Turkish Press: Aliyev insists on Armenia’s formal recognition of Karabakh

Turkey – July 12 2023


15:14 . 12/07/2023 Wednesday

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev recently provided an appraisal of his nation's socio-economic developments for the first six months of 2023, emphasizing the country's ongoing commitment to sustainable development, diversification of the economy beyond oil, and the reconstruction of Nagorno-Karabakh and Eastern Zangezur. He also reinforced the importance of persisting with their economic and social reforms.

Aliyev also shed light on the nation's increasing military power, acquisitions of advanced weaponry and military equipment, and ongoing military reforms. He emphasized the importance of transport corridors in the country's future and noted the challenges of managing relations with Armenia.


Stressing the necessity for concrete steps towards peace, Aliyev stated, "The time has come for words to be confirmed on paper, for signatures to be put, and for relations to be established." He referred to forthcoming high-level talks and negotiation phases aimed at fostering a durable peace agreement. He asserted that while Azerbaijan has been proactive in this effort, the outcome also depends on the readiness and willingness of the Armenian side.


An evolution in Armenia's position has been observed, with the country officially acknowledging the territorial integrity, sovereignty, and boundaries of Azerbaijan, which include Nagorno-Karabakh and its surrounding regions. President Aliyev, while welcoming this progressive turn, stressed the importance of putting these recognitions into a formal agreement.

https://www.yenisafak.com/en/news/aliyev-insists-on-armenias-formal-recognition-of-karabakh-3666486




Baku’s shooting at factory being built in Yeraskh will be viewed as political decision – US investors

 21:20,

YEREVAN, 14 JULY, ARMENPRESS․ The American companies "VIRTUAL FUNDING" and "CSE GLOBAL INVESTMENTS" JSC, owners of the iron smelting plant under construction in Yeraskh, issued a statement regarding the shootings by Azerbaijan, noting that the companies did not violate any provisions of the international conventions pointed out by Azerbaijan and are ready to demand compensation for the investments, the loss incurred and profit not earned in international legal platforms. And in the case of firing again at unarmed workers, the companies will see it as a direct blow to American capital without any environmental motive, but a purely political decision.

ARMENPRESS reports, the statement reads as follows,

“Earlier this June, Azerbaijan announced that in the Yeraskh settlement of Armenia, a metallurgical plant is being constructed, which will generate environmental problems for their country. In its statement issued on June 08th, "GTB Steel" LLC, the Company we founded in Armenia, stated that the Company received a positive conclusion on the environmental impact with the relevant expertise requirements, which comply with all international standards.

Five days later, on June 13, Azerbaijan started shootings in the direction of the plant that we are constructing. The shootings continue to this day. During this time, our two employees suffered serious injuries. Тhe Company's tractor, crane, and truck had been damaged and are no longer operational. We have published the photo and video footage thereof. Ambassadors, diplomatic representatives, international observers, and journalists from different countries have also documented the foregoing facts.

We believe it is relevant to point out the following essential points:

  1. The claims that the plant being constructed in Yeraskh will create ecological problems for Azerbaijan are false. Our plant is not a metallurgical, where metal is extracted from ore, but rather a metal smelter, where through casting the finished metals we will get rebar. In this case, there are no harmful emissions to the atmosphere or the environment and tailings. No waste either. A similar plant, i.e. "Baku Steel Company", is now operating in the capital of Azerbaijan. That company casts 4 times more iron per year than is planned to be cast in our plant, and is located 400 meters away from residential houses.
  2. The residential houses in the Yeraskh community are located about 300 meters away from our plant, and the nearest Azerbaijani village Hyderabad is 1,8 km away. Therefore, there can be no intention to generate an environmental problem for Azerbaijan. A similar plant is located in Charentsavan city of Armenia, which covers the entire city and surrounding villages with tens of thousands of citizens within a radius of 1.8 km.
  3. The plant will operate with a water cooling system, assuming that used water is in closed circulation and will not discharge the plant area. It's like the coolant used in vehicle engine that never discharges from the vehicle. Azerbaijan also emphasizes the possible pollution/contamination of the river Araks, which, is 6 km away from the plant. Even if we intend to pollute the river, it would be impossible for us.
  4. The furnace chimney of our plant will be of 33 meters height and equipped with a three-stage filtration system, thus the air rising through the chimney will have no negative impact on the environment. This was confirmed during the EIA examination, which lasted more than 6 months.

