Artsakh Investigative Committee launches criminal case over the incident in response to the provocation of the Azerbaijani serviceman

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 13 2021

The Investigative Committee of the Artsakh Republic opened a criminal case over the incident that took place on November 13, at 07:00 in response to the explicitly provocative action of the Azerbaijani servicemen. According to the source, a preliminary investigation is underway, and additional details about the case will be communicated further. 

To remind, the Artsakh National Security Service reported earlier that an unknown man threw an explosive device at the Azerbaijani checkpoint on the Stepanakert-Berdzor road near Shushi in response to provocative actions of Azerbaijani servicemen. 

The man is reportedly the brother of the 22-year-old Artsakh citizen killed by Azerbaijani forces on November 8. Three others were wounded as a result of Azerbaijani shooting.

Georgi Vanyan’s peace legacy must live on

Al-Jazeera, Qatar
Nov 8 2021

The late Armenian activist showed us the way to peace in the South Caucasus.

Azerbaijani-born Armenian peace activist Georgi Vanyan died on October 15, 2021 [Screengrab/Youtube/Daha Yaxşı]

Amid talk about a forthcoming meeting between Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, there is increasing hope in the South Caucasus that perhaps the two countries will make some progress on peace. One of the main proponents of such a summit, however, did not live long enough to see it take place.

On October 15, we lost Azerbaijani-born Armenian peace activist Georgi Vanyan, who dedicated his life to reconciliation between the two nations. One of his last two wishes, which he expressed in an interview with me, was to see a direct engagement between the two leaders, without mediation or supervision.

Last year, the frozen conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Nagorno Karabakh region escalated into a full-out war which killed thousands and displaced countless families on both sides. Following the 44-day conflict, a ceasefire without a settlement was concluded which brought back the state of no-war, no-peace between the two nations.

Vanyan knew that the only way forward towards peace was direct Armenian-Azerbaijani engagement. After all, for three decades he had worked on bringing together Armenian and Azerbaijani communities and seen its effect. He knew that when ordinary Armenians and Azerbaijanis meet, the bankruptcy of the military-patriotic machine and the folly of division are exposed.

Following last year’s ceasefire, Vanyan and I wrote for Al Jazeera that sustainable peace cannot be achieved only through high-level politics; it also necessitates “reconciliation between communities”.

Today, as most Azerbaijanis and Armenians form their perceptions of each other solely based on hateful rhetoric propagated by political elites and the media, his legacy must be remembered and upheld.

Vanyan took up the cause of reconciliation in the early 1990s, when amid the collapse of the Soviet Union, the conflict over the province of Karabakh between Armenia and Azerbaijan escalated. Legally belonging to Baku, but with a large population of Armenians, the region went through a six-year war that ended with Armenia’s occupation of most of its territory, the mass displacement of people on both sides and the closure of borders.

When the wall went up between our nations, Vanyan picked up the hammer. He focused on bringing Armenians and Azerbaijanis together, on challenging the idea that what happened in Karabakh was an ethnic conflict and not a political one.

In 2002, Vanyan founded the Caucasus Center of Peace-Making Initiatives and began active grassroots work. When in 2003 Armenian President Robert Kocharyan declared Armenians and Azeris “ethnically incompatible”, he decided to prove him wrong.

In the following years, Vanyan organised a marathon of events celebrating Azerbaijani culture around his country, inviting Azerbaijani philosophers, writers and journalists to meet Armenians. When his events managed to gather large crowds, his opponents found ways to disrupt or close them down.

Feeling the pressure of censorship and growing threats, Vanyan decided to take his work to neighbouring Georgia, where in 2011 he started a new initiative in an ethnically Azerbaijani village close to the Georgian border with Armenia and Azerbaijan. It was called the Tekali peace process: a space dedicated to debate, discussions, cultural exchanges and even free trade between Armenians, Azerbaijanis and Georgians.

I met Vanyan two years later in Berlin, where he gave me an interview. I was impressed by his passion and work and we became friends.

