Armenia and Ex-Soviet States Must Choose EU or EAEU

Modern Diplomacy
April 8 2026

Armenia, a former Soviet republic, and Russia were members of the Soviet Union and were strictly guided by rules and regulations.

Armenia, a former Soviet republic, and Russia were members of the Soviet Union and were strictly guided by rules and regulations. After the collapse of the Soviet empire in 1991, the republics have legitimacy to their sovereignty and territorial integrity. But that has not been the case. Kazakhstan operates a liberal economic system, as do other republics, including Armenia. These republics mostly have a tough time and, to some extent, control from Russia.

At a tense meeting in early April with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Vladimir Putin issued an ultimatum to its neighbor Armenia over maintaining closer ties with the European Union (EU).

“We see that there is a discussion in Armenia about developing relations with the European Union,” Putin said at the meeting with Pashinyan, adding that Moscow treats it “absolutely calmly.” But it should be obvious and honestly stated upfront that membership in a customs union with both the EU and the Eurasian Economic Union is impossible,” Putin told Pashinyan as recorded on camera.

The Russia-led Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), created in 2015, includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan, and it is meant to enable the free movement of goods, capital, and labor among its members. Azerbaijan, Armenia, and others have an increasing interest in getting closer with trade and establishing a working mutual economic cooperation with the EU, with Pashinyan even declaring an intention to join the 27-member bloc in the future.

During the meeting at the Kremlin, Putin followed up on Moscow’s gas supplies to Armenia, saying that Russia now sells gas to its neighbor at a “substantially” lower price than the EU does. ” Gas prices in Europe exceed 600 dollars per 1,000 cubic meters, whereas Russia provides gas to Armenia at 177.5 per 1,000 cubic meters,” he told Pashinyan, adding that “the disparity is vast; the difference is substantial.”

The Case of Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan, one of the Russian neighbors and former Soviet republics, also opens its doors for a broader external expansion. Given its geographical location and combined with current political reforms aimed at transforming its economy from the Soviet system to a more modernized system infused with Western culture of life, President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has chosen multi-vector policies, consistently advocating for more openness and improving necessary conditions for attracting foreign businesses and investors to participate in the various economic sectors, including the cultural and educational sectors.

Declaring that the creation of a fair Kazakhstan is its main goal, Tokayev has emphasized that the foreign policy course must also aim at the protection of national interests, the strengthening of mutually beneficial cooperation with all interested states, and international peace and security. As part of promoting a multicultural and friendly society, Kazakhstan has seriously made inbound tourism one of its priority spheres, so it has established a visa-free regime for citizens of 54 countries, including the European Union and OECD member states, the United States, Japan, Mexico, Australia, and New Zealand.

Kazakhstan has a GDP of $179.332 billion and an annual growth rate of 4.5%. Per capita, Kazakhstan’s GDP stands at $9,686. Its increased role in global trade and central positioning on the new Silk Road gave the country the potential to open its markets to billions of people. Further to this, it joined the World Trade Organization in 2015.

According to some reports, Kazakhstan has an abundant supply of accessible mineral and fossil fuel resources. Development of petroleum, natural gas, and mineral extractions has attracted most of the over $40 billion in foreign investment in Kazakhstan since 1993 and accounts for some 57% of the nation’s industrial output (or approximately 13% of gross domestic product).

The Concept of the Foreign Policy of Kazakhstan for 2020–2030, as announced and made public, outlines the following main points:

– An open, predictable, and consistent foreign policy of the country, which is progressive in nature and maintains its endurance by continuing the course of the first president—the country at a new stage of development;

– Protection of human rights, development of humanitarian diplomacy, and environmental protection;

– Promotion of the country’s economic interests in the international arena, including the implementation of state policy to attract investment;

– Maintaining international peace and security;

– Development of regional and multilateral diplomacy, which primarily involves strengthening mutually beneficial ties with key partners, for example, Russia, China, the United States, Central Asian states, and the EU countries, as well as through multilateral structures

– The United Nations, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and the Commonwealth of Independent States.

Kazakhstan is the world’s largest landlocked country, located in Central Asia and partly in Eastern Europe. It declared independence on 16 December 1991, thus becoming the last Soviet republic to declare political independence. Nursultan Nazarbayev became the country’s first president. Kazakhstan was the last Soviet republic to declare independence after the Soviet collapse in 1991. With a population of approximately 25 million, Kazakhstan strictly recognizes its political freedom, national interest, and territorial sovereignty.

Comparing EU with EAEU

The European Union (EU) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU/Eurasia Union) are distinct regional blocs with major differences in scope, purpose, and scale. The EU is a deeply integrated economic and political union of 27 democratic, mostly Western European nations, while the EAEU is a Russia-led economic union focusing on trade among post-Soviet states, featuring smaller GDP and less political integration.

Here are key differences: Membership & Leadership: The EU includes 27 mostly Western/Central European countries (e.g., Germany, France). The EAEU consists of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia.

Economic Scale: The EU’s economy is significantly larger—roughly four times larger in GDP than the EAEU (approx. $19.4 trillion vs. $4.8 trillion in 2023).

Integration Level: The EU is both a monetary (for most) and political union with strong democratic institutions, shared policies, and a common market. The EAEU is primarily an economic union focused on free movement of goods, labor, and capital, but it lacks the deep political integration of the EU.

Geopolitics & Values: The EU is built on shared democratic values and legal frameworks (EU law). The EAEU is often seen as a political tool for Russia to retain influence over post-Soviet states.

Conflicts & Stability: EAEU members are closely tied to Russia, which has created tensions in the post-Soviet space, especially following the war in Ukraine. The EU has increasingly become a preferred partnership for Eastern European nations over the EAEU.

According to the Kutafin Law Review, in essence, the EU is a deep political and economic integration project, whereas the EAEU is a smaller, trade-focused, post-Soviet initiative.

Exchanging Thoughts Over Political Sovereignty

The Armenian leader made it clear that when the time comes to make a choice, it will be solemnly made by the citizens of Armenia, without any interference. “And when the processes reach the point where it will be necessary to make a decision, I am sure that we, I mean the citizens of the Republic of Armenia, will make that decision,” Pashinyan told Putin, not mincing words.

With its long-standing influence in the South Caucasus fading and what appears to be the Kremlin’s ongoing intent to have a say in Armenia’s political decision-making, Putin told Pashiyan that Moscow hopes pro-Russian forces will be allowed to compete freely in Armenia’s parliamentary elections set for June.

Without mentioning names, Russia’s president claimed that some of their representatives have been put in custody, saying, “Some are in detention despite having Russian passports.” Putin, however, referred to Russian-Armenian billionaire Samvel Karapetyan, who was arrested last year after calling for the ouster of the government.

Pashinyan, also without naming Karapetyan, noted that Armenian law requires political candidates to hold exclusively Armenian citizenship, adding that “no restrictions” are being imposed on political opposition under such circumstances. “Persons with Russian passports, according to the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia, cannot be either a candidate for deputy or a candidate for prime minister,” Pashinyan explained to Putin.

Pashinyan firmly stated to Putin that “Armenia is a democratic country,” where the political processes are ongoing at all times. “In fact, twice a year we hold municipal elections, which are also very politicized, because as a result of our political reforms, people there also vote for or against political parties,” Pashinyan said.

The Armenian prime minister, then, referred to the internet outrage in Moscow and the Kremlin-introduced restrictions on the popular Telegram messaging app. “Our social networks, for example, are 100% free, with no restrictions at all,” Pashinyan told Putin on camera and added that, unlike Russia, there are no political prisoners in Armenia, stating that “in the general context, to be honest, we do not have participants in political processes in places of detention.”

“We have citizens who think that there is too much democracy in Armenia. But this is a matter of principle for us,” Pashinyan said.

Yerevan’s Balancing Act

Armenia’s relations with Russia have grown increasingly strained after Azerbaijan fully reclaimed the Karabakh region in 2023. Decades of bloody conflict ended as the two former bitter rivals embarked on a historic peace process, launching an economic revival in the region amid new stability in the South Caucasus. In 2024, Armenia suspended its membership in the Russia-led Yerevan Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) after Moscow failed to support Yerevan during the 2022 Karabakh escalation.

“In my opinion, the CSTO mechanisms should have been activated (in 2022),” Pashinyan told Putin, adding that “they were not activated, and this, of course, led to the situation that we have in relations with the CSTO.” He confirmed that Armenia is currently not participating in the CSTO for what he described as a “simple reason.”

