Genocide claims in Nagorno-Karabakh make peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan unlikely, despite cease-fire

The Conversation
Nov 14 2020
Genocide claims in Nagorno-Karabakh make peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan unlikely, despite cease-fire
                               12.43am AEDT

The deal leaves Azerbaijan, which was given Nagorno-Karabakh by the Soviets in 1923, largely in control of the majority-Armenian territory. Leaders in Nagorno-Karabakh, located in Western Azerbaijan close to Armenia, continue to demand independence.

Thousands have died and an estimated 100,000 have been displaced in Nagorno-Karabakh since September. As the cease-fire took effect on Nov. 10, Azerbaijanis danced in the streets. But angry Armenians stormed the Armenian parliament and office of the prime minister.

Both sides in the conflict have claimed that fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh isn’t just about territorial control – it is a fight to prevent genocide, a fight for their lives. These grave accusations, while yet unproven, may make a lasting resolution to the conflict much harder.

Violence first broke out in Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1980s, when the region’s ethnic Armenian leaders sought to gain independence from Azerbaijan. There has been intermittent fighting since then, including a bloody war in the 1990s that ended in another Russia-brokered cease-fire giving Azerbaijan legal control of the region.

But Armenian leaders in Nagorno-Karabakh declared themselves an independent republic, and have repeatedly tried to secede.

In my research on self-determination, I find that genocide is often invoked by secessionist regions as a last-ditch effort to secure outside intervention in their conflict.

The United Nations defines genocide as the destruction or partial destruction of a “national, ethnical, racial or religious group.” It is a war crime under international law, and countries are supposed to “prevent and punish” it under a 1948 U.N. agreement.

Secessionist leaders often try to rally foreign powers around their cause with arguments based on geopolitical strategy, economic self-interest, religious bonds or shared ideology. Those reasons broadly explain why Iran supports the Iraqi Kurds in their quest for greater autonomy, and why the Arab states back the Palestinians’ efforts at statehood.

But when all else fails, freedom fighters will highlight their own repression in the starkest of terms to gain international assistance. In war a global campaign for victimhood is the weapon of the weaker side – and genocide claims are the most powerful weapon in this arsenal.

According to my research, more than two-thirds of members in the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, a nongovernmental organization composed of autonomy-minded minority groups like the Kurds, have alleged genocide.

Genocide may be, as one scholar puts it, the “embodiment of radical evil,” but as a war crime it is incredibly difficult to prove.

Under international law, accusers must show perpetrators acted with the “intent to destroy, in whole or in part,” specified groups. Demonstrating intent is a tall order.

Armenia knows this as well as any nation. The 1915 Armenian genocide by Turkey is recognized by fewer than three dozen countries. In terms of both law and politics, declaring a deadly military campaign to be genocide – versus just the atrocities of a bloody conflict – is tricky indeed.

A house destroyed in an Oct. 17 rocket attack on Gyandzha, in Nagorno-Karabakh, that killed a young boy. Gavriil GrigorovTASS via Getty Images

Genocide allegations, on the other hand, are more easily come by. But according to my research they don’t bode well for peace.

Genocide claims turn “the other side” into an enemy bent on the destruction of an entire people. Once the public sees a conflict in these terms, history shows, leaders understandably balk at the prospect of sitting down at the negotiating table with that enemy.

Genocide claims also reduce the likelihood of effective outside mediation by winnowing away the pool of “honest brokers” – that is, objective intermediaries. Opposing parties can and do reject would-be peacekeepers based on their acknowledgment of – or refusal to acknowledge – genocide accusations, my research finds.

In archived coverage of the South Ossetian region of Georgia, for example, local leaders in the 2000s insisted various European and American troops could not serve as peacekeepers since they had not defended Ossetians from an alleged 1992 genocide.

Genocide claims in the Georgia cases did eventually lead to international intervention and separation from Georgia, but not through peaceful negotiations. Instead, South Ossetia, like another breakaway Georgian state called Abkhazia, gained de facto independence after a brutal Russian military assault on Georgia in 2008.

This mirrored what occurred in Kosovo nearly a decade earlier when Serbian atrocities prompted Western intervention. Western powers recognized Kosovo’s independence in 2008, but Serbia continues to contest Kosovo’s separation.

In the case of Nagorno-Karabakh, genocide claims on both sides are nothing new. In archival research I found media reports showing that Armenian leaders have repeatedly reminded foreign powers of the 1915 Armenian genocide when pressing for outside intervention in their conflict with Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijanis celebrate the end of the military conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh on Tuesday. Gavriil GrigorovTASS via Getty Images

Azerbaijanis, for their part, retort it is their citizens who should fear genocide. During a 1992 Armenian military campaign in Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenians committed what is now called the Khojaly massacre, when at least 613 civilians were reportedly killed. As newspapers from the era reveal, Azerbaijani leaders declared then that without international intervention, Armenians would finish the job.

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It is impossible to determine whether genocide has in fact occurred in Nagorno-Karabakh without in-depth investigations. But the accusations alone may overpower any truce. And as Armenians’ angry reaction to the recent cease-fire demonstrates, peace between the two nations is fragile at best.


https://theconversation.com/genocide-claims-in-nagorno-karabakh-make-peace-between-armenia-and-azerbaijan-unlikely-despite-cease-fire-149350






‘I take personal responsibility for this’ – Armenian PM on situation in Karabakh

JAM news
Nov 13 2020
    JAMnews, Yerevan

“If there were failures, then I was wrong somewhere, but you need to understand when and how, especially in the current situation,” Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said in a video message to Armenian citizens on his Facebook page late last night.

Nikol Pashinyan tried to analyze his mistakes on the Karabakh problem – from the moment he took office until the signing of the truce on November 10.

The main question that the prime minister tried to answer – what did he do wrong to prevent the war.

He explained that since becoming prime minister in 2018 and getting to know the situation on the settlement of the Karabakh conflict, he had found out much that he hadn’t been warned about before: the Armenian side was expected to abandon five regions around Karabakh – without specifying the status of NK or any specific mechanisms for determining it. Otherwise, a war would start.

Pashinyan explained that he did not talk publicly about this either then or at the beginning of September 2020, when there were clear signs of the coming war, or at the first stage of the war. He says that very few people in the Armenian society would agree to the proposed conditions at those stages. Even now, after great losses, the people cannot accept them.

Moreover, he was still looking for opportunities to change the logic of negotiations, making every effort to fight for the rights of the residents of Karabakh. 

Pashinyan also touched upon widespread myths claiming that the principles of the settlement were developed per ‘some foreign policy subtleties’ – he probably hinted at his not so smooth relations with Russia, which his predecessors had supported. This is precisely what the opposition is now accusing him of.

However, Pashinyan said that the approaches to solving the Karabakh problem were the same in 2015 and 2016. At the same time, Pashinyan regrets that Armenia has failed to alter the perception of the Karabakh conflict in the eyes of the international community as a territorial dispute for this whole time.

In conclusion, Pashinyan explained the timing when the decision was made to surrender the regions around Karabakh and end hostilities. The time came when it became clear that there was no way to turn the tide and that the task was to avoid the worst-case scenario.

“Now we can say that if we had agreed to these conditions a year ago, we would have had a more favorable situation than now. But who would have believed it a year ago? Very few. Myself, I wouldn’t have believed it. And it would seem as if we gave something away without fighting for it.”

Looking back on these events, Pashinyan admitted that this is the framework in which he says he is ready to bear responsibility for his mistakes. At the same time, he states that all the while alternative solutions were unacceptable for the Armenian side.

He also admits that in his years in the office, despite close attention to the problems of the army, the government has not been able to invest as much money in its development as desirable.

“Now it remains to concentrate on strengthening Armenia and Karabakh – intellectually and economically. We need to realize that while we fell, we didn’t fall to our knees – we heroically stood to the end, and on the very edge [of the abyss] we decided not to fall to the bottom. It was a painful decision, but necessary and inevitable because otherwise, the situation would have been much worse.”





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Russia to rotate its peacekeepers in Karabakh at least twice a year

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 15:58,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Rotation of Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno Karabakh will be carried out at least twice a year, according to the decree signed by President of Russia Vladimir Putin today, which clarifies several provisions of the peacekeeping mission.

According to the decree, the Russian defense ministry has been tasked to rotate the personnel of the peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno Karabakh at least twice a year, as well as replace the military equipment if necessary.

The decree also defined the funding for the peacekeeping activity, in particular providing material expenditures connected with the military personnel, including paying monetary allowances, additional guarantees and compensation to their family members in accordance with the Russian legislation.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a statement on a full ceasefire and cessation of all military actions in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone since 01:00 Yerevan Time on November 10.

 

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Participants of opposition rally march to NSS building

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 18:07,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. The participants of the rally organized by 17 opposition parliamentary and extra-parliamentary parties are marching to the building to the National Security Service from Matenadaran.

ARMENPRESS reports the organizers of the rally said that the future destination will be presented later.

The 17 parties organized a rally also on November 11. They demand the resignation of PM Pashinyan, saying that they will present their option of overcoming the post-war situation. The Police demand to stop the rally, citing the martial law in the country.




Russian peacekeepers arrive in Stepanakert

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 21:46,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. Russian peacekeepers have begun monitoring the implementation of ceasefire agreements in Nagorno-Karabakh, ARMENPRESS reports, citing Ria Novosti, official representative of the Russian Defense Ministry, Major-General Igor Konashenkov said.

''The ceasefire regime is respected along the entire contact line. The peacekeeping battalion of the 15th separate motorized rifle brigade entered Stepanakert at 17:00'', he said.

Aliyev blatantly defies BBC, Human Rights Watch accounts when pressed on war crimes

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 11:15, 9 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. Amid relentless deliberate bombings of residential areas in Artsakh, including with the use of cluster munitions – documented by the BBC and the Human Rights Watch, among others, – Azeri President Ilham Aliyev was once again placed in an uncomfortable situation during an interview with the BBC when pressed on the issue of Azeri indiscriminate attacks.

In the face of evidence of war crimes, Aliyev nevertheless again started to label everything as “fake news”.

The BBC told Aliyev that BBC correspondents on the ground in Stepanakert have witnessed Azeri indiscriminate bombardments of civilians, and that in addition to the BBC the Human Rights Watch has documented Azeri use of cluster munitions. However, Aliyev started claiming that these accounts of the BBC and the Human Rights Watch are all fake news. “I doubt this witnessing…..so what they were there”.

Then, when asked about the double-strike of the Shushi Cathedral, he again said that it might’ve been the Azeri artillery’s mistake, but when the BBC reported wondered whether it is possible to make the same mistake twice, Aliyev said “yes”.

“Everything is false news?” asked the BBC, to which Aliyev blatantly said “absolutely”.

Meanwhile, Stepanakert City is again under Azeri cluster missile strikes.

[see video]
Editing by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenian FM briefs Canadian counterpart on situation in Nagorno Karabakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 6 2020

Armenian Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan briefed his Canadian counterpart François-Philippe Champagne on the situation in Nagorno Karabakh.

“Today civilians in Stepanakert and Shushi were again under heavy shelling. Foreign terrorists brought over by Turkey for Azerbaijan fight against Artsakh. Much appreciate support and action of our friends,” FM Mnatsakanyn wrote on Twitter after the phone conversation.

François-Philippe Champagne said, in turn, stressed the need for a ceasefire in Nagorno Karabakh, and added that “allowing humanitarian assistance is a priority.”

“We’re working with allies to stop foreign interference and call on external forces to stay out of the conflict to end civilian casualties,” the Canadian Foreign Minister said.

TURKISH press: Resonance of arts in heart of Istanbul, where history, architecture meet modern life

With its historical atmosphere, Istanbul's streets and sidewalks can have a spellbinding effect on those who stroll them. Beşiktaş district’s Akaretler neighborhood, in particular, stands out with cobblestone streets lined with local shops. While walking up the sloping streets of the neighborhood, rowhouses, called Sıraevler, beautifully restored with charm and neoclassical style, welcome visitors.

The historical houses were built during the period of Sultan Abdulaziz in 1875 by Ottoman Armenian architect Sarkis Balyan. Adding color to the texture of Istanbul as the best example of the 1870s civil architecture, they served as accommodation for the leading high-ranking officials of Dolmabahçe Palace, which was the final seat of the Ottoman rulers, at that time. With a restoration project completed in 2008, the rowhouses became a significant gathering place in the city regardless of the event genre.

Şevket Sönmez, "Hari-Kiri", oil pianting on canvas, 180 by 145 centimeters.(Courtesy of Merkür Gallery)

It is not surprising that such a place bearing traces of the past has become the new spot swarmed by people from various organizations in modern times. The latest event that drew crowds to Sıraevler, despite anxiety over the coronavirus, is the fourth edition of Artweeks@Akaretler, a program consisting of exhibitions, interviews with artists and workshops.

Bringing art lovers and collectors together with the works of local and foreign artists, the event is highly anticipated by art circles in the city especially because of its meticulously curated selections. I was lucky to have a chance to visit the fourth edition, spread across the numbered buildings 25-27, 35, 37-39 and 55 of Sıraevler.

Kübra Boy, "Cybele", sgraffito, acrylic on polyester, 100 by 90 centimeters. (Courtesy of Merkür Gallery)

I always start to visit group events like Artweeks@Akaretler with this exhibit, which attracts my attention most. This is why my steps directed me to Building 35, where the Ara Güler Museum offered some imposing captures by Turkish photojournalist Güler, who was also known as "Istanbul’s eye." Even if Güler never described himself as an artist and stressed what he was doing was just capturing a moment of history, his iconic black-and-white pictures of Istanbul and its residents prove that he was a gifted photographer who hit the right chord and touched the soul of viewers with his heartfelt perspective.

Stunned by Güler’s phenomenal Istanbul photos, I walked to building No. 39 where a large selection of works by prominent artists of Merkür Gallery is exhibited. The gallery, founded by Sabiha Kurtulmuş in 2010, offers new works that the artist produced in their own style with the promising power of art. The vividness of the artworks reveals that the gallery offers the event to bring dynamism to the cultural industry again. The artists contributing to the gallery's effort are Abdülkadir Öztürk, Arzu Akgün, Burak Kutlay, Cengiz Yüzsever, Ersan Deveci, Eylül Deniz, Fatma Tülin, Zeynep Çilek Çimen, Gamze Zorlu, İsmet Doğan, Kurt Bullend, Kübra Boy, Nilhan Sesalan, Nilay Özenbay, Saliha Yılmaz, Şevket Arık, Şevket Sönmez, Ziya Tacir, Burcu Perçin, Ebru Döşekçi, Ekrem Yalçındağ and Vuslat. Two pop-art paintings by Çimen in this space were especially mesmerizing as forms of _expression_ of traditional interaction.

Modern blends with tradition

Zeynep Çilek Çimen is a young artist on the rise in the contemporary Turkish art scene. In Turkish painting, miniatures, calligraphy art, carpets and rugs, manuscripts, embroidery and all other traditional arts were included in art production in modern forms, and a new language began to be formed through this new trend started in the 1950s. This new language, established with care and skill in the trace of new forms, managed to transform the local into a novelty. Creating her artworks with a similar view, Çimen moves toward producing even greater abstract motifs and adopts the approach of placing a visual on an optical surface. At its core, this approach is centered on the relationship between shapes while also allowing for the use of symbolic motifs.

Her art pieces for Artweeks@Akaretler follow a simple, clean line, allowing for the proper placement of motifs inspired by a nomadic existence. These intertwined images of the artist are deformed to establish new notional ties and transformed into a stylistic concept that carries the belief that cultural identity can be displayed through symbols.

However, Çimen did not only participate in the event with just these two pieces. Her other two paintings are also on display in building No. 55, where the Art for Goodness Association, aiming to contribute to the development of the art environment in Turkey, displays valuable works by artists who participated in its projects “One Year in Passage," “Impressions from Anatolia” and “Workshop Cer."

Zeynep Çilek Çimen, "Eli Belinde-Arms-Akimbo", 80 by 100 centimeters.(Courtesy of Art for Goodness Association)

As an attendee of the "Workshop Cer" project, Çimen prepared two pieces for this exhibition as well. The first painting comprises of black and white tones and again reconstructs regional images. But this piece moves away from calligraphy and analyzes them with geometric color plans.

The other painting of the artist plays with the "elibelinde" (hands-on-hips) motif, one of the symbols that embody the rich cultural identity of Anatolian, Seljuk and Turkish societies. The people of these societies passed on meaningful, subtle messages with their art. And Çimen, combining all these elements in her works, interpret their motifs with analytic lines, which lead to the creation of a unique algorithm.

Kadir Akyol, "David", 90 by 130 centimeters.(Courtesy of Art for Goodness Association)

Challenging curation

The Art for Goodness Association’s other two sections in Artweeks@Akaretler also offer impressive works that were selected after meticulous evaluation. Before visiting the exhibitions of the Art for Goodness Association, I heard praise about their curation from the people around me. Naturally, my curiosity was at the highest starting from the first step.

Mehmet Kaplan, "Ortadoğu' da Bir Çocuk" ("A Child in the Middle East"), oil on canvas, 100 by 120 centimeters.(Courtesy of Art for Goodness Association)

Meeting with Feride Çelik, the curator of the association’s exhibitions, by chance, I learned that “Impressions from Anatolia” comprises of artworks produced by fine art students from different regions in Turkey, while “One Year in Passage" presents pieces by young artists who graduated from Mimar Sinan University Faculty of Fine Arts (MSGSÜ).

Çelik said that they received more than 60 applications for the “Impressions from Anatolia;” however, she had to choose eight among them to display at Sıraevler. While mentioning how challenging the evaluation period was for her, it became clear that the curator felt proud of her output.

I should mention I found this section charming because its works were opening the doors of a different world. What was magical about Çelik’s curation is that she has chosen artworks created with extraordinary perspectives. When I heard the name of the section, the first thing that came to my mind was paintings showing Anatolian culture. However, what I saw was completely different. Clearly, the pieces were a part of Anatolian lands as they were the creation of Anatolian students’ hearts. But they also tell particular stories, from brand obsession and wars that put children into desperate situations to the coronavirus affecting the whole world.

Yalçın Bulut, "Fethi Paşa Korusu" ("Fethi Pasha Grove"), oil on canvas, 108 by 140 centimeters.(Courtesy of Art for Goodness Association)

The works of “One Year in Passage" were no less expressive than the “Impressions from Anatolia.” This project was realized with the motivation to meet the production costs of young artists who are graduates of Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University (MSGSÜ). While the young artists of this project work at the workshops under the supervision of professor Nedret Sekban and Aslı Özok, they frankly expose a different reflection of their personal stories on their canvases.

You can also enjoy this great art by visiting Akaretler Sıraevler. The exhibition will continue until Nov. 8, 2020.

Iranian army commander vows “strict punishment to takfir-terrorists” near borders

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 15:05,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. The Commander of the Iranian Army Major-General Abdolrahim Mousavi has vowed “strict punishment” to the “takfir-terrorists” near Iranian borders, local news media reported.

Mousavi made the comments after visiting the Iranian air defense troops and inspecting the readiness level of the units at the north-western borders.

Mousavi stressed the need to ensure the safety of residents in the border towns.

He said the air defense units are on high alert in the north-western part of Iran and the units will be increased is required.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

International Efforts to Establish Ceasefire Have Failed, Says Pashinyan

October 26,  2020



Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan

Pashinyan says Baku Does Not Want to Settle Conflict; Artsakh President Echoes Concern

After Azerbaijan violated a third ceasefire agreement, this time brokered by the United States, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Monday said that international efforts to end the military attacks on Artsakh have failed.

“I would like to state that the efforts of the international community, this time brokered by the United States, to establish a ceasefire, have failed,” the Prime Minister said in a Twitter post, in which tagged President Trump. “As a result of continuous shelling by Azerbaijan, civilians were killed and wounded in Artsakh today.”

The ceasefire agreement announced Sunday by the State Department went into effect at 8 a.m. local time. At 8:45, Azerbaijani forces began shelling Artsakh’s northern front. Baku’s intention to, once again, disregard a ceasefire to which it had agreed was laid bare when well before 8 a.m. Azerbaijani government social media posts declared that Artsakh forces had violated the ceasefire. Those posts were quickly removed when they realized that had accused the Artsakh forces before the ceasefire went into effect.

Pashinyan said that he expects the U.S. to react to Azerbaijan’s violation of the agreement, which was hailed by Trump in a tweet congratulating Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on Sunday.

“It’s already clear that this time again it was impossible to respect the ceasefire. All should know that the Armenian side made all efforts for the preservation of the ceasefire. The Defense Army was extremely restrained from the morning, but the ceasefire failed to be implemented. We don’t know what will be the reaction of the U.S. President to the failure of the ceasefire, but I had a telephone conversation after midnight with Secretary of State Pompeo, and told him that this is the first ceasefire for them, but for us it’s the third and I can predict what will happen tomorrow. I said that with the utmost probability the ceasefire will not be respected and with the utmost probability Azerbaijan will blame Armenia,” Pashinyan explained in a Facebook Live address on Monday.

On Monday, when asked by a reporter about the ceasefire agreement, Trump said “it’s holding.”

The prime minister explained that he had asked Pompeo to how it would be determined which side had violated the ceasefire and what consequences would there be for not adhering to the agreement reached by his mediation efforts.

“It would not be proper for me to reveal how Mr. Popmeo responded,” said Pashinyan. “I hope U.S. officials will answer the question if they have clarified whose actions led to the violation of the ceasefire and if they have done so, what will be the consequences for the violator.”

Pashinyan expressed hope that efforts of the OSCE Minks Group co-chairing countries—the U.S., Russia and France—will still give results.

“If Russia, the U.S. and France are unable to establish a ceasefire in this conflict zone, it means we are living in entirely another world and we have to understand the logic of this world. We still hope that the efforts of the three presidents will give concrete results, but for now it is what it is,” Pashinyan said.

He said that Armenia has demonstrated maximum flexibility since Azerbaijan, with the help of Turkey, began attacking Artsakh on September 27. However, he said, it can be concluded that Azerbaijan does not want a settlement to the conflict.

“Whenever we have agreed to something, it was unacceptable for Azerbaijan, because they wanted more. We have to clearly register that Azerbaijan at the very least wants the capitulation of Karabakh now more than ever,’’ said Pashinyan.

The prime minister said that the Armenian people are ready for mutual concessions, even painful compromises, but the Armenian people will never agree to the idea of capitulation.
”Azerbaijan has never been and now is not ready for mutual concessions. This is the key point that did not allow a settlement to be reached,’’ said Pashinyan.

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan on Monday also pointed to Azerbaijan’s unwillingness to adhere to agreements, saying in a Facebook post that the security and rights of Artsakh’s people cannot be compromised.

“Like the previous times, the agreement reached with the mediation of the U.S. and participation of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-chairs, that reaffirmed the commitment of the sides to reach and observe a humanitarian ceasefire, assumed on October 10 in Moscow and October 17 in Paris under the initiative of the Russian and French Presidents, today was again grossly violated by official Baku. Particularly after midday, when Azerbaijan resumed offensive operations with the use of artillery and rockets along the entire frontline,” said Harutyunyan.

“This confirms that Azerbaijan, enjoying the unconditional sponsorship of the Turkish authorities and mercenary-terrorists, has no plans to resume peaceful dialogue and overtly show that they will continue their military efforts for the final eviction of Armenians from Artsakh. Therefore, our national task is to fight for the sake of the safe and dignified existence of the Armenians of Artsakh in their own Homeland. The security and rights of our people are not a subject to compromises,” added Harutyunyan.