Azerbaijan bans international commission to conduct monitoring in monuments under its control

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 09:55,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 29, ARMENPRESS. A number of Armenian cultural and spiritual monuments have come under the Azerbaijani control as a result of the recent war unleashed by Azerbaijan against Artrsakh: these monuments are of special importance for Armenians.

Armenia’s ministry of education, science, culture and sport is cooperating with both the local and international organizations for their preservation, however, no tangible results have been achieved yet in this regard.

UNESCO has tried to send a commission of international observers to these sites, however, Azerbaijan refused to grant an access.

Armenian deputy minister of education, science, culture and sport Narine Khachaturyan told Armenpress that they are cooperating with the foreign ministry over the preservation of the monuments of Artsakh which have come under the Azerbaijani control. “We have formed a group with the Armenian specialists who live both in Armenia and abroad. Armenians, who are engaged in lobbying activities at international platforms, are involved in the group, but the main organization we are applying to is UNESCO. It was expected in December that UNESCO should have sent a commission of international observers to the territories of Artsakh which currently are under the control of Azerbaijan. The commission must have carried out a monitoring of several Armenian monuments. The delegates were from Russia, France, the United States and Italy, however, Azerbaijan banned their entry to these territories”, the deputy minister said.

She stated that Azerbaijan in general doesn’t explain its action. According to Khachaturyan, Azerbaijan absolutely doesn’t show any good will in general.

“The members of the commission are specialists. They are visiting a particular monument, then return back and again visit some times later to see whether that monument has been distorted or not. They are not a political commission, they are professional groups and can visit Artsakh to see what monuments they need to observe”, she said.

 

Reporting Angela Hambardzumyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

A group of YSMU lecturers to join nationwide strike called by opposition

Panorama, Armenia

Dec 21 2020

A group of lecturers and other employees of the Yerevan State Medical University (YSMU) will join the nationwide strike called by Armenia’s opposition forces on Tuesday, December 22, YSMU Chief of Staff Shushan Danielyan said on Monday.

“Several lecturers and employees at the Yerevan State Medical University have informed that they will join the December 22 strike. It’s their constitutional right, which no one is entitled to take away from them,” she wrote on Facebook.

“The most important thing is that the university is an apolitical structure. The university administration has never used and will never use administrative leverage against its employees,”  Danielyan said, adding people are free to exercise their rights. 



Families of troops who were besieged in two villages of Artsakh protest against authorities

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 12:43, 16 December, 2020

GYUMRI, DECEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS. The families of the servicemen who were besieged in Artsakh’s Hin Tagher and Khtsaberd villages and who are officially considered missing since the evening of December 15 are blocking the Gyumri-Yerevan highway, demanding authorities to reveal the circumstances around what happened to them. 

The Ministry of Defense of Artsakh announced on December 16 in a statement that in the evening of December 15, in unknown circumstances, it lost contact with the military personnel of several combat positions of the Defense Army deployed in the direction of the Hin Tagher and Khtsaberd villages of Hadrut.

However, the Azerbaijani media had published videos online showing Armenian troops whom Azerbaijani servicemen have taken captive. But the Armenian authorities have not yet confirmed the captivity of these troops.

However, the protesters say they have recognized their family members in these videos. Most of the troops are from the province of Shirak. Their families claim that the servicemen were besieged for three days before they were taken captive.

Other than blocking roads, the families of the missing troops had earlier blocked the Shirak Governor’s Office, demanding a meeting with Governor Tigran Petrosyan, who told them to address the Ministry of Defense. In turn, the families say the defense ministry is not providing any information.

Several parts of the Yerevan-Gyumri road are closed. The Gyumri-Bavra road is also blocked.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Azerbaijan’s cynical approach to Jews is demeaning to all

Washington Examiner
Dec 16 2020


Against the backdrop of this autumn’s Nagorno-Karabakh war, another battle raged in Washington: partisans to the conflict seeking to sway American Jewry to their cause. In their telling, Azerbaijan was an enlightened society tolerant of all while Armenia was a deeply anti-Semitic country that supported Adolf Hitler.

Countries that embrace religious freedom seldom need to brag about how good they are to their minorities. The Netherlands, for example, seldom brags about how happy its Jews, Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, or Buddhists are. To hold indigenous Jewish communities on a pedestal, as Turkey and Azerbaijan do, is an obnoxious strategy. Not only does it suggest Jews think singularly and interpret policy through a religious lens rather than through the interests of the country in which they are citizens, but the strategy also carries an implied threat: Religious tolerance will be fleeting if Washington or Jerusalem do not abide by Ankara or Baku’s wishes. It’s the mafioso equivalent of, “Nice place you’ve got here; it would be a shame if anything happened to it.”

