Half of Nagorno-Karabakh’s population displaced by fighting

Deutsche Welle, Germany
Oct 7 2020

An official from the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region said that 50% of the population has been forced to flee amid bombing and fighting. Armenia accused Azerbaijan of trying to instigate a genocide in the area.

Half of the population of the  Nagorno-Karabakh region have been displaced since fighting erupted last week between Armenian separatists and Azerbaijan, rebel officials said on Wednesday.

"According to our preliminary estimates, some 50% of Karabakh's population and 90% of women and children — some 70,000 to 75,000 people — have been displaced," Karabakh rights ombudsman Artak Beglaryan told the AFP news agency.

The two sides have been in conflict for decades over the ethnically Armenian region of Azerbaijan, which broke away from Baku in the 1990s. The war then claimed at least 30,000 lives.

Shelling by Azerbaijan during the last week has reduced Karabakh's main city into a ghost town, with many unexploded bombs in the streets.

Nearly 290 people have been killed since the most recent clashes erupted, including 47 civilians.

Fears are growing the conflict will develop into a full-blown war. Neighboring Iran warned against this on Wednesday, with President Hassan Rouhani saying, "We must be attentive that the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan does not become a regional war."

In the Bundestag parliament in Berlin, Heiko Maas called on Azerbaijan to agree to a ceasefire in the region, telling lawmakers that Armenia had signaled its willingness in theory. If not, the German foreign minister said the EU should increase pressure on Baku.

People hide in a dugout in Nagorno-Karabakh

Russian President Vladimir Putin also weighed in on Wednesday to call for fighting to stop. He described the conflict as a "tragedy."

Putin, who holds major sway in the area, which was part of the USSR for much of the 20th century, also said he is in constant contact with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. He also spoke to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Russian news agency TASS reported on Wednesday.

Armenian leader Pashinyanaccused Azerbaijan and ally Turkey of trying to recreate the Armenian genocide.

"What we are facing is an Azeri-Turkish international terrorist attack," he told Sky News on Wednesday. "To me, there is no doubt that this is a policy of continuing the Armenian genocide and a policy of reinstating the Turkish empire."

The Armenian genocide refers to the killing of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottoman Empire, modern-day Turkey, from 1915 to 1923.

https://www.dw.com/en/half-of-nagorno-karabakhs-population-displaced-by-fighting/a-55183758?fbclid=IwAR0KNcPoFGmILvQ23_VkeRSnqBrbJDy0gwvXpAbE6o1Bypd6NVbMX6_9BqM

Posters supporting Armenia seen in different parts of Jerusalem

Public Radio of Armenia
Oct 3 2020
Posters supporting Armenia seen in different parts of Jerusalem

Posters supporting Armenia can be seen in different parts of Jerusalem today, blogger Alexander Lapshin says on Facebook.

He emphasizes that in most cases it is not Armenians posting the messages, but Jews sympathetic to Armenia.

“In many Israeli social media groups, people ask where to buy an Armenian flag to hang on their balconies. I repeat that this is written not by Armenians, but by ordinary Israeli Jews,” Lapshin writes.

He also notes that the Israeli Defense Ministry is now under tremendous pressure to stop supplying weapons to Baku.

Сегодня в Иерусалиме повсюду плакаты в поддержку Армении. И я хочу сказать, что в большинстве случаев это не армяне…

Gepostet von Aleksander Lapshin am Samstag, 3. Oktober 2020

https://en.armradio.am/2020/10/03/posters-supporting-armenia-seen-in-different-parts-of-jerusalem/

Armenia says facing ‘decisive moment’ as Karabakh fighting intensifies

CTV Canada
Oct 3 2020

AFP Staff

Contact

Published Saturday, October 3, 2020 8:38AM EDT Last Updated Saturday, October 3, 2020 4:06PM EDT

STEPANAKERT, AZERBAIJAN — Armenian and Azerbaijani forces were engaged in fierce clashes Saturday as fighting over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region intensified, with Armenia reporting heavy losses and its leader saying it was facing a historic threat.

Armenia's defence ministry said separatist forces had repelled a massive attack by Azerbaijan, seven days after fighting erupted again in the decades-old dispute over the ethnic-Armenian breakaway province.

Armenian-backed separatist fighters in Karabakh destroyed a "huge military grouping," of Azerbaijan's forces, defence ministry spokeswoman Shushan Stepanyan said, claiming to have inflicted "serious losses in manpower and military hardware".

But Armenia also announced the deaths of 51 more separatist fighters, increasing the number of fatalities on both sides above 240 after nearly a week of fighting.

Azerbaijan's defence ministry said its forces had "captured new footholds" and President Ilham Aliyev claimed that his forces took the village of Madagiz, a strategic hamlet within firing range of an important northern road.

In an address to the nation on Saturday, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan called on Armenians to unite.

"We are facing possibly the most decisive moment in our millennia-old history," Pashinyan said.

"We all must dedicate ourselves to a singular goal: victory."

The clashes took place after the regional capital Stepanakert came under artillery and rocket fire Saturday, with local defence officials reporting further explosions later in the day.

'FINAL BATTLE'

Residents hid in shelters and on Saturday were clearing wreckage and sweeping up the shattered glass windows of their homes and shops.

"This is a great sorrow for our community, for our people," Nelson Adamyan, a 65-year-old electrician, told AFP outside his damaged residential building.

"But we will stand for our freedom, we will always be free."

Both sides have been accused of hitting civilian areas, and Azerbaijan said Saturday that Armenian artillery had shelled 19 of its settlements overnight.

The new fighting erupted on September 27 and mounting international calls for a halt to the hostilities and a return to negotiations have gone unanswered.

The leader of Karabakh, Arayik Harutyunyan, said he was going to join "intensive fighting" on the frontline.

"The time has come for the entire nation to become a powerful army," he told reporters. "This is our final battle, which we will certainly win."

Both sides have repeatedly claimed to be inflicting heavy losses.

The Armenian side has reported 209 military deaths and 14 civilian fatalities. Azerbaijan has reported 19 civilian deaths but has not confirmed any fatalities among its troops.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights registered the deaths of least 36 militants from Syria fighting alongside Azerbaijan's forces in over the last 48 hours, bringing their reported deaths to 64.

The war monitor said 1,200 combatants from pro-Ankara Syrian factions had been dispatched to the conflict.

On a road between Armenia's capital Yerevan and Nagorno-Karabakh, AFP journalists saw ambulances going in both directions and buses carrying families fleeing the fighting.

There was a heavy police presence near the border and volunteers were also travelling to bring Stepanakert residents to safety after shelling. 

"We must come to their aid," volunteer Ani said, adding that she had dropped everything to help.

CALLS FOR RECOGNITION

"We help our country as we can."

Russia, the United States and France — whose leaders co-chair a mediation group that has failed to bring about a political resolution to the conflict — this week called on the warring sides to immediately agree to a ceasefire.

Armenia said Friday it was "ready to engage" with mediators but Azerbaijan — which considers Karabakh under Armenian occupation — has said Armenian forces must fully withdraw before a ceasefire can be brokered.

Karabakh's declaration of independence from Azerbaijan during the collapse of the Soviet Union sparked a war in the early 1990s that claimed 30,000 lives.

Talks to resolve the conflict have made little progress since a 1994 ceasefire agreement.

The breakaway province is not recognised as independent by any country — including Armenia — and Karabakh's foreign ministry said Saturday that only receiving official status from world leaders could resolve the military flare-up. 

International recognition, the ministry said, "is the only way towards peace and security in the region."

The fighting has threatened to balloon into a regional conflict drawing in powerful players like Russia and Turkey.

Armenia is in a military alliance of former Soviet countries led by Moscow, which maintains a military base there, while NATO member Turkey has signalled its full support for Azerbaijan's military operations.

Yerevan has accused Turkey of dispatching mercenaries from Syria and Libya to the conflict — an allegation confirmed and denounced by Russia and France.

Aliyev on Saturday informed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of civilian casualties and thanked Turkey for its support.

A residential area that were allegedly damaged by shelling is seen during a military conflict in self-proclaimed Republic of Nagorno-Karabakh, Stepanakert, Azerbaijan, Saturday, Oct. 3, 2020. (David Ghahramanyan/NKR InfoCenter PAN Photo via AP)

Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces fight new clashes as international tension mounts

CBC Canada
Sept 30 2020


Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian forces fought new battles on Wednesday in the biggest eruption of their decades-old conflict since the mid-1990s, while France and Turkey traded recriminations as international tensions mounted.

Azerbaijan and the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh said there were attacks from both sides along the line of contact that divides them.

In Wednesday's clashes, the latest in decades of conflict, Armenian media said three civilians had been killed and several wounded by shelling in the town of Martakert in Nagorno-Karabakh.

WATCH | Azerbaijan, Armenia intensify fighting over contested Nagorno-Karabakh region:

Azerbaijan said 14 Azeri civilians had been killed since fighting began on Sunday. Photographs taken in the Azeri town of Terter showed people taking cover in dugouts, and damaged buildings that residents said had been hit by Armenian shells.

Dozens have been reported killed and hundreds wounded in fighting that began on Sunday and has spread far beyond the enclave's borders, threatening to spill into all-out war between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Azerbaijan said ethnic Armenian forces attempted to recover lost ground by launching counter-attacks in the direction of Madagiz, but Azeri forces repelled the attack.

Armenia said the Azeri army had been shelling the whole front line during the night and two Azeri drones were shot down over Stepanakert, Nagorno-Karabakh's administrative centre. It was not possible to independently confirm the report.

The fighting has increased concerns about stability in the South Caucasus region, a corridor for pipelines carrying oil and gas to world markets, and raised fears that regional powers Russia and Turkey could be drawn in.

Some of Turkey's NATO allies are increasingly alarmed by Ankara's stance on Nagorno-Karabakh, a breakaway region inside Turkey's close ally Azerbaijan that is run by ethnic Armenians but is not recognized by any country as an independent republic.

WATCH | Clashes between Armenia, Azerbaijan intensify:

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday Azerbaijan must take matters into its own hands and that Turkey would stand with it "with all its resources and heart." Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu reiterated Ankara's backing on Wednesday, saying Turkey would "do what is necessary" when asked whether it would offer military support if Azerbaijan requested it.

Cavusoglu criticized France, which has many citizens of Armenian ancestry, saying French solidarity with Armenia amounted to supporting Armenian occupation in Azerbaijan.

French President Emmanuel Macron hit back while visiting fellow NATO member Latvia.

Macron said France was extremely concerned by "warlike messages from Turkey, "which essentially remove any of Azerbaijan's inhibitions in reconquering Nagorno-Karabakh. And that we won't accept."

On Tuesday, Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs François-Philippe Champagne and British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab released a joint statement saying they are "deeply concerned by reports of large-scale military action" in the region.

"We call for the immediate end of hostilities, respect for the ceasefire agreement, and the protection of civilians."

The UN Security Council called on Tuesday for an immediate end to the fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh, which broke away from Azerbaijan in the 1990s in a war that killed an estimated 30,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who spoke by phone to Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday, said he was not considering asking for help under a post-Soviet security treaty now, but did not rule out doing so.

"Armenia will ensure its security, with the participation of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) or without it," Russian news agencies quoted Pashinyan as saying.

He said he and Putin had not discussed the possibility of Russian military intervention in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Russia has used the CSTO, along with the Eurasian Economic Union, another regional bloc focused on trade, to project influence across most of the former Soviet Union.

The Azeri prosecutor's office said on Wednesday seven more civilians had been wounded as a result of shelling of the city of Terter, which borders Nagorno-Karabakh.

Its defence ministry said ethnic Armenian forces attempted to recover lost ground by launching counter-attacks in the direction of Madagiz, but Azeri forces repelled the attack.

Armenia's defence ministry said the Azeri army had been shelling the whole front line during the night and two Azeri drones were shot down in the town of Stepanakert, Nagorno-Karabakh's administrative centre. It was not possible to independently confirm the report.

rmenia's unified information centre, an online governmental platform, posted pictures on Wednesday of the wreckage of what it said was a SU-25 warplane shot down by a Turkish fighter jet on Tuesday.

Turkey has denied shooting down the plane. An aide to Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev accused the Armenian government of lying about the incident, saying two Armenian SU-25s had crashed into a mountain and exploded.

With files from CBC News and Reuters


https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/azerbaijan-armenian-forces-fight-new-clashes-1.5744277



Authorities ‘attempting to silence opposition’ through dirty vendetta – Prosperous Armenia party condemns leader’s arrest

Tert.am, Armenia
Sept 26 2020
Authorities 'attempting to silence opposition' through dirty vendetta – Prosperous Armenia party condemns leader's arrest  
The opposition Prosperous Armenia party (PAP) has released a statement condemning the authorities for exercising a "political vendetta" against their leader.

The political force, which formerly allied with the Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) in a coalition government, blames the current regime for attempts "to silence opponents" through a dirty revenge.

A Yerevan district court ruled to sanction Gagik Tsarykyan's arrest late on Friday, almost three months after  charging the businessman-politician wth vote-buying. The prosecution was initiated after Tsarukyan's parliament speech criticizing the current government for failures and calling for its "100% resignation".

The party dismisses the criminal case as a politically motivated vendetta.

"The court presented no justified argument as to how Gagik Tsarukyan could have possibly obstructed the inquest four months being formally charged. What happened is obviously a political reckoning against the leader of the largest opposition parliamentary force. Gagik Tsarukyan is obviously a political prisoner from now on.

"With their obvious downfalls and failures in all areas, the authorities, under the leadership of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, are attempting to silence the opposition through a dirty reckoning by ordering the most servile judge to arrest Gagik Tsarukyan," reads part of the statement.

Accusing the governing elite for persecutions against political opponents, the PAP also calls the Armenian society's attention to the pressing socio-economic and national security challenges, promising to continue its fight (in collaboration with allies) for the protection of the national values and interests.


Turkey transported over 300 Syrian rebels to Azerbaijan: monitor

AMN – Al-Masdar News
Sept 24 2020
 
 
 
 
By News Desk -2020-09-24
BEIRUT, LEBANON (9:00 P.M.) – Hundreds of Syrian rebels were transported from Turkey to Azerbaijan this week, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) reported on Thursday.
 
Citing reliable sources, SOHR said the Turkish government “transported over 300 fighters of the Turkish-backed Syrian factions” to Azerbaijan, pointing out that most of the fighters were previously living in the Afrin region of northwestern Aleppo.
 
Furthermore, the monitor said that most of these fighters were members of the Sultan Murad Brigade and Al-Amshat faction, which were based in northwestern Syria.
 
“The fighters themselves have said that they are taken to Azerbaijan in order to guard the state’s border in return for salaries of 1,500 to 2,000 USD,” they said.
 
The Turkish-backed factions have not issued any statement regarding the alleged deployment; however, rumors began to surface in August of a potential deployment of these Syrian fighters to Azerbaijan, especially after clashes between the Azerbaijani and Armenian forces.
 
Turkey, who is a close ally to Azerabaijan, has previously sent Syrian fighters to Libya in order to help the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord (GNA) forces in their fight against the Libyan National Army (LNA).
 
 
 
 

Armenia and China eager to boost cooperation: PM meets outgoing ambassador

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 18:37,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a meeting with the outgoing Chinese Ambassador to Armenia Tian Erlong on September 23.

The Prime Minister thanked the ambassador for contributing to the development of the Armenian-Chinese relations with active work and noted that the cooperation between the two states in various directions were close and productive during his tenure, the Prime Minister's Office said in a news release. 

PM Pashinyan underscored that the Armenian Government is interested in expanding and further strengthening partnership with China. The Armenian PM noted that his discussions in 2019 with the Chinese President and Prime Minister in Beijing are good basis for this expansion.

Ambassador Erlong thanked the Prime Minister and the Government for cooperation and added that the Chinese side is also interested in expanding the political, economic and humanitarian ties with Armenia.

The ambassador said that during the past years the trade turnover grew and the humanitarian ties expanded between China and Armenia. Ambassador Erlong expressed certainty that the great potential for bilateral cooperation will be utilized in the coming years – the basis of which is the will of the Armenian and Chinese governments.

Issues related to cooperation in road construction, infrastructure development, tourism, healthcare and education and implementation of new projects were also discussed.

The Prime Minister thanked the Ambassador for China’s donation of 200 ambulances to Armenia.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

3rd President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan tests negative for COVID-19

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 16:48, 8 September, 2020

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. 3rd President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has passed a novel coronavirus (COVID-19) test, and the result is negative, the former President’s Office said.

“In response to the questions of numerous media outlets, we would like to inform that 3rd President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, who was diagnosed with acute respiratory infection accompanied by fever on September 2 after a medical examination, is recovering.

The coronavirus test result was negative”, the Office said in a statement.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Eurovision: Armenia will take part in Junior Eurovision 2020 and Eurovision 2021

ESCXTRA, EU
Sept 6 2020
Armenia will take part in Junior Eurovision 2020 and Eurovision 2021

Armenian broadcaster ARMTV has announced that it will take part in the two upcoming Eurovision events – the 2020 Junior Eurovision Song Contest in Warsaw and the 2021 Eurovision Song Contest in Rotterdam.

They are the 14th country to confirm their participation at Junior Eurovision, while they join 29 other countries in announcing their intention to take part in Eurovision 2021. The news was announced as part of the broadcaster’s new season of programming.

With a full list of participating countries usually announced in July, Armenia’s confirmation comes late in the game with just over two months left until the contest. The contest will be held in Poland for the second time in a row. Last year in Gliwice, Karina Ignatyan represented Armenia at the contest with “Colours of Your Dream”. They finished in ninth place – their joint lowest ever result at the contest.

From a usually successful country, the past two results – both ninth-place finishes – have come as a surprise and Armenia will no doubt want to turn the tide on their results this year. In the past, they have finished in the top three seven times – including one win in 2010.

With confirmation of their participation from the Armenian Head of Delegation, David Tserunyan, the next question is: will Athena Manoukian return to Eurovision in 2021? After first expressing her interest to take part in the contest in July 2019, she went onto win Depi Evratesil 2020 with all but one set of full marks from the jury.

Following the contest’s cancellation in March, there has been no word on whether Athena will be given another chance to represent Armenia next year. It wouldn’t be the first time that the Armenian act was selected internally. In fact, their most recent internal selection was Srbuk in 2019.

Since joining the contest in 2006, Armenia have failed to impress the fans as much as in the junior contest, and have so far never made the top three. They earned their best result – 4th place – in 2008, and again in 2014. We will have to wait and see whether Athena will be invited back next year.


Turkish extremists who tried to attack French-Armenian community members to be held liable

News.am, Armenia
Sep 1 2020

00:26, 01.09.2020