X
    Categories: 2021

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/15/2021

                                        Monday, 


EU, Armenia Sign Common Aviation Area Agreement


Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan (L) and Chair of the Council of the 
European Union Stanislav Raščan (C) and European Commissioner for Neighborhood 
and Enlargement Olivér Várhelyi sign a Common Aviation Area Agreement in 
Brussels, 


Armenia and the European Union have signed a Common Aviation Area Agreement, the 
Armenian Foreign Ministry said on Monday.

The document was signed on November 15 between Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat 
Mirzoyan and European Commissioner for Neighborhood and Enlargement Olivér 
Várhelyi and Slovenia’s Foreign Minister Stanislav Raščan, who is currently the 
chair of the Council of the European Union, representing the EU.

In his remarks at the signing ceremony Mirzoyan described the event as “yet 
another remarkable benchmark” in Armenia’s relations with the European Union and 
its 27 member states.

“The ratification and entry into force of this Agreement in the near future will 
create new opportunities for the development of the aviation sector in Armenia, 
making the connection to other European countries easier for the Armenian 
citizens.

“Joining the EU Common Aviation Area – a single market for aviation services 
will foster the adoption of the EU aviation standards, the implementation of 
aviation rules and will further develop cooperation in the field of aviation 
security. It will in its turn, benefit the national airlines and, of course, 
individual travelers,” Mirzoyan said as quoted by the Armenian Foreign 
Ministry’s press office.

“I am convinced that the Agreement will be instrumental in promoting trade, 
tourism, investments, and economic and social development in general, as well as 
boost people-to-people contacts, and provide increased opportunities for bigger 
mobility,” the Armenian foreign minister concluded.



Armenian PM Vows Efforts To Overcome ‘Strategic Challenges’
Նոյեմբեր 15, 2021

Armenian Prime Minsiter Nikol Pashinian (C) introduced newly appointed Defense 
Minister Suren Papikian (L) in the presence of former Defense Minister Arshak 
Karapetian, Yerevan, 


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has pledged efforts of his government to 
overcome what he described as current strategic challenges facing Armenia as he 
introduced a newly appointed defense minister to his staff.

Presiding over a Security Council session earlier on Monday, Pashinian said that 
he had decided to dismiss Arshak Karapetian as defense minister after analyzing 
what he described as Azerbaijan’s latest incursions into Armenia’s sovereign 
territory in one of the sections of the eastern border.

Speaking in the presence of both Karapetian and Papikian at the Ministry of 
Defense hours after that, Pashinian said: “Our country is facing serious 
strategic challenges. We simply have no right not to manage these challenges in 
the interests of the Republic of Armenia, Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh – ed.) and 
the Armenian people.”

Pashinian stressed that the country’s leadership “has a clear idea of what steps 
are needed to successfully bring the country out of the crossroads of these 
strategic challenges, to pave the way for lasting and sustainable development.”

“We will take that way,” the Armenian leader added.

Pashinian emphasized the political nature of his decision to replace the defense 
minister. He thanked Papikian for agreeing to take “a politically more 
vulnerable” post.

At the same time, the prime minister vowed continued efforts of his cabinet to 
solve any problems facing the military.

“The Ministry of Defense, the Armed Forces are the largest state body in our 
country, and that body must be healthy, functionally efficient, and decisions 
[there] must be profound, substantiated, based on our military and strategic 
needs. In this regard, I want to emphasize this nuance, around which we must 
continue to work,” Pashinian concluded.



Pashinian Discusses ‘Azeri Incursion’ At Security Council Meeting

        • Heghine Buniatian

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian holding a Security Council meeting, 



Azerbaijani forces have invaded the territory of Armenia in one of the eastern 
sections of the border, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said during a meeting of 
the country’s Security Council on Monday.

The Armenian leader did not provide details as to when, where and under what 
circumstances the Azerbaijani military advancement took place. He only mentioned 
that this issue has been discussed by Security Council members since yesterday.

“Since yesterday we have had several meetings and discussions in this 
composition as well as in different formats. The subject of discussions was the 
fact of the incursion into the territory of the Republic of Armenia by the 
Azerbaijani troops in one of the eastern sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani 
border. The purpose of today’s meeting is to summarize our discussions, as well 
as to give full information to our public about the events that have taken 
place,” Pashinian said.


A meeting of Armenia’s Security Council chaired by Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian, 

The prime minister announced the dismissal of Arshak Karapetian as minister of 
defense and his replacement with Suren Papikian, who prior to that held the post 
of deputy prime minister.

Pashinian said that the decision was made “as a result of the analysis of the 
events unfolding since yesterday.”

