TURKISH press: Azerbaijan pledges peaceful coexistence with Armenian citizens in Nagorno-Karabakh

A Russian peacekeeper stands guard on a road in the town of Lachin, Azerbaijan, Dec. 1, 2020. (AFP Photo)

Azerbaijan is resolute to reintegrate its citizens of Armenian origin living in the Nagorno-Karabakh region into the country's political, social and economic sphere, Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov said Thursday.

Azerbaijan's foreign minister made the remarks at the 27th Meeting of the Council of Ministers of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE).

Bayramov, during the videoconference, talked about the Nagorno-Karabakh operation that liberated occupied territories, and the cease-fire deal signed between Azerbaijan and Armenia under the mediation of Russia.

He said the trilateral statement signed on Nov. 10 had created the ground for putting an end to the 30-year armed conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan and added that the deal includes an important article on the return of Azerbaijani migrants to their homes under the supervision of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

In contrast, Armenia had forced over 1 million Azerbaijanis to leave their homes after 1980.

Bayramov thanked Turkey and Russia for their efforts toward making this agreement a reality.

"These neighboring states play an important role as guarantors of the above-mentioned agreement, the implementation of which will ensure long-overdue peace and stability in the South Caucasus region," he stressed.

Bayramov underlined that after the return of the Aghdam, Kalbajar and Lachin districts to Azerbaijan, Azerbaijani and Armenian residents of these areas will have equal rights, irrespective of their ethnic background.

"Azerbaijan is resolute to reintegrate its citizens of Armenian origin residing in the territories of the Nagorno-Karabakh region of the Republic of Azerbaijan into its political, social, economic space, guaranteeing the same rights and freedoms with all the citizens of Azerbaijan regardless of their ethnic, religious affiliation on an equal and nondiscriminatory basis. The Constitution of the Republic of Azerbaijan provides a solid legal framework in this regard," he said.

"Peaceful coexistence of Azerbaijani and Armenian residents of the conflict-affected territories based on respect to each other's security, ethnic and religious identity within the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan must and shall be finally ensured," he added.

Bayramov also noted that with the agreement, all economic and transport links in the region will be opened and a Turkish-Russian joint monitoring center will be established to monitor the implementation of the agreements.

Relations between the former Soviet republics have been tense since 1991 when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.

Fresh clashes erupted between Armenia and Azerbaijan in late September, rekindling the Caucasus neighbors' decadeslong conflict over the region.

During the conflict, Azerbaijan liberated several towns and nearly 300 settlements and villages from the Armenian occupation.

Fierce fighting persisted for six weeks despite efforts by France, Russia and the U.S. to broker cease-fires, before Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a Moscow-brokered peace deal on Nov. 9.

The agreement was signed after Baku's army overwhelmed the separatist forces and threatened to advance on Karabakh's main city Stepanakert (Khankendi).

The deal has sparked celebrations in Azerbaijan and fury in Armenia, where the country's prime minister, Nikol Pashinian, is facing mounting criticism for agreeing to the deal.

Under the agreement, which leaves Karabakh's future political status in limbo, Armenia lost control of parts of the enclave as well as the seven adjacent districts that it seized during the 1990s war.

Nearly 2,000 Russian peacekeepers have been deployed between the two sides and along the Lachin corridor, a 60-kilometer (35-mile) route through the district that connects Stepanakert to Armenia.

TURKISH press: Russian journalists illegally filming Turkish drone production center detained

TURKISH press: Best road map for post-Karabakh war process

An Azerbaijani soldier stands guard at a checkpoint on a road entering Fuzuli province, Azerbaijan, Dec. 2, 2020. (AFP Photo)

The second Karabakh war is over, and peace has come. But peace is not just an absence of war; it also should involve a settlement that makes future war no longer necessary or desirable. In the search for a functional settlement in Karabakh, it might be worth examining the political structures which were established in Northern Ireland in 1998 to accommodate diverse interests and make reconciliation possible between two divided communities.

After a 28-year conflict in the north of Ireland, a peace agreement was signed, known as the Good Friday Agreement of 1998. Despite some difficult moments, it has stood the test of time. There are a number of elements within it that might be appropriate to apply to the Karabakh conflict to assist the development of long-term peace and stability.

What we have in Karabakh, like in Northern Ireland, is a conflict between two nationalities. Finding an accommodation between what are effectively two nations sharing the same territory involves discovering a way these historic peoples can share this land in peaceful coexistence. The previous Armenian regime attempted to solve the nationalities issue by removing one of them entirely. It failed, and nothing of the sort should be attempted again.

For the next five years, at least, the Armenian population of two-thirds of the former Nagorno-Karabakh will be isolated from their Azerbaijani neighbors. It would be very unfortunate if they remain a ringed-off homogeneous enclave within the Azerbaijani state, guarded by Russian forces. That would maintain a “siege mentality” which would certainly not be conducive to the building of future good relations between the two peoples of Karabakh, or between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The lessons of Northern Ireland suggest there needs to be development of mutual trust and interest within Karabakh itself, as well as between Armenia and Azerbaijan to address the totality of relations in the conflict. So how can this be done?

The settlement in the north of Ireland was built from strands that addressed all the crucial relationships. First, there was an internal arrangement that involved the establishment of an inclusive power-sharing government with powers over local aspects like the economy, education, health, agriculture, infrastructure and policing. This government was a mandatory coalition including ministers from each community and headed by two joint first ministers. Applied to Karabakh, this would provide for a cabinet made up of equal numbers of Armenians and Azerbaijanis, sharing executive authority.

A local legislative assembly made of representatives from both communities, elected on a proportional basis, also makes up the consociational structures in Northern Ireland which could be a model for Karabakh. This would facilitate power-sharing in which the two peoples are required to engage with one another on an equal basis, with veto power safeguards provided to each in legislative affairs, to protect the rights and interests of all. Statutory measures to ensure cultural and economic equality would be an important aspect of this.

A question will undoubtedly emerge about what the size and population composition of a new Karabakh might be. It should not be the territory of the old Soviet-imposed Nagorno-Karabakh. It would be better to form an autonomous region out of a roughly equal populace of Armenians and Azerbaijanis sharing the same local issues. That removes a potential minority problem faced by one of the communities.

Policing and justice acceptable to both peoples could be provided, as in Northern Ireland, through 50/50 recruitment to a local police force. It would have a distinct uniform and be unarmed. The decommissioning of all private arms would be insisted upon and carried out by the peacekeeping forces. Only state forces and any remaining peacekeepers would carry weapons.

As in the Good Friday Agreement, the wider relationship between Armenia and Azerbaijan could be provided for through an intergovernmental council in which the respective foreign and other relevant ministers would work together, consulting and cooperating in the mutual interest.

Issues like regional energy security, the development of infrastructure projects, economic resources and tourism would be discussed and collaborated on. The aim would be to build on the development of the totality of relationships between Armenians and Azerbaijanis in a harmonious and mutually beneficial way. It might even be desirable to establish an adjunct to such a council involving representation from Georgia to build a wider governmental structure for the region on the lines of the old Transcaucasian model.

This process would be important for Armenia, in particular. Due to the occupation, Armenia has been isolated from the rest of the region for three decades. Azerbaijan already has gained the benefits of being a corridor of east-west and north-south trade and transport links. Armenia could now be integrated into the wider economic sphere, as well as the energy supply routes that have, of necessity, bypassed the country which helped develop Azerbaijan into a prosperous country. Armenia, given a new dispensation, could develop in such a way that its population increases and its large number of migrant workers return home to their families.

All these relations, at executive and legislative levels, internally and regionally, would help build good relations and interdependence among peoples and states formerly in conflict. Confidence in each other would develop, and barriers and stereotypes would be broken down. The dissensions of the past could be replaced by the development of fraternal relations in the longer term.

In the short term, the supervisory powers of Russia and Turkey would have a vital role to play. These powers, working closely together, would provide for regional security and stability. All would be locked into a common purpose for the betterment of all. The potential of this vital geostrategic region at the heart of Eurasia could be fulfilled, bringing about the reconstruction of Karabakh and the enrichment of its people.

There will, of course, be problems on the road to peace and reconciliation, some of which may threaten the very existence of such a project. However, an imperfect peace will always be preferable to the most perfect war.

*Irish historian, political analyst, author of "Great Britain against Russia in the Caucasus: Ottoman Turks, Armenians and Azerbaijanis caught up in geopolitics, war and revolution"

Asbarez: Anti-Armenian Provision Stripped from FY 2021 U.S. National Defense Authorization Act

December 4,  2020



Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI), Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ), Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA), and Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) were among the Congressional leaders who blocked the anti-Armenian Chabot-Cohen amendment from the final version of the FY2021 NDAA Bill.

