RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/16/2023

                                        Wednesday, 


Stepanakert Official ‘Leaks’ Lavrov Proposals On Karabakh Hours Before UN 
Discussion

        • Tatevik Lazarian

A rally in Yerevan in support of Nagorno-Karabakh, July 25, 2023.


Official Yerevan neither confirms nor denies the authenticity of a document 
published by Tigran Petrosian, head of an anti-crisis body affiliated with the 
Karabakh president, which he said contained proposals made by Russian Foreign 
Minister Sergey Lavrov regarding Nagorno-Karabakh late last month.

The leakage of the document comes shortly before the UN Security Council is to 
convene for an emergency meeting in New York at Armenia’s request to discuss the 
ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh brought on by Azerbaijan’s de 
facto blockade of the region.

On July 25, Lavrov met separately with the foreign ministers of Armenia and 
Azerbaijan, Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov, in Moscow, and then the three 
ministers’ tripartite meeting was also held. Receiving Bayramov in Moscow, 
Lavrov announced that in addition to the already signed statements, a number of 
documents were being prepared for discussion by the leaders of Armenia, 
Azerbaijan and Russia, without providing details about their content.

The document published today by Petrosian and attributed to Lavrov is titled 
“The fundamental principles and parameters of ensuring the rights and security 
of the Armenian population in the territory of the former Nagorno-Karabakh 
Autonomous Oblast of Soviet Azerbaijan in accordance with the legislation of 
Azerbaijan” and contains 14 points.

They state that the Armenian population should have equal legal protection and 
should not be discriminated against on the basis of language, ethnicity or 
religion, should not be forcibly or involuntarily displaced, Armenians should 
not be persecuted for being part of the local government or armed groups, except 
when they are found guilty of war crimes in a judicial order.

The proposals state that the Armenian population should be proportionally part 
of the legislative, executive and judicial branches of power of Azerbaijan, 
including the Prosecutor’s Office and the Police of Azerbaijan, and participate 
in the decision-making concerning the Armenian population.

According to the proposals ascribed to Lavrov, the Armenian language should be 
freely used along with the Azerbaijani language in official writing and in 
public places. The inviolability of Armenians’ private property must be 
guaranteed, the religious freedom of Armenians must be ensured, education in 
Armenian from elementary grades to university, Armenian cultural and national 
identity must be preserved, the published document says.

It is stated that a separate agreement should be signed between Armenia and 
Azerbaijan, according to which close ties between the Armenian population of the 
former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast of Soviet Azerbaijan and Armenia will 
be ensured, and the unimpeded receipt of humanitarian and economic aid for the 
Armenian population from outside should be ensured.

During the day neither the Foreign Ministry of Nagorno-Karabakh nor the Foreign 
Ministry of Armenia responded in any way to say whether the document published 
by the Karabakh figure is authentic or not. The Russian side did not comment on 
the leaked document either.

Petrosian himself also left phone calls unanswered. However, he accompanied the 
publication of the document on Facebook with the following post: “I have to 
publish it so that the public understands what is really happening... Today, 
[Russian President Vladimir] Putin has the opportunity to change his attitude 
and plans at the UN Security Council session... Let’s wait.”

Political analyst Alexander Iskandarian ascribed the leakage of the document to 
“a very active process unfolding around Nagorno-Karabakh.”

“As for the text that was leaked, even if we assume that it is true and that 
such a text really exists, and that it is really a proposal from the Russian 
side, the main thing is missing here: the technologies as to how this writing 
will be guaranteed, how these points will be implemented, who will monitor it 
and what mechanism will be operated are not described. Without clarifying these 
questions, this text does not make much sense,” he said.

“It is clear that there are a lot of documents circulating, but there is an 
accepted principle among diplomats that nothing is agreed until everything is 
agreed. Even if we accept that this text is true, it may not mean anything until 
we see how the process develops, and the process will still take a long time to 
develop,” Iskandarian added.

