Friday, U.S. Envoy Emphasizes Support For Armenia’s Sovereignty, Security On Trip To Border Region U.S. Ambassador to Armenia Kristina Kvien (R) traveled to Armenia’s Vayots Dzor province “to observe the security situation on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.” United States Ambassador to Armenia Kristina Kvien has emphasized Washington’s support for the sovereignty and security of Armenia on a trip to the South Caucasus country’s region bordering on Azerbaijan. The U.S. embassy in Yerevan said in a Facebook post on Friday that Kvien traveled to Vayots Dzor “to meet with local officials and observe the security situation on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.” “The Ambassador met with the Governor of Vayots Dzor, the EU Monitoring Mission, and local military representatives, joined by Armenian Ambassador to the U.S. Lilit Makunts. Ambassador Kvien emphasized U.S. support for Armenia’s sovereignty and security, as well as lasting peace in the South Caucasus,” it said. While in Vayots Dzor Ambassador Kvien also traveled to Jermuk “to learn about the challenges and opportunities facing the city.” The embassy said that in Jermuk the U.S. ambassador met with the town’s mayor and hosted a roundtable with business owners “to discuss the local economy and tourism sector.” “Ambassador Kvien was impressed with the beautiful natural landscape and outdoor activities that make Jermuk a popular tourist destination,” the report said. Jermuk, an Armenian resort town close to the border with Azerbaijan, was shelled by Azerbaijani troops during last September’s deadly fighting. The escalation during which Azerbaijani forces advanced their positions closer towards Jermuk also affected the town’s businesses largely dependent on local and international tourism. Ambassador Kvien, joined by the mayor of Jermuk, also reportedly visited a major mining project – Lydian’s Amulsar – to view their operations. “The Amulsar project represents one of the biggest U.S. investments in Armenia and we are proud that it is deploying western mining standards. The United States supports Armenia’s economic development and opportunities for U.S. companies and investors to do business in a range of sectors,” the U.S. embassy’s said on Facebook. Armenia Vows Continued Efforts To Unblock Lachin Corridor The building of the Armenian Foreign Ministry in Yerevan Armenia will continue to work on various platforms to unblock the Lachin Corridor and resolve the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh, its Foreign Ministry said on Friday in a statement regarding the UN Security Council’s urgent meeting on the matter held at Yerevan’s request earlier this week. Armenia and ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh accuse Azerbaijan of violating the terms of the Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement by closing the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, which has led to severe shortages of food, medicines, fuel and other basic products in the predominantly Armenian-populated region. They also charge that Azerbaijan’s actions amount to a policy of ethnic cleansings and urge the international community to prevent a “genocide” by putting pressure on Baku to restore free movement of people, vehicles and goods along the Lachin Corridor in both directions. Baku denies blockading Nagorno-Karabakh or carrying out any policy of ethnic cleansings in relation to the region’s Armenian population. “The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia, highly appreciating the principled and fair positions of the UN Security Council members that remain faithful to their mandate to advance international security and peace, will continue to work on various platforms, including in the UN Security Council, taking consistent steps to unblock the Lachin corridor and resolve the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh,” the Armenian Foreign Ministry said. The statement said that the August 16 urgent meeting of the UN Security Council “once again showed that, despite the false propaganda of Azerbaijan, the international partners are clearly aware of the fact of the dire humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and realize the importance of addressing it.” The UN Security Council discusses the humanitarian situation in Nagorno Karabakh, New York, August 16, 2023. “During this second discussion in the format of the UN Security Council, the assessments and targeted appeals addressed to Azerbaijan, in essence, complemented the clear positions expressed so far by various governments, international structures, and human rights organizations,” the Armenian ministry said. “Noteworthy were the statements of the members of the UN Security Council and the EU representative reiterating that Azerbaijan is obliged to lift the illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor in accordance with the Trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, and the legally binding Orders of the UN International Court of Justice of February 22 and July 6. It was unequivocally emphasized that the ongoing eight-month-long severe humanitarian situation created for the population of Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of the blockade should be resolved,” it added. The statement said that “it is evident that Azerbaijan continues to distort the appeals of the international community, to look for false pretexts, not corresponding to reality, to avoid fulfilling its obligations and, by prolonging the humanitarian crisis, including through starvation, to subject the indigenous people of Nagorno-Karabakh to ethnic cleansing.” “Moreover, Azerbaijan tries to manipulate any ‘balanced’ approach of international actors, interpreting it as an explicit permission to continue its adopted policy. “We emphasize the urgency of using all available international tools to eliminate the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh and restore unimpeded movement in both directions through the Lachin corridor and ensure unhindered access of international humanitarian organizations to Nagorno-Karabakh,” the Armenian Foreign Ministry said. Summarizing the discussions in New York, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Thursday that the very fact of the closure of the Lachin Corridor was highlighted at the UN Security Council, which he called the highest international instance. Officials in Baku, meanwhile, claimed that the outcome of the meeting was more in favor of Azerbaijan as many representatives mentioned the possibility of Karabakh Armenians’ using alternative routes of supply. Azerbaijan, in particular, suggests that a road via Agdam, an Azerbaijani-controlled town situated to the east of Nagorno-Karabakh, be used for supplies to the Armenian-populated region. Authorities in Stepanakert reject this option, insisting that it is designed to legitimize the Azerbaijani blockade and cut Nagorno-Karabakh from Armenia. Azerbaijan Accused Of Disrupting Internet Access In Nagorno-Karabakh An Azerbaijani checkpoint at the entrance to the Lachin corridor from Armenia (file photo). Ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh said internet access in the region was disrupted late on Thursday after Azerbaijan cut off a fiber-optic cable in the Lachin corridor. Artak Beglarian, an advisor to Nagorno-Karabakh’s de facto premier, said on Friday that the incident happened at 5:55 p.m. on August 17 and that Karabakh specialists tried to approach the area together with Russian peacekeepers to restore the cable but were not allowed to proceed by Azerbaijani forces. He said negotiations between the peacekeepers and the Azerbaijani side to allow Karabakh specialists to access the site and repair the cable continued on Friday morning. Azerbaijani authorities did not comment on the reported incident immediately. “I don’t find it to be a coincidence that this new crime took place after the UN Security Council meeting and literally five minutes before the start of an online press conference on the subject of the genocide in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Beglarian said. He said that because of the disruption Nagorno-Karabakh-based participants of the press conference could join the two other speakers only with a 45-minute delay and had to use an unstable connection line. “Despite the Azerbaijani efforts, the press conference did take place and 130 people from 27 countries participated in the event,” Beglarian said. The official said that only a very limited volume of internet was accessible in Nagorno-Karabakh through an unstable radio connection as of Friday morning, adding that it was “continuously under Azerbaijani jamming” too. Nagorno-Karabakh has lived in conditions of an effective blockade imposed by Azerbaijan since last December when traffic along the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, was blocked by a group of Azerbaijani protesters calling themselves environmental activists. In April, claiming that Armenians were using the Lachin corridor for transporting military cargoes, Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint at its entrance from Armenia despite protests from Stepanakert and Yerevan that called the roadblock illegal, citing a Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement under which the vital road should remain under the control of Russian peacekeepers deployed in the region. Citing “various types of contraband”, Baku further tightened the effective blockade in the middle of June by banning all humanitarian supplies through the corridor. Shortages of food, medicines, fuel and other basic products in the region became particularly severe after that. Amid rationing of food in the region authorities in Stepanakert reported the first death from hunger among Karabakh residents earlier this week. The United Nations Security Council met in New York at Armenia’s request on August 16 to discuss the current humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia charge that Azerbaijan’s blockade amounts to a policy of ethnic cleansings and expect a resolution from the UN Security Council to unblock the Lachin corridor. Baku denies blockading Nagorno-Karabakh or carrying out any policy of ethnic cleansings in relation to the region’s Armenian population. It offers supplies to Karabakh Armenians through an alternative route, but Stepanakert rejects the offer. Shots Fired From Azerbaijani Territory At Armenian Airport Hours After PM’s Visit The runway of the airport near the Armenian town of Kapan is in close proximity to the border with Azerbaijan (file photo). Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) said on Friday that an unidentified person fired shots overnight from the territory of Azerbaijan at an Armenian airport in the southeastern town of Kapan stretching along the border with that country. The NSS said the incident in which windows and the roof of the “Syunik” airport were damaged occurred at 04:24 a.m., less than 24 hours after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian visited the facility, arriving from Yerevan on board a small passenger aircraft that is due to start regular flights to the Armenian town next week. According to the report, the unknown person who approached the territory of the airport and fired three shots then left. “We call on the authorities of Azerbaijan to conduct a proper investigation of the incident and to take measures to exclude the repetition of such incidents,” the NSS said in a statement. “The Border Guard troops of the Republic of Armenia NSS are ready for a joint investigation and/or a transfer of relevant videos to the Azerbaijani side,” it added. Azerbaijan did not comment on the incident immediately. The Kapan airport is expected to host the first demonstration passenger flight by a commuter aircraft from Yerevan on August 19, which is marked annually as the town’s day. Regular commercial flights between the Armenian capital and the town in Armenia’s strategic Syunik province bordering on Iran and sandwiched between Azerbaijan and its western exclave of Nakhichevan are expected to start next week. On his trip to Kapan on Thursday afternoon the Armenian prime minister was accompanied by Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure Gnel Sanosian. Syunik Governor Robert Ghukasian, Kapan Mayor Gevorg Parsian and other officials reportedly welcomed the prime minister at Kapan’s recently renovated airport. A video posted by the Prime Minister’s Office showed Pashinian touring the airport and inspecting its conditions. The first test flight from Yerevan to Kapan was operated in late April to become the first such flight since the 1990s, barring one private flight made in 2017. The Civil Aviation Committee said then that an Armenia-registered L-410 passenger plane (made in the Czech Republic) designed for 19 passengers successfully landed at Kapan’s Syunik Airport after a 48-minute flight from Yerevan’s International Zvartnots Airport. It described that flight as a “truly historic” event. Despite concerns raised in Armenia by the incident at the Kapan airport, the Civil Aviation Committee said that the Yerevan-Kapan-Yerevan flight will take place on Saturday as scheduled. It said that Azerbaijan had been notified about the planned flight in accordance with regulations concerning flights operated near borders between two states. Kapan is situated some 190 kilometers to the southeast of capital Yerevan not far from the border with Azerbaijan. The runway of its airport stretches along the border and at one point is situated less than a hundred meters from it. Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh for decades. Tensions along their restive border have persisted despite a Russia-brokered ceasefire that stopped a deadly six-week Armenian-Azerbaijani war in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020. Karabakh Official Says Opening Of ‘Alternative Road’ Will Legitimize Blockade • Artak Khulian • Anush Mkrtchian Sergey Ghazarian De facto ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh believe that agreeing to the opening of an “alternative road” from Azerbaijan would legitimize the current blockade of the Lachin Corridor and cut the region from Armenia. During a video-conference discussion on Thursday Nagorno-Karabakh’s Foreign Minister Sergey Ghazarian, in particular, explained why Stepanakert rejects humanitarian aid through the Agdam road. “Azerbaijan clearly wants that connection between Armenia and the Republic of Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh – ed.] be cut by blocking the Lachin Corridor. And secondly, no international aid should degrade human dignity, therefore, if Azerbaijan created such a difficult situation itself, deliberately dooming more than 120,000 of our compatriots to starvation, this is simply unacceptable, these false attempts to present themselves with humanitarian approaches are unacceptable,” Ghazarian said. The Karabakh official emphasized that this was not only the position of the Karabakh authorities, but also of the region’s ordinary residents. Speaking about the results of the emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council on the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh that was held at Armenia’s request on August 16, Ghazarian stressed that it was only the beginning of the process. Summarizing the discussions in New York, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Thursday that the very fact of the closure of the Lachin Corridor was highlighted at the UN Security Council, which he called the highest international instance. Officials in Baku, meanwhile, claimed that the outcome of the meeting was more in favor of Azerbaijan as many representatives mentioned the possibility of Karabakh Armenians’ using alternative routes of supply. Commenting on this, Ghazarian said: “We are concerned that a number of countries have attempted to establish some kind of equality between the Lachin Corridor and other roads, transport links, which is unacceptable and does not correspond to the parameters of the Lachin Corridor established by the November 9, 2020 document.” Ghazarian, however, expressed a hope that the emergency meeting of the UN Security Council was “only the beginning” and that “this process will continue.” Stepanakert and Yerevan accuse Azerbaijan of violating the terms of the Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement by closing the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, which has led to severe shortages of food, medicines and fuel in the predominantly Armenian-populated region. They also charge that Azerbaijan’s actions amount to a policy of ethnic cleansings and expect a resolution from the UN Security Council to unblock the Lachin Corridor. Baku denies blockading Nagorno-Karabakh or carrying out any policy of ethnic cleansings in relation to the region’s Armenian population. 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.