Thus, we have not violated any provisions of the international conventions that Azerbaijan points out, as the type of plant and productivity of the plant we are constructing will not cause any cross- border impact. To prove these claims, we are ready to discuss them with international experts both in person and remotely. The foregoing will be followed by our actions in international legal authorities. We will spare no efforts and will claim for investments made, the loss incurred, and profit not earned. Let us mention that we have all grounds, including those documented by the diplomatic representatives of about 40 countries.

In case our statement is ignored, and shootings in the direction of our unarmed workers continue, we will consider this as a direct attack on American capital without any environmental motive, but rather upon a political decision”

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 07/12/2023

                                        Wednesday, 


Self-Confessed Felons May Avoid Jail In Armenia

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia -- A prison in the Amavir province, Novemer 1, 2019.


The Armenian parliament approved late on Tuesday a controversial government bill 
that will allow law-enforcement authorities not to press charges against 
individuals confessing to murders and other serious crimes.

The bill denounced by opposition lawmakers involves amendments to the Criminal 
Code stipulating that suspects could avoid prosecution in “exceptional” cases 
where they cooperate with investigators, admit committing “serious or 
particularly serious crimes” and agree to compensate for the damage caused by 
them.

Presenting the bill to the National Assembly, Justice Minister Grigor Minasian 
said it is primarily aimed at reducing the workload of law-enforcement agencies 
as well as courts. He claimed that they are too busy at the moment.

Deputies from the main opposition Hayastan alliance rejected the official 
rationale for the proposed extrajudicial clemency which they believe will 
effective give judicial powers to Armenia’s security apparatus.

“This clearly contradicts the fundamental principles of criminal justice,” one 
of them, Artsvik Minasian (no relation to the justice minister), said.

He argued that the bill is also opposed by Armenia’s Interior Ministry, National 
Security Service and Supreme Judicial Council.

The bill is understood to have been originally drafted by another 
law-enforcement body, the Investigative Committee. It is headed by Argishti 
Kyaramian, one of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s trusted lieutenants.

Armenia’s national bar association, the Chamber of Advocates, voiced strong 
objections to the proposed amendments late last month. It said that giving 
prosecutors and investigators “uncontrolled” discretionary powers to pardon 
felons “could not only create an atmosphere of impunity but also carry 
corruption risks.” It warned of “very serious damage” to the fight against crime.

The law-enforcement authorities have reported considerable annual increases in 
Armenia’s crime rate since the 2018 “velvet revolution” that brought Pashinian 
to power. Critics claim that the country is not as safe as it used to be because 
its current government is more incompetent and softer on crime than the previous 
ones.

The authorities registered a total of 37,612 criminal offenses in 2022, up by 24 
percent from 2021. According to them, “serious and particularly serious crimes” 
accounted for about 16 percent of the total. This included 58 premeditated 
murders.




Armenia, Azerbaijan Hold More Talks On Border Delimitation


Armenia - A view of an area in Armenia's Syunik province bordering the Lachin 
district, May 14, 2021. (Photo by the Armenian Human Rights Defender's Office)


Senior Armenian and Azerbaijani officials held on Wednesday another round of 
direct negotiations on delimiting the Armenian-Azerbaijani border amid fresh 
fighting reported from some of its sections.

At least one Azerbaijani and two Armenian soldiers were wounded in border 
skirmishes that reportedly broke out on Tuesday evening and continued the 
following day. The two sides blamed each other for the ceasefire violations 
reported by them from border areas separating Armenia’s southeastern Syunik 
province from Azerbaijan’s Lachin district.

The fighting continued as Armenian and Azerbaijani government commissions on 
border demarcation and delimitation held a joint session at another section of 
the heavily militarized frontier located hundreds of kilometers northwest of the 
Syunik-Lachin section.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry said that the commissions headed by deputy prime 
ministers of the two South Caucasus states “continued discussing delimitation 
issues and addressed a number of organizational and procedural issues.” It gave 
no other details.

Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian proposed the joint meeting to his 
Azerbaijani counterpart Shahin Mustafayev last month following increased 
tensions along the border. Grigorian’s office said it should discuss “current 
contentious issues that are causing tension on the border.”

