Putin, Aliyev discuss factors for implementation of Russia-Armenia-Azerbaijan agreements on Nagorno-Karabakh

News.am, Armenia
June 23 2021

Presidents of Russia and Azerbaijan Vladimir Putin and Ilham Aliyev discussed the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh over the phone. The Kremlin’s press service reports that the phone talks were held at the initiative of the Azerbaijani side.

“The practical aspects of implementation of the agreements of the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia on Nagorno-Karabakh (November 9, 2020 and January 11, 2021) were discussed. There was special focus on intensification of the activities in a trilateral format to restore economic ties and transport links in the South Caucasus.

During a discussion on the current issues on the bilateral agenda, Vladimir Putin and Ilham Aliyev reaffirmed their mutual understanding to strengthen the Russian-Azerbaijani strategic partnership even further. An agreement was reached to continue contacts at different levels,” the press release reads.

Asbarez: EAFJD Highlights Baku’s Use of POWs as Political Leverage

The European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD) sent a letter to EU leaders Thursday drawing their attention to the leaked video of a conversation between the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his wife proving Azerbaijan’s instrumentalization of Armenian captives.

The Letter was sent to Charles Michel, President of Council of the European Union, Ursula Von der Leyen, President of European Commission and Josep Borrell, High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice-President of the Commission.

The video attests that Aliyev’s and his government’s previous public statements on the non-existence of Armenian prisoners of war in Azerbaijan were false, and explicitly proves Aliyev’s intention of using these captives as mere objects of trade and political bargaining.

Below is the full text of the letter:

A recently leaked video of an informal conversation between the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his wife not only attests that Aliyev’s and his government’s previous public statements on the non-existence of Armenian prisoners of war (PoWs), captives in Azerbaijan were false, but also explicitly proves Aliyev’s intention of using these captives as mere objects of trade and political bargaining.

In the video (dating to 15 June 2021) one can clearly hear Erdoğan’s wife asking Ilham Aliyev whether they still have more [Armenian] captives. Aliyev responds to this by “yes, of course, it is in the process”. Erdogan’s wife then comments, saying “then return them in portion by portion”, meaning in stages. The whole conversation implies that the Armenian captives and PoWs should be traded for something else.

Despite this irrefutable evidence of the Armenian captives being held as bargaining chips, we remind you of the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev’s answer to media representatives at press conference on 26 February 2021 and the Minister of Foreign Affairs Jeyhun Bayramov’s statement at press conference on 15 March 2021 where they both emphazised that there were no Armenian captives held in Azerbaijan.

This video and the developments on the ground prove that Azerbaijani authorities:

  1. illegally keep all Armenian captives as objects for use in political bargaining;
  2. continuously mislead the international community by qualifying the captives as “terrorists” or “saboteurs”;
  3. organize false, illegal criminal proceedings against the captives;
  4. commit human trafficking, which is a criminally punishable act, such as the capturing of 6 Armenian servicemen on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia on 27 May;
  5. blatantly violate clause 8 of the tripartite ceasefire statement of 10 November , 2020 which stipulates the return of all prisoners of war and captives.
  6. deliberately cause continuous suffering to the Armenian captives, prisoners of war as well as their families.

Additionally, we recall the fact that since 11 May 2021, the Azerbaijani forces have encroached onto the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia where they still remain illegally, endangering the security of the population in border settlements and generating an atmosphere of fear and intimidation. The US department of State, the French President Emmanuel Macron have urged to pull back all the forces from the sovereign territory of Armenian and cease the provocation. In its resolution adopted by overwhelming majority on 20. May 2021, the European Parliament declared that “the temporary entry of troops from Azerbaijan into the territory of Armenia amount to a violation of the territorial integrity of Armenia and of international law.”

Taking into account all the above-mentioned facts, the resolutions adopted by the European Parliament, as well as by several national parliaments of the EU member states, we a panEuropean grassroots organization, call on you to:

– use all the leverage at your disposal and put pressure on Azerbaijan to ensure an immediate and unconditional release of all the Armenian captives and prisoners of war, as stipulated by the ceasefire statement of 10 November 2020;
– to stand up against the Azerbaijani encroachment on the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia;
– support the creation of a security zone on the border of Armenia with Azerbaijan as an essential prerequisite for a demarcation process which must take place within the framework a comprehensive peaceful settlement, under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk group;

The lives and dignity of human beings should never be an object of trade. The release of the Armenian prisoners of war is a mandatory international requirement, and not an act of goodwill or grace. There is no lasting peace without justice. In order for peace to be sustainable, it has to be viable. As EU citizens we thus call on you to use all the instruments at your disposal to defend the inalienable rights of the indigenous Armenian population of Nagorno Karabakh and to ensure the realization of the above-mentioned objectives which are a minimal prerequisite for starting any viable peace-process.

CivilNet: Competing Stepanakert Rallies Underscore Post-War Political Tensions in Karabakh

CIVILNET.AM

24 Jun, 2021 03:06

By Mark Dovich

A series of rallies held in Stepanakert, Karabakh’s largest city, on June 21 and 22, have highlighted the deep political tensions in the region as it tries to rebuild after last year’s bloody 44-day war with Azerbaijan.

On June 21, a day after Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party overwhelmingly won snap parliamentary elections, about 1,500 people gathered in Stepanakert, demanding the resignation of Arayik Harutyunyan, the president of the Republic of Artsakh, as many Armenians prefer to call the territory.

The demonstrators on Renaissance Square, Stepanakert’s main square, were unhappy that Harutyunyan had congratulated Pashinyan earlier that day on his electoral victory. “I wish success to you and your team,” Harutyunyan said in a statement to Pashinyan. “I hope the results of the elections will enable Armenia’s authorities to strengthen the security and foriegn policy positions damaged by the war.”

A day earlier, on the day of the vote, Harutyunyan made a highly publicized visit to the office of Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party in Yerevan. Following the meeting, Harutyunyan said he had come to the office “on personal business” and later said that his “visit to the office of the Civil Contract Party on the day of the elections was misinterpreted.”

Nonetheless, Harutyunyan’s apparent support for Pashinyan — blamed by many Armenians, despite his recent reelection, for his role leading Armenia to a disastrous defeat in the September-November 2020 war against Azerbaijan in and around Nagorno-Karabakh — seems to have upset many Armenians.

Among them are Mary Davtyan, former executive director of Artsakh Public TV and head of the Hadrut De-Occupation NGO, and her husband Davit Avanesyan, who have both been on hunger strike since June 21, demanding Harutyunyan’s resignation. “There is no future with this man,” Avanesyan, speaking with CivilNet, said of the de facto Karabakh leader. “He does not represent anything to the people.”

“Are we going to live in safety or not?” added Davtyan.

On June 22, Harutyunyan announced that, “taking into account the internal political tensions in Artsakh these days,” he would deliver a message that evening in Stepanakert’s Renaissance Square. “I am going to speak openly and honestly about all the main problems and solutions, from the war to the current security and socio-economic situation, from relations with the Armenian authorities to internal political developments,” he said in a statement.

But Harutyunyan’s rally yesterday was eventually upstaged by demonstrators who gathered in the square immediately after the speech, underscoring the depth of public dissatisfaction with Harutyunyan in Karabakh. A video posted to Twitter by Anush Ghavalyan, a reporter with Artsakh Public TV, shows hundreds of people gathered in the center of Stepanakert, “demanding Harutyunyan’s resignation and new elections in Karabakh.”

Arayik Harutyunyan has served as the president of the Republic of Artsakh since May 2020. A Stepanakert native and an economist by training, he also served as the region’s prime minister for a decade, from 2007 to 2017, until that office was abolished.

In the immediate aftermath of Armenia’s defeat in the Second Karabakh War in November 2020, he lent his support to the controversial Russia-brokered ceasefire between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces, which permitted Azerbaijan to take control over all seven regions ringing the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast (NKAO), as well as parts of the territory of the former NKAO itself. “If the fighting continued at a similar pace, then within days we would have lost all of Artsakh,” Harutyunyan said at the time.

Iran ready to demine, rebuild liberated areas in Karabakh

Mehr News Agency, Iran
June 13 2021

TEHRAN, Jun. 13 (MNA) – Iranian Ambassador to Baku said that the Islamic Republic of Iran is ready for demining and rebuilding the liberated areas in the Karabakh region.

Seyyed Abbas Mousavi made the remarks on Sunday in his visit to the liberated city of Aghdam in the Republic of Azerbaijan and reiterated Iran’s readiness to demine and rebuild the liberated areas in Karabakh.

“We visited the liberated city of Aghdam along with the resident diplomatic staff and in the presence of Hikmet Hajiyev Foreign Policy Assistant to the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan,” Mousavi tweeted.

In the reconstruction plan of Aghdam, a modern city with 100,000 inhabitants is predicted, which is a good opportunity for Iranian companies, he said, adding, “I announced that the Islamic Republic of Iran is fully prepared for demining and reconstructing these areas.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif recently visited Baku.

Referring to Iran's principled policy towards the Karabakh crisis since the 1990s, Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif emphasized respecting territorial integrity, observing rights of all people in the region and peaceful settlement of disputes between the Republic of Azerbaijan and Armenia.

MA/FNA14000323000811

Erdogan will tell Biden that official recognition of Armenian Genocide ‘disturbed and upset’ Turkey

Public Radio of Armenia
June 14 2021

Joe Biden will hear directly from Turkish President Recep Erdogan how his recent statement on the Armenian genocide ‘disturbed and upset us’ during their one-on-one meeting Monday, the NATO ally said, the Daily Mail reports.

Erdogan is set to meet with Biden in a key bilateral meeting at the NATO summit in Brussels. It will be their first sit-down since Biden’s official White House statement on the subject infuriated the Erdogan government.   

‘An ally country taking such a stance on an issue that has nothing to do with NATO, the issue of Armenians, has disturbed and upset us. It is not possible to go on without reminding (Biden of) this,’ Erdogan said in comments before traveling to the summit.

He also plans to raise U.S. removal of Turkey from an F-35 fighter jet program amid security concerns over its purchase of Russian-made air defenses.

After years of debate in Washington, the White House in April released a statement on the historical event that resulted in the deaths of 1.5 million.  

‘Each year on this day, we remember the lives of all those who died in the Ottoman-era Armenian genocide and recommit ourselves to preventing such an atrocity from ever again occurring,’ Biden said in the official White House statement.

‘And we remember so that we remain ever vigilant against the corrosive influence of hate in all its forms,’ he said. 

Turkish press: From Brussels to Shusha, Erdoğan’s diplomacy takes hold

Illustration by Erhan Yalvaç

Turkey has been highly active in the international arena recently as all eyes were on the NATO summit and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s meeting with United States President Joe Biden.

A high-level delegation, led by Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, paid a surprise visit to Tripoli for a series of critically important meetings.

It is no secret that various foreign stakeholders in Libya, which are unhappy with Turkey’s military presence in the country, have been calling for “all foreign forces” to withdraw.

Ahead of the recent NATO summit, it was important for Libya's Government of National Accord (GNA) to resist such pressure.

The Turkish delegation’s visit thus served as a reminder to all relevant parties that Turkey’s forces were not a foreign element.

After all, there could have been no transition government or the Second Berlin Conference without Ankara’s intervention.

The Turkish troops, who liberated the Libyan capital from warlord Gen. Khalifa Haftar’s imminent occupation, cannot be equated with Russia's Wagner Group or mercenaries from Chad and Sudan.

The Turkish president’s meeting with his U.S. counterpart in Brussels too was extremely important. After all, Biden did not hold bilateral meetings with any leader at the Belgian capital – with the notable exception of Erdoğan.

On a separate note, Bloomberg’s editorial, which claimed that Turkey had abandoned the West long ago and called on Biden to sever ties with Ankara at the NATO Summit, was utter nonsense.

On the contrary, the two leaders’ body language and statements at the summit signaled that the engagement was quite positive.

Indeed, the U.S. president told reporters that he had a “very good” talk with Erdoğan after their 45-minute tete-a-tete meeting.

For the record, that was hardly surprising. The global system is headed in a direction, which requires NATO and the U.S. to strengthen their relations with Turkey.

That’s why areas of cooperation – such as the administration of Kabul airport and Libya – had to take precedence over areas of disagreement.

That is exactly what happened in Brussels. Those anticipating a Biden-Erdoğan fight would do their best to save their appetite for the U.S. president’s meeting with Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

Biden’s attitude in Belgium seemed in line with Erdoğan’s call for a “new chapter” in Turkey-U.S. relations.

The Turkish president made it abundantly clear that the bilateral meeting took place in a positive atmosphere: “We agreed to use dialogue channels effectively and regularly, as two allies and strategic partners ought to do. We had a most useful and sincere discussion. We see that there is a strong will to mark the beginning of an efficient period of cooperation, in all areas, on the basis of mutual respect and interests.” He added that there was “no problem in Turkey-U.S. relations that did not have a solution.”

Erdoğan’s bilateral meetings with the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Greece, too, concentrated on areas of cooperation.

It was noteworthy that Erdoğan and French President Emmanuel Macron began speaking about working together in Libya and Syria.

Furthermore, it must be taken into consideration that the final communique made references to the Syrian crisis and included a commitment to Turkey’s security measures.

The Brussels summit will be remembered as an event that consolidated Turkey’s position within the Western alliance.

Erdoğan’s subsequent trip to Shusha, in turn, reflected the new realities of Turkish foreign policy. I was part of the official delegation that traveled to Azerbaijan this week to celebrate that country’s victory in Nagorno-Karabakh in its cultural capital of Shusha.

That trip instantly became a symbol of the fraternal bonds and common destiny between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Indeed, Erdoğan absolutely deserved to join his counterpart, Ilham Aliyev, on that joyful day.

The Turkish president made valuable contributions to the liberation of Shusha, after 27 years of Armenian occupation, just as he prevented the fall of Tripoli, making the establishment of the Libyan transition government possible.

Turkey’s most recent diplomatic contacts in Tripoli, Brussels and Shusha reflect its new global and regional role.

Moving forward, Ankara will concentrate even more on opportunities for cooperation in the Caucasus and Central Asia. That pursuit must be seen as an effort to promote stability and trade in the region – rather than a move against Russia or Iran.

To conclude, Erdoğan continued to cement his country’s recent foreign policy moves with his meetings on the NATO summit's sidelines and his trip to Shusha.

Armenpress: U.S. Ambassador visits National Defense Research University of Armenia

U.S. Ambassador visits National Defense Research University of Armenia

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 19:15, 15 June, 2021

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS.  US Ambassador to Armenia Lynne Tracey visited the National Defense Research University of the Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Armenia on June 15. The leadership and professional staff of the Research University attended the meeting, who presented to the Ambassador the activities of the University.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the MoD Armenia, the US Ambassador spoke about the Armenian-American cooperation and regional development directions. She positively assessed the activities of the National Defense Research University.

The head of the university, Major-General Gennady Tavaratsyan highly assessed Ambassador Tracy's visit to the University and expressed readiness for further cooperation.

Armenpress: Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 18-06-21

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 18-06-21

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 17:37,

YEREVAN, 18 JUNE, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 18 June, USD exchange rate down by 0.38 drams to 513.73 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 2.20 drams to 612.16 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.03 drams to 7.12 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 4.28 drams to 713.98 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 1,377.94 drams to 29378.43 drams. Silver price down by 18.76 drams to 439.26 drams. Platinum price down by 905.93 drams to 18069.38 drams.

Armenia’s Revolution Betrayed

MediaMax, Armenia

Snap Parliamentary Elections will be held in Armenia on June 20. Will anything survive from the promises of the 2018 peaceful revolution?

It was only three years ago, but it already looks so far away. In Spring 2018 thousands of young and less young Armenians took to the streets demanding change. They reject the manoeuvres of former president Serge Sargsyan to stay in power for an unconstitutional third mandate. The event was exceptional: not only by the extreme civility of the protest movement, non-violent but also joyful, as if already were celebrating a better future. The fact that the ruling administration did not open fire on the demonstrations made a non-violent revolution possible.

The event was amazing if one considers the broad context of 2018. To the east, Azerbaijan had settled into a “republican dynasty” with Ilham Aliyev inherited the state from his father in 2003. To the west, a Turkey with Erdogan in power also since 2003, becoming harder since the failed coup of 2016. In the north, Vladimir Putin is in power since the year 2000. To the south, the Islamic Republic of Iran had expanded its power across the Middle East, only to be regularly contested by internal discontent. The world of 2018 was one of rise of populism and nationalism, where Donald Trump led the self-declared “free world”. It was in such a context of reaction that the Armenian “Velvet” Revolution took place. “In an international atmosphere hardening under nationalist populism and militaristic discourses, a peaceful regime change in Armenia is a welcoming fresh air”, I wrote in Agos back in 2018.

Little did we realize how difficult it was to preserve pro-democratic agenda in a time of global right-wing populism a cynical realpolitik. After a decade of Sargsyan’s rule, where people were tired of stagnation and corruption, there was finally a “happy” mood in Yerevan. Soon, that “fresh air” was polluted by external circumstances: a war launched by a coalition of autocracies seeking new legitimacy by unleashing nationalist instincts. The 44-day war led to the killing and maiming of thousands of young recruits. Armenia, abandoned by its ally Russia and ignored European democracies, suffered a crushing defeat. The happy mood in Yerevan is now gone, instead there is a pressing sadness, one of mourning for lost sons.

Armenia is heading to snap elections on June 20. There is little hope that the promises of the 2018 Revolution will be maintained. Many in Armenia ask whether the war and the defeat was the price they paid for their dreams of a better future, and whether it would be better to have autocratic rule that promises instead security and stability.

The promise of democratic change in Armenia has-been betrayed. It was molested by autocrats who did not hesitate to unleash a merciless war. It was abandoned by Russia, Armenia’s military ally, which tolerated a war against it ally for 44 long days. It was betrayed by a Europe interested in its merchantile interests and bank accounts, and indifferent towards democracy to its eastern borders.

It was also betrayed by the administration of Nikol Pashinyan who came to power in 2018: not only they did not manage to handle Armenia’s external relations, and failed to decrease risks of isolation and danger of war, but also they revealed to be unable to make the necessary internal reforms. Their failure is largely because the Pashinyan administration quickly cut-off its decision-making process from the broader social movement that made the 2018 revolution possible. “La démocratie, c'est moi!” was the populist answer of Pashinyan.

Today, Pashinyan has little to promise on the way of reforms. Not only he is weakened by the defeat and his powerful internal enemies emboldened, but also he has lost the support of the urban, educated middle-class, those who brought him to power, but now feel bitterly disappointed. Pashinyan’s popular support comes from the provinces and by the popular classes, who see him weak, yet prefer to the alternatives. Without the support of the civil-society Pashinyan has little chances to succeed in reforms.

While there are over two-dozen political parties competing in the elections, the serious challenger is Rober Kocharyan, the second president of Armenia. Kocharyan promises security, to limit Western influence and especially that of “Soros”, and closer cooperation with Russia. He has also promised to return Hadrut and may be Shushi through negotiations, although never explained how. The fact that Pashinyan remains in power after a painful military defeat, witnesses how unpopular Kocharyan and his nationalist allies are inside Armenia.

The events since 2018 revealed a strong desire in Armenia for reforms, to fight oligarchic corruption, and for a fair electoral process. In spite of the tense political atmosphere, at times harsh verbal attack, there has been no violence during the electoral campaign. That a democratic process is taking place is an outstanding situation in that entire region, with the single exception of Georgia. It is less important who will win from the 2021 elections; it is more important to have a parliamentary system where next to the ruling group a strong opposition emerges. It will be the first step towards a political process, towards the establishment of checks and balances.

The events of the last few years also showed that there is yet another obstacle in front of democratization in Armenia: the unreformed state administration inherited from the Soviet times. For three decades leaders refrained from tackling it. Without its modernization, neither the question of democratic participation, rule of law, corruption, or numerous other failures that were revealed in 2020 will be addressed. Those reforms will not be achieved by a small group of people coming to power, who, eventually have the state bureaucracy at their disposition. Only a sustained pressure from “below” from what we call “civil society” will bring much needed reform to an obsolete bureaucracy and public administration.

Vicken Cheterian is a Swiss-Lebanese historian, journalist and author.