CivilNet: Azerbaijani Media and the Karabakh War

CIVILNET.AM

08:57

Transfer of Weapons to Armenia

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has stated that he was ready to resume negotiations with the Prime Minister of Armenia, but with the precondition that Armenia return the territories of Karabakh to Azerbaijan. The statement was made during an interview with Russian TASS news agency on October 19, in which he also mentioned that he is convinced that there are illegal transfers of weapons from Russia to Armenia. Although President Aliyev was mainly accusing Armenian businessmen living in Russia, it was apparent that he was inadvertently also addressing Russian officials.

In Azerbaijani press, allegations of illegal arms transfers are not limited to Russia. According to the pro-government Modern.az news site, under the guise of humanitarian aid, weapons have been sent to Armenia from Los Angeles on a Qatar Airways flight. Days ago, Turkey had forbidden the flight from passing through its airspace, effectively banning the shipment of humanitarian aid from the United States to Armenia. The Azerbaijani press had turned the issue of humanitarian aid to Karabakh into source for rumors and disinformation, further provoking its public.

Fallen Soldiers

Ali Karimli, a radical opposition figure, said that Azerbaijani society is fundamentally opposed to the authorities' efforts to establish a ceasefire because Azerbaijanis want to take over more territories. Karimli said with respect to all the fallen soldiers, the people demand to move war forward.

Although the Azerbaijani press hardly reports on the number of fallen soldiers, certain videos of funerals have surfaced on social media. The death of Shaykh Kalbiyev has resonated throughout the masses, and has received varying responses from the Azerbaijani public since Kalbiyev was a sexual minority. The video shows a large attendance at Kalbiyev's funeral with the crowd chanting "Allahu Akbar" (God is great). It is worth noting that the national flags of Turkey and Pakistan were seen in the video during his funeral. The presence of the Pakistani flag is not a coincidence, as there is a close partnership between Baku and Islamabad. The Pakistani Foreign Affairs Minister stated this week that Pakistan fully supports Azerbaijan in the conflict. 

Access to Information

The Azerbaijani authorities are strengthening their control over communication lines in the country by blocking public access to the internet through different tactics. This became clear from the article published in Modern.az on October 20, which notes that the State Communication and Information Service has once again warned Azerbaijan’s citizens to refrain from accessing the Internet through a Virtual Private Network (VPN). Authorities justify their message by arguing that the application is vulnerable and could result in the enemy gathering information. But the populations attempt to access the internet through a VPN hint to the fact that they are seeking information.

Despite this, pro-government media outlets in Azerbaijan persistently deny that there is a lack of public information, and they insist on the public’s unconditional support for the authorities. Azerbaycan24 says that the level of trust in President Aliyev is so high that a large number of Azeris send letters of support to him daily.

In recent days, Azerbaijani media has also been circulating the idea that Armenians can and should live in harmony inside Azerbaijan. 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 10/21/2020

                                        Wednesday, 


U.S. Insists On ‘De-Escalation’ In Karabakh


U.S. - U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks during a news conference at 
the State Department, in Washington, October 14, 2020.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Wednesday that he will reiterate U.S. 
calls for a ceasefire in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone when he separately 
meets with the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Washington on 
Friday.

“Our view remains -- as does the view of nearly every European country -- that 
the right path forward is to cease the conflict, tell them to de-escalate, that 
every country should stay out, provide no fuel for this conflict, no weapon 
systems, no support,” Pompeo told reporters.

“And it is at that point that a diplomatic solution that would be acceptable to 
all can potentially be achieved,” he said. “That’s what I will talk to them 
about on Friday. And I’m anxious to hear from them what they are seeing on the 
ground and how we might get closer to what it is that we think is not only in 
the U.S. best interests but in each of their countries’ interests as well.”

Pompeo would not say whether he will try to broker a ceasefire agreement during 
his talks with Foreign Ministers Zohrab Mnatsakanian of Armenia and Jeyhun 
Bayramov of Azerbaijan. He noted only that such agreements brokered by Russia 
and France earlier this month did not stop the hostilities in and around 
Karabakh.

It also remained unclear whether Mnatsakanian and Bayramov could also with each 
other or hold a trilateral meeting with Pompeo in Washington.

The United States, Russia and France have long been leading international 
efforts to end the Karabakh conflict in their capacity as co-chairs of the Minsk 
Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. They have 
repeatedly issued joint statements calling for an immediate halt to the war that 
broke out on September 27.



Former Armenian Presidents Meet On Karabakh

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia -- Former Presidents Levon Ter-Petrosian (L) and Robert Kocharian.

Armenia’s former Presidents Levon Ter-Petrosian, Serzh Sarkisian and Robert 
Kocharian have met for the first time in many years to discuss the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, it was announced on Wednesday.

Ter-Petrosian’s spokesman, Arman Musinian, said the meeting was necessitated by 
the “current worrying situation” in the conflict zone.

Musinian said Ter-Petrosian, Sarkisian and Kocharian were joined by two former 
Karabakh presidents, Arkady Ghukasian and Bako Sahakian. He gave no other 
details of the meeting. Kocharian’s and Sarkisian’s offices released no 
statements on it.

Ghukasian and Sahakian held on Tuesday separate meetings with Ter-Petrosian and 
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

On Monday Pashinian discussed the hostilities in and around Karabakh with 
leaders of Armenia’s main opposition parties. Newspaper reports said that they 
talked about not only the situation on the ground but also possible solutions to 
the Karabakh conflict that could be proposed by international mediators and 
Russia in particular.

Edmon Marukian, the leader of the opposition Bright Armenia Party, claimed on 
Wednesday that Pashinian has also held a meeting with at least some of the 
former Armenian presidents.

Pashinian’s press secretary, Mane Gevorgian, did not confirm the claim. “If such 
a meeting takes place there will definitely be an official statement on it,” she 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

The ex-presidents’ trilateral meeting is noteworthy given the long history of 
mutual antagonism between Ter-Petrosian on one side and Kocharian and Sarkisian 
on the other.

Ter-Petrosian, who ruled Armenia from 1991-1998, ran in a disputed 2008 
presidential election in an unsuccessful bid to prevent the handover of power 
from Kocharian to Sarkisian. His Armenian National Congress party harshly 
criticized and challenged Sarkisian during the latter’s decade-long rule.



Armenian Leader Sees No ‘Diplomatic Solution’ To Karabakh War


ARMENIA -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian gives an interview to TASS 
Russian news agency, in Yerevan, October 19, 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian urged more Armenians to join their armed forces 
on Wednesday, saying that Azerbaijan is rejecting any compromise solution to the 
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and continuing the war in the conflict zone.

“We have repeatedly stated that we are ready to resolve the issue through mutual 
concessions,” Pashinian said in a live address to the nation aired on Facebook. 
“But what we agree to or would agree to is now not acceptable to Azerbaijan, and 
this shows that it is meaningless to speak of any diplomatic solution at least 
at this stage.”

He said that Azerbaijan is continuing offensive military operations in and 
around Karabakh and “throwing its last reserves into the battle” in a bid to 
defeat the Armenian side. In these circumstances, he said, Armenians have no 
choice but to keep fighting “until it will be possible to diplomatically achieve 
some acceptable variant.”

Pashinian went on to urge the heads of Armenian local government bodies, 
political parties and other groups to form volunteer units that will join troops 
fighting against the Azerbaijani army on the Karabakh frontlines.

“If this process is organized effectively, we will eventually manage to achieve 
a diplomatic solution acceptable to us because in essence Azerbaijan is saying 
today that it will not agree to anything but Karabakh’s capitulation,” added 
Pashinian.


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- An Ethnic Armenian soldier is seen at fighting positions on 
the front line in Nagorno-Karabakh, 

A senior aide to Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev denounced Pashinian’s 
remarks, saying they show that Yerevan is not committed to a peaceful resolution 
of the Karabakh conflict.

“With this statement the leadership of Armenia admits that Armenia’s aim is to 
maintain the occupation of Azerbaijani territory,” Hikmet Hajiyev told the RIA 
Novosti news agency.

Hajiyev insisted that Azerbaijan's position on a Karabakh settlement is 
“constructive.” But he did not clarify whether Baku supports an unconditional 
halt to the fighting sought by the Russian, U.S., and French mediators.

Pashinian’s appeal came hours after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held 
separate talks with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts in Moscow.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said the talks focused on the implementation of 
Armenian-Azerbaijani ceasefire agreements that were reached earlier this month. 
A ministry statement described the talks as a follow-up to Russian President 
Vladimir Putin’s “telephone contacts” with Pashinian and Aliyev. It reported no 
concrete understandings reached by the ministers.

Hostilities along the Karabakh “line of contact” have continued despite the 
truce agreements brokered by Russia and France. The conflicting parties accuse 
each other of violating them.

In his remarks, Pashinian praised Russia for “doing its best” to halt the 
hostilities and revive the Karabakh peace process. Moscow is also fulfilling its 
role as a “strategic ally of Armenia and the Armenian people,” he stressed.



Iran Starts Air Defense Drills As Karabakh Fighting Goes On


IRAN -- A Sayyad 2 missile is fired by the Talash air defense system during 
drills in an undisclosed location in Iran, November 5, 2018

The Iranian military began on Wednesday large-scale air defense exercises amid 
continuing heavy fighting between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces along Iran’s 
northwestern border.

Iranian media reported that the exercises will cover half of the country and 
take place as if it is a “real battle.”

The Mehr news agency quoted General Abbas Farajpour as saying that Iranian air 
defense units will practice “protecting the country's strategic sites with the 
help of homegrown missile, radar and reconnaissance systems as well as 
electronic warfare, communication and monitoring equipment.”

"The first stage of the drill involves the expansion and deployment of defense 
systems, including missile and radar systems, with a focus on the mobility and 
rapid response of operational forces,” said Farajpour.

An area south of Nagorno-Karabakh and north of Iran is currently the epicenter 
of the continuing hostilities in the Karabakh conflict zone. The warring sides 
are using large numbers of soldiers, tanks, artillery and other military 
hardware there.


Missiles fired by opposing sides in the Nagorno-Karabakh war hit a district in 
Iran’s East Azerbaijan province.

Tehran says that dozens of rockets and other projected have mistakenly landed 
near Iranian border villages since the start of the war on September 27. It has 
threatened to take “tough measures” if Armenian or Azerbaijani forces continue 
to accidentally shell Iranian territory.

Iranian news agencies reported that a “foreign drone” crashed on Tuesday in 
Iran’s Khoda Afarin district adjacent to the southern sections of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani “line of contact.” The district governor said that Iranian 
military experts are examining its wreckage.

Another unmanned aerial vehicle was reportedly shot down or crashed last week in 
Iran’s Ardabil province east of Khoda Afarin.

Like other foreign powers, Iran has repeatedly called for an immediate end to 
the war. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has spoken by phone with the leaders 
of Armenia and Azerbaijan as well as Russian President Vladimir Putin.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


CivilNet: Nouvelle violation de la seconde tentative de cessez-le-feu

CIVILNET.AM

11:03

By Ani Paitjan

Le nouveau cessez-le-feu conclu entre l’Arménie et l’Azerbaïdjan et entré en vigueur le 18 octobre à minuit a déjà été violé par les forces azerbaïdjanaises. 

Selon l’Armée de défense de la République du Haut-Karabakh, le nouvel accord de trêve temporaire humanitaire conclu à Moscou a été respecté de manière générale durant la nuit, sauf de 00:04 à 02:25 dans le nord de la région et de 02:20 à 02:25 dans le sud, où les forces azerbaïdjanaises ont fait usage de tire de lance-grenades. 

Vers 07:20, les forces azerbaïdjanaises ont attaqué en direction du sud, 

dans les environs du Khoda Afarin Dam (réservoir), pour adopter une position plus favorable. Le réservoir est un barrage situé à la frontière entre le Haut-Karabakh et l’Iran sur la rivière de l’Araxe qui sert à la production d’énergie hydroélectrique et à l’irrigation. 

Selon la secrétaire de presse de l’Armée de défense de l’Arménie, il y a des morts et des blessés des deux côtés.

L'Arménie et l’Azerbaïdjan s’étaient mis d’accord pour une seconde tentative de trêve humanitaire temporaire permettant l’échange de corps et de prisonniers. La décision avait été après une nouvelle médiation avec les présidents français, russe et américain qui sont les coprésidents du Groupe de Minsk de l’OSCE. Ce groupe est en charge de la résolution pacifique du conflit dans le Haut-Karabakh depuis 1992.

La première tentative du 10 octobre a très vite été violé par l'Azerbaïdjan, entraînant une nouvelle escalade de la violence dans la région.

Fierce clashes continue in southern direction of Artsakh – MoD

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 21:12, 8 October, 2020

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 8, ARMENPRESS. Fierce clashes take place along Artsakh-Azerbaijan contact line, particularly in the southern direction, ARMENPRESS reports representative of the Defense Ministry of Armenia Artsrun Hovhannisyan said in a press conference.

‘’Starting from morning the Azerbaijani armed forces resumed attacks both in the north and south. The Armenian side inflicted heavy manpower and military equipment losses on the enemy, repelling them to their initial positions. At this moment particularly fierce clashes are taking place in the southern direction’’, Hovhannisyan said, adding that the clashes take place all day long.

Azerbaijan, backed by Turkey , unleashed war against Artsakh on September 27. Turkey, in addition to various types of assistance to Azerbaijan, including using Turkish air force against Artsakh and Armenia, has also deployed thousands of mercenaries and terrorists from Syria in Azerbaijan to fight against Artsakh.

So far the Armenian side has reported 350 casualties among the military and 21 civilians, Azerbaijan’s manpower losses are nearly 4000, which includes both servicemen from the regular Azerbaijani army and terrorists.

President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan called for an new coalition against international terrorism on October 6.

The Armenian side has reported 350 military casualties and 21 civilians. Azerbaijan’s manpower losses is over 4.000, which includes both regular army servicemen and jihadist terrorists. The Azerbaijani side has also lost 16 helicopters, 17 warplanes, 496 armored vehicle, 145 UAVs and 4 TOS 1 Heavy Flamethrower System.

Editing and translating by Tigran Sirekanyan

​​Armenia’s Leader Makes Plea to U.S. as Conflict Rages With Azerbaijan

New York Times
Oct 4 2020
 
 
 
Armenia’s Leader Makes Plea to U.S. as Conflict Rages With Azerbaijan
 
Nikol Pashinyan, Armenia’s prime minister, said he was promised a call with President Trump over Turkey’s role in the intensifying conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. Then Mr. Trump fell ill.
 
By Andrew Higgins
 
Oct. 4, 2020Updated 6:04 p.m. ET
 
When Nikol Pashinyan, Armenia’s prime minister, spoke by telephone on Thursday with President Trump’s national security adviser, he raised a delicate issue: Why is nothing being done to stop a longtime United States ally, Turkey, from using American-made F-16 jets against ethnic Armenians in a disputed mountain region?
 
Mr. Pashinyan’s call to the national security adviser, Robert O’Brien, followed an eruption of heavy fighting in and around Nagorno-Karabakh, a remote territory at the center of the most enduring and venomous of the “frozen conflicts” left by the collapse of the Soviet Union.
 
The breakaway enclave, legally part of Azerbaijan but controlled by Armenians for the past three decades, has seen many military flare-ups over the years. But the current fighting, Mr. Pashinyan said in a telephone interview, has taken on a far more dangerous dimension because of Turkey’s direct military intervention in support of Azerbaijan, its ethnic Turkic ally.
 
On Sunday, news reports said, the forces of Armenia and Azerbaijan, both former Soviet republics, exchanged rocket fire, with missiles falling on Azerbaijan’s second largest city, Ganja, and on the Armenian-controlled capital of Nagorno-Karabakh. Each side accused the other of targeting civilians while denying carrying out any attacks itself on residential areas.
 
 
Continue reading the main story
 
In a statement Sunday, the International Committee of the Red Cross denounced “a surge in attacks using heavy explosive weaponry on populated areas,” which it said “is taking a deadly toll on civilians.” It said that hundreds of homes, as well as schools and hospitals, had been destroyed or damaged, forcing families to flee or retreat “underground to unheated basements, sheltering day and night from the violence.”
 
The conflict has set off alarms about the risks of a wider war and put the United States, with its large and politically influential Armenian diaspora, in the uncomfortable position of watching Turkey, a vital NATO ally, deploying F-16 jets in support of Armenia’s enemies.
 