Skirmishes at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border have been reported since the 
weekend. Some reports suggested advancement of Azerbaijani troops into Armenian 
territory. Official Yerevan, however, has not admitted any territorial losses 
until today.

During today’s Security Council meeting Pashinian said he had thanked Karapetian 
for his work as defense minister, at the same time telling him that “at the 
moment the situation has led me to the decision that there should be a change of 
the defense minister.”

According to an official statement, the Security Council heard the report by the 
chief of the General Staff of Armenia’s Armed Forces on the current situation, 
after which, according to Pashinian, the Security Council members would “analyze 
the situation and try to make a decision on our actions in several directions on 
the protection of our security, territorial integrity and sovereignty.”

Meanwhile, the Security Council of Armenia drew the attention of Russia, the 
Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and the international community 
to “the ongoing aggressive actions of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces”, emphasizing 
that “these actions are against Armenia’s sovereignty, territorial integrity, 
regional security and stability, as well as the provisions of the November 9 
trilateral statement.”

In its statement the Security Council said that at about 1 pm yesterday, in one 
of the eastern sections of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, units of the 
Azerbaijani armed forces invaded the sovereign territory of Armenia with the 
help of armored vehicles, with four military positions of Armenia’s armed forces 
being encircled. It said that as a result of negotiations the Azerbaijani 
military equipment and personnel were withdrawn from the territory of Armenia. 
According to the statement, the units of the Armenian armed forces were 
withdrawn from the above-mentioned four combat positions, “but the Azeri 
servicemen, who invaded the sovereign territory of Armenia in May, continue to 
be deployed in the mentioned area.”

Meanwhile, Baku has denied that its troops have invaded Armenia’s sovereign 
territory, insisting that Azerbaijani soldiers are stationed in the territories 
belonging to Azerbaijan.

“Azerbaijani servicemen are serving in the sovereign territory of Azerbaijan,” 
said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Leyla Abdullayeva, responding to statements 
from official Yerevan.



Defense Chief Replaced In Armenia


(Combined photo): Armenia’s fired Defense Minister Arshak Karapetian (L) and 
newly appointed Defense Minister Suren Papikian


Armenian Defense Minister Arshak Karapetian has been dismissed from his post, it 
emerged on Monday.

The presidential press office said today that based on the proposal of Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian, Armenian President Armen Sarkisian signed a relevant 
decree relieving Karapetian, who had held the ministerial position since August, 
of his duties.

By another decree proposed by Pashinian the president appointed Deputy Prime 
Minister Suren Papikian new defense minister. Papikian was relieved of his 
duties as deputy prime minister prior to that.

The changes come after two days of reported skirmishes between Armenian and 
Azerbaijani armed forces along the border between the two countries as well as 
tensions within Nagorno-Karabakh where one ethnic Armenian civilian was killed 
and three others wounded and three Azerbaijani soldiers were wounded in separate 
reported incidents during last week.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian convened a Security Council meeting on 
Monday during which he discussed “an Azeri incursion into Armenia’s territory at 
one of the sections of the eastern border.” He also announced the replacement of 
the defense minister, stressing that the decision was made “as a result of the 
analysis of the events unfolding since yesterday.”

The escalation of tensions coincided with a two-day visit of Karapetian to 
Nagorno-Karabakh reported by Armenia’s Defense Ministry early last week.

Azerbaijan strongly condemned that visit by a senior Armenian official made 
around the first anniversary of a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped last 
year’s Armenian-Azerbaijani war. Authorities in Baku claimed that the trip was a 
violation of the terms of the ceasefire “aimed at destabilizing the situation in 
the region.”

Major-General Karapetian’s successor Papikian has served in top positions in the 
Pashinian government since the 2018 “velvet revolution.” The 35-year-old 
politician has no military background.



Ruling Party Loses Election In Another Syunik Town

        • Karlen Aslanian

A voter goes through a fingerprint authentification process in Armenia’s 
elections (file photo)


The political party of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has suffered another 
setback in Syunik as its candidate lost a municipal election in the southern 
province’s town of Kapan to a pro-opposition incumbent major over the weekend.

According to preliminary results reported by the Central Election Commission, 
Civil Contract’s David Danielian received about 29 percent of the vote in the 
November 15 ballot. The winner, Gevork Parsian of the opposition Shant Alliance, 
gained nearly 70 percent of the vote, according to the same official source.

This is the third major town in Syunik where Civil Contract has suffered 
setbacks in local elections this fall.

While winning in several communities across Armenia, including in Syunik, in the 
October 17 elections, the Pashinian party still lost in the southern province’s 
key towns of Goris and Meghri to candidates representing different opposition 
parties. Last month Civil Contract also failed to win in municipal elections in 
Gyumri (Shirak province) where it eventually formed a coalition with the winning 
pro-opposition alliance.

In contrast, in the November 15 elections, Civil Contract’s candidates managed 
to win by a large margin in Stepanavan (Lori province) and Ijevan (Tavush 
province).

Observers did not report major violations during Armenia’s local elections on 
Sunday.

On his Facebook account, Daniel Ioannisian, programs coordinator at the Union of 
Informed Citizens who monitored the elections in Kapan, noted, however, a fairly 
high voter turnout in the town, over 63 percent, which is not typical for local 
elections in Armenia.

Kapan is one of Syunik’s communities that became a border town as a result of 
Azerbaijan’s regaining several Armenian-controlled districts around 
Nagorno-Karabakh in last year’s war. Pro-opposition sentiments have been 
observed to run high in most such areas.



Armenians Barred From Another Azeri-Controlled Road


An Azerbaijani flag is seen on the Goris-Kapan road section controlled by Baku; 
the photograph from the Armenian ombudsman's Facebook account,19Sep,2021


Azerbaijan has set up border controls and customs checks at another section of a 
road linking two communities in southern Armenia.

Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) said the measures were put in place at 
midnight on November 15.

Azerbaijan first took control of portions of a strategic road in Armenia’s 
Syunik province, including the Kapan-Chakaten section, after last year’s war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh as its troops advanced towards the Soviet-era administrative 
border between the two former socialist republics.

Last week Azerbaijan set up customs points at a 21-kilometer section of the road 
linking Kapan and Goris.

In a statement released late on Sunday the NSS said that like in the case of the 
Kapan-Goris road Armenia will also set up border and customs points at the 
Kapan-Chakaten section. It said that an alternative road for this section will 
be ready before the end of the year.

Azerbaijani forces set up a checkpoint on the Goris-Kapan road on September 12 
to tax Iranian commercial trucks transporting cargo to and from Armenia. The 
move caused serious disruptions in Armenian-Iranian trade operations and raised 
tensions in Baku’s relations with Tehran.

From November 11 Azerbaijan also announced border controls and customs checks 
for all Armenian traffic, effectively barring Armenian drivers from using the 
road.

At a cabinet meeting in Yerevan the same day Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian said that continuing to use the Baku-controlled road section would 
mean agreeing to a “corridor logic” advanced by Azerbaijan. He suggested that 
Baku imposed the border checks because of Yerevan’s refusal to agree to a 
special transport corridor that would connect Azerbaijan to its Nakhichevan 
exclave via the portion of Syunik bordering Iran.

All traffic from the relevant road section thereafter was redirected to an 
alternative road bypassing the border area.

The 70-kilometer bypass road has been mostly rebuilt in recent months. Pashinian 
acknowledged that it is still not convenient enough for heavy trucks and needs 
further upgrades.

Issues related to the use of roads come amid another military escalation between 
Armenia and Azerbaijan. Yerevan and Baku accused each other of attempting to 
make advancements on the ground at different contested sections of the volatile 
border. Azerbaijan also accused ethnic Armenian forces in Nagorno-Karabakh of 
firing at its military positions.

An Armenian man in Nagorno-Karabakh was detained by Russian peacekeepers and 
handed over to local ethnic Armenian authorities after allegedly throwing an 
explosive device at Azerbaijani soldiers at a checkpoint along a 
Russian-controlled corridor linking Stepanakert with Armenia.

Authorities in Baku said three Azerbaijani soldiers were wounded in the incident 
that took place near the town of Shushi (Susa) and led to a temporary closure of 
the vital supply route for Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians. Baku described the 
incident as a “terrorist act.”

De facto Armenian authorities in Stepanakert, for their part, said that a joint 
investigation with Russian peacekeepers was under way to establish the 
circumstances of the November 13 incident. But they added that their preliminary 
findings suggested that the person who threw the explosive device was responding 
to “provocative actions” by Azerbaijani soldiers. They also refuted Baku's 
claims of casualties, insisting that no one was hurt by the explosion.

Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a 44-day war over Nagorno-Karabakh last fall. The 
hostilities in which nearly 7,000 people were killed were halted due to a 
Russia-brokered ceasefire agreement signed on November 9, 2020, that granted 
Azerbaijan control of parts of Nagorno-Karabakh as well as adjacent territories 
that had been controlled by Armenians for nearly three decades. About 2,000 
Russian peacekeepers were deployed in the region under the terms of the 
ceasefire agreement.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2021 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 
Yeghisabet Arthur: