Azerbaijan is perpetrating genocide in Nagorno-Karabakh, says ex-prosecutor

California18
Aug 9 2023

The report by Luis Moreno Ocampo issued on Tuesday says that the blockade applied by Azerbaijan to the only road that links Armenia with Nagorno-Karabakh prevents the shipment of food, medical supplies and other basic items to the region of some 120,000 inhabitants.

“There are reasons to believe that genocide is being perpetrated,” the Ocampo report says, noting that a UN convention defines genocide as “the intentional imposition of living conditions against a group calculated to bring about their physical destruction.”

“There are no crematoriums or machete attacks. The invisible weapon for genocide in this case is famine. Without immediate drastic change, this group of Armenians will be destroyed within a few weeks,” the report says.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a region within Azerbaijan that fell under the control of ethnic Armenian forces backed by Armenian forces in a separatist conflict that ended in 1994. Armenian forces also gained control of substantial territory around the region.

Azerbaijan regained control of the surrounding territory in a six-week war against Armenia in 2020. A Russian-brokered armistice left the regional capital, Stepanakert, linked to Armenia by a single pathway known as the Lachin Corridor, in which the forces allegedly Russian companies had to guarantee free transit.

A government representative in Azerbaijan rejected the report by Ocampo, who was the ICC’s first prosecutor, stating that it “contains unfounded allegations and accusations.”

“He is biased and distorts the truth situation on the ground, and has serious factual, legal and substantive errors,” Hikmet Hajiyev, an aide to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

In December, crowds claiming to be environmental activists clogged the Lachin Corridor. Azerbaijan then set up a military checkpoint on the road, saying it was necessary to block traffic to prevent the smuggling of weapons and other goods.

Kidnapping of ICRC-protected patient by Azerbaijan should be condemned – foreign ministry spox

 21:47, 8 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 9, ARMENPRESS. The abduction of a patient under the protection of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) by Azerbaijan is unacceptable and should be condemned, Armenian foreign ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan said Tuesday.

Badalyan was referring to Vagif Khachatryan, a 68-year-old patient from Nagorno-Karabakh who was kidnapped on July 29 by Azeri border guards while being evacuated by the ICRC to Armenia.

"As we value ICRC humanitarian role in Nagorno Karabakh, we stress: its continuous obstruction by Azerbaijan & abduction of patient under its protection is unacceptable & should be condemned. Over 1760 persons are deprived of medical treatment, many 1000s lack medicine. ,” Badalyan wrote on social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1117024.html?fbclid=IwAR2e5wrU4qBnMq7QwI8J7v9PKqgdVTaIi9uZy90dWakzdtD-Lm_XlE0QTlw

Secretary Grigoryan, new Iranian Ambassador discuss regional security

 13:18, 8 August 2023

YEREVAN, AUGUST 8, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council Armen Grigoryan has held a meeting with the new Iranian ambassador Mehdi Sobhani.

During the meeting Grigoryan congratulated Ambassador Sobhani on assuming the responsible mission and expressed hope that during his tenure the latter will contribute to the further development and strengthening of the relations between the two friendly countries, Grigoryan’s office said in a readout.

Secretary Grigoryan and Ambassador Sobhani discussed a number of items on the Armenian-Iranian bilateral agenda, as well as the regional security situation. Grigoryan presented the humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh resulting from the Azerbaijani blockade of Lachin Corridor and Armenia’s stance on the matter.

Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia and the rest of the world, has been blocked by Azerbaijan since late 2022. The Azerbaijani blockade constitutes a gross violation of the 2020 Nagorno Karabakh ceasefire agreement, which established that the 5km-wide Lachin Corridor shall be under the control of Russian peacekeepers. Furthermore, on February 22, 2023 the United Nations’ highest court – the International Court of Justice (ICJ) – ordered Azerbaijan to “take all steps at its disposal” to ensure unimpeded movement of persons, vehicles and cargo along the Lachin Corridor in both directions.  Azerbaijan has been ignoring the order ever since. Moreover, Azerbaijan then illegally installed a checkpoint on Lachin Corridor. The blockade has led to shortages of essential products such as food and medication. Azerbaijan has also cut off gas and power supply into Nagorno Karabakh, with officials warning that Baku seeks to commit ethnic cleansing against Armenians in Nagorno Karabakh. Hospitals have suspended normal operations.

On July 26, Armenia sent a humanitarian convoy carrying emergency food and medication for Nagorno-Karabakh, but Azerbaijan blocked the trucks at the entrance of Lachin Corridor.

“Sanctions against Russia contributed to growth of Armenian economy” – Fitch Ratings

Aug 3 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Fitch ratings on the Armenian economy

The rating agency Fitch Ratings raised Armenia’s index from B+ to BB-, that is, ranked it among the countries “with a stable outlook”. This is the first positive change in this rating since 2020.

Fitch rating categories are designated by letters: “A” – excellent, “B” – good, “C” – bad, “D” – very bad. In addition to letters, the rating includes the signs “+” or “-“. They indicate an intermediate assessment. The more letters in the rating, the higher the score.

The change in the rating is assessed as a consequence of the high economic indicators recorded in Armenia last year. At the same time, the agency linked this revival in the economy with the war in Ukraine and sanctions against Russia. It is for this reason that Fitch Ratings believes that growth rates will decline from year to year.

According to economist Hrant Mikayelyan, the country’s rating improved not at all because of the successful work of the government. He agrees with the agency’s experts that economic growth in Armenia is “indirectly linked” to the ongoing war in Ukraine.


  • “The Tripartite Statement is not an international treaty.” View from Baku
  • Armenia sends humanitarian cargo to NK, Azerbaijan calls it a provocation
  • A positive impetus to the negotiations? Baku and Yerevan on the Moscow meeting of foreign ministers

Fitch Ratings experts identified the main factors contributing to the stability of Armenia’s rating:

  • stabilization of public debt and the fiscal sector,
  • improvement of the foreign trade balance.

However, the authors of the report see certain risks in the field of foreign trade, in particular “strong dependence on the Russian market.”

“Between January and May 2023, Russia accounted for 49 percent of exports from Armenia and 25 percent of imports to the country,” the report says.

According to Fitch, the main factor that contributed to economic growth in Armenia is the massive relocation of citizens of three post-Soviet countries – Russia, Ukraine and Belarus – after the start of the war:

“50-65 thousand immigrants have settled in Armenia, which is more than two percent of the country’s population.”

The agency’s experts emphasize that the sanctions imposed against Russia contributed to the intensification of economic processes in Armenia:

“Although in the short term, Armenia will benefit from a sharp increase in re-exports to Russia. The fact is that, as a result of the imposition of sanctions, other trade routes leading to Russia were closed.”

According to the forecast of the rating company, economic growth in Armenia will continue in the near future, but its pace will decrease every year:

“It is expected that in 2023 economic growth in Armenia will be 7.2% instead of last year’s 12.6%. In 2024, economic growth will be 5.9%, and in 2025 – 4.5%.”

The latest data published by the statistical committee, as well as expert commentary

The authors of the report also touched upon the “growing geopolitical risks” that Armenia faces. According to Fitch, the risks emanating from Azerbaijan have increased since the beginning of the year:

“As of July, the blockade of the Lachin corridor in the disputed region, Nagorno-Karabakh, has been ongoing for seven months. Many clashes, including fatal ones, have been recorded on the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan.”

The rating company also spoke about the Armenian-Azerbaijani settlement process. According to her forecast, the talks “are unlikely to lead to a long-term agreement.” The signing of a peace treaty in Fitch is considered unlikely “without territorial adjustments”, emphasizing that these “adjustments for Armenia are difficult to accept from a political point of view.”

Agency experts do not exclude the possibility of resumption of hostilities, but suggest that they will be limited to the territory of NK:

“In this case, the large-scale macroeconomic consequences for Armenia will also be limited.”

The ratings agency gives Armenia a sovereign rating of “Ba3”

According to economist and political scientist Hrant Mikayelyan, Armenia’s economic performance improved amid the Ukrainian war.

“The growth of the economy has only a negative relation to the work of this government. In recent years, especially in 2018-2020, government activities have contributed to the economic downturn,” he said.

Alen Simonyan, Speaker of the Armenian Parliament, also touched upon the topic. In particular, he presented statistical data on economic growth and inflation in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. According to the graph, which he published on his Facebook page, in January-June in 2023, the highest economic growth in the region was recorded in Armenia – 11.4%.

“If we can record such data in such a tense situation, imagine what the numbers would be if there was peace in our region now,” Simonyan wrote.

However, Mikaelyan declared the data published by the speaker to be “false”:

“Firstly, when calculating economic growth, one should take into account the economic losses in Nagorno-Karabakh, which are huge. Let the losses in Artsakh be subtracted from this increase, then they will say.”

Commenting on the risks indicated in the report of the rating agency, in particular, regarding the low probability of signing a peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Mikaelyan stated:

“Pashinyan himself does not believe in the prospect of a long-term agreement, but he is fulfilling the role assigned to him.”

https://jam-news.net/fitch-ratings-on-the-armenian-economy/

European companies’ aircraft endangered by interference from pro-Russian Karabakh enclave

Bulgaria – Aug 1 2023

A Czech Airlines aircraft, on a flight on the Budapest-Baku route, was on the verge of crashing due to radio interference when the aircraft was above the area where the Russian military contingent is stationed in the Karabakh enclave, newsweek.ro reports.

On July 25, the actions of the pro-Russian leadership of the Armenian separatist enclave of Karabakh caused a dangerous incident, which could lead to the downing of a European aircraft.

Fortunately, the pilots could land safely, saving the passengers from catastrophe.

Aircraft of some European companies have been endangered by interference from the pro-Russian Karabakh enclave.

Interference was registered in the following cases:

The ATR-45 passenger aircraft of Azerbaijan Airlines flying on the Baku-Fuzuli route on July 24.

Passenger aircraft C-680 of the Czech Airlines company, which flew on the Budapest-Baku route on July 25.

ATR-45 passenger aircraft of Azerbaijan Airlines, which flew on the Baku-Gabala route and in the opposite direction on July 27.

Previously, as a result of the use of radio interference against the Gulfstream G280 passenger aircraft of Azerbaijan Airlines flying on the Zangilan-Fuzuli route from 11.54am to 12.07pm (GMT+4) and on the Fuzuli-Baku route from 1.02pm to 1.17pm (GMT+4) on July 13, the aircraft’s GPS navigation system failed.

The command of the Russian maintenance forces was asked for explanations regarding these facts and the same incidents that occurred previously. To date, Russian peacekeeping forces have not taken any action against these provocations, which pose a serious threat to the security of flights transiting Azerbaijan’s airspace, according to Trend News Agency.

According to the Defence Ministry, this is not the only case: Armenian separatists regularly use radio jamming against passenger aircraft flying over Azerbaijan’s airspace.

Threats to the safety of European airlines are unacceptable, especially considering that the Czech Republic is not the only country with direct flights to Azerbaijan.

Which other companies could be affected?

The list of potential victims of the Armenian-Russian conspiracy also includes airlines from Hungary, the United States, Canada, Poland, Latvia, Germany, Turkey, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates.

When the war between Armenia and Azerbaijan ended in autumn 2020, Russian troops were stationed in Karabakh, on the territory of the separatist Armenian enclave of Artsakh. To maintain its positions and influence in the South Caucasus, which are necessary to carry out such challenges, the Kremlin prevents the conclusion of peace between Baku and Yerevan.

On July 28, CNN Prima, CNN’s Czech partner, noted: “Putin aims to freeze the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan according to the scenario that Russia initiated before the aggression in Donbas, South Ossetia or Moldovan Transnistria.”

The Bulgarian publication Fakti also pointed out that this seems the only way for Russia to maintain its position and military presence in the region.

Given the Russian Federation’s destructive role in the region and concerns about airline safety, the influential American publication The Hill called in January 2023 for Washington and its NATO and EU allies to mobilize international support to replace Russian troops of Karabakh and to help conclude a lasting peace agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan.


https://sofiaglobe.com/2023/08/01/european-companies-aircraft-endangered-by-interference-from-pro-russian-karabakh-enclave/

Armenpress: Meeting with Iranian ambassador, Armenian FM emphasized the need to immediately remove the blockade of Lachin Corridor

 14:23,

YEREVAN, JULY 22, ARMENPRESS. On July 22, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan received the newly appointed Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the Republic of Armenia, Mehdi Sobhani, on the occasion of handing over the copy of his credentials.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from MFA Armenia, Ararat Mirzoyan congratulated Mehdi Sobhani on assuming the responsible mission, expressing hope that the newly appointed ambassador will make an important contribution to the further development of relations between the two friendly and neighboring countries.

