Azerbaijani authorities attempt to achieve closure of ICRC Stepanakert office, warns Nagorno-Karabakh

 14:49, 30 August 2023

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. Authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have an unambiguous decision to keep the Aghdam-Stepanakert road closed, Speaker of Parliament of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Davit Ishkhanyan said at a press conference.

He added that the Russian peacekeepers and Nagorno-Karabakh police have posts on that road.

He described the Azerbaijani government’s move on sending trucks to the road as a “provocation” aimed at misleading the world that the humanitarian crisis in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) is its domestic issue.

“We have one road, which is called the Lachin Corridor, where unimpeded transit of humanitarian goods and generally any transit from Artsakh to Armenia and Armenia to Artsakh must be restored and ensured, this is stipulated in the 9 November 2020 document. The Azerbaijani narrative on launching the Akna [Aghdam]-Stepanakert road is no news, it’s at least three weeks old, when it attempted to realize it along with presenting the offer through Western and Russian colleagues. The Azerbaijani side’s step of yesterday is unacceptable for us,” the Speaker added.

Azerbaijan is attempting to shut down the Stepanakert office of the Red Cross through the Red Crescent, he warned.

“The presence of that international organization [ICRC] is an advantage and opportunity for us. The International Committee of the Red Cross office has been functioning in Stepanakert for nearly 30 years as a separate entity, directly subordinate to Geneva. It’s no secret that ever since the 2020 war Azerbaijan has directed every effort to push the ICRC office out of Stepanakert, out of Nagorno-Karabakh,” he said.

Van Novikov




Asbarez: Armenia ‘Disappointed’ at Russia Blaming Yerevan for Lachin Crisis

Azerbaijan installed a concrete barrier on the Lachin Corridor on June 22


Official Yerevan on Thursday hit back at Moscow’s assertion that the actions of the Armenian government, and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, are to be blamed for Azerbaijan’s blockade of the Lachin Corridor and the resulting humanitarian crisis in Artsakh.

Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova told a press briefing on Thursday that Pashinyan’s recognition of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity that supposes Baku’s sovereignty over Artsakh has resulted in the current situation in Artsakh.

“I would like to remind that the current situation in the Lachin corridor is a consequence of Armenia’s recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as part of the territory of Azerbaijan,” Zakharova said. “This was formalized as a result of summits attended by the leaders of the two countries under the aegis of the European Union in October 2022 and May 2023.”

“We believe that placing the blame in this context on the Russian peacekeeping contingent is inappropriate, wrong and unjustified,” Zakharova told a news briefing.

Armenia’s foreign ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan on Thursday said that Moscow’s statement has caused “confusion and disappointment” for Yerevan, asserting that Russia itself has, on numerous occasions, recognized Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan.

Below is Badalyan’s complete statement.

Remarks by the official representative of Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who yet again, claimed that the situation unfolding in the Lachin corridor is a consequence of the fact that Armenia’s recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan in October 2022 during a meeting in Prague based on the Alma Ata declaration has altered the mission of the Russian peacekeepers to that of ensuring the rights and security of the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh has caused confusion and disappointment.

We are compelled to recall the following, already well-known chronology and important circumstances.

