Armenian police ‘forced Ingush domestic abuse victim to meet family’

Nov 17 2023
 

An Ingush domestic abuse victim seeking asylum in Armenia was allegedly temporarily placed in police custody after being reported missing by her uncle, who rights groups claim was allowed to meet her at the police station.

On Tuesday, the Armenian police found Fatima Zurabova, 21, in Ashtarak, a town northwest of Yerevan, and took her into their custody in Yerevan.

Armenia’s Investigative Committee said that a friend of her relatives had reported her missing to the Armenian authorities on 10 November.

Before being taken into police custody, Zurabova published a video stating that she had left Russia voluntarily after being subjected to abuse by her family. She added that she taken nothing valuable from her home, and asked her family not to look for her. 

On the day that Zurabova was taken to Yerevan, her uncle, Yusup Zurabov, who is an Ingush MP, flew to Armenia’s capital and went to the police station where his niece was being held. Marem, a North Caucasus women’s rights group that facilitated her escape, claim that the police confiscated Zurabova’s phone and locked her in a room with her uncle.

Zurabov also served as Ingushetia’s minister of economy and is an active member of United Russia, a party that supports Russian President Vladimir Putin.

A spokesperson for the head of Armenia’s Investigative Committee stated on Thursday that Zurabova was not under arrest, and did not meet with any relatives during her time in Armenia’s investigation department. 

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Armenia’s Human Rights Defender’s Office added that police reported that Zurabova had been transferred to a ‘safe space’. 

On Wednesday, Marem told Holod Media that Zurabova had approached them for help in late September, saying that since she was 15, she had been frequently beaten by her family for ‘preventative purposes’.

‘They beat her with a belt for being insufficiently religious because of suspicions that at some point she might behave in a way that was inappropriate for Ingush society’, said Marem.

They also said that after each beating, the family would confiscate her phone so that she could not record evidence of her abuse.

Zurabova’s mother reportedly told her that her family planned to marry her off, while her brother pressured her into quitting her job.

Cherta Media quoted Zurabova as saying that her family would kill her if she returned to Ingushetia.

Marem added that Zurabova’s uncle had told the group that he had contacted his connections at ‘the top of Armenia’s Interior Ministry’, and had gained access to Zurabova’s phone, correspondence, and contacts.

He also demanded that Zurabova return to Ingushetia accompanied by lawyers, where she could declare ‘in front of all her relatives’ that she left Ingushetia of her own volition. He stated that he would subsequently ‘disown her because he does not need such a niece’.

He threatened to otherwise ‘deal with’ everyone who helped Zurabova, including the taxi driver who had taken her to the airport in Mineralnye Vody.

In an interview with RFE/RL, Marem said that Zurabov appeared to be ‘well-connected’, and that he had threatened to do ‘everything within his capabilities and character to those who organised it all’.

Marem’s founder, Svetlana Anokhina, added that Zurabov had threatened to accuse his niece of theft. Women fleeing domestic abuse in the North Caucasus are frequently detained on charges of theft and later returned to their abusers.

[Read more: Chechen domestic abuse victim ‘abducted and sent to Grozny’]

According to Marem, Zurabova has sought protection from the police in Armenia, who reportedly said that they could not assist her since she was subjected to abuse in Russia. The police also reportedly told her that she needed to apply for refugee status from the migration service in order to be eligible for state protection.

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender’s office told epress.am that their rapid response team had visited Zurabova on Wednesday. 

RFE/RL also stated that Zurabova’s mother had flown to Armenia to see her daughter. Mamikon Hovsepyan, a human rights activist, criticised the police for letting Zurabova’s family see her in the police station.

‘Firstly, the support of the police and law enforcement officers was needed, which is not there’, Hovsepyan told RFE/RL. ‘They say if the abuser is the brother, and he is not in Armenia, then she is not in danger. They do not take into account that the whole family is in the police, that she is threatened, and they are just ready to let her go.’


Is Armenia a logistical hub in Putin’s war against Ukraine?

eureporter
Nov 17 2023

According to  recent reports, Armenia-based entities are using  the sea route Batumi-Novorossiysk to re-export sanctioned goods to Russia. Through the Armenian Shipping Company, 600 containers with a total weight of 6 tons are transported to Russia weekly via Georgian ports, writes Nicholas Chkhaidze.

This sophisticated Russo-Armenian scheme involves a variety of goods, such as clothing, cars, and spare parts, as well as medical equipment produced by Western companies. Among the most re-exported commodities are vehicles, especially American: they are usually delivered, through the Georgian ports, to Armenia, where they are registered and stored in the city of Gyumri. This is from where most of the cars are re-exported to Russia, again via Georgia. This scheme has been very well portrayed on Financial Times back in summer.

Such operations usually involve several stakeholders, such as C&M International LLC, the operator of transportation along the sea route Batumi-Novorossiysk, the Armenian Shipping Company, the customer company from Armenia, and Black Sea Forwarding LLC, a Russian-based recipient firm.

This also underlines the fact that Georgian entities are also complicit in the sanctions evasion practice  via Armenia, though they may not be aware of where the goods originated from, which makes it difficult for state authorities to enforce the sanctions regime.  

Claims that Armenia has been serving as Putin’s main logistics hub in the war against Ukraine are not new, and have been written about quite intensively.

According to the U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security, between 2021 and 2022, Armenia's  imports of microprocessors and chips from the U.S. increased by approximately 500%, while shipments from the EU increased by approximately 200%. According to the bureau, up to 97 percent of these parts were subsequently re-exported to Russia. Russia and Armenia's trade volume topped $5 billion in 2022, which is a substantial increase in terms of the trade growth percentage. Russia and Armenia's commercial turnover reached $2.6 billion in 2021.

Unsurprisingly, U.S. State Department also addressed this issue and the Department`s Sanctions Coordinator, Jim O’Brien stated back in June 2023, that Russia's purchases of essential microchips and electronics have returned to pre-invasion stages, as Moscow found other nations to re-export the high-tech parts purchased from European corporations.

In September 2022, U.S. Treasury designated TACO LLC as a third-country supplier for “Radioavtomatika”, a major Russian defense procurement firm that specializes in procuring foreign items for Russia’s defense industry. The department consequently added it to the sanctions list for aiding Russia’s war effort in Ukraine. Similarly, Gazprom’s Armenia branch also faced sanctions due to it carrying out money transfers related to the purchase of Russian gas in roubles.

Armenia, a self-proclaimed democracy, and a nation that has been playing by Russian rules for quite some time has started acting rebellious vis-à-vis their strategic partner, Russia,  and in Armenia there is talk of shifting the geopolitical orientation away from Russia. However, on the ground, the business is being run as usual as Armenia-based companies are not only collaborating with Russian firms, but also providing them a window to trade with the West.

The surge of the Armenian economy in the last two years further underlines the fact that it is institutionally attached to Russia and cannot prosper without the latter; this fact was somehow re-affirmed by former Armenian Minister of Finance, Vardan Aramyan, who said that Armenia is not able to endure possible Russian sanctions and that the lion's share of 12.6% growth posted by Armenia in 2022 was contributed by Russia. Aramyan also said that today Armenia's integration in the Russian market is quite high. For example, of the $980 million FDI in 2022, $585 million were reinvested profit, mostly from companies with Russian capital. The bulk of individual remittances sent to Armenia come from Russia and 50-60% of re-exports, which increased significantly in 2022 and 2023, go to Russia.

Even though this Armenian-Russian economic axis has been addressed by Western political circles and expert communities multiple times, and several Armenian organizations have been sanctioned, the West`s relaxed reaction seems surprising. Particularly nowadays when euphoria prevails in many Western capitals regarding Armenia`s alleged Westward drift. While Armenia`s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in his October speech claimed that his country was ready to integrate with the European Union to the extent that the EU deems it possible, the Caucasus nation does not abandon its pro-Russian economic policies. In this situation, surprising is also the quick decision by France, a NATO member, to supply Armenia, a Russian ally, with weapons and air defense systems: no one gives a guarantee that the said Western military equipment and technology would not end up in the hands of Russia.

‘We left everything’ Uprooted and jobless, Nagorno-Karabakh refugees start from scratch in Armenia

Meduza
Nov 17 2023
3:55 pm,
Source: Meduza

Story by Sona Hovsepyan for The Beet. Edited by Eilish Hart.

Two months ago this week, Azerbaijani forces carried out a 24-hour offensive that led to the fall of Artsakh, the erstwhile breakaway republic in Nagorno-Karabakh. After more than three decades of bloody conflict that included two full-scale wars, Azerbaijan’s blitz offensive on September 19–20 forced the surrender of the separatist government and its army. Following Stepanakert’s capitulation, Baku finally lifted the Lachin Corridor blockade, opening the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia after nine long months. Fearing reprisals at the hands of Azerbaijani forces, Karabakh’s predominantly ethnic Armenian population began fleeing the region en masse. By October 1, Armenia had taken in more than 100,000 displaced people — nearly the entire population of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

For many Karabakh Armenians, this was not their first evacuation from the region. But with Azerbaijan in full control of Nagorno-Karabakh, it seems unlikely that they will return. With this in mind, the Armenian government has rolled out financial assistance and is offering a “temporary protection status” for the displaced, as well as the prospect of full citizenship. In the meantime, many displaced families struggle to find adequate housing and make ends meet. For The Beet, Yerevan-based journalist Sona Hovsepyan reports on how Karabakh refugees grapple with the difficult task of rebuilding their lives from scratch.

This story first appeared in The Beet, a weekly email dispatch from Meduza covering Central and Eastern Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia. Sign up here to get the next issue delivered directly to your inbox.

“My six-year-old grandson woke up in the middle of the night and cried, ‘Grandpa, I want our home,’” Areg Mirzoyan recalled, breaking down in tears.

Mirzoyan’s family is originally from Arajadzor, a village in Nagorno-Karabakh. They are among the more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians rendered homeless and unemployed after Azerbaijan’s lightning offensive drove them from the disputed enclave in late September. Mirzoyan’s family settled in Malishka, a village 130 kilometers (80 miles) south of Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. Locals provided them with temporary housing: a single bedroom for a family of six.

“I never imagined it would turn out like this. I thought we would go back to our homes,” Mirzoyan told The Beet.

But nearly two months after the exodus, finding permanent accommodations and employment are now top priorities for former Nagorno-Karabakh residents. 

On October 17, during his speech to the European Parliament, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated that Armenia had accepted 100,000 displaced people in the space of a week “without establishing refugee camps and tent settlements.” He also added that Armenia needs more international assistance, including financial support.

Earlier, Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Khachatryan reported that various governments and international organizations had donated more than 35 million euros ($37 million) in aid through the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).  

Mirzoyan’s family members are struggling to find jobs in the village, where farming is the only occupation. His son, Amran, was a soldier in the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army, but he has yet to find work and does not plan to continue serving in the military. Mirzoyan and his wife, Sevil, are both retired but have yet to receive pensions from the Armenian government. 

In late October, the Armenian government announced that displaced Karabakh Armenians would be granted “temporary protection status.” Labor Minister Narek Mkrtchyan later clarified that refugees registered at an address in Armenia may also be eligible for pensions and other government benefits. However, those who take Armenian citizenship would forfeit the social support provided to refugees.

During the interview, 63-year-old Mirzoyan pointed to the clothes on his back — the only things he could save while fleeing his home during the Azerbaijani attack. 

The family left in a rush without taking additional clothing, money, or food with them. Mirzoyan’s three-year-old granddaughter, Alice, arrived in Armenia barefoot because her shoes were broken. Neighbors and volunteers in Malishka donated new clothes and other necessities for the children.

