AW: Call for AYF Olympics Special Issue Page Sponsors

WATERTOWN, Mass.—The Washington, D.C. “Ani” AYF Chapter and Olympics Steering Committee will welcome athletes and supporters to the nation’s capital this Labor Day weekend. Along with the athletic games and entertainment, attendees will have the opportunity to visit the offices of the Armenian National Committee of America and to participate in the “SOS Artsakh!” rally at the White House to stand in solidarity with the Armenians of Artsakh and demand an end to Azerbaijan’s genocidal blockade. 

In honor of this beloved and highly-anticipated annual event, the Armenian Weekly team will publish its annual AYF Olympics Special Issue in the coming weeks.

The special issue, which is scheduled for publication on September 30, will feature in-depth articles by dedicated and longtime Weekly contributors Mark GavoorHarry Derderian and Bob Tutunjian and photography by Knar Bedian, Sona Gevorkian and Arev Kaligian, among others.

As part of this special tradition, the Armenian Weekly is once again asking generous community members and loyal readers to support the publication of this commemorative, pull-out issue by becoming a page sponsor for $100.

Checks can be made payable to “The Armenian Weekly” and mailed to 80 Bigelow Ave., Watertown, Mass., 02472. If you choose this option, please email [email protected] with the subject line “AYF SPECIAL ISSUE SPONSOR.” Be sure to note the names of the page sponsor(s) as they will appear in the AYF Olympics Special Issue.

The Armenian Weekly is also inviting athletes and spectators alike, especially AYF members, to write about their experiences and memories at this year’s Olympics. Articles and accompanying photographs can be emailed to [email protected]. The deadline for submissions is September 15.




We Live to Keep Others Alive…AMAA Artsakh holds Camp for Youth

AMAA Artsakh Camp

By Viktor Karapetyan, AMAA Representative in Artsakh

They are trying to eliminate us, but we live and keep others alive…

Life in Artsakh is different. To live here you must be a source of support for those around you. You must transmit life to others. You must fight and not give up.

Uncertainty, chaos, despair…Sometimes it seems like spring will never come to the homeland. It is difficult to work with and convey hope to members of the young generation who live in this chaos. It is even more difficult to show them how they can participate in the mission. 

From August 14-18, the Armenian Missionary Association of America (AMAA) Artsakh branch organized a camp to give hope and encouragement to the youth and teach them that each person has their part in building the homeland. The camp, filled with entertainment as well as educational and patriotic sessions, separated the children from their everyday worries and the blockade.

We must learn to be healthy in mind, heart and soul so that we can pass on the same spirit to others. We can each help and uplift each other to overcome these challenges.

“It is the heroic resistance that will save the motherland and not pitiful foreign mercy,” said Zaven Khanjian, AMAA Executive Director/CEO. “We firmly stand by your side, with unbreakable will, but we humble ourselves against your heroic struggle. We appreciate, love, join your struggle and bow before you.”

The Armenian Missionary Association of America (AMAA) was founded in 1918, in Worcester, MA, and incorporated as a non-profit charitable organization in 1920 in the State of New York. We are a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization. Our purpose is to serve the physical and spiritual needs of people everywhere, both at home and overseas. To fulfill this worldwide mission, we maintain a range of educational, evangelistic, relief, social service, church and child care ministries in 24 countries around the world.


Armenian coins and their link to Byzantium

Aug 22 2023
by LIANNA AGASYAN
000

The oldest Armenian coins found in Armenia date back to the 6th-5th centuries BC. As this was a century of cultural renaissance for Armenia, the earliest coins issued by Armenian rulers were struck for Kings of Sophene the 3th century BCE. The ruler's name and titles were inscribed in Greek letters. The coins of Armenia, both ancient and medieval, were fascinating and very diverse.

Armenian Kings usually inscribed the sign of the cross in various forms on their coins. Originally, references to Divine authority were found on most coins.

The unique status of ancient Armenia was recognised on Ancient Rome coins.

Ancient Armenia also played a notable role in Roman politics as a semi-independent buffer state between Ancient Rome and Parthian Empire.

Several Byzantine emperors minted coins that mentioned or depicted Armenia.

-The first picture shows a coin of the Kingdom of Sophene, King Arsames, third quarter of the 3rd century BC, a copper coin.

