Kim Kardashian heartfelt plea to President Biden in hopes of preventing another Armenian genocide

Clutch Points
Sept 9 2023

Kim Kardashian is making a heartfelt plea to President Joe Biden, urging him to take action to prevent another Armenian Genocide and cut ties with Azerbaijan, TMZ reports. In an opinion piece published in Rolling Stone, Kardashian, along with physician and producer Eric Esrailian, passionately addressed their concerns.

Both Kardashian and Esrailian are descendants of Armenian Genocide survivors and are deeply committed to preventing further atrocities. They express their desire not to witness the recognition or commemoration of another genocide in the future.

The central issue highlighted in their plea is Azerbaijan's blockade, which has severed the lifeline connecting the indigenous Christian Armenians of Artsakh with the rest of the world since December. This blockade has resulted in the use of starvation as a weapon against the Armenian population in the region. Kardashian and Esrailian argue that the war in Ukraine has forced some countries to rely on Azerbaijan for oil, inadvertently contributing to this dire situation.

Furthermore, they criticize the coordinated social media campaigns aimed at downplaying the blockade, emphasizing the urgent need for action. Kardashian and Esrailian call upon President Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and other officials to take a swift and resolute stand.

Their proposed measures include economic sanctions, cutting off foreign aid to Azerbaijan, boycotting international events held in the country (such as concerts and sporting events), and pursuing international legal proceedings. They stress that time is of the essence, and the international community must act urgently.

Kim Kardashian emphasizes that the time for mere “thoughts, prayers, or concern” has passed, citing the ongoing conflict overseas, the 2020 attacks on Armenians in Artsakh, and a ceasefire agreement that was not upheld. She firmly asserts that the silence of governments worldwide has only exacerbated the situation, making it imperative to cut off foreign aid to Azerbaijan and boycott international events held in the country.

Pro-Russian blogger, Sputnik journalist detained in Armenia

UKRINFORM, Ukraine
Sept 8 2023


08.09.2023 08:41

Pro-Russian blogger Mika Badalyan and Sputnik Armenia journalist Ashot Gevorkyan were apprehended in Armenia on suspicion of illegal arms trafficking.

This was reported by the spokesman for the Investigative Committee, Gor Abraamyan, Ukrinform wrote with reference to Radio Svoboda.

The spokesman specified Badalyan and Gevorkyan were detained in the Syunik region on September 6 and 7. In total, seven persons were taken into custody in the case of illegal arms trafficking.

The Russian Embassy in Armenia is yet to clarify the circumstances of the incident and is monitoring the developments, as per reports.

The state-owned Russian media group Rossiya Segodnya, of which Sputnik Armenia is part, also reported that it is monitoring Gevorkyan's detention and "expects compliance with all procedural norms."

"Possible provocations aimed at undermining the friendship between the fraternal peoples of Russia and Armenia must be stopped immediately," the company said in a statement.

Earlier, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan of Armenia criticized the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno-Karabakh, stating that it is not fulfilling its task, and also stated that Armenia's dependence on only one country, namely Russia, was a "strategic mistake". According to the politician, Russia itself is leaving the South Caucasus. He emphasized that none of the Western powers that Russia is talking about are pushing Yerevan to break with Moscow.

As reported earlier, the USA and Armenia will conduct joint military exercises.

https://www.ukrinform.net/amp/rubric-society/3758526-prorussian-blogger-sputnik-journalist-detained-in-armenia.html 

Congressmen seek to prohibit U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan

 12:31, 1 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Gus Bilirakis (R-FL), Adam Schiff (D-CA), and David Valadao (R-CA) were joined by Representatives Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Nicole Malliotakis (R-NY) in introducing a series of amendments to the Fiscal Year 2024 U.S. House Defense Appropriations Bill (H.R. 4365) to block U.S. military assistance to Azerbaijan, in the face of President Aliyev’s 260+ day genocidal blockade of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

“The Biden-Harris Administration’s failure of leadership on Azerbaijan’s genocidal blockade of Artsakh underscores the urgent need for strong Congressional leadership and strict legislative oversight,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We welcome each of these amendments – those in defense of Artsakh and also banning cluster bombs – and are working alongside a broad array of Congressional allies and coalition partners to see them enacted into law.”

The ANCA is urging U.S. Representatives to cosponsor and support passage of four pro-Artsakh amendments, including:

– Amendment 258 (presented by Rep. Sherman) – Preventing the use of funds to provide military assistance to Azerbaijan.

– Amendment 263 (presented by Rep. Sherman) – Preventing the use of funds to provide military assistance to Azerbaijan for use against Armenia or Nagorno Karabakh (also known as Artsakh)

– Amendment 272 (Led by Representatives Pallone, Bilirakis, Valadao, Schiff & Malliotakis) – Prohibiting military aid and security assistance to the defense, security, and border forces of the Government of Azerbaijan.

– Amendment 285 (Led by Representatives Pallone, Schiff & Malliotakis) – Allocating $1 million to support Department of Defense activities and partnerships that will help peacefully resolve the illegal Azeri blockade of Nagorno-Karabakh and allow for the unimpeded movement of essential humanitarian assistance, including food and medication, and commercial activities through the Lachin Corridor.

The ANCA is also recommending support for two amendments that would prohibit the acquisition, use, transfer and sale of cluster munitions, citing the devastating consequences of Azerbaijan’s use of these weapons during the 2020 Artsakh war.  These amendments are:

– Amendment 59 (Led by Rep. Dina Titus (D-NV) and Sarah Jacobs (D-CA)– Prohibiting funding for the acquisition, use, transfer, or sale of cluster munitions.

– Amendment 131 (Led by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) and Sarah Jacobs (D-CA) – Prohibiting funds made available by the bill from being used to transfer cluster munitions.

The amendments are currently under review by the House Rules Committee, which will determine their consideration by U.S. Representatives upon their return to session in mid-September.  Those ruled “in order” will be presented and voted upon during consideration of H.R. 4365

Blocking French aid proves Azerbaijan’s policy aimed at deteriorating humanitarian crisis in NK – Pashinyan to Hidalgo

 20:20,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has met with Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo and her delegation over a luncheon.

PM Pashinyan highly appreciated and expressed gratitude for the initiative of the French regions to provide humanitarian aid to the people of Nagorno-Karabakh and underscored that Azerbaijan’s blocking of the convoy once again proves Baku's policy of deteriorating the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a readout.

The interlocutors emphasized the need for steps aimed at overcoming the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Views were exchanged about issues concerning the Armenian-French relations and the existing cooperation.

On August 30, Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo personally lead a French humanitarian convoy for Nagorno-Karabakh from Yerevan to the entrance of Lachin Corridor. The trucks were blocked by Azerbaijani authorities.

The Crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh: “A Creeping Genocide”

Aug 27 2023

A humanitarian catastrophe is looming in Nagorno-Karabakh. The government of Azerbaijan is blocking the region: food, medicine and hygiene items have not been allowed to be delivered to the area for a good two months. Not even the Red Cross is allowed into the region. Azerbaijan wants to bring the region under Baku control – the ethnic Armenians in the region want it

The contribution  appeared first Tichy’s insight.

A contribution by David Boos.

https://www.breakinglatest.news/news/the-crisis-in-nagorno-karabakh-a-creeping-genocide/

Genocide again? Why is no one paying attention to Armenia?

Aleteia
Aug 24 2023

Dr. Tom Catena in 2017 was awarded the Aurora Prize, established to honor the memory of the 1915 Armenian Genocide. Over 100 years later, Catena is warning that the world might be witnessing another genocide against Armenians – this time taking place in the small enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

According to a report by a founding prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno Ocampo, Armenia’s neighbor, Azerbaijan, on June 15 completely sealed off the Lachin Corridor, the sole route into and out of the landlocked territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. “Since then, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and Russian peacekeeping forces have been banned from delivering humanitarian relief,” Moreno wrote.

Known for his work in Sudan, where he is medical director of Mother of Mercy Hospital in the Nuba Mountains, Dr. Catena is calling on parties in a regional dispute to open a humanitarian corridor to avoid potential mass starvation. 

A native New Yorker, Catena spoke with Aleteia from his home in Sudan. 

Could you explain what’s going on in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh?

Dr. Tom Catena: The history is complicated. This area has been ethnic Armenian for 2,000 years. It was always that way until the time of the Soviet Union, when they kind of created this Republic of Azerbaijan. 

In ancient times Armenia was a big empire. Later, it was part of the Ottoman Empire. It’s had its day as an empire and then as part of other empires since then. It was kind of independent, then it was kind of a Soviet Republic during the time of the Soviet Union.

And then its neighbor Azerbaijan was created as a country in the 1920s as the Republic of Azerbaijan. And this territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, my understanding is that [Soviet dictator Joseph] Stalin gave Azerbaijan jurisdiction over that area. So is was ethnic Armenian, but the Soviet Republic of Azerbaijan had jurisdiction over it, as Azeri people moved into that area.

Now fast forward to 1991, when the Soviet Union collapsed. They had a referendum in Nagorno-Karabakh, and they said, “No. We don’t want to be part of Azerbeijan. We want to be part of Armenia.’ The Azeris said, “No, we can’t do that.”

So fighting breaks out. Armenia supports the Armenian population in Artsakh [the Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh]. They fight for those areas and they win, so they capture some Azeri territory, and they get back Nagorno-Karabakh.

What year was that?

Dr. Catena: That was around 1993. Armenia won. They get the territory, and since that time it’s been almost like a semi-autonomous state. It’s affiliated with Armenia but it’s not really part of Armenia. They have their own president, their own parliament, but very close ties to Armenia. It’s almost kind of like an Armenian state. So that’s always been a bone of contention with Azerbaijan; they’re very bitter about this thing.

So now you come up to 2020, and fighting breaks out again. There’s always been cross-border [hostilities] – snipers taking shots at each other. So in 2020, war breaks out again, and now Azerbaijan has the backing of Turkey, and they defeat Armenia. They’re fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh, and they’re more or less victorious. They sign a ceasefire. Russia gets involved, and Armenia cedes the territory that they had gained in the previous war in the 1990s. 

Now it’s kind of at a standstill. They still have most of the territory, but this other stuff they had gained in the 1990s fight goes back to Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan is still kind of agitating, saying this part needs to be part of Azerbaijan. There’s always been a lot of tension back and forth. Russia got involved, but now Russia’s obviously occupied with Ukraine. 

So the last thing that happened was in December 2022. There was a blockade of this place called the Lachin Corridor. I’ve been to Artsakh with my wife back in 2019. There’s this one paved road that goes from Armenia into Artsakh. Azerbaijan blockaded that road in 2022.

Why?

Dr. Catena: They had excuses: They said it was blockaded because there were iPhones and minerals being smuggled out of Nagorno-Karabakh. They had to do it for that reason. I mean, it was all a ruse. I think they saw their chance that Russia is now going to protect them. There were Russian peacekeepers there. I think some stuff was allowed through, you know, some Red Cross stuff, but now it’s a total blockade: food, sick people getting in and out – it can’t happen. And apparently there are a fair amount of people that are at risk for starvation because there’s nothing going on. It’s a small isolated area. On the eastern border is Azerbaijan, on the western border is Armenia proper, and it has been blockaded at the Lachin Corridor.

What’s the situation like now?

Dr. Catena: The situation has gotten pretty critical, and there are 120,000 people that live there, and there are calls going out that people are going to die from starvation if something’s not done. So the question now is to at least open a humanitarian corridor, allow food and medicine in and wounded and sick people out to greater Armenia for care. And Azerbaijan has been refusing.

An International Criminal Court prosecutor named Luis Moreno Ocampo wrote an article arguing that what Ilham Aliyev, the dictator of Azerbaijan, is doing counts as genocide against these people in Artsakh. Now that word genocide gets tossed around a bit much, but Moreno gets into the definition of genocide and what it means and says that by denying food and medicine and all this stuff you’re putting people in the position for mass death. 

What can other nations, particularly the US, do at this point to help the plight of these people?

Dr. Catena: I think you simply have to push these guys to open a humanitarian corridor. It can’t be that difficult to, say, stop the blockade, open a humanitarian corridor, allow food and medicine in, and we go back to start negotiating. Try to find a durable peace and stop this back and forth. It’s only 120,000 people, so it’s not a massive number, but they’re people, and it’s potential starvation. It’s a very isolated area. You can’t go to Azerbaijan to get things. To the south actually is another province that used to be part of Armenia; it’s been taken by Azerbaijan. They can’t travel there. Even to the north is Azerbaijan. The only way out is traveling west into Armenia. And that’s cut off. 

So I think the UN Security Council has the ability to kind of force it. It can’t take that much to do it. I mean, what’s the problem? I don’t see a big deal.

Why is someone from upstate New York who’s been working in Sudan for half his life taking such an interest in Armenia?

Dr. Catena: It really started with th Aurora Prize, which I received in 2017. It’s a prize that was started by three Armenians. One of the main criteria for the prize was somebody who kind of risks their life to help other people. They were doing it to honor their ancestors who were helped by strangers during the Armenian genocide. They said they’re alive today because “these people helped my grandfather, great grandfather, whatever, who survived during this time. So I want to start a prize to honor humanitarians.” The first year it was supposed to coincide with the 100-year anniversary of the Armenian genocide, which went from around 1915 to 1923. So a hundred years on, they wanted to give the prize for these eight years, and after that they would see how things would go. 

So anyway, I went there to receive the prize in 2017, and then went back for their subsequent ceremonies. And then in 2018 they wanted me to be the chairman of the Aurora Humanitarian Initiative, which is a secular humanitarian project. The main involvement is sponsoring the Aurora Humanitarian Prize, helping their projects out – that’s kind of the main involvement. 

I spent a total of six months outside of Nuba, Sudan, between 2018-2019: part of the time was in Armenia, part of the time was in Europe, part of the time was in the US, going around meeting people and talking about this humanitarian initiative.

Have you come to a new appreciation of Armenian history and culture?

Dr. Catena: Armenia is a very unique country. It’s the first Christian Republic, even before Constantine. Armenia became a Christian nation, I think, in 301 AD. So it’s the oldest Christian nation, and it’s got Turks to the left, Turks to the right. Azeris are Turkic-speaking people, and this tiny country is in between. Iran is to the South, and Georgia is to the north. So they’re kind of in the way of what they call a pan-Turkic region. Turkey really wants to eliminate these people, and they’re the little guy who’s trying to survive next to two big bullies that have big armies and other weapons. 

Azerbaijan is a pretty wealthy country. They’ve got oil reserves, and now with Russia being sanctioned, I’m sure people are lining up to Azerbaijan hoping to tap into their oil reserves. So Azerbaijan obviously would have a lot more pull with, say, Western nations and everybody else because they have something to offer. Armenia is kind of just there. They don’t have a lot of resources.

When you were in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, did you get a look at how the Church is and how it’s operating?

Dr. Catena: I did, yeah. It’s got ancient monasteries there – I mean absolutely beautiful monasteries. It’s got a town called Shushi, which has a very old monastery. And now, actually, Shushi is in the hands of the Azeris. 

They have something called khachkars, Armenian crosses that are very unique to Armenian Christianity. And they’re all over the place in Armenia. And what the Azeris did is they would come into this territory – and these khachkars had been there for hundreds and hundreds of years – and they would just destroy the place, destroy the monasteries, destroy the khachkars and just lay waste to the place – a kind of cultural genocide. 

Azerbaijan is an Islamic country. They’re not looked upon as Islamic fundamentalists, but it’s an Islamic country like Turkey.

Also, the Church suffered a lot under communism; they went through 70 years under communist rule, where the Church was outlawed. It’s slowly coming back. People are coming back to the faith, but it’s slow. 

It’s an apostolic Church. St. Bartholomew, who was martyred in Armenia [and whose feast is on August 24], founded that Church. So it’s a very old history of Christianity there. It’s its own Church – one small country has its own Church. And they can trace that back 2,000 years. And it’s got a unique culture and a unique liturgy – really beautiful liturgies.

Asbarez: Yerevan Says U.S. Can Push for UN Security Council Resolution to Resolve Artsakh Crisis

The UN Security Council meets to discuss Azerbaijan's blockade of Artsakh on Aug. 16


Official Yerevan said that it anticipates that the United States will play a role in resolving the humanitarian crisis in Artsakh, stemming from Azerbaijan’s more than eight-month blockade of the Lachin Corridor

Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan told reporters on Tuesday that the U.S. can play a role in advancing a resolution by the United Nations Security Council to resolve the crisis.

Mirzoyan’s was responding to a reporter’s question about media reports suggesting that the U.S. actively obstructed the adoption of a resolution by the UN Security Council after it held an emergency session last week to discuss the Artsakh crisis.

An overwhelming majority of the countries represented last week at the UN Security Council session called on Azerbaijan to end the blockade and ensure free movement along the Lachin Corridor. However, no tangible statement or resolution emerged from the meeting aside from declarations of support for the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace talks.

The U.S. joined the European Union, France, Russia, China and other states to firmly reject the blockade.

“I have to note that the UN Security Council emergency meeting, which was convened at the request of Armenia, was open, and not only Armenians but the entire world had the opportunity to hear the positions of participating countries, including the United States,” Mirzoyan told reporters.

“In instances where the world is witnessing Azerbaijan’s policy of ethnic cleansing against the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, I don’t think the United States would want to or plans to be part or contribute to a policy of ethnic cleansing in any way or form,” added Mirzoyan. “It would be difficult to imagine that.”

“I think and I hope that the US very well realizes the extent and the alarming pace of the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh, and also realizes that a possible resolution in the UN Security Council would come to resolve this situation and return the parties to the negotiations agenda,” Mirzoyan said.

Armenia’s Foreign Ministry on Monday downplayed the UN Security Council’s failure to formally demand an end to Azerbaijan’s blockade of Artsakh.

Foreign Ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan told reporters in written comments that the format of the meeting did not “presuppose the adoption” of any such document.

“Besides, only the 15 (permanent and non-permanent) members of the UN Security Council have the right to draft UN Security Council resolutions and initiate voting. Armenia, not being a member of the UN Security Council, does not have such authority,” Badalyan added.

“The discussion at the UN Security Council provides an important platform, an opportunity to focus the attention of the international community on the possible catastrophic consequences of the situation, to activate the Council’s efforts to address it and to foster their possible coordination and to outline the further steps,” explained Badalyan.

She added that the Armenian foreign ministry will continue its efforts within the UN and other arenas.

“Today, the international community, the members of the UN Security Council interested in real, lasting stability in the region must take clear steps, unite efforts in order to lead the developed understanding regarding the importance of reopening the Lachin corridor and the immediate resolution of the problem with effective use of existing mechanisms,” Badalyan said.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 08/22/2023

                                        Tuesday, 


Karabakh Residents Escorted To Armenia

        • Robert Zargarian
        • Tigran Hovsepian

Armenia - A group of Karabakh residents arrive in Armenia, .


Azerbaijan has allowed several dozen residents of Nagorno-Karabakh to travel to 
Armenia for the first time since tightening its blockade of the Lachin corridor 
more than two months ago.

Forty-one Karabakh-born citizens of Russia as well as students enrolled in 
Armenian universities were escorted by Russian peacekeepers on Monday to an 
Azerbaijani checkpoint set up in the corridor in April before entering Armenia.

Another group of Karabakh Armenians passed through the checkpoint on Tuesday. 
They included the 17-year-old Knar Khachatrian, who was recently admitted to 
Yerevan State University.

“I expected the process of going through the checkpoint to be more complicated, 
but it was actually easy and everything went well,” she told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service after crossing into Armenia.

Many of the travellers were approached at the checkpoint by a large number of 
journalists from state-controlled Azerbaijani media that portrayed their journey 
as proof of Baku’s claims that Karabakh has not been cut off from the outside 
world. Karabakh authorities accused Baku of manipulating those interviews for 
propaganda purposes.

“The Azerbaijani side continues to create humiliating conditions at the illegal 
checkpoint located near the Hakari bridge, in addition to its illegal 
surveillance of and obstacles for the citizens of Artsakh,” read a statement 
released by a Karabakh agency on Monday evening.

The authorities in Stepanakert argue that Azerbaijan keeps blocking commercial 
and humanitarian traffic through the sole road connecting Karabakh to Armenia. 
The blockade, compounded by the disruption of Armenia’s gas and electricity 
supplies to Karabakh, has led to severe shortages of food, medicine, fuel and 
other essential items in the Armenian-populated region.

Baku has also periodically banned the International Committee of the Red Cross 
(ICRC) from transporting critically ill Karabakh residents to Armenian 
hospitals. The medical evacuations continued on Tuesday, with the ICRC escorting 
seven such patients to Armenia and transferring as many others back to Karabakh.

Meanwhile, the family of a young Karabakh woman who died in an August 13 road 
accident in Armenia still awaited Azerbaijani permission to repatriate her body 
through the ICRC. The Red Cross said it is continuing to discuss the matter with 
Baku.




Tensions Rise Again On Armenian-Azeri Border

        • Nane Sahakian

Armenia - An Armenian army post on the border with Azerbaijan.


One Armenian soldier has been killed and one Azerbaijani serviceman wounded in 
fresh skirmishes reported from the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

Armenia’s Defense Ministry said late on Monday that the soldier, Vanik 
Ghazarian, died at an Armenian army outpost in eastern Gegharkunik province that 
came under fire from across the border.

The mayor of the nearby village of Akhparadzor told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service 
that he heard the sounds of gunfire late in the afternoon. He said there were no 
signs of further shooting in that border area the following morning.

The Azerbaijani military said, meanwhile, that one of its soldiers was wounded 
by Armenian forces on Tuesday. It did not specify where the incident occurred 
while accusing Armenia of escalating tensions along the volatile border.

The Defense Ministry in Yerevan issued on Tuesday at least three statements 
denying Armenian ceasefire violations alleged by the Azerbaijani side.

Tensions at various sections of the long border have run high in recent months 
despite major progress reported in Armenian-Azerbaijani talks on a bilateral 
peace treaty. According to Yerevan, one of the main remaining obstacles to such 
a deal is Baku’s rejection of an Armenian proposal to use Soviet-era military 
maps for delimiting and demarcating the frontier.

Fresh shooting incidents were also reported from the “line of contact” in and 
around Nagorno-Karabakh. The authorities in Stepanakert on Tuesday accused 
Azerbaijani troops of continuing to shoot at residents of a Karabakh village 
trying to harvest their wheat.

The authorities report such incidents on a regular basis. They claim Azerbaijani 
is deliberately trying to disrupt agricultural activity in Karabakh in an effort 
to aggravate food shortages resulting from the Azerbaijani blockade of the 
Lachin corridor. Baku claims that its troops only open fire to stop Karabakh 
Armenian forces from fortifying their positions.




Azerbaijan Urged To Recognize Armenia’s Borders

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan meets his Belgian 
counterpart Hadja Lahbib in Yerevan, .


Belgian Foreign Minister Hadja Lahbib urged Azerbaijan to publicly recognize 
Armenia’s borders when she visited Yerevan on Tuesday.

“We have welcomed the courage of [Armenian Prime Minister] Nikol Pashinian who 
publicly recognized Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, and we call on 
Azerbaijan’s leadership to do the same,” she said after talks with her Armenian 
counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan.

Mirzoyan reiterated Yerevan’s claims that Baku could lay claim to Armenian 
territory even after Pashinian recognized Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh 
earlier this year.

“So far we have not heard public statements by Azerbaijan’s leadership 
recognizing the territorial integrity of Armenia,” he told a joint news 
conference with Lahbib. “We heard such words only during meetings held behind 
closed doors, and we are very concerned about this. This may mean that 
Azerbaijan has territorial claims to Armenia.”

Pashinian suggested earlier this month that Azerbaijan is seeking to sign the 
kind of peace deal with Armenia that would not preclude such claims.

Pashinian’s most recent meeting with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev was 
hosted in Brussels on July 12 by Charles Michel, a former Belgian prime minister 
heading the European Union’s top decision-making body. Michel said after the 
meeting that the two leaders reaffirmed their earlier “understanding that 
Armenia’s territory covers 29,800 square kilometers and Azerbaijan’s 86,600 
square kilometers.” Aliyev has still not publicly confirmed that.

Mirzoyan said that international mediators should make sure that Baku honors 
Armenian-Azerbaijani understandings brokered by them. “Not only are 
understandings not being respected but we are seeing opposite processes,” he 
said, pointing to the continuing Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin corridor.

Lahbib expressed serious concern over the worsening humanitarian situation in 
Karabakh, warning of the risk of famine in the Armenian-populated region. “It is 
incumbent on Azerbaijan to ensure the security of Karabakh’s population and free 
traffic through the Lachin corridor,” she said.


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.

 

In ongoing disinformation campaign, Azerbaijan again falsely accuses Armenia of border shooting

 09:51,

YEREVAN, AUGUST 14, ARMENPRESS. The Azerbaijani defense ministry has again falsely accused the Armenian military of opening gunfire in an ongoing disinformation campaign, the Armenian defense ministry warned Monday.

In a statement released Monday morning, the Armenian defense ministry said that the Azeri accusations are a “usual kind of disinformation.”

“The [Ministry of Defense] of Azerbaijan has come up with the usual kind of disinformation. The statement of the Ministry of Defence of Azerbaijan as if allegedly from 10:45 p.m. on August 13 to 7:05 a.m. on August 14 the units of the Armed Forces [of Armenia] fired against the Azerbaijani combat outposts located in the eastern and southwestern parts of the border, does not correspond to reality,” the Armenian defense ministry said.

Azerbaijan accuses Armenia of strengthening its border forces

Lebanon – Aug 14 2023



Azerbaijan has accused Armenia on Monday of bolstering its forces along the border between the two countries in the Caucasus region with the intention of provoking military action, an allegation vehemently denied by Yerevan, as tensions continue to escalate.

The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry stated, "In recent days, there has been a significant transfer of weapons, equipment, and personnel with the intention of launching new military actions along the border."

Yerevan was also accused of establishing military infrastructure in the separatist Nagorno-Karabakh region, where Russian peacekeeping forces have been stationed since 2020.

The ministry further asserted in a statement that Azerbaijan "reserves the right to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity by all means" as prescribed by international law.

Armenia's Defense Ministry issued a statement denying any transfer of weapons or forces near the borders or in Karabakh, condemning the claims as "inconsistent with reality."

Tensions have escalated between the two sides in recent days, with Yerevan accusing Baku of obstructing traffic through the Lachin Corridor, a short mountainous route connecting Armenia to the Armenian-populated areas in the separatist Nagorno-Karabakh enclave.

Armenia called for an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council on Saturday due to the "deteriorating humanitarian situation" in Nagorno-Karabakh.

The countries have been embroiled in a conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh since the late 1980s, culminating in two wars, the latest of which in 2020 saw Azerbaijani forces making significant territorial gains and defeating Armenian forces.
AFP

https://www.lbcgroup.tv/news/world-news/718276/azerbaijan-accuses-armenia-of-strengthening-its-bo/en