Prime Minister congratulates all Armenians on Christmas

 19:10, 5 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 5, ARMENPRESS. On Christmas Eve, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan congratulated all Armenians on Christmas.  

In a video message published on his Facebook page, Nikol Pashinyan extended Christmas greetings and read the 20th Psalm.

The Prime Minister concluded his congratulatory speech with a Christmas greeting: "Christ is born and revealed. Great news for you and for us!"

Asbarez: 55 Armenians Still Being Held Captive in Azerbaijan, Yerevan Says

Guards at the Armenia-Azerbaijan border during the prisoner exchange on Dec. 13 (Azatutyun.am screen grab)


A senior Armenian law enforcement official said that 55 Armenians are currently being held captive in Azerbaijan, as official Baku claims that 23 remain in its custody.

Argishti Kyaramyan, the Head of the Investigative Committee of Armenia, told Armenia’s Public Television on Thursday that Azerbaijan has confirmed holding 23 Armenians captives, but they have evidence on the forced disappearance of another 32 persons after the 2020 war.

“At this moment 23 compatriots confirmed by Azerbaijan are being held there, 17 of whom are persons captured as a result of the 2023 aggression. We have evidence regarding the forced disappearance of 32 persons after the 44-day war, which we have presented to supranational organizations,” Kyaramyan said.

The European Court of Human Rights mandates Baku to take interim measures regarding 22 of the prisoners, however Azerbaijan has denied the fact that these persons were taken captive.

Last month the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan issued a joint statement announcing the exchange of prisoners. Soon after Yerevan returned two Azerbaijani soldiers who we imprisoned for killing a worker at a mine in Syunik. In return, Azerbaijan released 32 Armenian POWs during the exchange, which took place on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 01/05/2024

                                        Friday, January 5, 2024


Baku Again Demands ‘Corridor’ Through Armenia

        • Heghine Buniatian

AZERBAIJAN -- Hikmet Hajiyev, the head of the Foreign Policy Affairs Department 
of Azerbaijan's Presidential Administration, gives a press briefing in Baku, 
February 26, 2021


Azerbaijan has renewed its demands for Armenia to open an extraterritorial 
corridor to its Nakhichevan exclave.

A senior aide to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev claimed that Yerevan has an 
“obligation” to do so under the terms of the Russian-brokered ceasefire that 
stopped the 2020 Armenian-Azerbaijani war.

The truce accord commits Armenia to opening rail and road links between 
Nakhichevan and the rest of Azerbaijan. It says that Russian border guards will 
“control” the movement of people, vehicles and goods. The transport links would 
presumably pass through Syunik, the sole Armenian province bordering Iran.

The Armenian government has rejected Baku’s demands, saying that Azerbaijani 
passengers and cargo cannot be exempt from Armenian border controls. It insists 
on conventional transport links between the two South Caucasus states.

Iran also strongly opposes the so-called “Zangezur corridor” sought by Aliyev. 
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi reaffirmed Tehran’s stance when he met with a 
visiting Azerbaijani official in October. Aliyev’s top foreign policy adviser, 
Hikmet Hajiyev, said later in October that the corridor “has lost its 
attractiveness for us” and that Baku is now planning to “do this with Iran 
instead.”

But in an interview with Germany’s Berliner Zeitung newspaper published on 
Thursday, Hajiyev said that the planned construction of a new road as well as a 
railway connecting Azerbaijan to Nakhichevan via Iran does not mean that Baku 
has abandoned the idea of the corridor passing through Armenia.

“The route through Armenia is Yerevan’s obligation which they must fulfill,” he 
said.

Hajiyev confirmed that Baku wants to make sure that Azerbaijani people and 
cargos travelling to and from Nakhichevan are not checked by Armenian border 
guards or customs officers.

Aliyev has implicitly threatened to open the corridor by force, prompting stern 
warnings from Iran. His renewed demands for the corridor follow what Armenian 
and Azerbaijani officials call major progress made in talks on a bilateral peace 
treaty.

Armenian opposition leaders dismiss Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s regular 
assurances that the treaty will preclude another war with Azerbaijan. They also 
say that he is willing to make disproportionate concessions to Baku and get very 
little in return, a claim denied by Pashinian and his political allies.

The main purpose of the 2020 ceasefire cited by Hajiyev was to stop fighting in 
Karabakh and prevent new hostilities. The deal led to the deployment of Russian 
peacekeepers in Karabakh and gave them control over the Lachin corridor 
connecting the region to Armenia.

Azerbaijan disrupted commercial and humanitarian traffic through the corridor in 
December 2022 and set up a checkpoint there in April 2023 in breach of the 
ceasefire. It went on to launch a military offensive in Karabakh in September 
2022, forcing the region’s practically entire population to flee to Armenia.




At Least 223 Karabakh Armenians Killed During Azeri Offensive


Nagorno-Karabakh - A residential area in Stepanakert damaged by Azerbaijani 
shelling, September 19, 2023.


At least 198 soldiers and 25 civilian residents of Nagorno-Karabakh were killed 
during last September’s Azerbaijani military offensive that enabled Baku to 
recapture the region, according to a senior Armenian official.

Five children were among the casualties, Argishti Kyaramian, the head of 
Armenia’s Investigative Committee, told Armenian Public Television late on 
Thursday. He said that five other civilians and 15 Karabakh Armenian soldiers 
went missing during the 24-hour hostilities that broke out on September 19.

The Azerbaijani Defense Ministry has acknowledged around 200 combat deaths among 
its military personnel involved in the operation. Its troops greatly outnumbered 
and outgunned Karabakh’s small army that received no military support from 
Armenia. Karabakh’s leadership agreed to disband the Defense Army in return for 
Baku stopping the assault and allowing the region’s ethnic Armenian residents to 
flee to Armenia.

More than 100,000 Karabakh Armenians, the region’s virtually entire remaining 
population, left their homeland in the space of a week. The hundreds of cars, 
buses and trucks carrying them caused a massive traffic jam on a 50-kilometer 
road leading to Armenia.

It reportedly took most refugees at least 30 hours to reach the Armenian border. 
According to the Investigative Committee, 64 of them died during the arduous 
journey due to a lack of medicine, medical aid and food.

A satellite image shows a long traffic jam of vehicles along the Lachin corridor 
as ethnic Armenians flee from the Nagorno-Karabakh.

The exodus began amid chaotic scenes inside Karabakh blamed for a massive 
explosion and fire at a fuel depot outside Stepanakert on September 25. The 
blast left at least 218 people dead. Videos posted on social media showed 
hundreds of cars parked near the depot, waiting to fuel up and head to Armenia.

The Armenian authorities maintain that Karabakh’s depopulation is the result of 
“ethnic cleansing” carried out by Azerbaijan. In October, Armenia’s human rights 
ombudswoman, Anahit Manasian, accused Azerbaijani troops of committing war 
crimes during the assault.

“There are many bodies, including of civilians, transported from 
Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia that carry signs of torture and/or mutilation,” 
Manasian told reporters.

Baku denies forcing Karabakh residents to flee their homes and says the 
Azerbaijani army did not target civilians during its offensive condemned by the 
United States and the European Union.




U.S. Peace Efforts ‘Not Thwarted By Russia’

        • Anush Mkrtchian

U.S. - State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller speaks during a news 
briefing in Washington, July 18, 2023.


Russia is not torpedoing U.S. efforts to broker an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace 
accord despite being strongly opposed to them, the U.S. State Department 
insisted on Thursday.

Moscow has repeatedly claimed that the United States and the European Union are 
seeking to drive it out of the South Caucasus, rather than end the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

In early December, the Russian Foreign Ministry also rebuked Armenia for 
ignoring recent Russian offers to organize more peace talks with Azerbaijan. It 
warned that Yerevan’s current preference of Western mediation may spell more 
trouble for the Armenian people.

“Russia does not in any way prevent us from conducting the important diplomatic 
efforts we think are necessary for Armenia and Azerbaijan, and we will continue 
to pursue them,” Matthew Miller, the State Department spokesman, told a news 
briefing in Washington.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken had been scheduled to host the Armenian 
and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in Washington on November 20 for further 
negotiations on a peace treaty between the two South Caucasus nations. Baku 
cancelled the meeting in protest against what it called pro-Armenian statements 
made by James O’Brien, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for Europe and 
Eurasia.

O’Brien visited Baku afterwards in what appears to have been a failed bid to 
convince the Azerbaijani leadership to reschedule the cancelled meeting. Miller 
indicated that no new date has been agreed for it yet.

“We’ll have an announcement to make when we have a meeting scheduled,” he said.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s top foreign policy aide, Hikmet Hajiyev, 
said on December 19 that Washington must reconsider its “one-sided approach” to 
the conflict before it can mediate more peace talks.

On December 28, Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov revealed that Baku 
has proposed that he and his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan hold direct 
talks at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. The Armenian government has still not 
publicly responded to the offer.

In an interview with the German newspaper Berliner Zeitung published on 
Thursday, Hajiyev said Baku and Yerevan do not need third-party mediation in 
order to negotiate the peace treaty. “We are not against honest mediation in 
principle but prefer direct discussions,” he said.

Armenian analysts have suggested that Baku does not want Western mediation 
anymore because it is reluctant to sign the kind of agreement that would commit 
it to explicitly recognizing Armenia’s borders and thus preclude Azerbaijani 
territorial claims.

Yerevan has said, at least until now, that the two sides should use Soviet 
military maps printed in the 1970s as a basis for recognizing each other’s 
territorial integrity and delimiting the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Its 
position has been backed by the EU but rejected by the Azerbaijani side.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2024 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 03-01-24

 17:15, 3 January 2024

YEREVAN, 3 JANUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 3 January, USD exchange rate up by 0.49 drams to 405.28 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 5.05 drams to 442.85 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate down by 0.07 drams to 4.43 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 3.71 drams to 511.67 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 108.63 drams to 26940.29 drams. Silver price down by 3.66 drams to 312.00 drams.

At least 73 killed in blasts near Qasem Soleimani’s grave in Iran

 17:26, 3 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 3, ARMENPRESS. At least 73 people were killed and 171 injured on Wednesday in the Iranian city of Kerman after twin blasts near the burial site of slain military commander Qasem Soleimani, in what local officials called a terror attack, according to state media.

The first explosion was 700 meters away from Soleimani’s grave, and the second was a kilometer (0.6 miles) away as pilgrims visited the site, according to IRNA. 

Soleimani was killed by a US airstrike ordered by then-President Donald Trump at Baghdad International Airport four years ago Wednesday.

The Lieutenant Governor of Kerman Province said the blasts were terror attacks, according to IRIB news agency.

Armenpress: Iran says at least 103 people killed, 141 wounded in explosions at ceremony honoring slain general

 19:46, 3 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 3, ARMENPRESS. Iranian state media said Wednesday at least 103 people have been killed by explosions minutes apart targeting a commemoration for a prominent general slain in a U.S. drone strike in 2020.

Another 141 were wounded,  Iranian media reports.

The blasts struck an event marking the the fourth anniversary of the killing of Gen. Qassem Soleimani, the head of the Revolutionary Guard’s elite Quds Force, who died in a U.S. drone strike in Iraq in January 2020.

The explosions occurred near his grave site in Kerman, about 510 miles southeast of the capital, Tehran.




Russia, Ukraine exchange hundreds of prisoners

 10:25, 4 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. Russia and Ukraine have exchanged hundreds of prisoners of war in the biggest single release of captives since the war began in February 2022.

Russia said on Wednesday that 248 of its soldiers were returned while Ukraine said 230 of its prisoners were released after mediation by the United Arab Emirates.

“On January 3, 2024, as a result of a complicated negotiation process, 248 Russian servicemen were returned from the territory controlled by the Kiev regime. The return of the Russian servicemen from captivity was made possible thanks to the humanitarian mediation of the United Arab Emirates,” TASS news agency quoted the Russian Defense Ministry as saying in a statement. 

Al Jazeera quoted Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman, Dmytro Lubinets, as saying that 230 Ukrainian prisoners, including six civilians, had been released, marking what he said was the 49th exchange between the two sides.

Armenpress: Magnitude 3,3 earthquake hits Armenia-Georgia border area

 08:37, 4 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. A magnitude 3,3 earthquake was detected on the Armenia-Georgia border area at 03:40, January 4, the Armenian Seismic Protection Agency reported.

The quake hit 8km north-east from the town of Tashir at a depth of 10km.

The earthquake was felt at an intensity of 4-5 MSK in the epicenter. It was felt at an intensity of 3 MSK in the villages of Sarchapet, Norashen, Dzoramut, Metsavan and Saratovka, and the town of Tashir.

No damages were reported.

Armenia looks forward to working jointly with Belgian Presidency of the Council of the EU – FM Mirzoyan

 10:35, 4 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 4, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan has lauded Spain for its activities during its Presidency of the Council of the EU and welcomed Belgium’s presidency in 2024.

“My congratulations to José Manuel Albares and outgoing Spanish Presidency of the Council of the EU for activities during exceptionally challenging times,” Mirzoyan said in a statement on X. “Appreciated that EU Council Spanish Presidency advanced our common agenda, aimed at further strengthening EU’s partnership with Armenia based on shared vision.”

“Warmly welcoming Belgium’s Presidency of EU Council, I wish every success to my counterpart Hadja Lahbib. Armenia looks forward to working jointly with Belgian Presidency of the Council of the EU to further deepen & strengthen our partnership with EU to effectively meet aspirations of our citizens,” he added.