Armenia PM Suggests Putting International Observers on Azeri Border -Ifax

MOSCOW (Reuters) – Armenia's acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan suggested on Thursday that international observers from Russia or other Minsk Group countries be deployed to Armenia's border with Azerbaijan, the Interfax news agency reported.

Azerbaijan captured six Armenian servicemen in the early hours of Thursday morning, the defence ministries of both countries said, in the latest twist in a simmering border dispute. The Azeri defence ministry accused the men of trying to cross into Azeri territory.

(Reporting by Andrey Ostroukh; Writing by Alexander Marrow; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

https://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2021-05-27/armenia-pm-suggests-putting-international-observers-on-azeri-border-ifax

Armenian President, French Ambassador refer to Baku’s encroachments on Armenia’s territorial integrity

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 18:59,

YEREVAN, MAY 25, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian received on May 25 Ambassador of France to Armenia Jonathan Lacôte.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the President’s Office, President Sarkissian and Ambassador Lacôte referred to the situation on the Armenian border, the encroachments of Azerbaijan on the territorial integrity of Armenia, as well as the necessity of an immediate return of the Armenian war prisoners and civilian hostages kept in Azerbaijan.

The sides also exchanged views on issues of regional security and stability, as well as the current agenda of the bilateral relations.


Issue of Azerbaijani intrusion into Armenia raised at UK House of Lords

Public Radio of Armenia
May 20 2021
– Public Radio of Armenia

During the debates at the House of Lords, Baroness Cox raised the issues of refusal by Azerbaijan to release Armenian prisoners of war and civilian detainees, atrocities perpetrated by Azerbaijan during the war in Nagorno-Karabakh, escalation of anti-Armenian rhetoric or Armenophobia in Azerbaijan, and the recent intrusion of the Azerbaijani troops into the sovereign territory of Armenia

The Baroness also presented the current situation resulting from the incursion of the Azerbaijani armed units to the sovereign territory of the Republic of Armenia.

“I visited Karabakh during that war and witnessed the perpetration of war crimes by Azerbaijan, including the deliberate bombing of civilian targets such as the maternity hospital in Stepanakert. However, despite a ceasefire in November, there are at least four urgent concerns, which Her Majesty’s Government, unlike the Governments of France, the United States and Canada, have failed adequately to address,” Baroness Cox said.

The first, she said, is the refusal by Azerbaijan to release Armenian prisoners of war and civilian detainees who are subject to killings—including beheadings—torture and indefinite imprisonment.

Secondly, the Baroness added, there are serious concerns over the fate of hundreds of Armenian Christian monuments and cultural heritage sites, now under Azerbaijan’s control.

“There has already been footage of the jubilant destruction of a church by Azeri soldiers. Between 1997 and 2006, an estimated 28,000 Christian monuments were destroyed by Azerbaijan in the previously Armenian land of Nakhchivan,” she noted.

“Thirdly, anti-Armenian rhetoric, or Armenophobia, by the Azeri president, other officials, and across social media, has escalated, naming Armenians as pigs, dogs and brainless. This hatred has generated the creation of the Spoils of War Park in Baku; it displays mocking, humiliating mannequins of Armenian soldiers, which children are encouraged to hit, and a corridor lined with the helmets of dead Armenian soldiers,” Baroness Cox stated.

Fourthly, she added, recently and very disturbingly, Azerbaijani forces have advanced into new positions along the Armenia–Azerbaijan border, away from the conflict zone, and occupied the sovereign territory of Armenia itself. This included, on 12 May, armed units advancing three to four kilometers into the Armenian province of Syunik.

“The atrocities perpetrated by Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh during the recent war have been so serious that Genocide Watch has defined them as genocide. They have largely been unrecognized by the UK, with no appropriate response. That is very dangerous because, as has been well said, every genocide which is not condemned is an encouragement to the perpetrator to continue genocidal policies with impunity,” Baroness Cox said.

She reminded that the International Association of Genocide Scholars raised similar urgent concerns in October, warning that “genocide of the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh, and perhaps even Armenia, is a very real possibility.”

“Yet despite these warnings Her Majesty’s Government have chosen not to intervene to protect civilians. They continue to refuse to hold Turkey and Azerbaijan to account for their actions, despite clear evidence of past, recent and ongoing atrocities, choosing instead to define the crisis as a “problem on both sides”, in which Armenia is portrayed as equally guilty as Azerbaijan and Turkey. While war often involves crimes against humanity, and Armenia may have some culpability, there is absolutely no equivalence with the atrocities and war crimes perpetrated by Azerbaijan,” she stated.

“As the Armenian Foreign Minister said to us on a recent visit to Armenia: “Autocratic states have assessed how far they can get away with things. They have concluded that the ‘democratic world’ is somewhere else. They have assessed the democratic world and they will therefore continue this policy, as they have learnt from this.” There is therefore an urgent need to fulfil the commitment in Her Majesty’s gracious Speech to uphold human rights and to alleviate human suffering for the Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia,” Caroline Cox said.

Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon, the Minister of State, Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, said: “On the current situation between Azerbaijan and Armenia, raised by the noble Baroness, Lady Cox, we are well aware of the allegations from both sides that war crimes have been committed. We have urged relevant authorities to investigate and understand the situation on the ground. I know my colleague, Minister Morton, is working very hard in this respect and has visited the area directly and had discussions with all sides.”

Blogger Lapshin opens account in Armenian bank to get EUR 30,000 compensation from Azerbaijan

Public Radio of Armenia
Blogger Lapshin opens account in Armenian bank to get EUR 30,000 compensation from Azerbaijan – Public Radio of Armenia

Blogger Alexander Lapshin has opened an account at the Armenian Artsakhbank to get the EUR 30,000 compensation from Azerbaijan.

The European Court of Human Rights on Thurday ruled that Lapshin’s right to life had been violated during his detention in Baku and obliged Azerbaijan to pay 30,000 euros in compensation.

The case concerned an incident during the applicant’s imprisonment in Azerbaijan in 2017 for “having crossed the State border outside the checkpoints” during journeys to Nagorno-Karabakh, and the ensuing inquiry by the prosecutor’s office into the incident. The authorities asserted that the incident had been a suicide attempt, while the applicant alleged it had been attempted murder.

The applicant was resuscitated and hospitalized in an intensive-care unit. The following day the applicant was pardoned by the President of Azerbaijan and, upon his discharge from hospital three days later, was expelled to Israel.

The Court found that the inquiry into the prison incident had been ineffective and in breach of the respondent State’s procedural obligations under Article 2 of the Convention. It found that the respondent State had failed to satisfy the burden of proof resting on it to provide a satisfactory and convincing explanation as regards the incident which had put the applicant’s life in danger. There had therefore been a violation of Article 2 under its substantive limb.

The Court held that Azerbaijan was to pay the applicant 30,000 euros (EUR) in respect of nonpecuniary damage.

Alfonso Di Rizzo appointed Ambassador of Italy to Armenia

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 19:37,

YEREVAN, MAY 18, ARMENPRESS.  Alfonso Di Rizzo has been appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Italy to the Republic of Armenia, ARMENPRESS reports, reads the Facebook page of the Foreign Ministry of Italy.  

"Congratulations to the new Italian Ambassador to Yerevan Alfonso Di Rizzo. We wish you a successful job’', reads the Facebook page of the Italian Foreign Ministry.

Armen Sarkissian sends condolence letter to Vladimir Putin over Kazan tragedy

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 18:51,

YEREVAN, MAY 11, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian sent a condolence letter to Russian President Vladimir Putin on the occasion of the tragic incident in Kazan.

As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the President's Office, President Sarkissian expressed deep condolences over the horrifying tragedy that took place in one of the schools of Kazan, addressed words of sympathy to the relatives of the victims and wished speedy recovery to the injured.

Armenia’s foreign ministry expresses deep concerns over ongoing clashes in Jerusalem

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 16:28,

YEREVAN, MAY 11, ARMENPRESS. Armenia’s foreign ministry has expressed its deepest concerns over the ongoing clashes in Jerusalem.

“We are deeply concerned about the ongoing clashes in Jerusalem. We call on all parties involved to exercise restraint in order to reduce tensions and prevent further civilian casualties”, the MFA said in a statement on social media.

Tensions in East Jerusalem started growing since mid-April. On May 7, clashes between the Israeli border police in Palestinians started near the Temple Mount and in Sheikh Jarrah district, where law enforcement officers perform eviction of several Arab families under the decision of the Israeli court, which accompanied by protest actions of the local population and fierce clashes, TASS reported.

Editing by Aneta Harutyunyan

Azerbaijan accused of war crimes after execution of Armenian prisoners

The Morning Star, UK
May 5 2021

AZERBAIJAN has been accused of war crimes after lawyers claimed that 19 Armenian prisoners of war had been tortured and executed today.

Artak Zeynalyan and Siranush Sahakyan, who represent the captives at the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), said that they had filed a case there calling for Azerbaijan to be held accountable.

The Armenian soldiers were taken as prisoners last year during the six-week war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, a landlocked majority-Armenian territory inside Azerbaijan.

The bitter conflict saw accusations of war crimes, such as the beheading of civilians by Azeri troops. Amnesty International condemned the use of banned cluster bombs used on civilian targets, including in the regional capital Stepanakert.

A Russian-brokered peace deal led to anger in Armenia and mass protests demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, who they felt ceded too much Armenian territory.

He stood down last month and called snap elections which analysts expect him to win, but with a reduced majority, possibly requiring a coalition to form a cabinet.

“During the Second Artsakh War, which was started on September 27, 2020, as well as after the signing of the tripartite agreement on November 9, 2020, Armenian civilians and servicemen continued to be taken prisoner by Azerbaijan,” a statement from the lawyers said.

“Nineteen of those prisoners of war, who have appeared in captivity, have been tortured and killed by the Azerbaijani servicemen, which is a war crime.”

Meanwhile two Syrian nationals, Muhrab al-Shkheri and Yusef al-Haji, have been sentenced to life imprisonment in Armenia on international terrorism charges for their role in the conflict.

The mercenaries were part of a number from the Free Syrian Army that were shipped in by Turkey to fight alongside Azeri troops.

They were accused of actions aimed at killing or seriously injuring civilians who were not involved in the hostilities.

Ankara recruited the jihadists from the battlefield of Syria, where they had been fighting alongside Turkish troops in the illegal invasion and occupation of Afrin, part of the Kurdish enclave known as Rojava.

Turkey has been accused of deploying jihadists in a number of arenas including Libya, where the militia helped swing its civil war in favour of the Government of National Accord.

The government of Azerbaijan was contacted for comment.

 

New war unlikely, says Artsakh FM

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 16:57, 4 May, 2021

STEPANAKERT, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS. Artsakh’s foreign minister David Babayan says there is “little likelihood” of a new war given the role of Russia and their peacekeepers as guarantors of security.

“In this situation any attack will be an attack against Russia,” Babayan said during a meeting with the academic staff and students of the Artsakh State University.

In his speech he highlighted the need for preserving the “entity-ness” of Artsakh and attached importance to the factors of Armenia and the Diaspora in this context.

“We must keep our national resistibility high, keep our value system strong. Any difficulty creates also opportunities. We must be able to use these opportunities wisely and correctly,” he said.

He said that the international recognition of Artsakh will remain the foreign ministry’s priority.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan