Azerbaijan-Armenia: Navigating the mediation maze to the promising path to resolution

Nov 22 2023

Azerbaijan and Armenia have, unfortunately, shared the fate of being locked in a six-year-long deadly war that claimed the lives of thousands on both sides.

The final stages of the Soviet Union’s life cycle set the chain of events in motion, leading to territorial disputes in various areas of the Union. Azerbaijan and Armenia have, unfortunately, shared the fate of being locked in a six-year-long deadly war that claimed the lives of thousands on both sides. As the parties continued their fight for Karabakh, internationally recognized as a territory of Azerbaijan, both Baku and Yerevan could not conclude the war either by the military or by diplomatic means.

After the disintegration of the Soviet Union, conflicting sides found themselves in a challenging economic and humanitarian situation. Consequently, several mediation attempts have been launched to bring the conflict to its conclusion. One of the most promising mechanisms was the OSCE Minsk Group. The Minsk Group was initially formed as an international mediation effort to find a political solution to the Karabakh conflict. It was formed in 1992 by the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE), now known as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE). The efforts of the Minsk group were spearheaded by three co-chair nations: France, the United States of America, and Russia. Several other countries, including Germany, Belarus, Turkey, Italy, Finland, Sweden, Azerbaijan, and Armenia, enjoyed the rights of permanent membership. However, in reality, these states’ roles have been extremely limited to the point of being almost non-existent.

On paper, establishing a team of international mediators was essential to achieving sustainable peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia. It is expected that after prolonged fighting, conflicting sides cannot find a comprehensive settlement, and indeed, Azerbaijan and Armenia have not been in a position to negotiate on their own. Hence, the birth of the OSCE Minsk Group was a step in the right direction. In retrospect, it is possible to say that the moment for the mediation became ripe as both sides engaged in hostilities for a significant amount of time, including after the disintegration of the Soviet Union. Additionally, the ongoing fighting took its toll on both nations. The fact that the Minsk Group operated under the auspices of the OSCE gave it a high level of credibility necessary to deal with the challenge of unraveling the puzzle.

The best way to analyze the diplomatic efforts of the OSCE Minsk Group is to divide its lifetime into three stages: early stage (pre-2000), mid-stage (2000-2010), and later stage (2010-2020).

Early attempts of the Group revolved around curbing the potential for another escalation in the region and finding a political settlement to the conflict. Three separate deals were put forward in the late 90s. The first deal was introduced in July 1997. It was labeled a “comprehensive agreement” and aimed to achieve two key objectives: end the armed hostilities and find a political solution for settling the region’s status. Armenia rejected this proposal due to a lack of consensus between President Ter-Petrosyan and other members of the political establishment. In September 1997, OSCE Minsk Group came up with another deal known as the “step-by-step deal”, which was once again rejected by Armenia. This deal entailed gradually removing forces and the sequence of other steps, with an eventual deployment of multinational OSCE peacekeeping forces.

The final proposal arrived in November 1998, widely known as “the common state deal.” Implementing this approach would have given Karabakh some aspects of sovereignty, including influencing Azerbaijan’s foreign policy, own borders, police and security forces, national anthem, constitution, and other symbols. Such an agreement could not have been implemented in practice because it would mean that Azerbaijan would have had to relinquish its sovereignty over the region and endanger its security permanently. It was consequently rejected.

The mid-stage of the Minsk Group mediation efforts coincided with the introduction of the Madrid Principles at the 2007 OSCE ministerial conference in Madrid. In 2009, during the G8 summit in L’Aquila, the US President Obama, Russian President Medvedev, and French President Sarkozy released a joint statement on the Karabakh Conflict by outlining the Basic Principles (also known as modified Madrid Principles) for conflict resolution:

  • Return of the territories surrounding Karabakh to Azerbaijani control;
  • An interim status for Karabakh providing guarantees for security and self-governance;
  • A corridor linking Armenia to Karabakh;
  • Future determination of the final legal status of Karabakh through a legally binding _expression_ of will;
  • The right of all internally displaced persons and refugees to return to their former places of residence;
  • International security guarantees that would include a peacekeeping operation.

