Human Rights Watch condemns human rights violations in Azerbaijan

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 16:29, 4 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani police violently dispersed a peaceful protest in central Baku on December 1, 2021, and detained dozens of protesters. Among those detained was an opposition leader, Tofig Yagublu, Human Rights Watch said in a statement.

“Azerbaijani authorities have yet again demonstrated brazen contempt for people’s right to hold peaceful protests and used violence to quash dissent,” said Giorgi Gogia, associate Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The authorities should conduct a prompt, impartial, and thorough investigation into law enforcement’s conduct and hold those responsible for abuses to account.”

Tofig Yagublu, who sustained multiple injuries in police custody, said police severely beat him while videoing him and demanding that he say on camera that he would stop criticizing Azerbaijan’s leadership.

“Yagublu’s horrific mistreatment was an attack on both an individual and the right to peaceful assembly,” Gogia said. “Given Azerbaijan’s poor record of addressing police abuses, the authorities need to ensure an effective, impartial investigation and hold to account those responsible.”

The situation in NK resulted by use of force cannot serve as basis for settlement – FM Mirzoyan

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 18:00, 3 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 3, ARMENPRESS. Within the framework of the 28th OSCE Ministerial Conference, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan met with OSCE Secretary General Helga Schmid on December 2, ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia.

Ararat Mirzoyan emphasized the effective cooperation of Armenia with the OSCE and its executive structures and the implementation of projects in the three OSCE dimensions, aimed at strengthening the concept of comprehensive and cooperative security.

The parties also touched upon the prospects of further development of the Armenia Cooperation Program (ACP).

Ararat Mirzoyan presented the situation resulted by the aggression carried out by the Azerbaijani armed forces against the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia.

The Armenian Foreign Minister reaffirmed the position of the Armenian side on the de-escalation of the situation in the region and the establishment of lasting peace, at the same time emphasizing that the continuous provocative actions of the Azerbaijani side, the Azerbaijani leadership's anti-Armenianism and belligerent rhetoric undermine those efforts.

Touching upon the humanitarian issues created by the 44-day war, Minister Mirzoyan stressed the need for unconditional repatriation of Armenian prisoners of war, hostages and other detainees held in Azerbaijan.

He also attached importance to the preservation the Armenian historical and cultural heritage in the territories of Artsakh, which came under Azerbaijani control.

Ararat Mirzoyan noted that the situation in Nagorno Karabakh resulted by use of force cannot serve as basis for the settlement of the conflict.

The need for a comprehensive and lasting settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict through peaceful negotiations under the mandate of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs was stressed.

Davit Babayan hopes the Artsakh-centrism would remain among the pillars of Hay Dat activities

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 4 2021

Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Artsakh (NKR) David Babayan participated in the conference of the ARF-Dashnaktsutyun Hay Dat Committees and Offices, which took place in the Grand Hall of the National Assembly of Artsakh, and delivered a speech, the Facebook page of the minister said. 

David Babayan highly appreciated the works carried out by the Hay Dat Offices and their contribution to the development and strengthening of Artsakh. Babayan expressed gratitude to the ARF Hay Dat for its patriotic activities and expressed hope that the structure would continue its work with the same zeal and dedication and that the Artsakh-centrism would remain among the pillars of its activity.

Armenia heightens testing requirement for the unvaccinated

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 15:56, 1 December, 2021

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian health authorities are requiring unvaccinated citizens to produce a PCR test result to their employers every 7 days instead of the currently active 14 days or else face potential termination.

Those who have contraindications against vaccination, persons who’ve recovered from COVID-19 and whose last positive test result was no more than 90 days ago, employees below the age of 18 as well as pregnant women and those who’ve had their first dose and are awaiting the second one are exempt from the requirement.

The mandate will come into force from December 1.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

CivilNet: SMART Debet Project with Children of Armenia Fund: What changed in the village?

CIVILNET.AM

29 Nov, 2021 08:11

The residents of Debet village, located in the mountains of Armenia’s Lori region have one goal: to turn it into a smart village. 

The Children of Armenia Fund, in collaboration with Debet’s municipality, has decided to give a modern boost to the village with the SMART Debet program. The community will be completely transformed in just a few years, through innovative infrastructure and new businesses. 

How is the progress so far? 

Armenian MFA comments on information about possible Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting

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 18:16,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS. In connection with the possible meeting between the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and president of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, different proposals in different formats are being discussed, spokesperson of the Foreign Ministry of Armenia Vahan Hunanyan told ARMENPRESS, answering the question if the information about Pashinyan-Aliyev meeting in Sochi on November 26 is true.

“Proposals for different meetings in different formats are being discussed, and when there is any specific agreement on the time, place and format, we will inform within a reasonable period of time”, Vahan Hunanyan said.

Earlier it became known that the Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan and the president of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev agreed to hold a meeting in Brussels on December 15 within the framework of the EU's Eastern Partnership Summit.




Armenians must be prepared to defend ‘motherland,’ says PM

RT – Russia Today
Nov 16 2021
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Armenians must be prepared to defend their homes if rising tensions on the shared border with Azerbaijan spill into outright conflict, the country’s prime minister has warned, as fresh fighting sparked fears for a ceasefire pact.

Nikol Pashinyan made the call on his compatriots to rally together and protect their “holy homeland” on Tuesday, after clashes broke out on the shared frontier.

According to a message from the Armenian Defense Ministry, “the situation in the eastern direction of the border zone continues to be extremely tense. There are local battles, during which the enemy uses artillery, armored vehicles and various types of small arms.” The Armenian side has said several of its soldiers have been wounded and two combat posts have been lost in the fighting.

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Putin announces that Russian peacekeepers are headed for Nagorno-Karabakh as Azerbaijan & Armenia sign suprise midnight armistice

Both former Soviet republics have pointed the finger at each other for the latest provocations. Yerevan’s Defense Ministry accused Azerbaijan of attacking Armenian positions along the border. Meanwhile, Baku has claimed that it acted in self defense, with its forces swooping in to destroy anti-tank weapons and mortars.

Yerevan’s security council spokesman Armen Grigoryan reached out to Moscow for help amid the skirmishes, saying that “since the attack was on the sovereign territory of Armenia, we ask Russia to protect the territorial integrity of Armenia within the framework of the 1997 treaty.”

This is not the first time Pashinyan has sounded the alarm with accusations that the Azeri army had crossed the state border. In May, the prime minister alleged that Baku’s forces had gone “three and a half kilometers inland” and accused undercover operatives of “trying to surround Lake Selvich,” which stretches across both sides of the frontier between the two nations.

Relations between Baku and Yerevan have hit rock bottom over the past year, with a short and bloody war in the disputed province of Nagorno-Karabakh. Last autumn saw Azerbaijan and Armenia strike a Moscow-brokered deal to end the current conflict over the territory, with Russian President Vladimir Putin confirming the agreement had been reached and that peacekeepers would be deployed to the region.

Nagorno-Karabakh is an enclave recognized as a de jure part of Azerbaijan, but administered by the ethnic Armenian majority. An armistice signed in 1994 froze the conflict over the territory not long after the fall of the USSR, but fighting resumed in a short and brutal campaign in which Azerbaijan took control over swathes of territory.

 

Armenian military reports 4 WIA, Azeri attacking force suffers heavy personnel and materiel casualties

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 15:55, 16 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. There were no significant changes in the situation at the eastern border of Armenia as of 15:00, the Ministry of Defense said.

There are four wounded on the Armenian side, and information on possible additional casualties is being clarified, authorities said.

“Localized battles are taking place with the use of artillery, armored equipment and various caliber firearms. The [Azerbaijani military] has significant losses of personnel and materiel. Information on casualties on the Armenian side is being checked.”

Armenian positions in the eastern border came under heavy Azerbaijani attacks using artillery and other equipment. 

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia, Azerbaijan Reach Russia-Mediated Ceasefire

Czech Rep. – Nov 18 2021

Mourners gather at a military cemetery in Yerevan, Armenia on 26 September 2021 to commemorate Armenian service members killed in the 2020 war with Azerbaijan over the region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Photo by Artem Mikryukov via Globe Media/Reuters.

Plus, Estonia installs razor fence at Russian border, Israeli couple accused of spying in Turkey, and more. 

The Big Story: Ceasefire Ends Latest Violence at Armenian-Azerbaijani Border

What happened: The Armenian Defense Ministry announced on 16 November that Yerevan had reached a ceasefire agreement with Baku, RFE/RL reports. The situation had “relatively stabilized” following the agreement, the ministry added. A recent bout of fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan led to the death of at least one Armenian soldier. 

More context: The fighting that took place this month was the worst since the two sides reached an agreement over the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict last November which resulted in significant territorial gains for Azerbaijan, Eurasianet reports. In Armenia, the political opposition blamed the government of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan for the recent escalation and called for his resignation. 

Worth noting: Earlier this week, Azerbaijani forces restricted traffic on two roads along the border with Armenia, according to a separate article in Eurasianet. The incidents come at a time when Armenia and Azerbaijan are close to reaching agreements for border demarcation and for the opening of new transportation routes.

​COVID-19 Pushes Armenian Families Into Poverty The government provided several one-time assistance payments in 2020

The Good Men Project
Nov 18 2021

COVID-19 Pushes Armenian Families Into Poverty The government provided several one-time assistance payments in 2020

by Global Voices  

By Chaikhana.media

Artyom Avetisyan, a father of two from Gyumri, Armenia, lost his job when the pandemic struck. Over the past 19 months, his family of four has skirted homelessness and struggled to pay for the medication and treatment his seven-year-old son, Felix, depends on.Before COVID-19 struck Armenia, Avetisyan says a steady stream of construction and day labor work kept his family fed and housed.“I had a lot [of work] before the virus but once the virus spread, I stopped getting calls for work,” he said. “I had a [monthly] income of about 150,000 drams (just over 300 US dollars), which my family lost.”While Avetisyan earned below Armenian’s median wage of 400 US dollars a month before Covid struck, the sudden loss of employment has affected his children’s lives on every level. Today, Avetisyan and his wife, Anna Davtyan, worry they will lose their apartment because they can no longer afford the 35,000-dram (75 US dollars) monthly rent.

The family has also struggled to pay for Felix’s medical therapy and treatments. Felix, a third-grader, has cerebral palsy. Before the pandemic, the family was able to pay for his treatments (a total of 152,000 drams a month, about 307 US dollars), in part due to the generosity of local charities and philanthropists.

But raising the necessary funds has been impossible since the pandemic started. Today the family is limited to the monthly disability assistance Felix receives from the state (roughly 50 US dollars).

While the lack of income is a constant concern, the family is also struggling to make sure Felix and his older sister, nine-year-old Donara, don’t fall behind in school after missing months of online classes since the family didn’t have a computer or smartphone.

The Avetisyan family is far from alone in the struggle to survive following the economic collapse caused by the pandemic. An estimated 720,000 Armenians slipped into poverty due to the pandemic ($5.50 2011 PPP poverty line).  The Armenian economy contracted by eight percent in 2020 due to COVID-19 and the lockdown measures that were imposed to slow the spread of the virus, according to the World Bank.

“The short-term impacts of COVID-19 on household labor and nonlabor incomes could substantially increase poverty rates in Armenia,” the World Bank noted in a report published in February 2021.

The report found the poverty rate could increase from 33.6 percent to 46.6 percent due to the pandemic, with the number of people living in extreme poverty increasing from one percent to seven percent.  “The economic shocks from COVID-19 could impoverish 370,000 Armenians. Over 720,000 (one in four) Armenians could suffer downward mobility, shifting to a lower-welfare group in 2020,” the report stated.

The Armenian government provided several one-time payments to help people survive the pandemic lockdown in 2020.

The assistance was allocated to specific groups that met certain criteria: each family received a single payment of 26,500 drams (53 US dollars) per child; the officially employed received 68,000 drams (136 US dollars) as compensation during one month of the lockdown; and business owners in hard-hit sectors, like retail and tourism, were given 10 percent of their 2019 fourth-quarter returns and their employees received the equivalent of half of one month’s pay.

As Avetisyan worked as a day laborer, he did not qualify for unemployment assistance. His family did receive the one-time payment allocated for children.

But months after that assistance ended, Avetisyan is still unemployed and has limited options until the economy recovers and he can find a job.

His situation is not uncommon for the Shirak region, where Gyumri is located. Even before the pandemic, the region had one of the highest poverty rates in Armenia — 48.4 percent lived below the poverty line according to the World Bank.

The situation is particularly dire for children in the region, where an estimated one out of every two children lives in poverty.

The pandemic has made things worse, as travel restrictions made it impossible for people to travel to Russia for work.

In Maralik, the Kirakosyan family lost their only source of income during the pandemic when the roads to Russia closed. For 7-year-old Davit, the lack of resources meant he couldn’t join online classes and he fell behind. Now a second-grader, he still doesn’t know all the letters of the alphabet and cannot read or write.

Vardan Ikilikyan, the head of Azatan, one of the largest communities in the Shirak region, says that although technically it is possible to get to Russia now, the burden of PCR tests and high travel costs effectively means people are stuck at home.

“About 30 percent of the population of Azatan go abroad for work, mainly to Yakutsk, Moscow, Sakhalin, Vladivostok, where most work in construction. Due to the coronavirus, the workers here were unable to leave,” he said, estimating that around 300 families were affected in Azatan alone.

This post was previously published on Globalvoices.org and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.