“We are still unable to explain to our people, our citizens, why the CSTO did not respond, and did not respond despite the obligations that exist under the Collective Security Treaty,” the Armenian leader told Putin.

Putin called Armenian concerns “certain grievances” as he argued that Moscow’s decision not to intervene was on Yerevan and Russia did not see a point in stepping in. “It is obvious that after you accepted in Prague in 2022 that Karabakh is part of Azerbaijan, the CSTO’s intervention in this process, which has acquired an intra-Azerbaijani nature, was simply absolutely wrong in this matter,” Putin told Pashinyan.

“This is not an assessment; I am not saying that this is good or bad. From the point of view of organizing peaceful life, I think that, probably, it made sense,” the Russian president added. “Here we simply need to look for ways to further strengthen relations. But it seems to me that here too we need to finish here,” Putin concluded.

Since reaching an agreement to put an end to almost four decades of a bloody conflict in Karabakh, Armenia and Azerbaijan have been working on normalizing and strengthening their bilateral relations as well as the cooperation in the region, with one exception. Russia has been notably absent from the Karabakh peace process, both during and after the agreement was reached, and both Yerevan and Baku have been distancing themselves from Moscow while jointly redirecting their foreign policy focus toward the EU and the US.

Tracking the Argumentative Sequence

In this analysis, tracking the argumentative sequence, with notable precision, the significant differences between the European Union and the Eurasian Union, sometimes referred to as the ‘Greater Eurasian Union,’ are as follows:

In either case, Armenia is a sovereign republic; it has its own right to determine the political system of governance, the parameters of economic development, and the shape of its own diplomatic directions with external partners without any restraint or restrictions. Armenia operates within the constitutional framework, and the prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, has the mandate from the electorate of Armenia. The choice of political sovereignty and foreign relations are stipulated in the constitution.

Russia’s political regulatory architecture, the system of restraints and mechanisms of instructing directives, is optional but not necessarily compulsory. The logic that any former Soviet republic must only maintain membership with the Eurasian Union and not at the same time with both is rather illogical, particularly when Russia is a staunch advocate of ‘multipolarism,’ which ascribes to flexible and broad practice and openness to global integration. An argument for making choices based on restrictions does not, precisely, fit into the context of global unity, new liberal architecture, and emerging multipolarism.

Could Vance’s visit to Armenia and Azerbaijan herald further American weapons

OC Media
April 8 2026

While the US’s role in the South Caucasus is expanding, significant political and economic factors argue against a full partnership reset.

US Vice President JD Vance’s trip to the South Caucasus highlighted the rising American interest in the region and placed new focus on the US’s deepening bilateral relationships with Armenia and Azerbaijan, both of which hosted Vance. Meanwhile, Georgia, once the US’s closest partner in the region, found itself left off the itinerary.

These expanding relations were initiated by the US’s role in securing a preliminary peace agreement between Azerbaijan and Armenia, which was initialled by the leaders of both countries in August 2025. That agreement envisioned a significant role for the US in promoting regional connectivity through the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity (TRIPP). The Trump administration is also increasingly involved in expanding economic investment and fostering nascent security relationships with both countries.

Vance’s trip was especially notable for including the announcement that, for the first time ever, the US would complete sales of military equipment to both countries

It is clear the Trump administration is pursuing a policy of actively expanding American arms exports worldwide in order to strengthen the American defense industrial base. Armenia and Azerbaijan are simply opportunities to expand American production within that overarching policy framework.

The peace process between Armenia and Azerbaijan is also arguably the only case where the Trump administration’s focus on achieving peace through bilateral negotiations and business deals has enjoyed unalloyed success. Consequently, the administration is eager to take actions that further that process and allow them to publicise that success. It is unclear, however, whether American interest in the region will continue beyond the current administration.

Indeed, while the announcement of the sale of surveillance drones to Armenia and naval patrol boats to Azerbaijan appears to augur a new era in US arms exports to the region, political and economic constraints will limit the South Caucasus’s potential as a market for US defence exports.

Armenian attempts to diversify amidst economic constraints

Prior to the 2020 Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, the overwhelming majority of Armenia’s arms imports came from Russia, which often subsidised Armenia’s purchases. This dynamic has changed significantly in recent years. Relations between Armenia and Russia deteriorated rapidly after Russia’s inaction in the face of continued military pressure from Azerbaijan in the aftermath of the war. Yerevan also lost faith in Russia’s reliability as an arms supplier after Russia failed to deliver weapons systems Armenia had ordered, which Russian officials blamed on the impact of their full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

‘The prior strategy of embedding Armenia within only one major external relationship is seen in Yerevan today as a catastrophic error’, Laurence Broers, Associate Fellow with Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia Programme, tells OC Media.

As a result, Armenia has sought to diversify its security relationships and, to that end, suspended its participation in the Russia-dominated Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO). Armenia has since imported weapons systems from France and India, with the latter becoming the largest provider of arms to Armenia in 2024.

‘French weaponry indicates some European concern for Armenia’s security, while Indian weapon imports do not trigger Russian fears as much as European or American weapons’, Joshua Kucera, a senior analyst with the International Crisis Group, tells OC Media, highlighting how these new partnerships also serve a specific political purpose.

Given its significant geopolitical reorientation in recent years, the Armenian government would likely welcome the opportunity to add the US to its list of security partners. In 2025, the country hosted US military forces for bilateral exercises for the first time. This eagerness for security cooperation includes an openness to purchasing American military equipment, though, as previously mentioned, any opportunity would have to be weighed against further deterioration of relations with Russia. However, economic and political factors constrain Armenia’s ability to dramatically expand its imports of US material.

Economically, Armenia’s central challenge in its long rivalry with Azerbaijan is the considerable material disparity between the two countries. Armenia’s population of 3 million and GDP of $26 billion are each only approximately a third the size of Azerbaijan’s population of 10 million and GDP of $74 billion. This discrepancy means that Armenia must be highly efficient with its limited resources to be capable of matching Azerbaijan’s considerably larger military potential. American military equipment is not renowned for being inexpensive and is almost certainly less cost effective for Armenia than alternative suppliers.

Politically, while tensions have certainly lessened since the initialling of the draft peace agreement, Azerbaijan and Armenia continue to regard each other as their primary security threat. This dynamic means that any extensive weapons sales to Armenia would likely strain relations between the US and Azerbaijan as well as Azerbaijan’s partner, Turkey. As the controversy over Vance’s tweet about the Armenian genocide neatly demonstrates, Trump’s administration prioritises its relationship with Baku and especially Ankara over its relationship with Yerevan, making significant arms sales to Armenia an undesirable prospect for both sides.

Both politics and economics argue against the US emerging as a major arms supplier for Armenia; however, ad hoc deals remain possible, especially in emerging areas such as unmanned systems where US equipment may be more cost competitive.

Azerbaijan’s wider strategic alliances

Like Armenia, Azerbaijan also relied heavily on Russian imports to equip its armed forces in the early post-Soviet era, though by the 2000s, it had a relatively diversified set of arms suppliers. This trend intensified in the years leading up to the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in 2020, though the US was not one of these diversified suppliers due to Section 907 of the 1992 Freedom Support Act, which de-facto banned US security assistance to Azerbaijan.

In contrast, the second Trump administration has been quite clear about its desire to develop a robust security relationship with Azerbaijan. Indeed, defence sales were explicitly mentioned in the US–Azerbaijan Strategic Partnership Charter, signed in February. Washington’s interest in building this security relationship also has much to do with the extensive relationship between Israel and Azerbaijan. As the war between the US and Iran continues to expand, the Trump administration likely sees Azerbaijan as a potential regional security partner.

The economics of the US exporting weapons systems to Azerbaijan are also reasonably sound. Azerbaijan’s extensive oil and gas revenues support a robust defence budget, with the country spending an estimated $3.7 billion on defence in 2024 with recent increases potentially bringing the budget to over $5 billion. The former figure is over twice the size of Armenia’s 2025 defence budget and could enable them to purchase expensive American systems, if permitted by Washington.

However, despite the interest from Washington in expanding American defence exports to Azerbaijan, actual arms purchases are likely to be limited. During the 30 years that Azerbaijan was de-facto banned from receiving American security assistance, Baku invested significant diplomatic energy and economic resources into building defence industrial cooperation with Israel, Turkey, and Pakistan. Israel and Turkey in particular provided the advanced missile and drone systems that enabled Azerbaijani victory in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War. Meanwhile, Pakistan recently supplied Azerbaijan with JF-17 fighter jets to supplement its existing Russian-made fighters.