  • The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has never been a territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In essence, it has always been and remains an issue of the rights and security of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh.
  • In August 2022, Armenia agreed to Russia’s draft proposal on the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, according to which the discussion of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh was supposed to be postponed for an indefinite period. Azerbaijan rejected the proposal, simultaneously announcing (as it did on August 31 in Brussels) that it is not going to discuss anything related to Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, and days later, on September 13, it launched military aggression against the sovereign territory of Armenia.
  • Russia not only did not pursue its proposal after Azerbaijan’s refusal, but also showed absolute indifference to the aggression against the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia, leaving Armenia’s official letter to support the Republic of Armenia on the basis of the bilateral legal framework unanswered. Moreover, Russia conditioned the lack of stating the fact of the attack on Armenia and the resulting inaction under the false excuse that the interstate border between Armenia and Azerbaijan is not delimited. By this approach it either intentionally or not supports the obviously false and extremely dangerous thesis which claims that there is no border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, therefore, attacking the border and the invasion into the territory of Armenia are difficult to verify. With the same mindset, Armenia’s similar application in the framework of the CSTO did not receive a proper response either.
  • Under these circumstances, on October 6, 2022, in Prague, Armenia and Azerbaijan reaffirmed their support of the Alma-Ata Declaration, which was signed back in 1991 by the former Soviet republics, including Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia, who recognized each other’s territorial integrity along the former administrative borders of the Soviet states. Therefore, nothing new was decided in Prague: as of October 2022, the Alma-Ata Declaration had been in force for about 31 years. The agreements in Prague did not change anything in the context of the Trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, either. The only new development was that, based on the results of the Prague meeting, the EU decided to deploy a monitoring mission on the Armenian side of the interstate border between Armenia and Azerbaijan to contribute to the stability at the border.
  • The Russian Federation has recognized Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan multiple times, including after the signing of the Trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, and the most recent and perhaps most significant instance was when it stated that it recognizes the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan in the document on establishing strategic relations with Azerbaijan.
  • On December 12, 2022, the Lachin corridor was blocked, under the false pretext of protests organized by the authorities of Azerbaijan in the area of the control of the Russian peacekeeping contingent. Already in April 2023, in the presence of Russian peacekeepers, Azerbaijan installed an illegal checkpoint in the Lachin corridor. Although these actions were a clear and gross violation of the Trilateral statement, the Russian Federation took no counteractions. Instead, Russian peacekeepers on June 15, 2023, actively supported the attempt to raise the Azerbaijani flag on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia, which is outside the scope of their mission and geographical area of responsibility. This was immediately followed by the total blockade of the Lachin corridor, bringing the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh closer to a true humanitarian catastrophe.
  • In circumstances of such arbitrariness in the presence of Russian peacekeepers, the Azerbaijani side has resorted to steps such as the abduction of residents of Nagorno-Karabakh at the illegal checkpoint in the Lachin corridor: the case of abduction of Vagif Khachatryan on July 29, followed by the case of three students on August 28.
  • Unfortunately, such practices of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh are nothing new. On December 11, 2020, the violation of the contact line in Nagorno-Karabakh, the illegal occupation of Khtsaberd and Hin Tagher villages, the capture and transfer of 60 Armenian servicemen to Baku took place in Nagorno-Karabakh with the presence and permission of representatives of the Russian peacekeeping contingent. At that time, the agreements of October 6, 2022, were not reached. The same applies to the events of Parukh on March 24, 2022, and Saribab on August 1, 2022, when Azerbaijan again violated the contact line in Nagorno-Karabakh. The logical continuation of this are the shootings by Azerbaijani armed forces in the presence of Russian peacekeepers towards people carrying out agricultural works, one of which ended with the killing of a tractor driver from Martakert; the intimidation of the Nagorno-Karabakh population with night lights and loudspeakers again in the presence of Russian peacekeepers; the thousands of violations of the ceasefire regime by the Azerbaijani armed forces again in the presence of Russian peacekeepers.

We advise that the representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry refrain from maneuvering the circumstances of the situation and thereby further complicating it in the absence of actions from Russian peacekeepers toward the prevention of the blockade of the Lachin corridor or its opening afterward.

We also reiterate that the Republic of Armenia is faithful to its commitment towards establishing stability in the region on the basis of mutual recognition of territorial integrity and borders. At the same time, we consider imperative for lasting peace the reopening of the Lachin corridor in accordance with the Trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, and in line with the Orders of the International Court of Justice, the prevention of a humanitarian catastrophe in Nagorno-Karabakh and addressing of all existing problems through the Baku-Stepanakert dialogue under international auspices.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/28/2023

                                        Monday, 


More Noncombat Deaths In Armenian Army’s Ranks

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Soldiers march at an Armenian military base, December 24, 2022.


