Citizen of Artsakh detained after accidentally crossing into territory controlled by Azeri forces

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 15:55,

STEPANAKERT, NOVEMBER 23, ARMENPRESS. The National Security Service of Artsakh says it is taking measures to return a citizen of Artsakh who got lost and accidentally crossed into territory controlled by the Azerbaijani military.

It said that early Tuesday morning it received a report that a 21 year old resident of the Ashan community of Martuni region is missing.

The National Security Service said they found out that the citizen has been detained by the Azerbaijani authorities after getting lost and “appearing” in territory under their control.

“The Russian peacekeepers were immediately notified on the incident,” it added, noting that the Russian peacekeepers have been assured that the citizen is safe. Negotiations are underway to return the citizen.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenpress: Canada calls for de-escalation at Armenia-Azerbaijan border

Canada calls for de-escalation at Armenia-Azerbaijan border

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 09:35, 17 November, 2021

OTTAWA, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Melanie Joly expressed concern and called for de-escalation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border following the deadly Azerbaijani attacks in the eastern direction.

“Canada is deeply concerned by the recent Armenia-Azerbaijan border clash, which resulted in the deaths of Armenian troops,” Joly tweeted. “Our thoughts are w/ the victims’ families, loved ones & the community. We call for de-escalation so that a peaceful solution to the conflict may be found.”

Editing by Stepan Kocharyan



Parliament adopts bill on cutting New Year holidays

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 10:21, 17 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. Parliament passed at second reading the government-authored bill on cutting the number of New Year holidays.

Before, Armenia had a week-long holiday starting December 31st (New Year holidays until January 2nd, then until January 5th pre-Christmas holidays, January 6th Christmas, and the 7th of January was observed as Merelots (Day of Commemorating the Dead).

By the new law, only December 31st,  January 1st and 2nd , as well the January 6th will be non-working days.

The law passed with 57 votes in favor.

The Armenian Church had recommended January 5 (Christmas Eve) and January 7 (Merelots) to remain non-working days, but the proposal was not approved.

The recommendation on cutting the number of holidays was brought forward by Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan, who says that the week-long holidays negatively impact the GDP and production volumes in different branches of the economy, as well as foreign economic activities and the implementation of contract relations with domestic and foreign organizations. Kerobyan said earlier that the move would lead to economic benefits and GDP growth.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Future of Karabakh: USC Institute of Armenian Studies’ Call For Research

Future of Karabakh: Call For Research flyer

The 2020 Karabakh (Artsakh) War created new challenges and exacerbated unanswered questions about the future of regional relations and the status of Karabakh / Artsakh.

Following the Russia-brokered ceasefire of November 2020 that ended the second Karabakh War, and despite the presence of Russian peacekeepers on the ground, continuing military clashes on Karabakh’s borders and on Armenia’s borders, together with mass displacement and economic and physical insecurity, remain the dominant drivers of future scenarios.

As Armenians and Azerbaijanis reinforce their positions along newly created frontlines, explosions of violence have become commonplace. In the long-term, Armenia and Armenians will continue to find themselves affected by changes to the regional geopolitical environment: a victorious but still fiercely aggressive Azerbaijan, a Georgia that strives for neutrality but remains deeply entwined with, and economically dependent on Azerbaijan and Turkey, and Iran and Turkey each embroiled in massive domestic challenges.

The University of Southern California Institute of Armenian Studies’ grants will support original academic and policy research on the key issues that impact the future of the political entity that is Karabakh and its people, as well as the future of Armenia.

The Institute invites scholars (Ph.D. candidate and above) to apply for research grants that will address any aspect of the themes above or topics below. Grants will cover new and ongoing research such as dissertation research or postdoctoral research, and will be awarded in amounts of $2,000 to $6,000. Grantees conducting research in the region may be able to apply for a residency at the USC Tacori Center in Armenia.

Priority will be given to proposals on the following topics. Proposals to pursue other topics are also welcome.

