Amnesty calls for probe into civilian casualties on Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

New Europe
Jan 14 2021
 
 
 
 
 By Elena Pavlovska, Journalist
 
 
A handout photo made available by the Armenian Foreign Ministry claims to show debris after fighting in Stepanakert of Nagorno-Karabakh, 05 October 2020. Armed clashes erupted on 27 September 2020 in the simmering territorial conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh territory along the contact line of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (also known as Artsakh).
 
EPA-EFE/Areg Balayan
  
Rights group Amnesty International on Wednesday urged Armenia and Azerbaijan to immediately investigate the use of “inaccurate and indiscriminate weapons” in civilian areas during the recent fighting over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, saying such attacks violated international law.
 
Armenia and Azerbaijan, two former Soviet republics, have been involved in a territorial conflict since they gained independence in the 1990s. Nagorno-Karabakh, which is internationally recognised as part of Azerbaijan, but is historically an ethnic Armenian region, has been the focal point of the conflict between the two nations.
 
More than 2,000 people have died since the fighting broke out on September 27, including many civilians. The six weeks of fierce fighting ended on November 10 with a Moscow-brokered ceasefire, under which Azerbaijan reclaimed much of the region along with surrounding areas. The peace deal prompted mass protests in Armenia.
 
Amnesty said it had analyzed “18 strikes by Armenian and Azerbaijan forces which unlawfully killed civilians”, and “visited dozens of strike sites” on both sides after the peace deal was signed.
 
Both sides have denied targeting civilians during the conflict “despite incontrovertible evidence that they have both done so,” using internationally banned cluster munitions and other explosive weapons “with wide area effects”, the watchdog said in a report on Wednesday.
 
According to the watchdog, Armenian forces used “inaccurate ballistic missiles, unguided multiple-launch rocket systems (MLRS), and artillery,” while Azerbaijani forces “also used unguided artillery and MLRS”. Both sides also used cluster munitions, which are banned under the international Convention on Cluster Munitions.
 
Human Rights Watch also said that both sides to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict had “committed violations of international humanitarian law that unlawfully harmed civilians”.
 

Armenian opposition: recent Karabakh, transit corridor talks in Moscow ‘another shameful defeat’

JAM News
Jan 14 2021
Armenian opposition: recent Karabakh, transit corridor talks in Moscow 'another shameful defeat'
JAMnews, Yerevan  
 
Members of the united opposition bloc in Armenia consider the trilateral negotiations which took place in Moscow on January 11 another failure.
 
Vazgen Manukyan, a candidate for prime minister from the opposition Movement to Save the Motherland, referred to the statement signed by the heads of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia as “another shameful defeat for Armenia.”
 
“Armenia did not gain anything from this meeting and was left with nothing on the issue of prisoners. Azerbaijan has once again secured what it wanted,” Manukyan posted on Facebook.
 
Prior to their visit to Moscow, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and his press secretary Mane Gevorgyan announced that the return of prisoners is a priority issue for Armenia.
 
“If it can be resolved, then it is possible for us to sign a joint statement,” Manukyan wrote in a Facebook post before the meeting.
 
In the aftermath of the Moscow negotiations, the newly achieved agreement had to be further clarified by the head of the ruling My Step faction, Lilit Makunts. Makunts reaffirmed that the question of returning Armenian prisoners of war is still on the agenda, and that the issue is one of the main priorities for the Armenian side.
 
 
How did the opposition respond
 
Politicians from the country’s opposition bloc believe that with the ceasefire agreement of November 9, 2020, Azerbaijan has already received more than it could ever dream of. The united opposition demands the resignation of Prime Minister Pashinyan who signed this ‘act of surrender’ along with the presidents of Azerbaijan and Russia.
 
The candidate for PM from the Salvation of the Homeland united opposition bloc, Vazgen Manukyan, said that Baku periodically violates the provisions set forth in this document. He specifically pointed out
 
– clause one – the parties stop and remain in the positions that they currently occupy, and
 
– clause eight – exchange of prisoners of war, hostages, and other detained persons as well as bodies of the deceased.
 
“All this is happening with the help of Nikol Pashinyan and as a result of his failure to act where necessary. On January 11, in Moscow, Aliyev managed to lay the foundation for the implementation of the ninth clause [ed – on unblocking economic and transport links in the region and providing Armenia with transportation links between Azerbaijan and its exclave, the Nakhichevan Autonomous Republic], which is strategically important to Azerbaijan.
 
There is no doubt that the results of further negotiations on the implementation of this item under Pashinyan’s premiership will only fully satisfactory to Azerbaijan”, Vazgen Manukyan said.
 
Manukyan insists that during the trilateral negotiations on January 11, Prime Minister Pashinyan should have noted the violation of the first paragraph of the statement on Karabakh, since it poses a real threat to the areas near Armenia’s southern border – specifically the Syunik region, where the border is now being redrawn.
 
In addition, Manukyan is not happy with the fact that the new document does not say anything about the settlement of the conflict within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group and the status of NK, which ‘was also a great defeat’:
 
“And, of course, the issue of detained persons had to be raised and resolved. The trilateral meeting on January 11 and the joint statement that followed it reaffirmed our concerns and proved that Nikol Pashinyan is unable to advance the interests of Armenia and the Armenian people”.
 
How did the authorities respond
 
Lilit Makunts, head of the My Step alliance faction, responded to the opposition’s accusations regarding the failure to negotiate the returning of Armenian prisoners of war. Makunts stated that this issue “is and will be a priority for the Armenian side”.
 
While talking about the trilateral statement signed on January 11, Makunts stressed that it had nothing to do with humanitarian issues and “there is no need to link one to the other”:
 
“The recently signed agreement is a statement of intent with a specific time frame, and humanitarian actions are aimed at returning the prisoners of war. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and our parliament are doing their best. We have to utilise all the mechanisms at our disposal.”
 

Political scientist: Popov’s interview makes it clear that Armenia began to change approaches in 2018-2019

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 14 2021
Political scientist: Popov's interview makes it clear that Armenia began to change approaches in 2018-2019
 
 
"There are significant differences between the perceptions and ideas expressed in Pashinyan's article and the realities presented by the former Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, Ambassador-at-Large of the Russian Foreign Ministry Igor Popov," political scientist Alexander Markarov told Panorama.am on Thursday, referring to Popov’s interview published by the Russian Foreign Ministry on Wednesday.
 
He underlined that there are clear differences in the perceptions of reality, resulting in two different pictures.
 
"What does this mean? In fact, it is the reaction of the Russian side to the statements that were made, as well as the continuation of the narrative that it was difficult for Putin to understand why the Armenian side rejected the options during the war, which were possibly more favorable than the terms of the November 10 statement,” the political scientist said.
 
In Markarov’s words, the interview of the Russian diplomat makes it clear that there are inconsistent perceptions, and in fact, the former co-chair presents a position according to which in 2018-2019 Armenia started to change the approaches applied to the conflict before that.
 
In the interview in the wake of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s article “Origins of the 44-Day War”, Popov said that the latest version of Russia’s multi-stage Karabakh settlement plan was handed over to the conflicting parties in June 2019.
 
Nikol Pashinyan's well-known statement “Artsakh is Armenia. Period!” was made at Stepanakert's Renaissance Square on August 5, 2019, after those proposals had been made.
 
“Azerbaijan, in turn, continued to declare that no status of Nagorno-Karabakh outside of Azerbaijan could be discussed, and after the appearance of the Russian proposals, Azerbaijan toughened its position: no status of Nagorno-Karabakh can be discussed at this stage,” Pashinyan's article said.
 
Igor Popov stated Russia has never said the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement must be confined to the return of seven districts of the region to Azerbaijan without taking care of its status.
 
"Claims to the effect Russia called for returning seven districts ‘in exchange for nothing’ and forgetting about its status have nothing to do with the reality," the diplomat said.
 

Azerbaijan violates Nov. 9 trilateral statement by bringing fabricated charges against Armenian POWs, FM says

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 14 2021
 
 
Armenia will continue its efforts to get back all Armenian prisoners of war (POWs) and hostages held in Azerbaijani captivity, Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian said at a working meeting with members of the National Assembly Standing Committee on Foreign Relations on Thursday.
 
Incidentally, lawmakers from the opposition Prosperous Armenia and Bright Armenia factions did not attend the meeting, which was held in an open-door format only for the first few minutes.
 
The foreign minister stressed that by bringing fabricated charges and launching criminal cases against Armenian POWs, Azerbaijan violates the provisions of the November 9 trilateral statement on the Artsakh ceasefire, as well as the Geneva conventions.
 
"These factors do not contribute to confidence-building efforts in the region, as the most important guarantee for confidence-building is the fulfilment of commitments. Armenia is pursuing the issue of return of POWs at the highest level and will continue its efforts towards the repatriation of all prisoners of war and hostages and ascertaining the fate of the missing,” he said.
 
According to Ara Aivazian, the Armenian Foreign Ministry cooperates with its international partners, as well as with other relevant agencies on the issue of POWs and missing persons.
 

Ex-ambassador: Nikol Pashinyan personally ‘coordinates anti-Russian sentiments’ in Armenia

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 14 2021
 
 
"Russia's official denial of Nikol's lie is yet another blow to the international standing of Armenia," former Armenian Ambassador to the Holy See Mikayel Minasyan said on Telegram, referring to Wednesday’s interview of former Russian Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Igor Popov in the wake of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan's article on the origins of the 44-day war in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).
 
“Azerbaijan, in turn, continued to declare that no status of Nagorno-Karabakh outside of Azerbaijan could be discussed, and after the appearance of the Russian proposals, Azerbaijan toughened its position: no status of Nagorno-Karabakh can be discussed at this stage,” Pashinyan said in the article.
 
Igor Popov stated in the interview that Russia has never said the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement must be confined to the return of seven districts of the region to Azerbaijan without taking care of its status.
 
"Claims to the effect Russia called for returning seven districts ‘in exchange for nothing’ and forgetting about its status have nothing to do with the reality," the diplomat said.
 
Mikayel Minasyan believes the premier had to blame someone for failing to receive positive outcomes from the January 11 trilateral talks in Moscow.
 
“According to the plan, now Russia is to blame for everything. Nikol, who personally coordinates anti-Russian sentiments in Armenia, has set two goals. First, he seeks to replace anti-Nicholism with Russophobia, making Russia the main culprit.
 
“Second, he is clearing the way for geopolitical maneuvers, which threatens to become a final disaster for Armenians and Armenia," he said.
 
 

Amnesty International: Azerbaijan/Armenia: Scores of civilians killed by indiscriminate use of weapons in conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh

Amnesty International
Jan 14 2021
, 00:01 UTC
  • Field investigators visited dozens of strike sites in Azerbaijan and Armenia
  • Evidence refutes both sides’ denials they launched indiscriminate strikes, including with cluster munitions
  • Other weapons used include ballistic missiles and volleys of notoriously imprecise rockets and artillery

The Armenian and Azerbaijani forces’ repeated use of notoriously inaccurate and indiscriminate weapons – including cluster munitions and explosive weapons with wide area effects in populated civilian areas – violated international humanitarian law and killed scores of civilians, injured hundreds and destroyed homes and key infrastructure in the recent conflict, Amnesty International said today.

The organization’s new report, In the Line of Fire: Civilian casualties from unlawful strikes in the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, is based on an on-the-ground investigation on both sides and details 18 strikes by Armenian and Azerbaijani forces which unlawfully killed civilians. In all, at least 146 civilians, including multiple children and older people, died in the 44-day conflict between late September and early November 2020.

Armenian forces employed inaccurate ballistic missiles, unguided multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS), and artillery. Azerbaijani forces also used unguided artillery and MLRS. Authorities on both sides have denied launching indiscriminate strikes against civilian areas and using cluster munitions – despite clear evidence that they both have done so.

“By using these imprecise and deadly weapons in the vicinity of civilian areas, Armenian and Azerbaijani forces violated the laws of war and showed disregard for human life,” said Marie Struthers, Amnesty International’s Director for Eastern Europe and Central Asia.

By using these imprecise and deadly weapons in the vicinity of civilian areas, Armenian and Azerbaijani forces violated the laws of war and showed disregard for human life. 

Marie Struthers, Amnesty International’s Director for Eastern Europe and Central Asia

“Civilians were killed, families were torn apart and countless homes were destroyed because all parties to the conflict used notoriously imprecise weapons against towns and cities.”

Civilian casualties would almost certainly have been much higher were it not for the fact that many people had either fled affected areas or taken shelter in basements when the conflict started.

Amnesty International investigators visited strike sites on both sides of the conflict. Basemap data: OCHA, ROCCA, ESRI

Following the 10 November tripartite agreement ending the conflict, Amnesty International visited dozens of strike sites in Azerbaijan and Armenia in late November and early December 2020.

The organization interviewed 79 survivors, witnesses and relatives of civilians killed and injured in the strikes, in addition to local civilian and military authorities, NGO workers and journalists.

Amnesty International’s Crisis Response team analyzed fragments of munitions used in the attacks and examined videos, photographs, and satellite images taken during the conflict.

“Our research revealed a pattern of indiscriminate and disproportionate strikes by both sides that killed and harmed civilians and damaged civilian objects. Attacks were repeatedly carried out on civilian residential areas far from frontlines, and where there often did not appear to be any military targets in the vicinity,” said Marie Struthers.

Amnesty International documented eight strikes carried out by Armenian forces on towns and villages in Azerbaijan which killed a total of 72 civilians.

In the city of Ganja on 17 October, 21 civilians were killed and more than 50 injured when a SCUD-B ballistic missile hit the Mukhtar Hajiyev neighbourhood. Sudaba Asgarova’s daughter Nigar was killed in the strike, a day before her 15th birthday. “She was my only child. She was all I had,” Sudaba told Amnesty International.

Ramiz Gahramanov, 64, told Amnesty International that in the same strike his daughter Khatira, 34, was killed along with her son Orhan, 11, and two daughters Maryam, six, and Laman, 18. In the aftermath of the blast, Ramiz said: “I looked down and when I saw that the house had been completely destroyed, I immediately knew that they had all died because nobody could have survived such destruction. I could not find the bodies of my grandchildren. Parts of their bodies were not found until days later, in the next street, and some parts were not found at all.”

I looked down and when I saw that the house had been completely destroyed, I immediately knew that they had all died because nobody could have survived such destruction. I could not find the bodies of my grandchildren. Parts of their bodies were not found until days later, in the next street, and some parts were not found at all. 

Rahiz Gahramanov, 64, who lost multiple family members in a strike on Ganja

On 27 October, five people were killed and 14 injured when Armenian forces launched a cluster bomb strike on the village of Qarayusufli, causing widespread damage to homes. One of those killed was seven-year-old Aysu Iskandarli, who was playing on a swing in her garden at the time.

Armenian forces also fired several large-calibre rockets into the city of Barda on 28 October, more than 20 km from the frontline. Three rockets landed in the city centre, two of them near two hospitals. The third – a Russian-made 9M55 Smerch rocket containing 72 9N235 cluster submunitions – landed in the middle of a busy roundabout, killing 21 civilians.

On 27 September, the day the conflict began, Armenian forces launched an artillery strike in Gashalti, near Naftalan, killing five members of the Gurbanov family and partially destroying their house. Bakhtiar Gurbanov, who lost his parents, along with his brother’s wife, his nephew and niece, told Amnesty International: “Our family was destroyed. We had started to renovate the house before the war, now we can’t bear to be here anymore.”

Amnesty International documented nine strikes carried out by Azerbaijani forces on towns and villages in Nagorno-Karabakh and one in Armenia, killing 11 civilians. According to local de facto authorities, at least 52 Armenian civilians were killed in the conflict.

The region’s main city Stepanakert came under frequent attack, sometimes several times in a single day. Some of the strikes were carried out using inherently indiscriminate weapons, such as 122mm Grad rockets and internationally banned cluster munitions. 

A series of strikes on 4 October killed four civilians and injured a dozen more. Naver Lalayal told Amnesty International how his 69-year-old father Arkadi was killed in this attack:

“Since the war started, my parents had been staying in the shelter in the basement of the building with other residents and came up to the apartment regularly to use the bathroom and the kitchen. That morning my father came upstairs and was standing on the balcony when a rocket exploded in the garden. He was killed on the spot and much of the apartment was destroyed.”

A young woman with intellectual and physical disabilities was injured and traumatized by the same strike.

An independent weapons expert reviewed munition fragments Amnesty International observed at the site and identified them as “likely parts of an EXTRA ballistic missile,” an Israeli weapon known to have been sold to Azerbaijan.

Several other locations around the city were struck the same day, including near a school that was no longer in session and near the office of the International Committee of the Red Cross.

In other strikes on Stepanakert, it appeared that Azerbaijani forces deliberately targeted critical infrastructure, including the Emergency Services, a large compound on the city’s eastern edge. On 2 October at around 2 pm a rocket strike hit the adjacent car park, mortally wounding one of the rescuers, 25-year-old Hovhannes Aghajanyan, injuring 10 of his colleagues and seriously damaging the hangar that houses emergency vehicles.

Victoria was our little angel. She is gone … My little boy now still wakes up saying that there are planes in the sky bombing. 

Anahit Gevorgyan, whose eight-year-old daughter was killed and two-year-old son injured in a strike on Martuni

In Martuni, on 27 September, 12 strikes in the space of four minutes included one that mortally wounded an eight-year-old girl, Victoria Gevorgyan, and left her two-year-old brother Artsvik badly injured and traumatized.

“Victoria was our little angel. She is gone … My little boy now still wakes up saying that there are planes in the sky bombing,” their mother Anahit Gevorgyan told Amnesty International.

Davit Khachatran, a resident of Martakert, told Amnesty International how both of his parents and his aunt – all in their 60s – were killed in an instant when a Grad rocket struck the entrance of a building opposite the family’s fruit and vegetable shop on 30 September. The rocket was still lodged in the building’s steps when Amnesty International visited in mid-December.

The Armenian and Azerbaijani authorities must launch immediate, impartial investigations into their forces’ relentless and often reckless use of heavy explosive weapons in populated civilian areas. 

Marie Struthers

“The Armenian and Azerbaijani authorities must launch immediate, impartial investigations into their forces’ relentless and often reckless use of heavy explosive weapons in populated civilian areas. As the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders begin to work out security arrangements it’s crucial that those responsible for these violations are swiftly held to account and that the victims get reparations,” said Marie Struthers.

Key issues of Karabakh conflict remain unsolved – Carey Cavanaugh

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 14 2021
Key issues of Karabakh conflict remain unsolved, OSCE Minsk Group’s former American Co-Chair Carey Cavanaugh says.
 
He referred to the positive and negative aspects of the trilateral meeting in Moscow between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Russian president Vladimir Putin and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev.
 
“Positive aspect of trilateral meeting: Putin is committed to working on Karabakh. Troubling aspect: Aliyev acting like conflict’s resolved; it’s not, key issues remain. Comprehensive settlement needed to establish foundation for lasting peace & prosperity,” Carey Cavanaugh tweeted.
Positive aspect of trilateral meeting: Putin is committed to working on #Karabakh. Troubling aspect: Aliyev acting like conflict's resolved; it's not, key issues remain. Comprehensive settlement needed to establish foundation for lasting peace & prosperity
— Carey Cavanaugh (@carey_cavanaugh)
https://en.armradio.am/2021/01/14/key-issues-of-karabakh-conflict-remain-unsolved-carey-cavanaugh/

Armenian American Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte elected to Maine Justice Foundation board

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 14 2021
Westbrook City Council Vice President Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte has been elected to the Maine Justice Foundations Board of Directors, Press Herald reports.
 
The Hallowell-based organization specializes in pro-bono civil legal aid to those in need.
 
“I think this foundation recognizes that women and minorities all bring something to the table,” Turcotte said. “I am someone who understands the need and also the mechanics of it.”
 
Turcotte, an Armenian refugee from Baku, Azerbaijan, is vice president, senior risk manager, at Androscoggin Bank. She is also an author, lecturer and human rights advocate.
 
She will serve on the board’s development committee.
 
“They reached out to me and I was very honored to go through the interview process let alone be elected, and so I am very honored to be starting,” Turcotte said.
 

De-occupation of Artsakh territories, safe return of IDPs a priority for Armenia – Foreign Minister

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 14 2021
Armenia is worried about periodic violation of key provisions of the the trilateral statement on Nagorno Karabakh by Azerbaijan, Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian said at a meeting with members of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Foreign Relations.
 
“He said the violations are primarily related to the 1st and 8th points, according to which the parties remain on the positions occupied at the moment of signing of the statement, fully cease the fire and return the prisoners of war and other detainees,” the Foreign Minister said.
 
According to the Minister, in some cases these violations have been interrelated. “For example the attack in the Hin Tagher-Khtsaberd direction in Hadrut region capturing of 64 Armenian servicemen.”
 
“The false charges brought against the Armenian servicemen and launching of criminal cases not only violate the trilateral statement, but also the Geneva Conventions,” the Foreign Minister stated.
 
He noted that these factors do not contribute to trust-building efforts in the region, as implementation of commitments is the most important guarantee for building trust.
 
“Armenia pursues the issues of return of POWs on the highest level, and Armenian Prime Minister declared about this during the trilateral meeting in Moscow on January 11. Armenia will maintain efforts towards ensuring the return of all captives, finding out the fate of the missing,” the Foreign Minister said.
 
He added that in this regard the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is cooperating with international partners, coordinating the steps with other relevant bodies.
“As a party to the trilateral statement of January 11, Armenia made it clear that it is ready to take steps for the mutually beneficial utilization of the transport and infrastructure capacities of the region, but we need reciprocal trust to move forward,” Minister Aivazian said.
 
He emphasized that the existing situation in the region is a result of use of force and added that no conflict in the world has ever been settled through use of force.
 
“The use of force can shape a new stage in the conflict, but will not solve the conflict. Only a negotiated, political solution that will respect everyone’s rights will pave the way for eliminating the reasons and consequences of the war, and bring lasting peace and reconciliation to the South Caucasus,” the Foreign Minister added.
 
According to him the right of the Artsakh people’s right to self-determination is at the core of settlement of the Karabakh conflict, and Armenia will continue to pursue the realization of that right.
 
“Armenia is ready to continue the process of peaceful settlement of the Karabakh conflict under the aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group and their countries, based on the part of the basic principles and elements not addressed in the November 9 statement,” the Foreign Minister said.
 
He stressed that a priority for Armenia is the de-occupation of Artsakh territories, and ensuring conditions for the safe return of displaced Armenians to their homes.
 
Given the previous experience of consistent destruction of Armenian cultural heritage, the protection of Armenian cultural and religious heritage on the territories under Azerbaijani control should be an important part of the peace process.
 
“Appropriation or distortion of the history and values of the Armenian people, violation of its rights cannot shape a good future for our region,” Minister Ara Aivazian said.
 
He said addressing humanitarian issues in Artsakh and the direct involvement of international partners, particularly the UN, is another priority in this stage.
 
 

Iranian athlete hands over his gold medal to family of Armenian soldier killed in Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Jan 14 2021
Iranian champion in Kyokushin karate Ahmad Bagheripoor, the gold medal winner of the 12th open championship in Armenia in 2017, has decided to hand over his gold medal to the family of Arthur Sukiasyan, an Armenian athlete who died during the 2020 Artsakh war, the Armenian Embassy in Iran reports.
 
Arthur Sukiasyan and Ahmad Bagheripoor were friends and participated in many tournaments together.
 
On January 13, the Iranian athlete handed his gold medal to Gor Shahverdyan, third secretary of the Embassy of Armenia in Iran to be presented to Sukiasyan family in Armenia.