An Armenian soldier reportedly shot dead a comrade before taking his own life 
while on combat duty on Sunday, adding to the growing number of noncombat deaths 
in the Armenian army’s ranks.

Armenia’s Investigative Committee suggested on Monday that the fatal shootings 
were the result of a gross violation of military regulations. The 
law-enforcement agency did not immediately arrest or charge any other servicemen 
in connection with the deadly incident which it said occurred at an army post on 
the border with Azerbaijan.

The shootings sparked fresh uproar from human rights activists monitoring the 
armed forces. According to one of them, Zhanna Andreasian, 54 Armenian soldiers 
died in the first half of this year, and only a dozen of them were killed by 
enemy fire.

Fifteen other conscripts were found dead in January at their military barracks 
destroyed by a major fire. Virtually all other victims of deadly noncombat 
incidents committed suicide, according to military investigators. Six more 
soldiers, including the latest victims, died in August.

“This is unprecedented,” Andreasian said on Monday, commending on the grim 
statistics. “There was no such scale under our former rulers.”

The veteran activist blamed Defense Minister Suren Papikian and the army top 
brass for the increased number of deaths which she said makes mockery of 
sweeping defense reforms repeatedly announced by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
after the 2020 war with Azerbaijan.

“He [Papikian] doesn’t speak up, and we don’t know … what they are reforming. He 
had better resign together with his boss [Pashinian,]” she told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.

Another human rights campaigner, Artur Sakunts, said the declared reforms cannot 
make any difference unless the authorities take “urgent” measures to tackle poor 
army discipline. He said military commanders must at last be held accountable 
for deaths and other serious incidents happening in their units.

Andreasian similarly complained that senior or mid-ranking officers are rarely 
prosecuted over such crimes. She accused investigators of routinely covering 
them up.




France's Macron Seeks Stronger Pressure On Azerbaijan


France - President Emmanuel Macron gives a speech in front of French ambassadors 
at the Elysee Palace, Paris, .


France will try to drum up stronger international pressure on Azerbaijan to end 
its continuing blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh, French President Emmanuel Macron 
said on Monday.

"I will have an opportunity to speak this week with [Armenian] Prime Minister 
Pashinian and with [Azerbaijani] President Ilham Aliyev,” Macron told French 
ambassadors to countries around the world.

“We will demand full respect for the Lachin humanitarian corridor and we will 
again take a diplomatic initiative in this direction internationally to increase 
the pressure,” he said in remarks cited by French media.

Macron gave no details of that initiative. France’s Le Figaro daily reported 
last week that Paris is “preparing to submit” to the UN Security Council a draft 
resolution designed to help Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population left “on the 
verge of starvation.”

The Security Council discussed the worsening humanitarian crisis in Karabakh 
during an August 16 meeting initiated by Armenia. Although most of its members, 
including the United States, urged the lifting of the Azerbaijani blockade, the 
council did not adopt a relevant resolution or statement.

The U.S., the European Union and Russia have repeatedly called for renewed 
commercial and humanitarian traffic through the sole road connecting Karabakh to 
Armenia. Azerbaijan has dismissed their appeals.

Baku was quick to denounce Macron’s latest remarks, saying that his “language of 
pressure” is unacceptable. An Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokeswoman also 
objected to the French leader’s use of the term “Lachin humanitarian corridor.” 
He said it violates Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.

France, which is home to a sizable Armenian community, has been the most vocal 
international critic of the eight-month Azerbaijani blockade. Baku has 
repeatedly accused Macron and other French officials of siding with Armenia in 
the Karabakh conflict.




Bread Shortage Worsens In Karabakh

        • Susan Badalian

Nagorno-Karabakh - People wait in a line outside a bakery in Stepanakert, August 
8, 2023.


Authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have urged local farmers to sell wheat harvested 
by them amid a deepening shortage of bread resulting from Azerbaijan’s 
eight-month blockade of the Lachin corridor.

Bread appears to have become the main staple food in Stepanakert and other 
Karabakh towns since Baku tightened the blockade in mid-June by halting all 
relief supplies to the Armenian-populated region carried out by Russian 
peacekeepers and the International Committee of the Red Cross. Local food stores 
have run out of limited amounts of other basic other foodstuffs sold in previous 
months.

The bread shortage worsened in recent days, with Stepanakert residents saying 
that they now have to spend more hours waiting in lines to buy up to loaves per 
person from bakeries.

“When you stand in a line you lose a whole day,” one of them, Arega Ishkhanian, 
told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “If you queue up at six in the evening, you may 
have to wait until the next morning.”

“And the problem is not just bread, there is nothing else available,” she said. 
“But at least the kids could eat bread.”

Nagorno-Karabakh - Stepanakert residents line up to buy bread, August 8, 2023.

In a statement issued on Sunday, Karabakh’s Agricultural Fund said it is 
supplying additional quantities of flour to bakeries to try to alleviate the 
problem. Underscoring its gravity, the agency said the authorities are ready to 
buy up all wheat grown and stored by Karabakh farmers and to swiftly pay for it 
in cash. It urged the farmers to sell off their wheat stocks.

The authorities are facing growing calls to introduce bread coupons and thus 
reduce waiting lines formed outside bakeries and shops.

The Armenian government warned in July that Karabakh is now “on the verge of 
starvation.” It urged the international community to put stronger pressure on 
Azerbaijan to lift the blockade.

The United States, the European Union and Russia have repeatedly called for 
renewed commercial and humanitarian traffic through the sole road connecting 
Karabakh to Armenia. Baku has dismissed their appeals.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev made clear on Saturday that he will not bow 
to the international pressure. Visiting the town of Lachin close to Karabakh’s 
lifeline road, Aliyev said Baku’s actions are aimed at “fully restoring 
Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity.”

“Nothing can force us to deviate from our path,” he said.




Three More Karabakh Men Arrested By Azerbaijan (UPDATED)

        • Ruzanna Stepanian

A view of the Azerbaijani checlpoint set up in the Lachin corridor, June 23, 
2023.


Three residents of Nagorno-Karabakh were detained by Azerbaijani security forces 
on Monday while traveling to Armenia through the Lachin corridor.

Karabakh officials said that the young men, identified as Alen Sargsian, Vahe 
Hovsepian and Levon Grigorian, were “kidnapped” at the Azerbaijani checkpoint 
blocking the corridor as they were escorted by Russian peacekeepers along with 
other Karabakh civilians.

One of the officials, Artak Beglarian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that the 
peacekeepers are negotiating with the Azerbaijani side to try have them freed. 
Arayik Harutiunian, the Karabakh president, held an emergency session of his 
security council later in the day.

“Azerbaijan is continuing its genocidal policy towards the people of Artsakh, 
once again violating international humanitarian law,” read a Karabakh statement 
issued shortly after the detentions.

The Azerbaijani authorities did not immediately comment on the arrests. But 
media outlets linked to them reported that the three Karabakh Armenians are 
suspected of being members of a Karabakh football team that had “disrespected” 
the Azerbaijani national flag in a 2021 video posted on social media.

Beglarian said he “cannot confirm” that Sargsian, Hovsepian and Grigorian played 
for that youth team based in the Karabakh town of Martuni. “All three of them 
are students of Armenian universities,” he said.

In any case, added Beglarian, the Azerbaijani allegations are “absurd” and aimed 
at intimidating Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population opposed to the restoration 
of Azerbaijani control over their region.

Another Karabakh man, Vagif Khachatrian, was arrested at the Azerbaijani 
checkpoint in late July while being evacuated by the International Committee of 
the Red Cross (ICRC) to Armenia. The 68-year-old was taken Baku to stand trial 
on charges of killing and deporting Karabakh’s ethnic Azerbaijani residents in 
December 1991, at the start of the first Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

Karabakh’s leadership rejected the “false” accusations and demanded 
Khachatrian’s immediate release. The Armenian Foreign Ministry likewise 
condemned Khachatrian’s arrest as a “blatant violation of international 
humanitarian law” and “war crime.”

The ministry condemned the latest detentions as well. It described them as a 
further indication that Baku intends to “avoid dialogue with Nagorno-Karabakh by 
all means and continue instead his policy of ethnic cleansing.”

Khachatrian is the first Karabakh patient arrested by the Azerbaijani 
authorities during regular medical evacuations organized by the ICRC after Baku 
halted last December commercial traffic through the only road connecting 
Karabakh to Armenia.

Last week, Baku also allowed other categories of Karabakh’s population, notably 
university students and holders of Russian passports, to travel to Armenia. They 
are escorted by Russian peacekeepers.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

6 patients evacuated from Nagorno-Karabakh through ICRC

 12:39,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 28, ARMENPRESS. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) facilitated on August 28 the transfer of 6 patients from Nagorno-Karabakh’s Republican Medical Center to Armenia for urgent treatment, the Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh) Ministry of Healthcare said Monday. The patients were accompanied by their attendants.

The ICRC plans to return three patients, together with their attendants, who completed treatment in Armenia, to Nagorno-Karabakh later on August 28.

37 children are hospitalized in the Arevik clinic in Nagorno-Karabakh. 4 of them are in neonatal and intensive care.

87 patients are hospitalized in the Republican Medical Center. 6 of them are in intensive care (3 are critically-ill).

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since late 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. The ICJ reaffirmed its order on 6 July 2023.

Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations.

Pray this important novena for peace in Armenia

Aleteia
Aug 24 2023

Sadly most of the world is unaware of the 120,000 Armenians in the Republic of Artsakh that have been blockaded since December 2022. This blockade has its principal aim of persecuting Christians and starving them to death!

Dr. Tom Catena was recently interviewed by Aleteia about this critical issue and explained how Christianity has ancient roots in Armenia, “Armenia is a very unique country. It’s the first Christian Republic, even before Constantine. Armenia became a Christian nation, I think, in 301 AD. So it’s the oldest Christian nation.”

Unfortunately, the situation has become very dire, as the Armenian Catholic Eparchy of Our Lady of Nareg, USA & Canada explains, “120,000 Armenians in the Republic of Artsakh have been blockaded since December 2022 and are being starved to death by Azerbaijani Muslim forces.  The President of Turkey, an ally and supporter of Azerbaijan, has publicly stated they are completing what their grandfathers started, or in other words the genocide of the Christian Armenians.

Please consider praying this perpetual novena organized by the Armenian Catholic Eparchy, praying for peace in Artsakh and that the people starving to death will receive the immediate aid they need!

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 23-08-23

 17:27,

YEREVAN, 23 AUGUST, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 23 August, USD exchange rate up by 1.01 drams to 386.80 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 2.07 drams to 417.94 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate stood at 4.10 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 4.08 drams to 488.34 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 97.43 drams to 23538.06 drams. Silver price up by 7.09 drams to 290.88 drams.

Azerbaijan violates Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire in four regions

 13:20,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 21, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan violated on August 21 the Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire in four different locations, the Ministry of Defense of Nagorno-Karabakh said in a statement.

The Azerbaijani forces opened small arms fire early Monday morning in Martakert, Askeran, Martuni and Shushi regions.

The Ministry of Defense of Nagorno-Karabakh said it has reported the shooting incidents to the Russian peacekeepers.

