Asbarez: Russia Urges Baku to ‘Unblock Lachin Corridor’

Azerbaijani forces deploy an armored vehicle to completely block the Lachin Corridor on June 20


Russia on Wednesday called on Baku to unblock the Lachin Corridor and “not to make the population of Karabakh a hostage to political differences with Yerevan.”

This terse call to Baku was made by Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova, who also told reporters on Wednesday that Moscow is continuing to work through Russian peacekeepers for the complete unblocking of the Lachin Corridor and expects that the Armenian and Azerbaijani sides will fulfill all the obligations assumed by the tripartite agreement.

She emphasized that the November 9, 2020 agreement “is as relevant as it was before.”

Yet during the same press briefing, Zakharova said that an attempt by Azerbaijani forces to breach Armenia’s sovereign territory on June 15 and plant a flag there was a result of the absence of border demarcation between the two countries.

“The Lachin Corridor incident is related to the general problem of the absence of a demarcated Armenian-Azerbaijani border. The Russian side has repeatedly called on the effective work of the bilateral commission with the advisory support of the Russian Federation. We are ready to help in demarcation and determining the border, which has become another bone of contention between the parties,” Zakharova said.

“The peacekeepers are working closely with the parties to settle the situation,” she added, saying that any accusation against the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Karabakh is groundless and warned against media reports the undermine their efforts.
Zakharova also seemed to accuse Armenia of abandoning efforts led by Moscow to resolve the conflict, referring to processes put in place through agreements between the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan.

“The interruption of Yerevan’s activities has a negative impact on the situation in the region and leads to the aggravation of the situation on the ground,” Zakharova said.

She also commented on Yerevan’s concerns regarding the opening of a Turkish consulate in occupied Shushi, which was announced by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey after when he visited Azerbaijan.

“The issue of opening consulates anywhere, particularly in Shushi, remains a topic of bilateral relations. In this case, between Baku and Ankara,” Zakharova said. “At the same time, we understand the sensitivity of the issue for Yerevan. In our contacts, we emphasize the need to consider each other’s interests and the importance of the process of normalization of both Armenian-Azerbaijani and Armenian-Turkish relations.”

The SEDE Delegation joined EUMA for a patrol near Lachin corridor for better understanding of the security situation

 21.06.2023
Goris, 21.06.2023 – Today, the delegates of the Subcommittee on Security and Defence (SEDE) of the European Parliament visited the operational hub of European Mission in Armenia (EUMA) in Goris to get better understanding of the security situation in border areas between Armenia and Azerbaijan on the ground. Following the briefing by Head of EU Mission in Armenia Markus Ritter, the delegation led by Ms Nathalie Loiseau and the Ambassador to EU Delegation in Armenia Andrea Wiktorin joined EUMA for a patrol near Hakari bridge on the Armenian side, leading to Lachin corridor.

Markus Ritter: EUMA acts in a way as a spotlight of the international community

As part of the welcome speech, Markus Ritter highlighted that EU Mission in Armenia “acts in a way as a spotlight of the international community on incidents and ceasefire violations in Armenian-Azerbaijani border areas.” At the end of the visit, Nathalie Loiseau expressed support for EUMA as well as “for the peace aspiration in the region,” and thanked all the involved parties for organising the visit.

Nathalie Loiseau: European Parliament supports EUMA as well as the peace aspiration in the region.

Besides the operations of newly launched EU Mission in Armenia, the purpose of the three-day long visit of the SEDE delegation was to assess the security situation in Armenia as well as the normalization process between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

What is SEDE?

The Subcommittee on Security and Defence (SEDE) is a subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Affairs of the European Parliament. It is responsible for the European security and defence policy (ESDP), including institutions, capabilities and operations, as well as developing relations with strategic partners and third countries. During the Ninth European Parliament (2019–2024), the committee has 30 members and is chaired by Nathalie Loiseau from France. More information on activities of the subcommittee can be found here.

What is EU Mission in Armenia?