This set of criteria paved the way for a systemic approach to dealing with the conflict. These guidelines imply the willingness of the sides to move in the direction of compromise. This view was somewhat reinforced by the introduction of the “Kazan formula” in 2011, according to which Armenia would have to return five occupied regions around Karabakh to Azerbaijan, followed by the remaining two. In turn, Azerbaijan would lift the economic blockade against Armenia and sign the economic, humanitarian cooperation, and non-violence agreements. Additionally, peacekeepers would be deployed in the area. In this context, it is essential to note that the “Kazan Formula,” in contrast to the Basic Principles, would have infringed upon the interests of Azerbaijan because now Baku would receive only five regions immediately. From this perspective, the “Kazan Formula” was a significant step back in mediation from the perspective of Baku.

After 2011, the Group failed to achieve any objectives. Furthermore, the Minsk Group’s apparent inability to deliver results tarnished its reputation and credibility. The best description of the Group’s mediation efforts came from the retired US Ambassador Richard E. Hoagland: “We stayed in fivestar hotels where we were usually assigned suites on the executive floor that gave us access to a private dining room and full bar at no additional expense. We always sought out the best restaurants in the cities where we found ourselves. We lived well while we showed the OSCE flag and reminded Baku and Yerevan that the Minsk Group exists. But to be blunt, very, very little ever got accomplished.”

Things went from bad to worse before the start of the Second Karabakh war. The two statements by top officials in Armenia illustrated that the peace talks have approached the end of their life cycle. First, the former Defense Minister of Armenia, David Tonoyan, publicly announced a strategic approach of “New war for new territories,” aimed to “rid Armenia of this trench condition, the constant defensive state, and will add the units which may shift the military actions to the territory of the enemy.” The statement made in 2019 is considered as one of the causes of the Second Karabakh War in September 2020 between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Another statement that further damaged the likelihood of reaching an agreement was made by Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who claimed that Karabakh is the territory of Armenia.

If we look at the situation through the lens of Mr. Tonoyan’s statements and plans, it becomes understandable why Baku had reasons to doubt the security of its other territories and people. A principle of anarchy in international relations, i.e., the fact that there is no higher authority capable of refereeing contentious issues among the states, contributed to the perception of a security threat, which diminished the chances of finding a solution to a protracted conflict. Adding Mr. Pashinyan’s comment to a discussion will show that by 2020, peace talks were doomed. Consequently, Azerbaijan exercised the right for self-defense outlined in the Article 51 of the UN Charter.

After the conclusion of the 2020 war, several rounds of talks were held in the US, the EU, and Russia. These talks have not led to any tangible results. The failure of the post-war peace-building initiatives can be attributed to the unresolved fate of the separatists at that time. Armenia tried to secure special privileges for the region, a demand Azerbaijan was unwilling to accommodate.

The analysis of earlier mediation attempts between Baku and Yerevan, both before and after the Second war, indicates that the presence of a separatist entity and the irreconcilable views on its future were the key issues preventing the sides from ending a long-lasting conflict. It is essential to realize that from Yerevan’s point of view, the presence of a separatist regime on Azerbaijani territory was a way to gain a competitive advantage over Baku. Meanwhile, Baku saw the presence of such a regime as a legitimate security threat. Hence, Azerbaijan opposed the presence of separatist forces on its territory, while Armenia benefitted from directly controlling separatists. This dynamic led to a zero-sum game between the two South Caucasus states, making it challenging to conclude the hostilities between the sides. Therefore, while the separatist regime continued to exist, Baku and Yerevan had a very slim chance of reaching a comprehensive agreement on normalizing relations. This is particularly evident from the analysis of mediation efforts spearheaded by the OSCE Minsk Group. Despite its fall into obscurity, the Group retained a monopoly over the Karabakh conflict mediation for a significant amount of time. Every proposal failed because Baku and Yerevan could not synchronize their views on Karabakh’s future.

However, now there is a glimmer of hope for Azerbaijan and Armenia. Following the September 2023 events, the separatist regime operating in the internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan ceased to exist. Thus, the root causes preventing Baku and Yerevan from reaching an agreement on normalizing relations are now history.

Eliminating a separatist entity on the territory of Azerbaijan enables the sides to search for a mutually beneficial solution and sign a peace document. From the mediation perspective, this development is the single most significant transformation that has taken place in the conflict. As things stand today, the risk-reward ratio shifted toward finding a solution because continuing hostilities carries more risks than potential rewards.

Peace treaty is the best way to guarantee security

After all, Armenia is more worried about its security. Looking at the balance of power dynamic between Baku and Yerevan paints a grim picture for Armenia. The population of Armenia stands roughly at 3 million people, while the Azerbaijani population exceeds 10 million inhabitants. The gross domestic product of Azerbaijan surpasses that of Armenia by more than threefold. Finally, Baku enjoys more substantial relations with other states.

Meanwhile, up until recently, Armenia was heavily reliant on Russia for security, and Moscow was the sole diplomatic partner of Yerevan. Considering the radical policy shift of Armenia and its subsequent attempts to foster ties with other states, it is unclear whether Yerevan will be able to achieve its foreign policy objectives in short order. Furthermore, at this point, there are serious reasons to consider that Armenia may become a metaphorical battlefield for dominance between the West and Russia or Iran. Therefore, an unresolved conflict with Azerbaijan will further challenge Armenia’s position, and contribute to the security concerns of Yerevan.

Finally, in the context of a possible peace agreement with Azerbaijan, Yerevan will find rapprochement with Baku economically beneficial. A peace deal between Baku and Yerevan will open opportunities for Armenia to join several international projects, including the Middle Corridor, which will further strengthen Armenian security via the mechanism of interdependence.

Signing a peace deal is the solution to the security competition that plagues the South Caucasus. Otherwise, the conflict dynamic between Baku and Yerevan may emerge once again. In principle, there is no alternative to the formal peace agreement between Baku and Yerevan. After all, this is how every conflict is supposed to end.

Statement: Rep. Schiff on CitiGroup’s illegal discriminatory practices targeting Armenian Americans

Nov 9 2023


Washington, D.C.— Today, Representative Adam Schiff (D-Calif) issued the following statement on the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) announcing a $25.9 million fine against Citibank for illegally discriminating against Armenian American credit card applicants.

Schiff’s 30th Congressional District, which includes the cities of Burbank and Glendale, is home to the largest Armenian diaspora outside of Armenia. He serves as Vice Chair of the Congressional Armenian Caucus.

“It is shameful that Citibank deliberately discriminated against Armenian Americans, denying credit to people on the basis of their last names and ethnic origin. All personnel responsible for participating in and then attempting to cover up this unlawful practice should be terminated from the company.

“While I welcome the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s action, I’m committed to holding banks and other institutions accountable for any such actions. We must ensure that overt discrimination like this never happens again,” said Representative Schiff, Vice Chair of the Armenian Congressional Caucus.

Guidance for Affected Consumers

Consumers who applied for a Citi Retail Services Credit Card between January 1, 2015, and December 31, 2021, and are identified as having been denied the credit card based on national origin discrimination are eligible for redress. Consumers can submit complaints about financial products and services by visiting the CFPB’s website or by calling (855) 411-CFPB (2372).

Background

Schiff has long represented the largest Armenian diaspora community in the country and serves as Vice Chair of the Congressional Armenian Caucus. For decades, he has fought side-by-side with his Armenian American constituents for the recognition of their history, as survivors of the first genocide of the 20th century, and for the protection of their future and the futures of their families and loved ones working for freedom abroad.


https://schiff.house.gov/news/press-releases/statement-rep-schiff-on-citigroups-illegal-discriminatory-practices-targeting-armenian-americans

Africa, Armenia new export destinations for Iranian wires and cables

 TEHRAN TIMES 
Nov 7 2023

TEHRAN – Tabriz Wire and Cable Company – the only producer of wires and cables in Iran – has found new export destinations for its products in Africa and Armenia.

