Any threat of violence against Armenian nationals condemnable – Ombudsman

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 15 2021
– Public Radio of Armenia

Any measure of the announced unblocking of economic and transport ties concerning our country must be implemented with the high guarantee of the rights of the citizens of Armenia and, first of all, the inhabitants of the border settlements enshrined in the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia, Human Rights Defender Arman Tatoyan says.

According to the Ombudsman, the actions or decisions of the highest state governing bodies of the Republic of Armenia should be based on the extent to which the rule of law is ensured in the country by that action or decision. This, in turn, means strong guarantees for the life, property and all other rights of every person living in Armenia, and full protection against all risks in real life.

“It is a matter of fundamental importance that any implementation of the provisions of Article 9 of the Tripartite Statement of November 9, 2020 and the subsequent Tripartite Statement of January 11, 2021 must take into account that the highest authorities of the Azerbaijani have pursued a policy of ethnic cleansing against the Armenians of Artsakh,” the Ombudsman said, adding that the hatred towards Armenians is growing day by day along accompanied by notorious propaganda of hostility and threats of a genocide.

“Any attempt at making demands to the citizens of Armenia with threats of abductions, violence and intimidation, is absolutely condemnable. It directly violates international human rights law, and grossly violates both the internationally recognized rights as well as those guaranteed by the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia,” Arman Tatoyan said.

“Despite it all, if any act based on a provision of an international act, in the short or long term, leads to an act or a decision that violate the rights of the people of Armenia, it cannot have any legal force, as it will be violative of the rule of law and, consequently, the RA Constitution,” he added.

“These are the obligations of our state before every person living in Armenia, obligations that our state has undertaken to protect human rights, which stem directly from the international treaties it has signed and ratified,” the Human Rights Defender concluded. 

Hrant Dink commemorations to be held online this year

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 15 2021

Commemorations for murdered Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink will take place online this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Ahval reported on Thursday, citing organizers.

Dink served as editor-in-chief of Istanbul’s Armenian-language newspaper Agos before being gunned down outside its offices on Jan. 19. 2007.

More than 100,000 people joined the funeral for the journalist and human rights advocate, who sought to mend relations between Turkey and the Armenian community.

Traditionally, friends and supporters gather outside the Agos offices to mark the anniversary of the killing. This year, however, the memorial will take place online, with speeches and features on Dink’s life broadcasted throughout the day.

Ogun Samast, a Turkish ultra-nationalist, was convicted of Dink’s murder in 2011, but questions remain over the alleged involvement of state security forces.

On Tuesday, a former gendarmerie intelligence officer was detained in relation to the case, state-run Anadolu news agency said. 

Agreements of Karabakh statement being implemented consecutively, Russia’s Putin says

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 15:42,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 11, ARMENPRESS. Russian President Vladimir Putin says the agreements of the trilateral statement signed by him, the Prime Minister of Armenia and the Azerbaijani President over the Nagorno Karabakh conflict are being implemented consecutively.

“Partnering and friendly relations are valuable for Russia, which connect our countries and peoples, therefore, we were following the renewed military clash with a sincere concern for the human fates. Unfortunately, the large-scale military operations led to huge human losses, escalated the complex situation in the South Caucasus and increased the risks for the spread of terrorism. I want to thank you that you accepted in a positive manner the mediation efforts of the Russian side aimed at assisting in stopping the bloodshed, stabilizing the situation and achieving stable ceasefire. We were in constant touch, were jointly searching for a compromise as a result of which a trilateral statement was agreed on November 9 which we have signed jointly. Today we can praise the fact that the trilateral agreements are being implemented consecutively”, Putin said at a meeting with Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev in Moscow.

The Russian leader said the Russian side continues discussing its actions with the remaining Co-Chair countries of the OSCE Minsk Group.

“Russian peacekeepers have been deployed [in Nagorno Karabakh] at the request of the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides aimed at observing the ceasefire. Exchange of prisoners of war and bodies of the dead has been carried out at the mediation of the Russian side”, Putin stated.

Meeting of the Armenian Prime Minister, the Russian President and the Azerbaijani President has kicked off in the Kremlin.

Earlier today Armenian PM’s spokesperson Mane Gevorgyan reported that the meeting is of economic nature, relating to the opening of regional communications and the implementation of international cargo transportation.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Armenian Ambassador raises the issue of Azerbaijan’s systematic violation of international law with UN chief

Public Radio of Armenia

Jan 8 2021

The Permanent Representative of Armenia to the UN, Ambassador Mher Margaryan has sent a letter to the UN Secretary-General referring to Azerbaijan’s persistent, systematic violations of international law and attempts to resort to misplaced invocation of the concept of “self-defense” as purported justification for military action.

The letter is available as a document of the General Assembly and of the Security Council.

The letter reads:

Further to my previous letters on the aggression unleashed by Azerbaijan against Nagorno-Karabakh, I am writing regarding Azerbaijan’s persistent, gross and systematic violations of the Charter of the United Nations and the norms and principles of international law in the context of the maintenance of international peace and security.

Azerbaijan has repeatedly demonstrated a blatant disregard towards its pre-eminent obligation to strictly adhere to the principles of non-use of force or threat of force and the pacific settlement of disputes by opting, instead, for instigation of violence, conflict and atrocity crimes in relation to the people of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).

In order to conceal its failures with respect to the multiple proposals on
implementation of confidence-building measures and consolidation of the ceasefire regime made by the Co-Chairs of the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) – such as the establishment of an investigative mechanism into ceasefire violations, expansion of the number of international monitors and their activities, refraining from provocative actions, including the use of snipers and engineering works along the line of contact and the State border – the
authorities of Azerbaijan displayed remarkable consistency in promoting the language of threats, fueling ethnic hatred and propagating war and violence against Armenians. In doing so, the leadership of Azerbaijan sought to push for a deceptive, victim-blaming narrative on the basis of misplaced, manipulative invocation of the concept of “self-defenses” as a purported justification for military action.

Over the years, the leadership of Azerbaijan has been consistently rejecting proposals for diplomatic settlement, resorting instead to an exponential arms race, while blaming the negotiation process, the mediators and the international community for its own inability to prioritize international peace and stability over violence and ethnic hatred.

Azerbaijan’s long-standing objective to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict by force and not through peaceful means resulted in a series of major escalations, including the large-scale offensive in April 2016 and border escalation in July 2020, in flagrant violation of the trilateral ceasefire agreements of 1994 and 1995.

From 27 September to 9 November 2020, Azerbaijan launched a premeditated military offensive leading to the most intense and destructive crisis in the region since the 1990s, in grave violation of the ceasefire agreements and international humanitarian law. In what has become the biggest military escalation in times of a global pandemic, Azerbaijan, with the military support of Turkey and the involvement of thousands of foreign terrorist fighters and mercenaries, carried out massive attacks against Nagorno-Karabakh, accompanied with the deliberate targeting of the civilian population, including women, children, journalists, humanitarian and medical workers, and the destruction of critical civilian infrastructure. Videos of public executions, mutilations, inhuman treatment of prisoners of war and civilian hostages and other atrocities have been widespread in online media.

As I elaborated in my letter dated 5 October 2020 (A/75/496-S/2020/984), all the available evidence clearly indicates that the Azerbaijani-Turkish attacks have been planned well in advance. The United Nations Working Group on the use of mercenaries expressed strong concern over the large-scale recruitment and transfer of foreign mercenaries from Syria that are “allegedly affiliated with armed groups and individuals that, in some cases, have been accused of war crimes and serious human rights abuses during the conflict in Syria”.

On 10 December 2020, the Presidents of the “One-Nation-Two-States” co-hosted a so-called “victory parade” in Baku, during which Azerbaijan’s President, Ilham Aliyev, stated: “We proved that a military solution to [the] Karabakh conflict was possible … We have been preparing all these years and have never ruled out a military solution to the conflict.” He went further, claiming that areas of the Republic of Armenia, including the capital, Yerevan, are “Azerbaijani territories”, 4 while Turkey’s President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, announced that “the struggle carried out in the political and military areas will continue from now on many other fronts” and glorified the masterminds and perpetrators of the Armenian Genocide.

Despite overt, unconcealed glorification of violence, sponsoring of international terrorism and genocidal ideology, both Azerbaijan and Turkey have been increasingly seeking to manipulate the right to “self-defense” to cover up Azerbaijan’s criminal conduct. Much to the embarrassment of those behind this fabricated argument, it must be clearly stated, however, that, in the case of Azerbaijan, neither the conditions of “self-defense” nor of “pre-emptive self-defense” are applicable.

First, both codified and customary international law prohibit the use of force. Indeed, Article 2 (3) of the Charter of the United Nations makes clear that “all Members shall settle their international disputes by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are not endangered”. While Article 51 of the Charter states that sovereign nations have an inherent right to self-defence, this right is allowed only “if an armed attack occurs against a Member of the United Nations”. No such “armed attack” – either by the Republic of Armenia or by the Republic of Artsakh – took place here.

Second, putting aside that there was no evidence of an armed attack against Azerbaijan by the Armed Forces of Artsakh, nor anything rising to such a level as to permit Azerbaijan’s invocation of self-defence, Azerbaijan’s purported response to “provocations” was widely accompanied with acts of atrocity crimes. In addition to the direct explicit evidence of genocidal intent, as communicated by Azerbaijan’s and Turkey’s leaders themselves, Azerbaijan’s goal of ethnically cleansing the indigenous Armenian population in Nagorno-Karabakh may be inferred from Azerbaijan’s commission of the following atrocity crimes: (1) inhuman treatment, torture, executions and beheadings of captive Armenian civilians; (2) torture, beheadings and mutilations of prisoners of war; (3) widespread destruction of civilian infrastructure; (4) destruction of cultural and religious heritage; and (5) hate speech by the Azerbaijani political leadership and public figures encouraging identity-based crimes against Armenians.

Throughout its offensive, Azerbaijan has widely used prohibited weapons, such as cluster munitions and incendiary weapons. As documented by international sources, Azerbaijan deliberately targeted civilian infrastructure during its 27 September to 9 November 2020 offensive, which involved:

  • The constant bombardment of Stepanakert, the capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, resulting in the destruction of several civilian sites, including the targeting and bombing of the city’s maternity hospital, damage to power lines, children’s playgrounds, vehicles, businesses, homes and the main post office, and the destruction of the city’s central market
  • Serious damage to an Armenian Apostolic cathedral in Shushi on 8 October 2020 (Ghazanchetsots), which was attacked not once but twice, injuring three foreign journalists who had come to the scene to document the first strike
  • Azerbaijan’s destruction of a hospital in Martakert as doctors were operating
  • Azerbaijan’s use of incendiary munitions (such as white phosphorus) to ignite large forest fires in Armenian-controlled areas of Nagorno-Karabakh, causing psychological and grievous bodily injuries, as well as extreme environmental damage.

Azerbaijan has, indeed, waived any self-defense argument by its capture and torture of ethnic Armenian civilians, including humanitarian aid workers, before and after the 10 November 2020 ceasefire. The relevant reports by the Human Rights Defenders of Armenia and Artsakh contain abundant evidence documenting the barbaric atrocities committed by the Azerbaijani armed forces against captured ethnic Armenian civilians, detailing the torture, mutilation and killing of captured Armenian civilians, including after the 10 November 2020 ceasefire.

Moreover, Azerbaijan’s atrocious treatment of Armenian prisoners of war – including mutilation, torture and beheadings – belies any “self-defence” argument. These are not acts of self-defence but acts of genocidal intent. As reported by several international sources and as documented in the Ombudsman’s reports, Azerbaijan committed multiple acts prohibited under the Third Geneva Convention, such as executions of Armenian soldiers by gunfire, decapitation of Armenian prisoners of war, deliberate execution of injured, non-resistant wounded soldiers, brutal execution of an alive, captured person,9 mutilation of the bodies of dead Armenian soldiers 10 and other inhumane acts and atrocities.

The genocidal intent does not stop at the bodies of ethnic Armenian civilians and prisoners of war; it also seeks to destroy Armenian cultural heritage, while erasing any evidence of the more than 2,000-year-old Armenian civilizational presence. Notable examples of such cultural erasure involved the shelling of the Tigranakert archaeological site, the best-preserved city of the Hellenistic and Armenian civilizations of the Caucasus, as well as the targeted destruction of the Armenian cathedrals in Shushi, including the removal of the Armenian cross and rounded, pointed dome from the “Kanach Zham” (“Green Chapel”) Armenian Church of Saint John the Baptist.

Despite Azerbaijan’s unsubstantiated claims that the ancient Christian cultural heritage in the region is not Armenian but rather exclusively “Caucasian Albanian”, such claims have not stopped Azerbaijan from destroying cultural heritage that it labels as “Caucasian Albanian”, as confirmed by Azerbaijan’s devastating campaign against the largest medieval Armenian cemetery in the world – the historical khachkars (cross-stones) in Old Jugha in Nakhichevan, destroyed by the Azerbaijani Government between 1997 and 2006. Notably, Azerbaijan not only denies such conduct – which was captured on video – but also denies the existence of this Armenian cultural heritage at all, in line with Azerbaijan’s genocidal indoctrination directed against ethnic Armenians and Armenian culture and history.

Sadly, such dangerous indoctrination is cultivated at the highest political level in Azerbaijan and Turkey, as reflected in the extensive use of inflammatory, derogatory language in relation to Armenians.

The past weeks have clearly indicated that bellicosity, warmongering and anti-Armenian sentiments have taken firm hold of the public discourse in Azerbaijan and Turkey, and that these represent serious risks of atrocity crimes. On 22 October 2020, a group of 80 prominent Genocide scholars published a joint letter on the imminent genocidal threat deriving from Turkey and Azerbaijan against Nagorno Karabakh, in which they point out the continuous policy of denial and justification of the Armenian Genocide.

It is clear that Azerbaijan’s violent conduct, encouraged and supported by its enabling State, Turkey, has been aimed not at defense but at intentional infliction of maximum casualties on the Armenian side.

At their core, the belligerent actions of Azerbaijan that began on 27 September 2020 violated international law as Azerbaijan’s conduct resulted in the resumption of hostilities, civilian casualties and widespread destruction. Plied with Turkey’s illicit caches of military command and counsel, hardware and technological munitions, and universally outlawed foreign terrorist fighters and mercenaries, Azerbaijan’s actions also led to the intensification of the conflict undermining peace and security in the region.

Azerbaijan, therefore, demonstrated not only that it was not acting in “self-defence” under international law, but also that it had no intention of complying with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations, international humanitarian law and human rights law, or any of the Security Council resolutions that it has so often invoked for manipulative purposes. This was further evid enced by Azerbaijan’s failure to adhere to the 10 October, 17 October and 25 October agreements on humanitarian ceasefire.

The fact that Azerbaijan chose to attack in the midst of a global health pandemic exemplifies Azerbaijan’s unwillingness to engage in peaceful resolutions and eagerness to resort to force.

Not only are Azerbaijan’s actions incompatible with the core values and objectives of the United Nations, but they also set a dangerous precedent to the detriment of international peace and security and must be unequivocally acknowledged for what they are – an attempt to solve an international dispute by force, contrary to the obligations under international law, including customary law.

I kindly ask that the present letter be circulated as a document of the General Assembly, under agenda items 34, 71, 72, 81, 86, 114 and 135, and of the Security Council.

https://en.armradio.am/2021/01/08/armenian-ambassador-raises-the-issue-of-azerbaijans-systematic-violation-of-international-law-with-un-chief/

Serving Fleeing Families in Armenia

MISSIONS Box
Jan 5 2021

ARMENIA — Samaritan’s Purse is in Armenia working alongside Christian charity Mission Eurasia and their church partners on the ground to provide tons of warm clothing and blankets to help families who are fleeing war and need to prepare for the oncoming winter.

John Freyler, Samaritan’s Purse:

Every nation and people are precious to God, and Samaritan’s Purse is both in Armenia and Azerbaijan talking with families, assessing their needs, seeing what Samaritan’s Purse can do, what we can provide. It breaks my heart, it breaks our heart to see these families who’ve left everything literally with the clothes on their back.

Sergey Rakhuba, President, Mission Eurasia:

People are hiding, running for their lives, looking for places where they can protect their children and their elderly ones. Mission Eurasia, we reached out to Samaritan’s Purse, and we’re extremely grateful for their strategic response so that this aircraft loaded with winter supplies, warm clothing to help families to cope with their cold weather, you know, the winter is coming. And there are people on the ground now preparing thousands and thousands food packages.

John Freyler:

Samaritan’s Purse is here providing hope, providing for the physical needs, whether that’s coats, boots, winter items, blankets, but more importantly, we’re here to provide the Gospel.

Vazgen Zohrabyan, Pastor, Abovyan City Church:

So this is our church hall where we used to come together on Sundays, but because of the situation, this is also a warehouse. So we have packed some food here. For now, we have 50 people here, and on a daily basis, we help 200 to get food. We feel this responsibility on our shoulders to feed them, to help them, to provide shelter for them.

