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Biden’s NSA Jake Sullivan, Erdogan’s chief advisor discuss normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations

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 12:11, 2 February, 2022

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 2, ARMENPRESS. United States National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and Spokesperson and Chief Advisor to the President of Turkey, Ibrahim Kalin, held a telephone conversation on February 1, discussing also the current process of normalizing the relations between Armenia and Turkey, the NSC Spokesperson Emily Horne said in a statement.

According to the statement, Jake Sullivan and also Ibrahim Kalin “discussed regional issues, including efforts by Turkey and Armenia to normalize relations”.

Azerbaijani press: Sarkissian: Belated departure of effete figurehead

By Orkhan Amashov

Following the four fruitless years of prowling around and travailing in pain as a nominal head of state, Armen Sarkissian eventually decided to quit this top but largely ceremonial post. There is a convincing narrative explaining the reasons for his departure, but the precise circumstances that prompted his resignation and its timing, given the half-confirmed allegations about his dual citizenship, remain shrouded in semi-impenetrable mystery.

One pivotal “but”

There is some truth to the official reasoning that Sarkissian put forward in his resignation statement. As a president, he did not have the necessary powers to influence the fundamental processes related to foreign and domestic policy at a time of national crisis.

This central linchpin of his rationale for quitting seems to be veracious, but to an extent only, as there is one "but" which will continue to haunt Sarkissian for the remainder of his lifetime. When he was offered presidency in 2018, the rules of the game defining the political leadership were already fixed. In many ways, he entered the process as a conformist, who knew exactly what sort of a president he was going to be - a ceremonial figurehead in a parliamentary republic, in which critical powers had been vested in the person of the prime minister.

When Armenia moved from a semi-presidential system to a parliamentary one in 2015, the purpose was to extend war-monger Serzh Sargsyan’s political lifetime and enable him to continue leading the country as a premier. Later, in 2018, when the latter recommended Sarkissian, who was Armenian ambassador to the UK back then, for the post of head of state, the terms of the offer were clear. Armen Sarkissian was never meant to be a strong president with real powers, but a leader in name only, standing by the premier and reinforcing his legitimacy.

It was only after Sargsyan’s resignation and Pashinyan’s ascendance to power that Sarkissian became a vociferous advocate for a political system with a more balanced distribution of constitutional powers. In this vein, his resignation is more indicative of his dissatisfaction with the scope of his resources rather than a defiant attack on the present system of governance.

As a last visible surviving member of the old guard, Sarkissian did not share the outlook of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan as to the future of Armenia. The kerfuffle over a key military appointment was just one of the episodes revealing the lack of harmony at the top. He had no say regarding the ceasefire agreement that the prime minister was forced to sign in November 2020.

The prevailing narrative is that, in view of the Armenian PM’s purported desire to move towards signing a peace agreement with Azerbaijan and normalising relations with Turkey, Sarkissian found it obligatory to disassociate himself from the “inglorious inevitability”.

Grand but impracticable tomorrow

Throughout his tenure, in addition to extensively complaining about his powerlessness, Sarkissian also spoke at inexorable length, without any perceptible sense of immediacy or urgency, about the future in terms of obscure and vague grandiosities.

Being both corpulent and refined, and bearing a striking resemblance to Count Fosco, Wilkie Collins's literary creation, he had and still has the air of a visibly effete and emollient figure, yet behind the facade of genteel delicacy there is a ruthless character and global operator. If this characterisation is true, there is nothing tangible or consequential on a grand scale that has so far eventuated from this assumed Machiavellian inner persona.  

There is a fine and nuanced difference between what is possible and what is not impossible. The latter is what he preferred to pontificate about. He portrayed Yerevan as a future financial centre and bridge between the EU and Eurasia. He enjoyed numerous references to the forum of minds with which he associated great hopes. But when it came to the issues within the rubric of the immediate agenda, he chose to equivocate.

As a spokesperson for a global Armenia, he was self-tasked with the mission to attract investment to the country, using his worldwide connections. Despite the Covid-related restriction, he practiced some globe-trotting in his post, albeit with no easily recognisable benefits for Armenia.

Dual citizenship

There is also a question about dual citizenship rumours swirling around. If to trust the Armenian media platform Hetq, which conducted an investigation together with its international partner, Sarkissian, at the point of assuming his presidential duties, was a citizen of Saint Kitts and Nevis, a Commonwealth nation in the Caribbean, in violation of the Armenian Constitution.

It appears that there was an exchange between Hetq and the presidential office, and the latter did not deny the fact but claimed that the citizenship was acquired by default as a result of his investment, and Sarkissian instructed his lawyers to request the citizenship to be put on hold, which it has now transpired was not duly carried out. The former president denied any connection between this citizenship scandal and the timing of his resignation, but the facts, as they are stated and known, do not favour him.

Future order

It remains somewhat a moot point if Pashinyan prefers to have a president of his own choice and remain an omnipotent premier in a parliamentary republic, or to become a President with enhanced powers, under a new constitution.

What is clear is that Sarkissian’s departure will allow him to put his own man into the office. Now Pashinyan has reached the political equilibrium of the German system in which the time-honoured rule is that “if you can create a President, you can form a government”. Sarkissian was already there when he became a PM. Now the parliament where he has a healthy majority will elect a new figurehead.

Armenian deputy PM receives acting UN Resident Coordinator

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 09:58, 27 January, 2022

YEREVAN, JANUARY 27, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Prime Minister Hambardzum Matevosyan received on January 26 acting UN Resident Coordinator in Armenia Lila Pieters Yahia, the deputy PM’s Office said.

Hambardzum Matevosyan congratulated Mrs. Lila Pieters Yahia on appointment and expressed readiness for close cooperation in the context of implementing targeted programs aimed at promoting democracy, security, peace and stability.

The deputy PM highly valued the support and efforts of the UN Office aimed at the fight against COVID-19 in Armenia, the implementation of Sustainable Development Goals and the solution of the humanitarian problems caused by the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

Lila Pieters Yahia said despite the challenges of 2020, Armenia continues moving forward, and the UN is ready to support the Armenian government’s development agenda within its mandate.

During the meeting the sides discussed a broad range of issues of bilateral interest and agreed to make the cooperation in e-governance and other areas more effective.

Armenian FM to visit Turkey in March: Çavuşoğlug

Jan 28 2022

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu revealed that his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan will visit Turkey in March, Reuters reported on Thursday.

Çavuşoğlu said that Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan accepted Turkey's invitation for Mirzoyan and Special Envoy Ruben Rubinyan to participate in the Antalya Diplomacy Forum (ADF) scheduled to take place March 11-13. 

"The Armenian Foreign Minister and the Special Envoy Ruben Rubinyan were invited, and Pashinyan lastly said they could participate in ADF," Çavuşoğlu said. 

"We would welcome this, because Azerbaijan is coming too," he added. "So let Azerbaijan state its views and Armenia state its opinions too, and this can be part of the confidence-building measures." 

The move follows Ankara and Yerevan's appointment of special envoys for normalisation talks that could pave the way for establishing diplomatic ties between the two neighbouring countries. These latest talks were the first efforts between them to restore links since a 2009 peace accord that was never ratified. 

The two countries have had tense relations for 30 years now. Armenia maintains that the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians by the Ottomans in 1915 was genocide, while Turkey disputes the figures and denies that what happened amounted to genocide. 

Turkey called for a rapprochement after the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, when Armenia lost control over large parts of the disputed region to Azerbaijan. One reason Turkey had for decades refused to normalise ties with Armenia was its previous occupation of those regions. Azerbaijan has also not opposed normalisation efforts. 

Both Turkey and Armenia described the first round of normalisation talks between their special envoy earlier this month as "positive and constructive." 

‘Consequences of last war cannot distract us from path of state-building’ – Artsakh President

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 11:30,

STEPANAKERT, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. President of the Republic of Artsakh Arayik Harutyunyan received a group of members of the Union of War Volunteers of Artsakh to bestow them with state awards on the occasion of the Homeland Defender’s Day, his Office said.

President Harutyunyan thanked the meeting participants for their service to the Homeland and stated that the consequences of the last war cannot distract them from the path of state-building, the Armenian people are fighting for more than thirty years.

Armenian PM self-isolating after positive Covid test

Macau Business
Jan 26 2022

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is self-isolating after testing positive for the coronavirus, his government said on Wednesday.

“The prime minister of Armenia took a coronavirus test, which came back positive,” the Armenian government said in a statement.

It said Pashinyan was asymptomatic and self-isolating as required, and would continue to work remotely.

Pashinyan and his family also had coronavirus in June 2020.

The ex-Soviet republic with a population of around three million people has registered 355,662 coronavirus cases and 8,033 deaths since the start of the pandemic.

Armenia has faced a period of instability after accepting defeat and suffering territorial losses in late 2020 in a war with arch-foe Azerbaijan over the exclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. 

Pashinyan faced pressure at home over the controversial truce with Baku as protesters staged rallies and demanded his resignation.

In the summer, Pashinyan called for snap parliamentary polls that were won by his party but discontent over the war continues to simmer. 

Last week, Armenia’s President Armen Sarkisian announced that was resigning from his post — a largely ceremonial role — over a lack of influence during times of national crisis. 

Azerbaijan launches first tourist buses to Karabakh

EurasiaNet.org
Jan 24 2022
Heydar Isayev Jan 24, 2022

The Azerbaijani government has launched regular tourist bus trips to Shusha and Aghdam, two cities in Karabakh reclaimed as a result of the 2020 war against Armenia. The trips, which began on January 24, mark the first opportunity for Azerbaijani civilians to visit the region since the start of the first war between the two countries in the early 1990s.

Plans for the trips were announced by the State Automobile Transport Service at a press briefing on January 18. They are intended only for Azerbaijani citizens and will run on five different routes: Baku-Shusha, Baku-Aghdam, Ahmadbayli (a village in the Fuzuli region)-Shusha, Barda-Aghdam, and – when passenger flights commence – from the new Fuzuli airport to Shusha. The Ahmadbayli-Shusha route will run four times a week, the others twice a week.

The tickets, sold online at the website yolumuzqarabaga.az (“Our way is to Karabakh”), cost a maximum of 10.4 manats (about $6) for the Baku-Shusha route. Various categories of people affected by the war, including veterans and families of soldiers killed in the war, can travel for free.

Tickets are sold only for same-day return, as overnight stays are not allowed.

Azerbaijani media heavily covered the launch of the tours, which left early in the morning from Baku’s central bus station. Anar Rzayev, chief of the State Automobile Transport Service, told media that the trip to Aghdam would be six hours each way and to Shusha, six and a half hours. Visitors would have two and a half hours to see the sights before having to come back. The buses were accompanied by police escort.

One restriction on the trips that led to some discontent was that people will only be able to travel once per year per route, as Rzayev explained in a January 18 briefing. Following some negative social media reaction the Ministry of Digital Development and Transportation (which includes the State Automobile Transport Service) explained that the limit was imposed due to expectations of “huge demand” for the trips. “After real demand passes the peak and certain evaluations are conducted, the restriction will be lifted,” the ministry said.

But to many, the restriction smacked of a government monopoly.

Gubad Ibadoglu, the chairman of the opposition Democracy and Welfare Party, wrote on Facebook that if demand is so high, then the trips should run more frequently than twice a week. “Was Karabakh liberated so that the ruling family and their partners will make it into a special zone, abuse the state budget via closed tenders, let in [to Karabakh] only those they want, but not allow free commerce, movement, and activities there?” he asked.

Others welcomed the news.

Karim Karimli, a Shusha native and advocate for displaced Azerbaijanis, told local news outlet Sharg that he “highly appreciates” the opening of bus routes to his hometown. “Before you could go to Shusha only with a special invitation. Now a lot of people will be able to see Shusha. The most important part is that the ticket prices fit people’s budget. Recently we see how people are suffering financial hardships. Nothing should get in the way of people’s dreams,” Karimli said. 

 

Heydar Isayev is a journalist from Baku.

Armenia invited to Antalya Diplomacy Forum, says Turkish FM

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 14:18,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said that Armenia is invited to the Antalya Diplomacy Forum due March 11-13, 2022, Hurriyet reports.

“So far, the number of foreign ministers who’ve confirmed participation is 39. We are inviting everyone from all over the world, we’ve also invited guests from our region, from Armenia, Greece, and even the Greek side of Cyprus, from Egypt and Israel,” the Turkish FM said.

Four killed in renewed clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan

Jan 12 2022
 

Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Photo: Armenian Public Radio.

Armenia reports three soldiers killed, two wounded, and Azerbaijan one soldier killed following fresh border clashes.

The fighting took place on the Gegharkunik-Kalbajar section of the Armenia-Azerbaijan border and began on 11 January. 

Both countries accused the other side of opening fire first and breaching the ceasefire. The Armenian Ministry of Defence also accused Azerbaijan of using artillery and suicide drones.

The Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has framed the incident as a ‘manifestation’ of the ‘continuous encroachments of Azerbaijan on the territorial integrity of Armenia’. The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, has blamed the ‘political-military leadership’ of Armenia for the ‘bloody provocation’.

According to the latest statement from the Azerbaijani Defence Ministry released on 12 January, the Armenian military fired upon Azerbaijani positions on the night of 11 January and the morning of 12 January with ‘small arms and large-calibre machine guns’. No further deaths or injuries were reported. 

On 10 January, authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh reported that the Azerbaijani military fired at ‘civilians and civilian objects’ in the Martuni (Khojavend) region. 

According to a recent report by the International Crisis Group, 94 people, including one Russian peacekeeper, have been killed in Nagorno Karabakh and on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border since the 10 November 2020 ceasefire agreement that brought an end to the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War.