Known as SIMCAT, the company’s exports surged by 410 percent in the first six months of the current Iranian calendar year that started on March 21, compared to the same period last year.

SIMCAT exported 1,348,796 meters of wires and cables worth 1,499,449 million rials in the first half of the past year, but the exports surged to 5,536,739 meters valued at 3,548,428 million rials in the current year.

Along with Africa and Armenia, Turkey, Iraq, Afghanistan, Georgia, and Azerbaijan are among the destinations for SIMCAT exports.

The company has an annual capacity for producing 35,000 tons of wires and cables meeting the world’s standards.

The products are used in mining, cement, steel, chemicals, oil, gas, petrochemicals, maritime, water, and electricity, as well as food and agriculture industries.

https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/491071/Africa-Armenia-new-export-destinations-for-Iranian-wires-and

Armed Israeli settlers attempt to seize Armenian Patriarchate property in Jerusalem’s Armenian Quarter

Nov 7 2023
Armed Israeli settlers attempt to seize Armenian Patriarchate property in Jerusalem's Armenian Quarter
Ibrahim Husseini
Jerusalem

Armed Israeli settlers stormed the Armenian Quarter in occupied East Jerusalem on Sunday, 5 November, in an effort to lay a hand on a piece of land following the signing of a murky deal between the Jerusalem Arminian Patriarchate and Xana Capital, owned by Jewish Australian investor Danny Rubenstein. 

Rubenstein carries an Israeli passport and also goes by the name Danny Rothman. 

News of the deal first emerged in 2021. It was contested by a group of Armenian priests who alleged it was done illegally without ratification by the Synod and the General Assembly.

Hagop Djernazian, a resident of the Armenian community and a leading activist against the land deal in question, told The New Arab, "We are fighting for our existence, for the status quo of Jerusalem, we have to maintain a Christian Armenian presence in Jerusalem". 

The deal reportedly pertains to 11.5 dunams in the Armenian Quarter, which amounts to 25 per cent of the total size of the Armenian Quarter in Jerusalem's Old City. It includes a vast tract of land currently used as a parking lot, a seminary, and five residential homes. 

Last month, the Armenian Patriarchate informed Xana Capital it was withdrawing from the deal. The deal's cancellation came following pressure from the local Armenian community and Areminians worldwide. 

In May of this year, the Petra news agency reported that the Palestinian Authority (PA) and Jordan suspended Nourhan Manougian from his role as the Patriarch of the Armenian Church in Jerusalem because he "mishandl[ed] culturally and historically significant Christian properties in Jerusalem's Armenian Quarter". 

Under a long-established tradition that has been upheld for centuries, senior church appointments in the Holy Land usually necessitate the approval of the authorities governing the land. Presently, these authorities are Israel, the Palestinian Authority and Jordan.

In a statement released on 6 November, the Armenian Patriarchate said that the party with whom it had signed the contract responded to the cancellation of the deal with "demolition of walls, demolition of the parking lot and scrapping of asphalt pavements". 

According to Hagop Djernazian, following the deal cancellation, about 15 armed settlers broke into the Armenian Quarter and proceeded to knock parts of a stone wall. They also partially destroyed asphalt ground. 

Soon after, several Armenian community members assembled and prevented the settlers from carrying out further damage to the property. 

Activists Hagop Djernazian (L) and Setrag Balian (R) are challenging a real estate deal in a sensitive area in occupied East Jerusalem between the Armenian Patriarch and an Israeli settler.
[Ibrahim Husseini/TNA]

Videos and images show the settlers armed with rifles accompanied by attack dogs rowing with the local community members.

"Danny hired the settlers from the Jewish Quarter", Djernazian told The New Arab

After several hours of tense arguments, the settlers dispersed.

Djernazian told TNA that community members had organised to guard the property. 

Djernazian estimates that around 1,000 people of Armenian descent reside in occupied East Jerusalem. 

The Arminian Jerusalem Patriarchate isn't the only Christian Church to become embroiled in questionable real estate deals with Israeli settlers in occupied East Jerusalem. 

