Yerevan tells U.S. International Community Failed to Prevent Ethnic Cleansing of Artsakh Armenians

U.S.'s top envoy to the Caucasus Louis Bono (left) meets with Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan in Yerevan on Oct. 11


Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan on Wednesday said that Azerbaijan, in fact, subjected the Artsakh population to ethnic cleansing despite warnings from several world international players, including the United States.

Mirzoyan made the statement during a meeting with the United States’ senior advisor for Caucasus Louis Bono, who traveled to Yerevan after holding talks in Baku.

Armenia’s top diplomat told Bono that the international community’s failure to prevent the mass displacement of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh from their homeland in the 21st century “once again attests to the imperative for clear steps by international stakeholders.”

Touching upon the process aimed at establishing lasting peace and stability in the South Caucasus and of normalization of Armenia-Azerbaijan relations, Mirzoyan stressed the need to restrain threats against the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Armenia.

In the event that Azerbaijan refuses to refrain from such threats its “constructive engagement” in the process will be needed.

The talks with Bono are taking place after Azerbaijan has told European Union leaders of its intention to invade eight villages in Armenia, which it says are being “occupied.”

The two also exchanged views on addressing current humanitarian challenges and rights of more than 100,000 forcibly displaced Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Bono also met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, with whom he discussed a meeting in Granada, Spain last week that included President Emmanuel Macron of France, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and European Council President Charles Michel.

Following the Granada meeting, an announcement was made regarding the imperative for Armenia and Azerbaijan to respect each other’s territorial integrity. Concerns were also voiced about the mass displacement of Armenians from Artsakh.

Aliyev complained to Michel that the statement was “anti-Azerbaijani” and said that the leaders of France, Germany, the EU and Armenia had no right to issue a statement that pertains to Azerbaijan without his presence at the meeting.

Aliyev opted out of the Granada meeting one day before it was scheduled to take place. Pashinyan, nevertheless, attended the talks and on Wednesday was chastised by the Azerbaijani leader.

During his visit to Yerevan, Bono also met with Armenia National Security chief Armen Grigoryan.

Politico revealed last week that Bono was among top diplomats from the EU and Russia who held secret talks in Istanbul two days before Azerbaijan launched a large-scale attack on Artsakh that forcibly depopulated its residents.

U.S. calls for long-term, independent monitoring mission in Nagorno-Karabakh

 11:08, 4 October 2023

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 4, ARMENPRESS. A longer-term, independent, international monitoring mission should be sent to Nagorno-Karabakh to provide transparency and reassurances that the rights and securities of ethnic Armenians will be protected, U.S. State Department principal deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel has said.

“The United States is going to continue to play a role in engaging with Azerbaijani and Armenian leadership at the highest levels to pursue a dignified and durable peace,” Patel said at a press briefing.  “And you’ve also seen us, over the course of this past week and beyond, reiterate our call for a longer-term, independent, international monitoring mission in Nagorno-Karabakh to provide transparency and reassurances that the rights and securities of ethnic Armenians will be protected, particularly for those who may wish to return, and for the protection of cultural heritage sites, which all of course is in line with Azerbaijan’s public statements and their international obligations as well,” he added.

The State Department spokesperson was also asked to comment on Armenia joining the Rome Statute of the ICC.

“Well, we respect Armenia’s sovereignty and independence, and we’ll leave it to Armenia’s Government to comment on its legislative processes, of course. We respect the right of every country to join the ICC and have been encouraged by many states, including Armenia, that have undertaken commitments to promote justice, accountability for genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity,” Patel said.

Asked to comment on a UN team’s report claiming they did not see any damage to civilian infrastructure during a visit to NK, Patel said: “So we certainly appreciate those comments from the UN spokesperson. But that does not change the United States’ point of view on this. As I just said to Alex, we continue to believe, even in the light of the UN visit, that there is a strong desire and a need for a longer-term, independent international monitoring mission in Nagorno-Karabakh. We think that that will provide transparency; we think that it will provide the appropriate reassurances for the various rights and securities that we continue to be deeply concerned about.”

On October 3, a senior Armenian diplomat strongly criticized the UN team, saying that it was “discrediting the UN as an institution.”

UNICEF in Armenia creates safe spaces for children from Karabakh

UN News
Oct 5 2023
5 October 2023

 

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In one week, more than 100,000 people arrived in Armenia from Karabakh, including around 30,000 children. The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) is among humanitarian agencies mobilized to help the refugees.

UNICEF Representative in Armenia Christine Weigand said children arrive there very tired, hungry and in a state of shock. Their immediate needs are very much linked to health issues. 

Speaking to UN News’s Anton Uspensky, she explained that in the long run, assistance will be provided to support children’s integration into the educational system. They will also receive psychological support to help them overcome the shock and trauma.

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Armenia: As of Oct. 5, continued demonstrations denouncing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan likely in Yerevan in coming days /update 3

Crisis 24
Oct 5 2023

As of Oct. 5, protests will likely continue in Yerevan in the coming days as residents continue to denounce Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Residents are demanding his resignation over his administration's perceived weak response to the recent conflict between ethnic Armenian forces and the Azerbaijani military in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh). Demonstrators plan to gather in Freedom Square from 19:00 Oct. 6; additional protests are possible.

Further protests are likely throughout downtown Yerevan as activist groups, including Mother Armenia, continue to call for protests. Other protest hotspots include the National Assembly, the Government of Armenia building, Freedom Square, and Republic Square.

Heightened security and transport disruptions are likely throughout Yerevan, particularly near government buildings. Clashes between demonstrators and law enforcement officers are possible.

Armenian nationalist and opposition groups regularly protest in Yerevan to denounce the government's actions in relation to the ongoing dispute regarding Nagorno-Karabakh. Protests typically flare up in response to military and political developments that may affect the ethnic Armenian control of the disputed region.

Avoid all protests. Allow additional time if traveling in central Yerevan. Immediately depart the area at the first sign that any violent confrontation may occur. Heed instructions from authorities.

https://crisis24.garda.com/alerts/2023/10/armenia-as-of-oct-5-continued-demonstrations-denouncing-prime-minister-nikol-pashinyan-likely-in-yerevan-in-coming-days-update-3

BREAKING: Azerbaijan opts out of Granada summit

 14:15, 4 October 2023

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 4, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has cancelled his participation in the planned October 5 Granada summit with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, President of the European Council Charles Michel, French President Emmanuel Macron and Chancellor of Germany Olaf Scholz, according to Azerbaijani media reports.

According to the reports, Azerbaijan opted out of the meeting because Germany and France rejected Azerbaijan’s request to include Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the meeting. According to the Azerbaijani media reports, Azerbaijan could agree to an EU-mediated trilateral meeting, if that format is restored.

Azerbaijan will also refuse to participate in any format meetings with French participation, according to the report.

Meanwhile, Turkish media outlets reported that Erdogan has also cancelled his visit to Granada, Spain.

Russian Volunteers in Armenia Help Refugees Displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh

Oct 3 2023

YEREVAN, Armenia — “We stand with Artsakh,” reads a poster using the Armenian name for Nagorno-Karabakh that hangs at Mirzoyan Library, a popular cafe and hangout spot for local hipsters and Russian emigres in the heart of the Armenian capital.

This place was recently transformed into a hub for humanitarian aid as volunteers started collecting and distributing boxes filled with clothing, shoes, food, hygiene products and children's toys to assist refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh.

During a visit by a Moscow Times reporter last week, Russian and Armenian volunteers were packing cars with humanitarian aid destined for tens of thousands of refugees pouring into Armenia from the disputed territory.

A number of Russians who relocated to Armenia when Moscow started its war against Ukraine are now assisting ethnic Armenians who left Nagorno-Karabakh after Azerbaijan launched a “military operation” in the majority-Armenian enclave last month.

The Ethos charity, opened last year by a group of Russian emigres who moved to Yerevan following the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine, has had to re-orient its charity work, which initially focused on refugees from Ukraine, toward the influx of Armenian refugees, Ethos head Yevgeny Yevsyukov told The Moscow Times.

In addition to collecting humanitarian aid in Yerevan, the organization has also established distribution points in multiple Armenian cities, including Goris, a city in the southern Syunik province where ethnic Armenians sought refuge from Azerbaijan's military offensive.

Volunteers say they work almost nonstop in Goris, which has taken in a major portion of the 100,000 refugees who fled from Nagorno-Karabakh.

Collecting humanitarian aid at Mirzoyan Library.Kirill Ponomarev

“Refugees were forced to sleep outdoors and use the streets as toilets because local hotels and camps were unable to accommodate everyone,” Yevsyukov said, describing the situation in Goris.

Ethos said it received over 30,000 requests for assistance from refugees in the week following the escalation of the conflict.

Many refugees had to leave their homes in a rush with no opportunity to pack their belongings when Baku lifted its nearly 10-month blockade on Nagorno-Karabakh’s only road to Armenia — a blockade which resulted in dire shortages of medicine, food, fuel and other necessities.

According to Yevsyukov, around 30 businesses and organizations, including Russian companies, are currently providing assistance to Ethos. Volunteers said that along with distributing food and clothes, they also started offering psychological and legal assistance to refugees.

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Ethos is not the only Russian group of volunteers providing assistance to refugees as some Russian emigres in Armenia are also actively involved in humanitarian efforts.

"I had no other option because offering help is not something extraordinary. It’s important to help people,” said one Russian woman, who organized a charity event and collected clothes and personal hygiene products for refugees.

“We must do what we can, and if we cannot change the political situation, then we can help those affected by it,” the woman, who recently moved to Yerevan and spoke on condition of anonymity, told The Moscow Times.

An Ethos volunteer speaks to refugees in Goris.Ethos

Another Russian emigre, Valeria Kopirovskaya, 29, who moved from Moscow to Yerevan last year, has organized charity film screenings to benefit Ukrainian refugees. But she too redirected her charitable efforts towards assisting refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh in recent weeks. 

"I am trying to organize classes for children in the refugee camp because their schooling has been interrupted. We are planning to offer needlework and music lessons,” Kopirovskaya said, adding that she was also looking for psychologists and psychiatrists for displaced people.

In the neighboring Georgian capital of Tbilisi, Anna, a Russian in her 30s who owns a vintage shop, started collecting clothing donations for Nagorno-Karabakh refugees.  

“I thought only a few of my friends would bring their old jackets and hoodies to the store, but in just a week we collected about 200 kilograms of clothes, sneakers, jackets and toys for children,” said Anna, who declined to provide her surname.

According to Anna, the main problem lies in transporting the aid across the Armenian-Georgian border.

“The Armenian customs did not believe that these clothes were for refugees and not for sale and demanded a duty for shipping the cargo, which we cannot pay. We are now trying to enlist the support of the Armenian Embassy in Georgia or the Armenian diaspora,” Anna told The Moscow Times. “As a last resort, we will try to collect donations in order to rent several minivans and transport clothes ourselves.”

Unloading humanitarian aid in Goris.Ethos

In addition to problems with logistics, some volunteers said they had encountered obstacles from local Armenian authorities. 

“When the Azerbaijani ‘military operation’ started, we contacted the Goris administration. They provided us with the contacts of 500 families in need of assistance. However, when we delivered the aid, a person from the city administration informed us that the authorities had forbidden them from accepting our aid,” Yevsyukov told The Moscow Times, adding that “the local authorities said they don't need help.”

According to Yevsyukov, Ethos’ office in Yerevan was also raided by police officers who checked volunteers’ passports.

“It seems as if [the authorities] just don't want to show that they can't cope with a huge flow of work,” Yevsyukov said.

The United Nations said this week that up to 1,000 ethnic Armenians remain in Nagorno-Karabakh out of its total population of 120,000.

Baku this week published its reintegration plan that says it guarantees residents of Nagorno-Karabakh — which was an autonomous region within Azerbaijan under the Soviet Union — equality of rights and freedoms, as well as the safety of every resident “regardless of ethnicity, religion, or language.”

The flags of Armenia and the separatist Armenian republic of Artsakh hang in the Ethos office.Kirill Ponomarev

However, Armenians said they feared repression and ethnic cleansing from Azerbaijani forces if they were to return.

Many Nagorno-Karabakh residents also felt let down by Moscow when, as they say, Russia's peacekeepers, who were deployed to the region following the 2020 war between Baku and Yerevan, were unable to prevent Azerbaijan’s offensive last month.

“Refugees react differently to Russians. Of course, some of them are offended and upset because the Russian peacekeepers were passive when Azerbaijan launched its ‘military operation’,” Yevsyukov said, recalling his conversations with people from Nagorno-Karabakh.

“But there was nothing rude to us on their part. They asked where we were from. We answered that we were from Russia.”

“They thanked us.”

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/10/03/russian-volunteers-in-armenia-help-refugees-displaced-from-nagorno-karabakh-a82651

Asbarez: ARTSAKH IS ALMOST COMPLETELY DEPOPULATED

Artsakh residents crammed onto and inside a truck leaving for Armenia (Reuters photo)


As of late Sunday night local time, 100,514 displaced Artsakh residents had entered Armenia, with the Artsakh Human Rights Defender Gegham Stepanyan reporting that the last bus carrying 15 passengers left Stepanakert for Goris.

In a Facebook post he said that a “small team of dedicated people” will stay in Artsakh to look for “helpless” civilians who may be stuck in their homes and unable to leave.

“If you still have clear information about lonely or helpless people left behind in Artsakh, you should contact the International Committee of the Red Cross or provide us with relevant information to be forwarded to the ICRC,” Stepanian said.

Artsakh President Samvel Shahramanyan said he and a group of other officials will stay in Stepanakert until the search for people who died or went missing as a result of last week’s powerful fuel depot explosion and victims of the Azerbaijani attack on Artsakh on September 19 is over.