“The United States,” Mr. Pashinyan said in an interview, “needs to explain whether it gave those F-16s to bomb peaceful villages and peaceful populations.” He said that Mr. O’Brien had “heard and acknowledged” his concerns and promised to set up a phone conversation between the Armenian leader and President Trump.
 
 
That opportunity to rally the United States to Armenia’s side vanished just a few hours later when President Trump announced that he had tested positive for the coronavirus.
 
But Mr. Trump’s health issues, analysts say, have only accentuated his administration’s disengagement from a conflict that offers no easy diplomatic victories. It has confounded decades of efforts to resolve a dispute that has left Armenians in control of not only Nagorno-Karabakh but large swathes of Azerbaijani territory outside the breakaway enclave.
 
Mr. Pashinyan declined to say whether Armenia might be ready to surrender any occupied Azerbaijani land as part of a possible peace settlement, insisting that this was not up to him but a matter for the leaders of Nagorno-Karabakh, a nominally independent entity ruled by ethnic Armenians.
 
Turkey said on Sunday that Azerbaijani forces had retaken Jabrail, the latest in a series of villages previously occupied by Armenia now said to be back under Azerbaijani control as a result of fighting over the past week. The claim could not be independently confirmed.
 
The Trump administration, distracted by other bigger issues like China, has “simply not been paying attention and been completely disengaged,” said Thomas de Waal, a British expert on the region and author of a book on Nagorno-Karabakh, “Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War.”
 
For Armenia, Mr. Pashinyan said, the current fighting, which began Sept. 27 after months of rising tensions, poses an “existential threat” because of the role of Turkey, whose precursor, the Ottoman Empire, killed an estimated 1.5 million Armenians at the end of World War I. The U.S. Congress and many countries have declared that slaughter a “genocide,” a label Turkey strenuously rejects.
 
Armenia, too, has selective memories of the past, with Mr. Pashinyan dismissing the worst atrocity of the 1991-1994 Karabakh war — the 1992 killing of hundreds of Azerbaijani civilians by Armenian fighters near the town of Khojaly — as a “pure propaganda trick.”
 
Armenia and Azerbaijan have a long record of playing down or ignoring each other’s past traumas, a tendency that has made it all but impossible for either side to accept legitimate grievances and has frustrated outside efforts to settle their feud over Nagorno-Karabakh.
 
“Each side focuses exclusively on their own traumas and belittles those of the other side,” Mr. De Waal said. “This conflict will go on for at least another generation unless it can be smothered by an international security operation” like the one that tamped down war in the Balkans in the 1990s. That, Mr. de Waal added, “is highly unlikely in the current international situation.”
 
Image
A crater in Beylagan, Azerbaijan, that locals said was caused by an Armenian rocket strike on Sunday.Credit…Tofik Babayev/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
 
Azerbaijan, Mr. Pashinyan said, has long harbored hopes of recovering Nagorno-Karabakh by force but was “encouraged” by Turkey to launch its recent offensive against the Armenian-controlled enclave.
 
“This is a continuation of the genocidal policies carried out by Turkey against the Armenians,” he said. He accused Turkey of not only providing air support but also recruiting Syrian fighters, whom he called “mercenaries and terrorists,” to strengthen Azerbaijan’s military forces on the ground.
 
Turkey has denied Armenia’s accusations, including unsubstantiated claims that a Turkish F-16 last week shot down an Armenian jet. It has instead attributed the spiraling violence to Armenia, with the foreign ministry in Ankara saying on Sunday that “Armenia is the biggest barrier to peace and stability in the region.”
 
Though obscured by a fog of propaganda by all sides, the conflict has clearly escalated beyond a local ethnic dispute into a bigger struggle as an increasingly assertive Turkey flexes its muscle in a region traditionally dominated by Russia.
 
Russia has a military base in Armenia and, with the United States standing back, Moscow has taken the lead in diplomatic efforts, so far fruitless, to calm the fighting while avoiding a direct confrontation with Turkey, with which it is already fighting proxy wars in Syria and Libya.
 
 
Describing the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh between Christian Armenia and Muslim Azerbaijan as a “civilizational front line,” Mr. Pashinyan said the dispute “is not about territory” but involves far bigger and more important stakes.
 
