Author: Lara Chatinian
Armenia and Azerbaijan agree to defuse Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
Both sides to refrain from targeting civilians, falling short of ceasefire
GENEVA (Reuters) — Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed on Friday to refrain from deliberately targeting civilians in a conflict over the mountain enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, where hundreds have been killed in more than a month of fighting.
The agreement, which falls short of what would have been a fourth ceasefire, was reached during talks in Geneva between the countries' foreign ministers and envoys from France, Russia and the United States, co-chairs of the group created to mediate.
The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group said in a statement that Armenia and Azerbaijan had also agreed to exchange the bodies of fighters and to provide within a week lists of detained prisoners of war, with the aim of an eventual exchange.
Human rights groups called earlier for an immediate halt to the use of banned weapons by both sides after confirming the use of cluster munitions either fired or supplied by Armenian forces in an attack this week on the Azeri city of Barda.
The worst fighting in the South Caucasus for more than 25 years has brought into sharp focus the increased influence of Turkey, an ally of Azerbaijan, in a former Soviet region considered by Russia to be within its sphere of influence.
Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, but is populated and controlled by ethnic Armenians. About 30,000 people were killed in a 1991-94 war in the region.
Azeri President Ilham Aliyev said on Twitter the country's troops had taken under their control nine more settlements. The regions to which he referred are in the southern part of the conflict zone, close to the border with Iran.
Azerbaijan's military gains since fighting began on Sept. 27 make a negotiated settlement more difficult. Aliyev has rejected any solution that would leave Armenians in control of territory claimed by both countries as part of their historic homeland.
In comments published on the prime ministerial website, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, responding to questions from foreign media, said he believed "the principle of 'remedial secession' should be applied to Nagorno-Karabakh".
Remedial secession refers to the secession of a sub-group from its parent state as a remedy of last resort.
Three ceasefires have failed to halt the latest fighting, the most recent brokered in Washington last Sunday by U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
Sporadic fighting continued on Friday. Azerbaijan's defence ministry said military positions and settlements in the Aghdere, Khojavend and Gubadli regions had come under fire.
The ethnic Armenian-controlled Nagorno-Karabakh defence ministry said it had thwarted Azeri offensives and that shelling of residential areas of towns in the enclave had resumed. It also said it had captured a fighter from Syria.
Rights group Amnesty International and New York-based Human Rights Watch said they had independently confirmed the use of cluster munitions in an attack on Barda on Wednesday. Azerbaijan has said 21 people were killed.
Both groups called for an immediate halt to the use of banned weapons. A separate report by Human Rights Watch on Oct. 23 found that Azerbaijan had used cluster munitions in at least four separate incidents.
PM calls Mike Pompeo’s attention to the fact of Azerbaijan’s violation of ceasefire agreement
19:44,
YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan today held a telephone conversation with U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Office of the Prime Minister.
The Armenian Prime Minister called his interlocutor’s attention to the fact that Azerbaijan broke the ceasefire agreement reached in Washington. Nikol Pashinyan stressed that this is the third time Azerbaijan has violated the ceasefire agreement, thus ignoring the Minsk Group Co-Chairs’ efforts to achieve a peaceful resolution of the conflict.
ANN/Armenian News – Week in Review – 10/18/2020
Armenian News Network / Armenian News
Armenian News: Week in Review
ANN/Armenian News
October 18, 2020
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Asbed Kotchikian
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Emil Sanamyan
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Asbed Bedrossian
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Hovik Manucharyan
Hello, and welcome to the Armenian News Network, Armenian News, Week in Review.
This Week we’re going to continue to talk about the ongoing war in Artsakh. We’re going to consider the following major aspects:
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In retrospect: tracing our steps back to September 27.
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Call from the extra parliamentary opposition to establish a War Council.
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Mobilization of the Armenian Diaspora.
To talk about these issues, we have with us:
Asbed Kotchikian, who is a senior lecturer of political science and international relations at Bentley University in Massachusetts.
And
Emil Sanamyan, a senior research fellow at USC’s Institute of Armenian Studies specializing in politics in the Caucasus, with a special focus on Azerbaijan.
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Today we’re exploring where the diplomacy stood On Sep. 27, – essentially from the Turkish/Azeri threats of war, for the 2 months since July, – and then why it took a long time for anyone in the international arena to react and even recognize that there was a real war in progress; and finally how the world reacted and what it means, and where we're headed.
On Friday, 13 extra-parliamentary political parties in Armenia called on the government to create a coordinating and executive council which includes former presidents, FMs and DM with the authority to make executive decisions regarding the military/political developments and to strategize a common action.
The Armenian diaspora has been mobilized since the first day of the war and worldwide Armenian communities have been engaged in fundraising, gathering medical and humanitarian assistance as well as organizing protests in major cities around the world. The communities have also activated in urging their governments to #RecognizeArtsakh. How important has this been in the overall war effort?
That concludes our program for This week’s Armenian News Week in Review. We hope it has helped your understanding of some of the issues from the previous week. We look forward to your feedback, and even your suggestions for issues to cover in greater depth. Contact us on our website, at groong.org, or on our Facebook Page “ANN – Armenian News”, or in our Facebook Group “Armenian News – Armenian News Network”.
Special thanks to Laura Osborn for providing the music for our podcast. I’m Hovik Manucharyan, and on behalf of everyone in this episode, I wish you a good week. Thank you for listening and talk to you next week.
Armenia, Artsakh, Nagorno Karabakh Negotiations, Lavrov Plan, Russia, Turkey, Azerbaijan
Asbarez: Do More
October 20, 2020
BY SOSÉ HOVANNISIAN
On the last night of AYF Camp in the summer of 2016, all of Director Moushig Andonian’s campers locked arms with one another in an emotional singing of Arabo Ispiryan’s “Bid Bashdbanem” (I must defend). Armenian juniors as young as 8 shared tears and heartfelt emotions as they sang in one large and unbreakable circle.
Today more than ever, I understand the depth of the lyrics and how they aren’t just words in a songbook. Rather, they represent the true grit, spirit, and resolve of our beloved soldiers and other Gharabaghtsis. Those very lyrics are being played out on the battlefields of Hadrut, Martuni, and other regions of our ancestral lands. We sang “Bid Bashdbanem” then, and today those brave young men and women stand ready at every moment to give their lives to protect what is rightfully theirs and ours.
Thousands of miles removed, we in the diaspora keep informed of the latest news from the front lines; we donate; we sign petitions. But then what? At the end of the day, we sleep in our comfortable beds, enjoy our food, and busy ourselves with our daily routines. Yes, we hurt and pray for our brothers and sisters, and do occasional good deeds to help the cause, but that only goes so far.
So I write this to say that the time is now to break through and do even more to make a real and tangible change. We can’t let up. We must act now.
Without the Diaspora’s help, our country will not pull through. Like more than 150,000 Armenians chanted on the streets of LA last week, յաղթելու ենք։ But in order to make these chants our reality, we must do more.
For the past three weeks, my friends and I have volunteered at Armenia Fund, fielding hundreds of phone calls from donors. This has been a very rewarding experience, and we’ll continue to devote as much time as possible to this cause. Though we receive hundreds of calls a day, the best, in my opinion, are those from the East Coast. Picking up a phone call from Tenafly, New Jersey or Hartford, Connecticut reminds me that our Armenian footprint is wide and deep in this country. The other day, I answered a call for a donation from a Massachusetts Armenian, and the call turned into a conversation about all of the efforts the East Coast Armenian community is making, from rallying at Heritage Park in Boston to shutting down the I-95 in Philadelphia. It feels good to know that Armenians near and far are doing their part. But we can do more.
My school, Holy Martyrs Ferrahian, organized a supply drive with Code3Angels, successfully arranged a car-wash, sold hundreds of Artsakh T-shirts, and is now working on a “manti fundraiser” to add to the $50,000+ the school already has collected for Artsakh. But we all can do more.
Elsewhere, Armenians continue to raise funds, some by selling handmade jewelry, homemade harissa, and baked goods. I encourage all business owners to take part in this movement of sending their proceeds to the Armenia Fund, as done by Hawaiian Hot Chicken and Raffi’s Place. But we can do more.
The ANCA, which has always been a frontrunner in providing resources for the Armenian community in America, has released several petitions for us to sign. Though you may not find them effective at first, it’s imperative to sign not one, but all of these petitions, become a rapid responder, and always be active for our homeland. We can still do more.
As a young student, I always wondered if the genocide would have happened if social media existed in 1915. And now the answer is clear to me: Yes. Despite our efforts to undermine Azeri and Turkish lies and propaganda as well as one-sided media coverage, and notwithstanding our pleas for assistance and peace, the murders and other atrocities continue in Artsakh.
We’ve grown up singing Hayer Miatsek, believing one day we’ll have the power to take back our lands from the Turks. But how will we reach that point if we are currently witnessing history repeat itself and not taking action? We sing Mer Hayrenik, pledge Hay Em Yes, and pray the Hayr Mer. Is Artsakh exempt from these? Do they not belong to Artsakh as much as they do Armenia?
Artsakh has been Armenian land since the days of the Urartu Kingdom. Take a look at its flag, for one. The white zig-zag pattern symbolizes two things: the region’s mountains, hence Լեռնային Արցախ, and the separation from the rest of the motherland. That white section leaves the puzzle incomplete as the two lands seek to unite. It is in our hands to make their union a reality. But to do so, we must do more.
In the end, it’s your centuries of history on the line. It is up to you to stand up and say “Bid Bashdbanem.” It’s up to you to continuously be active at protests, spread awareness on social media to your non-Armenian peers, and donate. While our brothers and sisters are giving their blood and lives for Artsakh, the least we can do is Do More!
Sosé Hovannisian is a senior at Holy Martyrs Ferrahian High School and an intern at Asbarez.
FP: The Diaspora May Be Armenia’s Biggest Asset in Nagorno-Karabakh
As clashes between Azerbaijani and Armenian forces continued for the third week, young men rode through the streets of Beirut’s largely Armenian Bourj Hammoud neighborhood waving Armenian flags. More than 7,000 miles away, Armenian Americans blocked roads and highways in Los Angeles; organized shipments of money, medicine, and food; and demanded action from the U.S. government. For the estimated 7 million Armenians flung to far corners of the globe, the latest conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh is a nearly unprecedented impetus to mobilize and unify—with reports of young Armenians even going back to an ancestral homeland few have ever seen to do battle.
“Around the world, when there is war, people flee the country,” said Krikor Artenian, a Lebanese Armenian resident of Bourj Hammoud. “But not Armenians. Armenians from all around the world have flooded into Armenia and Artsakh,” he said, using the term that millions of Armenians employ for the enclave that is legally part of Azerbaijan but mostly inhabited by and governed by ethnic Armenians.
The conflict over the breakaway region has been simmering for years, with the last big outbreak of violence before the current fighting claiming some 30,000 lives in the early 1990s. Since hostilities erupted in late September, Armenia and Azerbaijan have ramped up military pressure on each other and blown up a tentative cease-fire. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo described it as a “powder keg of a situation.”
For many Armenians living in Lebanon, the conflict hits close to home, even if Armenia proper never was theirs. Most Armenians in Lebanon are descendants of the up to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians inside the Ottoman Empire who were killed or forced to flee during World War I by Ottoman forces. Many fled into Syria’s eastern deserts or to Aleppo; others continued on to Lebanon, ending up in a refugee camp outside Beirut. A century later, that camp is now the densely populated, heavily Armenian neighborhood of Bourj Hammoud.
There, Armenian flags fly next to anti-Turkish graffiti; now, walls are spray-painted with “Azerbaijan is guilty” as the intensifying conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh occupies public attention. People, mostly chatting in Armenian with a bit of Arabic, gather to watch the latest news on the fighting on television; shopkeepers listen to patriotic Armenian songs. There are signs in Armenian, schools that teach in Armenian, and Armenian churches, too, and a deep collective memory of their historical trauma.
For all the differences among the Armenian diaspora—some are descendants of that first exodus, others from Soviet or even post-Soviet conflicts, each with different histories and relationships with modern-day Armenia—the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh is mobilizing and unifying them in unprecedented ways. Across Europe, ethnic Armenians have also blocked highways and protested in capitals, many demanding recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh as sovereign Artsakh.
“These differences are very clear during peacetime,” said Armenak Tokmajyan, a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Middle East Center. “Today, we don’t see these divisions. We see unity and mobilization.” Turkey’s role, as a major military backer of Azerbaijan, is reopening historical wounds, he said.
“It invokes certain memories, particularly for old-diaspora Armenians,” he said.
That sentiment is being translated into donations of money and aid—and plenty of talk, though less action, among young Armenians about going to fight for their country.
“Our people either give food, money, or their blood to the fight,” said Artenian, who is in his 60s and has never been to Armenia but says he’s willing to die for it.
One high-profile Armenian who’s willing to give money is Kim Kardashian West, who contributed $1 million. She’s not alone: the Hayastan All Armenian Fund, which offers the diaspora the chance to contribute in dollars, euros, rubles, or Armenian dram, has raised $126 million raised so far.
“My thoughts and prayers are with the brave men, women, and children,” said Kardashian in a video message to her 190 million Instagram followers. “I want everyone to remember that despite the distance that separates us, we are not limited by borders. We are one global Armenian nation together.”
Like Kardashian West, other Armenians in Los Angeles are rallying to the cause. Armenian Americans in southern California have sent heavy-duty generators, food, medicine, and volunteers, including ethnic Armenian doctors and nurses who traveled to Nagorno-Karabakh, said Sevak Khatchadorian, the chairman of the Armenian Council of America. (Not all the shipments are apparently arriving: Armenia complained this week that Turkey blocked the flight of one shipment of aid from Los Angeles.)
For Armenian Americans like Khatchadorian, the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh is a key political issue just weeks ahead of this year’s presidential election. The mayor of Los Angeles this month issued a statement supporting Armenia in the fight—a strange foray for a municipal official. Meanwhile, the United States has increased over the past two years its security funding for Azerbaijan by $100 million.
“It’s definitely a voting issue for us,” Khatchadorian said. “The Azeri government might be using my U.S. tax dollars to attack Armenians.” He calls what he sees as the Trump administration’s support for Azerbaijan “unforgivable.” The U.S. House of Representatives and Senate both passed resolutions recognizing the Armenian genocide between 1915 and 1923—but President Donald Trump, fearing a backlash from Turkey, has refused to sign it.
This week, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden weighed in as well, taking both countries and Turkey to task for their role in spreading the conflict. Khatchadorian says Biden’s position is better than Trump’s position but not enough.
But for all the boisterous talk and generous aid, one thing that few Armenians seem to be doing is going to the front lines to fight, unlike some of Turkey’s proxies. Some Lebanese say they have friends on the ground, but it’s hard to confirm. Artenian, sitting in a narrow alleyway of Bourj Hammoud, calls a friend he says is in the fighting. A photo of a man in fatigues pops up on the phone, but no one speaks on the other end. “They told him he’s not allowed,” Artenian said cryptically, putting away the phone.
Unlike the conflict in the early 1990s, Armenia doesn’t need foreign volunteers this time, even if seemingly every young man in Bourj Hammoud says they want to join the fight. Thirty years ago, Armenia’s military was less professional, while Lebanon was coming off years of civil war. Today, the fight is a high-tech war with drones and advanced battle tanks, leaving little room for volunteers.
“Regardless of how much you love this land and how much trauma you have, you can’t operate this equipment,” said Tokmajyan, the Carnegie expert.
But in a war that hinges just as much on the battle of international image, Armenia’s diaspora seems to give it an edge. Whether it’s Kardashian West and her fellow Armenian Americans in California or Lebanese Armenians lobbying their government and calling for cyberattacks on Azerbaijan, the usually well-off and well-educated diaspora is a strategic asset.
“This time, there is a feeling our main resource is not a country,” Tokmajyan said. “The main resource is the diaspora.”
Hassan Harfoush contributed reporting for this story.
Asbarez: CBS Fires 2 Employees Who Told Armenians ‘I Hope You Die’
October 14, 2020
President and CEO CBS Entertainment Group, George Cheeks, said that after a review, the company has fired two employees who confronted Armenian protesters in front of its studios Monday, one reportedly telling them, “I hope you die and I hope your country gets blown away.”
In a letter addressed to Armenia’s Consul General to Los Angeles Ambassador Armen Baibourtian, Cheeks said “two of these individuals have been identified as CBS employees.”
“Please be assured: this conduct does not align with the values of our company, and we condemn their language in the strongest terms. These incidents were investigated immediately, and as of last night, both of these individuals are no longer employed by CBS,” Cheeks told Baibourtian in the letter. “All of us here want you to know that we respect your right for peaceful protest, and we apologize to you and the Armenian community for this experience outside our facility.”
A group of Armenians staged a demonstration in front of the CBS Studios in Los Angeles to protest the network’s local coverage of the 150,000-person March for Victory for Artsakh on Sunday. In covering the Sunday’s event, the local CBS affiliate stations interviewed Nasimi Aghayev, Azerbaijan’s Consul General, who accused Armenia of being the aggressor and claimed Armenia attacked Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijani forces, with the equivocal and military support of Turkey, launched an aggressive attack across Artsakh beginning on September 27. Despite a ceasefire that went into effect on Saturday, Azerbaijan continues its relentless attacks on civilian and military targets in Artsakh.
During the Monday demonstration to protest the CBS coverage, two individuals who were believed to be employees directed insults at the Armenians gathered there. Baibourtian also was on the scene and spoke to CBS security officials.
The local news site Patch LA reported that one of the employees, who was not able to enter the parking lot told hurled insults at the protesters allegedly saying: “I hope you die and I hope your country gets blown away.”
Another employee, according to Patch LA, allegedly told the demonstrators, “Good thing you’re not ‘BLM,’ cause I probably would run your ass over,” referring to the ongoing Black Lives Matter protests.
According to Deadline, production “slowed” on the CBS lot as a result of the all-day protest on Monday.
CivilNet: La Russie Propose le Retrait des Troupes Arméniennes dans Cinq Region du Karabakh
Russia may allow migrants of EAEU states to work with national driving licenses at Armenia’s offer
19:24,
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. At the proposal of Armenia, Russia is considering to allow the migrants representing the member states of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) to work with their national driving licenses.
Russia’s Interior Ministry developed a bill which will allow the migrants from the EAEU states to work in Russia as a driver by using their national driving licenses.
According to the bill, the driving license of the EAEU member states will be recognized as valid while working in Russia.
Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan
Intel: Armenia’s foreign minister in Egypt says Turkey undermines ‘peace and stability in the region’
by Joe Snell
Egypt hosted Armenia’s Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan in Cairo on Sunday to discuss political and economic relations and stress the urgent need for what the minister said are peacemakers to “draw the red lines to war.”
Mnatsakanyan led an Armenian delegation filled with current and former ambassadors to Egypt. The officials were hosted by Egypt’s Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry. The visit was the first by Mnatsakanyan to the Middle East in his role since his appointment in 2018, and it started in Egypt, reflecting the two countries' deeply rooted and still-growing relations.
The ministers discussed enhanced political dialogue across the IT sector, e-governance, pharmaceuticals, tourism and education.
Why it matters: Relations between Egypt and Armenia go back over 100 years to when Egypt and other Arab states welcomed Armenians fleeing repression and genocide in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire. Today, there are thousands of Armenians living in Egypt, Mnatsakanyan said, and he applauded the ability to maintain their national identity, language and traditions.
“They are proud citizens of Egypt, they are proud Egyptians, and they are provided with every opportunity to also manifest and celebrate their national identity as Armenians,” Mnatsakanyan said.
At the 2019 Munich Security Conference, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi recognized the Ottoman Empire massacre and trumpeted Egypt’s role in welcoming Armenian refugees.
“They enjoyed peace and security in Egypt,” Sisi said. He later reassured that these refugees were “integrated within the Egyptian community, living and working like all of the Egyptians.”
Egypt was one of the first countries in the Middle East to recognize Armenia’s independence in 1991, and one year later, diplomatic relations were established. In 1992, Egypt was the first country to host a diplomatic mission of Armenia in the Middle East. Since then, the countries have signed more than 40 bilateral agreements and celebrate each country’s cultural days.
Tensions in the region have escalated in recent months after Turkey's intervention in Libya and a drive for oil in disputed waters in the eastern Mediterranean against Greece and Cyprus, two close allies of Egypt.
Shoukry stressed Cairo's support for a peaceful solution in Libya and a "Libyan-Libyan" dialogue in Morocco.
"We need actions and policies that enhance stability and are consistent with the rules of international relations and international legitimacy," Shoukry said.
And last month, Egypt approved a maritime deal with Greece to confirm their exclusive economic zone for oil and gas drilling. On Sunday, Mnatsakanyan expressed solidarity with Greece and Cyprus in their rights to the waters.
“We need peacemakers who are able to draw red lines to war,” he said.
Yerevan’s support for Egypt also extends to last January’s Eastern Mediterranean Gas Forum, joined by Egypt, Cyprus, Greece, Israel, Italy, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority to attempt to create a regional gas market, reduce infrastructure costs and offer competitive prices.
Armenian's top diplomat also supported Egypt’s efforts to sign a free-trade deal with the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union.
What’s next: Mnatsakanyan briefed Shoukry on the escalating border dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In July, clashes on the border killed 13 Azeris including a civilian, and four Armenians were killed.
"During the events in July, Turkey has been the only country that was taking a one-sided, very aggressive approach," Mnatsakanyan said. "Of course, we see the military build-up that they are attempting. … These are exactly the moves that undermine the effort toward peace and stability in the region."
On Monday, Mnatsaknayan was received by Sisi and reiterated Armenian’s stance on growing their partnership. The minister invited Shoukry and Sisi to Armenia.
Know more: Al-Monitor correspondent Mohamed Saied reviews Egypt’s focus on a natural gas pipeline amid escalating tension in the Mediterranean Sea.