Nagorno-Karabakh shuffles top officials, plans new elections

EurasiaNet.org
Jan 7 2021
Ani Mejlumyan Jan 7, 2021

Following the defeat to Azerbaijan, the de facto government in Nagorno-Karabakh has reshuffled many of its top officials and is preparing for new elections.

On December 1, the head of the self-proclaimed republic, Arayik Harutyunyan, said that it would start forming a “government of national accord” to manage the territory “in this period which is so difficult for our motherland.” Since then, several new cabinet officials including a new national security adviser and foreign minister have been named, representing a wide swath of the territory’s political spectrum.

“Overall, we can say that the appointments of the new government are completed,” the spokesman for de facto president Arayik Harutyunyan, Vahram Poghosyan, told RFE/RL on January 5. “We have to get on with work in order to try to get the life back to normal in [Karabakh] as soon as possible.”

The most consequential appointment has been that of Vitaliy Balasanyan as national security adviser. Balasanyan is a veteran of the first war with Azerbaijan, in the 1990s, and is a close ally of former Armenian presidents Serzh Sargsyan and Robert Kocharyan. He was national security adviser from 2016-2019 and ran unsuccessfully for president in elections last year while also helping lead a campaign to free Kocharyan, the archenemy of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan who was in jail in Armenia for charges related to the violent breakup of protests under the old regime.

In a 2019 interview with Eurasianet Balasanyan said that Pashinyan was a “Western project” and that his coming to power “wasn’t a revolution but a seizure of power by force.”

Since reassuming the position Balasanyan has signaled a hard line, vowing to further militarize the territory. In a December 29 interview, he said he would be soon creating new military structures, including new border units. “Everyone will be obliged to serve, they will be paid, they will get a high salary. This is a sacred duty for each of us,” he said.

In the interview he also said he intended to crack down on drinking, drug use, and “sects.”

“People who drink should do it at home,” he said. “Every citizen of Karabakh needs to be disciplined.” In another interview, he said that all state workers — including the president — would be banned from using social media while they are at work.

Balasanyan’s position holds substantial authority: All security forces in the territory answer to him, and Harutyunyan has given him effective veto power over any security-related decision. “All presidential decrees and government decisions related to the defense and security of [Karabakh] will be adopted only with the approval of the Security Council,” Harutyunyan said in a December 16 statement.

Harutyunyan also has said there will be snap elections “in a reasonable time frame,” though he did not provide details. He said he will himself not be running and will be leaving politics.

Analysts have seen Balasanyan as the early frontrunner to take over. “From the recent [December 16] statement of the president, we see that there has been an effective transition of power to the Security Council and accordingly to Balasanyan,” political analyst Hakob Badalyan told RFE/RL. The upcoming elections “can be expected to be a confirmation of that political power,” Badalyan said.

Balasanyan’s rise has been closely noted in Azerbaijan, where he is seen as a hardliner and pro-Russia figure. A recent report from the independent Azerbaijani agency Turan identified him as a “participant in the Khojaly genocide,” a massacre of Azerbaijani civilians in the first Karabakh war, as well as “a speaker of pure Azerbaijani” and a “harsh public critic of Pashinyan.”

The de facto government also has named a new foreign minister: David Babayan, currently an adviser to Harutyunyan, will take over from Masis Mailyan.

Several other new figures come from a wide variety of political and ideological backgrounds. Newly appointed Minister of Social and Labor Affairs Mane Tandilyan held the same position in the Armenian government shortly after Pashinyan came to power and was a member of the Bright Armenia party.

Minister of Territorial Administration Hayk Khanumyan was for a time the only opposition member of Karabakh’s parliament, and also unsuccessfully ran for president in 2020. The new presidential chief of staff Artak Beglaryan was formerly the territory’s human rights ombudsman.

However, Balasanyan has suggested that he also will hold veto power over all senior appointments, even the newly named officials.

“All the high-ranking positions will be discussed in the Security Council,” he said in a December 28 interview. “Even those who have already been appointed but are not competent will be replaced.”

 

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Anti-Armenian Hate Crimes Rise in California | Persecution

Jan 7 2021

01/07/2021 San Francisco (International Christian Concern) – According to a report from the San Francisco Examiner, hate crimes against the Armenian Christian community are on the rise. In the San Francisco Bay area alone, there were four anti-Armenian hate crimes during the second half of last year, including arson and vandalization. These crimes come alongside the armed conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan sparked in September after a decades-long feud between the two countries.

An estimated 2,500 Armenian-Americans live in the San Francisco Bay Area as a result of the spread of the Armenian diaspora following the Armenian genocide in the early 20th century. Turkey, the perpetrator of the genocide and supporter of Azerbaijan in the recent conflict, has been perpetuating a propaganda campaign to deny the existence of this genocide. California was also home to pro-Armenian protests around the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles last year in response to its aggressions against Armenia.

One of these anti-Armenian incidents happened on September 17 of last year, when an unknown suspect set fire to the St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church in a San Francisco neighborhood, causing extensive damage to the building. The incident prompted a response from the FBI San Francisco Field Office, putting out a reward for information on the arsonist.

FBI Special Agent Craig Fair, the agent assigned to the case, emphasized the significance of the attack in his statement. “This act of violence was not just an attack on a building, but on a congregation,” said Agent Fair. “This was an attack on a community.”

Other anti-Armenian incidents in the area included the spraying hateful graffiti on an Armenian school with the Azerbaijani colors, and a shooting at the school that occurred during the night, resulting in no injuries.

These manifestations of anti-Armenian sentiment around the world are part of an ongoing pattern as a result of the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenian: Artsakh), the disputed territory between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Such hatred is already widespread within Turkey, and continues to grow as a result of anti-Armenian rhetoric used by the Turkish government.


An Armenian Community Staple, Hye Quality Bakery Closes In Fresno After 63 Years

Jan 8 2021


Paula and Sammy Ganimian behind the counter on the last day of business at Hye Quality Bakery

Hye Quality Bakery in downtown Fresno closed at the end of December after 63 years in business. In this audio postcard, Sammy and Paula Ganimian tell FM89’s Soreath Hok about the role this iconic business has played in the Armenian community.


https://www.kvpr.org/post/armenian-community-staple-hye-quality-bakery-closes-fresno-after-63-years#stream/0

Lawyer urges Armenian authorities to make public new document presumably planned to be signed in Moscow

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 8 2021

A group of people staged a protest in front of Armenia’s Ministry of Justice on Friday, demanding that the authorities make public the treaty presumably planned to be signed between Armenia and Azerbaijani at the upcoming trilateral meeting in Moscow.

Citing its sources, the channel MediaPort on Telegram said on Thursday that Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan is going to “make new concessions” in Moscow. "The document was secretly sent to the Ministry of Justice today in order to conform it with the Constitution," it said.

However, Ministry of Justice spokeswoman Lusine Martirosyan dismissed the reports as “fake news” on Friday.

Speaking to reporters, lawyer Elinar Vardanyan, a member of the Alternative Projects Group, stated the reports on the discussion of the document by the ministry may be true. According to her, it can be a preliminary step in case of submitting the document to be signed to the Constitutional Court in order to prevent its constitutional controversy.

"If actually such a document exists, it should be made public so that it doesn’t come as a surprise to the people as it was the case on November 10. They told lies to the people for 44 days, signing a document in a single day. And even today I am not satisfied with the short response of the Ministry of Justice spokeswoman on Facebook. I am not happy with the denial, because I am afraid that after 44 days of lying, another lie will be imposed on us," she said.

The lawyer urged authorities to publish the treaty if it really exists, instead of issuing a denial.

"If someone persuades me that Nikol Pashinyan is heading to Moscow unprepared on 11 January, I will be convinced once again that the authorities have completely failed. If the authorities are going to take part in such a crucial meeting unprepared, there are no authorities in the country,” she said.

According to Vardanyan, now people are carrying out their struggle on social media, because either they do not realize the threats facing the country, or it is just convenient for them.


Authorities deprive citizens of their right to receive information – Media Advocate

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 8 2021

The Armenian authorities deprive citizens of their right to receive information, Media Advocate initiative said in a statement on Friday. The full text of the statement is below.

"There is an information collapse in Armenia. State agencies hardly comment on the events taking place in the country, furthermore, some politicians give interviews only to the media outlets of their choice. The impression is created that with such a step the politicians simply avoid unfavorable questions.

Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly Alen Simonyan and MP Andranik Kocharyan always stand out in terms of splitting and targeting the mass media, deputy Mikayel Zolyan and some others also stood out with such a step recently. These people not only split the media, but also utter inappropriate expressions regarding the media, which is an improper policy by the officials.

Media Advocate initiative condemns such behavior. In this way, the authorities deprive citizens of their right to receive information. Such behavior will lead to nothing but an information crisis. In information warfare, the absence or misrepresentation of information is beneficial only to the enemy. Media Advocate urges to take a more responsible approach to the issue and cooperate with the media."


Azerbaijani citizens can travel to Armenia upon valid passport, according to the Foreign Ministry

Panorama, Armenia

Jan 8 2021

Armenia's Foreign Ministry has published the list of countries, with which Armenia has a visa-free regime, according to bilateral and multilateral agreements.

The list also includes Azerbaijan Armenia has no diplomatic relations with. This  means that the citizens of the enemy country, who hold a valid passport, can enter Armenia without a visa or a prior travel approval. It is noteworthy that the list has been updated on December 17. 

Expert suggests to move the cabinet and parliament members to Goris

Panorama, Armenia

Jan 8 2021

Expert in Iranian studies Artyom Tonoyan insists that cabinet and parliament members should be moved to Goris, in the south of Armenia, to work at the border. 

"A conscious society would have taken to streets long ago and demanded moving the capital city from Yerevan to Goris," Tonoyan wrote on Facebook.

"Let us make the members of cabinet and parliament move to Goris to work at the border, to realize all the threats there and work on neutralizing them. Otherwise, they should resign since they are not able to live and work at the border," added Tonoyan. 



Negotiations can be kept secret but not the process of domestic coordination – Gevorg Danielyan

Panorama, Armenia

Jan 8 2021

Doctor of Juridical Science Gevorg Danielyan has commented on the reports about the existence of a draft treaty  which is allegedly planned to be signed between Armenia and Azerbaijan during the upcoming trilateral meeting in Moscow.

"Both the Constitution of Armenia and the 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties envisage no process of secret domestic coordination for draft international treaties. It is not envisaged by the Armenian legislation either – in particular by laws 'On international treaties' and "On the state and official secrets," Danielyan wrote on Facebook, 

"Negotiations be kept secret but not the domestic coordination process of drafts developed as a result of those negotiations. 

He reminded that the translated version of a draft treaty is subject to submission to at least three ministries for conclusions. 


On Orthodox Christmas, somber Armenians look back on ‘the worst year’

Rudaw, Kurdistan Province, Iraq
Jan 5 2021

                                                                                                                                                                                              
Dilan Sirwan

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region  It’s Christmas for some Orthodox Christians on January 6, but Armenians in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh are not in the mood to celebrate.

The disputed region, known by Armenians as Artsakh, was just the scene of a deadly six-week battle between Armenia and Azerbaijan. A Russian-brokered ceasefire was struck in November, but not before over 100 civilians were killed and tens of thousands of people were displaced.

The streets of Yerevan, Armenia’s capital, are devoid of their usual festive sparkle, funds for New Year and Christmas decorations reportedly redirected towards relief for areas worst hit by  the war.“The lights will be brighter next year”, Armenian prime minister Nikol Pashinyan promised in his New Year’s Eve message. In the Karabakh capital of Stepanakert, Christmas decorations put up by a charity organisation founded by the prime minister’s wife were taken down after complaints by locals, reported the privately-owned News Armenia outlet.

Among Stepanakert residents who aren’t celebrating Christmas this year is Irina Safaryan, a 28-year-old social activist originally from Hadrout, a city taken by Azerbaijan in the recent war.

Christmas celebrations would not be fitting for what was “the worst year for Armenia”, Irina told Rudaw English.

“Some families are celebrating it at home for the sake of their small kids, but generally speaking,  no one is in a festive mood,” she said.

Control of Karabakh has been a matter of dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan for decades. With the slow dissolution of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, the Armenian population of the region asked that it be put under control of Armenia. War between Armenia and Azerbaijan broke out in the early 1990s; by 1994, Armenia had taken control over a swath of the region, forcing Azerbaijan to enter negotiations and give up the land in a ceasefire brokered by Russia. The area was then administered by an Armenia-backed local government.

Ever-present tensions between the two countries escalated to an untenable level, and a fresh war over Karabakh broke out on September 27, 2020. Baku sent thousands of troops into the territory, looking to take back land many Azerbaijanis believe to be theirs. Stepanakert was among the towns subject to shelling by Azerbaijani forces.

Control of Nagorno-Karabakh as of January 5, 2021. Graphic: Maps4news, Sarkawt Mohammed / Rudaw

 

“We woke up early in the morning, around 7:15 am, and we were filled with uncertainty when we knew we were being attacked,” Irina recalled of the shelling.

Over the course of the six-week war, Armenia conceded much of Karabakh to Azerbaijan. Civilian death toll estimates say that 65 Armenians and 100 Azerbaijanis were killed. Armenia said 2,425 of its soldiers died in the war; Azerbaijan announced on December 3 that it had lost 2,783 of its soldiers. 

Irina believes that locals are still in “shock” over what happened.

“There are families who have no idea where their men are, or even if they are alive – the whole country is mourning”, she said. “I myself have lost lots of friends”.

There is one thing that Irina has been able to hold on to as Christmas approaches – visits to the ancient Armenian monastery of Dadivank, just north of Karabakh. The monastery is in territory under Azerbaijani control; Armenians can visit just once a week,  with permission from Russian peacekeepers deployed to Karabakh as part of the November ceasefire.

The fighting saw international human rights organizations report violations of war conventions by both sides. Human Rights Watch alleged that both Armenian and Azerbaijani used cluster munitions. Baku committed ‘apparently indiscriminate’ attacks on Karabakh, and a ‘possible war crime’ by bombing an Armenian church in October. 

Turkey played a vital supporting role to Azerbaijan, supporting its army with drones equipped with Canadian WESCAM sensors. Photos and videos showing Turkish-backed Syrian fighters in Karabakh sent to fight on behalf of Azerbaijan made international news. On December 10, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey arrived in Baku to attend nationwide celebrations marking Azerbaijan's military triumph over Armenia.

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku on December 10, 2020. Photo: AFP

Irina and other Armenians say Turkey brought “mercenaries” and “terrorists” to Karabakh, and are now using them to instigate long term demographic change.

“Turks, Azeris, and Syrian mercenaries are now settling in Hadrout and areas around it,” she said. “Artsakh has been made a center for terror.” 

Irina said that “voice recordings of Azerbaijani officials and commanders offering $100 for each Armenian head the mercenaries managed to cut” were circulating on Armenian social media groups. After an examination of gruesome videos that included the decapitation and torture of captives  posted online, Amnesty International said both sides had committed war crimes. 

Some Armenian soldiers are still in hospital receiving physical treatment for war-inflicted wounds – among them 18-year-old Arthur Harutyunyan. 

Three months before the war began, Arthur, from Mertakert – one of the few cities given to Armenia in the peace deal – had begun his compulsory military training, which Armenians must undertake for  two years upon graduating high school. On September 27, when the Azerbaijani military began its attack on Karabakh, he and his comrades were called to duty, at the border city of Jabrayil.

Arthur Harutyunyan (center) with two other young men undertaking military training in the summer of 2020. Photo: submitted

 

The war started “alright” for Armenia, Arthur told Rudaw English from a hospital in Yerevan. But on October 10, he and around 20 other soldiers were attacked and surrounded by Azerbaijani soldiers. In an attempt to save their own lives, Arthur and five of his comrades sought hideout in a forest  the start of a 70-day flight for survival.

The six soldiers took to the roof of an abandoned house in a village near Hadrout. “At night when the soldiers would leave, we would sneak into the abandoned village and try to get food and drinks, there was no water so we would rely on juice we found,” Arthur said.

They spent almost three weeks on the roof, before deciding to find a way out.

“On December 6, we decided to try to cross the Aras lake into Iran,” he said, from where they would  try to enter Armenia on the other side. “On the way, we would stop on every mountain and every hill to see if we could get Armenian signal.”

“We had travelled almost 60 kilometers, when we finally got signal on December 17,” he said. “By that time, walking had become really hard for us because we were all suffering from frostbite.”

The six were rescued on December 20 and taken to Stepanakert hospital, then transferred to Yerevan on December 24. There, Arthur had all five of the toes on his left foot amputated  four partially, and one completely. He has been in hospital since then and looks back on what he witnessed during the war.  

“When we were being attacked on the mountains, we would hear a call of “Allahu Akbar” (God is the greatest) with every bomb thrown at us,” he said. “They would attack us with weapons much more advanced than ours. It felt like we were fighting against many countries.

Recovery from the trauma of war will take a long time, Arthur said.

“Armenia has wounds that need to heal… My family are now in Yerevan and we do not know if we can go back to our own city, because our safety is not ensured.”

Arthur Harutyunyan recovers at a hospital in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on January 5, 2021. Photo: submitted

 

From afar, members of Armenia’s diaspora say they too have felt the effects of the war  particularly Turkey’s involvement.

Ellada Ghukasyan, a 35-year-old Armenian journalist, moved from Yerevan 13 years ago to Paris,  a city home to a sizeable Armenian community. She is married to an Armenian man, with whom she has a five-year-old son. They want their child to maintain a strong bond with home, and visit Armenia often.

“When the war started, we found it unbearable, and we took to the streets to express solidarity,” Ellada told Rudaw English. “But when we blocked the streets in Lyon, Turkish nationalists came and attacked us.” 

When Armenians in France took to the streets of Paris and other French cities in a show of support for their country during the war, marches were met with resistance from members of the Grey Wolves, a Turkish ultranationalist group. 

Pro-Armenia demonstrators blocked a motorway near Lyon in solidarity with Armenians in Karabakh in October, members of the Grey Wolves headed to the scene and attacked protestors using hammers and knives. One of the injured had to be taken to hospital as a result. That night, supporters of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan roamed the streets of Decines, chanting “This is Turkey!” and “Where are the Armenians?”

A few days later, the Armenian genocide memorial center in Lyon was vandalized with anti-Armenian, pro-Turkey graffiti  the fourth time it had been vandalised in its 15-year existence.

Armenians protest in Paris in October 2020. Photo: Ellada Ghukasyan

 

Tensions between France’s Armenians, who number anywhere between 250,000-750,000, and parts of the one million-strong Turkish community had already been simmering before the conflict in Karabakh, and the Grey Wolves were among the main agitators. In July, a pro-Armenia protest in Decines against escalating tension in Karabakh turned violent, with four people of Turkish descent arrested.
  
The Grey Wolves were banned in France by the country’s interior ministry on November 4, a few days before the Armenia-Azerbaijan ceasefire, and the organization's leader Ahmet Cetin was handed a four-month prison sentence for inciting violence towards Armenians and Kurds on social media.

But the move came too late for people like Ellada, who said she can no longer live in peace in France “because of Turkey.” 

“When the war ended, my five year old son came up to me and said, ‘are the Turkish people kind now?’ and I didn't know what to say,” she said.

Ellada feels especially let down by the French government. French President Emmanuel Macron initially expressed strong support for Armenia, but over the course of the conflict, he tempered his statements until they matched  the ‘neutral’ stance of his government’s foreign ministry. 

Ellada said she was disappointed at “France and the world” for their lack of solidarity with Armenia.

“I did not see the value of humanity that France and many other countries claim to have”, she said.

With the majority of Karabakh now controlled by Azerbaijan, Ellada too will skip Christmas celebrations this year  the least she could do in solidarity with Armenians in Karabakh, she said.

“It was not an equal fight”, she said, her voice weary. With Turkey steadfastly supporting Azerbaijan, “we were fighting two countries all alone”. 

6 Christian Sites Armenia Fears It Has Lost to Azerbaijan

Christianity Today
Jan 5 2021
Photo gallery captures cultural heritage that concerns Armenians most after ceasefire in Nagorno-Karabakh.

Location: Togh/Tugh

The ancient church of Ktchavank, from between the ninth and 10th centuries, was one of the large spiritual centers of eastern Armenia. Located at the foot of Mount Toghasar, near the ancient residence of Arstakh princes, the church bears a close resemblance to the architectural style of Ani, the capital city of Bagratid, Armenia.

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Ktich Monastery in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Shushi/Shusha

Commonly known as Kanach Jam (“Green Dome”) and built in 1818 on the site of a wooden church, its interior is a graceful, unified, and light-filled space dominated by a dome on pendentives (triangular construction devices that allow round domes to soar over square rooms). Over the entrance to the chapel is an inscription from 1847: “Babayan Stepanos Hovhannes. In the memory of his deceased brother Mkrtych.”

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Kanach Jam in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Shushi/Shusha

Completed in 1887 and known as Ghazanchetsots in honor of the people who built it, this cathedral is considered a modern architectural masterpiece. Missile fire pierced its rooftop during the first two weeks of fighting during the 2020 war. Sheathed in stone, capped with tall umbrella roofs, and ornamented with crosses, angels, and other sculptures, it is a beautifully coherent synthesis of age-old Armenian building traditions. Rising some 115 feet from its base to the tip of its cupola, it is also one of the largest Armenian churches constructed in the world.

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Ghazanchetsots in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Berdzor/Lachin

Dating from the fifth or sixth century, this church in the province of Lachin is an extraordinary example of an intact Early Christian basilica. The inscriptions found around the church—bearing the names of parents, children, and other individuals patrons—chronicle a veritable history book of the region. A khachkar (cross-stone) from before the 10th century has an Armenian inscription asking Christ to “Remember the prayers of your servant, the undeserving Grigor, for his beloved brother Azat.”

Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Tzitzernavank Church in Nagorno-Karabakh

Location: Karvarjar/Kalbajar

Also known as Khutavank—the “monastery on the hill”—this is the burial site of Saint Dadi, one of the disciples of Thaddeus, who together with Bartholomew evangelized in Armenia during the first century. The constructions at the site date from the ninth to 13th centuries and are not only important examples of medieval architecture but also preserve more than 100 Armenian inscriptions, as well as bas-relief sculptures and frescoes. The monastic complex is extensive, one of the largest known from medieval Armenia.

View Larger
Image: Hrair Hawk Khatcherian

Dadivank Monastery in Nagorno-Karabakh

Christina Maranci is professor of Armenian Art and Architecture at Tufts University.

CT’s previous coverage of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict can be found here.

Christina Maranci is professor of Armenian Art and Architecture at Tufts University.

CT’s previous coverage of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict can be found here.