Azerbaijan hinders visit of UNESCO mission to Nagorno Karabakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 21 2020

UNESCO is awaiting Azerbaijan’s Response regarding Nagorno-Karabakh mission, says Ernesto Ottone, Assistant UNESCO Director-General for Culture.

In its press release of 20 November, UNESCO reiterated countries’ obligation to protect cultural heritage in terms of the 1954 Convention for the Protection of cultural property in the event of armed conflict to which both Armenia and Azerbaijan are parties. The Organization proposed to carry out an independent mission of experts to draw a preliminary inventory of significant cultural properties as a first step towards the effective safeguarding of the region’s heritage.

The proposal received the full support of the Co-Chairs of the Minsk Group and the agreement in principle of the representatives of both Armenia and Azerbaijan.

Meeting at UNESCO on 10 and 11 December 2020, the members of the intergovernmental Committee of The Hague Convention of 1954 for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and its Second Protocol (1999), welcomed this initiative and confirmed the need for a mission to take stock of the situation regarding cultural properties in and around Nagorno-Karabakh. The Committee requested each of the parties to render the mission possible.

Since 20 November, UNESCO made proposals and led in-depth consultations with a view to organizing the mission which, in the terms of the Convention, requires the agreement of both parties.

Ernesto Ottone, Assistant UNESCO Director-General for Culture, said: “Only the response of Azerbaijan is still awaited for UNESCO to proceed with the sending of a mission to the field. The authorities of Azerbaijan have been approached several times without success so far. Every passing week makes the assessment of the situation concerning cultural property more difficult, not least due to the weather which is expected to become harsher in the coming weeks. The window of opportunity that was opened by the cease fire must not be closed again. The safeguarding of heritage is an important condition for the establishment of lasting peace. We are therefore expecting Baku to respond without delay so that the constructive discussions held over recent weeks can be turned into action.”

Armenian opposition protests as PM Pashinyan’s mandate slips

Foreign Brief
Dec 22 2020
  • In Daily Brief
  • December 22, 2020
  • Sinan Hanioglu

Armenian opposition groups will hold a protest today in Yerevan.

The demonstration will take place amid severe backlash against Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s perceived mishandling of the 44-day conflict with neighbouring Azerbaijan. Pashinyan’s signing of a Russian-brokered ceasefire last month returned significant territory to Azerbaijan, triggering mass protests that saw Armenians storm the nation’s parliament, presidential palace and Pashinyan’s private residence.

Despite the PM’s refusal to tender his resignation by the opposition’s Dec. 8 deadline, it is unlikely he will successfully retain his hold on power. Overwhelming public indignation and demands for his departure from all 17 opposition parties make Pashinyan’s political survival highly unlikely. Expect protests to grow in intensity until snap elections are called.

The government’s handling of the conflict’s fallout will also provide insights regarding the state of Armenia’s nascent democratic institutions. Public upheaval can only be overcome through meeting demands for fresh elections that would give the Armenian people the power to chart the country’s response to the national crisis. If the government refuses to hold early parliamentary elections, partisan actors, particularly on the right, could capitalise on mass discontent to threaten democratic rule.

Wake up smarter with an assessment of the stories that will make headlines in the next 24 hours. Download The Daily Brief.

ICRC handed details about 62 new Armenian POWs

Big News Network
Dec 21 2020

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Armenian side has provided the International Committee of the Red Cross with information about 62 servicemen taken captive by the Azerbaijani troops near the villages of Hin Tagher and Khtsaberd in Nagorno-Karabakh's Hadrut region, Armenian Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutyunyan said Monday, December 21.

The situation around the two villages came to a head when Azerbaijan launched new offensives to capture them on December 11, having seized most of the region of Hadrut during the war. According to a trilateral statement signed by Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia on November 9, the parties were supposed to remain at their current positions, which means both Hin Tagher and Khtsaberd should have remained under the Armenian side's control.

Harutyunyan spoke to the parents and family members of the newly-captured servicemen via videoconference on Monday and said the Armenian side doing everything to settle the matter as soon as possible. the Defense Minister said their personal information has been sent to the International Court of Human Rights (ICRC).

According to him, the issue is also in the center of attention of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Artsakh (Karabakh).


Facebook blocks Mikayel Minasyan’s page, removes his post about priest after Armenian authorities’ complaint

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 21 2020

Former Ambassador of Armenia to the Holy See Mikayel Minasyan told News.am that Facebook has blocked his page for 24 hours and has removed his last post supporting Father Pargev Zeynalyan, the priest of St. Gregory the Illuminator Church in the Armenian town of Sisian.

“Since the actions of the authorities of Armenia in agony to cling to power are becoming ridiculous, I deem it necessary to inform that the authorities, using all state resources and in fear of today’s release of the Requiem series, blocked my Facebook page for 24 hours and, as a result of staged complaints, Facebook removed my last post about Father Pargev.

"I am gladly presenting to your media outlet the “Requiem/4: People” series to broadcast it for me and reaffirm every word stated in my last Facebook post, according to which any encroachment against the Armenian Holy Apostolic Church and its servants will be punished by the strictest rules of the law and life. If only this government of pitiful bastards dealt with the Armenian boys who are missing and in captivity, the security of the borders of Armenia and Artsakh and the social issues of our people with the same consistency. Casus belli,” the ex-ambassador stated.

Armenian opposition slams Pashinyan’s ‘policy of mischief’

Panorama, Armenia

Dec 21 2020
Politics 20:11 21/12/2020 Armenia

Armenia's opposition forces making up the Homeland Salvation Movement reacted to the developments in Syunik Province on Monday, denouncing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s “mischievous” policy. A statement released by the movement reads:

“Nikol Pashinyan the traitor, who is clinging to power, today initiated another provocation against residents of Syunik. Having sent more than 1,500 police officers and other law enforcement agency officers to Syunik since late last night, he tried to secretly visit a number of towns in the region.

However, seeing the resolute position of Syunik residents to bar him from entering the region, Nikol Pashinyan first ordered the arrest of Goris Mayor Arush Arushanyan, then he had the interstate road blocked by police forces, depriving citizens of their constitutional right to free movement. Also, he incited provocative actions against the priest of the church in Sisian, Father Pargev Zeynalian.

To the credit of our compatriots in Syunik, all of Pashinyan's efforts were in vain, and with their dignified behavior they prevented another provocation of the traitor. This kind of attitude of Nikol Pashinyan is a serious challenge to our public solidarity.

The Homeland Salvation Movement strongly condemns the policy of mischief of incumbent Prime Minister Pashinyan and warns that any of his provocations will receive the most decisive response from the people.

And Pashinyan, who had to flee Syunik today, should have already realized how unpromising and even dangerous his approaches are. In any case, the Homeland Salvation Movement calls on all citizens of Armenia to unite and to join the nationwide strike and boycott of classes tomorrow, December 22.

Dear compatriots, tomorrow at 12pm we are waiting for you all at the Republic Square. Together we will save our homeland!” 

Why residents of south Armenia block PM’s entrance into region

JAM News
Dec 21 2020
Why residents of south Armenia block PM's entrance into region

    JAMnews, Yerevan

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan was unable to visit major cities in the south of the country earlier today after residents of Syunik region blocked roads, in particular, the Yerevan-Goris highway, and did not let the prime minister into the region.

He literally had to fly over closed roads in a helicopter.

The day before, Pashinyan wrote on his Facebook page that he was going to spend Monday working day in Syunik, visit the cities of Meghri, Kapan, Goris, Sisian, and meet with residents and representatives of local self-government.

However, the prime minister’s visit was limited only to the city of Sisian and the village of Sarnakunk. He did not go further.

What is happening in Syunik, why the prime minister decided to interrupt the trip, and who is the priest who refused to shake hands with him.


  • Armenia: mourning procession for Karabakh dead – march, protest, statements
  • Candlelight procession in Yerevan in memory of victims of second Karabakh war


Situation in Syunik

As a result of the second Karabakh war, the Zangelan region of Karabakh bordering on the Syunik region of Armenia, was transferred to Azerbaijan.

Now demarcation and delimitation is taking place in the area, along the administrative boundaries of the Soviet era.

As a result, the road between Goris and Kapan, Syunik region, crosses Azerbaijani territory in several places. Moreover, part of the airport in the city of Kapan, along the new borders, is also located on the territory of Azerbaijan.

The protests in the region began from the moment when the mayor of Kapan, Gevorg Parsyan, announced the order of the Armenian Ministry of Defense to vacate military posts near the city, located at “favorable heights”, by the evening of December 18.

The mayor said that at the same time the Azerbaijani Armed Forces will approach the borders of Armenia and will be at a distance of less than a kilometer, and the road from Kapan to the four nearest villages: Khdrants, Kapan, Yeghvard and Uzhanis “will fall into enemy territory”.

On the evening of December 20, the Mayor of Goris, Arush Arushanyan, called on the residents of Syunik “not to allow the person who is giving up Armenian lands to enter the region.”

“This is not a question of political orientation and not an initiative of any party, this is the struggle of the people of Syunik for dignity, security and physical existence, a manifestation of pan-Armenian disobedience,” the mayor wrote on his Facebook page.

How events developed

On the morning of December 21, it became known that the mayor of Goris had been detained, and information also appeared that criminal proceedings were instituted against Arusha Arushanyan.

At the same time, Deputy Mayor Irina Yolyan stated that Arushanyan’s lawyers are unable to obtain any information about him from the police.

Meanwhile, Nikol Pashinyan, on his way to Syunik, spoke live on his Facebook page and said that he was going to pay tribute to the residents of the region and talk openly with them:

“I intend to answer your questions, not to salt the wounds. I have fulfilled and are fulfilling my obligations to you in full. […] I want to emphasize that not a single millimeter will be given away from the territory of Syunik.”

But the words of the prime minister did not affect the residents of Syunik, and the road remained closed. More than a dozen buses with policemen were pulled into Syunik. From time to time there were clashes between the residents who blocked the road and the police.

As a result, the head of government “overcame the barrier” by helicopter.

Where did the PM visit and what he said

Nikol Pashinyan first drove to the village of Sarnakunk and talked with local residents about the processes taking place on the border with Azerbaijan:

“It so happened that the Goris-Kapan road passes through the Soviet borders of Armenia and Azerbaijan. Now our border troops are stationed there, the security and operation of the road will also be ensured by Russian border guards.”

In Sisian, Pashinyan laid flowers on the graves of soldiers killed in the war. Here he also communicated with residents and explained the situation with the borders.

According to him, the demarcation of borders is being carried out now in accordance with the law of Armenia on administrative-territorial division, which was adopted by the previous authorities – back in 2010.

Some of the residents of the city of Sisian welcomed the prime minister warmly. In conversation with them, he said that he had decided to interrupt his trip to Syunik region. The head of the cabinet explained his decision by the fact that he did not intend to succumb to provocations, especially taking into account the mourning announced in the country from 19 to 21 December.

Priest incident

However, not everyone in Sisian was happy with the premier.

The rector of the church Surb Grigor Lusavorich (Saint Gregory the Illuminator) Pargev Zeynalyan did not shake hands with the Prime Minister and with his eyes made it clear that he should leave the temple. A video of this incident appeared online.


Armenian PM thanks Putin for help in returning Armenian soldiers back home

TASS, Russia
Dec 21 2020
Earlier on Sunday, Nagorno-Karabakh’s emergencies ministry informed of the return of six military officers

YEREVAN, December 21. /TASS/. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has thanked Russian President Vladimir Putin for his help in returning Armenian military officers back home.

