Armenia has not reconsidered its assessment of Turkey’s destructive involvement in the region -MFA

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 11 2021

Armenia has not reconsidered its assessment of Turkey’s destructive involvement in the region, Spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Anna Naghdalyan said in a statement.

The comments come after the Armenian National Committee – International issued a statement expressing concerns over regional issues, particularly Armenia’s approach to Turkey.

“We highly appreciate the cooperation of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs with the offices and committees of the Armenian National Committee, which has always been aimed at advancing the pan-Armenian agenda,” Naghdalyan said.

She added that the concerns contained in the statement of the ARF Hay Dat Central Office are based on the comments made by Minister Aivazian during his question-and-answer session with the government in the National Assembly, which, she said, are made outside the general context, and in no way reflect Armenia’s assessment and approaches to Turkey’s involvement in the region.

“Armenia has not reconsidered its assessment of Turkey’s destructive involvement in the region, and those concerns were clearly stated in the question-and-answer session, in particular, regarding the conduct of joint Turkish-Azerbaijani military exercises near the Armenian border. At the same time, the Armenian Foreign Minister referred to Turkey’s policy of illegal blockade of Armenia, insisting that at present there is not even an excuse referring to the fact that Turkey has closed its border with Armenia for decades,” she added,

The Spokesperson emphasized that all the governments of the Republic of Armenia, as well as the leading organizations of the Diaspora, have always considered the blockade illegal, and have acted from the position of ending it.

“The position of the Republic of Armenia on this issue has not changed, neither has the determination to pursue the priorities of the foreign policy of the Republic of Armenia. We are convinced that Turkey’s direct involvement in the war unleashed by Azerbaijan against the people of Artsakh, the war crimes committed against the people of Artsakh and other mass crimes make the international recognition and condemnation of the Armenian Genocide more urgent in order to prevent the reoccurrence of such crimes in the future,” Naghdalyan stated.

She stressed that Armenia will continue its close cooperation with respected Diaspora Armenian organizations.

She further emphasized that the Foreign Minister has noted on various occasions that “we will consider Turkey’s actions, not statements,” and added that to date, these actions have not been constructive.

“In this regard, we would like to quote the position of the Foreign Minister, expressed during the same question-and-answer session, that “a favorable atmosphere should be created around Armenia, our diplomacy and our people, naturally, without breaking the red lines, protecting our state-national interests.”

Armenian, French FMs discuss issues of regional stability and security

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 11 2021

Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian had a telephone conversation with French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian. In the follow-up to the previous contacts, the Foreign Ministers had a comprehensive discussion on regional stability and security issues, referred to the steps taken to address the humanitarian situation in Artsakh and the challenges facing the Armenians of Artsakh.

In the context of urgent humanitarian issues, the Armenian Foreign Minister stressed the repatriation of Armenian prisoners of war and civilians, emphasizing the inadmissibility of Azerbaijan to create obstacles in that process. In this regard, Foreign Minister Aivazian thanked his French counterpart for always keeping the issue high on the agenda.

The Foreign Ministers stressed the need to address the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmanshp, and exchanged views on the upcoming schedule of the Co-Chairs’ activities.

The foreign ministers of Armenia and France also discussed issues on the bilateral agenda. The interlocutors highly assessed the recent visit of the delegation of the Secretary of State Jean-Baptiste Lemoine to Armenia on the instruction of the President of France Emanuel Macron to discuss the prospects of cooperation in spheres of mutual interest, exchange views on further steps to be taken.

Foreign Ministers Ayvazyan and Le Drian attached importance to the continuation of consultations and consultations at different levels.

Security of Goris-Davit Bek road section provided by Russian and Armenian border guards

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 11 2021

Security on the Goris-Davit Bek road section is provided by Russian and Armenian border guards, the Armenian Defense Ministry said in a statement.

