Armenian Government Hinting About Lack Of Water

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT HINTING ABOUT LACK OF WATER

17:47 February 09, 2015

EcoLur

Though Haypethydromet Service stated that it’s too early to speak
about the lack of water, but the Armenian Government already makes
hints about lack of water. Under the official website of the Armenian
Government, on the session of February 5, the government made a
reference the problem of water lack in the country. In this regard,
the website particularly says, “…under the specialists, this year
we will also experience lack of water, and the PM said that the
preparation to spring agricultural works were discussed with the
competent bodies at the meeting with the Armenian President. It was
arranged to discuss this issue also next week, as there is a matter
of 3 billion AMD subsiding and organizing mechanical irrigation.”

Reminder: 2014 was announced as a year of water lack and 270 million
cum water was let out of Lake Sevan to irrigate Ararat Valley.

http://ecolur.org/en/news/officials/armenian-government-hinting-about-lack-of-water/7008/

Nature Protection Minister And Extraordinary And Plenipotentiary Amb

NATURE PROTECTION MINISTER AND EXTRAORDINARY AND PLENIPOTENTIARY AMBASSADOR OF CZECH REPUBLIC TO ARMENIA DISCUSSED COOPERATION PERSPECTIVES

17:37 February 09, 2015

EcoLur

On February 9, Minister of Nature Protection of the Republic of
Armenia Aramayis Grigoryan received Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of the Czech Republic to the Republic of Armenia
Petr Mikyska. Ambassador Mikyska proposed to continue cooperation in
consistent management of hazardous substances and hazardous wastes.

Aramayis Grigoryan expressed his hope that the arrangements made
within the joint declaration between the relevant departments of both
countries will serve as a basis for many new projects.

The parties discusses cooperation perspectives in climate change
adaptation and mitigation, conservation of atmospheric air,
conservation and reclaiming of soil, ecotourism development in Armenia
and effective and sustainable management of specially protected areas
of nature.

Cooperation between “Dilijan” and “Krnkosh” national parks will
continue in the frames of the joint declaration signed between the
environmental departments of both countries.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://ecolur.org/en/news/officials/nature-protection-minister-and-extraordinary-and-plenipotentiary-ambassador-of-czech-republic-to-armenia-discussed-cooperation-perspectives/7007/

Let Political Parties Help But Not Direct Protest: Entrepreneurs Abo

LET POLITICAL PARTIES HELP BUT NOT DIRECT PROTEST: ENTREPRENEURS ABOUT PROTEST MOVEMENT

02.10.2015 15:29 epress.am

Certain small and medium sized entrepreneurs have simultaneously
closed their businesses in protest to the Law on Turnover Tax. Today,
during a press conference, Armenian Association of Small Businessmen
NGO president Stepan Aslanyan (pictured on the right) said that since
the beginning of February around 700 businesses have closed. Aslanyan
observed that a few underground shopes at the “Barekamutyun” subway
station have closed, while business has always been good there.

Armenian Vendors NGO president Gagik Danielyan added that those
numbers are not final because businesses are closing every day. “Go
to the markets on Firdusi Street, in Malatya, you’ll see many booths
closed,” said Danielyan.

The two guest speakers claimed that law’s new version would have
serious damage to small and medium sized businesses.

According to Aslanyan, in addition to delaying the Law on Turnover Tax,
the government needs to begin discussions with the entrepreneurs.

That process still has not begun, but the organizations dealing with
the issues of entrepreneurs propose that a Government delegation
walk around trade centers to conduct discussions, which would allow
entrepreneurs to continue their daily work.

Gagik Danielyan said that they do not wish to be included in any
political activities. “We want to be able to earn our daily bread
for our families. We are telling the political parties that if they
can help, so be it, but don’t direct us,” said Danielyan.

The entrepreneurs restarted their fast growing protests from last
September-October, which were halted after the government promised
to delay the compulsory inventorization of products until February
1st of 2015. The protest restarted yesterday, because the government
refused to include other amendments to the law.

Last year, the protesters against the Law on Turnover Tax stated that
they do not have possibility of inventorizing their products, because
large distributors often do not give them invoices. In addition,
in the case of inventorizing, their turnover would be over the legal
minimum threshold of 58.3 million AMD ($126,000), so they would be
forced to pay VAT, which would be impossible for small and medium sized
businesses. Among the business owners, some demand that they sharply
increase the threshold, while others demand the law be nullified.

