Renewed Dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia Worrying, Warns Foreign Minister

Hungary Today
Aug 14 2023
Hungary Today 2023.08.14.

In a Facebook post on Saturday, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade called the news of renewed disputes between the two countries on the issue of humanitarian deliveries “disturbing”. Péter Szijjártó wrote that the role of international organizations, especially the International Committee of the Red Cross, could be of great help in this situation.

“Hungary is on the side of peace, and we urge an end to the suffering of people who have lived through a long war. I informed both my colleagues, Azeri Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov and Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, of this position by phone last night,” Péter Szijjártó stressed.

He emphasized it was regrettable that many security conflicts were complicating life in the world.

On the Azeri-Armenian conflict, the Foreign Minister pointed out that it had long bitterly affected the lives of people in the region. “Hungary has always stood for a peaceful settlement, respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty. We welcome the peace agreement and hope that its implementation will put an end to the suffering of many, many people,” he concluded.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have not officially demarcated their mutual borders since becoming independent states following collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. The issue of border demarcation between the two countries arose immediately after the defeat of Armenia in the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, and Azerbaijan regaining control over its occupied territories. Before the 2020 war, there was no mutually agreed upon border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, with certain Armenian villages and agricultural workers crossing over into Azerbaijan. During Soviet times, cross-border interactions and movements were common.

The military forces of Armenia and Azerbaijan have been engaged in a border conflict since 12 May 2021, when Azerbaijani soldiers crossed several kilometers into Armenia in the provinces of Syunik and Gegharkunik. Azerbaijan is currently occupying at least 50 square kilometers of Armenian territory. Azerbaijan has not withdrawn its troops from internationally recognized Armenian territory despite calls to do so by the European Parliament, United States and France. Since the end of the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, Azerbaijan has made numerous incursions into Armenian territory.

Tensions between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the key transit route in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region have been flaring up again in recent days, reports Magyar Nemzet. The tension has been caused by Azerbaijan’s setting up of a border checkpoint at the entrance to the Lachin corridor, the only land link between the Armenian-led breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and Armenia. Yerevan claims that this has put them under a blockade. Baku denies this and claims that they want to stop Armenian arms and ammunition smuggling. The checkpoint was temporarily shut down earlier this month to investigate the situation, thanks to the Armenian branch of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Protesters waving Armenian flags block freeway lanes in Glendale

NBC
Aug 10 2023
TRAFFIC

A large crowd of protesters seeking to bring awareness of conflicts in Armenia blocked freeway lanes in Glendale Wednesday night near a major interchange

All the eastbound lanes on the 134 Freeway at its interchange with the 5 Freeway were closed for the demonstration. Protesters told NBCLA they aimed to bring awareness to humanitarian conflicts in Armenia.

One demonstrator said she hopes the group would catch the attention of Rep. Adam Schiff. The California Democrat released a statement Wednesday regarding the protest.

“I stand with the people of Armenia, Artsakh, and the Armenian-American community – not only my constituents but those around the world. I hear and see your pain over the inhumane situation your brothers and sisters are facing," Schiff's statement read. "From condemning ceasefire violations, to advocating for the release of Armenian prisoners of war, to calling for sanctions and accountability for Azerbaijan, I've always been, and will continue to be, steadfast in my commitment to ensuring the protection of fundamental rights for the people of Artsakh."

He added that he was in communication with the Biden administration, the State Department and other Congress members to push for humanitarian aid.

Signs on the freeway read "Adam Schiff Don't Ignore Us" and "Open the Road to Life."

Get Los Angeles's latest local news on crime, entertainment, weather, schools, COVID, cost of living and more. Here's your go-to source for today's LA news.

The protest prompted the California Highway Patrol to close the transition road from the eastbound Ventura Freeway to the northbound Golden State Freeway.  The protests began at Burbank City Hall then continued to the interchange of the Ventura and Golden State freeways and 101 Freeway at Vineland Avenue.

Signs laid out on the freeway said “Adam Schiff Don't Ignore Us” and “Open the Road to Life."

"From the day the blockade of the Lachin Corridor began, I, alongside my colleagues in Congress and Armenians around the country, have urged the White House, the State Department, and USAID, to take action to protect the people of Artsakh and their right to self-determination," Schiff said in his statement.

Azerbaijan began a blockade of the Lachin Corridor Dec. 12 following a series of clashes that erupted along the Azerbaijan-Armenia border in September, resulting in at least 200 deaths. The blockade prevented humanitarian aid, basic supplies and outside support from reaching approximately 120,000 civilians there.

Schiff was among the authors of a congressional resolution condemning the blockade.

News Chopper 4 flew over the area and it appeared several people were waving Armenian flags. A semi-truck was parked diagonally across the freeway lanes, blocking access to them.

https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/group-blocks-lanes-on-5-freeway-near-glendale/3203333/

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https://www.kulr8.com/news/national/us-armenian-protesters-block-freeway-in-glendale-to-bring-attention-to-artsakh-conflicts-3/video_26b475f3-fe51-50a5-a10f-4b132b35cb19.html

As Armenian Fish Farming Expands, a Pristine Aquifer Is Drying Up

Aug 10 2023

In recent decades, aquaculture has proliferated in Armenia’s Ararat Valley. The heightened use of water, combined with a warming climate and increased drought, has led to groundwater reserves shrinking by two-thirds, once-bountiful farms withering, and wells going dry.


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On an overcast morning this past spring, Gegham Muradyan searches for signs of water trickling through the dry soils of Armenia’s Ararat Valley. In an opening between two stone houses in the village of Dalar, some 15 miles southwest of Yerevan, the nation’s capital, he finds a single pipe protruding from knots of weeds.

A hydrometeorologist at Armenia’s Ministry of Environment, Muradyan holds a measuring cup beneath the water flowing from the pipe and notes the time it takes to fill. He does a quick calculation, then records the well discharge rate — an indicator of underground water pressure — in a logbook. Over the past year, the rate has dropped from 850 milliliters per second to 570 milliliters. “That’s very serious for this one,” he says.

For several years, Muradyan and his colleagues have crisscrossed this region to record the depth and velocity of groundwater at wells and boreholes. In 2016, they surveyed more than 2,800 sites — the most comprehensive analysis performed since the early 1980s. Their painstaking work has confirmed that the aquifer has shrunk from more than 32,000 hectares, in 1983, to just over 10,000 hectares. In some parts of the valley, the water table has dropped as much as 49 feet.

Years of overexploiting groundwater in the Ararat Valley have brought the aquifer to a crisis point.

Muradyan knows why. “Look around,” he says, pointing toward the horizon. “Do you see those?” Barely perceptible in the distance are rows and rows of concrete vats filled with fish.

Years of overexploiting groundwater in the Ararat Valley have brought the aquifer to a crisis point. Today, the valley hosts more than 200 documented fish farms, with potentially dozens more operating without permits. Together they are responsible for more than half of the region’s annual groundwater consumption, according to data collected by the U.S. Agency for International Development — more than irrigation, industrial, and household use combined.

Rainfall and snowmelt replenish the aquifer, but climate change has reduced these flows. Now, despite government efforts to shut down illegal wells and encourage water reuse on fish farms, experts say more needs to be done to preserve this vital natural resource.


The Ararat Valley, which lies along the Turkish border and is home to roughly 260,000 people, is the nation’s agricultural hub. Its prized apricots and pears, its melons and vegetables, have long thrived thanks to the valley’s artesian aquifer, which holds an estimated 2 billion cubic meters of water, equivalent to about 800,000 Olympic swimming pools.

But today, a bird’s-eye view of the region would reveal a stark contrast: a dusty, brown landscape dotted with striking blocks of blue and green. These tanks are filled with native trout, salmon, and sturgeon, most of which will be exported to Russia.

Aquaculture is the world’s fastest-growing food sector, according to the United Nations. But commercial fish farming is relatively new in Armenia, and an unlikely industry for a mountainous, landlocked country. The government first granted water extraction permits in the 2000s, allowing dozens of entrepreneurs to tap into the valley’s aquifer. Hydrologists say those early permits allowed aquaculturists to set up too many wells that pumped too much water, and that the permits were granted without an understanding of how much extraction the aquifer could handle.

“It was not good management and not a long-term vision for the Ararat Valley,” says Alexander Arakelyan, a hydrologist at Armenia’s Institute of Geological Sciences, who works with Muradyan.

Nowadays, aspiring fish farmers pay about $1,000 for a water permit, according to Muradyan. But once they’ve done that, the clean, cold water is virtually free — fish farmers can fill an entire tank, about 280,000 liters, for just a few dollars. It’s not surprising, then, that the valley quickly became a hotspot for enterprising aquaculturists, who caused extensive groundwater depletion in just a few years.

The Ararat Valley, which receives just 8 to 10 inches of precipitation yearly, is likely to become even drier.

As fish farming has grown, groundwater withdrawals in the Ararat Valley have far surpassed the aquifer’s rate of replenishment. The problem was first discovered in 2013, when groundwater withdrawals were more than 1.5 times the sustainable level. Three years later, nothing had changed. Users withdrew 1 billion cubic meters more than the aquifer’s natural recharge amount for that year.

“If we keep using [the aquifer] indiscriminately,” says Muradyan, “the time will come when it cannot recover.”

For a time, the problem seemed to be under control. In 2016, the Ministry of Environment attempted to close illegal farms and plug some of the valley’s unused, free-flowing wells. But now the warming climate — which enhances evaporation, triggers more drought and ramps up water demand — is exacerbating the crisis, says Alexander Arakelyan, a hydrologist at the Institute of Geological Sciences in Armenia.

Groundwater is the most important source of water for at least half of the world’s households and supports about a quarter of the world’s irrigation systems. But as the planet warms, water scarcity is expected to affect two-thirds of the world’s population by mid-century, according to the U.N.


The Ararat Valley, which has historically received just 8 to 10 inches of precipitation a year, is likely to become even drier. The United Nations Development Programme predicts rainfall will decrease by about 8 percent by 2100. “Armenia is warming much faster than expected,” says Naira Aslanyan, climate change coordinator at the UNDP in Yerevan.

This past winter, the lack of snowpack dramatically shifted the basin’s timeframe for regeneration. Usually, the water table rises until April as snow from the surrounding mountains melts into the valley’s recharge zones. But in 2022, the regeneration season ended in February, according to Muradyan. This year, he says, the water table started declining even earlier — in January.


The consequences of a decade of unmitigated groundwater abstraction and increasing climate pressures are already emerging, sometimes miles away from the heaviest users. Gevorg Avakian grows strawberries, eggplants, and grapes on a small farm in the village of Aknashen. Up until 2016, water flowed freely from an artesian well on the edge of his property, between the chicken pen and a few rows of grape vines.

“It’s not the right approach if we think that we can bring water from other places to close the deficit,” says a hydrologist.

In 2016, Muradyan helped install a deeper well on Avakian’s property to replace one that had dried up. But even this one is dying. “It’s only going down and down,” says Avakian. “You can see the fields around me. They’re all yellow. That’s because the water isn’t coming.” Avakian found the money to install a pump on his dry well, but it’s expensive to operate.


In more than 30 communities dotting the valley, residential wells are now too shallow to reach the ever-dropping water table. Villagers — not all of whom have access to municipal water supplies, which draw on reservoirs — have watched their wells dry up in the space of a few short years. Like Avakian, they are forced to either dig deeper or install costly pumps.

Farmers who partly depend on the aquifer for irrigation are increasingly reliant on water discharges from Lake Sevan — a large, freshwater lake about 45 miles northeast of the Ararat Valley that is already suffering from algal blooms and low water levels. This summer, the Armenian government agreed to discharge 240 million cubic meters of water from the imperiled lake to service shortfalls around the country, even though the annual maximum is set at 170 million cubic meters.

“It’s not the right approach if we think that we can bring water from other places to close the deficit,” says Arakelyan.

Still, many local fish farmers won’t accept that they’re part of the problem. Samvel Lablajyan, based outside of Hayanist village, insists nothing has changed on his plot of land. “The water isn’t going down, and it isn’t going up, either,” he says. “This situation will work for 100,000 years.”

In other parts of the Valley, Lablajyan concedes, “there are places where the water is decreasing naturally.” He blames climate change. “There’s no rain, the winds are stronger, everything on the Earth is changing,” he says.

Groundwater is not evenly distributed beneath the Earth’s surface, so some areas may feel the pinch of depletion more than others — at least for now. Fish farmers like Lablajyan, says Arakelyan, will inevitably come face-to-face with the problem. “We need to [make] these businesses understand that this environment is for everyone, it’s not a private thing,” he says.

After harvesting their fish, most farmers drain their nitrogen-rich water into the nearby Aras River.

Experts say all of the basin’s residents have to face reality: The years of insatiable extraction have caught up with them. “We don’t want to get to a situation where we have a massive water shortage, and we’re not that far off,” says Garabet Kazanjian, an aquatic ecology researcher at the American University of Armenia. “What are we going to do then?”


Powerful economic interests have stymied any reforms of aquaculture. After years of economic hardship, fewer Armenians are choosing to work the land. Many young people have moved to the city or left the country altogether. Creating employment opportunities for the remaining rural population is more important than ever.

Fish farms annually produce more than 18,000 tons of commercial fish, most of which is exported to Russia, according to the Ministry of Economy. Russian consumers have a taste for Armenian red and black caviar, as well as its trout and sturgeon — varieties that are too expensive to be viable on Armenian grocery shelves. The farms also employ local villagers. Artyom Torosyan’s business, called Svet Fish, recruits 10 people from Hovtashat, a village of about 3,000. Dozens of other fish farms do the same.


Torosyan’s expansive business is impossible to miss on Hovtashat’s Yerkatughayinner (metal works) Street. His elaborate, brass-trimmed gates stand out on the dirt road, where a half-mile of dilapidated factories once produced car parts and machinery. Torosyan believes he’s part of revitalizing the country’s economy and its global status, he says, because 90 percent of his product goes abroad.

Still, Torosyan calls himself one of the unlucky fish farmers: neighboring farms have about five permitted wells each, he says, whereas he has a permit for only one. And so Torosyan, like other aquaculturists without enough water, implemented water-saving measures out of need.

After harvesting their fish, most farmers drain their nitrogen-rich water into the nearby Aras River, which flows to the Turkish border. The process is both wasteful and polluting. On Torosyan’s farm, a system filters the water, reoxygenates it, and then reroutes it to another tank, ready to host several hundred more fish.

The pace of depletion will determine whether the fish farming industry can continue to operate.

Torosyan built the recirculating system himself, importing materials from China, Russia, and the European Union, and he believes his efforts could be a blueprint for the region’s other fish farms. But while recirculating systems result in higher fish production with less water use, the capital investment — from $16,000 to $130,000, depending on the size of the farm — can be prohibitive for smaller farms, according to research from the International Centre for Agribusiness Research and Education, an agricultural NGO based in Yerevan.

Nor do relatively water-rich fish farms have any incentive to invest in building a sustainable system, says Torosyan. “The fish farms around me have a lot of water already,” he says. “They don’t use these kinds of processes.”


Still, local environmental authorities are encouraging widespread adoption of recirculating systems. In January, the Ministry of Environment gave fish farms one year to install them, but experts on the ground have not seen any progress. “I’m not so sure that it will be done by January because it requires a lot of money and effort from businesses,” says Arakelyan. And without government subsidies to make the upgrades, smaller businesses might close if the deadline remains. “As usual in Armenia,” Arakelyan adds, “everything will happen at the last moment.”

Even for an enterprising operator like Torosyan, there might not be much water left to recirculate within a few decades. The pace of depletion will determine whether the fish farming industry can continue to operate. “If the water runs out,” Torosyan says, “we’re all going to be in trouble.”

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Lori Youmshajekian is a freelance journalist based in New York covering science, health, and the environment. MOREABOUT LORI YOUMSHAJEKIAN →

 

Azerbaijan wants to abandon the trilateral statement and continue war, warns Nagorno- Karabakh President

 11:02, 7 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 7, ARMENPRESS. The President of Nagorno-Karabakh Arayik Harutyunyan has warned that Azerbaijan wants to abandon the November 9, 2020 trilateral statement signed by the leaders of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan.  

President Harutyunyan noted that Azerbaijan, taking advantage of Russia’s situation at war with Ukraine, tried to force Nagorno-Karabakh to give up the rights given to it by the November 9 statement and enter into dialogue with its proposed agenda.

"Azerbaijan wants to abandon the trilateral statement and continue the war. This is already war, this is the continuation of the war, the aim of which is to turn Nagorno-Karabakh into a concentration camp through the siege, and then carry out genocide," Harutyunyan said in an interview with the local public television.

According to the President of Nagorno-Karabakh, one of the goals of Azerbaijan's genocidal policy in Nagorno-Karabakh is to put pressure on Armenia to have more favorable conditions for a road through Syunik.

Harutyunyan warned of Azerbaijan’s aspirations by quoting Azeri President Ilham Aliyev’s December 2021 remarks made before a meeting with Armenian PM Pashinyan and the European Council President Michel, when he claimed that the "Zangezur Corridor should work within the logic of Lachin Corridor.”

“Of course, in the beginning, we did not pay attention to it, we thought that it was a statement to put pressure on Armenian authorities, but later on, Azerbaijan emphasized it in its policy. I can also announce today that Azerbaijan continues its pressure to coerce the maximum. We must record that Azerbaijan wants to keep the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh hostage in some sense and to commit genocide in parallel, putting pressure on Armenia in terms of having a more privileged version of the Zangezur road,” Harutyunyan stated.

Syunik to host “Navasard” Armenian-Iranian cultural-culinary festival

 14:50, 2 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 2, ARMENPRESS. The upcoming “Navasard” Armenian-Iranian cultural-culinary festival will feature a rich program and draw a large number of tourists, organizers said Wednesday.  

The festival will take place August 10 in Sisian, Syunik.

“We manage to make it a traditional and long-awaited festival for many people,” said Armenian Tourism Federation President Mekhak Apresyan. “It is a unique regional tourism product. It is an important factor in directing the flow towards us in the reshaping global tourism market in the post-coronavirus era. This event is very important in terms of promoting cultural heritage, cuisine, presenting one of the results of Armenian-Iranian friendship."

Sisian Boghossian, Chairman of the Tourism Committee of the Ministry of Economy, noted that Iran is one of the target markets for the Armenian tourism industry. Tourism authorities carry out targeted work to attract Iranian tourists.

"Iran is an important market for us, these festivals help us create a more interesting atmosphere in Armenia and attract more tourists from Iran. Last year was very successful for the festival, it had quite a large number of visitors. We expect the same and even more activity this year. I myself was born in Iran and I know Iranian cuisine very well, they have quite tasty dishes. So, I suggest you visit Sisian city and see for yourself," said Sisian Boghosian.

Mohammad-Ali Kiani, the acting cultural adviser at the Iranian Embassy in Armenia, added that a variety of culinary and cultural events will be offered.

“We were allocated 20 booths in the festival. We’ve done everything to ensure high quality participation. We involved chefs from both Iran and Armenia. We aim to present to the locals that an Iranian cuisine market is available here as well,” said Kiani. He also added that there is a goal to organize such an event in Iran as well, the venue and dates of the event are being discussed.

Emphasizing the work with Iranian partners, the Chairman of the Development and Preservation of Armenian Culinary Traditions NGO Sedrak Mamulyan noted that both sides have a disposition to create a common tourist result and present it to the world.

The festival will feature the renowned Navasard harissa, a festive dish, as well as a cooking competition, Mamulyan said. The event will also include a music and dancing segment.

Azerbaijan corroborates fears of intention to commit genocide by blocking humanitarian convoy for Nagorno-Karabakh – PM

 11:26, 27 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 27, ARMENPRESS. If Azerbaijan blocks the Armenian humanitarian aid convoy from entering Lachin Corridor it would corroborate Armenia’s fears that Baku seeks to commit genocide in Nagorno-Karabakh, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan warned Thursday.

“We’ve asked the Russian peacekeepers deployed in Nagorno-Karabakh to accept the cargo and transport it to Nagorno-Karabakh, where there’s an ongoing humanitarian crisis resulting from the nearly 8-months blockade of the Lachin Corridor. However, Azerbaijan is obstructing the access of the humanitarian goods into Lachin Corridor and Nagorno-Karabakh. This conduct is incomprehensible and unacceptable,” Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting.

He denied Azerbaijani allegations on Armenia using the Lachin Corridor for military purposes to be an “absurd claim”, and said that these false accusations are simply a pretext for Azerbaijan to illegally block the Lachin Corridor.

The humanitarian convoy of 19 trucks sent to Nagorno-Karabakh carries 100 tons of flour, 80 tons of pasta, 60 tons of sugar, 40 tons of vegetable oil, 40 tons of powdered milk, 20 tons of salt, 12 tons of baby food and 9 tons of medication.

Furthermore, the diplomatic corps in Armenia were invited to review the cargo before it was sent. “So why doesn’t Azerbaijan allow the goods to enter Nagorno Karabakh? Perhaps because Azerbaijan’s true goal is to starve the people of Nagorno-Karabakh, subject them to genocide. However, regardless of our assessment, we are waiting for the response of the Russian peacekeeping contingent and official Baku’s positive reaction, because the blocking of the humanitarian cargo would only confirm  fears that Baku intends to commit genocide in Nagorno-Karabakh,” Pashinyan said.

Access of the humanitarian cargo into Nagorno Karabakh would contribute to the peace efforts in the region and would be a positive step on the path of establishing an atmosphere of trust, he added.

Armenpress: Ceasefire violation recorded in Lachin Corridor

 21:36,

YEREVAN, JULY 25, ARMENPRESS. A violation of the ceasefire regime was recorded in the Lachin Corridor, the zone of responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers. There were no casualties or injuries, ARMENPRESS reports, citing "RIA Novosti", the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation said in a statement.

"One violation of the ceasefire regime was recorded in the Lachin Corridor, there were no casualties or injuries," the message says.

The command of the Russian peacekeeping troops is conducting an investigation with the Azerbaijani and Armenian sides in relation to this incident.

Pashinyan-Aliyev-Michel trilateral meeting scheduled on July 15 in Brussels

 11:15,

YEREVAN, JULY 13, ARMENPRESS. A tripartite meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and European Council President Charles Michel is scheduled for July 15 in Brussels, ARMENPRESS reports, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan announced at the Cabinet meeting today.

"On July 15, my meeting with the President of the European Council and the President of Azerbaijan is scheduled in Brussels. I confirmed my participation in that meeting. I hope to make progress in the peace treaty negotiations during that meeting," Pashinyan said.

Azerbaijani president targets French "neocolonialism"

Jul 10, 2023

Azerbaijan's authoritarian president, Ilham Aliyev, is an unlikely champion for the victims of French colonialism.

But as chairman of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), that is precisely how he is positioning himself. 

Of course, he has his own grievances against France, namely Paris' allegedly pro-Armenian stance in the Azerbaijan-Armenia peace talks that have followed the Second Karabakh War of 2020.

In a speech on July 5 at the Ministerial Meeting of the NAM Coordinating Bureau in Baku, Aliyev criticized France at length and said some NAM members are still suffering from its continuing practice of "neocolonialism."

NAM was established during the Cold War as a forum for states not formally aligned with or against the major power blocs of the time. It now has 120 members and is the largest congregation of states worldwide, after the United Nations. Azerbaijan joined NAM in 2011 and has been chairing it since 2019.

"Azerbaijan is very much concerned by the rising tendency towards neo-colonialism. NAM, which was created as a result of the decolonization process, should vigorously combat this shameful legacy of the past and contribute to its full elimination," Aliyev said in his speech. "French-administered territories outside Europe are nasty remains of the French colonial empire."

He then backed Comoros' claim of sovereignty over the French-administered Island of Mayotte and appeared to support the independence movement in New Caledonia. 

He said France's colonial-era atrocities in Algeria amounted to "genocide", echoing a claim made in 2011 by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the president of Azerbaijan's closest ally, Turkey. Paris does not accept the claim. 

Aliyev called on France to "apologize for its colonial past and bloody colonial crimes and acts of genocide against NAM member countries in Africa, South-East Asia and other places."

France needs to do so now more than ever in the aftermath of unrest in the country following the killing of an Algerian teen, he said. 

Aliyev visited Algeria in November 2022 and paid a visit to the Martyrs' Memorial, which was built to commemorate Algerians who died fighting against French imperial rule. He said then that "France conducted a terrible war against the Algerian people for more than 130 years which resulted in the deaths of more than one and a half million Algerians," but stopped short of using the word "genocide." 

Azerbaijan has long been critical of France over its pro-Armenian stance in the Karabakh conflict, especially during the peace process that followed the 2020 war between Armenia and Azerbaijan. 

In a television interview in October 2022, French President Emmanuel Macron blamed Azerbaijan for launching "a terrible war" against Armenia in 2020 and again "attacking" the latter in September 2022. In response, the Azerbaijani president said that France should have no place in mediation efforts between Armenia and Azerbaijan. 

"I had the opportunity to communicate quite closely with President [Jacques] Chirac, President [Nicolas] Sarkozy and President [Francois] Hollande, and our relations were quite balanced, quite friendly," he said at an October 14 CIS summit meeting in Astana. "We always perceived the activities of previous French presidents, despite, of course, a certain factor of the Armenian diaspora in France, as balanced. However, the current French leadership has effectively crossed out all this."

France was one of three mediating countries comprising the OSCE Minsk Group for the settlement of the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict that was set up in the mid-1990s. The format still exists on paper but has not been active since the 2020 war.

Most recently, on July 7, France's Foreign Minister Catherine Colonna reaffirmed her country's support for an international mechanism guaranteeing the rights and securities of Karabakh Armenians in the Armenia-Azerbaijan peace process in a phone call with her Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan. 

The Azerbaijani president and his government, meanwhile, find the French stance hypocritical given France's history of colonialism and "neocolonialism." 

"Unfortunately, France is trying to impose the same ill practice in the region of the South Caucasus by supporting Armenian separatism in the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan and by means of geopolitical rivalry, foreign military presence and colonial policy of 'Orientalism,'" Aliyev argued in his July 5 speech. 



Pope Francis ‘angry and disgusted’ over burning of Qur’an – newspaper

 10:53, 3 July 2023

YEREVAN, JULY 3, ARMENPRESS. Pope Francis said he rejected the authorization of the burning of the Qur’an in an interview with UAE's newspaper al-Ittihad on Monday, adding that such acts made him angry.

“Any book considered holy should be respected to respect those who believe in it,” the Saudi Arab News quoted the Pope as saying in the interview. “I feel angry and disgusted at these actions”

 “Allowing this is unacceptable and condemned,” he said, stressing that freedom of _expression_ should not be used as an excuse to offend others.

“Our mission is to transform the religious sense into cooperation, fraternity, and tangible acts of goodness.”

A man tore up and burned a copy of the Qur’an in Sweden’s capital Stockholm last week, resulting in strong condemnation from several countries. 

While Swedish police have rejected several recent applications for anti-Qur’an demonstrations, courts have over-ruled those decisions, saying they infringed freedom of speech.