Armenian human rights defender: Azerbaijani soldiers open fire near Syunik villages

News.am, Armenia
Jan 30 2021

Azerbaijani soldiers have opened a fire near Syunik villages, Armenian human rights defender Arman Tatoyan wrote on his Facebook.

The reports were confirmed by residents of all the villages, as well as local government bodies. The latters have submitted alarming complaints to the Human rights defender that the shooting is carried out regularly, both during the day and night. According to alarming information, shots are clearly heard in the villages aimed at intimidating civilians, primarily children and women.

The residents of the village noted that there are frequent cases when Azerbaijani soldiers shoot while being drunk.

A delegation led by the Human Rights Defender was informed of these shootings on January 9, 2021.

Special reports will be sent to international organizations, including the OSCE, the UN and the Council of Europe. Another reports will also be sent to special mechanisms of intergovernmental organizations.

Russia reports 19,138 daily coronavirus cases

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 13:28,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 28, ARMENPRESS. Russia’s coronavirus cases grew by 19,138 in the past day to 3,793,810, TASS reports citing the anti-coronavirus crisis center.

The average growth rate reached 0.51%.

Moscow confirmed 2,897 new COVID-19 cases in the past day. Some 2,128 cases were registered in St. Petersburg, 939 in the Moscow Region, 469 in the Nizhny Novgorod Region, 382 in the Voronezh Region and 375 in the Rostov Region.

Currently, 492,901 people are undergoing treatment for the coronavirus in Russia.

Provision on exchange of POWs not being fully implemented – Armenian PM

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 11 2021
Unfortunately, the Karabakh conflict remains unsolved, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan told reporters after a meeting with Russian and Azerbaijani Presidents in Moscow.
 
“We have managed to stop the hostilities, but a number of issues still need to be solved,” Pashinyan said.
 
According to him, one of those issues is the status of Nagorno Karabakh, and Armenia is ready to continue the negotiations within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmanship.
 
“Unfortunately, we did not solve the issue of prisoners of war today, and it is the most sensitive and painful issue. We agreed to continue the work in that direction,” he said.
 
The Prime Minister noted that point 8 of the trilateral statement is not being fully implemented and voiced hope that the parties would be able to reach a concrete solution in shortest terms.
 
He noted that the statement signed today is very important, and added that the implementation of the agreements enshrined in the documents could change the economic image of the region.
 
“The economic innovations can lead to more reliable security guarantees, and we are ready to work constructively in that direction,” Pashinyan said.
 
Unfortunately, he said, it’s impossible to solve issues during a single meeting and stressed that humanitarian issues, including the exchange of prisoners, remains a priority.
 

Nakhijevan and Azerbaijan to tie with railway passing through Armenia’s Meghri

Aysor, Armenia
Jan 12 2021
 
 
 
 
The cost of the construction of railway between Azerbaijan and Turkey are estimated 434 million USD, director of Azerbaijan’s economic reforms and communication analysis center Vusal Gasimli stated.
 
 He said he is speaking about the construction of Kars-Nakhijevan-Meghri-Zangelan-Baku railway which first of all must tie Nakhijevan with Azerbaijan.
 
 He said using Azerbaijan’s potential Armenia may establish transport communication with Russia in two directions – Gyumri-Nakhijevan-Meghri-Baku and Ijevan-Gazakh-Baku.
 
“Taking into consideration the possibility of construction of Kars-Gyumri branch of the railway, according to the assessments of foreign sources Kars-Gyumri-Nakhijevan-Meghri railway construction project will cost approximately 434 million USD,” Gasimli stated.
 

31 years after Baku pogrom Azerbaijan continues the policy of ethnic cleansing of Armenians in Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 13 2021
To date, Azerbaijan continues the policy of ethnic cleansing and annihilating Armenians in Artsakh, the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement on the 31rd anniversary of the Baku pogroms.
 
“Thirty-one years ago, the international community witnessed another crime against the Armenian population of Azerbaijan: the Armenian population which was an essential part of then Baku’s multicultural identity was subjected to the massacres and mass deportation carried out with particular cruelty. Hundreds were murdered, maimed, many went missing, tens of thousands became refugees. The anti-Armenian massacres in Baku of January, 1990, completed the ethnic cleansing of the Armenian population of Azerbaijan,” the Foreign Ministry said.
 
It stressed that the anti-Armenian policy of the authorities of Azerbaijan targeted not only the Armenian population living and prospering in Baku for centuries, but also the Armenian historical-cultural heritage of the city.
 
“So far, the masterminds and perpetrators of the anti-Armenian massacres in Baku have not been held accountable, and they continue to be glorified as heroes,” the statement reads.
 
“Moreover, to date, Azerbaijan continues the very policy of ethnic cleansing and annihilating Armenians in Artsakh. A vivid evidence of that is the wiping out of the entire Armenian population from the territories that fell under the Azerbaijani control, which was carried out through massive war crimes and ethnic cleansing,” the Foreign Ministry said.
 
“Today by paying tribute to the innocent victims of the anti-Armenian massacres in Baku, we once again emphasize the joint commitment of the Republic of Armenia, Artsakh and the Armenians all over the world to ensure the right of all Armenians to free, secure and dignified life in their homeland,” it concluded.
 

"We had only managed to deceive ourselves"

MIAPAN, Russia
Jan 11 2021
«WE HAD ONLY MANAGED TO DECEIVE OURSELVES»
in Russian — https://miaban.ru/info/armenia/london-11-1-2021/
 
On , Armenian President Armen Sarkissian published an article «Towards the «Fourth Republic»» on his official website.
 
Reading the articles of all the leaders of Armenia (for 30 years there were 4 presidents, 13 chairmen of parliament, 16 prime ministers — from the first prime minister Vazgen Manukyan to the current one), listening to fiery speeches, it is difficult to notice mistakes, almost always everything sounds very logical and true.
 
The aforementioned article the president, in particular, speaks of tactics for 25 years, which was «doomed from the very beginning», that «we lost the information war, both externally and internally» …
 
Of the 2,192 words (in Russian 1,696 words) in the article, the word «we» is used 41 times (in Russian 35). The word «I» — only six times (in Russian five). The word «we» is often used in phrases about losses, mistakes, failures. The word «I» is in neutral phrases. With the aforementioned traditional impeccability of the logic in the articles and speeches of the leaders of Armenia, nevertheless the reader involuntarily arises a question: does the author feel the degree of his own guilt too? Or there is no such guilt at all?
 
I will dwell on only one question to Armen Sarkisyan. It is known that his connections in London are very extensive. Back in the Soviet years, in 1984-1985, he taught at the University of Cambridge (Great Britain). Since 1992 — served as Ambassador to Great Britain, Europe, EU, Belgium, Vatican, in 1998-2000 — as a Special Ambassador again to Great Britain, etc. He became the president of Armenia as a matter of fact by «a direct landing from London» under the patronage of Serzh Sargsyan (btw, it became not entirely legal — meaning the factors of citizenship and residence in Armenia).
 
The question is about London’s role in what happened in 2020. It is not heard of this assessment from the President of Armenia. However this role was key. There are strong arguments that it was London that gave Erdogan the go-ahead for this dirty crimes. London’s globalists have given the green light to pan-Turkism for crimes against humanity and war crimes. Below are just a few facts and events — for short.
 
Boris Johnson (left on a picture), British Prime Minister since 2019 — his paternal great-grandfather was the Ottoman journalist Ali Kemal who was of Turkish and Circassian origin and for a some period was an Interior Minister in the government of Ahmed Okday, the last Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire. And Boris Johnson’s grandfather, Osman Ali, fled to the UK, where he took the name Wilfred Johnson.
 
Richard Moore (pictured in the middle, friend of Erdogan):
 
2014-2017 Ambassador to Turkey
2018-2020 Director-General, Political in the FCDO
since July 29, 2020 – Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6)
On 6 August 2020 the UK appoints a new Permanent Representative to the UN (and the UN Security Council) Barbara Woodward (pictured right).
 
September 27 2020 — A treacherous attack on the Republic of Artsakh by a terrorist coalition of Azerbaijan, Turkey, Israel and jihadists with the support of Great Britain (global cover), Georgia (transport corridor for Turkey and Israel and blockade of the way from Russia to Armenia), Pakistan and several other countries.
 
October 17 2020 — Closed meeting of the UN Security Council. Barbara Woodward vetoes all other permanent members’ proposal for stabilization in Artsakh.
 
Taking into account also other facts and events, there is a direct connection with the official London, its criminal role in the terrorist war against Artsakh. Was there any public assessment from the president? Was there a warning message to the people? After all, now he addresses the people with his articles and speeches. And why there was a silence BEFORE the war, when it was planned by London at full speed?
 
It would be good to see the answers to these questions on the president’s official website. If such and similar questions are not answered, self-deception in Armenia will continue. For, as Mr. A. Sarkisyan correctly writes in his article, «We had only managed to deceive ourselves.» Indeed, as much deception as there was in Armenia during these 30 years, there was probably no other place in the world. And there is a fear that this ongoing process of deception is being and will continue on new and new levels …
 
Эта информация в других веб ресурсах

During and after the war: where and how did Karabakh schoolchildren study

JAM News
Dec 29 2021
Sona Martirosyan, Yerevan   
 
 
The second Karabakh war suspended studies for 30,000 Karabakh schoolchildren.
 
According to official data, about 90,000 Karabakh residents were forced to leave their homes during the hostilities; since the truce, about 45,000 people have returned home. More than 30,000 will not be able to return, since their homes are located on territories that are now under the control of Azerbaijan.
 
Overall, 58% of students and 72% of teachers returned to Nagorno-Karabakh.
 
Below: how the problems of schoolchildren were solved during the days of hostilities, what is being done now so that children can continue their studies.
 
Volunteers
 
Shushanik Papazyan came to one of the temporary shelters for Karabakh residents in Yerevan in early October, when the war had just begun. The 20-year-old journalist had no idea what she could do for the people who settled here.
 
“At first I thought I would be useful as a psychologist, because I took special courses. It was obvious that everyone here needed psychological support. People did not speak at all, not even to each other. One of the volunteers came to the shelter on a motorcycle. And every time he turned the ignition, the children just jumped up in horror.
 
More volunteers came here, and together we began to figure out what and how to organize for children: songs, dances, drawing, reading books. We tried our best to dispel their thoughts of war.”
 
The volunteers soon realized that entertainment alone was not enough. The war seemed endless, and they set about teaching the children. Five of them started helping them do their homework after school.
 
Classes at the shelter
 
At first, classes for all students were held in one room.
 
“Of course it was very inconvenient. But one volunteer worked with each child, and we knew that they were leaving this room ready for the next day’s lessons. And we constantly contacted their school teachers, because we ourselves often had questions – after all, none of us are really teachers,” Shushanik says.
 
 
Հայաստան, ԼՂ, Արցախ, կրթություն, ղարաբաղյան պատերազմ, կրթության նախարարություն,
Then they managed to divide the students into age groups – four in each, so that the lessons were more effective for all 23. For this, the orphanage had equipped classrooms.
 
Shushanik says that the hardest thing for her was going to her charges on November 10, after the signing of the trilateral ceasefire agreement in Karabakh.
 
“In the morning I was worried, how will I enter the classroom, what will I say to these children? Some of them no longer even have a home and have nowhere else to return. I thought about how to talk to them about the lessons now.
 
But when I entered the classroom, everything had changed. My students sat in silence, with swollen and red eyes, but with open books and notebooks. And I realized that I have no right to be weak, because these children who have lost their homes, whose fathers and brothers are wounded or missing, whose families have lost so much, came to study.”
 
State aid
 
Children who moved to Armenia from Karabakh were offered to continue the educational process from the very first days of the war, says Zhanna Andreasyan, Deputy Minister of Education:
 
“They were given the opportunity to go to the school closest to their place of residence, register and attend classes. This did not require any documents. Moreover, the ministry did not take into account the availability of places in schools.
 
All children assigned to schools received the necessary textbooks and, if necessary, other school supplies. In general, more than half of the children who arrived from Artsakh during the war had the opportunity to study in schools in Armenia.
 
And now the process of their schooling continues. Moreover, all primary school students in Armenia now go to school, all the rest are taught remotely.
 
However, according to rough estimates, more than 2,000 of the children who moved to Armenia need technical support for online learning. The state, in cooperation with charitable and international organizations, is trying to provide them with the necessary equipment.
 
The deputy minister says there were two main reasons for the refusal of Karabakh children to go to local schools. Unlike Armenia, where 12-year education is compulsory, 9-year education is compulsory in NK. That is, students may not go to school after grade 9 if they do not want to continue their studies. The second reason is that people did not expect the war to be so long.
 
“Now more than half of the schoolchildren have returned to Artsakh. This trend continues. We are in constant contact with our colleagues in Artsakh – both in terms of technical assistance and information support, since the personal files of children attending schools in settlements that are already under the control of Azerbaijan can no longer be restored.
 
In addition, there is currently no way in NK to organize the final exams scheduled for December. And for those who intend to pass them, we organize exams in Armenia, since the loss of this opportunity for high school students can be fateful,” says Zhanna Andreasyan.
 
She ays that the opportunity to receive an education in Armenia will be provided as long as at least one child from Karabakh needs it.
 
 
Information from Nagorno-Karabakh
 
The war violated the right to education of more than 30,000 Karabakh residents, says NK Minister of Education, Science and Culture Lusine Karakhanyan:
 
“We are talking about 23,967 schoolchildren, more than 4,000 preschoolers and about 5,000 students. The buildings of more than 80 schools and kindergartens were completely or partially destroyed. There are also educational institutions that remained in the settlements that came under the control of Azerbaijan.”
 
According to Karakhanyan, the NK government is doing everything possible so that children can return to school. And some have already started working in Stepanakert. The minister assures that no child will be left without an education – difficult times have come, but solutions will be found.
 
In some cases, students will be referred to other schools in the neighborhood where they can provide acceptable learning environments.
 
Despite the coronavirus epidemic, there is currently no distance learning opportunity in NK. After the war, the infrastructure was damaged, there is no Internet, and electricity is often cut off.
 
“All this makes it very difficult to organize online education. We will try to maintain social distance and other rules, but the lessons will be held in person. Three schools in Stepanakert are already accepting students. With some reservations, the educational process began in rural schools, which were not affected. We have no right to be defeated in the field of education,” says Lusine Karakhanyan.
The class where Shushanik taught is gradually emptying. 16 out of 23 schoolchildren have already returned to Karabakh. Families from Hadrut and Shushi will remain in the shelter for now, who have nowhere to return.
 
For each of the children leaving home, Shushanik prepares portfolios with books and notebooks, pencil cases and notebooks, in which he asks to write about his dreams.
 

Armenia: Ban on Turkey imports to take effect on December 31

Post Online Media
Dec 26 2020
 

CHRISTIAN FERNSBY ▼ | December 26, 2020

The State Revenue Committee of Armenia once again reminds that the ban on the import of goods of Turkish origin that are on the list defined in the appendix to a government decision shall be in force in Armenia as of December 31, and for six months.

TURKEY   Armenia
But this ban on such goods that are imported before December 31 shall not apply only if customs clearance is carried out on these goods before December 31.

Topics: ARMENIA TURKEY

This import ban applies to the aforementioned goods of Turkish origin that are imported into Armenia from all countries. 


Police detain Mayor of Goris

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 10:04, 21 December, 2020

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, ARMENPRESS. The Mayor of Goris Arush Arushanyan has been detained by police amid a criminal investigation.

“The mayor is detained within the framework of a criminal case,” police told ARMENPRESS.

Police refused to elaborate details from the criminal case, noting that it has been forwarded to the Committee of Investigations. The Committee of Investigations also refused to comment.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan

Putin comments on post-armistice territorial problems between Armenia and Azerbaijan

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 16:57,

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 17, ARMENPRESS. President of Russia Vladimir Putin says the territorial problems that emerged between Armenia and Azerbaijan after the Karabakh armistice was signed must be resolved through negotiations.

“We’ve agreed on a cessation of military actions, and we’ve agreed that the sides will stand in positions where they were at the moment of the signing of the statement,” Putin said at a news conference when asked to comment on the developments in Hadrut.

“Some technical problems emerged regarding this, which are related with infrastructures, both for Armenia and Azerbaijan. These problems must be solved calmly, during the negotiations process, because the trilateral statement provides all possibilities for this, because it mentions that after the establishment of a ceasefire a complete stabilization of relations must take place in the region, with economic and infrastructural unblocking. This refers also to Nakhijevan, and Armenia’s south and north. I hope that the flare-up which happened with the violation of the ceasefire will be the only one and that it will be possible to bring all agreed sides around negotiations,” President Putin said.

Putin noted the importance of the November 9 Russia-Armenia-Azerbaijan statement because it stopped the bloodshed in Karabakh. He noted that all other matters are secondary to this.

“The preservation of people’s lives and health is the most important objective that we solved,” he said.

Editing and Translating by Stepan Kocharyan