Azerbaijan shells Armenia border guard guiding posts near border with Iran

Save

Share

 11:24,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. At around 10:00-10:15 this morning, Azerbaijan once again violated the ceasefire and used drones (one of which has crashed within the Republic of Armenia borders) to shell border guard guiding posts of the Republic of Armenia at its southern border with Iran, the Armenian Unified Infocenter said.

Noting this latest violation of the ceasefire and the shelling of the state border of the Republic of Armenia, the Republic of Armenia Ministry of Defense declares that it is forced to strike retaliatory blows at the Azerbaijani forces.

Armenian MFA expresses solidarity with French President Macron

Save

Share

 02:30,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 26, ARMENPRESS. The Foreign Ministry of Armenia expresses full solidarity with French President Emmanuel Macron following the incident that Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan made insulting remarks addressed to the French President, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Twitter page of MFA Armenia.

‘’We express our full solidarity with France and French President Emmanuel Macron. Insulting rhetoric, supporting terrorism, using religious issues for igniting hatred have no place in the civilized world’’, reads the statement.

CivilNet: "Eat it and don’t ask", War Soup in Karabakh

CIVILNET.AM

23:51

By Michael Krikorian

The good thing about eating bad food in a conflict zone is when you have something that hits the spot, well, it’s like a slap upside your head reminding you that food isn’t just fuel.  

After succumbing to war food, I got that slap Sunday in Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno Karabakh, aka Artsakh, where the Azerbaijanis are attacking the Armenians.  

I had the soup at Samra restaurant on Tumanian Street. The soup, the owner tells me, is called Gerusoos, which roughly translates to “Eat it and don’t ask.”  So I don’t ask. It’s a soulful chicken soup with a little rice, potatoes and it hits the spot. So much that I loudly announce to the owner, Hovik Asmaryan, and a few others present that Samra is the best restaurant in Stepanakert. He reluctantly agrees, but insists on telling a story related to my bold announcement.  

“A boy comes home and tells his parents ‘Papa, Mama! I won first place in the running race. 100 meters. I won!’ The parents are so proud. ‘How many other runners were there?’ the father asks. The boy proudly says ‘It was only me running the race. But, I won.’ ”

“That’s how I feel,” Asmaryan, 50, says, “I have no competition. All the other restaurants are absent because of the war.”

Samra he says means a light brown or tan-color. In fact, it is a common Muslim name for girls. This Samra is not so much a restaurant any more, but a way station that dishes out free food to soldiers, journalists, or anyone who drops in. Asmaryan will not take money, though he is open to taking product donations so he and his wife, Isabel, who is the chef, can cook for others.

Hovik and Isabel and three children, ages 14, 13, and 11, lived in Aleppo, Syria, where he made a good living running an auto parts store. But, after living through two years of the utterly brutal war, they moved to the then-tranquil Stepanakert.  

Then war came to town the morning of September 27. The family heard the first explosions and gathered in a hallway of their two-story home. “I didn’t want to panic my children so I told them that it was fireworks. My youngest son shook his head and said ‘No, those are bombs. The war is here now.’”

Like many, Asmaryan felt a war was coming because he knew of the extensive arms build up of the Azeris, especially drones from Israel. “They were busy buying so many weapons. Why does someone buy weapons when no one wants to invade your country? To invade someone else’s land.”

When the shelling started, the family closed Samra, a fast-food restaurant specializing in sandwiches.  A couple of days later, soldiers were walking by and Asmaryan offered them sandwiches. Isabel offered soup. The fighters longed for home cooking. The soup made the day. And they knew better than to ask about it.

Behind the restaurant, in front of his home is his garden of rose bushes, fruit trees and a trellis that will someday produce kiwis. Asmaryan sits down and talks about his paradise.

“When my children and wife are here with me, this is my heaven. My children are in Yerevan now. It’s better for them to be there, but it hurts they are away. My wife, she is there now, but she will return tonight.”

He is silent for many seconds. Then he looks around his lovely little garden and smiles sadly. “There are no birds singing here now. Only bombs. But, in the spring the birds will be back. I know they will.”

One last thing. I show him my notebook and ask if my spelling of his wife’s name, Isabel, is correct. “I don’t know,” he says. “I never have to write her letters. Why should I? She is usually always with me.”

Also Read: On Karabakh Frontline, Faith Remains a Key Weapon

Michael Krikorian is a writer from Los Angeles. He was previously a reporter for the Los Angeles Times and for the Fresno Bee. He writes under the pseudonym "Jimmy Dolan" for the Mozza Tribune. His website is www.KrikorianWrites.com and his first novel is called "Southside".

Azeri troops use Armenian military fatigues as disguise on the battlefield

Save

Share

 16:43,

STEPANAKERT, OCTOBER 24, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani soldiers are regularly disguised in Armenian military fatigues in their attacks on Artsakh, the Human Rights Defender of Artsakh Artak Beglaryan said.

“We’ve received information already from several directions and troops that the Azeri armed forces are regularly carrying out attacks also dressed in Armenian army uniforms. What goal does this pursue? First of all, most probably the Azerbaijani side wants to confuse Artsakh soldiers and achieve success. Secondly, on one hand they seek to artificially reduce and conceal their victims, and on the other hand try to present them as Armenian victims during exchange of bodies.

According to the eyewitness account of a soldier, around two weeks ago during one such attack in the direction of Mataghis the Azerbaijani side left nearly 40 bodies behind and was repelled, all the bodies were in Armenian uniforms. Given that this was recorded in various directions and periods of time, we can’t rule out that the number of such losses can be significantly higher. Moreover, it is likely that most of them are mercenary terrorists. Anyhow, I am sure that when the time comes for exchange of bodies, it will be possible to prove the origin and identities of the bodies through professional methodology,” he said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenians in Turkey appear under target of hate speech and threats: MP Paylan among them

Save

Share

 11:54,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 23, ARMENPRESS. Hate speech and threats to Armenians in Turkey have intensified amid the ongoing Turkey-backed Azerbaijani aggression on Armenia and Artsakh.

Ethnic Armenian MP of the Turkish parliament Garo Paylan, in an interview to Duvar, stated that the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has created an “ordinary hate atmosphere” in the country.

The news agency noticed that Garo Paylan is also under target in Turkey for supporting the ceasefire, calling for peace.

Paylan said various identities, citizens of various faiths and beliefs live in Turkey. “However, the current administration, unfortunately, continues running its policy having nationalist, racist and religious direction”, Paylan said.

At the time when the Turkish government stands by Azerbaijan in the war around Nagorno Karabakh, Armenians in Turkey have appeared under the target of hate speech and threats. “In such situation when Turkey is standing by Azerbaijan and when hate speech is applied on Armenians, we feel the pigeon’s anxiety as once said our beloved Hrant Dink. Unfortunately, we feel the deepest anxiety of the pigeon these days”, Garo Paylan said.

He said peaceful civilians suffer during the war, adding that he sees the solution of the issue on the peace table.

On September 27 Azerbaijan, with the support of Turkey, launched a massive attack against the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), by using all its ammunition, targeting also the civilian infrastructures both in Artsakh and Armenia. There are confirmed reports that there are mercenaries in the Azerbaijani army brought from Syria by Turkey for fighting against the Armenian side.

On October 10 an agreement has been reached in Moscow between the Russian, Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers on cessation of hostilities in the NK conflict zone for humanitarian purposes. However, minutes after the agreement entered into force Azerbaijan again launched attacks against Artsakh and till now continues violating the humanitarian truce.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Artsakh bomb squads discover Azeri-fired cluster missile warhead with 260 bomblets in FARM

Save

Share

 16:35,

STEPANAKERT, OCTOBER 20, ARMENPRESS. A missile with an internationally prohibited cluster warhead fired by the Azerbaijani armed forces on civilian settlements of Artsakh has been discovered near Stepanakert City, the capital of Artsakh. More than 260 exploded and unexploded shrapnel bomblets were found.

“The area where the missile was found is of economic significance,” the State Service of Emergency Situations of Artsakh said.  “Residents here make their living by farming, gardening and beekeeping. There is not a single military facility anywhere nearby,” the service said, adding that the bomb squads will dispose the ordnance.

The State Service of Emergency Situations of Artsakh called on citizens of the country to dial 911, 112 or 101 immediately upon noticing bombs, rockets or anything resembling them in gardens, forests or yards, or anywhere else in the country.

Numerous towns and cities of Artsakh were hit by Azeri rocket-artillery strikes since September 27.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Russian Deputy FM does not rule out Russia-USA face-to-face contacts on NK conflict

Save

Share

 18:39,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 14, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Foreign Minister of Russia Sergei Ryabkov does not rule out face-to-face contacts between Russia and the USA over the situation in Nagorno Karabakh, ARMENPRESS reports, Ryabkov told TASS.

‘’Contacts with the USE over Nagorno Karabakh conflict will continue. I think face-to-face contacts are fully possible, depending on the situation in the region, including before the presidential elections in the USA’’, he said.

According to the Deputy Minister, the comments of the U.S. Department of State over Nagorno Karabakh in no way mention Russia or the role of Russia in bringing the conflicting sides to an agreement.

‘’We have recorded it as a fact, but it will not hinder the dialogue with the United States on the substantive side of the issue’’, Ryabkov added.

Editing and translating by Tigran Sirekanyan

Russian-brokered ceasefire in Azeri-Armenian war collapses

WSWS – World Socialist Web Site
Oct 13 2020
 
 
 
 
Alex Lantier
 
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s attempt to broker a truce in the two-week-old war between Azerbaijan and Armenia collapsed over the weekend. Fighting erupted between the two former Soviet republics in the Caucasus five minutes after the agreement reached by Azeri and Armenian diplomats in Moscow was to go into effect, at noon on Saturday. Bombings of civilian targets on both sides, and bloodshed along the front and in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region all continue to mount.
 
The Kremlin had invited delegations from the Azeri and Armenian foreign ministries on October 9 to Moscow, declaring: “The President of Russia is issuing a call to halt the fighting in the Nagorno-Karabakh on humanitarian grounds in order to exchange dead bodies and prisoners.” French President Emmanuel Macron, who has aggressively backed Armenia, also called for a cease-fire.
 
 
Armenian officials went to the talks, reversing their stated position that they would only attend talks if a cease-fire was first agreed to. Shortly before talks began in Moscow, however, officials in both Azerbaijan and its main regional backer, Turkey, said they would make no compromises.
 
Turkish presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin bluntly predicted that the Moscow talks would be a failure. “If they’re calling only for a ceasefire, if they’re working only towards a ceasefire, it will be nothing more than a repeat of what went on for the last 30 years or so,” he said. Restating the Turkish government’s position that Armenia illegally occupies the Karabakh, Kalin added: “It is almost certain to fail if it doesn’t also involve a detailed plan to end the occupation.”
 
Azeri President Ilham Aliyev gave a televised address to the nation insisting he would make no concessions to Armenia. Aliyev said, “Azerbaijan’s use of force had changed the facts on the ground” and that has “proved there was a military solution to the dispute,” Reuters reported. He added that these negotiations were Armenia’s “last chance” to peacefully resolve the conflict.
 
Aliyev added that Azeri forces had taken the communities of Hadrut, Chayli, Yukhari Guzlak, Gorazilli, Gishlag, Garajalli, Afandilar, Suleymanli and Sur in the Karabakh, calling it a “historic victory.” He reported that Armenian-held Fuzuli province in Azerbaijan had also been surrounded, and that Azeri forces had left a small escape route through which Armenians were leaving.
 
After a ceasefire was briefly announced for noon on Saturday, fighting soon re-erupted on both sides. Armenian officials charged Azeri troops with launching an assault at 12:05 p.m., while Azeri officials charged Armenia with bombing civilian targets. Fighting intensified on Sunday, with AFP reporting artillery fire targeting the Azeri city of Barda and the Armenian-held city of Stepanakert in the Nagorno-Karabakh. An Armenian missile also hit Azerbaijan’s second-largest city, Ganja, killing nine people and wounding 34.
 
On Monday, Azeri and Armenian forces traded accusations of ceasefire violations, while both claimed to respect it, with Azeri forces accused of shelling the conflict zone and “large-scale hostilities” near Hadrut, and Armenian forces accused of shelling front-line areas of Azerbaijan.
 
Moscow and Tehran both fruitlessly called upon Azerbaijan and Armenia to abide by the cease-fire. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh said: “Iran calls on the two parties to exercise more self-restraint, condemns the missile attacks on the vital infrastructure, the residential areas of cities, and the killing of civilians.” Khatibzadeh also said Iran could offer to host talks to achieve a “permanent and sustainable peace and solution.”
 
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said, “We expect that the decisions that have been adopted will be rigorously observed by both parties,” adding that he hoped that the “all-night vigil” during which the cease-fire agreement was reached would “not be in vain.”
 
It appears, however, that both Azerbaijan and Armenia have shrugged off the cease-fire and are set to escalate a conflict that is indissolubly bound up with the disastrous consequences of the Stalinist bureaucracy’s dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.
 
In 1921, in the early years of Soviet Russia, Nagorno-Karabakh was a majority-Armenian region surrounded by Azeri areas. It was granted autonomous status within Azerbaijan. In the lead-up to the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the restoration of capitalism, however, armed conflict erupted amid the rise of ethnic nationalism and separatism in the Soviet bureaucracy. Azeri and Armenian forces fought over the Nagorno-Karabakh, which also declared its independence, leading to a 1988-94 war that saw 30,000 dead and over 1 million displaced.
 