-The second picture shows a coin of the Armenian Kingdom of Tashir-Dzoraget and a Gold coin of King Yervand I (Orontes I Sakavakyats) of the Yervanduni dynasty (Кing of the Orontid Dynasty), 357–352 BC. These coins are similar to Byzantine copper coins but engraved with the name of the King. These are some of the first coins with Armenian inscriptions.

– The third picture shows: The first inscriptions in the Armenian language were found on this coin. It was the only medieval coin with an Armenian inscription minted in Greater Armenia. This type is directly based on the anonymous Byzantine Folles of John Tzimisces and Basil II, commonly circulated in Armenia at the time.

– The fourth picture shows the gold coin of King Levon I of the Kingdom of Armenia and Cilicia, enthroned facing, holding a cross in right hand and branch in left / Patriarchal cross flanked by two lions, heads reverted.

King Levon I of the Kingdom of Cilicia in Armenia was so ambitious that he struck twelve types of coins with Latin and Armenian inscriptions and a large copper coin known as a tank.

Iran, Armenia sign off on renewed gas-for-electricity deal

Iran – Aug 15 2023

Iran and Armenia have signed off on an extension to a deal that allows natural gas exports from Iran to Armenia in return for electricity imports from the Caucasus country.

A Tuesday statement from the National Iranian Gas Company (NIGC) said the extended gas-for-electricity swap deal between Iran and Armenia will run until early 2031.

It said the deal will allow the NIGC to double its supply of natural gas to Armenia in return for increased imports of electricity.

It said NIGC chief Majid Chegeni had signed the deal during a recent trip to Armenia without elaborating on the exact date. 

Chegeni and Armenia’s Minister of Territorial Administration and Infrastructures Gnel Sanosyan had signed an initial agreement to renew the gas-for-electricity deal between the two countries in November when Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was in Tehran for an official visit.

Local news agencies said at the time that Iran and Armenia would commit to swapping gas for electricity under the new deal until the end of the Iranian calendar year 1409 (March 2031).

Those reports said that the deal will also modify electricity swap figures in line with the increase in Iran’s size of gas exports to Armenia.

Experts say the new deal with Armenia would boost Iran’s gas export capacities while improving the country’s ability to respond to peak demand for electricity in its populous northwestern regions.

However, the size of Iranian gas supplies to Armenia will still remain small compared to exports to countries like Turkey and Iraq as the two countries combined receive some 70 million cubic meters per day of gas from Iran.

Nagorno-Karabakh: Azebaijan seizes Armenian helicopter at military positions

Pakistan – Aug 9 2023
By Web Desk
August 09, 2023

An Armenian four-rotor helicopter was seized by Azerbaijan over its military sites in the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh on Monday.

“On Aug. 7, around 1:30 p.m., a DJI Mavic 3 quadcopter belonging to the Armenian armed forces tried to fly over positions of the Azerbaijani Army located in the Basarkechar district,” the country’s Defense Ministry said in a statement.

The statement added that the quadcopter was brought down by Azerbaijani units in the area after its detection using “special technical means.”

The two former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have stressed relations since 1991. The Nagorno-Karabakh region is internationally recognized as the territory of Azerbaijan. The land is a center of dispute between the countries of Azerbaijan and Armenia.

In the fall of 2020, Azerbaijan took over several cities, villages, and settlements from Armenia during 44 days of clashes. The war ended with a Russia-brokered peace agreement.

The tensions between both countries have risen despite the ongoing talks over a long-term peace agreement. The recent dispute is in regards to the Lachin corridor, the only land route giving Armenia access to Nagarno-Karabakh

People, money and the economy: an analysis of the situation in Armenia


Aug 6 2023


  • Gayane Asryan
  • Yerevan

Socio-economic situation in Armenia

In recent months, there has been a drop in prices in the food market of Armenia. This is noticeable in comparison with a sharp increase in prices for goods, services and rental housing in 2022. Experts believe that inflation and related factors were equally stressful for both the economy and the people of the country.


  • “Armenia’s economic growth potential is not infinite.” Opinion
  • Modernization of old buildings in Armenia: energy savings and modern design
  • Stagnant economic ties in the South Caucasus: Three stories

In the first months of 2023, the Central Bank of Armenia took steps to contain the inflation rate against the backdrop of rising prices around the world.

It has become even more difficult for the elderly and people with disabilities to provide for their most minimal needs. There was an urgent need to increase pensions and benefits.

The average monthly and minimum pensions were increased, as were benefits for old age and disability.

According to the government program, state pensions will be regularly increased until 2026. The minimum and average pension will be equated to the cost of food and consumer baskets.

Since the 2020 war, Armenians are increasingly concerned about security issues and constant tension on the border. Against this background, social and economic problems recede into the background.

However, a small increase in pensions and benefits has become an occasion for people to speak out on this issue, to recall the obligations of the state and their expectations.

Vardush and Aramais calculate all their possible expenses in advance – within the limits of the pension paid to both of them. The wife is 67 years old, the husband is 70. Since July 1, 2023, the total budget of their family in the form of a pension has increased by about 8 thousand drams ($20). Together they receive 110,000 drams ($286). This amount is used to buy food, clothes, pay utility bills and other expenses.

When they first started receiving pensions, they could not live on the amount, and Aramais had to drive a taxi.

“In order to spend less on food, we bought a freezer to freeze fruit and vegetables during the summer months. The children helped to change the windows, changed all the lamps in the house to energy-saving ones, and insulated the walls of the apartment. Now we significantly save on food, electricity and gas,” Vardush shares his “secrets of survival”.

He says that although their income is small, they manage to hold out until the end of the month. This year they even managed to save money for a week in Kobuleti. Children are asked for help only when there are health problems. They have enough for other expenses, they do not complain.

“8 thousand drams is not a big amount, but not a small one. We can buy, for example, a couple of kilograms of meat. It is important that such increases occur every year or two, and not every five or more years. And the state should monitor the prices of goods. Over the past two years, everything has risen in price, even matches, the price of which has never changed,” says the pensioner.

The Central Bank predicts economic growth of 6.9% in 2023. They announce that the influence on price growth from the outside has significantly weakened, and the Central Bank continues measures to curb inflation and strengthen the local currency – the dram. However, with strong demand and expectations of inflation, prices in services and some goods are adjusting more slowly.

An employee at a fruit and vegetable stall says that compared to previous years, people are buying fewer products because they are more expensive.

“At the beginning of the season, when the first shipments of eggplants, tomatoes and beans hit the market, everything was very expensive. People didn’t buy much. Now, we can say that the situation is changing, vegetables are gradually becoming more accessible. It’s good that prices are regulated, people can at least prepare canned food for the winter,” says Gohar.

That is, judging by the forecast of the Central Bank, a certain economic growth is observed in the country. However, it is not inclusive and does not affect the prices and standard of living of the majority of residents. Experts consider this a problem for the Armenian economy: only a few areas provide growth – and “the money goes to a few.”

Because of the war in Ukraine, many Russians moved to Armenia. For some, the country has become a transit country, some decided to stay here.

The influx of tens of thousands of people was a shock to the Armenian economy, primarily because a large amount of foreign currency entered the country. The dollar and the euro have devalued, the prices for renting apartments, tariffs for services have soared, food and clothing have risen in price. Due to Western sanctions against Russia, Armenia has become a transit for goods and cash flows.

All this has become stressful for the economy. It took about a year for relative stabilization.

According to the statistics committee, in June this year, the price of a food basket compared to the same month last year decreased by half a percent. This was due to a 5.5% decrease in prices for food and non-alcoholic beverages. For other components of the basket: alcohol and tobacco, clothes and shoes, restaurants and hotels – prices are higher than last year.

Thus, vegetables fell in price by 22.3%, vegetable oil by 17.3%. The price of wheat decreased by 21.4%, lentils 18.4%. Bread became cheaper by about 1.5%, and cheese by about 2%.

At the same time, some food prices went up, for example pork by about 3.5%, sugar by 1.6%.

Meanwhile, in the international market, in contrast to Armenia, deflation is more noticeable. According to data published by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, as early as March 2023, a 22% drop in prices was recorded in the food market compared to March of the previous year.

Ordinary residents of Armenia do not yet feel the price reduction.

JAMnews talked about the reasons with Narek Karapetyan, an economist and expert at the Amberd Research Center.

The economist believes that first you need to understand what changes in the quality of life can be considered tangible.

“In general, there is such a phenomenon: we do not feel the course of changes that occur gradually. We can see them when looking at the longer term. From this angle, deflation, especially food deflation, cannot but be felt,” he says.

At the same time, Karapetyan emphasizes that deflation occurred on the basis of last year’s high prices, therefore, prices continue to remain at a high level.

The expert believes that there is a problem of disproportionate distribution of income in the economy. This has become more pronounced in recent years against the backdrop of economic growth registered under the influence of the influx of people and capital from Russia. Income growth does not affect everyone equally.

As for the increase in pensions and benefits, their meaning, according to the economist, is not to stimulate the economy, but to mitigate social tensions and the consequences of rising prices for a long time.

“By absolute standards, these increases are, of course, small, but I think they are adequate to our capabilities at the moment. If we want significant changes in our social policy, then we need to build a stronger and more efficient economy.”

Economic activity in the second quarter of 2023 is supported by strong growth in construction and services.

Last year and in the first half of this year, the fastest growing sectors were information technology, transport, hotel and restaurant business and construction.

However, this growth is not inclusive, as part of the effectively developing areas is geographically concentrated in Yerevan. These financial flows do not reach the regions.

According to the economist, the decline in dynamics is obvious in such areas as agriculture, mining, and healthcare. And these areas just provide significant employment in the regions.

Karapetyan says that the Armenian economy was able to withstand the consequences of the coronavirus and the 2020 Karabakh war. He emphasizes that there are many challenges at the moment, but in general, stability is observed in the country’s economy.

https://jam-news.net/socio-economic-situation-in-armenia/

Tamil manuscripts from 18th Century found in Armenian monastery in Northern Italy

The Hindu, India
Aug 5 2023

09:18 pm | Updated 09:18 pm IST – CHENNAI

THE HINDU BUREAU
Palm manuscripts from the 18th Century titled Gnanamuyarchi have been discovered in an Armenian monastery in Northern Itlay. Tamil Bharathan, a doctoral scholar of the Special Centre for Tamil Studies in Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), was allowed access to the manuscripts.

“I was only allowed to read the manuscripts after days of persuasion,” said Mr. Bharathan, who was invited to participate in a seminar on Greek Paleography at the headquarters of the Hellenic Institute of Byzantine and Post-Byzantine Studies in Venice.

He sought the help of Margherita Trento, a professor who has studied the history of the literary and social techniques employed by Roman Catholics to localise Christianity in early modern Tamil Nadu. According to her, it could be a copy of the first translation of Ignatius’ Spiritual Exercise in Tamil.

“This translation is most likely by Michele Bertoldi, known in Tamil as Gnanaprakasasamy. This is a prose text from the early 18th Century (likely the 1720s) and has been printed several times in the 19th Century by the Mission Press in Puducherry,” said Ms. Margherita, who has written extensively about the text.

Mr. Bharathan said the library had categorised the manuscripts as ‘Indian Papyrus Lamulic Language–XIII Century’, and the authorities were not aware that it had been written in Tamil. Those in charge of the monastery are of the opinion that the Armenians in Chennai could have brought the manuscripts to Italy.

He has started cataloguing the manuscripts and also has plans to visit Roja Muthiah Library in Chennai since it also has a copy of the work in its possession. “Once I go through the manuscripts and make comparisons, I can get a clear picture,” he added.

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/tamil-nadu/tamil-manuscripts-from-18th-century-found-in-armenian-monastery-in-northern-italy/article67162471.ece

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 08/03/2023

                                        Thursday, August 3, 2023


Armenia Sticks To Preconditions For CSTO Mission


Armenia - The building of the Armenian Foreign Ministry in Yerevan.


Armenia effectively dismissed on Thursday Russia’s latest calls to drop its 
preconditions for the deployment of Collective Security Treaty Organization 
(CSTO) monitors to the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

Russia and other CSTO member states first proposed such a deployment during a 
summit in Yerevan last November. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian turned down the 
offer on the grounds that they refused to condemn Azerbaijan’s offensive 
military operations along the border carried out in September 2022. He gave the 
same reason for refusing “military-technical assistance” offered by Armenia’s 
CSTO allies.

Pashinian and other Armenian officials have repeatedly said since then that the 
Russian-led military alliance must condemn the Azerbaijani “aggression” before 
it can launch the monitoring mission.

“The position of the Armenian side regarding the deployment of the CSTO 
monitoring mission on the international border of Armenia and Azerbaijan has 
been presented and voiced in different formats and there is no change in this 
matter at the moment,” the Armenian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Ani Badalian, 
told Radar.am.

Armenia - CSTO Secretary General Stanislav Zas (right) visits the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border, September 22, 2022.

Badalian made this clear one day after a senior Russian Foreign Ministry 
official, Mikael Agasandian, said the CSTO is ready to revisit the issue and 
“use the organization’s broad capabilities with the maximum benefit for our 
Armenian friends.”

“We continue to expect a positive response from Yerevan and are ready to resume 
substantive work on the proposal to deploy a CSTO monitoring mission in the 
border regions of Armenia as well as other joint measures to help our ally,” he 
told the RIA Novosti news agency.

Agasandian claimed in this regard that the West is trying to end Russian 
presence in the South Caucasus through “economic and political pressure” exerted 
on Armenia.

“In order to achieve this objective, they are trying to undermine the existing 
mechanisms of regional security, including those based on the CSTO capabilities. 
We hope that Yerevan understands this well,” warned the ethnic Armenian diplomat.

Russian officials have chided Yerevan for agreeing to a similar monitoring 
mission launched by the European Union in February. They claim that the 
deployment is part of the U.S. and European Union efforts to drive Russia out of 
the region.

Armenia - European Union monitors patrol Armenia's border with Azerbaijan.
Early this year, the Armenian government also cancelled a CSTO military exercise 
planned in Armenia and refused to appoint a deputy secretary-general of the 
military alliance. Pashinian said afterwards that he will pull his country out 
of the alliance “if we conclude that the CSTO has left Armenia.” The Russian 
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, scoffed at his remarks and warned 
of their potentially “dangerous” consequences.

Armenia’s estrangement from the bloc comprising Russia and five other ex-Soviet 
states is part of a broader rift between Moscow and Yerevan. On Wednesday, 
Zakharova lambasted Pashinian for questioning the continued presence of Russian 
peacekeepers in Nagorno-Karabakh and claiming that Moscow has scaled back its 
involvement in Armenian-Azerbaijani peace talks because of the war in Ukraine.

For his part, Pashinian said on Thursday that the peacekeepers must “clarify” 
why a food aid convoy sent by the Armenian government last week is still unable 
to reach Karabakh through Lachin corridor. He pointed to Baku’s claims that it 
is not blocking traffic through the corridor.




Another Diaspora Activist Denied Entry To Armenia

        • Narine Ghalechian

Armenia - Armenian-American activist Areni Margossian airs a video message from 
Zvartnots airport, Yerevan, August 2, 2023.


Armenia’s government has barred yet another Diaspora-based activist of the 
Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) from entering the country, 
again drawing strong condemnation from the opposition party.

U.S. citizen Areni Margossian was deported back to Lebanon on Thursday one day 
after arriving at Yerevan’s Zvartnots airport on a flight from Beirut. In a live 
video aired from Zvartnots, she said immigration officers there took away her 
passport and refused to explain why she is not allowed to enter the country.

The National Security Service (NSS), which is in charge of border control, also 
did not provide such an explanation to the office of Armenia’s human rights 
defender. The office said it was only told that Margossian’s “entry to Armenia 
is prohibited.”

Kristine Vartanian, a Dashnaktsutyun member of the Armenian parliament who 
visited the airport in a bid to prevent her deportation, said the 
Armenian-American woman was denied entry because of being affiliated with the 
pan-Armenian party highly critical of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian. Margossian 
has attended anti-Pashinian protests and “not shied away from expressing her 
views about those in power in Armenia,” the lawmaker said.

France - President Emmanuel Macron, Mourad Papazian (right) and other 
French-Armenian leaders visit the Armenian genocide memorial, Paris.

Margossian defended her participation in the protests staged outside the 
Armenian Embassy in Washington and elsewhere in the United States. “We are 
fighting so that Armenia doesn’t hand over Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) to the 
enemy,” she told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“I don’t know why they think that we are dangerous people,” she said. “We only 
hold demonstrations and don’t harm anyone.”

Margossian is the sixth Dashnaktsutyun member known to have been banned from 
visiting their ancestral homeland over the past year. The other blacklisted 
members include Mourad Papazian, one of the leaders of France’s influential 
Armenian community.

Dashnaktsutyun, which is a key member of the main opposition Hayastan alliance, 
has accused Pashinian of ordering the travel bans to try to silence his vocal 
critics in the worldwide Armenian Diaspora.

“It’s absurd that we see this precedent under a government that talks the most 
about democracy,” said Vartanian.

Under Armenian law, foreign nationals can be banned from visiting Armenia if 
they pose a threat to its “state security” and “constitutional order” or plan to 
carry out terrorist attacks there.




Yerevan Again Warns Of Azeri Territorial Claims


TURKMENISTAN - Armenia's Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijan's 
President Ilham Aliyev attend a Commonwealth of Independent States summit in 
Ashgabat, October 11, 2019.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian suggested on Thursday that Azerbaijan is seeking 
to sign the kind of peace deal with Armenia that would not prevent it from 
laying claim to Armenian territory.

Pashinian pointed to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s comments made in an 
interview with the Euronews TV channel broadcast earlier this week.

“While claiming that Azerbaijan has no territorial claims to Armenia, the 
Azerbaijani president says that the borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan have 
not been determined,” he said at the start of a weekly cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan. “The borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan were decided in 1991 by the 
Almaty Declaration [of former Soviet republics] and that was reaffirmed on 
October 6, 2022 as a result of the quadrilateral meeting in Prague during which 
the Almaty Declaration was adopted as the basis for the delimitation and 
demarcation of the borders between the two countries.”

“It looks like Azerbaijan's plan is as follows: to sign a peace treaty with 
clauses that leave room for disputing the Armenian-Azerbaijani border fixed by 
the Almaty Declaration and to make territorial claims to Armenia later on, 
during the delimitation and demarcation process,” added Pashinian.

Deputy Foreign Minister Vahan Kostanian likewise complained last week that 
Azerbaijan remains reluctant to recognize Armenia’s borders. This is one of the 
main obstacles to the signing of the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty currently 
discussed by the two sides, Kostanian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

This is why, he said, Yerevan insists that 1975 Soviet military maps be used for 
delimiting the long Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Baku has rejected the proposed 
mechanism in delimitation talks held so far.

The most recent round of those talks took place on July 12 three days before the 
European Union chief, Charles Michel, hosted yet another meeting of Pashinian 
and Aliyev in Brussels. Michel said after the meeting that the two leaders 
reaffirmed their earlier “understanding that Armenia’s territory covers 29,800 
square kilometers and Azerbaijan’s 86,600 square kilometers.” Aliyev has still 
not publicly confirmed that.

“We expect Azerbaijan to publicly reaffirm that understanding,” Pashinian said 
on Thursday. He insisted that despite Aliyev’s stance the two South Caucasus 
states “do have a chance to achieve long-term, stable and lasting peace.”

Opposition leaders and other critics of the Armenian government note that Baku 
is unwilling to reciprocate Pashinian’s recent pledge to recognize Azerbaijani 
sovereignty over Nagorno-Karabakh through the peace deal. This means, they say, 
that even such a far-reaching concession made by him would not safeguard 
Armenian territory from future Azerbaijani attacks.

Following Pashinian’s pledge, Azerbaijan also tightened its crippling blockade 
of Karabakh’s only land link with Armenia.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Azerbaijan arrests Nagorno-Karabakh resident for ‘war crimes’

 

Vagif Khachatrian being arrested at the Lachin checkpoint. Image via ITV.

Azerbaijani border guards have arrested a 68-year-old resident of Nagorno-Karabakh as he was being evacuated to Armenia by the Red Cross for heart surgery, accusing him of genocide.

Vagif Khachatrian, a resident of the village of Patara, was among 16 patients being evacuated by the Red Cross to Armenian hospitals for urgent treatment when he was arrested at the Lachin checkpoint on Saturday. 

The authorities in Stepanakert accused Baku of ‘kidnapping’ Khachatrian and taking him in an ‘unknown direction’. Yerevan and Stepanakert accused Baku of ‘gross violation of international law’. 

Azerbaijan’s Prosecutor’s Office released a statement on Saturday accusing Khachatrian of genocide and ethnic cleasnsing, claiming that he took part in a massacre of Azerbaijani civilians in the village of Meshali during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War.

Vagif Khachatrian at the Lachin checkpoint. Image via ITV.

They said Khachatrian would be placed in a medical facility in Baku and that the Red Cross would be provided access to him.

Following the arrest, the Red Cross announced they had halted the transfer of critically ill patients from Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, as well as the return of recovered patients.

On Sunday, the organisation said they had visited Khachatrian and that he was in contact with his family.

The Red Cross is the only organisation currently able to access Nagorno-Karabakh, solely for the transfer of ill patients to Armenian hospitals. 

In the past month, the organisation has been banned from entry at least twice, with Azerbaijan also attempting to impose medical examinations by Azerbaijani doctors at the Lachin checkpoint.

According to the statement from the Azerbaijani Prosecutor’s Office, Khachatryan took part in a massacre of Azerbaijani civilians in the village of Meshali on 22 December 1991. 

‘Using various weapons, including firearms and infantry fighting vehicles, they raided the village and killed 25 people of Azerbaijani nationality, injured 14 people, and contrary to national and international law norms expelled 358 Azerbaijanis from their domicile’, the statement said.

It added that Khachaturyan then ‘continued his criminal actions together with his accomplices’, causing property damage of ₼5.5 million ($3.2 million).

A 1992 report by the Russian human rights group, Memorial, cited ‘severe violence against the civilian population’ in Meshali by ethnic Armenian forces in 1991. Meshali is located in a part of Nagorno-Karabakh that remains under the control of the authorities in Stepanakert.

The Azerbaijani Prosecutors’ statement said that an international arrest warrant was issued against Khachaturyan in November 2013.

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender dismissed the Azerbaijani claims, stating that no ‘international prosecution’ was registered in any international databases against Khachatryan. 

Artak Beglaryan, an adviser to Nagorno-Karabakhs’ State minister denied that Khachatryan took part in war crimes, saying he was a driver who ‘defended his homeland’ during the First Nagorno-Karabakh war.

Khachatrian’s daughter, Tsovinar Khachatrian, who was accompanying him to Yerevan, also denied that her father was a war criminal, telling RFE/RL that ‘he was neither a commander nor a deputy commander. He was a driver’. 

Khachatryan was arrested as he was crossing the Azerbaijani checkpoint at the start of the Lachin Corridor, which connects Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia and the rest of the world.

In a statement on Saturday Armenia’s Foreign Ministry linked Khachatryan’s detention to the ongoing blockade of the Lachin Corridor, calling it a ‘war crime’.

‘We consider the criminal act committed by Azerbaijan today and the ongoing blockade of the Lachin Corridor unacceptable and reprehensible’, they said in a statement.

‘We expect united and clear-cut steps by the international community, including using existing tools aimed at restoring unimpeded movement through the Lachin Corridor, ensuring the activities of international humanitarian organisations in Nagorno-Karabakh, as well as humanitarian access to Nagorno-Karabakh’, the statement said. 

According to the November 2020 ceasefire agreement that brought an end to the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War, the Lachin Corridor was meant to be controlled by the Russian peacekeeping mission.

However, since Azerbaijani government-backed ‘eco-activists’ first blocked the route in December 2022, supplies and traffic in and out of the region have been limited. Since Azerbaijani border guards set up a checkpoint on the corridor in April, they have several times halted the remaining humanitarian aid supplies going into the region as well as red cross access.

The Azerbaijani government has repeatedly insisted that the region is not under blockade and that civilian traffic through the checkpoint was possible, despite little evidence of civilian traffic being allowed to pass.

[Read on OC Media: Nagorno-Karabakh aid convoy held at Lachin Corridor]

Many in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh have warned that the use of the Lachin Corridor by the population of Nagorno-Karabakh would be impossible while the Azerbaijani checkpoint remained in place, with some calling it an attempt to force the Armenian population out. Some have cited the fact that a large proportion of the male population of the region has taken part in hostilities against Azerbaijan since the 1990s, meaning they could be subject to arrest.

In their statement on Saturday, the Azerbaijani Prosecutor’s Office said that ‘operative and investigative measures are being conducted to bring the other accused persons to justice.’