Caucasian Knot | Armenia reports shooting on Azerbaijani border

Caucasian Knot, EU
May 21 2021

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In response to the shots from the Azerbaijani side, Armenian militaries opened fire on the border section of the Gegarkunik Region, the Armenian Ministry of Defence (MoD) has informed. The MoD has banned civilians from visiting the problem border areas because of the threat of conflict escalation.

The "Caucasian Knot" has reported citing the Armenian party that on May 12, Azerbaijani militaries advanced to the Black Lake area. Azerbaijani authorities claim that their border guards had just changed their deployment. The negotiations haven't yielded any results yet. The situation remains tense; about 500-600 Azerbaijani soldiers are stationed in the Syunik and Gegarkunik sections of the border, Nikol Pashinyan, Acting Prime Minister of Armenia, has stated.

At the border section of the Gegarkunik Region, Armenian militaries opened a warning fire in response to several dozen shots from the Azerbaijani side, the Armenian MoD has informed.

Azerbaijan has apologized for the incident, the Armenian MoD has stated.

The Armenian MoD has called on civilians not to visit those border areas of the Syunik and Gegarkunik Regions, where Azerbaijani soldiers are located. The MoD notes that an escalation of the conflict is possible.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on May 20, 2021 at 05:32 pm MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Caucasian Knot | Nagorno-Karabakh resident wounded in shelling

Caucasian Knot, EU
May 21 2021

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An excavator operator was hospitalized after shelling near a village in the Askeran District. He was wounded by fragments of the glass, broken by shots, the Ombudsperson of Nagorno-Karabakh has stated.

According to the Ombudsperson's office, "a targeted fire was opened on a resident of the village of Sos in the Martuni District, who was performing engineering works at the Armenian military positions near the village of Shosh in the Askeran District."

The villager's health condition is satisfactory, Unan Grigoryan, the head of the Sos community, told the "Caucasian Knot" correspondent. According to his story, the shots were fired from the city of Shushi, which is under Azerbaijan's control. The fire stopped only after the intervention of Russian peacemakers, Mr Grigoryan has added.

The office of the Karabakh's Ombudsperson has urged to take steps in connection with the incident.

This article was originally published on the Russian page of 24/7 Internet agency ‘Caucasian Knot’ on May 21, 2020 at 05:00 am MSK. To access the full text of the article, click here.

Author: Alvard Grigoryan; Source: CK correspondent

Source:
© Caucasian Knot



Who should the West work with in Armenia?

May 21 2021

by Guest Contributor

The tragic events in and around Armenia have been developing faster this month than we could ever imagine.

After the painful defeat in the 2020 Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) war, Armenia has been trampled by the black triangle of Russia, Turkey and Azerbaijan since November 2020.

This black triangle has been quite successful with intervening in the domestic
affairs of Armenia and perpetrating political cleansing with an attempt to erase the political arena of Armenia from any Armenia-centric political forces who would come together and fight the capitulation in the 2020 war and the very triangle.

The post-revolutionary government of Armenia (since 2018) has thus become a puppet-servant of this triangle driving the country into an abyss.

Ironically, the government has called parliamentary elections in June while Azerbaijan
has advanced into the territory of Armenia in Syunik and Gegharkunik provinces thus violating the very territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia.

Moreover, as a member of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), Armenia has applied for military support but never got any help except neutral statements.

Put short, the black triangle and its servant Armenian government are playing havoc with the entire Armenian nation directing it to another wave of territorial losses and genocide.

In order to step back from the edge of an abyss, hundreds of Armenians both in Armenia and in the Armenian Diaspora have formed different political, educational, social initiatives trying to put a halt to the country’s collapse.

This process should have already gained attention in the West, especially in France and the United States of America, as well as India and Iran who have expressed their will to support the restoration of the territorial integrity of Armenia.

Those great and regional powers have also shown some interest in helping Armenia to revive its civilizational and geopolitical role of the wedge between Russia-Turkey, the buffer between the East and the West.

The biggest mistake the aforementioned Western powers, the USA and France in particular have made since the 1990’s vis-a-vis the establishment of closer ties with the Armenian people has been their continuous focus on the political parties of Armenia and even of the Armenian Diaspora.

While it has always been clear that the culture of the political parties has never been well-rooted within the Armenian nation since the birth of the first Armenian parties in the late 19th century, the West has never diverted from that party-centric policy through its diplomatic missions, corporations and special services.

Those political parties, which number almost 100 in a country of 2.5 million people, lack deep and fundamental knowledge of big politics or 3G-s: good governance, geopolitics, globalisation.

Here is why the West, who has an immense soft power in Armenia, cannot drive the black triangle and particularly Russia out of Armenia and take geopolitical control of it, thus connecting the Black Sea, Georgia, Armenia and then Iran and the Persian Gulf.

The political parties are so far from well-established ideological backgrounds that
they easily get into the political traps made by the special services of the black triangle and other malign powers, as well as their servant governments of the Republic of Armenia since 1991.

It is of utmost importance to change that myopic political agenda if the West truly wants to achieve any positive geopolitical gains in Armenia and hinder the Russo-Turkish empire from getting formed by helping Armenia to reestablish its wedge-buffer status in the region.

The latter is an attainable goal and there is good news for the West: the new generation of the Armenians in Armenia and Diaspora who are fed up with those amateur political parties have already teamed up in network structures, organisations, initiatives and movements.

The advantage of those networks is their readiness to face the harsh realities in and around Armenia and undertake pragmatic foreign and domestic policy as they are free from different “-ism”-s.

Those networks combine people from diverse backgrounds and experiences and possess astoundingly huge potential energy which needs some moral and political support to reshape itself into the needed kinetic energy.

As the founder of the pan-Armenian Network State movement, I see that historical chance of building a sustainable bridge between the Armenians in Armenia and Diaspora with the support of the Western powers and thus institutionalise them all into one structure that I call the World Armenians.

Uniting the World Armenians, the Network State will then possess the overwhelming
amount of wealth (97% of the Armenian capital which exceeds 100 billion USD is in the
Armenian Diaspora according to some Armenian and non-Armenian sources) and intellectual capacity (at least 5 million Armenians in the Diaspora may join the Network) to stand strong in the Highlands, destroy the black triangle of Russia-Turkey-Azerbaijan and build up itself as a robust civilizational and geopolitical wedge between Russia and Turkey, between Turkey and Azerbaijan (the so-called Turkish world).

Time is running, the West has to act as another political trade at Armenia’s expense and the loss of Armenian factor in geopolitics will have the same repercussions for mankind as the Fall of Constantinople.

Network State’s World Armenians are ready to take a grip on Armenian politics and work with partners to pacify the malign powers.


Vahram Ayvazyan is the founder of the Network State movement. He is an International
Relations and Genocide scholar, startup founder and a Climate Reality Leader, personally
trained by former US vice president Al Gore.

Greek military representative inspects Armenia-Azerbaijan border

May 21 2021
by Paul Antonopoulos

Military attaché’s accredited in Armenia visited Syunik Province in Armenia’s south, including Greece’s Colonel .

Azerbaijan has been occupying pockets of Syunik province and other areas of Armenia to force Yerevan to open transportation corridors across its territory.

As part of the working visit, a military attaché from the Greek Embassy in Yerevan, as well as other delegates from the U.S., Ukraine, Germany, France and Georgia were present to familiarise themselves with the situation.

After negotiations stalled last weekend to see Azerbaijan withdraw from Armenian territories, a new round of talks scheduled for Wednesday were halted due to Azerbaijan’s absence, demonstrating it is uninterested in resolving the issue.

Armenia’s Defense Ministry said in a statement on Wednesday that if Azerbaijan does not withdraw “within a reasonable timeframe,” they may use force to remove the Azerbaijani troops.

Following this warning, the foreign military delegates conducted their tour of Syunik province, including Greece’s Colonel .

https://greekcitytimes.com/2021/05/21/greek-military-armenia-border/

Armenian MFA: We reject the false agenda of “disputed territories”

MediaMax, Armenia
May 21 2021

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Spokesperson of the Armenian MFA Anna Naghdalyan today has stated that the delimitation and further demarcation of the borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan “should be part of a comprehensive peaceful settlement of the conflict, in the framework of which the de-occupation of territories of the Artsakh Republic and determination of the Artsakh Republic’s final legal status should be resolved under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group.”

“Proposal of conditions through use of force or threat of force is a gross violation of the international law. Armenia will not give in to such pressure. Armenia rejects the introduction of the false agenda of so-called “disputed territories” that can be a dangerous precedent for justification of use of force in other territories as well.

Having failed to fulfill the obligations under the November 9 trilateral statement, in particular the release of all Armenian POWs and civilian detainees as well as implementation of other humanitarian agreements, Azerbaijan once again demonstrates its policy of breaking its international obligations,” said Anna Naghdalyan.

Secretary of State Discusses Nagorno-Karabakh with Russian Minister Amid Rising Tensions


May 21 2021


05/21/2021 Artsakh (International Christian Concern) – This week, Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on his visit this week to northern Europe, during which they discussed their governments’ roles in overseeing mediation between Armenia and Azerbaijan. These talks come during a week when tensions between the two countries have risen after Azerbaijani troops encroached 3.5 kilometers into Armenian territory.

Russia brokered a ceasefire agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan in December to end fighting in Nagorno-Karabakh (Armenian: Artsakh) after Azerbaijani troops aided by Turkish-paid Syrian mercenaries attacked in September. Russian peacekeepers are now present in the region to ensure that fighting does not break out again.

Russia and the United States are both members of the OSCE Minsk Group, a collection of states formed in 1994 mandated to oversee mediations and ensure peace between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Many Armenian groups within the U.S. have been calling for American leaders to take a more active role in this group to ensure that Azerbaijan does not continue to commit aggressions with Turkey against Armenians.

Azerbaijan still holds an estimated 200 prisoners of war in captivity, many of them Armenian Christian civilians. Armenians are a predominately Christian community that has suffered multiple genocides because of their combined ethnic-faith identity. The events in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020 were reminiscent of the 1915 genocide which almost eliminated them from their native lands.

With the recent movements of Azerbaijani troops into Armenian territory, Russian and American mediation may prove to be even more vital in the coming weeks.


Armenian foreign ministry rejects Azerbaijan’s statement on disputed territories

TASS, Russia
May 21 2021
Armenian acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said earlier that certain agreements had been reached with international partners to settle the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border
– World – TASS

YEREVAN, May 21. /TASS/. Armenia’s foreign ministry has rejected Azerbaijan’s statement about disputed territories as a false agenda.

"It is a blatant violation of international law to set conditions with the use of force or a threat of its use. Armenia rejects the false agenda of the so-called disputed territories, which may become a dangerous precedent to justify the use of force in other regions," Armenian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Anna Nagdalyan said on Friday.

Processes of the delimitation and demarcation of borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan must be part of the process of comprehensive peaceful settlement of the conflict, she stressed, adding that the priority task is to "settle the issues of de-occupying the territories of the Republic of Artsakh (the non-recognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic – TASS) and agreeing Artsakh’s ultimate legal status under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs," she said.

Armenian acting Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said earlier that certain agreements had been reached with international partners to settle the situation on the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. "These solutions are 100% in Armenia’s interests. If Azerbaijan implements these agreements on the conditions we spoke about, I will sign this document," he said, but did not specify what kind of document he meant.

Later, Armenian mass media published a draft of what they called a statement of the Armenian, Azerbaijani and Russian leaders on the establishment of a joint commission on the delimitation of borders between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Under the document, national delegations to the commissions are to be formed by May 31, while Russia will form a delegation to offer consultancy services. The Russian side has not yet issued any official comments.

Armenia’s defense ministry said on May 12 that Azerbaijani armed forces had tried to carry out "certain works" in a border area in Syunik Province in a bid to "adjust the border." Following retaliatory measures, the Azerbaijani side stopped its activities and agreed to hold talks to settle the situation. Later on the same day, Pashinyan called a meeting of the country’s Security Council where he described the situation as an infringement of Armenia’s territory. He said Azerbaijani troops had crossed Armenia’s state border and moved 3.5 kilometers deep into its territory.

The sides have had several rounds of talks to settle the situation, with the latest one being held on May 16 and mediated by Russia.

Tehran: Iran repudiates press reports on detention of Armenian soldiers

Tehran Times, Iran

Iran repudiates press reports on detention of Armenian soldiers

– 19:54

TEHRAN – The Iranian embassy in Yerevan has responded to press reports claiming that dozens of Armenian soldiers have been detained in Iran.

The embassy has said the rumors claiming that 160 Armenian soldiers are in Iran and the Iranian side has set preconditions for their repatriation are false and groundless, according to Public Radio of Armenia.

The statement came in response to a number of Armenian media outlets’ reports claiming the soldiers had crossed to the Iranian side during the 44-day war, which broke out last year on September 27 and lasted until November 10. The war resulted in Azerbaijan liberating large swathes of the territories that were under Armenian control.

During the war, Iran refused to take sides and maintained a neutral position. It also voiced readiness to help the warring sides to settle their differences through dialogue and presented a peace initiative in that regard.

In addition, Iran made it clear that it supports the territorial integrity of both Armenia and Azerbaijan. In mid-May, a senior Iranian lawmaker reiterated that position and warned against any change in the borders on the two countries.

The lawmaker, Mojtaba Zolnouri, who serves as the head of the Iranian Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Committee, said Tehran has made it clear that it will not accept any change in international borders in the region.

“The position of the Islamic Republic of Iran is very clear, unequivocal, and decisive. We do not accept any change in the borders of the region. The territorial integrity of the countries in the region must be preserved. At the same time, we do not accept the deployment of any supra-regional forces near our borders,” Zolnouri told Russian state news, Sputnik.

“Therefore, if part of the territory of Armenia is to be taken and our border conditions change, that is, to have a new neighbor, it is not acceptable for us. The existing borders must be completely protected and the shared border of the Islamic Republic of Iran with Armenia must be maintained,” he continued.

The comments came after Armenia claimed that the Azerbaijani forces have advanced into its sovereign territory in Syunik province.

Armenia’s opposition party calls for sending Russia’s military contingent to Syunik

TASS, Russia
WorldMay 23, 14:35

YEREVAN, May 23. /TASS/. Armenia should boost its military cooperation with Russia and ask Moscow to deploy its military contingent to the Syunik Province bordering on Azerbaijan, MP Gevorg Gorgisyan told a session of the opposition’s Bright Armenia party on Sunday.

"We should keep deepening [cooperation] in the security field with Russia and also make every effort to create Russia’s military contingent in Syunik to counter Azerbaijani-Turkish aggression," Gorgisyan said.

Bright Armenia led by Edmon Marukyan has the third largest faction in the parliament (18 seats). The party decided to take part in the early parliamentary polls due on June 20 without establishing a bloc with other political forces.

On May 12, the Armenian Defense Ministry reported that Azerbaijan's forces tried to carry out "a certain effort" in one of Syunik’s border regions in order to "adjust the border". As the ministry stated, after the measures taken by the Armenian forces, the Azerbaijani servicemen halted these works. In the evening of the same day, Acting Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan held a meeting of the republic's Security Council, during which he slammed these events as an encroachment on Armenia’s territory. According to Pashinyan, the Azerbaijani forces crossed the country’s border, going 3.5 km deep.

Amid a political crisis that broke out in Armenia in November 2020, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and leaders of the parliamentary parties agreed to hold snap elections. Pashinyan will continue fulfilling his duties as acting prime minister, as will his government. The leader of the My Step ruling bloc, Lilit Makunts, said that Pashinyan’s Civil Contract party would take part in the elections independently and would not join any blocs.

Tbilisi: The Language Barrier: the Ongoing Challenge to Provide Decent Education to Georgia’s Minority Schoolchildren

Civil Georgia
May 19 2021

Education was meant to be the means Georgia would achieve the civic integration of its ethnic minority communities. As Tamar Burduli discovered, there is still a long way to go.

Georgians are proud of the country’s tradition of inter-ethnic tolerance. Some 16% of the country’s population are ethnic minorities, mostly Armenians and Azerbaijanis, and Tbilisi’s old town, with its synagogue, mosque, Armenian and Georgian churches all crowded together, is seen as a symbol of the country’s multicultural harmony. But for most minority communities the reality is different. The bulk of Georgia’s Armenians and Azerbaijanis live in rural, monoethnic settlements in the south and east of the country. They are isolated from the rest of Georgian society, most obviously by language: 74% of native Azerbaijani speakers and 51% of native Armenian speakers do not speak Georgian fluently. Minorities look to Baku or Yerevan (or to Russia) rather than Tbilisi for opportunities for work and study and there is large-scale emigration. Since 2005, Georgia has seen education as the primary means to integrate its minority population: by providing them with Georgian language skills and quality education, it is thought minorities will be able to find good jobs or go to university in Georgia, hastening the civic integration of the country.

The results of the efforts of the last fifteen years have been mixed. As part of the U.S. Embassy-funded Georgian Educational Advocacy Project, we combed through reams of quantitative and qualitative data and spoke to a dozen of teachers and parents to examine the issues ethnic minorities face in general education. The results showed that in spite of some progress, there are multiple challenges faced by non-Georgian students.

There are currently over 80,000 students from minority backgrounds studying in Georgian schools, representing around 14% of the total student body. Most of these students study at one of 208 non-Georgian schools, or one of 83 Georgian schools with non-Georgian sectors. Efforts to improve the Georgian language skills and the overall level of educational attainment of minorities in Georgia are longstanding. The first textbooks to teach Georgian as a Second Language were created as far back as in 2005.

Other efforts include teacher training programs by Teachers’ Professional Development Center (TPDC) and the Zurab Zhvania School of Public Administration, a project for the professional development of school principals in their preferred language, the introduction of bilingual teaching and teacher training, the assignment of Georgian-speaking consultant-teachers to non-Georgian schools and the improvement of textbooks. These efforts have coincided with reforms to Georgia’s education sector overall, which includes the reconstruction of rural schools and increases in teachers’ salaries.

But in spite of this, there still exists a huge educational attainment gap between ethnic Georgians and minorities. In 2016, 56% of Azerbaijani language school and 44% of Armenian language school students failed their final exams, compared to just a quarter of Georgian students. A quarter of ethnic minority applicants failed their university entrance exams in 2018 compared to 13% of Georgian speakers.

Not speaking Georgian is an overarching issue. Since most ethnic minorities live in monoethnic minority settlements, for children, primary school is where they first encounter Georgian. From six years old they start to learn Georgian as a second language, followed at secondary school by several other subjects in Georgian (history, geography and social sciences). But from their first day at school, minority children face difficulties: parents cannot help their children with Georgian subjects at home because they do not speak Georgian. Children often need parental engagement in homework, especially in primary school, so ethnic minority schoolchildren are at a greater disadvantage. The situation is even more difficult given that many teachers in non-Georgian schools do not speak fluent Georgian themselves, meaning that children are often left alone with textbooks and difficult terminology.

“Even when there are bilingual textbooks, often teachers do not speak Georgian, which creates further problems,” said one teacher from the predominantly Azerbaijani town of Marneuli. “If the teacher does not know Georgian, they are unable to transfer knowledge in either language.”

As a result, many ethnic minority parents prefer their children to go to Georgian instead of non-Georgian schools – in total 32,000 or 40% of ethnic minority schoolchildren go to Georgian schools. This is a good solution for some students, who are more immersed in the Georgian-language environment. But, as one teacher from Gori municipality explained, without extra efforts from teachers, minority students’ education can suffer both in Georgian and in their native language.

“Due to the language problems many children from our non-Georgian school would transfer to the Georgian school. The parents understood that their kids would be unable to progress in life without knowing the Georgian language, so they would transfer them there. But then the child was in shock – twenty-five children in the class, five non-Georgian kids, the teacher would not even think about paying proper attention to them, so the children would remain without knowledge, without skills. After a few years they would realize that they are unable to study there and would come back to Azerbaijani school, but by then without proper knowledge of either Azerbaijani or Georgian.”

This points towards another issue: the fact that instruction in minority languages can also be problematic.  Georgia does not produce Armenian or Azerbaijani language and literature textbooks, so they have to be imported from neighboring Armenia and Azerbaijan. Because these countries have an 11-grade school system, final year students in the Georgian K12 system are left “without a book” for their native languages and have to repeat the 11-grade material.

Making matters worse is the fact that, as pension-age teachers retire every year with no one to replace them, some teachers have to cover subjects for which they have no training. In spite of extensive need and multiple vacancies, especially in sciences, it has proved persistently difficult to attract minorities to the teaching profession. This might be because lack of Georgian language knowledge prevents minority teachers from advancing up the career ladder as they struggle with language tests — even if they teach a non-Georgian subject.

“There is no teaching exam in the Azerbaijani language. This creates big problems for teachers. You can’t move forward. I have been working since 2016 and I am still a Teacher Seeker [a type of trainee]. Teachers of [minority] language and literature don’t have the opportunity to pass their exam and move forward in the career advancement scheme,” said a minority teacher from Gori Municipality. This, in turn, deters many minority-Georgians from going into the teaching profession.

In order to try to remedy this, since 2009 Georgian-speaking teaching assistants and consultants have been dispatched to some minority schools. However, studies by the Social Justice Center found “no significant difference in the achievements of the students with whom these teachers work.” The report found that these “consultant-teachers” worked with only 15% of non-Georgian students, and that half of the consultant teachers left the job after a year. Furthermore, lack of Georgian language knowledge deters minority teachers from advancing in career scheme as they struggle with Georgian-language tests, which, in turn, might partially explain the low general interest in the profession. While it is clear that there remains much to be done for the Georgian education system to improve standards for minority pupils, there are other factors at play that result in educational inequalities. Lower school attendance and a high dropout rate is another huge problem. Students from non-Georgian schools predominate among those who drop out of school. Economic and cultural issues, such as child labor and early marriage greatly affect their access to general education. Boys tend to be taken out of class for seasonal agriculture-related work, while girls in some communities drop out for marriage, as one teacher from a non-Georgian school in Telavi municipality explained.

“The tendency is that when children reach a certain age, mostly after the 9th grade, they pay less attention to education. Early marriage is an accepted custom. Also, they [boys] go away for work.”

It is likely that one of the most effective ways to mitigate the socio-economic conditions that lead to early marriage and child labor is through education. Yet in spite of more than ten years of intensive effort on the part of the government and international institutions, and multiple attempts at reform, it is clear that there remains a huge attainment gap for Georgia’s ethnic minority students. While things such as funding, employment opportunities and teaching materials appear to be improving, it is clear that the pace of these improvements is slower than one would expect, resulting in meagre overall improvements in Georgian language knowledge and overall educational attainment. This is an issue that must be addressed if Georgia is to live up to its reputational of inter-ethnic tolerance and successfully integrate its minority communities.

This article is written under the Georgian Educational Advocacy Project, which is funded by a grant from the United States Department of State. The opinions, findings and conclusions stated herein are those of the author[s] and do not necessarily reflect those of the United States Department of State, or Civil.ge.