Karabakh’s Kashatagh residents picketing outside Armenia government rip reporter’s banner quoting PM Pashinyan

News.am, Armenia
Jan 29 2021

YEREVAN. – One of the—now former—residents of Artsakh’s (Nagorno-Karabakh) Kashatagh region protesting in front of the main building of the government of Armenia tore the banner—quoting Armenian PM Nikol Pashinyan's statement about Artsakh’s Shushi—in the hands of reporter Lia Sargsyan.

Subsequently, this demonstrator started chanting, "Nikol, Nikol."

To note, at Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan on Thursday, in response to this reporter's remarks that, "You said that Shushi is an Azerbaijani city," PM Pashinyan had countered by saying: "You personally shall bring my quote on paper that I said, 'Shushi is Azerbaijani,' and I will respond to you live."

And the reporter on Friday brought Pashinyan's respective quote in writing—and on a banner—to outside the aforesaid government building. "Among the citizens carrying out the [protest] action there were Nikol Pashinyan's supporters, who forcibly snatched the banner from my hand and tore [it]. The situation is quite frightening, this situation is intolerable. Yes, I can ask that question to the Prime Minister again, at any occasion. I want the citizen of the Republic of Armenia to know whether our prime minister considers Shushi Armenian or Azerbaijani," the reporter said.

3 families with minor children being deported from Austria to Georgia, Armenia, causing political scandal

News.am, Armenia
Jan 29 2021

The deportation—to Georgia and Armenia—of three families with minor children from Austria has caused a political scandal, EurAsia Daily reports.

Three families—including three teenagers who went to school in Vienna and Lower Austria—were deported from Austria to Georgia and Armenia yesterday. The deportation of minors has provoked the protest of people who know the families. Around 160 people protested in Vienna near the detention center where the detainees were being held. Police had to disperse the demonstrators who had blocked street with shopping carts and waste tanks.

The media sensibly escalated the deportation by taking close-up photos of the frightened children. In addition, due to technical problems, the teenagers spent three hours on the bus transporting the detainees, before being taken to the airport.

"While you were sleeping, three children spent three hours in a deportation bus; dogs and hundreds of policemen outside," Florian Klenk, editor-in-chief of the Vienna’s Falter magazine, tweeted.

The deportation of these students has also caused disagreements within the Austrian ruling coalition. Vice Chancellor Werner Kogler from the Green Party stated: "There is no legal obligation, especially in the pandemic conditions, to deport students who grew up here in Austria and are well integrated. We all have a political obligation to remain human.”

However, Interior Minister Karl Nehammer of the Austrian People's Party spoke in favor of the measure. "This is a decision of the Supreme Court, which has been reviewed several times, and the police must implement it," he said.

Mittagsjournal reports on the details of one of the deported Georgian families, which has a 12-year-old. In 2015, the family applied for asylum for the first time, but it was rejected. Meanwhile, the family continued to live in Austria. The Federal Administrative Court clarified that the long-term residence of the family was motivated by the fact that the migrants persistently opposed the formal demands, appealing the decisions.

It got to the point where the President of Austria, Alexander van der Bellen, had to comment on the situation. "I cannot and will not believe that we live in a country where it is really necessary in that way. I'm deeply shocked. We need to find a way to interact humanely and respectfully with each other, especially when the main victims are the children."

ANN/Armenian News – The Literary Armenian News – 01/31/2021

ՀԱՍՈՒՆՈՒԹՅՈՒՆ
Գրիշ Դավթյան
Հիմա, որ հասկանում եմ ցավը,
Ըմբռնու՛մ եմ
Նվիրականությունն ու սրբությունը,
Եվ չեմ հուսահատվում.
Քանզի
Զգացումներիս աստղերը,
Որ աչքերիս լույսով են պսպղում
Երկնքում
Լուսավորում են ճամփան,
Որով ընթանում եմ սիրահարված,
Զգացումներով արբած,
Հուսալիությամբ ամրացած։
Որպիսի~ ափունքներում եմ տեղավորվելու…
Չէոր սերը անստվեր է
Ու չի մթագնում սրտերը
Թափթփված եզերքից եզերք,
Հորիզոնից հորիզոն…
Ես հիշում եմ այն թխադեմ տղային,
Որ ծառերի ճնճղուկներին էր որսում
Ճղլանիով.
Որսում էր,
Այլ չէր դատապարտում
Կամ սպանում։
Կյանքն ու մահը խաղ չէին,
Այլ պարգեվ էին,
Որ կամարում էին եզերքները
Եվ հորիզոնները
Ասուպների ճախրանքով,
Աչքերիս լույսով պսպղացող
Աստղերի բույլերով։
Գիշերները երազում
Ես գրկում եմ թխադեմ պարմանությանս,
Որ մուշ-մուշ քնի իմ տաք գրկում,
Հանգստանա,
Ես նրա հոգնություններից եմ այսպես ամրացել,
Իմաստնացել, հասունացել,
Զգալով ցավը,
Ըմբռնելով
Նվիրականությունն ու սրբությունը։
Կյանքը հասունությամբ է քաղցրանում,
Հասնում արժանավորության,
Որպես ջանքի ու տքնության
Զարգուն բերք ու բարիք,
Արգասիք.
Շահված օրերի բերրիություն:

Grish Davtian has published three books of his poetries in Armenian, and one book in English.
He is the president of the Armenian Writers Association of California, and founding and former
editor of The Literary Armenian News. https://groong.org/tlg/
***************************************************************************
The homepage for The Literary Armenian News is at: groong.org/tlg/

Dr. Bedros Afeyan ([email protected]) is the editor of The Literary Armenian News (TLG), and will consider works not only of poetry, but also in the area of short fiction. Quality of language, excellence of translation, quality of song and images are all crucial to the aesthetic value of any work up for consideration.
Please note the following important guidelines:
  • All submissions to TLG MUST be sent to [email protected] and [email protected]. No others will be considered.
  • With your submission include a short bio about the author;
  • Submissions may not be anonymous, but at the author's request we may use their pen-name and/or withhold their Email address for purposes of privacy;
  • Submissions which have not yet been selected will continue to receive consideration for following issues;
  • In art, selection is necessarily a judgement call. As such, we will not argue why a particular submission was or was not selected;
  • There is no guarantee or promise that a submission will be published.

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CivilNet: Armenia’s pathways after the Second Karabakh War

CIVILNET.AM

31 հունվար, 2021 10:19

By Laurence BROERS

Beyond the battlefield, when we think about the salient visions of Armenia over the last 25 years this has been a double defeat. In the early 1990s, a national project led by the Pan-Armenian National Movement sought both to democratize and emancipate Armenia from the politics of eternal friends and enemies. Subsequently eclipsed by the outcomes of the first Karabakh war, that project resurfaced in a new iteration in 2018’s Velvet Revolution, a civic uprising focused on participation and clean governance. But due to the second Karabakh war, the Velvet Revolution now joins the ranks of democratic transitions in Eurasia engulfed in violent conflict, and with an uncertain future.

An alternative project sought to normalize the territorially “augmented Armenia” that emerged from the first Karabakh war as a viable and durable reality. Whereas the occupation of regions around Nagorny Karabakh was initially justified as a security imperative, over time a sense of ownership began to attach to these areas. This was clearly visible in standard maps of Armenia, which depicted areas occupied in 1992-93 as integral parts of a unified Armenian national space. Yet “augmented Armenia” has also been a casualty of the recent war, as all of the occupied districts have returned to Azerbaijani jurisdiction with the exception of a narrow corridor across Lachin.

But while both visions of Armenia have suffered defeats, neither is fatally wounded. A dynamic of competing visions of Armenia is likely to continue. For all the talk of turning points in Armenia’s road, it may well be that its future will continue to be an uncertain, two-steps-forward, one-step-back zig-zag between pathways. Yet these will evolve.

The first you might call the pathway of the “garrison state”, meaning a project to rebuild Armenia focusing on military capacity and innovation, and potentially building capacity for asymmetric warfare decades from now. This project would be centered on networks associated with Nagorny Karabakh and the former ruling Republican Party of Armenia. It would be a Eurasiaphile project, embedded in existing Russian-Armenian networks and, potentially, and a new cohort of Armenians in Nagorny Karabakh who might take up Russian citizenship. 

An impetus towards an Armenian garrison state would not only by driven by Karabakh-focused aspirations, but a more generic sense of ontological insecurity driven by Turkey’s more assertive role, the newly exposed strategic ‘shallowness’ of Armenia’s southernmost Syunik province and the reiteration by the Azerbaijani leadership of historical claims to this territory. While “wide Azerbaijanism” – a narrative of Azerbaijan’s territorial truncation at the hands of Armenians – has for many years reciprocated “augmented Armenia’s” expansive territorial gaze, such claims now come in a much more threatening context for Armenia. 

The alternative pathway might be called that of the “constitutional state”, which seeks to uphold the reformist agenda of the Velvet Revolution and re-orient Armenian national priorities from idealism to pragmatism. This would involve a greater emphasis on development, evoking Armenia as a ‘Silicon Valley in the Caucasus’, emphasizing institution-building and de-emphasizing irredentist visions, and rebooting complementarity beyond the European-Eurasian binary. However difficult this is to imagine today, the logical horizon of the “constitutional state” would be the normalization of relations with all neighbours. This is not to under-estimate the complexity and scale of the issues that still need to be resolved with Azerbaijan. Nevertheless, the constitutional state project seeks normalcy within a more coherent regional design.   

Rather than the clarity of one of these pathways coming to define Armenia’s trajectory in the coming years, what may be more likely is that neither project will win out over the other, and Armenian politics will unfold as a complex dialectic between the two.

In the immediate aftermath of defeat, there are indications that ‘strongmen in waiting’ may be poised to return to Armenian politics. Yet Armenia is unlikely to become a garrison state. Externally, the combined threat of Azerbaijan and Turkey establishes an overwhelming power asymmetry imposing constraints on the plausibility of garrison statehood as a response. Internally, Armenia’s political economy presents deep structural obstacles to consolidated authoritarianism. Armenia consistently rated as an unconsolidated authoritarian regime until 2018. The regime that existed between the mid-1990s and 2018 survived in large part due to the coercive capacity inherited from the first Karabakh war, which was deployed in 1996, 2004 and 2008 to quell mass protest in Yerevan. 

Yet for as long as the Karabakh conflict is not resolved and relations with Azerbaijan and Turkey are not normalized, Armenia will not be sufficiently emancipated of security threats for a “constitutional state” to truly take hold. Undiminished threat perception will sustain a conceptual dichotomy between security and democracy, or the notion that Armenia cannot be both democratic and secure. Insecurity will impose both real and rhetorical obstacles to the sustained implementation of reforms, and offer political opportunities to elites leveraging national security as a source of political legitimacy. The more that Armenia appears to be dominated by Azerbaijan and Turkey, the more such opportunities there will be.   

In the coming years, then, there will still be plural Armenias, wrestling each other to define what Armenian interests really are. In that sense, words written by Jirair Libaridian in 2004 will still hold true: ‘the absence of consensus defines Armenian political life today.’

“Garrison state”

Eurasia-centricity
Insecurity in Karabakh/Turkish threat
Russian influence
Old guard / Karabakh elite
Revanchism
Asymmetric warfare after 20-30 years?                     

“Constitutional state”

Complementarity 2.0
Representational demand
Domestic constraints on authoritarianism
Euro-Atlantic diaspora influence
Reframed priorities
Normalisation after de-securitisation?

In considering the future, two outcomes of the recent war are also worth reflecting upon. The first is that Armenia is now released of occupation. Armenian control over the seven districts surrounding the former Nagorno-Karabakh autonomous oblast’ has been justified in Armenian geopolitical culture as a security imperative. But even if not formally supported by Yerevan, new processes of settlement in these territories were ongoing over the last decade, further embedding an Armenian presence that was not seen internationally as legitimate (even if many of those settling in these areas were themselves victims of forced displacement). Dynamics in these territories were deepening a disjunction between the constitutional space of the Armenian state and a wider nationalist space of an enlarged homeland, diluting the claim of self-determination. These dynamics were dragging the Armenian state into a highly ambiguous, draining geopolitical project of territorial aggrandizement, yet without the resources, demographic mass and strong statehood that has enabled Israel, for example, to sustain settlement in contested areas of the West Bank. Armenia is now liberated of this possible future. 

Armenia is also released from regional isolation. Both the 10 November 2020 trilateral declaration and the 11 January trilateral meeting between Presidents Vladimir Putin and Ilham Aliyev and Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan affirmed the opening of all borders and communications routes. The rationale behind Turkey’s closure of its border with Armenia in 1993 – Armenian control of Kelbajar – no longer exists. To be sure, the obstacles to open and softened borders across the region remain formidable, none more so than mindsets hardened by the horrors of the recent war and the ongoing, unresolved issues such as the release of prisoners-of-war and other captives. Yet the commitments to open borders not only enable but demand that Armenia begins to think of itself as a transit state, and to elaborate and define its interests and optimal strategy accordingly.  

There is a third release, which is the most important of all, yet which Armenia and Azerbaijan must forge together. This is the release from the conflict paradigm itself. For 30 years, zero sum perspectives dominated Armenian-Azerbaijani views on every issue (with the sole exception, ironically, of the fears that both nations held of a Russian-dominated peace process).

The conflict paradigm has become a comfort zone, offering a familiar palate of arguments and counter-arguments, mnemonic strategies and emotional triggers, all under-written by real-world insecurity. Now, potentially, there is an opportunity to temper the conflict paradigm.

As the winning party, a great deal now depends on what Azerbaijan does. Azerbaijan too faces choices, between an approach that seeks to dominate Armenia, and one that ultimately seeks partnership with it. The more the first approach is pursued, the easier the pathway to the “garrison state” will be in Armenia, and the continuation of both the Armenian-Azerbaijani rivalry and the foreign influence over both states that it enables. The alternative is a transformation in Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, and with it the possibility of release from rivalry. This is a reminder that despite the prominence of great powers and geopolitics in the new realities in the South Caucasus today, the future of their relations and their region lies ultimately in the hands of Armenians and Azerbaijanis.  

Laurence BROERS is the South Caucasus Programme Director at Conciliation Resources, and associate fellow at the Russia and Eurasia Programme at the Royal Institute of International Affairs at Chatham House, London.

In picture: Russian peacekeepers near the Lake Sevan, heading to Karabakh after the November 9/10 ceasefire agreement, Photolur.

CivilNet: Sotk: A Mining Village Divided Between Armenia and Azerbaijan

CIVILNET.AM

21:06

The village of Sotk, located in the Gegharkunik region, is in the heart of a mining area. It is famous for holding the country’s largest gold deposits. Prior to the recent Karabakh war, the region bordered Karabakh. But that area has been handed to Azerbaijan per the end of war agreement signed in November 2020. For the residents, it has been a difficult pill to swallow.

Republican Party of Armenia vice-president: Why is the EU calling for return of 57 Armenian POWs, if there are more?

News.am, Armenia
Jan 29 2021

Vice-President of the Republican Party of Armenia Armen Ashotyan posted the following on his Facebook page:

“Why is the European Union calling for the return of 57 Armenian prisoners of war, if there are actually more prisoners of war?

It’s good that the EU is calling on Azerbaijan to immediately return another 57 Armenian servicemen.

It’s bad that the EU isn’t indicating a specific number when Armenia actually has more data regarding the number of prisoners of war based on the sources of the Human Rights Defender, human rights activists or Davit Shahnazaryan.

It’s very bad that Armenia failed to present the real picture of the situation to the EU, and the EU is apparently guided by Azerbaijani sources.

Yerevan court rejects motion to release ex-education minister for AMD 2,000,000

News.am, Armenia
Jan 29 2021

The Yerevan court of general jurisdiction today rejected the defense counsel’s motion to apply pledge in the amount of AMD 2,000,000 for the release of former Minister of Education, Science, Culture and Sport of Armenia Gevorg Loretsyan, who will remain in custody.

Loretsyan’s attorney Levon Sahakyan said there is no risk that Loretsyan will hinder investigation and Loretsyan doesn’t even recognize the witnesses by their faces.

The prosecutor objected the motion and stated that the motion is subject to rejection.

According to the indictment, starting from June 4, 2019, Loretsyan, as a government official, demanded a bribe from owner and executive director of companies Hrachik Kananyan in the amount of AMD 2,000,000 to not create obstacles for him to participate in the procurement tenders organized by the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport and accepting goods supplied in case Loretsyan won the tender.

Yerevan court rules to detain Karabakh ex-MP, freedom fighter Vahan Badasyan

News.am, Armenia
Jan 29 2021

The Yerevan court of general jurisdiction today granted the motion of an investigator of the National Security Service of Armenia to choose arrest as a pre-trial measure against former deputy of the National Assembly of Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), freedom fighter Vahan Badasyan, as reported Badasyan’s attorney Arayik Papikyan.

Yesterday the National Security Service detained Vahan Badasyan for the statements he made during a conversation with reporters at Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan.

Badasyan had declared that Nikol Pashinyan needs to be removed from power, and if he doesn’t leave, he must be physically destroyed. “There are various paths to take to remove him, even physically destroying him. This implies destruction of the enemy, perhaps through weapons. Yes, I am consciously threatening, let the National Security Service detain me,” he said.

Badasyan is charged with making public calls for seizure of power, violation of territorial integrity of forceful overthrow of constitutional order.