Shahramanyan signaled on Friday that he was going to negotiate with the Azerbaijanis to allow former Artsakh leaders and other prominent figures to leave for Armenia safely.

Azerbaijan’s prosecutor general’s office said on Saturday that it has compiled a “most wanted” list of 300 Artsakh officials and issued what it called “international warrants” for their arrest. Included on the list are the three former presidents of Artsakh, Arayik Harutyunyan, Bako Sahakian and Arkady Ghukasian.

Citing an unnamed source in Artsakh, the Russian TASS news agency reported on Monday that Harutyunyan, Sahakian and Ghukasian remained in Stepanakert as of noon local time on Monday amid continuing negotiations with the Azerbaijani side.

Artsakh’s former foreign minister David Babayan reportedly was arrested after he said he was going to turn himself in to Azerbaijani authorities. Another three officials, former state minister Ruben Vardanyan, former Artsakh Army commander Levon Mnatsakanyan and his ex-deputy Davit Manukyan, have also been arrested and under currently in Azerbaijani prisons.

Azerbaijani officials escorted a team of United Nations observers to Stepanakert on Sunday for what was the first official visit of a UN delegation in 30 years.

Reports are circulating that Azerbaijani television and radio broadcasts have already begun airing in areas previously under the control of the Stepanakert authorities.

Azerbaijan has signaled that it will begin circulating it currency, the manat, in those areas and Stepanakert.

Cyprus Considers Sheltering Some Armenian Refugees if Needed

Sept 29 2023

(Reuters) – European Union member Cyprus on Friday said it was considering ways to host, if needed, displaced ethnic Armenians who had fled Azerbaijan's war-ravaged breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

More than three-quarters of the Armenian population of 120,000 had fled by Friday after a lightning defeat by Azerbaijani forces. The enclave had broken away in the 1990s.

Cyprus traditionally has close ties with Armenia, and has a minority Armenian Christian population represented in parliament.

"The Cypriot government maintains an open corridor for the Armenian people and in that framework is ready to offer immediate humanitarian aid," the Cypriot Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

"Cyprus is considering, among other things, ways to host a number of displaced Armenians in our country should that be deemed necessary."

There have been Armenians in Cyprus for centuries. Many trace their roots back to Armenian people or orphans forced to flee mass killings under the Ottoman Empire in 1915, which some governments today consider genocide.

Turkey accepts that many Armenians were killed in clashes with Ottoman forces during World War One, but denies that the killings were systematically orchestrated or constitute a genocide.

(Reporting By Michele Kambas; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2023-09-29/cyprus-considers-sheltering-some-armenian-refugees-if-needed

Exclusive: Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Nadia Murad on ‘crime against humanity’ taking place in Nagorno-Karabakh

 12:05,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Nadia Murad has called on the whole world to work together quickly and find a solution amid the ongoing “crime against humanity” taking place in Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of Azerbaijan’s attacks.

In written comments provided to ARMENPRESS, Nadia Murad said that ‘as with all forms of violence, prevention is better than intervention, and intervention is infinitely better than turning away.’

"My heart is with all the Armenians fleeing their homes, carrying nothing but fear and uncertainty. It is a crime against humanity and the world needs to work together quickly to find a peaceful solution. Thousands of people shouldn't be condemned to a life in make-shift refugee camps with no future or hope. All authorities need to work together to keep women and children safe from sexual violence and trafficking which can begin during conflict. As with all forms of violence, prevention is better than intervention, and intervention is infinitely better than turning away,” Murad said when asked to give an assessment to the ongoing humanitarian disaster in Nagorno-Karabakh, as tens of thousands of people are crossing into Armenia in a forced displacement influx following the September 19-20 Azerbaijani attack.

Nadia Murad, co-recipient of the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize, is a leading advocate for survivors of genocide and sexual violence.

The California Courier Online, September 28, 2023

The California
Courier Online, September 28, 2023

 

1-         Artsakh is
Lost After Being Abandoned

            By Armenia, Russia and the West

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         After
Massive Onslaught, Artsakh Accepts Terms of Ceasefire,

            Capitulates
to Azerbaijan

3-         Sen. Bob
Menendez, Nadine Arslanian Menendez indicted on bribery charges

4-         Armenian
Government Postpones Snoop Dogg Yerevan Concert

            amid Attack
on Arstakh

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************

 

1-         Artsakh is
Lost After Being Abandoned

            By Armenia, Russia and the West

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

Last week, Armenians worldwide experienced one of the
biggest tragedies of their lives after Azerbaijan occupied Artsakh.

120,000 Artsakh Armenians—men, women and children—were
attacked in their historic homeland by advanced weapons imported by oil-rich Azerbaijan from Israel,
Russia, Pakistan and Eastern Europe.

The main evil-doers are Azerbaijan
and its partner Turkey
which are guilty of committing mass crimes against the people of Artsakh.

However, there is plenty of blame to go around. I want to
start with the shameful role that Armenia’s Prime Minister has played
in this disaster. Starting from 2001, while Pashinyan was an unknown
journalist, he wrote in his Haykakan Jamanak newspaper that “through diplomacy,
it is not possible not to return these [Artsakh] territories to Azerbaijan….
Having abandoned our own lands, we are trying to be the owners of someone
else’s land.” After becoming Prime Minister, Pashinyan made numerous
contradictory statements regarding Artsakh, first stating emphatically that
“Artsakh is Armenia, that’s
it,” and then, “Artsakh is part of Azerbaijan.” While the words of a
journalist may not matter, his statements as Prime Minister cannot be
dismissed. Game over! Artsakh is lost and nothing is expected to change that reality
for a long time. As always, Pashinyan blames everyone else for his misdeeds,
including the former leaders, the domestic opposition, and Russia.

To make matters worse, Pashinyan washed his hands from
Artsakh and urged its leaders to sort out their differences with Azerbaijan.
Pashinyan basically threw 120,000 poorly-armed Artsakh Armenians to the big bad
Azeri wolf. How can tiny Artsakh negotiate with powerful Azerbaijan?
Pashinyan ignored the fact that since Artsakh Armenians are citizens of Armenia, it was
his constitutional duty to protect them. For months, he made the laughable
promise that the rights and security of Artsakh Armenians will be protected
after they become citizens of Azerbaijan.
Ridiculously, Pashinyan announced last week, a couple of hours before the UN
Security Council meeting, that the lives of Armenian civilians in Artsakh were
secure after Azerbaijan’s
attack. Shortly thereafter Armenia’s
Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan told the Security Council that Azerbaijan is
engaged in ethnic cleansing of Artsakh Armenians. Azerbaijan’s
Foreign Minister immediately pointed out to the UN the contradictory statements
by the two Armenian leaders, thus undermining Armenia’s credibility in front of
the whole world. In the meantime, hundreds of Artsakh Armenians were killed and
wounded, and thousands are missing as a result of Azerbaijan’s attack.

Last week, when Azerbaijan’s strong military invaded what
remained of Artsakh, Pashinyan announced that Armenia will not get involved in
the conflict, thus giving the green light to Azerbaijan to commit all sorts of
horrible crimes on the people of Artsakh. Pashinyan has held the mistaken
notion that once Artsakh is returned to Azerbaijan,
citizens of Armenia
will live in peace. Regrettably, this is the farthest thing from the truth. Azerbaijan’s President, seeing in front of him a
militarily weak Armenia
and a leader who has no idea what he is doing, will not stop after his conquest
of Artsakh. Aliyev will keep on demanding concessions from the weakling Pashinyan
and occupy more and more territories of the Republic of Armenia.
Aliyev has repeatedly and falsely claimed that all of Armenia is “Western
Azerbaijan.” Since the 2020 war, Azerbaijan’s
troops occupied portions of Armenia’s
territory and have no intention of leaving. My fear is that Aliyev will
continue making incursions into Armenia,
until he takes over the whole country. Therefore, Pashinyan’s premise that
Armenians in Armenia
will leave in peace after abandoning Artsakh is absurd.

Azerbaijan’s
President Ilham Aliyev quickly capitalized on Pashinyan’s capitulation and
repeatedly told the world that since Armenia’s
Prime Minister admitted that Artsakh is part of Azerbaijan, that region is his
country’s internal issue and no one has the right to intervene. Shortly
thereafter, Russia’s
leaders, including President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov,
repeatedly stated that Pashinyan is the one who relinquished Artsakh.

Nevertheless, Russia has its own share of guilt
for what has been taking place in the last three years, and what happened in
Artsakh last week. The Russian peacekeepers, who were mandated by the 2020
agreement to safeguard the population of Artsakh and keep the Lachin Corridor
open until 2025, failed miserably to carry out their responsibilities. Russia did not even try to protect the borders
of the Republic of Armenia, as required by the CSTO agreement signed
between Armenia, Russia and several other former Soviet Republics.
Russia’s
inaction and Pashinyan’s relinquishment of Artsakh resulted in the massive
human tragedy suffered by 120,000 Artsakh Armenians.

The international community is also guilty of ignoring the
suffering of Artsakh Armenians who lost their historic homeland after being
starved for nine months due to the blockade of the Lachin Corridor by Azerbaijan.
Other than saying a lot of useless words, no one in the world lifted a finger
to rescue these people and defend their rights. All international laws, human
rights, and notions of justice were a lot of hot air. Equally useless were the
UN Security Council, the International Court of Justice, European Court of
Human Rights, European Union, European Council, and statements by officials of
many countries, including the United
States. As we all know, might makes right.
Nothing else matters.

The top priority of Armenians worldwide now is seeking the
immediate ouster of Pashinyan, since he is refusing to resign and digging a
deeper hole for Armenia
with every passing day. Unless Pashinyan is replaced soon by a competent and
nationalistic Armenian who protects Armenia’s interests, Armenians may
end up losing their homeland, this time for good!

After Pashinyan is replaced, Armenia’s new leader has to put all
other issues aside and immediately acquire a massive amount of advanced weapons
to defend the country’s borders from further incursions.

After vainly hoping and waiting for thousands of years for a
foreign power to come and save Armenia,
it is high time that Armenians finally realize that no one will ever come to
rescue them. They need to save themselves!

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         After Massive Onslaught,
Artsakh Accepts Terms of Ceasefire,

            Capitulates
to Azerbaijan

 

(Combined Sources)—The 120,000 ethnic Armenians of the Republic of Artsakh
will leave as refugees to Armenia,
as they do not want to live as part of Azerbaijan and fear ethnic
cleansing, said Artsakh presidential advisor David Babayan on Sunday, September
24.

“Our people don’t want to live as part of Azerbaijan.
Ninety-nine point nine percent prefer to leave our historic lands,” said
Babayan. “The fate of our people will go down in history as a disgrace and
shame for the Armenian people and for the whole civilized world. Those
responsible for our fate will one day have to answer to God for their sins.”

Babayan said that all those made homeless by the Azerbaijani
military operation and wanting to leave would be escorted to Armenia by Russian
peacekeepers—noting, however, that the Lachin Corridor “does not work as it
should,” he said. “At the present time, other questions need to be resolved.”

There are some 2,000 peacekeepers in the region, Russia said.

Karabakh Armenian rights would be respected as part of their
integration into Azerbaijan,
said Azerbaijan’s
Foreign Policy Advisor Hikmet Hajiyev, adding that they had requested
humanitarian support as well as oil and gasoline supplies.

Hajiyev indicated that humanitarian help would be delivered
to the region on Friday, September 22. More than 15 Russian aid trucks passed
through the Lachin Corridor on Friday, September 22 through Sunday, September
24

Armenia’s
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that that Armenia was ready to take in Artsakh’s
refugees. In an address to the nation on Sunday, September 24, Pashinyan said
some humanitarian aid had arrived—but the Armenians in Artsakh still faced “the
danger of ethnic cleansing.” A reported 377 refugees from Artsakh had arrived
in Armenia
by Sunday, September 24. Space for 40,000 people from Artsakh has been prepared
in Armenia.
Azerbaijan
has said the Armenians can leave if they want.

This mass exodus has been widely seen as changing the
delicate balance of power in the South Caucasus region with its patchwork of
ethnicities and religions—crisscrossed with gold, iron and molybdenum mines,
along with oil and gas pipelines—where Russia,
the United States, Iran and Turkey are jousting for influence.

Artsakh was forced to concede to a Russian-brokered
ceasefire— whereby it would disband its armed forces and discuss its
“reintegration” into Azerbaijan—following
a lightning 24-hour military attack by Azerbaijan against Artsakh on
Tuesday, September 19.

Azerbaijan
said on Tuesday, September 19 that six of its citizens had been killed by land
mines in two separate incidents in the Nagorno-Karabakh region and blamed
“illegal Armenian armed groups” for laying the mines—using this incident as the
precursor for its attack against Artsakh that day.

At least 200 people were killed and more than 400 were
wounded in Artsakh as a result of the Azerbaijani attack, according to the
latest information released by Nagorno-Karabakh Human Rights Defender Gegham
Stepanyan.

The number of the wounded among the civilian population
exceeds 40, 13 of whom are children. There are 10 confirmed civilian deaths, 5
of whom are children.

Over 7,000 people from 16 villages among the Askeran,
Martakert, Martuni, Shushi regions in Artsakh had been evacuated after the
attack, according to Stepanyan.

On Wednesday, September 20, the Russian Defense Ministry
confirmed the deaths of several of its peacekeepers—among them Captain Ivan
Korgan, who not only held the position of deputy commander for the peacekeeping
force but also served as the deputy commander for Russia’s Northern submarine
fleet forces. The peacekeepers were returning from the Janyatag (Chankatah)
observation point when they came under gunfire from small arms.

The Azerbaijani Ministry of Defense conveyed its condolences
regarding the peacekeepers’ tragic deaths and reported that both Azerbaijani
and Russian investigative authorities are actively looking into the incident.

Artsakh representatives and Azerbaijani officials started
talks on Thursday, September 21 on the region’s possible “reintegration” into Azerbaijan and
the Artsakh Armenians’ rights and security “within the framework of the
Azerbaijani constitution.” Their first meeting took place in the Azerbaijani
town of Yevlakh.

The Artsakh Defense Army on Friday, September 22 withdrew
from its positions as part the deal in Yevlakh by representatives from
Stepanakert and Baku.

Based on the agreement, Russian peacekeeping forces replaced
the Artsakh Defense Army at those positions.

A second round of talks took place in Shushi on Saturday,
September 23, where Artsakh officials said the ceasefire was being implemented
and aid had been arriving. Russia
announced on Sunday, September 24 that more than 800 small arms, anti-tank
weapons and portable air defense systems, as well as 22,000 ammunition rounds,
had been handed in by Saturday, September 23.

Meanwhile, the Armenian government distanced itself from the
truce accord, with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan on Sunday, September 24
blaming Russia for failing
to do enough for Armenia—which
he said would review its alliance with Moscow.

“Some of our partners are increasingly making efforts to
expose our security vulnerabilities, putting at risk not only our external, but
also internal, security and stability, while violating all norms of etiquette
and correctness in diplomatic and interstate relations, including obligations
assumed under treaties,” said Pashinyan.

Russian officials say Pashinyan is to blame for his own
mishandling of the crisis, and have repeatedly said that Armenia—which borders Turkey,
Iran, Azerbaijan and Georgia—has few other friends in
the region.

Amid renewed antigovernment protests in Yerevan (See article on page 1), Pashinyan on
Wednesday, September 20 had also flatly denied any involvement in the ceasefire
talks.

In address to the nation, he said Yerevan was “taking note” of the deal while
disagreeing with one of its provisions calling for the withdrawal of Armenian
troops from Karabakh. He insisted that Armenia has had no military
presence in the region since 2022—saying that the Russians had now fully
assumed an “obligation to ensure the security of the Armenians of
Nagorno-Karabakh.”

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday, September
19 expressed full support for Azerbaijan’s
military operation in Artsakh. “We support the steps taken by Azerbaijan—with
whom we act together with the motto of one nation, two states—to defend its
territorial integrity,” Erdogan said in an online statement.

Ankara supplied Azerbaijan with combat drones and other military
equipment that helped Baku
win back swathes of Artsakh in a short but brutal war three years ago.

U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert
Menendez (D-NJ) on Thursday, September 21 called on the U.S. government
to hold Azeri president Ilham Aliyev accountable and provide immediate support
to Armenians in Artsakh. (On Friday, September 23, Menendez and his wife,
Nadine Arslanian Menendez were indicted on a number of charges including
bribery. Menendez stepped down as chair of the Foreign Relations Committee
until the case is resolved. See article on page 5.)

“Spoke with Secretary Blinken last night about my concerns
with Azerbaijan’s
troop buildup at the border & their continued aggression, which I warned
about during last week’s hearing. We must hold Aliyev accountable & provide
immediate support to Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Menendez said in a post on
X (formerly known as Twitter).

On Sunday, September 24, President of France, Emmanuel
Macron made a statement about the ongoing ethnic cleansing in Artsakh: “Today, Russia supports Azerbaijan,
and Turkey, as Azerbaijan’s ally, while France stands
alongside the Armenian people and international law. We have always supported Armenia, and
they are aware of that. In recent days, we have witnessed a military operation
and unacceptable crimes committed by Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh. The
rights of ethnic Armenians living in Nagorno-Karabakh are being completely
violated. We will continue to provide humanitarian and political assistance in
the name of peace, which can only be achieved through negotiations.”

Pope Francis on Wednesday, September 20 appealed for arms to
fall silent and for nations to seek peaceful solutions in Nagorno Karabakh.

"Yesterday, I heard the disturbing news from Nagorno Karabakh,
in the Southern Caucasus, where the already
critical humanitarian situation is now aggravated by additional armed
clashes," said the Pope.

He urged involved parties to cease hostilities and seek
peaceful solutions to the crisis.

"I address my appeal again to all the parties involved
and to the International Community," said Pope Francis, "so that they
may stop using weapons and make every effort to find peaceful solutions for the
good of the people and respect for human dignity."

On Wednesday, September 20, Los Angeles City Council
President Paul Krekorian issued a statement about Artsakh, demanding the end to
Azerbaijan's
aggression against Artsakh.

"Azerbaijan’s
dictator launched another outrageous, unprovoked full-scale military attack
against the democratic Republic
of Artsakh. Azerbaijan’s forces are attacking Artsakh at
every point of contact, and are bombarding apartment buildings in the capital
city of Stepanakert,
yet again targeting the civilian population. Many casualties have already been
reported in the first hours of this attack, including the death of at least one
child and injuries to many more, and more will occur every minute if the
international community does not take immediate and effective action.

The United
States must lead the international community
in taking action immediately to interrupt this genocide before it is complete.
I am calling on the President of the United
States, as well as the member states of the United
Nations Security Council, to demonstrate their commitment to global stability,
to the law of nations, and to common decency by opposing Azerbaijan’s
genocidal aggression and coming to the aid of the people of Artsakh. That
immediate and unambiguous response should include: An explicit demand for an
immediate end to Azeri military actions in Artsakh, to be enforced by maximum
sanctions against the government in Baku; deployment of international
peacekeepers to thwart Aliyev’s expansionist military aggression and to ensure
that the Lachin Corridor remains open; Insistence that Azerbaijan allow safe
passage of delivery of aid into Artsakh via the Lachin Corridor; and Immediate
negotiations between Baku and Stepanakert to guarantee the rights and security
of the Armenian population of Artsakh.

 

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3-         Sen. Bob Menendez, Nadine
Arslanian Menendez indicted on bribery charges

 

(Combined Sources)—Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and his wife,
Nadine Arslanian Menendez, were indicted Friday, September 22 by the U.S. attorney’s
office for the Southern District of New York.

The New Jersey
senator and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and his wife
each face three charges each including: conspiracy to commit bribery,
conspiracy to commit honest services fraud and conspiracy to commit extortion
under color of official right. The bribes the couple received included “cash, gold
bars, payments toward a home mortgage, compensation for a low-or-no-show job, a
luxury vehicle and other items of value,” the indictment alleges, using the
senator’s “power and influence” for their own enrichment and the benefit of
Egypt.

Prosecutors based a large portion of their case on Menendez
and on texts between the senator, his wife and their co-defendants— New Jersey businessmen Wael Hana, Jose Uribe and Fred Daibes.
Federal agents said they discovered many of the items when they executed search
warrants in the couple’s home in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, in June 2022. They found more
than $480,000 in cash, “much of it stuffed into envelopes and hidden in
clothing, closets, and a safe,” including jackets bearing the senator’s name
that were hanging in his closet, as well as more than $70,000 in Nadine
Menendez’s safe deposit box, along with several gold bars, the indictment
alleges.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer confirmed in a
statement on September 22 that Menendez “has rightly decided to step down
temporarily” as chair of the Foreign Relations Committee until the matter is
resolved.

Menendez has denied the allegations against him. “I have
been falsely accused before because I refused to back down to the powers that
be and the people of New Jersey
were able to see through the smoke and mirrors and recognize I was innocent,”
he said in a statement Friday.  Nadine
Menendez’s lawyer, David Schertler, said in a statement that she “denies any
wrongdoing and will defend vigorously against these allegations in court.”

In a 2020 “The Armenian Report” YouTube interview, Arslanian
said she fled Lebanon,
her birthplace, during the country’s civil war. She said she was born to
Armenian parents.

“During the Civil War, we fled Lebanon
to Greece to London and came to the United
States and stayed in Palo Alto,
Calif., for about seven months, and then moved
to New York,”
Arslanian said.

In the same “Armenian Report” interview, Arslanian said she
went to New York University (NYU) for undergraduate and graduate studies,
majoring in international politics and French culture and civilization. She
said she has a daughter who also attended NYU.

Menendez met Arslanian at an IHOP in Union City, N.J.,
in December 2018, according to The New York Times. Following their meeting, the
two explored the world together, going to four countries in five months. The
senator proposed to Arslanian in October 2019 at the Taj Mahal while on a visit
to India.
The couple wed in 2020.

 

**********************************************************************************************************************************************

4-         Armenian
Government Postpones Snoop Dogg Yerevan Concert

            amid Attack
on Arstakh

 

The Government of Armenia has postponed the Snoop Dogg
concert that was to be held under its auspices along with concert organizer
Doping Space, the company said in a statement on September 21.

“We strongly condemn Azerbaijan’s large-scale aggression
and grave atrocities against our compatriots on September 19. We offer our
condolences to the families of the victims and wish the injured a speedy
recovery,” said the statement.

“We sincerely apologize to all those who had purchased
tickets and were eagerly anticipating the concert," said the statement.

We would also like to assure you that details concerning
ticket management and the announcement of the new concert date will be coming
soon,” said the statement.

 

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