ArmInfo.Following the Armenian Foreign Ministry, references to Artsakh disappeared from the website of the country's president. This is signaled by ARF member, MP from the "Armenia" opposition parliamentary faction Artur Khachatryan.
"Mentions about Artsakh are beginning to disappear from the websites of government bodies of the Republic of Armenia.
There have already been reports in the press that in connection with the "updating" of the official website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (they say temporarily), the section on Artsakh was removed from it. For the same reason, there is no Artsakh Liberation War section on the website of the Ministry of Defense. Now the Artsakh section has also been removed from the president's website. It turns out that here too they decided to "update" the content and immediately started with Artsakh.
I have a clear conviction that this government was infected with the "disease of renewal" by the Azerbaijanis. Let's see when they are cured," Khachatryan wrote, while sharing photographs of an official request sent to the RA Presidential Administration due to the fact that since February 13, the section on Artsakh has not been available on the presidential website, Khachatryan notes.
In response to Khachatryan, acting Head of the Presidential Staff Khachatur Poghosyan notes that the website of the President of the Republic of Armenia is a platform where information is provided about the activities of the President of the Republic. According to him, various changes and updates are carried out on the website on a permanent basis, which are aimed at providing users with up-to-date information that would correspond to both the functions and constitutional responsibilities of the head of state. "As part of these works, the "Artsakh" section you specified is temporarily unavailable due to the fact that work is underway to update the information," the parliamentarian was assured.
Notably, for the second month now the Armenian Foreign Ministry has been unable to cope with the task of updating the sections on Artsakh and the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire.