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    Categories: 2021

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/21/2021

                                        Thursday, 


Armenian Defense Chief Chides NATO Over Turkey’s Role In Karabakh War

        • Emil Danielyan

Armenia - Armenian Defense Minister Arshak Karapetian at a meeting with a 
visiting NATO envoy, Yerevan, .


NATO member Turkey’s active involvement in last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh 
undermined Armenia’s trust in the U.S.-led alliance, Defense Minister Arshak 
Karapetian told a visiting NATO envoy on Thursday.

Javier Colomina Piriz, the NATO secretary general’s new special representative 
for the South Caucasus and Central Asia, held separate talks with Karapetian and 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian during his first visit to Yerevan.

Official Armenian sources said the talks focused on the future of Armenia’s 
relations with NATO as well as regional security and the current situation in 
the Karabakh conflict zone in particular.

The Armenian Defense Ministry said Karapetian spoke about “NATO member Turkey’s 
role in the 44-day war unleashed against Artsakh.” He said that it “reduced 
confidence towards NATO in the task of maintaining peace and stability in the 
region,” the ministry added in a statement.

It did not specify whether Karapetian, who has frequently visited Russia since 
being appointed defense minister in July, signaled Yerevan’s plans to reconsider 
its relationship with the alliance because of that.


Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets with NATO envoy Javier Colomina 
Piriz, Yerevan, .

A separate statement released by the Armenian government’s press office, said 
Pashinian “attached importance, in the political sense, to cooperation with 
NATO.” It was not clear whether he too complained about the Turkish involvement 
in the six-week war stopped by a Russian-brokered ceasefire last November.

Turkey provided decisive military assistance, including sophisticated weapons 
and personnel, to Azerbaijan during the hostilities. Armenia maintains that 
Ankara also sent Islamist mercenaries from Syria to fight in Karabakh on the 
Azerbaijani side. The Turkish and Azerbaijani governments deny that.

Shortly after the outbreak of the Karabakh war, President Emmanuel Macron of 
France, another key NATO member state, also accused the Turks of recruiting 
“Syrian fighters from jihadist groups” for Azerbaijan.


U.K. -- French President Emmanuel Macron speaks to the press on arrival at the 
NATO summit at the Grove hotel in Watford, northeast of London, December 4, 2019

"A red line has been crossed, which is unacceptable," Macron said on October 1, 
2020. "I urge all NATO partners to face up to the behavior of a NATO member.”

Armenian President Armen President Armen Sarkissian brought up the matter with 
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg when they met in Brussels later that 
month. At a joint news conference with Stoltenberg, Sarkissian charged that 
Turkey is also obstructing international efforts to broker an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani ceasefire.


Belgium -- NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg (R) and Armenian President 
Armen Sarkissian hold a news conference after talks in Brussels, October 21, 
2020.

Stoltenberg expressed serious concern about the hostilities but stopped short of 
criticizing Ankara. He said that NATO is “not part of this conflict.”

According to Pashinian’s press office, Piriz said NATO stands ready to use its 
ties with regional states to contribute to peace and stability in the South 
Caucasus.

Successive Armenian governments have sought to deepen ties with NATO while 
keeping Armenia allied to Russia politically and militarily. Armenian troops 
participated in the NATO-led mission in Afghanistan, and dozens of them remain 
deployed in Kosovo as part of a multinational peacekeeping operation also led by 
the alliance.



Yerevan Silent On ‘Positive Messages’ To Baku

        • Naira Nalbandian

Armenia/Iran - A view of the Arax river separating Armenia and Iran.


Armenia’s political leadership on Thursday pointedly declined to comment on what 
Azerbaijani officials have described as “positive messages” sent by it to Baku 
of late.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov spoke of such signals coming from 
Yerevan ahead of Wednesday’s session of a Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani task 
force working on the restoration of transport links between Armenia and 
Azerbaijan. He expressed hope that they will translate into “concrete results” 
soon but did not go into details.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s office and the Armenian Foreign Ministry had no 
comment on Bayramov’s remarks. Pro-government lawmakers also declined to say 
what signals, if any, were sent to Baku.

Earlier this week, Azerbaijan released and repatriated five more Armenian 
soldiers taken prisoner during or shortly after last year’s war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

“I think that ‘velvet’ messages sent by the Armenian authorities are clearly 
pleasing the Turks and the Azerbaijanis,” said Tatul Hakobian, a veteran 
political analyst. “They are therefore trying not to use very tough rhetoric 
[against Armenia,] even if their actions suggest that they are sticking to their 
tough positions.”

“It’s hard to tell what understandings have been reached,” Hakobian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “But it is obvious that there is a certain process 
which is leading to some understandings.”

The Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani working group co-headed by deputy prime 
ministers of the three states did not announce any agreements in a statement on 
its latest meeting in Moscow issued late on Wednesday. It said the three parties 
agreed to meet again soon.


RUSSIA -- Russian President Vladimir Putin (C), Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian (R) and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev deliver a joint statement 
following their talks in Moscow, January 11, 2021.

The trilateral group has been discussing practical modalities of opening the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border for commercial traffic in line with the 
Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the Karabakh war last November.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has repeatedly claimed that the deal 
envisages a permanent land “corridor” that will connect the Nakhichevan exclave 
to the rest of Azerbaijan via Armenia’s Syunik province also bordering Iran. He 
has threatened to forcibly open such a corridor if the Armenian side continues 
to oppose its creation.

Armenian leaders have denounced Aliyev’s threats as territorial claims, saying 
that the truce accord only calls for transport links between the two South 
Caucasus states.

“I repeat that the issue of providing corridors is not discussed,” Deputy Prime 
Minister Mher Grigorian told journalists before flying to Moscow on Tuesday.

Aliyev claimed, meanwhile, that Azerbaijan is succeeding in securing the 
“Zangezur corridor.”


IRAN - A handout photo shows an explosion during a military exercise by the 
Iranian Army in the northwest of Iran, close to the border with Azerbaijan, 
October 1, 2021.

His stance and rhetoric have also prompted concern from Iran. Earlier this 
month, a senior Iranian parliamentarian accused Aliyev of trying to “cut Iran’s 
access to Armenia” with the help of Turkey and Israel.

In an October 11 editorial, the official Iranian news agency IRNA said that the 
idea of the “Zangezur corridor” is part of a “hidden plan to change the borders” 
of Armenia and Iran.

“This would result in the elimination of Iran's land border with Armenia and 
Iran’s exclusion from this important route for international transport in the 
northwest,” it wrote, adding that a recent Iranian military exercise was a 
warning to “adventurers from inside and outside the region trying to diminish 
the Islamic Republic’s geopolitical role.”



Armenian Hospitals Again Overwhelmed With COVID-19 Patients

        • Robert Zargarian
        • Susan Badalian

Armenia -- A COVID-19 patient at the intensive care unit of Surp Grigor 
Lusavorich hospital, Yerevan, May 10, 2020. (A photo by the Armenian Mnistry of 
Health)


Armenia reported a record 2,603 coronavirus cases and hundreds of its 
unvaccinated citizens awaited hospitalization on Thursday as health authorities 
struggled to cope with a new wave of infections in the country of about 3 
million.
The Armenian Ministry of Health also said in the morning that 32 more people 
have died from COVID-19 in the past day, raising to 5,902 the official death 
toll from the disease. The figure does not include the deaths of 1,243 other 
citizens which the ministry also links to the coronavirus.

The daily number of new officially confirmed cases has been growing steadily 
since June amid a continuing lax enforcement of sanitary rules and a very slow 
pace of coronavirus vaccination.

Yerevan’s ambulance service said its medics are working nonstop to respond to 
hundreds of phone calls from people infected with COVID-19.

“People call us during the day and they call us at night,” one ambulance doctor 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “People are suffocating in their homes. Only we 
can help them.”


ARMENIA -- A doctor wearing a face mask and protective gear gives a call as she 
stands next to an ambulance at the Grigor Lusavorich Medical Centre in Yerevan, 
June 1, 2020

The Ministry of Health said late last week that Armenian hospitals have run out 
of vacant beds for COVID-19 patients, resulting in a waiting list of more than 
400 infected people in need of urgent care.

The coronavirus section of the largest of those hospitals, the Surb Grigor 
Lusavorich Medical Center, has over 500 regular and 114 intensive-care beds. All 
of them were occupied when an RFE/RL correspondent visited the facility on 
Tuesday.

“It can be said that we are now at the peak [of the new coronavirus wave,]” said 
Petros Manukian, the Yerevan-based hospital’s deputy director.

Zarik Hakobian was one of the patients treated there. The 70-year-old woman was 
taken to Surb Grigor Lusavorich two months ago and was still not discharged from 
its intensive-care unit.

“I’m very tired and want to feel well, but I can’t,” said Hakobian.

Another patient, Siranuysh Nalbandian, was five months pregnant. She was 
connected to oxygen equipment and had to use hand gestures to communicate with 
the journalist. Nalbandian, 41, smiled and pointed to a picture of her elder son 
Hayk who was killed during last year’s war in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Only one of the more than 100 patients in intensive care was fully vaccinated 
against COVID-19, according to the hospital administration.


Armenia - Passengers on a commuter bus in Yerevan, March 12, 2021.

Vaccine hesitancy remains widespread in Armenia despite the soaring coronavirus 
cases and deaths caused by them. Nor do the vast majority of Armenians wear 
mandatory masks indoors, including in overcrowded public buses. Authorities 
essentially stopped fining them more than a year ago.

Ministry of Health data shows that just over 403,000 people received at least 
one dose of a coronavirus vaccine and only about 185,000 of them were fully 
vaccinated as of October 17. Earlier this month, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
ordered relevant authorities to use their “administrative levers” to speed up 
the vaccination process.

The authorities had already obligated all public and private sector employees to 
get inoculated or take coronavirus tests twice a month at their own expense, a 
requirement effective from October 1. Health Minister Anahit Avanesian said on 
October 11 that they could also introduce a mandatory coronavirus health pass 
for entry to cultural and leisure venues.



Russian Schools ‘Not On Armenian Government Agenda’

        • Nane Sahakian

Armenia - First-graders have a class at a village school in Gegharkunik 
province, September 1, 2021.


Education Minister Vahram Dumanian insisted on Thursday that his government is 
not considering asking Russia to open Russian schools for Armenian children in 
Armenia.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said late last week that Moscow is now 
setting up in Tajikistan five Russian-language schools that will have “curricula 
created on the basis of our methodology.” He claimed that the Armenian 
government “recently showed an interest in having the same program drawn up for 
Armenia.”

“There is no such issue on our agenda,” Dumanian told journalists. “At the 
moment no discussions are taking placing on opening Russian schools in Armenia 
or Armenian schools in Russia.”

He suggested that Lavrov may have only referred to Russian-backed educational 
programs in schools in former Soviet republics.

“Any such program deserves attention so that one can understand what it is all 
about. Let’s familiarize ourselves and understand,” added the minister.

Dumanian also stressed the importance of improving the teaching of Russian and 
other foreign languages in Armenian schools. The Russian language is a mandatory 
subject there. Schoolchildren study it for ten years.

Armenian has been the country’s sole official language ever since the break-up 
of the Soviet Union. A law enacted in 1991 also made it the principal language 
of instruction for Armenian children enrolled in both public and private schools.

Several public schools have Russian-language sections for Russian citizens as 
well as those Armenian children who lived in Russia and only recently returned 
to Armenia. The latter are allowed to study there only temporarily.

Armenia also has five schools financed and run by the Russian government. Most 
of their students are children of Russian military personnel serving in the 
South Caucasus state.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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