Wednesday, July 5, 2017 Mediators Concerned Over Fresh Fighting In Karabakh (UPDATED) Nagorno-Karabakh -- Ethnic Armenian soldiers walk in a trench at an artillery positions near the Nagorno-Karabakh's town of Martuni, April 7, 2016 A team of U.S., Russian and French negotiators on Wednesday urged the parties to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to observe the ceasefire following fresh skirmishes that reportedly left two Azerbaijani civilians dead. "The Minsk Group Co-Chairs urgently call upon the sides to cease military action," the mediators said in a joint statement. "Violence only begets further violence and accomplishes nothing." "The only responsible and humane way to resolve this long-standing conflict is for the sides to return to the negotiation table in good faith," they added. Azerbaijan's Defense Ministry said a 50-year-old woman and her 2-year-old granddaughter were killed on Tuesday evening by Armenian shelling of their village of Alkhanli just southeast of Karabakh. Another local resident, also a woman, was seriously wounded, the ministry said, adding that the Azerbaijani side fired back at Armenian forces stationed across the nearby section of "the line of contact." Azerbaijan -- An Azeri man points at a house damaged during clashes between Armenian and Azeri forces in the settlement of Gapanli, outside the frontline Azeri town of Terter, April 5, 2016 Karabakh's Armenian-backed Defense Army came up with a different version of events, saying that Azerbaijani forces fired five rockets towards one of its command points from an artillery position located within Alkhanli.It said its frontline troops retaliated by targeting that position. In a separate statement, the Defense Army accused the Azerbaijani military of using Alkhanli residents as a "human shield." It also released a short video that purportedly shows two Azerbaijan rockets landing near Karabakh Armenian trenches overlooking the Azerbaijani village. It said it was the first time that the Azerbaijanis used Turkish-made TR-107 multiple-launch rocket systems since the April 2016 hostilities in and around Karabakh. "If the enemy really suffered casualties among civilians, then we have to express regret," said the Karabakh army commander, Lieutenant-General Levon Mnatsakanian. "At the same time I want to make clear that the armed forces of Artsakh (Karabakh) # will continue to fully exercise their right to defend themselves and, if need be, respond to the enemy's offensive actions in a targeted and disproportionate manner." Mnatsakanian also warned Baku against resorting to "further military adventures," saying that they would have "unpredictable consequences." The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry claimed on Wednesday, however, that the Armenians are deliberately targeting Azerbaijani civilians living near the Karabakh frontlines. It said the deaths of the two villagers "confirmed the terrorist nature" of Armenia. The ministry also said the American, French and Russian mediators must now demand "the immediate withdrawal of Armenia's armed forces from the occupied territories of Azerbaijan and a change of the status quo." Nagorno-Karabakh -- An Armenian man walks inside a destroyed building in the village of Talish, some 80km north of Karabakh's capital Stepanakert, April 6, 2016 Official Yerevan blamed the Azerbaijani side for the deadly incident. Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian discussed it in phone conversations with the Minsk Group co-chairs. Nalbandian's press office said he briefed them on "the situation after the Azerbaijani provocation." The Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman, Tigran Balayan, said that in order to prevent further bloodshed Baku should comply with confidence-building agreements that were reached by Armenia's and Azerbaijan's presidents last year. Presidents Serzh Sarkisian and Ilham Aliyev specifically agreed to allow the OSCE to deploy more field observers in the conflict zone and investigate truce violations occurring there. The Azerbaijani leadership has since been reluctant to implement these safeguards, saying that they would cement the status quo in the absence of progress in Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks. The latest escalation comes ahead of a meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers expected later this month. The Minsk Group co-chairs hope that they will help to prepare for a fresh Armenian-Azerbaijani summit. The mediating troika said after visiting Baku, Yerevan and Stepanakert last month that Aliyev and Sarkisian "expressed their intention to resume political dialogue in an attempt to find a compromise solution for the most controversial issues of the settlement." The Interfax news agency quoted the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman, Hikmet Hajiyev, as saying later in the day that Baku does not plan to cancel the ministerial meeting that could take place as early as next week. "We want substantive negotiations," he said. Moscow Slams Azeri Travel Ban For Russian Armenians Russia -- Aaerial view of central Moscow, with the headquarters of Russian Foreign Ministry, one of the so-called Stalin high rises, in the foreground, April 06, 2012 Russia publicly demanded on Wednesday Azerbaijan stop barring Russian citizens of Armenian descent from visiting the South Caucasus country, saying that the "blatant discriminatory practice" could hurt Russian-Azerbaijani ties. The Azerbaijani government has long maintained a travel ban for not only Armenia's citizens but also ethnic Armenians from other countries because of the unresolved Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.It considers any Armenian presence on Azerbaijani soil a security risk and an affront to the country's honor and territorial integrity. The TASS agency quoted an unnamed official at the Russian Foreign Ministry as saying that 25 Russian nationals with Armenian surnames have been detained and deported after attempting to enter Azerbaijan so far this year. The official said Azerbaijani immigration officers have also interrogated individuals with traditional Russian names suspected of having Armenian ancestors. "We have to conclude that Russian citizens arriving in Azerbaijan are really discriminated against on ethnic grounds," said the official. "We are continuing to demand an end to the blatant discriminatory practice which is not compatible with friendly relations between the two countries. We will certainly be drawing conclusions from the existing situation." According to TASS, the Russian Foreign Ministry has repeatedly demanded explanations from the authorities in Baku and has been told by them that the travel ban is needed for averting "undesirable incidents." The ministry official dismissed the explanation as unsatisfactory. Commenting on the unusually strong Russian criticism later in the day, a spokesman for Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry cited continuing "Armenian occupation" of Azerbaijani territory. "Unfortunately, some ethnic Armenian individuals display ethnically motivated hostility, and that is why we take certain measures," the official said, according to the Turan news agency. Incidentally, Russia's longtime Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov was born to an ethnic Armenian father. Lavrov has visited Baku on a regular basis. The Azerbaijan ban also applies to presumed or actual ethnic Armenians from Turkey, Azerbaijan's closest ally. In 2014, a Turkish arm-wrestler called Zafer Noyan was reportedly barred from entering Azerbaijan and participating in a major competition there because of his last name which officials at the Baku airport felt is Armenian. Noyan was forced to flow back to Istanbul despite his assurances that he is not of Armenian origin. Polish Envoy Expects New EU-Armenia Deal With `Fingers Crossed' . Sargis Harutyunyan Belgium - Armenia's President Serzh Sargsyan (L) walks next to European Council President Donald Tusk after a joint news statement in Brussels, Belgium February 27, 2017 Poland's ambassador in Yerevan expressed hope on Wednesday that a new agreement to deepen Armenia's political and economic ties with the European Union will be signed as planned this autumn. "We are waiting for the signing of the document," Jerzy Nowakowski told reporters. "And as [EU] Ambassador Piotr Switalski has pointed out, we are waiting not for promises but for concrete steps from our Armenian partners." The Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement (CEPA) is a less ambitious alternative to an Association Agreement negotiated by Armenian and EU officials in the summer of 2013. President Serzh Sarkisian precluded the signing of that deal with his unexpected decision in September 2013 to make Armenia part of the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). The U-turn was widely attributed to strong Russian pressure. The alternative deal apparently contains the main political provisions of the cancelled Association Agreement. It was finalized in Yerevan in March and is expected to be signed in Brussels in November. Armenia - Polish Ambassador to Armenia Jerzy Nowakowski gives a press conference in Yerevan, 4May2015. Asked whether he thinks the CEPA could be scuttled like the Association Agreement was, Nowakowski said: "I cross my fingers and say no [there is no such risk.] But I cross my fingers." Speaking in the Armenian parliament last week, Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharian insisted that the CEPA is "due to be signed this autumn." "We'll talk about the results next year," he added with a grin. Naira Zohrabian, the chairwoman of an Armenian parliament committee on European integration, said on June 21 that Armenia has "discussed" the key CEPA provisions with Russia and that the latter does not object to them. "Therefore, right now I see no risk that the Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement will not be signed in Brussels on November 24," she told RFE/RL's Armenian service (Azatutyun.am). Press Review Armenia -- Newspapers for press review illustration, Yerevan, 12Jul2016 "Aravot" pays tribute to Armenia's post-Soviet constitution on the 22nd anniversary of its adoption in a disputed referendum held in July 1995. The paper says that the constitution is one of the key state symbols that should be respected by Armenians even if it has not been enforced by successive governments in Yerevan. "Wrong things may be written in the constitution," editorializes the paper. "Constitutional provisions are not necessarily enforced, which is certainly the case. Courts may be dependent [on the government] and corrupt. This also happens often times. But to extend our cynicism and nihilism to state institutions means to contribute to their being weak and underdeveloped." "Hraparak" quotes Mane Tandilian, a parliament deputy from the opposition Yelk alliance, as criticizing the Armenian government's decision to use more water from Lake Sevan for irrigation and power generation. "We see serious corruption risks here," she says. "When we speak of [the extra] 100 million cubic meters of water we are told that only 40 million cubic meters will reach farmers for irrigation purposes and that the remaining 60 percent will be lost. How did they calculate that? There are concerns that those 60 million cubic meters will benefit hydroelectric plants, resulting in extra profits that will not be taxed." "We really have a problem with serious oversight in the area of use of water," Gagik Melikian, a senior lawmaker representing the ruling Republican Party of Armenia (HHK), tells "Hayots Ashkhar," commenting on an opposition argument that water losses have not decreased despite substantial government sums spent on refurbishing Armenia's irrigation networks. "On the other hand, I don't think that the losses are that big," Melikian goes on. "I don't exclude that we may have losses in the canals, but they are not large-scale. I am inclined to think that water reaches villages but its entire volume is not recorded because of a lack of necessary equipment. A lot needs to be done in that area." In an interview with "Past," political commentator Manvel Sargsian says that popular demand for political changes in Armenia is not strong enough. "Unlike previous elections, these latest [parliamentary] elections were not followed by a wave of protests," he says. "This is a very important fact. There may be different reasons for that." The election outcome is viewed as natural by many Armenians, he adds. (Tigran Avetisian) Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL Copyright (c) 2017 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc. 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036. www.rferl.org