ANCA Strongly Opposed One-Sided, Hostile Measure Advanced by Congressional Turkey Caucus Co-Chairs

WASHINGTON—U.S. Senate and House conferees on Thursday struck down the anti-Armenian Chabot-Cohen amendment – a hostile measure advanced by Congressional Turkey Caucus Co-Chairs Steve Chabot (R-OH) and Stephen Cohen (D-TN) as part of the Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 National Defense Authorization Bill.

The amendment – strongly opposed by the ANCA – would have called for a one-sided report on the status of selectively identified internally displaced persons in Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova, and Azerbaijan.

“We welcome today’s decision by NDAA conferees to strike down the Chabot-Cohen Amendment,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.  “This was, as we said from the start, a hostile, one-sided anti-Armenian measure – proposed by two of Ilham Aliyev’s most reliable Congressional apologists. Congress was right to reject it on a bipartisan basis.”

Senate Armed Services Committee Ranking Member Jack Reed (D-RI), House Energy and Commerce Committee Chair Frank Pallone (D-NJ), House Foreign Affairs Committee Senior Member Brad Sherman (D-CA), and House Armed Services Committee Senior Member Jackie Speier (D-CA) were among key Congressional leaders who worked with NDAA bill conferees, tasked to iron out differences between the Senate and House versions of the measure, to remove the one-sided Chabot-Cohen language.

ANCA Rapid Responders sent over 100,000 letters to Congressional leaders to oppose the Chabot-Cohen amendment, arguing that maintaining the provision “would further undermine the U.S. Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group as an honest broker, and set back the cause of peace by rewarding Azerbaijan’s brutal aggression against Artsakh.”

The FY 2021 NDAA Bill will now go back to the Senate and House for final Congressional approval and then head to the White House for the President’s signature.

Turkey is preparing Syrian mercenaries to fight in Kashmir: report

Greek City Times


By Paul Antonopoulos
Dec. 5, 2020

Turkey, which has previously sent Syrian mercenaries to Libya and
Azerbaijan, is preparing to send fighters to Kashmir to fight against
India.

According to ANF News, which quoted local sources in northern Syria,
Abu Emsha, the head of the Turkish-backed Suleyman Shah Brigades
terrorist organization that is a part of the so-called Syrian National
Army, informed his members five days ago that Ankara wanted to
reinforce Kashmir.

The head of the terrorist groups, Abu Emsha, said that Turkish
officers would later ask the commanders of other terrorist groups to
list the names of those who want to go to Kashmir.

Abu Emsha stated that those who will go from his terrorist group will
be registered in a list and they will receive $2000 in funding. Abu
Emsha told the militant fighters he met that Kashmir is a mountainous
region like Artsakh.

Local sources stated that Ankara has been conducting this activity in
Azaz, Jarablus, Al-Bab, Afrin and Idlib for a short time, picking the
names of the fighters to go. The sources say they will be transported
secretly.

The Turkish state stands by Pakistan on the Kashmir issue against
India. Like Qatar, Pakistan supports the Turkish state’s invasion
attacks in Northeast Syria.

The official news agency of the Turkish state, Anadolu Agency, reports
that the problem between India and Pakistan in Kashmir is equivalent
to the Artsakh problem.

The Turkish state’s attempt to send terrorists to Kashmir, according
to ANF News, comes at a time of escalation between Pakistan and India.

On November 13, both forces fired intensively against each other in
the Kashmir region. At least 13 people died and dozens were injured in
the mutual attacks.

The clashes and bombings took place along the 740km control line
separating Azad Kashmir (Pakistan) from Jammu Kashmir (India). Five
days ago, three Indian soldiers and three terrorists died in clashes
on the same line.

Kashmir has been divided between India and Pakistan, both nuclear
powers, since their independence in 1947. The conflict over Kashmir
has been the reason for major wars between the two countries since
then.

Ankara has also became active in Pakistan and Bangladesh for them
recognize Turkish occupied northern Cyprus.


 

RFE/RL Armenian Report – 12/04/2020

                                        Thursday, December 04, 2020

Armenian Authorities Expect First COVID-19 Vaccines In February
December 04, 2020
        • Naira Bulghadarian

Vials with a sticker reading "COVID-19 / Coronavirus vaccine / Injection only" 
and a medical syringe are seen in front of a displayed AstraZeneca logo. October 
31, 2020.