The border demarcation was on the agenda of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
June 1 meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev held in Moldova’s capital 
Chisinau. Pashinian suggested right after those talks that Baku is open to 
accepting an Armenian proposal to use 1975 Soviet maps as a basis for delimiting 
the long border.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry denied that, however. It emphasized that 
Azerbaijan has demarcated its borders with other neighboring states “on the 
basis of analyses and examination of legally binding documents, rather than any 
specially chosen map.”

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan acknowledged on June 5 that Yerevan 
and Baku continue to disagree on the key parameters of delimiting their border. 
This is one of the stumbling blocks in their ongoing talks on a bilateral peace 
treaty. Aliyev and Pashinian are due to meet again later this month.

Pashinian and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken discussed the peace process 
in a phone call on Tuesday. Blinken tweeted afterwards that he reiterated his 
“strong support for ongoing efforts to secure peace with Azerbaijan.”




U.S., EU Insist On Reopening Of Lachin Corridor


Armenia - EU parliamentarians and monitors visit a section of the Armenian-Azeri 
border adjacent to Lachin corridor, June 21, 2023.


The United States and the European Union renewed their calls for the immediate 
lifting of Azerbaijan’s blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh on Wednesday one day after 
Baku again banned medical evacuations from the Armenian-populated region.

Azerbaijan’s state border guard service said that it imposed the ban because 
individuals escorted by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) back 
to Karabakh from Armenia tried last week to “smuggle” cigarettes, mobile phone 
screens, gasoline and other items. The ICRC had transported hundreds of Karabakh 
patients to Armenian hospitals since Baku blocked last December commercial 
traffic through the Lachin corridor.

“The United States is deeply concerned about Azerbaijan's continued closure of 
the Lachin corridor,” the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan said in a statement to 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“Yesterday’s halting of humanitarian traffic exacerbates a worsening 
humanitarian situation and undermines efforts to establish confidence in the 
peace process. Free and open transit through the Lachin corridor must be 
restored immediately,” added the statement.

The EU’s foreign policy spokeswoman, Nabila Massrali, similarly urged Azerbaijan 
to “ensure that ICRC can continue its operations and prevent a potential 
humanitarian crisis” in Karabakh.

“The EU strongly supports the crucial role of the ICRC in the region, and 
reiterates its call for Azerbaijan to ensure the unrestricted movement of people 
and goods via the Lachin corridor,” said Massrali.

A view of the Azerbaijani checkpoint set up in the Lachin corridor, June 23, 
2023.
The U.S., the EU as well as Russia have repeatedly made such statements during 
the Azerbaijani blockade. Baku has dismissed them and denied blocking supplies 
of food, medicine and other essential items that are now running out in Karabakh.

The Azerbaijani side further tightened the blockade on June 15, banning Russian 
peacekeepers from shipping limited amounts of such items to Karabakh. It has 
also been blocking Armenia’s electricity and gas supplies to the region.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry warned on Wednesday that Karabakh’s ethnic 
Armenian population is now “facing a real danger of starvation.” It accused Baku 
of trying to create “conditions incompatible with life” for the Karabakh 
Armenians.

In a statement, the ministry also urged the international community to “use all 
available tools” to ensure Azerbaijan’s compliance with a decision made by the 
International Court of Justice in February. The UN court ordered Baku to “take 
all measures at its disposal to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles, 
and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.”




Armenia Sees Continued Surge In Trade With Russia


RUSSIA -- An Armenian truck passes through the newly expanded Russian checkpoint 
at the Upper Lars border crossing with Georgia, June 21, 2023.


Economy Minister Vahan Kerobian predicted on Wednesday a continued sharp 
increase in Armenia’s trade with Russia resulting in large measure from the 
Western economic sanctions against Moscow.

Russian-Armenian trade doubled last year and in the first five months of this 
year as the South Caucasus country took advantage of the barrage of sanctions 
imposed on its main trading partner following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. 
This, coupled with other cash inflows from Russia, is the main reason why the 
Armenian economy grew by over 12 percent in 2022.

“Last year, our trade turnover with Russia reached more than $5 billion and we 
have been seeing its doubling,” Kerobian told the TASS news agency as he 
attended a trade exhibition in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg. He said that 
the rapid growth will likely moderate to “50-60 percent” by the end of 2023.

Armenian government data shows that the trade with Russia totaled $2.5 billion 
in January-May 2023, compared with about $1.2 billion with the European Union.

The unprecedented upward trend is primarily driven by Armenian exports to Russia 
that tripled in 2022 and January-May 2023. Goods manufactured in third countries 
and re-exported by Armenian firms are thought to have accounted for most of that 
gain. They include consumer electronics as well as other hi-tech goods and 
components which Western powers say could be used by the Russian defense 
industry.

The Armenian government has faced in recent months strong pressure from the 
United States and the EU to curb the re-export of these items. It announced in 
late May that Armenian exporters will now need government permission to deliver 
microchips, transformers, video cameras, antennas and other electronic equipment 
to Russia.

James O’Brien, the sanctions coordinator at the U.S. State Department, visited 
Yerevan late last month to discuss the issue with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
and other Armenian officials. According to the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan, he 
“expressed appreciation for Armenia’s continued commitment to upholding U.S. 
sanctions.”


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Azerbaijani army fires at the Armenian positions located in the Ishkhanasar sector from different-caliber firearms

 17:55,

YEREVAN, 12 JULY, ARMENPRESS. On July 12, at 13:40-13:50, Azerbaijani army opened fire from different caliber firearms in the direction of the Armenian positions located in the Ishkhanasar sector, Syunik Province, ARMENPRESS was informed from MoD Armenia.

Earlier, the Ministry of Defense reported that on July 12, Azerbaijanis opened fire twice at the Armenian positions located in the Tegh sector, as a result of which 2 servicemen of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Armenia were injured.

Azeri kangaroo court sentences kidnapped Armenian soldiers to over 11 years imprisonment on fabricated charges

 12:04, 7 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 7, ARMENPRESS. The two Armenian soldiers who were kidnapped by Azerbaijani forces on May 26 in an Azeri cross-border incursion into sovereign territory of Armenia were sentenced on Friday to more than 11 years in prison in a sham trial in Azerbaijan.

Local media reported that the Azeri court sentenced the two Armenian soldiers to 11 years and 6 months imprisonment on fabricated charges of illegal border crossing and conspiracy to commit crimes.

The two servicemen were ambushed and kidnapped by Azerbaijani forces after delivering water and food to an Armenian army unit on the border.

On May 27, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said Azerbaijan was attempting to deviate from its own obligations with the illegal kidnapping of the troops. It called on Azerbaijan to immediately release all Armenian POWs.

On May 29, Armenia requested the ECHR to indicate interim measures in the case of the two kidnapped soldiers.

Armenia sees 42% drop in new COVID-19 cases

 11:08, 3 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 3, ARMENPRESS. COVID-19 cases have been dropping since the beginning of 2023, and although the pandemic is not over yet, the World Health Organization has reported decrease in both new cases and deaths around the world. 

A significant decrease in new cases has been reported in Armenia as well. Only 2 new cases were confirmed in the country last week.

Romella Abovyan, the Director of the Department of Epidemiology of Infectious and Non-Infectious Diseases at the National Center for Disease Control and Prevention, told ARMENPRESS that Armenia too is witnessing a drastic drop in new cases of COVID-19.

Abovyan said that the reproduction number (Re) of the virus is below 1, which means that the pace of spread has slowed down significantly.

The COVID 19 fatality rate in Armenia stands at 2%.

“Less testing is conducted because the situation is more stable around the world,” Abovyan said, adding that regardless of the declining rates the healthcare authorities in Armenia still require all health facilities to test patients who display symptoms of respiratory diseases.

Despite the decreasing numbers, Armenia is conducting testing more actively compared to other countries now and the 4,1% of total tests come back positive, Abovyan said.

“2 cases of COVID-19 were confirmed in the past seven days, compared to the nine cases of the week before. We had 11 cases in the past 14 days, and 19 cases in the same period before that, which means that we have a 42% decrease,” the expert added.

Red Cross facilitates transfer of patients from blockaded Nagorno Karabakh

 15:49, 3 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 3, ARMENPRESS. The International Committee of the Red Cross has facilitated the transfer of 15 patients from blockaded Nagorno Karabakh to Armenia for treatment, the Nagorno Karabakh (Artsakh) Ministry of Healthcare said on Monday.

The 15 patients were accompanied by their attendants.

Another 8 patients together with their attendants are expected to return under Red Cross mediation to Nagorno Karabakh on June 3 after having received treatment in Armenia.

26 children are hospitalized at the Arevik clinic in Nagorno Karabakh. Two of the children are in neonatal and intensive care.

Another 81 patients are hospitalized at the Republican Medical Center in Stepanakert. 10 of them are in intensive care (6 are critically ill).

The Armenia-Azerbaijan Disputes: We Need a Peace Treaty That Will Bring Peace

Published

  

on

 

By

 Dr. Vasif Huseynov

The agreement reached by conflicting parties to sign a peace treaty following violent wars is a significant turning point and has the potential to create a more positive and cooperative framework. However, history is replete with examples where painstakingly negotiated peace treaties failed to bring about lasting peace, often leading to the resumption of conflicts. It is crucial to thoroughly consider this aspect in the present peace negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan. We need a peace treaty that addresses the underlying causes of the conflict, minimizes, if not eliminates, the chances for the resumption of hostilities, and, towards this end, includes monitoring mechanisms that should be established to ensure compliance and accountability from the parties.

Trust: once broken, it’s hard to restore

The relationship between Armenians and Azerbaijanis was not always marked by hostility. For a significant part of history, these two peoples lived in a state of friendship, often sharing familial ties. These friendly relations persisted during the period of the Soviet Union, serving as a testament to their shared past of coexistence.

A similar situation existed in the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO) and surrounding regions of Azerbaijan, including the Kalbajar region where my family lived until 1993, when the region was occupied by Armenia. Despite the fact that the Armenian population in the region was less than 1 percent of the total population during the Soviet era, local Azerbaijanis maintained amicable relations with the Armenians. I remember my parents recounting stories of how the Armenian craftsmen were highly regarded among the Kalbajaris, who frequently invited them to construct their homes and other structures.

These historically-rooted connections were the primary factors that led Azerbaijanis to be caught off guard by the Armenian nationalists who, first in 1987-1988, advanced a territorial claim to NKAO and then in 1992 launched a full-scale war to invade Azerbaijani territories. Indeed, most of Azerbaijanis in Karabakh and surrounding regions, including my parents in the Bashlibel village of Kalbajar, were not prepared to the Armenian assaults.

The residents of Bashlibel were uninformed of this situation in the first days of April 1993, because the villagers had not had a stable means of communicating with the outside world since the electricity supply was cut by Armenians more than a year ago in January 1992. Nor did they believe that their Armenian neighbors would take up arms, launch a war, and forcefully expel them from their homes. This was part of the reason that local Azerbaijanis continued to live in Kalbajar as if nothing had happened, even after the blockade of the Kalbajar region in the wake of Armenia’s 1992 occupation of the former NKAO and the cities of Shusha and Lachin.

On April 2, 1993, Kalbajar’s residents, then approximately 60,000 people, woke up to the horror of being surrounded by the Armenian armed forces. The Armenians gave local Azerbaijanis only ten hours to leave the area. The alternative was being killed or, worse, taken hostage. Not everyone managed or wanted to leave their homelands. Hundreds of people were killed, tortured, or taken hostage. The Kalbajaris paid a rather high price for their miscalculation of the intentions and territorial ambitions of Armenia.

“Duality of the Armenian consciousness” and security threats it poses to the neighboring countries

30 years passed since the occupation of the Kalbajar region by Armenia. The region was liberated in November 2020 in accordance with the outcomes of the Second Karabakh War. Soon after this war, Baku and Yerevan launched peace talks and started negotiations on a peace treaty which is going to be oriented around the principle of mutual recognition of each other’s territorial integrity.  It is, however, imperative that the peace treaty goes beyond mere words on paper and has a practical impact on the ground. Thus far, too much attention is given to the rights and securities of Armenians in Karabakh rather than to concerns of Azerbaijanis. It is therefore essential to address the legitimate problems and security anxieties of the Azerbaijani people, particularly those who were displaced from the formerly Armenia-occupied territories.

One major reason for the security concerns of the Azerbaijani people is related with what the Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan calls “duality of the Armenian consciousness”. Making critical comments about the coat of arms of the Republic of Armenia in a speech at the parliament on the 15th of June, he highlighted the irrelevance of some elements (e.g., the picture of the Mount Ağrı/Ararat [Armenian name of the Mount Ağrı] that is located in Turkey) on the coat of arms and the implications of such a discourse and public thinking for Armenia’s political future. “Looking at the center [of the coat of arms], there is Noah’s ark on Mount Ararat, today’s territory of the Republic of Armenia is under flood, a lion that has not lived here in natural conditions in Armenia for a long time. And this issue that we are discussing is actually about each of us, about that duality that exists in each of us, historical Armenia and real Armenia”, the Armenian premier said.