Political commentator Hakob Badalian voiced doubts regarding whether the 
revealed document was a submitted proposal or just a draft. He said that in any 
case the content of the presented proposals was unacceptable to both Yerevan and 
Stepanakert as it meant Nagorno-Karabakh’s dissolution. He, however, considered 
remarkable the timing of the leak – hours before the expected discussion at the 
UN Security Council and after a phone call between Lavrov and Bayramov.

“The publication is accompanied with a post that Putin has the opportunity to 
change the attitude at the UN Security Council session, that is, here at least 
the following question arises: is it a hint that the [Russian] Ministry of 
Foreign Affairs does not convey complete information to Putin and in this sense 
different games are going on, and this way an attempt is being made to draw 
[Putin’s] attention?... Naturally, there is also a question as to whether the 
Russian Foreign Ministry can carry out any actions fundamentally different from 
Putin’s approach or carry out any actions secretly from Putin? At the same time, 
if there is a direct expectation, then the question arises: if, for example, 
Russia’s policy does not change, then what does Nagorno-Karabakh do, or what 
does the Armenian side do in general if it has to deal with such a proposal?” 
Badalian said.




UN Security Council Set To Hold Emergency Meeting On Nagorno-Karabakh


A shop in Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh where a blockade has 
resulted in sever shortages of food, medicines, and energy.


The United Nations Security Council is set to hold an emergency meeting 
regarding the deteriorating humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh on August 
16.

The meeting at the UN headquarters in New York City comes after the Armenian UN 
Ambassador Mher Margarian said in a letter to the Security Council that the 
people of Nagorno-Karabakh are “on the verge of a full-fledged humanitarian 
catastrophe.”

Both Armenia and ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have said that 
Azerbaijan has blockaded the region since December, resulting in shortages of 
food, medicines, and energy.

The situation had deteriorated to such a point that the office of 
Nagorno-Karabakh’s ombudsman said on August 15 that a man around the age of 40 
had died as a result of chronic malnutrition, protein and energy deficiency.

A former International Criminal Court prosecutor said earlier in August that the 
blockade of the Lachin Corridor, the only link between Nagorno-Karabakh and 
Armenia, may amount to a “genocide” of the local Armenian population. Baku has 
rejected such an assertion.

Tensions sparked by the blockade escalated further after Azerbaijan in June 
tightened a checkpoint installed in April on the road known as the Lachin 
Corridor, claiming that “various types of contraband” had been discovered in the 
Red Cross vehicles coming from Armenia.

Referring to the blockade, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on 
August 11 that Azerbaijan’s moves could result in “nullifying a historic 
opportunity for peace” between the two South Caucasus nations.

Azerbaijan denies blockading Nagorno-Karabakh and offers an alternative route 
for supplies via the town of Agdam, which is situated east of the region and is 
controlled by Baku.

However, Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian government has rejected that offer, 
saying Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin Corridor is a violation of the 
Moscow-brokered 2020 cease-fire agreement that placed the 5-kilometer-wide strip 
of land under the control of Russian peacekeepers.

A group of UN experts issued a statement on August 7, expressing alarm over the 
ongoing blockade of the Lachin Corridor by Azerbaijan, which they said had led 
to a dire humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“By lifting the blockade, the [Azerbaijani] authorities can alleviate the 
suffering of thousands of people in Nagorno-Karabakh and allow for the unimpeded 
flow of humanitarian assistance to the civilian population,” the experts said. 
“It is essential to ensure the safety, dignity, and well-being of all 
individuals during this critical time.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought two wars over Nagorno-Karabakh. The most 
recent war lasted six weeks in late 2020 and left 7,000 soldiers dead on both 
sides.

As a result of the war, Azerbaijan regained control over a part of 
Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding districts. The war ended with a 
Russian-brokered cease-fire under which Moscow deployed about 2,000 troops in 
the region to serve as peacekeepers.




Yerevan Denies Baku’s Report On Attempted Armenian ‘Commando Raid’


The Armenian Defense Ministry building in Yerevan


Military authorities in Yerevan have denied a report by Baku claiming an 
Armenian commando unit attempted to infiltrate into Azerbaijani territory on 
Wednesday.

The Armenian Defense Ministry said the report was an “absolute lie.”

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said one of the members of the Armenian 
commando unit that allegedly attempted the raid at 11:15 am was wounded and 
detained by Azerbaijani forces in the Kelbajar region. The ministry said that 
other members of the unit, whose number it did not specify, retreated.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry promptly issued a statement, strongly condemning 
“continued military provocations” by Armenia on the day when the UN Security 
Council was to hold an emergency meeting on the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh 
requested by Yerevan.

Meanwhile, the Armenian Defense Ministry reminded its earlier report that 
according to preliminary data, an Armenian reservist participating in military 
training assemblies had left his combat positions.

“A possible scenario of the reservist’s appearing on the Azerbaijani side and 
related circumstances are being examined,” the Armenian ministry said.

Later the Armenian ministry confirmed that the Armenian reservist was detained 
by Azerbaijani servicemen. It published a video showing a group of Azerbaijani 
soldiers approaching and talking to the Armenian, who appeared in Azerbaijani 
territory under yet unclear circumstances, before apprehending and taking him to 
an unknown direction on a truck.

“This video disproves the false information spread by Azerbaijan’s Defense 
Ministry about an attempted penetration by an Armenian commando unit,” it said.

Azerbaijan, meanwhile, said the video disseminated by Armenia’s Defense Ministry 
had “nothing to do with the incident” and itself posted photographs of the 
detained Armenian serviceman identified as Gagik Voskanian born in 1983.

Tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan escalated again in recent days amid a 
reportedly deteriorating humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh that Yerevan 
blames on Baku, accusing it of trying to force the local Armenian population out 
by blocking access to all commercial and humanitarian supplies via the Lachin 
corridor.

Azerbaijan denies blockading the region and offers alternative ways of supply as 
part of its policy on the integration of Karabakh Armenians. Authorities in 
Stepanakert have rejected such offers, considering them as a prelude to the 
absorption of Nagorno-Karabakh into Azerbaijan.

Both Armenia and Azerbaijan have blamed each other for ceasefire violations 
along their restive border in recent days. Armenia said on Monday that one of 
its soldiers stationed at a border position was seriously wounded by fire coming 
from the Azerbaijani side. Baku and Stepanakert have also traded accusations for 
reported shooting incidents around Nagorno-Karabakh.




Russian Peacekeepers Unblock Entrance To Their Karabakh Base Amid Armenian 
Protest


Russian peacekeepers dragging a car of Karabakh Armenian protesters blocking the 
entrance to their base in Nagorno-Karabakh, . (Photograph from 
Artur Osipian’s Facebook account).


Russian peacekeepers deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh removed a car of Armenian 
protesters to unblock the entrance to their military base in the region on 
Wednesday morning.

A video posted on social media by one of the protesters demanding that the 
Russians restore free traffic along the Lachin corridor that has now been closed 
by Azerbaijani forces showed Russian peacekeepers led by a colonel using an 
armored personnel carrier to threaten a group of Armenians who parked a car in 
front of the main entrance to their base in Ivanyan (Khojaly).

“Why don’t Russian soldiers remove the Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin 
corridor? Is the [Russian] empire trembling before Azerbaijan?” said Artur 
Osipian, one of the Karabakh protesters, as several Russian servicemen were 
carrying his car aside by hand.

Osipian, a member of Nagorno-Karabakh’s movement to unblock the Lachin corridor, 
said their demand was for the Russian peacekeepers, who he said fail to carry 
out their main duties, to at least guarantee the security of their trip by cars 
to the Azerbaijani checkpoint in the Lachin corridor to hold a protest there.

The command of the Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh last week refused to 
provide an escort to the protesters to the bridge over the river Hakari at the 
border with Armenia.

It said that the terms of the deployment of the Russian military under a 
trilateral statement signed by the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in 
November 2020 to end a six-week war in Nagorno-Karabakh did not provide for the 
possibility of escorting protesters and ensuring the security of various 
demonstrations and rallies.

The Russian side did not comment on the incident immediately, but a Russian 
officer on the video was heard rebuking the protester as he asked him: “Who has 
paid you for this?”

On the same video, turning to the Russian servicemen, Osipian said: “If you use 
force against those whom you are supposed to protect from the enemy and do not 
use force against the enemy, it shows who you are for here.”

Osipian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that the protesters later returned to 
Stepanakert and were planning what to do next.

“There is no other option, we cannot but fight,” he said.




Azerbaijan Slams France Over Karabakh Road Blockade Remarks


The building of the Foreign Ministry of Azerbaijan in Baku (file photo)


Baku has strongly rejected “baseless accusations” regarding the Lachin road that 
it said were made by the French foreign minister in her phone call with her 
Armenian counterpart on Tuesday.

“Regarding the [French minister’s] claims that Azerbaijan keeps the Lachin road 
‘under siege’, as a result of which ‘Armenian residents are facing a serious 
humanitarian crisis’, we remind you once again that it is absurd to present as a 
blockade the operation of a border checkpoint set up in accordance with the 
obligation of Azerbaijan to guarantee the safety of citizens, vehicles and 
cargoes on the Lachin road, as well as to prevent its misuse by Armenia for 
military and illegal economic purposes,” Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said in a 
statement.

The ministry repeated the offer to provide aid to ethnic Armenians via Agdam, an 
Azerbaijani-controlled town east of the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

“Also, the French side is well aware that if the Armenian residents really need 
daily necessities, then the Azerbaijani side has proposed the Agdam-Khankendi 
(Stepanakert) road and other alternative ways for that,” the Azerbaijani 
ministry said.

In her telephone conversation with Armenia’s Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, 
Catherine Colonna, Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs of France, in 
particular, said that Azerbaijan’s actions contradict the obligations that it 
undertook under the terms of the ceasefire agreement and harm the negotiation 
process.

Colonna also reportedly gave assurances about the willingness of France to 
support the population of Nagorno-Karabakh, and also announced that France 
intends to make an additional allocation of 3 million euros for the activities 
of the International Committee of the Red Cross in the region.

Earlier on Tuesday Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry summoned a Spanish charge 
d’affaires over Madrid’s official announcement of aid to ethnic Armenians 
displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh. It said that the decision announced in a post 
on the X (formerly Twitter) account of Spain’s embassy in Russia amounted to 
supporting “the separatist regime established by Armenia on the sovereign 
territory of Azerbaijan.”




U.S. Again Urges Azerbaijan To Restore Free Transit Through Karabakh Road


Vedant Patel, principal deputy spokesperson for the U.S. Department of State 
(file photo).


The United States has again called on Azerbaijan to restore free transit through 
the Lachin corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia that 
has been effectively blockaded by Baku in recent months.

During a press briefing in Washington on August 15, Vedant Patel, principal 
deputy spokesperson for the U.S. Department of State, said that Washington 
remains “deeply concerned about the continued closure of the Lachin corridor, 
specifically its closure to commercial, humanitarian, and private vehicles.”

“The halting of this kind of humanitarian traffic, in our opinion, worsens the 
humanitarian situation and undermines the efforts that have been in place to 
build confidence in the peace process. And so we urge the Government of 
Azerbaijan to restore free transit of commercial, humanitarian, and private 
vehicles through this corridor,” Patel said.

He added that the United States expected “further discussions” to take place 
during an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council on Nagorno-Karabakh that 
would be held at Armenia’s request in New York on August 16.

The U.S. Department of State official reiterated Washington’s position on 
Armenian-Azerbaijan negotiations, saying that “direct dialogue is essential to 
resolving this longstanding conflict [over Nagorno-Karabakh].”

“We think that any engagements that ultimately bring peace and stability to the 
people of the South Caucasus would be a good thing and a positive step forward,” 
Patel said.

The call from the U.S. official came as ethnic Armenian authorities in 
Nagorno-Karabakh reported the first death from hunger among residents of the 
region that they say has experienced severe shortages of food, medicines, fuel 
and other basic supplies because of Azerbaijan’s effective blockade.

Baku denies blockading the region and offers an alternative route of supply via 
the eastern town of Agdam, which is rejected by Karabakh Armenians who fear it 
could be a prelude to their absorption into Azerbaijan.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS