President of Azerbaijan tells Armenia to ‘leave our territory, and then, the war will stop’

CNN News
Oct 2 2020

(CNN)President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan has said Armenia and its military forces "need to leave our territory, and then, the war will stop and then the conflict will come to an end."

In an interview with Al Jazeera, President Aliyev went on to say that once the war is over "maybe some time later people of Azerbaijan and Armenia can again live together, in peace."
Aliyev, however, gave no indication that a cessation of hostilities would end anytime soon, adding: "I think Armenian government overestimated their so-called importance on global arena, overestimated the possible international support to them and made very serious mistakes provoking us, attacking us and now they are suffering the very serious defeat."
    Long-simmering tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan have flared up in the contested Nagorno-Karabakh region in recent days, with both sides accusing each other of attacking civilians amid reports of casualties.
    The neighboring countries have long been at odds over the mountainous territory — which is situated within the borders of Azerbaijan — and fought a war over it that ended in 1994.
    Although the conflict finished with a Russian-brokered cease-fire, military skirmishes between the two sides are not uncommon.
    Further evidence has emerged this week of rebels from Syria being recruited to fight as mercenaries in the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia, over the disputed enclave.
    But both Azerbaijan and Turkey have denied the presence of Syrian rebels in the conflict — something that Aliyev maintained in his Al Jazeera interview, adamant that no such fighters were in the country.
      Aliyev urged French President Emmanuel Macron to provide proof that Syrian mercenaries were fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh, saying, "He made the statements without any evidence. Let him give us evidence. Let him give us proof."
      In a statement released Saturday, the Armenian Foreign Ministry warned: "The political-military leadership of Azerbaijan will pay a high price for committing such grave crimes against the Armenians of Artsakh, for importing terrorists to the region and for undermining the regional security."


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Karabakh Tests ‘Competitive Cooperation’ of Putin, Erdogan

Moscow Times
Oct 2 2020

The marriage of convenience between Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdogan has confounded sceptics by withstanding Russian and Turkish rivalries in Syria and Libya.

Now, with the deadliest fighting in decades returning to Azerbaijan's Armenian separatist region of Nagorno Karabakh, the bond between the two strong-willed leaders is being tested in Russia's own backyard, analysts said.

Putin, who views the volatile Caucasus as part of Russia's "near abroad", wants Muslim Azerbaijan and Christian Armenia to bury their historic rivalries and make peace.

Not so Erdogan, who is urging Azerbaijan to press on with its campaign until Armenian separatists withdraw "from every span of Azerbaijani territory".

"Turkey and Russia are engaged in a relationship which can be best characterised as competitive cooperation," said Ozgur Unluhisarcikli, Ankara office director of the US German Marshall Fund.

"The South Caucasus is among the regions where this competition is most intense."

The Kremlin supplies arms to both Yerevan and Baku, although Armenia — while poorer and smaller than its resource-rich eastern neighbor — is also part of a Moscow defense alliance and hosts a Russian base.

Turkey, meanwhile, views Azerbaijan as a brotherly nation whose interests it will defend on the global stage.

While their differences in the Caucasus are not yet as stark as they have been on the battlefields of Syria and Libya, where Moscow and Ankara back opposing sides, analysts said the situation was fraught with risks.

Erdogan appears to know Putin's limits, stopping short of backing Baku militarily and keeping mum about reports that Turkey was sending Libyan or Syrian mercenaries to the Caucasus.

And weighing its own interests, the Kremlin has shown only tepid support for Armenia, whose current prime minister, Nikol Pashinyan, has previously irritated Moscow.

"Turkey's support to Azerbaijan is not new, but Russia's reluctance to back Armenia is. So I don't think Erdogan is attracting Putin's anger, yet," Unluhisarcikli said. 

But if Russia feels threatened "to the extent that it is worth dismantling the relationship it has been developing with Turkey, it can retaliate in Libya and more likely in Syria," Unluhisarcikli said.

Turkey's Ottoman empire never got along comfortably with the Russian tsarist one, and Moscow's more recent relationship with Ankara has exhibited signs of mutual mistrust.

And while historic, Turkey's hostilities with Armenia are now defined by one of the darkest episodes of Ottoman empire's demise, with the two countries still unable to reconcile the 1915 Armenian genocide.

Erdogan's unlikely courtship of Putin began after he survived a failed Turkish coup in 2016, when Russia was feeling isolated internationally in the wake of its annexation of Crimea.

Erdogan and Putin began cooperating more closely in Syria, where Russia backs the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, and Turkey supported the insurgency trying to topple him.

Yet it was always an uneasy alliance.

More than 30 Turkish soldiers have died this year alone in northwestern Syria.

The strains have been compounded in Libya, where Turkey supports a UN-recognised government in the west, and Russia helps the eastern-based commander Khalifa Haftar with fighters from the Kremlin-linked Wagner group.

"Turkey-Russia relations were already very complicated because of Syria and Libya. The Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict will further complicate this relation," said Ankara-based analyst Ali Bakeer.

While Putin might be wary of Erdogan's push into the Caucasus, Bakeer said Turkey views Syria as part of its own "backyard" in which Russia is meddling.

"The latest disagreement (in northwest Syria) shows that Moscow is not willing to make things easy for Ankara," he said.

Alexei Khlebnikov, a Middle East analyst with the Russian International Affairs Council, agreed that Turkey's diplomatic posturing in Nagorno Karabakh could affect its relations with Russia in other hotspots, particularly Syria.

"Not in a major way, but there will be some influence," Khlebnikov said.

"We know that in the past years Russia and Turkey have gone through more than a few crisis situations that couldn't cardinally drive a wedge between the two countries," Khlebnikov said.

"Russia and Turkey will try to find a common language, but there are no guarantees."

Emre Kaya, of Istanbul's Centre for Economics and Foreign Policy Studies, said Russia was most likely to retaliate if Ankara went beyond supplying Baku with intelligence and logistical support — or if Azerbaijan made swift military gains.

"Then we could definitely expect a Russian-backed attack on Turkish troops stationed in Syria or Libya," Kaya said.


CivilNet: It Is Now Very Important to Tune Down the War Rhetoric

CIVILNET.AM

18:00

Azerbaijan launched an offensive along the entire Line of Contact between Azerbaijan and Karabakh, on September 27. The capital of Nagorno-Karabakh, Stepanakert, as well as other residential areas, were bombarded. Civilian casualties have already been reported.

CivilNet’s Ani Paitjan talks with journalist and colleague Tatul Hakobyan about the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Asbarez: Parliament Approves New Constitutional Court Judges

Armenia’s Constitutional Court

YEREVAN (Azatutyun.am)—The Armenian parliament elected on Tuesday three new members of the country’s Constitutional Court who will replace justices controversially ousted in June.

The parliament’s pro-government majority voted for them three months after passing constitutional changes calling for the gradual resignation of seven of the court’s nine judges locked in a standoff with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s political team.

Three of them were to resign with immediate effect. The constitutional amendments also required Hrayr Tovmasyan to quit as court chairman but remain a judge.

Tovmasyan and the ousted judges refused to step down, saying that their removal is illegal and politically motivated. They appealed to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) to have them reinstated.

Tovmasyan and the six other court justices have been under strong government pressure to step down over the past year. Pashinyan has accused them of maintaining close ties to Armenia’s former government and impeding his judicial reforms. Tovmasyan has dismissed Pashinyan’s claims and in turn accused the prime minister of seeking to take control of the country’s highest court.

In line with the Armenian constitution, Pashinyan’s government, President Armen Sarkissian and a national convention of Armenian judges each nominated last month a candidate to replace the ousted high court members.

The government’s pick for the court was Edgar Shatiryan, a 40-year-old law lecturer, while Sarkissian nominated Artur Vagharshyan, a chair of jurisprudence at Yerevan State University. The judges’ nominee, Yervand Khundkaryan, has headed the Court of Cassation, Armenia’s highest body of criminal and administrative justice, for the last two years.

Pro-government deputies overwhelmingly backed all three candidates despite objections voiced by some of them. The latter claimed, in particular, that Khundkaryan, Vagharshyan and Shatiryan were linked to the former Armenian authorities in one way or another.

Alen Simonyan, a deputy parliament speaker and leading member of Pashinyan’s My Step bloc, downplayed the misgivings. “Believe me, no matter whom we nominate there will always be conflicting interests,” he told journalists after the announcement of the parliament vote results.

Simonyan also insisted that the current authorities are not intent on creating a “puppet” Constitutional Court. “The authorities are forming a new and principled Constitutional Court,” he said.

The election of the new court justices was boycotted by lawmakers representing the two parliamentary opposition parties, Prosperous Armenia and Bright Armenia. They maintain that the recent constitutional changes were enacted in breach of other articles of the Armenian constitution.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 24-08-20

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 17:45, 24 August, 2020

YEREVAN, 24 AUGUST, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 24 August, USD exchange rate up by 0.20 drams to 485.25 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.26 drams to 574.20 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.01 drams to 6.54 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 1.68 drams to 636.94 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 31.29 drams to 30022.07 drams. Silver price down by 0.84 drams to 418.89 drams. Platinum price down by 243.73 drams to 14041.03 drams.

No new case of COVID-19 confirmed in Artsakh in past 24 hours

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 11:53, 26 August, 2020

YEREVAN, AUGUST 26, ARMENPRESS. No new case of the novel coronavirus has been confirmed in the Republic of Artsakh in the past 24 hours, the ministry of healthcare said.

So far, the total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Artsakh is 271, with 252 recoveries.

The number of active cases stands at 17.

35 citizens are currently quarantined.

No death case has been registered.

Two death cases have been registered, when the patients had a coronavirus but died from other disease. 

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Carl Bildt proposes the “Armenian model” for Belarus

Public Radio of Armenia
Aug 18 2020


Co-Chair European Council on Foreign Relations, former Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt proposes the Armenian model for Belarus.

“Perhaps we should think about an Armenia model for Belarus? A democratic breakthrough and then combining Eurasian customs union, security links with Russia and Eastern Partnership with EU. What Belarus needs in addition is WTO membership and IMF support,” Bildt tweeted

Perhaps we should think about an Armenia model for ? A democratic breakthrough and then combining Eurasian customs union, security links with and Eastern Partnership . What needs in addition is WTO membership and IMF support.

— Carl Bildt (@carlbildt) August 15, 2020

The stand-off continues in Belarus after presidential elections. The unrest erupted after Mr Lukashenko claimed a landslide victory in the election, the result of which has been condemned amid widespread allegations of vote-rigging.