It is an apparent attempt by him to wake up the nation and urge them to discard dreams for territorial expansion of the modern Republic of Armenia to what they believe the boundaries of historical “Greater Armenia”. The reactions to his statement by some members of the Armenian public and expert community, however, demonstrate that these territorial claims to Azerbaijan and Turkiye are deep-rooted in their consciousness and run the risk of taking over the political rule in the Republic of Armenia at an opportune moment in the future. In particular, those from the Armenian diaspora, who called Pashinyan’s statement “anti-constitutional”, look for an opportunity to bring “more nationalistic” leader to the governance of the country.

In my personal exchanges with the Armenian political experts at international events, none of those experts dared to acknowledge or endorse the statement of the Armenian premier that Karabakh is part of the internationally recognized territories of Azerbaijan. Some of them do not shy away from publicly recommending the Armenian leaders to delay the peace negotiations as long as possible and wait for a better geopolitical situation emerge – in which Armenia’s bargaining power would be stronger. One senior member of the former Armenian government once told me at an international event in the presence of mediators from the EU and Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) that “tell your government upon your return that we will abolish all the deals you now reach with the incumbent government in Armenia as soon as they are removed from power”.

Needless to say that almost no Armenian, including Nikol Pashinyan, who boasts his endeavors to build a democratic society, speak about the return and restitutions of the rights of Azerbaijanis who lived in Armenia before the conflict. Though, the mutual exodus of the Azerbaijani and Armenian populations from the respective countries occurred during 1987-1991, the fair and just resolution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conundrum requires the comprehensive approach.

If no demilitarization, then robust monitoring mechanisms and security guarantees

History can suggest some insights into how to deal with the polities with territorial ambitions and records of violent aggressions while ensuring  the practical implementation of the peace treaty.  For example, following World War II, at the initiative of the Allied leaders, both Germany and Japan underwent demilitarization as part of broader efforts to promote stability and prevent future aggression. In the case of Japan, the demilitarization process involved the dissolution of the country’s imperial armed forces and the adoption of a new pacifist constitution, known as the
Article 9 Constitution,” which renounced war as a means of settling international disputes.

Demilitarization of the Republic of Armenia would have been surely the policy options of the Allied leaders if they were in the present situation Azerbaijan is in. Under the present circumstances and due to the biased support of some countries, such as France, to Armenia, such measures are not on the agenda, though they would have been decisive with a real contribution to regional peace and security.

Nevertheless, a peace treaty should still address the security concerns of the Azerbaijani side. Above all, it should make sure that the territorial claims to Azerbaijan and Turkiye in the legislative documents and state symbols of the Republic of Armenia will be removed. The treaty should be built on the fact that the deep-rooted territorial ambitions in the consciousness of the Armenian nationalists and their threats against Azerbaijan necessitate robust security guarantees. Such a treaty should include provisions that not only facilitate the return of displaced Azerbaijanis to their homes, amongst others, by urging Armenia to cooperate in demining the region, but also guarantee their safety and security with assurances that no aggression will take place in the future. Additional mechanisms should be established to ensure compliance and accountability with the provisions of the peace treaty.

Dr. Vasif Huseynov is a senior fellow at the Center of Analysis of International Relations (AIR Center) in Baku, Azerbaijan.

https://moderndiplomacy.eu/2023/06/29/the-armenia-azerbaijan-disputes-we-need-a-peace-treaty-that-will-bring-peace/

Azerbaijan opens fire on the harvester doing agricultural work in Artsakh

 20:05,

YEREVAN, JUNE 29, ARMENPRESS. On June 29, around 6:10 p.m., the Azerbaijani Armed Forces violated the ceasefire by opening fire from firearms at a harvester doing agricultural work in the fields of Chartar community in Artsakh, ARMENPRESS was informed from the Ministry of Defense of Artsakh, adding that there were no casualties on the Armenian side.

"At the same time, the Ministry of Defense of Azerbaijan has spread misinformation that allegedly the units of the Defense Forces opened fire in the same direction towards the Azerbaijani positions," the message says.

The ceasefire violation was reported to the command of the Russian peacekeeping troops.