Indeed, representatives of Turkey’s Jewish community simultaneously tell American visitors how happy they are under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s leadership but appear terrified of running afoul of the mercurial ruler and quietly ask for advice on securing visas. While Turkish Jews can honestly say Turkey has historically been kind to the community, the community has declined under Erdogan as Turkish Jews vote with their feet. The Turkish president, meanwhile, makes little secret of his view that Turkey’s Jews are hostages to his approval of Israel’s behavior. That the Azerbaijani government and its proxies now embrace the same strategy does not assuage concerns.

Indeed, while Azeri diplomats and officials tell visitors that Azerbaijan is home to 30,000 Jews, the true population is less than a third of that as many in the community chose to emigrate when they had the opportunity. Jews also have a long history in Armenia. Armenian officials sometimes tell visitors the country is home to 500 Jews, although both emigration and intermarriage have also taken a toll on this number, and the true figure may be only half that. Regardless, numbers of Jews are likewise a silly metric for supposed anti-Semitism. Consider the fact that the Mountain Jewish community of Azerbaijan aside, most of the Jews in Baku and its environs date their arrival just to the late 19th or early 20th centuries and tied their presence to certain industries: Does that mean that anti-Semitism declined during the influx and then increased after the Ashkenazi Jews again emigrated? Or, to question the logic in a different way, is Bhutan more anti-Semitic than Iran because Iran has more Jews? Is Canada more anti-Semitic than the United States?

 

Azerbaijan has historically been enlightened with regard to religious pluralism, and polls show anti-Semitic attitudes among Azerbaijanis to be less in most cases than Armenians. But there still have been anti-Semitic incidents in Azerbaijan in recent years, such as the desecration of a Jewish cemetery in Baku. Nadraran, a town just 15 miles from Baku, is famous for being a stronghold of Hezbollah, though this is certainly the exception rather than the rule in Azerbaijan today.

Of greater concern, however, should be Azerbaijan’s partnership and general submissiveness to an increasingly anti-Semitic Turkey. Diplomats say the Turkish Foreign Ministry demarches its Azeri counterparts to limit the number of Jews and Israelis at diplomatic functions. Azerbaijan’s recent utilization of Syrian mercenaries, some of whom previously worked for al Qaeda affiliates or the Islamic State, also undercut the notion of Azeri liberalism. To ally with and fight alongside those who would behead Christians and enslave non-Muslim minorities is hardly a sign that Jews will remain safe in Azerbaijan. Sometimes, lavish spreads in luxury hotels for visiting dignitaries are not enough to obscure reality.

There is an irony when Azeris accuse Armenians of sympathy toward Hitler when Azeri President Ilham Aliyev appears to harbor a fascination with the German dictator. Just as Hitler defined his enemy as Jews inside Germany, Jews outside Germany, and those who would support the Jews, Aliyev has made similar comments with regard to Armenians. Aliyev has also embraced eliminationist rhetoric. “Armenia, as a country, is of no importance. In fact, it is a colony, an outpost; a territory governed from abroad which was artificially created in ancient Azerbaijani lands,” he said in 2012. In 2018, the Azeri dictator declared, “Yerevan is our historic land and we, Azerbaijanis, must return to these Azerbaijani lands.” Just last week, Aliyev repeated his quest for further territorial conquest (Azeri lebensraum) defining Zangerzur, Sevan, and Yerevan as “Azerbaijani territories” while Erdogan bragged about his “Caucasus Islamic Army.”

Simply put, while it is true that religious freedom is the canary in the coal mine to determine the reality of a regime, trajectory also matters. Azeri and Armenian officials and their respective diasporas may castigate the other, but both societies have traditionally embraced tolerance toward their indigenous Jewish communities. What should be of greater concern, however, is the recent trajectory of Azerbaijan’s leadership not only to embrace rhetoric rooted in the Armenian genocide but also to welcome as a partner a Turkish leader whose obsession lays not with territorial dispute but rather with religious warfare, jihad, and deeply anti-Semitic conspiracies. Simply put, the days of Azerbaijan being an oasis for Jews is now in the past.

Michael Rubin (@Mrubin1971) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner's Beltway Confidential blog. He is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a former Pentagon official.

Belgium’s Chamber of Representatives condemns Azerbaijan’s aggression against Artsakh

Belgium’s Chamber of Representatives condemns Azerbaijan's aggression against Artsakh

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 12:14,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 18, ARMENPRESS. The Chamber of Representatives of Belgium adopted 130/12 a resolution condemning the Azeri attack on Artsakh, the Committee of Armenians of Belgium reported.

The resolution “condemns the resumption of military actions by Azerbaijan on September 27, 2020” and calls upon the government to take several actions to help the affected civilians, to reveal and bring to accountability those guilty for war crimes, maintain the ceasefire and lead the negotiations to a peace treaty that would respect the borders of Artsakh and its right to self determination.

The resolution also condemns Turkey’s destructive role in the war and demands Ankara to stop meddling militarily in the NK conflict and refrain from actions that destabilize the region.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenpress: Armenian FM to pay working visit to France on December 8-9

Armenian FM to pay working visit to France on December 8-9

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 21:44, 7 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, ARMEPRESS. Foreign Minister of Armenia Ara Ayvazian will pay a working visit to France on December 8-9.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MFA Armenia, FM Ayvazian will hold negotiations with French FM Jean-Yves Le Drian.

Ara Ayvazian is also scheduled to meet with Secretary General of La Francophonie Louise Mushikiwabo and UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay during the visit.

Putin lauds steady implementation of Karabakh armistice terms

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 13:57, 2 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. President of Russia Vladimir Putin has said that the Karabakh armistice terms are being steadily implemented and highlighted the provision of coordinated assistance to the people who suffered from the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

“Everyone is well aware that Russia’s active mediation efforts were needed in order to prevent bloodshed in the Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone and to achieve a complete cessation of hostilities and start a stabilization process,” Putin said at the online meeting of the CSTO Council.

“At the same time we followed the cornerstone agreements reached through the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship. Now the trilateral statement between Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan is steadily being implemented. Russian peacekeepers are deployed in the line of conflict and the Lachin corridor,” he said.

“It is important to provide aid to solve humanitarian problems related to the return of refugees, reconstruction of destroyed infrastructures and protection of cultural and religious monuments. Cooperating with Yerevan and Baku, the Russian side is already dealing with all these issues,” President Putin said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia’s first president toughly responds to Pashinyan’s post

Aysor, Armenia
Nov 30 2020

President Ter-Petrosyan considers it senseless to refer to “the mental anguish of a genocidal plague, first president’s spokesperson Arman Musinyan said responding to today’s publication of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

“He may say whatever he wants. He has no way to justify. The Armenian people will never forgive him,” Musinyan said.

Earlier the head of the second president’s office Viktor Soghomonyan responded to Pashinyan’s post, saying that “lie and falsification are inseparable part of Nikol.”

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French Minister of State Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne to visit Armenia

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 13:57,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 27, ARMENPRESS. French Minister of State attached to the Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs Jean-Baptiste Lemoyne will visit Armenia, the French Embassy in Armenia told ARMENPRESS.

During the two-day visit, Lemoyne will hand over the French humanitarian assistance to Armenia and also have meetings with the political leadership.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Armenia exports and imports drop 4,4% and 13,7%

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 09:18,

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 26, ARMENPRESS. The export volumes of goods and services from Armenia in January-September 2020 totaled 1 billion 828 million 122 thousand US dollars at current prices. The figure dropped 4,4% compared to 2019, while the import volumes (according to the country of export) totaled 3 billion 219 million 918,7 thousand dollars – a 13,7% drop.

According to the Statistics Committee, exports from Armenia to CIS countries in the reporting period totaled 494 million 424,9 thousand dollars (12% drop), and imports from these countries totaled 1 billion 332 million 696 thousand dollars (5,1% increase), from which the exports to EEU countries totaled 472 million 683,5 thousand dollars (11,8% drop), and imports totaled 1 billion 230 million 686 thousand dollars (6,7%).

Exports to European Union countries dropped 27,5% (325,9 million dollars), while imports stood at 662 million (16,1% drop).

Exports volumes from Armenia to other countries grew 11,9% and totaled 1 billion 7 million 774,5 thousand dollars, and imports dropped 26,8% – totaling 1 billion 225 million 213,8 thousand dollars.

The figures don’t include information on energy carriers.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan