Armenian FM to participate in UN Human Rights Council High-Level session in Geneva

Save

Share

 09:37,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan will travel to Geneva to participate in the session of the High Level segment of the UN Human Rights Council, the Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson Vahan Hunanyan said in a statement.

“On February 28 to March 1, Foreign Minister of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan will pay a working visit to Geneva to participate in the session of the High Level segment of the UN Human Rights Council. During the framework of the visit the opening of an exhibition dedicated to the 30th anniversary of Armenia's membership in the UN will be held. Meetings of Minister Mirzoyan with a number of colleagues are scheduled,” Hunanyan said.

Russian Armed Forces are not delivering strikes against Ukrainian cities – Defense Ministry

Save

Share

 09:43,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 24, ARMENPRESS. The Russian Armed Forces are not delivering artillery or air strikes against Ukrainian cities and are striking military infrastructure with precision weapons, TASS reports citing the statement of the Russian Defense Ministry.

“Precision weapons are degrading military infrastructure, air defense facilities, military aerodromes and aviation of the Ukrainian armed forces”, the ministry said as quoted by TASS.

Civilians are not threatened, Russia’s Defense Ministry assured.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a televised address on Thursday morning that in response to a request by the heads of the Donbass republics he had made a decision to carry out a special military operation. The Russian leader stressed that Moscow had no plans of occupying Ukrainian territories.

NK conflict not fully settled yet, but there is progress – Putin

Save

Share

 17:33,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 22, ARMENPRESS. The Nagorno Karabakh conflict is not fully settled yet, but there is progress, Russian President Vladimir Putin said at the meeting with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev in Moscow today, RIA Novosti reported.

At the meeting Putin said agreements have been reached over the development of trade and economic ties in Nagorno Karabakh.

The Russian leader said there are disputes, but Moscow will do the utmost to ensure the peaceful nature of the settlement process.

“Certain agreements have already been reached on ensuring not only the security of all the people living there, but on developing trade and economic ties, unblocking transport communications. I know that disputes continue and there is much to be done, but, on our part, we will do our utmost to ensure the peaceful nature of this process and to satisfy all the parties involved in this process”, he said as quoted by TASS.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 02/21/2022

                                        Monday, 


Ex-President’s Undeclared Assets ‘Investigated’

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Switzerland - Switzerland's national flags fly beside the logo of Swiss bank 
Credit Suisse in Zurich, April 24, 2017.


Armenian prosecutors on Monday pledged to look into reports that former 
President Armen Sarkissian had failed to declare millions of dollars stashed in 
a Swiss bank.

According to an international journalistic investigation conducted by the 
Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), Sarkissian is among 
current or former officials from around the world and their relatives who have 
held hidden accounts in Switzerland's second-largest bank, Credit Suisse.

The OCCRP, a nonprofit journalism consortium that partners with dozens of media 
outlets, released the findings of the investigation, based on a massive data 
leak, in a weekend report.

The reported said in particular that Sarkissian and his sister Karine kept more 
than 10 million Swiss francs ($11 million) in Credit Suisse from 2006 through 
2016. Sarkissian served as Armenia’s ambassador to Britain from 2013-2018, 
meaning that he had to declare his assets to an anti-corruption state body. He 
only admitted having 8 million euros ($10 million) held elsewhere.

Hetq.am, an Armenian media outlet that also took part in the OCCRP 
investigation, said that Sarkissian confirmed that the money belonged to him and 
his sister but denied any wrongdoing.

“At that time [Armenian income] declarations were not done electronically and 
did not require officials to declare concrete bank accounts,” he told the 
investigative publication. He claimed that he was only obliged to disclose his 
cash assets.

Haykuhi Harutiunian, the head of the Commission on Prevention of Corruption, 
denied the claim. “All kinds of financial assets had to be declared,” she told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

A spokesman for the Office of the Prosecutor-General, Gor Abrahamian, said that 
law-enforcement authorities will closely examine the information. He argued that 
inaccurate or incomplete asset declarations are a criminal offense in Armenia.


France - Armenian President Armen Sarkissian takes part in the Summit of Minds 
in Chamonix,17Sep2021

Sarkissian, 68, had lived and worked in London for nearly three decades before 
becoming Armenia’s largely ceremonial president in 2018. He made a fortune in 
the 2000s, working as an advisor and middleman for Western corporations doing 
business in the former Soviet Union.

Sarkissian unexpectedly resigned on January 23, citing a lack of powers vested 
in the presidency. Hetq.am, claimed that he stepped down because it emerged that 
he violated a constitutional provision stipulating that the president must have 
been a citizen of only Armenia for at least six years before taking office.

The publication said that an ongoing investigation conducted by it jointly with 
the OCCRP has revealed that Sarkissian was a citizen of the Caribbean island 
country of Saint Kitts and Nevis “not long before being elected president in 
March 2018.”

Prosecutors instructed Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS) to investigate 
that report. The NSS has not publicized any conclusions so far.

Sarkissian left the country several days before his resignation. In a January 25 
statement, the presidential press office reaffirmed the stated reason for the 
resignation and accused the independent publication of trying to “divert public 
attention with a false agenda.”



Azerbaijan Issues Arrest Warrants For Kocharian, Sarkisian


Armenia - President Serzh Sarkisian (L) and his predecessor Robert Kocharian 
visit Gyumri, 7 December 2008.


The Azerbaijani authorities have issued international arrest warrants for 
Armenia’s former Presidents Robert Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian.

An Azerbaijani military prosecutor said on Monday that the two men born in 
Nagorno-Karabakh have been indicted for helping to launch in 1988 demonstrations 
for the Armenian-populated territory’s secession from Azerbaijan and unification 
with Armenia. He said they are also wanted for their role in the 1991 creation 
of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

Kocharian and Sarkisian, who led Karabakh during its 1991-1994 war with 
Azerbaijan, were quick to scoff at the accusations.

“The filing of accusations against Serzh Sarkisian by the Aliyev regime is in 
itself a caricature,” his office said in a statement.

It said that Sarkisian, who ruled Armenia from 2008-2018, will continue to use 
his “extensive connections and experience” to fight for the Karabakh Armenians’ 
“right to a free, independent and secure life.”

The statement also stressed that Sarkisian and Kocharian, who now lead Armenia’s 
two main opposition groups, are also prosecuted by the “capitulator authorities” 
in Yerevan which it claimed are now effectively allied to “Azerbaijan’s ruling 
clan.”

A spokesman for Kocharian likewise linked the Azerbaijani arrest warrants with 
separate corruption charges leveled against both ex-presidents and strongly 
denied by them. Bagrat Mikoyan said they come amid Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s continuing “flirtation” with Azerbaijani President Ilham] Aliyev.

“The Armenian authorities, who are begging for peace from Azerbaijan at the cost 
of national dignity, are receiving help from their ‘educated and constructive’ 
friends,” he said tartly.


Armenia - Tens of thousand of Armenians demonstrate in Yerevan in support of 
Nagorno-Karabakh's unification with Soviet Armenia, February 1988.

Baku already issued international arrest warrants for Karabakh’s current leaders 
shortly after the 2020 war. Armenia’s Office of the Prosecutor-General condemned 
the move at the time, saying that it has “taken measures” to prevent them from 
being placed on Interpol’s most wanted list. It did not immediately react to 
Baku’s latest move.

During his nearly two-decade rule Aliyev held numerous face-to-face meetings 
with Kocharian and Sarkisian aimed at ending the Karabakh conflict. Over the 
past year he has repeatedly lambasted his former Armenian counterparts. The 
verbal attacks mostly followed their harsh criticism of Pashinian and his 
handling of the disastrous war.

The arrest warrants came the day after Armenia’s current and former leader 
issued statements marking the 34th anniversary of the start of the popular 
movement for Karabakh’s unification with Armenia.

“The movement was the first step in restoring our statehood,” read a statement 
released by Pashinian.

“Today Artsakh (Karabakh), though wounded, is still standing,” he said. “Today 
our steps are aimed not only at solving the socio-economic problems of the 
Armenians of Artsakh and overcoming security challenges but also at protecting 
their rights.”

“Artsakh will always be ours,” Kocharian said for his part.



Iranian FM Hails ‘Expanding’ Ties With Armenia


Germany - Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan (left) and his Iranian 
counterpart Hossein Amir-Abdollahian meet in Munich, February 19, 2022.


Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian praised Iran’s relations with 
Armenia and reaffirmed his government’s strong opposition to any “geopolitical 
change” in the region when he met with his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan 
at the weekend.

The meeting took place on the sidelines of an annual conference on international 
peace and security held in the German city of Munich.

“Amir-Abdollahian described bilateral relations between Tehran and Yerevan as 
deeply expanding,” the Iranian Foreign Ministry said in a statement on the talks.

He said that senior Armenian and Iranian diplomats should build on this positive 
dynamic by negotiating a new “document on bilateral cooperation,” the statement 
added without elaborating.

Amir-Abdollahian was also reported to hail the planned opening of an 
Armenian-Iranian “transit route” for regional trade. He clearly referred to an 
ambitious project to create a transport corridor that would connect Iran’s 
Persian Gulf ports to the Black Sea through Armenia and Georgia.

According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Mirzoyan and Amir-Abdollahian agreed 
on the need to finalize an agreement on that corridor that would pass through 
Armenia’s southeastern Syunik province bordering Iran as well as Azerbaijan.

The Iranian ambassador in Yerevan, Abbas Badakhshan Zohouri, said last month 
that Syunik must remain “the principal transit route” for cargo shipments 
between Armenia and Iran even after the anticipated launch of 
Armenian-Azerbaijani transport links. The Iranian side is therefore looking 
forward to further highway upgrades in the strategic Armenian region, he said.


Armenia - A cargo terminal at a border crossing with Iran, November 29, 2018. 
(Photo by the State Revenue Committee of Armenia)

The Armenian government last week announced its first step towards attracting 
potential contractors for the multimillion-dollar construction of a new highway 
in Syunik that will significantly shorten travel time between Armenia and Iran.

“We hope that by the end of the year we will have [selected] a company that will 
carry out that work,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said during a session of 
his cabinet.

Armenia lost control over a 21-kilometer stretch of an existing Syunik road 
leading to the Iranian border after a controversial troop withdrawal ordered by 
Pashinian following the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh. Last September, Azerbaijan 
set up checkpoints there to tax Iranian vehicles, triggering unprecedented 
tensions with Tehran.

An influential Iranian cleric accused Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in 
October of trying to “cut Iran’s access to Armenia.” More than 160 members of 
Iran’s parliament issued a joint statement warning against “any geopolitical 
change and alteration of the borders of neighboring countries.”

Meeting with Mirzoyan, Amir-Abdollahian likewise “emphasized Tehran's opposition 
to any geopolitical change in the region,” according to the Iranian Foreign 
Ministry.



Armenian, Saudi FMs Hold First-Ever Talks


Germany - Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud and his 
Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan meet in Munich, February 19, 2022. (Photo 
by the Saudi Foreign Ministry)


Saudi Arabia signaled more overtures to Armenia as the foreign ministers of the 
two countries having no diplomatic relations met for the first time over the 
weekend.

Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud and his Armenian 
counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan held talks on the sidelines of the annual Munich 
Security Conference in Germany.

The Saudi Foreign Ministry said they “reviewed bilateral relations in various 
fields of cooperation and ways to support and enhance them.” They also explored 
“opportunities to enhance bilateral coordination” and discussed “many regional 
and international issues,” it wrote on Twitter.

According to the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Mirzoyan discussed with Al Saud 
“prospects for establishing relations and cooperation” between their nations and 
expressed readiness to work on setting “bilateral and multilateral agendas.”

“During the meeting, the Foreign Ministers emphasized the importance of 
promoting trade and economic ties, implementing investment programs, and 
establishing contacts between business circles,” read a statement released by 
the ministry.

Saudi and Armenian foreign ministers are not known to have met in the past.


Saudi Arabia - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman talks to Armenian 
President Armen Sarkissian during the Future Investment Initiative forum in 
Riyadh, October 26, 2021.

Saudi Arabia has for decades refused to establish diplomatic relations with 
Armenia due to its conflict with Muslim Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. The 
oil-rich kingdom signaled a change in that policy after its relations with 
Armenia’s arch-foe and Azerbaijan’s ally Turkey deteriorated significantly 
several years ago.

The policy change was highlighted last October by then Armenian President Armen 
Sarkissian’s visit to Riyad. Sarkissian sat next to Saudi Arabia’s de facto 
ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, at the opening ceremony of an 
international conference held there.

“We spoke about our diplomatic relations, and we agreed that in reality our 
diplomatic relations started with that visit,” Sarkissian told the Saudi 
newspaper Arab News in December.

The Karabakh conflict has not prevented Armenia from developing relations with 
other Gulf Arab monarchies, notably the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. Both 
nations have embassies in Yerevan.

Successive Armenian governments have maintained closer ties with Iran, Saudi 
Arabia’s main regional rival.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenpress: Russian, Azerbaijani FMs discuss normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations

Russian, Azerbaijani FMs discuss normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations

Save

Share

 21:12,

YEREVAN, 16 FEBRUARY, ARMENPRESS. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov discussed the process of normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, ARMENPRESS reports the Russian MFA informed.

During the telephone conversation on February 16, the FMs exchanged views on a number of regional and international issues. Special attention was paid to the situation in the South Caucasus, first of all to the process of normalization of relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia. In this context, the importance of the implementation of all provisions of the trilateral agreements between Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia of November 9, 2020, as well as January 11 and November 26, 2021 was emphasized.  

The ministers also discussed the prospects for further development of the Russian-Azerbaijani strategic partnership.

Azerbaijani MFA cynicism in ‘explaining’ attempts to limit ICRC activities in Karabakh

  News.am  
Armenia – Feb 2 2022

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry responded to a statement made by Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan about Baku's attempts to limit ICRC activities.

Speaking at a joint press conference with his Austrian counterpart on 2 February in Yerevan, the Armenian Foreign Minister highlighted the attempts of the Azerbaijani authorities to hinder the work of international organizations in Nagorno-Karabakh by stating that Azerbaijan forces ICRC, purely humanitarian organization, to fit into the policy dictated by them.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry immediately responded. Leyla Abdullayeva, head of the MFA Press Service said that the activities of international organizations in the territory of Azerbaijan, in accordance with a resolution of the UN General Assembly of December 19, 1991 "On the coordination of humanitarian assistance", must be carried out on the basis of respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the state. She pointed out that in accordance to that principle the activities of international organizations in the territory of Azerbaijan were implemented.

The representative of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry reminded Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan that the activities of any international organization in the sovereign territories of Azerbaijan are a subject of discussion between the international organization and Azerbaijan.

She labeled the comment of the representative of a third state as inappropriate. Leyla Abdullayeva concluded by saying that the Armenian Foreign Minister was better to comment on the issues related to the fulfillment of the obligations undertaken by the country to establish peace in the region.

Meanwhile, the resolution mentioned by the representative of the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry and its annex have a completely different meaning and context. The UN document implies the consent of the affected party to provide humanitarian assistance and, in principle, on the basis of its request. The people of Nagorno-Karabakh, as a side suffering from Azerbaijani aggression, are asking international organizations for help. However, Azerbaijan, having in reality neither legal nor factual rights to Artsakh, in violation of both OSCE and UN principles, is trying to oppose this.

The endless cynicism with which the Azerbaijani authorities refuse to help solve Artsakh's humanitarian problems should be a grave warning to the international community, confirming Baku's genocidal policy against the Armenians of Artsakh.

Armenia bans gambling advertisements

Save

Share

 10:28, 21 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 21, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian parliament adopted amendments to the Law on Advertising, banning all kinds of gambling advertisements.

The bill passed first reading with 56 votes in favor, 8 against and 16 lawmakers voted present.

The law bans gambling advertisements of all types, including via television, radio, internet with few exceptions: the casinos or bookmakers will still be able to advertise their services through their own official websites or on their own buildings.

During the debates, ruling Civil Contract party MP Babken Tunyan 3,2 trillion drams in gambling bets were made from January to November of 2021 in Armenia.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1073590.html?fbclid=IwAR1Q3gqDzCbp8C1e2GAxENAni76DyL-JYQ8OOfdeFrfDB6QQG1nsmN8usk0

Armenia confirms 940 new coronavirus cases, no deaths

  News.am  
Armenia – Jan 22 2022

As of 11:00 on Saturday, 940 new cases of coronavirus infection were registered in Armenia, the total number of infected reached 350,897, Armenian News-NEWS.am was informed by the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia.

The total number of tests carried out is 2,669,792, of which 5,812 were over the past day. In fact, 7,242 patients are currently being treated.

According to the latest data, 334,109 people have recovered, over the past day – 127.

No deaths from coronavirus have been reported.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 01/18/2022

                                        Tuesday, 


Many Karabakh Armenians Still Lack Adequate Housing After 2020 War

        • Robert Zargarian

Nagorno Karabakh --Pedestrians walk past a poster bearing a flag of 
Nagorno-Karabakh in Stepanakert, November 24, 2020


Nearly 16,000 residents of Nagorno-Karabakh displaced by the 2020 war with 
Azerbaijan continue to live in temporary shelters or homes, a senior official in 
Stepanakert said on Tuesday.

Artak Beglarian, the Karabakh state minister, said that more than 20,000 others 
remain in Armenia 14 months after a Russian-brokered ceasefire stopped the 
six-week war that left least 6,500 people dead.

Most of the displaced Karabakh Armenians are former residents of Karabakh’s 
southern Hadrut district and the town of Shushi (Shusha) captured by Azerbaijani 
forces. Others used to live in districts around the Soviet-era Nagorno-Karabakh 
Autonomous Oblast handed back to Baku after the ceasefire.

In Beglarian’s words, the Karabakh authorities provided 467 apartments for 
displaced people in 2021.

“At the end of last year we provided 108 apartments built by the All-Armenian 
Fund Hayastan,” the official told a news conference. “We will provide more than 
200 apartments in the coming weeks.”

“Right now 2,862 apartments are being constructed,” Beglarian said, adding that 
the authorities are on track to provide virtually all displaced families living 
in Karabakh with adequate housing by 2024.

The authorities also offer between 10 million and 15 million drams 
($21,000-$31,000) to families buying existing apartments or houses. The subsidy 
is well below home prices in Stepanakert and nearby settlements which went up 
after the war.

The prices are too high for the family of Lusine Hayrian. She, her husband and 
five children fled their village in Hadrut during the war and now huddle in a 
single room in a Stepanakert hostel.

“Nobody has visited us so far,” Hayrian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “Nor 
have we heard any promises of a [new] home.”

Karabakh had an estimated 150,000 residents before the war that broke out in 
September 2020. According to Karabakh officials, at least 90,000 local civilians 
fled their homes and took refuge in Armenia during the fierce fighting. Most of 
them returned to Karabakh after the ceasefire.



Armenian Government Revives Plans For Health Insurance

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia -- A newly refurbished hospital of the Yerevan State Medical University, 
October 17, 2019.


The Armenian government appears to have revived plans to introduce a system of 
national health insurance that would cover the country’s entire population.

Deputy Health Minister Lena Nanushian said on Tuesday that that the Ministry of 
Health has drafted relevant legislation and submitted it to Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian’s cabinet for approval.

“The proposed package is quite comprehensive and will cover 90-95 percent of all 
[medical] services,” she said, adding that this includes, among other things, 
heart and cancer surgeries as well as free medication for people suffering from 
chronic diseases.

Free healthcare would be financed by a 6 percent personal income tax. Public and 
private employers would pay half of the new tax to be levied from their workers.

Former Health Minister Arsen Torosian pushed for such a tax in 2019 amid strong 
opposition from mostly middle-class Armenians willing to only pay for their own, 
private health insurance. Pashinian’s government did not go ahead with the 
proposed measure at the time.

Speaking with RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Monday, Torosian, who is now a 
parliament deputy representing the ruling Civil Contract party, said the 
government should tread carefully on the issue.

Armenia’s former governments also promised to introduce a national health 
insurance system. But they abandoned those plans in the face of financial 
constraints.


Armenia - Аn intensive care ward at the Arabkir Medical Center in Yerevan, 
December 9, 2021.

Public access to healthcare in the country declined following the collapse of 
the Soviet Union as cash-strapped Armenian hospitals were allowed to charge 
their patients. Most of those hospitals were privatized in the 1990s.

Only state-run policlinics are now required to provide medical services to the 
population free of charge. Healthcare, including surgeries, is also supposedly 
free for children aged 7 and younger. Their parents often have to make hefty 
informal payments to doctors, however.

Also, over the past decade the state has partly covered healthcare expenses of 
civil servants, schoolteachers and other public sector employees.

Nanushian said that the proposed insurance system would significantly improve 
public health in Armenia. She argued that many of its low-income citizens in 
need of medical aid do not visit doctors for financial reasons.

Davit Melik-Nubarian, a public health lecturer at Yerevan’s Mkhitar Heratsi 
Medical University, welcomed the plans for mandatory insurance but said its 
introduction should be gradual. He also stressed the importance of proper 
government oversight of medical services that would be covered by the new system.



Prosecutors Block Trial Of Former Armenian Police Chief

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Natonal police chief Vladimir Gasparian meets with police officers in 
Kotayk region, February 23, 2017.


Prosecutors have refused to give the green light to the trial of Vladimir 
Gasparian, a former chief of the Armenian police facing corruption charges, 
saying that a criminal investigation conducted by another law-enforcement agency 
was flawed.

The recently formed agency, the Anti-Corruption Committee, charged Gasparian 
with six counts of illegal enrichment, embezzlement, fraud and other crimes in 
early December. In particular, it claimed that he acquired over 2 billion drams 
($4.1 million) worth of assets “by criminal means” when holding high-level 
positions in Armenia’s security apparatus from 2000-2018.

Gasparian denies the accusations. But he has avoided publicly commenting on them.

The Anti-Corruption Committee announced last week that it has completed the 
investigation and sent its findings to prosecutors for approval.

The Office of the Prosecutor-General told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service on Tuesday 
that it has sent the case back to the law-enforcement body for further 
investigation. It gave no reasons for the decision.

The Anti-Corruption Committee condemned the decision as “illegal and unfounded” 
and said it will ask a more high-ranking prosecutor to overturn it.

“We are more than convinced, though, that that will be fruitless because we 
believe key decisions on such important cases are made at the highest level of 
prosecution,” read a statement released by the committee.

Gasparian, 63, headed the Armenian police from 2011-2018, during former 
President Serzh Sarkisian’s rule. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian sacked him 
immediately after coming to power in May 2018.

Gasparian had served as military police chief from 1997-2010 and as deputy 
defense minister from 2010-2011.



Russia Insists On Mediators’ Renewed Visits To Karabakh

        • Heghine Buniatian
        • Astghik Bedevian

RUSSIA -- A woman looks at her phone as she walks across a bridge with the 
Russian Foreign Ministry building in the background, in central Moscow, on 
October 12, 2021.


Russia has reiterated that the U.S., Russian and French mediators co-heading the 
OSCE Minsk Group should be able to resume their visits to Nagorno-Karabakh as 
part of their peace efforts.

“We are concerned by the fact that the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group are 
still not able to visit the region, familiarize themselves with the situation 
there and map out steps that will help the parties establish people-to-people 
contacts and resolve humanitarian and some other issues,” Alexander Lukashevich, 
the Russian ambassador to the OSCE, told the RIA Novosti agency on Monday.

The co-chairs had for decades travelled to Karabakh and met with its ethnic 
Armenian leadership during regular tours of the conflict zone. The visits 
practically stopped with the onset of the coronavirus pandemic and the 
subsequent outbreak of the Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

The mediators planned to resume their shuttle diplomacy after organizing talks 
between the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in New York in September. 
The trip has still not taken place, however.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian suggested in November that it is blocked 
by Azerbaijan. The Russian Foreign Ministry called afterwards for a “quick 
resumption of visits to Karabakh by the Minsk Group co-chairs.”

In a joint statement issued on December 7, the mediators urged the conflicting 
sides to allow them to visit the conflict zone “as soon as possible” and “assess 
the situation on the ground first-hand.”

Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev mocked the mediating troika and questioned 
the wisdom of the Minsk Group’s continued existence last week. He again claimed 
that that Baku’s victory in the 2020 war ended the Karabakh conflict.

“They must not deal with the Karabakh conflict because that conflict has been 
resolved,” Aliyev told Azerbaijani television.

“If one of the parties says that the conflict has been resolved, there is no 
room for mediation,” he said. “Our position has been communicated to them.”

Armenia as well as the United States and France have publicly insisted that the 
conflict remains unresolved. Russian officials have made similar, albeit more 
implicit, statements.


Nagorno-Karabakh -- Bako Sahakian, the Karabakh president, meets with the U.S., 
Russian and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Stepanakert, October 16, 
2019.

Pro-government and opposition members of the Armenian parliament suggested on 
Tuesday that Lukashevich’s comments were a response to Aliyev.

“Azerbaijan cannot avoid peace talks,” said Anush Beghloyan of the ruling Civil 
Contract party. “The international community will not deem the Karabakh issue 
closed because Azerbaijan tried to solve it by force.”

Tigran Abrahamian, a deputy from the opposition Pativ Unem bloc, said the 
Russian diplomat spoke after official Yerevan’s failure to react to Aliyev’s 
claims.

“I find it important that Russia sees the continuity of the process in the Minsk 
Group framework,” Abrahamian told reporters.

In Stepanakert, a senior Karabakh official, Artak Beglarian, said that Baku is 
continuing to object to the mediators’ renewed visits to the disputed territory.

“I think that after Aliyev’s recent statements and mockery of the Minsk Group 
co-chairs it’s about time these [co-chair] countries … not only visited Artsakh 
without taking into account Azerbaijan’s opinion but also recognized Artsakh’s 
independence or at least the realization of the Artsakh people’s right to 
self-determination,” he said.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.