State Minister convinced Russian peacekeepers will stay in Artsakh for a long time

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 13:29, 1 July, 2021

STEPANAKERT, JULY 1, ARMENPRESS. State Minister of Artsakh Artak Beglaryan sees two main steps for stopping emigration from Artsakh – ensuring long-term security and quickly solving the housing problems.

“Of course, security is the most important. People must feel that it’s secure here and plan their long-term life. Fortunately, I can state that compared to the post-war period, in particular to November, December, January of 2020, it’s already obvious for us and the people that the security conditions are more effective than many expected. Our expectations were worse and negative than the reality showed. This gives additional positive trends and hope to our society to plan a long-term life here”, he said during an online press conference.

He also commented on the concerns what will happen in five years when the term of the stay of Russian peacekeepers in Artsakh ends. Beglaryan believes that the presence of Russian peacekeepers is not limited to five years.

“What will be the solutions, time will show, and also the superpowers will show with their actions, but I am convinced that we will have Russian peacekeepers here for a long time who will guarantee our security. Of course, our Defense Army in its part guarantees the security and will guarantee it more effectively within the course of time. Our agenda is the guarantee of our security with a peaceful negotiation process, which, we hope, Azerbaijan will be ready for”, he said.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Vardan Voskanyan: Lavrov’s words prove Russia and Turkey compete in the South Caucasus

Panorama, Armenia
July 1 2021

Expert in Iran, member of "Homeland" party Vardan Voksanyan reflected on Facebook on the outcomes of the recent meeting between Russian and Turkish FMs held in Antalya.  

"All details of the recent meeting between Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu, especially at the level of the rhetoric, should be analyzed through a magnifying glass amid the absence of any specific content of the talks. Since in the diplomatic language there are no unimportant words, it is noteworthy that Russian top diplomat used a very interesting term for Russian-Turkish relations when it came to the Armenia-Azerbaijan and Artsakh issues. He used the word 'interaction' («взаимодействие») instead of cooperation («сотрудничество»),"  Voskanyan wrote. 

"This rhetoric comes to prove once again that despite the visibly positive backdrop Russia and Turkey compete rather than cooperate in the South Caucasus  which is characterized by the diplomatic word of 'interaction' from the Russian side," added the expert. 

Armenia Ombudsman calls on Artsakh-Armenians to remove or block phone numbers, personal data on social networks

News.am, Armenia
July 1 2021

To disallow the dissemination of the Azerbaijani authorities’ new acts for causing panic, I call on Armenians of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to remove or block phone numbers, addresses and other personal data on social networks. This is what Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan wrote on his Facebook page, adding the following:

“I urge the Armenians of Artsakh to not answer any suspicious phone call via social networks.

The Azerbaijani authorities have started committing new acts to terrorize the peaceful population of Artsakh and cause panic.

I came to this conclusion based on the recent statements of the Human Rights Defender and law-enforcement authorities of Artsakh, as well as the studies and alarms of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia.

In particular, the Azerbaijanis call people living in Artsakh with their phones and offer to purchase their apartments and stores. They also obtain personal data from the social network pages. Moreover, there are active pages on Facebook that are also aimed at exerting psychological pressure on people living in Artsakh.

The Human Rights Defender of Armenia is calling the international community’s attention to this new dangerous policy of the Azerbaijani government.

It’s clear to the Human Rights Defender that this is part of the policy of ethnic cleansing against the Armenians living in Artsakh and is a manifestation of the Azerbaijani authorities’ genocidal policy against the population of Artsakh.

This information will be sent to international bodies along with the statement made by Human Rights Defender of Artsakh Gegham G. Stepanyan.

The Human Rights Defender of Armenia is in contact and cooperates with his counterpart in Artsakh on a daily basis, and all data and reports are thoroughly studied.”

Armenia, Hostage of Russia and Turkey Amid Power Play

Village of Karaglukh in the Hadrut Province of Nagorno-Karabakh / credit: Maxim atayants is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0

Armenia, a landlocked Caucasus nation-state of around 3 million people appears in a hopeless position. Following defeat in the 44-day war against Azerbaijan last autumn, the country remains stuck in the Russian geopolitical orbit, and has been forced to make painful concessions to its arch enemy, Azerbaijan.

On June 20, Armenia held parliamentary elections that led to the victory of the Civil Contract Party, whose leader is Acting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Although he is seen by many Armenians as a traitor, given he failed to preserve Armenian control over Nagorno-Karabakh—a mountainous territory in Azerbaijan that ethnic Armenians have controlled since 1994—Pashinyan’s party won 54 percent of the vote. The opposition Armenia Alliance, led by former President Robert Kocharyan, garnered a distant second with 21 percent. Why did Armenians vote for the person who signed the de facto capitulation to Azerbaijan on November 10?

