Turkish press: Turkey, Russia begin monitoring Karabakh truce

Ruslan Rehimov   |30.01.2021

BAKU, Azerbaijan

A joint Turkish and Russian center to monitor a cease-fire deal between Azerbaijan and Armenia has become operational in Upper Karabakh on Saturday.

Established in the Merzilli village of the Aghdam region, the center will monitor the implementation of the Russian-brokered agreement which was reached in November after six weeks of intense fighting.

Following the Nov. 10 truce, Turkey and Russia signed a memorandum of understanding to set up a joint center to monitor the peace deal on Azerbaijani territories liberated from Armenia's occupation.

Azerbaijani Defense Minister Zakir Hasanov, Turkey's Deputy Minister of National Defense Yunus Emre Karaosmanoglu, and Russian Deputy Defense Minister Alexander Fomin were in attendance of the opening ceremony of the center, where 60 Turkish and 60 Russian troops would be on duty.

Stressing the importance of the center in monitoring and implementing the peace deal, Karaosmanoglu praised the efforts of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Russian President Vladimir Putin, and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to bring peace and stability to the region.

Delivering a speech at the ceremony, Hasanov wished success for the Russian and Turkish staff of the center. Also addressing the event, Fomin said the center will serve peace and stability in the region.

Liberation of Karabakh

Relations between the former Soviet republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan had been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, internationally recognized as an Azerbaijani territory, and seven adjacent regions.

When new clashes erupted on Sept. 27, 2020, the Armenian army launched attacks on civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violated several humanitarian cease-fire agreements.

During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages from the nearly three-decade-long occupation.

Despite the Nov. 10 deal ending the conflict, the Armenian army several times violated the agreement and martyred several Azerbaijani soldiers and a civilian, according to the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry.

The truce is seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia.

Catholicos of All Armenians pays tribute to memory of fallen soldiers at Yerablur Military Pantheon

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 14:51,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. His Holiness Garegin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, visited on January 28 the Yerablur Military Pantheon to pay tribute to the memory of soldiers fallen for the defense of the Homeland, the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin told Armenpress.

His Holiness Garegin II was accompanied by a group of clergymen.

January 28 marks the 29th anniversary of the foundation of the Armenian Armed Forces.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Polish politician offered 50,000$ to cancel publication of a brochure on Azerbaijani war crimes in Karabakh

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 20 2021

Polish politician Tomasz Lech Buczek says that Azerbaijan has offered 50,000$ for canceling the publication of brochure on Azerbaijani war crimes against Armenians in the recent war in Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Buczek has shared the screenshot of a message received from an Azerbaijani social media user, reading: ""The Azerbaijani government will give you $50,000, if you don't publish the publication about Azerbaijani crimes. If interested, please post a photo of Baku on January 25th on Facebook." 

"President Aliyev probably heard about my publication?" My response to Baku is: "Release the Armenian prisoners of war," Buczek wrote in an accompanying message to the screenshot. 

To note, Buczek  earlier organized a fund-raising campaign for publishing the brochure. He said that the brochure would be the world's first printed publication on Azerbaijan's war crimes against the Armenian population in Karabakh in 2020. 

The publication specifically details the tortures and inhuman treatment of Armenian war prisoners held in Azerbaijan. 

President Alijev probably? heard? about my publication. I received a proposal for not publishing Azerbaijani war crimes…

Posted by Tomasz Lech Buczek on Tuesday, January 19, 2021

 

Iranian FM to visit Armenia on January 27

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 19:09,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 22, ARMENPRESS. Foreign Minister of Iran Mohammad Javad Zarif will pay a visit to Armenia on January 27, spokesperson of MFA Armenia Anna Naghdalyan told ARMENPRESS.

Foreign Minister of Iran Mohammad Javad Zarif plans to visit Yerevan, Moscow, Baku and Tbilisi next week. He will visit Baku on January 24.

''I plan to visit the countries that are able to work together to help overcome Karabakh crisis and establish peace and stability in the region'', Zarif had said earlier.




Artak Beglaryan discussed a number of humanitarian programs with the Head of the ICRC mission

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 22 2021

Chief of the Presidential Staff of the Artsakh Republic  Artak Beglaryan received on Friday the Head of the Stepanakert Office of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Mission Bertrand Lamon, Information Department at the President's Office reported. 

Artak Beglaryan, considering the involvement of the ICRC mission in overcoming some of the existing humanitarian challenges as productive, was particularly interested in the ICRC's efforts to return the captives and find out the fate of the missings. Artak Beglaryan highlighted the important role of the organization in solving these vital problems. He stressed the imperative of comprehensive, active and practical pressure on Azerbaijan by the international community, taking into account the gross violations of international humanitarian law by that country even after the end of hostilities.

Bertrand Lamon presented the ongoing and planned work of the ICRC mission in Artsakh, emphasizing their readiness to support state institutions in resolving various humanitarian issues and developing local capacities.

The parties exchanged views on various issues on the cooperation agenda, reaching concrete agreements. They mutually highlighted the coordinated efforts in solving the existing humanitarian issues.

Bodies of seven more servicemen found in search operations in Artsakh

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 19 2021

Eight more bodies of killed were found during the search operations in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) on Monday, Hunan Tadevosyan, the head of the press service of Artsakh’s State Service of Emergency Situations, told Panorama.am. As Avetisyan informed, one of the victims is a civilian, identified as resident of Hadrut town Arsen Gahramanyan, born in 1976. 

Five of the bodies were retrieved from Jabrayil, while the other  recovered from Aygestan village from the former administrative area of Davit Bek village of Syunik province. All of the killed are servicemen and yet to be identified through a forensic DNA analysis. 

Search operations continue in the Varanda, Jabrayil, Hadrut regions and former administrative area of Meghri town, currently under the control of Azerbaijani forces, Tadevosyan added.

So far, a total of 1246 bodies of fallen soldiers and civilians have been found during the search operations. 

Azerbaijan openly politicizes issue of POWs, Armenian Ombudsman says

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 14:22, 12 January, 2021

YEREVAN, JANUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. Human Rights Defender of Armenia Arman Tatoyan says politicizing humanitarian and human rights-related issues in the post-war stage is impermissible, which, according to him, is a gross violation.

“Azerbaijan is openly politicizing the issue of prisoners of war. According to the international standards, the prisoners of war or civilian captives must be immediately released and returned to their home countries after the end of the military operations. Initiating criminal proceedings against them is banned, their detention, arrest is viewed as a punishment and is also banned. Moreover, the artificial delay of these issues is also banned, and this, in fact, is also a war crime”, the Ombudsman said at a press conference.

He added that all these are enshrined by international conventions, the demands of which are also spread on Azerbaijan.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Unblocking communications: Deputy PM Mher Grigoryan to lead trilateral task force from Armenian side

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 15:11, 12 January, 2021

YEREVAN, JANUARY 12, ARMENPRESS. The trilateral working group chaired by the Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani Deputy Prime Ministers with the purpose of unblocking all economic and transport communications in the region will be chaired from the Armenian side by Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigoryan, his office said in a news release.

The trilateral task force is being created in pursuance of a statement signed between Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan at the January 11 summit.

The working group, which will deal with the implementation of clause 9 of the 2020 November 9 statement between the Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani leaders, will hold its first meeting by January 30, 2021.

The results of the first meeting are expected to elaborate the primary directions of work in pursuance of clause 9 of the agreement, prioritizing railway and road communications, as well as define other agreed directions between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Russia, Armenia, Azerbaijan to restore transportation in Nagorno-Karabakh

DT Next, India
Jan 12 2021
 
 
 
Published: Jan 12,202104:17 PM by IANS
 
 
Leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan have agreed to take joint measures to restore transportation in the Nagorno-Karabakh region recently freed from armed conflict.
 
Moscow: Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan issued a statement on these measures following their talks in Moscow on Monday, Xinhua news agency reported.
 
 According to the statement, the three countries will set up a trilateral working group co-chaired by their Deputy Prime Ministers to ensure that all economic and transport connections in Nagorno-Karabakh will be unblocked, part of the fourth ceasefire deal reached on November 9, 2020.
 
 The working group will hold its first meeting before January 30 to make a list of key areas of work, with railway and road links as the priority.
 
 
           The statement
 
 Under the working group, expert sub-groups will be established to determine projects together with the necessary resources and activities for their implementation.
 
 By March 1, the working group will come up with a detailed plan for the restoration and construction of infrastructure necessary for safe transportation in the region.
 
 After the fourth ceasefire agreement was signed, Putin had said the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides would maintain the positions that they held and Russian peacekeepers would be deployed to the region.
 
 The three other ceasefires — two brokered by Russia (October 10, 17) and one by the US (October 26) — collapsed after Armenia and Azerbaijan traded accusations and attacks.
 
 A new round of armed conflict broke out on September 27 along the contact line of the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, which is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan but mostly governed by the Republic of Artsakh, a de facto independent state with an Armenian ethnic majority.
 
 Armenia and Azerbaijan went to war over the region in 1988-94, eventually declaring a ceasefire.
 
 However, a settlement was never reached.

Asbarez: After Moscow Meeting, Armenia Will be Forced to Make More Concessions

January 13,  2020



From left: Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan at a joint press briefing in Moscow on Jan. 11

BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

The leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia met in Moscow on Monday to hammer out the details of the November 9 agreement, which has already wreaked havoc on the lives of lay citizens in Armenia and Artsakh who have had to come face-to-face with Azerbaijani soldiers because of the uncertainties of the document.

After four hours, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev announced the signing of another agreement, this time regarding the steps to be taken to “unblock” transport routes in order to “normalize” economic and trade. In layman’s terms this means opening the border to Azerbaijan and allow Baku unimpeded access to Nakhichevan and Turkey.

Aliyev hailed Monday’s agreement, saying that after more than 30 years, Azerbaijan will have a transport connection through the territory of Armenia with its Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic, and Armenia through the territory of Azerbaijan will have a railway connection to Russia and Iran.

“We will also have access to the Turkish market through the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic, the Turkish and Russian railway arteries will be connected,” Aliyev said, adding that this can create a huge momentum for the development of the region and strengthen its security.

Pashinyan also hailed the agreement, saying that opening transport routes will increase investment and economic prosperity.

“I will not hide the fact that its [the agreement’s] implementation may simply change the economic image and appearance of our region,” said Pashinyan, expressing hope that economic reforms will become another “reliable guarantor of security” and will increase the investment attractiveness of the region.

The agreement signed on Monday gives the sides a little less than two months to consult “experts” and come up with a blueprint how this “unblocking” process is going to take place.

It seems Pashinyan will have to come up with more elaborate excuses to back up what he said before the Moscow meeting, which was that the words “Meghri” and “Nakhichevan corridor” were not included in the November 9 agreement. The words “Sotk,” “Kapan,” “Shurnukh” and “Hintagher” were also not included in the November 9 agreement, but the fact of the matter is residents of those areas in Armenia’s Syunik Province and Artsakh woke up one day to find Azerbaijani soldiers either violently attacking them or forcing them out of their houses and places of employment.

What officials are not talking about are the verbal agreements that were made during the Moscow meeting. A dangerous precedent was set during the implementation of the November 9 agreement that provisions—or concessions—not overtly listed in the document were forced upon Armenia, while Aliyev and Putin boasted that the “Karabakh conflict” is over and that discussion on Karabakh’s status are tabled until further notice.

Pashinyan lamented that during the four hours in Moscow, the issue of captives and prisoners of war was not discussed, with Putin and Aliyev alluding to their conviction that this critical matter had already been resolved.

Hundreds of people are still believed to be held captive by Azerbaijan and neither Moscow nor Baku have lifted a finger to properly resolve the fate of those military and civilian Armenians that are currently held captive and are probably enduring unimaginable atrocities and violations against them.

Ahead of Monday’s meeting, Aliyev called the Armenian POWs still in captivity in Azerbaijan “terrorists” and threatened to prosecute them to the fullest extent of Azerbaijan’s laws—not a comforting prospect for the relatives of captive Armenians who have been holding vigil at the government building only to get the runaround by Pashinyan and his government.

The most egregious threat from the Monday agreement is that Turkey will have free reign in the region and what Ankara wasn’t able to achieve through the failed Protocols process, it can do so without having to make one single concession.

As Lilit Galstyan, a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Supreme Council of Armenia, aptly stated: Pashinyan green-lighted Ankara’s pan-Turkic agenda.

What is clear is that by March 1, the deadline set for finalizing the “unblocking” process, Pashinyan will make more concessions as we have seen during the past two months. Because, apparently, what’s not in the agreement is what actually matters.