Toy Drive For Artsakh Children Unites Armenian Community

Pasadena Now, CA
Dec 1 2020
Published on Tuesday, December 1, 2020 | 11:02 am

Thousands of toys and lots of warm clothes were collected for the children of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) at the Homenmen (Armenian Athletic Association) Toy Drive in Pasadena and Glendale.

Volunteers of all ages helped donors unload toys from cars lining up the street with people eager to put a smile on a child’s face in the war-torn region of Artsakh. Some participants in the toy drive held Saturday and Sunday donated warm clothing, which is much needed in the winter months ahead. Others made monetary contributions to help with humanitarian efforts.

“We are very happy with the turnout of the toy drive and the outpouring of support from the community,” said Homenmen Chairman Vartan Kojababian, according to Massis Post, a news service covering Armenia and the Armenian Diaspora.

 “The innocent children of Artsakh have witnessed their homes being destroyed, their family members have been murdered in a war they never asked for and their right to live peacefully on their ancestral lands has been threatened by a merciless enemy,” Kojababian said. “The very least we can do as Diaspora Armenians is help our brothers and sisters during this dire humanitarian crisis. We hope that these toys that were donated by generous community members will uplift the spirits of the children in Artsakh and restore a sense of calm and normalcy during these uncertain times.”

Kojababian also thanked the Armenian Educational Benevolent Union in Pasadena and Mission Wine and Spirits in Glendale where the two-day toy drive was held.

Large boxes of toys were packed up and will be flown to Armenia and distributed to children in Artsakh within the next two weeks. 

For more information, or to donate toys or clothing, contact (818) 324-0574.

Catholicos Garegin II personally visits ARF’s Gegham Manukyan and convinces to stop hunger strike

Catholicos Garegin II personally visits ARF's Gegham Manukyan and convinces to stop hunger strike

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 12:08, 1 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. The ARF official Gegham Manukyan and several of his supporters demanding the resignation of the Prime Minister have stopped their hunger strike after the Catholicos Garegin II personally visited them outside the government headquarters and asked them to do so, a spokesperson for the Armenian church said.

Manukyan, who declared an indefinite hunger strike on November 23 in demand of the resignation of PM Pashinyan, said it was “hard to refuse the Catholicos”.  He said he would continue “the struggle.”

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia Police Chief addresses congratulatory message on Artsakh Police Day

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 17:04,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 30, ARMENPRESS. Police Chief of Armenia Vahe Ghazaryan has addressed a congratulatory message on the occasion of the Day of Police of Artsakh.

The message reads:

“On behalf of the Board of the Police of Armenia and myself personally I offer congratulations on the Police Day of the Republic of Artsakh.

The police officers of Artsakh always stand on the frontline of the fight against crime, as they were in the liberation war frontline and during these difficult days as well they are sacrificing their lives for the defense of the Homeland.

The contribution of the Artsakh police officers to the strengthening of legality and defense of citizens’ rights is invaluable.

I am confident that the Police of Artsakh will continue fulfilling its mission for the sake of the Homeland and the people.

I once again offer my congratulations, wishing productive work and achievements”.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Catholicos of All Armenians welcomes French Senate’s adoption of resolution to recognize Artsakh

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 10:08,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. His Holiness Garegin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, welcomes the adoption of the resolution by the Senate of France on the necessity to recognize the Republic of Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh), His Holiness Garegin II said on social media.

“This was an important and humanitarian step on the path to the international recognition of the Artsakh people’s right to free and independent life. We are delivering our blessings to the friendly France, the good people and the factions of the Senate”, the statement says.

On November 25 the Senate of France has adopted a resolution on the necessity to recognize the Nagorno Karabakh Republic. The resolution was passed with 305 votes in favor, 1 against and 30 abstentions. During the Senate session the MPs called on the government to act, stand by the Armenian people and recognize the independence of Nagorno Karabakh.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 11/25/2020

                                        Wednesday, 

French Senate Calls For Karabakh’s Recognition


France -- French senators stand during a moment of silence in tribute to the 
victims of French Senate Calls For Karabakh’s Recognitionexplosions at the 
airport and metro in Brussels, March 22, 2016.

In a resolution hailed by Armenia, France’s upper house of parliament, the 
Senate, called on the French government on Wednesday to recognize 
Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent state.

The resolution also describes the recent war in Karabakh as an Azerbaijani 
aggression supported by Turkey and foreign mercenaries. It urges Azerbaijan’s 
withdrawal from territory seized during the six-week fighting stopped by a 
Russian-mediated ceasefire on November 10.

