Catholic, Anglican bishops affirm support for Armenia

Vatican News
Oct 6 2023
As the Archbishop of Canterbury visits crisis-struck Armenia, the Catholic Bishops of Europe call for action to address the growing humanitarian emergency in the country.

By Joseph Tulloch

“I come here to say you are not forgotten.”

Those were the words of the Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, as he arrived in Armenia. 

The Anglican Archbishop is on a two-day journey to the country, which has been rocked by Azerbaijan’s recent annexation of the neighbouring enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Speaking on Thursday to His Holiness Karekin II, the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Archbishop Welby said: “Armenia was the first Christian kingdom. You were the first region to have the cross as your symbol. This is a symbol of weight, pain and struggle.”

“The last weeks have seen so many Armenians suffer deeply. I have been praying for you daily. I come here to say you are not forgotten.”

Archbishop Welby is in the region as part of a five-day “pilgrimage of listening”. Earlier this week, he visited Azerbaijan and Georgia, meeting with civil and religious leaders, including the Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.

On the day Archbishop Welby began his visit to Armenia, the Council of Bishops’ Conferences of Europe, a Catholic grouping, released a statement echoing Pope Francis’ “repeated calls for a negotiated solution in the region.”

Noting that over 100 thousand Armenians have been displaced, they called on the international community to alleviate what they described as a “humanitarian emergency.”

Moreover, the bishops said, the exodus of the enclave's Armenian population “is also endangering the Christian heritage of the region”, which must be “monitored” to prevent defacement.

In their statement, the European bishops referred to a Resolution passed in 2022 by the European parliament.

The Resolution observes that “considerable deliberate damage was caused by Azerbaijan to Armenian cultural heritage during the 2020 war.”

“Over the last 30 years,” it continues, “the irreversible destruction of religious and cultural heritage has been carried out by Azerbaijan, notably in Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, where 89 Armenian churches, 20 000 graves and more than 5 000 headstones have been destroyed.”

The Resolution also condemns “falsification of history and attempts to present [Armenian heritage] as so-called Caucasian Albanian”, in reference to Azerbaijani government claims that historical and religious sites widely recognised as Armenian in fact belong to a now vanished culture.

Fwd: The California Courier Online, October 5, 2023

The California
Courier Online, October 5, 2023

 

1-         Biden’s
Inaction on Artsakh

            Disappoints
Armenian-Americans

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         The Republic of Artsakh Will Cease to Exist,

            Nearly All
Armenians Have Been Forcibly Displaced

3-         At Reagan
Library, LA Armenians Protest

            to Raise
Awareness of Artsakh Genocide

4-         Armenian
students protest at USC event featuring Turkish Ambassador to US

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************

 

1-         Biden’s
Inaction on Artsakh

            Disappoints
Armenian-Americans

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

There are many justified complaints about Russia’s shameful role in the loss of Artsakh
and inaction in coming to the defense of Armenia’s borders. However, there
is also a lot to complain about the indifference by the international
community, including the United States,
about Azerbaijan’s
aggression against Artsakh and Armenia.

For 30 years, the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group, composed of the United
States, France
and Russia,
the mediators in the Artsakh conflict, issued repeated statements about the
unacceptability of the use of force, urging the settlement of the dispute
through peaceful negotiations.

However, contrary to such well-intentioned words, when Azerbaijan repeatedly attacked Artsakh and Armenia with
frequent shootings at the border for three decades, the OSCE Minsk Group simply
issued meaningless statements, urging both sides not to engage in violence. The
OSCE, however, never bothered to point a finger at the guilty party – Azerbaijan—thus
equating the victimizer with the victim.

Such unjust statements encouraged Azerbaijan
to brazenly continue its attacks, culminating in the unleashing of a massive
war against Artsakh in 2020, followed by incursions into the territory of Armenia.
Last month, Azerbaijan
violated the agreement it signed in 2020 to allow Russian peacekeepers to
protect the remnants of Artsakh’s population until 2025. Pres. Ilham Aliyev,
knowing full well that no foreign country would intervene to stop his attacks,
ethnically cleansed the 120,000 inhabitants of Artsakh and drove them out of
their historical homeland.

On Sept. 14, 2023, the Acting Assistant Secretary of State
Yuri Kim testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee: “We will not
tolerate any military action. We will not tolerate any attack on the people of
Nagorno-Karabakh.” Days later, Azerbaijan
attacked and occupied Artsakh confident that the U.S. government was bluffing.

Naturally, no one expected the United
States or another major power to send troops to defend
Artsakh and Armenia, but
merely urging Azerbaijan
not to block the Lachin Corridor or refrain from the use of force is an
exercise in futility. The international community did not even impose sanctions
on Azerbaijan
because its gas and oil was more valuable than Armenian blood.

To make matters worse, after ignoring Azerbaijan’s repeated
attacks on Artsakh and Armenia since the 2020 war, Samantha Power, the
Administrator of U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), finally
arrived in Armenia last week, bringing along a letter from Pres. Joe Biden
which contained a lot of sweet words for Armenians, but once again, no action.

Even more shocking, Power offered the pitiful amount of
$11.5 million in humanitarian aid to the 120,000 destitute Artsakh refugees.
That’s almost $96 for each refugee, deprived of housing, food, medicines and
other basic necessities. This is a shameful amount of money compared to the
USAID’s annual budget of $50 billion. Her visit was too late and accomplished
too little.

Several other countries and international agencies also
pledged assistance to the Artsakh Armenians: France ($7.4 million), Germany
($5.3 million), the European Union ($5.3 million), Sweden ($1.3 million),
Canada ($1.85 million), Denmark ($140,000), United Nations Refugee Agency,
UNHCR (amount unspecified), Japan (amount unspecified), Spain (amount
unspecified). Armenia
committed $25 million, plus $125 for rent and utilities per month for six
months for each refugee. The government of Cyprus
invited the Artsakh refugees to resettle in Cyprus. However, it is not a good
idea to take these displaced Armenians out of Armenia.

In addition, dozens of Armenian organizations throughout the
Diaspora are raising funds to help the Artsakh refugees. There are also many
charitable organizations and businesses in Armenia that are helping the
Artsakh Armenians with funds, supplies or services. Armenia’s Ministry of Finance
opened a bank account to receive donations from the public. There is also an
office set up by the Armenian government to coordinate the distribution of the
offered assistance.

Just in case someone thinks that the pledged assistance is a
lot of money, it is in fact a negligible amount compared to the vast needs of
the refugees for the months and years to come. Ukraine,
on the other hand, has received so far $80 billion from the United States
for its military, financial and humanitarian needs. In addition, 41 other
countries have contributed tens of billions of dollars to Ukraine.

The lack of concrete action by the Biden Administration,
aside from pledging $11.5 million to the Artsakh refugees, has highly
disappointed many Armenian-Americans. It is surprising that Pres. Biden, an
experienced politician and candidate for reelection next year, who has one of
the lowest ratings in the history of the United States for an incumbent
president, has not made more of an effort to win over Armenian-American voters.
Even if Pres. Biden does not care about Armenia and Artsakh, he should have
at least cared about his own self-interest, which is getting votes for his own
re-election.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         The Republic of Artsakh Will
Cease to Exist,

            Nearly All
Armenians Have Been Forcibly Displaced

(Combined Sources)—“The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
will cease to exist,” said an order signed by Artsakh President Samvel
Shahramanyan on Thursday, September 28, dissolving all state agencies and
organizations on the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The order said that given the “grave military-political
situation and pursuant to ensuring the physical security and essential
interests of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh as a priority, taking into
consideration the agreement reached with Azerbaijan mediated by the Russian
peacekeeping forces command that the free, voluntary and unimpeded passage of
the Nagorno-Karabakh residents with their property and vehicles through Lachin
Corridor will be taken into consideration,” the official Artsakh InfoCenter
reported.

“All ministries and other state agencies and organizations
will be disbanded by January 1, 2024 and the “Nagorno-Karabakh (Artsakh)
Republic will cease to exist,” reads the order.

“The population of Nagorno-Karabakh, including the population
now outside the republic, after this order takes effect, will become acquainted
with the terms of reintegration presented by Azerbaijan with the purpose of
making an individual decision in the future on the opportunity to stay in or
return to Nagorno-Karabakh,” the presidential order said.

Of the population of 120,000 in Artsakh, some 20,000 had
alreadly fled the region after the 2020 War, according to reports.

The number of forcibly displaced persons from Artsakh who
have crossed into Armenia
reached 100,417 as of Monday, October 2 (at the time of The California
Courier's publication), according to official reports. Of them, 30% are minors
separated from parents. A total of 41,043 vehicles had crossed the Hakari Bridge,
which links Armenia
to Artsakh, since last week.

Unofficial reports say only a handful of people are left in
Artsakh—among them elderly who are unable to leave due to poor health and lack
of assistance; and government officials who will stay in Stepanakert to
facilitate the safety of those citizens who may be in the territory of Artsakh,
but are willing to move to the Republic of Armenia.

The Armenian government has offered accommodation to all
arriving forcibly displaced persons from Nagorno-Karabakh. According to the
latest information, 32,200 of the forcibly displaced persons had accepted the
accommodation provided by the Armenian government.Some of the forcibly
displaced persons chose to stay with their relatives or friends in Armenia.

Nagorno-Karabakh representatives and Azerbaijani authorities
held a third meeting in Yevlakh on September 29, as part of ongoing talks on
the region’s possible “reintegration” into Azerbaijan and the Artsakh
Armenians’ rights and security “within the framework of the Azerbaijani
constitution.”

Artsakh representatives and Azerbaijani officials started
talks on Thursday, September 21, in Yevlakh. The second meeting took place in
Ivanyan on September 23. Nagorno-Karabakh was represented by Davit Melkumyan, a
lawmaker and head of the Artsakh Democratic Party, along with Deputy Secretary
of the Security Council Sergey Martirosyan.

Artsakh was forced to concede to a Russian-brokered
ceasefire— whereby it would disband its armed forces and discuss its
“reintegration” into Azerbaijan—following
a lightning 24-hour military attack by Azerbaijan against Artsakh on
Tuesday, September 19.

Azerbaijan
said on Tuesday, September 19 that six of its citizens had been killed by land
mines in two separate incidents in the Nagorno-Karabakh region and blamed
“illegal Armenian armed groups” for laying the mines—using this incident as the
precursor for its attack against Artsakh that day. At least 200 people were
killed and more than 400 were wounded in Artsakh as a result of the Azerbaijani
attack, according to the latest information released by Nagorno-Karabakh Human
Rights Defender Gegham Stepanyan.

Azerbaijan
claims it lost 192 servicemembers during its attack on Artsakh on September 19
and 20, and 511 others were wounded in the attack.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
3-         At Reagan Library, LA Armenians
Protest

            to Raise
Awareness of Artsakh Genocide

By Jeremy Childs and

Christian Martinez

 

(Los Angeles
Times)—Close to 100 Armenian Americans and supporters gathered in front of the
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library on Tuesday to rally for the thousands of
ethnic Armenians in the contested and besieged region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Organizers said the rally in Simi Valley, held the day before the second
Republican presidential debate at the same location, was intended to shine a
light on the ongoing humanitarian crisis facing the estimated 120,000 Armenians
living in the region. Known to Armenians as Artsakh, the region sits within the
borders of Azerbaijan
but has been historically occupied by ethnic Armenians.

The crowd gathered on Presidential Drive, with many waving
Armenian and American flags. They were led in chants denouncing genocide and
asking for sanctions against Azerbaijan.

Ratcheting up the tension and adding to the conflict’s death
toll, an explosion at a gas station in Nagorno-Karabakh on Tuesday, September
26 left scores of people dead or injured. Many of those killed were among the
thousands of ethnic Armenians trying to flee the region. The cause of the blast
remained unclear late Tuesday.

Joseph Kaskanian, a spokesman for the Armenian National
Committee of America, said the rally was a call for support from both the GOP
presidential candidates and the Biden administration. He said previous requests
for aid had fallen on deaf ears.

“Not only is the Biden administration failing to address any
of this stuff, the Biden administration is complicit in the genocide of
Armenians,” Kaskanian told The Times.

Protesters at the rally carried signs demanding action and
expressing anger at the Biden administration.

“1915 Never Again,” read one sign, in reference to the
Armenian genocide. “Biden supports genocide,” said another.

“We’re here to demand action from the U.S.
government,” said Alexis Tolmajian, a member of the Armenian Youth Federation,
the youth organization of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation political party
that organized the rally. “We want awareness and some sort of action plan from
the GOP.

“We just need them to get, you know, get the ball rolling,”
she added, “and to start actually talking about what’s happening to stop it
before it’s irreversible.”

Tolmajian said it had been “extremely difficult” to see “no
action” from the Biden administration.

Ralliers were demanding five actions from President Biden
and the GOP candidates: to intervene and stop the attacks in Artsakh; end
military aid to Azerbaijan; send emergency humanitarian airlifts to Artsakh for
those remaining in the region; enact sanctions on Azerbaijan; and remove the
blockade within the Lachin Corridor.

“How do you go about recognizing the first genocide of the
21st century, and then turn around and allow for it to happen again,” said
Nyree Derderian, chairperson of the Armenian Relief Society, referring to
Biden’s formal recognition of the Armenian genocide in 2021.

Derderian said she “would take a pledge” from the GOP
candidates but hoped for action.

“There’s been a lot of pledges over the years,” Derderian
said, “a lot of promises that have all been broken.”

 

**********************************************************************************************************************************************

4-         Armenian
students protest at USC event featuring Turkish Ambassador to US

 

(Combined Sources)—A group of more than 100 Armenian
students, faculty, and members of the Los Angeles Armenian community, including
representatives of the The Armenian National Committee of America – Western
Region (ANCA-WR), gathered at USC to protest the “Türkiye Conference” organized
by USC Annenberg’s Master of Diplomacy program on September 29.

The conference featured Turkey’s
Ambassador, Murat Merçan, and Azerbaijan’s
Consul General, Ramil Gurbanov, in a panel discussion about Turkey’s
foreign policy. Gurbanov’s participation was undisclosed until the event’s
commencement, leaving the Armenian attendees astonished and outraged.

The event took place two days after the USC Undergraduate
Student Government passed a resolution calling on USC to recognize the Azerbaijan
incursion into Artsakh and the resulting humanitarian crisis as a genocide. The
resolution called on President Carol Folt, as well as USC Provosts, to “release
a community message in support of the Armenian student community and [for]
genocide that their nation is facing.”

Members of USC’s Armenian Students’ Association attended the
weekly USG meeting and voiced their concerns that USC has done little to aid
the Armenian student community or to speak out against what they say is the
current genocide within Nagorno-Karabakh. These students shared how their
mental health and academic work have been affected due to these atrocities. “In
collaboration with the Armenian Students’ Association, we wrote a resolution as
a call to action to the administration demanding that they release a social
media statement, specifically Dr. Carol Folt, in support of Armenian students
because of the genocide currently happening in Nagorno-Karabakh back in
Armenia,” said Senator Julianna Melendez, a junior studying international
relations.

Melendez worked alongside the Armenian Students’ Association
on the resolution throughout the last year while running her USG campaign.
“Many Armenian students showed up tonight to show their support for the
resolution, to share how the genocide is affecting them personally and to urge
the rest of the senators to vote ‘yes’ on the resolution.”

On Friday, September 29, Folt issued a statement on
Instagram. “LA has the largest population of Armenians outside of Armenia. Our
hearts go out to the people in Nagorno-Karabakh and those impacted by this
grave humanitarian crisis. USCArmenianStudies continues to educate our
community about the historical context. Many on our campus are hurting and may
be in need of support. USC is here for you with Campus Support and Intervention
(https://campussupport.usc.edu/), as well as Student Health’s Counseling and
Mental Health services (https://sites.usc.edu/counselingandmentalhealth/).”

Numerous comments on the Instagram post further called on
President Folt to cancel the event featuring the two envoys—but the event went
on as planned.

The protest outside Friday's event began with an Armenian
student standing up from the audience, holding an Armenian flag in the air and
demanding the event be stopped. Police escorted him outside; others soon
joined, chanting “shame on USC” and “1915 happening again,” in reference to the
Armenian Genocide and the recent defeat of the Republic
of Artsakh, a breakaway
Armenian-majority state in the Caucasus, following renewed attacks by Azerbaijan.

Discontent with USC’s decision to host the event had been
brewing for days. On Tuesday, USC’s Armenian Students Association posted a
statement on Instagram that said Mercan “is known for directly upholding Turkey’s policy
of Armenian Genocide denial.”

“Genocidal policy has no place in foreign policy — or on a
college campus,” the ASA wrote.

USC’s Annenberg School of Communication and Journalism where
the event was held was closed to the public while the protest was ongoing.
Students wishing to enter required an escort. The building perimeter was
monitored and blockaded by the LAPD and USC’s Department of Public Safety
during Mercan’s visit; video footage shows altercations among the safety
officers and protesters. Several Armenian students were forcibly removed from
the conference once the demonstration began. From the outside, the chants of
“1915 never again it’s happening again” and “genocidal policy has no place in
diplomacy” grew louder, spanning for a duration of over six hours.

The ANCA-WR had joined in written demands by USC ASA,
All-ASA, USC faculty members, the Pan Armenian Council and concerned members of
the Armenian community, urging USC Annenberg to cancel the event. These
requests were made in light of the purveyance of blatant genocidal rhetoric
masked as a discussion of “foreign policy,” which has no place in diplomacy nor
on an esteemed college campus.

“While we bear witness to the forced exodus of 120,000
Armenians from their ancestral homeland spanning thousands of years, after
having endured more than 9 months of illegal blockade by the Government of
Azerbaijan, followed by repeated attacks on civilians with Turkey’s full
support, we condemn in the strongest of terms the Annenberg School’s choice to
remain complicit in Turkey’s efforts to whitewash its reputation as a despotic
and genocidal regime. Rather than ignoring the calls of your students, and the
Armenian-American community of Los Angeles—amongst the largest in the world—we
demand that the USC Annenberg School of Communications and Journalism
immediately cancel Friday’s conference with the Turkish Ambassador, and issue a
statement apologizing to the Armenian-American students and community at large
and condemning the united effort by Turkey and Azerbaijan to carry out a Second
Armenian Genocide,” said the ANCA-WR’s letter sent in advance of the
conference.

USC Annenberg proceeded with the event, noting its
commitment to the “freedom of _expression_” in a written response to the ANCA-WR
from USC President Carol Folt, even though USC Annenberg’s own mission
statement states: “The right to free communication carries with it the
responsibility to respect the dignity of others, and this must be recognized as
irreversible.”

The ANCA-WR said, “By organizing this event, we trust that
the organizers understand the immense contempt that their chosen speaker—and
the regime that he represents—have expressed toward the Armenian People, and
urge that the USC Annenberg School refrain from contributing to the ongoing
violation of the rights and dignities of the indigenous people of Artsakh, and
to the Armenian Nation as a whole.”

ANCA-WR has urged USC Annenberg to issue a statement of
apology for its platforming of the Turkish Ambassador and the Azerbaijani
Consul General. The ANCA-WR further demanded USC Annenberg to publicly
recognize and condemn Turkey
and Azerbaijan for their
role in the Second Armenian Genocide—the ethnic cleansing of the Republic of Artsakh.

In response to protests, the USC Annenberg
School for Communication
and Journalism released a statement: “We recognize and understand that the USC
Armenian Students’ Association has objections to this event. The USC Annenberg
School for Communication
and Journalism believes that the freedom to express one’s views are at the foundation
of what it means to be part of a research university. These freedoms are
outlined within the USC Policy on Free Speech, and apply to all members of our
community.”

They continued: “We sometimes profoundly disagree with
statements of faculty, invited speakers, or other students; such disagreement
and critical analysis occur regularly at our university, and we are committed
to ensuring that our environment encourages and protects robust debate and
inquiry.”.

 

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Nagorno-Karabakh Crisis Deepens Divides in Armenia Toward Russia

Sept 28 2023

YEREVAN, Armenia – Tigran has been protesting outside the Russian embassy every day since Azerbaijan launched its offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh. 

On the embassy’s steps, flowers have been laid in memory of the peacekeepers who were killed by Azerbaijani shelling last week. 

"Are these bloody flowers for the occupiers?" reads the poster that Tigran, 19, holds up. When diplomats' cars leave the embassy, he and a small group of protesters shout "Shame!"

He is just one of the thousands of Armenians who have grown disillusioned with Russia — their country’s longtime ally and security guarantor — for failing to prevent Azerbaijani aggression.

Large-scale protests have been taking place in Yerevan since Sept. 19, when Azerbaijan announced a military operation in Nagorno-Karabakh despite the presence of Russian peacekeepers in the region.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian separatist leadership announced Thursday that it will dissolve, ending a bitter, three-decade fight for independence in the breakaway region, which is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan.

Some protesters accuse Moscow, distracted by its war in Ukraine, of abandoning its commitments to Armenia.

"Until recently, my whole family was pro-Russia. But our opinion has changed," Tigran, who declined to share his last name, told The Moscow Times. "Armenia has always been loyal to Russia. We are the most pro-Russia country. But now we demand from the Russian military that they do their job or get out."

Samvel, a 21-year-old student at the Yerevan University of Theater and Cinema, organized a student strike of more than 100 people originally from Karabakh. 

For several days, alongside thousands of other protesters, he has demanded that the Armenian authorities save his family, who are caught in a humanitarian crisis. 

“Russia promised that it would protect Artsakh,” said Samvel, using the region’s Armenian name. “People believed it and stayed there. But the Russians did not fulfill their promise. They betrayed us! Russia has stabbed us in the back.”

“We won't forget it.”

Russian peacekeepers have been stationed in the region since the end of a 2020 war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the region that ended in an Armenian defeat.

This month, Armenia’s Foreign Ministry called on the peacekeepers to “take clear and unequivocal steps to stop Azerbaijan's aggression.”

But Moscow merely urged Baku and Yerevan to put “an end to the bloodshed… and a return to a peaceful settlement" as Russian peacekeepers largely stood aside.

Last week, Baku announced an end to its military operation after the Armenian separatist forces agreed to lay down their arms and hold reintegration talks.

And on Sunday, Karabakh’s 120,000 ethnic Armenians began embarking on a mass exodus from the region, fearing ethnic cleansing by incoming Azerbaijani forces. 

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said the day before that his country would welcome the arrival of those displaced from the territory, and by Thursday, more than 68,000 refugees had already arrived in Armenia.

Because the latest ceasefire agreement was brokered by Russian peacekeepers, some Armenians suspect that it was in fact a "deal" between Moscow and Baku. 

Soon after, the National Democratic Alliance, a pro-Western political movement, organized protests in Yerevan. Hundreds marched through the streets of the Armenian capital for several days in a row, holding torches and chanting "Russia is the enemy!"

Although Tigran said he believes the fall of Karabakh’s separatist government has undermined the confidence of many Armenians in Russia as an ally, he admitted that a significant part of society blames the loss on Pashinyan, who has moved away from Moscow in recent years. 

"I think Russia is still supported by about 40% of Armenian society," he said. 

"But I think many of them just haven't had time to be disappointed yet."

READ MORE

According to a May 2023 survey conducted by the Washington-based think tank International Republican Institute (IRI), 50% of Armenians described their country’s relationship with Russia as “good,” the lowest ever measured in an IRI poll in Armenia. 

Nevertheless, the majority of respondents indicated that Russia is still one of Armenia’s most important political, economic and security partners. 

And despite the widespread criticism toward the Russian peacekeepers, many Armenians still believe the situation in Karabakh could have been much worse without their presence.

Since the start of the crisis, the Russian Defense Ministry has published daily reports on its delivery of humanitarian aid and helped escort Karabakh Armenians. Videos published by the ministry show women thanking Russian soldiers.

The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic gained de facto independence from Azerbaijan in 1994, after more than two years of war that ended in Yerevan’s victory over Baku. 

A second bloody war over the region in the fall of 2020 saw Azerbaijan regain part of the territories it had lost in 1994 and ended in a Russia-brokered ceasefire.

In November 2022, as tensions with Azerbaijan escalated again, Yerevan was denied its request for military assistance by the Moscow-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), drawing criticism from Pashinyan.

In a sign of the Armenian prime minister’s growing frustration with the Kremlin on the issue of Karabakh, Armenia and the United States earlier this month carried out joint military drills, which drew the ire of the Russian authorities. 

Armenia’s pro-Russian opposition laid the blame for the loss of Karabakh on the prime minister, accusing him of betraying the region’s ethnic Armenians “in favor of the interests of the West.” Mika Badalyan, a political activist who regularly appears on Russian television, called on Armenians to take to the streets and overthrow Pashinyan's government. 

Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said Russian peacekeepers would help Karabakh Armenians in every way possible, while the U.S. and the EU, she argued, “treat Yerevan with destructive fanaticism, pushing Armenia to withdraw from the CSTO.”

"The fact that Pashinyan began to move away from such an ‘ally’ as Russia does not mean that we will begin to cooperate with the West. They don't expect us there either, to put it mildly. And this is understandable to many,” said Ani Sargsyan, an entrepreneur who raises humanitarian aid for refugees.

“But the fact is that it will no longer be possible to follow the same path with Russia and continue friendly relations. Relations have deteriorated not only because of Pashinyan. And here we must admit that it seems that we are moving away from Russia,” she added.

Arevik, a 24-year-old volunteer collecting humanitarian aid, said she was certain that the refugees would never return to Karabakh. 

“No one will live there. And the Russian troops will leave,” she said. “But I am afraid that [Azerbaijani President Ilham] Aliyev will not stop there. He once said that the whole of Armenia is just Western Azerbaijan.”

“We shouldn't expect someone to protect us. It was immediately clear that Russian troops would s*** themselves in Karabakh. And international organizations just don't care about us,” she added.

“Unfortunately, we are not Ukraine. It is unprofitable to protect us.”

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2023/09/28/nagorno-karabakh-crisis-deepens-divides-in-armenia-toward-russia-a82586

Congressman Adam Schiff introduces new resolution seeking suspension of U.S. aid to Azerbaijan

 16:02,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. United States Congressman Adam Schiff on September 28 said he’s introducing a new resolution that seeks suspension of U.S. aid to Azerbaijan amid its ‘horrific aggression’ against Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia.

“Amid Azerbaijan's horrific aggression against Artsakh [NK] & Armenia, and the ethnic cleansing taking place, I'm introducing another resolution that I hope will lead to the suspension of U.S. aid to Baku. No matter what our diplomats say, if the money to the regime continues, so will its violence,” Schiff said on X.

United States activates Disaster Assistance Response Team to respond to humanitarian needs in the South Caucasus

 19:34,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has deployed a Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) in the South Caucasus region to coordinate the U.S. humanitarian response, USAID Administrator Samantha Power said in a statement after traveling to Armenia.

“This week, I traveled to Armenia to hear directly from the people fleeing their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh in the wake of Azerbaijan’s September 19-20 attacks. The United States is deeply concerned about the safety of vulnerable populations in Nagorno-Karabakh and the more than 50,000 people who have fled to Armenia. We are grateful to the Government of Armenia for welcoming new arrivals and helping them find shelter and to humanitarian organizations working to address acute needs. 

“Today, I am announcing that the U.S. Agency for International Development has deployed a Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) in the South Caucasus region to coordinate the U.S. humanitarian response. The DART will assess the situation, identify priority needs to scale up assistance, and work with partners to provide urgently needed aid.

“Last week’s unacceptable military operation has made an already dire humanitarian situation even worse. For nine months, Azerbaijan blocked the Lachin Corridor – shutting down a vital lifeline that connects the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh with food, medicine, fuel, and commercial supplies which is creating dire shortages. 

“The Lachin Corridor must remain fully and permanently open so that civilians can leave and return freely, communities can access food, medicine, and other essential supplies, and humanitarian organizations can see and meet needs on the ground. Azerbaijan must protect civilians, uphold its obligations to respect the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all individuals in its country, and ensure its forces comply with international humanitarian law. 

“Given the scale of the needs, the United States announced $11.5 million in humanitarian assistance earlier this week to support communities across the South Caucasus who are affected by the ongoing crisis. This is in addition to the more than $23 million the United States has provided in humanitarian assistance since 2020 in response to the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. These funds will be used to provide everything from food to psychosocial support to help address trauma caused by the violence and mass displacement,” Power said in the statement.

Russian peacekeeping mission did not ensure peaceful existence of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh – Edmon Marukyan

 12:09,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 25, ARMENPRESS. As of now, the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh are being evacuated by thousands to Armenia, Ambassador-at-Large Edmon Marukyan said on X (formerly known as Twitter).

“As of now, the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh are being evacuated by thousands to Armenia. Why are these people evacuated? Because on September 19, Azerbaijan carried out military aggression against the peaceful people of Nagorno Karabakh, as a result of which, not only hundreds were killed and wounded, but also thousands of civilians have lost their homes, villages and communities.

“In other words, the population has been starved for 9 months because of the illegal blockade of the Lachin Corridor and following the aggression of September 19:

  1. They are forcefully displaced from their homes and after 6 days of sleeping in the cellars hungry and thirsty, were not given the opportunity to return to their homes but to be evacuated from their ancestral land.
  2. We acknowledge that the Russian peacekeeping mission did not ensure their peaceful existence in Nagorno Karabakh on the basis of November 9, 2020, trilateral statement.
  3. We acknowledge that the EU, the USA and all other international actors failed to ensure the rights and security guarantees of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh. Notwithstanding with the fact that these actors have been repeatedly stating during their mediation efforts, that the rights and securities of the Nagorno Karabakh Armenians must be guaranteed under the international mechanisms in order to allow them to live safely in their ancestral lands,” Marukyan said.

Asbarez: Russia Summons Armenia’s Ambassador Over ‘Unfriendly Steps’

Vagharshak Harutyunyan is Armenia's Ambassador to Russia


Armenia’s Ambassador to Russia, Vagharshak Harutyunyan, was summoned to the Russian Foreign Ministry, which reprimanded Yerevan for what it called recent “unfriendly steps” by Yerevan.

The ambassador was also given a “protest notes” outlining grievances from Moscow, including a remarks by Parliament Speaker Alen Simonyan, who told reporters that it was beneath him to “respond to some female secretary,” referring to Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova. Moscow was also angry the Anna Hakobyan, the wife of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan visited Ukraine this week and presented “humanitarian assistance to the Nazi Kyiv regime.”

“We noted the appearance of certain doubts in the official circles and political elite of the Republic of Armenia regarding the expediency of allied relations within the framework of the Collective Security Treaty Organization and with Russia on a bilateral basis, as well as regarding the feasibility of the complex of tripartite agreements between Moscow, Yerevan and Baku reached in 2020-2022 about ways of normalization of Armenian-Azerbaijani relations,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement regarding the ambassadorial summons.

Russia also cited a recent Armenian government decision to ask parliament to ratify the International Criminal Court treaty, as well as the announcement this week that Armenia will host joint military exercises with the United States.

“At the same time, Moscow firmly believes that Russia and Armenia remain allies, and all agreements on the development and strengthening of partnership relations will be fully implemented for the benefit of the peoples of our two countries. This, among other things, concerns the organization of exercises within the CSTO and in the future sending to the Republic of Armenian an observation mission of the Organization in order to facilitate the settlement between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The Russian side will continue to apply all necessary efforts for these purposes,” the Russian foreign ministry added in its statement.

Armenia to move embassy in London to larger, 5-storey building in St James’s Square

 12:01, 7 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government on Thursday approved the acquisition of a 5-storey building in London to relocate its embassy there.

Since 1992, the Armenian embassy in London has been located in a building provided by Armenian House (Hye Doon), where it occupies only two rooms, which “has constantly significantly limited the working capacity of the embassy.” Furthermore, the Armenian House has notified the embassy that it needs to vacate the building in 2024.

The new building, which is located at 31 A St James's Square, will provide “proper representation and increase of political ranking,” according to the bill on buying the real estate.

The Armenian government will spend £17,4 million to buy the building.

Situation on border with Azerbaijan relatively stable, says Armenian defense ministry

 13:36, 2 September 2023

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 2, ARMENPRESS. The situation on the border is relatively stable, the Armenian ministry of defense said Saturday.

In a statement, the ministry of defense said the reports alleging that Azerbaijan on Saturday has again targeted Armenian outposts near Sotk with mortar fire is false.

Three Armenian servicemen were killed and two others were wounded on Friday when Azerbaijani forces opened heavy gunfire at Armenian border outposts near Sotk and Norabak in Gegharkunik province.