35-year-old Nagorno-Karabakh man goes missing

 16:21,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 21, ARMENPRESS. A 35-year-old man from Martakert region in Nagorno-Karabakh has gone missing, local police said Monday.

He was last seen on August 19.

According to police, the man (pictured above) left his home around 17:00 on August 19 in the town of Martakert to search for his livestock and hasn’t returned since. He was wearing a blue shirt, black jeans trousers and sneakers.

Top Ukrainian diplomat tragically died in Armenia. Details of the tragedy HELP UKRAINIAN NEWS

Ukrainian News
Aug 14 2023
Редактор: Daria Zubkova

This was reported by European Pravda with reference to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine.

"The tragedy happened in Armenia," the ministry emphasized.

According to local mass media, which refer to the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Armenia, a Ukrainian diplomat drowned in the Lake Sevan.

In the evening of August 13, information was received that on one of the beaches of the Lake Sevan, rescuers, while on duty 25 meters from the shore noticed a man in the water who disappeared while swimming.

Rescuers swam to this area, pulled him out from a depth of about 1.5 meters and brought him ashore in a motor boat.

Medics who arrived at the scene declared the man dead.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/14/2023

                                        Monday, 


Ankara Urges Yerevan To Back Use Of Agdam Road By Karabakh Armenians


The Turkish national flag


The Turkish Foreign Ministry has called on Armenia to support the idea of the 
use of the Agdam road by Karabakh Armenians who continue to reject Azerbaijan’s 
relevant offer and continue to demand the reopening of the Lachin corridor.

In a statement issued on Monday, the Turkish ministry also called on Yerevan to 
“refrain from provocative steps, recognize the territorial integrity and 
sovereignty of Azerbaijan and support Azerbaijan’s efforts on the integration of 
the [Karabakh] Armenian population.”

Official Ankara said it was closely following the discussions around the Lacհin 
road, emphasizing that it “understands the legitimate concerns of Azerbaijan on 
that issue.”

“Turkey believes that there is no reason to criticize Azerbaijan regarding the 
Lachin road,” it said.

The Turkish statement came after Armenia officially asked the United Nations 
Security Council to hold an emergency meeting on the issue of humanitarian 
access to Nagorno-Karabakh that Yerevan and Stepanakert say has been denied for 
months by Azerbaijan that has imposed an “illegal blockade” on the region.

Earlier ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh said that the purpose of 
Baku’s proposal to provide humanitarian aid through Agdam without restoring free 
movement through the Lachin corridor was “an attempt to revise” the 
Moscow-brokered 2020 ceasefire agreement under which the vital land connection 
between Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia was placed under the control of Russian 
peacekeepers.

“This approach that has persistently been proposed by Azerbaijan violates the 
rights and humiliates the dignity of the people of Artsakh [Nagorno-Karabakh – 
ed.] and contradicts international humanitarian law,” Stepanakert said.

Yerevan, likewise, believes that the checkpoint installed by Azerbaijan at the 
Lachin corridor contradicts the terms of the ceasefire agreement and is, 
therefore, illegal. The Armenian government also denies having any territorial 
claims to Azerbaijan or otherwise infringing on its sovereignty. It insists, 
however, that the rights and security of Karabakh Armenians be discussed between 
Baku and Stepanakert in an “internationally visible” dialogue.




Yerevan Calls Azeri Reports On Concentration Of Armenian Troops Along Border 
‘Disinformation’


The national flag of Armenia over a combat position along the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border (file photo).


Military authorities in Yerevan have disproved a statement made in Baku about an 
alleged concentration of a large number of Armenian troops and military hardware 
near the border with Azerbaijan.

Armenia’s Defense Ministry said on Monday that the statement of Azerbaijan’s 
Ministry of Foreign Affairs to that account did not correspond to the facts.

“To another false message in the statement of the Azerbaijani Ministry of 
Foreign Affairs, the Defense Ministry of the Republic of Armenia states once 
again that the Republic of Armenia has no army in Nagorno-Karabakh,” it added.