"I would like to thank President Putin for the fact that yesterday, six of our soldiers who had spent 70 days in the forest were found and evacuated. This is something akin to a miracle. We are constantly working on returning our soldiers, and we have spoken about this with the Russian president dozens of times," Pashinyan said on Monday during a meeting with the residents of the town of Sisian.

The list of 62 Armenian soldiers captured in Hin Tagher-Khtsaberd section transferred to ICRC – Minister

Public Radio of Armenia
Dec 21 2020

Minister of Defense Vagharshak Harutyunyan today provided clarifications to the parents and relatives of the servicemen who were taken prisoner by the Azerbaijani side in the Hin Tagher-Khtsaberd section of the Artsakh Republic.

The Minister of Defense noted that everything possible is being done for a quick settlement of the issue.

In particular, according to Vagharshak Harutyunyan, the list of 62 captured servicemen has already been transferred to the International Committee of the Red Cross, and their personal files have been sent to the European Court of Human Rights.

The issue is also in the focus of the leadership of the Russian peacekeeping contingent stationed in Artsakh.

Vagharshak Harutyunyan assured the relatives of the servicemen that the Ministry of Defense is doing its best to return the captured servicemen to the Homeland, that there are no misinterpretations in this issue.

Armenia’s Tragedy in Shushi

The New York Review of Books
Dec 21 2020
Viken Berberian
Purged of its Armenian population during fighting over the disputed enclave of Artsakh, also known as Nagorno-Karabakh, the historic center now faces cultural cleansing.

December 21, 2020

 Alex McBride/Getty Images)

The interior of a church in Shushi that was damaged by Azerbaijani forces during fighting over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh, October 12, 2020

Armenia and Azerbaijan’s lobbying activities

New Eastern Europe
Dec 21 2020

A response to Anna Barseghyan’s article on ‘The difference between Armenian and Azerbaijani lobbying activities in Europe’.

December 21, 2020 – Taras Kuzio
         

Armenian diaspora protesting in Los Angeles, USA. October 2020. Photo: Tverdokhlib / Shutterstock

Anna Barseghyan’s article provided a biased view of Azerbaijani-Armenian relations that is very common in European and North American media. This is despite attempts to portray these opinions as balanced. There are four main reasons for this.

The first is the large, wealthy and therefore influential Armenian populations and lobbies that exist in countries such as America and France. As Barseghyan writes, “EU official announcements are quite pro-Armenian”. France has the third largest Armenian community in the world, which numbers around 600,000 people. In late November, the French Senate voted to recognise Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Armenia. Of course, this action was condemned by Azerbaijan. Although the vote was only symbolic, it showed the degree to which French foreign policy is confused regarding frozen conflicts. After all, how can Paris take this step and at the same time oppose Russia’s de facto occupation of Georgian and Ukrainian territories and annexation of Crimea.

Armenians have long lobbied Washington to impose sanctions against Azerbaijan even though it was Baku’s territory that had been occupied by Armenia. Azerbaijan was the only post-Soviet state denied assistance under Section 907 of the 1992 US Freedom Support Act. Baku always believed US policy was patently unfair because it sent the signal Armenia was being rewarded for occupying a fifth of Azerbaijani territory. In October 2001, the US Senate amended the Freedom Support act to permit presidents to waive Section 907, allowing Presidents George H. W. Bush and Barack Obama to provide assistance to Azerbaijan.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) reported that Senator Bob Menendez, ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, had called for sanctions against Azerbaijan and Turkey for “aggression against Armenia and Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh)”. Menendez does not seem to understand that countries cannot undertake “aggression” against their internationally recognised sovereign territory.

The second is Western bias in support of Christian countries, which is clearly seen in French President Emmanuel Macron’s support for Greece over Turkey and Armenia over Azerbaijan. Long-standing negative European stereotypes of Turkey have blocked its membership of the EU for decades. This has had a knock-on effect on European attitudes towards Azerbaijan.