Map of Caucasus region, with Nagorno-Karabakh within the dotted lines / credit: Wikipedia/CuriousGolden

 

Choosing Between Traitor and Old Guard

From the perspective of an average Armenian voter, the choice they had was either “traitor” Pashinyan, who came to power in 2018 following the so-called “Velvet Revolution,” or Kocharyan, who represents the overthrown corrupted old guard. 

According to Armenian analyst David Arutyunov, the opposition did not offer any practical alternative for resolving the issues of demarcation, a burning question in the country. Indeed, in May, Armenian authorities accused Azerbaijan’s army of advancing more than 3 kilometres (2 miles) into southern Armenia. They claimed the Azeri state was trying to lay siege on Lake Sev Lich (Black Lake), shared by the two countries. In other words, Armenia had lost control not only over most of Nagorno-Karabakh, but also over certain parts of the Republic of Armenia.

As Arutyunov points out, Azerbaijan likely will keep pressuring Armenia until the end in order to get as many concessions as possible in the process of resolving the border demarcation.

Some Armenian officials have announced Russian border guards will be deployed to those areas where Azerbaijani units allegedly advanced. At this point, however, it is highly uncertain how the border will be protected after demarcation—will the Russian troops permanently stay there, or will Armenia and Azerbaijan continue to guard borders on their own? As a result of the 44-day war, some 2,000 Russian peacekeeping troops were deployed to Nagorno-Karabakh to protect the region’s capital, Stepanakert, and the surrounding area, which is the only portion of the territory that is still de facto under Armenian control. From the Armenian perspective, Russian peacekeepers are seen as the only guardian of the remaining Armenian population in the region. Moreover, Armenia has become so dependent on Moscow, it expects the Kremlin to protect not just ethnic Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, but the borders of the Republic of Armenia, too.

 

Russia’s Responsibility

Russia, on the other hand, is obligated to defend Armenia. The Caucasus country is a member of the Moscow-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), which is often described as a Russian version of NATO, having come into being after the former Soviet Union came apart. Other CSTO members include Belarus, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. However, during the war, Russia refused to provide help to its nominal ally, Armenia. According to Key Article 4 of the Treaty, “If one of the State Parties is subjected to aggression by any state or group of states, this will be considered aggression against all States Parties to this Treaty.” The problem for Armenia is that in 2020, Azerbaijan did not attack Armenia itself, but Armenian-backed forces in Nagorno-Karabakh. That is why Moscow hesitated to directly intervene. But in May 2021, following the border incidents, Pashinyan wrote a letter to Russian President Vladimir Putin, asking for military assistance. To this day, however, no such aid has been provided.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (left) and Azeri President Ilham Aliyev / credit: President.az

Meanwhile, Azeri President Ilham Aliyev and his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, have signed a protocol of alliance in a bid to further strengthen their ties. “In the event of a third state’s threat to the independence or territorial integrity of any of the parties, the parties will provide necessary assistance to each other,” the protocol stipulates.

 

Turkey’s Role

Even before the two countries became formal allies, Turkey supplied Azerbaijan with modern, sophisticated weapons, including the Turkish-made Bayraktar drones that proved to be a game changer in the Nagorno-Karabakh War. Russia promises to arm Armenia, although it remains unclear what prevented the Kremlin from selling modern weapons to its ally before the war broke out. Over the years, Russia aimed to preserve good relations with both Azerbaijan and Armenia and at the same time to keep playing the role of the regional arbiter. However, indications suggest the Kremlin prioritized lucrative business and energy ties with Azerbaijan than its nominal alliance with Armenia.

Although the Armenian leadership may have felt because of Moscow’s unwillingness, it hardly has a choice but to keep playing the Russian card. The country depends on Russia economically, politically and militarily.

According to the Moscow-brokered peace deal, signed in November between Pashinyan and Aliyev, Azerbaijan will be able to cross to its exclave Nakhchivan—bordering Armenia, Turkey and Iran—through Armenian territory, and the Russian Federal Security Service will secure roads. Such an action could undermine remnants of Armenia’s sovereignty in the south, primarily in the area bordering Iran.

Azerbaijan, on the other hand, has insisted on the construction of the Nakhchivan corridor, also known as Zangezur Corridor, which would effectively connect the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic with mainland Azerbaijan. Given that Azerbaijan, as the clear victor, has an upper hand to the defeated Armenia, sooner or later Armenia will have to agree to the Azeri terms and conditions regarding this transregional project. Thus, it is not surprising that Pashinyan, celebrating his election victory, said, “All agreements will be fulfilled.” His room for political maneuvers vis-à-vis Azerbaijan is rather limited.

In the short term—at least until 2025, when the 5-year mandate of Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh expires—Russia will remain the dominant regional actor. In the mid and long term, Turkey is expected to improve its positions in the Caucasus, and possibly build a military base not far from the Russian border. Azerbaijan already benefited from its military ties with Turkey, while Armenia proved to be collateral damage in a wider geopolitical game played by Russia and Turkey. 

And the game is far from over.

Nikola Mikovic is a Serbia-based contributor to CGTN, Global Comment, Byline Times, Informed Comment, and World Geostrategic Insights, among other publications. He is a geopolitical analyst for KJ Reports and Global Wonks.



Baku "says will return PoWs if most of Karabakh is recognized as Azerbaijan"

PanArmenian, Armenia


– 20:23 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Baku wants to have Armenia recognize the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan with most of the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh in exchange for the release of the prisoners of war, lawmaker Naira Zohrabyan told a press conference on Tuesday, June 29.

Zohrabyan revealed that after a PACE meeting, she spoke to the head of the Azerbaijani delegation, Samed Seyidov, who claimed that the Azerbaijani side holds no prisoners of war, and that Armenian soldiers who are now in Baku have allegedly committed terrorist attacks, Sputnik Armenia reports.

Azerbaijan is refusing to return all Armenian prisoners of war, in violation of the statement on the cessation of hostilities signed by the parties in November 2020. The Armenian side has information about some 200 Armenians still in Azerbaijan’s captivity, but Azeri President Ilham Aliyev claims that persons being kept in Baku are not PoWs, but “terrorists and saboteurs”. At least 19 of the hundreds of Armenian captives have been tortured and killed, according to their lawyers.

Seyidov further charged that 50% of the minefield maps transferred to Baku in exchange for 15 PoWs were "fake". At the same time, according to the Azerbaijani lawmaker, Baku is ready to consider the release of prisoners of war only if Armenia agrees to sign a peace treaty, Zohrabyan said.

Signing such a document would mean "to recognize in writing the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, including that it owns 75% of Artsakh. Then, 'as a gesture of goodwill', they are ready to consider" the return of the Armenian PoWs, the Armenian lawmaker added.

Zohrabyan noted that if Baku ignores calls for the release of the PoWs coming from the European Union, then concrete sanctions should be applied against Azerbaijan. She suggested European structures to arrest the bank accounts belonging to Azeri President Ilham Aliyev and his family members.

Chess: Goldmoney Asian Rapid: Aronian tops preliminaries

Panorama, Armenia

Armenian GM Levon Aronian won the preliminaries of the Goldmoney Asian Rapid tournament after scoring two wins and three draws on Monday to get a 10½/15 score, ChessBase reports.

Eight out of the sixteen participants made it into the knockout stage, with 17-year-old Arjun Erigaisi surprisingly qualifying, while Alireza Firouzja, Peter Svidler and Daniil Dubov were left out of contention.

The top scorers were Levon Aronian, Vladislav Artemiev and Ding Liren.

In the remaining matches of the quarterfinals, Aronian will play Arjun, Ding will face Jan-Krzysztof Duda and Artemiev will play against Anish Giri. 

Caucasian Knot | Protesters in Yerevan demand to free Professor Charchyan

The Caucasian Knot

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More than 500 medical workers have signed a letter demanding to change the freedom restraint measure of Professor Armen Charchyan, the director of the "Izmirlyan" Medical Centre, who is accused of pressing voters before the early parliamentary elections in Armenia. Charchyan himself treats his criminal case as political persecution, said his advocate.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that the Nikol Pashinyan’s “Civil Contract” Party gained 53.92 percent of the votes at the early parliamentary elections held in Armenia on June 20. The “Hayastan” (Armenia) bloc, considered the closest rival of the current authorities and led by Robert Kocharyan, the second president of Armenia, gained 21.04 percent of the votes.

Armen Charchyan was detained on June 18, but the court refused to arrest him. However, on June 23, the court granted the investigators' motion to arrest Armen Charchyan.

The "Caucasian Knot" correspondent was informed at the Special Investigating Service (SIS) of Armenia that Professor Charchyan had forced the staff of his medical centre to take part in the early parliamentary elections and vote "against the current authorities." "Charchyan threatened that whoever fails to fulfil his demand deserves a tough attitude," the SIS has added.