EUMA is a non-armed, civilian and non-executive mission with the aim to observe and report to the EU on the security situation on the ground. The mission is deployed on the Armenian side of the international border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, with Headquarters in Yeghegnadzor, planned six operational hubs (also called Forward Operating Bases) and a small Support and Liaison office in Yerevan.

Contact information

Press and Public Information Office

[email protected]

https://www.eeas.europa.eu/euma/sede-delegation-joined-euma-patrol-near-lachin-corridor-better-understanding-security_en

Hundreds of Pakistanis dead in Mediterranean migrant boat disaster

 10:47,

YEREVAN, JUNE 19, ARMENPRESS. More than 300 Pakistani nationals have been killed in the June 14 sinking of a overcrowded fishing trawler off the coast of Greece, CNN reported citing a statement by a Pakistani official.

The chairman of Pakistan’s Senate, Muhammad Sadiq Sanjrani, disclosed the numbers in a statement Sunday. 

Greek authorities have yet to confirm Pakistan’s death toll.

About 750 men, women and children were on the packed boat when it capsized last week, the United Nations Migration Agency (IOM) said, killing hundreds and making the tragedy one of the worst in the Mediterranean Sea, according to the EU Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson.

Nagorno-Karabakh not under blockade, Azerbaijan insists

POLITICO

Statistics compiled by Baku’s border service and seen by POLITICO record a total of 1,927 people passing through the checkpoint between Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh since it opened in April, while more than a hundred cargo vehicles have been waved through in each direction.

The EU and U.S. have repeatedly warned that the installation of the checkpoint could trigger a “humanitarian crisis” in the war-torn region, as tensions flare across the former Soviet Union.

“As is demonstrated by free and unimpeded passage of Armenian residents, allegations the checkpoint prevents movement and is a ‘blockade’ are completely baseless,” said Aykhan Hajizade, spokesman for Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry.

Inside Azerbaijan’s internationally recognized borders, the area has been controlled by its Armenian population since a war that followed the collapse of the USSR. In 2020, Baku launched an offensive to take back swathes of land, leaving the region’s estimated 100,000 residents connected to Armenia by a sole highway, known as the Lachin corridor.

A Moscow-brokered cease-fire saw Russian peacekeepers deployed to oversee the road. However, Baku claims Armenia was using it to bring in weaponry and export resources. Last December, Azerbaijani activists, backed by the government, staged a sit-in on the Lachin corridor, preventing civilian traffic from passing.

Since then, Nagorno-Karabakh’s Armenians have been dependent on Russian peacekeeper convoys and Red Cross aid workers to bring in supplies. The demonstrations ended in April after Azerbaijan installed the border post on the corridor.

Many of those using the checkpoint appear to have done so under escort by Russian peacekeepers or with the Red Cross. According to Yerevan, three people with registered addresses inside Armenia have been denied entry.

However, according to Tigran Grigoryan, a political analyst from Nagorno-Karabakh who heads Yerevan’s Regional Center for Democracy and Security, local Armenians are only crossing the border in emergencies.

“The majority of the population isn’t using it — it’s dangerous, nobody knows what will happen there. But it’s also a matter of principle — nobody in Karabakh wants to legitimize this new status quo,” he said.

Grigoryan believes local Armenians will be pressured to register for Azerbaijani passports. “For the majority of people, this is unacceptable. If the choice is to accept the passports or leave the territory, the majority of people will choose to leave.”

Armenia has claimed Azerbaijan’s efforts to tighten control over Nagorno-Karabakh could lead to “ethnic cleansing.” Yerevan has accepted Baku’s sovereignty over the region, but insists an international mechanism should be put in place to guarantee the rights of Armenians living there in peace talks mediated by the EU, U.S. and Russia.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, meanwhile, has said the region is an internal issue and any reference to it in a peace deal is “unacceptable.” He has offered “amnesty” to the Karabakh Armenian leadership, provided they accept being governed from Baku.

A series of bloody clashes on the shared border in recent days have left several injured on the Armenian side and reignited concerns over the prospect of a renewed conflict. On Thursday morning, Azerbaijan claimed the checkpoint itself had come under attack, leaving one border guard injured.

Later the same day, Artak Beglaryan, a senior Nagorno-Karabakh Armenian official, said that Russian peacekeepers and Red Cross convoys had been prevented from crossing through the checkpoint in the wake of the reported incident.

This article has been updated.


Parliament speaker: If Azerbaijan wants Russia to control entry, Armenia may want another country to control it

News.am
Armenia –

Armenia has a sovereign territory where Armenia’s laws apply. If at some point Armenia believes that it should outsource any of its functions to the bodies of another country, it is an internal matter of Armenia. But at the moment there is no concrete decision, nothing discussed. Alen Simonyan, speaker of the National Assembly (NA) of Armenia told this to reporters Tuesday, in terms of whether the road connecting Nakhichevan to Azerbaijan should be controlled by Armenian, not Russian forces.

"If Azerbaijan wants the Russian side to control the entry, then Armenia may also want some representation of a third country to control [it] because the opening of the borders, de-blockade is a mutual process. If an Azerbaijani should come, go to Nakhichevan through the territory of Armenia, it means that the resident of Armenia can also go to Russia or any other country through the territory of Azerbaijan; the conditions should be the same," said Simonyan.

He added that the Armenian side will decide what kind of control will be in relation to the Armenian territory.

As for the tripartite statement of November 9, 2020, according to the Armenian NA speaker, "practically all points are violated to some extent."

Borrell notes that the socio-economic situation in Nagorno-Karabakh is serious

 19:01,

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, ARMENPRESS. The socio-economic situation in Nagorno-Karabakh is quite serious, which is why the EU has implemented various initiatives in the last two years to provide humanitarian support to the local residents. 70 million euros have already been allocated for this purpose, ARMENPRESS reports, EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Josep Borrell said during the discussion on "Relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh and the Lachin Corridor" in the European Parliament.

The head of EU diplomacy noted that the humanitarian support was aimed at solving health problems, including providing medical equipment and providing social support to people affected by the conflict. Borrell emphasized that there is still a lot to be done in that area.

Parliament committee OKs government’s 2022 budget report

 12:20,

YEREVAN, JUNE 12, ARMENPRESS. The financial-credit and budgetary affairs committee of parliament has approved the bill on confirming the 2022 government budget report.

The bill will be debated at the plenary session in parliament.

The report was presented to lawmakers at the committee by finance minister Vahe Hovhannisyan.

“We had a forecast of 1 trillion 947 billion drams in revenues in the beginning of the year, the revenues increased by 110 billion drams during the year. Spending was forecast at 2 trillion 184 billion and increased by 103 billion drams. As a result, the planned deficit dropped 6,5 billion drams. Factual spending planned under our adjusted program was executed 100,2% in terms of revenues and 98% in terms of spending, which resulted in a 78% execution of the deficit, that is, by 56 billion less, in total 179 billion,” Hovhannisyan said.

Speaking about the increase of revenues, the minister said that tax revenues stood at 81 billion drams, while other revenues at 51 billion drams. Official grants were reduced by 21,9 billion drams.

A drop in customs duties was recorded, which is related to the decrease of imports in the overall EEU area.

The state debt stands at 10 billion 637 million USD (4 trillion 186 billion drams). The debt has decreased in drams but increased in dollars.

“The government debt-GDP ratio, which was planned at 58,4%, dropped to 46,7%. If we were to neutralize the dram valuation factor our debt would have been around 53%,” Hovhannisyan said.

Azerbaijan postpones planned talks with Armenia in Washington D.C.

 13:53, 8 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijan has requested to postpone the planned next round of foreign ministerial talks with Armenia in Washington D.C., the Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson said on Thursday.

“At the request of the Azerbaijani side, the next round of discussions planned to take place next week in Washington D.C. is postponed. The public will be duly informed on the new timeframes of the meeting,” spokesperson Ani Badalyan said in a statement on social media.

The foreign ministerial talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan were planned to take place June 12 in Washington D.C.

Turkish Press: Armenian prime minister to attend Turkish president’s swearing-in ceremony

Yeni Safak, Turkey
June 3 2023
Armenian prime minister to attend Turkish president's swearing-in ceremony

Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan will be attending the swearing-in ceremony of newly reelected Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday, an announcement by Yerevan said.

"Armenia has received an offer to take part in the inauguration ceremony of Turkish President (Recep) Tayyip Erdogan. On June 3, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan will travel to Ankara to attend the inauguration," said a statement on Friday by the country's cabinet of ministers press service.

Erdogan won Sunday's presidential runoff election with 52.18% of the vote, while opposition candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu received 47.82%, according to final results released by the country's Supreme Election Council.



Armenian church leaders in U.S. call on Biden to stand firmly against any attempt to force Artsakh under Azerbaijan

 11:10, 1 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. The spiritual leaders of America’s Armenian Apostolic, Catholic, and Evangelical faithful have joined forces in a powerful public warning to President Biden that forcing Artsakh under Azerbaijan is a “death sentence for the Armenians of this sacred land, home to 120,000 men, women, and children," the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) reported. 

In a letter sent yesterday to the White House, the Church leaders wrote: “We, the spiritual leaders of American Christians of Armenian heritage, call on you to stand firmly against any attempt to force the Christian Armenians of Artsakh under Azerbaijan, a country that is openly committed to ethnically cleansing the indigenous population of this ancient part of the Armenian homeland.”

The signatories to the letter are Archbishop Hovnan Derderian (Western Diocese Prelate), Archbishop Anoushavan Tanielian (Eastern Prelacy Primate), Very Rev. Mesrop Parsamyan (Eastern Diocese Primate), Bishop Torkom Donoyan (Western Prelacy Prelate), Bishop Mikhael Mouradian (Eparch Armenian Catholic Eparchy), Reverend Hendrik Shanazarian (Interim Minister, Armenian Evangelical Union), and Zaven Khanjian (Armenian Missionary Association of America Executive Director).

The full text of the interdenominational letter is provided below.

#####

President Joseph R. Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President:

We, the spiritual leaders of American Christians of Armenian heritage, call on you to stand firmly against any attempt to force the Christian Armenians of Artsakh under Azerbaijan, a country that is openly committed to ethnically cleansing the indigenous population of this ancient part of the Armenian homeland. Any settlement that subordinates the at-risk citizens of democratic Artsakh to dictatorial Azerbaijan is a death sentence for the Armenians of this sacred land, home to 120,000 men, women, and children, and, of course, countless holy sites.

We make this urgent appeal in the wake of our longstanding calls for you to withdraw your waiver of Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act and fully enforce this provision of U.S. law. As we have shared with you in the past, Armenia, the world’s first Christian nation, remains a landlocked, blockaded, genocide survivor state, striving to survive on the frontiers of global freedom. Our great nation must stand with Armenia in every way, beginning with a suspension of U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan, a country that would erase our ancient nation from the map of the world. We must never, as Americans, be complicit in such genocidal violence.

We look forward to learning of your renewed leadership in saving Christian Armenian lives and advancing a truly democratic peace that respects the right to self-determination of Artsakh, an early cradle of Christianity.

We pray that the Almighty Lord bless you abundantly and His wisdom leads your endeavors with success, spreading peace, justice, and prosperity to the world.

Sincerely,

Archbishop Hovnan Derderian
Western Diocese Prelate

Archbishop Anoushavan Tanielian
Eastern Prelacy Primate

Very Rev. Mesrop Parsamyan
Eastern Diocese Primate,

Bishop Torkom Donoyan
Western Prelacy Prelate,

Bishop Mikhael Mouradian
Eparch Armenian Catholic Eparchy

Reverend Hendrik Shanazarian
Interim Minister, Armenian Evangelical Union

Zaven Khanjian
Armenian Missionary Association of America Executive Director