The New Imperial Hotel, located in Jaffa Gate and long owned by the Greek Orthodox Church, was sold in 2004 to a right-wing Israeli group known as Ateret Cohanim. The Greek Orthodox Church claims the purchase of the properties was fraudulent and has challenged the deal's legality. However, the courts have ruled in favour of the settlers. 

The New Imperial Hotel is a minute's walk from the property leased to Rubnestein in the Armenian Quarter. Both properties are within a minute's walk of the Holy Sepulchre, the Christian Quarter. 

"Apart from Armenia, no one needs the Crossroads of Peace." Opinion from Yerevan

Nov 2 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Crossroads of Peace” Project

A project called “Crossroads of Peace” is being discussed in expert circles in Armenia. As Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan says, its essence is to utilize regional communications, roads and railroads between Armenia, Turkey, Azerbaijan and Iran. On October 26, he presented this project and its principles in detail at the Silk Road international conference held in Tbilisi.

And now, at a regular session of the government, the Prime Minister said that a separate subdivision has been created under the National Security Service of Armenia to ensure the security of communications passing through Armenia, the movement of vehicles and people through them.

Political observer Armen Baghdasaryan says that such a “Crossroads of Peace”, which Pashinyan envisions, is not needed in the region by anyone but Armenia.


  • NK Armenians face choice of Armenian citizenship or refugee status
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According to the Armenian Prime Minister, the project will be extremely useful to all countries in the region:

“The railroads running through the south and north of Armenia have not been functioning regionally for thirty years, nor have the numerous highways connecting east and west been functioning. While reopening these roads would be a short and efficient both rail and road route connecting the Caspian Sea to the Mediterranean Sea.”

He believes that rail and road links could also become effective in connecting the Persian Gulf to the Black Sea, including Georgian ports.

Pashinyan emphasizes that the idea of a “Crossroads of Peace” is an integral part of the peace agenda his government intends to implement in the region, and explains that without roads it will be very difficult to build peace:

“Roads connect not only countries and cities, but also people. And therefore, if busy, active roads are a sign of cooperation, peace, and success, then closed roads indicate the presence of problems.”

The Armenian Prime Minister promised to officially present the essence of the project and its principles to the governments of the regional countries. He hopes that “by joint efforts, including investor activity” it will be realized.

1. All infrastructure, including roads, railroads, air routes, pipelines, cables, power lines, operate under the sovereignty and jurisdiction of the countries through which they pass.

2. Each country, through its state institutions, shall exercise border and customs control on its territory and ensure the security of infrastructure, including the passage of goods, vehicles and people through them.

3. All infrastructure may be used for both international and domestic transportation.

4. All countries use each other’s infrastructure on an equal and reciprocal basis. Certain simplifications of border and customs control procedures may be realized on the basis of equality and reciprocity.

Political observer Armen Baghdasaryan believes that “Pashinyan’s promises about the era of peace and the “Crossroads of Peace” are beautiful, but he does not say what price Armenia will have to pay for it” and that these ideas are “illusions and empty promises with which they are trying to deceive the people.”

“The probability of achieving peace is zero until the issue of Syunik [Armenia’s southern region bordering Azerbaijan] is resolved. Azerbaijan’s appetites are bigger than the road [the so-called “Zangezur corridor” demanded by Baku through Armenian territory to connect with Nakhichevan]. They do not need such a road as we imagine. We realize that Nakhichevan is not in a blockade – it has a connection with Azerbaijan both through the territory of Iran and Turkey. There is no such problem.”

According to the observer, Only Armenia needs this project, and other countries in the region will be against it:

“Georgia doesn’t need it more than others, because it has a monopoly on West-East roads. If the crossroads are activated, Georgia will lose half of its huge profits, as these will pass through Armenian territory.”

Iran, Baghdasaryan explains, does not need this project, as it cannot transport cargo secretly like Turkey and Azerbaijan. And Turkey and Azerbaijan will not allow the unblocking of roads and development of Armenia as it is not in their interests. Besides, the expert is convinced that these two countries “need the whole of Syunik”, not a road to connect with Nakhichevan.

As for Russia, it needs the “Crossroads of Peace” only on one condition – if it is the Russia that controls these roads.