The measure introduced by five pro-Armenian senators was passed by 305 votes to 
1 despite being opposed by the French government. A government representative 
warned before the vote that it would undermine France’s role as one of the three 
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group trying to broker a solution to the Karabakh 
conflict.

Armenia was quick to welcome the resolution, with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
calling it “historic.”

“Artsakh’s international recognition is entering the international agenda,” 
Pashinian wrote on Facebook.

For its part, the Armenian Foreign Ministry expressed hope that the French lower 
house and other foreign parliaments will pass similar measures.

Karabakh’s independence from Azerbaijan, declared in 1991, has not been 
recognized by any country, including Armenia.

Predictably, Azerbaijan condemned the Senate resolution. President Ilham 
Aliyev’s office dismissed it as a mere “piece of paper” that cannot influence 
the Karabakh negotiating process or the situation on the ground.

Aliyev repeatedly accused Paris of pro-Armenian bias during the six-week war. 
Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov echoed those claims in an 
interview with the French weekly Le Point published earlier on Wednesday.

French President Emmanuel Macron criticized Azerbaijan’s military action in 
Karabakh shortly after the outbreak of the war on September 27. Macron has been 
even more critical of Turkey’s strong political and military support for Baku.



Armenian PM Dismissive Of Opposition Protests

        • Astghik Bedevian
        • Gayane Saribekian

ARMENIA - People attend an opposition rally to demand the resignation of 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan following the signing of a deal to end 
the military conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh, in Yerevan, November 18, 2020

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian dismissed on Wednesday opposition demands for his 
resignation, saying that they are not backed by most Armenians.

“I think that the question of a government formed by the people can only be 
resolved by the expression of the people’s will. The fact is that the calls 
voiced by the opposition are not receiving the backing of the Armenian society,” 
he told the TASS news agency in an interview.

Pashinian again signaled no plans to hold in the coming weeks or months fresh 
parliamentary elections demanded by the Armenian opposition. He said he will 
focus instead on the implementation of a six-month plan of government actions 
aimed at “restoring stability” in Armenia in the wake of the war in 
Nagorno-Karabakh.

“After that we will consult with our society, people and political forces and 
make a decision regarding further events and steps, regarding what to do next,” 
he said.


Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian gives a speech in the Armenian 
parliament.

Pashinian’s 15-point “roadmap” and ongoing cabinet reshuffle have been dismissed 
as a gimmick by opposition parties. More than a dozen of them launched street 
protests in Yerevan following the announcement of a Russian-brokered ceasefire 
that stopped the fighting in Karabakh on November 10.

The opposition forces blame Pashinian for the Armenian side’s defeat in the war 
with Azerbaijan. They are seeking his resignation, the formation of an interim 
government and conduct of snap parliamentary elections.

Pashinian’s political allies note that only a few thousand people have attended 
the anti-government rallies.

Organizers of the protests include Gagik Tsarukian’s Prosperous Armenia Party 
(BHK), former National Security Service Director Artur Vanetsian’s Fatherland 
party and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun). Their most 
recent rally was held in Yerevan’s Liberty Square on Saturday.

Pashinian is also facing resignation calls by other opposition groups, some 
prominent public figures and intellectuals. President Armen Sarkissian has 
likewise called for fresh elections, saying that they are need to “save the 
country from upheavals.”

Meanwhile, Vanetsian said that the opposition will continue to hold rallies and 
“civil disobedience actions” in Yerevan and other parts of the country.

“We are going to use all instruments allowed by the law,” the former security 
chief told reporters. “All of Nikol Pashinian’s actions are aimed at prolonging 
his rule by another. He has no other goals. He wants to keep and enjoy power.”

Vanetsian also said that his party and its opposition allies will name soon an 
interim prime minister which they believe should govern the country until the 
pre-term elections. He refused to say who that candidate will be.

“I can only say that someone who doesn’t have popular support cannot be prime 
minister,” he added.

Vanetsian spoke as he visited a Dashnaktsutyun leader, Gegham Manukian, and a 
former Constitutional Court judge, Kim Balayan, holding a hunger strike outside 
the main government building in Yerevan to demand Pashinian’s resignation.

Pashinian’s press secretary, Mane Gevorgian, emerged from the building to talk 
to Manukian and urge him to end the hunger strike.



Pashinian Sees Longer Russian Military Presence In Karabakh

        • Heghine Buniatian

NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Russian peacekeepers patrol a checkpoint on the road leading 
to the Dadivank Monastery in the Kalbajar region, 

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian suggested on Wednesday that Russian peacekeeping 
forces will likely remain in Nagorno-Karabakh for more than five years envisaged 
by a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the Armenian-Azerbaijani war on 
November 10.

The nearly 2,000 Russian soldiers are deployed along the current Karabakh “line 
of contact” and a road connecting the enclave to Armenia. The ceasefire 
agreement says that the peacekeeping operation can be repeatedly extended by 
five more years if Armenia and Azerbaijan do not object to that.

“Guarantees of security and stability in the region have to be created during 
the five-year period. But the Karabakh conflict is a prolonged one, so I do not 
believe that the presence of Russian peacekeepers will be confined to one 
five-year period,” Pashinian told the Russian TASS news agency in an interview.

“The five-year period is the beginning of a process and … the possibility of its 
automatic extension is envisaged,” he said. “The main thing at the moment is to 
ensure stability in Nagorno-Karabakh and the security of Nagorno-Karabakh’s 
citizens, and I think and hope that the Russian peacekeepers will manage to 
accomplish this mission.”


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- Armenian servicemen pose for a picture with Russian 
peacekeepers as they leave a region outside the town of Kalbajar, November 23, 
2020

The truce accord, which formalized significant territorial gains made by 
Azerbaijan during the six-week war, says nothing about Karabakh’s future status, 
the main bone of contention. This is expected to be a key focus of 
Armenian-Azerbaijani negotiations which Russia, France and the United States 
hope will resume soon.

Pashinian made clear that Armenia’s position on Karabakh’s internationally 
recognized status has not changed after the war. Successive Armenian governments 
have maintained that the disputed territory’s predominantly ethnic Armenian 
population should be able to fully exercise its right to self-determination.

By contrast, Azerbaijan insists on a full restoration of its control over 
Karabakh. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said earlier this month that Baku 
will not even agree to grant Karabakh an autonomous status.

Aliyev’s foreign minister, Jeyhun Bayramov, praised Russian mediation efforts in 
an interview with the French weekly Le Point published on Wednesday. Bayramov 
also emphasized the fact that the Russian peacekeepers were deployed to Karabakh 
with Baku’s consent.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


Les Arméniens du Karabagh en danger: un remède, l’autodétermination

Le Temps, Suisse
17 nov 2020

OPINION. La guerre du Karabagh est à la fois un conflit territorial et un conflit «ethnique». C’est une guerre pour l’existence d’un peuple qui lutte pour ne pas être chassé, broyé, détruit par deux Etats voisins. Plusieurs personnalités suisses inquiètes lancent une pétition


Depuis l’époque soviétique, les Arméniens du Karabagh ont toujours manifesté légalement et pacifiquement leur volonté collective d’indépendance. Face à la décision autoritaire en 1921 de rattacher ce territoire à la République d’Azerbaïdjan, alors même qu’il faisait partie intégrante de la République d’Arménie entre 1918 et 1920, reconnue internationalement, les Arméniens de la région ont lutté et dès que le régime soviétique s’est un peu ouvert à la fin des années 1980, le mouvement a pris de l’ampleur. En réaction à ce mouvement, Bakou a organisé des pogroms contre les Arméniens d’Azerbaïdjan en 1989-1990, puis lancé les hostilités et entraîné la première guerre, qui a duré de 1990 à 1994.

Lire aussi: Plongée dans les tranchées des séparatistes du Haut-Karabakh

Le matin du 27 septembre, alors qu'il dépense des milliards de dollars chaque année pour les armements les plus sophistiqués et les plus dévastateurs, l’Azerbaïdjan a ouvert les hostilités par une attaque puissante et coordonnée sur l’ensemble de la ligne de front. L’agression a été menée avec le soutien actif logistique, tactique et opérationnel de l’armée turque. L’objectif de cette agression était énoncé très clairement par le pouvoir de Bakou et d’Ankara: reconquérir le Karabagh par la force et en chasser les Arméniens.

Du 27 septembre au 9 novembre, les forces armées arméniennes ont résisté à l’assaut azéro-turc, tout en cédant du terrain surtout dans le sud et devant finalement se rendre à l’évidence de la supériorité de l’adversaire. Du 27 septembre au 9 novembre, les forces azéro-turques ont engagé des mercenaires djihadistes syriens, bombardé systématiquement les villes et les zones civiles avec des bombes à fragmentation et à sous-munitions, incendié les forêts avec des bombes à phosphore, décapité des prisonniers de guerre arméniens. Il n’y a aucun doute sur le projet de Bakou: détruire le Karabagh pour dissuader les Arméniens d’y retourner et écraser toute résistance. Le président azéri Aliyev avait déclaré à plusieurs reprises qu’il était prêt à un cessez-le-feu à condition que les Arméniens cessent le combat et se laissent donc envahir. Trois accords de cessez-le-feu ont été signés, tous les trois ont été violés par la partie azérie immédiatement après leur entrée en vigueur. La dernière déclaration, imposée par Poutine le 9 novembre 2020, a mis en place un cessez-le-feu à des conditions défavorables pour l’Arménie et en passant sous silence les questions relatives au statut futur du Haut-Karabagh.

Lire également: Haut-Karabakh: «Je me suis retourné, je n’avais plus de maison»

On a pu voir entre 1998 et 2005 l’attitude d’Aliyev à l’égard des Arméniens lorsqu’il a ordonné la destruction du grand cimetière arménien médiéval de Djoulfa, dont il ne reste aujourd’hui plus rien. Le bombardement de la cathédrale de Chouchi porte la marque de cette démarche visant l’annihilation de l’héritage culturel et spirituel de l’autre. La politique génocidaire consiste non seulement à éliminer les vivants, mais aussi à faire en sorte que les morts n’aient pas vécu.

Que conclure de cette situation? Qu’est-ce que cela nous donne à penser et à faire en tant que citoyens suisses? Deux choses principalement: la première est d’exprimer notre solidarité avec la population arménienne réfugiée, bombardée et menacée de nettoyage ethnique voire de génocide. En tant que Suisses, nous sommes sensibles aux droits et à la sécurité des peuples minoritaires et nous pensons que tous les peuples minoritaires ont droit à la sécurité. La seconde chose est d’appeler le Conseil fédéral et les Chambres fédérales à reconnaître officiellement le droit à l’autodétermination des Arméniens du Karabagh. Nous avons vu la campagne criminelle menée par Bakou et Ankara, et il est parfaitement clair que les Arméniens ne pourront pas être en sécurité sous la souveraineté de Bakou. Dans ces cas-là, il existe un concept qui a été appliqué au moins deux fois depuis la fin de la guerre froide, pour le Kosovo et pour Timor-Est: la sécession remède. Une population menacée de génocide ou de nettoyage ethnique par l’Etat dont elle dépend peut légitimement revendiquer en ultime recours son droit à l’autodétermination au nom de sa survie et de sa sécurité. Si un peuple a jamais été dans une telle situation, ce sont aujourd’hui les Arméniens du Karabagh.

Nous voyons au moins trois raisons pour la Suisse de reconnaître le droit à l’autodétermination des Arméniens du Karabagh: en raison de sa très longue expérience historique dans l’équilibre des minorités; au nom de sa haute idée de la souveraineté, tout enclavée qu’elle est au milieu de l’Europe; enfin, rappelons que la Suisse a été parmi les premiers Etats à reconnaître l’indépendance du Kosovo au nom de ces valeurs-là.

Ce serait la moindre des choses pour les Arméniens qui ont combattu seuls contre des milliers de terroristes, de mercenaires, contre l’impérialisme turc durant un mois et demi. Seule une reconnaissance internationale de leur droit à l’autodétermination peut préserver leur sécurité à l’avenir. Nous leur devons bien cela.

Pour soutenir le droit à l’autodétermination du Haut-Karabagh, nous vous invitons à signer la pétition sur https://www.change.org/RecognizeNagornoKarabakh


*Premiers signataires, liste arrêtée au 17 novembre, 15h00

  • Isabelle Moret, conseillère nationale
  • Marianne Streiff-Feller, conseillère nationale
  • Lisa Mazzone, conseillère aux Etats
  • Carlo Sommaruga, conseiller aux Etats
  • Stefan Müller-Altermatt, conseiller national
  • Stéfanie Prezioso, conseillère nationale
  • Fabienne Bugnon, ancienne conseillère nationale
  • Dominique de Buman, ancien conseiller national
  • Ueli Leuenberger, ancien conseiller national
  • Anne Mahrer, ancienne conseillère nationale
  • Jean Rossiaud, député au Grand Conseil
  • Sylvain Thévoz, député au Grand Conseil
  • Arnaud Moreillon, conseiller municipal
  • Charles Beer, ancien conseiller d’Etat
  • David Hiler, ancien conseiller d’Etat
  • Valentina Calzolari Bouvier, professeure d’études arméniennes, Unige
  • Erica Deuber Ziegler, historienne de l’art
  • Saskia Ditisheim, avocate, présidente de l’ONG Avocats sans frontières ASF
  • Philipp Egger, historien, Swiss South Caucasus Foundation
  • Frederic Esposito, politologue GSI-Unige
  • André Gazut, réalisateur
  • Leo Kaneman, fondateur/président d’honneur du FIFDH Genève et du HRFF Zurich
  • Massia Kaneman-Pougatch, Association Carte blanche pour les droits humains
  • Philippe Macasdar, comédien
  • Jean Perret, historien du cinéma, critique
  • Alfred de Zayas, expert en droits humains et droit international
  • Jean Ziegler, vice-président du comité consultatif du Conseil des droits de l’homme de l’ONU

Les Opinions publiées par Le Temps sont issues de personnalités qui s’expriment en leur nom propre. Elles ne représentent nullement la position du Temps.


Asbarez: Statement by Political Council of 17 Parties

November 16,  2020



Opposition protest at Yerevan’s Liberty Square on Nov. 11

Dear compatriots!

The authorities, which have taken the country on a defeatist path through an act of capitulation, continue to implement their treacherous agenda.

The government, which is in a state of apparent distress, is not only trying to divert the public’s attention from its treasonous actions, but is also laying the groundwork to ban opposition parties, by using autocratic means that violate the principles of the rule of law and democracy.

With the obvious intention of sowing negative perceptions in the people and shirking accountability for their own actions, a fiendish plot has been concocted claiming that members of certain opposition forces were plotting Pashinyan’s assassination. On November 14 the leader of the Homeland party, Major General Arthur Vanetsyan, was illegally arrested on that charge. Vahram Baghdasaryan, the former head of the Republican Party of Armenia parliamentary faction, Ashot Minasyan, a decorated colonel of the Armed Forces who was awarded the Combat Cross and who fought in three Artsakh wars and is the commander of the Sisian brigade, and Ashot Avagyan, a member of the same detachment and an ARF intellectual were also arrested on the same charges.

Illegal criminal persecutions are intensifying, as a result of which a large army of political prisoners is forming.

We have repeatedly emphasized that in our fight against the treasonous authorities that we are guided by the Constitution and rule of law, unlike the ruling party and the groups that support it. By projecting its sick behavior on its opponents, the government is making futile attempts to intimidate people without realizing that for every illegally imprisoned patriot, there are dozens of devoted activists waiting in the wings.

Dear compatriots, we call on you to raise your voice in defense of the political prisoners and to come together and immediately get rid of Pashinyan’s catastrophic regime through provisions laid out in the Constitution.

Our fight for the salvation of the homeland continues.

11/15/20
Political Council of 17 [Opposition] Parties

The announcement is open for others to join.

Second group of refugees escorted by Russian peacekeepers returns to Stepanakert

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 10:08,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. Russian peacekeepers have accompanied the second group of refugees back to Stepanakert City, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

475 people returned to the capital of Artsakh on board 19 buses. The convoy left Yerevan and was escorted by the Russian peacekeepers and military police, who ensured their security at the line of contact. 

Earlier a group of 250 evacuated citizens of Artsakh had returned to Stepanakert.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

US Congressional Armenian Caucus calls on President-elect Joe Biden to revise Karabakh policy

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 13:46, 13 November, 2020

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 13, ARMENPRESS. The US Congressional Armenian Caucus has called on Joe Biden to lead U.S. re-engagement in negotiations for a lasting settlement of the NK conflict through the OSCE Minsk Group and stop military aid to Azerbaijan.

Congressmen Pallone, Schiff and Speier – in a letter addressed to the US President-Elect – underscore: "The ceasefire that was reached this week does nothing to settle the underlying territorial dispute or ensure a lasting and equitable peace. The United States should work with the Minsk Group to define the future status of Nagorno Karabakh in a way that is consistent with the right of self-determination."

Below is the full text of the letter, as reported by ANCA.

“The Honorable Joe Biden

President Elect of the United States

Dear President Elect Biden:

Congratulations on your election as the 46th President of the United States. We look forward to working with you and your Administration on behalf of the American people.

We write today to bring to your immediate attention the urgent crisis occurring in Nagorno Karabakh, also known as Artsakh, where a war launched by Azerbaijan, with support from Turkey and foreign mercenaries, has caused a mass humanitarian disaster and disorder that could worsen in the months and years ahead.