Mirzoyan recounted how his grandson, also named Areg, was astonished upon entering a grocery store in the Armenian border city of Goris, which was the first to receive displaced people from Nagorno-Karabakh.

“He said to me, ‘Grandpa, look at how many candies there are here.’ The stores in Artsakh were already empty, with literally nothing in any of them. The child was amazed,” said Mirzoyan.

In the nine months leading up to Azerbaijan’s September 19–20 attack, Nagorno-Karabakh was under a blockade. It began when Azerbaijani activists blocked the only road connecting Karabakh to the outside world: the Lachin Corridor, or “the road of life,” as Armenians call it. As access to food, medicines, and vital services dwindled, the region descended into a humanitarian crisis. 

On the eve of the Azerbaijani offensive, Nagorno-Karabakh’s human rights ombudsman, Gegham Stepanyan, told The Beet that the region was experiencing a “humanitarian catastrophe.”  

“Nagorno-Karabakh residents had no access to basic necessities such as food and healthcare during the blockade, nor the right to free movement,” said Mariam Muradyan, the children’s rights officer for the Caucasus at Global Campus of Human Rights. The blockade and subsequent exodus have had a huge impact on children from Nagorno-Karabakh, she added. 

“The government has to look at the individual demands of Karabakh refugees, which is a challenging process,” Muradyan said. The most important thing now, she continued, is that the Armenian government provides psychological help to displaced children and their families.

UNICEF-supported social workers reported in October that Nagorno-Karabakh’s displaced children — who number more than 30,000 — were showing “signs of severe psychological distress” and were at risk of deteriorating mental health unless they received immediate support. 

Mirzoyan said his grandson Areg remembers the recent fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh well; even weeks later, every loud noise makes the six-year-old jump out of his skin.

Despite everything they’ve been through, the Mirzoyan family still hopes to return to their homeland one day. However, they fear living under Azerbaijan’s control. “If we have the opportunity to go back, we will go back immediately, but we can’t live side by side with Azeris,” Mirzoyan said. 

After taking control of Nagorno-Karabakh in September, Baku presented a plan for reintegrating the region’s ethnic Armenian population. However, Human Rights Watch warned that Baku’s assertions are “difficult to accept at face value” given the months-long blockade of the enclave, decades of conflict, impunity for apparent war crimes, and Azerbaijan’s poor human rights record.

Seda Avanesyan, 69, fled Nagorno-Karabakh with her family on September 25 after Azerbaijan opened the Lachin Corridor. Initially, they stayed with relatives, but now they rent a house in Malishka. Avanesyan’s family members are willing to undertake any work to earn a living, but her daughter has yet to find a job. Her son-in-law, a soldier, plans to continue serving in the Armenian army. And her grandchildren, eight-year-old Anahit and 11-year-old Nare, have already started attending a local school.

Avanesyan, who is from Askeran, recalled a time when Karabakh Armenians used to interact with Azerbaijanis from a neighboring town. But now, she said, people find it difficult to trust the reintegration process.

“We had a good relationship during the Soviet Union; we used to communicate and trade with Azerbaijanis from Akna, but now it is not possible to live alongside each other,” she told The Beet. (Akna is the Armenian name for the town of Aghdam, which was left completely destroyed and deserted after the first Nagorno-Karabakh war. Yerevan ceded Aghdam to Azerbaijan under the ceasefire that ended the 2020 war.)

“We were hungry and thirsty for 10 months, but in the end, we hoped everything would be fine,” Avanesyan continued. “The opposite happened. Everyone calls for peace, but nothing changes.”

The ICRC reported that only a small number of Karabakh Armenians had chosen to stay in their homes as of mid-October, while others had been unable to leave the region. According to Red Cross teams, some of these people required medical help, food and water, or assistance securing transportation out of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Earlier, a U.N. mission estimated that between 50 and 1,000 ethnic Armenians remained in the region.

Emma Baghdasaryan, a 20-year-old student living in the town of Armavir in the west of Armenia, assisted displaced families in the aftermath of Azerbaijan’s September offensive and throughout the 2020 war. She volunteers with the Armavir Development Center, a non-profit organization providing the displaced with food, blankets, and sanitary items.

“Volunteering is a form of patriotism for me. I don’t have extra money to help families. It’s the only thing I can do for Artsakh’s people,” Baghdasaryan explained. “I believe that families from Artsakh simply need warmth, understanding, and appreciation.”

According to Naira Arakelyan, executive director of the Armavir Development Center, there is still an urgent need for volunteers. Arakelyan also emphasized that many Karabakh refugees are living in poor conditions. 

“Karabakh Armenians need social and psychological support; everyone is under immense stress right now. The living conditions in the temporary housing that people have rented are terrible,” Arakelyan told The Beet. “There are no beds, refrigerators, washing machines, or other necessary items in most of the apartments.” 

Andranik Aloyan, 44, fled Nagorno-Karabakh along with his pregnant wife, two small children, and 71-year-old father. Their journey from the town of Martuni to Armenia took an exhausting three days; at night, the family slept in their car. 

“We didn’t have bread after September 19. My children had nothing to eat for [a] few days. My wife was pregnant, and, in that condition, we left everything and fled to Armenia,” Aloyan said.

This marked the family’s second flight from Nagorno-Karabakh: they previously fled the region during the 2020 war. In the months before the exodus, the family experienced constant fear and anxiety due to the blockade, Aloyan recalled. His wife, Hasmik Antonyan, lacked access to vitamins and basic healthcare throughout her pregnancy, causing a delay in her childbirth. She was then hospitalized on September 19, during the Azerbaijani attack. She eventually gave birth to their son after the family reached Armenia.

