Armenian Prime Minister's wife makes an impassionate call for peace in Karabakh

Anna Hakobyan, the wife of Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan has launched a "women for peace" initiative, and spoke about the human cost of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict at a meeting in Moscow with Russian women.

The semi-official Armenpress news agency reported that Anna Hakobyan said that the main mission of the initiative is to contribute to the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. "It isn't important how this conflict originated. What matters is the loss of human lives, young human lives, that are the cost of this conflict".

Hakobyan recalled that during the 2016 April War, she was an executive at a news media company and followed the coverage of the war in both the Armenian and Azerbaijani media. "Believe me, when looking at Azerbaijani soldiers, at their faces, I was noting that these children aren't any different from our soldiers. The expression in their eyes was the same - fearful and anxious," she said.

"However, we have what we have, and it does not matter what each of the states has gained from that war, who is satisfied, who is dissatisfied. The important thing is that young and bright lives have been extinguished, families have become orphaned, and new armies of widowed mothers have been formed in both countries".

Hakobyan called on political decision-makers of all sides to do their best to put aside the guns, and asked the participants of the meeting to join her campaign which aims at establishing peace, for the sake of preserving the young lives on both sides of the border.

Hakobyan invited participants of the meeting to visit Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, and to repeat this appeal from there. She also asked the women present to use every opportunity to make this appeal from the Azerbaijan side as well.

sopurce: commonspace.eu with agencies

photo: Anna Hakobyan launching her "Womern for peace" initiative in Moscow on 24 July 2018

Related articles

Editor's choice
News
Borrell tells the European Parliament that the situation in Afghanistan was critical, but the EU will remain engaged

Borrell tells the European Parliament that the situation in Afghanistan was critical, but the EU will remain engaged

Borrell underlined that the European Union will make every effort to support the peace process and to remain a committed partner to the Afghan people. "Of course, we will have to take into account the evolving situation, but disengagement is not an option.  We are clear on that: there is no alternative to a negotiated political settlement, through inclusive peace talks.
Editor's choice
News
Israeli hostages and Palestinian detainees released as Trump’s Gaza plan is endorsed in Egypt summit

Israeli hostages and Palestinian detainees released as Trump’s Gaza plan is endorsed in Egypt summit

Hamas freed the last living Israeli hostages from Gaza on Monday 13 October under a ceasefire deal and Israel sent home busloads of Palestinian detainees, as U.S. President Donald Trump declared the end of the two-year long war in the Middle East. Hours later, Trump convened Muslim and European leaders in Egypt to discuss the future of the Gaza Strip and the possibility of a wider regional peace, even as Hamas and Israel, both absent from the gathering, are yet to agree on the next steps. The Israeli military said it had received all 20 hostages confirmed to be alive, after their transfer form Gaza by the Red Cross. The announcement prompted cheering, hugging and weeping among thousands waiting at "Hostage Square" in Tel Aviv. In Gaza, thousands of relatives, many weeping with joy, gathered at a hospital where buses brought home some of the nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees to be freed by Israel as part of the accord. "The skies are calm, the guns are silent, the sirens are still and the sun rises on a Holy Land that is finally at peace," Trump told the Knesset, Israel's parliament, saying a "long nightmare" for both Israelis and Palestinians was over.

Popular

Editor's choice
News
Israeli hostages and Palestinian detainees released as Trump’s Gaza plan is endorsed in Egypt summit

Israeli hostages and Palestinian detainees released as Trump’s Gaza plan is endorsed in Egypt summit

Hamas freed the last living Israeli hostages from Gaza on Monday 13 October under a ceasefire deal and Israel sent home busloads of Palestinian detainees, as U.S. President Donald Trump declared the end of the two-year long war in the Middle East. Hours later, Trump convened Muslim and European leaders in Egypt to discuss the future of the Gaza Strip and the possibility of a wider regional peace, even as Hamas and Israel, both absent from the gathering, are yet to agree on the next steps. The Israeli military said it had received all 20 hostages confirmed to be alive, after their transfer form Gaza by the Red Cross. The announcement prompted cheering, hugging and weeping among thousands waiting at "Hostage Square" in Tel Aviv. In Gaza, thousands of relatives, many weeping with joy, gathered at a hospital where buses brought home some of the nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees to be freed by Israel as part of the accord. "The skies are calm, the guns are silent, the sirens are still and the sun rises on a Holy Land that is finally at peace," Trump told the Knesset, Israel's parliament, saying a "long nightmare" for both Israelis and Palestinians was over.