“And this is not at all what Pashinyan envisioned. In short, 5 out of 6 countries in the region are against the “Crossroads of Peace”. Consequently, what the Armenian Prime Minister imagines will not happen, whether we want it or not,” he concludes.

https://jam-news.net/crossroads-of-peace-project-of-the-government-of-armenia/

Approximately 200 square kilometers of Armenian territory is under Azeri control – FM

 11:50, 3 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 3, ARMENPRESS. Approximately 200 square kilometers of Armenian territory is under Azeri control, FM Ararat Mirzoyan has said.

“There are territories of Armenia that have been under Azerbaijani control even since the 1990s. But we also have new examples, I am aware of such approximately 200 square kilometers of territory of Armenia, which is now under the control of Azerbaijani forces,” Mirzoyan told lawmakers at a parliamentary committee discussion when asked on the matter.

State Dept.’s Chollet to visit Israel

 18:41, 1 November 2023

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 1, ARMENPRESS. U.S. Counselor of the Department of State Derek Chollet is set to travel to Israel on Wednesday "to reaffirm the United States’ commitment to stand in solidarity with Israel and support its right to defend itself, consistent with international humanitarian law," according to the State Department.

According to the statement, after visiting Israel, the U.S. Counselor of the Department of State will head to Jordan and Turkey.

Peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan is possible if mutual recognition of territorial integrity is unequivocal – FM

 12:58,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 27, ARMENPRESS. A peace treaty is possible between Armenia and Azerbaijan if the mutual recognition of territorial integrity is unequivocal and delimitation of borders is implemented, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said on Friday during a joint press conference with his Hungarian counterpart Péter Szijjártó in Yerevan.

“Ruling out the use of force and xenophobic policy is vital for lasting and dignified peace in the South Caucasus for our people, because we’ve already witnessed their manifestation, and we’ve raised this numerously. Just one month ago the policy of ethnic cleansing was completed in Nagorno-Karabakh, over 100,000 Armenians were forcibly displaced from Nagorno-Karabakh, they left their historical homeland and have now found shelter in Armenia as refugees,” FM Mirzoyan said.

Lasting peace in the region requires commitment, effective steps and abandoning of maximalist aspirations by all countries of the region, the Armenian FM said.

“It is possible to reach sustainable peace, the signing of a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan if the recognition of territorial integrity of Armenia and Azerbaijan is unequivocal and border delimitation between the two countries is implemented based on the 1991 Alma-Ata Declaration and the most recent USSR maps,” Mirzoyan said, noting that this is outlined in the October 5 Granada statement. Armenia expects effective support from international partners, Mirzoyan said.

He highlighted addressing the rights of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh for the possibility of developing an atmosphere of mutual trust, as well as addressing the issue of preserving the rich Armenian heritage in Nagorno-Karabakh.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 10/25/2023

                                        Wednesday, 


Armenian Citizenship Of Karabakh Refugees Called Into Question

        • Susan Badalian

Armenia - Refugees from Nagorno Karabakh wait at a Karabakh office in Yerevan, 
October 18, 2023.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian indicated on Wednesday that his government does 
not regard refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh’s as Armenian citizens despite the 
fact that virtually all of them hold Armenian passports.

Pashinian said that the government will therefore grant the more than 100,000 
Karabakh Armenians, who fled their homeland after last month’s Azerbaijani 
military offensive, “temporary protection” formalizing their status of refugees. 
This, he said, will increase “the possibilities of protecting their rights in 
the local and international arenas.”

“Right after that decision, our sisters and brothers from Nagorno-Karabakh will 
have an opportunity to apply for Armenian citizenship and we will solve that 
issue in the fastest possible way,” he added during the government’s 
question-and-answer session in the parliament.

An Armenian law on refugees stipulates that only foreign nationals and stateless 
persons are eligible for the “temporary protection status.”

Many of some 20,000 other Karabakh residents who took refuge in Armenia prior to 
the September mass exodus have sought such a status for almost three years in 
hopes of receiving regular government aid. They say government officials in 
Yerevan have repeatedly told them that they do qualify because of being citizens 
of Armenia.