Mehdi Sobhani expressed his gratitude for the warm reception and expressed his willingness to make maximum efforts to further promote relations between the two countries, which are running smoothly on historical and cultural foundations, and to implement programs of mutual interest.

During the meeting, a number of issues related to the Armenian-Iranian agenda were discussed. The interlocutors noted with satisfaction the dynamically developing Armenian-Iranian political dialogue, emphasizing the organization of high-level mutual visits. Reference was made to the deepening of cooperation in the bilateral trade and economic, energy and transport sectors and the implementation of planned projects.

The interlocutors also exchanged ideas on regional security issues.

Referring to the recent discussions on the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Ararat Mirzoyan emphasized that the efforts of the Armenian side are aimed at establishing stable peace in the South Caucasus, which will be beneficial for all the peoples of the region. Both sides emphasized the approach to settle the existing problems peacefully and through negotiations.

Minister Mirzoyan presented the humanitarian crisis created in Nagorno-Karabakh as a result of the illegal blocking of the Lachin Corridor, stressing the need to immediately remove the blockade.

Did ‘Hotel Rwanda’’s Paul Rusesabagina Just Sabotage Armenia-Azerbaijan Peace?

By Michael Rubin

AEIdeas

Paul Rusesabagina came to fame two decades ago as the hero in the movie Hotel Rwanda. While reality was not as Hollywood depicted, fame sparked first ambition and then, failing to gain support in Rwanda, bitterness. He spoke about the necessity to overthrow the Rwandan government by any means necessary and then acted on it, wiring money to a terrorist group. Under Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, one of the State Department’s top goals in Africa was to convince Burundi, the continent’s poorest country, to cease allowing cross-border insurgents to use its territory. He succeeded. Rusesabagina fumed.

In June 2020, Évariste Ndayishimiye became president of Burundi. Rusesabagina sought to convince him to cease stopping the terrorists Rusesabagina funded. After his capture, Rusesabagina’s story that he was taking a private jet to Burundi to talk to a church never made sense given Burundi’s poverty and the expense of international private charters.

After the plane diverted to Rwanda, a deception international law allows, Rwandan forces arrested Rusesabagina and tried him for crimes relating to terrorist attacks in southern Rwanda. The evidence was overwhelming. Behind the scenes, the State Department believed it. Rusesabagina’s supporters lobbied, Hollywood donors rallied, image trumped truth, and Secretary of State Antony Blinken and National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan intervened.

Negotiations were tough. Rusesabagina was a Belgian citizen. Belgian police certified the validity of evidence against him. Despite claims to the contrary, his trial was transparent and the Rwandans treated him well in prison. Privately, State Department officials acknowledged no evidence supported his adopted daughters’ claims of mistreatment.

Negotiators had to address not only Rusesabagina, but also his co-conspirators as it would be an affront to pardon one among many involved in the crime. Under Rwandan law, criminals can seek amnesty if they show contrition. Sullivan, Rusesabagina’s lawyers, and the former hotelier himself agreed he would. Rusesabagina penned a letter, seeking clemency, and acknowledging his calls to and support for violence and terrorism. He promised, “If I am granted a pardon and released, I understand fully that I will spend the remainder of my days in the United States in quiet reflection. I can assure you through this letter that I hold no personal or political ambitions otherwise. I will leave questions regarding Rwandan politics behind me.”

That lasted two months. Rusesabagina’s downfall has always been addiction to limelight. In late June, the New York Times published a lengthy interview in which Rusesabagina said, “‘They expected me to be silent. To be a good guy and behave . . . . No one can silence me that easily.”

The issue was never Rusesabagina’s silence but rather his terrorism sponsorship. While Rusesabagina’s supporters parry by criticizing Rwandan President Paul Kagame, these complaints are immaterial to his case: They do not justify the terror attack on Nyabimata that killed nine civilians.

Sullivan and Blinken have a problem. They gave their word to Rwanda to achieve a short-term goal and relieve donor pressure. Should they not respond to the deal’s violation, for example by deporting Rusesabagina to Belgium, then they signal that the agreements they broker are meaningless.

Sullivan and Blinken now turn their efforts to peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The chief sticking point is Armenian insistence that Azerbaijan guarantees the rights and safety of the ancient Christian community in Nagorno-Karabakh and their cultural heritage.

Rwanda may be a long way from Armenia, but the trauma of genocide links the two countries. Their ministers pay homage at each other’s memorials. The rhetoric in which Azerbaijan now engages parallels the genocide minimization if not denial that Hutu génocidaires and Rusesabagina himself engage. As Armenians seek American guarantees, they should recognize the cynicism with which Sullivan and Blinken conduct diplomacy. They should not gamble on the sanctity of any agreement Blinken negotiates or Sullivan guarantees, for neither keeps promises. For the government of Armenia or residents of Nagorno-Karabakh to trust either man now would be suicide.

The President of the French Senate announces the need to supply defense weapons to Armenia

 18:29,

YEREVAN, 14 JULY, ARMENPRESS․ The President of the French Senate, Gerard Larcher, announced the need for France to supply defense weapons to Armenia, ARMENPRESS reports,  Larcher wrote on his "Twitter" page.

"I demand to immediately open the Lachin Corridor connecting Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh and speed up the supply of defensive weapons by France to Armenia in order to ensure its security," Larcher wrote after the meeting with the President of the National Assembly of Armenia, Alen Simonyan.

Turkish Press: ​​US reiterates support for peace talks between Azerbaijan, Armenia

Turkey –

US reiterates support for peace talks between Azerbaijan, Armenia

Free passage of commercial, humanitarian and private vehicles through Lachin corridor is important, says US Secretary of State

09:15 . 13/07/2023 Thursday
AA

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke by phone with Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on Wednesday, saying his country continues to support peace talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Blinken reiterated US support for negotiations between the two countries and emphasized the need for creativity, flexibility and reconciliation in the talks, said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller.

He emphasized the need for the free passage of commercial, humanitarian and private vehicles through the Lachin corridor.

Blinken said that both sides should maintain the positive momentum in the negotiations for a lasting and dignified peace.

On Tuesday, Blinken said on Twitter that he spoke with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.

"I spoke with Armenian Prime Minister @NikolPashinyan yesterday to reiterate my strong support for ongoing efforts to secure peace with Azerbaijan. Direct dialogue and diplomacy are the only path to a durable peace in the South Caucasus and I remain committed to help facilitate," he said.

Azerbaijan’s Illegal Blockade Causes 30,000 Armenian Children Mental Anguish, Starvation, Trauma [corrected source]

Azerbaijan and its ally, Turkey, have blockaded Artsakh (also known as Nagorno-Karabakh), an Armenian republic in the South Caucasus, since December 12, 2022, in an attempt to force the Armenians to flee their native lands and take over the region. Currently, food supplies are completely cut off from transportation into Artsakh, and there is no fuel or gas. The Azeri military attacks on farmers are ongoing. And the 7-month siege of Artsakh Republic is killing children.

Artsakh has for millennia been an integral part of historic Armenia and has never been a part of independent Azerbaijan. Dating back to the 9-6th century BC, the region was governed by various Armenian kingdoms, and in the 17th Century, it was annexed by the Russian Empire. In 1921, Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin arbitrarily carved out Artsakh and placed it under the administration of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic as an autonomous oblast. Artsakh, however, remained demographically Armenian and preserved its autonomous status despite widespread oppression and discrimination at the hands of Soviet Azerbaijan. On December 10, 1991, Artsakh declared independence as a republic from the Soviet Union – an act which further increased Azerbaijan’s persecution of Artsakh. And this persecution that aims to ethnically cleanse Armenians has reached its culmination in recent years. 

On July 8, in Aghabekalanj village in Artsakh’s Martakert region, three-year-old Leo and six-year-old Gita died of heat and exhaustion in an abandoned car after going to look for their mom, who had gone on foot to search for something to feed them.

Artsakh officials have been warning that supplies of basic goods are dwindling after Azerbaijan closed the Berdzor (Lachin) Corridor to humanitarian shipments on June 15. Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade has since reached a critical point.

During the initial months of the blockade, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and Russian peacekeeping forces were able to deliver humanitarian cargo, including food and medicine, from Armenia to Artsakh.  

In recent months, however, Azerbaijan has been taking additional illegal steps to double down on the blockade and finalize its genocide against Armenians. On April 23, Azerbaijan illegally established a military checkpoint on the Berdzor Corridor on the Hakari River Bridge. 

