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Romanian FM highlights release of people taken hostage as a result of NK war

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 17:00, 26 June, 2021

YEREVAN, JUNE 26, ARMENPRESS. The South Caucasus has a strategic imotance for the EU, ARMENPRESS reports Foreign Minister of Romania Bogdan Aurescu announced in a press conference in the EU office in Goorgia.

Summarizing the visit of Austrian, Romanian and Lithuanian FMs to the 3 South Caucasian countries, he emphasized that it was the first visit of the European Foreign Ministers authorized by the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Vice-President of the European Commission, Josep Borrel.

''We conveyed the commitments of the EU, prioritizing the security, stability and welfare of all the 3 South Caucasian countries, as well as the EU determination to get involved in the settlement process of the prolonged conflicts in this region more actively, since it has a strategic importance for the EU'', the Romanian FM said.

Referring to the prolonged conflicts in the region, Bogdan Aurescu noted that they had a negative impact on the development of the Eastern Partnership countries.

He urged their partners in the South Caucasus to derive all possible from the tools provided by the EU Eastern Partnership to strengthen regional cooperation for the benefit of peace and prosperity.

''All three countries supported the creation of regional format comprised of the tree countries'', the Minister said.

Referring to the visit to Armenia, Bogdan Aurescu noted that during the visit they congratulated the caretaker Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan on the occasion of winning in the early parliamentary elections, highly assessing the democratic nature of the elections, as recorded by the OSCE/ODIHR and other observer missions.

He underscored that they had in-depth discussions in Armenia and Azerbaijan over the current situation and upcoming activities, considering the military operations of the previous year. ''We urged to act in constructive nature, since the confidence-building measures, including the release of all the POWs and providing all the minefield maps, remain a priority'', the Foreign Minister of Romania said, adding that the EU is ready to assist in any issue that can lead to a negotiated, stable and lasting solution of issues. ''I emphasized the importance of reconciliation between the two societies. This process may be difficult and time-consuming, but has no alternative'', the Minister said.


Pashinyan announces how many seats his Civil Contract party will have in newly-elected parliament

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 10:21, 21 June, 2021

YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS. Caretaker Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan says his Civil Contract party will have a constitutional majority in the newly-elected parliament and will form a government led by him.

“Thus, according to the preliminary results of the elections as published by the Central Electoral Commission, in the newly-elected parliament the Civil Contract party will have a constitutional majority (at least 71 MPs out of 105) and will form a government led by me”, Pashinyan tweeted.

Armenia held snap parliamentary elections on June 20.

21 parties and 4 blocs were running for parliament.

Pashinyan’s party is leading with 53.92% of the vote, the second is the “Armenia” bloc led by 2nd President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan with 21.04% and the third one is “I Have the Honor” alliance with 5.23% of the vote.

Gagik Tsarukyan’s Prosperous Armenia party received 3.96% of the vote, the Republic party – 3.04%.

 The electoral threshold for parties is 5%, for blocs – 7%.

The voter turnout was at 49.4% or 1 million 281 thousand 174 voters.

 

 

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Step Toward Home: Diaspora youth explore Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia
June 24 2021    

Over 100 youth from eight countries have arrives in Armenia as part of the Step Toward Home program of the Diaspora High Commissioner’s Office.

During the first three days young people visited the Matenadaran depository of ancient manuscripts, Oshakan, AGBU Armenian Virtual College, and Tsitsernakaberd. They are taking courses of Armenian, Armenian song and dance.

The program’s participants viewed and learned about the Matenadaran’s ancient manuscripts, some of which were donated by Diaspora-Armenians.

In Oshakan, they visited the St. Mesrop Mashtots Church named after the inventor of the Armenian alphabet who is buried there.

At the AGBU Armenian Virtual College, the Diaspora-Armenian youth learned about available technologies for studying Armenian language and Armenian Studies.

Afterwards, the participants visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial, where they laid flowers in honor of the 1.5 million Armenians martyred during the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

Yerevan slams Aliyev and Erdogan’s visit to Nagorno-Karabakh’s Shusha

TASS, Russia
June 15 2021
These provocative actions clearly demonstrate the false nature of statements made in Ankara and Baku about normalization of ties with Armenia and Armenian people, the national Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday

YEREVAN, June 15. /TASS/. Armenia views the visit of Presidents of Azerbaijan and Turkey Ilham Aliyev and Recep Tayyip Erdogan to the town of Shusha located in Nagorno-Karabakh as a provocation aimed at undermining regional peace and security, the national Foreign Ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

"We decisively condemn the joint visit of the Turkish and Azerbaijani presidents to the town of Shusha, Armenia’s historic and cultural center in Artsakh (unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh Republic – TASS), which is currently placed under Azerbaijan’s occupation, on June 15 as an obvious provocation against peace and security in the region," the statement reads.

The ministry noted, "it is noteworthy that this visit was preceded by destruction of religious, historic and cultural heritage of the forcibly relocated indigenous Armenian population, particularly during the war waged by Turkish and Azerbaijani forces against Artsakh, including the desecration of Ghazanchetsots Cathedral and the full destruction of the memorial honoring victims of the Armenian genocide".

"These provocative actions clearly demonstrate the false nature of statements made in Ankara and Baku about normalization of ties with Armenia and Armenian people. We reiterate that the elimination of the consequences of the recent Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression against Artsakh should be carried out as part of a comprehensive settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict under the auspices of the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group," the statement adds.

Mine maps prove how strong protection was provided by former Armenian authorities – Artak Zakaryan

Panorama, Armenia
June 15 2021

Former Deputy Defense Minister of Armenia Artak Zakaryan, a candidate of the I’m Honored bloc running in the June 20 snap parliamentary elections, on Tuesday denounced Nikol Pashinyan for using the release of 15 Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) by Azerbaijan in exchange for maps of mined areas as an election campaign tool.

“The negotiations have been going on for a long time. They refused to provide maps of mined areas several times. The process was delayed to the election period to also turn it into a campaign tool for the capitulator,” he said.

He noted that the mine maps could have been swapped for the prisoners 5-6 months ago, however the authorities delayed the process to the election period allowing the POWs to be subjected to torture to “mislead and fool the public again”.

The former deputy minister said that the maps are of great strategic significance, since the mined areas prevented Azerbaijan from unleashing hostilities against Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) for many years.

“The maps also go to prove how strong protection was provided by the former authorities. Mining is part of the engineering work. It’s about some 97,000 landmines in the area of Akna alone,” he said.

Zakaryan said it is important for Azerbaijan to quickly populate the town of Akna (Aghdam), because it already poses a threat to Karabakh.

“This is why they purchased the maps from the capitulators, and the latter sold the maps, to put it bluntly, because if he [Pashinyan] had really cared about our captives, he would have resolved this issue long ago, there would have been no discussions,” he said. 

The glowing embers of Nagorno Karabakh

EU Observer
June 8 2021
  • There is no appetite in Yerevan or Baku to conduct genuine inquiries into the conduct of their militaries, or to enact key institutional and legislative reform to prevent unnecessary civilian suffering in future conflicts (Photo: nkrmil.am)

LONDON/BRUSSELS, 8. JUN, 07:03

On 27 September 2020, the embers of the long-standing conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh ignited a bitter six-week war.

At least 5,000 people lost their lives – including 100 Azerbaijani and 55 Armenian civilians. Over 100,000 people have been displaced. Countless civilians on both sides suffered horrendous physical injury, life-altering trauma and widespread damage to housing and key infrastructure.

Between October and December 2020, International Partnership for Human Rights and Truth Hounds conducted multiple field investigation missions to Azerbaijan and Armenia.

The team documented 32 cases of indiscriminate bombing of civilians, at least eight cases of extra-judicial executions, systematic abuse and torture of prisoners of war and civilian captives, despoliation of the dead, deliberate targeting of places of religious or cultural significance and the deliberate targeting of hospitals, medical transport and medical personnel.

This conduct amounts to gross violations of international humanitarian and human rights law and should be prosecuted as war crimes. Behind all of these facts and figures, lie heart-wrenching victim accounts.

At approximately 2PM on 30 September 2020, Vahe was near his shop in Martakert/Agdere, when he heard the sound of incoming Azerbaijani artillery fire. He ran into the basement of his shop. When he came out, he saw that David – the owner of his neighbouring shop – was bleeding from injuries suffered during the attack. He rushed to him, only to realise that David's mother, father and aunt lay dead inside the shop, and a customer was in critical condition.

On 17 October, three Armenian ballistic SCUD missiles descended on Ganja city, Azerbaijan, hitting undefended residential areas, killing 13 civilians. Ali and his wife were in their summer kitchen in the backyard of their house. He was watching television when he heard a loud explosion and temporarily lost his hearing and orientation. When he came to, he heard people screaming under the rubble. His children had cuts all over their arms and legs, and his pregnant daughter was taken to hospital where she gave birth prematurely.

On 25 October, Armen was transferred into the custody of Azerbaijan's state security with four other Armenian captives. During his "medical examination", he was stripped naked and beaten on his face and buttocks with hands and truncheons. He was taken to his cell, severely beaten and made to clean the floors with his clothes. He was repeatedly forced to salute and shout "Karabakh is Azerbaijan". The next day, he was taken to an interrogation room, where he was kicked, punched, shocked with a Taser and whipped with electric cables. An interrogator placed a plastic bag over his head to choke him. Armen says he was unable to walk by himself after the interrogations and suffered multiple fractures and damage to his kidneys.

On 27 October, a group of Azerbaijani soldiers captured and decapitated a 69-year old civilian, Genadiy Petrosyan, in the Madatashen village of Nagorno-Karabakh. A video of the attack shows an Azerbaijani combatant cutting Petrosyan's head off and placing it on a dead pig's corpse. A voice, in Azerbaijani, states "this is how we get revenge".

The 2020 six-week-war has not resolved any of the issues that divide the region.

The level of inter-ethnic hatred is at peak level, laying the foundations of future conflicts. The ink was barely dry on the peace deal when tens of thousands of Armenians took to the streets to denounce prime minister Nikol Pashinyan at a traitor.

Just five months after the end of the conflict, Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev inaugurated the so-called "Military Trophies Park" – a grotesque collection of war memorabilia, including helmets belonging to Armenian casualties and unabashedly racist wax mannequins of Armenian soldiers.

Whilst it may be convenient to do so, the international community must not sweep this war – and its war crimes – into the dustbin of history.

As long as there are no meaningful steps towards justice and reconciliation, the conflict will continue to re-ignite, costing lives and destabilising the entire South Caucuses region.

There is no appetite in Yerevan or Baku to conduct genuine inquiries into the conduct of their militaries, or to enact key institutional and legislative reform to prevent unnecessary civilian suffering in future conflicts.

The impunity gap must be bridged by the international community, through independent investigations to establish a trustworthy historical record, and justice mechanism to establish accountability for war crimes.

To do nothing is to condemn the region and its long-suffering civilian populations to future conflict and suffering.

Alexandre Prezanti is a partner at Global Diligence LLP. Simon Papuashvili is programme director at the International Partnership for Human Rights.

Nagorno Karabakh wound marks the polls in Armenia – Market Research Telecast

Market Research Telecast

Published by: MRT

Published on:

Frustrated and sad, Rosalía Shahbekyán wonders how the hope and optimism that flooded much of Armenia three years ago could be diluted in such a short time, when a popular mobilization against political elites after the elections brought populist and reformist Nikol Pashinián to power. Shahbekyán, with almond-shaped dark eyes and 33 years old, grew up and was educated outside the small country of the southern Caucasus and nurtured the Armenian diaspora of millions of people around the world. As he tries to cool off from the soporific heat of Yerevan by sipping Tan, a special Armenian recipe liquid yogurt, he says he returned to the capital in 2016. Like many other young people, he participated in the so-called “velvet revolution”. “At that time the discontent was so great that the general feeling was that it did not matter who came to power, the important thing is that the usual people leave,” he says.

Pashinián was appointed Prime Minister of Armenia (2.9 million inhabitants) in 2018, after peaceful riots and with promises to fight corruption and evict the old families that had held the most juicy government posts for decades. Three years later, weakened after losing the Nagorno Karabakh war in 2020 to Azerbaijan, which has triggered a political and social crisis in Armenia, Pashinian is measured in the snap elections that take place tomorrow with some of those old school politicians in elections in which the war of Nagorno Karabakh flies over everything.

Close to 6,000 people have died in the latest escalation of the conflict, which erupted in September 2020. And Armenia has had to give up control of large areas that it had dominated since the 1990s in the mountainous enclave, still populated and controlled by mostly Armenians today. , but internationally recognized as Azerbaijan and with claims of self-determination (to become the Republic of Artsakh). “Emotionally it has been devastating,” Shahbekyán laments, in perfect Spanish: he studied in Galicia, worked in the tourism sector and is now reinventing himself, after the crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Pashinián has not had time to cover many of the promised reforms, says the woman, who believes, however, that Armenian society is now more open, less conservative on social rights issues due to the government’s more liberal vision.

The latest polls indicate as favorites Pashinián and former President Robert Korcharián (1998-2008), a wealthy businessman, close friend of Russian President Vladimir Putin, and with a reputation as a strong man, who campaigns to “bring the country out of chaos.” . Originally from Nagorno Karabakh, where he fought in the first enclave war in the 1990s, he ranks 24th on the lists with almost 30 candidates for prime minister in which there are no women. Two other former presidents are also participating in elections that could mean the return of the old elites to politics.

The results are expected to be very tight, says analyst Nikolai Torosyán. The polarization, anger and division between political groups is enormous and observers fear that strong protests will break out after the elections, with supporters of the loser in the streets and a winner who does not have a sufficient percentage to imbue himself with legitimacy before the whole. citizenship.

The general trend in the opposition is that the fault of the defeat in the Nagorno Karabakh war lies with Pashinyan, explains Torosyan in a modern cafe in the center of Yerevan, the capital, which contrasts with old sand-colored buildings in the area. Even Pashinián described the agreement as “disastrous”, but stressed that he had been forced to sign it to avoid greater territorial and human losses. Since then, protests have followed. Even what the prime minister defined as an attempted coup by some army chiefs. The pressure has been immense.

“Critics assure that Pashinián has proven to be a weak politician who cannot negotiate or manage a government; while Pashinián’s supporters emphasize that the problem is inherited, that it has to do with the corruption of previous administrations and their bad negotiations, ”says the journalist and analyst, drowned in cigarette smoke: in Armenia it is allowed to smoke indoors and tobacco is also on the menu in most restaurants. “This is a choice between the corrupt but professional, and others cleaner, but not professional,” says Torosyán.

Russia is closely watching the outcome of the elections. It has a military base in Armenia, which has always been a close ally. Although Pashinian has had somewhat colder relations with the Kremlin than its predecessors. Hence some also blame him for not getting more support from Moscow in the war.

While the supporters of each other leave at dusk, to the last political events, Rudi Kalousián prepares to open his bar, EVN, a rock venue in the center of Yerevan. Define the political campaign as a “puppet show.” Will not vote. He has never voted. He believes that all politicians in Armenia are more of the same. “Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, when Armenia became a republic, there has been no normal government. Only corrupt politicians who worry about their pockets or staying in office, “says the 39-year-old businessman.

Kalousian opened EVN, decorated with baseball paintings, Marvel comics and portraits of artists like Jimi Hendrix, about four years ago. Now he has put it up for sale. “Before the revolution we were drowned by bribes. Now, there are no bites but we are suffocated by taxes, ”he says. EVN closed for five months at the peak of the pandemic. State aid for the crisis was a single payment of 120 euros. “It was so ridiculous that I had a barbecue with my friends to celebrate the irony,” says Kalousián, who defines himself as a “patriot.” Disenchanted, he believes that the solution for the country would be to have someone from the great Armenian diaspora (about eight million) head the government, who has known another way of doing things and has a rich and diverse political background.

Retired jurist Surén Mamikonyan has come over to put a couple of candles in the Zoravor Surp Astvatsatsin Orthodox Church, the oldest in Yerevan, which was home to the 13th century Zoravor bible. He is dressed like a paintbrush, a polka dot tie and a plaid jacket under a 35-degree sun. He is 70 years old, he says that he has lived and seen a lot and believes that, like other times, Armenia will recover quickly from this crisis. “Armenia is at the center of a turbulent geopolitical map, surrounded by carnivorous neighbors who have threatened us for years, who wanted to leave a single Armenian as a sample in a museum, but who only managed to spread it around the world with a huge diaspora,” he says. . And he adds: “Difficulties do not matter. The spirit of the Armenians is unbreakable ”.

Disclaimer: This article is generated from the feed and not edited by our team. 

Armenia election campaign: Day 9

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 08:58,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. The electoral campaign for the June 20 snap parliamentary elections officially launched in Armenia on June 7.

The campaign will last until June 18.

25 political forces – 21 parties and 4 blocs, are participating in the elections.

ARMENPRESS presents the schedule of the visits of the political forces on the 9th day of the campaign.

 

“Armenia” bloc led by 2nd President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan

Visit to Ararat province

-Masis (14:00)

-Avshar (16:00)

-Ararat (17:00)

-Vedi (18:00)

-Artashat (19:30)

 

Bright Armenia party

-Yerevan, Kanaker-Zeytun administrative district (11:00)

 

Shirinyan-Babajanyan Democrats Union alliance

-Visits to various administrative districts of Yerevan

-Some of the representatives of the alliance will visit Abovyan town of Kotayk province at 15:00

 

Civil Contract party led by caretaker Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan

Visit to Syunik province

-Sisian (11:00)

Goris (12:00)

-Agarak (16:00)

-Meghri (16:30)

-Kajaran (17:30)

-Kapan (19:00)

 

Free Fatherland alliance

Visit to Vayots Dzor province

-Yeghegnadzor (12:00)

-Vayk (13:00)

-Jermuk (15:00)

-Press conference in Yerevan’s Erebuni administrative district at 20:00

 

“Our Home Is Armenia” party

-Yerevan, Victory district (13:00)

 

United Armenia party

-Press conference at 12:00

Armenia 3rd President doesn’t know why Nikol Pashinyan hasn’t signed the pro-Armenian document he’s talking about

News.am, Armenia

Aliyev has entered into our territory to pressure him [Nikol Pashinyan] to sign that document, but what happened later? Why is Aliyev now waiting for the elections in Armenia? This is what third President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan stated during one of his campaign meetings today when asked what pro-Armenian document Nikol Pashinyan signed and what document was he talking about during the government session two weeks ago.

“Why didn’t he sign it? Doesn’t he want to sign that pro-Armenian document? Wasn’t Aliyev forcing him to sign it? Let him say what he has promised Aliyev that made the latter change his opinion? One has to be stupid to not sign a pro-Armenian document. If he hasn’t signed it, then we should wait for surprises,” Sargsyan said, adding that he doesn’t know why the potential document was disclosed after pressure from the society.

“Perhaps he has signed it and we don’t know about it. We didn’t know that he was going to sign a capitulation document on November 9, 2020. These people [the authorities] talk about democracy and transparency, but in reality, they are illiterate, keep secrets and betray the nation,” Sargsyan emphasized.