“If they have Armenian passports, it means they are citizens of Armenia,” the 
head of the government’s Migration Service insisted recently.

Ara Ghazarian, an international law expert, made the same point when he spoke to 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service hours before Pashinian’s announcement. Ghazarian said 
that under the law in question, the displaced Karabakh Armenians are formally 
not refugees.

Pashinian’s government sparked controversy earlier this month when it refused to 
pay Karabakh’s public sector salaries, pensions and other benefits. The decision 
caused discontent among civil servants, teachers, military and security 
personnel, pensioners and other socially vulnerable people who made up a large 
part of Karabakh’s population. They will not be even paid for September.

Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Khachatrian said on Monday that these and other 
refugees will instead receive 50,000 drams ($125) each in November and December 
in addition to 100,000 drams given to them this month.

“I had a monthly salary of 150,000 drams, plus my pension,” complained Seda 
Sargsian, who worked as an accountant in Karabakh’s northern Martakert district 
before fleeing to Armenia with her family.

“We don’t want alms,” said another Karabakh woman. “My family has lost a member 
during each war [with Azerbaijan.]”




Canada Opens Embassy In Armenia

        • Astghik Bedevian

Armenia - Canada's Foreign Minister Melanie Joly inaugurates the Canadian 
Embassy in Yerevan, .


Foreign Minister Melanie Joly reaffirmed Canada’s support for Armenia’s 
territorial integrity when she visited Yerevan and inaugurated the Canadian 
Embassy there on Wednesday.

Joly hoisted a Canadian flag outside an office building in the Armenian capital 
that will house the embassy. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan also 
attended the ceremony.

The Canadian government announced its decision to open the embassy in June 2022. 
It said it wants to deepen Canadian-Armenia relations in view of a “profound 
geopolitical shift” in the world resulting from the Russian invasion of Ukraine. 
It said the diplomatic presence in Armenia as well as four Eastern European 
states will help Ottawa “counter Russia’s destabilizing activities.” Russia 
denounced that explanation, saying that it is indicative of the West’s “arrogant 
attitude towards other countries and peoples.”

Mirzoyan as well as Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian welcomed the opening of the 
Canadian mission during their talks with Joly. Pashinian described it as a 
“remarkable event for our bilateral relations.

“I must note with satisfaction that the relationship between Armenia and Canada 
is based on common values such as democracy, human rights and the rule of law,” 
Mirzoyan said, for his part.

The Armenian leaders also praised the Canadian government’s recent decision to 
join a monitoring mission launched by the European Union along Armenia’s border 
with Azerbaijan in February. Ottawa said in July that two Canadian experts will 
be sent to the South Caucasus country in the coming months to act as a 
“third-party contributor to the mission.”

Armenia - Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan and his Canadian counterpart Melanie 
Joly meet in Yerevan, .

“Canada calls for the full respect of the territorial integrity of Armenia and 
reaffirms the importance of strict adherence to the principle of non-use of 
force or threat of it,” Joly told a joint news conference with Mirzoyan earlier 
on Wednesday.

Joly alluded to the risk of an Azerbaijani invasion of Armenia which Armenian 
officials as well as some analysts believe increased after Azerbaijan’s 
September 19-20 military offensive in Karabakh. She did not rule out the 
possibility of Canadian sanctions against Baku in the event of the invasion.

“When it comes to sanctions … I have said that everything is on the table,” 
stressed the top Canadian diplomat.

Joly also reiterated Canada’s condemnation of the Azerbaijani offensive which 
forced Karabakh’s virtually entire Armenian population to flee to Armenia. Baku 
must respect “the right to return of the recently displaced Armenians from 
Nagorno-Karabakh,” she said, adding that Ottawa has approved additional 
humanitarian aid to those refugees.

Just days after the outbreak of the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war in Karabakh, 
Canada suspended the export of drone technology to Turkey. It banned such 
exports altogether in 2021 after investigating and confirming reports that 
Turkish-manufactured Bayraktar TB2 combat drones, heavily used by the 
Azerbaijani army, are equipped with imaging and targeting systems made by a 
Canada-based firm. Ankara criticized the embargo and urged the Canadian 
government to reconsider it.




Fresh Armenian-Azeri Summit ‘Delayed’ Again

        • Anush Mkrtchian

Belgium - European Council President Charles Michel hosts talks between the 
leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Brussels, May 14, 2023.


The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan will not meet in Brussels before the end 
of this month for fresh talks that were due to be hosted by the European Union’s 
top official, it was confirmed on Wednesday.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
had been scheduled to meet, together with European Council President Charles 
Michel and the leaders of Germany and France, on the fringes of the EU’s October 
5 summit in Granada, Spain. However, Aliyev withdrew from the talks at the last 
minute, citing pro-Armenian statements made by French officials. Michel said 
afterwards that the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders will likely hold a 
trilateral meeting with him in Brussels later in October.

“We will not have a meeting by the end of October,” Toivo Klaar, the EU’s 
special envoy to the South Caucasus, told a conference in Yerevan.

Speaking via video link from Brussels, Klaar suggested that this is a “slight 
delay, rather than anything else.” There was not have enough time to organize 
the summit, he said, adding that the trilateral meeting should take place soon. 
But he gave no possible dates.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan said, meanwhile, that the two leaders 
will not meet in the coming days because Aliyev “did not find the time” to fly 
to Brussels.

“I hope that the problem was indeed to do with concrete dates and that a new 
date for the meeting will be agreed upon soon,” he said. “Armenia is ready to 
participate in that meeting. We remain committed to our peace agenda.”

“We have received no new proposals yet regarding [meeting] dates,” Mirzoyan 
added during a news conference.

Spain - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian meets German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and 
French President Emmanuel Macron in Granada, October 5, 2023.

Despite last month’s Azerbaijani military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh and 
Baku’s resulting takeover of the region, Pashinian hoped to sign a framework 
peace deal with Aliyev at Granada. The document would lay out the key parameters 
of an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty discussed since the beginning of last 
year. One of the main sticking points in those talks has been a mechanism for 
delimiting the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

In a joint statement with Pashinian issued in Granada, Michel, French President 
Emmanuel and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz effectively backed the idea of using 
a 1975 Soviet military map for the border delimitation, which is advanced by 
Armenia. Azerbaijan continues to oppose it.

Klaar said that although the conflicting sides are “moving slowly” towards a 
peace accord, they will likely sign it in the near future.

Russia has been very critical of the EU mediation, saying that it is part of the 
West’s efforts to drive Moscow out of the South Caucasus. Yerevan appears to 
prefer Western peace efforts now amid a continuing deterioration of 
Russian-Armenian relations.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held talks with his Azerbaijani 
counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov but not Mirzoyan on the sidelines of a multilateral 
meeting of the top diplomats of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Russia and Turkey 
held in Tehran on Monday. Lavrov also phoned Bayramov the following day. 
According to the Russian Foreign Ministry, the two men “reaffirmed the need to 
step up efforts to normalize relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan” on the 
basis of agreements brokered by Moscow.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
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UN Chief urges ceasefire to end Gaza’s ‘godawful nightmare’

 14:55,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 21, ARMENPRESS. UN chief Antonio Guterres pleaded Saturday for a "humanitarian ceasefire" in the war between Israel and Gaza's Hamas, demanding global "action to end this godawful nightmare", AFP reports.

Addressing a peace summit in Cairo as the war raged into its third week, Guterres said Gaza was living through "a humanitarian catastrophe" with thousands dead and more than a million people displaced.

His remarks came just hours after a first contingent of aid trucks rumbled into southern Gaza, which Guterres said needed to be rapidly scaled up, with "much more" help sent through.

The Palestinians need "a continuous delivery of aid to Gaza at the scale that is needed", he told the Cairo "Summit for Peace" which was attended by many Arab leaders.

The UN Secretary General called for the release of all hostages and for a two-state solution to be reached. He said Hamas’s “reprehensible assault” on Israel “can never justify the collective punishment of the Palestinian people.”