His grassroots approach was radically different to the jet-set international peacemakers that stayed in five-star hotels. For Vanyan, ordinary Armenians and Azerbaijanis represented the truth and held the keys to conflict resolution. Meeting together in respect and compassion, they offered an alternative to the official narrative of eternal hate, showing Armenians and Azerbaijanis what was possible. There was no protocol or ceremony and everyone was welcome. Many more people travelled to Tekali from Armenia and Azerbaijan than was initially expected.

Tragically, the popularity of the project also brought its downfall. The organisation was put under pressure to stop activities after the home of its local coordinator was raided and it eventually closed its doors.

Vanyan paid dearly for his work. After he organised an Azerbaijani film festival in Yerevan, supported by Western embassies, he was attacked and physically assaulted. Those around him were placed under surveillance and warned to distance themselves from him. His associates were threatened with dismissal from their workplaces or even with their children being harmed.

Vanyan’s family were forced to leave him. With little choice before him, he moved to a remote village in self-exile, only able to avoid destitution by working as a taxi driver.

That did not stop the Armenian government from claiming he was in the pay of the enemy, systematically discrediting him as an agent of Azerbaijan’s secret service. He was a traitor to the nation because he exposed the Karabakh conflict as political in nature and insisted on direct engagement with Azerbaijan.

Indeed, the lack of resolution suited vested interests: leaders in Azerbaijan and Armenia derived popular legitimacy as protectors of their nations. Maintaining external enemies had its benefits: domestic discontent could always be muffled by chest-thumping patriotism and public anger was always best handled by channelling it across the border.

Vanyan died in poverty, having lost everything – friends, family and wealth – to his lifelong cause. I was the last of his associates to see him alive.

In late September, we met in Tbilisi for an interview about the situation between Azerbaijan and Armenia. This is when he revealed his final wishes. The first one was for Pashinyan and Aliyev to meet. The second one was for the Tekali peace process to be rebuilt. His first wish is close to coming true, the second one – we, his remaining friends and supporters, will do our best to fulfil.

The challenge before us is to protect Vanyan’s legacy, as it faces systematic suppression, and keep his grassroots peace-building cause alive. Indeed, true peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan can only be achieved through reconciliation efforts that bring together ordinary people on both sides and help them overcome artificial barriers and political manipulation.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.


Highest number of divorces registered in Yerevan since 2017

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 9 2021

Armenia has registered 258 divorces from January to September this year, the latest figures released by the State Statistical Committee suggest. The divorce rate for the indicated period in the  previous year stood at 267.

According to the source, the highest number of divorces has been recorded in capital city Yerevan, where 332 divorces were registered in the past nine months which is also the highest number recorded since 2017. The second highest number of divorces is registered in Kotayk (258), followed by Lori (238). 

The divorce rate has grown  most in Tavush region to compare with the previous year data. 158 cases were registered in the province last year, while the number in the first nine months of the ongoing year is 192. 

According to the official statistics, the divorce rate has significantly dropped in Syunik province with 260 cases registered last year against 187 of the ongoing year. 

Turkish press: Azerbaijani, French, Armenian FMs discuss Nagorno-Karabakh

A member of a survey team from Halo Trust looks on at a damaged ammunition store near Aygestan, in outskirts of Khankendi, Nagorno-Karabakh, Nov. 23, 2020. (AP File Photo)

Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh with his French and Armenian counterparts in Paris on Wednesday.

According to a statement from France's Foreign Ministry, Jean-Yves Le Drian held separate meetings with Bayramov and Ararat Mirzoyan, the Armenian Foreign Minister. They then had a trilateral meeting as part of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group.

France seeks to strengthen the dialogue between the parties and establish lasting peace in the South Caucasus, said the statement.

It was also noted that Le Drian wishes to continue the dialogue with Azerbaijan and Armenia.

France has faced criticism for abandoning its neutrality and supporting Armenia in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict as one of the co-chair countries of the Minsk Group, which was set up by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

The Minsk Group, co-chaired by France, Russia and the United States, was formed in 1992 to find a peaceful solution to the conflict between Baku and Yerevan over the occupied Nagorno-Karabakh region. However, for years it has been unable to provide a solution.

Previously, Azerbaijan's parliament called for France to be stripped of its mediation role in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict to punish the French Senate for adopting a resolution backing the region's independence.

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

New clashes erupted on Sept. 27, 2020, with the Armenian army attacking civilians and Azerbaijani forces and violating humanitarian cease-fire agreements.

The fighting ended with a Russia-brokered agreement on Nov. 10, 2020.

During the 44-day conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and 300 settlements and villages that were under the Armenian occupation for almost 30 years.

Ukrainian delegation of political, public figures to visit Armenia

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 13:57,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS. A delegation from Ukraine consisting of political and public figures will visit Armenia on November 15-16, AnalitikaUA.net reports.

Among over 70 guests will be leaders of Armenian communities, influential politicians, members of Parliament, political scientists, media experts, journalists, athletes, etc.

During the visit the Ukrainian delegation members are expected to meet with the Armenian authorities.

A number of round-tables, cultural events and the opening of a skate-park – the donation of the Union of Armenians of Ukraine for Yerevan, will be held during the visit.

“Our goal is to give a new impetus to the relations between Kiev and Yerevan”, head of the Union of Armenians of Ukraine Vilen Shatvoryan told AnalitikaUA.net.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Azerbaijan’s customs checkpoint not in the territory of Armenia – PM Pashinyan

Public Radio of Armenia
Nov 11 2021

Azerbaijan’s customs checkpoint is not in the territory of Armenia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the government sitting today.

The comments come after the Azerbaijani side said it would set up customs checkpoint on Goris-Kapan road.

“As you know, since August Azerbaijan has been charging customs duties from Iranian trucks driving along Goris-Kapan road, namely the Eyvazli-Chaizami section under their control. Yesterday, we received an informal notification on the plans to carry out passport and customs control for Armenian citizens and cargoes, as well,” the Prime Minister said.

He added that after the notification was received, the Armenian side made a decision to  advise people traveling along that road to use Kapan-Aghvani-Halidzor-Shinuhayr road instead.

“The Tatev-Aghvani section of this road, which had been impassable for decades, has been asphalted and commissioned this month,” the Prime Minister said.

He said the situation for Iranian drivers traveling along Goris-Kapan highways remains unchanged, but they can now chose to use the alternative road without any additional customs duties.

Pashinyan stressed that the customs checkpoint is not in Armenia’s territory, and the question is about the “Eyvazli section.” He added that it would still be possible to negotiate the decision, but the cost would be the “corridor logic, which is unacceptable to us.”

The Prime Minister noted that the Armenian side has always said the reopening of regional communications should take place without and “context of exterritoriality.”

COVID-19: Armenia reports 1121 new cases, 62 deaths in one day

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 11:28, 9 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS. 1121 new cases of COVID-19 have been confirmed in Armenia in the past 24 hours, bringing the total number of confirmed cases to 322,364, the ministry of healthcare reports.

9152 COVID-19 tests were conducted on November 8.

2191 patients have recovered in one day. The total number of recoveries has reached 285,057.

The death toll has risen to 6762 (62 death cases have been registered in the past one day).

The number of active cases is 29,203.

The number of people who have been infected with COVID-19 but died from other disease has reached 1342.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Mask-wearing outdoors is once again mandatory in Armenia, tougher measures are expected


Nov 2 2021


    JAMnewsYerevan

Since November 1, wearing a mask on the street has again become mandatory in Armenia. The government plans to introduce stricter anti-epidemic measures amid the next wave of coronavirus with extremely high rates of both morbidity and mortality – incomparable with previous, even the most difficult periods of the pandemic.

The tightening of measures will affect those who have not yet been vaccinated or are late with the second dose of vaccination.

As of November 1, 1,071 new cases of infection were detected. Moreover, in recent weeks, this figure has exceeded 2,000. During the day, another 51 have died, the total death toll has reached 6,379 people.

Since October 26, by decision of the government, universities have switched to distance learning, school holidays have been extended by a week, and the issue of extending them for another week is already being discussed.

The Armenian government intends to avoid a lockdown by stimulating vaccinations and introducing strict anti-epidemic restrictions.


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Since October 1, all working citizens of Armenia who have not yet been vaccinated, are obliged to submit a negative coronavirus test result to the employer once every two weeks. This does not apply to those who have already received the first dose of the vaccine. However, now a new measure is being introduced: the test will also have to be taken by those who are late for their second dose of vaccine.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that they are discussing the introduction of another measure. It may soon be necessary to submit a vaccination QR code or a negative test result to visit cafes, restaurants, cinemas and entertainment events.

It is also possible that from December 1, unvaccinated citizens of Armenia who get sick with coronavirus will be treated at their own expense.

Armenian media began writing about this from the beginning of October. Press Secretary of the Ministry of Health Hripsime Khachatryan does not deny this information. She stated that the issue is under discussion:

“The average cost of inpatient treatment for a patient with Covid-19 is 800,000 drams [about $ 1,700], but depending on the patient’s condition – in a severe or extremely serious condition, this amount naturally increases and exceeds one million drams [about $ 2,000 ]”.

All these measures are being discussed in the government, since a decision has already been made that there will be no more lockdown in the country. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan himself stated that his cabinet’s strategy is to stimulate vaccinations and avoid the collapse of the economy.

Meanwhile, 27 medical centers across the country are now serving coronavirus patients. More than 3,000 beds are constantly occupied, more than a 1,000 people are in serious condition, more than 300 are in critical condition, more than 100 are connected to artificial respiration devices, Health Minister Anahit Avanesyan said earlier.

She also presented figures showing the effectiveness of vaccination:

“In general, out of 30,433 citizens with a positive test, that is, active cases, 1,702 people were vaccinated, out of 3,100 hospitalized citizens the number of vaccinated is only 96. Out of 1,500 citizens receiving treatment in the intensive care unit, we have only five people. who have been vaccinated”.

Healthcare ministry recommends coronavirus health pass

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 14:29, 4 November, 2021

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 4, ARMENPRESS. The Minister of Healthcare Anahit Avanesyan didn’t rule out that authorities would introduce a coronavirus health pass for entry to cultural and leisure venues.

Avanesyan told reporters that they will introduce a draft decision on November 4 which, if passed, will require people to produce a negative PCR test or a vaccination certificate against COVID-19 upon entry to cultural venues or restaurants.

The proposed health pass is yet to be discussed at an inter-departmental commission.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

ECtHR obliges Azerbaijan’s authorities to pay compensation to relatives of two Armenian POWs

Caucasian Knot, EU
Nov 5 2021

The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) has awarded the compensations in the amounts of 40,000 euros to the family of Mamikon Khodjoyan and the family of Karen Petrosyan, residents of the Tavush Region of Armenia, who were captured and tortured in Azerbaijan in 2014.

The “Caucasian Knot” has reported that on January 28, 2014, Mamikon Khodjoyan, a 77-year-old Armenian citizen, was detained in the Tovuz District of Azerbaijan. On March 4, the man was handed over to Armenia and placed to a resuscitation ward in a hospital, where he died on May 20. Karen Petrosyan, who lived in the Armenian village of Chinari, was captured on August 7, 2014, and the other day he died suddenly from acute heart failure. According to the Azerbaijan’s authorities, the man was a member of a sabotage group.

According to the materials of Mamikon Khodjoyan’s case, Azerbaijani investigators claimed the man deliberately crossed the border, knowing that he could be captured. The country’s authorities also argued that Azerbaijan was not responsible for the death of the elderly man in Armenia and that he was detained as a prisoner of war (POW) in accordance with the Geneva Convention.

The Strasbourg Court found in the cases of both complainants a violation of the articles on the right to life and on the prohibition of torture, and in the Mamikon Khodjoyan’s case, the ECtHR also recognized a violation of the article on the right to liberty and security of person of the European Convention on Human Rights.

As a result of the war in Nagorno-Karabakh in the autumn of 2020, the death toll in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh reached 3788 people, while 224 soldiers and 22 civilians were missing, Armenia reported. On August 11, Armenian human rights defender Artak Zeinalyan reported that Azerbaijan recognized the existence of only 45 Armenian prisoners of war, while Armenia submitted the information about 280 POWs to the European Court of Human Rights.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on November 4, 2021 at 07:26 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Source: CK correspondent

Source: 
© Caucasian Knot