Wednesday, Armenia, Iran Extend Energy Swap Deal Representatives of Iran and Armenia sign an agreement extending an energy swap scheme between the two countries until 2030. Yerevan, . Armenia and Iran on Thursday signed an agreement to extend the term of the “natural gas for electricity” program by four years and increase its volumes. The new agreement was signed at Armenia’s Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure between Aram Ghazarian, Director General of Yerevan’s Thermal Power Plant, and Majid Chegeni, Deputy Minister of Oil of Iran and Director of the Islamic Republic’s National Gas Company. Armenian Minister of Economic and Technological Development Gnel Sanosian congratulated the parties on the extension of the agreement, emphasizing that it is “one of the best manifestations of Armenian-Iranian friendly relations.” “The extension of the agreement is a profitable deal for both countries. With the extension of this agreement it is possible to increase gas imports and electricity exports, which will definitely have a positive effect on the economic development of both countries,” he said, according to an official press release. Chegeni, in his turn, reportedly stressed that the new agreement will “give a new impetus to the development of Armenian-Iranian relations.” Since 2009, Armenia has been importing natural gas from Iran and turning it into electricity at a local thermal power plant, supplying it back to Iran. The surplus of electricity obtained from one cubic meter of natural gas has remained in Armenia. Under this scheme, the term of the agreement was to expire in 2026. With the agreement signed today, the period has been extended until 2030. However, specific figures regarding the volumes of supplies are not mentioned in official reports. Oskanian Urges Armenian PM To Renounce Prague Statement • Ruzanna Stepanian Former Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian (file photo). Former Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian has called on Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian to withdraw from the statement made in Prague last year, by which Baku and Yerevan recognized each other’s territorial integrity and sovereignty based on the declaration signed in Almaty in 1991. In a new video on Facebook Oskanian claimed that this statement is one of the main causes of the closure of the Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan that has put Karabakh Armenians “on the brink of starvation.” “Pashinian made a big mistake. Pashinian must admit he made that mistake and correct it. Today he has the opportunity to retract that statement, just based on today’s situation. He can clearly say that ‘I’ve tried something, but I see that our opponent is abusing it, so I retract that statement, and today I have the right to do that’,” Oskanian said. The former foreign minister said he believes that the Prague statement made following Pashinian’s quadrilateral meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, French President Emmanuel Macron and President of the European Council Charles Michel on October 6 last year “has become a serious obstacle, because no one can do anything to unblock the corridor.” “Russia has already openly said it. Citing the Prague statement and Pashinian’s signature under it that has significantly changed the entire essence of the November 9, [2020 trilateral] statement, Russia says that today it cannot do anything and it says it openly. The West doesn’t say it openly, but it says the same in private meetings,” Oskanian said. Without giving names Oskanian also claimed that “many people abroad are doing serious work, both at the governmental and legislative levels, trying to change the content of the negotiations, but they are facing the same wall.” “They are told that the government of Armenia has a different approach… and that they should rather work with their own [Armenian] government,” the former Armenian diplomat said. “Believe me, if there is a change in the attitude of the Armenian government today, the attitude of the international community will change dramatically, too,” Oskanian said. Oskanian suggested that today it is still possible for Pashinian to go back on his statement without provoking a war, while today’s situation, in the former foreign minister’s view, only increases the possibility of war. “Because Pashinian has made a lot of promises to Azerbaijan, but the signing of the document stalls,” he said. “I think that it will not be easy for Pashinian to sign such a document, because its content has nothing to do with the interests of the Armenian people. Naturally, this can be dragged out, and this is where the danger lies, and believe me, the mediators will not be able to do anything here, because all the time you promise something to your opponent, which you do not fulfill. That’s why I’m just asking, I’m begging, that we change the approach, the narrative of today’s negotiations as it contains a serious danger, and the possibility for doing that really exists today,” Oskanian concluded. Pashinian has repeatedly supported mutual recognition of territorial integrity by Armenia and Azerbaijan as a way to move forward in hammering out a peace agreement between the two South Caucasus nations. In his several public remarks he said that Armenia was ready to recognize Azerbaijan’s Soviet-era borders if Baku does the same in respect with the Armenian borders that existed during the Soviet times. While this means also recognizing Nagorno-Karabakh within the borders of Azerbaijan, the Pashinian government has insisted that an internationally visible dialogue take place between Baku and Stepanakert on the rights and security of Karabakh Armenians. Earlier, Pashinian and members of his political teams also dismissed Oskanian’s offer to lead diplomatic efforts on changing the course of the current negotiations with Azerbaijan. In a recent speech in parliament Pashinian, in particular, suggested that all of the steps publically proposed by the former foreign minister to be taken to raise the issue of at least an autonomous status for Nagorno-Karabakh have actually been taken by the current administration. Azerbaijan Dismisses Opinion By Top International Lawyer On ‘Genocide Against Armenians’ In Karabakh Hikmet Hajiyev, a foreign policy advisor to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev (file photo) A senior official in Baku has rejected as biased a report by a leading expert on international criminal law who described the ongoing blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan as a genocide. Hikmet Hajiyev, a foreign policy advisor to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, said on Thursday that the report released by the founding prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno Ocampo, earlier this week “contains unsubstantiated allegations and accusations.” In his 28-page expert opinion requested by Arayik Harutiunian, the ethnic Armenian leader of Nagorno-Karabakh, Ocampo, an Argentine lawyer who served at the Hague court in 2003-2012, assessed whether the current siege of Nagorno-Karabakh by Azerbaijan implemented by blocking the only road of supply from Armenia and resulting in a dramatically worsening humanitarian situation in the region amounts to the crime of genocide. In the document that he released from New York on August 7 Ocampo gives a straightforward answer, stating that “there is an ongoing Genocide against 120,000 Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh.” Luis Moreno Ocampo The 71-year-old lawyer who successfully prosecuted for crimes against humanity three heads of state, including the president of Sudan, Omar al-Bashir, says that “the blockade of the Lachin Corridor by the Azerbaijani security forces impeding access to any food, medical supplies, and other essentials should be considered a Genocide under Article II, (c) of the Genocide Convention: ‘Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction.’” “There are no crematories, and there are no machete attacks. Starvation is the invisible Genocide weapon. Without immediate dramatic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed in a few weeks. Starvation as a method to destroy people was neglected by the entire international community when it was used against Armenians in 1915, Jews and Poles in 1939, Russians in Leningrad (now Saint Petersburg) in 1941, and Cambodians in 1975/1976. Starvation was also neglected when used in Srebrenica in the winter of 1993/1994,” Ocampo writes. In his expert opinion Ocampo also refers to the analysis of the Lachin corridor blockade given by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) at Armenia’s request. Still in February the United Nations’ top court ordered Azerbaijan to restore “unimpeded” traffic through the sole road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia. It reaffirmed its position in July, a few weeks after Baku only tightened the de facto blockade by prohibiting all kinds of cargoes coming to the region. Ocampo further maintains that “there is reasonable basis to believe that President Aliyev has Genocidal intentions.” “He has knowingly, willingly and voluntarily blockaded the Lachin Corridor even after having been placed on notice regarding the consequences of his actions by the ICJ’s provisional orders,” the founding prosecutor of the International Criminal Court concludes. Meanwhile, in rejecting the Ocampo report, Hajiyev, according to Azerbaijani media, said: “It is biased and distorts the real situation on the ground and represents serious factual, legal and substantive errors.” Aliyev’s aide did not elaborate. Nagorno-Karabakh’s leader Harutiunian on August 8 issued an urgent appeal to the international community, asking for immediate action to lift the blockade imposed by Azerbaijan and prevent what he called “the genocide of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.” Meanwhile, in a post on Twitter today Armenia’s Ambassador-at-Large Edmon Marukian wrote that Ocampo’s is “a solid report with facts and analyses, which may become a future indictment against the Azerbaijani leadership.” Officials in Baku deny blockading Nagorno-Karabakh, saying that humanitarian supplies to the region could also be implemented through the Azeri-controlled town of Agdam, which is situated to the east of the region and is away from Armenia. Despite severe shortages of food, medicines, fuel and other essentials in the region ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh reject that offer, fearing that it could be a prelude to the absorption of what remains of the former autonomous oblast into Azerbaijan. Authorities in both Yerevan and Stepanakert consider the Azerbaijani checkpoint at the Lachin corridor illegal as they insist its violates a Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement that places the vital route under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh for decades. Some 30,000 people were killed in a war in the early 1990s that left ethnic Armenians in control of the predominantly Armenian-populated region and seven adjacent districts of Azerbaijan proper. Decades of internationally mediated talks failed to result in a diplomatic solution and the simmering conflict led to another war in 2020 in which nearly 7,000 soldiers were killed on both sides. The 44-day war in which Azerbaijan regained all of the Armenian-controlled areas outside of Nagorno-Karabakh as well as chunks of territory inside the Soviet-era autonomous oblast proper ended with a Russia-brokered ceasefire under which Moscow deployed about 2,000 troops to the region to serve as peacekeepers. Tensions along the restive Armenian-Azerbaijani border and around Nagorno-Karabakh leading to sporadic fighting and loss of life have persisted despite the ceasefire and publicly stated willingness of the leaders of both countries to work towards a negotiated peace. Heat Wave Hits Armenian Capital, Ararat Valley • Robert Zargarian A view of Mount Ararat and the Ararat Plain from the center of Yerevan (file photo). Armenians are coping with a heat wave coming from the south as air temperatures in parts of the country are rising to extremely high levels this week. According to a weather forecast, lower areas of Yerevan and the rest of the Ararat Valley in which they are situated as well as foothills of Armenia’s southern Syunik province will see air temperatures of up to 42 degrees Celsius in the period from August 10 to 14. Meteorologists say the heat wave is coming from the Arabian Peninsula and along with sweltering weather bring in its wake higher-than-normal levels of ultraviolet radiation. Health experts, meanwhile, advise staying hydrated and avoiding being in the sun during the day. “We recommend reducing caffeine-containing drinks and beverages, both hot and cold, as much as possible, because even though they have a short-term refreshing effect, they exhaust the body, and sugar-containing drinks make them heavier and dehydrated,” said Nune Bakunts, deputy director of the National Disease Prevention Center. She also recommends that people stay in the shade as much as possible whenever it is absolutely necessary to be outside during the day and that they wear a hat and sunglasses. According to the specialist, oily and hard-to-digest foods should also be avoided or at least consumed during the coolest hours of the day, while preference should be given to vegetables and easy-to-digest food taken in small portions. Emergency services, meanwhile, warn that risks of fires also increase due to high air temperatures and a prolonged period of dry weather. They caution against starting fires in forests or throwing away burning matches or cigarettes. According to weather forecasts, air temperatures in Yerevan and the rest of Armenia will go down a little after August 14 but are likely to stay relatively high for the rest of the month. 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.