Those who work in the gold trade have stressed that once the new law
comes into effect they would be forced to immediately halt their work.

Certain experts have noted that the inclusion of the Law on Turnover
Tax would entirely wipe out small and medium sized businesses,
while the members of government claim that the purpose is to fight
against the illegal practices in large businesses and that they are
not prepared to consider the law void.

During last year’s protest, the merchants received backlash from
the owners of large marketplaces they rent space from. A few large
marketplaces threatened to fire (or cancel rent contracts) those
merchants who did not show up to work and protested. The most covered
case was that of Vosku Shuka owner Vagharsh Abrahamyan who broke tables
and showcases of those merchants who participated in the protests. the
destructive behavior of Abrahamyan was not dealt with by the police.

http://www.epress.am/en/2015/02/10/let-political-parties-help-but-not-direct-protest-entrepreneurs-about-protest-movement.html

Monitoring: Azerbaijan Refuses To Lead The OSCE Mission To Its Front

MONITORING: AZERBAIJAN REFUSES TO LEAD THE OSCE MISSION TO ITS FRONT-LINES

13:46, 10 Feb 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

On February 10, in accordance with the arrangement reached with
the authorities of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, the OSCE Mission
conducted a planned monitoring of the Line of Contact between the
armed forces of Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan in the east direction
of the Seisulan settlement of the NKR Martakert region.

>From the positions of the NKR Defense Army, the monitoring was
conducted by Field Assistants of the Personal Representative of the
OSCE Chairman-in-Office Yevgeny Sharov (Ukraine) and Khristo Khristov
(Bulgaria), as well as by staff member of the Office Peter Svedberg
(Sweden).

>From the opposite side of the Line of Contact, the monitoring was
conducted by Field Assistant of the Personal Representative of the OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Jiri Aberle (Czech Republic) and Personal Assistant
to the Personal Representative of the CiO Simon Tiller (Great Britain).

The monitoring passed in accordance with the agreed schedule. No
violation of the cease-fire regime was registered. However, the Azeri
side did not lead the OSCE mission to its front-lines.

>From the Karabakh side, the monitoring mission was accompanied by
representatives of the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry
of Defense.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/02/10/monitoring-azerbaijan-refuses-to-lead-the-osce-mission-to-its-front-lines/

ARKA News Agency Correspondent Wins Rostelecom’s Contest In Twitter

ARKA NEWS AGENCY CORRESPONDENT WINS ROSTELECOM’S CONTEST IN TWITTER

YEREVAN, February 10. /ARKA/. Inna Verlinskaya, a correspondent at ARKA
News Agency, has won Russian Rostelecom Telecommunication Company’s
contest in Twitter, the company’s press office reported on Monday.

On September 29, 2014, Rostelecom announced its Fourth Annual Contest
of Journalists titled ‘Technologies for Life – Light Velocity Internet’
in Russia.

The grand prize in this contest is a trip with a Russian delegation
to Huawei headquarters in Shenzhen, China in autumn 2015.

This project was launched in Armenia on December 23. Along with
this contest announcement, another contest announcement appeared on
the company’s page in Twitter – contenders here had to translate a
record about the launch of the contest in Armenia from Armenian to
Russian language.

“We are happy to name the winner – Inna Verlinskaya, ARKA News Agency’s
correspondent, to whom a corporate gift was handed in recent days,”
the company says in its press release.

The company also says that ‘Technologies for Life – Light Velocity
Internet’ contest is under way now and every media representative
who has a published article related to telecommunication may join
this race by posting the article on The winner from
Armenia will travel to China together with winners from Russia.

Journalists working in various areas – radio, television, Internet and
news agencies, as well as bloggers may take part in the contest. The
best articles will be selected by the professional jury made up of
representatives of IT community and Armenian media outlets.

Karen Vardanyan; the executive director of the Union of Information
Technology Enterprises; Bagrat Yengibaryan, director of the Enterprise
Incubator Foundation; Yeva Yusyan, head of Microsoft Armenia; Galina
Davidyan, director of Novosti-Armenia International News Agency,
head of Rostelecom Group’s GNC-Alfa CJSC and director of Armenpress
News Agency Aram Ananyan.

The first contest was conducted in 2011. It attracts no less than
500 articles every year.

‘Technologies for Life’ project is being implemented to attract
media outlets and bloggers to unbiased and higher-quality coverage
of innovative technologies and services and their application in
various areas.

Details are available on Applications are received
here. The application submission deadline is April 10, 2015.

The contest is organized by Rostelecom jointly with Huawei, the
Russian Association of Electronic Communications and Mikhaylov&Partners
under information support from flagship regional Russian and Armenian
media outlets.

GNC-ALFA CJSC, Armenian subsidiary of Russia’s Rostelecom, started
selling telecommunication services in December 2012 under Rostelecom
brand. In late 2012, it offered super-speed Internet as well as IP
television and telephony services to clients.

The company’s fiber optic network covers 80% of Armenia’s territory
stretching 2,500 kilometers across the country.

The company has built a backbone fiber optic cable from Iran, as well
as two outputs through Georgia. –0–

http://telecom.arka.am/en/news/internet/arka_news_agency_correspondent_wins_rostelecom_s_contest_in_twitter/#sthash.1Xqjmoav.dpuf
www.smi.rt.ru.
www.smi.rt.ru.

If Turkey And Russia Achieve Agreement On Karabakh

IF TURKEY AND RUSSIA ACHIEVE AGREEMENT ON KARABAKH

Igor Muradyan, Political Analyst
Politics – 10 February 2015, 15:41

The European Union does not bear responsibility for the countries of
the South Caucasus, and there is not a notion of area of responsibility
of the European Union. The EU may influence security only through its
political reputation, and there is not a real lever of influence on
security issues even after creating a foreign political service.

The European Union is trying to revise their views on regional
conflicts, making those regions more accessible, involving them in
social, political and economic processes.

The former metropolises must realize that these intentions are aimed
at the settlement of conflicts. Peoples living in conflict areas have
the right to benefit from the advantages of broader cooperation with
the European Union and, at the same time, observe certain conditions,
keeping loyal to European values.

For the time being, it is hard to tell how the process will go. For
example, Georgia and Azerbaijan were cautious to this initiative,
Azerbaijan was hostile. The European Union is trying to fulfill these
principles within the framework of Eastern Partnership, defining the
advantages and commitments of the members of the project.

The European Union has assessed the arms race as a negative phenomenon
but confessed that it has no lever to influence the state of things.

For the time being, it is not known what the official political stance
on arms race and war of snipers in the area of the Karabakh conflict
is. Only the continuation of the process of settlement mediated by the
Minsk Group is considered, which is supported by the European Union.

The European Union thinks the probability of military intervention
in the conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is low. At the same
time, having the necessary information, at a time of war the EU may
put political pressure but cannot force stopping military actions.

One can state for sure that the European Union will be against
military actions but will not condemn any of the sides because it will
hardly condemn the aggressor. The aggressor will not be mentioned or
identified in the political statement.

These are the current perceptions in Europe, and everything may change
if Russia and Turkey achieve certain agreements on Karabakh.

http://www.lragir.am/index/eng/0/politics/view/33614#sthash.lmWk13S6.dpuf

Rubin: US Ready To Help Armenia In Overcoming Economic Problems

RUBIN: US READY TO HELP ARMENIA IN OVERCOMING ECONOMIC PROBLEMS

13:52, 10.02.2015

WASHINGTON, DC. – The United States are ready to help Armenia and
other regional states in overcoming economic problems that occurred
because of deteriorating economic situation in Russia, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State Eric Rubin said.

The officials in Washington realize that economic difficulties in
Russia have an impact on other countries, and the U.S. is ready
to work with the governments of these states to help them overcome
the obstacles.

Eric Rubin noted that economic difficulties in Russia were caused
rather by reduction in energy prices and insufficient diversification
of Russian economy, than by western sanctions.

The goal of sanctions is not to punish other regional states,
Rubin said, adding that the issue will be high on the agenda of the
meetings between new Ambassador Richard Mills with Armenian leadership
in Yerevan.

The politician said U.S. policy on South Caucasus is based on support
of sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of states. At
the same time U.S. supports economic growth, democracy development
and free speech in these countries.

Eric Rubnin emphasized that the United States consider their relations
with the regional states in the context of development of bilateral
ties, rather than in terms of competitiveness with Russia.

http://news.am/eng/news/251970.html

Zhoghovurd: Armswissbank And Artsakhbank To Declare Merger

ZHOGHOVURD: ARMSWISSBANK AND ARTSAKHBANK TO DECLARE MERGER

10:53 10/02/2015 >> DAILY PRESS

Armswissbank and Artsakhbank will declare a merger soon, Zhoghovurd writes.

Speaking to the newspaper, a representative of Artsakhbank denied the
report. The newspaper has learnt, however, that 43.1% of Artsakhbank’s
shares and 80% of Armswissbank’s shares belong to the same person,
Vartan Sirmakes.

“It is known that it is shareholders that make a decision on banks’
merger. And the presence of the same shareholder in two banks
facilitates this process to a great extent,” the newspaper notes.

Source: Panorama.am

Russian Prosecutors May Act As Prosecution In Gyumri Murder Case

RUSSIAN PROSECUTORS MAY ACT AS PROSECUTION IN GYUMRI MURDER CASE

16:08 10/02/2015 >> LAW

Representatives of Russia’s Prosecutor’s Office could act as a
prosecution in the case of the murder of the Avetisyan family in the
Armenian city of Gyumri, Russian Chief Military Prosecutor Sergei
Fredinsky has said, according to RIA Novosti.

“I think so,” Fredinsky told reporters. Meanwhile, he added that this
issue has not been discussed yet.

Russia’s Military Prosecutor’s Office is prepared to get involved in
the process, according to him.

Six members of one family, including a two-year-old child, were shot
dead in their house in Gyumri on January 12. A six-month-old baby
was hospitalized with stab wounds. He died in hospital on January 12.

Valery Permyakov, a serviceman of the 102nd Russian military base
stationed in Gyumri, the main suspect in the murder, was detained by
Russian border guards while attempting to cross the Armenian-Turkish
border near Yerazgavors village in Armenia’s Shirak province.

Permyakov is held in custody at the Russian military base. He was
questioned and confessed to the crime. Permyakov is charged under
Article 105.2 and 338.2 of the Russian Criminal Code (murder and
desertion). Also, Armenian Investigative Committee brought a charge
against Permyakov under Article 104 part 2 point 1 (murder of two or
more persons) of the Armenian Criminal Code.

http://www.panorama.am/en/law/2015/02/10/fredinsky-permyakov/

Nagorno-Karabakh: The Land That Doesn’t Exist

NAGORNO-KARABAKH: THE LAND THAT DOESN’T EXIST

Ethnically Armenian, annexed to Azerbaijan, unrecognised by almost
everyone: Nagorno-Karabakh could be the world’s least-known wonder

Mark Stratton | Issue 150 | September 2014

“This is the miracle of Gandzasar,” said Galust, pointing to a
missile embedded in the 13th-century mountaintop monastery where
locals say John the Baptist’s head is buried. “It hit,” said Galust,
“but never exploded.”

It was difficult reconciling the loveliness of this medieval
treasure’s valley location and exquisite 16-sided tambour, with the
bulletholes peppering its facade. Yet given the breakaway republic
of Nagorno-Karabakh’s recent history, following 70 years of Soviet
atheism, the real miracle of Gandzasar is that it remains standing
at all.

Nagorno nowhere

Nagorno-Karabakh, which perches like a jagged crown above northern
Iran, remerged after the USSR went supernova in the early 1990s and
sent breakaway Caucasus republics spiralling out of control like
rudderless sputniks. Chechnya, South Ossetia and Abkhazia remain
volatile. But a ceasefire between Karabakh separatists, their
Armenian allies and Azerbaijan, which fought for six years over
Nagorno-Karabakh, has held since 1994, allowing travellers to visit
what has become a de facto (although internationally unrecognised)
eastern extension of Armenia.

Stalin sowed the seeds of conflict in the region in 1921, pursuing
a policy of divide-and-rule to combat ethnic opposition within the
fledgling USSR. He severed predominately Christian Nagorno-Karabakh
from Armenia, and spliced it to the mainly Muslim Azerbaijan Soviet
Socialist Republic. The enclave sank into anonymity until Stalin’s
Machiavellian legacy came back to haunt the USSR’s disintegration,
when simmering ethnic tensions resurfaced.

Cradle of Christendom

It was from Armenia’s sun-drenched capital, Yerevan, that I made the
330km drive east into Nagorno-Karabakh: the only access corridor. With
me was Armenian guide, Galust Hovsepyan, whose world-weary countenance
belied his encyclopaedic brilliance for history and art.

In Yerevan we visited several poignant reminders of the 1988-94
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, such as the Mother Armenia Military Museum
and Yerablur Cemetery, where 7,000 Armenians are buried from a conflict
that cost 30,000 lives.

>From Yerevan it was a magnificent day’s drive through the cradle
of Christendom to reach Stepanakert, Nagorno-Karabakh’s capital. En
route, along Armenia’s Turkish border, roadside vendors sold sweet
watermelons, peaches, dried apricots and demijohns of areni wine.

Behind, snow-capped Mt Ararat rose 5,137m to a summit that allegedly
received Noah’s ark.

Mt Ararat was also annexed in 1921 to pacify Turkey but remains highly
auspicious to Armenians. On its foothills, at Khor Virap Monastery,
I clambered into a coal-black zindan (pit dungeon) where St Gregory
the Illuminator spent 13 miserable years imprisoned before emerging
to convert Armenia to Christianity in AD 301 – making it the world’s
first Christian nation.

Beyond Ararat the road soared above 2,000m onto Syunik’s rolling
golden prairie. It then entered the contentious Lachin Corridor, the
umbilical cord connecting Armenia and 4,400 sq km Nagorno-Karabakh
through now occupied Azerbaijan territory.

As we crossed over the River Ahavno, a border sign proclaimed ‘Welcome
to the Mountainous Republic of Karabakh’. However, the locals here
tend to call it Artsakh – nagorno (‘mountain’ in Russian) and karabakh
(‘black garden’ in Turkic) echo years of historic foreign domination.

A matter of life or death

There’s no obvious wartime hangover in modern Stepanakert, a vibrantly
breezy little capital that’s been industriously reborn. A youthful
population frequents airy boulevards of boutiques and cafes in a city
putting down roots. Living in a ceasefire zone seemed forgotten every
evening around the Armenia Hotel; on the former Soviet parade ground
of Renaissance Square, goose-stepping soldiers have been superseded by
promenading crowds. At 7pm I joined the nightly migration to Stepan
Shahumyan Park, where a funky fountain spewed in sync to musical
eclecticism – from Shostakovich to Shakira.

Stepanakert Museum holds evidence of centuries of Roman, Persian and
Turkic conquest. But raven-haired museum guide, Gayaneh, was keen to
reaffirm the territory’s Christian heritage, showing me khachkars,
medieval memorial stones finely decorated by geometric patterning
reminiscent of Celtic crosses.

When the war started, Gayaneh – then aged two – was evacuated to
Yerevan. “My father was a mathematician and stayed to fight as a tank
driver,” she said. This petite young woman told me she too would
fight for Artsakh. It reminded me of something I’d read by Russian
dissident Andrei Sakharov: ‘For Azerbaijan the issue of Karabakh is
a matter of ambition; for the Armenians of Karabakh, it is a matter
of life or death.’

“No country in the world recognises them,” Galust explained to us.

“But the Karabakh people are very stubborn and will never leave
these lands.”

“We Are Our Mountains” monument (Shutterstock)

Cultural corners

Over the next few days we sought out far-flung expressions of
Armenian culture in the form of secreted monasteries, fortresses
and ancient cities. First we visited the former capital Shushi, 10km
from Stepanakert. This mountaintop fortress tops the awe-inspiring
Karkar River canyon, the cliffs of which concertina into synclines as
if squeezed through a cook’s icing bag. Shushi’s war-damaged streets
showed glimpses of what once was an elegant multi-faith cosmopolitan
city: there were Persian inscriptions, Moorish Arabian arches and
the tiled minarets of 19th-century mosques. Shushi’s resident Muslim
Azeri worshipped here until recently, fleeing only in 1992 after
being overrun by Karabakh fighters in a ferocious battle that turned
the war in the latter’s favour.

Shushi’s restored 19th-century Ghazanchetsots Cathedral highlights
an interesting dichotomy. Nagorno-Karabakh’s reviving self-identity
centres on its Christian heritage yet during Soviet times practising
religion was forbidden so worship dwindled and churches fell into
disrepair.

After visiting Gandzasar’s hilltop medieval church, we took another
sublime drive to Dadivank Monastery. West of 3,340m Mrav Mountain,
we skirted south of Azerbaijan’s border into the Tartar Valley’s
fertile mosaic of fruit orchards and walnut groves. Here, the sparsely
populated villages contained abandoned Russian T-72 tanks and defunct
Soviet kolkhoz (collective farms). Indicative of the ever-present
Karabakh hospitality, an old man halted his donkey to press hazelnuts
into my hand with a toothless grin.

Galust hadn’t made this journey often so stopped to ask three old men
seated roadside how far Dadivank was. “Fifteen kilometres,” said one.

“Seventeen,” growled another. “It’s 20km!” the third exploded. “You’ve
both always talked rubbish.” When we returned two hours later, the
trio hadn’t budged.

Dadivank is completely unsigned and invisible from the road. Accessed
by a steep track onto a mountain terrace, the terracottacoloured
tenth-century building possesses the austere orthodoxy of mountainous
monasteries I’d seen in Greece and the Holy Land. “It was abandoned
and decayed during Soviet Azerbaijan rule. Not one rouble was spent
maintaining it,” complained Galust.

But the monastery touches the very nerve-ends of Christianity. Dadi,
a pupil of St Thaddeus (Jude the Apostle), is said to have travelled
to Armenia two millennia ago, spreading the gospel. The church was
originally built in the fourth century but rebuilt in medieval times.

Its antiquated decor comprises sumptuous bas-reliefs featuring Jude and
archaic Armenian script including a testament of Queen Arzou-Khatoun
bemoaning her sons’ martyrdom to Turkish invaders.

Unknown world wonder?

My adventures in the South Caucasus ended around eastern
Nagorno-Karabakh’s militarily imposed buffer zone within seized
Azerbaijan territory. It’s accessed via Askeran, where the turreted
wall of Mayraberd Fortress infills a valley like a row of yellowing
dentures. It was constructed by 16th-century Persian occupiers to
block access into Nagorno-Karabakh from the Caspian plains eastwards.

The monastery of Dadivank, Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (Shutterstock)

As I scrambled among the overgrown ruins, 75-year-old Zhora wandered
out from his garden of pomegranates and black grapes. “We used to
share Askeran with Azeris. We helped each other,” he said. “But it
became dangerous here in 1988 when there was violence. I was born
here and will never leave because my son was killed and buried here.”

Galust struggled to interpret Zhora’s dialect, which was flecked
with Russian and Farsi diction. But he understood his sentiments,
strident enough to suggest rapprochement with his former Azeri
neighbours remained distant.

Beyond Askeran, the mountains melted into the Caspian plain stretching
deep into sovereign Azerbaijan. Galust tuned in to an Azerbaijani
radio station while we gazed over Agdam, an Azeri ghost town, once
home to 80,000 people before being destroyed by Armenian forces.

Abandoned minarets poked above the rubble of shelled buildings.

The object of our journey was Tigranakert, a 2,000-year-old city that
may one day be celebrated as an ancient wonder of the world. For
now though, a small museum hosts just a fraction of the treasures
trickling from recent archaeological excavations. These reflect the
power of Armenian king, Tigram the Great, whose once formidable empire
(95-55BC) stretched from the Mediterranean to the Caspian. Marc Anthony
and then seventh-century Arab invaders later occupied Tigranakert
before its descent into obscurity.

“Tigranakert is unknown because there was a Soviet prison here so
it couldn’t be excavated until after the war,” explained Varham,
an onsite archaeologist. Most of the artefacts, coins, weapons and
tools are being catalogued in Yerevan. “The richness of these finds
and this architecture demonstrates that several thousand years ago
this was a major trading city between China and Arabia,” he added.

I hiked up to Tigranakert’s mountainside citadel and rested on
the remains of its first-century foundations as blistering hot
winds rasped the dry grass. I was totally alone bar scurrying sand
lizards and looping vultures. Such a vast empire, I reflected,
so completely forgotten. Then distant artillery fire from Armenian
military manoeuvres jolted me back from my heat-hazed daze into the
modern realpolitik of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“This status quo won’t change for some time but maybe in 20 years,
when the sentiments of war have died down, there can be an agreement,”
hoped Galust.

Nagorno-Karabakh remains controversial. And I was aware that, on my
travels, I hadn’t heard the Azerbaijani side of the argument. But
for now, this obscure breakaway republic, so rich in hospitality and
history, provides an absorbing offbeat break away.

The author travelled with Regent Holidays. Includes UK flights,
time in Yerevan, transportation to and around Nagorno-Karabakh,
most meals and a guide.

http://www.wanderlust.co.uk/magazine/articles/destinations/nagorno-karabakh-the-land-that-doesnt-exist?page=all