Economic, Political, Social Development in Karabakh:

  • Legitimacy and viability of governmental institutions in de facto states
  • Displacement and humanitarian crisis during and after the war
  • Scenarios for economic revival
  • Assessment of Armenia’s financial support to Karabakh
  • Human security: Water, food, energy
  • View from Karabakh and Armenia: Political and Military Security

Karabakh’s view of its own short and long-term security: Armenia’s role, Russia’s role:

  • Understanding post-war security and policy: Options for Armenia & Karabakh
  • Assessment of Armenia’s regional diplomatic strategy: Georgia and Iran
  • Approaches to Armenian military reform
  • Post-war uncertainties: Issues of independence, autonomy, sovereignty for Armenia and Karabakh
  • Understanding Armenia’s diplomatic agenda
  • The role of legacy diaspora lobbying organizations in light of new realities
  • The economic involvement of the Armenian diaspora in state-building

View from Russia:

  • Russian foreign policy with de facto states
  • Prospects and questions regarding formal Russian integration of Karabakh
  • Russian objectives in Karabakh, and the impact on Karabakh of changing political, economic, social scenarios inside Russia
  • Russia-Azerbaijan relations, tensions, and cooperation
  • Karabakh’s place in the Russia-US agenda, and the Russia-Turkey agenda

View from Azerbaijan:

  • Azerbaijan’s soft power and economic power in Georgia and Russia
  • Internal political dynamics, governance, and decision-making processes in the context of Azerbaijani’s consolidated authoritarianism
  • Extent and impact of Turkey’s integration in Azerbaijan’s institutions, especially the military and the media
  • View From the Region

Armenia between Russian and Turkish global and regional interests:

  • Impact of Iran-Israel tensions on the region, post-war
  • NATO-Turkey’s membership, Georgia’s aspirations, and consequences for the region
  • Impact of demographic trends in the region
  • Prospects of diplomacy and peacebuilding: Negotiation, compromise, region and neighborhood
  • Dealing with climate change in a fractured region
  • Psychological, conceptual consequences of the post-war trauma in Armenia, Karabakh, and Azerbaijan
  • The role of media and education in developing national ideologies
  • Human rights abuses and accountability

In addition, researchers are encouraged to address question from the list provided.

Applications (in English) should consist of ONE MS Word or PDF document. They should include:

  • A proposal of no more than 500-1000 words which outlines the rationale and plan of research, presents a clear research question, reviews previous research and theory that form the basis of the study, describes the research methodology, and summarizes what the research aims to uncover.
  • A one-page detailed budget indicating the items for which the applicant is seeking funding. Grants are available for research expenses, such as the cost of hiring a research assistant or transcriber, computer software packages not typically provided by a college or university, and transportation, including travel to the region.
  • A CV of no more than three pages.

Complete applications, in one document, should be sent to [email protected] by December 29, 2021.

Awards will be announced by January 14, 2022.

Grant recipients are expected to submit a 1,000 word progress report by June 30, 2022. The report should include:

  • Description of data / material collection process and outline of research methods
  • Timeline for completion of the project
  • Challenges and difficulties

Grant recipients are expected to complete and submit a 1,000 word FINAL report by November 30, 2022. The report should include:

  • Research-related challenges and difficulties
  • Conference / publication prospects
  • Submission of an article into a peer-reviewed journal
  • An article submitted to a newspaper or news site or to the USC Institute of Armenian Studies

Established in 2005, the USC Institute of Armenian Studies supports multidisciplinary scholarship to re-define, explore and study the complex issues that make up the contemporary Armenian experience—from post-genocide to the developing Republic of Armenia to the evolving diaspora. The institute encourages research, publications and public service, and promotes links among the global academic and Armenian communities.

For inquiries, write to [email protected] or call 213.821.3943


Perspectives | Iran-Azerbaijan: A new cold war? [Azeri Opinion]

EurasiaNet.org
Nov 19 2021
Eldar Mamedov Nov 19, 2021
The Khodaafarin Bridge on the Azerbaijan-Iran border. (president.az)

As tensions subsided following weeks of saber-rattling and hostile rhetoric, the foreign ministers of Iran and Azerbaijan had a November 5 phone call in which they blamed “ill-wishers” for trying to exploit “recent misunderstandings between the two neighbors,” as the Iranian readout put it.

But the short-term rapprochement and blame-shifting only serves to obscure larger shifts in the relationship: While the war games and insults have abated, diverging geopolitical choices continue to pull Baku and Tehran in opposite directions, augmenting the risks of periodic eruptions in the future.

Azerbaijan’s victory in the 2020 war against Armenia, achieved with Turkish and Israeli support and Russian acquiescence, convinced Baku that its military-diplomatic strategy was vindicated and that there is little reason to alter it. Iran, by contrast, was sidelined by the war: Its peace plans proposed during the fighting elicited little interest in Baku, and Tehran has been unhappy about post-war developments, particularly by its arch-foe Israel’s expansion of its foothold on Iran’s northern borders.

With its newly consolidated alliances and fresh military confidence, Baku felt it could largely ignore its southern neighbor’s concerns. That explains the arrest in September of two Iranian truck drivers transiting Azerbaijani-controlled land en route to Armenian-controlled parts of Karabakh. While the incident could have been resolved through quiet backroom diplomacy between the two capitals, Baku chose to send a public message to Tehran that it won’t tolerate what it saw as encroachments on its sovereignty. That triggered unprecedented Iranian military exercises next to the Azerbaijani border.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev tried to put on a brave face but couldn’t hide his surprise and unease about Tehran’s escalations. While pro-government websites responded to the crisis by extolling the might of Azerbaijan’s armed forces, military confrontation with Iran – a country with eight times the population – clearly is not in Baku’s interests. All the more so because even Baku’s main ally, Turkey, is unlikely to fight a war with Iran on Azerbaijan’s behalf.

In recent years relations between Turkey and Iran have been on a downward spiral in several areas. The South Caucasus is one of them, as Tehran resents Ankara’s expanding reach there, most of all its rising influence in Baku. Both sides, however, have been mindful not to let things deteriorate too badly and have taken steps to de-escalate. On November 15, Iran Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian shared his “delight” at hosting his “brother” and Turkish counterpart Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu in Tehran. That visit was reportedly a precursor to a visit to Tehran by Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, during which some kind of roadmap for future relations is expected to be discussed.

Even if such a document were to be signed, it likely wouldn’t drastically change the current trajectory of Turkish-Iranian relations. With political Islam receding in Turkey, and conservative nationalism resurgent, Ankara will continue to bolster its alliance with Baku while trying to expand its influence further east into the Turkic republics of Central Asia.

That explains Turkey’s support for a transportation route linking it with Azerbaijan (what Baku calls the “Zangezur corridor”) through Armenia, potentially cutting off Iran. But preserving channels of dialogue can make the differences between Ankara and Tehran more manageable. Turkey also realizes that, should relations sour further, Iran can leverage its ties with the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK) against Ankara. Policymakers in Baku would be wise to realize the limits of the Turkish support in any potential future conflagration with Tehran.

Azerbaijan’s close relations with Israel represent a different set of variables. Baku strongly benefited from Israel’s military technology, particularly drones, during the war with Armenia. Pro-Israel organizations also are a mainstay of Baku’s lobbying efforts in Washington directed, in no small degree, to neutralizing the rival Armenian lobby and blunting human rights criticisms. In exchange, Azerbaijan is expected to continue providing a platform for Israel’s intelligence activities aimed at Iran.

Meanwhile – already after the latest Baku-Tehran spat cooled down – the state-run Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy is proudly hosting a member of a group of Washington pundits who openly advocate for Iran’s dismemberment on ethnic lines because that, in their view, would benefit Israel. In this context, given the bellicose statements from Israeli officials concerning Iran’s nuclear program and the uncertainty surrounding the revival of the multilateral agreement that held it in check, Tehran continues to see Azerbaijan as a potential staging ground for an Israeli military attack.

This growing threat perception is leading Iran to build up its deterrence against Baku. Recently, the influential website Iranian Diplomacy, linked to former high-ranking diplomat Sadeq Kharrazi, published an article criticizing the government’s purported “appeasement policy towards Ankara and Baku” and calling for a more robust defense of “Iran’s national interests in the north.”

In practical terms, one immediate way of doing so is for Iran to pivot towards Armenia. Many in Baku saw the recent trucking spat as ending in Azerbaijan’s favor, as Iran committed to banning its trucks from travelling to Nagorno-Karabakh. The reality, however, is more complex: While Tehran indeed conceded on that issue, it also has made it clear that it will henceforth prefer Armenia, rather than Azerbaijan, as its conduit for north-south trade, thus depriving Azerbaijan of some potentially lucrative business opportunities.

Resurgence of irredentism

Other Iranian moves could be even more fraught for Azerbaijan. Iran’s efforts to cultivate pro-Iranian constituencies, primarily through Shiite religious organizations, have not yet borne fruit. Few in Azerbaijan are attracted to the Iranian system of governance, and not all devout Shiites are pro-Iran.

But over decades of international ostracism, Iran has developed highly adept skills of asymmetric warfare. The fact that Tehran today lacks any credible proxies or allies in Azerbaijan does not mean that it won’t keep trying. Iran will simply adapt to a strategic landscape that is different from Lebanon or Iraq, where the “proxy strategy” has so far proved more successful.

Internal developments in Azerbaijan and Iran, meanwhile, are contributing to a deepening of the divide between the two nations.

Authorities in Baku have been using the crisis with Tehran to launch a crackdown on alleged “Iran sympathizers” in the country, by closing down a number of Shiite religious websites and detaining some prominent Shiite clerics, even though the evidence of their pro-Iranian activity is flimsy at best. Meanwhile, the state-affiliated media continue to accuse Iran in harsh terms of meddling in Azerbaijani affairs.

While in Azerbaijan there has been a resurgence of irredentism inspired by the thought of “reunifying” the territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan with the northern Iranian provinces largely populated by ethnic Azerbaijanis and known to nationalists as “southern Azerbaijan,” in Iran a countervailing movement also has gained momentum.

From this angle, it is Azerbaijan that must be reunified with the “Iranian motherland” after being forcibly incorporated into the Russian empire in the 19th century. These views have gained fresh prominence in Iran, especially on the level of public discourse. The influential reformist daily Shargh is instrumental in disseminating them. But such views are not limited only to reformist circles, as Iranian nationalism is increasingly serving as a glue around which different segments of the population can rally.

With both Baku and Tehran digging in on their current foreign policy trajectories, and public attitudes in both countries increasingly seeing each other through an adversarial lens, both neighbors appear destined to continue on this collision course for the foreseeable future. 

 

Eldar Mamedov is a political adviser to the Progressive Alliance of Socialists & Democrats in the European Parliament. This article reflects his personal views and not necessarily the opinions of the S&D Group and the European Parliament.

  

Armenpress: Talking with Putin, Pashinyan strongly highlights Armenian-Russian strategic partnership in the existing situation

Talking with Putin, Pashinyan strongly highlights Armenian-Russian strategic partnership in the existing situation

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 22:05,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had a telephone conversation with the President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister, the Prime Minister presented in detail the latest developments on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Nikol Pashinyan stressed that the actions of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces are nothing but aggression against the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia. In the existing situation, the Prime Minister strongly highlighted the Armenian-Russian strategic partnership.

The commitment of the Armenian side to the trilateral statements of November 9, 2020 and January 11, 2021 was reaffirmed.

​Azerbaijan celebrates Nagorno-Karabakh victory anniversary

Chron
Nov 8 2021

Azerbaijan celebrates Nagorno-Karabakh victory anniversary
Nov. 8, 2021Updated: Nov. 8, 2021 2:35 p.m.

Soldiers carry a 440-meter-long (1,444-foot) Azerbaijan national flag to celebrate the Victory Day in Baku, Azerbaijan, Monday, Nov. 8, 2021. The celebrations mark the one-year anniversary of Azerbaijan's victory in six weeks of heavy fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh.AP

MOSCOW (AP) — Tens of thousands marched across Azerbaijan's capital on Monday to mark the one-year anniversary of the country's victory in the six-week battle over Nagorno-Karabakh.

Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev declared Nov. 8 as Victory Day to mark the capture of the strategic city of Shusha by Azerbaijani forces. The city's capture forced Armenia to accept a Russia-brokered truce two days later.

“We have restored our dignity,” Aliyev said. “We will live forever as a victorious country and a victorious nation. If any force in Armenia looks askance at us or engages in revanchist tendencies, it will see our fist.”

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As part of Monday's celebrations, demonstrators and military cadets carried a huge 440-meter (1,444-foot) national flag across the capital of Baku.

Nagorno-Karabakh lies within Azerbaijan but has been under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenia since a separatist war there ended in 1994.

Hostilities that erupted in September 2020 marked the biggest escalation of the conflict in more than a quarter century. In 44 days of fierce fighting that killed thousands, the Azerbaijani military routed Armenian forces and moved deep into Nagorno-Karabakh.

The agreement that ended the conflict saw the return to Azerbaijan of a significant part of Nagorno-Karabakh and also required Armenia to hand over all the regions it held outside the separatist region. Russia deployed nearly 2,000 peacekeepers for at least five years to monitor the peace deal.

The peace deal was celebrated as a triumph in Azerbaijan, but sparked months of massive street protests in Armenia against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who was accused by the opposition of betraying national interests.

About 10,000 opposition supporters rallied Monday in the Armenian capital of Yerevan to denounce Pashinyan's rule.

Robert Kocharyan, the country’s former president who leads Armenia's opposition bloc, criticized Pashinyan for triggering last year's hostilities with what he called ill-conceived policies and then missing a chance for an earlier truce that could have prevented Azerbaijan from winning control over a large part of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The government has done everything to lose the war,” Kocharyan said at the rally.

Ishkhan Sagatelyan, a deputy parliament speaker, called for a nationwide resistance movement to prevent Pashinyan from making new concessions to Azerbaijan, which the opposition fears.

https://www.chron.com/news/article/Azerbaijan-celebrates-Nagorno-Karabakh-victory-16602678.php


Also at
https://www.yourvalley.net/stories/azerbaijan-celebrates-nagorno-karabakh-victory-anniversary,270420
https://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/Azerbaijan-celebrates-Nagorno-Karabakh-victory-16602678.php
https://www.thehour.com/news/article/Azerbaijan-celebrates-Nagorno-Karabakh-victory-16602678.php
https://www.yakimaherald.com/news/nation_and_world/azerbaijan-celebrates-nagorno-karabakh-victory-anniversary/image_e553c46a-752c-5051-987b-d7a962885da1.html
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/azerbaijan-celebrates-nagorno-karabakh-victory-anniversary/2021/11/08/d08dbe1a-40b3-11ec-9404-50a28a88b9cd_story.html
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/nagornokarabakh-azerbaijan-armenia-moscow-nikol-pashinyan-b1953758.html

Israeli Members of Knesset submit bill to recognize Armenian Genocide

News.am, Armenia
Nov 9 2021

Several opposition Members of Knesset (MKs) have submitted a bill Tuesday to officially recognize the Armenian Genocide and hold a memorial day for it every April 24, Jpost reports.

The bill was submitted by Shas MKs Ya'acov Margi, Haim Biton and Moshe Arbel alongside Likud MKs Yuli Edelstein, Israel Katz and Yoav Kish.

This is not the first time an attempt has been made in the Knesset for Israel to officially recognize the Armenian Genocide.

In 2018, Meretz MK Tamar Zandberg proposed a bill to recognize the massacre as genocide, but the bill was canceled due to government resistance.

In 2019, a number of high-profile members of Knesset like Yair Lapid and Gideon Sa’ar voiced support for the move, but again it did not proceed due to little government support.

Foreign Minister: Armenia is ready to overcome the atmosphere of enmity


Nov 9 2021



    Yerevan

The Armenian Foreign Ministry issued an extensive statement on the anniversary of the signing of the trilateral agreement on the cessation of hostilities in Karabakh. It concerns the implementation of the provisions of the agreement signed by the leaders of Armenia. Azerbaijan and Russia, and contains Armenia’s assessment of the current situation.

Main theses of the statement of the Armenian Foreign Ministry.


  • One year since the signing of armistice with Azerbaijan: Pashinyan on the post-war realities
  • ECHR ruling: Azerbaijan violated the right to life of Armenian prisoners
  • Why is Azerbaijani language taught in Nagorno-Karabakh, and Armenian in Azerbaijan?

The statement of the Foreign Ministry says that “the aggression against Artsakh and its people” was unleashed on September 27, 2020, by Azerbaijan “with the direct participation of Turkey and with the involvement of foreign terrorist fighters”.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry claims that the 44-day war was accompanied by “large-scale violations of international humanitarian law and human rights by Azerbaijan, a deliberate attack on civilian infrastructure and cultural monuments, with the use of prohibited weapons and other war crimes”.

The statement says that as a result of the second Karabakh war, a number of areas of the unrecognized NKR were subjected to ethnic cleansing, and the population became a victim of war crimes:

“40,000 people were deprived of their homes and property, more than 17,000 civilian objects and infrastructure were destroyed, hundreds of civilians were killed or injured, and the fate of many is still unknown”.

The Armenian side claims that it has complied with all the provisions of the trilateral statement and accuses Azerbaijan of violating its obligations:

“Just a month after the signing of the trilateral statement, contrary to the commitments to remain in the positions held at the time of signing, the Azerbaijani armed forces invaded the villages of Khtsaberd and Khin Tager in the Hadrut region of Artsakh, killing and capturing Armenian soldiers.

Moreover, after the withdrawal of Armenian troops from the regions indicated in the document, the Azerbaijani side responded by penetrating and continuing illegal deployment of its armed forces in the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia”.

The statement says that Azerbaijan has not yet complied with the 8th paragraph of the November 9 statement, “holding numerous Armenian prisoners of war, hostages and other detainees, which is a gross violation of not only the trilateral statement but also the international humanitarian law”.

Another accusation concerns “the violation of the ceasefire by the Azerbaijani armed forces”. According to the document, they are of regular nature and are accompanied not only by strikes against Armenian military positions but also against peaceful settlements and civilians.

The Armenian side believes that Azerbaijan deliberately distorts and arbitrarily interprets “the provisions of the trilateral statements of November 9, 2020. and January 11, 2021. on the unblocking of infrastructures in the region, Azerbaijan exaggerates the idea of the so-called “corridor” and threatens to use force”.

This refers to the Zangezur corridor – the road connecting Azerbaijan with its exclave Nakhichevan through the Syunik region of Armenia.

The Armenian authorities insist that they are ready to unblock the roads, but they must remain under the sovereign control of the country. And this meets the requirements of the statement, which does not mention “corridors”, it only talks about unblocking communications.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry believes that the Azerbaijani side is pursuing “a policy of Armenophobia, the Armenian historical and cultural heritage is being destroyed and desecrated”. At the same time, Azerbaijan hinders the access of international humanitarian organizations to the territory of the unrecognized NKR.

All this, as the statement says, “testifies to the fact that guaranteeing the right of the Armenians of Artsakh to a safe and dignified life in their native land is impossible under the jurisdiction or control of Azerbaijan”.

The document emphasizes that “the realities formed as a result of the use of force by Azerbaijan”, that is, military actions in Karabakh, cannot become the basis for resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict:

“Azerbaijan’s statements that as a result of the war, not only the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict but also Nagorno-Karabakh no longer exist in the international arena, are also a violation of the trilateral statement of November 9, since, in it, Nagorno-Karabakh is presented as a territorial unit”.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry states that in order to ensure lasting peace and stability in the region, the following is necessary:

  • urgent settlement of humanitarian problems, first of all, the return of all prisoners of war, hostages, and other detainees, the disclosure of the fate of the missing and the investigation of cases of enforced disappearances,
  • protection of the Armenian cultural and religious heritage,
  • full restoration of the process of peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The Armenian side believes that a long-term settlement of the conflict is possible only through peaceful negotiations within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmanship. This would encompass the following:

  • clarification of the status of Nagorno-Karabakh,
  • ensuring the safe return of displaced Armenians to their settlements throughout NK,
  • realization of the right of the people of NK “to live freely and with dignity in their homeland on the basis of equality and the right of peoples to self-determination

At the end of the statement, it is said that Armenia is ready to make efforts

  • to defuse the situation in the region,
  • overcome the atmosphere of enmity step by step,
  • begin an era of stability and peaceful development in the region.

“At the same time, for the effectiveness of the process, it is necessary for Azerbaijan to also take a constructive position, abandonmits policy of Armenophobia, aggressive rhetoric and actions”.


Armenian authorities have taken over Azerbaijan’s role, says opposition MP

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 12 2021

MP Tigran Abrahamyan from the opposition With Honor faction says the Armenian authorities are trying to hide the truth, pushing the key issues to the background and focusing on the secondary ones.

Speaking at a news conference on Friday, he blamed the authorities for the failure to deal with the security issues and respond to Azerbaijan’s audacious actions.

His comments came after the news on the installation of Azeri checkpoints on the Goris-Kapan road section from Thursday midnight.

"The authorities say, ‘we have built a bypass road, it is a really good road and is of higher quality than the one where Azerbaijan has wedged in, it is safer and meets international standards.’ But what does the quality of the road have to do with what we are talking about? Apart from invading different parts of the Republic of Armenia and taking control of our important infrastructures, Azerbaijani forces pose a serious threat to our settlements,” the lawmaker stated.

Tigran Abrahamyan stressed that instead of preventing the Azerbaijani aggression or minimizing the security threats, the authorities are trying to legitimize the Azerbaijani provocations by claiming that the actions of Azerbaijan stem from the realities emerged after the war and are in accordance with the Soviet maps.

"The Armenian authorities have undertaken the role that Azerbaijan was supposed to play, i.e. they justify, legitimize Azerbaijan's steps, further narrowing down our negotiation opportunities,” Abrahamyan said.