The Armenian government has commissioned 600,000 doses of coronavirus vaccines 
from World Health Organization-backed COVAX Facility and hopes to receive their 
first batch in February, a senior official said on Friday.

They will be enough to vaccinate 300,000 people making up roughly 10 percent of 
Armenia’s population.

According to Gayane Sahakian, the deputy director of the National Center for 
Disease Control and Prevention, medical and social workers, seniors and people 
suffering from chronic diseases will be the first to get vaccine shots free of 
charge.

COVAX is a global partnership which aims to finance COVID-19 vaccines to be 
distributed fairly to more than 180 countries that have joined it. It should 
give them access to several vaccine candidates in development globally. Vaccine 
manufacturers and suppliers will be chosen by the COVAX administration.

The Armenian government’s supply contract with COVAX is worth $6 million.

“The first vaccine which COVAX will make available to the participating 
countries is the one produced by the British company AstraZeneca,” Sahakian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “It is expected that the manufacturer will deliver it 
to COVAX in February or March.”

“We can directly apply to any other manufacturer and get vaccines from them,” 
she said. “But the cost will be quite high. Can we afford it? Of course we 
can’t. That is why we are mainly pinning our hopes on the COVAX Facility.”

Sahakian at the same time did not exclude that the government will urgently buy 
smaller quantities of vaccines from other sources for high risk categories of 
the population.


RUSSIA -- A school teacher receives a jab while being injected with Sputnik V 
vaccine against the coronavirus at a clinic in the town of Domodedovo near 
Moscow, December 3, 2020

Late last month the Russian Ministry of Health donated several dozen doses of 
the Russian vaccine Sputnik V to Armenia. It emerged on Friday that Health 
Minister Arsen Torosian and his deputy Artyom Smbatian are among Armenian 
volunteers vaccinated with Sputnik.

“He is feeling well and waiting for the next inoculation because the Russian 
vaccine involves two shots,” said Torosian’s spokesman, Alina Nikoghosian.

The Armenian health authorities have confirmed a total of nearly 140,000 
coronavirus cases so far. The real number of infections is believed to be much 
higher.



Armenia Setting Up New Anti-Corruption Body
December 04, 2020
        • Sargis Harutyunyan

Armenia -- Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian chairs a cabinet meeting in 
Yerevan, December 3, 2020.

The Armenian government has formally approved a bill calling for the creation of 
a special law-enforcement agency tasked with investigating corruption cases.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s cabinet sent the bill to the National Assembly 
on Thursday. The parliament controlled by Pashinian’s My Step bloc is widely 
expected to pass it.

Mariam Galstian, a senior official at the Armenian Ministry of Justice, said on 
Friday that the Anti-Corruption Committee (ACC) will start operating in the 
second half of 2021.

The committee will be set up in accordance with the government’s anti-graft 
strategy and a three-year action plan adopted in October 2019. It will inherit 
most of its powers from anti-corruption divisions of four Armenian 
law-enforcement agencies that have long prosecuted corruption-related crimes.

Galstian expressed confidence that the ACC will be in a much better position to 
combat bribery and other corrupt practices. “If you have several functions at a 
time you cannot specialize in corruption-related crimes,” she told RFE/RL’s 
Armenian Service.

Galstian also said that the ACC will recruit not only officers of the anti-graft 
divisions of the existing law-enforcement bodies but also other specialists. All 
of them will be selected by a special commission on a competitive basis after 
undergoing “integrity checks,” she said.

Under the government bill sent to the parliament, the commission would also 
shortlist two candidates for the post of ACC chairperson. The Armenian prime 
minister would appoint one of them as head of the new anti-graft agency.

In Galstian’s words, the commission will be made of not only state officials but 
also civil society members.

Pashinian has repeatedly claimed to have eliminated “systemic corruption” in 
Armenia since coming to power in May 2018. Law-enforcement authorities have 
launched dozens of high-profile corruption investigations during his rule.



