Yerevan Mayor departs for Artsakh on private visit

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 10:22,

YEREVAN, APRIL 13, ARMENPRESS. Mayor of Yerevan Hayk Marutyan has departed for the Republic of Artsakh on a private visit, his spokesperson Hakob Karapetyan said.

During the visit the Mayor will meet with Mayor of Stepanakert, the capital of Artsakh, Davit Sargsyan to discuss the mutual cooperation between the two capitals.

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Biden Can Help Armenia and Azerbaijan Make Peace. Here’s How.

Foreign Policy
March 30 2021

The first 100 days are not even over, and the Biden administration’s national security and foreign-policy team has already dealt with major fires around the world—from the Saudi-backed war in Yemen to a military coup and brutal crackdown in Myanmar to calibrating the relationship with a bristling China.

Late last year, a war broke out between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and although the bullets and bombs have stopped for now, the underlying conflict has not ended. It is an example of the kind of problem that slips out of the headlines and, therefore, away from the firefighters’ view. That’s too bad—not only because the smoldering embers could ignite further violence and human misery but also because firefighting is about preventing destruction, not about construction. If all one does is put out fires, one never builds anything. In other words, moments of relative calm, however tense and enduring the challenges might be, often present the opportunities—however difficult—for actual progress.

Though its roots go back further (they always do), in its contemporary incarnation the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan erupted three decades ago, as ripples of the Soviet Union’s slow-motion collapse began radiating outward from its epicenter in Moscow.

Until a new wide-scale war broke out in September 2020, the conflict over the status of the majority-Armenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh and adjacent territories had been mostly frozen since 1994, when a Russian-brokered cease-fire ended several years of war that killed thousands of people and displaced more than a million in the two former Soviet republics. Since 1997, the United States, Russia, and France, as co-chairs of the Minsk Group at the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), have been charged with facilitating negotiations toward a lasting resolution.

But in recent years, diplomacy faltered, and outbreaks of violence along the line of contact became more frequent, including a four-day conflagration in 2016. The 1994 agreement left Armenia in de facto control not only of Nagorno-Karabakh, a majority-Armenian region that had been part of Azerbaijan in the Soviet Union, but also of adjacent Azerbaijani territories—and it was signed in part because of Azerbaijan’s fear at the time that Armenian troops might make further gains, including attacking Azerbaijan’s second-largest city, Ganja. But in the intervening decades, Azerbaijan’s oil money combined with military, intelligence, and training support from Turkey—and Armenia’s relative poverty and dependence on Russia—created a situation where the party dissatisfied with the status quo, Azerbaijan, had accumulated significant advantages in military power. This loaded the spring for renewed conflict, and the failure of the parties to negotiate effectively—and of the international community to pressure and incentivize them to do so—released the spring in the new war that broke out last year.

This time, roles were reversed as Azerbaijan reclaimed territory adjoining Nagorno-Karabakh and wrested control of a significant portion of Nagorno-Karabakh itself before the parties signed another Russian-brokered cease-fire late in the night of Nov. 9, 2020. Notably, that agreement provides for 2,000 Russian peacekeepers to be deployed along a new line of contact and in the corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia proper—a step that worries many who have witnessed how in Georgia and Moldova, two other former Soviet republics, Russian so-called peacekeepers have undermined sovereignty rather than reinforced it.

The new status quo is unlikely to change in the near term, nor do the two parties seem willing to move forward constructively. And the Nov. 9 agreement is only a cease-fire, not a peace accord. Furthermore, the deep involvement of and ambiguous objectives of Russia and Turkey make things even more complicated, and the situation on the ground is already a morass of sensitive transit routes and mountainous terrain. Looking at maps of the conflict area can actually be confusing rather than clarifying.

Today Azerbaijan, though drunk with victory, remains a brittle and repressive petrostate held back by official corruption and economic stagnation. Armenia’s democratic reforms, a source of hope after the 2018 political transition, are—like its prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan—on the ropes, as weak institutions and a disheartened populace prove vulnerable to Russian disinformation, corruption, and anti-Western narratives. Though an improvement over his predecessors, Pashinyan has proved an unsteady steward of Armenia’s democratic transformation. This month, he called for snap elections in a bid to escape the political crisis precipitated by anger over Armenia’s defeat. Either way, Armenia is likely to remain painfully dependent on Moscow. And leaders in both Baku and Yerevan have prepared their populations for war for more than a generation and have done little to lay the groundwork for peace. Against this backdrop, senior officials in the Biden administration might well argue internally that they should keep an eye on the situation but focus their energies elsewhere—and not attempt to play a leading role diplomatically.

This would be a mistake. Instead, the new U.S. administration should see the South Caucasus region as an opportunity to demonstrate the value of serious U.S. engagement and use it as an example of President Joe Biden’s commitment to a pro-democracy foreign policy centered on universal values and human rights. This is not to suggest that a dramatic breakthrough is obviously in reach; there is plenty of reason for sober analysis and skepticism about outcomes. But without energetic U.S. diplomacy, there is significantly less hope for progress.

Here are four steps the Biden administration can take to encourage Armenia and Azerbaijan toward a lasting peace. It will be a long road, but these steps would set a constructive course.

First, press for implementation of the cease-fire, addressing issues of accountability and remediation. The Nov. 9 agreement between the two parties, co-signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin, is not ideal. But for now, there is no near-term alternative framework for sustaining the cease-fire. That agreement demands the exchange of all prisoners, military and civilian, taken by both sides. Credible reporting suggests that prisoners remain, and their return should be a priority. Washington should also support reporting by the OSCE team on the ground—hopefully augmented from its current size of just a handful of people—on complaints about cease-fire violations, human rights abuses, and alleged war crimes. Accountability requires a factual record, and recording victims’ complaints is a first step. The OSCE can also advise on possible approaches for compensation for displaced persons.

Second, support humanitarian work and resettlement activities. Too often, when the guns go silent, attention shifts elsewhere. People on the ground are left to sort out how to restart their lives with property and businesses destroyed, landmines strewn in unknown numbers in indeterminate places, infrastructure and transportation routes disrupted, and families displaced or returning. The practical work of supporting ordinary people as they adapt to a new political geography is less sexy than the negotiation of military cease-fires or political agreements, but it is the foundation for peace: The conflict cannot be settled until people are. Resettlement in territories newly controlled by Azerbaijan will not be easy—and the corrupt government in Baku does not have a track record of responsible management of local governance challenges. Meanwhile, Armenians newly displaced are worried about the fate of Armenian religious and cultural sites now under Azerbaijani control. Neither Russia nor Turkey can be relied on to shepherd this work.

The international community can lend both expertise and credibility to addressing concerns on both sides. New grievances should not be allowed to smolder in the quiet after conflict. The United States should work with Europeans and others to support NGOs and international organizations that can carry out local confidence-building measures.

Third, drive a regionwide economic development strategy. The most plausible lever to drive future cross-border cooperation is a new regional economic strategy, including infrastructure development, that can attract international investment to strengthen the economies of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and neighboring Georgia (which is going through its own self-inflicted political crisis). U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen should, formally or informally, put the region on the agenda for high-level talks at the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank beginning next week. And Washington should work with the European Union and the three governments in the South Caucasus to develop such a framework for regional development. The C5+1 framework, developed by the Obama administration (and continued by the Trump administration) to foster cooperation on regional issues in Central Asia, could be a model for a new SC3+2 framework, involving the three South Caucasus countries, the United States, and the EU.

Financial investments from the international community should be pinned to political commitments from the parties and to their progress on resolving contentious issues that impede regional economic development, such as border crossings and utilities infrastructure. Moreover, any financial assistance should be paired with measures to tackle endemic corruption.

Fourth, reinvigorate diplomacy. The U.S. co-chair of the Minsk Group should have ambassadorial rank. Washington should energetically push the co-chairs to meet regularly along with the OSCE team on the ground to chart and implement a strategy for addressing the irritants that rarely make headlines but hamper day-to-day progress. In addition, Washington should begin talks with Moscow about a United Nations Security Council resolution to ratify the Nov. 9 cease-fire and call for a full peace agreement.

The Russians should welcome Security Council ratification of Putin’s hastily drawn-up one-page agreement. In exchange, such a resolution should also give an international imprimatur to a regional development plan that would include all three South Caucasus countries. It could reaffirm the parties’ sovereignty, including their right to end the Russian peacekeeper deployment after five years.

In an era increasingly defined by geopolitics, there is a natural tendency to focus on the heavyweights of the global stage and to see the rest of the world, especially smaller countries, through the prism of great-power competition. Indeed, great-power competition often manifests itself indirectly and through proxies in other parts of the world. In part, that is why great-power competition persists as a model for understanding international politics.

But it is never the full picture, either. As Eleanor Roosevelt observed, human rights begin in the “small places close to home.” A foreign policy centered on human rights, therefore, cannot focus only on geopolitics and the biggest players. And when the geopolitical contest is not just a contest of power but of ideologies and worldview, even small places can become big tests. The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is seen by many as intractable. An earnest U.S. effort to push for progress is an opportunity to demonstrate what a values-driven foreign policy looks like.

Daniel Baer is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He was U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe from 2013 to 2017. Twitter: @danbbaer

New Ambassador of UK presents credentials to Armenian President

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 15:10, 1 April, 2021

YEREVAN, APRIL 1, ARMENPRESS. Newly-appointed Ambassador of the United Kingdom to Armenia John Patrick Gallagher presented his credentials to President Armen Sarkissian, the Presidential Office told Armenpress.

The Ambassador said he is happy to represent the United Kingdom in Armenia, adding that he and his team are expecting close cooperation for the benefit of strengthening and deepening the UK-Armenia relations.

The Ambassador conveyed the greetings of Queen Elizabeth II to the Armenian President.

President Sarkissian congratulated the Ambassador on assuming office and expressed confidence that he will invest all his efforts for further enriching and promoting the Armenian-British inter-state agenda.

Highlighting the complete use of the cooperation potential, the Armenian President and the UK Ambassador highlighted economy, science, education, artificial intelligence as prospective sectors for cooperation. They said both countries can work jointly in the fight against the international challenges, including the coronavirus pandemic and the climate change.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Baku denies brutal treatment of Armenian prisoners of war

TASS, Russia
March 23 2021
The Foreign Ministry commented on the charges of brutal treatment of Armenian prisoners of war, contained in a report by Human Rights Watch

BAKU, March 23. /TASS/. Azerbaijan denies charges of brutal treatment of Armenian prisoners of war, contained in a report by Human Rights Watch, the country’s Foreign Ministry said in a statement published on Tuesday.

"Azerbaijan is committed to the observance of international norms concerning humanitarian law and human rights. We dismiss Human Rights Watch accusations some prisoners of war were subjected to treatment violating the Geneva Convention," Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said.

It described the report as "biased and not reflecting the objective reality" and based on groundless charges.

"All Armenian prisoners of war and civilians were treated in accordance with the Geneva Convention. They were not subjected to any torture, humiliation of maltreatment. All of them received the necessary medical assistance and were examined by medics. The examinations found no traces of traumas or injuries, except for those received in combat," the statement runs.

Baku stressed once again that Azerbaijan had released to Armenia all prisoners of war in accordance with the trilateral statement of November 9, 2020, adding that the Armenian citizens still kept in its custody could not be regarded as prisoners of war.

"The Armenian side tries to mix up contexts: those detained in Azerbaijan following the signing of the November 9, 2020 trilateral statement cannot be regarded as prisoners of war. Persons sent to the country’s territory from Armenia for committing acts of terror and sabotage are not prisoners of war from the standpoint of international law and cannot be regarded as such. They must be brought to justice in accordance with Azerbaijan’s criminal legislation. All of them are treated in accordance with international humanitarian law and the country’s legislation. We stress once again that all persons classified as prisoners of war have been released," the Foreign Ministry said.

Baku urged Human Rights Watch to pay attention to the "instances of brutal treatment of Azerbaijani prisoners of war and civilians by the Armenian side, as well as the thousands of Azerbaijanis who remain unaccounted for."

Tensions in Nagorno-Karabakh surged up on September 27. Intensive hostilities followed. Baku and Yerevan have disputed the region since February 1988, when Nagorno-Karabakh declared secession from the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic. Russian President Vladimir Putin, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenia’s Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on November 9 signed a joint statement on the full cessation of hostilities in Karabakh. The Azerbaijani and Armenian forces stopped at the positions they were holding at that moment. A number of territories was transferred to Baku’s control. Russian peacekeepers were deployed along the engagement line and the Lachin corridor.

Dam construction in Turkey caused 30-40% decline of water resources in Araks – Levon Azizyan

Panorama, Armenia
March 23 2021

We face problem of water resources in Araks-Akhuryan section due to dam construction in Turkey, the director of the Center for Hydrometeorology and Monitoring Levon Azizyan told a news conference on Tuesday. 

"It is no coincidence that today, we have 100 million cubic meters less water resources in Akhuryan reservoir than last year. It is because starting from 2012, active dam construction has been carried out in Turkey which has resulted in 30-40% decreased of the overall water resources of Araks river," Azizyan said. 

In the words of the speaker, climate change is another factor that impacts the dramatic decline of water resources as the temperature continues growing since 1994, there is no snow accumulation in the mountainous areas, while the precipitation is mostly in the form of rains. 

"According to various predictions, we will face a problem with water resources in 2024 and the overall availability of water resources will be decreased by 15% to compare with the norm. In 2070, we will face 20-25% and 35-40% decline in 2100," said Azizyan. 

TURKEY Istanbul: four life sentences for Hrant Dink murder, disappointment of Armenians

Asia News, Italy

Two former police chiefs and two other former senior officials of the Interior Ministry sentenced. The Armenian community says the sentence fails to do justice to the victim. RSF: "Partial justice" 14 years after his death. Friends of Hrant Dink Group: the mechanisms and connections that led to the assassination are still unknown.

Istanbul (AsiaNews / Agencies) – A Turkish court yesterday sentenced four people to life imprisonment, two former police chiefs and two other people, top security officials, in connection with the murder of the Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

The local minority still cherish the memory of the reporter killed in front of the Agos headquarters on January 19, 2007 – tried two years earlier for writing about the genocide and killed in cold blood with four gunshots by a young man. The Armenian community in Turkey recently dedicated a youth center in Istanbul to his memory and have expressed their disappointment at what they see as a failure to do the victim justice.

Former police chiefs Ali Fuat Yilmazer and Ramazan Akyürek were convicted of the crime, along with two former senior officials of the Turkish Interior Ministry, Yavuz Karakaya and Muharrem Demirkale. There were a total of 27 defendants, charged with various crimes including lack of supervision aimed at preventing the murder.

However, the other defendants, including the top executives of the Istanbul and Trabzon police, and accused by the victim's family of implications in the murder, were acquitted by the judges "because the crimes ascribed to them have lapsed”.

Lawyers representing the family of the journalist and editor of the bilingual Turkish and Armenian weekly had submitted evidence to the Court showing the involvement of the police chiefs, who were allegedly warned of the plan to murder the then 52-year-old Hrant Dink. Despite the warnings, the top executives did nothing to prevent it, leaving a free hand to the killer.

At the time, his death had shaken the consciences of many citizens and more than 100,000 people had participated in his funeral, recognizing the work of a chronicler and intellectual who had worked for reconciliation between Turks and Armenians. However, the Turkish nationalists have never forgiven him the repeated denunciations of the Armenian genocide of 1915, always strongly denied by Ankara.

His killer, Ogun Samast, a 17-year-old unemployed youth at the time of the murder, confessed to the crime and was sentenced in 2011 to 23 years in prison. Human rights defenders and activists criticize the trial that ended yesterday and that would not have shed full light on the matter. “Some officials – says the representative of Reporters Without Borders (RSF) in Turkey Erol Önderoglu – are still at large. This partial justice rendered after 14 years leaves a bitter taste in the mouth ".

Bulent Aydin, of the Friends of Hrant Dink group, reports that "it is not yet known exactly what are the mechanisms that led to planning and committing the crime." Turkish authorities say the network of Islamic preacher Fethullah Gülen, the number one enemy of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan after being his longtime ally, is believed to be the mastermind of the (failed) coup of July 2016, according to Turkish authorities. At a commemoration of the murder last January, the journalist's widow denounced an attempt to hide the responsibility of the state.

Armenia’s highest court declares Article 300.1 to be unconstitutional

Panorama, Armenia

Armenia’s Constitutional Court declared Article 300.1 of the country's Criminal Code, under which former president Robert Kocharyan is charged, to be unconstitutional. 

President Kocharyan was accused of overturning the constitutional order of the country within criminal investigation into March 1, 2008 post-electoral devents. Kocharyan, who served as Armenia’s president at a time of March 1, 2008, declared a 20-day state of emergency, with the approval of the Armenian parliament, banning future demonstrations. 

In July 2019, Robert Kocharyan and his lawyers asked the highest court of Armenia to determine the constitutionality of Article 300.1. The defense team of the former president argued, among other things, that the clause was added to the Criminal Code in 2009 and cannot be used retroactively against him.

The verdict of the Court read out by its President A. Dilanyan said that the Article in question "contradicts to Articles 78 and 79 of the Constitution of the Republic of Armenia and is declared void." The decision is final and takes effect upon its publication. 

To note, Articles 78 and 79 of the Constitution concern the principles of Proportionality and Certainty. 

Historical and cultural heritage of Artsakh an inseparable part of world culture – Armenian FM

Public Radio of Armenia

The historical and cultural heritage of Artsakh is an inseparable part of world culture, Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian said at the Q&A session at the National Assembly.

“The Minister said its destruction, desecration or falsification must be strictly prevented,” he noted.

“It is known that ethnic cleansing of Armenians has been carried out on territories of Artsakh, which came under the occupation of Azerbaijan. And today the destruction of the cultural heritage has been launched in an effort to erase or falsify the millennial cultural heritage of Artsakh,” Minister Aivazian stated.

He stressed that “now more than ever we need to intensify our international cooperation, our involvement with the international community.”

“In this sense, culture plays a very important role as a factor of “soft power,” the Minister said. He added that by the recent creation of the Commission on Cultural Diplomacy “we are applying to make culture a powerful tool in our diplomatic arsenal.”

European Parliament officials urge Azerbaijan to immediately release Armenian POWs

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 22:08,

YEREVAN, MARCH 23, ARMENPRESS. Chair of the Delegation for relations with the South Caucasus, MEP Marina Kaljurand, the European Parliament's Standing Rapporteur on Armenia, MEP Andrey Kovatchev, and the European Parliament's Standing Rapporteur on Azerbaijan, MEP Željana Zovko issued a joint statement, demanding Azerbaijan to immediately release all Armenians kept there.

 “We are gravely concerned by numerous allegations of abuse of Armenian captives by Azerbaijan, as documented in particular in a recent Human Rights Watch report. We urge the Azerbaijani authorities to investigate all such allegations and to bring those responsible to justice. Full respect of international humanitarian law and the prohibition of torture and other degrading or inhuman treatment must be ensured. We also deplore the fact that the Azerbaijani government has failed to comply with the interim measures of the European Court of Human Rights which ordered Azerbaijan to provide information on the conditions of detention of the detainees, their state of health, as well as the measures taken to return them. Once again, we call on Azerbaijan to release without delay all remaining Armenian detainees, in line with the provisions of the ceasefire agreement of 9 November 2020'', ARMENPRESS reports, reads the statement.

Chess: GM Iniyan wins silver at FIDE World University meet; Haik Martirosyan wins gold

Times of India

GM Iniyan wins silver at FIDE World University meet

Prasad RS | TNN | Updated: Mar 21, 2021, 21:04 IST
TNN

CHENNAI: The 1st FIDE World University online blitz chess saw India's P Iniyan win silver in the open section. Armenian GM Haik Martirosyan won gold while Russia Mikhail Antipov bagged bronze. The event saw 960 student players from 84 countries featuring in it. The results of the event, which concluded on March 18, was officially announced on Sunday after a fair play analysis conducted by the organisers.

Grandmaster Iniyan, representing Bharathiar University, scored 8.5 points from 10 games to top his group and qualify for the final stage of the event. The 8-player final phase saw Iniyan start with a loss in round 1 to Chinese GM Xu Yinglun. The 18-year-old, who hails from Erode, quickly regrouped to notch up 5.5 points in the last 6 games. "The start in the final phase wasn't great but I was able to set aside the loss and focus on the next set of matches. It feels great to be winning a medal in this prestigious event," Iniyan told TOI on Sunday. Iniyan is currently pursuing his BBA at PSG College in Coimbatore, affiliated toBharathiar University.After the conclusion of the final phase, Iniyan was tied for the first place with Martirosyan, but the latter won gold due to better tie-break scores.

The women's section of the tournament was won by Armenia's Anna Sargsyan.

The event didn't start the way it was planned. Due to technical problems the organizers had to nullify the results of the first four rounds played on Day 1 and restart the blitz championship the next day after slightly changing the format.