‘Baku has multifaceted ties with each of those countries, so the military element is embedded in these wider strategic relationships’, Broers tells OC Media, adding that beyond the specific equipment provided ‘with Israel, this was about breaking the Russian monopoly on arms supplies balancing the Armenian-Azerbaijani rivalry; with Turkey this is about a more rounded military alliance and transfer of NATO know-how and standards; with Pakistan it’s about diversification and joint production potential’.

Beyond the political depth and unique strategic context of each of these relationships, ‘having multiple partners is always better than depending on one power’, Kucera assesses.

These middle powers are viewed by Baku as reliable security partners. While Baku may welcome attempts by the Trump administration to develop a US–Azerbaijan security partnership, it likely does not view Washington as a sufficiently reliable long-term security partner to make extensive purchases of American materiel, nor does it see such a relationship with the US as necessary, given its recent success enabled by its existing partners.

Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act remains on the books, and, while the Trump Administration will likely continue issuing annual waivers to the act, there is no guarantee that future US administrations will continue this practice. The Armenian diaspora in the US remains influential within Congress and it is entirely possible a future US administration might share the Biden administration’s concerns with Azerbaijan’s human rights record. Baku has not forgotten the Biden administration’s re-imposition of Section 907 bans in response to Azerbaijan’s actions during the blockade and subsequent conquest of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2023.

Significant arms deals are often at least as much about the underlying bilateral relationship as they are about economics or the technical capabilities of any equipment purchased, and for Azerbaijan, the American relationship is too uncertain to replace its current partners.

Even so, limited purchases are still likely since, as Kucera notes, ‘American weapons, even in symbolic amounts, help the country move past the perceived stigma of Section 907’.

Vance’s trip to Armenia and Azerbaijan highlighted that the US’s role in the South Caucasus is expanding. The announcement of the sales of defence material to both Azerbaijan and Armenia during that visit is a significant development in this regard as it represents a serious commitment by the Trump Administration to be a security partner for each country.

However, significant political, and in Armenia’s case economic, factors argue against the US being able to step into Russia’s old role as the primary provider of arms to the South Caucasus. Instead, both Armenia and Azerbaijan are likely to use whatever military equipment they purchase from the US to supplement militaries that will be primarily equipped with the weaponry of a diverse collection of middle powers that they see as individually more reliable and collectively less risky than relying on any single partner.

The views expressed are the author’s own and do not represent Georgetown University or any employer past or present

https://oc-media.org/could-vances-visit-to-armenia-and-azerbaijan-herald-further-american-weapons-deals/

Major Armenian opposition alliance forced to drop Karapetyan’s name after legi

OC Media
April 8 2026

Armenia’s Parliament has adopted amendments to the electoral code prohibiting the use of personal names in the names of party alliances. The newly formed alliance of Russian–Armenian tycoon Samvel Karapetyan was the only bloc whose name included a personal name.

The amendments, proposed by three MPs from the ruling Civil Contract party, were discussed in a session on Tuesday and were eventually passed with 67 votes in favour and 6 against.

The changes, along with other amendments, came ahead of the 7 June parliamentary elections and five days before the nomination of candidates starts.

Such regulation existed in the electoral code but was removed by the end of 2024 — Civil Contract MPs claim the removal was a result of a ‘technical error’ that they recently noticed.

The timing appeared to coincide with Karapetyan’s Strong Armenia party announcing on 31 March that it had formed a coalition named Strong Armenia with Samvel Karapetyan.

Karapetyan, who is currently under house arrest and faces multiple charges in Armenia, has been named the party’s prime ministerial candidate.

The decision was made despite the fact that under Armenia’s constitution, Karapetyan is ineligible to run for parliament or become prime minister as he holds Russian and Cypriot citizenships in addition to being Armenian. The tycoon has also not lived in the country for the past four years.

In his stead, his nephew Narek Karapetyan has taken a lead in the party’s campaign.

Explainer | Who is Samvel Karapetyan, the Russian–Armenian billionaire whose empire is under siege

Alongside Karapetyan’s party, the coalition includes two smaller, less prominent parties, New Era and United Armenians. Earlier talks had considered including more established parties, such as the Armenian National Congress under Armenia’s first president, Levon Ter-Petrosyan, but negotiations failed to produce an agreement.

On Tuesday, the opposition criticised the speedy changes to the electoral code, claiming there was a political pretext, as Karapetyan is Civil Contract’s main political opponent in the upcoming elections.

‘The largest opposition political force that has declared its participation has already announced its name, and suddenly you introduce a law that restricts and prohibits doing that’, the head of the opposition I Have Honour faction, Hayk Mamijanyan said.

He further described the initiative as ‘unlawful’.

Representatives of the ruling party defended their initiative, saying it aligns with the logic of the proportional electoral system, so that elections ‘would revolve around political parties rather than individuals’.

As the session was underway, Karapetyan’s alliance protested against the changes near parliament.

Most of the protesters approached by Factor TV refused to comment on the demonstration, or denied they were taking part in it altogether. The footage was shared online by ruling party members, who mocked Karapetyan’s party and said the attendees ‘don’t know why they have gathered’.

They also questioned the ‘spontaneous’ nature of the gathering, as Karapetyan’s team described it.

‘If this is the strong part of the opposition, what’s the state of the rest?’ Parliamentary Speaker Alen Simonyan said, ridiculing the small turnout of the gathering in a Facebook post.

He also urged opposition supporters to frequent the area near the parliament, as ‘it’s actually quite fun’.

“Don’t Let Anyone Know”: OST Stigma in Armenia’s Post-Soviet Healthcare Syste

Talking Drugs
April 8 2026

As an addiction medicine specialist in Armenia, I often meet patients that, lowering their voices, tell me: “Doctor, please don’t let anyone know I am on methadone.”

Addiction treatment in many post-Soviet healthcare systems has historically been associated with shame, stigma, fear of being monitored and distrust toward health institutions. These forms of stigma are not only social, but also embedded in legal frameworks, healthcare structures and everyday interactions, shaping how individuals experience and access treatment. 

This shame persists despite the fact that Opioid Substitution Therapy (OST, also referred to as Opioid Agonist Therapy) is widely recognised as one of the most effective evidence-based treatments for opioid dependence and is recommended as a core component of modern public health responses to opioid dependence.

For decades, Armenians living with opioid dependence have consistently been the second largest group in drug treatment settings, second only to cannabis. Heroin is the drug of choice, with consumers mostly injecting it. In recent years, changing drug markets impacting heroin’s supply in Eastern Europe, as well as the inherent risks to drug injecting, have made accessible and effective treatment more important than ever. 

OST was introduced in 2009 at the National Centre for Addiction Treatment in Armenia (under the Ministry of Health). When it started, only 32 patients received methadone doses; today, around 1,200 patients are enrolled in OST treatment programmes across the country and even within Armenian prisons, with just over half (625 patients) at the National Centre. 

 

Uptake still lagging

Despite this expansion, increased access has not translated into full uptake among those who could benefit from OST. A significant treatment gap likely remains between those in need of treatment and those who actually receive it. This gap is not only structural, but deeply rooted in stigma, legal barriers, and long-standing social perceptions of addiction. In many post-Soviet contexts, opioid dependence continues to be viewed as a moral failure rather than a medical condition, which directly affects how treatment is perceived and accessed.

In Armenia, OST access is also regionally limited. While Armenia has ten regions, substitution therapy is currently available primarily in the capital, Yerevan, and in only three others – Lori, Shirak (Gyumri), and Syunik. For those living elsewhere, treatment access usually means long travels and greater expenses. Treatment choice is also restricted. OST in Armenia mostly means methadone; there’s little access to alternatives like buprenorphine, particularly in the public settings. This limits the ability to tailor treatment to individual needs and preferences, discouraging some from entering care.

Legal and administrative barriers further complicate access. Many people avoid substitution therapy due to fear of being formally registered as a person with substance dependence. As in many other post-Soviet nations, once you’re in treatment, the label of “drug addict” will follow someone for years, recorded clearly in official documents for law enforcement and other public officials to see.

This registration can have long-term consequences: people can lose their driving licenses or be limited from certain types of employment, such as public service positions, security-related jobs, transport and driving roles, and other positions involving a high level of responsibility. Even if someone’s not using drugs anymore, they may remain under observation for up to five years and be subjected to regular drug testing during that period to be removed from the “addict” registry.

Sadly, little has been done to change public perceptions around drug treatment, particularly of opioids. OST is often perceived by the general public – including family members – and in clinical settings as replacing one drug with another, rather than as a legitimate form of treatment. True “recovery” is only seen as achieving abstinence, with stable life on a medicine still seen as a failure. 

This narrative is incredibly damaging to evidence-based care. In my clinical practice, including my experience working in the OST department between 2019 to 2026, it is not uncommon for family members of those in treatment to oppose substitution therapy or question my or my colleague’s decisions, even urging clinicians to discontinue treatment. There have also been cases in clinical practice, including my own experience, where patients said that family members threw away their take-home methadone doses, throwing their treatment into disarray and potentially causing acute opioid withdrawal.

As a result, many in Armenia delay treatment or avoid it entirely: it’s understandable that some may feel that navigating opioid drug use by themselves may be easier than going through a treatment system that exposes them to long-term legal and social consequences.

Criminalisation continues to play a significant role in shaping these dynamics. When problematic drug use is framed primarily as a criminal issue rather than as a health condition, it reinforces punitive responses and perpetuates stigma. In Armenia, drug criminalisation remains unchallenged: under current government policy, drug use and possession are addressed primarily through legal and punitive measures, and there is no legal framework for the decriminalisation or legalisation of drug use.

In practice, gaps in coordination between health and law enforcement systems can create additional barriers. Patients receiving methadone treatment may be temporarily detained by police on suspicion of illegal possession of methadone until their treatment status is verified. In some cases, this detention can last up to 72 hours. Verification may be completed more quickly on working days, but delays are more likely during weekends on non-working hours, when official confirmation is harder to obtain. Even short disruptions in treatment can negatively affect continuity of care and further discourage engagement.

 

The need for reform

While comprehensive national data is limited, clinical experience suggests that engagement in substitution therapy is associated with improved social outcomes, including reduced involvement in criminal activity and better reintegration into daily life.

So can we, in Armenia and beyond, make sure that patients feel confident that treatment will be beneficial to them? 

A key turning point came in 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Armenia introduced more flexible approaches to opioid substitution therapy (OST). Stable patients – defined as those who are clinically stable on treatment, adhere to prescribed medication, do not exhibit high-risk behaviours, and can safely manage take-home medication – were able to attend clinics once a week, taking one supervised dose at the clinic while receiving take-home doses for the following six days.

This patient-centred adjustment helped improve treatment retention by reducing the burden of daily clinic visits and enabling individuals to maintain employment and social stability. These practices were later reinforced through regulatory changes, with amendments introduced by the Ministry of Health in 2022 allowing take-home medication for multiple days, in some cases covering up to 10 days treatment.

Although Armenia has made important progress toward a more health-oriented drug policy, stigma and criminalisation continue to shape public attitudes and institutional practices. Building on recent reforms requires long-term efforts to improve treatment quality and access while strengthening trust in the healthcare system. Dependence must be recognised as a health condition rather than a moral or legal failing, requiring coordinated responses across healthcare, social services, education, law enforcement, and media.

Reducing stigma should be a central priority. This includes promoting person-centred approaches, eliminating harmful language, and removing legal and administrative barriers that discourage people from seeking treatment due to fear of social or legal consequences. Expanding services beyond major cities, ensuring continuity of care, and supporting early prevention efforts are also key to improving outcomes.

These challenges reflect broader patterns across post-Soviet systems, where drug use has historically been framed as deviant behaviour rather than a medical issue. Yet the effectiveness of opioid substitution therapy depends not only on pharmacology but also on trust: when people trust healthcare providers, they are more likely to seek support, remain in treatment, and rebuild their lives.

Armenia’s experience shows that expanding access to OST is necessary but insufficient without tackling stigma, reforming legal frameworks, and prioritising a comprehensive, health-based response.


https://www.talkingdrugs.org/dont-let-anyone-know-ost-stigma-in-armenias-post-soviet-healthcare-system/

Iran Conflict Threatens Armenia-Azerbaijan Progress

Foreign Policy
April 8 2026

Trump’s Iran policy might undermine his one successful peace accord.

By Joshua Kucera, the senior analyst for the South Caucasus at the International Crisis Group.

Last year, U.S. President Donald Trump pulled off a remarkable feat: With an unexpected White House summit and some creative diplomacy, he managed to jump-start the peace process between longtime foes Azerbaijan and Armenia and spur more diplomatic progress than the region has seen in decades. Amid Trump’s wildly overhyped global peacemaking efforts, this was a real win.

Now, though, the fallout from Trump’s war in Iran is threatening to undo his achievement in the Caucasus. Officials in both Armenia and Azerbaijan are expressing concern that Trump’s tiny circle of trusted foreign-policy figures has shifted attention away from the region. Even with a cease-fire declared, the White House is going to be fixated on Iran for some time. As a result, the momentum toward peace in the Caucasus could be lost.


When Trump got involved in the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process, it was already well advanced. Azerbaijan had, in a series of offensives from 2020 to 2023, retaken all the territory Armenia forces occupied during a war in the 1990s, namely Nagorno-Karabakh and several adjoining Azerbaijani provinces. With Armenia weakened and unable to keep fighting, the two sides were now ready to negotiate in earnest. By early 2025, they had already finalized the text of a peace agreement.

But two critical issues remained. One was the question of Armenia’s constitution, which contains indirect references to territorial claims over Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan demands that this language be removed before the final peace treaty can be signed.

The second point of contention was the creation of a transportation route connecting the main territory of Azerbaijan and its exclave of Nakhchivan via southern Armenia. This was first stipulated in the Russia-brokered cease-fire agreement that ended the fighting in 2020 and included a provision that it would be guarded by Russian border troops. However, following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Kremlin’s influence in the Caucasus plummeted, and that arrangement was no longer tenable.

But Azerbaijan still badly wanted the route, which would secure access to Nakhchivan and onward to Turkey. It demanded that the route be “unobstructed,” a term included in the initial cease-fire but which Armenia and Azerbaijan each interpreted differently. In its maximalist position, Azerbaijan had demanded that its trucks or trains wouldn’t even have to stop at the Armenian border for passport or customs checks. Armenia rejected the demand, arguing that it was an unacceptable infringement of Armenian sovereignty.

Enter Trump. His foreign-policy team, apparently on the hunt for possible peace accords, identified Armenia and Azerbaijan as low-hanging fruit. They came up with a solution by which Armenian officials would retain control of the border legally but employees of a private company from some third country would actually conduct the checks. It was not a new proposal—U.S. and European officials were floating a similar idea in their mediation before Trump came to office—but Trump’s team added some innovations. The route would be operated by an Armenian-American joint venture. And it would, of course, be named after the president: the “Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity,” or TRIPP. He invited the leaders of the two countries to the White House in August 2025 to sign the deal. The image of him with the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders smiling and shaking hands was a sight that many in the Caucasus never expected to see.


The openly self-aggrandizing character of Trump’s involvement naturally raised skepticism. Many wondered whether his administration would do the hard work to follow through, especially as Trump never seemed to know the names of the countries he was dealing with; he repeatedly called them “Albania” and “Aberbaijan.”

But the push from Trump turned out to have galvanized the process. Following the White House summit, the two sides began to rapidly take steps to improve relations. Azerbaijani think tank experts began visiting Armenia and vice versa. Azerbaijan began for the first time to sell fuel to Armenia and allow grain from Russia and Kazakhstan to transit its territory en route to Armenia.

All of this would have been difficult to imagine a year earlier. Azerbaijan, which had been threatening Armenia over the route, moderated its rhetoric, and for Armenians, fears of another war began to recede. Some part of this momentum was thanks to the fact that both leaders, for their own reasons, wanted to curry favor with Trump and knew that his cherished reputation as a peacemaker was riding on them.

In January, the United States and Armenia released the text of an agreement laying out the framework for TRIPP. It was proof that the Americans had been doing a lot of work behind the scenes and that critics’ skepticism had been unwarranted. In early February, Vice President J.D. Vance visited Armenia and Azerbaijan in a show of the U.S. resolve to see TRIPP through. Along the way, Trump even learned to pronounce Azerbaijan properly. “I love saying that name now. You know, at the beginning it was giving me a hard time,” he said on Feb. 19 at the rollout of his so-called Board of Peace. (The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan both attended the launch.)

The first stage of TRIPP will run directly along Armenia’s far southern border, within shouting distance of the Iranian border. Companies that the United States was hoping to attract to build and operate the route are no doubt reassessing the security risks of their potential investments. Sources in Yerevan say a visit from the U.S. company conducting site surveys has already been postponed because of the war.

Beyond that, officials both in Yerevan and Baku have told me and my colleagues at Crisis Group that they are worried the war will take critical U.S. attention away from TRIPP. The United States and Armenia still need to work out a contract setting up the company to operate the route, for which there isn’t really a precedent and which involves addressing many sensitive political and financial issues. Handling that process is the same tiny team, led by Trump advisor Steve Witkoff, which now has its hands more than full with Iran.

“Obviously, TRIPP isn’t a high priority with the U.S. administration, at least today, because we see what is going on and what they’re doing,” Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said in March. “Unfortunately, there is a high probability that this will affect the time frame” of TRIPP, he continued.

More broadly, the war could reorder U.S. priorities in the Caucasus in ways that will make peace harder to reach. As it stands now, TRIPP would actually benefit Iran, as it would restore the Soviet-era rail links that connected to Iran via a junction in Nakhchivan. It would also particularly benefit Armenia, a critical trade and security partner to Iran. Will Washington continue to be interested in a project that is going to help Iran?

While everyone in the region was assuming that U.S. interest in TRIPP would wane once its namesake left power, that wasn’t going to happen until 2028. The assumption was that by then, the peace process would be far more consolidated. But what if Trump has already lost interest? It’s hard to know the implications of a highly personalized diplomatic initiative losing its patron, but there is no doubt that the involvement of Trump and the United States has underpinned remarkable progress in the last few months. Losing that would be a real test for the peace process.


Ideally, the Iran war would lead Armenia and Azerbaijan to take greater control of the peace process. Both countries share similar worries about potential spillover from the U.S.-Iran conflict, and it could spur them to redouble their bilateral engagement. Azerbaijan’s access to Nakhchivan has already been compromised: Until TRIPP gets built, the only operable land route between Azerbaijan’s mainland and Nakhchivan is via Iran, and this was closed as a result of the war.

Two Iranian drones also struck Nakhchivan, including its airport. One Armenian official told me that if this war had happened a year ago, Armenians would be worried that Azerbaijan might use it as a pretext to attack them. Now, instead, there are new opportunities to cooperate. These included working on short-term transit arrangements to manage the border closures caused by the war and sharing air defense information on threats coming from Iran.

That is a best-case scenario, though. If that scenario is not realized, the Iran war and its aftermath could undermine one of Trump’s real achievements and expose the risks of his heavily personalized and opportunistic diplomacy.

This post is part of FP’s ongoing coverageRead more here.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2026/04/08/iran-armenia-azerbaijan-trump-aliev-pashinyan/

Armenian Communities in Pasadena and Glendale Commemorate, Celebrate, and Refu

April 8 2026

Cities mark Armenian Heritage with a month of events.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors has proclaimed April 2026 Armenian History Month — and communities across the San Gabriel Valley are marking the occasion with a full calendar of cultural events, commemorations, and calls to remembrance.

There are a few people in the world whose communities beyond their national borders outnumber those within it. The Armenians are among the most striking examples. Their diaspora — scattered across continents by catastrophe rather than choice — is a living testament to survival, and nowhere in the world is it more visible than in Southern California.

When the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously this spring to proclaim April 2026 Armenian History Month, it was an acknowledgment of something the region’s Armenian community has long known: Los Angeles County is, in many ways, a second homeland. The motion, authored by Supervisors Kathryn Barger and Janice Hahn, honors what the proclamation describes as “the rich cultural heritage, resilience, and contributions of the Armenian community.”

The proclamation’s timing is deliberate. On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Empire began the systematic deportation and massacre of the Armenian population — an atrocity now recognized as genocide, in which an estimated 1.5 million people were killed or displaced. It unfolded amid the chaos of World War I, when global attention was elsewhere. Silence and then denial became instruments of the crime itself.

The question of how so many Armenians came to call Southern California home traces directly to that history. Survivors who initially settled on the East Coast — in Boston, New York, and other port cities — gradually made their way westward, establishing roots in Fresno and San Francisco, and eventually in Burbank, Glendale, and Pasadena. Today, the global Armenian population is smaller than that of Los Angeles County alone, yet the diaspora has managed to build an enduring presence here, contributing across medicine, science, business, education, law, sports, and public service.

“History has shown that inaction is not neutral; it enables injustice. The failure to hold perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide accountable did not just close a painful chapter; it set a dangerous precedent. When crimes against humanity go unanswered, they echo forward, creating conditions where ethnic cleansing and persecution can continue, as we have seen affecting Armenians in Artsakh in recent years.” — Ardy Kassakhian, Glendale City Councilmember

The centennial of the genocide in 2015 proved a galvanizing moment. Armenian organizations across Los Angeles united for a major rally, and cities including Pasadena and Glendale officially proclaimed April 24 a Day of Remembrance. In Pasadena, the community went further — erecting a permanent memorial at Memorial Park, a monument built in defiance of denial and dedicated to collective memory and respect.

This April, that spirit of remembrance takes shape across dozens of events in both cities. From film screenings and art workshops to poetry readings, choir performances, and culinary tastings, the month’s programming offers something for every generation — and keeps faith with those who came before.

Pasadena

The City of Pasadena is recognizing Armenian and Arab American Heritage Month throughout April with cultural programming, library events, arts performances, and a social media spotlight on local businesses. Below are the Armenian-focused events.

Colors & Patterns: Armenian-Inspired Canvas Painting

Saturday, April 4  |  3 p.m.  |  Santa Catalina Branch Library, 999 E. Washington Blvd.

Create your own painted canvas using a simple pre-drawn square pattern inspired by Armenian design. Participants choose colors from the Armenian flag or traditional rug palettes. For ages 13 and up.

Film Screening: The Color of Pomegranates (1969)

Friday, April 17  |  11 a.m.  |  San Rafael Branch Library, 1240 Nithsdale Rd.

A special library screening of Sergei Parajanov’s visually stunning masterpiece celebrating Armenian culture, history, and identity. Through poetic imagery and symbolism, the film paints a portrait of the 18th-century troubadour Sayat-Nova and the rich spirit of Armenian heritage. Rated NR. For ages 18 and up.

Forget-Me-Not Cross Stitch: A Symbol of Remembrance

Saturday, April 18  |  3 p.m.  |  Santa Catalina Branch Library, 999 E. Washington Blvd.

Learn the basics of cross stitch while creating a forget-me-not design, a symbol of remembrance for the Armenian Genocide. This guided program offers a quiet, meaningful way to reflect through craft. For ages 13 and up.

An Afternoon of Armenian History & Heritage

Saturday, April 25  |  1–3:30 p.m.  |  Lamanda Park Branch Library, 140 S. Altadena Dr.

A two-part program beginning with the documentary My Mother’s Voice (2012, 30 minutes), the story of author Kay Mouradian’s mother — a survivor of the Armenian Genocide who made her way to America to marry a man she knew only from a photograph. A presentation and Q&A follow the screening. At 2:15 p.m., longtime friends Meri and Elen present a personal travelogue of their travels to Armenia, sharing photos, artifacts, and stories of Yerevan and the Armenian countryside. For ages 13 and up.

GenoLive: An Exhibition on Armenian Contributions to Humanity

Friday, April 24  |  Hours TBD  |  Armenian Arts Center, 250 N. Orange St., Pasadena

GenoLive is a cultural and educational exhibition highlighting Armenian contributions to science, medicine, and the arts — told through stories, inventions, discoveries, and accomplishments spanning generations despite historical tragedy. The show includes visual presentations and historical material. For more information: Armenian Arts.

AGBU Choir and Lila Dance Studio Performance

Wednesday, April 28  |  7 p.m.  |  Westerbeck Recital Hall, Pasadena City College, 1570 E. Colorado Blvd.

A cultural performance evening featuring the AGBU Choir and Lila Dance Studio. For more information: http://pasadena.edu

Throughout April, the City’s Communications and Marketing Division will spotlight Armenian-owned businesses in Pasadena on social media. Follow along at Facebook and Instagram @CityOfPasadena and Twitter @PasadenaGov.

The Pasadena Public Library has compiled a reading list of titles by Armenian authors and on Armenian American history and experiences. Find the list at CityOfPasadena.net/Library.

Photo: Karine Armen

Glendale

Home to one of the largest concentrations of Armenians outside the Republic of Armenia, Glendale has long treated April as a civic as well as cultural occasion. This year, events span City Hall, the Alex Theatre, Glendale Community College, and the public library.

Glendale City Council Proclamation

Tuesday, April 21  |  6 p.m.  |  Glendale City Hall, Council Chambers, 613 E. Broadway (Second Floor)

A formal proclamation will be presented before the Glendale City Council in recognition of the Armenian Genocide Commemoration and Armenian History Month.

City of Glendale Commemoration Ceremony

Thursday, April 23  |  6 p.m.  |  Alex Theatre, 216 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale

The city’s official commemoration, themed “Memory Across Generations: The Continuing Echo of 1915,” explores what memory means when history grows more distant — and why it still matters. The program includes performances by the AGBU Choir and Lila Dance Studio, traditional music by Jivan Gasparyan Jr., student performances from the Sonata Music School, and a short documentary produced by the City of Glendale TV Team on the Armenian displacement. Free and open to the public.

“The reason we commemorate and educate others about the Armenian Genocide — even more than a century later — is because without that understanding, we become far more susceptible to ignoring the warning signs of human rights violations and atrocities as they unfold around the world today. Learning about history is not just about acknowledging the past; it’s about preparing the next generation to recognize the early signs of injustice and to act before a crisis becomes a tragedy.” — Ardy Kassakhian, Glendale City Councilmember

Armat Culinary Diaspora Tasting

Saturday, April 11  |  10 a.m.–1 p.m.  |  Glendale Central Library, 222 E. Harvard St.

Experience the Armenian culinary diaspora through a curated tasting from three Glendale restaurants: Zhengyalov Hatz (representing Armenia and Artsakh), Carousel (Lebanese-Armenian), and Monta Factory (Middle Eastern-Armenian). The program explores how Armenian culinary traditions have evolved across regions, with two tasting sessions, cooking demonstrations in the Teen Space at 10:30 a.m., 11 a.m., and noon, and a conversation with restaurant staff. Wristbands distributed beginning at 10 a.m. on a first-come, first-served basis. Abril Bookstore will be on-site selling Armenian cookbooks.

Glendale Community College: Araksya Karapetyan in Conversation

Tuesday, April 28  |  12:30–2 p.m.  |  GCC Auditorium, 1500 N. Verdugo Rd.

Araksya Karapetyan, news anchor for Good Day LA and Fox 11 Los Angeles, speaks as part of Glendale Community College’s Armenian Genocide Commemoration programming. GCC hosts additional events throughout April. For the full schedule: http://glendale.edu.

GUSD Armenian-American Heritage Month Celebration

Wednesday, April 29  |  6 p.m.  |  Alex Theatre, 216 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale

Glendale Unified School District honors Armenian-American Heritage Month with a free public program featuring award-winning filmmaker, screenwriter, and photojournalist Eric Nazarian as keynote speaker. The evening also includes a piano recital by five-year-old Alec Van Khajadourian and performances by the International School of Music, Sonata Music School, Davidian Mariamian Educational Foundation, Svartnots Dance Ensemble, and GUSD students. Free admission.

“It is important for Glendale to honor the Armenian Genocide. The students and community need to know the history of the Armenian people so that we can look at the present and future and advocate and uplift the culture, people, and country of Armenia.” — Ingrid Gunnell, GUSD Board Member

Peter Balakian: Poetry Reading and Book Event

Thursday, April 30  |  6–7 p.m.  |  Glendale Central Library Auditorium, 222 E. Harvard St.

Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Peter Balakian reads from his latest collection, New York Trilogy — a sweeping long poem in three parts tracing one man’s journey from the late 1960s to the twenty-first century, shaped by historical events including the Armenian Genocide, the Vietnam War, the AIDS epidemic, September 11, and the climate crisis. Balakian is the author of nine poetry collections and the PEN/Albrand Award-winning memoir Black Dog of Fate. His book The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response was a New York Times bestseller. Books will be available for purchase from Abril Bookstore at the event.

For the full Glendale Public Library series on Armenian Heritage Month, visit eglendalelac.org/armenian.

This article draws on reporting from the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors, the City of Pasadena, the City of Glendale, and the Armenian National Committee of America. The Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial is located at Memorial Park, Pasadena; its history is documented at designmattersatartcenter.org.

Sarkisian Workshop Series: Centering Indigenous Experiences in Climate Narrati

Sarkisian Workshop Series: Centering Indigenous Experiences in Climate Narratives with Diane Wilson

The International Armenian Literary Alliance (IALA), Mizna and the Asian American Writers’ Workshop (AAWW) invite you to the second installment of the Sarkisian Workshop Series: Centering Indigenous Experiences in Climate Narratives with Diane Wilson. The virtual workshop will take place on April 19, 2026, at 9:00 AM Pacific | 12:00 PM Eastern | 8:00 PM Armenia Time.

Foundational to Indigenous culture is a worldview that is relational to all other beings, a perspective that also shapes our storytelling. Climate narratives from that viewpoint are stories that emphasize this relationality, that accept the responsibility that is intrinsic to being a good relative, and has social justice embedded in its foundation. This workshop will provide context about Dakota people, and key teachings related to this world view, in particular, the concept of Mitakuye Owasin (We Are All Related), food sovereignty, and cultural recovery. Students will explore literature that embodies these teachings, as well as generative writing prompts.
Diane Wilson is a Dakota writer, educator, and bog steward, enrolled on the Rosebud Reservation. She has published six award-winning books as well as essays in numerous publications. Her novel, The Seed Keeper, won the 2022 MN Book Award and is a selection for the 2026 NEA Big Read. Wilson’s work explores seed sovereignty, social justice, cultural recovery, and environmental stewardship. She is currently working on a memoir, Mapping My Way Home: A Story of Loss, Renewal, and a Bog.
 
Recommended Reads
  • The Seed Keeper, by Diane Wilson
  • Braiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall Kimmerer
  • Traditional Ecological Knowledge, edited by Melissa K. Nelson and Dan Shilling
  • Fresh Banana Leaves: Healing Indigenous Landscapes Through Indigenous Science, by Jessica Hernandez
  • Eating the Landscape: American Indian Stories of Food, Identity, and Resilience, by Enrique Salmon
  • Solar Storms, by Linda Hogan
 
Ticket Prices: $20 for each individual workshop
Purchase your tickets here.
Please reach out to [email protected] if you are interested in joining but the registration price is prohibitive.
IALA programs are shared spaces for creative work, dialogue, and learning. We invite all participants to contribute to an environment of respect, care, and thoughtful engagement. IALA reflects the multiplicity of identities in the Armenian community and beyond, and we do not tolerate any offensive behavior regarding gender identity and _expression_, sexual orientation, disability, religious belief, national origin, socio-economic class, educational background, personal style/appearance, citizenship and immigration status, or political affiliation. Participants whose behavior disrupts programs or harms the community may be asked to leave the space or restricted from future participation.
 
The Sarkisian Workshop Series 2026: Can Storytelling Save Us? is brought to you by IALA, Mizna and AAWW. Funded by the Sarkisian Foundation for the Arts and Engineering, the series offers six writing workshops that will include literary analysis and generative writing exercises. Designed to bring together writers from diverse backgrounds, these workshops will encourage writers to engage with the pressing issues of our time.

Explore the full series and read along with it by purchasing titles at IALA’s Bookshop.org storefront.

California Courier Online, April 6, 2026

California Courier Online, April 6, 2026
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3- Radio station appeals license cancellation over Armenian genocide reference to Turkey’s top court

SCF
Açık Radyo (Open Radio), whose broadcasts were silenced in October 2024 by Turkish authorities after a guest spoke on air about Armenian genocide, has taken its legal challenge against the cancellation of its license to Turkey’s highest administrative court after lower courts rejected its appeals, Turkish Minute reported.
The İstanbul-based station and its legal team announced on Tuesday that both cases they filed against the decision have been escalated to the Council of State, marking the latest stage in a nearly two-year legal battle.

Speaking at a press conference in İstanbul’s Beyoğlu district, representatives of the station said the case should not be seen as an isolated administrative measure but as a “critical threshold” for freedom of _expression_, media freedom and the rule of law in Turkey.

“This is not only a matter concerning one institution,” they said, describing the process as a structural problem affecting all independent media outlets in the country.

In a press statement the station argued that imposing harsh sanctions over expressions that have been recognized as protected speech by both national and international court rulings creates a chilling effect on the media and restricts freedom of _expression_.

The controversy stems from a broadcast in April 2024, when a guest referred to the mass killings of Armenians during the late Ottoman period, using the term Armenian genocide.

The Armenians, supported by a majority of historians and scholars, say 1.5 million of their people died in a genocide committed by the Union and Progress government of the Ottoman Empire during World War I. Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of Armenians and Turks died in the conflict but firmly rejects the characterization of the deaths as genocide.

Following the broadcast Turkey’s media watchdog, the Radio and Television Supreme Council (RTÜK), imposed the highest administrative fine on the station and ordered a five-day suspension of the program.

According to Açık Radyo co-founder Ömer Madra, the station later lost its license after failing to implement the suspension due to a technical issue that prevented them from viewing the dates included in the official notification.

“Despite the administrative fine being enforced and despite our request for new dates due to technical reasons regarding the suspension schedule, we were effectively silenced without even receiving a response to our petitions,” Madra said.

Madra criticized the court rulings thus far, saying the station’s legal submissions, including expert reports and precedents, were dismissed with a standard justification that RTÜK’s decision to revoke the station’s license was “in compliance with the law.”

In its legal filings the station argued that it could not be held responsible for remarks made by guests during live broadcasts without considering the overall context and intent of the program and that the sanctions imposed were disproportionate.

Lower courts rejected Açık Radyo’s appeals, and both cases were escalated to the Council of State for final review in 2026.

The station’s broadcasting license was suspended by RTÜK for five days in May on the allegation of inciting hatred. The media regulator subsequently withdrew the station’s license in July, but the radio continued to broadcast until its closure on October 16.

The station, which had been broadcasting for three decades, describes itself as a station “open to all sounds, colors and vibrations of the universe.” Its broadcasts addressed human rights, minority rights and ecological issues, among other topics.

Following the shutdown the station resumed broadcasting online under the name “Apaçık Radyo,” meaning “more open radio,” maintaining its editorial line on digital platform.

Representatives of the station said during the press conference that despite the loss of its FM license, it continues to operate online under the Apaçık Radyo platform with an expanded team, maintaining its principles of independent broadcasting.

They also noted that the cancellation of an FM license in a metropolis like İstanbul, which faces a high earthquake risk, affects not only a media outlet but also the public’s right to access information.

Turkey, which has a poor record on freedom of the press, was ranked 159th out of 180 nations in the 2025 World Press Freedom Index published by Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
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4- Vahe Boghosian Preserves Sudanese-Armenian Community History, Boosts Sudanese Image

By
Satenig Kouyoumdjian
The
Armenian Mirror-Spectator

YEREVAN
— Vahe Boghosian is the founder of the first multimedia project on
Sudanese-Armenian history, called sudanahye (Armenian for Sudanese Armenian),
which documents and preserves the unique history and rich culture of the Sudanese-Armenian
community. He has been touring various countries, giving lectures and
organizing exhibitions of the archival materials, starting last year in London,
Amsterdam and Berlin, and this year in the US at New Haven (Yale University),
Boston (Harvard University and several other venues), and New York City.

“I don‘t
think I have a particular skill. I only have love – love for my family, my
culture and our history,” Boghosian said in Western Armenian, whilst sitting on
the steps of the Matenadaran in Yerevan, the largest center of Armenian
manuscripts in existence.

Born and
raised in London, Boghosian got his his bachelor’s degree in history and his
MSc. in security studies. On his mother’s side he is Sudanese-Armenian.

The
majority of the Sudanese-Armenian community fled genocide from the Ottoman
Empire and resettled in Sudan, not only surviving the genocide, but preserving
their Armenian identity and creating a unique Sudanese-Armenian culture.

More
specifically, many Sudanese-Armenians are indigenous to Arabkir, a town located
near Malatya in the eastern Ottoman Empire, today’s Turkey. Arabkir was
described as “extremely culturally advanced,” and the Armenian population there
was skilled in crafts, trade and business, according to a book about the town
prepared by Antranig Poladian (1969). Fleeing the Hamidian (1894-1897) and
Adana (1909) massacres, Arabkir Armenians resettled in Sudan and helped each
other building their lives and businesses which were often connected to larger
trading networks, such as in Egypt.

Sarkis
Melikian is said to be the first Armenian in the modern period coming to Sudan,
where he arrived in the 1840s and successfully set up a trading business
between Sudan and Egypt.

An
example of a later prominent family of immigrants is the Kurkjian brothers, who
founded the Kurkjian Brothers Company which supplied the Sudanese government
with food. This company later expanded and began trading with Europe. It turned
into an infrastructure and ports company, making roads, bridges and railway
lines, according to sudanahye.com. The family was also the main sponsor which
funded the building of the Armenian Church St. Krikor Lusavorich in Khartoum
and was considered as one of the most successful families of the
Sudanese-Armenian community.

Boghosian
says that in general, Sudanese-Armenians secured themselves an enviable
economic position in Sudan, utilizing their entrepreneurial mindset to set up
businesses like the examples given above.

Overall
the modern immigration of Armenians to Sudan can be summed up as three major
waves, with the first wave being during the Turco-Egyptian rule (about
1820-1880) of Sudan. The second wave came after the Hamidian and Adana
massacres in the end of the 19th century/beginning of the 20th century and the
third wave after the Armenian Genocide starting in 1915.

“It is a
culture of a certain serenity and graciousness” is how Boghosian characterizes
the Sudanese-Armenian identity, in part “coming from the Sudanese culture,
which is perceived as very hospitable in the Arab world.”

Unlike
the big Armenian diasporan communities in Syria, Lebanon or Egypt, the Sudanese
Armenians did not have Armenian political parties, Boghosian explains. However,
that doesn’t mean that Armenian culture was less valued or passed on in the
Sudanese-Armenian community.

Crises
and Reaction

Since
2023, one of the biggest humanitarian crises in the world has been unfolding in
Sudan, with more than 150,000 victims and about 12 million people who have
become refugees seeking safety (BBC). The civil war broke out as a result of a
struggle for power between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary group Rapid
Support Forces (RSF). (See “A simple guide to what is happening in Sudan,”
Natasha Booty, Farouk Chothia, Wedaeli Chibelushi- BBC 11/13/2025.)

Unfortunately,
today the Armenian community in Sudan is almost non-existent, and the Armenian
Church has also been damaged during the war.

In this
regard, Boghosian remarked: “I don’t think any human has more of a
responsibility than others to do something. If we have a common humanity, then
we all have a shared responsibility to care about injustice everywhere. Justice
is a universal not national concept. I think as a people who have seen
Genocide, have been refugees in multiple countries, and continue to experience
injustice today we should strive to be aware of injustice, oppression and
genocides elsewhere. In those countries where we have a shared history with a
diaspora community it’s understandable we would be more in touch with current
affairs there.”

After
war broke out in Sudan, Boghosian chose not to lose hope but instead started
the sudanahye project in January 2025. It aims to preserve the
Sudanese-Armenian culture despite the events of war and destruction, but also
intends to be a means to change the narrative about Sudan, which currently
connotes war, destruction and instability.

In the
past, Sudan has served as a safe harbor for Armenians, where they were welcomed
and had the chance to build prosperous lives. Their success made them become a
people the Sudanese appreciated.

For
Boghosian, a key point is that we should not forget that we were refugees in
their countries long before they became refugees in ours. Unfolding the
successful stories of Armenians in Sudan is therefore also an attempt to give
the country a chance to break free from the shackles the narrative of war is
currently imposing.

Boghosian
is now living in Armenia. While he is researching and publishing, he also finds
himself on a path of discovering his own connection to Armenia as a
“spyurkahye” (Armenian for diasporan Armenian).

The
sudanahye project is supported by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation. If you
are interested in the project, you can follow his journey through the Instagram
page @sudanahye or his blog 
http://www.sudanahye.com.
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5- Western Diocese: Two churches and pastors not affiliated with Diocese

We wish to inform the faithful of our Church of certain uncanonical activities taking place in the cities of Glendale and Upland, about which concerned members of the faithful have repeatedly brought to our attention.

For some time, an entity operating at 332 N. Pacific Ave., Glendale, CA 91203, has presented itself under the name “St. Sargis Armenian Apostolic Church.” This structure has no affiliation whatsoever with the Western Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church of North America and has not been consecrated by the Primate, His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian. Furthermore, the individual presenting himself as the “spiritual pastor,” under the name “Fr. Petros Baghramyan,” is in fact a defrocked former priest. By a Pontifical decree issued by the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin on January 20, 2022, his clerical rank was formally removed. The decree explicitly states that he is to be regarded among the laity under his baptismal name, Armen Baghramyan, and from that date forward he is no longer permitted to perform any priestly functions within the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church.

The authority to ordain and depose clergy has been entrusted to the Church by our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ (cf. Matthew 18:18). The Acts of the Apostles and the Epistles of the Apostle Paul (Acts 20:28; 1 Timothy 3:1–7; Titus 1:5–7) clearly affirm that the Apostles appointed bishops as overseers to safeguard the integrity of the faith, to preserve proper ecclesiastical order, and to protect the faithful from deception.

Regrettably, Armen Baghramyan (formerly Fr. Petros Baghramyan), in defiance of this decree, continues to present himself as a priest within the structure he established, performing such sacraments as Holy Baptism, Holy Matrimony, and the Divine Liturgy.

We have recently been presented with a document purporting to be a certificate of “Holy Baptism,” issued this year, which lacks the officiant’s signature, contains no certificate number, and bears an invalid seal. Moreover, there is no clarity regarding the source or authenticity of the Holy Chrism (Muron) used in the administration of Baptism and Chrismation, as such sacred elements are not authorized to be received outside the canonical structures of the Church.

A similar situation exists in the city of Upland, where another self-proclaimed structure operates without having been consecrated by the Primate. The individual presenting himself as “Fr. Kevork Halladjian” is not an ordained priest according to the canons of the Armenian Apostolic Church and does not possess valid priestly ordination. This entity identifies itself as “Holy Cross Armenian Apostolic Church” and is located at 196 S 3rd Ave, Upland, CA 91786.

It is with deep concern that we note many sincere and God-fearing faithful, unaware of these facts, have participated in these purported “sacraments.” Upon learning the truth, some have expressed distress and have turned to the Diocesan Office for guidance.

For this reason, we urge all faithful to remain vigilant and to verify, through the Diocesan Office, the canonical status of any church or clergyman, in order to avoid falling victim to self-proclaimed or defrocked individuals and the danger of spiritual deception.

We also call upon those who may have unknowingly received baptism or been married within the above-mentioned structures to contact the Diocesan Office for proper pastoral guidance and assistance.

*****************************************************************************************************6– Israel settlers attack Armenian restaurant in Jerusalem

Middleeastmonitor.com
Taboon Wine Bar [Twitter]
Israeli settlers on Thursday evening attacked an Armenian restaurant near the New Gate in the Christian Quarter of the occupied city of Jerusalem, local sources told Wafa News Agency.
The radical settlers attacked a group of diners, mostly Armenians, who were enjoying their meals at the Taboon Wine Bar.
Video footage posted by Wafa News Agency showed the extremist Jewish settlers hurling chairs at the restaurant and diners.
On Friday afternoon, Latin Patriarch Pierbattista Pizzaballa visited the restaurant owners and adjacent shopkeepers, whose businesses were the target of attacks, in a show of solidarity by the church.
This came just one day after a number of extremist Jewish settlers cursed Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and chanted “death to Arabs” near Damascus Gate in occupied Jerusalem.


















*****************************************************************************************************7- Jerusalem Armenian Church Building Desecrated with Nightclub Banners

zartonkmedia

Armenian Church-owned property in Jerusalem’s Armenian Quarter has been desecrated with rainbow-colored banners reading “Armenian Church Night Clubs & Bars,” sparking outrage from the local Armenian Christian community. The image, showing the signage draped across a balcony and misappropriating church identity, was shared by Jerusalemite-Armenian Kegham Balian on X.

The banners welcome visitors to “Armenian Church Night Clubs & Bars” in Jerusalem’s city center, falsely implying church endorsement of nightlife establishments. Some signs even include the wording “Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem,” raising concerns over reputational harm and blatant disrespect toward sacred institutions.

The tenant responsible for this signage is occupying property owned by the Armenian Church. The use of church-owned space in this manner has been labeled by members of the community as a direct desecration of Armenian Christian heritage and a mockery of the Church’s identity in the Holy City.

“Desecration of Armenian property in Jerusalem: A tenant of the Armenian Patriarchate has turned Church-owned property into ‘Armenian Church Night Clubs & Bars.’ Unacceptable! This is a grave insult to our faith and heritage, and it demands accountability. Now!” — Kegham Balian, on X

As earlier reported in July, an Israeli watchdog revealed that 50% of hate crimes in Jerusalem’s Old City targeted Armenian Christians, amid an alarming spike in attacks. Between April and June 2025, the Religious Freedom Data Center documented 50 such incidents, with half occurring in the Armenian Quarter and many taking place at the Armenian Patriarchate itself. The attacks included spitting, verbal abuse, vandalism, and desecration of holy sites. Despite 22 police reports, only 2 cases have led to prosecution, raising serious concerns about accountability and protection for Christian communities.

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Armenpress: Israel issues warning to Iranians to avoid taking trains

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The Israeli military warned Iranians on Tuesday to avoid taking trains until at least 9 p.m. local time, AP reported.

“Your presence puts your life at risk,” the warning posted on X in Farsi read, likely signaling a new target for their airstrikes.

The U.S. and Israel launched what they described as a pre-emptive strike against Iran on February 28, claiming that Tehran was developing a nuclear weapon and posed a threat—an allegation Iran has denied. In response, Iran launched counterattacks, firing missiles and drones at Israel, as well as at U.S. assets and other targets across the Middle East. 

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Artemis II flight day 6: Crew wraps historic lunar flyby

U. S.10:06, 7 April 2026
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The NASA Artemis II mission wrapped up a historic seven-hour lunar flyby, marking humanity’s first return to the Moon since Apollo 17 in 1972 and capturing images of the lunar far side.

After the lunar observation period concluded, the Artemis II crew was congratulated by U.S. President Donald J. Trump, in a live conversation that aired as part of NASA’s continuing live coverage of the mission.

They also spoke with NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman and answered questions from social media.

The momentous day began at 1:56 p.m. EDT as NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, along with CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Jeremy Hansen, set the record for the farthest distance from Earth traveled by any human, surpassing Apollo 13’s distance of 248,655 miles, NASA said in a press release.

During a planned 40-minute loss of signal as Orion passed behind the Moon, the spacecraft and its crew made their closest approach at 7:00 p.m., flying at about 4,067 miles above the surface. Two minutes later, the crew reached the mission’s maximum distance from Earth at 252,756 miles, setting a new record for human spaceflight.

As they flew over the Moon’s far side, the crew photographed and described terrain features including impact craters, ancient lava flows, and surface cracks and ridges formed as the Moon slowly evolved over time. They also noted differences in color, brightness and texture, which provide clues that help scientists understand the composition and history of the lunar surface. The crew witnessed an “Earthset” — the moment Earth dropped below the lunar horizon — as Orion traveled behind the Moon and an “Earthrise” as the spacecraft emerged from the opposite edge of the Moon.

As the lunar observation period ended, the crew witnessed a nearly hour-long solar eclipse as the spacecraft, the Moon and the Sun aligned. With a view of a mostly darkened Moon, the crew analyzed the solar corona — the Sun’s outermost atmosphere — as it appeared around the Moon’s edge.

During the eclipse, the crew had an opportunity to look for some rarely seen phenomena that are only visible on an unlit portion of the Moon. They reported six light flashes created by meteoroids impacting the lunar surface while traveling many thousands of miles per hour.

“On the far side of the Moon, 252,756 miles away, Reid, Victor, Christina, and Jeremy have now traveled farther from Earth than any humans in history and now begin their journey home. Before they left, they said they hoped this mission would be forgotten, but it will be remembered as the moment people started to believe that America can once again do the near-impossible and change the world. Congratulations to this incredible crew and the entire NASA team, our international and commercial partners, but this mission isn’t over until they’re under safe parachutes, splashing down into the Pacific,” NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said on X.

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