Today, Aloyan and his family live in the village of Getap in Armenia’s Vayots Dzor province, a two-hour drive from Yerevan. Their new house, which they are renting, is unsuitable for winter. Some of the windows are broken, and the gas and water supply lines need to be replaced before the colder weather comes, Aloyan said. “The house is in terrible condition; it’s very damp. We are cleaning it so that we can move in. Right now, we don’t have another option,” he explained. 

On November 13, Aloyan told The Beet that, so far, only he had received a support payment from the Armenian government, which has promised to provide each displaced person with a one-time payment equal to $250 and an additional $125 per month to cover rent and utility costs (for a period of six months). His wife, father, and children were still waiting to receive their respective payments, he said.

Aloyan was a soldier in Nagorno-Karabakh and is still looking for a new job. His son and daughter have yet to start kindergarten in Armenia. For now, their parents’ priority is readying the rental house for winter, and afterward, they will send the children to nursery school.

Having fled Nagorno-Karabakh for the second time in three years, the family has decided not to return. “No, we don’t want to go back. I am scared for my children,” said Aloyan. “We can’t live there anymore.” 

Release of Armenian journalist’s murderer continues to spark outcry in Turkey

MEDYA News
Nov 17 2023


The release of Ogün Samast, the convicted murderer of prominent Armenian journalist and editor-in-chief of Agos newspaper, Hrant Dink, continues to stir debate in Turkey on its second day. Samast’s early release, attributed to ‘good behaviour’, starkly contrasts with the ongoing detention of individuals who have not committed violent crimes, underscoring a disparity in the judicial system as noted by several observers.

The Agos newspaper questioned the resolution of the broader issues surrounding the case. “The matter is inherently grave. Yet, we must ask ourselves: [Hrant Dink’s widow] Rakel Dink, following the murder, made a striking statement about Samast [a minor at the time of the crime]: ‘The darkness that turns a baby into a killer’. We ask: Has this darkness been illuminated? We highly doubt it,” the editorial stated.

It also highlighted a missed opportunity for a more comprehensive sentence: “The lawyers of the Dink Family had also sought a sentence for ‘organisational membership’ for Samast and his co-accused. The court made a decision in this direction, but since the membership was charged under Article 220, the First Penal Chamber of the Court of Cassation led the case to expire due to the statute of limitations. Thus, Samast did not receive an additional sentence. However, the Dink Family lawyers had sought organisational membership under Article 314, which would have resulted in a longer prison term for Samast.”

The editorial concluded by emphasising that “a similar atmosphere of darkness still prevails in our country. Many dissidents are easily targeted by power circles and their media. Unbelievable accusations are made daily against Osman Kavala and the Gezi detainees. A similar situation applies to other opposition politicians and human rights defenders. Above all, we are in an environment where even the Constitutional Court is accused of ‘terrorism’ and ‘political activism’.”

Rakel Dink addressed these concerns at the 100th Year of the Republic: Minority Rights conference. “The pursuit of justice in Hrant’s murder case was not about whether a person received a few years more or less in prison. From day one, we said it was necessary to question the darkness. Finding justice in this case is essential for the democratisation of our country. Now, should we say ‘this decision is auspicious for our country?'” she remarked.

In response to Samast’s release, protests and statements were made at the former Agos office. Sera Kadıgil, an MP from the Workers’ Party of Turkey (TİP), spoke at the scene, describing Samast as “merely a pawn” and stressing the unresolved nature of the murder.

The release has also raised questions about the broader implications for Turkey’s judicial system and its approach to minority rights. Nuriye Alsancak from the Left Party, speaking at the protest, criticised the government’s handling of the case and the ongoing challenges faced by political dissidents and human rights defenders in the country.

A statement from the Labour Party (EMEP) said: “Gültan Kışanak, Can Atalay, Osman Kavala, and many others haven’t killed anyone, yet they are held without reason. Hrant Dink’s murderer, on the other hand, has been protected from the start and now has been released.”

Former Minister of Culture and Tourism Ertuğrul Günay also expressed his dismay at this development, highlighting the irony of Samast’s release: “Journalist Hrant Dink’s killer was released today. Meanwhile, people who haven’t committed any crimes and whose charges remain unclear are still detained. Where there is no justice, there can neither be peace nor prosperity.”

Journalist and Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (HEDEP) MP Cengiz Çandar voiced a similar, ironic sentiment:  “Osman Kavala, who never touched a weapon, received aggravated life imprisonment. Selahattin Demirtaş chose the Turkish Grand National Assembly over weapons. He’s in prison. European Court of Human Rights decisions are not applied to either of them. Ogün Samast, who was imprisoned for murdering Hrant Dink, is now free. It’s possible. Turkey is a rule of law state and the judiciary is independent!”

https://medyanews.net/release-of-armenian-journalists-murderer-continues-to-spark-outcry-in-turkey/

Explosion Rocks University in Armenia’s Capital, Killing 1 Person and Injuring – AP

NTD
Nov 17 2023
By The Associated Press

By The Associated Press

YEREVAN, Armenia—An explosion rocked a university building in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, on Friday, killing one person and injuring three others, authorities said.

The Interior Ministry said the blast happened in the basement of the chemistry department building at Yerevan State University. One person died and three others were hospitalized with burns and other injuries, health officials said, adding that one was in grave condition.

Authorities were investigating the cause of the blast.YEREVAN, Armenia—An explosion rocked a university building in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, on Friday, killing one person and injuring three others, authorities said.

The Interior Ministry said the blast happened in the basement of the chemistry department building at Yerevan State University. One person died and three others were hospitalized with burns and other injuries, health officials said, adding that one was in grave condition.

Authorities were investigating the cause of the blast.

https://www.ntd.com/explosion-rocks-university-in-armenias-capital-killing-1-person-and-injuring_955110.html 

Wales football fans warning after Armenia taxi ride

BBC
UK – Nov 17 2023

A Wales football supporter was asked for "sexual favours" instead of paying for a taxi in Armenia, according to the fan embassy.

She was left feeling distressed and vulnerable when the driver got in the back of the vehicle with her, it added.

There are hundreds of Wales fans in capital Yerevan ahead of Saturday's crucial Euro 2024 qualifier.

Fan Embassy Wales said the female involved wanted other fans to be aware of what happened on Thursday.

The British Embassy in the country has been asked to comment.

In a statement, Fan Embassy Wales – which looks after Wales fans travelling on away trips – said the local police had also been notified after the alleged incident.

On X, formerly Twitter, it said: "A serious incident took place last night when a Welsh fan was in the back of a taxi from (the city's) Beatles Pub.

"The driver pulled into a quiet place and joined her in the back asking for sexual favours as payment.

"She is okay and got out unscathed, but is obviously distressed and must have felt very vulnerable."

Hundreds of Wales fans have travelled to the country ahead of Saturday's game, with a victory keeping alive Wales' dream of automatically qualifying for Euro 2024.

Fan Embassy Wales said the female fan had asked other supporters abroad to be made aware of what had happened.

They also urged others to "be aware and, if you are a single person late at night, please be extra careful".

"The best advice is to take a photo of the cab and post it to a mate or don't travel alone if possible," a spokesperson added.

Deadly explosion hits Armenia capital ahead of Wales football match

Wales online
Nov 17 2023

More than a thousand Wales supporters are due to be in the Armenian capital of Yerevan

An explosion has rocked a university building in Armenia's capital, Yerevan, killing one person and injuring three others, authorities said.

The interior ministry said the blast occurred in the basement of the chemistry department building at Yerevan State University.

One person died and three others were take to hospital with burns and other injuries, health officials said, adding that one is in a "grave condition".

Authorities are investigating the cause of the explosion.

Rob Page's Wales side are currently in the country and are preparing for their Euro 2024 qualifier which is scheduled to take place tomorrow afternoon (2pm UK time).

More than 1,000 Wales fans are set to attend the match tomorrow, with more travelling to the capital as non-ticketholders.

Page confirmed the FAW had had contact with UK government officials ahead of their trip regarding security concerns. He said: "There has been nothing that has been brought to our attention that we have to be concerned about.

"It's all good and we're raring to go."

Film: Armenian War Documentary ‘1489’ Wins Best Film Prize at IDFA

Bollyinside
Nov 17 2023

Armenian war documentary 1489, directed by Shoghakat Vardanyan, has won the top prize for best film at the International Documentary Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), along with a 15,000 euro cash bursary.

  • Vardanyan’s film documents her family’s search for her brother, who went missing during a conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
  • Palestinian filmmaker Mohamed Jabaly also received the award for best director for his film essay “Life Is Beautiful,” which contrasts his life in Norway with the struggles of his family in Gaza.
  • The festival has been the subject of controversy due to the current conflict in the Gaza Strip, with protests and filmmakers pulling their films from the festival in protest.
  • Other winners at the festival include the Brazilian documentary “Canuto’s Transformation” and the film “Silence of Reason,” which examines mass rapes in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
  • In a stirring victory, the Armenian war documentary “1489” clinched the top prize for best film at the International Documentary Festival Amsterdam (IDFA), bringing home a 15,000 euro cash bursary. The film, directed by Shoghakat Vardanyan, follows her family’s quest to find her brother, who went missing during a conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

    The festival has been marred by controversy surrounding the current conflict in the Gaza Strip, with protests disrupting the opening night ceremonies and filmmakers withdrawing their films in protest. Both pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian voices have criticized the festival organizers for their statements regarding the war.

    – Advertisement –

    Other winners at the festival include the Brazilian documentary “Canuto’s Transformation,” which delves into a mythical story from an indigenous Mbyá-Guaraní community, and “Silence of Reason,” a film that examines the mass rapes of women and girls in Bosnia and Herzegovina by Serbian fighters.

    Armenian Catholic Patriarch Raphaël Bedros XXI Minassian visited Bucharest Patriarchal Palace

    Nov 17 2023

    His Beatitude Raphaël Bedros XXI Minassian, Patriarch of Cilicia of the Armenian Catholic Church, arrived at the Palace of the Patriarchate in Bucharest on Thursday as part of a multi-day visit to Romania.

    Patriarchal Auxiliary Bishop Varlaam of Ploiești cordially received the Armenian Patriarch and his delegation. In addition to introducing the historical building, the bishop presented the visitors with a selection of books published by the Publishing Houses of the Romanian Patriarchate.

    Following a brief gathering at Saint John Cassian Hall, the Patriarch of Armenian Catholics bestowed a commemorative medal and a hacikar, an intricately carved cross emblematic of Armenian art, upon the Patriarchal Auxiliary Bishop Varlaam.

    Patriarch Raphaël Bedros recently visited several significant religious, historical, cultural, and patrimony landmarks in the country.

    In conjunction with his attendance at the 10th edition of the “Constantin Brancoveanu” Awards Gala, which is orchestrated by the “Alexandrion” Foundation, His Beatitude travels to Romania to be honored with a special award in recognition of his exemplary service to religious dialogue and peace in the East Middle.

    https://orthodoxtimes.com/armenian-catholic-patriarch-raphael-bedros-xxi-minassian-visited-bucharest-patriarchal-palace/

    RFE/RL Armenian Service – 11/17/2023

                                            Friday, 
    
    
    ICJ Order Says Baku Must Ensure Safety Of Armenians Who Want To Return To 
    Nagorno-Karabakh
    
    
    The International Court of Justice (ICJ) has published a preliminary order 
    calling on Azerbaijan to ensure the safety of Armenians who want to return to 
    Nagorno-Karabakh following Azerbaijan’s lightning offensive in September that 
    resulted in Baku regaining control of the region.
    
    The ICJ decision on November 17 concluded that pending a final decision in the 
    case, Azerbaijan must ensure that people who left Nagorno-Karabakh after 
    September 19 and wish to return “are able to do so in a safe, unimpeded, and 
    expeditious manner.”
    
    The same applies to people who wish to depart Nagorno-Karabakh, while those who 
    wish to stay must remain “free from the use of force or intimidation that may 
    cause them to flee,” the court said in its decision, approved 13-2 by the judges.
    
    The judges also called on Azerbaijan to “protect and preserve registration, 
    identity, and private property documents and records” of people in the region 
    and told the country to submit a report to the UN’s top court within eight weeks 
    on the steps taken to apply the provisional measures.
    
    The decision is a preliminary step in a case brought by Armenia accusing 
    Azerbaijan of breaching an international convention against racial 
    discrimination linked to Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan also has brought a case 
    against Armenia alleging breaches of the same convention. It is likely to take 
    years to resolve the cases.
    
    The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said Baku welcomed the court’s decision, saying 
    it confirms the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan.
    
    “It is worth noting that the court also rejected the groundless and ridiculous 
    request to withdraw the personnel of all the military and law enforcement 
    agencies of Azerbaijan from the Karabakh region,” the Azerbaijani Foreign 
    Ministry said in a statement.
    
    According to the statement, the measures mentioned by the court accept the 
    already declared policy of the Azerbaijani government regarding the Armenian 
    residents of Karabakh.
    
    “This includes our commitment to ensure the safety and security of all 
    residents, regardless of national or ethnic origin,” it said.
    
    The decision released on November 17 comes after Armenia asked The Hague-based 
    ICJ to order so-called provisional measures guaranteeing safety and protecting 
    property and identity documents.
    
    Armenia made the request after Azerbaijan’s army routed ethnic Armenian forces 
    in Nagorno-Karabakh in a 24-hour campaign that began on September 19. The 
    region’s ethnic Armenian government agreed within days to disband itself by the 
    end of the year as more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians fled Nagorno-Karabakh.
    
    The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry’s statement reiterated the country’s position 
    that it did not force out any ethnic Armenians and that many left despite the 
    government’s call for them to stay.
    
    Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Elnur Mammadov pledged at a hearing before 
    the ICJ in October that Azerbaijan would do all it could to ensure the safety 
    and rights of all citizens in the region.
    
    The court said on November 17 that the pledges “are binding and create legal 
    obligations for Azerbaijan.”
    
    The ICJ decision also said that Azerbaijan’s operation in Nagorno-Karabakh took 
    place in the context of “the long-standing exposure of the population of 
    Nagorno-Karabakh to a situation of vulnerability and social precariousness.”
    
    It said the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh “have been severely impacted by the 
    long-lasting disruption of the connection between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia 
    via the Lachin Corridor.”
    
    
    
    
    
    Azerbaijan Urged To Return To ‘Constructive Discussions’
    
            • Ruzanna Stepanian
    
    Artur Hovannisian, a member of the ruling Civil Contract faction in the Armenian 
    parliament
    
    
    Assessing negatively Baku’s decision to cancel an upcoming meeting of the 
    foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington on November 20, the 
    Armenian ruling party has called on Azerbaijan to return to the field of 
    “constructive discussions.”
    
    “We see a non-constructive approach, which, in turn, can cause many problems and 
    risks,” Artur Hovannisian, a lawmaker representing Prime Minister Nikol 
    Pashinian’s Civil Contract faction in the National Assembly, told RFE/RL’s 
    Armenian Service on Friday.
    
    Azerbaijan canceled talks planned in Washington for November 20, complaining 
    about the statements of James O’Brien, a senior U.S. Department of State 
    official who criticized Baku during a recent congressional hearing, warning that 
    “nothing will be normal with Azerbaijan” after its one-day military operation 
    against Nagorno-Karabakh in September “until we see progress on the peace track.”
    
    In response, Baku described this approach by the United States as “one-sided”, 
    warning that Washington could lose its role as a mediator.
    
    Earlier, Azerbaijan also refused to attend meetings in Granada and Brussels that 
    were planned by leaders of the European Union.
    
    The government of Armenia, however, says it still does not rule out the signing 
    of a peace treaty with Azerbaijan by the end of the year.
    
    “We do not rule out anything. We are moving forward constructively with the 
    peace agenda, and I repeat, I also hope that with the mediation and efforts of 
    our international partners, it will be possible to move forward effectively and 
    return Azerbaijan to a constructive framework,” Hovannisian stressed.
    
    Artur Khachatrian, a lawmaker with the opposition Hayastan faction in the 
    Armenian parliament, meanwhile, said that he believed that Azerbaijani President 
    Ilham Aliyev rejected the meetings organized first by the European Union and 
    then through the mediation of the United States because “Western platforms are 
    no longer interesting to Azerbaijan.”
    
    Artur Khachatrian
    
    “Baku has already got what it wanted, namely Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh – red.],” 
    he said.
    
    “Let’s not forget that for the first time in the history of the Third Republic 
    of Armenia, without having any right to do that, [an Armenian leader], Nikol 
    Pashinian, has recognized the sovereignty of Azerbaijan over the Republic of 
    Artsakh on the Western platform. They got what they wanted on those platforms, 
    now they have nothing to get from there anymore. That’s the main reason,” the 
    opposition lawmaker told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.
    
    “What it is fraught with? A new war?” he added.
    
    The fact that Azerbaijan has canceled three meetings in the last two months, 
    according to another opposition lawmaker Tigran Abrahamian, shows that Baku is 
    buying time, trying to understand whether it is worth taking the path of 
    military operations to achieve its maximum goals.
    
    Tigran Abrahamian
    
    “I think that a certain calculation and re-evaluation of the balance of forces 
    is taking place in Azerbaijan at the moment, because it is obvious that 
    Azerbaijan today also has territorial claims towards various settlements of the 
    Republic of Armenia. Recently, they have been quite actively talking about 
    so-called enclaves, about their demands in relation to eight villages, and maybe 
    at this stage Azerbaijan is trying to gain time, to assess the situation and see 
    whether to resort to military action in specific directions in order to achieve 
    its maximum goals,” Abrahamian, of the Pativ Unem faction, told RFE/RL’s 
    Armenian Service.
    