On June 25, medics from different medical centres went to the building of the Armenian General Prosecutor's Office (GPO), where they handed their open letter to Arthur Davtyan, the Public Prosecutor General. The letter demanding to release Armen Charchyan was signed by 539 medical professionals. Then they went to governmental buildings and the presidential residence, as well as to the buildings of the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) and the Ministry of Public Health (MPH) of Armenia, where they handed over letters addressed to the Acting Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, President, Armen Sargsyan, and Minister of Justice, Rustam Badasyan.

"Every day, a long queue is lined up at Professor Charchyan's office; and all the patients want to be operated on by him. We assure that, as soon as necessary, Professor Charchyan will come to the investigator and will not hamper the investigation," said one of the participants of the action, a teacher at the Yerevan Medical University.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on at 08:25 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: Armine Martirosyan; Source: CK correspondent

Source: https://www.eng.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/55947/
© Caucasian Knot

Armenpress: Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 22-06-21

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 22-06-21

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 17:47,

YEREVAN, 22 JUNE, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 22 June, USD exchange rate down by 0.22 drams to 513.07 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 0.98 drams to 609.73 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.02 drams to 7.01 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 0.30 drams to 711.63 drams.

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

Gold price up by 19.62 drams to 29280.48 drams. Silver price down by 7.28 drams to 428.14 drams. Platinum price down by 502.43 drams to 17155.41 drams.

Russian peacekeepers held a training session to prevent provocative actions in Nagorno-Karabakh

Panorama, Armenia
June 15 2021

The servicemen of the Russian peacekeeping contingent continue to perform tasks to monitor compliance with the ceasefire regime on the line of demarcation of the parties in their area of responsibility, as well as ensure the safety of motor transport, transportation of food and various goods along the Lachin corridor, the Russian Defense Ministry reported. 

Also, as planned, the military personnel of the Russian peacekeeping contingent carry out combat training activities, conducting training to repel an attack on an observation post and prevent violations provocative actions against the civilian population. 

Upon receiving the signal, the peacekeepers took up defence in pre-equipped positions in the shortest possible time. Units of BTR-82A armored personnel carriers were in involved in the training to straighten the protection of the observation post. 

According to the source, over the past week, no ceasefire violations were recorded in the area of responsibility of the peacekeeping contingent, no provocative actions against Russian servicemen were noted.

All observation posts of the Russian peacekeeping contingent are equipped with Blockpost fortifications designed to protect military personnel from small arms and shrapnel, as well as to conduct circular surveillance of the nearby territory.

Declaration signed in Shushi, remarks by Erdogan and Aliyev equally deplorable – Armenian MFA

Public Radio of Armenia
June 17 2021
 

The declaration signed by the Presidents of Turkey and Azerbaijan in the occupied city of Shushi, as well as the remarks made by the President of Turkey in the Parliament of Azerbaijan are equally deplorable and provocative, the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement.

“Although one of the provisions of the Turkish-Azerbaijani declaration states that the document is not directed against a third party, its entire content, nevertheless, targets the Armenian people. It clearly reveals that the two states, which launched a 44-day aggression against the Republic of Artsakh, made an alliance against the self-determination of the people of Artsakh, the territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia, and the rights of the Armenian people around the world who survived the genocide,” the Ministry said.

“The “Zangezur corridor” _expression_ used in the declaration proves that Turkey and Azerbaijan, encouraged by the impunity of their joint aggression and mass atrocities committed against the people of Artsakh, are now making public agreements against the territorial integrity and sovereignty of the Republic of Armenia. The agreement of the two states to fight against the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide is equally worrying,” it added.

The Ministry says the abovementioned agreements completely contradict the peremptory norms of general international law and notes that according to the international law, particularly the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties of 1969, all international treaties that conflict with a peremptory norm of general international law are void and can have no international legitimacy.

“It is noteworthy that this declaration is based not on the UN Charter or the comprehensive and indivisible concept of security of the OSCE, but on their approach of “kinship security”, which is promoted as the principle of unification of the “Turkic world.” Amid such an Armenophobic context, the proposals of the President of Turkey voiced in the Parliament of Azerbaijan on creating a platform for regional cooperation are hypocritical and misleading,” the statement reads.

“The public agreements of the Presidents of Turkey and Azerbaijan contain not only genocidal threats against the Armenian people in the region, but also a serious challenge for all countries interested in international and regional peace and security, that necessitates close cooperation among all these countries,” the Foreign Ministry stated.

“The situation deriving from the use of force and aggression against the people of Artsakh cannot become a basis for lasting peace, just as various made-up Turkish-Azerbaijani initiatives in Shushi cannot alienate this Armenian cultural center from Artsakh and the Armenian people,” it concluded.