To ensure the safety of citizens’ movement, vehicles and cargo transportation on the Goris-Davit Bek road, border guards of the Armenian and Russian border services have been deployed on the highway, the Ministry said in a response to a number of inquiries of media representatives.

The Ministry reminds that back on December 19 it shared a statement saying that an agreement was reached between the Defense Ministers of Armenia and Russia to ensure the security control of the above-mentioned roads by the Russian border guards.

According to the agreement reached, Russian border guards are stationed on the Goris-David Bek road section to ensure uninterrupted traffic.

The security of the 21 km long section of the Goris-Kapan highway, which passes through the disputed area, will be ensured by the Russian border guards.

Armenian border troops are deployed on the Armenian side, Azerbaijani border troops are on the Azerbaijani side.

Necessary complex measures are being taken to ensure the safety of the mentioned road section.

Thus, in order to ensure the safety of citizens’ movement, vehicles and cargo, the border guards of Armenia and Russia were deployed on the highway. An agreement was reached between the “Russian Defense Ministers” of the Republic of Armenia to ensure the security control of the above-mentioned roads by the Russian border guards.

Thus, the Ministry says, to ensure the safety of citizens’ movement, vehicles and cargo, the border guards of Armenia and Russia have been deployed on the highway.

An agreement was reached between the Armenian and Russian Defense Ministries to ensure the security control of the above-mentioned roads by the Russian border guards.

Armenia to go digital as government approves new strategy

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 11 2021

The Armenian government today approved the country’s Digitalization Strategy.

The executive says the development of high technologies plays a decisive role in the competitiveness, security and living standards of the state.

The strategy envisages digital transformation of the Government, the economy and the society through introduction and development of innovative technologies, cyber security, data policy and e-services and e-government systems, coordination of digitalization processes, creation of common standards and digital environment, as well as initiatives promoting the use of digital technologies in the private sector of the economy and the development and implementation of programs promoting the use of electronic tools by the public.

Armenia’s digitalization strategy is aimed at ensuring high quality of public service delivery, efficiency and transparency of the public administration system, development of broadband and telecommunication infrastructure, increase of competitiveness of the private sector, decision-making necessary for economic growth, development of digital skills workforce

Armenia considers prospect of open borders with Turkey

EurasiaNet.org
Feb 11 2021
Ani Mejlumyan Feb 11, 2021

Since the end of last year’s war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Turkish officials have repeatedly suggested that they may be ready to open their border with Armenia. But those suggestions have been met with suspicion in Armenia, where mistrust of Turkey has hit record levels following Ankara’s strong support of Azerbaijan in the war.

That is somewhat of a reversal of the two sides’ pre-war positions. Turkey unilaterally closed the border and cut relations with Armenia in 1993, in solidarity with Azerbaijan during the first war over Nagorno-Karabakh and in protest at Armenia’s capture of territories surrounding the region. Since then, the official Armenian position has been that the Turkish closure amounted to a unilateral “blockade” and that it favors reopening the border.

The recent war resulted in Azerbaijan regaining control of many of the territories it lost in the 1990s. Now that that obstacle has been removed, Turkish officials say they are interested in revisiting the border issue.

In the wake of the war, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has proposed a six-country regional cooperation “platform,” including Armenia, to promote economic integration. “If positive steps are taken in this regard, we will open our closed doors” to Armenia, he said during a December 10 visit to Baku. In January, the Washington Post quoted an unnamed senior Erdogan adviser saying that Ankara is ready to normalize relations with Armenia.” The adviser continued: The problem for us has always been Armenian occupation of Azeri territory. That’s now resolved. If Armenia is willing to take a step, we are ready.”

It was not clear, in either case, what steps Ankara expected Yerevan to take. And Armenians have also viewed with alarm Turkey’s less conciliatory statements, such as Erdogan’s invocation of Enver Pasha, the architect of the Armenian genocide, at a December military parade in Baku.

“Our assessment is based not on words, but actions, and we have a lot of contradictions here,” Anna Naghdalyan, the spokesperson for Armenia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told Eurasianet. “It’s not Armenia who closed the border so the question on the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border should first be addressed to Turkey. Armenia is in favor of unblocking all transport communications in the region,” she said, adding that at the moment there is “no discussion” on opening the border.

Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazyan also signaled a cautious interest in the border opening on February 10, when he said that Turkey had “no reason” to keep it closed.

Since the war ended on November 10, there have been rapid developments regarding opening up the region’s many closed borders. The leaders of Russia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan met on January 11 to discuss “unblocking” communications, and officials from the three sides have already had multiple follow-up meetings to work out details. The process appears to be driven mostly by Russians and Azerbaijanis, however, and Armenians seem to be taking a more passive stance.

At the most recent meeting, between the deputy foreign ministers of the three sides on January 30, “the most surprising thing was that Armenia had no agenda, no talking points, no demands,” said Richard Giragosian, the head of the Yerevan-based think tank Regional Studies Center. “They don’t want it,” he said, referring to an open border with Turkey. “It’s a primitive position by Pashinyan, that ‘we are too vulnerable, too weak to normalize relations with Turkey,’” he told Eurasianet.

“This is not what the Armenian government is focused on now,” one senior government official told Eurasianet on condition of anonymity. “There haven’t been any preparations, new documents or even processing of old ones.”

As a result, there is some concern in Armenia that Ankara may present Yerevan with a fait accompli for which it is not prepared. “Even if Armenia says ‘no,’ they [Turkey] won’t let us keep saying ‘no’ for long,” said Arman Grigoryan, a professor of international relations at Lehigh University, in an interview with news website CivilNet.

“If Turkey unilaterally opens the border we have no response planned, no scenarios planned, and we could lose all the diplomatic dividends by saying ‘no don’t open it, we’re not ready, what about national security,’ and so on,” Giragosian said. “The lack of a strategy only encourages Turkey to take advantage of the situation.”

The question of relations with Turkey is now highly sensitive in Armenia. Yerevan has introduced a ban on Turkish imports to the country, citing national security as a reason. And the political opposition has been trying to paint Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan as an “agent” of Azerbaijan and Turkey, a factor which could complicate Yerevan’s calculations. 

Former president Robert Kocharyan, a Pashinyan foe who has signaled his interest in returning to politics, was asked in a January 28 interview about “an impression that Pashinyan is a favorable candidate for Turkey and Azerbaijan.” Kocharyan coyly replied that Pashinyan “has been doing everything that an enemy state would want to happen in Armenia.” Another prominent government critic, Mikayel Minasyan, has claimed that close Pashinyan ally and speaker of parliament Ararat Mirzoyan is a Turkish spy.

There also have been concerns that Armenia, in its weakened state, may be forced to moderate its demands that Turkey finally acknowledge the 1915 genocide of ethnic Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. Many Armenians opposed the last attempt at normalization with Turkey, which began in 2008 under the presidency of Serzh Sargsyan, since Turkey had yet to acknowledge the genocide.

Ruben Melkonyan, a Turkish studies scholar at Yerevan State University, said that Turkey may have additional conditions for normalizing relations. “Now that we are in a weak position, Turkey can press Armenia to drop the demand for genocide recognition,” he told Sputnik Armenia. In that context, Foreign Minister Ayvazyan’s cautious interest in opening the border is “flawed and risky,” he said.

 

map by Evangeline McGlynn.

Ani Mejlumyan is a reporter based in Yerevan.

Turkish Press: Armenia says must normalize ties with Turkey to guarantee own security

Yeni Şafak, Turkey
Feb 11 2021


Armenia says must normalize ties with Turkey to guarantee own security

News Service 14:50 February 11, 2021

Armenia says must normalize ties with Turkey to guarantee own security

Armenia must do everything to guarantee the country’s security, including normalizing ties with Ankara, Foreign Minister Ara Ayvazyan said on Wednesday, as the fallout from Yerevan’s humiliating defeat against Azerbaijan in Karabakh continues to send shockwaves across the country.

Ayvazyan, in an address to parliament, also underscored the need to reopen borders with Turkey, noting that keeping them closed “makes no sense anymore,” according to TASS news.

“Keeping Armenia’s borders with Turkey closed serves no purpose,” Ayvazyan said as he called on ties with Turkey to be normalized.

Ayvazyan also reportedly expressed concern over the joint Turkey-Azerbaijan military exercises as the two nations boost military cooperation.

In December 2020, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said his country could open its borders to Armenia, if Yerevan takes steps toward regional peace.

"We have no grudge against the people of Armenia. The problem is with the Armenian administration. Over 100,000 Armenians live in my country," he said.

Out of solidarity with Azerbaijan, Turkey closed its borders with Armenia in 1993 and has refused to re-establish diplomatic relations since then.

Nationwide demonstrations have been raging in Armenia with protesters demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan who admitted defeat following a conflict with Azerbaijan in the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

During the 44-day conflict in Karabakh, Azerbaijan liberated several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages, while at least 2,802 of its soldiers were martyred. There are differing claims about the number of casualties on the Armenian side, which, sources and officials say, could be up to 5,000.

The two countries signed a Russian-brokered agreement on Nov. 10 to end fighting and work toward a comprehensive resolution.

A joint Turkish-Russian center is being established to monitor the truce, and Russian peacekeeping troops have also been deployed in the region.

The cease-fire is seen as a victory for Azerbaijan and a defeat for Armenia, whose armed forces have withdrawn in line with the agreement. Violations, however, have been reported in the past few weeks, with some Armenian soldiers said to have been hiding in the mountainous enclave.

How Armenia will look after servicemen injured in Karabakh, families of the fallen

JAM News
Feb 11 2021
    JAMnews, Yerevan

Armenia will provide state aid to servicemen who were injured during the second Karabakh war and fully cover the cost of their treatment.

The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs has begun accepting applications and will soon begin to issue compensation in the amount of 500,000 drams (about 1,000 dollars) to all who were injured during the war in Karabakh.

A large-scale military escalation in Karabakh began on September 27 and lasted 44 days. It became known as ‘the second Karabakh war’. The hostilities were stopped after the heads of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia signed a joint statement on November 10.

The Ministry of Defense reports that payments to all reservists called up during the second Karabakh war are almost complete.

Families with missing persons for six months will be paid 300,000 drams (about $600) every month. Payments started in December 2020.

If a missing soldier is never found and is declared dead, their families will receive permanent payments from the Life and Health Insurance Fund. Families of prisoners will receive the same assistance until they return to their homeland.


  • New rules for entering Nagorno-Karabakh
  • The fight for Karabakh is over, but the battle with PTSD is just beginning

Helping the wounded

One-time aid in the amount of 500,000 drams is intended for those wounded who do not have disabilities. Those who received more serious injuries that led to disability will receive larger amounts.

The Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs will accept online applications until April 15. They can be sent on the website ssa.am by going to the section “Applications for assistance to people injured in Artsakh”.

After providing the necessary information, everyone who submitted an application will be informed from the ministry about the decision – whether they are entitled to assistance or not.

Payments to reservists

Armenian Defense Minister Vagharshak Harutyunyan said that almost all reservists who were called up during the second Karabakh war have already received corresponding payments.

Only 3-4% of the funds have not paid because some reservists did not provide personal data or did not register after arriving at one or another military unit. And as soon as the necessary information is received, payments will go to the indicated accounts, the minister assures.

Armenia says Turkey has no reason to keep land border shut

AHVAL News
Feb 11 2021

Armenia said Turkey has no reason to keep a border between the two countries closed after a conflict with Azerbaijan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh ended in a ceasefire agreement.

The standoff in Nagorno-Karabakh has now been resolved through military means, Armenian Foreign Minister Ara Aivazian said in a Q&A session at the country’s parliament in Yerevan on Wednesday, according to Armenian-American newspaper Asberez.

“As you are aware, the blockade – the closure of the border – was the result of the Nagorno-Karabakh status quo, which has changed through a use of force,” he said. “Turkey therefore no longer has any reason to keep its border with Armenia closed.”

Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a ceasefire deal in November to end last year’s military conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. Turkey, which sealed its border with Armenia in 1993, backed Azerbaijan with weapons and military know-how during the clashes, which lasted six weeks and killed thousands of combatants. Azerbaijan regained five cities and control of the entire Azerbaijan-Iran border.

Aivazian said an ongoing Turkish-Azeri military exercise in Turkey’s Kars region, adjacent to the border, which Ankara said was designed to “coordinate efforts during joint operations and to test new weapons” was a cause for concern.

Armenia has received certain diplomatic messages from Turkey, but the time had come for action, he said.

The European Union has said the re-opening of the land border would benefit the economies of the two countries and the wider region, including the South Caucasus, Russia, the Black Sea, Iran and Central Asia, and would help de-escalate ethnic pressures and promote de-militarisation.

Relations between Turkey and Armenia have been marred by the mass killing of ethnic Armenians by Ottoman Turks early last century and Armenia’s historical claims to land inside Turkey.   

The key to lasting peace in the Caucasus is reconciliation

Al Jazeera, Qatar
Feb 11 2021

After decades of conflict, sustainable peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan can only be achieved through civil society-led reconciliation.

| Conflict News | Al Jazeera

On January 30, the trilateral working group comprised of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, which was formed in the wake of last year’s devastating 44-day conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh to oversee the re-establishment of transport links between the warring nations, held its first meeting in Moscow.

The meeting, co-chaired by the deputy prime ministers of each country, was undoubtedly an important step towards resolving the decades-old dispute between Azerbaijan and Armenia. But such diplomatic efforts and technical arrangements, however important, cannot deliver a durable peace settlement on their own. Sustainable peace is achieved not through meetings held in far-away capitals, but reconciliation between communities.

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As an Armenian and an Azerbaijani, we know that mistrust remains rife between our two nations. No political agreement on its own can convince two peoples divided by 30 years of conflict to trust each other and make peace. Armenian and Azerbaijani civil societies, however, can forge footholds upon which real peace can stand by launching initiatives that would bring the two communities together and allow them to understand each other.

Wars, whether they end in victory or defeat, fuel nationalism and this presents yet another obstacle to reconciliation. In Armenia, there are protestors in the streets of the capital calling for a new war to settle the score. In Azerbaijan, meanwhile, the victory against Armenia is being celebrated with military parades. For now, neither nation seems willing to leave the conflict behind and focus on building neighbourly relations.

While the post-war surge in nationalist sentiment will eventually subside, we cannot expect Armenians and Azerbaijanis to simply forget their prejudices about each other over time.

The two communities have had no real interaction since the end of the first Nagorno-Karabakh war in 1994. As they had no shared experiences in more than 20 years, each nation constructed an unrealistic, almost inhuman image of the “enemy” in their collective minds. Their perception of recent history has also split, with both seeing themselves as the victim and the other as the aggressor.

If what we strive for is lasting peace, this cannot be allowed to continue.

Bringing together two communities that see nothing but an enemy in each other may be difficult, but it is not impossible.

While we do not have shared experiences from the last few decades, we do have a long history of peaceful coexistence that came before that. Ethnic Armenians and Azerbaijanis peacefully lived side by side, in the same streets, villages and towns in Karabakh for millennia.

Sure, our youths do not remember those days, but their parents do. It was not the people who started the conflict – it was the opposing militaries and political leaders. Both Armenians and Azerbaijanis had their lives destroyed by this conflict, and they both have so much to gain from making peace.

Perhaps too much has happened since the 1990s for people to simply forget and return to the way things were before the start of this dispute. But they can try to forgive. And they can certainly strive to move on.

To do so, civil society should take steps to reconnect older Armenians and Azerbaijanis who once lived together in peace. If old friends and neighbours come together to remember their shared past and rebuild broken relationships, they can show their children that peaceful coexistence is possible.

Old friends can have video calls and, once the pandemic is over, face-to-face meetings. They can visit their old neighbourhoods together.

Armenians and Azerbaijanis of all ages can also come together to celebrate Novruz – a Zoroastrian festival that regularly brought Christian and Muslim peoples of the region together in pre-war times. Or civil society can organise joint art festivals, concerts or other social events to present the two communities with opportunities to interact with each other.

What we should not do, however, is to attempt to convince the two communities to agree on a single version of history, for this is impossible. Instead, we should all recognise there is no “right” version of history.

The deportation of Azerbaijanis from Armenia, the Khojaly massacre, the Sumgait and Baku pogroms – both nations will forever remember some of these tragedies while choosing to ignore or forget others.

We cannot, and should not aspire to, convince either community that their perception of their nation’s recent history is flawed. But we can create opportunities for both Azerbaijanis and Armenians to recognise that there can be different, but equally legitimate, interpretations of historical events.

As British historian EH Carr opined, “interpretation plays a necessary part in establishing the facts of history, and because no existing interpretation is wholly objective, one interpretation is as good as another”.

If each community can accept that its version of history, and understanding of it, is different to the other, they can finally stop focusing on proving themselves right, and instead start working on building a common future.

We can start our reconciliation efforts with a meeting in Tekali – a Georgian village near the intersection of the country’s borders with Armenia and Azerbaijan. Rebuilding the links that existed between members of our communities before everything was prised apart by war must be prioritised as our political leaders continue their efforts to secure a peace deal acceptable to both sides. This is the only way we can achieve sustainable peace.

The views expressed in this article are the authors’ own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.

Rep. Schiff briefed on the situation following Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression against Artsakh

Public Radio of Armenia
Feb 11 2021

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region (ANCA-WR) Board of Directors, regional and national staff, as well as local ANCA chapter leaders held a productive meeting with Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA-28).

ANCA representatives briefed Congressman Schiff on the latest developments in the region following the Turkish-Azerbaijani aggression and 44-day war waged against Artsakh and Armenia with the assistance of terrorist mercenaries from Syria. Chief among the topics discussed were the issues relating to the deployment of immediate U.S. humanitarian aid to Armenia and Artsakh, strict enforcement of Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act as well as sanctions and other punitive measures against Turkish and Azerbaijani regimes, and the immediate return of Armenian POWs still in Azerbaijani captivity.

“Congressman Schiff is one of the most knowledgeable and committed legislators we have representing our community in the federal government. He has championed all aspects of the Armenian Cause in Congress and through the media, and we are grateful to enjoy a close partnership with him and his office throughout his 20 year Congressional tenure, especially as he successfully led the passage of the resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide,” remarked ANCA-WR Chair Nora Hovsepian, Esq. “We look forward to continuing to work with him moving forward as he continues to advocate for the needs and concerns of his constituents,” she continued.

Democratic Vice-Chair of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues, Rep. Schiff has consistently and persistently advocated for justice for the Armenian Genocide, secure and prosperous Artsakh, stronger U.S.-Armenia strategic partnership, and other matters of critical importance to the Armenian-American community. In October 2020, Rep. Schiff called for the formal U.S. recognition of the Republic of Artsakh, in a statement entered into the official Congressional Record. He reiterated his position in a recent op-ed published in the San Francisco Chronicle and co-authored with Rep. Jackie Speier.

Rep. Schiff has consistently received an “A+” rating from the ANCA. In 2003, ANCA Western Region honored him with the prestigious Freedom Award. Rep. Schiff was also honored at the 2019 “Thank You Congress!” town hall as the principal co-author of H.Res.296 which passed in an overwhelming 405-11 bipartisan vote.