The third is the influence of pro-Russia sentiment in some Western countries. This can be seen in France, where Gaullists, the extreme right and the extreme left hold pro-Kremlin views regarding countries such as Azerbaijan and Ukraine. French politicians, such as Valéry Giscard d’Estain, believe that Crimea was “always Russian”. As the recent vote in the French Senate has shown, many think that Nagorno-Karabakh is Armenian.

Before discussing the mechanics of Azerbaijani lobbying, let us analyse the themes that both sides are attempting to promote. On the Armenian side, recognition of the genocide of Armenians during the First World War is backed by 32 countries, although not by Turkey. Armenian lobbying has been unsuccessful in the former USSR where only two (Russia, Lithuania) of the fifteen post-Soviet republics, in addition to Armenia, recognise the massacres as a genocide as defined by the UN in 1948; Ukraine officially uses the term ‘tragic events of April.’ The reasons are likely to be a mixture of pro-Western Georgia and Ukraine not wishing to align with pro-Russian Armenia and pro-Russian Belarus and Kazakhstan fearful of using the term ‘genocide’ because it would open up a pandorah’s box on Soviet crimes.

At the same time, lobbying for EU sanctions against Turkey is unlikely to be successful. It is unclear to many (including me) why these restrictions should be imposed in the first place for its support for Azerbaijan re-taking back its sovereign territory. Any Western sanctions put in place against Turkey and Azerbaijan for implementing international law under article 2(4) of the UN Charter would simply be an example of double standards.

The third, as Barseghyan writes, is the support shown for the population of Nagorno-Karabakh to “determine their own future”. If this happened, it has to be asked why the EU should just stop at Nagorno-Karabakh? Why not apply this proposal to other post-Soviet frozen conflicts, Russian regions such as Chechnya and the Kuril Islands, and other ethnic conflicts in Belgium, Romania, Slovakia and Spain? It is unclear why the EU, OSCE, UN and Western governments should ignore the concept of territorial integrity in the case of Nagorno-Karabakh.

The fourth, EU assistance to Armenia is a sign that Yerevan wants to have the best of both worlds in a geopolitical sense. Although you would not notice it in Western reporting, Armenia has been a long-term Russian ally since the disintegration of the USSR in the early 1990s. In 2013, Yerevan made its choice when it withdrew from the EU’s Eastern Partnership and joined Russian President Vladimir Putin’s Eurasian Economic Union. Armenia continued to turn its back on Europe after the 2018 ‘colour revolution’ brought Nikol Pashinyan to power.

In a major contrast to Armenia, in the same year Yerevan turned its back on Europe, Ukrainians rose up against President Viktor Yanukovych who also attempted to end Ukraine’s European integration. Putin succeeded in Armenia but failed in Ukraine. Armenians did not protest their country’s shift from European to Eurasian integration while Ukrainians protested in their millions and 100 were murdered during the Euromaidan Revolution to maintain their country’s European choice. 

Azerbaijani lobbying, as outlined by Barseghyan, is actually far less controversial compared to Armenia’s activities. Four of the five points she outlines in her article are indisputable. These include Azerbaijan’s importance in relation to European energy security, the Western principle of upholding the territorial integrity of states, Azerbaijan’s status as a secular Islamic state, and its position as a model of tolerance regarding national and religious minorities. Azerbaijan and Israel have a well developed security relationship and Azerbaijan is a staging area for Israeli intelligence operations in Iran. The fifth – the nature of Azerbaijan’s political system – depends on whether you are an optimist (young evolving democracy) or pessimist (authoritarian state).

The assumption found in most Western writing that Azerbaijan is the ‘intolerant’ side in the conflict is simply wrong. America and Europe also have issues with nationalist populists, who have promoted intolerance towards national and religious minorities. As reported by Simon Ostrovsky for PBS News Hour, Armenia’s three decades-long control of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven surrounding districts was also accompanied by the destruction of Azerbaijani religious and cultural artefacts.

Barseghyan blamed Azerbaijani “rhetoric, discourse and physical action” for starting the recent war. In fact, this was brought about by Pashinyan’s nationalism, specifically his threat to annex Nagorno-Karabakh. The leader also disavowed the 2009 ‘Madrid Principles’, which were agreed by both sides under the auspices of the OSCE in order to peacefully resolve the conflict. The first salvo’s in this year’s war were undertaken by Armenia in July, according to former Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Armenian leaders also believed that Azerbaijan would not use military force because this would trigger a Russian military intervention in support of a member of the CSTO (Collective Security Treaty Organisation). However, Russian security guarantees only apply to internationally recognised Armenian territory and not to the Azerbaijani lands that the state occupied.

Now to the mechanics of Azerbaijani lobbying.

Barseghyan writes that Azerbaijan uses “oil money to buy influence” in Europe. This is not a surprise, as all countries with energy resources do the same. Saudi Arabia and Russia are two major examples of this practice.

In addition, Azerbaijan is not alone in lobbying using official and unofficial means, as this has been done in Washington and the capitals of Europe for a long time. You only have to take a look at the websites of Washington’s Foreign Agency Registration Act (FARA) and Lobbying Disclosure Act (LDA) to see how billions of dollars pour into American politics each year from foreign governments.

As I have written about in an extensive study of this practice, Ukrainian oligarchs and governments have been buying influence in Washington for the last three decades. As the case of Paul Manafort shows, some of the funds received by US consultants are not declared and end up in offshore Caribbean tax havens. Manafort was unlucky and was sentenced to jail because he went public after working for a decade in Ukraine for the pro-Russian Party of Regions in order to head Donald Trump’s election campaign. Others have been luckier and gotten away with hiding their cash payments.

Barseghyan writes about relatively innocent activities undertaken by Azerbaijani lobbyists, such as paying for the restoration of buildings, international conferences and the creation of new think tanks. This kind of work is done by many foreign governments in Europe and America. In Washington, one of the ways of bypassing registration with FARA or LDA is to donate directly to think tanks. The Kazakh government, for example, donated to the well-known Center for Strategic and International Studies. Ukrainian oligarchs have donated to at least three influential Washington think tanks – Brookings Institution, Peterson Institute for International Economics and Atlantic Council.

In comparison, Azerbaijan’s lobbying activities are therefore no worse than those of many other governments in Europe and America. Importantly, they seek to counter unbalanced reporting and various pro-Armenian governments in the West.

Azerbaijan waited three decades for the West and Russia to peacefully resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict through the Minsk Group. However, the West and Russia have always approached the conflicts in Eurasia with a strategy of ‘freeze and forget’ which was evident with France and the US not paying attention to the south Caucasus for many years allowing Russia to fill the vacuum. Another reason was the three co-chairs of the Minsk Group – Russia, France and the US – were pro-Armenian. Worst still, France’s foreign policy confusingly supported separatism in the south Caucasus and territorial integrity in Ukraine. Meanwhile, all three countries rebuffed attempts by Turkey, which borders both Armenia and Azerbaijan, to join as a co-chair of the Minsk Group.

Unlike Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan, his Azerbaijani counterpart upheld the ‘Madrid Principles’, which, rather ironically, have been implemented through military force. A second irony is that Turkey is now an important geopolitical player in the south Caucasus in a region where it is competition with Russia and Iran. The outcome of the 44-day war is that Azerbaijan-Turkish and Armenian-Russian ties are now more firmly entrenched and Turkish military cooperation with Ukraine is growing.

Azerbaijan’s military success also has important ramifications for Georgia and Ukraine’s frozen conflicts. International forums, such as the Minsk Group for the south Caucasus and Normandy Group for the eastern Ukrainian Donbas region, are discredited. We have to wait and see if incoming US President Joe Biden will change the dynamics in these international forums, strike a more balanced position between Armenia and Azerbaijan and re-energise US policies towards Eurasia.

Taras Kuzio is a professor in the Department of Political Science, National University of Kyiv Mohyla Academy and a Non-Resident Fellow, Foreign Policy Institute, School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University.