    Officials in Azerbaijan routinely deny statements from the Armenian side about 
    Baku’s being unconstructive in the negotiations, for their part accusing Yerevan 
    of not willing to make headway in the peace process.
    
    
    
    
    Washington Reaffirms Support For Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace Talks
    
    
    Spokesperson for the U.S. Department of State Matthew Miller (file photo).
    
    
    Washington has reaffirmed its support for peace talks between Azerbaijan and 
    Armenia after Baku pulled out of an upcoming U.S.-hosted meeting citing “biased” 
    remarks by a Department of State official.
    
    During a press briefing on November 16 Matthew Miller, a spokesperson for the 
    U.S. Department of State, was asked to comment on Baku’s step to refuse to 
    participate in Washington talks planned at the level of foreign ministers.
    
    Miller said that “we continue to support peace talks to resolve the issues 
    between Azerbaijan and Armenia.”
    
    “We would encourage the two parties to engage in those talks, whether they are 
    here, whether they are somewhere else, and that’ll continue to be our policy,” 
    he added.
    
    Speaking to members of the House Foreign Affairs Committee’s Subcommittee on 
    Europe as part of a hearing on “the future of Nagorno-Karabakh” on November 15, 
    James O’Brien, assistant secretary at the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of 
    European and Eurasian Affairs, said that Washington “made clear that nothing 
    will be normal with Azerbaijan after the events of September 19 until we see 
    progress on the peace track.”
    
    The official referred to Baku’s one-day military operation in Nagorno-Karabakh 
    as a result of which virtually the entire local Armenian population – more than 
    100,000 people – fled to Armenia.
    
    O’Brien said that Washington canceled a number of high-level visits to 
    Azerbaijan in response to that action and that “we don’t anticipate submitting a 
    waiver on Section 907 until such time that we see a real improvement.”
    
    Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act passed along with the adoption of the 
    legislation in 1992 bans any kind of direct United States aid to the Azerbaijani 
    government. A decade later, however, U.S. lawmakers amended Section 907 to allow 
    presidents to repeal it annually to provide military assistance to Azerbaijan 
    such as for countering international terrorism and border security.
    
    Azerbaijan on Thursday reacted angrily to the remarks by the U.S. State 
    Department official that its Foreign Ministry described as a blow to relations 
    between the two countries.
    
    It said that Baku would, therefore, not send a delegation to Washington for 
    talks between the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia around a peace 
    agreement that it said were planned for November 20.
    
    Last month Azerbaijan also withdrew from at least two meetings planned by the 
    European Union and European leaders.
    
    Armenia, on the country, has indicated readiness to engage in further talks with 
    Azerbaijan both in Brussels and Washington.
    
    In his remarks during the congressional hearing O’Brien said that the next few 
    weeks will be “critical” in the context of negotiations between Armenia and 
    Azerbaijan.
    
    
    
    
    France ‘Vigilant’ About Armenia’s 1991 Borders
    
    
    French Ambassador to Armenia Olivier Decottignies on the slope of Mount Tezhkar 
    near the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. .
    
    
    France is vigilant about the territorial integrity of Armenia and respect for 
    its 1991 borders, the French Embassy in Armenia said.
    
    In a Thursday post on Facebook the embassy showed photographs of the French 
    ambassador to Armenia hiking in the mountains, writing: “French Ambassador 
    Olivier Decottignies on the slope of Mount Tezhkar, a strategic point in 
    Armenian territory, on the border with Azerbaijan (Nakhichevan). France is 
    particularly vigilant about the territorial integrity of Armenia and respect for 
    its 1991 borders reiterated in the Prague Declaration.”
    
    By referring to the 1991 borders, France implies the Almaty Declaration that was 
    signed by Armenia, Azerbaijan and 10 other former Soviet republics in December 
    1991 after the collapse of the USSR.
    
    Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
    issued a joint statement following their quadrilateral meeting in Prague on 
    October 6, 2022 with French President Emmanuel Macron and European Council 
    President Charles Michel, confirming their commitment to the Charter of the 
    United Nations and the Alma-Ata 1991 Declaration through which both Armenia and 
    Azerbaijan recognize each other’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.
    
    During his visit to Tbilisi, Georgia, last month Pashinian stressed that the key 
    meaning of that Alma-Ata Declaration is that the administrative borders that 
    existed between the republics of the Soviet Union at the moment of the USSR’s 
    collapse become state borders.
    
    “We hope to sign a peace agreement with Azerbaijan in the coming months and 
    restore relations based on these principles,” Pashinian said.
    
    In his public statements on several occasions Azerbaijani leader Aliyev has said 
    that his country has territorial claims to Armenia. But he has so far declined 
    to recognize the integrity of Armenian territory in numerical terms, something 
    that Pashinian has done repeatedly.
    
    Pashinian has said that Azerbaijan’s narrative about what Armenia perceives as a 
    demand for an extraterritorial land corridor to its western exclave of 
    Nakhichevan and continued talk about “Western Azerbaijan”, suggesting that 
    Azeris who left Armenia at the start of the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh in 
    the late 1980s had lived in their “historical lands,” shows that Azerbaijan is 
    “preparing a new war against the Republic of Armenia.”
    
    Azerbaijan has denied any aggressive plans against Armenian territory, 
    condemning France for its supply of weapons to Armenia under a recent military 
    cooperation agreement signed between the two countries.
    
    
    
    
    EU To ‘Explore Options’ For Visa Liberalization With Armenia
    
    
    Peter Stano, the European Commission’s lead spokesperson for foreign affairs and 
    security policy (file photo).
    
    
    The European Union is going to explore options for visa liberalization with 
    Armenia, an official in Brussels has said.
    
    Peter Stano, the European Commission’s lead spokesperson for foreign affairs and 
    security policy, told Armenia’s state-run Armenpress news agency that “this 
    means we will start the process to see whether it’s feasible, whether it’s 
    possible.”
    
    Stano said that “visa liberalization is something that is very important because 
    it’s tangible and visible for people.”
    
    “There are also tasks to be fulfilled on the side of the partner country, in 
    this case of Armenia,” he said. “In general, for visa liberalization, there are 
    technical requirements that means biometric passports, for example, but also 
    political requirements to make sure that the political framework in the country 
    prevents people from misusing the asylum system. First of all, that people are 
    not forced to leave the country and claim asylum.”
    
    Stano emphasized that they do not want to have a sudden increase in asylum 
    seekers and want to prevent the misuse of the visa-free or liberalized travel 
    regime.
    
    He said that “if everything goes well, the process might bring a lot of benefits 
    for the Armenian citizens.”
    
    The EU’s Foreign Affairs Council on November 13 gave the green light to the 
    European Commission to explore options for visa liberalization with Armenia.
    
    The European Commission is to come up with a specific decision subject to 
    ratification by all members of the 27-nation bloc.
    
    Armenia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Paruyr Hovannisian said earlier this week that 
    Yerevan considered it possible that negotiations on visa liberalization with the 
    European Union would commence “in the coming months.”
    
    He said he considered it positive that no EU member state had opposed the start 
    of the process.
    
    “It was difficult to ensure that consensus among all countries, but it was a 
    very positive development,” the senior Armenian diplomat said.
    
    “We will continue to actively work with the European Union and its member states 
    to speed up that process as much as possible,” he added.
    
    Back in 2016, the head of the European Union delegation to Armenia announced 
    that Yerevan and Brussels would achieve visa liberalization in the near future. 
    It is also provided for under the Comprehensive and Extended Partnership 
    Agreement that Armenia signed with the EU in 2017. However, no significant 
    progress has been made in terms of visa liberalization for Armenia since then.
    
    
    
    
    Armenia To Formally Join ICC In February
    
    
    Armenia has formally handed in its request to join the International Criminal 
    Court (ICC) and will become a member in February, The Hague-based tribunal 
    announced on November 17.
    Yerevan last month signed the ratification of the ICC’s founding treaty also 
    known as the Rome Statute, recognizing the Court’s jurisdiction. Armenia says 
    this would allow the Court’s prosecutors to investigate alleged crimes committed 
    in Nagorno-Karabakh.
    
    Baku in September retook complete control of the region after a lightning 
    offensive, resulting in more than 100,000 ethnic Armenians fleeing across the 
    border into Armenia. Yerevan has accused Baku of “ethnic cleansing” in the 
    region, a claim Azerbaijan strongly denies.
    
    Risking more tensions with Russia, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian met 
    on November 10 with Karim Khan, the chief prosecutor of the ICC who issued an 
    arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin in March. The meeting took 
    place on the sidelines of an annual Paris Peace Forum held in the French capital.
    
    One week after the order for Putin’s arrest over war crimes allegedly committed 
    by Russia in Ukraine Armenia’s Constitutional Court gave the green light for 
    parliamentary ratification of the Rome Statute. Despite stern warnings issued by 
    the Russian leadership in the following months, the National Assembly controlled 
    by Pashinian’s party ratified the treaty on October 3.
    
    The move added to unprecedented tensions between the two states. Russian 
    officials said it will cause serious damage to Russian-Armenian relations. They 
    dismissed Yerevan’s assurances that the ratification does not commit it to 
    arresting Putin and handing him over to the ICC in the event of his visit to 
    Armenia.
    
    The Armenian Foreign Ministry said earlier this month that it has proposed to 
    Moscow a bilateral agreement that “can dispel the concerns of the Russian 
    Federation.” Russian lawmakers brushed aside the proposal.
    
    
    
    
    1 Killed, 3 Injured In Yerevan University Blast, Fire
    
    
    An ambulance car and police work near a Yerevan State University building. 
    .
    
    
    One person was killed and three others were injured in a blast and subsequent 
    fire at a Yerevan State University (YSU) building on Thursday morning, the 
    Armenian police, healthcare authorities and the university’s administration said.
    
    Initially, the YSU reported only fire, saying that it began in one of the rooms 
    of the basement floor in Building N1. It said that the fire was extinguished and 
    “appropriate actions” were being taken. It said the fire was caused by a voltage 
    fluctuation, but did not elaborate.
    
    The Ministry of Health, in its turn, reported that three persons were 
    hospitalized from the scene of the fire at one of the YSU buildings. It said all 
    three were getting the necessary medical care and undergoing examinations. No 
    other details regarding their current conditions were reported immediately. The 
    Ministry of Health also confirmed that one person was killed in the fire.
    
    The Ministry of Internal Affairs later reported that an explosion took place in 
    the 100-square-meter basement of YSU’s chemistry department that caused a 
    subsequent fire.
    
    The report said that the room where the blast occurred was intended for a 
    pumping station, but it also served as a dressing room for maintenance workers. 
    It said that next to it was a room for storage of chemicals, but there was no 
    fire in that room. The Ministry of Internal Affairs said that an on-site 
    investigation was carried out by chemists and no dangerous gases were detected 
    in the air.
    
    The ministry reported that one of the employees died on the spot and three 
    people were taken to hospital, including one patrol service officer who was 
    hospitalized with symptoms of smoke inhalation and whose condition is currently 
    assessed as satisfactory.
    
    The ministry said the rescue service was alerted to the incident at 9:40 am. It 
    said the fire in the university basement was contained at 10:11 a.m. and 
    extinguished at 10:23 a.m.
    
    “Household items and wooden structures were burned in the compressor room. 
    Investigation is underway to find out the circumstances of the incident,” it 
    said.
    
    
    
    Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
    Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
    1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.