AW: “Ser Artsakh” marks one year on International Children’s Day

Ser Artsakh’s sweet little assistant Arpi among some of the many boxes prepared for Artsakh’s mothers and newborns

On this International Children’s Day, Anna Astvatsaturian Foundation announces that its “Ser Artsakh” initiative delivered 1,627 baby gift boxes (683 since the blockade began) to every child born in Artsakh since the foundation launched its initiative exactly one year ago. The foundation also intends to continue delivering these gift boxes in Artsakh as long as it is possible.

The “Ser Artsakh” initiative was launched on June 1, 2022 as a sign of support to the families who give new life to their homeland. It became more imperative to continue the initiative during the Artsakh blockade when baby supplies became and continue to be scarce. 

An Artsakh mother admiring some of the items in her “Ser Artsakh” box

“The Ser Artsakh program should not be perceived as a regular donation or charitable initiative. Instead, we created these quality gift boxes to honor brave families that live and continue to grow in difficult conditions in Artsakh,” said Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte, founder and president of the Anna Astvatsaturian Foundation, herself an Armenian refugee from Baku. Since the launch of the initiative, the foundation reports that the Diaspora’s reception was so positive that instead of its initial goal of six months, it extended to 12 months and beyond. 

Each gift box costs approximately $105 USD and includes 22 to 25 high-quality clothing and hygiene items for the baby and the mother. These items are either made or purchased in Armenia. It was important for the foundation to support the local economy. The initiative is based on donations, all of which are used for the “Ser Artsakh” boxes. Mothers are gifted with the boxes upon checking out of the maternity wards of one of Artsakh’s three maternity hospitals.

The foundation hopes to launch the “Ser Syunik” initiative in Syunik in the near future if the resources, support from donors and logistics align with its mission.





Armenpress: Pashinyan rules out “unsolvable” road issues related to enclaves

 09:55, 2 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 2, ARMENPRESS. There’s no enclave that could create an unsolvable road problem for Armenia, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has said.

“On the political level, we proceed with the presumption that Kyarki was there,” Pashinyan said at a meeting with the Armenian community of Moldova on June 1 when asked whether Tigranashen belongs to Armenia or Azerbaijan under the 1975 map.

“We are saying that we should look into the legal grounds. Politically, if it turns out that it belongs to Azerbaijan by that map, then we don’t have any problem,” Pashinyan added.

It’s no fact that Azerbaijan would want to return Artsvashen and take Tigranashen, Pashinyan said.

The Prime Minister said he wouldn’t want the value of this issue to be overestimated.

“There’s no such enclave that could cause the kind of road problems for us that would be unsolvable. There’s no such issue. If the road can’t pass this way it will pass that way. There is no problem whatsoever. We are actually developing our road network in Armenia to such level that there is no unsolvable issue,” Pashinyan said.

Pashinyan warned that the enclave issue is being exploited to psychologically pressure the Armenian society.

“We are saying that on the political level we accept the enclaves, and they accept Artsvashen. Artsvashen is also an enclave. Assuming Azerbaijan wants that, thus we will take Artsvashen,” he said.

He added that there are many issues, for example how citizens must pass that road. Many issues must yet be agreed upon. PM Pashinyan warned that this issue should not become a tool for psychological pressure.

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/01/2023

                                        Thursday, June 1, 2023


Armenian Policeman Avoids Prosecution For Assault

        • Naira Bulghadarian

Armenia - Police officer iArsen Ghaytmazian.


Armenian law-enforcement authorities have decided not to prosecute a senior 
police officer who beat up a teenage waiter at a hotel in the resort town of 
Dilijan.

A video circulated by multiple news websites on Thursday shows Arsen 
Ghaytmazian, the chief of the Dilijan police department’s investigative unit, 
repeatedly punching the 16-year-old waiter, Araz Amirian.

According to Amirian’s lawyer, Sasun Rafaelian, a drunk Ghaytmazian assaulted 
his client after being told to pay for a hotel room upfront.

“He refused to pay [upfront,] saying that he will pay up when he wants to,” 
Rafaelian told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

Although the incident occurred on April 10, Armenia’s Investigative Committee 
commented on it only after the publication of the scandalous video. The 
law-enforcement agency said it has not brought criminal charges against 
Ghaytmazian because he has cooperated with its criminal investigation, “fully 
regretted” his actions and apologized to the victim. It said a prosecutor 
overseeing the probe has approved the decision.

Rafaelian said that he will challenge the decision in court because he believes 
it amounts to a cover-up.

Artur Sakunts, a veteran human rights campaigner, also criticized the 
investigators for not indicting Ghaytmazian. The officer must also be fired by 
the Armenian police, he said.

“The presence of such policemen in the police ranks must be deemed 
unacceptable,” added Sakunts.

The Interior Ministry announced, meanwhile, that the officer has been suspended 
pending an ongoing internal inquiry conducted by the police.

Incidentally, Interior Minister Vahe Ghazarian was the police chief of Dilijan 
when Nikol Pashinian swept to power during the 2018 “velvet revolution.” 
Ghazarian, who is reputedly a childhood friend of the Armenian prime minister, 
was repeatedly promoted in the following years.

Some Armenian civic groups objected to Ghazarian’s appointment as interior 
minister in January, saying that he has resisted police reforms and tolerated 
police brutality and corruption.




EU Hosts Another Aliyev-Pashinian Meeting


Moldova - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Azerbaijani President Ilham 
Aliyev, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and EU 
chief Charles Michel meet in Chisinau, June 1, 2023.


Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
met on Thursday for the third time in less than three weeks for fresh peace 
talks mediated by the European Union.

They reported no concrete agreements following the meeting held on the sidelines 
of a European summit in Moldova’s capital Chisinau.

Aliyev and Pashinian were joined by EU chief Charles Michel, French President 
Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

Michel said they focused on an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty as well as “the 
security and rights” of Nagorno-Karabakh’s population, the restoration of 
transport links between the two South Caucasus nations and delimitation of their 
long border. He did not say whether the Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders 
narrowed their differences on these issues.

“This meeting has been a good preparation for the next meeting,” Michel told 
reporters after the talks that lasted for about 90 minutes. “It will take place 
in Brussels on July 21.”

“It means that we are working hard and we intend to support all the positive 
efforts in the direction of normalization of the relations,” he said, adding 
that the EU “will do everything” to facilitate the conflict’s resolution.

Michel described the talks as “substantive” on his Twitter page. “Important to 
implement commitments,” he wrote.

Pashinian’s office confirmed that he and Aliyev will hold another trilateral 
meeting with Michel on July 21.

The three men made progress towards the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace deal at their 
last meeting in Brussels held on May 14. In particular, Pashinian confirmed that 
Yerevan is ready to recognize Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh through such 
an accord.

Aliyev and Pashinian also held talks in Moscow on May 25. The talks hosted by 
Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared to focus on the reopening of the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border for commerce and cargo shipments.




Karabakh ‘Deeply Disappointed’ By U.S. Statement


NAGORNO-KARABAKH -- A view of Stepanakert, September 29, 2020


Nagorno-Karabakh’s leadership has criticized the United States for welcoming 
“amnesty” offered to it by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on the condition 
of its “surrender” to Baku.

Aliyev again threatened the Karabakh Armenians with military action on Sunday, 
warning that they must dissolve their government bodies and unconditionally 
accept Azerbaijani rule. “Only then can there be talk of amnesty,” he said.

The U.S. State Department spokesman, Matthew Miller, on Tuesday welcomed 
Aliyev’s “remarks on consideration of amnesty.”

The Karabakh foreign ministry said the U.S. reaction caused “deep disappointment 
and bewilderment” in Stepanakert and amounted to the endorsement of “Baku’s 
unconstructive and bellicose policy.”

“It is inexplicable how one can find any positive element worthy of 
encouragement in the Azerbaijani president’s statement, which is totally based 
on open blackmail and coercion,” the ministry said in a statement issued on 
Wednesday night.

It said Aliyev made clear that he will not engage in an “equal dialogue” with 
the authorities in Stepanakert and is only keen to forcibly impose Azerbaijani 
rule on them.

Armenia likewise expressed dismay at the U.S. praise of Aliyev’s remarks. The 
Foreign Ministry in Yerevan said they “contained clear threats” to the security 
of Karabakh’s population and Armenia’s territorial integrity.

Armenian opposition leaders and other critics of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian 
also denounced the State Department’s perceived pro-Azerbaijani stance. They 
said it was made possible by Pashinian’s recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty 
over Karabakh.

“The fact that Washington ignores Azerbaijan's intensifying aggression and 
reacts to the covert Azerbaijani blackmail in a positive light is absolutely 
unacceptable and fraught with severe consequences,” Tigran Abrahamian, a senior 
lawmaker from the opposition Pativ Unem bloc, said on Thursday.

Former Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian claimed, for his part, that the State 
Department added “another drop” to “humiliations” which he said the Armenians 
have endured during Pashinian’s rule.

“One of the world’s most corrupt and authoritarian leaders promises to grant 
amnesty to the elected representatives of people who have lived in their 
historical homeland for millennia … and have never been part of an independent 
Azerbaijan. And the U.S. welcomes that step?” Oskanian wrote on Facebook.

“The United States should not be blamed. There is only one culprit here: the 
current authorities of Armenia,” he charged, calling, for the first time, for 
Pashinian’s removal from power.

As well as praising Aliyev’s offer of “amnesty” to the Karabakh leaders, the 
State Department spokesman also said that “aggressive rhetoric can only 
perpetuate the violence of the past.”


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.

 

Armenian PM congratulates Italian counterpart on national day, notes growing volumes of trade and investments

 11:43, 2 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 2, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan has congratulated Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on the Italian national day, the Festa della Repubblica. 

Below is the congratulatory telegram sent by the Armenian PM to his Italian counterpart.

“Your Excellency,

On behalf of the Government of the Republic of Armenia and the Armenian people, I cordially congratulate you and the friendly people of Italy on the national holiday, the Republic Day.

The Armenian-Italian cooperation stands out with the high level political dialogue. I am pleased to note that bilateral trade and volumes of Italian investments in Armenia are growing every year. Armenia is determined to bring the economic relations with Italy to the level of political dialogue. We attach importance to partnership with Italy both bilaterally and multilaterally, including cooperation within the framework of the EU.

I am convinced that through joint efforts we will contribute to the strengthening of the traditionally friendly Armenian-Italian relations. I hope we will have the chance to meet in the nearest future to discuss all issues on the agenda of mutual interest, and to outline new prospects of bilateral cooperation. I wish new successes to you in your responsible mission and peace and prosperity to the friendly people of Italy.”

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/31/2023

                                        Wednesday, 


Pashinian Sees ‘External Threats’ To Democracy In Armenia

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian addresses a conference in Yerevan, May 
31, 2023.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian spoke on Wednesday of “external threats” facing 
democracy in Armenia which he claims to have established during his rule.

“I want to point out that there is no internal threat to democracy in Armenia … 
All potential threats to democracy in Armenia are external, and these threats 
are, of course, well-known and visible to everyone,” he said during a “forum for 
democracy” organized in Yerevan by a local civic group and the U.S. watchdog 
Freedom House.

Pashinian did not name foreign countries which he thinks pose such threats. He 
pointed instead to the “thickest question” preoccupying the domestic public: “Is 
democracy also capable of ensuring security?”

“We do believe in a positive answer to this question but it has yet to be 
proved,” he told the conference held in the conspicuous absence of Armenian 
opposition leaders and other well-known critics of Pashinian.

The latter accuse the prime minister of tolerating no dissent, jailing his 
political opponents and curbing judicial independence.

Armenia - Security officers remove opposition deputy Gegham Manukian from the 
parliament podium, Օctober 26, 2021

Pashinian insisted that democracy is “Armenia’s main brand and our conviction 
and strategy.” He argued, in particular, that elections held on his watch were 
not marred by reports of serious fraud.

According to Freedom House’s latest Nations in Transit survey of former 
Communist countries released last week, Armenia remains a “hybrid regime” and 
has yet to become an established or even “semi-consolidated” democracy five 
years after the “velvet revolution” that brought Pashinian to power.

Still, Freedom House concluded that Armenia “continued to make democratic gains 
in 2022.”

“The potential for deterioration remains, however, as evidenced by arrests of 
opposition candidates before local elections last August,” cautioned its annual 
report. “With its dependence on authoritarian Russia for military protection 
against Azerbaijan, its openly hostile and equally authoritarian neighbor, 
Armenia’s democratic project faces uniquely powerful headwinds.”




Armenian Gold Mine Closed 'Due To Azeri Gunfire’


Armenia - Gold mines at Sotk.


The Russian owner of Armenia’s largest gold mine has indicated that it will not 
restart open-pit operations there because of continuing cross-border fire from 
nearby Azerbaijani army positions.

The Sotk mine, which employs more than 700 people and is located on the volatile 
border with Azerbaijan, has stood idle since an upsurge in skirmishes between 
Armenian and Azerbaijani forces in mid-April. Its employees say that they have 
repeatedly come under fire and been evacuated after trying to return to work.

Fighting at that section of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border escalated on May 
11-12, involving exchanges of artillery fire and resulting in several casualties 
from both sides.

“The situation of constant danger for the employees of the enterprise persists 
for more than a month,” read a statement released by the mine operator, GPM 
Gold, late on Tuesday. “As a consequence, further work of the Sotk open pit has 
become impossible due to circumstances beyond the Company's control.”

The subsidiary of Russia’s GeoProMining group added that it has therefore 
decided to “stop the operation of the open-pit mine” and put its workers on 
unpaid leave.

Hovannes Harutiunian, an Armenian deputy minister of local government and 
infrastructures, predicted GPM Gold’s decision earlier this month. Harutiunian 
told lawmakers in Yerevan that the company plans to switch to underground mining 
due to the periodical border clashes and Azerbaijani gunfire targeting its 
open-pit facilities.

The GPM Gold statement said nothing about that, however. Nor did it shed light 
on the uncertain future of GeoProMining’s gold smelter located in Ararat, a town 
50 kilometers south of Yerevan.

The company already lost control over a large part of the mountainous area’s 
gold deposits following the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh and the resulting 
Armenian withdrawal from the Kelbajar district bordering Sotk. This appears to 
explain why total taxes paid by it plummeted from 20.8 billion drams ($53 
million) in 2021 to just 3.2 billion drams in 2022.




U.S. Hails Aliyev’s ‘Amnesty’ Offer To Karabakh Leaders


U.S. - The State Department building in Washington, January 26, 2017.


The United States has welcomed Azerbaijani President Aliyev’s stated readiness 
to grant “amnesty” to Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian leaders if they resign 
and “surrender” to Baku.

Aliyev made the offer on Sunday while again telling the Karabakh Armenians to 
unconditionally accept Azerbaijani rule and threatening to take military action 
against them as well as Armenia.

“Everyone knows that we can carry out any [military] operation in that territory 
[Karabakh,]” he warned. “That is why the [Karabakh] parliament must be 
dissolved, the element who calls himself the president [of Karabakh] must 
surrender and all ministers, deputies and other officials must resign. Only then 
can there be talk of amnesty.”

The Armenian government and Karabakh’s leadership condemned the threats. The 
Armenian Foreign Ministry said Aliyev not only threatened the Karabakh Armenians 
with “ethnic cleansing” but is also “preparing the ground for another aggressive 
action against Nagorno-Karabakh’s population.”

“We recently expressed appreciation for Prime Minister Pashinian’s commitment to 
peace, and we welcome President Aliyev’s recent remarks on consideration of 
amnesty,” the U.S. State Department spokesman, Matthew Miller, said in a 
statement issued late on Tuesday.

Miller at the same time stressed: “Aggressive rhetoric can only perpetuate the 
violence of the past; constructive dialogue -- both public and private -- can 
create peace, opportunity, and hope.”

The Armenian Foreign Ministry expressed dismay at the U.S. reaction on 
Wednesday, insisting that Aliyev’s remarks “contained clear threats” to 
Armenia’s territorial integrity and the security of Karabakh’s population. 
Washington “should react appropriately to such statements,” said a ministry 
spokeswoman.

Aliyev made the threats ahead of his fresh meeting Prime Minister Nikol 
Pashinian scheduled for Thursday. The two leaders will meet together with 
European Union chief Charles Michel, French President Emmanuel Macron and German 
Chancellor Olaf Scholz on the sidelines of a European summit in Moldova.

Aliyev and Pashinian apparently made significant progress towards an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty during their May 14 meeting in Brussels hosted 
by Michel. Pashinian confirmed afterwards that he is ready to recognize 
Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh.

Pashinian’s stance was hailed by a senior U.S. official but condemned by the 
Armenian opposition and Karabakh’s leadership. Karabakh’s parliament said on May 
22 that any peace deal ignoring the Karabakh Armenians’ right to 
self-determination would be “null and void” for Stepanakert.

The U.S. had backed that right through peace plans jointly drafted with Russia 
and France before the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war.


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.

 

Armenia Tourism hosts debut roadshow in Dubai

June 1 2023

The Tourism Committee of Armenia recently hosted its first ever roadshow in Dubai to unveil its rich layers and competitive tourism hotspots.

Recently rebranded as The Hidden Track, Armenia presented the destination to the travel trade in Dubai.

At the crossroads of Europe and Asia this small, but diverse country offers history, culture, nature and adventure.

The Capital City Yerevan was named one of the safest cities in the world. With four seasons, visitors and their families can enjoy Armenia any time of the year and for all budgets.

Some of the things you can experience in Armenia include:
•    City walking tour
•    Wild food tour
•    Adventure tours or adventure road trip (in a Soviet time machine!)
•    Glamping holidays
•    Hiking (over 800 km of trails detailed via an app)
•    Horseback riding
•    Hot air ballooning
•    Paragliding (Trip Adviser has named this as a must do in Armenia)
•    Ziplining

Armenia is easily accessible through with direct flights from Dubai with FlyDubai and from Sharjah with Air Arabia and on Wizz Air from Abu Dhabi. While citizens of the UAE do not require a visa, those with a residence visa in the UAE can apply for an E-Visa or can get one on arrival. – TradeArabia News Service



Sports: We hope that some of these Armenian children will become professional football players. Claudio Zola

Aysor, Armenia
June 1 2023

The Milan Academy Junior Camp has kicked off in Yerevan bringing together Italian coaches, kids and teens from Armenian regions and leading brands.

The Milan Academy Junior Camp is a charity project implemented by Ameriabank. Leading Armenian brands such as Team Telecom Armenia, Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine and Tashir Group have joined the initiative. The camp is held under the slogan “Let’s score tomorrow’s goal today”.

From May 28 to June 7, a total of 160 children from various regions will start their day at the Yerevan Football Academy with the coach’s whistle and go to the stadium to refine their football skills and practice football techniques brought by the professionals from Milan.

The camp has welcomed boys and girls aged 11-15 from the regions of Armenia who play in regional football clubs. The participants have showcased exceptional performance, having previously participated in the Armenian junior championships and distinguished themselves as the finest in their respective positions.

To train the children, AC Milan Academy coaches Claudio Zola, Amadeo Cataldi, Leo Mosesohn and Virio Perelli have arrived in Armenia.

“We speak different languages but the football is the same around the world. We hope that some of these children will become professional football players. It is important that kids follow their dreams. Maybe one day they have an opportunity to play in the top leagues”, said Claudio Zola, AC Milan International Academies Head Coach. 

For more details, watch the video.

Ameriabank CJSC

Ameriabank is a leading financial and technology company in Armenia, a major contributor to the Armenian economy, with assets exceeding AMD 1 trillion. In the course of digital transformation, it has launched a number of innovative solutions and platforms going beyond banking-only needs of its diverse customer base, thus creating a dynamically evolving financial technology space. 

Team Telecom Armenia

Team Telecom Armenia is a company operating in the field of telecommunications in Armenia, which provides mobile and fixed telephone, as well as internet services and digital television services. As the successor of the first telecommunication system in Armenia, Team combines the rich experience of the first communication operator with modern technologies.

Zangezur Copper-Molybdenum Combine

Zangezur copper-molybdenum combine was founded in 1952. It is one of the largest employers in Armenia and the number one taxpayer. Only last year, ZCMC paid about 144 billion drams to the state budget. ZCMC is among the world’s top 10 producers of molybdenum․

Tashir Group

Tashir is a diversified group of industrial and construction companies, operating across various economic sectors. The group consists of approximately 200 companies primarily involved in construction and real estate management. The group has a presence in the Republic of Armenia and several cities in the Russian Federation.

The West should not abandon Armenia

FIRST THINGS
June 1 2023


by Mark Movsesian6 . 1 . 23


More than 120,000 Christian Armenians continue to face the threat of ethnic cleansing in Nagorno Karabakh, a region inside Azerbaijan. Over the past few weeks, the E.U., the U.S., and Russia have hosted rounds of talks about the crisis between Armenia and Azerbaijan. But these meetings are unlikely to resolve the crisis, even though Armenia recently made painful and substantial concessions. Given the indifference and, frankly, complicity of outside powers, the Azeri strongman, President Ilham Aliyev, has little incentive to negotiate in good faith—and his declared ambitions include not only Karabakh, but Armenia itself. The international community needs to do more than convene meetings to avoid a humanitarian catastrophe.

As I explained last year, the current crisis is the latest episode in a conflict that dates to the Armenian Genocide of 1915, when the Ottomans eliminated the Armenian Christians of Anatolia in hopes of creating a pan-Turkic empire that would extend from the Mediterranean through the Caucasus into Central Asia. Karabakh survived the genocide and Joseph Stalin made it an autonomous region within the newly created (and Muslim-majority) Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic in the 1920s. When the Soviet Union dissolved, Karabakh Armenians declared independence. A brutal war ensued, after which Armenians controlled Karabakh and several surrounding regions they held as bargaining chips for an eventual settlement.

In the succeeding decades, flush with money from its natural gas industry, Azerbaijan built up its military. In September 2020, the Azeris attacked and reconquered all the surrounding regions and parts of Karabakh. At the time, Turkish President Erdogan boasted of “fulfilling the mission of our grandfathers in the Caucasus.” Russia, supposedly Armenia’s protector, intervened only at the last minute and fashioned a ceasefire agreement in November 2020 that the parties agreed would last five years. 

The Russian-brokered ceasefire has been a farce. Although it has some 2000 peacekeepers in the region, Russia has shown itself unable—or, more likely, unwilling—to stop continued Azeri aggression. Azerbaijan has launched two large-scale invasions of Armenia since the ceasefire was proclaimed, seizing significant territory while Russian peacekeepers stood by. Since December, Azerbaijan has blockaded Karabakh, creating a humanitarian crisis. In February, the International Court of Justice ruled that the blockade violates international law and ordered Azerbaijan to reopen the road that links Karabakh to the outside world. The Azeri government has simply ignored the ruling.

Azerbaijan can safely do so because it knows Russia would block enforcement of the ICJ’s ruling in the U.N. Security Council. This might come as a surprise to Americans, who assume that Armenia and Russia are partners. That hasn’t been the case for years. Armenia’s current government is pro-Western and has tried to balance the country’s economic and military ties with Russia with new links to Europe and the U.S. This is popular in Armenia. Armenians resent Russia’s failure to honor treaty obligations and protect Armenia when Azerbaijan invaded in September 2022, and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has publicly questioned whether Armenia will remain in the CSTO, the Russian-led security organization. A recent poll shows that a majority of Armenians now think of France and the U.S. as potential political partners rather than Russia.

In fact, Azerbaijan, not Armenia, has become Russia’s key ally in the South Caucasus. Two days before Russia invaded Ukraine, Aliyev traveled to Moscow to sign a cooperation agreement with the Russian government—an agreement, he boasted, “that brings our relations to the level of an alliance.” Azerbaijan touts itself as an alternative source of natural gas for Europe, but in fact it quietly purchases gas from Russian companies, thereby allowing Russia to avoid Western sanctions. It recently announced an Azeri-Russian-Iranian partnership to build a transport corridor to link the three countries—and exclude Western interests from the South Caucasus hub.

Western governments see all this, which explains why they have become increasingly active in the region. The U.S. intervened diplomatically to stop Azerbaijan’s invasion of Armenia in September 2022. Over strenuous Russian objections, the E.U. has placed civilian observers on Armenia’s border with Azerbaijan. And, as I wrote above, both the E.U. and the U.S. are now competing with Russia to resolve the crisis with diplomatic talks—on Western terms.

There seem to be limits, though, to how far the West will push Aliyev. Notwithstanding his ties to Putin, the West sees Aliyev as at least a potential foil against Russia—and, given the Ukraine conflict, the West is willing mostly to look the other way when it comes to Aliyev’s menacing of his democratic neighbor. The E.U. signed a deal for the importation of natural gas from Azerbaijan last summer and has praised Aliyev as a “reliable” and “crucial energy partner.” The E.U. might send civilian monitors, but it is unlikely to take too hard a line. The U.S. thinks it can perhaps use Azerbaijan to keep neighboring Iran in check; Israel thinks so too. So Aliyev can continue to play a double game, cozying up to Russia while remaining interesting enough to the West to avoid serious sanctions.

But without sanctions or other serious action, Aliyev will continue to treat Armenian concessions as invitations to engage in further aggression. For example, in negotiations in Brussels last month, both Armenia and Azerbaijan agreed to recognize each other’s territorial integrity and discussed reopening railway connections based on mutual reciprocity. Pashinyan subsequently confirmed that Armenia was ready to recognize Azeri sovereignty over Karabakh (provided arrangements could be made to guarantee Armenians’ security there)—a painful public concession, apparently made at the urging of the U.S., which caused anger in Karabakh itself.

How did Aliyev respond? After Pashinyan’s statement, Aliyev again threatened Karabakh Armenians with ethnic cleansing and, for good measure, threatened Armenia as well. Armenia would have to agree to Azerbaijan’s demands with respect to border demarcation, he announced, or face further aggression. “The border will pass where we say,” Aliyev crowed. “They know that we can do it. No one will help them.” A bewildered Pashinyan asked whether Aliyev was already abandoning the position he had taken in Brussels and demanded clarification. The U.S. has not yet responded.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine, American and European leaders have spoken of the need to defend democracy and self-determination against authoritarian aggression. That is precisely what is needed in the South Caucasus now. At the very least, Western sanctions against the Aliyev regime should be on the table. Even in realist terms, it would not be in the West’s interest to abandon Armenia, which is looking to reorient itself and which can serve, in time, as an important bridge between the West, the South Caucasus, and beyond. Unless the West creates greater incentives for Azerbaijan to negotiate in good faith, however, a humanitarian crisis looks about to unfold.

Mark Movsesian is the Frederick A. Whitney Professor and Co-Director of the Center for Law and Religion at St. John's University.

 

Iran-EEU Free Trade Deal to Benefit Armenia: Kerobyan

Financial Tribune, Iran
June 1 2023

With the implementation of the free-trade zone agreement between Iran and the Eurasian Economic Union, Armenia will receive privileges for a number of products, including food commodities, Armenia’s Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan said on Tuesday.

He noted that it is very difficult to export goods to Iran, but the main reason is not customs duties, News.am reported.

“Iran strives for self-sufficiency in all the main branches of the economy, and this sharply complicates competition. The main direction of cooperation with Iran is the joint production of goods that can be sold all over the world," Kerobyan added.

Armenia is a member of the Eurasian Economic Union.

Earlier, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said the implementation of the free trade agreement between Iran and the EEU is a priority for Armenia.

“Given the high dynamics of the development of cooperation with Iran, the entry into force of the Free Trade Agreement and its subsequent implementation are priorities for us in the context of a real expansion of trade cooperation with third countries,” he was quoted as saying at the meeting of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council in Moscow.

He said continued negotiations with India and Egypt, as well as the development of comprehensive dialogue on the economic agenda and the deepening of trade and economic cooperation with the UAE and Indonesia, will give an additional impetus to the process of integrating the union into the world economy.

The Eurasian Economic Union may strike a deal on a free trade zone with Iran earlier than with other countries, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksey Overchuk was quoted as saying by TASS.

"We are closest with Iran," he said, when asked which countries the EEU is closest to reaching an agreement with on a free trade zone.

EEC (Eurasian Economic Commission) Trade Minister Andrey Slepnev said earlier that the agreement on a free trade zone between the EEU and Iran could be signed as early as this year.

Overchuk said Russia is negotiating free trade zone agreements with a number of Muslim countries.

"Within the framework of the Eurasian Economic Union, we have been negotiating the creation of a free trade zone with a number of Islamic states, including Egypt, Iran, the UAE. We have already started negotiations with them and we are about to begin talks with Indonesia," he told the plenary session of the 14th international economic forum Russia-Islamic World: Kazan Forum on Friday.

"We see our bilateral trade growing and it may indicate that our countries are becoming closer to each other. Our task for today is to reduce trade barriers and simplify contacts, primarily in the economic sphere,” Overchuk said.

On the sidelines of the summit of the European Political Community, new discussions between Armenia and Azerbaijan

India – June 1 2023

You should throw away your false laws and abandon your dreams (…) You must follow us and continue your life as a citizen within the framework of our laws. We are only holding on for now! At any moment we can launch a military operation. Everybody knows it.The words of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on May 27, made during a trip to Lachin, leave no ambiguity. The Head of State celebrated the installation of Azeri families in this city of the Nagorno-Karabakh region, an enclave populated mainly by Armenians, and which was, by Stalin’s decision, attached to Azerbaijan in 1921.

Since Nagorno-Karabakh unilaterally proclaimed its independence after the collapse of the USSR, its status has never been recognized by the international community. Without taking a formal position, the Armenian authorities have since remained the de facto protectors of Karabakh.

In 2020, Azerbaijan, after 44 days of a deadly war, regained control of 70% of the enclave. On December 12, Baku took a new step by installing a blockade on the only road linking the enclave to neighboring Armenia. The corridor that the 120,000 Armenians of Artsakh regularly used, and where until then food and medicine passed, now only allows Red Cross convoys to pass for the dropper transfer of urgently ill patients.

We are still alive. We try to hold onsighs Vadim, a resident of Stepanakert. He’s been out of petrol and gas for a long time. In front of the stores, the queues are getting longer. To hold out despite the shortages, particularly in fresh produce, the Artsakh authorities have established a rationing system. Sugar, rice, pasta, fruits and vegetables, or even eggs are available according to a specific schedule. Some prices have exploded. “You could find strawberries from 900 drams before (2.20 euros), they are now at 5000-8000 (12-19 euros)!Vadim explains.

Electricity is also missing. The only supply line that came from Armenia, and passed through Azeri territory, was sabotaged. The authorities have introduced daily cuts to save energy. Since May 26, they have gone from 3 to 6 hours a day. “In Stepanakert, in the streets, the electricity is cut from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m., from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., then from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Exact meal times. I have six children, I let you imagine the complications“says Siranush, 39 years old and mother. The hospital is also affected by the breakdowns. The generators are just enough to supply the emergency and resuscitation services.

Life in Artsakh has turned bleak. “When evening comes, the streets look like a ball of ghosts: it’s people walking through a pitch-black city. When you ask them, people will tell you: if it’s just a lack of light and a little food, it’s fine. But nobody knows what will happen to us tomorrow“. Siranush’s voice chokes on the phone. “We are very worried. For us, but also for our children…“.

On the international scene, the silence is heavy. In Washington, then in Brussels with Charles Michel, and finally this Thursday in Chisinau, Westerners are trying one after another to mediate between Azerbaijani President Aliev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. “Westerners put pressure on Armenia to cede Nagorno-Karabakh. For them it’s the only way forward“, says a diplomatic source from Artsakh. “France is the exception. I would even say, the French president is the exception. But when Westerners go under the same European banner, France is forced to review its position. She can’t afford to be offside“.

If the inhabitants of Artsakh are accustomed to the virulent threats of the Azerbaijani president, more surprising were the remarks slipped by the Armenian prime minister during a press conference on May 22. Nikol Pashinian declared himself ready to recognize Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over the enclave with a view to a bilateral peace agreement. “Armenia is ready to recognize the territorial integrity of 86,600 km of Azerbaijan“, declared the leader, specifying then that “the 86,600 km also include Nagorno-Karabakh“.

Coming from the protective country which has always condemned the imminent risk of a “ethnic cleansingby Baku in Nagorno-Karabakh, these words resonated like a betrayal in Artsakh. In a terse statement, the authorities expressed their “feeling of indignation and anger“. Concession of a cornered leader, abandoned by his allies? Several times in recent months, Azerbaijan has unleashed volleys of fire on the territory of Armenia itself. No international reaction followed. Abandoned by Russia, faced with the silence of Westerners, Yerevan is more isolated than ever.

“What is being asked of Armenia is an impossible choice. What would you do if you were asked to choose between your two children?asks another Armenian source. “The mistake is to believe that Aliyev will stop there. It did not respect the tripartite declaration of November 9, 2020, it did not respect the orders of the International Court of Justice requiring the reopening of the Lachin corridor. No peace agreement will satisfy him. It’s the war he wants».

In France, the Armenian diaspora is mobilizing. On Sunday, the CCAF, which coordinates the Armenian organizations in France, called for demonstrations in Paris, from the Trocadéro to the Azerbaijan embassy.

Thank you for your interest in us“Slipped Siranush, a resident of Stepanakert, at the end of the exchange. “We feel like we’ve been forgotten. Every morning I wake up and I ask myself the same question: what will happen to us, to our future? I have this anxiety all the time. Where is the United Nations? The European Union ? International organizations? They know who Aliyev is, but they keep talking about possible integration… Agreeing to hand us over to Azerbaijan is putting a lamb in the mouth of the wolf and saying, go ahead, have fun“.

https://morningexpress.in/nagorno-karabakh-six-months-of-blockade-and-dwindling-hopes-for-forgotten-armenians/