planned to take place in the first half of the year can have a very big role,” Mirzoyan said.
The Armenian FM thanked his Greek counterpart for supporting the development of Armenia-EU ties.
“We are really set to develop these ties based on the values we share in Armenia, in Greece, and in the EU. I am talking about democracy, human rights and other values. I expect future support from Greece in this process,” the Armenian FM said.
Greece supports stronger Armenia-EU ties
12:42,
YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. Greece supports the strengthening of the Armenia-EU ties and the deployment of the EU monitoring mission in Armenia, Greek Foreign Minister George Gerapetritis has said.
“Regarding the Armenia-EU relations, Greece supports strengthening relations with Yerevan and the deployment of the EU monitoring mission in Armenia,” the Greek FM said at a joint press conference with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan in Yerevan.
“Greece will work to strengthen institutional dialogue on the level of our expert skills, being one of the oldest EU members,” the Greek FM said.
Thanking Mirzoyan for the warm reception, Gerapetritis added, “I am happy and honored to be in Yerevan for the first time as foreign minister, and to reiterate the excellent level of bilateral ties and our willingness to further deepen our relations. Indeed, Greece and Armenia have strong historical ties, friendly relations that have been built over centuries. And I have also regular contact and cooperation with my good friend and colleague.”
Peace treaty with Azerbaijan should include basis for delimitation – FM
13:49,
YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. Peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan must be anchored on several fundamental principles to prevent escalation or aggression in the future, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan has said.
Speaking at a joint press conference with the Foreign Minister of Greece George Gerapetritis in Yerevan, Mirzoyan said that on January 4 Armenia responded to Azerbaijan’s proposals on a peace treaty which was received in late December 2023.
“I’d say that in terms of content we see certain regress in some parts of the Azerbaijani proposals, but also progress in several other directions. And we’ve worked very constructively on these offers and we’ve sent our proposals, which, I am sure, are very constructive,” Mirzoyan said.
What matters are the principles on which the peace must be based, he added.
“Regardless whether any specific clause of the new offer is regress or progress, the final peace must definitely be anchored on several fundamental principles. The countries must recognize each other’s territorial integrity without any ambiguity. This is a matter that requires maximum clarity, and the final peace treaty must ensure that clarity. Also, understandably, if the delimitation of borders can take a long time, we must at least see in the peace treaty the clear grounds upon which the delimitation process must take place in the future. These are the issues where the Republic of Armenia cannot see or allow any uncertainty. Also because of the reason that uncertainty is grounds for future aggression or escalations. Therefore, if we are establishing peace, we are establishing the kind of peace that would be maximally difficult to doubt or violate,” Mirzoyan said.
The next principle is the unblocking of economic links and infrastructures in the region, based on fair and fundamental principles, Mirzoyan added.
Reiterating Armenia’s interest on opening the links, Mirzoyan said, “Peace isn’t only the absence of gunfire. Peace is open borders and the movement of goods and persons on each other’s territory. It’s difficult to talk about the establishment of peace in South Caucasus when Armenia continues to be blockaded.”
Armenia to strengthen ties with Diaspora via local commissioners
09:55,
YEREVAN, JANUARY 10, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government plans to enhance the country’s ties with its Diaspora through special commissioners who will work with Armenian communities around the world.
Diaspora Commissioners will be appointed in various cities across the world with large presence of Armenians.
Zareh Sinanyan, the High Commissioner of Diaspora Affairs of Armenia, told Armenpress that his agency has a list of potential candidates for the job.
“Over the past two years we’ve been mostly working in the communities, explaining what the commissioner’s job is going to be like. The first commissioner was appointed in 2023 to Poland by the Prime Minister. We are now considering several candidates and the appointments will be made soon. We have a big list that’s under consideration. We will work with the candidates, and when the time comes, we will ask the prime minister to make the appointment,” Sinanyan said.
Launching the network of commissioners is expected to increase the capacity of the Office of the High Commissioner of Diaspora Affairs.
The commissioners will have a “very simple” job, Sinanyan explained. “The Office of the High Commissioner of Diaspora Affairs has a limited staff, whereas we have a very big Diaspora. Therefore, we need people on the ground to act as the link between the community and my office,” he said.
“In the past there was a practice when our diplomats were the contact persons of the community. As a result they became community attachés instead of dealing with diplomacy. We want to avoid this and that’s why we are launching the institute of commissioners. We are not going to send anyone from Yerevan to the community, we will appoint the commissioner from within the community. They will be well-known, acceptable people for the community.”
The number of commissioners in any given country will depend on the size of the local Armenian community.
Upcoming appointments are expected in several countries of Western Europe.
[see video]
Interview by Anna Gziryan