Over the last three decades, the conflict has periodically re-erupted, defying all attempts to negotiate a lasting settlement, and underscoring the reactionary and unviable nature of the nation-state system. Ethnic-Turkic Azeri forces sought to retake the Karabakh, which Armenian forces have controlled since 1994. This conflict is now exacerbated by all the ethnic and military tensions provoked by three decades of US-led imperialist wars in the region since the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
 
The Caucasus—nestled between the Caspian Sea, Central Asia and China to the east; Iran and Turkey to the south; the Black Sea and Europe to the west; and Russia to the north—is now the focal point of explosive geostrategic tensions. These point to the very real danger that multiple wars and conflicts in the region could coalesce and escalate into a global war between the great powers.
 
 
Not least among these is the US war drive threatening China, as Beijing develops its “Belt and Road” global infrastructure plan. In an October 1 Harvard University briefing titled “US Should Keep an Eye on Rising Chinese Investment in the South Caucasus,” analyst Daniel Shapiro wrote that China’s presence in the region “can impact U.S. energy security and other important interests.” He added that for Chinese firms, the region is an “excellent logistical hub for expansion to Caucasus, EU and Central Asian markets.”
 
Shapiro charged that China’s activities in the region “threaten several US vital interests,” including maintaining “a balance of power in Europe and Asia [compatible] with a continuing US leadership role” and ensuring the “stability of major global systems” including oil and financial markets.
 
US officials have not made major statements on the current Karabakh war, as chaos erupts in the US political system over President Donald Trump’s threat not to respect the outcome of next month’s presidential election. However, they have given a substantial $100 million in military aid to Azerbaijan, which made major weapons purchases from Israel and Turkey, at least partially reversing the military balance with Armenia, according to certain analyses. Armenia has for its part relied on Russian and French support.
 
Reports that Syrian Islamist “rebel” militias and Turkish security firms are sending fighters to Azerbaijan, on the borders of both Russia and Iran, further inflame these tensions. Tehran and Moscow, which have backed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime against these militias in the decade-long NATO war in Syria, fear these fighters could spread Turkish-nationalist or Islamist demands in Azeri-majority regions of Iran or Muslim regions of the North Caucasus in Russia.
 
French imperialism’s support for Armenia is part of its broader conflict with the Turkish government, which has backed militias opposed to France’s proxies in the Libyan civil war triggered by the 2011 NATO war in that country. This escalated in recent years into a conflict over oil resources not only in Libya, but also in undersea oil deposits in the Mediterranean, where Turkey, Greece and Cyprus have made rival claims. In this, France has aggressively backed Greece, which recently purchased billions of euros in French fighter jets and military supplies to prepare for war with Turkey.
 
This conflict again flared yesterday, when Turkey announced that it would send the oil drilling vessel Oruç Reis to explore for oil in waters also claimed by Greece. The Foreign Ministry of Greece, whose vessels repeatedly came close to firing on Turkish ships this summer, called this a “new serious escalation.”
 
The entire region is a tinderbox, with multiple conflicts each threatening to erupt into a general conflagration, underscoring the urgent necessity to unify the working class across national lines in an international anti-war movement against capitalism and imperialism.
  
 

Armenian PM says OSCE Minsk Group may discuss Russian peacekeepers’ deployment to Karabakh

TASS, Russia
Oct 3 2020
Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh

YEREVAN, October 3. /TASS/. The issue of Russian peacekeepers’ deployment to Nagorno-Karabakh could be raised at the OSCE Minsk Group, the Armenian government’s press office said on Saturday citing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s interview with Al Jazeera

"You see those issues could be discussed in the context of the wider resolution within the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmanship," Pashinyan said when asked if he would like to see Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Renewed clashes between Azerbaijan and Armenia erupted on September 27, with intense battles raging in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. The area experienced flare-ups of violence in the summer of 2014, in April 2016 and this past July. Azerbaijan and Armenia have imposed martial law and launched mobilization efforts. Both parties to the conflict have reported casualties, among them civilians.

The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the highland region of Nagorno-Karabakh, a disputed territory that had been part of Azerbaijan before the Soviet Union break-up, but primarily populated by ethnic Armenians, broke out in February 1988 after the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Region announced its withdrawal from the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic. In 1992-1994, tensions boiled over and exploded into large-scale military action for control over the enclave and seven adjacent territories after Azerbaijan lost control of them. Talks on the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement have been ongoing since 1992 under the OSCE Minsk Group, led by its three co-chairs – Russia, France and the United States.