Since Azerbaijan launched a massive offensive against Nagorno Karabakh on September 27, the situation has rapidly devolved. Three ceasefires negotiated by the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs were breached almost immediately. Azerbaijan’s forces, aided by Turkish-funded foreign mercenaries, have pressed forward, backed by drones and other weapons. This week, Azerbaijan overran the strategically important city of Shushi just ten miles from the Capitol, Stepanakert.

With the risk of a mass atrocity against thousands of Armenian civilians rising, Armenia agreed to a peace agreement brokered by Russia. This agreement has ended the fighting, at least for now, but at tremendous cost. Under the deal, Azerbaijan will hold territory in Nagorno Karabakh and be guaranteed passage to its enclave, Nakhichevan, through Armenia itself. Russian peacekeepers will be stationed in Nagorno Karabakh to prevent a renewal of hostilities.

While we welcome peace, we are deeply concerned about the immediate and long-term implications of this deal, which does nothing to settle the question of Nagorno Karabakh’s ultimate status. Further, we believe that this tragic outcome was avoidable had the United States and the international community acted decisively. We completely concur with your strong and clear statement from October 28, which provided that, “The administration must fully implement and not waive requirements under section 907 of the Freedom Support Act to stop the flow of military equipment to Azerbaijan, and call on Turkey and Russia to stop fueling the conflict with the supply of weapons and, in the case of Turkey, mercenaries.”

Sadly, in the absence of these and other actions that could have deterred Azerbaijan and Turkey from pressing their military advantage, they have pushed ahead to create new facts on the ground by force. For far too long, we have condoned the bellicose rhetoric and aggressive actions of Turkey and Azerbaijan, and the results are now devastatingly clear.

As you take office, you have the opportunity to forge a new policy towards the region, one that reorients our foreign policy towards supporting democracy, human rights, and the right to self -determination.

First, we believe your Administration should immediately end the waiver of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act with regard to Azerbaijan, and end military assistance to Azerbaijan under Section 333 which has totaled more than $100 million in the past two years. The United States should not be building the capacity of a nation that uses its military to attack its neighbors.

Second, the United States should reengage on negotiations for a lasting settlement through the OSCE Minsk Group. The ceasefire that was reached this week does nothing to settle the underlying territorial dispute or ensure a lasting and equitable peace. The United States should work with the Minsk Group to define the future status of Nagorno Karabakh in a way that is consistent with the right of self-determination.

Third, we need to recognize that the civilian population, infrastructure, and economy of Nagorno Karabakh have been severely impacted by Azerbaijani military attacks that included cluster munitions and repeated shelling. We must ensure that displaced Armenian civilians can return to their homes and are secure from future military threats by Azerbaijan and Turkey. This should include significant humanitarian aid and assistance in clearing unexploded munitions.

Fourth, the United States must engage in a thorough review of our policy towards Turkey, a nation that while a member of NATO has repeatedly acted against U.S. interests. In Syria, Nagorno Karabakh, Cyprus, and elsewhere, Turkey’s behavior has been destabilizing, and the once vibrant democracy within Turkey has been tragically diminished. As you know, Turkey has also tested Russian S-400 anti-aircraft missiles, in direct contravention of U.S. law. Our relationship with Turkey, long complex, has become increasingly untenable, and we believe developing a new policy that is consistent with our values and interests should be a high priority for your Administration.

Finally, the United States should seek to strengthen our ties to Armenia, a young democracy that has been shaken by the events of the past month. We request that your administration identify ways in which our economic, cultural, and other ties to Armenia can be improved, something that would be enormously beneficial to Armenia and to the large Armenian-American diaspora in the United States.

Thank you for your attention. We stand ready to work with you after your inauguration to craft a policy that is consistent with U.S. national security, universal principles of human rights, and our democratic values.

Sincerely,

[signed]

Adam B. Schiff

Frank Pallone Jr

Jackie Speier.”

Artsakh’s Shushi resists Azerbaijani strikes

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 10:01, 8 November, 2020

SHUSHI, NOVEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS. The city of Shushi of the Republic of Artsakh is resisting the strikes of the Azerbaijani side despite the numerous damages, the State Service for Emergency Situations of Artsakh reports.

“Despite the numerous destructions the city is resisting the adversary’s strikes”, the Service said.

Overnight November 7-8 the situation has been tense in Stepanakert as the capital of Artsakh has been reportedly hit with missiles by the Azerbaijani forces. 8 long-range missile strikes were fired at the city’s apartment buildings, residential districts, public facilities and other civilian infrastructure. According to preliminary reports, there are no casualties. In other communities, the relative calm situation has been maintained.

Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan