Shadow Enemies Cause Iran Jitters

May 2 2023
By Emil Avdaliani
May 2, 2023
Azerbaijan and Iran want to maintain pragmatic relations. Yet that’s becoming increasingly difficult.

Tensions between Iran and Azerbaijan are reaching a critical point. The two neighbors have never been friendly, but pragmatism driven by growing bilateral trade and at times overlapping geopolitical imperatives often aided the search for common ground. 

This changed after the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh when Azerbaijan decisively defeated Armenia, re-established control over the lost territories, and has ever since pressed its military and economic advantage to force Armenia into a peace deal that would recognize the two countries’ territorial integrity (as currently defined). 

As one of the big three powers bordering the South Caucasus states, Iran would view Azerbaijan’s assertiveness with close interest at the best of times; the fact that it is aimed at its close friends in Armenia makes it a matter of deep concern. Iran would likely intervene should Armenia’s internationally recognized borders be challenged. While Armenia’s southernmost Syunik corridor provides Iran with land access to the country’s capital Yerevan and Georgia to the north, it also provides the east-west route between Azerbaijan and its exclave of Nakhchivan. There is a lot at stake for both sides. 

That helps explain the rhetorical barrages now regularly fired between Azerbaijan and Iran. Each accuses the other of interfering in its internal affairs, while Azerbaijan has made a series of arrests of alleged pro-Iranian figures across the country. On March 28, the Azeri MP Fazil Mustafa, widely known for his criticism of Iran, was shot and wounded outside his home. That followed a deadly attack on the Azerbaijani embassy in Tehran earlier this year, while in early April, Azerbaijan expelled four Iranian diplomats for “provocative actions”. 

Iran has chosen the dual messaging of deterrence and diplomacy. On the one hand, it talks to Azerbaijan seemingly to dial down tensions, but on the other, the Islamic Republic has upped its military game by staging exercises along its border with Azerbaijan. Much of their mutual border runs along the River Aras, making Iran’s river crossing drills particularly pointed. 

Were there to be open conflict, the stakes are high and would have broader geopolitical repercussions.  

Azerbaijan has traditionally close ties to Turkey and has lately been seen as a critical energy partner for the European Union (EU.) But it is Azerbaijan’s expanding ties with Israel that really make Iran jittery. Baku inaugurated its embassy in Tel Aviv and on March 29 Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said he had agreed with his Azerbaijani counterpart Ceyhun Bayramov to “form a united front against Iran”, though Baku later tried to carefully distance itself from the statement. 

The two countries shared, “the same perception of the Iranian threat. The Iranian ayatollah regime threatens both our regions, finances terrorism, and destabilizes the entire Middle East. We must act together to prevent Iran from achieving nuclear capabilities,” Cohen said. Iran demanded an explanation for the trumpeted strategic partnership between the two countries, then complained when none was received. 

It is notable that not only has Iran’s nuclear facilities and scientists come under attack in recent years, but so too has military production infrastructure, including some connected to ballistic missile production and drones. US and other officials have been quoted as linking two such attacks this year to Israel. Azerbaijan was not mentioned in either case, although there have been stories in Israeli and other media suggesting potential Israeli access to Azerbaijani airfields and the Iranian media regularly promotes this narrative. 

Iran has further worries. Azeri Turks make up around a quarter of Iran’s population and are concentrated in the northwest of the country, near the Azerbaijan border. They joined the huge women-led protests which began in 2022 which at times appeared to leave the government close to impotent.  

Azerbaijan has also been investing in closer ties with Iraqi Kurdistan, another neighbor with whom Iran has hostile relations. Kurds too are a discontented Iranian minority and also joined the 2022 protests.  

For Iran, the South Caucasus have been low on the traditional list of priorities. It has few pro-Iranian proxies to employ and nor has it possessed the soft power or economic muscle to influence the region in the way that Turkey and Russia could.  

But the Middle East and South Caucasus are becoming much more closely linked. Regional security and energy resources underpin the growing interconnection. Russia and Turkey, which since the 2010s have been active in increasing their military and economic footprint in the wider Middle East, now, as the Second Nagorno-Karabakh war demonstrated, consider the South Caucasus part of a greater geopolitical game that stretches from the Mediterranean to the Caspian seas. The trend is clear: for the first time since the early 19th century when the Russian empire began its expansion into the South Caucasus and effectively cut the region off from the Middle East, the two regions are again growing closer.  

The West should pay close attention to these developments because there is a risk that it may be shut out from South Caucasus altogether. Given that the region is increasingly important for Europe in particular, as a source and transportation route for energy, it is well worthwhile to pursue policies to build a more secure space.  

This will require a new approach, less dependent on sugared words about democracy and peace, and more reliant on economic realities and the military balance of power. It is in these last two areas that the West is lagging far behind its opponents. 

Emil Avdaliani is a professor at European University and the Director of Middle East Studies at the Georgian think-tank, Geocase. 

Europe’s Edge is CEPA’s online journal covering critical topics on the foreign policy docket across Europe and North America. All opinions are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the position or views of the institutions they represent or the Center for European Policy Analysis.


Armenian-Azerbaijani talks in Washington, but what comes next?

May 3 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Mirzoyan-Bayramov talks in the USA

Negotiations between the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan continue in the US through the mediation of US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken. The details of the talks, which began on May 1, have not been disclosed; only minimal information is being conveyed from Washington.

The State Department reported that the meeting was taking place in a “constructive atmosphere.” The parties are also refraining from lengthy comments. The Armenian Foreign Ministry announced that, according to the preliminary plan, May 4 is the last day of negotiations.

“Issues related to the security situation in the region and the process of normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan were discussed. The humanitarian situation that has developed as a result of the illegal blocking of the Lachin corridor by Azerbaijan was mentioned,” the statement of the Armenian Foreign Ministry reads.

Meanwhile, Russia has already announced that the reduction of tension in the region “first of all is possible on the basis of those trilateral documents that were signed together with Russia.” Press Secretary of the President of Russia Dmitry Peskov said that so far these “documents are absolutely uncontested.”

There is also information that the Washington meeting will be followed by negotiations mediated by Moscow. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan, before leaving for Washington, said that for Yerevan “there are no differences between the platforms, the peace process is the same, the negotiations are around one draft peace treaty, in fact the negotiations are the same.”

But local analysts believe that these theses are “incorrect, false and dangerous for Armenia” — “we are talking about completely opposite, mutually exclusive goals of the mediators”.


  • Azerbaijan installs checkpoint at entrance to Lachin road. Information and comments from Baku and Yerevan
  • “Azerbaijani citizen killed the plant’s security guard” – Armenian Prosecutor General’s Office
  • “We will live in our Motherland”: reaction to Aliyev’s speech
  • Ilham Aliyev: “Either they will live under the flag of Azerbaijan, or they will leave”

According to information coming from the US, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken considers the dialogue between Yerevan and Baku “the key to achieving lasting peace in the South Caucasus.” The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan are reportedly “working together to achieve a peaceful future for the South Caucasus region.”

“We believe that peace between these two countries is possible and we are happy to accept them. We expect peace and stability between these two countries and in the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh,” US State Department Deputy Spokesman Vedant Patel said.

He also said that a number of American diplomats are involved in the negotiation process:

“Senior Advisor for Caucasus Negotiations Lou Bono is significantly involved not only in these meetings, but also as part of his work in the South Caucasus. You know that Secretary Blinken took part in the first plenary session and met with ministers over dinner. So we continue to be significantly involved.”

When asked about the extent to which it is possible to merge the positions of the parties following negotiations in the United States, Patel preferred to refrain from “hypothetical assumptions.”

To a question from Radio Azatutyun (Liberty) about whether issues related to Nagorno-Karabakh are being discussed during the talks, the following answer was received from the US State Department:

“Official Washington asked Baku and Yerevan to consider how best to protect the rights and security of the people of Nagorno-Karabakh. The issue of the rights and security of the population of Nagorno-Karabakh is a key issue in the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The only way to find a lasting solution to a conflict that has claimed too many lives and lasted too long is for these people to finally feel safe in their homes, with their rights protected.”

The State Department gas not provided any other details on what issues Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun Bayramov are discussing. There is only a report that the ministers are discussing a project called “Agreement on the resolution of relations.”

The Prime Minister of Armenia talked about the signing of a peace treaty with Azerbaijan and the normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations.

Armenian journalists tried to find out if the “Agreement on the resolution of relations” is a peace agreement which is expected to be signed. MP from the ruling party Arman Yegoyan confirmed that this is the same document that has been talked about for some time.

When asked about the name change, the deputy replied: “To answer this question, I would have to reveal substantive details.” He refused to comment in more detail on when and in connection with what the name of the document was changed, as “this will mean a substantive discussion about its content.”

Another deputy from the government, secretary of the Civil Treaty parliamentary faction Artur Hovhannisyan, said that the renaming of the peace treaty took place by mutual agreement with Azerbaijan and “does not contradict the content and goals of the process that existed before.”

The head of the parliamentary commission on foreign relations, Sargis Khandanyan, was asked by journalists whether there would be confusion if the parties went to talks in Moscow after the meeting in Washington, to which he replied:

“From the point of view of Armenia there is no confusion, Armenia clearly knows what it wants, always and on any platform upholds these principles. This is ensuring peace in the region, protecting the security of Armenia’s borders, sovereignty, territorial integrity, protecting the rights and security of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh, regardless of the platform.”

Commenting on Peskov’s statement regarding the talks in the United States and the lack of alternatives to the trilateral documents signed with the mediation of Russia, Khandanyan said:

“The document of November 9 is certainly very important. And it is very important that many of the provisions prescribed there are respected. But the question here is also why Mr. Peskov does not say, why Russia does not guarantee the provisions guaranteed by the tripartite declaration of November 9, in particular unimpeded movement along the Lachin corridor, the return of Armenian prisoners, etc.”

The head of the mission of EU observers monitoring the Armenian-Azerbaijani border said that they inform the Azerbaijani authorities in advance when and where exactly they will be

Political scientist Ruben Mehrabyan commented on the statement of the Armenian authorities that Yerevan does not differentiate the platforms where the peace agreement with Azerbaijan is being discussed. He says the ruling party claims that there is no difference where the negotiations take place, and there is no difference in their content. Mehrabyan himself believes that “both theses are incorrect, false and even dangerous” for Armenia, even if they are made as a “diplomatic statement” that does not express a real assessment:

“There is not so much a difference, but an abyss, since we are talking about completely opposite, mutually exclusive goals. At least for us [the Armenian side].

As a result of the expected results from the negotiations taking place on the western platform, Armenia, having yielded in some things, should receive

  • strengthened independence and sovereignty,
  • reducing the “need” of Russia,
  • expansion of the field of possibility of independent steps,
  • development prospects.

Russia will increase its presence in the region, primarily in Armenia, turning its “necessary” into “irreplaceable”.

The independence, democracy and sovereignty of Armenia disappear.

Forget about development, get used to Gazelle, Cheburnet and other Russian garbage in fulfillment of “your obligations within the framework of the EAEU” [an economic union operating under the leadership of Russia, Armenia is a member of it]. And the key-keepers with the train of a thieves’ company will come to power [in Armenia].

Despite the inaction of its allies whom Armenia asked for help, the country’s authorities avoided talking about leaving the Russian military bloc. But it was said that perhaps “the CSTO is leaving Armenia”

Not to mention the fact that peace negotiations are underway on the western platform, and in the case of Russia it will not be peace, but a controlled “non-peace”, the control panel of which will be conditionally in the hands of Kopirkin-Lentsov-Safonov-Ivanov.

This bazaar will continue until you [meaning the Armenian authorities] take away the gun that is pointed at the head of Armenia — fascist detachments scattered along the Armenian-Azerbaijani border, which, taking advantage of the weakness of Armenia, wrested from the government a decision on the “legality” of their deployment. Now it’s time to return this herd to the barn before our head is crushed.

Be aware and, by decision of the government, return them [the Russian military] to your garrison until there is a final decision on this issue. And start a conversation with Tehran about gas, with Brussels about the accelerated implementation of the 2013 agreement.

Before the 2013 Eastern Partnership Summit, Yerevan refused to sign the Association Agreement with the EU. At that time, Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, visiting Moscow, announced that Armenia was joining the Customs Union, which later became the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU).

It is needless to repeat that the so-called “Russian platform” must be avoided.

Ratify the Rome Statute [appeal to the Armenian authorities]; you will bring trouble to all of us if you do not firmly hold on to the Western platform.

Those same “research-professional-expert” platitudes like “what if the Russians won’t allow it”, “what if there are no Russians”, “but on earth … [there are only Russians in the region]”, etc. not important. Send all this clockwise, neutralize this rabble in red shorts, get rid of this evil at the state level – at least to the level and clarity of Moldova, and then we will have a chance for a decent world.

Otherwise we get guarantees of Russian chaos, chaos that the Russians will impose on us with your hands and hang the blame on your neck.”

https://jam-news.net/mirzoyan-bayramov-talks-in-the-usa/

AP: Turkey closes airspace to Armenian flights over monument

Washington Post
May 3 2023

ANKARA, Turkey — Turkey has closed its airspace to flights by Armenian aircraft in retaliation for the erection of a monument in the Armenian capital that Ankara says honors people responsible for the killings of Turkish officials, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Wednesday.

In an interview with NTV television, Cavusoglu warned that Turkey would take further measures if the monument in Yerevan is not removed.


The move comes as Turkey and Armenia, which have no diplomatic relations, had been engaged in talks to normalize ties and put decades of acrimony behind. They appointed special envoys who have held several rounds of talks. Their discussions had resulted in an agreement to resume charter flights between Istanbul and Yerevan.


The two countries have a more than century-old bitter relationship over the deaths of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in massacres, deportations and forced marches that began in 1915 in Ottoman Turkey.


Historians widely view the event as genocide. Turkey vehemently rejects the label, conceding that many died in that era but insisting that the death toll is inflated and the deaths resulted from civil unrest.


Cavusoglu said the monument aimed “to glorify” Armenians involved in plans to assassinate Ottoman and Azerbaijani officials in the 1920s and Turkish diplomats in the 1970s and 1980s.


“It is not possible for us to accept this. We can clearly see that their intentions are not good,” Cavusoglu said.


The monument is dedicated to members of “Operation Nemesis” — the codename for a covert operation to avenge the killing and deportation of Armenians by Ottoman Empire forces, with seven assassinations carried out by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation between 1920 and 1922.


Operation Nemesis represented “a record of the fact that throughout history, crimes do not go unpunished regardless of how the international community treats it,” Yerevan Deputy Mayor Tigran Avinyan told state news agency Armenpress on the April 25 unveiling of the monument, on which the names of 16 Operation Nemesis members are engraved.


Armenia’s central aviation committee claimed that it didn’t receive official notification from the Turkish side about the airspace closure.


Turkey shut down its border with Armenia in 1993, in a show of solidarity with its close ally Azerbaijan, which was locked in a conflict with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.


In 2020, Turkey strongly backed Azerbaijan in the six-week conflict with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh, which ended with a Russia-brokered peace deal that saw Azerbaijan gain control of a significant part of the region.


Meanwhile, Armenian parliamentary president Alen Simonyan arrived in Ankara on Wednesday to attend the 30th anniversary of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation. According to Simonyan’s press secretary, the parliamentary president is set to also meet with the president of the Turkish parliament.

___

Elise Morton contributed to this report from London.


https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/05/03/turkey-armenia-monument-airspace-closed/961a7cea-e9af-11ed-869e-986dd5713bc8_story.html

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President of Armenia: We want Moscow to defend us against Turkey and Azerbaijan

May 3 2023




We have signed three agreements with the Russian Federation, which specify that the Russian armed forces must intervene in the event of an attack on Armenia. But Russia has done nothing to keep its promises, says Wahagan Khachaturian.

TVP WEEKLY: We were supposed to talk about the economy and business, but after I landed in Armenia, it turned out that seven soldiers had just died on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. And during the opening gala of the European Weightlifting Championships in the Armenian capital of Yerevan, the flag of Azerbaijan was burned. The war has been going on for 30 years and does not allow either of the two sides to develop. What role, as the president, should you play in this situation?

WAHAGN KHACHATURIAN: You have to be aware that we are a country with a parliamentary system, and the role of a president is more about representing the country than managing it. However, the president has an important task within the constitution: monitoring it, mediating, and supporting valuable ideas. And it is particularly important – in the era of fierce political battle – to balance the power.

It may seem that it is not so important, but during my one-year presidency, I have already realised that it is one of my key responsibilities. In the age of war with Azerbaijan, looking for allies for Armenia worldwide is essential. The role of presidential diplomacy in the international arena cannot be underestimated.

According to what I've been told, you live in Suwałki – several dozen kilometres away from the Lithuanian border. And just after our meeting, I am flying to Vilnius to sign a memorandum of cooperation in the field of technology and innovation.

I want to expose our country to the European Union and show it at its best; That we are implementing democratic reforms; That we are strongly committed to cooperation with the West; That Armenia today is a completely different country than it used to be in the 1990s.

What I mostly focus on today is supporting the elementary values: human rights, freedom of speech and the rule of law. And that the president is the guarantor of these values and their implementation.

The president must also be the guarantor of public trust in state institutions. Equally for all – citizens living in Armenia and our diaspora, as well as the people coming to our country.

Our diaspora, which I mentioned, is three times more numerous than its inhabitants living in Armenia today. So I must be a leader who inspires the confidence of all Armenians. Our emigrants invested over 5 billion dollars in our country only last year.

The Armenian diaspora is strongly connected to its homeland. Only in 1991-2001, every third of its citizens left Armenia. It is a phenomenon on a global scale. How does it affect the economy and development of the country? And most importantly, how do you encourage these people to come back when you're still at war?

If we were to realistically assess the scale of emigration you are asking about, it would be even higher. The collapse of the USSR and the 1990s were – as in Poland – an extremely difficult time for our emerging statehood. The total transformation of the economy has resulted in massive unemployment. In addition, there was a massive energy crisis, for which we were also unprepared. This caused a domino effect in the entire business sector.

If we enclose the real and tragic war to all of this, I am not surprised that hundreds of thousands of citizens want to change their destiny to live in peace and on a higher level. The Armenian diaspora today is gigantic. There are more Armenians in Russia alone than in Armenia. The Armenian community in the United States is also powerful.

But in this respect, our countries have a similar history. Do you remember the political changes in Poland? After the borders were opened, millions of Poles sought better life opportunities abroad to provide means of subsistence for their families. And very often, Poles and Armenians met on this emigration route. Besides, many of my compatriots came to Poland looking for a job.

Fortunately, this trend has reversed in recent years. We've learned an important lesson. Today, international investments are changing the face of our economy. I will not hide that the success of people who went abroad at that time also had a powerful influence on it. Because today they come back with their money and invest in their homeland. The patriotism of Armenians living abroad is a huge driving force in our country.

What exactly could Armenia offer to the European Union, Poland, or even entrepreneurs from Poland in terms of business? You are in a state of a permanent dispute with Azerbaijan. And this country is an attractive partner for Europe; it offers us oil and gas, thus independence from Russia. And mediation in the supply of raw materials from Kazakhstan.

You have a very straightforward and concrete approach to business.

Because international relations are based on the game of business and economic interests. If you want to reach the European elites, the world of EU finance – influential people – then you have to talk to them in the language of benefits. Ideas and lofty values disappear when real cash becomes visible. Why has the world failed to help the North Koreans for decades? Because there are no valuable deposits there. Who cares that Poland was morally right during World War II if we ended up with ruined Warsaw, and the Germans, who were the aggressors, with the Marshall Plan?

Armenia has learned this lesson as well. We are aware of our strengths and weaknesses. We know what we can offer to other partners. We will not extract oil and deliver it to Orlen because we do not have it. We focused on what we can win and what we can deliver to modern economies. Since this could not be the mineral deposits, let it be the assets of knowledge and human potential.

Today, we are already a powerful basin of the IT sector throughout Asia. We are much better, more professional and higher-educated than our competitors. And at the same time still relatively cheaper when compared to Western economies. Our IT specialists are highly valued all over the world. We also have companies that have achieved global success. Besides, Polish agencies and headhunting companies are eager to penetrate our market.

Our other advantage is the developed industry and agricultural processing. Our cuisine is one of the best in the world. Delivering high-quality food from Armenia to the West can be a real goldmine for our and your entrepreneurs.

The premium brand spirits and the tobacco industry production sectors have also developed strongly in Poland. I must admit that we focus firmly on developing our financial sector. And it's also no secret that our economy benefits from Russia's problems.

The size and scale of the market may be a problem – Armenia has only 3 million inhabitants. It's like Warsaw with its suburban area.

Let us remember the 10 million Armenians living abroad. As I said before, these people are extremely emotionally attached to our country. It is, in practice, another "outlet market", as you would probably put it in your business jargon. But they are also our best ambassadors. If you come to California, you will find Armenian products and Armenian flavours everywhere. These people are incredibly committed to promoting all that comes from their homeland and promoting companies which cooperate with us. By entering the Armenian market, you are practically entering the global diaspora market.

Let's also not forget that in the Soviet Union, it was Armenia that produced goods of the highest possible quality at that time. After all, the entire industry of the Soviet bloc was based on our electronics, machines and know-how, as we would put it today.

Although, and I will say it once again, I am most proud of our human resources and the Armenian intellectual potential – these are our best high-end export products.

Recently, these minds have had some serious competition. Armenia, along with Georgia, has become the main destination for the migration of Russian programmers and IT specialists who try to escape the army recruitment.

I'll tell you more. Many experts from the IT sector flew to us from Ukraine and found shelter here. We are open to people who want to find their second home with us and, at the same time, bring to this home something valuable.

Read the full story.

By Karol Wasilewski
Translated by: Katarzyna Chocian


Armenia and Russia discuss NPP construction

May 3 2023

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Rosatom Director General Alexey Likhachev have held talks in Yerevan on the possible construction of a new NPP in Armenia. Pashinyan emphasised the importance of cooperation between the Armenian government and Rosatom, which are successfully implementing a number of joint projects.

The currently operating Armenian NPP at Metsamor was built in the 1970s with two Soviet-supplied VVER-440-V230 units, but was closed following a devastating earthquake in 1988. However, unit 2 was recommissioned with Russian help in 1995 following severe energy shortages. In March 2014, the Armenian government decided to extend the plant’s service life to 2026. Most of the overhaul (until 2019) was funded by an interstate loan from Russia. Construction of a new nuclear plant has long been part of Armenia’s overall plan, although finance has proved to be an obstacle.

Likhachev confirmed Rosatom’s continued support for co-operation. Further extension of the operating life of ANPP was viewed as a priority. Rosatom said Pashinyan and Likhachev “agreed on specific steps for the near future, which will allow the re-extension work to be launched by the end of this year”.

Construction of new nuclear power units in Armenia was also discussed and Likhachev said Rosatom is ready to offer Russian-designed NPPs with VVER reactors. At the end of the meeting, the parties “agreed to continue work on joint projects in the field of the peaceful use of atomic energy and in related high-tech areas”.

Azerbaijani, Armenian FMs Continue Negotiations in US

Egypt – May 3 2023
By Ahmad El-Assasy

Aykhan Hajizada, a spokesperson for the Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told Trend that talks between Jeyhun Bayramov of Azerbaijan and Ararat Mirzoyan of Armenia are still ongoing in the US.

Today's meetings have already started. The discussions will go on tomorrow. Unknown is the precise period when the negotiations will end, he continued.

A peace pact is the primary subject of negotiations, according to prior statements by Hajizada.

Jeyhun Bayramov, the foreign minister of Azerbaijan, met with Ararat Mirzoyan, the foreign minister of Armenia, and Anthony Blinken, the secretary of state of the US, on May 1 in the US.

The two countries' foreign ministers then met bilaterally at the NFATC (Shultz National Foreign Affairs Training Centre).

The Lachin Corridor standoff between Armenia and Azerbaijan ends, for now

May 3 2023

This article was first published on OC Media. An edited version is republished here under a content partnership agreement. 

On April 28, the Azerbaijani so-called “eco-activists” blocking the Lachin Corridor — the only route connecting Armenia to Karabakh across the territory of Azerbaijan — suspended their blockade following the installation of an Azerbaijani border checkpoint on the corridor on April 23.

The protest had been ongoing since December 2022, blocking all traffic in and out of Nagorno-Karabakh except for vehicles from the Red Cross and the Russian peacekeeping mission. According to the ceasefire agreement that brought an end to the Second Nagorno-Karabakh War in 2020, the Russian peacekeepers were to control the Lachin Corridor.

Despite claiming to be protesting environmental damage from mining in Nagorno-Karabakh, the protesters had seemingly no connection to any environmental movements and were widely seen as an instrument of the Azerbaijani government, who rarely allow protests to go ahead unhindered and control all access to Shusha, the city that was regained following the 44-day war Armenia and Azerbaijan fought in 2020.

The Nagorno-Karabakh area has been under the control of its ethnic Armenian population as a self-declared state since a war fought in the early 1990s, which ended with a ceasefire and Armenian military victory in 1994. In the aftermath of the first war, a new, internationally unrecognized, de facto Nagorno-Karabakh Republic was established. Seven adjacent regions were occupied by the Armenian forces. As a result of that war, “more than a million people had been forced from their homes: Azerbaijanis fled Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and the adjacent territories, while Armenians left homes in Azerbaijan,” according to the International Crisis Group, an independent organization that works to prevent wars and shape policies. Following the second Karabakh war in 2020, Azerbaijan regained control over much of the previously occupied seven regions. Azerbaijan also captured one-third of Karabakh itself during the war. On November 10, 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefire agreement brokered by Russia.

The activists reportedly said they reserved the right to restart the blockade if their demands were not met for the Russian peacekeepers to “stop the illegal exploitation of mineral deposits” and to “ensure the monitoring of environmental and other consequences remain in force.”

The move follows the installation of an Azerbaijani border checkpoint at the entrance of the Lachin corridor near the Armenian border on April 23. According to the reporting by the Economist Intelligence Unit, “the move has increased the blockade of Nagorno Karabakh. A checkpoint on the border would give Azerbaijan the ability to stop any cars traveling between Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.” Reports that residents were being screened by the Azerbaijani border troops emerged on May 1. According to reports, footage appeared to show Armenian vehicles passing through the checkpoint, with Azerbaijani border control officers inspecting their vehicles and documents.

“The people are from villages near the checkpoint under double blockade and were traveling with the support of peacekeepers, with guarantees of not being bothered,” wrote Artak Beglaryan, an adviser to the State Minister, on Twitter.

The villages were cut off from the rest of Nagorno-Karabakh after the blockade began near Shusha. They are now separated from Armenia by the new customs checkpoint. Samvel Tavadyan, a teacher in one of the villages affected, told OC Media the residents of the village were now surrounded on four sides, “it feels like a cage,” adding, “People hoped that Russians would ensure free movement” but now they are “confined to a small area between the blockade and the new checkpoint.”

Meanwhile, the checkpoint, which was erected on the Hakari Bridge, next to a base of the Russian peacekeepers, triggered criticism in Armenia that the peacekeepers are “unreliable.” With the new checkpoint, resentments have only gotten stronger. Armenia's foreign ministry calling on the “Russian Federation to finally fulfill its obligation under Provision 6 of the trilateral statement by eliminating the illegal blockade of the Lachin corridor and ensuring the withdrawal of Azerbaijani forces from the entire security zone of the corridor.” Yerevan criticized Baku’s actions, stating that “no one but Russia” should exercise control over the Lachin Corridor.

Baku, in the meantime, denied blocking the corridor. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov stated on April 27 that Azerbaijan installed the checkpoint after warning Armenia of the “illegal use” of the road to transport weapons to the region.

“The Lachin road is open and will remain open,” Bayramov stated during a meeting with his French counterpart in Baku.

The Foreign Ministry had previously promised to create the “necessary conditions” for the “transparent and orderly passage of Armenian residents living in the Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.”

Western officials also expressed concern over Azerbaijan’s actions. US State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said Secretary of State Antony J.Blinken, who spoke with President Ilham Aliyev on the phone on April 30, expressed “the United States’ deep concern that Baku has established a checkpoint on the corridor.”

The US mission to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe echoed Blinken's concern in a statement. “[The] United States is concerned that Azerbaijan’s establishment of a checkpoint on the Lachin corridor on April 23 undermines efforts to establish confidence in the peace process,” read the statement by the mission.

The EU High Representative Josep Borrell said in a Tweet the checkpoint ran “counter to EU calls for reducing tensions and solving issues by dialogue.”

The checkpoint has led to renewed fears in Nagorno-Karabakh and Armenia over the future of the region’s ethnic Armenian population.

GCC Closes Campus in Honor of Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day

Glendale Community College
May 3 2023

The 108 year long struggle for recognition continues

Sevan Asatryan, Staff Writer

On April 24, Glendale Community College’s campus was closed, in honor of Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day. April 24, 1915 is the date commonly believed to be the beginning of the Armenian genocide, and is subsequently the chosen date for the Armenian genocide remembrance.The genocide began with the deportation and eventual killing of several hundred Armenian intellectuals at the hands of the Ottoman Empire. It’s estimated that up to 1.5 million ethnic Armenians were killed as a result of the genocide. Many of the descendants of Armenian genocide survivors reside right in Glendale, Calif., and many of those same descendants attend GCC.

 Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, serves as a reminder of the millions of Armenian lives lost due to ethnic and religion based hatred, and also as a reminder of the need to prevent similar atrocities from ever happening again. It’s a chance to honor those who were victims and to pay tribute to and celebrate their descendants. Additionally, the day serves as an opportunity for the Armenian diaspora and others around the world to come together and show unity in the fight for recognition of the genocide. Despite overwhelming evidence of the injustices inflicted upon the Armenian people during World War I, the Turkish government, to this day, continues to deny that a genocide ever took place. As of 2023, 34 countries have recognized the Armenian genocide. On April 24, 2021, American President Joe Biden released a statement officially recognizing the events that took place as genocide, becoming the first American president to do so. 

An annual demonstration takes place every 24th of April, in front of the Turkish consulate in Beverly Hills, with demonstrators demanding that the Turkish government take action and finally recognize the genocide. Campus being closed on Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day gives students the opportunity to make their voices heard, and is reflective of the values of the community, which is comprised of many Armenian students, staff, and faculty.

Sevan Asatryan can be reached at [email protected].


64 percent of poll respondents in Armenia do not trust any political figure

May 3 2023

This is evidenced by the results of the polls conducted in January-March 2023 at the initiative of the International Republican Institute (IRI).  Some 1,513 citizens over 18 participated in the polls conducted by BREVIS.

 

Some 13% of the respondents said they trust Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, 2% said they trust the second president of Armenia Robert Kocharyan.

 

If the parliamentary elections were held on the coming Sunday, 21% of respondents would vote for the Civil Contract party, and 4% for the Armenia bloc. Some 30% said they would not go voting, and 12% said they would make the ballot invalid. Some 20% of respondents found it difficult or refused to answer.

Dutch man shot dead in Armenia; Body found next to shards of hand grenade: report

The Netherlands – May 3 2023

A Dutch man was shot dead in the Armenian capital of Yerevan on Sunday. The man was found dead in front of the building where he lived with a bullet wound in his head and hand grenade shards next to his body, sources confirmed to the Telegraaf after reports in the local media.

The Duch Ministry of Foreign Affairs could not confirm that a Dutch person was killed. The Ministry hasn’t received a request for consular assistance,” a spokesperson told De Telegraaf. “If such a request comes, we will grant it if it is indeed a Dutch person.”

A passerby called the police late Sunday evening to report a bleeding person on the ground in front of a building on Myasnikyan Street. According to the passerby, the man was no longer breathing.

The police responded and cordoned off the area for investigation, securing several pieces of evidence, including two shards of a hand grenade. The investigation is ongoing.

According to the Telegraaf’s source, the man did not stand out and wasn’t a known criminal. “It was someone who apparently lived a normal life. Nothing special.”


https://nltimes.nl/2023/05/03/dutch-man-shot-dead-armenia-body-found-next-shards-hand-grenade-report