Yerevan Keeps Pressing For Ex-Soviet Common Energy Market
December 04, 2020

RUSSIA -- A general view of the Atamanskaya compressor station, part of 
Gazprom's Power Of Siberia project outside the far eastern town of Svobodny, in 
Amur region, November 29, 2019

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian renewed on Friday his calls for the creation of a 
single energy market that would lower the cost of Russian natural gas imported 
by Armenia and other members of the Russian-led Eurasian Economic Union (EEU).

The gas price is currently significantly lower for consumers in Russia than 
other ex-Soviet states making up the trade bloc. Two of them, Armenia and 
Belarus, have said that this puts their manufactures reliant on gas in a 
disadvantaged position vis-à-vis their Russian competitors. They have pressed 
Moscow to agree to uniform EEU energy tariffs.

Pashinian insisted on this idea during a video conference with the presidents of 
Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan held in May.

Russian President Vladimir Putin rejected it, implying that Yerevan and Minsk 
should agree first to even deeper economic integration with Moscow which would 
result in a “single budget and system of taxation” for all EEU member states. 
Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Mher Grigorian indicated afterwards that Yerevan 
is not prepared for such integration.

Pashinian again made a case for “the formation of common markets for oil, oil 
products and gas” on Friday when he spoke at a virtual meeting of the prime 
ministers of Russia and the four other EEU member states.

“We emphasize the need to look for a joint solution and final settlement of the 
issue of forming a common gas market,” he said.

Pashinian’s government tried unsuccessfully this spring to get Russia’s Gazprom 
monopoly to cut the price of Russian gas delivered to Armenia. It pointed to a 
collapse in global energy prices resulting from the coronavirus pandemic.

The gas prices for Armenian households and corporate consumers actually rose by 
an average of about 5 percent in July. Armenian utility regulators argued that 
they had remained unchanged since a Gazprom raised its wholesale price for 
Armenia by 10 percent in January 2019.


Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2020 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 


CivilNet: The French Parliament Passes a Resolution Urging for Karabakh’s Recognition

CIVILNET.AM

4 December, 2020 19:34

The French Parliament followed the French Senate today by passing a resolution calling for the need to recognize Nagorno Karabakh as an independent state. The vote for the resolution passed, yet again, near-unanimously, with 188 votes for, 3 against, and 16 abstaining.

On November 25, the French Senate had passed a resolution, which also recommended that the French government formally recognize Karabakh. The vote for the resolution passed with 305 votes for and only one against. 

"The resolution is France's decisive protest against agression and ethnic cleansing of the population of Artsakh [Karabakh]," Armenian Foreing Minister Ara Ayvazyan said.

The following day Azerbaijan called the French envoy to a meeting with its foreign minister and called for France to be expelled from the Minsk Group. France, along with Russia and the United States, is one of three Co-Chairs of the Minsk Group since its inception in 1992. The Minsk Group was created to mediate peaceful negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan and has been unsuccessful in their attempt to reach a lasting peace agreement. It is worth noting that the Minsk Group was not included in the recent trilateral agreement mediated by Russia.

French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves le Drian denounced the passing of the resolution before the Parliament convened for a vote and noted that if such a decision was made then France would remove itself as a co-chair of the Minsk Group.

Both resolutions are non-binding in nature, but this decision adds pressure on the French Government to take action and formally recognize Nagorno Karabakh as an independent state.

CivilNet: Armenia’s Opposition Gives Pashinyan Until Tuesday to Resign

CIVILNET.AM

6 December, 2020 01:18

“Nikol Pashinyan has until Tuesday 12 pm to discuss with his political team, his advisers and make the decision to resign and leave,” Ishkhan Saghatelyan, a representative of Armenia’s opposition, said today.

The announcement came following a rally organized by “Salvation of Homeland”, a new movement created by a group of 17 opposition parties. Other than Prosperous Armenia, none of the other parties in the opposition hold seats in the current parliament. The group has been organizing protests in the country’s capital Yerevan for weeks to demand the resignation of the prime minister following his signing of the “end of war” statement with Azerbaijan’s and Russia’s presidents on November 9.

Saghatelyan noted that if Pashinyan does not resign by Tuesday, acts of civil disobedience will be held throughout the country.

During today’s rally, Vazgen Manukyan, the opposition’s candidate for prime minister, said that Pashinyan must understand that a voluntary resignation will be better for him.

Manukyan mentioned that a new leadership must understand the unclear points in the “end of war” statement signed by Pashinyan, and through negotiations, resolve those uncertainties in Armenia’s favor.