Official Baku stated, in particular, that “armed forces of Armenia illegally 
stationed on the territory of Azerbaijan have intensified military engineering 
works and other military activities in recent weeks”, and “in recent days, a 
large amount of weapons, military equipment and personnel of the armed forces of 
Armenia have been accumulating along the un-demarcated border with Azerbaijan.”

At the same time, Azerbaijan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs claimed that “Armenia 
has not stopped its territorial claims against Azerbaijan and its verbal 
recognition of the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan differs from its actions.”

“Azerbaijan reserves the right to defend its sovereignty and territorial 
integrity,” the ministry underscored.

Meanwhile, the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs also described the 
Azerbaijani statement as disinformation. “The spread of such false information 
indicates Azerbaijan’s intention to escalate the situation in the region,” it 
charged in a statement.

The kind of rhetoric from official Baku comes amid reports of sporadic 
cross-border shootings that Armenia and Azerbaijan blame on each other. 
Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenian authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh have also traded 
accusations regarding violations of the ceasefire regime in recent days.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh for 
decades. Some 30,000 people were killed in a war in the early 1990s that left 
ethnic Armenians in control of the predominantly Armenian-populated region and 
seven adjacent districts of Azerbaijan proper.

Decades of internationally mediated talks failed to result in a diplomatic 
solution and the simmering conflict led to another war in 2020 in which nearly 
7,000 soldiers were killed on both sides.

The 44-day war in which Azerbaijan regained all of the Armenian-controlled areas 
outside of Nagorno-Karabakh as well as chunks of territory inside the Soviet-era 
autonomous oblast proper ended with a Russia-brokered ceasefire under which 
Moscow deployed about 2,000 troops to the region to serve as peacekeepers.

Despite the ceasefire and publicly stated willingness of the leaders of both 
Armenia and Azerbaijan to work towards a negotiated peace, tensions between the 
two South Caucasus nations escalated in June after Azerbaijan tightened its 
blockade at a checkpoint installed in April on the road known as the Lachin 
Corridor, the only link between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

Yerevan and Stepanakert view the Azerbaijani roadblock as a violation of the 
terms of the ceasefire agreement that they insist places the vital route solely 
under the control of Russian peacekeepers.

Amid severe shortages of basic foodstuffs, medical and fuel supplies experienced 
by Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians, Armenia last Friday officially asked the United 
Nations Security Council to hold an emergency meeting regarding the 
deterioration of the humanitarian situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The move came after the region’s ethnic Armenian leader appealed to the 
international community for “immediate action” to lift the de facto blockade 
imposed by Azerbaijan and prevent what he called “the genocide of the people of 
Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Azerbaijan denies blockading Nagorno-Karabakh and offers an alternative route 
for supplies via the town of Agdam, which is situated east of the region and is 
controlled by Baku.

However, Nagorno-Karabakh’s authorities have rejected that offer amid concerns 
in Stepanakert that the opening of the Agdam road could be a prelude to the 
region’s absorption by Azerbaijan.




13 Parties, 1 Bloc Bid To Compete In Yerevan Municipal Polls


The Yerevan Municipality building


Thirteen political parties and one bloc of parties have submitted their 
applications to the Central Election Commission (CEC) to participate in upcoming 
municipal elections in Yerevan.

The CEC is due to complete the registration process by August 18 and publish 
electoral lists within three days after that.

The vote in the elections to Yerevan’s Municipal Assembly (Council of Elders) is 
due on September 17. It will proceed according to party lists, with the 
four-week campaigns of the political forces and their candidates for mayor 
commencing on August 23.

The ruling Civil Contract party is led in the elections by current Deputy Mayor 
Tigran Avinian who formerly also served as deputy prime minister in the 
government of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian.

Former Yerevan mayor Hayk Marutian, who was removed from office by a vote of no 
confidence in December 2021 after falling out with the ruling party, has also 
announced his participation in the elections with the hitherto little-known 
National Progress party.

Several other political parties and groups, notably Aprelu Yerkir (Country for 
Living), Bright Armenia, the European Party of Armenia and others, have also 
applied for registration to participate in the Yerevan elections.

Two key parliamentary opposition alliances affiliated with former presidents 
Robert Kocharian and Serzh Sarkisian, Hayastan and Pativ Unem, have not joined 
the local race in the Armenian capital where about a third of the country’s 
voters are concentrated.

It is not clear whether either alliance will support any other political party 
or bloc participating in the elections, including the Mother Armenia bloc, which 
is led by Andranik Tevanian, a former Hayastan faction member who resigned 
recently to focus on the Yerevan elections.




Leading Ukrainian Diplomat Drowns in Armenia


Oleksandr Senchenko


Ukraine’s charge d’affaires in Armenia has died in an apparent drowning incident 
at Lake Sevan that was reported by the country’s authorities and confirmed by 
the Ukrainian foreign ministry on Monday.

Armenia’s Interior Ministry said the body of a Ukrainian citizen was recovered 
from the mountain lake on August 13.

Later local media as well as Ukraine’s foreign ministry confirmed that the 
drowned man was Oleksandr Senchenko, who led Ukraine’s embassy in Yerevan for 
the past year or so.

The Armenian rescue service was quoted by local media as saying that on Sunday 
evening lifeguards at a public beach at Lake Sevan spotted a man at a distance 
of 25 meters from the shore who disappeared while swimming.

“Lifeguards swam towards the area and lifted a man from the bottom that was 1.5 
meters deep, taking him to the shore on a rubber motor boat. Ambulance service 
workers registered the man’s death,” a report said.

In reporting the tragic death of Senchenko, Ukraine’s foreign ministry described 
him as an experienced and highly qualified diplomat who had worked in the 
ministry since 2003.

The Armenian police said materials related to the drowning of the Ukrainian 
citizen had been sent to Sevan’s investigation department.

No other details related to the circumstances of Senchenko’s death were reported 
immediately.

According to Armenia’s embassy in Ukraine, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat 
Mirzoyan extended condolences on behalf of the entire staff of Armenia’s 
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and on his personal behalf to his Ukrainian 
counterpart Dmytro Kuleba on the tragic death of Ukraine’s charge d’affaires 
Senchenko.




11 Killed In Minibus-Truck Collision In Armenia

        • Satenik Kaghzvantsian

Armenia - Firefighters are working on the scene of a major motor vehicle 
collision on the Yerevan-Gyumri highway, .


At least 11 people were killed and nine others injured in an overnight collision 
of a passenger minibus and a truck in Armenia.
The Rescue Service of Armenia’s Interior Ministry said the collision occurred on 
the 90th kilometer of the Yerevan-Gyumri highway just after midnight on August 
14.

It said a Volkswagen van carrying passengers collided with a ZIL truck on the 
section near the village of Lanjik.

Six people injured in the crash were hospitalized in Gyumri, a local medical 
center said, adding that one patient was later transferred to a hospital in 
Yerevan.

Deputy director of the Gyumri Medical Center Armen Khachatrian told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service that said that the five patients were in a critical condition 
and their lives were in danger.

The Health Ministry later said that on person hospitalized in Yerevan was also 
in a serious condition, while three others taken to a medical center in the 
Armenian capital had sustained only light injuries and were discharged from the 
clinic shortly after they had been examined and received treatment.

According to relatives of the victims, they were returning from Turkey where 
they had visited historical Armenian sites.

Investigators were reportedly working on the scene early on Monday to establish 
the circumstances of the traffic collision. No other information was reported 
immediately.

The Investigation Committee said later criminal proceedings had been instituted 
in connection with the case.

Meanwhile, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian expressed condolences to the 
families of all victims.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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