When you realize that you are alone, it’s very challenging for us. So thank you to the Mission Eurasia and Samaritan’s Purse for standing with us and for us. Praise God for it. Praise God for the help.

John Freyler:

Pray for these families. Pray for them as they prepare for winter. Pray for our teams and our distributions, but really pray for both sides of the border, that they heal from this conflict and that they would come to know the hope of the Gospel.


Samaritan’s Purse is a nondenominational evangelical Christian organization providing spiritual and physical aid to hurting people around the world. Since 1970, Samaritan’s Purse has helped meet the needs of people who are victims of war, poverty, natural disasters, disease, and famine with the purpose of sharing God’s love through His Son, Jesus Christ. The organization serves the Church worldwide to promote the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ.

The Samaritan’s Purse International Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) program is committed to meeting the critical needs of victims of war, poverty, famine, disease, and natural disaster. We stand ready to respond at a moment’s notice whenever and wherever disaster strikes. The DART specializes in providing water, food, shelter, and medical care while sharing the Good News of Jesus Christ.


European Court request information about 23 more Armenian captives

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 31 2020

The European Court of Human Rights has decided to apply an interim measure with regard to 23 more Armenian citizens held in Azerbaijani captivity, lawyers Artak Zeynalyan and Siranush Sahakyan say in a press release.

The mentioned persons are: Aram Guyumjyan, Arman Ashpakhyan, Levon Mkrtchyan, Levon Hovhannisyan, Gevorg Gasparyan, Erik Gasparyan, Gevorg Manukyan, Gnel Petrosyan, Levon Tosunyan, Samvel Shukhyan, Grigor Saghatelyan, Haykaz Hovhannisyan, Karen Vardanyan, Edik Harutyunyan, Hrayr Herabyan, Hrayr Tadevosyan, Andranik Manukyan, Argam Hunanyan, David Voskanyan, Seyran Tamrazyan, Sasun Petrosyan, Gagik Mkrtchyan and Yurik Poghosyan.

The facts of capturing or arrest of the above-mentioned individuals is supported by pieces of evidence, including videos.

The European Court of Human Rights has requested documented information from the Government of Azerbaijan on the fact of their detention, their location, conditions of detention and medical care. The court set deadlines accordingly for providing the required information.

“Thus, our appeals to the European Court protect the rights of 80 captured servicemen and civilians, eighteen of them have already returned to homeland,” the lawyers say.

They pledge to spare no effort to identify all persons in captivity, restore their rights and the rights of their families.

https://en.armradio.am/2020/12/31/european-court-request-information-about-23-more-aremnian-captives/

Armenian, Azerbaijani intelligence chiefs discuss PoW exchange at Moscow-mediated meeting

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 15:17,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The Director of Russia’s Federal Security Service Alexander Bortnikov held a meeting on December 28 in Moscow with his Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts.

“Several necessary issues were discussed during the meeting, including also the exchange of captives and the search for those missing. As a result of the meeting agreements were also reached on the implementation of works in different directions,” the Armenian National Security Service said in a news release.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

ANN/Armenian News – Week in Review – 12/13/2020

Armenian News Network / Armenian News

Armenian News: Week in Review

ANN/Armenian News

December 13, 2020


Guests

  • Pietro Shakarian

  • Emil Sanamyan

  • Hovik Manucharyan

  • Asbed Bedrossian

Hello, and welcome to the Armenian News Network, Armenian News, Week in Review for Sunday December 13, 2020. We’ll be talking to our guests about the following major topics:

  • Renewed Fighting & OSCE Minsk Group Visit

  • Expedited Border Demarcations?

  • What will happen to Sotq?

  • Diplomatic Relations with Azerbaijan?

To talk about these issues, we have with us:

Emil Sanamyan, who is a senior research fellow at USC’s Institute of Armenian Studies specializing in politics in the Caucasus, with a special focus on Azerbaijan. 

and

Pietro Shakarian who is a historian and a Ph.D. candidate in Russian History at the Ohio State University. His analyses on Russia, Armenia, and the post-Soviet space have appeared in several publications, including The Nation, the Cleveland Plain Dealer, the Russian International Affairs Council, Russia Direct, Hetq, and more.

This episode was recorded on Sunday, December 13, 2020

The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced on Dec. 11 that Azerbaijani armed forces launched an attack on the line of contact in the area of Hin Tagher and Khtsaberd villages in the Hadrut region. As of today, it appears that Azerbaijani forces had taken control of Hin Tagher and Mt. Dizapayt and have reached the outskirts of Khtsaberd. Per the announcement, six Armenian servicemen received injuries. 

While Russian peacekeepers were reported to be trying to restore calm in this area, we also heard news that fighting is also ongoing in the direction of Mets Shen and Hin Shen villages which are close to the Lachin corridor.

Prior to the MFA announcement, the initial response from Mane Gevorgyan, Pashinyan’s spokesperson was as follows: “The attack of the Azerbaijani forces in Hin Tagher-Khtsaberd direction should receive reaction from Russian peacekeepers in the first place"

This fighting was going on while the OSCE Minsk Group was in Baku on December 12 and due to visit Yerevan the following day. During this meeting, Ilham Aliyev had a firm derogatory stance toward the group and chided the organization for failing to resolve the conflict in over two decades. He also gloated about being able to resolve it by force. If you watch the video, it is hard to find a moment where the OSCE co-chairs were able to look Aliyev in the eye.

It is also noteworthy that during this meeting OSCE MG co-chairs several times referred to new realities on the ground. Furthermore, their statement from Dec 3 omits any mention of territorial integrity and self-determination and only refers to the principle of “non-use-of-force”.

Do we see the OSCE MG remaining relevant here? What remains of their role?

In a parliament hearing on Dec. 9, Tigran Avinyan indicated that a border demarcation process is currently underway between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Avinyan said that the negotiations will start this year and will be done under a strict deadline. What was notable is that Avinyan mentioned that Soviet maps from 1928-29 will be used as the basis for this demarcation (among other maps). 

What is the urgency of officially demarcating the borders now? Why did Avinyan emphasize 1928-29 maps? Are they advantageous for Armenia?

If Armenia were to recognize Soviet Azerbaijani borders, what would that mean for the status of Karabakh. How will that affect recognition of Artsakh either as an independent state or even as an autonomous region in Azerbaijan? According to a resolution of Armenia Parliament in 1992, the Republic of Armenia is obligated to protect and support the Republic of Artsakh and any document where Artsakh is mentioned as part of Azerbaijan would be unacceptable to Armenia. 

One of the key issues that is certain to be discussed during the border demarcations is the destiny of the Sotq gold mine. Since the withdrawal of Armenian forces from Kelbajar, Azerbaijan seems to be claiming half of the mine and has sent a military unit to the area to set up an observation post.

In response to the outcry from this incident, Armenian officials, including Pashinyan seemed to confirm this.

This is a big deal since Sotq mine is Armenia’s 4th largest taxpayer and the mine has now announced that it plans to cut back its operations significantly until this issue is resolved.

While we covered this in the past, I’d like to bring up just one issue as a result of my discussions with a former US state department employee.

The Sotq mine was privatized in 1997 and at that time. Because a US company was interested in acquiring the mine (and because of Azerbaijani complaints resulting from it), the US State Department conducted a thorough survey of the territory between July – August of 97) and they found that the mine was completely on the Armenian side.

I was told that this document may possibly be obtained as a result of a FOIA request. If any journalist wishes to submit such a request, please contact us and we can provide more detailed information that should help narrow-down your request.

What could be the repercussions if the mine is split between Armenia and Azerbaijan?

On December 8, Andranik Kocharyan from My Step made a provocative speech in the parliament arguing that Armenia should try to establish dialogue with Azerbaijan and not delay attempts to establish diplomatic relations with Azerbaijan. That was only a few days before the military parade in Baku where Aliyev claimed that not only Karabakh, but also Zangezur, Sevan, and even Yerevan are historical Azerbaijani lands.

Is this likely to happen?

That concludes our program for This week’s Armenian News Week in Review. We hope it has helped your understanding of some of the current issues. 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 PageANN – Armenian News”, or in our Facebook Group “Armenian News – Armenian News  Network.

Special thanks to Laura Osborn for providing the music for our podcast. On behalf of everyone in this episode, we wish you a good week. Thank you for listening and we’ll talk to you next week.

YouTube           Apple            Google         Spotify       Facebook

OSCE Minsk Group, Sotq Mine, Border Demarcation, Diplomatic Relations, Emil Sanamyan, Pietro Shakarian, Hadrut

Additional: Armenia, Nagorno Karabakh, Artsakh, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Hin Tagher, Mt. Dizapayt, Khtsaberd, Mets Shen, Hin Shen, Mane Gevorgyan, Ilham Aliyev, Nikol Pashinyan, Baku Parade, Enver Pasha, Nuri Pasha, Shushi, Tigran Avinyan, Andranik Kocharyan, Zangezur, Sevan, Yerevan

Armenia’s Pashinyan: Border positioning taking place in Syunik Province

News.am, Armenia
Dec 24 2020
 
 
 
14:02, 24.12.2020
 
 
YEREVAN. – Border positioning works are taking place in Syunik Province, this positioning has some nuances and difficulties, but we are convinced that this work must take place and it is necessary from the point of view of ensuring the security of Syunik and Armenia. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan stated this at Thursday’s Cabinet meeting of the government.
 
"We are increasing the security guarantees of Syunik and the security guarantees of Armenia, and we are forming a new security system of Syunik and Armenia. [But] we have two settlements in connection with which certain issues may arise; one is about Vorotan [village], the second is about Shurnukh [village], where there are certain border issues around which daily work is done," the Prime Minister said.
 
Pashinyan added that these issues can lead to certain "painful" situations, but assured that the government will provide adequate compensation, and the interests of the affected Armenian citizens will be fully protected. "There has not been and cannot be a word about a single millimeter of concession from the internationally accepted, recognized territory [of Armenia], but this does not mean that these processes should be considered a demarcation of borders and a delimitation of borders. A positioning of border points is taking place with the aim of ensuring security [of Armenia]," the PM said.
 
Pashinyan noted that the government will fully compensate the affected people for their possible property damage.
 
 

Pashinyan is incompetent and should be removed immediately – Vardan Voskanyan

Panorama, Armenia

Dec 26 2020

The political assessment of the current developments is that Pashinyan is both traitor and incompetent. In fact, he has failed to exercise his powers which resulted in treacherous agreements concluded with the enemy side," Head of the Department of Iranian Studies at YSU Vardan Voskanyan told an interview with Panorama.am. 

Voskanyan pointed to the fact that as a result of the agreement reached between Pashinyan and Azerbaijan, not only Armenia lost part of Artsakh, but also pushed the NK conflict settlement to uncertainty and indefinite future, since the ongoing problems the country face may not allow to think of the Artsakh issue. 

"One conclusion we can give is that Pashinyan is incompetent and traitor and should resign as soon as possible," the YSU professor said. 

Voskanyan reminded that the idea of holding snap elections was put forward by intellectuals long before Pashinyan came up with the idea, however one precondition for that was Pashinyan's resignation and his removal from office. 

"Authorities are the symbol of the defeat and in the face of their leader they are not capable of organizing an electoral process given also the lack of trust in the public. If Pashinyan considers himself the guarantor of the free will of the people, it is obvious that during his ruling, especially in the war and post-war period, he has failed to act as a guarantor," Voskanyan said. In his words, no-one may claim that people's will is in any way expressed in the shameful statement signed on November 9 or in the land concessions being made daily to the enemy in border areas of Syunik and Gegharkunik provinces of Armenia. 

"Furthermore, those developments have direct negative consequences on the life and the vitality of the local communities, likewise the future viability of Armenia in a broad sense. The Syunik example, where Pashinyan was not able to guarantee even the preservation of the 4km-long road section, comes to prove this. That road was crucial both in terms of ensuring inter-Armenian transport communication as well as relations with Iran which are of vital importance for Armenia. In fact, the person, who occupies now the office of the prime minister, not only failed to ensure the will and wish of Syunik residents but also the security of Armenia, considering the strategically important land corridor with Iran," said the expert in Iranian studies. 

Voskanyan admitted with pain that Armenia has never had a lower security level  than today, and the people never felt unsafe like these days.  

"It is obvious, that Pashinyan cannot organize free, fair and transparent elections. In order to organize such elections, one should be impartial and entrusted with arbitration functions. One person capable to show impartiality has been nominated by the opposition. That is Armenia's first prime minister Vazgen Manukyan, who'll exercise arbitration functions while assuming the post and not participating in the elections himself. He may act an arbitrator and that could be acceptable for any reasonable person," concluded Voskanyan.