On July 11, Azerbaijan announced that it would deny the ICRC access to Artsakh through the Corridor after claiming they were used to “smuggle” mobile phones, cigarettes, and fuel into the region.

This decision makes the illegal blockade absolute as the Berdzor corridor is the only path Armenians in the Artsakh region have with the outside world. This means that if somebody gets sick in Artsakh and needs to be transported out, they will die.   

Artak Beglaryan, an advisor to State Minister of Artsakh, reported on July 11:

“Azerbaijan just announced that again forbids the movement of the ICRC through Lachin Corridor to transfer patients and medications. The new pretext is alleged transfers of some small number of non-medical products by ICRC drivers. Now Artsakh is under full siege with 0 [zero] movement.”

The ICRC issued the following statement about the Azeri allegations:

“Our work along the Lachin corridor is always strictly humanitarian. This essential work, which has allowed more than 600 patients to be evacuated for medical care and for medical supplies, food, baby formula and other essentials to reach healthcare facilities and families, must be allowed to continue. This work is always done with the agreement of the sides and makes a difference to the lives of thousands of people.”

Azerbaijan is creating a humanitarian crisis in Artsakh through a state-sponsored campaign to eliminate the region’s indigenous Armenian population who does not want to be persecuted by Azerbaijan and requests its right to self-determination. The greatest victims of this ongoing siege are 30,000 children, who live in Artsakh. 

Dr. Anzhela Mnatsakanyan, a lecturer at the Chair of Political Science of Yerevan State University, and a researcher at the Edinburgh Peace Institute, told Providence:

“Even though we might think that the children are too small to understand what is going on, the reality is different. Children see their parents stressed; there is little food, and some can’t attend school and kindergartens. I can give an example of my friend trying to explain to her five-year-old granddaughter that she can’t take a bath as there was no hot water back in March. Her granddaughter answered, ‘But you used to have heating.’ Try explaining to a five-year-old that she cannot have ice cream as usual because there is no cream in the whole republic. My other friend hasn’t seen her nephew since December, and they were quite close; it is hard for her to explain to him why she is not visiting and missed his birthday.

“Another friend shared a video of her child playing with her friends. During the play, she said to her friends, ‘You look pale; you need to eat fruit,’ and then complained that there was no fruit in their home as well.

“Let’s remember how scared the children from Artsakh who went to Armenia to participate in the Junior Eurovision Contest were, and then they couldn’t come back home due to the siege. When they eventually had a chance to return, they were physically attacked by Azeri eco-activists and some even lost consciousness.

“A few days ago, a tragedy happened. Two children died because there was no food and fuel, so their mother went to another city on foot to find food. Please remember this is happening in 2023…

“This ongoing nightmare is not only affecting children’s mental and physical health, but is also killing children, even those who were not born yet; I know women who miscarried their children because of stress and the lack of vitamins.”

On his Twitter account, Arman Tatoyan, the former Human Rights Defender of the Republic of Armenia, listed additional facts regarding the Azeri ethnic cleansing in Artsakh. 

Tatoyan noted that since January 9 there has been no electricity in Artsakh. Since March 21, no gas and no humanitarian aid (including food) since June 15.  There has only been limited medications through the ICRC since June 25. Tatoyan added that Azeri-sponsored hatred and the total blockade of Artsakh with 120,000 Armenians is ongoing. 

Narine Karapetian, a mother living in Artsakh, told Providence:

“Fuel shortages and limited transportation make it impossible for children to attend sports and art classes that are far from home. Unfortunately, it has become commonplace for children to be constantly exposed to life-threatening situations. Even when they hear a loud clap of thunder, they stare at us with a puzzled look, expecting us to say, ‘We have to go down to the basement.’

“Children genuinely find happiness when there is light in the house. They often wonder why their peers can travel outside of Artsakh and have new life experiences, especially during the summer, while they cannot.”

Lilit Hovakimyan, a teacher in Artsakh, told Providence:

“From a teacher’s perspective, it is incredibly challenging to educate children in Artsakh about basic human rights and fundamental freedoms when the international community seems to turn a blind eye to the violations happening in their region. As educators, we strive to instill in our students a sense of justice, equality, and the importance of standing up for their rights. However, the ongoing blockade of Artsakh creates an environment of frustration and helplessness.”

Siranush Sargsyan, a journalist based in Stepanakert, the capital of Artsakh, shared with Providence:

“The blockade imposed by Azerbaijan affects everyone in Artsakh, but perhaps children suffer the most. I experienced my childhood during the first Artsakh war [1988-1994] and its consequences have always followed me throughout life. I don’t know if it’s harder for children who are newly born, whose rights are already violated, or for children who already understand what is happening. For small kids, their mothers struggle to find diapers, formula, and other necessities. For kids who understand, they will remember all these hardships throughout their whole lives. Even their games are impacted by the blockade.

“I remember a friend’s child playing with toy cars. He lined them up and just watched. When his mother asked why he wasn’t playing, he answered that he was playing – he was waiting with his car in line to get fuel. Some children don’t understand why they can’t eat what they want or why Santa didn’t bring them gifts or why they can’t celebrate their birthdays. Another cruel fact is that children living near the border are under the constant threat of fire; they can hear gunfire from Azerbaijani positions every day and live in fear.

“The sad part of all this is that even if the problems are solved tomorrow, which I find hard to believe, these children will always remember these hardships.”

Mariam Gasparyan, a psychologist living in Artsakh, agrees with Sargsyan’s observations:

“Firstly, children feel the situation as much as the parents, since the safety for the children depends on the safety of the parent. The reaction of parents develops the reaction of the child to the situation. Kids are facing very directly the situation – skipping school due to the blockade and being deprived of their favorite foods. If the parents can’t manage their reactions correctly, then the kids do not react well. But we are in a situation that is out of our control. If the parent has certain needs and she/ he does not know how to meet them, then they cannot help their child feel secure. The longer the blockade lasts, the more one must passively adapt to it, but at the same time the adaptation mechanisms start to weaken.

“Today, the play of the children has changed. In their activities, they are more often imitating blocked roads, the absence of some food and the guards driving nearer. On one hand it is good that the kids are expressing their feelings through games, but on the other hand the situation is so tense and serious that the kids lose carelessness, and they start to combat the situation together with each other, but the levels of perception are very different. As opposed to an adult, when the kids hear that they [Azeris] will come and kill us, they perceive it directly while adults can analyze and think of other options. This brings panic attacks to children who perceive what they hear directly. 

“The child’s feelings are exacerbated and when the situation is stressed, and their fathers go to the frontline, they have increased anxiety, concerns that they will never see their fathers again, they may have frustration and psychosomatic symptoms. When the parents take the child to the psychologist since they cannot do anything about the symptoms. And it is not happening once or twice, but it is constant, resulting in apathy or some elements of disorder, which needs therapeutic treatment. Especially when the kid loses a parent in recent events, their roles change. The child assumes the role of an adult and not of someone playing soccer in the yard, so they understand what they are losing. Childlike things are no longer in the focus of their life.

“The kids need to regain their carelessness, with no feelings of danger, they should be able to believe once again that their parents will be able to protect them.”

Meanwhile, 28 non-governmental organizations from Artsakh published an open letter to the international community on July 10. They said, in part:

“Artsakh is not a ‘territory’ inherited by someone by the right of the strong, but our Homeland, where we have a full and inalienable right to a safe life. Artsakh is not just a handful of 120,000 people, not counting about 30,000 forcibly displaced Artsakh residents, who were expelled from their homes as a result of Azerbaijan’s military aggression in 2020…

“We suggest recalling the history of the Second World War and trying to imagine: would it have been possible to call on Jews to live under Hitler’s Nazi government? Modern Azerbaijan is also a Nazi state in relation to the Armenians, and it is not difficult to make sure of that – in case of an objective look at this issue without unilateral consumption of the Azerbaijani propaganda. Having survived the horrors of the three wars unleashed by Azerbaijan, pogroms, exile, psychological terror, human and material losses, continuing to live with the looming existential threat, the people of Artsakh are demanding to use all existing international mechanisms to prevent ethnic cleansing and genocide carried out by Azerbaijan. In view of the current situation, we demand the presence of representatives of all relevant international organizations in Artsakh.”

Will the world hear this call? Azerbaijan’s illegal blockade on Artsakh has remained ongoing for the past 7 months. Will the US administration finally take a moral step at this historic time and end the second Armenian genocide in Artsakh?

https://providencemag.com/2023/07/azerbaijans-illegal-blockade-causes-30000-armenian-children-mental-anguish-starvation-trauma/