“Armenians in the south Caucasus are the last remaining obstacle in the way of Turkish expansion toward the north, the south and the east,” he said.
 
  
 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 09/23/2020

                        Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Armenia Hires Lobbying Firm For ‘Strategic’ Talks With U.S.

        • Sargis Harutyunyan

U.S. -- Former U.S. Senator Bob Dole salutes before the flag-draped coffin of 
former U.S. President George H. W. Bush at the U.S. Capitol rotunda in 
Washington, December 4, 2018

The Armenian government confirmed on Wednesday that it has hired a 
Washington-based lobbying firm ahead of fresh negotiations with U.S. officials 
which it hopes will boost U.S.-Armenian relations.

Lobbying records in Washington revealed last week a one-month contract between 
the government and the Alston & Bird law firm worth $10,000. It was signed on 
September 15 by Armenian Ambassador to the United States Varuzhan Nersesyan and 
Bob Dole, a former pro-Armenian U.S. senator who now works as a special counsel 
at Alston & Bird.

“We will assist the Republic of Armenia in its efforts to build on the strategic 
partnership with the United States in advance of planned diplomatic talks in 
October of 2020,” the 97-year-old Dole said in a letter to Nersesyan.

“During the course of this engagement, Alston & Bird will monitor current events 
relevant to US-Armenia relations and provide strategic counsel with respect to 
improvement of that relationship,” he wrote. “These services may include 
outreach to United States Government officials as well as Members of Congress 
and their staffs.”

The lobbying firm will help Yerevan prepare for the final round of the 
U.S.-Armenia Strategic Dialogue which will take place in Washington next month. 
The Armenian delegation is expected to be headed by Foreign Minister Zohrab 
Mnatsakanian.

“The format and level of the final meeting is still being discussed,” said 
Armella Shakarian, head of the U.S. and Canada desk at the Armenian Foreign 
Ministry. It should be ascertained over the next week, she said.


Armenia - Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanian (R) and U.S. Deputy Assistant 
Secretary of State George Kent are about to sign an agreement after the first 
session of the U.S.-Armenia Strategic Dialouge in Yerevan, May 7, 2019.

The first session of the “strategic dialogue” was held in Yerevan in May 2019. 
Senior U.S. and Armenian officials discussed a wide range of issues and pledged 
to strive for closer bilateral ties. The two sides held two more sessions via a 
video link earlier this month.

Shakarian said that the dialogue has widened the scope of issues on the agenda 
of U.S.-Armenian cooperation. “We expect the implementation of more far-reaching 
projects and the development of economic ties with the United States,” she told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

The official added that defense and security issues are also on the agenda of 
the dialogue. “We are discussing ways of deepening relations in these areas,” 
she said.

U.S. officials promised greater financial assistance to Armenia following the 
May 2019 talks. Washington increased that assistance by 40 percent, to over $60 
million, last year to support the implementation of the Armenian government’s 
ambitious reform agenda.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo praised the government’s declared efforts to 
root out corruption, strengthen the rule of law and improve the domestic 
business environment when he congratulated Armenia on its Independence Day on 
Monday.



Armenian Opposition To Demand Snap Elections

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

Armenia -- Ishkhan Saghatelian, a leader of the opposition Armenian 
Revolutionary Federation, at a news conference in Yerevan, April 30, 2019.

The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) and two other opposition 
parties will demand the holding of fresh general elections at their first joint 
rally scheduled for October 8, a Dashnaktsutyun leader said on Wednesday.

Dashnaktsutyun, the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK) and Hayrenik Party announced 
their decision to rally supporters in Yerevan’s Liberty Square on Tuesday. In a 
joint statement, they denounced Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and his cabinet 
and cited “the need for the formation of a new kind of national government.”

“The main demand is pre-term parliamentary elections and that requires the prime 
minister’s resignation,” Dashnaktsutyun’s Ishkhan Saghatelian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service. “Other details will be voiced at the rally.”

Just hours after the three parties made the announcement, it emerged that a 
court in Yerevan scheduled for Wednesday a hearing on the pre-trial arrest of 
the BHK’s indicted leader Gagik Tsarukian sought by prosecutors. Tsarukian and 
his lawyers did not show up for the hearing, leading the court to postpone it 
until Friday.

Alen Simonian, a senior lawmaker from the ruling My Step bloc, claimed that the 
planned rally is aimed at helping Tsarukian avoid arrest on vote buying charges 
strongly denied by him.

Saghatelian categorically denied such a connection. “We are saying the opposite: 
that these authorities keep trying to silence their political opponents through 
criminal cases and persecution,” he said.

The Dashnaktsutyun leader insisted that the rally will take place as planned 
even if Tsarukian is arrested. “We hope that the authorities will not opt for 
that,” he said.

The three parties agreed in June to work together in challenging the government 
shortly after Tsarukian was stripped of his parliamentary immunity from 
prosecution and charged with bribing voters ahead of 2017 parliamentary 
elections. The BHK leader, who is one of Armenia’s richest men, rejects the 
accusations as politically motivated.

With 8.3 percent of the vote, Tsarukian’s party came in a distant second in the 
last general elections held in December 2018 and widely recognized as 
democratic. Dashnaktsutyun got only 3.9 percent, failing to win any parliament 
seats.

Dashnaktsutyun and the BHK had for years been represented in former President 
Serzh Sarkisian’s government toppled during the 2018 “Velvet Revolution.” They 
joined Pashinian’s first cabinet formed in May 2018 but were ousted from it five 
months later when the prime minister accused them of secretly collaborating with 
the former ruling Republican Party.

The third opposition party, Hayrenik, was set up early this year by Artur 
Vanetsian, the former head of Armenia’s National Security Service (NSS). 
Vanetsian fell out with Pashinian and resigned as NSS director in September 2019.



China Opens New Embassy Complex In Armenia


Armenia -- Chinese Ambassador Tian Erlong (R) shows Armenian President Armen 
Sarkissian around China's newly built embassy complex in Yerevan, September 23, 
2020.

President Armen Sarkissian visited China’s new and sprawling embassy complex in 
Armenia on Wednesday, saying that its construction highlights Beijing’s desire 
to deepen Chinese-Armenian relations.

Work on the Chinese Embassy’s new building and adjacent facilities in Yerevan 
began three years ago. Officials said at the time that it will be China’s second 
largest diplomatic mission in the former Soviet Union.

“You are the first and most honorable guest of our new embassy,” Chinese 
Ambassador Tian Erlong told Sarkissian before showing him around the 
40,000-square-meter compound.

Sarkissian toured the compound ahead of China’s National Day that will be marked 
on October 1. He congratulated Tian and other Yerevan-based Chinese diplomats on 
the upcoming holiday.

“I think China can be proud of such presence,” the president told the envoy at 
an ensuing meeting. “We regard this [new embassy complex] as China’s bid to 
deepen Chinese-Armenian relations and elevate them to a higher level.”


Armenia -- Armenian President Armen Sarkissian (R) visits China's newly built 
embassy complex in Yerevan, .

“Despite their different size, Armenia and China have many similarities: they 
both are global nations in a certain sense,” he said.

Chinese President Xi Jinping praised bilateral ties when he congratulated 
Sarkissian on the 29th anniversary of Armenia’s declaration of independence on 
Monday. He said Beijing and Yerevan support each other in the international 
arena on “issues which are vital for the interests of the two countries.”

“I attach great importance to the development of the Chinese-Armenia relations 
and I am ready to make, together with you, joint efforts to elevate our 
multifaceted cooperation to a new level,” Xi wrote in a congratulatory message.

Xi reaffirmed China’s desire to deepen political, economic and cultural ties 
with Armenia when he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Beijing in May 
2019. “Constructive and productive relations with China are very important for 
us,” Pashinian said, for his part.


China -- Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian in Beijing, May 14, 2019.

In August 2018, Pashinian attended the inauguration of a new school in Yerevan 
built by the Chinese government. He said that having many Chinese speakers is an 
“economic necessity” for Armenia.

China is Armenia’s second largest trading partner after Russia. According to 
official Armenian statistics, Chinese-Armenian trade totaled $405 million in the 
first half of this year.

Sarkissian called on Wednesday for closer commercial ties between Armenian and 
Chinese high-tech companies. “I would be very happy to make my modest 
contribution to the development of Chinese-Armenian economic relations in the 
area of high technology,” he said.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Most of industrial accidents in Armenia occurred during mining last year: statistics

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 19 2020

A total of 27 industrial accidents were recorded in Armenia in 2019 due to violations of standards on occupational safety and health, the latest figures released by the Statistical Committee of Armenia show.

Most of the accidents – 17 – occurred in Syunik Province, in which 17 employees, including two women, were injured.  4 of the accidents took place in capital Yerevan, 2 – in Armavir Province, and one – in Lori, Kotayk and Aragatsotn Provinces, each.

According to the statistics, last year 3 people died as a result of industrial accidents in Yerevan, Aragatsotn and Lori Provinces.

Most of these accidents (66%) occurred in the mining industry due to the violation of workplace safety standards. 5 accidents were registered in the processing industry, while 4 others were electrical and gas leak accidents.

The affected employees or their relatives were paid a total of 70.8 million drams in compensation for the damages. 



Armenia, Artsakh discuss foreign policy issues

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 13:07,

STEPANAKERT, SEPTEMBER 18, ARMENPRESS. President of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan held a meeting on September 18 in Stepanakert with a delegation of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia headed by its Secretary General Vahagn Melikian to discuss foreign policy.

“A wide range of foreign policy issues” were discussed, Harutyunyan’s office said.

“President Harutyunyan attached importance to close and coordinated work with partner organizations, emphasizing the need for conducting a united and harmonious foreign policy for withstanding common challenges.”

Melikian told the president that the meetings and discussions will contribute to exchange of experience and strengthening of cooperation between the Armenian and Artsakhi foreign ministries.

Artsakh’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Masis Mayilian also participated in the meeting.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

A large-scale program for the development of horticulture will be launched in Akna district of Artsakh

Panorama, Armenia
Sept 14 2020

Artsakh President Arayik Harutyunyan visited the Akna district of Askeran on Sunday, Information department at the President's office reported.

The president got acquainted on site with the activities of farmers engaged in horticulture, cultivation of vegetables and tobacco, inquired about the yield indices and realization issues. President Harutyunyan noted that the Government has been developing a program that envisages planting gardens throughout the whole district of Akna.

"The problem of irrigation in the district will be solved in the next two years. The works have already started. According to experts, the area has a great potential for the development of horticulture, and in the next stage the Government will start support programs in that direction. They will be accessible to all who wish," said the President, noting that they will be consistent in targeted and efficient use of the allocated means.



Turkey is an exporter of instability, Armenia’s top diplomat says

Public Radio of Armenia
Sept 15 2020

Armenia sees Turkey as a country promoting “policies of instability and aggression, Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan said in an interview with Italian EFE agency.

“While all countries were calling for a halt to the escalation with Azerbaijan, Ankara was doing the opposite by instigating the conflict and approving joint military maneuvers with Baku,” the Minister said,

Mnatsakanián said the denial of the genocide, the threats, the economic blockade and the total support for Baku represent a “threat to the security of Armenia.”

“While Turkey says it does not want problems with its neighbors, in reality it is an exporter of instability and aggression for its entire neighborhood and this policy is exported to the South Caucasus. We cannot remain indifferent,” he said.

Referring to the Karabakh conflict, the Foreign Minister said Yerevan believes that the best thing for regional stability would be to strengthen the ceasefire regime in force since 1994 with “control mechanisms” that prevent escalations and that “target” the party responsible for violating the truce.

“But Baku has been avoiding it. They had better accept it. De-escalation is the priority now. That is the most important thing,” he stressed.

The Foreign Minister stressed that there is no alternative to a peaceful settlement.

“No one can expect a solution at the expense of Armenia or Nagorno Karabakh,” he said.

In this regard, Yerevan has two priorities: the recognition of Nagorno Karabakh’s right to self-determination “without limitations” and security agreements that prevent the resumption of hostilities.

“For us everything starts from security. The physical and existential security of Nagorno Karabakh. But security is one issue and the status of Nagorno Karabakh is another issue,” he stressed.

And he defended the participation of the Nagorno Karabakh authorities in the peace process, as they have received the mandate from the people to negotiate.